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南京師大附中2018-2019學(xué)年第1學(xué)期高三年級(jí)英語(yǔ)試卷2018.12JingSuhua江蘇省海安高級(jí)中學(xué)景蘇華1/9QQ:771515126
南京師大附中2018-2019學(xué)年第1學(xué)期
高三年級(jí)英語(yǔ)試卷
命題人:高三英語(yǔ)備課組第1卷(共85分)第一部分:聽(tīng)力(共兩節(jié),滿分20分)第一節(jié)(共5小題:每小題1分,滿分5分)聽(tīng)下面5段對(duì)話。每段對(duì)話對(duì)后有一個(gè)小題,從題中所給的A、B、C三個(gè)選項(xiàng)中選出最佳選項(xiàng),并標(biāo)在試卷的相應(yīng)位置。聽(tīng)完每段對(duì)話后,你都有10秒鐘時(shí)間來(lái)回答有關(guān)小題和閱讀下一小題。每段對(duì)話僅讀一遍。1.
Which
place
does
the
man
spend
most
of
his
lunch
time
in
these
days?
A.
A
store.
B.
The
library.
C.
His
office.2.
Where
have
the
speakers
probably
been?
A.
A
flower
show.
B.
A
restaurant
C.
A
concert3.
What
happened
to
the
woman?
A.
Someone
knocked
her
down.B.
Her
friend
just
had
an
operationC.
Something
was
stolen
from
her.4.
Whois
the
man
playing
the
game
with?
A.His
friend
Samantha.
B.
The
woman.
C.
A
stranger5.
What
are
the
speakers
mainly
talking
about?
A.
Rules
for
winning
a
prize.B.
How
to
lose
weight.C.
A
special
diet.第二節(jié)(共15小題;每小分,滿分15分)聽(tīng)下面5段對(duì)話或獨(dú)白。每段對(duì)話或獨(dú)白后有幾個(gè)小題,從題中所給的A、B、C3個(gè)選項(xiàng)中選出最佳選項(xiàng),并標(biāo)在試卷的相應(yīng)位置。聽(tīng)每段對(duì)話或獨(dú)白前,你將有時(shí)間閱讀各個(gè)小題,每小題5秒鐘;聽(tīng)完后,各小題將給出5秒鐘的作答時(shí)間,每段對(duì)話或獨(dú)白讀兩遍。聽(tīng)第6段材料,回答第6、7題。6.
What
does
the
woman
hope
to
buy?
A.
Ashirt
B.Abag
C.
A
computer7.
Who
is
the
man?
A.
The
manager
of
the
shop.B.
The
woman's
assistant.C.
A
shop
assistant.聽(tīng)第7段材料,回答第8、9題。8.
Why
was
the
woman
on
the
news?
A.
She
won
a
music
contest.
B.
She
sang
a
song
for
charityC.She
wrote
a
song
for
the
TV
station.9.Whatisherplanaboutsinging?A.Shedecidestobeaprofessionalsinger.B.Shewillsticktoitwhateverhappens.C.Shewilljustsinginhersparetime.
聽(tīng)第8段材料,回答第10至13題。10.What
are
the
speakers
doing?A.
watching
ads
onTV
B.Reading
ads
ina
newspaperC.
Looking
for
anofficebuilding
11.
What
kind
of
company
isCulture
Flash?
A.Aclothing
company.
B.
An
education
company.
c.
A
chemical
company.12.
What's
one
of
the
requirements
of
the
job
offer?
A.
Rich
experience.
B.
Being
able
to
travel.
C.
Being
independent13.
What
will
the
man
probably
do
later?
A.
Go
to
class
B.
Look
for
a
different
job.C.
Go
to
the
company'soffice.
聽(tīng)第9段材料,回答第14至17題。14.
Where
did
the
woman
take
her
pictures?
A.
In
Australia
B.
In
America
C.
in
Africa,15.
How
much
money
did
the
man
save
by
buying
his
camera
in
Japan?
A.
S200.
B.$400.
C.
$500.l6.
What
mistake
did
the
woman
make?
A.
She
didn't
save
her
own
pictures
B.
She
thought
the
man
bad
saved
his
pictures.C.
