期中考试
英语答案
8
C
阅读理解(共两
解析】从
部
句可知答案
第三段
网课就是为
过或未
业
英语答案第1页(共7页)
解析】从
及文章最后
解析】从
中倒数第二段可知
景下
本文应属
畴
答案
从文
ot
alway
vIors
he
aggregated(整体统计的)
章的
并引起读者兴趣。其他几
围过大
下文,可知此
为疫
看望孙子的这种情况发生了变
居空前内容,由于疫情影响,老人参
后内容
英语答案第2页(共7页)
万面
解析】根据空前内容,对
父母来说
载着照顾孩子
居家学习开始
解析】根据前后内
暴发
关闭
被要求参
顾
故选
解析】根据
老人因疫情影响而参与照
丁
录。根据空后内容
爱孩子,故
第二部
言知识运
两节,满分45分
意
tzen因为一次意外可
康复,他重新回到赛场,并在2018年成为
男子500米
速滑比赛冠
极备
解析】考查动
析。句意:这个前途光
历
事情。
expect期待;ike喜欢;fea
deserve值得。由下文可知,腿部受伤是
白的事情。故选
解析】考查动
内侧
冰鞋严重割
cut割破,划破
燃烧。由下文的“The
快脱落
解析】考查形容
得
为受
不
员来说,这个消息无疑
我往下看的时候,看到小腿上的皮肤
挂在腿
eep保持;
break破碎;hang悬
英语答案第3页(共7页)
le
Injury”可知,他腿上的皮肤变黑,医生从他身体的不同部位取皮,敷在
腿上的皮肤脱
f(脱落,拉开)。故选C项
案
析。句意:那并不是
的
来庥烦的;
awkward尴尬
他小腿上的皮
脱落,这个
不怎么令人愉快
解析】考查副词词义辨析。句意:谢天谢地,
Lorentz
够笑着说
理
再滑冰
还在2018年成为奥
男
赛
所
谢
解析】考查动
德国进行了手术
Lorentzen乘飞机
走,步行;
力。根据上下文
rentz
术后乘飞
选A
解析】考查动词词义辨
当他腿上的皮肤变黑
况变得更糟
ed
black”可知,皮肪
在脱落,还变黑
解析】考查形容
家医院,那里的医生帮他从身
不同部
有规
皮肤正在脱落,还变
处的皮
就没有
为了治疗,只有
体的其他部位取皮肤放上去
意:考虑到
散周
走路了,对
做事的年轻人来说,康复并不是一个简单的
英语答案第4页(共7页)
可知
腿内侧划伤
康复期间肯
走
解析】考查名
考虑
敖周不
做事的年
单的过
恢复。由上文语境可知
腿内侧划
术,肯定需要时间来静养,不能走路,要好好康复。故
继续
h擦亮。由下文语境可知
en最后能重新滑冰了,说明康复
解析】考查名
意:首先,康复过程帮助他更加专注于睡眠和营养等重要
因为他需要更快地
场
养
教育
境可知
时间来静养康复
常
康复的时候需要保证充足的睡眠和营养,才能
要更
好的状态返回赛
境
度;
order秩序,命
身体
意和
知be
表示身体健康
解析】考查形
辨析。句意:更重要
没有
慎的
验
但是现在在冰上,他反而不
解析】考查动
意:我
为我知道,如果我
有什么样的后果
在
在
现什么后果,(有心理准备
项
英语答案第5页(共7页)绝密★启用
河南名校联盟2020-2021学年高二(下)期中考试
英
语
考生注意:
1.本试卷共8页。时间100分钟,满分120分。答题前考生先将自己的姓名、考生号填写在试卷指定位置,并将姓名、考场号、座位号、考生号填写在答题卡上,然后认真核
对条形码上的信息,并将条形码粘贴在答题卡上的指定位置。
2.作答选择题时,选出每小题答案后,用2B铅笔把答题卡上对应题目的答案标号涂黑。
如需改动,用橡皮擦干净后,再选涂其他答案标号。作答非选择题时,将答案写在答题卡上对应的答题区域内。写在本试卷上无效。
3.考试结束后,将试卷和答题卡一并收回。
第I卷(选择题,共70分)
第一部分
阅读理解(共两节,满分40分)
第一节(共15小题;每小题2分,满分30分)
阅读下列短文,从每题所给的A、B、C和D四个选项中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。
A
Here
are
four
art
exhibitions
in
Paris
which
look
at
the
poetry
of
Pablo
Picasso,
vintage
(老式
的)photography
by
Henri
Cartier-Bresson,
the
history
of
technology
and
fashion
design
by
Coco
Chanel.
