1、2024年苏州市震川中学高一上10月月考英语试题一、阅读理解T is an online typing tutor for students of all ages. Ts proven curriculum helps students from beginners to advanced learners, focusing on technique, accuracy, and speed. The following are some frequently asked questions about typing on our website. How long does it tak
2、e to type without looking at the keyboard? An average student without learning differences will learn to touch type within eight to ten hours. They may be touch typing at a very slow speed (8-15 words per minute). Is it bad to look at the keyboard when typing? Yes. Not only does it prevent you from
3、practicing your fingering, but it also slows you down and makes you type less accurately. Its far more difficult to notice mistakes when youre not looking at the screen. How do you get faster at typing? The most important technique to learn to type faster is touch typing. This is a technique based o
4、n developing muscle memory for your fingers. How can I learn to type correctly? Focus on accuracy rather than speed. Use the entire keyboard correctly. Learn some keyboard shortcuts. Practice every day. How do I increase my typing speed? Arrange your fingers properly. The most important step in impr
5、oving your typing speed is ensuring that you place your fingers correctly on the keyboard. Rest the index finger (食指) of your left hand on the “F” key and the index finger of your right hand on the “J” key. Is free? T is a free online typing tutor and digital literacy (读写能力) platform used by million
6、s of students and education professionals around the world. We aim to provide valuable learning tools to as many school teachers and students as possible.1What do we know about ?AIt charges very little.BIt is suitable for every student.CIt helps to improve writing skills.DIt can automatically correc
7、t typing errors.2Who might be interested in T?AManagers.BSalesmen.CAthletes.DTeachers.3What is the purpose of the text?ATo promote a typing website.BTo share typing experience.CTo correct typing mistakes.DTo teach typing skills.Mary Dickins had been a member of the audience at poetry nights before a
8、nd knew “the poetry clap”. She made a polite tapping of fingers. But when she made her debut (首次演出) as a performer at the age of 62 at the legendary Bang Said the Gun night in south London, she said, “It was so wild like nothing I had ever seen before.” The audience stamped their feet and shook shak
9、ers. “It felt transformative. I thought, Ive got to have more of this, ” Dickins said. Becoming a performance poet has given her a place on a stage of her own making. All her life she has written is mostly without being seen or heard. Her mother died when she was nine, and, after she went into a car
10、e home at 13, Dickins writing stayed in notebooks. Really, she says, a lot of her adult life has been about getting over childhood shyness. At university she studied education she met her husband of 40 years, but in three years of seminars she did not say a word. Some of these results from her years
11、 at the childrens home. She says, “It gave me a sense of what its like to be excluded. I never fitted in anywhere.”After she graduated, she discovered that she loved working with people with learning disabilities. She became an expert in inclusive education. “That was my niche (称心的职业),” she says. Sh
12、e published books and returned to the University of North London as a senior lecturer in early childhood studies. Dickins now sees that in adulthood she has been giving herself permission to be silly. “The sillier I allow myself to be, the better the writing is,” she says. Her observations are humor
13、ous. “Putting things into words and giving shape to your emotions is an important part of coming to terms with the things that happen in life,” she says. Does she still feel like an outsider? “I think Ive made it into a virtue. I celebrate the fact that I dont fit into a box. Finally! You have to wa
14、it till youre 62 to feel confident!” she says. “But I have a sense of who I am and Im proud of it. I wouldnt be anyone else now and it took me a long time to say that.”4How did Dickins feel about her debut?ANervous.BAnxious.CEncouraged.DRelieved.5Why was Dickins lacking in a sense of belonging?AHer
15、early stay at the care home.BHer inexperienced writing skills.CHer struggle with her university studies.DHer poor relationship with her husband.6How does writing benefit Dickins?AIt helps her land a good job.BIt develops her sense of humor.CIt makes her overcome her learning disabilities.DIt enables
16、 her to get on well with her life.7Which of the following can be the best title for the text?AMary Dickins First PerformanceBMary Dickins New Start after 60CMary Dickins Troubled Writing CareerDMary Dickins Influence on Performance PoetsI have worked as a keeper at the National Zoo, Paris for 11 yea
