上海市2018届各初中名校初三九年级英语试卷题型分类专题汇编--阅读理解--老师版(带答案已校对珍藏版)

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上海市
2018
届各初中名校初三九年级英语试题题型分类专题汇编:阅读理解


One

2018
届上海市外国语大学附属浦东外国语学校初 三下学期英语月考试题】

g comprehension
(阅读理解)(共
50
分)

the best answer
(根据短文内容
,
选择最恰当的答案)(共
14
分)


Why do you do what you do?
What is the engine that keeps you up late at night or gets you going in the morning?
What stands between you and your dream?
Weighty questions. One researcher believes that writing down the answers to these questions
can
be
decisive
for
students.
Jordan
Peterson
teaches
in
the
Department
of
Psychology
at
the
University of Toronto. He wrote a paper that demonstrates a surprising effect: nearly erasing the
achievement
gap
for
700
students
over
the course
of
two
years
with
a
short
written
exercise
in
setting goals.
Experiments
going
back
to
the
1980s
have
showed
that

expressive


writing
can
reduce
depression, increase productivity and even cut down on visits to the doctors.

Goal-setting theory

holds that writing down specific goals and strategies can help people
overcome
obstacles
and succeed. Seeing a positive outcome helps people stay motivated and stick
to achieving their goals.
Recently,
researchers
have
been
getting
more
and
more
interested
in
the
role
that
mental
motivation plays in academic achievement. Peterson wondered whether writing down goals could
be shown to affect students

motivation. He started a course called
Map of Meaning,
in which
students
complete
a
set
of
writing
exercises
that
combine
writing
with
goal-setting,
Students
reflect on important moments in their past and create plans for the future, including specific goals
and strategies to get through difficulties.

It
completely
turned
my
life
around,

says
Christine
Brophy,
who
is
an
under-graduate
several years ago, was on the verge of dropping out of school. After taking Peterson

s course, she
changed her major. Today she is a doctoral student and one of Peterson

s main research assistants.
In
an
early
study
at
McGill
University
in
Montreal,
Peterson

s
course
showed
a
powerful
positive effect on students at risk, reducing the dropout rate and improving academic achievement.
Peterson
is
seeking
a
larger
audience
for
what
he
has
named

self- authoring,


He
started
a
company and is selling the course online.


1
上海市
2018
届各初中名校初三九年级英语试题题型分类专 题汇编:阅读理解


60. Which is NOT the advantage of expressive writing?
A. Reducing depression

C. Increasing productivity

B. Improving health

D. Changing personality
61. What does the underlined word

obstacles

mean?
A. troubles

B. difficulties

C. worries

D. horrors
62. Jordan Peterson created the course Map of Meaning in order to _________.
A. help students write down goals.
B. reduce the dropout rate
C. prove the mental motivation in academic performance
D. find out whether writing down goals helps students achieve them
63. If people can see a positive outcome, they will ________.
A. stay motivated


B. feel happy



C. be interested in writing

D. forget what they

re done
64. In the course, students take part in some activities EXCEPT ________.
A. reflecting on important moments
C. sharing their school life
65. Which word can best describe the course?
A. Trustworthy

B. Effective

C. Negative

D. Comfortable
B. create plans for the future
goals and strategies
66. Which is the best title of the article?
A. Power of writing goals!

C. Life is changing!


Keys:60-66

DBDACBA
B. Stay positive!