She
accidentally
broke
the
man's
camera,17.
How
did
the
man
sound
in
the
end?
A.Angry
B.
Surprised.
C.
Delighted.聽(tīng)第10段材料,回答第18至20題。18.
What
are
the
people
going
to
do
tomorrow
morning?
A
Havea
meeting
B.
See
a
performance.
C.
Visit
the
sick
speaker19.
Why
does
the
chairman
have
to
change
today's
plan?
A.
The
first
speaker
is
sickB
Diana
wants
tospeak
firstC.
He
wants
to
have
coffee
earlier
20.
When
are
the
people
going
to
have
their
coffee
break?
A.
At9:00
B.
At
9:30
C.At
10;00
第二部分英語(yǔ)知識(shí)運(yùn)用(共兩節(jié),滿分35分)第一節(jié)單項(xiàng)填空(共15小題,每小題1分,滿分15分)請(qǐng)認(rèn)真閱讀下面各題,從題中所給的A、B、C、D四個(gè)選項(xiàng)中,選出最佳選項(xiàng),并在答題紙上將該項(xiàng)涂黑。21.
Human
rights
protection
is
a
universal
principle
that____all,including
criminals.
A.
caters
to
B.
appliestoC.
adapts
to
D.submitsto22.
Driving
in
rush
hour
traffic_____
be
very
dangerous,
so
you_______betoo
careful
A
should;
ought
to
B.
could;
shouldC.
might;
mustn't
D.
can;
can’t
23.____
some
teenagers
don't
realize
is_____
difficult
life
canbe
after
they
get
addicted
to
drugs.
A.
What;
what
a
B
That;
what
C.
That;
how
D.
What,
how24.
There
is
no
universal_____
for
discovering
these
simplifying
patterns
of
nature.A.prescription
B.
presentation
C.
preservation
D
prediction25.
—
Ann,
you
look
so
tired
and
wet
all
over!
—
Well,
you
know,
all
morning
I_____
my
properties
to
my
newoffice
on
thethird
floor,
A.
had
moved
B.
have
been
moving
C.
am
moving
D.
have
moved26.
After
several
hours
of
struggling
in
the
snow,
they
finally
arrived___
they
had
thought
they
should
be
picked
up.
A.
which
B.
where
C.
when
D.
what
27.
The
singer
will
have
to___her
image
if
she
wants
to
win
the
support
from
fans.
A.
advance
B.
improve
C.
evolve
D
promote
28.
They
also
developed
their
own
language,
_______
there
are
now
approximatelysixty
varieties.
A.
of
which
B.
about
which
C.
whose
D.
what
29.
China's
updated
adverising
law
is
regarded
as
the
strictest
in
history
since
it___
lies
in
all
forms
of
advertisement.
A.
has
banned
B.
banned
C.
is
banning
D.
bans
30.
A
new
study
surprised
researchers,________
that
for
adolescent
girls,
romantic
relationship
problems
can
have
serious,
negative
effects
on
their
mental
health.A.
only
to
find
B.
found
C.
finding
D.
having
found31.
Sometimes
we
get
so
caught
up
in
trying
to
accomplish
something
big_____
we
fail
to
notice
the
little
things
that
give
life
its
magic.
A.
while
B.
until
C.
before
D.
that32.
Much
disappointed
as
he
is_____
in
the
job
interview,
he
still
keeps
his
confidence.
A.
to
have
failed
B.
failed
C.
having
failed
D.
failing33.
Unstable
employment
and
high
turnover
do
not
necessarily_____
accumulation
of
experience.
A.
push
for
B.
provide
for
C.
allow
for
D.
head
for
34.The
twenty-first
centuryfinds
many
people
using
more
natural,
less
drug-orientedtherapies,
sometimes
as
an
alternative
to_____medicines.
A.
systematic
B.
artificial
C.
tentative
D
conventional
35.—I’m
looking
for
a
first
edition
of
Alice
in
Wonderlandtor
my
mother’s
birthday.—Well,
____,butit's
worthatry
A
you
saidit
B.
it's
a
long
shot
C.
you
beatmetoit.
