2026届高考英语二轮复习:语法填空(9篇)主题课件(共34张PPT)

文档属性

名称 2026届高考英语二轮复习:语法填空(9篇)主题课件(共34张PPT)
格式 pptx
文件大小 7.0MB
资源类型 教案
版本资源 通用版
科目 英语
更新时间 2025-09-23 23:37:34

图片预览

文档简介

(共34张PPT)
2025年完胜高考语法填空
(9篇)
主题:Uncommon champions
Bethany Hamilton has never been a typical surfer like all the others. She surfs “goofy footed,” with her right foot 1.________ front. Now, even more so, she goes against the norm. She surfs with one arm!
One day in late October, Bethany was sur ng at Hawaii’s Tunnel Beach. Around 7:30 A.M., a tiger shark attacked Bethany, 2.________(bite) off her left arm. Bethany 3.___________(rush) to the hospital where specialists in limb loss worked on her injury.
Bethany Hamilton’s Comeback
in
biting
was rushed

Before her attack, Bethany was ranked second from her area in amateur sur ng and was thought of as one
of the best new women surfers. She hoped to become a professional surfer. To further her plans, Bethany was
homeschooled, 4.________ gave her more time to surf.
Bethany didn’t put her plans for the future to the
side. She would not let the attack put her in a peripheral position. Instead, she moved back into the limelight when she returned to the water about four weeks after the
attack. Three months later, she received a prosthetic arm and competed 5.__________(national).
which
nationally
With the help and 6.__________(guide) of both her coach and her father, Bethany has been encouraged to
keep up the sport and she continues to improve. Because she returned so quickly and works so hard, her 7.________(surf) skills have not deteriorated.
guidance
sur ng
She competed in the National Scholastic Sur ng Association meet in Hawaii and took 8._________( ve) place. In worldwide competitions, she shows her maturity, or development, as a person and as a surfer, refusing to let her work before the attack represent the summit, 9.________ peak, of her sur ng career. She continues to progress with each contest. “I’m an athlete rst, with a great second story,” Bethany said to a reporter.
fth
or
Bethany has received an award as best comeback athlete, which is proof of her athletic ability and a testament to her personal strength. This young woman
is 10._______ awesome example for athletes around the world. She is a picture of courage and grace in the face of tremendous challenges.
an
Erik Weihenmayer thrust his ice ax into the deep snow, hoping 1._________(grip) a hold long enough to catch his breath. The howling winds, gusting up to 100 miles per hour, 2._________(roar) like a fleet of jet planes. To communicate with his climbing partners, Erik had to scream 3.___________(hear). It was only 3,000 more feet to the summit, but Erik’s team was 4.___________(hopeless) trapped for five days in a blizzard on the high slopes of Mt. McKinley.
Seeing Things His 0wn Way
to grip
roared
to be heard

hopelessly
At 20,320 feet, Alaska’s Mt. McKinley is the highest peak in North America. Freezing temperatures, sudden avalanches, and devastating storms make 5.______ one
of the most difficult mountains in the world to climb. Nearly one hundred climbers have lost their lives there after falling into deep crevasses or being blown off the
face by gale-force winds. For even the most 6.____________(experience) mountaineers and rugged explorers, climbing McKinley is the challenge of a lifetime.
it
experienced
Imagine climbing such a treacherous peak without being able to see a single step. That is the task that Erik Weihenmayer faced in June 1995. Erik is 7.___________(complete) blind, having lost his vision at age thirteen due 8.________ a condition he was born
with called retinoschisis. 9._______ blindness has never stopped him from living an exciting life and pursuing adventures most of us only dream about.
completely
to
But
“I am not a daredevil,” Erik explains. “I have 10._______ healthy fear and respect of the mountains,
but I believe with proper training and skill a blind
person can tackle some awesome challenges.”
a
From a young age, life 1._________(it) proved to be a challenge for Erik. When he was a three-month-old baby, Erik’s eyes began to quiver and shake. His parents were 2._________(alarm) and brought him to teams of specialists over a year and a half. The doctors diagnosed his problem 3._________ retinoschisis, a rare condition that causes pressure to build in the retina until it disintegrates, eventually 4._________(lead) to blindness. To view something directly in front of him Erik would have to
Seeing Things His 0wn Way
itself
alarmed
as