D. Writing exercises!

Two

2018
届上 海市西南模范初三上学期英语第一次月考试题】

g comprehension
(阅读理解)(共
50
分)

the best answer
(根据短文内容
,
选择最恰当的答案)(共
12
分)


(A)
Daniel Boone was born in the United States in 1734. He didn

t go to school and couldn

t read,
although
he
learned
all
about
the
forests,
streams
and
hunting.
He
could
move
silently
like
an

2 < br>上海市
2018
届各初中名校初三九年级英语试题题型分类专题汇编:阅读理解


Indian leaving no marks. He loved to live alone in the woods where nothing frightened him.
When he grew up, he married and tried to settle down on a farm. A year later, however, he
wasn

t
satisfied
and
decided
to
go
into
the
unknown
western
lands,
crossing
the
Appalachian
Mountains. When he returned after two years, he became famous for his long journey. He brought
valuable animal skins and told stories about the Indians.
After this, he chose to keep travelling to unknown places. Once he lost to the Indians in battle
and was taken away. The Indians liked him and became his friends.
Daniel Boone died at the age of 86. He is remembered as an explorer and a pioneer who lived
an exciting life in the early years of American nation

69. Daniel Boone

s early life was mainly spent in ________.
A. learning about nature

C. learning useful skills from the Indians

B. hunting with ish friends

D. studying at home instead of going to school
70. When he got married, Daniel Boone first planned to ________.
up a large farm


C. find food, new land for his farm

B. go on a journey with ish wife

D. live a peaceful life with his family
71. Why did the Indians want to make friends with him?
e they wanted to learn from him.
B. Because he wanted to make peace with them.
e they wanted to make friends with white people.
D. No reason is told this article.
(B)
Perhaps the most famous theory, the study of body movement, was suggested by Professor
Ray Bird Whistle. He believes that physical appearance is often culturally(
文化的
)programmed.
In other words, we learn our looks --- we are not born with them. A baby has generally unformed
face features(
特征
). A baby, according to Bird Whistle, learns where to set the eyebrows(
眉毛
) by
looking at those around --- family and friends. This helps explain why the people of some areas of
the United States look so much alike, New Englanders or Souterners have certain common
face
features that cannot be explained by genetics(
遗传学
). The exact shape of the mouth is not set at
birth,it is learned after. In fact, the final mouth shape is not formed until well after new teeth are
set. For many, this can be well into grown-ups. A husband and wife together for a long time often

3
上海市< br>2018
届各初中名校初三九年级英语试题题型分类专题汇编:阅读理解


come to look somewhat alike. We learn our looks from those around us. This is perhaps why in a
single country there are areas where people smile
more than those in other areas. In the United
States, for example, the South is the part of the country where the people smile most frequently. In
New
England
they
smile
less,
and
in
the
western
part
of
New
York
State
still
less.
Many
Southerners find cities such as New York cold and unfriendly, partly because people on Madison
Avenue smile less than people on Peachtree Street in Atlanta, Georgia. People in largely populated
areas also smile and greet each other in public less than do people in small towns.

72. Ray Bird Whistle believes physical appearance ________.
A. has little to do with culture

C. is ever changing


B. has much to do with culture

D. is different from place to place
73. According to the passage, the final mouth shape is formed ________.
A. before birth


B. as soon as one

s teeth are newly set

D. around 15 years old
C. sometime after new teeth are set

74. This passage might have been taken out of a book dealing with ________.
A. physics


Keys:

69-74

ADDBCD

B. chemistry

C. biology

D. body movement
Three

2018
届上海市张江集团学校 初三上学期英语第一次月考试题】

g comprehension
(阅读理解)(共
50
分)

the best answer
(根据短文内容
,
选择最恰当的答案)(共
12
分)


(A)
It was a cold March day in High Point, North Carolina. The girls on the Wesleyan Academy
softball team were waiting for their next turns at bat during practice, stamping their feet to stay
warm.
Eighth-grader
Taylor
Bisbee
shivered
(
发抖
)a
little
as
she
watched
her
teammate
Paris
White play. The two didn't know each other well--Taylor had just moved to town a month or so
before.
Suddenly,
Paris
fell
to
the
ground.

eyes
rolled
back,
Taylor
says.

started
shaking. I knew it was an emergency.

