2018年高考英语一轮复习 每日一题(第12周)每周一测(含解析)
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每周一测
Ⅰ.单项填空
1.________me a chance, I promise, and I’ll give you a wonderful surprise.
A.Giving
B.Give
C.To give
D.Having given
2.Before getting off the train, ______ sure you have all your belongings with you.
A.making
B.to make
C.made
D.make
3.Follow your doctor’s advice, ________your illness will get better.
A.then
B.or
C.and
D.but
4.__________what the young man said just now about the result of the experiment sounded!
A.How foolishly
B.How foolish
C.What foolishly
D.What foolish
5._______ different life today is from_________ it was fifty years ago!
A.What a; what
B.What a; how
C.How; what
D.What; what
6.The little boy came riding at full speed down the motorway on his bicycle. ________it was!
A.What a dangerous scene
B.What dangerous a scene
C.How a dangerous scene
D.How dangerous the scene
7.— Mrs Willson doesn't believe that Tom is able to pass the exam, ________? —That's where I disagree.
A.does she
B.doesn't she
C.is she
D.isn't she
8.I’m sure you’d rather she went to school by bus, _________?
A.hadn’t you
B.wouldn’t you
C.aren’t I
D.didn’t she
9.They must have mistaken you for your elder sister yesterday, ________?
A.haven’t they
B.didn’t they
C.aren’t they
D.mustn’t they
10.—We didn’t find Tom________the lecture.
—No one had told him about ________a lecture the following day.
A.to attend; there to be
B.attending; there being
C.attended; there be
D.attend; there was
II.阅读理解
阅读下面短文,从每题所给的A、B、C和D四个选项中,选出最佳选项。
Malala Yousafzai, the teen activist from Pakistan, has just become the youngest person ever to win a Nobel Prize. In 2012, Malala survived from being shot by terrorists for speaking out for a girl’s right to be educated in her native country. She is being recognized today for her global activism on education for girls. Winning this award is a huge honor, especially for such a young person.
Malala’s journey to the Nobel Prize has not been easy. She grew up in a dangerous district of Pakistan called the Swat Valley. This area was taken over by the Taliban. The Taliban ruled the district with an iron fist. They were especially cruel to women, not allowing them to go shopping, have jobs, or go to school.
In 2009, Malala began speaking out publicly for every girl’s right to an education. She blogged about how the Taliban didn’t want her to go to school. She also continued to attend her local school, despite the danger involved.
Then, in 2012, the Taliban tried to kill Malala to silence her. Two Taliban gunmen shot her and two other students while they were on a school bus. Malala was flown to the United Kingdom for immediate medical treatment.
Malala eventually recovered from her injuries. She now lives in Birmingham, England, and continues to work hard to support girls’ and women’s rights around the world.
"The terrorists thought that they would change my aims and stop my ambitions,"she said, "but nothing changed in my life except this. Weakness, fear, and hopelessness died. Strength, power, and courage were born."
The 17-year-old girl from Pakistan is sharing the 2014 Nobel Peace Prize with a children’s activist Kailash Satyarthi, who is from India Satyarthi leads many campaigns dedicated to removing child labor.