D
it’sa
marvelous
idea
第二節(jié)完形填空(共20小題;每小題1分,滿分20分)請(qǐng)認(rèn)真閱讀下面短文,從短文后各題所給的A、B、C、D四個(gè)選項(xiàng)中,選出最佳選項(xiàng)。
There
is
a
war
destroying
the
world,
I
speak
not
of
the
conflicts
between
men
or36
I
speak
of
another,37
different
kind
of
war.
Itis
not
a
war
forpolitical
reason
or
for
teritorial
expansion.
Its
basis
is
far
simpler
thanthat,38its
potential
implications
far
exceed
anything
our
civlization
has
ever
seen.
I
speak
ofthe39
battle
between
mankind
and
the
other
creatures
of
this
world.
A(An)
40example
of
such
battle
is
that
which
currently
continues
withviolence
in
the
Serengeti
National
Park.
The
Tanzanian
government
intends
to41
the
road
which
runs
across
50
km
of
the
park.
The
annual
migrations
in
thisregion
42
tmore
than
15
million
animals,
primarily
wildebeests
and
zebras.These
annual
migrations
are
considered
one
of
the
greatest
natural43of
theworld.
The
paving
of
this
road
would
have
disastrous
consequences
both
to
themigrating
herds
and
the
local
environment
itself.
Butas
44as
this
would
be,
itis
not
the
sole
repercussion(反響)
that
would
follow.
Nature
isa45,
with
all
its
parts
working
together
in
harmony.
'The
lion
andcheetah
population,which
also46
to
be
among
the
most
popular
touristattractions
in
the
park,
depend
heavily
upon
the
annual
migration
for
their
food47
.
The
48
of
such
conflicts
is
extensive.
One
needs
only
to
turn
on
the
newsor
read
a
local
paper
tofind
stories
of
such
conflicts
between
man
and
nature.It
is49
to
affectone
link
in
the
chain
which
is
part
of
a
given
environment
withoutcausing
disastrous
consequences.
Human
beings
are
the
ultimate
embodiment(體現(xiàn))of
this
destructive50
on
the
planet.
Our
invasion
into
various
(51)
habitatscomes
ina
variety
of
forms.
Mankind,52is
the
single
greatest
contributor
toecological
imbalance
on
the
planet.
Conversely,
to
be
honest,
we
are
also
the
speciesthat
holds
the
53
to
have
the
greatest
positive
effect
upon
this
world'secosystems.
We54
it
within
us
to
either
save
or
destroy.
The
ability
and
thechoice
are
ours.
We
as
a
species
need
to
acquire
environmental
awareness55our
own
shortsightedness
and
indifference
condemn
us
and
our
fellow
inhabitants
ofthis
world
to
extinction.36
A.
politiciansB.
soldiersC.
countriesD.
historians37.
A.
vastlyB
generallyC.
hardlyD.
hopefully38.A.
soB.
yetC.
evenifD.
as
though39.A
ongoingB.
fierceC.
bloodyD.
temporary40.
A.rareB.
ordinary
C.
outwardD.
prime4I.A.
paveB
enlargeC.monitorD.
abandon42.
A.
concern
B.
involve
C.
affectD.
encourage43.
A.
wonders
B.
viewsC.
sceneryD.
sight44.
A.
challengingB.
particularC.
impressiveD
.tragic45.
A.
blendB.
miracleC.
treasureD
.dilemma46.
A.
tendB.
seemC.
meanD.
happen47.A.
varietyB.
safetyC.
industryD.
supply48.A.
listB.
resultC.
cause
D.
future49.A.
enormous
B.
impossible
C.
shockingD.
permanent50.
A.
economy
B.
pollution
C.
potentialD.
resource51.
A.
apparentB.
delicateC.reservedD.
protected52.A.
in
generalB.
in
this
regard
C.
as
a
wholeD.
for
the
long
term53.A
.viewB.
abilityC.
responsibilityD.
imagination54.
A.
choose
B.
have
C.
deserveD
appreciate55.A.
before
B.
whenC.as
D.
unless第三部分:閱讀理解(共15小題;每小題2分,滿分30分)請(qǐng)認(rèn)真閱讀下列短文,從短文后各題所給的A、B、C、D四個(gè)選項(xiàng)中,選出最佳選項(xiàng)。A
American
dramas
and
situation
comedies
would
have
been
candidates
for
primetime
several
years
ago.
