2019-2020学年高二期中线上测试英语试题
(满分
100分
考试时间80分钟)
第一部分
阅读理解(共两节,满分50分)
第一节(共15小题:每小题2.5分,满分37.5分)
A
2
Killed
in
Knife
Attack
in
French
Town
Under
Lockdown
In
what
was
described
as
a
potential
terrorist
attack,
a
knife-wielding
man
killed
two
people
and
wounded
five
others
on
Saturday
morning
in
a
town
in
southern
France
with
only
a
few
shops
open
under
a
national
lockdown
to
prevent
the
coronavirus
pandemic(新冠肺炎).
The
attacks
took
place
about
11
a.m.
local
time
outside
a
bakery
and
other
shops.
Witnesses
said
that
the
suspect
yelled,
“Allahu
akbar!’’
as
he
lunged
at
his
victims,
according
to
France
Bleu.
The
assailant(行凶者)
randomly
attacked
bystanders
on
the
street,
first
cutting
the
throat
of
a
man
in
his
40s
in
front
of
his
companion
and
his
son,
in
the
center
of
Romans-sur-Isère,
just
south
of
Lyon,
according
to
the
French
authorities
and
news
media.
He
then
attacked
two
workers
and
a
customer
inside
a
tobacco
store
before
heading
to
a
butcher’s
shop.
The
suspect,
a
33-year-old
man
of
Sudanese
origin,
was
arrested
by
the
police
as
he
was
“found
on
his
knees
on
the
sidewalk
while
praying
in
Arabic,”
said
the
country’s
antiterrorism(反恐怖主义)
prosecutor’s
office,
which
is
handling
the
investigation
into
the
attack.
At
the
man’s
home,
investigators
found
religious
writings
in
which
the
author
complained
of
living
in
a
“country
of
infidels(没有信仰的),”
the
prosecutors
said
in
a
statement.
The
suspect
—
who
the
French
news
media
said
was
an
asylum-seeker(避难者)
from
Sudan
—
was
not
immediately
identified
by
name.
President
Emmanuel
Macron
vowed
that
“light
would
be
shed
on
this
odious(可憎的)
act
which
casts
a
shadow
on
our
country,
which
has
already
been
severely
tested
in
recent
weeks.”
1.
Where
does
the
attacker
come
from?
A.
Iraq
B.
Saudi
Arabia
C.
France
D.
Sudan
2.
The
first
victim
was
accompanied
with
_____
when
he
was
attacked.
A.
his
son
B.
his
companion
C.
his
wife
and
his
son
D.
none
3.
Which
of
the
following
statements
is
Not
True
according
the
passage?
A.
The
attack
was
in
the
street.
B.
The
suspect
was
an
infidel
man.
C.
The
suspect’s
name
wasn’t
known
to
the
French
new
media
at
first.
D.
President
Emmanuel
Macron
cared
much
about
the
case
and
promised
to
make
it
clear.
A篇:本文是一篇新闻报道。文章报道了法国在疫情封城期间发生的一起凶杀案。
1.
D
事实细节题。从最后一段第一句The
suspect
—
who
the
French
news
media
said
was
an
asylum-seeker(避难者)
from
Sudan
—
was
not
immediately
identified
by
name.可知袭击者来看在Sudan
2.
C事实细节题。从第二段第三句The
assailant(行凶者)
randomly
attacked
bystanders
on
the
street,
first
cutting
the
throat
of
a
man
in
his
40s
in
front
of
his
companion
and
his
son
可知受害者被害时有妻子和儿子在旁边。
3.
B
推理判断题。从倒数第二段最后一句At
the
man’s
home,
investigators
found
religious
writings
in
which
the
author
complained
of
living
in
a
“country
of
infidels”可知行凶者是信教的,故B不正确。
B
I
watched
my
Dad
close
the
door.
It
was
a
really
cold
night
in
dead
silence
and
I
was
all
alone
at
home.
My
parents
left
because
they
had
been
running
fever
for
several
days
and
they
were
showing
other
symptoms
of
COVID-19.
It
was
the
9th
day
of
Wuhan
lockdown
starting
on
January
23.
The
virus
we
now
know
as
COVID-19
is
somehow
fearsome
partly
because
it
does
not
discriminate(区别对待)
in
choosing
who
it
infects.
But
that
is
only
partly
true.
All
the
evidence
suggest
that
it
can
be
merciless
to
older
people,
so
I
was
wondering
whether
my
parents
would
make
it
and
whether
we
would
ever
take
family
photos,
which
my
parents
and
I
had
talked
about
during
the
Spring
Festival
holiday..
On
their
second
day
away
my
parents
called
and
asked
me
how
I
was.
We
talked
using
FaceTime,
and
the
moment
I
saw
mom
lying
there
with
an
oxygen
mask
and
my
dad
could
not
talk
without
breathing
heavily,
I
realized
that
I
had
to
live
on
my
own.
But
two
weeks
later,
I
came
across
a
fever
and
had
to
go
into
quarantine(隔离)
and
be
put
under
medical
observations
for
14
days.
Fortunately,
my
illness
turned
out
to
be
due
to
a
bacterial
infections
but
not
COVID-19.
Everything
there
was
hectic,
there
seemed
to
be
a
shortage
of
medical
staff
and
materials
were
in
short
supply.
Even
though
the
doctors
and
nurses
were
covered
from
head
to
toe,
I
could
see
how
tired
they
were
when
I
looked
into
their
bloodshot
eyes.
They
would
work
a
whole
day
preparing
for
new
patients
and
seemed
incredibly
apologetic
for
not
having
everything
that
was
needed.
Most
of
the
patients
were
really
understanding,
but
of
course
there
were
those
who
were
not,
and
complained
loudly,
but
all
the
doctors
and
nurses
tried
their
best
to
deal
with
it
in
a
calming
way.
And
they
are
all
from
other
cities
like
Shanghai
and
Guangzhou,
and
some
of
them
are
just
three
or
four
years
older
than
me.
When
the
quarantine
was
over,
every
patient
effusively
thanked
the
workers
for
what
they
had
done,
but
the
answer
they
received
was
exactly
the
same:
“That’s
what
we’re
here
for.”
4.
When
did
the
author’s
parents
leave
her
for
the
hospital?
A.
January
23
B.
January
30
C.
January
31
D.
February
1
5.
What
does
the
underlined
phrase
“make
it”
in
Paragraph
2
mean?
A.
succeed
B.
join
in
C.
arrive
D.
survive
6.
What
can
we
learn
according
to
the
passage?
