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沐阳县潼阳中学届高三年级阶段性2017英语质量检测试题(ID本试卷分第I卷(选择题)和第n卷(非选择题)两部分,共计wo分考试时间wo分钟第I卷(选择题,共计65分)第一部分英语知识运用(共两节,满分35分)第一节单项填空(共15小题;每小题1分,满分15分)从下列每题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑
21.As isknown to all,pandas arenative toChina,that is,China ishome topandas.A.the;the B.the;/C./;the D./;/
1..1am about what Isay becausecareless remarks are likelyto hurtothers feelings.A.enthusiastic B.concerned C.doubtful D.cautious
23.When theAmericans to the Britishraising taxrates,the Britishincreased controlover theirAmericancolonies,stationing soldiersthere.A.objected B.opposed C.submitted D.appealed
24.一Do youmind ifI closethe window—.We shouldlet inmore freshair.A.Yes,go ahead.B.Of coursenotC・I wouldlike toclose it D.Fd appreciateit ifyou didnt
25.In thedark forests,some largeenough tohold severalEnglish towns.A.stand many lakes B.lie many lakesC.manylakeslie D.manylakesstand
26.My daughteris notpresent at the awardceremony,so Iwill receive the prizeher.A.on behalfof B.in honorof C.on accountof D.in favorof
27.I dontknow the reason you were absentfrom themeeting,but Iam surethat someonewilltell methereasonyou haventtold me.A.of which;that B.why;why C.because;which D.why;that
28.—Jerry,where didyou guysgo for the summervacation—We busywith ourwork,or wewould havegone toBrazil towatch thegames.A.were B.have beenC.had beenD.would betheirenvironment,despite thefact that they areoften ratherobvious.In casesof change blindness,the personisntfailing to notice smallor insignificantchanges,but willprobably missbig changes,like someonestanding next to themwavingtheir hand.Early experimentswith change blindness focusedlargely onmemory andperception whenviewing pictures.Forexample,a personmight be shown aphotograph of a streetscene inEgypt andtold tomemorize theimage.Followingthat,they wouldbeshownthe samepicture withcertain elementsadded ortaken awayand asked to identifywhafsdifferent.Very oftenthe individualcould recall the largeraspects of the picturebut couldntrecognize the smallerchanges.In the1990s,researcher DanielSimons conducteda fascinatingstudy into changeblindnessthat manypeople findunbelievable.In Simons study,he askedparticipants towatch avideo of a basketballbeing passedaround betweenseveralpeople,with aparticular focus on the basketball itself.When theexperiment wasover,Simons foundthat alargenumber ofparticipants wereso focused on watchingthe basketballbeing passedaround that they failed to noticea manin a gorillasuit jumpingaround infront of the camera.Its importantto notethat thechange inSimons videowasnt subtle;the gorillais veryobviously takingup muchofthe frame.Simons concluded that participants were experiencinginattentional blindness,which iswhen a person failstonotice amajor changebecause they are sofocusedonanother task.In thiscase,because participantswere askedto focuson the movementof thebasketball,their brainsprioritized thattask in order to do itproperly,thereby missingthe otherthingshappening in the video.In thecase ofSimonsstudy,participants engagedwhats referredto asattentional selection,which iswhen apersonselects certainthings tofocus oninorderto achievea taskand filtersout anythingthat isunrelated to theobjective.There area number of theoriesabout whatcauses a persons inabilityto recognizeobvious changes in theirenvironment,but mostagree that the phenomenonis relatedto sensoryprocessing.Broadly speaking,our brainshave alimitedcapacity todetect andprocess everythingin