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近三年高考(2024-2024)英语试题分项版解析:专题15 社会生活、说理议论类(原卷版)

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  2024年高考题

  1.【2024·全国新课标I】B

  Grandparents Answer a Call

  As a third generation native of Brownsville, Texas, Mildred Garza never pleased move away,. Even when her daughter and son asked her to move to San Antonio to help their children, she politely refused . Only after a year of friendly discussion did Ms Gaf finally say yes. That was four years ago. Today all three generations regard the move to a success, giving them a closer relationship than they would have had in separate cities.

  No statistics show the number of grandparents like Garza who are moving closer to the children and grandchildren. Yet there is evidence suggesting that the trend is growing. Even President Obama’s mother-in-law, Marian Robinson, has agreed to leave Chicago and into the White House to help care for her granddaughters. According to a study grandparents com. 83 percent of the people said Mrs. Robinson ‘s decision will influence the grandparents in the American family. Two-thirds believe more families will follow the example of Obama’s family.

  “in the 1960s we were all a little wild and couldn’t get away from home far enough fast enough to prove we could do it on our own,” says Christine Crosby, publisher of grate magazine for grandparents .We now realize how important family is and how important”” to be near them, especially when you’re raining children.”

  Moving is not for everyone. Almost every grandparent wants to be with his or her grandchildren and is willing to make sacrifices, but sometimes it is wiser to say no and visit frequently instead. Having your grandchildren far away is hard, especially knowing your adult child is struggling, but giving up the life you know may be harder.

  25. Why was Garza’s move a success?

  A.It strengthened her family ties.

  B.It improved her living conditions.

  C.It enabled her make more friends.

  D.It helped her know more new places.

  26.What was the reaction of the public to Mrs. Robinson’s decision?

  A.17% expressed their support for it.

  B.Few people responded sympathetically.

  C.83% believed it had a bad influence.

  D.The majority thought it was a trend.

  27. What did Crosby say about people in the 1960s?

  A.They were unsure of raise more children.

  B.They were eager to raise more children.

  C.They wanted to live away from their parents.

  D.They bad little respect for their grandparent.

  28.What does the author suggest the grandparents do in the lasr paragraph?

  A. Make decisions in the best interests' of their own

  B. Ask their children to pay more visits to them

  C. Sacrifice for their struggling children

  D. Get to know themselves better

  2.【2024·全国新课标I】D The meaning of silence varies among cultural groups. Silences may be thoughtful, or they may be empty when a person has nothing to say. A silence in a conversation may also show stubbornness, or worry. Silence may be viewed by some cultural groups as extremely uncomfortable; therefore attempts may be made to fill every gap(间隙)with conversation. Persons in other cultural groups value silence and view it as necessary for understanding a 

  person's needs. Many Native Americans value silence and feel it is a basic part of communicating among people, just as some 

  traditional Chinese and Thai persons do. Therefore, when a person from one of these cultures is speaking and 

  suddenlystops, what maybe implied(暗示) is that the person wants the listener to consider what has been said before continuing. In these cultures, silence is a call for reflection.

  Other cultures may use silence in other ways, particularly when dealing with conflicts among people or in relationships of people with different amounts of power. For example, Russian, French, and Spanish persons may use silence to show agreement between parties about the topic under discussion. However, Mexicans may use silence when instructions are given by a person in authority rather than be rude to that person by arguing with him or her. In still another use, persons in Asian cultures may view silence as a sign of respect, particularly to an elder or a person in authority.

  Nurses and other care-givers need to be aware of the possible meanings of silence when they come across the personal anxiety their patients may be experiencing. Nurses should recognize their own personal and cultural construction of silence so that a patient’s silence is not interrupted too early or allowed to go on unnecessarily. A nurse who understands the healing(治愈) value of silence can use this understanding to assist in the care of patients from their own and from other cultures.

  What does the author say about silence in conversations?

  It implies anger.

  It promotes friendship.

  It is culture-specific.

  It is content-based.

  Which of the following people might regard silence as a call for careful thought?

  The Chinese.

  The French.

  The Mexicans.

  The Russians.

  What does the author advise nurses to do about silence?

  Let it continue as the patient pleases.

  Break it while treating patients.

  Evaluate its harm to patients.

  Make use of its healing effects.