A.
Both
the
author
and
her
parents
got
infected
with
COVID-19.
B.
The
majority
of
the
patients
understood
the
doctors
and
nurses.
C.
The
patients
apologized
to
the
doctors
and
nurses
because
they
were
too
tired.
D.
The
author
didn’t
get
infected
with
COVID-19
because
the
virus
can
only
infect
the
older.
7.
What
may
the
author
think
of
the
medical
workers
according
to
the
passage?
A.
admirable
B.
outgoing
C.
impatient
D.
thankful
B篇:本文是一篇记叙文,讲述作者在武汉隔离期间,父母被感染,本人也因发烧而被隔离,期间受到医护人员的照顾,对医护人员的敬业感到由衷敬佩。
4.
C推理判断题。武汉封城于1月23日,父母住院是在封城的第9天,故应该是1月31日。
5.
D词义猜测题。因为病毒易感染老年人,故作者很担心父母能否活下来去拍全家福。
6.
B
事实细节题。从第六段第二句Most
of
the
patients
were
really
understanding可知大多数病人能理解医护人员。
7.
C.
推理判断题。从第五段最后一句I
could
see
how
tired
they
were
when
I
looked
into
their
bloodshot
eyes
第六段第一句They
would
work
a
whole
day
preparing
for
new
patients
and
seemed
incredibly
apologetic
for
not
having
everything
that
was
needed.和第二句but
all
the
doctors
and
nurses
tried
their
best
to
deal
with
it
in
a
calming
way.以及最后一段最后一句可知作者对这些医护人员是由衷敬佩的。
C
Dutch
author
Marieke
Lucas
Rijneveld
has
become
one
of
the
youngest
writers
to
be
shortlisted(列入候选)
for
a
Booker
prize,
after
their
debut
novel(处女作)
made
the
final
line-up
for
the
International
Booker.
Rijneveld,
a
rising
star
in
Dutch
literature,
is
28
—
slightly
older
than
British
author
Daisy
Johnson
was
when
she
was
shortlisted
for
the
Booker
prize
in
2018,
age
27.
The
author,
who
identifies
as
male
and
uses
the
pronouns
they/them,
was
shortlisted
after
a
six-hour
virtual(虚拟的)
judging
meeting
for
the
?50,000
prize,
which
is
shared
equally
between
writer
and
translator,
for
The
Discomfort
of
Evening,
translated
by
Michele
Hutchison.
The
novel,
tells
of
a
girl
whose
brother
dies
in
a
skating
accident
and
draws
from
Rijneveld’s
own
experiences:
when
they
were
three,
their
12-year-old
brother
was
knocked
over
and
killed
by
a
bus.
“Rijneveld’s
language
renders(重现)
the
world
again,
revealing
the
shocks
and
violence
of
early
youth
through
the
angle
of
a
Dutch
dairy
farm.
The
strangeness
of
a
child
looking
at
the
strangeness
of
the
world
is
in
it,”
said
judges
of
the
work.
“The
Discomfort
of
Evening
is
one
of
six
novels
in
the
running
for
the
International
Booker,
each
of
which,”
said
chair
of
judges
Ted
Hodgkinson,
“restlessly
reinvents(重塑)
received
narratives,
from
foundational
myths
to
family
folklore,
plunging
us
into
discomfiting
and
delightful
encounters
with
selves
in
a
state
of
transition(过渡)”.
Hodgkinson
chaired
a
panel(陪审团)
of
five
judges
who
selected
the
shortlist
from
124
submissions.
The
coronavirus
pandemic
meant
their
meeting
had
to
be
virtual,
but
Hodgkinson
said
he
and
his
panel
still
managed
to
discuss
the
line-up
for
more
than
six
hours.
The
winner
will
be
announced
on
19
May.
8.
We
can
learn
from
the
2nd
paragraph
that
_______.
A.
Rijneveld
is
a
young
male
writer.
B.
Rijneveld
and
the
translator
Michele
Hutchison
will
share
the
$50,000
prize.
C.
Daisy
Johnson
was
the
youngest
writer
shortlisted
for
a
Booker
prize
this
year.
D.
The
Discomfort
of
Evening
is
partly
adapted
from
Rijneveld’s
own
experiences.
9.
Which
can
we
infer
from
the
passage?
A.
Rijneveld’s
brother
died
from
a
skating
accident.
B.
The
judges
of
the
work
speak
highly
of
Rijneveld’s
language.
C.
Six
novels
reveal
the
shocks
and
violence
of
early
youth
on
a
Dutch
dairy
farm.
D.
Hodgkinson
and
his
panel
were
unhappy
to
discuss
the
line-up
online
for
over
six
hours.
10.
Why
did
the
panel
have
a
virtual
judging
meeting?
A.
Because
of
the
coronavirus
pandemic
B.
Because
there
were
too
many
submissions
C.
Because
it
was
more
effective
online
D.
Because
the
judges
lives
too
far
away
from
each
other.
11.
What
is
the
most
suitable
title
of
the
passage?
A.
Booker
prize
winner
will
be
announced.
B.
Rijneveld,
one
of
the
most
youngest
Booker
winner
C.
International
Booker
prize
shortlist
led
by
28-year-old’s
debut
D.
The
Discomfort
of
Evening:a
novel
running
for
the
International
Booker.
C篇:本文是一篇说明文。主要讲述28岁的年轻丹麦女作家Rijneveld被提名布克奖,成为最年轻的候选人之一,引领今年的布克奖。
8.
D
事实细节题。从第二段最后一句The
novel,
tells
of
a
girl
whose
brother
dies
in
a
skating
accident
and
draws
from
Rijneveld’s
own
experiences可知《不凡之夜》这本书部分由作者本人的经历改编。
9.
B
推理判断题。从第三段可知布克奖评委对Rijneveld的语言是评价很高的。
10.
A
事实细节题。从倒数第二段第二句The
coronavirus
pandemic
meant
their
meeting
had
to
be
virtual可知之所以布克奖要采用虚拟评审的方式是因为新冠肺炎。
11.
C
主旨大意题。本文着重介绍了年轻丹麦女作家Rijneveld被提名布克奖,成为最年轻的候选人之一,引领今年的布克奖。故C正确。
D
The
3D-printing
industry
is
accelerating
its
efforts
to
help
fight
the
new
coronavirus
and
the
disease
it
causes,
COVID-19.
On
Tuesday,
HP
announced
it’s
working
with
those
who
bought
its
3D
printers
to
make
medical
face
shields,
hands-free
door
openers
and
an
adjuster
for
face
masks
for
medical
staff
who
often
must
wear
them
for
hours.