ourenvironment.Instead,what thebrain doesis choosecertainthings toprocess,evaluate,and store,which allowsother things to bemissed orfiltered out.In simpleterms,changeblindnesshas agreat dealto dowith wherea persondirects their attention.In thecase ofthegorilla and thebasketball,people focusedtheirattentionalmost exclusivelyon onething,which causedthem tomissother elementsor changes.Given thatattention isoften atthe rootof changeblindness,apersonsage ormental andphysicalhealth caninfluence howwell theywill noticechanges instimuli.Change Blindness71▲of Change blindness is a surprisingperceptual phenomenon that occurs when aperson recognizeschangeblindness minorchangesinscenes whilelarge changesgo72A•The main73▲of earlyexperiments wasmemory andperception.Experiments with•Individuals werefound to be74▲at recallingthesmallerdetails in the samechangeblindnesspicture previouslyshown to them.•In Simonsstudy,participantswereaskedtopay specialattention to the75_____________▲basketball,during whichtime aman wearinga gorillasuit unexpectedlywalked throughthescene.Research in the•Contrary topopular belief,with theirattention fixedon thebasketball,many participantsreported1990sthat thegorilla^76▲their notice.•It isconcludedthatparticipants failto recognizesomething bigbut unrelatedto theobjectivewhen theirbrains areprogrammed toconsider sometask asa top77A•The brainmakes79▲aboutwhatto bedealt withbecause of its limitedcapacity.78▲of•Although attentionis closely80▲tochangeblindness,age and health areotherchange blindnessfactorsthat playa role.第五部分读写任务(满分25分)阅读下面的短文,然后按要求写一篇150字左右的英语短文A boyfound an eagles eggandheput itin thenest ofa hen.The eaglehatchedand thoughthe was a chicken.He grewup doingwhat chickensdo-scratching forfood andflying shortdistances.It was a dulllife.Gradually theeaglegrew olderand bitter.One dayhe andhis chickenfriends saw a beautifulbirdsoaring on the currentsof air,high abovethe mountains.“Oh,I wishI couldfly likethat!”said the eagle.The chickenreplied,Dont giveit anotherthought.Thafs themighty强大的eagle,the kingof allbird-you couldnever belike him!^^And tileeagle didntgiveit anotherthought.He wenton cacklingand complainingabout life.He diedthinking hewasa chicken.My friends,you toowere bornan eagle.The Creatorintended youto be an eagle,so dontlisten to the chickens!【写作内容】
1.以大约30个词概括上文的主要内容
2.以大约120个词谈谈你对“自信”的看法,内容包括:⑴鹰成为鸡的原因;⑵这则故事的启示【写作要求】
1.可以参照阅读材料的内容,但不得直接引用原文中的句子;
2.作文中不能出现真实姓名和学校名称届高三年级阶段性英语质量检测试卷()参考答案2017n第二部分(英语知识应用)单项选择21-25DDADB26-30ADACA31-35DACDD完形填空36-40CBABD41-45CADAB46-50ACCBD51-55ACBDB阅读理解56-60DABDD61-65CACAC66-70DADCA任务阅读
71.Definition/Concept
72.unnoticed
73.focus
74.poor
75.moving
76.escaped
77.priority
78.Causes
79.choices
80.related/linked第五部分(书面表达)One possibleversion:Hatched bya hen,aneaglelived likea chicken.He wantedto flylike aneagle butdiscouraged byhisfellows.Eventually hedied bitterlywithout knowinghe himselfwas aneagle.Some factorsmay accountfor whythe eaglewas madeachicken.Firstly,theeaglewas influencedby the chickensaround him,scratching forfood justlike themwithout ahigher goal.Secondly,the eaglefailedto reflecton himselfso hedidnt knowhe hadthe potentialto flyhigh.Finally,he lackedenoughself-confidence,so hegave uphis dreamof flyinglike aneagle Justbecause of the discouragingwordsfrom others.There aremany sucheagles in our dailylife.I thinkwe shouldavoid negativeinfluences,set ahighgoal andwork hardto achieveit.Besides,we mustbe confidentinourpotential andmake gooduse ofitinto becomereal eagles.
