山东省学业水平合格考试
山东省济南市2022-2023学年普通高中学业水平合格考模拟试题英语试题
学校:___________姓名:___________班级:___________考号:___________
一、阅读理解
Join Our Sports Camp
Ever created a whole sports plan for yourself only to give up a few days later? If you’re trying to keep it, join us! The camp is 100% volunteer-run and totally non-profit.
What we’ll help you do:
·Create a plan which fits you. Start small, and then gradually increase difficulty.
·Find the time to exercise. Even if it’s only a 10-minute walk, any exercise is enough to get you started.
·Try various activities to find one that you love. After doing them more, you start looking forward to your exercise.
·Find ways to make exercising more fun. Try changing the places where you work out by playing tennis on the playground or doing yoga(瑜伽) in the gym—anything to get yourself excited to workout.
Requirements
·Ages:13-17
·Take your own equipment ·Parents must be with you for your first coming Schedule
·Weekdays 9:—10:;2:—5:
·Weekends 8:—10:;2:—7:
How to join
Click here to get information and hand in the form to our camp before 9: everyday!
1.What can be learnt about the sports camp?
A.It is not free of charge.
B.It welcomes parents to join.
C.It provides teenagers equipment.
D.It inspires teenagers to keep exercising.
2.When can you do exercises during the camp?
A.1: on Friday.    B.6: on Saturday.
C.8: on Thursday.    D.10: on Monday.
3.Where does the text probably come from?
A.A website.    B.A newspaper.    C.A travel journal.    D.A sports handbook.
A few months ago someone gifted us a robot cleaner. We already had a regular cleaner and I didn’t really see the need to use this new one, so it just satin its box.
One of our neighbors is moving away to a new house next week and I thought of asking her whether this might be something she could use. It turned out that she replied yes! Her new place had hardwood floors and her daughter was asking if they could get a robot cleaner but she said they would have to wait and now she didn’t have to buy one!
I couldn’t tell you how overjoyed I was to see her daughter’s response when she came over. She was also as excited about the flower seeds I gave her from our backyard to plant in their new home.
The nice thing was that the daughter would still be working in our town, and I told her that if she ever needed to stay over instead of driving 45 minutes to the new house, our home was always here for her.
She also told me that she was so touched that I drew a big pink heart on the front of our house for their going-away party. I told her maybe after they moved I would clean it up. Or maybe not—I like being reminded of how our hearts are connected to everyone.
4.Why did the author give away the robot cleaner?
A.She liked to giveaway gifts.
B.She already had one at home.
C.She showed off before her neighbor.
D.She met the need of her neighbor’s daughter.
5.What do we know about the neighbor’s new home?
A.It is surrounded by some flowers.
B.It has a door with a “heart” on it.
C.It saw a goodbye party for the author.
D.It is far from her daughter’s workplace.
6.What can be the best title for the text?
A.Love never fails    B.Hearts connect us
C.Little acts add up    D.Family warms hearts
More than one billion pounds of pumpkins are grown in the U.S. every year, and after they’ve been used for Halloween, millions of them will end up in a waste yard.
“Driving around after Halloween, you see so many pumpkins on top of their garbage cans. All of them will go to a waste yard and become methane gas(沼气),” says Kay McKeen, director of an environmental education organization based in Illinois.
Methane is a greenhouse gas. Compared to CO2, it warms the atmosphere in a shorter amount of time, which means it’s a most important cause of climate change. And waste yards—where we send as much as 40 percent of the food we produce—take up 14 percent of methane produced in the US every year.
That’s why, in 2014, McKeen began a collection event where local people can bring their waste pumpkins to 69 different locations to send them off to the bins, and—of course—sma
sh them to pieces.
“It puts nutrients(营养) back in our soil, it saves water, it doesn’t make methane gas—it’s just a win-win,” says McKeen.
But not everyone has access to pumpkin smashing events, so we asked our newsletter readers how they reduce their pumpkin waste. The answers are various, ranging from baking sweet treats to bringing a pumpkin treat to farm animals.