It’s
also
testing
“hospital-grade”
face
masks
meeting
the
higher-end
FFP3
(过滤式面罩)
standard
and
parts
for
simple
emergency
ventilators.(呼吸机)
And
it’s
looking
into
nasal
swabs
to
test
for
COVID-19
infection.
HP
also
is
offering
free
downloads
of
its
3D-printed
medical
equipment
designs.
Carbon,
whose
3D
printers
are
used
to
make
everything
from
bicycle
seats
to
teeth
straighteners,
said
it
plans
to
send
face
shield
designs
to
its
network
of
customers
who’ve
bought
its
3D
printers.
Carbon
co-founder
and
Executive
Chairman
Joseph
DeSimone
said
on
Monday
the
company
expects
to
send
the
designs
by
early
Tuesday.
3D-printer
makers
typically
sell
their
products
to
others
that
actually
do
the
3D
printing.
One
such
customer,
Ford,
said
Tuesday
that
it’s
made
1,000
face
shields
and
shipped
them
to
Michigan
hospitals,
with
plans
to
make
100,000
face
shields
a
week.
It
is
also
working
with
3M
and
General
Electric
on
respirator
masks
and
ventilator
designs.
The
effort
is
one
of
several
to
apply
3D-printing
technology
to
the
fight
against
coronavirus.
3D
printing
isn’t
as
fast
at
churning
out
products
as
conventional
mass
production
methods.
But
3D
printers
are
flexible
and
able
to
make
many
different
parts
anywhere
there’s
a
printer
and
raw
materials
like
the
plastic
resins
Carbon
printers
use.
Some
3D-printing
efforts
have
focused
on
ventilators,
which
expected
to
be
in
short
supply
with
a
surge
of
COVID-19
patients
suffering
from
respiratory(呼吸器官)
problems.
Also
in
short
supply
are
N95
masks
that
can
be
useful
in
reducing
the
likelihood
a
wearer
will
spread
COVID-19
to
others.
Carbon’s
DeSimone
is
cautious
about
the
enthusiasm,
though,
saying
that
regulatory(监管的)
approval
is
important
and
that
3D-printer
enthusiasts
shouldn’t
be
making
components
not
intended
for
close
human
contact
that
might
release
unhealthy
gases.
12.
What
is
the
passage
mainly
about?
A.
an
introduction
about
3D-printing
B.
the
3D-printing
industry’s
efforts
to
help
fight
COVID-19.
C.
the
products
that
3D-printing
makers
sell
D.
how
3D-printing
makers
produce
medical
equipment
13.
HP
annouced
to
help
its
customers
to
make
the
following
products
except
for
_____.
A.
medical
face
shields
B.
hands-free
door
openers
C.
an
adjuster
for
face
masks
D.
emergency
ventilators
14.
Which
of
the
following
is
true
according
to
the
passage?
A.
Carbon’s
company
will
finish
its
design
after
Tuesday.
B.
Ford
has
made
1,000
face
shields
and
plans
to
make
10,000
more
in
a
week.
C.
3D
printers
are
more
flexible
than
traditional
mass
production
methods.
D.
Most
3D-printings
focus
on
making
ventilators
and
N95
because
of
their
short
supply.
15.
What
can
be
inferred
from
the
last
paragraph?
A.
3D-printing
may
release
unhealthy
gases.
B.
DeSimone
is
cautious
about
3D-printing.
C.
Carbon’s
company
didn’t
gain
regulatory
approval
of
making
medical
equipment.
D.
3D
printers
aren’t
enthusiastic
about
making
components
designed
for
close
human
contact.
D篇:本文是说明文。介绍了3D打印行业为对抗疫情,转行生产医护产品。
12.
B
主旨大意题。本文主要介绍3D打印行业为对抗疫情,转行生产医护产品。
13.
D
事实细节题。从第地速食面第一句On
Tuesday,
HP
announced
it’s
working
with
those
who
bought
its
3D
printers
to
make
medical
face
shields,
hands-free
door
openers
and
an
adjuster
for
face
masks
for
medical
staff可知HP宣布帮助生产ABC三项产品。而D选项是处于测试阶段。故选D。
14.
C
事实细节题。根据第五段第一、二句可知3D打印在打造部件方面比传统方法更为灵活。
15.
A
推理判断题。从最后一段最后一句可知3D打印可能会放出一些有害气体。
第二节(共5小题;每小题2.5分,满分12.5分)
We
Are
All
Fighters
We
are
facing
a
dark
time
right
now.
Some
of
us
are
stuck
at
home.
Some
are
stuck
far
away
from
home.
Some
of
us
have
lost
their
jobs.
Some
have
to
shut
down
their
businesses.
Some
of
us
are
cutting
down
the
expenses.
Some
can’t
even
pay
their
rent
and
bills.
16
.
Some
can’t
get
back
to
their
jobs.
And
some
of
us
are
still
working
day
and
night,
no
matter
how
exhausted
they
are,
or
how
dangerous
it
is.
Some
of
us
have
become
infected.
They
are
isolated
from
their
families,
their
loved
ones,
and
have
to
be
alone
in
the
wards.
Or
even
worse,
it
is
their
children,
their
parents,
or
loved
ones
that
are
infected
and
they
don’t
even
have
a
chance
to
say
goodbye.
The
virus
is
rampaging.
The
numbers
are
increasing.
The
rumors
are
spreading.
17
.
It
seems
that
all
of
a
sudden
the
whole
country
lost
its
vitality
and
prosperity.
You
are
not
the
only
one
who
is
worrying.
You
are
not
the
only
one
who
is
fearing.
You
are
not
the
only
one
who
is
struggling.
We
are
all
facing
a
dark
time
right
now.
Our
whole
country
is
facing
a
dark
time
right
now.
This
is
a
war!
18
But
it’s
a
war
with
virus,
doubts,
fears,
rumors,
and
discrimination.
But
we
shall
all
be
fighters,
my
dear
fellows!
19
All
of
us
should
be
the
fighters
in
this
war.
We
shall
fight
against
fear.
We
shall
fight
against
uncertainty.
We
shall
fight
against
doubts.
We
shall
fight
against
selfishness.
We
shall
fight
against
rumors.
We
shall
fight
against
discrimination.
This
is
going
to
be
a
fierce
and
cruel
war.
But
don’t
be
afraid,
because
we’re
going
to
win
this
war
together
in
the
end!
