2024湖北省高三下学期模拟联考阅读(C+D篇)模考精选合集20篇(含答案解析).docx
《2024湖北省高三下学期模拟联考阅读(C+D篇)模考精选合集20篇(含答案解析).docx》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《2024湖北省高三下学期模拟联考阅读(C+D篇)模考精选合集20篇(含答案解析).docx(32页珍藏版)》请在得力文库 - 分享文档赚钱的网站上搜索。
1、目录:1.湖北省七市州2024届高三年级3月联合统一调研测试英语试题2024.32.湖北省武汉市2024届高中毕业生二月调研考试英语试题2024.2.293.湖北省2024年新高考联考协作体高三2月收心考试英语试题4.2024年宜荆荆随恩高三1月联考高三英语试题5.湖北省高中名校联盟2024届高三第三次联合测评英语试卷2024.026.湖北省武汉市武昌区2024届高三年级上学期期末质量检测英语7.湖北省部分市州2024年元月高三期末联考英语试卷8.2023 年宜荆荆随恩高三12月联考高三英语试卷9.湖北十一校2024届第一次联考10.湖北省高中名校联盟2024届高三第二次联合测评英语试卷湖北省
2、七市州2024届高三年级3月联合统一调研测试英语试题2024.3CA new study involving nearly 50,000 people from four continents offers new insights into identifying the quantity of daily walking steps that will best improve adults health and longevity(长寿), and whether the ideal number of steps differs across people of different a
3、ges. The study represents an effort to develop an evidence-based public health message about the benefits physical activity. The often-repeated 10,000-step-a-day saying grew out of a decades-old marketing activity for a Japanese pedometer (步器), with no science to back it up.Led by physical activity
4、professor Amanda Paluch, an international group of scientists conducted an experiment among adults aged 18 and older. They grouped the nearly 50 ,000participants into four comparative groups according to average steps per day. The lowest step group averaged 3,500 steps; the second, 5,800; the third,
5、 7,800; and the fourth, 10,900steps per day. Among the three higher active groups, there was a 40-53%6 lower risk of death compared to the lowest step group.More specifically, for adults 60 and older, the risk of early death leveled off at aboul6,000-8 ,000 steps per day, meaning that more steps tha
6、n that provided no additional benefit for longevity, while for adults younger than 60, about 8 ,000-10 ,000 steps per day.“So, what we saw was this continuing reduction in risk as the number of steps increases until it levels of. Interestingly, the study found no definitive association with walking
7、speed, Paluch says.The new study supports and expands findings from another study led by Paluch before which found that walking at least 7,000 steps a day reduced middle-aged peoples risk of early death, “Theres a lot of evidence suggesting that moving even a little more is beneficial particularly f
8、or those who are doing very little activity,” Paluch says. “More steps per day are better for your health.”28.Why did the scientists carry out the new study?A. To know about peoples health condition.B. To explain the pedometers working principles.C. To determine the best physical activity for people
9、D. To provide a scientific guideline on daily walking.29. What does the underlined words “leveled off” in paragraph 3 mean?A. Turned higher. B. Became stable. C. Fell sharply. D. Changed rapidly.30.What does the experiment find?A. The old should walk as much as possible. B. Young people usually walk
10、 more than the old.C. The most beneficial steps differ by age groups D. Walking pace is the key to avoiding early death.31.What does Paluch advise people doing little activity to do?A. To walk more steps. B. To control walking speed.C. To limit walking distance. D. To track the number of steps.DDesp
11、ite its benefits, drinking milk into adulthood, let alone other animals milk, is a strange behavior in the animal kingdom. What makes it even stranger is that an estimated 68percent of the global human population is actually lactose (乳糖)intolerant. Scientists are still getting to the bottom of why t
12、he practice began and continued. This research could unlock new understandings of our food cultures and even our DNA. The earliest evidence of animal milk drinking dates back almost 9 ,000 years to modern-day Turkey near the sea of Marmara, where milk fats have been found on ancient pottery. Accordi
13、ng to Jessica Hendy, a scientist at the University of York, then milk would have been part of a diverse diet for it was mixed with other food. From its origins, the technology of making use of milk spread into the Caucasus and then across Europe. By the Bronze Age, people may have been using cows mi
14、lk to feed their babies.For a long time, researchers believed that milk drinking changed as a cultural practice hand in hand with the spread of genetic mutations (异)that allowed people to tolerate milk into adulthood. But one recent finding suggests milk drinking occurred before these mutations and
15、might not even require them. In Europe, people appear to have been drinking milk for thousands of years before any genetic ability to drink milk became common. The ancient cheesemaking equipment might offer part of the solution: Fermenting(发) milk into yogurt cheese, or other products reduces the am
16、ount of lactose. In Mongolia, researchers have not yet found a genetic mutation that allows people to digest lactose, despite the major role of milk in that culture. So some scientists held that there might be other potential factors helping.What we do know about the history of milk reveals how wron
17、g-headed one-size-fits-all nutritional guidance can be. In modern America, milk drinking has been presented as a universal good. In reality, how milk is prepared can change the nutritional picture, and how much our bodies process depends, at least in part, on our own genes.32.What can we learn about
18、 milk drinking from paragraph 2?A. It used to be a symbol of identity. B. It initially started with little babies.C. It was the key diet of ancient people D. It has been a human tradition for long.33.Why does the author mention Europe in paragraph 3?A. To give a suggestion. B. To define a concept C.
19、 To make a prediction. D. To clarify a finding.34.What can be inferred from the last paragraph?A. Milk consumption functions as a cure-all. B. Milk intake varies from person to person.C. Milks nutritional value is beyond imagination. D. Ones milk digestive ability changes constantly35.Which of the f
20、ollowing can be the best title for the text?A. The Mystery of Drinking Milk B. The Process of Genetic MutationsC. The Phenomenon of Lactose Intolerance D. The Technology of Making Milk Products湖北省武汉市2024届高中毕业生二月调研考试英语试题2024.2.29CThe greatest irony (讽刺) of the world-wide celebrations held in 2012 to
21、honour the 200th anniversary ( 周年纪念) of the first edition of the Grimms Hausm rchen involves the discovery that most people really dont know the original Grims tales published in 1812.If we return to take a closer look at the first edition, well find it was this edition that inspired scholars of fol
22、k culture throughout Europe to gather tales from the oral tradition and preserve them for future generations.When the Grimms Jacob and Wilhelm began collecting all kinds of folk tales and songs at the beginning of the 19th century, what attracted them to concentrate on old German literature was a be
23、lief that the most natural and pure forms of culture were to be located in the past, while modern literature, even though it might be remarkably rich, was artificial and thus could not express the genuine quality of folk culture that originated naturally from peoples experiences and bound the people
- 配套讲稿:
如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。
- 特殊限制:
部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。
- 关 键 词:
- 2024 湖北省 下学 模拟 联考 阅读 精选 20 答案 解析
限制150内