But
those
programs--though
some
remain
popularincreasingly
occupy
less
important
periods
on
foreign
networks.
Instead,
a
growingnumber
of
shows
produced
by
local
broadcasters
are
on
the
air
at
the
best
times.
The
shift
opposes
longstanding
assumptions
that
TV
shows
produced
in
theUnited
States
would
continue
to
overshadow
locally
produced
shows
from
Singaporeto
Sicily.
The
changes
are
coming
at
a
time
when
the
influence
of
the
United
States
onintenational
affairs
has
annoyed
friends
and
enemies
alike,
and
some
people
areexpressing
relief
that
at
least
on
television
American
culture
is
no
longer
quite
theforce
it
once
was.
“There
has
always
been
a
concern
that
the
image
of
the
world
would
be
shapedtoo
much
by
American
lecture,"
said
Dr.
Jo
Groebek,
director
general
of
the
EuropeanInstitute
for
the
Media,
a
non-profit
group.
Given
the
choice,
he
adds,
foreign
viewersoften
prefer
homegrown
shows
that
better
reflect
local
tastes,
cultures
and
historicalevents.
Unlike
in
the
United
States,
commercial
broadcasting
in
most
regions
of
theworld-including
Asia,
Europe,
and
a
less
extent
Latin
America,
which
hasa
longhistory
of
commercial
TV
is
a
relatively
recent
development.
A
majority
of
broadcasters
in
many
countries
were
either
state-owned
orstate-sponsored
for
much
of
the
lastcentury,
Governments
began
to
relax
their
controlin
the
1980's
by
privatizing
national
broadcasters
and
granting
licenses
to
dozens
ofnewcommercialnetworks.Theriseofcableandsatellitepay-televisionincreasedthe
spectrum(范圍)of
channels.
Relatively
inexperiened
and
often
under-
financed,
these
new
commercial
stationsneeded
hours
of
programming
fast.
The
cheapest
and
easiest
way
to
fill
airtime
was
to
buyshows
from
American
studios,
and
the
bidding
wars
for
popular
shows
werefierce.Тhе
b?g
Аmеr?саn
?tud?о?
tоok
аdvаntаgе
оf
thаt
dеmаnd
by
ra???ng
рr?се?
аndforcingforeign
broadcastersto
buy
less
popular
programs
if
they
wanted
access
to
thethebest-selling
shows
and
movies.
“The
studio
priced
themselves
out
of
prime
time,"
said
Hary
Evans
Sloan,Chaitman
of
SBS
Broadcasting,
a
Pan-
European
broadcaster,
Mr.
Sloan
estimates
thatover
the
last
decade,
the
price
of
American
programs
has
increased
fivefold
even
asthe
international
ratings
for
these
shows
have
declined.
American
broadcasters
are
still
the
biggest
buyers
of
American-
made
televisionshows,
accounting
for
90%
of
the
$25
billion
in
2001
sales.
But
international
saleswlich
totaled
$2.5
billion
last
year
often
make
the
difference
between
a
profit
and
aloss
on
show.
As
the
pace
of
foreign
sales
slows
the
market
is
now
growing
at
5%a
year,
down
from
the
double-
digit
growth
of
the
1990's--
-
studio
executives
arerethinking
production
costs.
56.
The
intervention
(干預(yù))
of
governments
in
the
1980's
probably
resulted
in
A.
the
patenting
of
domination
shows
and
moviesB.
the
emergence
of
new
commercial
networks
C.
the
promotion
of
cable
and
satellite
pay-televisionD.
the
intense
competition
coming
from
the
outside
57.
The
main
reason
why
American
dramas
and
situation
comedies
are
driven
out
of
prime
time
is
that________.
A.
they
lose
competitivenessB.
theyare
not
market-orientedC.
they
are
too
much
priced
D.
they
fall
short
of
audience
expectations
58.
American
studio
produces
will
give
thought
to
production
costs_____.
A.
ifhey
have
no
access
to
popular
showsB.
because
theirefforts
come
to
no
satisfactionC.
since
bidding
warsare
no
longer
fierceD.
as
international
sales
pace
slows
down
B
The
idea
ofa
vacuum(真空)
cleaner
originates
from
the
19th
century,
The
firstvacuum
cleaners
had
to
be
operated
by
hand.