29.Im verylucky tohave acomfortable life,there9s alwaysfood on the table,heat in the winter,and,above all,love inhouse.A.which B.when C.where D.whom
30.the jointefforts madeby the people ofHangzhou,preparatory workfor G20Summit has a success.A.Thanks toB.In termsof C.With regardto D.In addition to
31.一Do youknow thatprevents somany citizensfrom beinghappy一Im surelow incomeis the main reason.A.why isit B.what isit C.why it is D.what itis
32.Nowadays,more andmore studentstend toonline coursesinstead oftaking coursesat thetrainingcenter.A.subscribe toB.appeal toC.adapt toD.stick to
33..He didntmake clearwhen andwhere themeeting wouldbe held.A.this B.that C.itD.these
34.President XiJinping madean inspectiontour ofBeijing NormalUniversity on the eveofTeachers*Day,saying Tobecome agood teacher,one musthave loftyideals,good,solid knowledgeand akindheart.nA.interests B.regulations C.identities D.virtues
35.---Are youcontent withthe resultof theexam---Not alittle.I canthave one.A.a worseB.the worseC.the betterD.a better第二节完形填空(共20小题;每小题1分,满分20分)请认真阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑I wasgoing throughmy sonMatthews backpackwhen Isaw anenvelope in the bottomofit.Immediately,I knewit wasa“thank you”card fromone ofhis36,Totally notnecessary sincemyChristmas giftstothemare myway ofsaying,Thank you”.I37I readit quickly.And thenI stopped.I38the cardand readit again.One wordcaught myattention.love working with our Matthew.One word.Our.That oneword39the meaningof thesentence forme.If shehad written“I loveworking withMatthew,I wouldknowthat sheloves workingwith myson.40by addingthat oneword,“our,it meant“I loveworkingwiththis boywho41here,is acceptedhere andwe alltakeresponsibility incaring for.”I42knew thisof course,see ablog Iwrote previously,but itsalways goodto be43Inthat blogpost I mentioned tenreasons whyhis44is theright placefor him.Since thatblog wehavehad hisIEP IndividualizedEducation Programmeeting,where Iwas45of thatfeeling again.In thatmeeting,someone46Everyone lovesMatthew.We alllove Matthew”.And it was genuineand
47.As wewentaround the room and the staff48usoninformation aboutMatthew,itwasapparent itwent waybeyond sharingwhat heis doing49and behaviorally.Eachperson hada uniquelittle50to tellabout Matthew.Stories thatshow thatthey reallyknow whoMatthewis and thatthey51him.In factjust todayI hadwritten anote inhis communicationbook thatitwas52Matthew toseenew snowand notbe able to playin it.Later in the dayI gotan emailand apicture ofMatthew53with snowin abig containerinside theschool.As Iwas reflectingon this,I realizedthat asa familywe arereally lucky54school isnttheonly placewhere theythink ofhim asourMatthew”.It55to otherparts ofour livesas well—
36.A.classmates B.friends C.teachers D.doctors
37.A.realize B.admit C.imagine D.predict
38.A.opened upB.tore upC.put awayD.gave away
39.A.simplified B.changed C.determined D.created
40.A.Or B.And C.So D.But
41.A.stays B.lives C.belongs D.remains
42.A.already B.also C.even D.still
43.A.reached B.accepted C.adored D.reminded
44.A.school B.book C.home D.room
45.A.informed B.assured C.suspected D.cured
46.A.commented B.insisted C.guaranteed D.recalled
47.A.formal B.casual C.sincere D.severe
48.A.advised B.judged C.updated D.congratulated
49.A.accurately B.academically C.steadily D.securely
50.A.secret B.lie C.joke D.story
51.A.get B.greet C.envy D.embarrass
52.A.calming B.inducing C.killing D.inspiring
53.A.meeting B.playing C.fighting D.dealing
54.A.until B.unless C.though D.because