leading
look up, down, or sideways. He relied on his peripheral
(side) vision to navigate his neighborhood and to do
daily chores 5._________ tasks.
and
But Erik hated to be treated 6.__________(different), so he learned to compensate for his poor vision. When he played basketball with friends, they helped him cover the court by 7.________(play) zone defenses. They also learned to feed him the ball with a bounce pass. “Erik would hear a bounce pass,” his father, Ed Weihenmayer, explains. “But lots of passes hit him in the face anyway. After most games Erik had a bloody nose and looked as if he was playing football, not basketball.”
differently
playing
With the help of family and friends, Erik was encouraged to find creative ways to participate in everyday activities. When his brothers raced their mountain bikes over a ramp, Erik joined in, but sometimes he rode off the edge, picking up scraped knees for his efforts. Though he rarely complained or showed his frustration, Erik’s family was aware of his 8._________(struggle). His father solved the bike problem by painting the ramp bright orange. After two more months of bike stunts on the ramp, however, Erik’s eyesight had deteriorated to the point that the ramp became an orange blur. He rode off his driveway one day and broke his arm. ”
struggles
Despite his failing vision Erik continued his attempts to blend in and be like everyone else. Frequently he walked into trees or doors, and he had constant bruises and black-and-blue shins. “I guess it was a lack of maturity on my part,” Erik admits. “It was a sense of 9._________(deny). I refused to learn to read Braille or to use a cane, even 10.__________ I needed one for my own safety.”
denial
though
By the time he was thirteen, Erik’s eyesight was completely 1._________(go). At first he tried to function without the use of canes or visual aids, but that proved 2.__________(danger). While visiting his grandparents, he stepped off a dock and fell eight feet into a boat. Though unharmed by the incident, it shook 3._______(he) up. Out of sheer desperation, Erik came to accept his 4.__________(blind).
Seeing Things His 0wn Way
gone
dangerous
him

blindness
“I realized that if I got good at using the systems for 5.________ blind I would blend in 6.________(well) and be more like everyone else,” he says. “If I didn’t use my cane, I would be stumbling about, and that would make me stand out more.”
the
better
At fifteen Erik joined his high school’s wrestling team.
Because the sport depends on physical contact, strength, 7.________ instinct, Erik found he could compete on even terms with his opponents. He did not win a match as a freshman, but by his senior year he 8.__________(choose) team captain and sported a 30-3-3 record. He was selected to represent Connecticut 9.________ the National Freestyle Wrestling Championships and went on 10.__________(wrestle) at Boston College.
and
was chosen
in
to wrestle
Just as Erik was beginning to accept his blindness and
learning 1.__________(function) in a sightless world, tragedy struck hard. 2._________ he was away at summer wrestling camp, Erik’s mother was killed in an automobile accident. The loss was devastating, but Erik’s father exerted extra efforts to spend more time with his children. As a way to bring the family 3.__________(close), Ed Weihenmayer brought his children together for adventurous treks around the world. Among many other journeys, they visited the Batura Glacier in Pakistan and the Inca ruins at Machu Picchu in Peru.
Seeing Things His 0wn Way
to function
While
closer

“4.________(face) his mother’s death and blindness
so close together was difficult,” Ed recalls. “But Erik never used them as 5.________ excuse for not measuring up and going for 6._______.” Rock-climbing trips to New Hampshire and other travels with his family whet Erik’s
appetite for adventure. He soon became a skillful rock 7.________(climb), scuba diver, and sky diver.
Facing
an
it
climber
After getting his master’s degree from Lesley College in Massachusetts, Erik was hired to teach at an elementary school in Phoenix, Arizona. Managing a class of lively fifth graders was a challenge equal to any Erik 8.______________(undertake), 9._______ he loved his work and handled it well. “My dad worked on Wall Street for thirty years,” he says. “He struggled 10.________(find)
meaning in his work. I don’t have that struggle as a teacher.”
had undertaken
but
to find
The students in his classes quickly realize that Erik needs their help to make learning work for them. With his guidance they devise systems to communicate and get things done. Students pitch in taking turns writing on the board, hanging posters, and 1.________(pass) out papers. 2.__________ the class could take advantage of their
sightless teacher, they rarely do. In fact, they fall over each other 3._______(be) the first to fill his dog’s water bowl.
Seeing Things His 0wn Way
passing
Although
to be

