2022届高考英语一轮复习人教版(2019)选择性必修第三册_Unit 5 Poems 教材串讲课后提升 有答案

文档属性

名称 2022届高考英语一轮复习人教版(2019)选择性必修第三册_Unit 5 Poems 教材串讲课后提升 有答案
格式 zip
文件大小 110.6KB
资源类型 教案
版本资源 人教版(2019)
科目 英语
更新时间 2021-10-17 09:27:37

图片预览

内容文字预览

2022高考一轮复习:选择性必修三 Unit 5 教材串讲提升练
Ⅰ.阅读理解
A
I grew up in libraries,or at least it feels that way.I went there several times a week with my mother when I was young.Those visits were fantastic.The library might have been the first place where I was ever given autonomy (自主权).In the library,I could have anything I wanted.And on the ride back to home,my mom and I would talk about the order in which we were going to read our books,a solemn conversation in which we planned how to pace ourselves through this charming period until the books were due.
When I left for college,one of the many ways I differentiated myself from my mom was that I was wild about owning books.All I know is that I lost my appreciation of the slow pace of making my way through a library and of having books on borrowed time.If my mother ever mentioned to me that she was on the waiting list for some book at the library,I got annoyed and asked why she didn't just buy it.
But in 2011,one of my son's school assignments was to interview someone who worked for the city.He said he wanted to interview a librarian.As my son and I drove to meet the librarian,I was flooded by a sense of absolute familiarity,a recollection of the journey of the parent and child on their way to the library.I had taken this trip so many times before,but at that moment I turned my thought on its head,and I was the parent bringing my child on that special trip.
As I walked into the library,nothing had changed-the sense of gentle,steady busyness,like a pot of water on a rolling boil (沸腾),was just the same.In the library,time is dammed up—not just stopped but saved.I knew what hooked me was the shock of familiarity I felt—the way it revealed my childhood,my relationship with my mom,my love of books.However,as I was rediscovering those memories,my mother was losing all of hers.The writer Amadou Hampté B once said that in Africa,whenever an old man dies,it is as though a library were burning down.But if you can take something from his or her internal collection and share it,it takes on a life of its own.
1.What can be inferred about the author's childhood from paragraph 1
A.She lived near a library.
B.She possessed a library.
C.She didn't borrow books from libraries.
D.She enjoyed visits to libraries.
2.How did the author change after entering college
A.She lost her enthusiasm for reading.
B.She did not return books on time.
C.She quit the habit of going to libraries.
D.She wanted to buy books for her mom.
3.What did the author rediscover when she walked into the library with her son
A.Her love of libraries.
B.Her delight in owning books.
C.Her lost memory of her mom.
D.Her familiarity with her mom.
4.Which can be the title of this passage
A.The Library—a World of Knowledge
B.The Library—a Place of Memory
C.The Library—a Busy Place
D.The Library—an Old Man
B
Literature reflects life.So in aging Japan there are a large number of hit books by aged authors.“Age 90:what's so great about it?” is a humorous essay on the difficulties of the elderly, by Aiko Sato, who is 95.It sold one million copies in 2017, making it Japan's bestselling book that year.
In 2018 the Akutagawa Prize (芥川龙之介奖) went to Chisako Wakatake, 63 at the time, for her first novel I'll Live by Myself.The book talks about how to live in old age.Going to Die Soon, by Ms.Uchidate, features 78yearold Hana, a former alcoholshop owner trying to make the most of her remaining years.The novel has been called a book for shukatsu (为死亡做准备), or preparing for death, making readers think more deeply about what it means to age.
Japan's population has the world's highest percentage of over65s.People are living longer, so many have at least 20-30 years of retirement, for much of which they are energetic.
And although the Japanese have been spending less on books, that is least true for the over60s.
Lawson, a conveniencestore chain, recently decided to stock books with the older generation in mind.
But the elderly writers' books are attracting younger readers, too.Some are preparing for their own old age or want to understand the increasing number of old people they see around them.Others find relevance in the themes explored, such as loneliness, a problem that stretches well beyond the silverhaired.