Our
people
may
get
sick,
our
city
may
get
sick,
but
we
as
a
brave
nation,
will
never
get
sick.
Because
we
have
the
spirit,
history
and
determination
to
win.
In
each
dark
time,
we’ve
always
fought
together,
no
matter
how
strong
our
enemy
was,
or
how
impossible
it
seemed
to
win.
We
just
kept
fighting,
because
we
are
all
fighters!
When
all
of
this
is
over,
we’ll
have
another
great
and
heroic
story
to
tell
our
children,
our
grandchildren
and
they
will
tell
the
next
generations.
20
The
fear
is
growing.
Some
can’t
go
back
to
school.
It’s
a
war
concerned
with
all
of
us.
It’s
a
war
without
guns,
bombs,
or
smoke.
And
that’s
what
makes
us
the
greatest
nation
ever.
That’s
how
we’ll
pass
this
great
spirit
on,
and
keep
it
alive
forever!
Not
just
the
doctors,
the
nurses,
the
policemen
and
the
scientists
should
fight.
答案:
16-20
BADGF
解析:16.
B
此处前后文都在讲述疫情期间各种困难,运用了排比手法,每句均以some开头,故选B
17.
A
此段讲述病毒造成的一些负面影响。运用了排比手法,每句都以the
+n.的形式开头,故选A。
18.
D
此段解释这场战疫是一场战争。根据后文but可以与空格处形成转折关系,故选D。
19.
G
此段讲述我们所有人都应该参与这场战疫,而不仅仅是医生护士警察和科学家。
20.
F
此句为文章总结升华。我们会将这份伟大的精神代代相传永存不朽!
第二部分
英语知识运用(共两节,满分45分)
完形填空(共20小题;每小题1.5分,满分30分)
Monroe
took
the
full-time
job
as
an
English
teacher
in
Wuhan
to
get
her
teaching
certificate.
She
never
21
that
an
outbreak
of
coronavirus
would
turn
all
her
plans
22
.
“When
the
epidemic(传染病)
first
23
,
my
supervisor
and
I
got
lots
of
food
and
other
necessities
in
24
and
weren’t
too
focused
on
work,”
she
told
the
Global
Times
on
Sunday.
Although
the
US
25
to
have
its
citizens
evacuated(撤离)
from
the
city,
Monroe
decided
to
stay
in
Wuhan
26
she
felt
living
alone
in
her
apartment
in
the
city
was
more
27
than
on
a
plane
with
a
lot
of
people.
Since
the
lockdown
of
Wuhan,
Monroe
has
been
28
videos
about
her
29
in
the
city
on
TikTok(抖音)
as
well
as
producing
30
including
audio
recordings,
video
clips,
and
other
anecdotes
for
her
students
every
day.
Additionally,
She
also
shared
her
experience
31
on
TikTok.
In
the
video,
Monroe
can
be
seen
wearing
gloves
and
a
hazmat
suit
as
she
delivers
big
bags
of
vegetables,
eggs,
fish
to
residents(居民)
who
32
them
online
since
most
residents
are
not
33
to
go
out
of
their
homes
34
some
sort
of
permission.
She
explained
that
the
service
is
a
type
of
“no
contact”
35
,
and
that
she
was
very
36
to
help
the
community.
“I
felt
37
to
be
out
of
the
apartment
and
interacting(互动)
with
people.
Even
though
I
can’t
speak
Chinese
yet!
I
could
still
empathize
with
these
people,”
she
said.
Monroe
said
a
lot
of
people
have
also
followed
her
TikTok
account
to
stay
38
on
her
life.
The
videos
have
39
many
Chinese
netizens(网民),
with
many
expressing
their
thanks
in
the
comment
section.
“
40
does
not
have
a
border.
Thank
you,
our
foreign
friend.
We
care
about
you
and
hope
you
can
protect
yourself,”
one
Chinese
netizen
wrote.
A.
accepted
B.
expected
C.
learned
D.
pretended
A.
up
B.
away
C.
upside
down
D.
out
A.
broke
out
B.
set
off
C.
occurred
D.
took
place
A.
debt
B.
charge
C.
surprise
D.
panic
A.
forced
B.
forbade
C.
arranged
D.
disagreed
A.
as
B.
though
C.
while
D.
if
A.
lonely
B.
interesting
C.
annoying
D.
secure
A.
watching
B.
sharing
C.
recording
D.
selling
A.
life
B.
work
C.
hobbies
D.
family
A.
entertainment
B.
lessons
C.
speeches
D.
classes
A.
modelling
B.
travelling
C.
volunteering
D.
performing
A.
appointed
B.
hired
C.
requested
D.
ordered
A.
prepared
B.
occupied
C.
limited
D.
allowed
A.
in
B.
for
C.
without
D.
from
A.
donation
B.
distribution
C.
reputation
D.
contribution
A.
delighted
B.
amazed
C.
shocked
D.
terrified
A.
terrible
B.
nice
C.
ashamed
D.
sympathetic
A.
updated
B.
escaped
C.
inspired
D.
repeated
A.
reflected
B.
witnessed
C.
frightened
D.
touched
A.
challenge
B.
warmth
C.
love
D.
communication
参考答案:21-25
BCADC
26-30
ADBAB
31-35
CDDCB
36-40
ABADC
本文讲述一位外教女孩在疫情期间留在武汉当志愿者并发布视频到抖音宣扬正能量的故事。
21.
B考查动词词义辨析。梦露本来在武汉当外教,却没有料到新冠疫情的发生让她的计划完全乱了。expect
预料,pretend假装。
22.
C考查动词短语。turn
up
调大;出现turn
away
拒绝…进入;弃用(方法、主意)
turn
upside
down
乱七八糟;上下颠倒
turn
out结果是;原来是。句意为“疫情使她的计划完全乱套了。”
23.
A考查动词和动词短语。break
out
(疾病或灾害)爆发,set
off出发;引爆occur发生;(想法等)出现;take
place发生。此处为疫情爆发,故选A。
24.
D考查介词短语。in
debt欠债
in
charge
负责
in
surprise吃惊地
in
panic慌张地。此处意为“她和她的督导慌乱之中买了大量食物和其他必需品”
25.
C考查动词词义辨析。force强迫
forbid禁止
arrange安排
disagree不同意。此句意为“尽管美国安排从武汉撤侨,梦露还是决定留在武汉”
26.
A考查连词辨析。
27.D考查形容词辨析。此外意为“梦露还是决定留在武汉,因为她觉得一个人独自住在公寓比那么多人一起在飞机上要更安全。”as
由于;因为though
while
然后;在…期间
if
如果
secure安全的
annoying令人恼火的lonely孤独的;寂寞的。
28.