55.A.flies B.extends C.applies D.switchesour friends,our family,our neighborhood,and ourchurch.第三部分阅读理解(共15小题;每小题2分,满分30分)请认真阅读下列短文,从短文后各题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑It mightsound unbelievablethat twokids underthe ageof tenwould chooseto hangout ata hotelinstead ofgoing toDisney World,just minutesaway,but thatsexactly whathappened whenwe visitedthe newFour SeasonsResortOrlando atWalt DisneyWorld Resortlast month.What kindofahotel makeskids forgetabout DisneyWorldCheck In:As Iwas signingthe necessarypaperwork atthe frontdesk,my kidswere takenaway byWayne,thereceptionist,toalarge interactivemap of the resortin theentrance hall.Wayne usedthe touchscreen toshow thekids theentireresort andtalked about all of the funthingstodo,like thekids club,the waterslides,and thegame room.Ive neverseenso muchattention paidtothekids atcheck-in—such acool touch.The Room:Not onlywere therekid-sized robesin theroom,there wereplay things,NatGeo Kidsmagazines,chocolate lollypops,and milkchilling in the refrigerator.Plus,theroomwas designedfrom afamily perspective.Thesinks andshower settingswere easilyreachable,and theking bedand verycomfortable sofapull-out couldeasily fitafamily offour,if notfive.We hadplenty ofroom.The Pools:There5salarge shallow infinity pool.Theres ameandering lazyriver.Theres awater park.Theres anareafor poolvolleyball andbasketball.And thereare twovery funwaterslides.We spentmany hoursroaming amongthemall,and justhanging outin aprivate teepee-shaped cabananexttothe waterslides.So fun!No Surcharges:Theres noresort fee.If you want touse oneof thecool cabanasaround thepools,its included.Forthe kidsclub,you canuse itas muchor aslittle asyouwantto and the Hideoutgame roomhasa lot ofactivities,likepinball,at no cost.We tookadvantage ofpretty mucheverything aroundthe hotelexcept forthe spa,and ourfinal billonlyshowed ourroom charges,taxes,and meals.And ifmy kidswere stillunder five,their mealswould havebeen free.
56.The passageis writtenby the author mainlyto.A.advertise ahotel atWalt DisneyWorld ResortB.introduce thegood serviceWalt DisneyprovidesC.recalltheexperience thatthey oncehad ina hotelD.share informationaboutahotel nearDisneyWorld
57.Customers dontneed topay forwhen theystay inthe hotel.A.cool cabanasB.rooms C.the spaD.taxes
58.What canwe learnfrom the passageA.The hotelisnt anideal choicefor afamily ofmore thanfour.B.The twokids oftheauthorshould havebeen overfive yearsold.C.The authorspent hoursplaying poolvolleyball andbasketball.D.The receptionistshowed childrenaround DisneyWorld Resort.More than100million peoplein Nigeriaare notconnected tothe Internet.There areonly afew networksthat offerserviceand itis costlyand undependable.Now,a newproject providesa resourcefor offlineviewing at nocost.A non-profit organizationcalled TheWiderNet Projecthas developedthe offlineeGranary Digital Library.Theservice putsmillions ofdigital documents,multimedia workand websitesonto aserver.The informationis thenavailableto students,medical workers,and researchersatnocost,whether thereis Internetor not.Users can access informativewebsites thateGranary updatesevery daysuch asWikipedia,Khan Academy,ProjectGutenberg,MIT OpenCourse Ware,and MITBLOSSOMS which is Mathand Sciencevideo lessonsfor highschoolstudents.Other resourceson the service includeuniversity andmedical publications,computer software,and educationalgames.Ahmadu BelloUniversity,the largestuniversity in Nigeria and the secondlargest inAfrica,uses eGranarysdigitaleducational resources.Kasa Mathias,head ofthe schooPsdatabase department,says studentscanaccesstens ofthousandsof educational materials withoutmuch problem.“We givethem backgroundinformation onthe availabledatabases thatthey canuse fortheir researchwork,theirassignments,especially projects,and sometimeswe willcarry themthrough sensitizing激5舌on newdatabases thatareavailable forthem.^^Ibitoye Idowu,a first-year studentof archeology,says easyaccess touniversity reading material,documents andjournalshas greatlyhelped hisstudying process,andthatin somecases,he understandsthe digitalmaterials betterthanclass lectures.Students nowhave greatreadingmaterial,but onlywhen thereis electricpower.It oftenfails.Student IbitoyeIdowusays thosemoments aredifficult.Muhammed Muazuwho leadsthe Electricaland ComputerEngineering Departmentsays theuniversity hasspent alarge amount ofmoney onaccess toinformation,whichis available for40,000students andteachers.