Musee
National
Picasso
—
Paris
On
view
at
the
Musee
National
Picasso
——Paris,
an
exhibition
called
Picasso
Poet
looks
at
the
poems
that
Pablo
Picasso
wrote
in
his
lifetime.
It's
more
than
just
framed
pieces
of
paper
but
a
look
into
his
handwritten
plays,
typewritten
artist
books
and
hand-painted
poems,
alongside
his
drawings
and
paintings.
"It
reveals
the
extraordinary
resourcefulness
of
the
poet
Picasso,"
writes
the
curator
(馆长).
Pricing
:
$
10
Henri
Cartier-Bresson
Foundation
This
quiet
little
museum
features
more
than
just
photos
by
the
French
master
photographer
Henri
Cartier-Bresson.
There's
also
a
solo
show
featuring
the
photos
of
Chilean
photographer
Sergio
Larrain
currently
on
display.
Featuring
photos
of
London
taken
in
the
winter
of
1958
to
1959,
there
are
street
scenes
with
fog
and
rain
as
well
as
the
locals
daily
lives.
Pricing
:
Free
Metiers
Art
Museum
This
is
one
of
the
most
overlooked
museums
in
Paris,
and
it's
well
worth
a
day
trip.
The
collection
of
engineering
machines
and
televisions,
as
well
as
cameras
and
typewriters
will
walk
us
through
the
history
of
technology
over
the
past
200
years.
Pricing
:
$
14
Palais
Galliera
Palais
Galleria
in
Paris
is
the
city's
best
fashion
museum,
and
it
has
been
closed
for
the
past
two
years
undergoing
a
huge
renovation
(整修).Now,
the
museum
has
reopened
with
a
retrospective
(回顾展)honoring
a
French
designer,
Coco
Chanel.
The
exhibition
looks
back
at
the
career
of
one
woman
who
broke
the
glass
ceiling
in
fashion
design
and
features
over
350
dresses,
accessories
,
jewels
and
scents.
The
exhibition
continues
in
the
newly-renovated
basement
galleries,
which
are
not
to
miss.
Pricing:
$20
1.
Where
should
you
visit
if
you're
interested
in
the
old
London?
A.
Mus6e
National
Picasso
—
Paris.
B.
Henri
Cartier-Bresson
Foundation.
C.
Metiers
Art
Museum.
D.
Palais
Galliera.
2.
What
do
we
know
about
Palais
Galliera?
A.
It
is
rebuilt
for
Coco
Chanel.
B.
It's
under
construction
at
present.
C.
It's
famous
for
fashion-themed
show.
D.
It
has
a
glass
ceiling
in
fashion
design.
3.
What
do
the
four
exhibitions
have
in
common?
A.
They
are
all
celebrity-related.
B.
They
are
displayed
in
Paris.
C.
They
ask
for
admission
tickets.
D.
They
are
displayed
in
grand
museums.
B
Fed
up
with
too
much
screen
time,
some
students
from
one
Philadelphia
high
school
in
the
US
refused
to
log
on
for
school
on
Dec
14th,
staging
a
protest
that
they
hope
will
draw
attention
to
the
difficult
situation
of
stressed
teenagers
across
the
city
and
beyond.
Instead
of
attending
virtual
school
from
8
am
to
3
pm
as
usual,
dozens
of
students
at
Kensington
High
School
for
the
Creative
and
Performing
Arts
(KCAPA)
declined
to
participate
in
classes.
