2021届高考英语二轮完型填空议论文专项练习(十六)

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1、2021 高考英语二轮高考英语二轮完型填空议论文专项练习完型填空议论文专项练习(十六十六) (A) Sitting at a table in my school cafeteria, I looked around,slowly taking in everything. Student after student passed my 1 carrying that days lunch, but if you looked deeper,there was more to 2 .There was more than just the uniform they were wearing,

2、or the way they had styled their hair that day. There was a lot more hidden under the 3 . Catching the eye of a girl in my grade sitting at a nearby table, I waved politely. She smiled 4 and then continued to pick at the spaghetti in front of her. If I hadnt 5 recently that her mother was dying of l

3、eukemia, I would have never 6 anything was wrong and I may not have been as 7 and sympathetic, either. It suddenly 8 me that we judge others too quickly without knowing the whole story. I have an incurable lung disease. No one at our school knows - I dont show any noticeable 9 except for a few cough

4、s here and there. I go about my day like any other kid, 10 with the realization that I have a 11 and terrifying future. Before that day when I decided to 32 the world with a new perspective, I 13 myself almost every day. I thought only about myself and my heavy 14 .But Ive now realized no one is 15

5、- we just need to accept the way we are. 1Aorder Broom Ctable Dcafeteria 2Aimagine Bcompare Cobserve Dexchange 3Auniform Brules Ccircumstances Dsurface 4Aweakly Bcasually Chappily Dimpatiently 5Afound Bnoticed Cheard Ddecided 6Aremembered Bsuspected Cpredicted Dregretted 7Awilling Boutstanding Cunde

6、rstanding Ddemanding 8Aescaped Bsatisfied Chit Dattracted 9Adiseases Bsymptoms Ccomplaints Dweaknesses 10Abut Band Cor Dso 11Abright Breal Cserious Ddark 12Atolerate Bcreate Cchange Dview 13Aforgave Bpitied Cchallenged Dencouraged 14Adebt Breward Cburden Dworkload 15Achangeable Bperfect Cunique Ddif

7、ferent (B) I used to believe in the American Dream, which meant a job, a mortgage (按揭), credit cards, success. I wanted it and worked toward it like everyone else, all of us 1 chasing the same thing. One year, through a series of unhappy events, it all fell 2 . I found myself homeless and alone. I h

8、ad my truck and $56. I 3 the countryside for some place I could rent for the 4 possible amount. I came upon a shabby house four miles up a winding mountain road 5 the Potomac River in West Virginia. It was 6 , full of broken glass and rubbish. I found the owner ,rented it, and 7 a corner to camp in.

9、 The locals knew nothing about me, 8 slowly, they started teaching me the 9 of being a neighbor. They dropped off blankets, candles, and tools, and began 10 around to chat. They started to teach me a belief in a 11 American Dreamnot the one of individual achievement but of 12 . What I had believed i

10、n, all those things I thought were 13 for a civilized life, were nonexistent in this place. 14 on the mountain, my most valuable possessions were my 15 with my neighbors. Four years later, I moved back into 16 . I saw many people were having a really hard time, 17 their jobs and homes. I managed to

11、rent a big enough house to 18 a handful of people .There are four of us now in the house, but over time Ive had nine people come in and move on to other places. Wed all be in 19 if we hadnt banded together. The American Dream I believe in now is a shared one. Its not so much about what I can get for

12、 myself; its about 20 we can all get by together. 1. A. separately B. equally C. violently D. naturally 2. A. off B. apart C. over D. out 3. A. crossed B.1eft C. toured D. searched 4. A. fullest B. largest C. fairest D. cheapest 5. A. at B. through C. over D. round 6. A occupied B. abandoned C. empt

13、ied D. robbed 7. A. turned B. approached C. cleared D. cut 8. A. but B. although C. otherwise D. for 9. A. benefit B. lesson C. nature D. art 10. A. sticking B. looking C. swinging D. turning 11. A. wild B. real C. different D. remote 12. A. neighborliness B. happiness C. friendliness D. kindness 13

14、. A. unique B. expensive C. rare D. necessary 14. A. Up B. Down C. Deep D.Along 15. A. cooperation B. relationships C. satisfaction D. appointments 16. A. reality B. society C. town D. life 17. A creating B. losing C. quitting D. offering 18. A. put in B.turn in C. take in D. get in 19. A. yards B.