Two
persons
were
needed
for
this:
onetooperate
the
bellows(風(fēng)箱)
and
the
other
to
move
the
mouthpiece
over
the
floor.
Thedustwasblown
into
the
air.
On
August
30th
1901,
Hubert
Cecil
Booth,
a
British
engineer,
received
a
Britishpatent
for
a
vacuum
cleaner.
It
took
the
form
of
a
large,
horse-
drawn,petrol-drivenunit
which
was
parked
outside
the
building
to
be
cleaned
with
long
flexible
pipe,
beingfed
through
the
windows.
Until
then
vacuum
cleancrs
blew
the
dust
away,
but
Booth
came
up
with
the
ideaof
sucking
away
dust
instead
of
blowing.
Furthermore,
Booth
equippedhiscleanerwith
a
filter,
which
kept
the
dust
in
the
machine.
All
modern
vacuum
cleanersarebasedon
Booth's
principle.
As
Hubert
Booth
demonstrated
his
vacuuming
device
in
a
restaurant
in
1901,twoAmericans
introduced
variations
on
the
same
theme.
Corirnne
Dufour
inventedadevice
that
sucked
into
a
wet
sponge.
David
E.
Kenney'shuge
machine
was
installedin
the
cellar
and
connected
to
a
network
of
pipes
leading
toeach
room
in
the
house.
Agroup
of
cleaners
move
the
machine
from
house
to
house.
In
1903,
wealthy
society
ladies
threw“vacuum
cleaner
parties".
Guests
sippedtheir
tea
and
lifted
their
feet
for
Booth's
uninformed
attendants
to
vacuum
the
carpet.After
giving
a
vacuum
demorstration
at
the
Royal
Mint(皇家鑄幣廠),
Booth,
onleaving,
was
stopped
by
the
police.
He
had
forgotten
to
empty
the
dust
bag,
whichcontained
a
large
quantity
of
gold
dustfrom
the
Mint.
In
1910,
Profesor
Stanley
Kent
of
University
College,
Bristol
found
355,500,000living
organisms
in
just
one
gramme
of
dust
extracted
from
Marlborough
Hotel,
thehome
of
HRH
The
Princess
of
Wales.
In
1907,
James
Mutray
Spangler,
a
janitor
in
a
Canton,
Ohio
department
store,deduced
that
the
carpet
sweeper
he
used
was
the
source
of
his
cough.
He
managedwith
an
old
fan
motor
and
attached
it
toa
soap
box
stapled
to
a
broom
handle.
He
thenimproved
his
basic
model
the
first
to
use
both
a
cloth
filter
bag
and
cleaningattachments,
and
received
a
patent
in
1908,
and
formed
the
Electric
Suction
SweeperCompany,
One
of
the
first
buyers
was
a
cousin,
whose
husband,
William
H.
Hoover,later
became
the
president
of
the
Hoover
Company,
with
Spangler
as
a
superintendent.Hoover's
improvements
resembled
a
bagpípe
attached
to
a
cake
box,
but
they
worked.Sluggish
sales
were
given
a
kick
by
Hoover's
10-day
free
home
trial,
and
eventuallythere
was
a
Hoover
vacuum
cleaner
in
nearly
every
home.
John
Thurman
started
a
horse
drawn
(door
to
door
service)
vacuum
systemin
StLouis,
similar
to
Booth.
His
vacuum
services
were
priced
at
$4
per
visit
in
1903.
Heinvented
his
gasoline
powered
vacuum
cleaner
in
1899
and
some
historians
consider
itthe
first
motorized
vacuum
cleaner.
Thurman's
machine
was
patented
on
October
3,1899
(patent
#634,042).
59.
The
author
mentions
the
demonstation
at
the
Royal
Mint
in
order
to
illustrate
that
Booth's
vacuum
cleaner_________.
A.
amazed
the
upper
class
B.
could
work
efficientlyC.
was
once
very
popular
D.
needed
improvement60.
What
was
found
by
Stanley
Kent
is
similar
to
that
discoveredby_______.