“With orwithout Internetaccess studentsand staffhave mostof theseeducational databasesand universityhas alsoinvestedalotin Internetaccess soeven foronline materialstheyarereadily availablefor staffand studentsanywhere youareintheuniversity campus.”There arefears thatstudents maywaste timeon socialmedia networkslike Facebookand Twitterinstead ofspendingit onschool work.Professor Muazusays theuniversity needs to becareful aboutplacing restrictionson usage.But hesaysit willinvestigate whata useris accessingif alargeamountof bandwidthis used.Muhammed Muazucompares thespeed ofthe offlineservice toaccess over the Internet.The eGranaryserver candownloadhundreds ofpages inless than15minutes.In thepast,a10-page documentwould takehours todownload.WiderNet saysit aimsto expandto thousandsmore educationand health centers aroundthe world.
59.The eGranaryDigital Libraryis mainlyintended for.A.poor peoplein NigeriaB.Ahmadu BelloUniversityC.teachers andstaff ofa universityD.people whocant accessthe Internet
60.The underlinedword“them”in Paragraph5probably refersto.A.educationalmaterialsB.available databasesC.assignments andprojects D.university students
61.Which ofthe followingis TRUEaccording tothe passageA.Offline eGranaryDigital Libraryis availableto over100million peopleinNigerianow.B.A universityneedstopay fortheserviceof eGranaryDigitalLibraryto offerit tostudents.C.The powersupply becomesthe mainchallenge studentsface whenusing offlineproject.D.Education andhealthcentersintheworld willall useeGranarydigital educationalresources.CScientists haveknown fordecades thathaving measles(麻疹)suppresses kidsimmune systemsfbr severalweeksor months,leaving themill-equipped tofight offpneumonia,bronchitis andother infections.Now ateam ofresearchers hassuggested thatthe measlesvirus mayalso leavea longer-lasting sort of“immune-amnesia”that makesit harderfor peopleto staveo代other illnessesfor twoyears ormore.That re-emphasizes theimportance ofvaccination(疫苗),said biologistMichael Mina,lead authorofapaper thatwas published inthe journalScience.“There may bealong-lasting impactthat youcant undoif yourchild getsmeasles Jhe said.I hopethis studycanimpress uponpeople thedanger measlesposes.”The researchersused whatMina called“an unconventionalapproach“to searchfbr thelong-lasting immune systemeffects.Previous work in monkeyssuggested thatmonkeys withthe diseaselost whiteblood cellstheir bodieshad trainedtofight offother illnesses,leaving themmore likelyto beinfected.To testif asimilar thingmay occurin humans,the groupmined historical data tofind out the relationshipbetweenmeasles incidence(发病率)and deaths from other infectious diseases.They turnedto datafrom England and Wales-developed nationswhere disease levels are generally low,allowing aless-confused view of measleseffects.Studying measles incidence anddeaths frominfectious diseaseboth beforeandafter theintroduction ofthe measlesvaccine inthe U.K.inthe1960s,Mina andthe teamsawa sortof shadow effect,where deathsfrom avariety ofnon-measles infectiousdiseases closelytracked measles incidence.The moremeaslesinapopulation,the moredeathsfromother illnessesinthe28-month periodthat followed.“Really itdidnt matterwhat agegroup,what decadeor whatcountry/9said Mina.They allshowed consistentresults...what weresuggesting happensover thelong termis that your immunesystem worksfine,but ithas forgottenwhatit previouslylearned.”Some researcherswho were not involved inthework questionedwhether thereductions indeaths asmeasles casesdeclinedmay havehad moretodowith improvingnutrition andsmaller familysize thanwith prolongedimmunesuppression.Others thoughtthe papersopinion ofyears-long suppressionwas seeminglyreasonable butsaid theycould notcommentonthemathematical modelsthe groupused.To knowfor certainwhat wasbehind theeffect thegroup saw,Mina agreed,scientists wouldneed tolook atimmunecells andobserve theirbehavior.He saidhe wouldlike topush theworkina moretraditional direction:back intothelaboratory.
