2022届湖南省湘潭市高三下学期第三次模拟考试英语试题.docx
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1、2022届湖南省湘潭市高三下学期第三次模拟考试英语试题学校:_姓名:_班级:_考号:_一、阅读理解On August 4, 2021, the US toymaker of Mattel showed the latest additions to the collection of Barbie Role Models series-custom, one-of-a-kind dolls modeled after six ordinary female workers. To shine a light on their efforts, Mattel is sharing their s
2、tories to inspire the next generation to take after these heroes and give back. The company does not plan on selling these dolls.Amy OSullivanAmy OSullivan is an emergency room nurse at Wyckoff Heights Medical Center in Brooklyn, New York. She treated Brooklyns first COVID-19 patient, survived a dea
3、dly attack of COVID-19 herself, and then returned to care for others.Professor Sarah GilbertProfessor Sarah Gilbert, a professor at the University of Oxford in England has been battling the pandemic(疫情) out of the public sight. Ms. Gilbert helped develop the Oxford/AstraZeneca COVID-l9 vaccine(疫苗),
4、which has helped save the lives of millions of people worldwide.Dr. Audrey Sue CruzDr. Audrey Sue Cruz is the perfect role model for any young girl wishing to have a STEM career. The 31-year-old got a bachelors degree in Electrical Engineering before turning to a medical school. Sue Cruz has been on
5、 the front lines in both hospitals and clinics during the pandemic.Dr. Kirby WhiteDr. Kirby White, a doctor in the countryside of Australia, was honored for her work in providing frontline workers with protective gowns(长袍) during the pandemic. She started the movement, Gowns for Doctors, which attra
6、cted hundreds of local volunteers and companies to make thousands of re-usable gowns. They were given away to over 750 countryside medical clinics.1Why does the toymaker exhibit the dolls?ATo collect donations.BTo develop the market.CTo inspire the youth.DTo create civilian heroes.2Which worker is w
7、orking behind the scenes?ASarah Gilbert.BKirby White.CAmy OSullivan.DAudrey Sue Cruz.3What do the four female workers have in common?AThey are well-known for their work.BThey have courage against COVID-19.CThey graduated from medical colleges.DThey devoted themselves to toy making.Six-year-old Kenda
8、ll Rae Johnson has been in love with gardening all her life. Now, the Georgia native is the states youngest certified farmer. Taught by her grandmother, Kendall started her first garden on a backyard, and by her fourth birthday, she had a backyard garden filled with carrots, tomatoes, onions, cucumb
9、ers and strawberries. Her green thumb just didnt extend in the walls of her garden. She started a monthly gardening club with subscription food boxes, to help spread awareness about farming among her peers.Kendalls journey to becoming a certified farmer didnt happen overnight. First, she had to get
10、a business unit at the state and federal levels. Then she joined various farming organizations associated with Georgias Department of Agriculture and Georgia Farm Bureau. This made her qualified to be certified.The ambitious grower was to apply for scholarships so she can purchase her own land and r
11、un the business, which she can legally do now that she is certified. She also hopes to raise $10,000 for an outdoor agricultural science lab to begin composting. Kendalls mother told ABC News her daughter was “the example of young entrepreneurship and the future of Black farmers.”Black farmers are f
12、ew and far between. According to the U. S. Department of Agriculture, of the farmers in the United States, less than 2% are black. However, Black people do have a strong history in farming. In 1920 there were nearly a million black farmers in the United States: there are just 45,000 now. But Kendall
13、 can help change that. Kendall regularly attends farming conferences and Agriculture summits and is committed to making a difference in the field. Throughout it all, she is still a kid and says her main goal is to make new friends. But along the way she also hopes to motivate those friends to grow a
14、n interest in farming.4What can we learn about Kendalls gardening club?AIt took her over a month to prepare.BIt made her the youngest certified farmer.CIt was created as a gift for her fourth birthday.DIt is aimed at teaching other kids about farming.5What does the author intend to convey in paragra
15、ph 2?AGetting certified as a farmer is not easy.BKendall is the youngest farmer in the USACThe journey to Kendalls garden is difficult.DKendall is popular among farming organizations.6What enables Kendall to buy land for her business?AAsking for scholarships.BRaising money by delivering speeches.CEa
16、rning money through her science lab.DSelling her own produce from her garden.7What is Kendalls wish according to the last paragraph?ATo educate the black farmers.BTo organize more farming meetings.CTo teach other kids to plant vegetables.DTo make more friends and inspire them.Tobogganing, or sleddin
17、g (雪橇), likely comes before the colonization of North America. Records show that Canadas First Peoples used small sleds to transport their belongings and food between camps, Raymond Flower writes in The History of Skiing and Other Winter Sports. But modern-day sled races can trace their origins back
18、 to the Swiss Alps in the late 1800s when British tourists decided to race in wooden luges (a sled used by one person) that locals had used to travel through snow. The origin is debatable in snowy northern New York, however, where there $ evidence that Albany held bobsled (a sled used by two or more
19、 people) races as early as 1885.Wherever they began, sled races quickly became popular. The famous Cresta Run, named after the Swiss town near the base of its course, was built in 1885 using snowbanks. The first organized competition was in 1898, hosted by the first bobsled club in nearby St.Moritz
20、(a city in Switzerland). It was then that sledding began to separate from the luge to include two new sports: bob sledding, and skeleton sledding (俯式雪橇).Cresta Run is considered the birthplace of the skeleton, a particularly daring form of sledding. Unlike the luge, where competitors ride feet-first
21、 on a sled with metal runners, the skeleton sledding is a steel sled with a slim appearance. Riders lie down on the sled headfirst, then drop suddenly down an ice track. Bobsledding, meanwhile, involves teams of two to four in which the person in front controls directions and the player in back brak
22、es when needed. It earned its name after competitors started swinging back and forth to speed up the sled.Bobsledding initially overtook skeleton sledding in popularity, becoming one of a handful of sports played at the first Winter Games in 1924. The skeleton sledding was limited to the Cresta Run
23、for decades because other bob runs around the world were not built for the steel skeleton sled. But in the 1970s, adjustments were made to both the skeleton and bob runs in order to include the event at future winter games.8What can we infer about Raymond Flower?AHe is a writer.BHe is good at sleddi
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