B考查动词词义辨析。从后文Additionally,
She
also
shared
her
experience可知此处应该是“分享她在武汉的生活视频”
29.
A考查名词词义辨析。从后文“Monroe
said
a
lot
of
people
have
also
followed
her
TikTok
account
to
stay
updated
on
her
life.许多人都会追更她的生活视频”可知是分享关于她在武汉的生活视频。
30.
B考查名词词义辨析。根据后文的for
her
students可知应该是制作视频课程。
31.
C考查动词词义辨析。此句为段首句,从后文可知此段讲述她做志愿者的经历。故选volunteering
32.
D考查动词词义辨析。此处意为“她给那些网购的居民送菜,鸡蛋和鱼”,order预订,request请求,hire租用;雇用appoint约定;任命
33.
D.
考查动词词义辨析。此处意为“由于大多数居民没有许可的话都不允许出门。”allow允许,limit
限制occupy占用
prepare准备
34.
C.
考查介词词义辨析。此处指没有许可的情况下,故用without
35.
B
考查名词词义辨析。donation捐赠distribution
分配;配送reputation荣誉;声誉;名声
contribution贡献;投稿。此句意为“她解释说这种服务是一种非接触式配送”
36.
A
考查形容词词义辨析。从后方梦露说话的语气可以看出她对乐意帮助社区,故选A
delighted高兴的
amazed
吃惊的
shocked
震惊的terrified害怕的
37.
B考查形容词词义辨析。梦露说她觉得出门和人们互动很好,虽然不会中文,但能与他们感同身受。
38.
A
考查动词词义辨析。梦露说许多人在追更她的抖音生活视频。stay
updated保持更新
escape
逃脱inspire
鼓舞;激励repeat
重复
39.
D考查动词词义辨析。这些视频感动了许多中国网民,他们纷纷在留言区表达感激之情。touch触动;感动
witness见证;目击frighten使害怕reflect反映;思考
40.
C考查名词词义辨析。此处意为“爱不分国界”,故选C。
challenge
挑战warmth
温暖
communication交流。
第二节(共10小题:每小题2分,满分20分)
阅读下面的短文,在空白处填上合适的词或提示词的正确形式。
Cancel
The
Olympics.
Despite
the
coronavirus
pandemic,
the
International
Olympic
Committee
and
Tokyo
2020
Olympic
organizers
insist
that
the
Tokyo
2020
Summer
Games
41
(should)
go
(go)
on.
Even
with
widespread
cancellations(取消)
in
European
soccer,
Formula
One
auto
racing,
42
and
professional
basketball
in
the
United
States,
Prime
Minister
Shinzo
Abe
of
Japan
vowed,
“We
will
overcome
the
spread
of
the
43
infection(infect)
and
host
the
Olympics
without
problem,
as
44
planned
(plan).”
While
sports
can
create
an
escape
hatch
from
the
grit
and
grind
of
daily
life,
there
is
no
escaping
the
fact
45
that
the
coronavirus
pandemic
presents
46
an
extraordinary
challenge
that
cannot
be
overcome
with
mere
platitudes
and
prayers.
Pressing
ahead
with
the
Tokyo
Games
means
47
creating
(create)
a
massive,
48
potentially(potential)
dangerous
petri
dish(培养皿).
49
For
the
sake
of
global
public
health,
the
Tokyo
2020
Olympic
Games
should
50
be
canceled
(cancel).
解析:
41.
insist表示坚持要某人做…时其宾语从句应该使用(should)+动词原形的虚拟语气。故用(should)
go
42.
European
soccer,
Formula
One
auto
racing和后文的professional
basketball三个并列的名词,故用并列连词and
43.
of介词后接名词。故用infection
44.
as+
p.p
表正如…那样,
as
planned
按照计划
as
expected
正如所料
45.
fact后面接同位语从句,
说明具体内容。故用无意义的连词that
46.
名词challenge前缺少限定词,故用不定冠词an
47.
mean
doing
意味着做…
48.
修改形容词dangerous用副词,故用potentially
49.
for
the
sake
of
=
for
one’s
sake
为了…的利益;看在…的份上
50.
should后应接动词原形,被动,故用be
canceled,
注意cancel的过去分词两种写法都是正确的。canceled
/
cancelled
12019-2020学年高二期中线上测试英语试题
(满分
100分
考试时间80分钟)
第一部分
阅读理解(共两节,满分50分)
第一节(共15小题:每小题2.5分,满分37.5分)
A
2
Killed
in
Knife
Attack
in
French
Town
Under
Lockdown
In
what
was
described
as
a
potential
terrorist
attack,
a
knife-wielding
man
killed
two
people
and
wounded
five
others
on
Saturday
morning
in
a
town
in
southern
France
with
only
a
few
shops
open
under
a
national
lockdown
to
prevent
the
coronavirus
pandemic(新冠肺炎).
The
attacks
took
place
about
11
a.m.
local
time
outside
a
bakery
and
other
shops.
Witnesses
said
that
the
suspect
yelled,
“Allahu
akbar!’’
as
he
lunged
at
his
victims,
according
to
France
Bleu.
The
assailant(行凶者)
randomly
attacked
bystanders
on
the
street,
first
cutting
the
throat
of
a
man
in
his
40s
in
front
of
his
companion
and
his
son,
in
the
center
of
Romans-sur-Isère,
just
south
of
Lyon,
according
to
the
French
authorities
and
news
media.
He
then
attacked
two
workers
and
a
customer
inside
a
tobacco
store
before
heading
to
a
butcher’s
shop.
The
suspect,
a
33-year-old
man
of
Sudanese
origin,
was
arrested
by
the
police
as
he
was
“found
on
his
knees
on
the
sidewalk
while
praying
in
Arabic,”
said
the
country’s
antiterrorism(反恐怖主义)
prosecutor’s
office,
which
is
handling
the
investigation
into
the
attack.
At
the
man’s
home,
investigators
found
religious
writings
in
which
the
author
complained
of
living
in
a
“country
of
infidels(没有信仰的),”
the
prosecutors
said
in
a
statement.
The
suspect
—
who
the
French
news
media
said
was
an
asylum-seeker(避难者)
from
Sudan
—
was
not
immediately
identified
by
name.
President
Emmanuel
Macron
vowed
that
“light
would
be
shed
on
this
odious(可憎的)
act
which
casts
a
shadow
on
our
country,
which
has
already
been
severely
tested
in
recent
weeks.”
