高中英语外研版必修2Module2 No Drugs单元练习.docx

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1、高中英语外研版必修 2Module2 No Drugs单元练习 一、听力 (听力 )(共 20 小题;共 20 分) 第一节(共 5 小题,每小题 1. 5 分,满分 7. 5 分) 听下面 5 段对话。每段对话后有一个小题,从题中所给的 A、 B、 C 三个选项中选出最佳选项,并标在试题巷的相应位置。听完每段对话后,你都有 10 秒钟的时间来回答有关小题和阅读下一小题。每段对话仅读一遍。 例: How much is the shirt? A. 19. 15. B. 9. 15. C. 9. 18. 答案是 B. 1. What will the woman probably do toni

2、ght? A. See a film. B. Go to a concert. C. Do some shopping. 2. Where does the conversation take place? A. In an office. B. In a hotel. C. in a bedroom. 3. What time is it now? A. 2:30. B. 2:20. C. 2:10. 4. What did the man buy yesterday? A. Shirts. B. Shoes. C. Trousers. 5. What does the man sugges

3、t the woman do? A. Study at home. B. Go to school. C. Come back early. 第二节(共 12 小题;每小题 1. 5 分,满分 18 分) 听下面 4 段对话。每段对话后有几个小题,从题中所给的 A、 B、 C 三个选项中选出最佳选项,并标在试题卷的相应位置。听每段对话前,你将有时间阅读各个小题,每小题 5 秒钟;听完后,各小题将给出 5 秒钟的作答时间。每段对话读两遍。 听下面一段对话,回答第 6 和第 7 两个小题。 6. What is the probable relationship between the two s

4、peakers? A. Clerk and guest. B. Nurse and patient. C. Manager and secretary. 7. What can we learn from this conversation? A. The man cant smoke in the office. B. The mans living-room is full of smoke. C. The man cant get a non-smoking room. 听下面一段对话,回答第 8 至第 10 三个小题。 8. Why is the man sleeping on the

5、 job? A. He has to work late. B. He has to get up early. C. He has a busy social life. 9. How did the man probably go to work in the past? A. By bus. B. By train. C. By motorbike. 10. How long does it take the man to go to work now? A. About two hours. B. About one hour. C. About 15 minutes. 听下面一段对话

6、,回答第 11 至第 13 三个小题。 11. Where is the woman probably speaking? A. In a changing room. B. At a school cafe. C. At an information desk. 12. When can the man swim in the afternoon? A. From one to three. B. From three to five. C. From five to seven. 13. What would the man like to play? A. Tennis. B. Foot

7、ball. C. Basketball. 听下面一段对话,回答第 14 至第 17 四个小题。 14. Why did the couple leave? A. They got their concert tickets. B. They felt angry with the woman. C. They didnt want to wait any longer. 15. How soon will the ticket office be closed? A. In one hour. B. In two hours. C. In three hours. 16. What do we

8、 know about the woman? A. She quarreled with the man. B. She is waiting for her friend. C. She has moved up only a little. 17. What can we learn about the man? A. He is willing to wait. B. He is pleased to see the woman. C. He is disappointed about his phone order. 第三节(共 3 小题,每小题 1. 5 分,满分 4.5 分) 听下

9、面一段材料,将第 18 至 20 三个小题的信息补充完整,每个小题不超过三个单词;听完后,各小题将给出 15 秒钟的作答时间。本段材料读两遍。 BRIGHTON TOURIST INFORMATION OFFICE Working hours: (Monday-Friday): 9:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. Information on: hotels, restaurants that B. so; that C. such; as D. so; as 68. get a good seat, he set out early after supper. A. In order t

10、o B. So that C. So as to D. In order that 69. The end of A Dream of the Red Chamber goes like this: Jia Baoyu what he has and follows a monk to somewhere unknown. A. gives up B. gives away C. gives off D. gives out 70. the bad weather, the sports meeting has to be put off. A. As a result of B. As a

11、result C. Because D. Thanks for 六、完形填空(共 20 小题;共 30 分) Opinion surveys repeatedly tell us that the only thing Americans worry about more than the environment is their health. This is 71 understandable, for health is obviously 72 to illness. What makes todays concern 73 health slightly surprising is

12、that Americans are 74 healthier now than they have ever been. Many diseases that once 75 terror into hearts have either been entirely 76 or brought under control. Although AIDS is a notable 77 , few new mass killers have come along to 78 the ones that have been eliminated. 79 , health and the variou

13、s threats to it remain everyones 80 concern. After all, more than half of us (57 percent) will die from either heart disease or cancer, if current 81 continue. One major problem with any 82 of health risks especially life-threatening ones is that they 83 enormously in their immediacy. For instance,