4
上海市
2018
届各初 中名校初三九年级英语试题题型分类专题汇编:阅读理解


It certainly was. Paris had suffered a sudden heart failure. Without immediate medical care,
Paris would die. At first, no one moved. The girls were in the softball coach shouted
Out , “Does anyone know CPR



CPR is a life- saving technique. To do CPR, you press on the sick person's chest so that blood
moves
through
the
body
and
takes
oxygen
to
organs.
Without
oxygen,
the
brain
is
damaging
quickly.
Amazingly, Taylor had just taken a CPR course the day before. Still, she hesitated. She didn't
think she knew it well enough. But when no one else came forward, Taylor ran to Paris and began
doing CPR.
Taylor's swift action helped her teammates calm down. One girl called 911. Two more ran to
get the school nurse, who broughtdefibrillator, an electronic device(
器械
) that can shock the heart
back into work. Luck stayed with them: Paris's heartbeat returned.
“I
k
now I was really lucky,” Paris says now.
my life”

Experts
say
Paris
is
right:
For
a
sudden
heart
failure,
the
single
best
chance
for
survivalis
having someone nearby step in and do CPR quickly .
Today, Paris is back on the softball team. Taylor will apply to college soon. She wants to be a
nurse.
know I can act under pressure in
a scary situation.

happened to Paris on a March day?
A. She caught a bad cold
C. She was knocked down by a ball.
70. Why does Paris say she was lucky?
A. She made a worthy friend.
C. She received immediate CPR.
B. She recovered from shock.
D. She came back on the softball team.
B. She had a sudden heart problem
D. She shivered terribly during practice.
71. Which of the following words can best describe Taylor?
A. Enthusiastic and kind.

C. Cooperative and generous.

B. Courageous and calm.
D. Ambitious and professional.

(B)

5
上海市
2018
届各初中名校初三九年级英 语试题题型分类专题汇编:阅读理解


Some of the world’s most
famous musicians recently gathered in Paris and New Orleans to
celebrate the first annual International Jazz Day. UNESCO(United Nations Educational, Scientific
and
Cultural
Organization)
recently
set
April 30
as
a
day
to
raise
awareness
of
jazz
music,
its
significance, and its potential as a unifying(
联合
) voice across cultures.
Despite the celebrations, though, in the U.S. the jazz audience continues to shrink and grow
older, and the music has failed to connect with younger generations.
It’s Jason Moran’s jo
b to help change
that
. As the Kennedy Center’s artistic adviser for jazz,
Moran
hopes
to
widen
the
audience
for
jazz,
make
the music
more
accessible(
可接近的
),
and
preserve(
保护
) its history and culture.
“Jazz seems like it’s not really a part of the American appetite,”
Moran tells National Public
Radio’s reporter Neal Conan. “What I’m hoping to accomplish(
实现
) is that my generation and
younger start to reconsider and understand that jazz is not black and write anymore. It’s actually
color, and it’s actually digital.”

Moran says one of the problems with jazz today is that the entertainment aspect of the music
has
been
lost.
“The
music
can’t
be
presented
today
the
way
it
was
in
1908
or
1958.
It
has
to
continue to move, because the way the world works is not the same
,”
says Moran.
Last year, Moran worked on a project
that arranged Fats Waller’s music for a dance party,
“Just
to
kind
of
put
it
back
in
the
mind
that
Waller
is
dance
music
as
much
as
it
is
concert
music,”

says
Moran.
“For
me,
it’s
the
recontextualization(
语境重构
).
In
music,
where
does
the
emotion
lie?
Are
we,
as
humans,
gaining
any
insight
on
how
talk
about
ourselves
and
how
something as
abstract(
抽象的
)
as
a
Charlie
Parker
record
gets
us
into
a
dialogue
about
our
emotions
and
our
thoughts?
Sometimes
we
lose
sig
ht
that
the
music
has
a
wider
context,”
says
Moran, “so I want to continue those dialogues. Those are the things I want to foster(
促进
).”