17、rs. Spot and Stripe are the first tiger cubs that have ever been born here. Globally, a third of Sumatran cubs in zoos dont make it to adulthood, so I decided to give them round-the-clock care at home. Ive got two childrenthe younger one, Kynan, was extremely happy about the tigers arriving - but al
18、l of us really looked forward to being part of their lives and watching them grow. I wasnt worried about bringing them into my home with my wife and kids. These were cubs. They weighed about 2.5 kg and were so small that there was absolutely no risk. As they grew more mobile, we let them move freely
19、 around the house during the day, but when we were asleep we had to contain them in a large room, otherwise theyd get up to mischief. Wed come down in the morning to find theyd turned the room upside down, and left it looking like a zoo.Things quickly got very intense due to the huge amount of energ
20、y required to look after them. There were some tough times and I just felt extremely tired. I was grateful that my family was there to help. We had to have a bit of a production line going, making up “tiger milk”, washing baby bottles, and cleaning the floors. When Spot and Stripe were four months o
21、ld, they were learning how to open doors and jump fences, and we knew it really was time for them to go. It was hard for us to finally part with them. For the first few days, Kynan was always a bit disappointed that the cubs werent there. Im not sad about it. Im hands-on with them every day at the z
22、oo, and I do look back very fondly on the time that we had them.8Why did the author bring the tiger cubs home?ATo ensure their survival.BTo observe their differences.CTo teach them life skills.DTo let them play with his kids.9What do the underlined words “get up to mischief” mean in paragraph 3?ABeh
23、ave badly.BLose their way.CSleep soundly.DMiss their mom.10What did the author think of raising the tiger cubs at home?ABoring.BTiring.CCostly.DRisky.11Why did the author decide to send Spot and Stripe back to the zoo?AThey frightened the children.BThey became difficult to contain.CThey annoyed the
24、neighbours.DThey started fighting each other.A recent global study, which surveyed 10,000 young people from 10 countries, showed that nearly 60 percent of them were extremely worried about the future state of the planet. The report also showed that nearly half of the respondents (受访者) said that such
25、 distress affected them daily, and three-quarters agreed with the statement that “the future is frightening.” This, and many other studies, show clearly that climate change is not just a threat to the environment. It also poses a very real threat to our mental health.Psychologists have classified th
26、ese feelings of sadness, distress, and worry about the current climate emergency as eco-anxiety. According to the Climate Psychology Alliance, eco-anxiety is defined as the “intense physical and mental discomfort in response to dangerous changes in the climate system.”Eco-anxiety doesnt just affect
27、young people. It also affects researchers who work in climate and ecological science, burdened by the reality discovered in their findings, and it affects the poor people across the globe, who hopelessly bear the harmful impacts of climate breakdown.In recent years, weve seen wildfires tear through
28、Canada and Greece, and summer floods destroy regions in Pakistan that are home to nearly 33 million people. Studies have shown that those impacted by air pollution and rising temperatures are more likely to experience mental distress.The cause of this mental distress is absolutely external. Accordin
29、g to Caroline Hickman, a researcher on eco-anxiety from the University of Bath, anyone experiencing these emotions is displaying entirely natural and rational reactions to the climate crisis. Her suggestion? Take eco-anxiety as a tool for good-as an emotion that can urge people to act in protection
30、of our planet.This is why, in 2024, we will also see more people around the world join the fight for climate justice and apply for jobs that seek sustainable development. Eco-anxiety is not something we will defeat with therapywe will solve it by taking action.12What does the underlined word “distre
31、ss” in paragraph 1 mean?AShock.BAnxiety.CHappiness.DAnger.13What is eco-anxiety according to the Climate Psychology Alliance?AIt is a strong reaction to the natural disasters.BIt is a kind of mental disease for the young people.CIt is a physical and mental discomfort when we meet difficulties.DIt is
32、 a strong physical and mental discomfort for the dangerous climate changes.14What is mainly talked about in paragraph 3?AThe process of eco-anxiety.BThe impact of eco-anxiety.CThe causes of eco-anxiety.DThe benefits of eco-anxiety.15Whats the approach to solving eco-anxiety according to Caroline Hic