14、AIDSif you get itwill probably be 84 after a number of years. Cancer induced by smoking or 85 to radiation, on the other hand, may take 20 to 30 years 86 its catastrophic effects show 87 . In making choices about health risks, 88 , it is important to bear in 89 the likely time lag between taking a r

15、isk and 90 its consequences. Those with a mind to “live for today“ are apt to be indifferent to health risks that have a very long incubation period (潜伏期 ). Although this is short-sighted, it does make sense to discount long-term risks more than short-term ones. After all, when actually any of us is

16、 faced with the choice of doing something likely to kill us today vs doing something likely to kill us in two decades, the choice is going to be the lesser of the two evils. 71. A. chiefly B. exclusively C. mostly D. completely 72. A. preferable B. beneficial C. suitable D. desirable 73. A. with B.

17、about C. on D. in 74. A. little B. quite C. far D. rather 75. A. struck B. brought C. forced D. clicked 76. A. broken into B. got rid of C. worn out D. taken place of 77. A. example B. instance C. exception D. evidence 78. A. purchase B. supplement C. dispose D. replace 79. A. Besides B. Therefore C

18、. Nevertheless D. Moreover 80. A. continual B. lasting C. continuous D. forever 81. A. trend B. condition C. tide D. direction 82. A. contrast B. difference C. character D. comparison 83. A. postpone B. depart C. change D. differ 84. A. fatal B. mental C. accidental D. vital 85. A. magnification B.

19、exhibition C. exposure D. extension 86. A. after B. when C. until D. before 87. A. off B. up C. out D. in 88. A. however B. therefore C. while D. but 89. A. heart B. head C. mind D. thought 90. A. suffering B. tolerating C. bearing D. experiencing 七、阅读理解(共 15 小题;共 30 分) A When other nine-year-old ki

20、ds were playing games, she was working at a petrol station. When other teens were studying or going out, she struggled to find a place to sleep on the street. But she overcame these terrible setbacks to win a highly competitive scholarship and gain entry to Harvard University. And her amazing story

21、has inspired a movie, “Homeless to Harvard: The Liz Murray Story”, shown in late April. Liz Murray, a 22-year-old American girl, has been writing a real-life story of willpower and determination. Liz grew up in the shadow of two drug-addicted parents. There was never enough food or warm clothes in t

22、he house. Liz was the only member of the family who had a job. Her mother had AIDS and died when Liz was just 15 years old. The effect of that loss became a turning point in her life. Connecting the environment in which she had grown up with how her mother had died, she decided to do something about

23、 it. Liz went back to school. She threw herself into her studies, never telling her teachers that she was homeless. At night, she lived on the streets. “What drove me to live on had something to do with understanding, by understanding that there was a whole other way of being. I had only experienced

24、 a small part of the society,” she wrote in her book Breaking Night. She admitted that she used envy to drive herself on. She used the benefits that come easily to others, such as a safe living environment, to encourage herself that “next to nothing could hold me down”. She finished high school in j

25、ust two years and won a full scholarship to study at Harvard University. But Liz decided to leave her top university for a couple of months earlier this year in order to take care of her father, who has also developed AIDS. “I love my parents so much. They are drug addicts. But I never forget that t

26、hey love me all the time.” Liz wants moviegoers(影迷 ) to come away with the idea that changing your life is “as simple as making a decision”. 91. In which order did the following things happen to Liz? a. Her Mum died of AIDS. b. She worked at a petrol station. c. She got admitted into Harvard. d. The

27、 movie about her life was put on. e. She had trouble finding a place to sleep. A. b, a, e, c, d B. a, b, c, e, d C. e, d, b, a, c D. b, e, a, d, c 92. What decision did Liz make that changed her life? A. To write Breaking Night. B. To go to the best university. C. To live through the difficult time.

28、 D. To live a different life from her parents. 93. When she wrote, “What drove me to live onI had only experienced a small part of the society”, she meant that . A. she had little experience of social life B. she could hardly understand the society C. she would do something for her own life D. she n

29、eeded to travel more around the world B A new weapon is on the way in the fight against smoking in Europe. Soon when smokers buy cigarettes, they might see a shocking photo of a blackened lung or a cancer patient staring back at them from the packet. Some boys may think of smoking as cool and sexy.