Leilani
Ferrara
and
her
classmates
didn't
want
to
shirk
work.
"In
fact,
the
logoff
was
designed
to
catch
up
on
missed
or
incomplete
assignments,
and
organized
around
the
fact
that
the
current
school
schedule
is
unworkable,"
said
Ferrara,
15,
a
strong
student
whose
grades
are
now
falling.
“We
are
all
breaking
down
every
day,"
Ferrara
said.
"I
barely
eat.
I'm
sleeping
all
the
time.
You
just
can’t
be
online
every
day
from
8
am
to
3
pm.
It's
too
much.
”
Philadelphia
School
District
students
have
not
seen
the
inside
of
their
classrooms
since
March
when
schools
closed
because
of
COVID-19.
Social
studies
teacher
Ismael
Jimenez
has
seen
students
grow
increasingly
stressed.
They
worry
about
too
much
work,
not
enough
time
to
complete
it
and
a
lack
of
one-on-one
time
with
teachers.
KCAPA
attendance
has
been
declining
—
last
week,
it
was
under
50
percent.
KCAPA
students
are
expected
to
be
in
classes
for
seven
hours,
with
10
minutes
between
classes
and
a
lunch
break.
The
students
have
taken
their
concerns
to
Principal
Patricia
McDermott-Fair?
who
has
not
made
meaningful
changes
to
the
schedule.
District
leaders
did
not
make
McDermott-Fair
available
for
comment.
In
a
statement,
Malika
Savoy-Brooks,
the
district's
Chief
of
Academic
Support,
said
she
understood
remote
learning
is
challenging
for
some.
"We
encourage
anyone
who
has
concerns
about
this
matter
to
work
with
their
school
leaders
with
the
final
goal
of
creating
an
environment
where
students,
progress
comes
first,"
Savoy-Brooks
said.
Students
say
they're
overwhelmed
(压垮的)by
hours
of
work
followed
by
homework.
Junior
Kayla
Reynolds,
18,
wants
to
finish
high
school.
But
now
she's
getting
mostly
Ds
and
Fs.
"
I'm
not
a
good
learner
when
it
comes
to
virtual
—
I'm
not
slow,
but
I
just
need
face-to-face
learning,
she
said.
"Some
of
us
are
thinking
about
dropping
out
of
school."
4.
What's
the
reason
for
the
protest
of
some
KCAPA
students?
A.
Offline
homework
is
too
much.
B.
Online
courses
are
challenging.
C.
The
school
schedule
is
unreasonable.
D.
Sleeping
and
eating
time
is
not
enough.
5.
Which
of
the
following
may
replace
the
underlined
word
“shirk”?
A.
Select.
B.
Complete.
C.
Continue.
D.
Escape.
6.
What
did
KCAPA
face
after
COVID-19
broke
out?
A.
The
change
of
the
principal.
B.
A
decline
in
class
attendance.
C.
Better
attendance
for
classes.
D.
Many
students'
failure
in
exams.
7.
According
to
Malika,
what's
the
right
choice
for
the
students?
A.
Talk
to
school
leaders
about
the
current
schedule.
B.
Communicate
with
teachers
to
reduce
homework.
C.
Get
over
learning
difficulties
to
adapt
to
virtual
school.
D.
Go
on
protesting
to
get
their
advantage
over
other
things.
C
There
is
something
that
has
been
proven
to
help
reduce
stress
levels,
mental
illness,
and
the
risk
of
heart
disease.
It
can
also
help
you
live
longer,
be
happier,
and
even
earn
more
money.
Do
you
know
what
it
is?
Forgiveness.
“I
don't
know
if
there
is
a
sphere
(领域)of
your
life
that
will
not
be
positively
affected
by
being
more
forgiving,"
Loren
Toussaint,
a
psychologist
who
studies
forgiveness
at
Luther
College
in
Iowa,
US,
told
BBC
News.
Even
though
forgiveness
seems
like
a
universal
concept,
not
everyone
forgives
in
the
same
way.
