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考点 4 阅读理解
主旨大意之段落大意(核心考点精讲精练)
1. 2021-2023年三年高考真题考点分布
考点
段落大意
题型
2023 试卷类型 设问 考点
阅读理解
2023浙江1月高考 C篇31.What can we learn from the last 段落大意
paragraph?
2023·新高考I卷 D篇32.What is Paragraph 2 of the text mainly 段落大意
about?
2022 2022·新高考I卷 阅读D14. What is paragraph 5 mainly about? 段落大意
2022·全国甲卷 D 阅读D32. What is the first paragraph mainly about? 段落大意
2021 2021年全国乙卷 B篇24. What does paragraph 2 mainly tell us about 段落大意
mobile phones?
2021年6月浙江卷 C篇10. What is the last paragraph mainly 段落大意
about?
2. 命题规律及备考策略
【命题规律】近3年新高考卷对于阅读理解中段落大意的考查共计6次,主要考查:
根据阅读文章中的某一段落,概括段落大意。概括段落大意的方法:1.利用主题句;2.没有主题句,总结段
落大意。
【备考策略】系统归类段落大意的总结方法,尤其是主题句、同义句表达的技巧;熟练掌握阅读技能。
【命题预测】
2024年阅读理解对段落大意的考查仍然是重点。
【2024年高考命题预测】
主旨大意之段落大意考点是高考中的必考点。一篇文章有多个段落,为什么把题出在其中的某个段落?因为
这个段落在文章中起着至关重要的作用,这些段落或引出话题或承上启下或总结全文。命题者的意图是明确的,他们着眼于文章中起重要作用的段落进而设题。预测在2024高考中,段落大意题会继续在高考阅读理解中呈现。
【主旨大意之段落大意考点指南】
段落大意题常考问题:
The main point /idea of the passage is…
The passage is mainly about…
The passage mainly discusses…
The last but one paragraph is chiefly concerned with…?
Which of the following statements best expresses the main idea of the passage?
近几年高考段落大意考查的特点:
考查的段落一般没有主题句,这需要考生对整段进行归纳,找出段落的重点,总结段落大意。
[2023·新高考全国Ⅰ卷]
D
On March 7, 1907, the English statistician Francis Galton published a paper which illustrated what has come to be
known as the“wisdom of crowds” effect. The experiment of estimation he conducted showed that in some cases,the average
of a large number of independent estimates could be quite accurate.
This effect capitalizes on the fact that when people make errors, those errors aren’t always the same. Some people will
tend to overestimate, and some to underestimate. When enough of these errors are averaged together, they cancel each other
out, resulting in a more accurate estimate. If people are similar and tend to make the same errors, then their errors won’t
cancel each other out. In more technical terms, the wisdom of crowds requires that people’s estimates be independent. If for
whatever reasons, people’s errors become correlated or dependent,the accuracy of the estimate will go down.
But a new study led by Joaquin Navajas offered an interesting twist(转折) on this classic phenomenon. The key finding
of the study was that when crowds were further divided into smaller groups that were allowed to have a discussion, the
averages from these groups were more accurate than those from an equal number of independent individuals. For instance,
the average obtained from the estimates of four discussion groups of five was significantly more accurate than the average
obtained from 20 independent individuals.
In a follow-up study with 100 university students, the researchers tried to get a better sense of what the group members
actually did in their discussion. Did they tend to go with those most confident about their estimates? Did they follow those
least willing to change their minds? This happened some of the time, but it wasn’t the dominant response. Most frequently,
the groups reported that they“shared arguments and reasoned together.”Somehow, these arguments and reasoning resulted in
a global reduction in error. Although the studies led by Navajas have limitations and many questions remain, the potential
implications for group discussion and decision-making are enormous.
( )32.What is Paragraph 2 of the text mainly about?
A.The methods of estimation.
B.The underlying logic of the effect.
C.The causes of people’s errors.
D.The design of Galton’s experiment.
【2023年1月·浙江卷】C
A machine can now not only beat you at chess, it can also outperform you in debate. Last week, in a public debate in
San Francisco, a software program called Project Debater beat its human opponents, including Noa Ovadia, Israel’s formernational debating champion.
Brilliant though it is, Project Debater has some weaknesses. It takes sentences from its library of documents and
prebuilt arguments and strings them together. This can lead to the kinds of errors no human would make. Such wrinkles
will no doubt be ironed out, yet they also point to a fundamental problem. As Kristian Hammond, professor of electrical
engineering and computer science at Northwestern University, put it: “There’s never a stage at which the system knows
what it’s talking about.”