A.
Booth
B.
Spangler
C.
Hoover
D.
Thurman61.
The
Hoover
company
began
to
prosper
after
_________.
A.
it
used
the
free
home
trial
strategy
B.
ithired
Spangler
as
superintendent
C.
avacuum
cleaner
suitable
for
every
family
was
madeD.
Hooverimproved
Spangler’s
electric
vacuum
cleaner
C
Many
people
seem
to
think
that
sciencefiction
is
related
to
the
covers
of
someof
the
old
pulp
magazines(廉價(jià)低級(jí)雜志)
:
the
Bug
Eyed
Monster
representing
everycharacteristicand
feature
that
most
people
find
unpleasant
is
about
to
grab,
andprobably
have
sex
with,
a
sweet,
blonde
Earth
girl
wearingpretty
muchnext
to
nothing.
This
is
unfortunate
because
it
degrades
a
worthwhile
andeven
important
literary
trial.
In
contrast
of
this
unjustified
image,
science
fiction
rarely
emphasizessex,
and
when
it
does,
it
is
moremodest
than
other
contemporary
fiction.Instead,
the
basic
interest
of
science
fiction
lies
in
the
relation
between
man
and
histechnology
and
between
man
and
the
universe.
Science
fiction
is
a
literature
of
changeand
a
litrature
of
the
future,
and
while
it
would
be
foolish
to
claim
that
sciencefiction
is
a
major
literary
genre(體裁、種類(lèi))
at
this
time,
the
aspects
of
human
lifethat
itconsiders
make
it
well
worth
reading
and
studying
for
no
other
literary
formdoes
quite
the
same
things.
What
is
science
fietion?
To
begin,
the
following
definition
should
be
helpful:science
fiction
is
a
literary
sub-genre
which
puts
forward
a
change
(for
human
beings)from
conditions
as
we
know
them
and
follows
the
implications
of
these
changes
to
aconclusion.
Although
this
definition
will
necessarily
be
modified
and
expanded,
itcovers
much
of
the
basic
groundwork
and
provides
a
point
of
departure.
The
first
point
that
science
fiction
is
a
literary
sub-gere
is
a
very
important
one,but
one
which
is
often
overlooked
or
ignored
in
most
discussions
of
science
fiction.Specifically,
science
fiction
is
either
a
short
story
or
a
novel.
There
are
only
a
fewdramas
which
could
be
called
science
fiction,
with
Karel
Capek's
RUR
(Rossum’sUniversal
Robots)
beingthe
only
one
that
is
well
known;
the
body
of
poetry
thatmight
be
labeled
science
fiction
is
only
slightly
larger.
To
say
that
science
fiction
is
asub-genre
of
fiction
is
to
say
that
it
has
all
the
basic
characteristics
and
serves
thesame
basic
functions
in
much
the
same
way
as
fiction
in
general,
that
is,it
shares
agreat
deal
with
all
other
novels
and
short
stories.
Everything
that
can
be
said
about
fiction,
in
general,
applies
to
science
fiction.Every
piece
of
science
fietion,
whether
short
story
or
novel,
must
have
a
narrator,
astory,
a
plot,
a
setting,
characters,
language,
and
theme,
And
like
any
other
kind
offiction,
the
themes
of
science
fiction
are
concerncd
with
interpreting
man's
nature
andexperience
in
relation
to
the
world
around
him.
Themes
in
science
fiction
areconstructed
and
presented
in
exactly
the
same
ways
that
themes
are
dealt
with
in
anyother
kind
of
fiction.
They
are
the
result
of
a
particular
combination
of
narrator,
story,plot,character,
setting,
and
language.
In
short,
the
reasons
for
reading
and
enjoyingsciencefiction,
and
the
ways
of
studying
and
analyzing
it,
are
basically
the
same
asthey
would
be
for
any
other
story
or
novel.62.
According
to
the
author,
the
popular
image
of
science
fiction
is_______.A.
prejudiced
B.
neutral
C.
worthy
D.
admiring63.
Science
fiction
is
called
a
literary
sub-genre
because_______.A.
it
is
not
important
enough
to
be
a
literary
genreB.
it
cannot
be
made
dramatic
presentation
C.
it
shares
characteristics
with
other
types
of
fictionD.
to
call
it
a
"genre"
would
subject
it
to
literary
item64.The
last
sentence
of
the
passage
implies
that_____.
