Atomic energy has _____ many uses, either as fuel or as radiation, _____ it is almost impossible to imagine all the great changes it will bring into our lives.

a. such…as                   b. such…that         c. too…then                  d. so…that

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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解

任務(wù)型閱讀(每小題0.5分,滿分5分)

請認真閱讀下列短文,并根據(jù)所讀內(nèi)容在文章后表格中的空格里填入一個最恰當(dāng)?shù)膯卧~。   

注意:每個空格只填l個單詞。請將答案寫在答題卡上相應(yīng)題號的橫線上。

What makes people happier: money or having happy friends and neighbors? Researchers from Harvard University and the University of California, San Diego, have found an answer as part of a study.

Nicholas Christakis and James Fowler based the study on the emotional health of almost five thousand people. They used information gathered over a period of twenty years, until 2003, in the Framingham Heart Study. That study began sixty years ago in Framingham, Massachusetts, to learn more about the risks of heart attack and stroke.

The new study found that friends of happy people had a greater chance of being happy themselves. And the smaller the physical distance between friends, the larger the effect they had on each other’s happiness.

For example, a person was twenty percent more likely to feel happy if a friend living within one and a half kilometers was also happy. Having a happy neighbor who lived next door increased an individual’s chance of being happy by thirty-four percent. The effects of friends’ happiness lasted for up to a year.

The researchers found that happiness really is contagious(可蔓延的,傳染的). Sadness also spread among friends, but not as much as happiness.

People removed by as much as three degrees of separation still had an effect on a person’s happiness. Three degrees of separation means the friend of a friend of a friend.

The study showed that having an extra five thousand dollars increased a person’s chances of becoming happier by about two percent. But the researchers found that the influence of a friend of a friend of a friend can be greater than that. 

Another finding is that people who are married or work together do not have as much of an effect on happiness as friends do.

The findings appeared in the British Medical Journal. The National Institute on Aging in the United States helped pay for the study.

The study is described as the first to demonstrate the indirect spread of happiness. In other words, that your emotions can be affected by someone you do not directly know.

Earlier studies by the two researchers described the effects of social networks on obesity and efforts to stop smoking. The new study shows that happiness spreads through social networks like an emotional virus — a virus people would be happy to catch. 

The (81) ________ of the study

To find what makes people happier.

The (82) ________ of the study

Having extra money meaning (83) _______ chances of becoming happier.

People after marriage or working together not (84) _______ a person a lot.

Friends’ happiness having an (85) _________ on a person.

★ Happiness as well as sadness (86) _________ among friends.

★ (87)________ less than a year.

★ Three degrees of (88) _________ playing a role, too.

(89) ___________

(90) _________ happiness affecting a person more.

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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解

    If there is one thing that matters in high school-and for your whole life-it is friendships.

    My latest novel,THE UNWRITTEN RULE,is about a girl,Sarah,who falls for her best friend Brianna’s boyfriend,Ryan,but it’s more about wrestling with feelings for a guy that you know you shouldn’t have.A lot of the book deals with friendship,the kind of lifelong friendship that means the world to you...a(chǎn)nd what happens when you realize that maybe it isn’t what you think it is.

    Maybe your best friend isn’t your best friend.Maybe she isn’t even a friend at all.

    Friendships are tricky things.You can he sure everything is fine,and that your friendship is going to last forever...a(chǎn)nd it can just end.No explanation,no anything.And it is not easy.In fact,I think losing a friend is worse than losing a boyfriend,especially when it is a friend you’ve had in your life for a long time.

    One of the things that Sarah struggles with in THE UNWRITTEN RULE,beyond her feelings for Ryan,is her friendship with Brianna—how long they’ve been friends,how she understands Brianna in a way no one else does,and what to do when a crack appears in their friend ship,not because of Sarah’s feelings for Ryan,but because Sarah begins to wonder if maybe Brianna isn’t her best friend after all.