30、Their friends wont agree when they see their packets of cigarettes lying on the table. The European Union announced on October 22, that it had chosen 42 photos that showed the damage cigarettes could do to the body. It called on member nations to put these pictures on packets to discourage young smo

31、kers. To catch the attention of teenagers, the special packets warn of long-term medical dangers, like cancer. Short-term effects, like bad skin, are also on the list. “The true fact of smoking is disease, death and horror. That is the message we should send to the young,“ said David Byrne, an EU he

32、alth official. “Hopefully these pictures will shock students out of their love for cigarettes.“ The EU head office hoped the pictures would work better than current written warnings on packs of cigarettes. The warning included “smoking kills“ and “smoking can lead to a slow and painful death“. So fa

33、r, Ireland and Belgium have shown interest in the photos. Canada has used similar pictures and warnings on cigarette packs since 2000. The country has recently seen a fall in the number of smokers. According to studies, smoking is the single biggest cause of avoidable death in EU. Every year more th

34、an 650,000 smokers die, more than one person a minute. 94. Which of the following would be the best title for the passage? A. New Ways to Stop Smoking B. Pictures to Shock Smokers C. New Packets of Cigarettes D. Dangers of Smoking 95. Which of the following is NOT the true fact of smoking? A. Diseas

35、e. B. Death. C. Horror. D. Happiness. 96. We can learn from the passage that . A. the EU countries have put the new warning method into practice B. only a small number of EU countries have used the new warning method C. the new warning method has worked in some EU countries D. countries in the EU st

36、ill use the old warning method 97. Which country is the most successful in stopping smoking? A. Ireland. B. Belgium. C. Canada. D. Britain. 98. The underlined part in the last paragraph suggests that . A. its hard to stop smoking in the EU B. deaths caused by smoking could have been avoided C. smoki

37、ng is the biggest cause of deaths in the EU D. the EU has the largest number of deaths caused by smoking C Eating processed meat can cause cancer, World Health Organization experts said Monday. Processed meat is meat that has been preserved by curing, salting, smoking, drying or canning. Experts fro

38、m the WHOs International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) in Lyon, France, studied 800 cases. IARC researchers linked processed meat, such as hot dogs and ham, to bowel cancer, as well as pancreatic cancer and prostate cancer. The IARC has included processed meat in its group 1 list, for which t

39、here is “sufficient evidence“ of links to cancer. Tobacco, asbestos, and diesel fumes are also on the group 1 list. WHO experts also called red meat, including beef, lamb and pork, “probably“ carcinogenic(致癌的 ) to humans. Dr. Kurt Straif is with the IARC. He said in a statement that the risk of canc

40、er increases with the amount of meat a person eats. A person who consumes 50 grams of processed meat per dayabout two pieces of baconincreases his or her risk of bowel cancer by 18 percent. Health experts in some countries already advise against eating large amounts of red and processed meat. But th

41、ose advisories had been centered on the increased risks of heart disease and obesity. Meat industry groups are protesting the WHO study. They say that meat is part of a balanced diet. They also say the causes of cancer are broad, and include environmental and lifestyle factors. The WHO report cited

42、the Global Burden of Disease project, which estimates that diets high in processed meat lead to 34,000 cancer deaths per year worldwide. 99. According to the text, which of the following does not belong to red meat? A. Pork. B. Chicken. C. Beef. D. Lamb. 100. In Dr. Kurts view, which of the followin

43、g statement is TRUE? A. Meat is absolutely harmful to peoples health. B. Eating meat can cause bowel cancer for sure. C. A person will not develop cancer if he or she consumes less than 50 grams of processed meat a day. D. The more a person eats red or processed meat, the more likely he is to suffer

44、 from bowel cancer. 101. The main idea of the last but one paragraph is . A. meat industries protest against the study of WHO on red and processed meat B. red meat and processed meat are considered a balanced diet by some meat industries C. there are some other factors causing cancer D. bad environm

45、ent and unhealthy lifestyle may result in cancer to some extent 102. The best title of the text might be . A. Factors Causing Cancers B. A New WHO Study on Meat C. WHO: Red and Processed Meat Can Cause Cancer D. Meat Industrys Protest against the Study on Meat D The latest United Nations report on t

46、he AIDS spread paints a sad picture. It concludes that the regions of the world most affected by AIDS will experience rapid increases in deaths among young adults. This will have serious social and economic results. So the United Nations urge developed countries and international organizations to wo

47、rk together to come up with a solution. The spread of AIDS and the virus that causes it, HIV, is particularly destructive in Africa. It is estimated that in sub-Saharan Africa, over twenty-four million adults and children are now living with HIV. In sixteen sub-Saharan countries, according to the UN

48、, at least ten percent of the people between the age of fifteen and forty-nine are HIV positive. In South Africa and Zimbabwe, half the people between those ages may die of AIDS. In Botswana, about one in three adults is infected, and some two-thirds of the countrys fifteen-year-old boys may die before they grow up. As a result, agriculture, business, education, and health care are already suffering serious loss worldwide. The United States is spending millions of dollars to cover it. Funding is being used for prevention campaigns and

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