江苏省常州市2019届高三上学期期末考试 英语 联系客服

发布时间 : 星期日 文章江苏省常州市2019届高三上学期期末考试 英语更新完毕开始阅读be6ac2165122aaea998fcc22bcd126fff6055df5

While you were feeling satisfied with yourself, you were slowly eating away at their own dreams and ambitions.

You

were

adding

material

things

to

their

lives,

but

subtracting

the__most__precious__gifts__of__all.

Invest in their future, don't just give.

Use your success, wealth and influence to put them in the best position to realie their own dreams and find their true purpose. Put them through school, set them up with job interviews and help them become leaders in their own right. Hold them to the same level of hard wor and dedication that it too for you to get to where you are now, and where you will eventually go.

I'm writing you now so that you can begin this process immediately, and so that you don't have to deal with the hurt and struggle of weaning(断绝) them off of the addiction that you facilitated. That addiction only leads to anger, hatred and jealousy from everybody involved, including yourself.

As time goes on, you will see them grow independently and have their own ambitions and their own lives, and your relationship with all of them will be much better as a result.

Trust me, setting things up right from the beginning will avoid a ton of tears and heartache, some of which remains to this day

Much love,

( )58. What might be the best title of this letter? A. To My Younger Self B. For My Dear Family C. To My Beloved Son D. For My Older Self

( )59. What may be “the most precious gifts of all” in the underlined part? A. Independence and growth. B. Wealth and health. C. Love and dedication. D. Success and leadership. ( )60. What can we infer from this letter?

A. The writer will stop offering his siblings help in the future. B. The writer didn't thin it a good fortune to become successful early. C. The writer intends to remind others not to care too much about materials.

D. The writer was once troubled by the relationship between him and his family.

C

Sam, I say to myself as I start across the bridge, you must stop these thoughts and start thining about what to do now that you have lost your falcon(猎鹰), Frightful.

Life, my friend Bando once said, is meeting problems and solving them whether you are an amoeba or a space traveller. I have a problem. I have to provide my younger sister Alice and myself with meat. Fish, nuts, and vegetables are good and necessary, but they don't provide enough fuel for the hard physical wor we do. Although we have venison(鹿肉) now, I can't always count on getting it. So far this year, our venison has been only road ill from in front of Mrs Strawberry's farm.

I decide to tae the longest way home, down the flood plain of the West Branch of Delaware to Spillill, my own name for a fast stream that cascades down the south face of the mountain range I'm on. I need time to thin. Perhaps Alice and I should be lie the early Esimos. We should wal, camp and hunt, and when the seasons change, wal on to new food sources. But I love my tree and my mountaintop.

Another solution would be to become farmers, lie the people of the Iroquois Confederacy who once lived here. They settled in villages and planted corn and squash(南瓜), bush beans and berries. We already grow groundnuts in the damp soil and squash in the poor land. But the Iroquois also hunted game. I can't do that anymore.

I'm bac where I started from.

Slowly I climb the Spillill. As I hop from roc to roc beneath shady basswoods and hemlocs, I hear the cry of the red-tailed haw who nests on the mountain crest. I am reminded of Frightful and my heart aches. I can almost hear her call my name, Cree, Cree, Cree, Car-ree.

Maybe I can get her bac if I beg the man who is in charge of the peregrines(游隼) at the university. “But it's the law,” he would say. I could write to the president of the United States and as him to mae an eception of Alice and me. That won't wor. The president swore to uphold the Constitution(宪法) and laws of the United States when he too office.

I climb on. I must stop thining about the impossible and solve the problem of what to do now. I must find a new way to provide for us. Frightful is going to be in good hands at the university, and she will have young.

I smile at the thought of little Frightfuls and lift my reluctant feet.

When I am far above the river, I tae off my clothes and moccasins(鹿皮鞋) and bathe in a deep, clear pool until I am refreshed and thining more clearly. Climbing up the ban, I dress and sit down. I breathe deeply of the mountain air and try to solve my problem more realistically.

( )61. What does this ecerpt(节选) main describe? A. Delicate mental activities. B. Unique story environment.

C. Complicated character relationship. D. Ever-changing story events. ( )62. What is Sam's first worry?

A. The shortest way to go bac. B. Survival for Alice and himself. C. The safety of Frightful. D. How to get enough venison. ( )63. What do we now about Frightful?

A. He left Sam and Alice due to lac of food. B. He helped Sam hunt before being taen away. C. He is living with the red-tailed haw happily. D. He is giving birth to babies in the university. ( )64. Which of the following can best describe Sam? A. Humorous. B. Aggressive. C. Responsible. D. Unrealistic.

D

“It can't be done.” Boyan Slat heard this over and over when he first proposed a way to clean up millions of tons of plastic polluting our oceans. Almost anyone else would have given up in frustration and despair. But 20-year-old Slat hasn't been discouraged but committed to his dream. “Human history is basically a list of things that couldn't be done, and then were done,” he says. Today, Slat and his team at The Ocean Cleanup are well on their way to proving the critics wrong. Good news for the planet.

1. ________________________

Slat, who grew up in the city of Delft in the Netherlands, was on a diving trip in Greece three years ago when he was deeply impressed by plastic. “There were more plastic bags than fish,” he says. “That was the moment I realied it was a huge issue and that environmental issues are really the biggest problems my generation will face.”

That fall, Slat, then 17, decided to study plastic pollution as part of a high school project. Soon, Slat learned that no one had yet come up with practical way to clean up these massive garbage patches. Most

proposed solutions involved “fishing” up the plastic using ships equipped with nets—which, as Slat discovered, would liely tae more than 1,000 years, cost too much, let off too many greenhouse gases, and fish out too much sea life along with the trash.

Slat proposed an alternative that mostly avoided these problems—a solar-powered system using a floating plastic tube which will go around the garbage and trap it. It is 600 metres long. A big screen hangs down from it, about three metres into the water. Wind, waves and ocean currents will push the trash toward the tube.(Fish can swim under the screen.) A ship will pic up the trash and tae it bac to the shore to sort and recycle it into oil and other products. Best of all, Slat predicted his system could clean up the North Pacific Garbage Patch between California and Hawaii where a lot of floating garbage eists, within 5 to 10 years.

2. ________________________

The following fall, Slat entered the aerospace engineering programme at the Delft University of Technology and officially announced his ocean cleanup concept at TED Delft. But nothing much moved forward.

Slat found himself continually absent-minded in classes, looing for ways to improve his concept. “It wouldn't let go. I finally decided to put both university and my social life on hold to focus all my time on developing this idea. I wasn't sure if it would succeed, but considering the scale of the problem I thought it was important to at least try,” He says.

With his family's blessing, Slat began in earnest organiing a team of volunteers and employees for The Ocean Cleanup, which now numbers about 100.

3. ________________________

In answer to opposition, Slat and his team raised $100,000 from a crowdfunding campaign and began testing a 40-metre collecting barrier near the Aores Islands last March. In June, they released 500+ page possibility study.

Over the net three to four years, Slat will push toward a fully operational large-scale project by testing a series of longer and longer barriers. He's currently seeing to crowdfund $2 million to finance it.