2020届广东省广州市高三普通高中毕业班综合测试(二)英语试题.docx
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1、2020届广东省广州市高三普通高中毕业班综合测试(二)英语试题学校:_姓名:_班级:_考号:_一、阅读理解We can all think of times when people didnt make remembering easy. Directions given at machine-gun speed. New people introduced in a flood of names and handshakes. Whenever information is passed between people, its all too easy for it to go in one
2、 ear and straight out of the other. Thankfully, the opposite is also true. Look around you, and youll see parents who can get their children to remember exactly what they were told; advertisers who know how to imprint their sales messages on our brains.So, how do they do? Their secrets can be summed
3、 up in four simple words: focus, imagery, reasons and engagement.FOCUS means ensuring that the person youre talking to can concentrate on learning. Choose your moment carefully. Check that they can properly hear or see the information. Communicate slowly and clearly enough for their memory to cope.I
4、MAGERY helps information to stick. Do everything your can to make other people “see” the ideas youre giving them. Add visual details to directions, and illustrate abstract concepts with metaphors.REASONS to remember help people to put in the mental effort. So, make it clear that your words are impor
5、tant, and be explicit about why. Maybe this information will save them time, protect them from embarrassment, or let them enjoy a particular experience or event.EMGAGEMENT requires you to ask questions. Point out links between new concepts and things listeners already know. Activate their senses, sp
6、ark their curiosity, get them doing something physical, or simply make them laugh.The next time youve got an important message to pass on, put some of these techniques to the test. Youll discover that there are benefits on both sides when you know how to FIRE peoples memories into action.1What is th
7、e main purpose of the text?ATo report new research.BTo provide some advice.CTo explain a problem.DTo define some terms.2How can you do to help a listener “focus” on what you are saying?ASelect the appropriate time to raise the topic.BDo something humorous to get their attention.CMake sure the inform
8、ation provided is correct.DSpeak as slowly and clearly as you possibly can.3Explaining to listeners why your information is important is an example of _.AFOCUSBIMAGERYCREASONSDENGAGEMENTSpecial boxes lie at the bottom of my locked filing cabinet. Deposited there are important letters and cards colle
9、cted throughout my life, from my grandparents, school friends, parents, wife and son. Since the invention of e-mail though, theyve been few and far between.Tonight is New Yorks Eve 2029 and theres a very special box of letters I want to look at. But first theres something I have to do The Ritual(惯例)
10、.I go to my trusted computer and start. I begin to type: Dear - . I leave the name blank for now, anticipating the thrill of typing it in. “I hope you are well and I wonder how this will find you. And you still planning to move to that villa in Portugal? Did your son marry Fiona? Is your mother stil
11、l alive? Questions surge into my mind.For the next two hours I sit writing. About what Ive been doing for the last year, my failing health, my increasing wealth and sometime difficult marriage. Then about my goals and ambitions. Will he be interested? Do I climb Mt. Kilimanjaro? Do I get that novel
12、published? the one thats been rejected more times than I carte to think about.Finally, its finished. 11:30 pm. I fill in the recipients name, print my letter, sign and address it and then seal it up with tape. I then delete the document and empty the trash folder to avoid the possibility of temptati
13、on. That completes the ritual!I walk over to my “special box”. It contains ten long, white, thick envelopes, all with the same handwriting. I place the one I have just written in at the back and take out the one at the front. Its dated 2019, and labelled “to be opened 31st December 2029”.The cycle i
14、s finally complete! I open it, trembling with anticipation. I begin to read, my eyes tearing up a little as I do so. Throughout the last ten long, eventful years, of life, death, joy and heartbreak, it has been waiting patiently in this box for me, though I now have no memory of ever having written
15、it.4Why does the author receive fewer “important letters” these days ?AHe has moved from his original address.BHe is rarely in contact with his friends and family.CPeople communicate with each other less often than before.DElectronic communication has largely replaced physical letters.5Who does the
16、underlined word “he” in paragraph 4 refer to?AThe author himself.BThe authors son.CThe authors school friend.DThe authors book publisher.6Why does the author probably delete the completed letter from his computer?ASo that no one else will be able to read it.BSo that he wont read it ahead of schedule
17、.CBecause he decides at last not to send it.DBecause he wants forget what has happened.7How does the author feel as he is about to open his special letter?ARelievedBMovedCExcitedDAfraidTexas rancher(牧场主) Charles Goodnight had a problem. He needed skilled cowboys to drive his herd of two thousand lon
18、ghorn cattle to New Mexico to be sold. He couldnt offer high wages. He couldnt promise easy jobs or even nice weather. But he decided that decent, warm meals might entice men to work for him.In the mid-to-late 1800s, cattle drives sometimes took three to four months, and once the drive began, there
19、were no stores for hundreds of miles. All the food and supplies needed for the trip were carried on two-wheeled carts. Usually, the cowboys food was boring and unappetizing.Goodnight went to work and solved the problem. His invention of a mobile kitchen, the chuck wagon(四轮马车), got its name from the
20、cowboy word for food, chuck. Goodnight took an old army wagon and rebuilt it with Osage orange, a wood so tough that Indians used it to make bows. The wagons iron axles were stronger than the wooden ones found on standard wagons, and the wider wheels lasted longer. Besides food, coffee sugar and eat
21、ing utensils, it held everything from first-aid supplies to needles and thread. It even contained cooking stove.The first chuck wagon was an instant success. Eighteen cowhands joined Goodnight and his partner, Oliver Loving, to drive the cattle to New Mexico for a handsome profit. The route they too
22、klater called the Goodnight-Loving Trailbecame one of the most heavily used cattle trails in the Southwest.The chuck wagon soon was the backbone of all successful cattle drives. Other ranchers created their own moving kitchens, and eventually the Studebaker Company produced chuck wagons that sold fo
23、r $75 to $100 apiece, about $1,000 today.The chuck wagon was much more than a mobile kitchen. Sometimes called the trail drives mother ship, it was like a magnet that drew the men together. The wagon and the ground around it were the cowboys home. There he enjoyed hot meals, a warm fire, and good co
24、mpanionship. He could also get a bandage, a haircut, or horse liniment for his sore muscles. And there, under the stars and around the chuck wagon, he crawled into his bedroll each night.8Who does the underlined word “entice” in paragraph 1 mean?AInformBDirectCEnableDAttract9Why were cattle drives i
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