The most notable feature of the new trend is that the vast majority of authors, and main characters, are women.Especially popular are the arahun (“aroundhundred”yearold) writers like Ms.Sato, whose book, readers say, helps them be more positive.Their popularity also reflects support for strong women who are passionate about their work, a phenomenon that is all too rare in Japan today.
5.Going to Die Soon is a book________.
A.about how to stay positive in old age
B.which won the Akutagawa Prize in 2018
C.which helps people live the rest of the life to the fullest
D.written by 78yearold Hana, an alcoholshop owner
6.Why are the books by aged authors popular with younger readers
A.Young readers now have more elder relatives.
B.Young readers face similar problems as the elderly.
C.Young readers are worried about becoming old.
D.Young readers are as lonely as the elderly.
7.What can we learn from the passage
A.Aged writers might be more successful than younger writers.
B.An aging society brings more chances for women writers.
C.People have to work after their retirement in an aging society.
D.Ambitious career women might not be popular with the Japanese.
Ⅱ.七选五
The organization leads crowdfunded train journeys.1.________The organization has already completed two journeys,through the northern and central United States.Twentyfour people are now getting ready to be a part of the third.
To earn a place on the train,each person has to raise $5,000.2.________ At each stop,they get off the train to explore a different town or city.The idea is to visit small businesses,community centers,schools—or wherever their projects take them.
3.________ He knows that universities are becoming more and more expensive each year,and that many people think higher education is no longer affordable.Over the next 10 days he is going to visit seven universities.He wants to see what they are doing to meet these challenges.
Catherine Tsavalas is planning to explore how bookstores and libraries improve local communities.4.________ She also wants to know if they are using social media to connect with people.
Hurricanes,tornadoes,wildfires,floods—research suggests these are going to happen more and more. Jenny Gottstein thinks she can address these challenges.At each stop,she is planning to interview local leaders,emergency workers,and computer game designers.5.________ She believes people are more likely to remember something important when the information is fun and gamelike.
These 24 people are strangers now,but not for long.The next week is going to be a lifechanging learning experience for many.
A.She then plans to create a game to help people prepare for disasters.
B.Trevor Eagle wants to make a difference to the education system.
C.Besides money,they also need to have an idea for a project.
D.Community leaders will travel by train across American South.
E.These journeys provide the young with the chance to help different communities.
F.Tyson Foods had supported the project for a 10day journey across the US.
G.She wants to find out what they are doing to encourage more people to read.
Ⅲ.语法填空
Peking Opera is a form of traditional Chinese theater that 1.____________(appear) in Beijing in the late 18th century.2.____________(combine) music, song, dance and acrobatics (杂技动作) in a lively and colorful display, it is a 3.____________ (relative) new style of drama, compared to other types of Chinese theater.
In the early years of Peking Opera, all the actors were men,4.____________ the roles of women played by young boys.The stories fell into two main 5.____________(category)—wen, or civil theater, which focused on love, marriage and other civilian concerns, and wu, or military theater, which focused on the theme of war and was known for featuring thrilling stage actions.
In the first half of the 6.____________(twenty) century, the most famous actor of Peking Opera was Mei Lanfang, 7.____________ played a key role in popularizing Peking Opera and introducing Chinese theater to the West.Additionally, Mei also took the bold step in taking on female students, which was 8.____________ highly risky and unconventional step at the time.
After the founding of the People's Republic of China, Peking Opera performances, which dealt with contemporary and revolutionary themes, were encouraged.Despite 9.____________(it) ups and downs, Peking Opera was revived (复兴) in the 1980s and continues to 10.____________(perform) today.
参考答案
Ⅰ.阅读理解
A
1-4 DCAB
B
5-7 CBD
Ⅱ.七选五
1-5 ECBGA
Ⅲ.语法填空
1.appeared  2.Combining  3.relatively 4.with  5.categories 
6.twentieth  7.who  8.a  9.its  10.be performed