四川射洪县2018高考英语主旨大意+泛读一轮练习试卷(12份)
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四川射洪县2018高考英语主旨大意+泛读一轮练习打包12份
四川射洪县2018高考英语主旨大意+泛读一轮练习:(10)及答案.doc
四川射洪县2018高考英语主旨大意+泛读一轮练习:(11)及答案.doc
四川射洪县2018高考英语主旨大意+泛读一轮练习:(12)及答案.doc
四川射洪县2018高考英语主旨大意+泛读一轮练习:(1)及答案.doc
四川射洪县2018高考英语主旨大意+泛读一轮练习:(2)及答案.doc
四川射洪县2018高考英语主旨大意+泛读一轮练习:(3)及答案.doc
四川射洪县2018高考英语主旨大意+泛读一轮练习:(4)及答案.doc
四川射洪县2018高考英语主旨大意+泛读一轮练习:(5)及答案.doc
四川射洪县2018高考英语主旨大意+泛读一轮练习:(6)及答案.doc
四川射洪县2018高考英语主旨大意+泛读一轮练习:(7)及答案.doc
四川射洪县2018高考英语主旨大意+泛读一轮练习:(8)及答案.doc
四川射洪县2018高考英语主旨大意+泛读一轮练习:(9)及答案.doc
四川射洪县2018高考英语主旨大意+泛读一轮练习(1)及答案
【阅读理解----主旨大意】(2016•全国Ⅱ,C)
Reading can be a social activity.Think of the people who belong to boops.They choose books to read and then meet to discuss them.Now, the website BookCrossing.com turns the page on the traditional idea of a boop.
Members go on the site and register the books they own and would like to share.BookCrossing provides an identification number to stick inside the book.Then the person leaves it in a public place, hoping that the book will have an adventure, traveling far and wide with each new reader who finds __it.__
Bruce Pederson, the managing director of BookCrossing, says, “The two things that change your life are the people you meet and boo read.BookCrossing combines both.”
Members leave books on park benches and buses, in train stations and coffee shops.Whoever finds their book will go to the site and record where they found it.
People who find a book can also leave a journal entry describing what they thought of it.E-mails are then sent to the BookCrossers to keep them updated about where their books have been found.Bruce Pederson says the idea is for people not to be selfish by keeping a book to gather dust on a shelf at home.
BookCrossing is part of a trend among people who want to get back to the “real” and not the virtual(虚拟).The site now has more than one million members in more than one hundred thirty-five countries.
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文,介绍了BookCrossing.com网站帮助喜爱读书的人们互相交流和传递图书的内容。
❶ Why does the author mention boops in the first paragraph?____B____
A.To explain what they are.
B.To introduce BookCrossing.
C.To stress the importance of reading.
D.To encourage readers to share their ideas.
解析:考查推理判断。根据第一段第三句话“Now,the website BookCrossing.come turns the page on the traditional idea of a boop”可知,作者提到boops是为了引出BookCrossing。故选B项。
❷ What does the underlined word “it” in Paragraph 2 refer to?____A____
A.The book.
四川射洪县2018高考英语主旨大意+泛读一轮练习(2)及答案
【阅读理解----主旨大意】(2016•北京,B)
Surviving Hurricane Sandy
Natalie Doan,14, has always felt lucky to live in Rockaway, New York.Living just a few blocks from the beach, Natalie can see the ocean and hear the wave from her house.“It's the ocean that makes Rockaway so special,” she says.
On October 29, 2012, that ocean turned fierce.That night, Hurricane Sandy attacked the East Coast, and Rockaway was hit especially hard.Fortunately, Natalie's family escaped to Brooklyn shortly before the city's bridges closed.
When they returned to Rockaway the next day, they found their neighborhood in ruins.Many of Natalie's friends had lost their homes and were living far away.All around her, people were suffering, especially the elderly.Natalie's school was so damaged that she had to temporarily attend a school in Brooklyn.
In the following few days, the men and women helping Rockaway recover inspired Natalie.Volunteers came with carloads of donated clothing and toys.Neighbors devoted their spare time to helping others rebuild.Teenagers climbed dozens of flights of stairs to deliver water and food to elderly people trapped in powerless high-rise buildings.
“My mom tells me that I can't control what happens to me,” Natalie says.“but I can always choose how I deal with it.”
Natalie's choice was to help.
She created a website page matching survivors in need with donors who wanted to help.Natalie posted introduction about a boy named Patrick, who lost his baseball card collecting when his house burned down.Within days, Patrick's collection was replaced.
In the coming months, her website page helped lots of kids: Christopher, who received a new basketball; Charlie, who got a new keyboard.Natalie also worked with other organizations to bring much-need supplies to Rockaway.Her efforts made her a famous person.Last April, she was invited to the White House and honored as a Hurricane Sandy Champion of Change.
Today, the scars(创痕)of destruction are still seen in Rockaway, but hope is in the air.The streets are clear, and many homes have been rebuilt.“I can't imagine living anywhere but Rockaway,” Natalie declares.“My neighborhood will be back, even stronger than before.”
文章大意:这是一篇记叙文。本文的主人公——14岁的女孩娜塔莉——主动参与重建遭受飓风重创的家乡。她建立了一个网站,为外界的捐赠者和家乡需要帮助的人结对,同时帮助很多孩子实现了自己的梦想。她应邀到白宫,并被授予荣誉称号。
四川射洪县2018高考英语主旨大意+泛读一轮练习(3)及答案
【阅读理解----主旨大意】 (2016•全国Ⅲ,D)
Bad news sells.If it bleeds, it leads.No news is good news, and good news is no news.Those are the classic rules for the evening broadcasts and the morning papers.But now that information is being spread and monitored(监控) in different ways, researchers are discovering new rules.By tracking people's e-mails and online posts, scientists have found that good news can spread faster and farther than disasters and sob stories.
“The ‘if it bleeds’ rule works for mass media,” says Jonah Berger, a scholar at the University of Pennsylvania.“They want your eyeballs and don't care how you're feeling.But when you share a story with your friends, you care a lot more how they react.You don't want them to thin as a Debbie Downer.”
Researchers analyzing word-of-mouth communication—e-mails,Web posts and reviews, face-to-face conversations—found that it tended to be more positive than negative(消极的), but that didn't necessarily mean people preferred positive news.Was positive news shared more often simply because people experienced more good things than bad things? To test for that possibility, Dr.Berger looked at how people spread a particular set of news stories: thousands of articles on The New York Times' website.He and a Penn colleague analyzed the “most e-mailed” list for six months.One of his first finds was that articles in the science section were much more likely to make the list than non-science articles.He found that science amazed Times' readers and made them want to share this positive feeling with others.
Readers also tended to share articles that were exciting or funny, or that inspired negative feelings like anger or anxiety, but not articles that left them merely sad.They needed to be aroused(激发) one way or the other, and they preferred good news to bad.The more positive an article, the more likely it was to be shared, as Dr.Berger explains in his new book, “Contagious: Why Things Catch On.”
文章大意:本文讲述了科学家对大众传媒的新发现:好消息比坏消息传得更快、更远,越积极乐观的信息越容易被大众分享。
❾ What do the classic rules mentioned in the text apply to?____A____
A.News reports. B.Research papers.
C.Private e-mails. D.Daily conversations.
解析:考查细节理解。根据第一段的内容尤其是“Those ar
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