2018-2019学年高一上学期训练卷
必修二 Unit 5 Music
英 语 (二)
注意事项:
1.答题前,先将自己的姓名、准考证号填写在试题卷和答题卡上,并将准考证号条形码粘贴在答题卡上的指定位置。
2.选择题的作答:每小题选出答案后,用2B铅笔把答题卡上对应题目的答案标号涂黑,写在试题卷、草稿纸和答题卡上的非答题区域均无效。
3.非选择题的作答:用签字笔直接答在答题卡上对应的答题区域内。写在试题卷、草稿纸和答题卡上的非答题区域均无效。
4.考试结束后,请将本试题卷和答题卡一并上交。
Ⅰ. 阅读理解
Hospitals employ many therapeutic(治疗的) methods, such as medication(药物治疗), massage(按摩) therapy and music therapy. And music therapy is growing in popularity.
Sandra Siedliecki is a Senior Scientist at the Nursing Institute of Cleveland Clinic in Ohio. She says music is a low-cost treatment. And she says scientists have done a lot of rearch on music’s effect on pain. Dr. Marian Good did a lot of studies looking at surgery(外科) patients and the u of music. In her studies, patients just listened to relaxing music. Dr. Good found that her surgery patients took fewer painkillers after they listened to music. Music had a good effect on short-term pain. However, chronic pain, the kind that recurs(复发) continually, changed a little under the effect of music.
Dr. Linda Chlan was studying something different. She was not interested in patients’ pain, but instead, their anxiety. She spent a lot of time with people who were in hospital becau their anxiety was so great that they couldn’t breathe. People with this condition often have to u breathing machines. Dr. Chlan said that the machines sometimes did little to improve their condition. Sometimes they even made things wor. The patients w
ould become more anxious. Dr. Chlan let nurs tell patients that music was a good choice to make them feel better. They also placed signs near the patients’ beds—Listen to your music at least twice a day. The people who listened to music had a reduction(减少) in the amount of medication they received. In addition, their anxiety reduced by about 36 percent.
Both doctors had similar explanations for why music was so helpful. Music can be a very powerful distracter(干扰) in the brain when we’re listening to music that is pleasing and then it interrupts stressful thoughts.
1. Dr. Marian Good’s studies show that music therapy ________.
A. can help patients recover fast
B. cannot take the place of medication
C. doesn’t work well on all patients
D. is cheaper than massage therapy and medication
廉洁从政若干准则2. Which of the following is TRUE according to the passage?
A. Dr. Good and Dr. Chlan didn’t agree with each other on music’s effect.
B. Patients will forget their illness completely while listening to music.
C. Patients with great anxiety would not recover after taking medicine.
D. Listening to enjoyable music is a good way to relieve anxiety.
3. What does the underlined word “it” in the last paragraph refer to?
A. The brain. B. Music.
C. Stress. D. Medicine.
4. What is the author’s purpo of writing the passage?
回到清朝当驸马
A. To show that music therapy is uful.
B. To encourage all patients to listen to music.
只要你喜欢
C. To tell how to reduce pain and anxiety.
D. To explain how music reduces pain and anxiety.
Ⅱ热情洋溢的近义词. 完形填空
Music can make us happy, peaceful or sad. As an orchestra(管弦乐队) conductor, Amy Anderson brings music to life, allowing people experience many 1 that music can give.
Anderson fell in love with 2 when she was a child. She began playing the piano at ven and started composing at nine. She bought many videos 3 by the world’s great orchestras and conductors and listened to them for hours 4 .
During a concert, the audience e the 5 of a conductor and the arm movements he or she makes. What audiences do not e is all the work the conductor has done before the 借景抒情的小练笔 6 .
Months before a concert, Anderson studies the music by 7 it on the piano. She listens to recordings, reads about the compor’s life, and reviews 8 events that would have influenced the compor. Her goal is to recreate the music as the compor 精明之府 9 文化包括哪些方面.
While conducting, Anderson us her whole body to 10 how the music should sound and feel. Her 11 are dramatic(激动人心的) when the music is
12 and gentle when the music is peaceful. As she 13 , Anderson listens for problems with balance, sound and style.
To help young musicians better 14 how to play the music, Anderson might tell them to imagine a 15 and leisurely walk or a ship being tosd(颠簸) by waves.
“It is music’s ability to 16 people that I value most, ” said Anderson. She has en audiences at her concerts 17 , clap together in rhythm, and shout “Bravo! ” 18 , audiences are moved to tears. After one concert in Serbia, audiences 19 around the orchestra’s bus and cheered for the young musicians as they climbed aboard.
Anderson is happy, knowing that she and the musicians have changed lives for the better, 20 spirits and brought joy to people.
无聊说说