    Having a friendship end is incredibly painful and one of the things I hated when I was younger—and that I still hate now—is how people say.“Oh,it’ll be okay.You’ll move on,you’ll be fine.”

    It is true that you will eventually move on and that you will be fine.But you will also always carry that lost friendship with you.It may not take up all of your heart like it does at first,but it will take part of it.

    And that,I think,is something no one ever talks about and that I wish we could — and would.

    What do you do when someone you are friends with decides your friendship is over? How do you deal with it?

    Maybe my latest novel can provide something for you.

47.From the passage we can infer that        .

      A.it may takes Sarah a long time to recover after she lost Brianna’s friendship

     B.Sarah and Brianna are still best friends after a long period of time

     C.Sarah does not value Brianna’s friendship at all

     D.Ryan would feel puzzled about his real love

48.What do you think the book THE UNWRITTEN RULE is mainly about?

     A.Friendship.    B.School life.

    C.Love.         D.Wrestling with feelings.

49.What’s the writer’s attitude towards friendship?

     A.We will all lose some friends in our life.

     B.Ending a friendship is worse than losing a boyfriend.

     C.It’s usual when a crack appears.

     D.You will eventually move on after you lose a friendship.

50.What do you think is the best title for the passage above?

     A.My Latest Novel.     B.Tricky Friends.   

    C.Sarah and Brianna.    D.Unforgettable Friendship

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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解

第三部分:閱讀理解 (共15小題;每小題2分,滿分30分)

    閱讀下列短文,從每題所給的A、B、C和D項中,選出最佳選項,并在答題卡上將該項涂黑。

China launched its first manned spaceship at 9:00 a.m. Wednesday, becoming the third country in the world to send a person into orbit after the former Soviet Union and the United States. Astronaut Yang Liwei became China’s first space man.

With a column of beautiful smoke, the Shenzhou V craft cut across a bright northwest China sky at exactly 9:00 a.m. Wednesday and went into orbit 10 minutes later.

China Central Television’s Channel One cut into its regular programming to announce the launch. The station later showed the Shenzhou V streaking(moving very fast)into the sky and disappearing, its tracer billowing (to fill with air and become larger)behind it.

Minutes after the launch, a CCTV announcer said that Shenzhou V and 38-year-old Yang Liwei, an air force pilot since 1983, had “entered orbit at 9:10.” It reported Yang was “reading a flight manual(手冊) in the capsule of the Shenzhou V spacecraft and looked composed and at ease.”

The Shenzhou V launch came after four test launches of unmanned capsules that orbited the earth for nearly a week before parachuting back to China’s northern grasslands. Reports said the manned flight was expected to last about 22 hours.

President Hu Jintao watched the launch at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Centre in northwest China’s Gansu Province.

Hu called the launch “the glory of our great motherland and a mark for the initial victory of the country’s first manned space flight and for the significant, historic step of the Chinese people in the advance of climbing over the peak of the world’s science and technology.”

He said that: “The Party and the people will never forget those who have set up the outstanding merit(貢獻) in the space industry for the motherland, the people and the nation.”

“The launch of the Shenzhou V is long-awaited by the Chinese people,” Foreign Minister spokeswoman Zhang Qiyue said on Tuesday. She said the flight was a key step in the “Peaceful development of space.”

NASA Administrator Sean O’ Keefe also congratulated on China’s first successful human space flight.

41. The following are countries succeeded in sending man into space EXCEPT ____

A. China          B. Germany      C. America              D. the former Soviet Union

42. The underlined word “composed” in paragraph 4 means_____

A. happy      B. nervous        C. calm         D. excited

43. According to the passage which of the following statements is NOT true?

A. It’s the first time that China has sent up its first manned spaceship.

B. Before the Shenzhou V launched, four test launches of it had moved around the earth.

C. The 38-year-old astronaut was sent into space by China’s ShenzhouⅤspacecraft and landed safely the next day.

D. Yang Liwei is China’s first astronaut in space.

44. The writer quoted(引用) Foreign Minister spokeswoman Zhang Qiyue’s words to express ________.

A. the Chinese have been expecting the successful space launch and it’s a great contribution to the peaceful development of space.