In
fact,
this
especially
holds
true
depending
on
which
part
of
the
world
you
come
from.
Because
of
this,
the
way
you
forgive
someone
in
one
culture
could
actually
be
seen
as
rude
in
another
one.
Toussaint
explained,
“
When
you
cross
cultural
borders,
it
becomes
not
important,
but
crucial,
that
the
approach
toward
forgiveness
should
be
culturally
sensitive
and
appropriate.
"
There
are
also
different
reasons
why
we
forgive
others.
Western
countries
have
more
individualistic
cultures,
where
people
may
use
forgiveness
to
feel
like
they
have
done
the
right
thing
or
to
clear
their
own
guiltiness.
Other
countries
have
more
collectivistic
(集体主义的)cultures,
where
people
will
use
forgiveness
to
achieve
social
harmony
for
the
betterment
of
the
whole
group.
So,
what
are
some
ways
that
people
from
around
the
world
say
“I
forgive
you
?
In
Hawaii,
there
is
a
term
called
"ho'oponopono”.
Toussaint
noted,
"
'
I
am
sorry,
please
forgive
me,
I
love
you',
is
the
really
extremely
oversimplified
way
to
describe
it.
"
Man
Yee
Ho,
a
behavioral
scientist
at
City
University
of
Hong
Kong,
stated
that
Chinese
cultures
are
“
not
quite
used
to
using
the
term
'forgiveness'."
For
instance,
there
is
a
term
called
"
yuanliang"
,
which
is
more
similar
to
"forbearance
(宽容)"
in
English.
"
People
don't
like
the
idea
of
directly
addressing
a
fault,"
Ho
said.
"
Forbearance
comes
more
easily
to
mind.”
Regardless
of
these
cultural
differences,
forgiveness
is
an
important
part
of
life
that
we
should
all
do
more
of.
8.
What's
more
important
when
we
forgive
others?
A.
The
reason.
B.
The
occasion.
C.
The
way.
D.
The
statement.
9.
What's
a
possible
reason
for
forgiveness?
A.
To
remove
your
sad
feelings.
B.
To
show
you're
sympathetic.
C.
To
prove
you
have
been
right.
D.
To
keep
the
group
harmony.
10.
Who
may
be
the
one
to
point
out
the
mistakes
indirectly?
A.
A
Chinese.
B.
A
Hawaiian.
C.
An
American.
D.
A
German.
11.
Which
part
of
the
magazine
is
the
text
probably
taken
from?
A.
Entertainment.
B.
Business.
C.
Society.
D.
Culture.
D
You
are
being
stalked
(
跟踪)everywhere
you
go.
In
your
car.
On
your
morning
walk.
Even
in
your
own
home
-
by
your
own
TV.
TVs
have
joined
the
ranks
of
websites,
apps,
and
credit
cards
in
the
profitable
business
of
sharing
your
information.
Americans
spend
an
average
of
three
and
a
half
hours
in
front
of
a
TV
each
day,
according
to
eMarketer.
Your
TV
records
may
not
contain
sensitive
financial
data,
but
that
history
is
a
window
to
your
interests,
joys,
and
embarrassments.
And
marketers
are
collecting
it
because,
legally
speaking,
we
gave
our
permission
when
we
set
up
our
Internet-connected
smart
TVs.
The
TV
makers
sell
this
information
to
data
brokers
(中间人),who
in
turn
sell
it
to
advertisers
and
media
companies,
who
are
now
able
to
link
up
what
you
watch
with
what
you
do
on
your
phone,
tablet,
and
laptop
—
even
with
what
you
buy
in
stores.
Marketers
can
then
retarget
ads
you
see
on
TV
to
your
computer
and
phone.
They
can
measure
how
many
people
bought
their
product
after
seeing
their
ads.
I
ran
an
experiment
on
my
own
Samsung
TV
as
well
as
new
models
from
Samsung,
TCL
Roku
TV,
Vizio,
and
LG.
I
set
up
each
as
most
people
do:
by
tapping
“OK”
with
the
remote
control
to
each
on-screen
prompt
(提示).Then,
using
special
software
from
Princeton
University,
1
watched
how
each
model
sent
data.
