2019届高三英语阅读理解考点复习题

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江苏新沂市2018高考英语(二轮)阅读理解选练(3)及答案 阅读下列短文,从每题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出最佳选项。 【2018第一轮质检试题】 Nelson Mandela was a figure of international fame,and many details of his life and career were public knowledge.But here are some things you may not have known about him. In his youth,Mandela enjoyed boxing.Even during the 27 years he spent in prison,he would exercise every morning.“I did not enjoy the violence of boxing so much as the science of it.Boxing is equal.I never did any real fighting after I entered politics.My main interest was in training,”he wrote in his autobiography Long Walk to Freedom. Among the memorabilia in the Mandela Family Museum in Soweto,visitors call find the world championship belt given to Mandela by American boxer Sugar Ray Leonard. Rolihlahla Mandela was nine years old when a teacher at the primary Methodist school where he was studying,gave him an English name—Nelson—in accordance with the custom to give all school children Christian names. Rolihlahla is not a common name in South Africa.It means“troublemaker”.His circumcision name was Dalibunga,meaning “founder of the Bunga”. However,in South Africa,Mr Mandela was often called by his clan(宗族)name—Madiba—which South Africans used out of respect. After going underground because of his ANC activities,Mr Mandela’s ability to evade(躲避)the securities services earned him the nickname“the black Pimpernel”,after the novel The Scarlet Pimpernel,about a hero with a secret identity. A fake(伪造的)passport in the name of David Motsamayi was used by Mr Mandela.He had disguised himself as a driver,a gardener and a chef in order to travel around the country unnoticed by the authorities. Mr Mandela studied law on and off for 50 years from 1939,failing about half the courseshe took.In August 1952,he and Oliver Tambo established South Africa’s first black law firm,Mandela and Tambo,in Johannesburg.He persevered to finally secure a law degree while in prison in 1989. 41.Why did Nelson Mandela become a boxing fan? A.He enjoyed the violence of boxing. B.He wanted to take the championship. C.He desired to enjoy the training. D.He hoped to find a better job. 42.Which of the following is true of Mandela’s name? A.His original name was not Nelson. B.His parents gave him the name—Nelson. C.Rolihlahla is a popular name in South Africa. D.Madiba was his Christian name. 43.What made people call Mr Mandela“the black Pimpernel”? A.His ability to escape from being caught. B.His underground activities in ANC. C.His pressure given by the authorities. D.The novel’s hero with a secret identity. 44.Mr Mandela made a fake passport to_____. A.travel around the country B.escape from the authorities C.disguise himself as an actor D.go abroad easily 45.What can we learn from the last paragraph? A.It took Mr Mandela over fifty years to get a law degree. B.Mr Mandela set up South Africa’s first law firm. C.Mr Mandela got his law degree after being released from prison. D.Mr Mandela was a determined person. 【参考答案】41-0-45、CAABD

阅读下列短文,从每题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出最佳选项。 (A Smuggling Syndicate) The smuggler in many ways is just another international businessman and his turnover would do credit to many international corporations. His business happens to be illegal and risky, but look at the stakes involved: $5 billion worth of heroin smuggled into the United States each year, and $1.5 billion in gold passing annually along smuggling pipelines to India and Indonesia, to France and Morocco, to Brazil and Turkey. Perhaps half of all the watches made in Switzerland reach their eventual wearers by some back door. Most of this illicit trade is carried on with all the efficiency of any multinational company. Entirely legitimate businesses, such as a travel bureau or an import-export agency, are also often fronts for smuggling organizations. One of the world’s largest gold smugglers also owned and operated the franchise for a leading make of British cars in a small Middle Eastern country. He made a good profit from both activities. A smuggling syndicate operates much like any other business. The boss is really a chief executive. He makes all the plans, establishes international contacts, and thinks up the smuggling routes and method but remains aloof from actual operations. He is aided by a handful of managers looking after such specialties as financing, travel (one reason why many smuggling syndicates find it handy to have their own travel agency), the bribing of airline or customs officials, and recruitment of couriers, or mules as they are called. There may also be someone in