15、shelters C. camps D. cottages 20. A. when B. what C. whether D. how (C) One of the easiest things in the world is to become a fault-finder. However, life can be 1 when you are not busy finding fault with it. Several years ago I 2 a letter from seventeen-year-old Kerry, who described herself as a wor

16、ld-class fault-finder, almost always 3 by things. People were always doing things that annoyed her, and 4 was ever good enough. She was highly self-critical and also found fault with her friends. She became a really 5 person. Unfortunately, it took a horrible accident to change her 6 . Her best frie

17、nd was seriously hurt in a car crash. What made it almost 7 to deal with was that the day before the 8 , Kerry had visited her friend and had spent the whole time criticizing her 9 of boyfriends, the way she was living, the way she related to her mother, and various other things she felt she needed

18、to 10 . It wasn t until her friend was badly hurt that Kerry became 11 her habit of finding fault. Very quickly, she learned to appreciate life rather than to 12 everything so harshly(刻薄). She was able to transfer her new wisdom to other parts of her 13 as well. Perhaps most of us aren t as extreme

19、at fault-finding, 14 when we re honest, we can be sharply 15 of the world. I m not suggesting you 16 problems, or that you pretend things are 17 than they are, but simply that you learn to allow things to be as they are 18 most of the time, and especially when it s not a really big 19 . Train yourse

20、lf to bite your tongue, and with a little 20 , you ll get really good at letting things go. And when you do, you ll get back your enthusiasm and love for life. 1.A. lonely B. great C. quiet D. uneasy 2.A. received B. answered C. expected D. rejected 3.A. threatened B. interrupted C. bothered D. spoi

21、led 4.A. anything B. everything C. something D. nothing 5.A. caring B. boring C. interesting D. surprising 6.A. attitude B. plan C. measure D. explanation 7.A. urgent B. unnecessary C. certain D. impossible 8.A. occasion B. event C. accident D. adventure 9.A. memory B. notice C. evidence D. choice 1

22、0.A. hear B. contribute C. express D. admit 11.A. aware of B. afraid of C. curious about D. confused about 12.A. discuss B. realize C. judge D. settle 13.A. family B. life C. career D. education 14.A. so B. or C. but D. for 15.A. proud B. sure C. hopeful D. critical 16.A. face B. create C. solve D.

23、ignore 17.A. rarer B. better C. stranger D. worse 18.A. at least B. At last C. By far D. So far 19.A. task B. deal C. result D. duty 20.A. practice B. speech C. rest D. pity (D) Parents feel that it is difficult to live with teenagers. Then again, teenagers have 1 feelings about their parents, sayin

24、g that it is not easy living with them. According to a recent research, the most common 2 between parents and teenagers is that regarding untidiness and daily routine tasks. On the one hand, parents go mad over 3 rooms, clothes thrown on the floor and their children s refusal to help with the 4 . On

25、 the other hand, teenagers lose their patience continually when parents blame them for 5 the towel in the bathroom, not cleaning up their room or refusing to do the shopping at the supermarket. The research, conducted by St. George University, shows that different parents have different 6 to these p

26、roblems. However, some approaches are more 7 than others. For example, those parents who yell at their children for their untidiness, but 8 clean the room for them, have fewer chances of changing their children s 9 . On the contrary, those who let teenagers experience the 10 of their actions can do

27、better. For example, when teenagers who don t help their parents with the shopping don t find their favorite drink in the refrigerator, they are forced to 11 their actions. Psychologists say that 12 is the most important thing in parent-child relationships. Parents should 13 to their children but at

