2020年高三英语阅读理解专项训练
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一
Not so long ago, most people didn’t know who Shelly Ann Francis Pryce was go to become. She was just an average high school athlete. There was every indication that
she was just another American teenager without much of a future. However, one person
wants to change this. Stephen Francis obrved then eighteen-year-old Shelly Ann as a
the beginning of true greatness. H er
track meet and was convinced that he had en t he beginning of
time were not exactly impressive, but even so, he emed there was something trying to
get out, something the other coaches had overlooked when they had assd her and
her lacking. He
He decided to offer Shelly Ann a place in his very strict training
found her lacking.
asons. Their cooperation quickly produced re sults, and a few year later at Jamaica
Olympic games in early 2008, Shelly Ann, who at that time only ranked number 70 in
短跑).
the world, beat Jamaica’s unchallenged queen of the sprint(
“Where d id she come from?” asked an astonished sprinting world, before concluding that she must be one of tho one-hit wonders that spring up from time to
time, only to disappear again without signs. But Shelly Ann was to prove that she was
wonder. At the Beijing Olympic she swept away any doubts
a one-hit wonder. At
anything but a one-hit
about her ability to perform consistently by becoming the first Jamaican woman ever to
win the 100 meters Olympic gold. She did it again one year on at the World
Championship in Briton, becoming world champion with a time of 10.73--- the fourth
record ever.
Shelly-Ann is a little woman with a big smile. She has a mental toughness that did not come about by chance. Her journey to becoming the fastest woman on earth has been anything but smooth and effortless. She grew smooth and effortless. She grew up in up in one of Jamaica ’s toughest inner-city communities known as Waterhou, where she lived in a one-room apartment, sleeping four in a bed with her mother and two brothers. Waterhou, one of the poorest communities in Jamaica, is a really violent and overpopulated place. Several of Shelly-Ann's friends and family were caught up in the killings; one of her cousins was shot dead only a few streets away from where she lived. Sometimes her family didn have enough to eat. She ran at the school championships barefooted becau she couldn ’t afford sho es. Her mother Maxime, one of a family of fourteen, had been an athlete herlf as a young girl but, like so many other girls in Waterhou, had to stop after she had her first baby. Maxime ’s early entry into the adult world with its responsibilities gave her the determin
ation to ensure that her kids would not end up in Waterhou's roundabout of poverty. One of the first things Maxime ud to do with Shelly-Ann was taking her to the track, and she was ready to sacrifice everything. It didn't take long for Shelly-Ann to realize that sports could realize that sports could be her be her be her way way out of Waterhou. O n a summer evening in Beijing in 2008, all tho long, hard hours of work and commitment finally bore fruit. The barefoot kid who just a few years previously had been living in poverty, surrounded by criminals and violence, had written a new chapter in the history of sports.
But Shelly-Ann ’s victory was far greater than that. The night she won Olympic gold in Beijing, the routine murders in Waterhou and the drug wars in the neighbouring streets stopped. The dark cloud above one of the world ’s toughest criminal
neighbourhoods simply disappeared for a few days. “ I have so much fire burning for
学校的运动会
for homeless children and
start a foundation for
my country,”Shelly said. She plans to start a foundation
wants to build a community centre in Waterhou. She hopes to inspire the Jamaicans内蒙古高校排名
to lay down their weapons. She intends to fight to make it a woman’s as world.
As Muhammad Ali puts it, “ Champions aren't made in gyms. Champions are made
from something they have deep inside them. A desire, a dream, a vision.”One of the
things Shelly-Ann can be proud of is her understanding of this truth.
1. Why did Stephen Francis decide to coach Shelly-Ann?
A. He had a strong desire to free her family from trouble.
B. He nd a great potential in her despite her weakness.
宝的繁体字怎么写
徐光启简介C. She had big problems maintaining her performance.
D. She suffered a lot of defeats at the previous track meets.
2. What did the sprinting world think of Shelly-Ann before the 2008 Olympic Games?
A. She would become a promising star.
B. She badly needed to t higher goals.
C. Her sprinting career would not last long.
D. Her talent for sprinting was known to all.
3. What made Maxime decide to train her daughter on the track?
A. Her success and lessons in her career.
B. Her interest in Shelly-Ann’s quick profit.
C. Her wish to get Shelly-Ann out of poverty.
D. Her early entrance into the sprinting world.
4. What can we infer from Shelly-Ann's statement underlined in Paragraph 5?
A. She was highly rewarded for her efforts.
B. She was eager to do more for her country.
C. She became an athletic star in her country.
D. She was the envy of the whole community.
5. By mentioning Muhammad Ali’s words, the author intends to tell us that .
A. players should be highly inspired by coaches
B. great athletes need to concentrate on patience
C. hard work is necessary in one’s achievements
D. motivation allows great athletes to be on the top
6. What is the best title for the passage?
奥德赛主人公A. The Making of a Great Athlete
B. The Dream for Championship
高调做事低调做人
C. The Key to High Performance
D. The Power of Full Responsibility
答案1—6 BCCBDA
二
Two things changed my life: my mother and a white plastic bike basket. I have
thought long and hard about it and it
’s true. I would be a different person if my m hadn ’t turned a silly bicycle accessory into a life lesson I car ry with me today.调研心得体会
My mother and father were united in their way of raising children, but it mostly fell to my mother to actually carry it out. Looking back, I honestly don
did it. Managing the family budget must have been a very hard task., but she made it look effortless. If we complained about not having we complained about not having what what another kid did, we ’ d hear something like, “I don ’t care what so –
and –so got for his birthday, you are not getting a TV in your room a car for your birthday a lsvish sweet 16 party.” We had to earn our allowance by doing chores around the hou. I can still l remember how long it took to polish the legs of our coffee table. My brothers can no doubt remember hours spent cleaning the hou .Like the two little girls growing up at the White Hou, we made our own beds (no one left the hou until that was done)and picked up after ourlves. We had to keep track of our belongings ,and if something was lost ,it was not replaced.
It was summer and ,one day ,my mother drove me to mother drove me to the bike the bike the bike shop to shop to get a tire fixed---and there it was in the window, White, shiny, plastic and decorated with flowers ,the basket winked at me and I knew ----I k new---I had to have it.
“It ’s beautiful,” my mother said when I pointed it out to her,”What a neat basket.”I tried to hold off at first ,I played it cool for a short while. But then I guess I couldn ’t at and it any longer:“Mom, plea plea can I can I plea plea ,plea ,plea get it? get it? I I ’ll do extra chores for as long as you say, I ’ll do anything ,but I need that basket,I love that basket.