A.
thereader
shouldturn
next
to
commentaries
on
general
fictionB.
there
is
no
reason
for
any
reader
not
to
like
science
fiction
C.
the
reader
should
compare
other
novels
and
stories
with
science
fiction
D.
those
who
can
appreciatc
other
kinds
of
fiction
can
appreciate
sciencc
fiction65.
An
appropriate
title
for
this
passage
would
be_______.A.
On
the
Inaccuracies
of
Pulp
MagazinesB.
Toward
a
Definition
of
Science
FictionC.
Abouta
Type
of
Fiction
D.
Beyond
the
Bug
Eyed
Monster
DCancer
researchers
are
leaning
to
read
genes
like
a
crystal
ball
to
predict
howpatients
will
respondto
cancer
therapy,
who
will
suffer
the
worst
side
effects
and
whattreatments
may
be
best
for
a
particular
patient.
Foreseeing
the
outcome
of
treatment,and
knowing
with
certaintywhich
drugs
are
best
for
Individual
patients,
have
longbeen
the
goals
of
cancer
researchers.For
at
least
40
years,oncologists(腫瘤學(xué)家)
have
puzzled
over
why
somepatients
respond
so
well
to
chemotherapy
while
others
obtain
modest
benefits
or
noneat
all.
The
discovery
decades
ago
that
linked
a
chromosome(染色體)
abnormality
toone
form
of
leukemia(白血病)
paved
the
way
for
the
development
ofthe
drugGleevee
by
Druker
and
the
ability
to
identify
the
patients
most
likely
to
benefit,
Morerecently,
with
the
wealth
of
knowledge
from
the
Human
Genome
Project,
researchershave
been
able
to
develop
evenmore
specific
tools
to
create
genetic
profiles
of
tumorsand
match
those
profiles
with
the
right
drugs.
The
tools
also
help
delermine
whichpatients
are
most
likely
to
experience
the
worst
side
effects
of
specific
types
ofchemotherapy
and
guide
them
to
other
treatments.Researchers
from
the
University
of
Chicago
studied
alternations(改變)
of
theUGTIA1
gene,
associatedwith
an
increased
chance
of
chemotherepy
side
etfects.Mark
Ratain
and
his
team
studied
61
colon(結(jié)腸)
cancer
patients
receivingirinotecan(化療)
and
learned
that
patients
with
alterations
of
the
gene
that
labeled
as7/7
were
most
likely
to
suffer
severe
losses
of
white
blood
cells.
Patients
with
the
6/7alteration
type
had
intermediate
side
effects,
and
patients
with
the
6/6
type
had
none.Scientists
at
the
Massachusetts
General
Hospital
examined
genes
that
normallyhave
the
ability
to
repair
damage
to
DNA
in
cells
called
XPD
and
XRCCI.
Thenurmber
of
veriations
in
these
genes
indicates
how
long
a
patient
is
likely
to
survive,Sarada
Gurubhagavatula
and
her
team
studied
variations
of
these
genes
in
103patients
diagnosed
with
advanced
non-
smallcell
lung
cancer.
Patients
with
a
totalofthree
variations
in
the
genes
survived
a
median
of
6.8
months;
those
with
twovariations
survived
11
months;
patients
with
one
variation
survived
16.6months.
Andthose
with
no
variations
survived
20.4
months.
Gurubhagavatula
says
the
variationscould
be
identified
and
those
with
the
worst
predicted
outcomes
put
an
chemotherapyplans
that
offer
better
odds
of
survival.
Scientigts
at
Cedars
Sinai
Medical
Center
and
Genomic
Health
Inc.
havedeveloped
a
way
to
test
lung
tumors
for
genetic
profiles
associated
with
responses
tothe
new
lung
cancer
drug
Iressa.
The
drug
has
been
shown
to
shrink
tunors
in
10%
to12%
of
patients
with
advanced
lung
cancer
David
Agus
at
Cedar
Sinai
found
apattern
of
185
genes
that
are
turned
off
and
on
in
a
manner
that
correlates
withresponse
to
lressa
or
to
a
lack
of
response.