28、 the same time they should lend an ear to what they have to say. Parents may 14 their children when they are untidy but they should also understand that their room is their own private space. Communication is a two-way process. It is only by listening to and 15 each other that problems between paren

29、ts and children can be settled. 1.A. natural B. strong C. guilty D. similar 2.A. interest B. argument C. link D. knowledge 3.A. noisy B. crowded C. messy D. locked 4.A. homework B. housework C. problem D. research 5.A. washing B. using C. dropping D. replacing 6.A. approaches B. contributions C. int

30、roductions D. attitudes 7.A. complex B. popular C. scientific D. successful 8.A. later B. deliberately C. seldom D. thoroughly 9.A. behavior B. taste C. future D. nature 10.A. failures B. changes C. consequences D. thrills 11.A. defend B. delay C. repeat D. reconsider 12.A. communication B. bond C.

31、friendship D. trust 13.A. reply B. attend C. attach D. talk 14.A. hate B. scold C. frighten D. stop 15.A. loving B. observing C. understanding D. praising (E) We are surrounded by stories of sadness, cruelty and violence. Evil arrests our 1 . But there are also many 2 stories of selfless goodness. T

32、hey could 3 go unnoticed, but such acts can also change lives forever. My brothers and I 4 with a story of something that happened to my father, who 5 seven years ago. It is a story of family tragedy and astonishing, quiet kindness. My fathers father died when my father was 11.His mother was a widow

33、 at 34, and as an only child, he 6 much of his grief alone. In accordance with traditional 7 , he began to walk very early to church each morning to say prayers in his fathers 8 . At the end of his first week, he 9 that the ritual director of the synagogue, Mr. Einstein, walked past his home just as

34、 he left to walk to church . Mr. Einstein, 10 advanced in years explained,“Your home is on the way to the church. I thought it might be fun to have some 11 . That way, I dont have to walk alone.For a year my father and Mr. Einstein walked through the New England 12 , the humidity of summer and the s

35、now of winter. They talked about life and loss and, for a while, my father was not so 13 After my parents married and my oldest brother was born, my father 14 Mr. Einstein, now well into his 90s, and asked if Mr. Einstein could meet his new wife and child. Mr. Einstein 15 , but said that in view of

36、his age my father would have to come to him. My father once wrote about what happened:“The journey was long and 16 . His home, by car, was 17 twenty minutes away. I drove in tears as I 18 what he had done. He had walked for an hour to my home so that I would not have to be alone each morning. . By t

37、he simplest of gestures, the 19 of caring, he took a frightened child and he 20 him with confidence and with faith back into life. 1. A. doubt B. goal C. attention D. dream 2. A. confusing B. exciting C. amazing D. moving 3. A. widely B. easily C. clearly D. particularly 4. A. grew up B. took off C.

38、 broke away D. gave in 5. A. passed away B. fell down C. died away D. get away 6. A. burden B. took C. carried D. bore 7. A. behaviour B. practice C. habit D. motion 8. A. support B. favour C. memory D. place 9. A. noticed B. discovered C. expected D. predicted 10. A. usually B. even C. still D. alr

39、eady 11. A. company B. experience C. interest D. comfort 12. A. fields B. seasons C. scenes D. months 13. A. different B. lively C. alone D. simple 14. A. rang back B. worried about C. came across D. called up 15. A. promised B. refused C. agreed D. arrived 16. A. accidental B. complicated C. short

40、D. satisfied 17. A. fully B. regularly C. commonly D. hardly 18. A. confirmed B. saw C. realized D. told 19. A. faith B. behavior C. kindness D. act 20. A. held B. led C. warned D. protected 参考答案: A 篇:CCDAC BCCBA DDBCB B 篇:ABDDB BCADA CADAB CBCBD C 篇:BACDB ADCDC ACBCD DBABA D 篇:DBCBC ADAAC DADBC E 篇:CDBAA DBCAD ABCDC BACDB

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