72. Why did UNESCO set April 30 as International Jazz Day?
A. To remember the birth of jazz.

C. To encourage people to study music

B. To protect cultural diversity.
D. To recognize the value of jazz
73. What does the underlined word

that

in paragraph 3 refer to?
A. jazz becoming more accessible.

C. jazz being less popular with the young

B. The production of jazz growing faster.
D. The jazz audience becoming larger.
74. Which of the following can be the best title for the text?

6
上海市
2018
届各初中名校初三九年 级英语试题题型分类专题汇编:阅读理解


A. Exploring the Future of Jazz.

C. The Story of a Jazz Musician.


Keys:

69-74

BCBDCA

B. The Rise and Fall of Jazz.
D. Celebrating the Jazz Day.
Four

2018
届上海市新竹园中学初三九年级上学期英语
12
月考试题】


g comprehension
(阅读理解)(共
50
分)

the best answer
(根据短文内容
,
选择最恰当的答案)(共
12
分)


A half- century ago, most mothers of young children in the United States did not work outside
the home. But life has changed. The United States Census (
官方统计
) Bureau (
办事处
) said that
in 2002, sixty-four percent of mothers with a child under age six were in the workforce (
劳动大

). If the father also works, the need for child care is clear. The same is true if a parent is single.
Sometimes
grandparents
or
other
family
members
watch
over
children.
But
most
working
parents must pay for care. And they often have to pay a lot. The Labor Department’s Bureau of
Labor
Statistics
(
统计资料
)
says
child-care
costs
for
a
full
day
begin
at
about
four
thousand
dollars yearly. Many families pay ten thousand dollars yearly per child --- and more.
Some parents employ a person to supervise (
照料
) children in the parents’ home. This person
is often called a baby sitter or a nanny. Sometimes this care provider lives with the family. Some
care providers open their own homes to one or more children. These, and other, children’s centers
must
meet
the
requirements
of
local
and
state
governments.
For
example,
a
care
provider
can
supervise
only
a
limited
number
of
chi
ldren.
The
number
depends
on
the
children’s
ages.
Care
centers must show that they are protected against fires and other dangers.
Yet once parents find a place, they cannot be sure they will stay. The care might not be as
good as they hoped. Or the cost might increase. Or the parents might even be asked to take their
son or daughter elsewhere if the child often bites or hits other children.
Child-care
companies
and
religious
organizations
operate
some
of
the
daycare
center
and
preschools in the United State
s. Organizations like the Y. M. C. A, the Young Men’s Christian
Association, provide daytime child care in many cities across the country. These programs serve
children from the earliest years to as old as students in middle school. Care for school-age children
is also provided at public and private schools before and after normal school hours.

7
上海市
2018
届各初中名校 初三九年级英语试题题型分类专题汇编:阅读理解



69. When didn’t most mothers of young children work outside the home?

A. A century ago.


B. Fifty years ago.
D. Six years ago.

C. Sixty-four years ago.

70. What kind of people need child care?
A. Working parents.

















C. Religious organizations.









71. Why can’t parents be sure they will stay?

A. The care is not as good as they hoped.
B. The cost might increase.
B. Grandparents.
D. Some companies.
C. They might even be asked to take their son or daughter elsewhere if the childoften bites or
hits other children.
D. Above all.
72. How much do parents pay for child care according to statistics?
A. They have to pay a lot.
B. More than ten thousand dollars every year

C. About four thousand dollars every year.
D. Used to be ten thousand dollars yearly per child.
73. Care for school-age children is also provided at public and private schools __________.
A. until children leave middle school
C. after they are old enough
74. What is the best title of this passage?
A. Child Care in The United States.
B. Mothers in The United States.
C. Child-care Companies Have Appeared in The United States.
D. Taking Care of Your Children.

