1. 阅读理解 

 The Nobel Prize in literature has been awarded to the novelist Abdulrazak Gurnah,for his concern for refugees(难民)between cultures and continents. Gurnah,72,is the first black writer to receive the prize since Toni Morrison in 1993,and some observers saw his selection as a corrective after years of European and American Nobel winners. 

Growing up in Zanzibar,Abdulrazak Gurnah never considered the possibility that he might one day be a writer. "It never occurred to me," he said in an interview. Then,in 1964,a violent protest forced Gurnah,when he was 18,to escape to England. Poor and homesick,he began to write something about home in his diary,then longer passages,then stories about other people. Those reflections,the habit of writing to understand and document his own lives,eventually gave rise to his first novel,then nine more. They include Memory of Departure,Pilgrims Way and Dottie , which all deal with the immigrant experience in Britain;Paradise shortlisted for the Booker Prize in 1994,about a boy in an East African country hurt by colonialism;and Admiring Silence,about a young man who leaves Zanzibar for England,where he marries and becomes a teacher.

The news of Gurnah's Nobel was celebrated by fellow novelists and academics who have long argued that his work deserves a wider audience. His longtime editor,Alexandra Pringle at Bloomsbury,said Gurnah's win was "most deserved "for a writer. "He is one of the greatest living African writers,and no one has ever taken any notice of him and it's just killed me. I posted a video on the social network last week and in it I said that he was one of the people that had been just ignored. And now this has happened,"she said.

(1) What inspired Abdulrazak to write?  A. His good education background. B. The stories he read about other people. C. A protest led by people in his hometown. D. His suffering when he first came to England.
(2) What did Alexandra Pringle's words indicate?  A. African writers should be valued more. B. She would rather die than see him become famous. C. Gurnah's books have aroused little attention online. D. Gurnah's writing talent should be known to more people.
(3) Where is this text most likely from?  A. A novel. B. A diary. C. A newspaper. D. A brochure.
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推理判断题; 细节理解题; 新闻报道类; 记叙文;
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1.阅读理解

The Amazon rainforest, is as undisturbed a place as most people can imagine, but even there, the effects of a changing climate are playing out. Now, research suggests that many of the region's most sensitive bird species are starting to evolve in response to warming.

Birds are often considered sentinel (哨兵) species——meaning that they indicate the overall health of an ecosystem—so scientists are particularly interested in how they' re responding to climate change. In general, the news has not been good. For instance, a 2019 report by the National Audubon Society found that more than two-thirds of North America's bird species will be in danger of extinction by 2100 if warming trends continue on their current course.

For the new study, researchers collected the biggest dataset so far on the Amazon's resident birds, representing 77 non-migratory species and lasting the 40 years from 1979 to 2019. During the study period, the average temperature in the region rose, while the amount of rainfall declined, making for a hotter, dryer climate overall. According to the report on November 12 in the journal Science Advances, 36 species have lost substantial weight, as much as 2 percent of their body weight per decade since 1980. Meanwhile, all the species showed some decrease in average body mass, while a third grew longer wings.

Because of the study's long time series and large sample sizes, the authors were able to show the morphological (形态学的) effects of climate change on resident birds. However, the researchers themselves are unsure and wonder what advantage the wing length changes give the birds, but suppose smaller birds may have an easier time keeping cool. In general, smaller animals have a larger rate of surface area to body size, so they dissipate more heat faster than a bigger animal. Less available food, such as fruit or insects, in dryer weather might lead to smaller body size.

(1) Why are scientists fond of doing research on birds? A. They have small body sizes. B. They are sensitive to hot weather. C. They live in an undisturbed rainforest. D. They are ecological balance indicators.
(2) What can we learn from the new study? A. A third of species have been extinct for a decade. B. 36 species lost 2% of their body weight every year. C. Two-thirds of species showed a considerable decrease in weight. D. About 26 species responded to climate change with longer wings.
(3) What does the underlined word "dissipate" in the last paragraph mean? A. Put off. B. Give off. C. Put away. D. Give away.
(4) What would probably the researchers further study? A. Why it is easier for smaller animals to keep cool. B. What effects the wing length changes have on birds. C. Why the Amazonian birds have lost substantial weight. D. Whether bird species in North America will be extinct in 2100.
阅读理解 模拟题 普通
2. 阅读下列短文,从每题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中选出最佳选项。

July was the world's hottest month on record. Wildfires this summer destroyed a Hawaiian city and caused excuations(疏散) in Canada. Greece, and Thailand. Floods devastated towns in Vermont in July and killed thousands of Libyans in September.