1.
Where
does
the
attacker
come
from?
A.
Iraq
B.
Saudi
Arabia
C.
France
D.
Sudan
2.
The
first
victim
was
accompanied
with
_____
when
he
was
attacked.
A.
his
son
B.
his
companion
C.
his
wife
and
his
son
D.
none
3.
Which
of
the
following
statements
is
Not
True
according
the
passage?
A.
The
attack
was
in
the
street.
B.
The
suspect
was
an
infidel
man.
C.
The
suspect’s
name
wasn’t
known
to
the
French
new
media
at
first.
D.
President
Emmanuel
Macron
cared
much
about
the
case
and
promised
to
make
it
clear.
B
I
watched
my
Dad
close
the
door.
It
was
a
really
cold
night
in
dead
silence
and
I
was
all
alone
at
home.
My
parents
left
because
they
had
been
running
fever
for
several
days
and
they
were
showing
other
symptoms
of
COVID-19.
It
was
the
9th
day
of
Wuhan
lockdown
starting
on
January
23.
The
virus
we
now
know
as
COVID-19
is
somehow
fearsome
partly
because
it
does
not
discriminate(区别对待)
in
choosing
who
it
infects.
But
that
is
only
partly
true.
All
the
evidence
suggest
that
it
can
be
merciless
to
older
people,
so
I
was
wondering
whether
my
parents
would
make
it
and
whether
we
would
ever
take
family
photos,
which
my
parents
and
I
had
talked
about
during
the
Spring
Festival
holiday..
On
their
second
day
away
my
parents
called
and
asked
me
how
I
was.
We
talked
using
FaceTime,
and
the
moment
I
saw
mom
lying
there
with
an
oxygen
mask
and
my
dad
could
not
talk
without
breathing
heavily,
I
realized
that
I
had
to
live
on
my
own.
But
two
weeks
later,
I
came
across
a
fever
and
had
to
go
into
quarantine(隔离)
and
be
put
under
medical
observations
for
14
days.
Fortunately,
my
illness
turned
out
to
be
due
to
a
bacterial
infections
but
not
COVID-19.
Everything
there
was
hectic,
there
seemed
to
be
a
shortage
of
medical
staff
and
materials
were
in
short
supply.
Even
though
the
doctors
and
nurses
were
covered
from
head
to
toe,
I
could
see
how
tired
they
were
when
I
looked
into
their
bloodshot
eyes.
They
would
work
a
whole
day
preparing
for
new
patients
and
seemed
incredibly
apologetic
for
not
having
everything
that
was
needed.
Most
of
the
patients
were
really
understanding,
but
of
course
there
were
those
who
were
not,
and
complained
loudly,
but
all
the
doctors
and
nurses
tried
their
best
to
deal
with
it
in
a
calming
way.
And
they
are
all
from
other
cities
like
Shanghai
and
Guangzhou,
and
some
of
them
are
just
three
or
four
years
older
than
me.
When
the
quarantine
was
over,
every
patient
effusively
thanked
the
workers
for
what
they
had
done,
but
the
answer
they
received
was
exactly
the
same:
“That’s
what
we’re
here
for.”
4.
When
did
the
author’s
parents
leave
her
for
the
hospital?
A.
January
23
B.
January
30
C.
January
31
D.
February
1
5.
What
does
the
underlined
phrase
“make
it”
in
Paragraph
2
mean?
A.
succeed
B.
join
in
C.
arrive
D.
survive
6.
What
can
we
learn
according
to
the
passage?
A.
Both
the
author
and
her
parents
got
infected
with
COVID-19.
B.
The
majority
of
the
patients
understood
the
doctors
and
nurses.
C.
The
patients
apologized
to
the
doctors
and
nurses
because
they
were
too
tired.
D.
The
author
didn’t
get
infected
with
COVID-19
because
the
virus
can
only
infect
the
older.
7.
What
may
the
author
think
of
the
medical
workers
according
to
the
passage?
A.
admirable
B.
outgoing
C.
impatient
D.
thankful
C
Dutch
author
Marieke
Lucas
Rijneveld
has
become
one
of
the
youngest
writers
to
be
shortlisted(列入候选)
for
a
Booker
prize,
after
their
debut
novel(处女作)
made
the
final
line-up
for
the
International
Booker.
Rijneveld,
a
rising
star
in
Dutch
literature,
is
28
—
slightly
older
than
British
author
Daisy
Johnson
was
when
she
was
shortlisted
for
the
Booker
prize
in
2018,
age
27.
The
author,
who
identifies
as
male
and
uses
the
pronouns
they/them,
was
shortlisted
after
a
six-hour
virtual(虚拟的)
judging
meeting
for
the
?50,000
prize,
which
is
shared
equally
between
writer
and
translator,
for
The
Discomfort
of
Evening,
translated
by
Michele
Hutchison.
The
novel,
tells
of
a
girl
whose
brother
dies
in
a
skating
accident
and
draws
from
Rijneveld’s
own
experiences:
when
they
were
three,
their
12-year-old
brother
was
knocked
over
and
killed
by
a
bus.
“Rijneveld’s
language
renders(重现)
the
world
again,
revealing
the
shocks
and
violence
of
early
youth
through
the
angle
of
a
Dutch
dairy
farm.
The
strangeness
of
a
child
looking
at
the
strangeness
of
the
world
is
in
it,”
said
judges
of
the
work.
“The
Discomfort
of
Evening
is
one
of
six
novels
in
the
running
for
the
International
Booker,
each
of
which,”
said
chair
of
judges
Ted
Hodgkinson,
“restlessly
reinvents(重塑)
received
narratives,
from
foundational
myths
to
family
folklore,
plunging
us
into
discomfiting
and
delightful
encounters
with
selves
in
a
state
of
transition(过渡)”.
Hodgkinson
chaired
a
panel(陪审团)
of
five
judges
who
selected
the
shortlist
from
124
submissions.
The
coronavirus
pandemic
meant
their
meeting
had
to
be
virtual,
but
Hodgkinson
said
he
and
his
panel
still
managed
to
discuss
the
line-up
for
more
than
six
hours.
The
winner
will
be
announced
on
19
May.
8.
We
can
learn
from
the
2nd
paragraph
that
_______.
A.
Rijneveld
is
a
young
male
writer.
B.
Rijneveld
and
the
translator
Michele
Hutchison
will
share
the
$50,000
prize.
C.
Daisy
Johnson
was
the
youngest
writer
shortlisted
for
a
Booker
prize
this
year.