62.Why didMina calltheir researchmethod“an unconventionalapproach”?A.Their researchwas basedonthehistoricaldata.B.Their researchcompared monkeyswith humans.C.They onlypaid attentionto developed nations.D.They discoveredasortofshadoweffect.
63.According toMina,what is the significanceof theirresearchA.They warnedpeople thatmeasles canresult inotherinfectiousdiseases.B.They carriedout theresearch onmeaslesinan unconventionalapproach.C.They showedhow dangerousmeasles isandtheimportance ofvaccination.D.They foundoutthediseaselevelsaregenerallylowindevelopednations..
64.The underlinedphrase“stave off9in Paragraph2is closestin meaningto.A.keep awayB.survive fromC.search forD.turn down
65.Which ofthe followingmaybethe besttitle ofthe passageA.Measles hasbeen theorigin ofother diseasesand deathsB.New researchconducted intomeasles hasbeen widelyquestionedC.Study pointsto years-long immunesystem misfortunesfrom measlesD.Damage causedby measlestotheimmunesystemcould lastseveral weeksDSvetlanaAlexandrovna Alexievich,born on31May1948,isaBelarusian investigativejournalist andnon-fictionprose writer,writing inRussian.She wasawarded the2015Nobel Prizein Literaturefor herpolyphonic writings,amonument tosuffering andcourage inour time”.She isthe firstwriter fromBelarus toreceivetheaward.Alexievich grewup in Belarus.After finishingschool sheworked asa reporterin severallocal newspapersbeforegraduating fromBelarusian StateUniversity andbecoming ajournalist forthe literarymagazine Nemanin Minsk.She wentontoa careerin journalismand writingnarratives frominterviews withwitnesses tothe mostdramaticevents inthe country,such asWorld War II,the Soviet-Afghan War,the fallofthe Soviet Union,andthe Chernobyldisaster.After politicalpersecution迫害by the Lukashenko administration,she leftBelarus in
2000.The InternationalCitiesof RefugeNetwork offeredher shelterand during the followingdecade shelived inParis,Gothenburg andBerlin.In2011,Alexievich movedback toMinsk.According toRussian writerand criticDmitry Bykov,her booksowe muchtotheideas ofBelarusian writerAlesAdamovich,who feltthatthebest wayto describethe horrorsofthe20th centurywas notby creatingfiction butthroughrecording theevidence ofwitnesses.Belarusian poetUladzimir Nyaklyayewcalled Adamovich“her literarygodfather,\He alsonamed thedocumentary novelImfrom theBurned Villageby Ales Adamovich,Janka Bryland UladzimirKalesnik,about thevillages burnedbytheNazi troopsduringtheoccupation ofBelarus,as themain singlebook thathasinfluenced Alexievich,s attitudeto literature.Alexievich admittedthe influenceof Adamovichand added,among others,Belarusian writerVasil Bykauas anothersource ofimpact onher.Her mostnotable worksin Englishtranslation includeacollection offirst-hand accountsfrom the war inAfghanistan{Zinky Boys:Soviet Voices from aForgotten Warand ahighlypraised oralhistory oftheChernobyldisaster Voices from Chernobyl.Alexievich describesthe theme of her works thisway:If youlook backatthewhole ofour history,both Sovietandpost-Soviet,itisa hugecommon graveandablood bath.An eternaldialogue ofthe executionersandthevictims.Theaccursed Russianquestions:what istobedone andwho isto blame.The revolution,the gulags,the SecondWorld War,theSoviet-Afghan warhidden from thepeople,the downfallofthegreat empire,the downfallofthegiant socialistland,the land-utopia,and nowa challengeof cosmicdimensions-Chernobyl.This isa challengefor allthe livingthings onearth.Such isour history.And this isthetheme ofmy books,thisismy path,my circlesof hell,from manto man.Her firstbook,Wars UnwomanlyFace,came outin