What
I
found
is
that
some
TVs
record
and
send
out
everything
on
your
screen.
It's
not
always
"you"
they're
after,
but
your
behaviors
help
create
aggregated
(整体统计的)statistical
models
of
people
who
act
or
watch
TV
the
way
you
do.
Still,
you
might
find
it
upsetting.
When
1
set
up
my
TV,
I
didn't
realize
I
could
say
no
to
any
of
this.
You
can
change
your
settings
after
the
fact,
if
you're
prepared
to
hunt
around
in
out-of-the-way
menus,
such
as
“Terms
and
Policies.”
But
it
may
be
worth
the
hunt.
12.
How
do
the
TV
makers
collect
customers'
information?
A.
By
recording
watching
history.
B.
By
linking
up
their
phone
with
TV.
C.
By
setting
up
the
Internet-connected
TV.
D.
By
monitoring
their
sensitive
financial
data.
13.
Who
will
most
likely
be
the
buyer
of
personal
information?
A.
Banks.
B.
Websites.
C.
Media
companies.
D.
Data
brokers.
14.
What
can
be
inferred
from
the
author's
experiment?
A.
We
can
choose
a
different
menu
to
set
up
TV.
B.
TV
makers
record
and
give
away
our
way
of
life.
C.
We
can
change
the
settings
to
protect
our
information.
D.
We
should
agree
with
the
TV
settings
without
hesitation.
15.
Which
of
the
following
is
the
best
title
for
the
text?
A.
Is
Your
TV
Safe
Enough
to
Watch?
B.
Legal
but
Disturbing
Deals
C.
How
to
Keep
Our
Information
Secret?
D.
Information
War
between
Companies
第二节(共5小题;每小题2分,满分10分)
根据短文内容,从短文后的选项中选出能填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为多余选项。
Retirement,
if
you
plan
well,
is
filled
with
leisure
time
to
do
what
you
want
when
you
want.
That
is
why
we
call
retirement
the
Golden
Years.
Retirees
with
grandchildren
have
the
leisure
to
see
them
whenever
they
want.
16
。
Early
in
the
pandemic
(流行病),health
experts
warned
older
adults
to
limit
contact
with
children.
No
matter
how
much
you
love
them,
children
are
known
for
spreading
germs.
And
older
adults
are
at
higher
risk
of
dying
from
CO
VID-19.
But
now,
as
the
pandemic
continues,
the
situation
is
changing
again
for
some
retired
people.
Because
of
the
pandemic,
most
grandparents
are
involved
in
the
family's
childcare.
17
They
check
schoolwork,
control
study
time,
and
create
educational
games.
Why?
For
many
families,
school
is
also
childcare
for
working
parents.
18
So
education
is
happening
online
and
in
the
home.
19
More
grandparents
are
now
being
asked
to
not
only
watch
their
grandchildren
but
also
supervise
(监督)their
online
learning.
Mary
Hill
and
her
husband
Bill
have
to
care
for
their
grandson
Will
five
days
a
week
and
supervise
his
distance
learning.
Mary
says
she
and
her
husband
are
much
busier
than
they
were
before
the
pandemic.
20
Grandparents
are
often
accused
of
spoiling
grandchildren
-
letting
them
eat
lots
of
sweets
and
play
all
the
time.
For
Mary,
becoming
a
rule
enforcer
instead
of
just
a
fun
grandmother
for
Will
has
been
the
hardest
part.
A.
But
most
schools
remain
closed.
B.
However,
that
changed
with
the
coronavirus
pandemic.
C.
As
a
result,
many
families
are
struggling
to
find
childcare.
D.
It
is
not
easy
for
old
adults
to
get
along
with
their
grandchildren.
E.
Besides
being
much
busier,
grandparents
face
another
difficult
problem.
F.
In
the
United
States,
some
grandparents
are
adding
new
work
in
their
Golden
Years.
G.
Children
experts
say
grandparents
and
their
grandchildren
should
hang
out
together
regularly.