Keys:

69-74

BADCBA


B. before and after normal school hours
D. before children begin school
Five

2018
届上海市建平实验中学初三上学期英语第一次月考试题】

g comprehension
(阅读理解)(共
50
分)


8
上海市
2018
届各初中名校初三九年级英语试题题型分类专题汇编:阅 读理解


the best answer
(根据短文内容
,
选择最恰当的答案)(共
12
分)


Do you dream of being a reporter or an editor? Are you a good writer who loves the news? If so, you
may have what it takes to be a winner in the TFK Kid Reporter Talent Search.
We’re looking for 12 students from around the nation to be members of the TFK Kid Reporter Team
for the 2016-2017 school year.
Next year’s te
am will continue the tradition of reporting local and regional news stories for TIME
FOR KIDS magazine.
Professional journalists from TIME FOR KIDS will select this team. In the past , TFK Kid Reporters
have:


Interviewed national leaders, celebrities, and other newsmakers.


Written news stories, reviews and opinion pieces for TIME FOR KIDS.


Learned about the news business from award-winning journalists who work at TIME.


Appeared on television to talk about their work.
How to Enter
To apply(
申请
), complete the required fields and the official entry form. Be sure to read the
official rules and share them with
your parent or guardian, who must sign
your entry form and
submit(
提交
) it electronically. Entries must be submitted by June 17, 2016. You must be 14 years
of age or younger on September 1, 2016.
Contest opens: 10:00 A.M. EST on March 14, 2016
Contest deadline: 12:00 P.M. EST on June 17, 2016
All entries must follow the official rules for consideration.
See contest rules below. Good luck!

69. What kind of person do the TFK KID Reporter Team want?
A. reporters

B. editors

C. writers

D. students
70. What don

t TFK KID Reporters probably do?
A. have a talk on TV

C. have an interview with Obama

71. The parents must ________.
A. fill in the entry form

C. sigh the entry form


B. teach kids how to write a report
D. write a news story
B. share the entry form with the guardians
D. visit the website
9
上海市
2018
届各初中名校初三九年级英语试题题型分类专题汇编:阅读理解


72. Which is it possible for kids to apply for the job?
A. March 15, 2015

B. July 16, 2016
C. May 1, 2016


73. According to the passage, which of the following statements is true?
A. The TFK is a newspaper organization.

B. TFK KID Reporter may write different kinds of articles.
C. Any kids can apply for the job.
D. Kids need to write a letter to TFK to apply for the job.
74. You may find the above information in _______.
A. advertisements


Keys: 69-74

DBCBBA
B. novels

C. poems

D. text books

Six

2018
届上海市建平西校初三上学期英语周练试题】

g comprehension
(阅读理解)(共
50
分)

the best answer
(根据短文内容
,
选择最恰当的答案)(共
1
2
分)


If you want to find out a piece of information about anything, the best place to search for it is
Wikipedia.
This
online
encyclopedia(
百科全书
).
is
written
by
thousands
of
people
around
the
world.
Anyone
can
add
or
change
the
information
if
he
or
she
finds
it
not
correct
or
not
well
written. In this way, people who know a lot about a certain subject can write about it even if they
are not university professors.
What is more, Wikipedia includes articles written in about 235 languages. This fact makes it
one of the few websites on the Internet that are truly international. It was started in 2001 by Larry
Sanger and Jimmy Wales, as a free online English-language encyclopedia project. By April 2008
over 10 million articles had been put on Wikipedia. A quarter of the articles in English. Wikipedia
is also a place where people can find the latest news.
However, Wikipedia has its own problems. There have been many complaints that some of
the information on Wikipedia is not accurate and some important subjects are not included. This
has
led to
arguments between the writers of articles. The people running Wikipedia say that the
accuracy of the information is improving and that it is one of the top 20 visited websites on the
Internet.

10

yy签名大全-qq特殊符号网名


yy签名大全-qq特殊符号网名


yy签名大全-qq特殊符号网名


yy签名大全-qq特殊符号网名


yy签名大全-qq特殊符号网名


yy签名大全-qq特殊符号网名


yy签名大全-qq特殊符号网名


yy签名大全-qq特殊符号网名