As he settled into his teaching job, Erik and a buddy filled their weekends 4._________ climbing trips to the rock faces and mountains of Arizona. On the higher slopes Erik and his partners devised a climbing language 5.___________ the lead climber would call out. If a
teammate shouted, “Iceberg ahead,” for example, Erik understood that a pointy rock 6.__________(stick) out of the ground was in his path.
with
that /which
sticking
7.________ cry of “ankle breaker” 8.__________(mean) that little loose rocks lay ahead. By learning to follow in the 9.__________(footstep) of his partners and to rely on his other senses, Erik took on the tallest peaks in Africa 10.________ North and South America with his climbing friends.
meant
A
footsteps
and
“Feeling the rock under my hand, feeling the wind and sensing I am 1._________(hundred) of feet above tree line is 2._______ incredible experience,” Erik says. “It’s exciting to work on a team 3._______ a common goal.” 4._______ great is his love of the mountains that Erik and his wife, Ellen, were wed at a rock altar 13,000 feet up the slopes of Mt. Kilimanjaro in Tanzania.
Seeing Things His 0wn Way
hundreds
an
for

So
But pulling yourself up a sheer rock wall, balancing on an icy ridge, and 5.__________(handle) sub-zero temperatures can prove frustrating for any mountaineer, 6.__________(particular) one who is blind. While climbing Mt. Rainier in 1985 Erik discovered he could not set up his tent in the freezing weather 7._________ his bulky gloves covering his hands. In typical fashion he refused 8.__________(admit) failure. “I was so embarrassed that I resolved never 9._________(let) that happen again,” he says. “When I returned to Phoenix, I practiced setting up a tent in the one-hundred-degree heat with gloves on over and over. 10._______ is no longer a problem for me.”
handling
particularly
with
to admit
to let
It
Careful planning and practice have always helped Erik work around the problems 1._________(cause) by his lack of vision. 2.__________(prepare) for the risky climb up Mt. McKinley, Erik’s team practiced on Mt. Rainier in Washington and Long’s Peak in Colorado. Back in Phoenix, Erik and a teammate strapped on fifty-pound packs and raced up 3._________ down the stairs of a forty-story skyscraper to build 4._________(strong) and endurance.
Seeing Things His 0wn Way
caused
To prepare
and

strength
Before the McKinley trip, Erik’s climbing group, 5.________ called itself Team High Sights, secured the sponsorship of the American Foundation for the Blind.
“I was 6.________(hope) that my climb would make a statement” Erik says.
hopeful
which
Huddling in their ice-coated tents 7.________ 17,000 feet, Team High Sights 8.__________(force) to wait out a five-day storm on Mt. McKinley. Their food supply was dwindling and all that could be seen of the summit was a plume of snow blowing hundreds of feet into the air. 9.________ the storm let up, all hope of reaching the summit would have to be abandoned. On the sixth day they heard on 10.________(they) weather radio the news they’d been waiting for: There would be a twelve-hour period of clear weather in which to reach the summit and return before the next storm system closed off the mountain.
was forced
at
Unless
their
Strapping on their ice shoes and insulated gear, the climbers tied 1.___________(they) together with sturdy rope. Pushing through thigh-deep snow 2.________(be) exhausting work, but Team High Sights 3.________(careful) moved up the mountain. For Erik, the climb to the summit seemed endless. At the top of a knife-edge ridge his ski pole 4.________(slip) and all he could feel was air. “I was concentrating very hard with each step,” he explains. “Finally I took a step and my friend Stacey said, ‘Congratulations, you’re on the top of North America.’ ”
Seeing Things His 0wn Way
themselves
was
carefully

slipped
5.________ tears in their eyes, the climbers embraced and snapped photographs of each other. Erik held aloft a pair of banners—one designed by a girl at his school, 6.________ one for the American Foundation for the Blind. After fifteen minutes at the peak, the team headed down, safely 7.________(make) their way back to a 8.________(low) camp.
and
With
making
lower
The climb to the top of Mt. McKinley was a proud accomplishment for Erik, and one that he hopes provides 9.___________(inspire) for others. “Before McKinley I never thought I was extremely tough,” Erik says. “I always felt I had the potential to do much more. I hope my climb proves that we can all push beyond 10._______ we think we can do.”
inspiration
what
Having climbed McKinley, the highest mountain in North America, Erik is well on the way to meeting one of his climbing goals. In the next few years he plans to summit the highest peak on each continent, including Mt. Everest in Asia. He has learned to step around every obstacle in his path, and though it will be a difficult task, Erik knows there is no reason a blind man cannot sit atop the tallest mountain in the world.
Thanks