◎ 2013年北师大版高三英语高考一轮复习作业手册课时作业(二十) Unit 20 New Frontiers (选修7)的第一部分试题
  • The doctors spent a long time in________  her, and at last she was________ .
    [     ]
    A. treating; treated
    B. curing; cured
    C. treating; cured    
    D. curing; treated
  • Examinations are not the only means of________  someone's ability.
    [     ]
    A. assessing
    B. valuing
    C. guessing
    D. praising
  • If I had one million dollars, I would________it to the charity.
    [      ]  
    A. sell  
    B. operate  
    C. lend  
    D. donate
  • "Women's faces give their ages________ far more than men",  a piece of research suggested recently.
    [      ]
    A. away  
    B. off  
    C. up  
    D. out
◎ 2013年北师大版高三英语高考一轮复习作业手册课时作业(二十) Unit 20 New Frontiers (选修7)的第二部分试题
  • In what field will robots________ human tasks?
    [      ]
    A. take up  
    B. take out
    C. take down  
    D. take over
  • This special school accepts all disabled students, ________educational level and background.
    [      ]
    A. according to  
    B. regardless of
    C. in addition to  
    D. in terms of
  • The pregnant woman is about to give birth to a baby, so we'd better________a doctor immediately.
    [     ]
    A. send in  
    B. send off
    C. send for  
    D. send away
  • Her job is to assist the technique department________  detailed plans.
    [     ]
    A. make  
    B. to making
    C. making  
    D. in making
◎ 2013年北师大版高三英语高考一轮复习作业手册课时作业(二十) Unit 20 New Frontiers (选修7)的第三部分试题
  • Three students were chosen to________the experiment.
    [      ]
    A. take out  
    B. look out
    C. carry out  
    D. watch out
  • — We are going to hold a sports meeting tomorrow.
    — ________  it rains?
    [     ]
    A. How about  
    B. What if
    C. If only  
    D. Even if
  • 完形填空
         In the depths of my memory, many things I did with my father still live.These things have come to
    represent, in fact, what I call__1_and love.
         I don't remember my father ever getting into a swimming pool.But he did__2_the water.Any kind
    of __3_ride seemed to give him pleasure.__4_ he loved to fish;sometimes he took me along.
    But I never really liked being on the water, the way my father __5_.I liked being at the water, moving
    through it, __16__it all around me.I was not a strong __7_,  or one who learned to swim early, for I
    had my__8__.But I loved being in the swimming pool close to my father's office and__9__those summer
    days with my father, who  10   come by on a break.I needed him to see what I could do.My father
    would stand there in his suit, the  11    person not in swimsuit.
         After swimming, I would go  12   his office and sit on the wooden chair in front of his big desk,
    where he let me  13   anything I found in his top desk drawer.Sometimes, if I was left alone at his desk
      14    he worked in the lab, an assistant or a student might come in and tell me perhaps I shouldn't be
    playing with his 15  . But my father always  16   and said easily, "Oh, no, it's  17  ."Sometimes he handed
    me coins and told me to get   18     an ice cream…
    (     )1. A. desire      
    (     )2. A. avoid        
    (     )3. A. boat        
    (     )4. A. But          
    (     )5. A. expected    
    (     )6. A. having      
    (     )7. A. swimmer      
    (     )8. A. hopes        
    (     )9. A. spending    
    (     )10. A. should      
    (     )11. A. next        
    (     )12. A. away from  
    (     )13. A. put up      
    (     )14. A. the moment  
    (     )15. A. fishing net
    (     )16. A. stood up    
    (     )17. A. fine        
    (     )18. A. the student
    (     )19. A. memory      
    (     )20. A. as          
    B. joy            
    B. refuse          
    B. bus            
    B. Then            
    B. desired        
    B. to leave        
    B. rider          
    B. faiths          
    B. saving          
    B. would          
    B. only            
    B. out of          
    B. break down      
    B. the first time  
    B. office things  
    B. set out        
    B. strange        
    B. the assistant  
    B. wealth          
    B. but            
    C. anger        
    C. praise      
    C. train        
    C. And          
    C. wished      
    C. make        
    C. walker      
    C. rights      
    C. wasting      
    C. had to      
    C. other        
    C. by          
    C. play with    
    C. while        
    C. wooden chair
    C. showed up    
    C. terrible    
    C. myself      
    C. experience  
    C. or          
    D. worry            
    D. love            
    D. bike            
    D. Still            
    D. did              
    D. get              
    D. runner          
    D. fears            
    D. ruining          
    D. ought to        
    D. last            
    D. inside          
    D. work out        
    D. before          
    D. lab equipment    
    D. turned out      
    D. well            
    D. himself          
    D. practice        
    D. and              
  • 阅读理解

         It is often considered that the schoolyard is where bullies(欺负)go to make other kids a miserable
    school life, but a new study suggests that classrooms are another popular place.
