2022年高中英语人教版(2019)选择性必修第一册Unit1单元测试题(含答案)
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1、 UNIT 1 PEOPLE OF ACHIEVEMENT 第一部分第一部分 听力(略)听力(略) 第二部分第二部分 阅读(共两节,满分阅读(共两节,满分 50 分)分) 第一节(共第一节(共 15 小题;每小题小题;每小题 2.5 分,满分分,满分 37.5 分)分) 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。 A Global Student Challenge Global Student Challenge is an online construction business game open to students across the world, st
2、udying a built environment course. About Global Student Challenge Started in 2014, Global Student Challenge is a yearly competition run by the Chartered Institute of Building that provides built environment students with a chance to apply their learning to a real-world situation of running their own
3、 virtual construction company. Phase (阶段) One: Registration Registration is perhaps the most important part of the competition! Youll need to register your team in order to use the MERIT software. Even more important, youll need to decide who your teammates will be. Entry for the competition is open
4、 now and will close on 7 April 2021. Phase Two: Pre-Competition The first phase of competition begins on 15 March 2021. In this phase, your team will be able to use the game software and begin to make your plan to run the company. Phase Three: Competition This is when things start to get real. On 14
5、 April 2021 the first round of data will be shown to all teams and youll have a week to make your decisions and hand them in for scoring. After each round youll get a score and youll be graded against other teams based on this. We call this stage “The Early Years” as you begin to get your virtual co
6、nstruction company off the ground. In total, youll do this six times over six rounds of competition. Phase Four: The GSC Final The top six teams after The Early Years will be told to the public as our finalists on 25 May 2021. The finals week is scheduled to be held virtually in June 2021. 21. What
7、do we know about Global Student Challenge? A. It is held twice a year. B. It is an offline competition. C. It is now entering its eighth year. D. It asks competitors to work in a real company. 22. When must signing up for the competition be done? A. At the beginning of April. B. In the middle of Mar
8、ch. C. In the middle of April. D. At the end of May. 23. What will competitors do during Phase Three? A. Make their own plans. B. Start to collect their data. C. Compete with other teams. D. Learn to use the game software. B Gerty Cori, the first American woman to win the Nobel Prize for Physiology
9、or Medicine, was born Gerty Theresa Radnitz in Prague in 1896. Gerty decided at the age of sixteen to study medicine. She entered the Realgymnasium at Tetschen, from which she graduated in 1914, and then went to the Medical School of the German University of Prague. While in medical school, Gerty me
10、t Carl Cori, a classmate who shared both her love of skiing and mountain climbing and her interest in laboratory research. In 1920, the two published the results of their first joint research, received their medical degrees, and married each other. Gertys first research position was as an assistant
11、in the Karolinen Childrens Hospital in Vienna. In 1922, Carl Cori moved to the United States to join the staff of the New York State Institute for the Study of Malignant Diseases in Buffalo, New York. Gerty Cori moved a few months later, starting as an assistant pathologist ( 病理学家) at the Institute
12、and later rising to an assistant biochemist. In 1928, the Coris became US citizens. In 1931, Carl Cori accepted the position of chairman of the Department of Pharmacology of the Washington University School of Medicine (WUSM), while Gerty Cori was hired as a research fellow. In the early 1940s the C
13、oris moved to the Department of Biological Chemistry. Gerty Cori was made an associate ( 副) professor of Research Biological Chemistry and Pharmacology in 1943. She was elevated to the rank ( 级别) of professor of Biological Chemistry in July 1947, the same year she and her husband were awarded the No
14、bel Prize for their work on the metabolism of glycogen (糖代谢). In 1947, Gerty Cori began showing the signs of myelofibrosis, an unusual blood disease. She fought the disease for ten years, refusing to give up her research until the last few months of her life. Gerty Cori died on October 26, 1957. 24.
15、 What can we learn about Gertys husband? A. He shared the same interests with Gerty. B. He moved to the USA later than Gerty. C. He married Gerty while in medical school. D. He studied pathology under the influence of Gerty. 25. Which of the following is the correct order of the events in Gertys lif
16、e? a. She moved to the USA. b. She won the Nobel Prize. c. She met her husband Carl. d. She got a job in the WUSM. e. She received her medical degree. A. e, a, c, b, d B. c, e, a, d, b C. e, c, a, d, b D. c, a, e, b, d 26. What does the underlined word “elevated” in paragraph 3 mean? A. Adapted. B.
17、Defeated. C. Promoted. D. Committed. 27. What can we infer about Gerty from the last paragraph? A. She was satisfied with her later life. B. She was in poor health all her life. C. She died of a common disease. D. She was very mentally strong. C Walking through an airport is never easy. Now imagine
18、doing it if you were blind. Thats the problem faced by Chieko Asakawa, a computer scientist and IBM researcher. Asakawa often flies between the US and Japan, making the journey monthly. If traveling alone she has to be helped at both ends of the flight, which sometimes includes endless waiting. Sear
19、ching for a better replacement led Asakawa to invent a high-tech suitcase that helps get her to the place she wants to go safely. “I never relax when I travel alone,” she says. “I always think about what technology will help me travel easier, quicker and more comfortably.” It was this restlessness t
20、hat led to the AI suitcase. The idea has been in development since 2017 through research between IBM, other Japanese companies, and Carnegie Mellon University in Pennsylvania. Asakawa says there are hopes to commercialize the suitcase and a pilot scheme ( 试验计划) is planned to use it in an airport, a
21、shopping mall and other public spaces. Though the suitcase is too full of tech to hold any clothes, that could change in the future, she says. A runner, Asakawa held Olympic dreams as a child, but a swimming accident at age 11 caused her to gradually lose her sight until, aged 14, she became totally
22、 blind. As a grown-up she has paid attention to developing accessibility technology. Among her creations is “aDesigner,” whose aim is to make designers websites more user-friendly, and “IBM Home Page Reader,” the first voice browser ( 浏览器) to allow Internet access for blind people. Asakawa has won i
23、ndustry and government awards and been introduced into the US National Inventors Hall of Fame. “The blind people usually use a white cane ( 手杖) or a guide dog. It will open up many doors for blind people, because wed be able to go anywhere by ourselves. Without new technology, we cannot make our soc
24、iety more inclusive,” Asakawa says. “A smart suitcase is a great showcase for how AI and technology can change the lives of the blind.” 28. What drove Asakawa to invent the suitcase? A. The suggestion from an international airport. B. The wish to finish her trip without any help. C. The huge busines
25、s advantages of the suitcase. D. The experience of keeping the blind company. 29. What can we say about the suitcase? A. It can hold clothes. B. It has yet to be widely used. C. It has proved unhelpful for the blind. D. It is ready to be commercially produced. 30. What does Asakawa think of the suit
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