D.
The
Discomfort
of
Evening
is
partly
adapted
from
Rijneveld’s
own
experiences.
9.
Which
can
we
infer
from
the
passage?
A.
Rijneveld’s
brother
died
from
a
skating
accident.
B.
The
judges
of
the
work
speak
highly
of
Rijneveld’s
language.
C.
Six
novels
reveal
the
shocks
and
violence
of
early
youth
on
a
Dutch
dairy
farm.
D.
Hodgkinson
and
his
panel
were
unhappy
to
discuss
the
line-up
online
for
over
six
hours.
10.
Why
did
the
panel
have
a
virtual
judging
meeting?
A.
Because
of
the
coronavirus
pandemic
B.
Because
there
were
too
many
submissions
C.
Because
it
was
more
effective
online
D.
Because
the
judges
lives
too
far
away
from
each
other.
11.
What
is
the
most
suitable
title
of
the
passage?
A.
Booker
prize
winner
will
be
announced.
B.
Rijneveld,
one
of
the
most
youngest
Booker
winner
C.
International
Booker
prize
shortlist
led
by
28-year-old’s
debut
D.
The
Discomfort
of
Evening:a
novel
running
for
the
International
Booker.
D
The
3D-printing
industry
is
accelerating
its
efforts
to
help
fight
the
new
coronavirus
and
the
disease
it
causes,
COVID-19.
On
Tuesday,
HP
announced
it’s
working
with
those
who
bought
its
3D
printers
to
make
medical
face
shields,
hands-free
door
openers
and
an
adjuster
for
face
masks
for
medical
staff
who
often
must
wear
them
for
hours.
It’s
also
testing
“hospital-grade”
face
masks
meeting
the
higher-end
FFP3
(过滤式面罩)
standard
and
parts
for
simple
emergency
ventilators.(呼吸机)
And
it’s
looking
into
nasal
swabs
to
test
for
COVID-19
infection.
HP
also
is
offering
free
downloads
of
its
3D-printed
medical
equipment
designs.
Carbon,
whose
3D
printers
are
used
to
make
everything
from
bicycle
seats
to
teeth
straighteners,
said
it
plans
to
send
face
shield
designs
to
its
network
of
customers
who’ve
bought
its
3D
printers.
Carbon
co-founder
and
Executive
Chairman
Joseph
DeSimone
said
on
Monday
the
company
expects
to
send
the
designs
by
early
Tuesday.
3D-printer
makers
typically
sell
their
products
to
others
that
actually
do
the
3D
printing.
One
such
customer,
Ford,
said
Tuesday
that
it’s
made
1,000
face
shields
and
shipped
them
to
Michigan
hospitals,
with
plans
to
make
100,000
face
shields
a
week.
It
is
also
working
with
3M
and
General
Electric
on
respirator
masks
and
ventilator
designs.
The
effort
is
one
of
several
to
apply
3D-printing
technology
to
the
fight
against
coronavirus.
3D
printing
isn’t
as
fast
at
churning
out
products
as
conventional
mass
production
methods.
But
3D
printers
are
flexible
and
able
to
make
many
different
parts
anywhere
there’s
a
printer
and
raw
materials
like
the
plastic
resins
Carbon
printers
use.
Some
3D-printing
efforts
have
focused
on
ventilators,
which
expected
to
be
in
short
supply
with
a
surge
of
COVID-19
patients
suffering
from
respiratory(呼吸器官)
problems.
Also
in
short
supply
are
N95
masks
that
can
be
useful
in
reducing
the
likelihood
a
wearer
will
spread
COVID-19
to
others.
Carbon’s
DeSimone
is
cautious
about
the
enthusiasm,
though,
saying
that
regulatory(监管的)
approval
is
important
and
that
3D-printer
enthusiasts
shouldn’t
be
making
components
not
intended
for
close
human
contact
that
might
release
unhealthy
gases.
12.
What
is
the
passage
mainly
about?
A.
an
introduction
about
3D-printing
B.
the
3D-printing
industry’s
efforts
to
help
fight
COVID-19.
C.
the
products
that
3D-printing
makers
sell
D.
how
3D-printing
makers
produce
medical
equipment
13.
HP
annouced
to
help
its
customers
to
make
the
following
products
except
for
_____.
A.
medical
face
shields
B.
hands-free
door
openers
C.
an
adjuster
for
face
masks
D.
emergency
ventilators
14.
Which
of
the
following
is
true
according
to
the
passage?
A.
Carbon’s
company
will
finish
its
design
after
Tuesday.
B.
Ford
has
made
1,000
face
shields
and
plans
to
make
10,000
more
in
a
week.
C.
3D
printers
are
more
flexible
than
traditional
mass
production
methods.
D.
Most
3D-printings
focus
on
making
ventilators
and
N95
because
of
their
short
supply.
15.
What
can
be
inferred
from
the
last
paragraph?
A.
3D-printing
may
release
unhealthy
gases.
B.
DeSimone
is
cautious
about
3D-printing.
C.
Carbon’s
company
didn’t
gain
regulatory
approval
of
making
medical
equipment.
D.
3D
printers
aren’t
enthusiastic
about
making
components
designed
for
close
human
contact.
第二节(共5小题;每小题2.5分,满分12.5分)
We
Are
All
Fighters
We
are
facing
a
dark
time
right
now.
Some
of
us
are
stuck
at
home.
Some
are
stuck
far
away
from
home.
Some
of
us
have
lost
their
jobs.
Some
have
to
shut
down
their
businesses.
Some
of
us
are
cutting
down
the
expenses.
Some
can’t
even
pay
their
rent
and
bills.
16
.
Some
can’t
get
back
to
their
jobs.
And
some
of
us
are
still
working
day
and
night,
no
matter
how
exhausted
they
are,
or
how
dangerous
it
is.
Some
of
us
have
become
infected.
They
are
isolated
from
their
families,
their
loved
ones,
and
have
to
be
alone
in
the
wards.
Or
even
worse,
it
is
their
children,
their
parents,
or
loved
ones
that
are
infected
and
they
don’t
even
have
a
chance
to
say
goodbye.
The
virus
is
rampaging.
The
numbers
are
increasing.
The
rumors
are
spreading.
17
.
It
seems
that
all
of
a
sudden
the
whole
country
lost
its
vitality
and
prosperity.
You
are
not
the
only
one
who
is
worrying.
You
are
not
the
only
one
who
is
fearing.
You
are
not
the
only
one
who
is
struggling.
We
are
all
facing
a
dark
time
right
now.