         The study, presented recently at the American Public Health Association's yearly meeting in
    Philadelphia, is based on the results of the research from more than 10,000 middleschool students
    who answered questions online.
         Of those researched,43%said they'd been physically bullied within the last month.A bit more than
    half said they'd been laughed at in an unfriendly way, and half reported being called hurtful names.
    About onethird said groups had excluded (排斥)them to hurt their feelings.28% said their belongings
    had been taken or broken;21%said someone threatened to hurt them.According to the results,
    twothirds of the students said they'd been bullied in more than one way over the previous month.
         The study authors mentioned that 8% of the students who answered said they'd missed school at
    least once during the school year because of fear of being bullied. 25% said they'd taken other actions,
    such as missing recess(课间), not going to the bathroom or lunch, missing classes, or staying away from
    some area of the school to escape from experiencing a bully.
    Bullies did too much to the school life.

    1. Bullies can happen in the following places except________.
    A. schoolyards  
    B. classrooms
    C. bathrooms  
    D. teachers' offices
    2. Which of the following is the best title?
    A. Bad School Life  
    B. Fear at School
    C. Bullies at School  
    D. School Problems
    3. Some students might ________ to protect themselves from bullies.
    A. leave the school
    B. go for lunch
    C. hurt others
    D. break others' belongings
    4. The writer feels ________ about bullies at school.
    A. excited  
    B. disappointed
    C. worried  
    D. puzzled
  • 阅读理解
         The evidence for harmony may not be obvious in some families. But it seems that four out of five
    young people now get on with their parents, which is the opposite of the popularlyheld image of unhappy
    teenagers locked in their room after endless family quarrels.
         An important new study into teenage attitudes surprisingly shows that their family life is more
    harmonious than it has ever been in the past."We were surprised by just how positive today's young
    people seem to be about their families, "said one member of the research team."They're expected to
    be rebellious(叛逆的 )and selfish but actually they have other things on their minds; they want a car
    and material goods, and they worry about whether school is serving them well.There's more negotiation(商议) and discussion between parents and children, and children expect to take part in the family
    decisionmaking process.They don' t want to rock the boat. "
         So it seems that this generation of parents is much more likely than parents of 30 years ago to treat
    their children as friends."My parents are happy to discuss things with me and willing to listen to me, "
    says 17yearold Daniel Lazall. "I always tell them when I'm going out clubbing.As long as they know
    what I'm doing, they're fine with it."Susan Crome, who is now 21, agrees."Looking back on the last 10
    years, there was a lot of what you could call negotiation. For example, as long as I'd done all my
    homework, I could go out on a Saturday night. But I think my grandparents were a lot stricter with my
    parents than that."
         Maybe this positive view of family life should not be unexpected. It is possible that the idea of
    teenage rebellion is not rooted in real facts. A researcher comments, "Our surprise that teenagers say
    they get along well with their parents comes because of a brief period in our social history when
    teenagers were regarded as different beings. But that idea of rebelling and breaking away from their
    parents really happened during the 1960s when everyone rebelled. The normal situation throughout
    history has been a smooth change from helping out with the family business to taking it over."
    1. What is the popular images of teenagers today?
    A. They worry about school.
    B. They dislike living with their parents.
    C. They have to be locked in to avoid troubles.
    D. They quarrel a lot with other family members.
    2. The study shows that teenagers don't want to ________.
    A. share family responsibility
    B. cause trouble in their families
    C. go boating with their family
    D. make family decisions
    3. Compared with parents of 30 years ago, today's parents________.
    A. go to clubs more often with their children
    B. are much stricter with their children
    C. careless about their children's life
    D. give their children more freedom
    4. According to the author, teenage rebellion________.
    A. may be a false belief
    B. is common nowadays
    C. existed only in the 1960s
    D. resulted from changes in families