第二部分
语言知识运用(共两节,满分45分)
第一节(共20小题;每小题1.5分,满分30分)
阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的A、B、C和D四个选项中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。
The
28-year-old,
Havard
Lorentzen,
known
as
a
Norwegian
speed
skater,
was
sitting
on
a
hospital
bed
in
his
hometown.
The
promising
young
athlete
had
done
what
every
skater
21
the
most.
He
stepped
on
something
on
the
ice,
his
left
skate
just
went
away
under
him
and
he
hit
the
pads
on
the
outside
of
the
comer
in
a
not
—
so
—
good
way
and
ended
up
22
his
right
calf(小腿)
on
the
inside
pretty
bad
with
his
left
skate.
He
received
the
23
news
that
he
might
not
be
able
to
skate
again.
“The
skin
was
just
24
off
my
calf
when
I
looked
down.
It
was
far
from
a
25
sight.”
Lorentzen
explained,
26
now
able
to
smile
at
the
frightening
details.
After
the
emergency
surgery
in
Germany,
Lorentzen
27
home.
But
things
got
worse
when
the
skin
on
his
right
leg
turned
black
and
28
He
had
to
go
to
a
local
hospital
where
the
doctors
helped
him
by
taking
skin
from
a
29
part
of
the
body
and
put
it
on
the
injury.
Given
he
was
unable
to
30
for
weeks,
the
31
was
not
a
simple
process
for
a
young
man
used
to
doing
everything
at
pace.
But
everything
began
to
32
for
the
better.
First,
it
helped
him
be
even
more
focused
on
important
details
like
sleep
and
33
because
he
needed
to
come
back
to
the
ice
quicker
and
in
good
34
More
importantly,
he
felt
less
35
on
the
ice.
“I
am
not
sure
why.
I
think
it
is
because
I
knew
what
kind
of
consequences
there
were
if
I
36
,
now
that
I
had
experienced
them.
It
was
bad
of
course,
but
not
something
I
couldn't
37
.
”
he
said.
This
new
Lorentzen
was
a
different
prospect
on
the
ice.
He
became
the
champion
of
the
Olympic
Men's
500m
speed
skating
in
2018.
With
a
taste
for
record-setting,
the
skater
has
no
38
of
stopping
any
time
soon.
He
has
set
his
sights
firmly
on
Beijing
2022
and
will
be
ready
to
39
his
Olympic
title.
After
all,
the
40
man
on
ice
is
a
pretty
cool
title
to
tell
the
grandchildren
about.
"To
do
it
on
the
shortest
and
fastest
event
that
is
probably
the
hardest
distance
to
win
is
amazing,”
he
said.
"It's
something
I
am
going
to
be
really
proud
of
when
I
look
back
at
my
career.”
21.
A.
expects
B.
likes
C.
fears
D.
deserves
22.
A.
losing
B.
exchanging
C.
cutting
D.
burning
23.
A.
amazing
B.
disappointing
C.
amusing
D.
inviting
24.
A.
keeping
B.
breaking
C.
hanging
D.
taking
25.
A.
pleasant
B.
troublesome
C.
awkward
D.
complex
26.
A.
unfortunately
B.
gradually
C.
properly
D.
thankfully
27.
A.
flew
B.
ran
C.
walked
D.
flowed
28.
A.
healed
B.
brightened
C.
died
D.
mixed
29.
A.
different
B.
dark
C.
near
D.
regular
30.
A.
sleep
B.
walk
C.
dive
D.
jump
31.
A.
retirement
B.
procedure
C.
communication
D.
recovery
32.
A.
happen
B.
change
C.
continue
D.
polish
33.
A.
training
B.
nutrition
C.
education
D.
companion
34.
A.
position
B.
extent
C.
order
D.
shape
35.
A.
scared
B.
cautious
C.
experienced
D.
curious
36.
A.
participated
B.
quit
C.
survived
D.
crashed
37.
A.
live
with
B.
come
across
C.
depend
on
D.
cut
off
38.
