
专题04 阅读理解A篇(原卷版).docx
23页专题04 阅读理解A篇(答案版)卷01:2023年上海市虹口区高三一模卷02:2023年上海市宝山区高三一模卷03:2023年上海市嘉定区高三一模卷04:2023年上海市金山区高三一模卷05:2023年上海市闵行区高三一模卷06:2023年上海市松江区高三一模卷07:2023年上海市杨浦区高三一模卷08:2023年上海市长宁区高三一模卷09:2023年上海市黄浦区高三一模卷10:2023年上海市静安区高三一模卷11:2023年上海市崇明区高三一模卷12:2023年上海市青浦区高三一模卷13:2023年上海市浦东新区高三一模卷14:2023年上海市奉贤区高三一模卷15:2023年上海市普陀区高三一模卷16:2023年上海市徐汇区高三一模卷01:2023年上海市虹口区高三一模AI was always a reader.As a kid, I walked to the library several times a week and checked out so many books and returned them so quickly that the librarian once snapped,“Don’t take home so many books if you’re not going to read them all!”“But I did read them all,” I said.But I had stopped reading gradually. I joined book clubs that I never attended. I requested a library book everyone was reading, only to return it a week late, unread, with fines.Then I met David. When I asked him about his last book, his face lit up and his fingers danced. David read much more than I did, about a book or two a week. He preferred history and nonfiction, while I loved fiction writers. On our seventh date, David and I visited the library.“I have a game,” he said, pulling two pens and Post-its out of his bag. “Let’s find books we’ve read and leave reviews in them for the next person.”“We wandered in the library for an hour. In the end, we sat on the floor among the poetry, and I read him some. He listened, then asked,“What is it you like about that one?”That summer, as we picnicked outside, I said, “If I tell you something, will you not judge me?” David paused and raised his eyebrows.“I’ve only read one book this year,” I said.“But it’s June,” he said.“I know.”“Well, read a book!”The next time I visited a bookstore, his charge to “read a book” echoed in my head. I picked up a book solely for its poetic title.I had a hard time getting into it. The narrator was an old man. Whenever I was tempted to give up on it, I thought of David. I pushed through the first two chapters and discovered a new narrator in the third. I loved the alternating points of view. I carried the book to work. I read at lunch and on my walk home.“How’s your day?” David texted.“Good. A little tired,” I replied. “I stayed up late and finished my book.”I tried to make it sound casual, but I was proud of myself. It was not a competition, but I felt him pushing me to be more of the person I used to be and more of who I wanted to be.I asked David once what he liked about me.He paused, then said. “I see the world as a more wonder-filled place with you.”By the end of that year, David suggested we visit the library again. He asked if I remembered the game we played on our first visit.“I remember,” I said.He pulled a book from the shelf, dropped to one knee, and opened it. Inside, his Post-it read: “Karla, it has always been you. Will you marry me?”His proposal had rested between the pages of The Rebel Princess for over a year.“Yes,” I said.36. The word “snapped” (paragraph 2) most probably means ________.A. talked to someone voluntarilyB. spoke to someone impatientlyC. gave someone a suggestionD. laughed at someone heartlessly37. Which of the following may best illustrate the author’s reading habit when she first met David?A. Carrying books around without opening them.B. Only reading the books everyone recommended.C. Avoiding sharing books when going to book clubs.D. Often forgetting to return the books already read38. According to paragraph 19 why was the author proud of herself?A. She finished reading a book she didn’t like.B. She had read more books than David did.C. She did what she thought to be difficult.D. She had kept to her taste in poetic titles.39. What was the main change that David brought into the author’s life?A. He introduced a new library and a fun game to the author.B. He encouraged the author to read more fiction and poetry.C. He helped the author finish reading an entire book in a day.D. He motivated the author to rediscover her love for reading.卷02:2023年上海市宝山区高三一模(A)During the Second World War, Dr. William Walsh served on a U.S. Navy ship in the South Pacific. While serving there, Walsh observed the poor health conditions in which the people of the South Pacific lived.After the war ended in 1945, Walsh founded an organization called Project Hope. Its goal was to bring health education and care to people in poor countries around the world. In 1958, Walsh convinced U.S. President Eisenhower to allow Project Hope to rent a U.S. Navy hospital ship for just one dollar a year. Many companies and ordinary people donated money to Project Hope. The organization used the funds to turn the navy ship into a civilian hospital ship called the SS Hope.During the next 14 years, the SS Hope traveled to every region of the world. Wherever it went, it provided health care for needy people and helped poor countries establish their own health care systems. In 1974, the SS Hope wa。












