2026届高考英语二轮复习:语法填空课件(共29张PPT)

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名称 2026届高考英语二轮复习:语法填空课件(共29张PPT)
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科目 英语
更新时间 2025-11-01 07:31:23

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(共29张PPT)
The New Gym
2025年完胜高考语法填空
(6篇)
The New Gym
The New Gym
At Riverside School in Miami, Florida, gym class isn’t always held in the gym. In fact, it isn’t even always held on land. One option available 1.______ kids at Riverside is an elementary course in sailing 2.________(teach) on real sailboats on Biscayne Bay.
Thanks to 3.______ terrific new physical education movement, gym class is no longer just about traditional team sports. The idea is 4.________(help) kids find activities they’ll enjoy so much 5.______ they’ll stay
active for the rest of their lives. The fun activities include
The New Gym
to
taught
a
to help
that

yoga, 6._______(cycle), martial arts(武术), dance, kickboxing(跆拳道), in-line skating(直排轮滑), using treadmills(跑步机), and even sailing and kayaking(坐爱斯基摩划子航行). The goal is to teach children sports and physical activities that they can enjoy outside of school.
7.__________(advocate提倡者,拥护者) of the “new” gym class point to studies that show kids are less active than ever before. They believe that children’s natural boundless(无限的) energy isn’t being channeled into(倾注到) healthy activities for a lifetime. One in four kids gets
cycling
Advocates
no physical education in school at all. Kids’s general activity level is at its 8._______(high) in tenth grade but then 9._______(slow) declines all the way into adulthood. That’s what the new movement 10.__________(design) to change.
slowly
highest
is designed
Before leaving her apartment, Carmen Fernandez, a blind woman 1.________(live) in Madrid, Spain, used to 2.________(careful) memorize her route. If she didn’t,
she would get lost. 3.______ a new device using GPS (Global Positioning Satellite) technology 4.______(free)
her from such a rigid(固定的) routine.
Using the gadget’s Braille keypad(辅助键盘), she punches in her destination. As she walks, the device calls out 5._________(direction) to her. “Now I can walk home by any route,” Fernandez says. “I’ve learned so much about my own neighborhood. ”
Satellite Guidance for the Blind
living
carefully
But

frees
directions
6._________ the current technology cannot guarantee total 7._________(accurate), it already grants(授予; 给予) a new level of freedom for the visually impaired(受损的). It allows 8._______(they) to interact more directly 9.______ their surroundings and their neighbors. “Soon I’ll be giving directions to 10.______ taxi driver,” says Fernandez.
While / Although / Though
accuracy
them
with
the
Every two years men and women from around the world come to compete at the Olympic Games. However, this is not 1.______ only time a gold medal is up for grabs(人人都可以争取). 2._______ the Olympics come the Paralympics(残奥会).
The Paralympics are just like the Olympics, 3._______ these games are for athletes with physical 4.__________(ability). A Paralympic athlete may use a wheelchair or get around with the help of a guide dog in everyday life.
The Second Olympics
the
After
but

disabilities
directions
Athletes who share a particular disability compete 5.______(win) medals and set world 6.________(record). Paralympians want others 7._______(see) them 8.______ world–class athletes 9.________ disabilities do not hold 10.______(they) back.
records
to win
to see
whose
as
them
A Dream Comes True
2025年完胜高考语法填空
(5篇)
Pauline
Paint panel 喷涂面板
Talk tube 传声筒、传话管
Hannah Kristan has a great time in this Boundless Playground high-back swing.
Why do ALL kids need a place to play
Most kids love recess(课间休息), but for Hannah Kristan, it was her least favorite part of the school day. “I never got to do anything except sit there,” she recalls.
Hannah 1._________(bear) with a disease that kept the bones in her back from forming properly. She uses a wheelchair. 2.______(sad), for kids like her, most
playground equipment is off limits(禁止入内的). In fact, Hannah is one of 5 million kids in the United States who
cannot use traditional playground equipment because 3.______ some type of disability.
A Dream Comes True
was born