A.
idea
B.
doubt
C.
meaning
D.
intention
39.
A.
attempt
B.
shelter
C.
defend
D.
achieve
40.
A.
cutest
B.
fastest
C.
toughest
D.
proudest
第Ⅱ卷(非选择题,共50分)
第二节(共10小题;每小题1.5分,满分15分)
阅读下面短文,在空白处填入1个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。
If
there
is
one
thing
in
life
that
we
could
choose
not
to
experience,
it
is
the
death
of
someone
we
love.
41
(lose)
a
friend
or
family
member
is
heartbreaking
and
hard
to
accept,
but
how
we
deal
with
it,
and
how
we
"move
on”
,
changes
from
person
to
person.
Sometimes
we
feel
42
passing
of
a
loved
one
has
come
too
soon.
Our
first
reaction
is
to
feel
very
sad,
and
even
though
we
may
soon
43
(encourage)
to
accept
and
let
go.
But
feeling
of
great
sadness
is
a
very
natural,
human
response
to
loss
and
can
take
the
form
of
many
44
(expected)
emotions,
from
shock
to
anger
and
disbelief.
When
someone
dies,
we
may
try
to
put
on
a
brave
face
and
hide
our
45
(feeling).
But
you
can
talk
to
them
in
your
head,
write
them
a
letter
or
share
memories
with
other
people
who
knew
them.
Some
people
choose
to
make
a
more
permanent
reminder
46
someone
by
getting
a
tattoo.
Dr
John
Troyer
from
Bath
University
told
the
BBC:
"You
can
have
a
continuing
bond
with
the
dead...
I
think
it's
a
very
important
way
for
people
to
come
to
terms
with
the
fact
47
someone
has
left.
"
Whatever
approach
you
take
to
grieving
and
to
keeping
someone's
memory
alive,
48
(final)
,
the
physical
aching
and
pain
caused
by
the
loss
of
a
loved
one
will
go
down.
But
the
memories
of
that
person
and
the
times
we
shared
can
stay
with
us
forever.
49
the
singer
and
songwriter
Patti
Smith
said,
“Loss
50
(be)
something
that
we
never
get
over.
"
第三部分
写作(共两节,满分35分)
第一节短文改错(共10小题;每小题1分,满分1。分)
假定英语课上老师要求同桌之间交换修改作文,请你修改你同桌写的作文。文中共10
处语言错误,每句中最多有两处。每处错误仅涉及一个单词的增加、删除或修改。
增加:在缺词处加一个漏字符号(∧),并在其下面写出该加的词。
删除:把多余的词用斜线(\)划掉。
修改:在错的词下划一横线,并在该词下面写出修改后的词。
注意:1.每处错误及其修改均仅限一词;
2.只允许修改10处,多者(从第11处起)不计分。
My
father
is
a
driver
and
my
mother
is
a
teacher.
All
of
them
work
hard
during
the
week.
No
matter
what
busy
they
are,
they
always
manage
to
take
us
to
my
uncle's
home
at
the
weekend
and
work
on
the
farm.
The
farm
is
not
very
big,
and
there
is
always
so
much
to
do.
I
like
looking
after
the
animal,
taking
them
to
the
field,
giving
them
food,
and
play
with
them.
My
parents
help
with
my
uncle
in
the
field,
while
my
aunt
prepare
dinner
for
us.
Sometimes
I
help
in
the
field,
too.
It
is
on
the
farm
what
I
get
to
know
the
meaning
of
the
saying,
A
grain,
a
sweat.
After
several
hours'
hard
work,
we
are
all
hungry
and
tired.
We
usually
have
big
meal,
and
then
go
back
home
in
the
evening.
第二节书面表达(满分25分)
假定你是李华,上周你校开展了主题为“劳动创造美好未来creates
a
better
future)”的评选活动。请你为校英文报写一篇报道,内容包括:
1.活动主题;2.劳动内容(烹饪、急救等);3.活动反响。
要求:
1.词数100左右;
2.可根据内容要点适当增加细节,以使行文连贯。