综合检测9

来源 :高中生学习·高三文综版 | 被引量 : 0次 | 上传用户:qq616009003
下载到本地 , 更方便阅读
声明 : 本文档内容版权归属内容提供方 , 如果您对本文有版权争议 , 可与客服联系进行内容授权或下架
论文部分内容阅读
  一、完形填空
  Randy Kraus was paralyzed(瘫痪). His left side was useless. But his right hand was .1 enough to lift a bucket to his forehead. Once, he’d been a police officer and owned a private-eye agency. Once, he’d been strong and able. Now, he felt he was nothing.
  His 2 started with Parkinson’s (帕金森) disease, but it didn’t 3 there. In July 2002, the 60-year-old Kraus went into the hospital for an operation to control the shaking. 4 , during the operation, he had a stroke(中风). He was paralyzed. The 5 man, who loved golf, could think, but couldn’t 6 . Kraus wanted the doctors to 7 it to him straight. “You may never walk again,” they told him. “Maybe you won’t 8 be able to talk. ”
  Once home, he 9 he couldn’t lift a fork or take a drink by himself. Physical treatment was so painful and slow. What did he have to 10 for? So now Kraus held the gun against his head. 11 . the cold metal on his skin, he began to consider not his pain, but the pain he 12 cause his wife, daughters and grandchildren. He didn’t pull the trigger(扳机).
  “You are where you are”, his exercise physiologist(生理学者), Andrew Garud told him. “The pace (进度) would be slow;the pain would be 13 . But as long as you are 14 , you have the ability to get better.” After three months of 15 with Garud, Kraus wanted to see if he could 16 . He could. Then he took three steps, sat down and cried like a baby. One step 17 to another. Next he managed a short walk. It was the hardest 18 . of Kraus’s life.
  Garud kept saying he could 19 more. Now, Kraus can brush his teeth, shave himself and get around the house with a walker. Little success only the paralyzed can 20 understand.
  1. A. safe B. good
  C. big D. free
  2. A. puzzle B. process
  C. injury D. trouble
  3. A. end B. achieve
  C. pause D. reach
  4. A. Therefore B. Besides
  C. However D. Otherwise
  5. A. tough B. normal
  C. strange D. rough
  6. A. talk B. hear
  C. move D. operate
  7. A. give B. offer
  C. leak D. pass
  8. A. still B. only
  C. just D. even
  9. A. supposed B. observed
  C. declared D. found
  10. A. search B. try
  C. live D. look
  11. A. Touching B. Feeling
  C. Leaving D. Laying
  12. A. should B. must
  C. would D. need
  13. A. sharp B. dull
  C. familiar D. real
  14. A. awake B. alive
  C. aware D. available
  15. A. chatting B. working   C. discussing D. testing
  16. A. walk B. stand
  C. shake D. fall
  17. A. turned B. pointed
  C. led D. stuck
  18. A. fight B. adventure
  C. lesson D. defence
  19. A. hold B. walk
  C. prevent D. do
  20. A. fully B. generally
  C. suddenly D. simply
  二、阅读理解
  Last summer, when Amanda R of Anaheim Hills, Calif, was running on a cross-country course with her team, she blacked out. “I got really dizzy,” she says. “I was out for a few minutes.” At first, Amanda thought she was just tired and didn’t think she had a health problem. She did go to the emergency room, where she was released after tests, but she fainted(昏厥) again several days later as she was talking with her coach. Another doctor ran more tests and told her she had a heat illness. “I had been running in heat all summer,” Amanda says, The doctor guessed that Amanda had blacked out. “because we were in heat so much with not enough water and not enough of the right king of foods”.
  Teens often don’t want to stop and take a break or don’t notice when they start to feel bad, doctors say. However, paying attention if you’re not feeling well is important, as Amanda learned.
  As a result, Amanda has changed her habits. “I drink a lot more water.” she says. “And put more salt in my diet. I’m eating more balanced meals.” Amanda advises teen athletes to trust their coaches and speak up when they’re not feeling well. “And recognize the difference between when you’re tired and when there’s something really wrong.”
  Some people, up to 3 percent of the populationsweat too much, even in cold weather. The condition, called hyperhidrosis(多汗), can affect many parts and it often runs in families. Too much sweating over the whole body could be a symptom of another medical condition. Doctors aren’t sure what causes hyperhidrosis, but using special medications or other treatments can help.
  1. What happened to Amanda when she was running on a cross-country course?
  A. She was tired and had a rest for a few minutes.
  B. She fell down to the ground because of thirst.
  C. She lost consciousness for a short time.
  D. She was asked to stop the race.
  2. What caused the happening mentioned in the passage during Amanda’s running?
  A. She couldn’t breath in enough air in the race.
  B. She didn’t eating anything before the race.
  C. She had been running all summer without a rest.
  D. She neither drank enough water nor ate enough of the right king of foods.
  3. Amanda advised teen athletes to___________ .
  A. tell their coach if they feel bad
  B. put more salt into their drinking water
  C. eat much more to get energy
  D. stop running and never run in summer
  4. The underlined sentence in Passage 4 may means___________ .
  A. all family members often sweat when they are running
  B. hyperhidrosis often hands down from generation to generation
  C. every member of the family likes running
  D. people like to run in the form of families
  5. The purpose of writing this massage is to___________ .
  A. introduce the treatment of a heat disease
  B. explain what is the cause of hyperhidrosis
  C. expect teens to beat the heat in the summer exercise
  D. tell the difference between being tired and being wrong
其他文献
陈旧性视网膜脱离是指视网膜脱离较长时间未治疗,出现视网膜脱离范围扩大、玻璃体浑浊加重、视网膜下液多且不能吸收、广泛多变的视网膜下膜及视网膜皱折形成等改变的视网膜脱离.近几年,随着医疗器械、材料的提高,对治疗这类疾病的方法也有增多,使其治愈率明显提高,本文对在我院收治的陈旧性视网膜脱离病例共82例进行回顾性分析,进一步探讨手术疗效。
黑恶势力向政治渗透的主线逐渐明朗:招揽更多成员——壮大经济实力——寻求“保护伞”——向党政司法机关直接渗透势力。 The main line of political infiltration by the