Sadly
of
Then Hannah 4.___________(hear) about Boundless Playgrounds—playgrounds without limits for children with 5.___________(disability). The wonderful group behind Boundless Playgrounds helps communities create special playgrounds for children of all abilities. There are swings and sandboxes(沙坑) specially 6._________(design) for kids with physical disabilities. Kids with vision problems can enjoy the movement of swings and also use musical activities such as chime walls(编钟墙). Since her hometown in Connecticut(康涅狄格州) had nothing like it, Hannah helped raise money for this new kind of playground.
disabilities
heard
designed
The 7.__________(inspire) for Boundless Playgrounds was a playground created by Amy Jaffe Barzach. It is named Jonathan’s Dream in honor of her son. Jonathan’s Dream and many Boundless Playgrounds around the country have a glider(滑翔机) swing 8.__________ can be used by kids who use wheelchairs and 9._______(them) friends. The glider swing at Jonathan’s Dream was designed by Matthew Cavedon, who wasn’t even 10 years old at the time. Matthew was motivated because he uses a wheelchair himself and wanted to be able to have fun at playgrounds with other kids, regardless of their physical abilities 10._______ disabilities.
inspiration
that / which
their
or
A Boundless Playground is
an exciting place for all kids.
New Experiences
Matt Cavedon designed a swing especially for Boundless
Playgrounds, but his commitment(奉献;必须要做的事情) didn’t stop there. In 1._____ speech he gave in 2004, Matt, then 15 years old, 2._________(describe) an experience he had at the grand opening of a Boundless Playground in Rhode Island: “A girl of our age [15 years old] was swinging, laughing, and 3._______(cry) all at once. Her mom explained that it was the 4._______(girl) first time on a swing! Is this a small thing Not for her! Not for her mom! Not for the kids without disabilities who came up to her to say 5.______________(congratulation)!
a

described
crying
girl’s
congratulations
I wonder 6.______ many of those kids had just talked to a person with a disability for the first time. I wonder how
many will choose to interact 7.______ people who have different abilities because of that experience.”
with
how
The elementary idea behind Boundless Playgrounds is that play is 8.______ part of the joy of childhood and an important way for children 9.________(learn) about the world. Kids who 10._________(keep) away from playgrounds are denied this enjoyment as well as the learning. Far from being a place of happy excitement, traditional playgrounds are often places of humiliation(屈辱;耻辱感) and isolation(孤独;孤立) for those who can’t join in the fun.
to learn
both
are kept
Contrary to some rigid(顽固的;不易改变的) ideas about what a playground for children with special needs should be like, a Boundless Playground is every bit as colorful and challenging as a traditional playground. That’s why it is inviting(令人愉快的;吸引人的) and fun for all children. And for Hannah, Matthew, and other kids like them, a playground like this is also a dream come true.
Amy Barzach and friends at Jonathan’s Dream, the playground she designed and named for her son
Profile of a Paral YMPIAN
Jennifer Howitt may use a wheelchair, but she isn’t sitting
out life. Since being paralyzed(瘫痪的) after breaking her back in a 1._______( hike) accident at age nine, she has developed into one of the country’s top young disabled athletes.
hiking

Howitt competed in the 1998 World Athletic Championships in track and field and went to the 2000 Sydney Paralympics as the 2._________(young) member of the 12-person U.S. women’s wheelchair basketball team. Although the team finished in 3._______(five) place, “I was on an emotional high,” says Howitt. “It was pretty inspirational. If the entire world can come together 4.___________(celebrate) sport and disability, then it is 5.________(real) possible for us, as a planet, to work out all our problems. ”
youngest
fifth
to celebrate
really
Howitt is committed to 6.________(change) the world in positive ways. She has coached young paraplegic (截瘫的) athletes, traveled extensively, 7.______ attended Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., 8._______ she studied international politics. She hopes “to show young girls with disabilities that they can achieve whatever they want. A disability doesn’t get 9._____ the way of anything. Maybe you’ll have 10._________(adapt) your goal, but you can always achieve it,” Howitt says.
changing
and
where
in
to adapt