Our
whole
country
is
facing
a
dark
time
right
now.
This
is
a
war!
18
But
it’s
a
war
with
virus,
doubts,
fears,
rumors,
and
discrimination.
But
we
shall
all
be
fighters,
my
dear
fellows!
19
All
of
us
should
be
the
fighters
in
this
war.
We
shall
fight
against
fear.
We
shall
fight
against
uncertainty.
We
shall
fight
against
doubts.
We
shall
fight
against
selfishness.
We
shall
fight
against
rumors.
We
shall
fight
against
discrimination.
This
is
going
to
be
a
fierce
and
cruel
war.
But
don’t
be
afraid,
because
we’re
going
to
win
this
war
together
in
the
end!
Our
people
may
get
sick,
our
city
may
get
sick,
but
we
as
a
brave
nation,
will
never
get
sick.
Because
we
have
the
spirit,
history
and
determination
to
win.
In
each
dark
time,
we’ve
always
fought
together,
no
matter
how
strong
our
enemy
was,
or
how
impossible
it
seemed
to
win.
We
just
kept
fighting,
because
we
are
all
fighters!
When
all
of
this
is
over,
we’ll
have
another
great
and
heroic
story
to
tell
our
children,
our
grandchildren
and
they
will
tell
the
next
generations.
20
The
fear
is
growing.
Some
can’t
go
back
to
school.
It’s
a
war
concerned
with
all
of
us.
It’s
a
war
without
guns,
bombs,
or
smoke.
And
that’s
what
makes
us
the
greatest
nation
ever.
That’s
how
we’ll
pass
this
great
spirit
on,
and
keep
it
alive
forever!
Not
just
the
doctors,
the
nurses,
the
policemen
and
the
scientists
should
fight.
第二部分
英语知识运用(共两节,满分45分)
完形填空(共20小题;每小题1.5分,满分30分)
Monroe
took
the
full-time
job
as
an
English
teacher
in
Wuhan
to
get
her
teaching
certificate.
She
never
21
that
an
outbreak
of
coronavirus
would
turn
all
her
plans
22
.
“When
the
epidemic(传染病)
first
23
,
my
supervisor
and
I
got
lots
of
food
and
other
necessities
in
24
and
weren’t
too
focused
on
work,”
she
told
the
Global
Times
on
Sunday.
Although
the
US
25
to
have
its
citizens
evacuated(撤离)
from
the
city,
Monroe
decided
to
stay
in
Wuhan
26
she
felt
living
alone
in
her
apartment
in
the
city
was
more
27
than
on
a
plane
with
a
lot
of
people.
Since
the
lockdown
of
Wuhan,
Monroe
has
been
28
videos
about
her
29
in
the
city
on
TikTok(抖音)
as
well
as
producing
30
including
audio
recordings,
video
clips,
and
other
anecdotes
for
her
students
every
day.
Additionally,
She
also
shared
her
experience
31
on
TikTok.
In
the
video,
Monroe
can
be
seen
wearing
gloves
and
a
hazmat
suit
as
she
delivers
big
bags
of
vegetables,
eggs,
fish
to
residents(居民)
who
32
them
online
since
most
residents
are
not
33
to
go
out
of
their
homes
34
some
sort
of
permission.
She
explained
that
the
service
is
a
type
of
“no
contact”
35
,
and
that
she
was
very
36
to
help
the
community.
“I
felt
37
to
be
out
of
the
apartment
and
interacting(互动)
with
people.
Even
though
I
can’t
speak
Chinese
yet!
I
could
still
empathize
with
these
people,”
she
said.
Monroe
said
a
lot
of
people
have
also
followed
her
TikTok
account
to
stay
38
on
her
life.
The
videos
have
39
many
Chinese
netizens(网民),
with
many
expressing
their
thanks
in
the
comment
section.
“
40
does
not
have
a
border.
Thank
you,
our
foreign
friend.
We
care
about
you
and
hope
you
can
protect
yourself,”
one
Chinese
netizen
wrote.
A.
accepted
B.
expected
C.
learned
D.
pretended
A.
up
B.
away
C.
upside
down
D.
out
A.
broke
out
B.
set
off
C.
occurred
D.
took
place
A.
debt
B.
charge
C.
surprise
D.
panic
A.
forced
B.
forbade
C.
arranged
D.
disagreed
A.
as
B.
though
C.
while
D.
if
A.
lonely
B.
interesting
C.
annoying
D.
secure
A.
watching
B.
sharing
C.
recording
D.
selling
A.
life
B.
work
C.
hobbies
D.
family
A.
entertainment
B.
lessons
C.
speeches
D.
classes
A.
modelling
B.
travelling
C.
volunteering
D.
performing
A.
appointed
B.
hired
C.
requested
D.
ordered
A.
prepared
B.
occupied
C.
limited
D.
allowed
A.
in
B.
for
C.
without
D.
from
A.
donation
B.
distribution
C.
reputation
D.
contribution
A.
delighted
B.
amazed
C.
shocked
D.
terrified
A.
terrible
B.
nice
C.
ashamed
D.
sympathetic
A.
updated
B.
escaped
C.
inspired
D.
repeated
A.
reflected
B.
witnessed
C.
frightened
D.
touched
A.
challenge
B.
warmth
C.
love
D.
communication
第二节(共10小题:每小题2分,满分20分)
阅读下面的短文,在空白处填上合适的词或提示词的正确形式。
Cancel
The
Olympics.
Despite
the
coronavirus
pandemic,
the
International
Olympic
Committee
and
Tokyo
2020
Olympic
organizers
insist
that
the
Tokyo
2020
Summer
Games
41
(go)
on.
Even
with
widespread
cancellations(取消)
in
European
soccer,
Formula
One
auto
racing,
42
professional
basketball
in
the
United
States,
Prime
Minister
Shinzo
Abe
of
Japan
vowed,
“We
will
overcome
the
spread
of
the
43
(infect)
and
host
the
Olympics
without
problem,
as
44
(plan).”
While
sports
can
create
an
escape
hatch
from
the
grit
and
grind
of
daily
life,
there
is
no
escaping
the
fact
45
the
coronavirus
pandemic
presents
46
extraordinary
challenge
that
cannot
be
overcome
with
mere
platitudes
and
prayers.
Pressing
ahead
with
the
Tokyo
Games
means
47
(create)
a
massive,
48
(potential)
dangerous
petri
dish(培养皿).
49
the
sake
of
global
public
health,
the
Tokyo
2020
Olympic
Games
should
50
(cancel).
1