B. a lot of Chinese people are waiting for the launch.

C. this launch is the first time in China.

D. China’s manned spaceship made a peaceful development of space.

45. The description of Yang Liwei tells us that _______.

A. Yang didn’t know what to do and he was looking up a flight manual

B. it’s 10 years since he became an air force pilot

C. Yang entered orbit at exactly 9:00 a.m.

D. Yang trained himself well and felt very satisfied with everything in the space craft

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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解

    Most people would agree that it would be wonderful if humans could regenerate (再生) limbs. Those who have lost their arms or legs would be complete again. The day is still far off when this might happen. But in the last 10 years, doctors have reported regeneration in smaller parts of the body, most often fingers.

    Regeneration is not a newly-discovered process. For centuries, scientists have seen it work in some kinds of animals. Scientists now are looking for a way to turn on this exciting ability in more highly-developed animals, including humans. Their experiments show that nerves (神經(jīng)), cell chemistry and the natural electric currents in the body all seem to have a part in this process.

    The body of every animal contains general purpose cells that change into whatever kind of cells the body needs. These cells collect around the wound. They form a mass called a blastema (芽基). The cells of the blastema begin to change. Some became bone cells, some muscle cells, some skin cells. Slowly, a new part re-grows from the body outward. When completed, the new part is just like the old one.

    More than 200 years ago, Italian scientist Luigi Spallanzani showed that younger animals have a greater ability to regenerate lost parts than older animals. So do animals lower on the ladder of evolutionary (進化的) development. The major differences seem to be that less-developed animals have more nerves in their tails and legs than humans do in their arms and legs.

    Another helpful piece of information was discovered in the late 1800s. Scientists found that when a creature is injured, an electrical current flows around the wound. The strength of the current depends on how severe the wound is and on how much nerve tissue (組織) is present.

59.According to the passage, limb regeneration ________.

    A. will become a reality in the near future

B. is a branch of study set up by a group of modern doctors

C. has a long way to go before it works in humans

D. has been reported successful in some patients

60.What animals are lower on the ladder of evolutionary development ?

    A. More-developed animals.                                        B. Fully-developed animals.

    C. Highly developed animals.                                       D. Less-developed animals.

61.According to Luigi Spallanzani’s discovery, ________.

    A. humans have less nerves in the limbs than animals

B. electrical current can be found around the would in younger animals

C. an injured animal regenerates masses of cells round the wound

D. some animals may not have so much nerve tissue as others

62.The passage is mainly about ________.

    A. a newly-discovered process                                         B. research on regeneration

    C. a new medical discovery                                           D. research on animal evolution

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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:

It is generally considered unwise to give a child_____________he or she wants.

A. however            B. whatever                         C. whichever                D. whenever

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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:

第一部分:語音  共5小題;每小題1分, 滿分5分)

從每小題A、B、C、D四個選項中,找出所給單詞的正確讀音,并在答題卡上將該項涂黑。

1. concern      A. voyage          B. common         C. continue          D. forecast

2. breathe      A. thick         B. southern      C. beneath        D. method

3. exactly    A. experience    B. examine       C. excite         D. expression

4. settle      A. base         B. season         C. shock         D. usual

5. watched   A. judged        B. worked       C. refused        D. wanted

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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:

The hospital in Harbin is already _________ of shocking mistreatment, as a 74-year-old man died of heart failure, after 67 days of treatment which cost the family 5.5 million yuan.   

    A. acquired     B. charged          C. accused          D. punished

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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:

.

As Christmas draws near, they feel more and more uneasy with their stored money ____.

A. to be run out     B. to run out of     C. being run out    D. running out

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