When
used
commercially,
the
test
willtarget
patients
most
likely
to
benefit
and
will
allow
patients
to
make
other
choices
ifthe
negative
profile
is
found.66.
The
passage
is
mainly
about_______.
A.the
search
for
effective
cancer
treatment
drugsB.
the
goals
of
cancer
therapyC.
the
success
in
reading
genes
D.
the
advances
in
cancer
treatment
67.
Tbe
achievements
from
Human
Genome
Project
enable
researchers
to
_______.
A.
diagnose
a
chromosome
abnormality
more
accuratelyB.
develop
cancer
treatment
drugs
like
Gleevee
C.administer
cancer
treatment
with
fewer
side
effects
D
come
up
with
chemotherapy
as
an
effective
tool
for
cancertreatment68.
The
author
mentions
the
three
researches
to______.
A.
make
a
contrastive
analysis
of
them
B.
illustrate
the
achievements
in
cancer
therapy
C.
present
the
similaritiesanddifferences
betweenthemD.
show
bow
altered
genes
can
cause
cancer
69.The
undertined
word
"profile"
in
the
second
paragraph
most
probably
means______.
A.
graphic
presentationB.
scientific
discoveryC.
inherited
source
D.
specific
treatment
plan
70.
Sarada
and
her
team
are
convinced
that_______.
A.
research
on
genes
offers
them
greater
predictive
powerB.
lung
cancer
caused
by
variation
of
genes
C.
patients
can
survive
lung
cancer
by
altering
their
genes
D.
chemotherapy
can
save
the
worst
lung
cancer
patients第四部分:任務(wù)型閱讀(共10題;每小題1分,滿分10分)請(qǐng)認(rèn)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(gè)最恰當(dāng)?shù)膯卧~。注意:每個(gè)空格只填一個(gè)單詞。
Positive
thinking
is
a
significant
element
of
happiness.
In
order
tobecomeapositivethinker,determinationandconsistencyareimportant.Thefirstthing
to
knowabout
positivethinking
is
that
everyone
can
do
it
with
certain
cognitive(認(rèn)知的)andbehavioraladjustment,wecanallbecomepositivethinkers.Another
importantfactoristhatbeingapositivethinkerdoesnotmeanyoubecomenumbtoanythingthatnot
working
properly
in
your
life
or
is
negativeit
just
means
that
you
approachlifeand
face
challenges
with
a
healthier
outlook.
To
become
a
positive
thinker,
these
may
help
you:Change
your
self-monitoring
Instead
of
selectively
attending
to
negative
events,
focus
on
the
positive
ones.Then
pay
attention
to
the
delayed
consequences
of
your
behavior
ratherthan
theimmediate
ones.
For
example,
if
a
job
is
not
going
like
you
want,
focus
on
thefactthat
you
have
ajob
and
how
you
can
take
your
time
to
make
the
situation
better.Change
your
self-evaluation
Challenge
any
inaccurate
internal
attributions
and
see
if
you
compare
yourbehavior
to
standards
that
are
extremely
rigid.
If
so,
change
these
and
be
reasonablewith
your
comparisons.
For
example,
if
you
constantly
compare
your
weaknesseswith
other
peoples'
strengths,
then
switch
this
and
compare
yourself
with
those
doing
poorer
than
you
as
well.
Overall,
people
who
focus
more
on
their
strengthsthan
their
weaknesses
but
at
the
same
time
are
aware
of
their
weaknesses
have
ahealthier
self-evaluation
result.
Change
your
self-reinforcement
If
you
have
law
rates
of
self-reward
and
high
rates
of
self-
punishment
when
itcomes
to
certain
aspects
of
your
life,
then
you
need
to
adjust
this,
For
example,
thinkmore
of
how
far
you've
come,
how
hard
you've
worked,
acknowledge
yourself
for
itand
then
see
how
much
further
you
want
to
go.
Draw
conclusions
with
evidence
Look
at
the
evidence,
look
at
the
events,
look
at
patterns
and
don't
base
yourconclusions
on
assumptions.
For
example,
don't
just
assume
someone
will
cheat
you
because
they
loo
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