John Vaillant's new book Fire Weather aims to shake us out of this with a tale of terror from a climate change frontline: the city of Fort McMurray, in northern Canada's vast forest, where an uncontrollable wildfire during an exceptionally warm spring in 2016 flooded entire communities within days.

Vaillant tells his story at disaster-movie pace, starting with the glimpse of smoke on the horizon and assurances from the authorities that all will be fine. Mounting misfortune follows as the flames lick golf courses on the city's edge. By the end, 90, 00 people had been evacuated, 2,500 structures destroyed, another 500 damaged. The energy generated by the fire created its own weather system, with hurricane force winds and lightning strikes.

What attracts me most is the book's central irony. The story takes place in Fort McMurrary, which is the industrial centre of northern Alberta's tar sands, one of the world's largest fossil fuel deposits. It is a city whose existence depends on the hydrocarbons whose burning caused climate change; but whose existence almost ended in a climate-caused burning.

Fire Weather isn't a typical disaster book. Vaillant's references to Nassim Taleb, Lucretius, Seamus Heaney, The Lord of the Rings, Xerxes, and Moby-Dick can grant. But Vaillant's theme is also catching my eyes. Our industrial world is releasing carbon at a rate 10 times faster than scientists can find in the geological record for the past 250mn years, he writes. "Thanks to fire and our appetite for boundless energy, we have evolved into a geologic event that will be measurable a million years from now."

(1) What's the purpose of mentioning the examples in paragraph 1? A. To show the varieties of nature disasters. B. To engage the readers in the same topic. C. To indicate the difficulties of these areas. D. To provide the background of the book.
(2) What's special about the book according to this passage? A. Plot and viewpoint. B. Character and conflict. C. Setting and theme. D. Tone and style.
(3) What does the underlined word "grant" in paragraph 5 mean? A. Be presented. B. Be refused. C. Be preserved. D. Be recorded.
(4) Where as the text most probably taken from? A. An essay on the climate change. B. A guidebook to Fort McMurrary. C. A review of world disasters. D. An introduction to a book.
阅读理解 未知 困难
3.阅读理解

Cecilia Chiang, whose San Francisco restaurant, the Mandarin, introduced American diners in the 1960s to the richness and variety of authentic Chinese cuisine, died on Wednesday at her home in San Francisco.

Ms. Chiang was not a chef, nor was she a likely candidate to run a restaurant. She was born near Shanghai in 1920 as the seventh daughter in a wealthy family. After her parents died, Cecilia managed the businesses' finances while still in her teens.

Ms. Chiang came to the United States from China to flee the Japanese during World War Ⅱ, traveling nearly 700 miles on foot. Once in San Francisco, she met two Chinese acquaintances who wanted to open a restaurant. Ms. Chiang agreed to put up a huge deposit. But when the two women quit, Ms. Chiang found to her honor that the deposit was not refundable (可退还的). She took a deep breath and decided to open the restaurant herself. "I began to think that if I could create a restaurant with Western-style service and the dishes that I was most familiar with -the delicious food of northern China — maybe my little restaurant would succeed, " she wrote in her book.

The Mandarin , which was opened in 1962 as a 65 -seat restaurant, introduced customers to mainly Sichuan9 Shanghai and Canton dishes. The early days were difficult. But little by little, Chinese diners, and a few Americans, came regularly. Overnight the tables filled and became a huge success.

Ms. Chiang continued to work as a restaurant consultant into her 90s. " I think I changed what average people know about Chinese food, " Mrs. Chiang wrote. "They didn't know China was such a big country. "

(1) When did Ms. Chiang start to manage the businesses' finances? A. In the 1920s. B. In the 1930s. C. In the 1950s. D. In the 1960s.
(2) What does paragraph 3 mainly talk about? A. When Ms. Chiang came to the US. B. How Ms. Chiang earned her deposit. C. What Ms. Chiang wrote in her book. D. Why Ms. Chiang opened her restaurant.
(3) What do we know about The Mandarin? A. It survived the early hardships. B. It provided all kinds of Chinese dishes. C. It could seat less than 60 people at    first. D. It attracted many Americans once opened.
(4) Which of the following best describes Ms. Chiang? A. Smart but stubborn. B. Devoted and brave. C. Adventurous but careless. D. Enthusiastic and ambitious.
阅读理解 模拟题 普通