33、kman?ADefeat it with a therapy.BJust wait for a good solution.CJoin the fight for climate justice.DUse it to urge people to protect our earth.As the saying goes, failure is the mother of success. Many of us were told from an early age that, at school or in life, “you learn from your mistakes.” Is th
34、is actually true? The short answer is “yes”. 16 Because we would not like to fail, learning from our mistakes is, in reality, very hard. It doesnt feel good. So we react to failure in emotional ways, like giving up on a task easily, telling ourselves we dont care whether we succeed, or finding fault
35、 with the task itself. This is self-protective, according to Hallgeir Sjastad, a psychology professor. In his opinion, most of us want to think of ourselves as capable. 17 Fortunately there are strategies to help us overcome the emotional barriers. 18 . Instead of asking “Why did I fail?”, we could
36、ask “Why did Sam fail?”, for example. Multiple studies show this way helps to soften our negative emotional reactions. Also it allows us to look at failure more objectively. 19 This led to better levels of motivation and academic success in the test groups involving both adults and children that wer
37、e asked to give advice based on their own failures. Professor Eskreis-Winkler found that the satisfaction of helping others “forces people to engage with their experience and what they have learned”. The writer Samuel Beckett once said, “fail again, fail better.” But it now seems that we should say,
38、 “fail again, fail smarter”. 20 , but by learning to overcome the emotional barriers around it, we may find the road to success is a little easier to navigate (驾驭).AEveryone needs successBHard work leads to successCFailure can be a teachable momentDFailure is an unavoidable part of lifeEOne of them
39、is to adopt a third-person viewFNext, offer advice to others in the same position as usGSo what failure causes is a serious threat to our self-image二、完形填空As a child, Id spent entire afternoons 21 new worlds in my mind and giving life to 22 in my stories I wished could be my friends. Id written mysel
40、f into my favorite stories so I could be part of them. Writing was a part of me; it was who I was.However, in high school I 23 with writers block. By the time I was in college, Id stopped writing entirely, 24 the dream remained. I wanted to 25 a novel one day. It was then that I read an interview wi
41、th the Belgian writer Amlie Nothomb. She said shed go crazy if she didn t write; she needed to do it to stay 26 . Her words made me feel 27 . She was telling me that I wasnt really a writer.Or so I thought. I tried again, and it was like feeling the sun on my skin, or hearing snow lightly fall. I ha
42、dnt realized it, but I hadnt really been happy until I 28 my pen again. Writing was in my blood after all.Finally, half-hours 29 to writing stretched into hours. Before, I had been upset all the time because I didnt advance my writing projects. Now, every day was a step forward, and I was 30 with it
43、. One day, I was reading a story in a library. 31 , an idea hit me that I wanted to submit (提交) a few stories. I didnt do it in the hopes they would get published.And then, something 32 happened. The first story I submitted was chosen for publication! When I got the e-mail, I was wild with joy and 3
44、3 around my kitchen table. That moment 34 me that I must keep writing not because Ill go 35 ,but because I want to keep being crazily happy like that.21AcreatingBdefendingCshockingDchanging22AspeciesBimagesCresidentsDcharacters23AarguedBdisagreedCarmedDstruggled24Aas ifBeven thoughCdue toDso that25A
45、readBbuyCdonateDpublish26AconnectedBquietCawakeDpolite27AscaredBupsetCcuriousDdelighted28Apicked upBpicked outCbroke outDbroke down29AcontributedBdevotedCledDattached30AsatisfiedBstrictCangryDconcerned31AFrequentlyBTypicallyCSuddenlyDHopefully32AamazingBordinaryCdifficultDboring33AhungBdancedCturned
46、Dlooked34AinstructedBdirectedCinformedDtaught35AcrazyBblankCwrongDbankrupt三、语法填空阅读下面短文,在空白处填入1个适当的单词括号内单词的正确形式。China has countless 36 (attract). The Great Wall is probably one that is most familiar to the Western tourists. The Great Wall is like a giant stone dragon, 37 (run) across the country from
47、 the ocean on the east 38 the desert on the west. It is the longest wall that 39 (build) ever, 1,500 miles in length. Along the wall 40 (be) watch towers, where soldiers were on the watch for threats. The wall was initially built 41 (prevent) invasion(入侵) of neighbouring states, and the majority of the existing wall is from the Ming Dynasty. From the top of the Great Wall, people can enjoy an 42 (impress) view of continuous mountains
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