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1、资料来源:来自本人网络整理!祝您工作顺利!高考英语真题详解_高考英语真题答案 高考不就是收麦子吗,辛辛苦苦种了三年,你怎么就不敢收了?英勇点面对高考,祝高考顺当!下面是我为大家推举的高考英语真题,仅供大家参考! this english channel beach town is less than an hour by train from london .the railway between london and brighton was completed in 1841.the city soon became a popular tourist spot. brighton joi

2、ned together with the neighboring town of hove in 1997 to form one city:brighton and hove.it is englands largest seaside mort(度假胜地)town.visitors enjoy the water,the entertainment on brighton pier,and good weather. banff,canada banff is surrounded by the towering canadian rocky mountains.the resort t

3、own sits within banff national park,canadas first national park.skiers come in winter to take on the steep slopes of the rockies the town is south of lake picturesque,mirror-like lake louise,a banff national park symbo1.the area is home to wildlife like grizzly bears and milu deer. 21. what will att

4、ract visitors most in moscow,russia? a.famous buildings. b.the economic center. c.modern music d.the political center 22.what made brighton become popular quickly? a.the fine weather. b.a tourist spot. c.joining with hove. d.a railway. 23.where can visitors go to see wild animals? a.brighton,england

5、 b.new delhi,india. c.moscow,russia d.banff,canada. b an american photographer,john olson,is making copies of great artwork available for blind individuals and those with very poor eyesight.at least 285 million people worldwide are either blind or considered visually impaired(受损).they are unable to

6、see or enjoy visual fine art. romeo edmead lost his eyesight when he was only two years old.but that has not stopped him from living life to the fullest.he went to college and studied journalism.but he cannot experience the great works of art in new york city. he remembers a visit to an art collecti

7、on with his grandmother. so we went to this museum and i just sort of like wandered off somewhere and i started touching something,and all of a sudden alarm went off. and a guard came running over,and my grandmother felt shamed at it. john olson once worked as a photographer for life magazine.he dev

8、eloped a printing process to make the art of da vinci and van gogh touchable for visually-impaired individuals i began to realize how signifieant images have been to me,what they have allowed me to do and it caused me to wonder what it was for the blind,not having access to images. olsons company is

9、 called 3d photoworks.it produces copies of artwork in three dimensions:height,width and depth.olson says this is how the process works.first,a painting is scanned,and a 3d computer image is created.then it is sent to a machine that digitally sculpts it.then the original image is printed on top of t

10、he relief(浮雕).the whole process can take up to four weeks creating art in this way gives a blind person a new experience. thanks to hew technology.3d art way soon hang in art museums all over the world.it gives the visually-impaired the chance to experience the beauty of visual art. 24.what made the

11、 alarm in the museum sound suddenly? a.the loss of an artwork. b.romeos touch. c.the danger of a robbery. d.the guards mistake. 25.what did john olson think of images? a.important. b.special. c.attractive d.accessible. 26.how does the company 3d photoworks create artworks for the blind? a.changing f

12、ine works into images. b.making famous paintings touchable, c.scanning great artworks with a computer. d.describing famous artworks by a machine 27.whats the authors attitude towards the new technology? a.doubtful b.grateful c.positive. d.critical. c given that female bed bugs lay over 200 eggs duri

13、ng their lifetime,its not surprising that about one out of five american households have had or know someone who has had a bed bug infection.but a new study shows that an unexpected weapon may be useful in the fight against the tiny,biting enemies:color the bbcs michelle roberts reports that bed bug

14、s appear to have strong preferences for certain colors. a group of researchers became curious about whether bed bugs like certain colors,so they created tiny tents,or harborages of different colors and placed them in petri dishes(培育皿).the researchers then put bed bugs on the center of the dish,givin

15、g them ten minutes to choose which harborage they wanted to hide in. bed bugs are nest parasites(寄生虫)thats why they love humannests,or bedrooms.so theyre crazy about finding shelter.as a result,it would make sense that a bug placed on the scary broadness of a petri dish would rush for cover as soon

16、as possible. most of the bugs ran to black and red harborages,passing by ones of other colors.and they werent into yellow or green at a11.overall,the bugs preferred harborages in this order:red,black,orange,blue,lilac,violet and green.gender influenced the decisions because groups of single-gender b

17、ugs preferred the same colors researchers guess that the decisions may have to do with bugs considering different shelters as better or worse places to mate or perhaps stay safe from enemies. we originally thought the bed bugs might prefer red because blood is red and thats what they feed on,says dr

18、.corraine mcneillhowever,after doing the study,the main reason we think they prefer red colors is that bed bugs themselves appear red,so they go to these harborages because they want to be with other bed bugs,as they are known to exist in groups. 28.what did the research discover? a.bed bugs are par

19、ticular about certain colors. b.bed bugs have a preference for living in groups. c.bed bugs are difficult to get rid of. d.bed bugs are afraid of dark colors. 29.the wordharboragesin para 2 can be replaced by_. a.bed rooms b.dishes c.eggs d.shelters 30.bed bugs like red mainly because_. a.they are r

20、ed b.red is beautiful c.red can scare their enemies away d.b1ood is red and they feed on blood 31.what colour sheet should people choose against bed bugs according to the research? a.red. b.yellow. c.white. d.black. d last july a german doctoral student named matthias weel made a remarkable discover

21、y. he was examining are papers of the late swiss publisher emil oprecht for an essay on arthur koestlers switch from writing in german to writing in english at the end of the 1930s. oprecht was a 1eft-wing know traveler who had founded his famous publishing house europa verlag in zurich in 1933.and

22、was well known for his antinazi views and support for writes who were forced to flee their homes,including the young arthur koestler.weel once said,i was looking for letters and royalty reports,because i wanted to know how many copies were printed of the first german edition of koestkrs spanish test

23、ament.he failed to find the answer to his question,but while 1ooking over the europa holdings in the zurich central library he came across a puzzling entry:koestler,arthur.rubaschow:roman.typescript,march 1940,326 pages. this was extremely strange weel knew of no such novel(roman)in koestlers german

24、 writings.but the name rubaschow rang a bell.rubasehow is the hero of koestlers novel,darkness at noon. weel hardly dared think about what he had found,suspecting a sequel(续集)or perhaps a false entry,for it was well known that the original text of the novelthe last one koesder wrote in german before he switched to englishwas lost during his flight from france at the start of world war ii.that was seventy-five years ago and it has never been seen since.with unease,weel ordered a scan,which

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