1985.It wasrepeatedly reprintedand soldmore thantwomillion copies.The book was finishedin1983and publishedin shortedition inOktyabr,a Sovietmonthly literarymagazine,in February
1984.In1985,the bookwaspublished by severalpublishers,andthenumberofprinted copiesreached2,000,000inthenext fiveyears.This novelis madeup ofmonologues独白of womeninthewar speakingaboutthe aspectsof WorldWar IIthat hadnever beenrelated before.Another book,The LastWitnesses:the BookofUnchildlike Stories,describes personalmemories ofchildren duringwar time.The warseen throughwomens andchildrenseyes revealeda newworld offeelings.In1993,she publishedEnchanted withDeath,a bookabout attemptedandcompleted suicidesdue tothe downfalloftheSoviet Union.Many peoplefelt inseparablefrom theCommunistideology andunable toaccept thenew ordersurely andthe newlyinterpreted history.Her bookswerenotpublishedby Belarusian state-owned publishinghouses after1993,while privatepublishers inBelarushave onlypublished twoof herbooks:VoicesfromChernobyl in1999and Second-hand Timein2013,bothtranslated intoBelarusian.As aresult,Alexievich hasbeen betterknown inthe restof worldthan inBelarus.
66.According tothepassage,Alexievich wasabletowin the2015Nobel Prizein Literaturemainly because.A.she issuperior toother writersin literatureB.she isthe greatestjournalist allovertheworldC.she witnessedthe mostdramatic eventsinBelarusD.her worksreflected thesuffering andcourage inher time
67.Who playeda significantrole inAlexievichs literaryworldA.AlesAdamovichand Vasil Bykau.B.Dmitry Bykovand AlesAdamovich.C.Uladzimir Kalesnikand JankaBryl.D.VasilBykauand UladzimirNyaklyayew.
68.Which ofthe followingis TRUEabout Alexievich^first bookA.It wasnot until5years laterthatthebookwaswell received.B.It iswritten from the viewpointof womenand childreninvolvedinthewar.C.It wasfirst publishedbyBelarusianstate-owned publishinghouses in
1984.D.It revealssomething unknownabout WorldWarIItothepublic.
69.What canwe knowfromthethemeofAlexievich9s worksA.She discusseswho isto blameforthewars inherworks.B.She takesa practicalviewofthe futurefor hermotherland.C.Her worksshow sorrowand sympathyfor warvictims andher country.D.Her worksmerely focusedonthedisasters theBelarusian experienced.
70.What canbe inferredfromthepassageA.Some peoplewere dependentontheSoviet Unionwith affection.B.Women andchildren arethemaincharacters ofAlexievichs works.C.VoicesfromChernobyl publishedin1999was writtenin Belarusian.D.Alexievich hasbeen highlyrespected bytheLukashenkoadministration.第口卷非选择题(共计35分)部分任务型阅读(共10小题,每小题1分,满分10分)请认真阅读下列短文,并根据所读内容在文章后表格中的空格里填入最恰当的单词注意每空格只填个单词请将答案写在答题卡上相应题号的横线上1Have youever beenso absorbedinaconversation ata partythat youfailedtonotice thatsomeone newis standingonlysix inchesaway fromyou,trying toget yourattention Itspossible thatyou wereso distractedthatyoudidnt noticesomeoneapproaching you.But ifsalso entirelylikely thatyouwereexperiencing changeblindness.Changeblindnessisaphenomenonthatoccurswhenapersonis unabletonoticevisual changesin。
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