  What may be the best title for the text?

  Sound and Silence

  What It Means to Be Silent

  Silence to Native Americans

  Speech Is Silver; Silence Is Gold

  3.【2024·全国新课标II】D

  A new collection of photos brings an unsuccessful Antarctic voyage back to life.

  Frank Hurley’s pictures would be outstanding----undoubtedly first-rate photo-journalism---if they had been made last week. In fact, they were shot from 1914 through 1916, most of them after a disastrous shipwreck(海滩), by a cameraman who had no reasonable expectation of survival. Many of the images were stored in an ice chest, under freezing water, in the damaged wooden ship.

  The ship was the Endurance, a small, tight, Norwegian-built three-master that was intended to take Sir Ernest Shackleton and a small crew of seamen and scientists, 27 men in all, to the southernmost shore of Antarctica’s Weddell Sea. From that point Shackleton wanted to force a passage by dog sled(雪橇) across the continent. The journey was intended to achieve more than what Captain Robert Falcon Scott had done. Captain Scott had reached the South Pole early in 1912 but had died with his four companions on the march back.

  As writer Caroline Alexander makes clear in her forceful and well-researched story The Endurance, adventuring was even then a thoroughly commercial effort. Scott’s last journey, completed as be lay in a tent dying of cold and hunger, caught the world’s imagination, and a film made in his honor drew crowds. Shackleton, a onetime British merchant-navy officer who had got to within 100 miles of the South Pole in 1908, started a business before his 1914 voyage to make money from movie and still photography. Frank Hurley, a confident and gifted Australian photographer who knew the Antarctic, was hired to make the images, most of which have never before been published.

  13. What do we know about the photos taken by Hurley?

  A. They were made last week

  B. They showed undersea sceneries

  C. They were found by a cameraman

  D. They recorded a disastrous adventure

  14. Who reached the South Pole first according to the text?

  A. Frank Hurley

  B. Ernest Shackleton

  C. Robert Falcon Scott

  D. Caroline Alexander

  15. What does Alexander think was the purpose of the 1914 voyage?

  A. Artistic creation

  B. Scientific research

  C. Money making

  D. Treasure hunting

  4.【2024·全国新课标III】B

  On one of her trips to New York several years ago, Eudora Welty decided to take a couple of New York friends out to dinner. They settled in at a comfortable East Side cafe and within minutes, another customer was approaching their table.

  “Hey, aren’t you from Mississippi?” the elegant, white-haired writer remembered being asked by the stranger. “I’m from Mississippi too.”

  Without a second thought, the woman joined the Welty party. When her dinner partner showed up, she also pulled up a chair.

  “They began telling me all the news of Mississippi,” Welty said. “I didn’t know what my New York friends were thinking.”

  Taxis on a rainy New York night are rarer than sunshine. By the time the group got up to leave, it was pouring outside. Welty’s new friends immediately sent a waiter to find a cab. Heading back downtown toward her hotel, her big-city friends were amazed at the turn of events that had changed their Big Apple dinner into a Mississippi.

  “My friends said: ‘Now we believe your stories,’” Welty added. “And I said: ‘Now you know. These are the people that make me write them.’”

  Sitting on a sofa in her room, Welty, a slim figure in a simple gray dress, looked pleased with this explanation.

  “I don’t make them up,” she said of the characters in her fiction these last 50 or so years. “I don’t have to.”

  Beauticians, bartenders, piano players and people with purple hats, Welty’s people come from afternoons spent visiting with old friends, from walks through the streets of her native Jackson, Miss., from conversations overheard on a bus. It annoys Welty that, at 78, her left ear has now given out. Sometimes, sitting on a bus or a train, she hears only a fragment(片段) of a particularly interesting story.

  5.What happened when Welty was with her friends at the cafe?

  A. Two strangers joined her.

  B. Her childhood friends came in.

  C. A heavy rain ruined the dinner.

  D. Some

  people held a party there.

  6.The underlined word “them” in Paragraph 6 refers to Welty’s.

  A. readers

  B. parties

  C. friends

  D. stories

  7.What can we learn about the characters in Welty’s fiction?

  A. They live in big cities.

  B. They are mostly women.

  C. They come from real life.

  D. They are pleasure seekers.

  5.【2024·全国新课标III】C

  If you are a fruit grower—or would like to become one—take advantage of Apple Day to see what’s around.

