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高考英语能力阶段训练六

2014-5-11 0:21:15下载本试卷

高考英语能力阶段训练六

1,完型

    Dahlia was running around the house screaming and crying. “I hate her! I hate her! I will

36   play with her again!” Finally ,her steps slowed ,    37 she told her father what had happened .He listened attentively.   38  she stopped ,he asked , “Is there  39   else?” Dahlia added more details and began   40  bitterly again. Father listened .When Dahlia   41  talking ,he said, “It must    42  to be made fun of like this by your best friend Tina.” Dahlia 43   her father’s embrace(拥抱)and support as she cried   44   more in his arms. Then as   45   as the storm of tears began, she was finished. She got up and   46   announced, “Daddy, did you know that tomorrow Tina and I are going together to the beach? We are   47   a log house there with Adam and Tom, I will tell Tina before we go that I   48   ruin her work again, and I’m sure she will be   49   to me. ”

Why was this encounter ( sudden meeting ) so successful? How did Dahlia  50  her upset so completely and realize her responsibility in the matter   51   her own?

There were three main parts in her father’s reaction that   52  ; (A) Attention (B ) Respect (C) Trust. He gave his daughter  53   attention and took her seriously as she   54   her feelings. He respected her by not coming with words of wisdom, advice or help. He validated(证实)the ycy feelings she  55 . And he trusted her to do and say what she needed in order to lead herself toward resolution of her emotions.

36.A.hardly         B.seldom        C.ever          D.never

37.A.so            B.but           C.and           D.then

38.A.Before         B.When         C.While         D.Since

39.A.something      B.anything       C.everything      D.nothing

40.A.crying         B.shouting       C.talking         D.saying

41.A.kept          B.started         C.stopped        D.hated

42.A.hurt          B.ache          C.injure         D.wound

43.A.got           B.received       C.accepted       D.admitted

44.A.many         B.some          C.any           D.no

45.A.soon          B.quickly        C.suddenly       D.fast

46.A.surprisingly     B.angrily         C.sadly          D.cheerfully

47.A.building        B.buying         C.making        D.repairing

48.A.shouldn’t       B.won’t         C.daren’t        D.can’t

49.A.polite         B.cruel          C.rude          D.nice

50.A.get over       B.get away       C.get along       D.get through

51.A.for           B.on            C.by           D.of

52.A.did           B.followed       C.went          D.worked

53.A.full           B.incomplete      C.half           D.undivided

54.A.sent out        B.threw out      C.put out        D.poured out

55.A.expressed      B.showed        C.hid           D.strengthened

阅读                   一

    Having reached the highest point of our route according to plan, we discovered something the map had not told us. It was impossible to climb down into the Kingo valley. The river lay deep between mountain sides that were almost vertical(垂直).We couldn’t find any animal tracks, which usually show the best way across country, and the slopes were covered so thickly with bushes that we could not see the nature of the ground. We had somehow to break through to the river which would give us our direction out of the mountains into the inhabited lowlands.

    Our guide cut a narrow path through the bushes with his long knife and we followed in single file. Progress was slow. Then, when we thought we had really reached the river, we found ourselves instead on the edge of a cliff with a straight drop of 1,000 feet to the water below. We climbed back up the slope and began to look for another way down. We climbed slipped, sweated and scratched our hands to pieces and finally arrived at the river. Happily we came downhill along its bank without having to cut our way. However, after a few miles the river entered a steep-sided gap between rocks and suddenly dropped thirty-five feet over a waterfall. There was no path alongside it and no way round it.

    Then one of the guides saw a way of overcoming the difficulty. There was a fallen tree lying upside down over the waterfall with its leafy top resting on the opposite bank below the falls. Without hesitation he climbed down the slippery trunk to show us how easy it was. Having got to the fork of the tree, he moved hand over hand along a branch for four or five feet with his legs hanging in space, then he dropped onto the flat bank the other side, throwing his arms in the air like a footballer who has scored goal, and cheerfully waving us on.

68.Having reached the highest point on their route, the travelers expected to be able to   .

    A.track animals to the river           B.put away the maps they had been using

    C.come near to the river from a different direction D.get down to the river without much difficulty.

69.The travelers wanted to get to the river because    .

    A.it would lead them to the waterfall       B.it would show them which way to go

    C.it was the only possible way out of the mountains

    D.it was a quicker way than going over the mountains

70.One reason why the travelers took so long to get to the river was that   .

    A.it was too hot to move quickly     B.there was no proper path

    C.they all tried to go different ways    D.they could not follow the animal tracks

71.To get past the waterfall the guide had to   .

    A.use a fallen tree as a kind of bridge   B.cross the river above the waterfall

    C.slide down a steep river bank      D.swing across the river from a high branch

    Anxiety is the appropriate(适当的)emotion when the immediate personal terror—of a volcano, an arrow, a stab(刺伤)in the back and other disasters, all directed against one’s self-disappears.

    The kind of world that produces anxiety is actually a world of relative safety, a world in which no one feels that he himself is facing sudden death. The anxiety exists as an uneasy state of mind, in which one has a feeling that something unspecified(不具体的)and indeterminable may go wrong. If the world seems to be going well, this produces anxiety—for good times may end. If the world is going badly—it may get worse. Anxiety tends to be without focus; the anxious person doesn’ t know whether to blame himself or other people. He isn’t sure whether it is the current year of the administration or a change in climate or the atom bomb that is to blame for this undefined sense of unease.

    It is clear that we have developed a society which depends on having the right amount of anxiety to make it work…While we agree that too much anxiety is harmful to mental health, we have come to rely on anxiety to push us into seeing a doctor about a symptom(症状)which may indicate cancer, into checking up on that old life-insurance policy which may have out-of-date provisions in it, into having a conference with Billy’s teacher even though his report card looks all right.

    People who are anxious enough keep their car insurance up, have the brakes checked, don’t take a second drink when they have to drive. People who are too anxious either refuse to go into cars at all—and so complicate the ordinary course of life—or drive so tensely and carefully that they help cause accidents. People who aren’t anxious enough take chance after chance, which increases the terrible accidents of the roads.

72.According to the author, anxiety is the emotion when    .

    A.one is filled with a sudden sense of uneasiness  B.one sees no immediate danger

    C.one has a vague sense about his life      D.one feels that the world may go badly

73.The author holds that   .

    A.anxiety is a good thing           B.anxiety is a symptom of mental illness

    C.some anxiety can lead to changes for the better D.no anxiety is bad for society

74.According to the author, accidents of the road tend to be caused by    .

    A.all those who are too anxious        B.all those who have anxiety

    C.those who have no anxiety          D.those who are not anxious enough

75.The best title for the passage would be   .

    A.One Man’s Thought about Anxiety     B.The Right Amount of Anxiety

    C.Anxiety versus Safety             D.Different Attitudes to Anxiety

Key: 36—40 DCBBA 41—45 CACBC 46—50 DABDC 51—55 BDADA

 DCBA,BCDA