  It’s called Apple Day but in practice it’s more like Apple Month. The day itself is on October 21, but sinceit has

  caught on, events now spread out over most of October around Britain.

  Visiting an apple event is a good chance to see, and often taste, a wide variety of apples. To people who are used to the limited choice of apples such as Golden Delicious and Royal Gala in supermarkets, it can be quite an eye opener to see the range of classical apples still in existence, such as Decio which was grown by the Romans. Although it doesn’t taste of anything special, it’s still worth a try, as is the knobbly(多疙瘩的) Cat’s Head which is more of a curiosity than anything else.

  There are also varieties developed to suit specific local conditions. One of the very best varieties for eating quality is Orleans Reinette, but you’ll need a warm, sheltered place with perfect soil to grow it, so it’s a pipe dream for most apple lovers who fall for it.

  At the events, you can meet expert growers and discuss which ones will best suit your conditions, and because these are family affairs, children are well catered for with apple-themed fun and games.

  Apple Days are being held at all sorts of places with an interest in fruit, including stately gardens and commercial orchards(果园).If you want to have a real orchard experience, try visiting the National Fruit Collection at Brogdale, near Faversham in Kent.

  8.What can people do at the apple events?

  A. Attend experts’ lectures.

  B. Visit fruit-loving families.

  C. Plant fruit trees in an orchard.

  D. Taste many kinds of apples.

  9.What can we learn about Decio?

  A. It is a new variety.

  B. It has a strange look.

  C. It is rarely seen now.

  D. It has a special taste.

  10.What does the underlined phrase “a pipe dream” in Paragraph 3mean?

  A. A practical idea.

  B. A vain hope.

  C.A brilliant plan.

  D. A selfish desire.

  11.What is the author’s purpose in writing the text?

  A. To show how to grow apples.

  B .To introduce an apple festival.

  C. To help people select apples.

  D. To promote apple research.

  6.【2024·全国新课标III】D

  Bad news sells. If it bleeds, it leads. No news is good news, and good news is no news. Those are the classic rules for the evening broadcasts and the morning papers.But now that information is being spread and monitored(监控) in different ways, researchers are discovering new rules. By tracking people’s e-mails and online posts, scientists have found that good news can spread faster and farther than disasters and sob stories.

  “The ‘if it bleeds’ rule works for mass media,” says Jonah Berger, a scholar at the University of Pennsylvania. “They want your eyeballs and don’t care how you’re feeling. But when you share a story with your friends, you care a lot more how they react. You don’t want them to think of you as a Debbie Downer.”

  Researchers analyzing word-of-mouth communication—e-mails, Web posts and reviews, face-to-face conversations—found that it tended to be more positive than negative(消极的), but that didn’t necessarily mean people preferred positive news. Was positive news shared more often simply because people experienced more good things than bad things? To test for that possibility, Dr. Berger looked at how people spread a particular set of news stories: thousands of articles on The New York Times’ website. He and a Penn colleague analyzed the “most e-mailed” list for six months. One of his first findings was that articles in the science section were much more likely to make the list than non-science articles. He found that science amazed Times’ readers and made them want to share this positive feeling with others.

  Readers also tended to share articles that were exciting or funny, or that inspired negative feelings like anger or anxiety, but not articles that left them merely sad. They needed to be aroused(激发) one way or the other, and they preferred good news to bad. The more positive an article, the more likely it was to be shared, as Dr. Berger explains in his new book, “Contagious: Why Things Catch On.”

  12 .What do the classic rules mentioned in the text apply to?

  A. News reports.

  B. Research papers.

  C.Private e-mails.

  D. Daily conversations.

  13.What can we infer about people like Debbie Downer?

  A. They’re socially inactive.

  B. They’re good at telling stories.

  C. They’re inconsiderate of others.

  D. They’re careful with their words.

  14.Which tended to be the most e-mailed according to Dr. Berger’s research?

  A . Sports new.

  B. Science articles.

  C. Personal accounts.

  D. Financial reviews.

  15 .What can be a suitable title for the text?

  A. Sad Stories Travel Far and Wide

  B .Online News Attracts More People

  C. Reading Habits Change with the Times

  D. Good News Beats Bad on Social Networks

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