What Hammond is referring to is the question of meaning, and meaning is central to what distinguishes the least
intelligent of humans from the most intelligent of machines. A computer works with symbols. Its program specifies a set of
rules to transform one string of symbols into another. But it does not specify what those symbols mean. Indeed, to a
computer, meaning is irrelevant. Humans, in thinking, talking, reading and writing, also work with symbols. But for
humans, meaning is everything. When we communicate, we communicate meaning. What matters is not just the outside of a
string of symbols, but the inside too, not just how they are arranged but what they mean.
Meaning emerges through a process of social interaction, not of computation, interaction that shapes the content of the
symbols in our heads. The rules that assign meaning lie not just inside our heads, but also outside, in society, in social
memory, social conventions and social relations. It is this that distinguishes humans from machines. And that’s why,
however astonishing Project Debater may seem, the tradition that began with Socrates and Confucius will not end with
artificial intelligence.
31.What can we learn from the last paragraph?
A.Social interaction is key to understanding symbols.
B.The human brain has potential yet to be developed.
C.Ancient philosophers set good examples for debaters.
D.Artificial intelligence ensures humans a bright future.
规律方法:如何总结段落大意?
段落大意即某一段的中心思想,通常中心思想会在首句体现出来,这就是常说的段落主题句。主题句具有鲜
明的概括性,句子结构简单,段落中其他句子均用来解释、支撑或扩展主题句所表达的主题思想。主题句通常位
于段首,也可位于段尾、段中。有时作者没有写出明显的主题句,要学会根据段落内容去概括主题句。
【2023届安徽省A10联盟高考最后一卷】
When I was a kid, a sycamore (枫树) grew in front of my home. At the age of 10, I was just tall enough to reach its
lowest branch and lift myself into its embrace. Sometimes two or three of my friends would join me in the sycamore, or in
the maple down the street, or Mrs. DiMarco’s old peach tree, some of whose stout horizontal branches allowed us to sit
shoulder to shoulder, eating sweet fruit.
In my small town there are some kinds of trees, their branches spreading wide, open for business. But I have not yet
seen a climber. Perhaps computer games have replaced tree climbing, or maybe the activity went the way of monkey bars,
which came to be viewed as too risky and have largely disappeared from playgrounds.
It is a sad loss. I have always believed that, since low-hanging branches provide no benefit to the tree, they must be
meant for the child. Robert Frost understood this when he wrote:
When I see baches (桦树) bend to left and right,
Across the lines of straighter darker trees,
I like to think some boy’s been swinging them.My only disagreement with Frost is his inference that tree climbing is a gender-specific task. Both boys and girls make
a joyful climb.
The campus of the university where I teach has all sorts of trees. During a recent walk, I found myself bending under
the branch of an immense spruce (云杉). I grabbed the thing, and a moment later was sitting on a branch. Then the
memories came flooding back. The old sycamore, the friends, and finally, the reluctance to return to earth when the parental
call to supper came.
I was so lost in my thoughts that I didn’t hear the student calling to me from below. He asked what I was doing. I didn’t
waste time on explanations. “Come on up,” I said “The air’s fine.” But he only laughed and waved me off. He didn’t know
what he was missing.
4.What does the underlined word “stout” in Paragraph 1 probably mean?
A.Slim. B.Bent. C.Smooth. D.Strong.
5.What is the second paragraph mainly about?
A.Why kids don’t climb trees.
B.Why monkey bars are dangerous.
C.Why there is no business under trees.
D.Why kids are addicted to computer games.
6.What does the author want to prove by mentioning Robert’s poem?
A.Some branches of trees are useless.
B.Trees are intended for kids to climb.
C.Trees are a source of inspiration for poets.
D.Climbing trees is a unique right of boys.
7.What did the author think the student had missed?
A.The explanations to his question.
B.The fresh air above the tree.
C.The pleasure of climbing trees.
D.The sense of safety on earth.
基础过关
(最新模拟试题演练)
1.【2023届广东省部分学校高三5月联合考试模拟预测】
As the costs of fuel, groceries and housing increase suddenly around the world, scientists are fighting inflation (通货膨
胀) at the bench. Almost all items needed to conduct science are more expensive than they were just a year ago. And that
means that nearly every researcher is feeling the pressure. “Nobody is immune to this economy,” says Tola Olorunnisola,
who leads innovation in the lab at Avantor, an international science-management company in Pennsylvania. Olorunnisola
visited labs in the Netherlands, Switzerland and Ireland to help researchers find ways to enlarge their budgets. “Scientists
are becoming more conscious of costs,” she says.
The increase in lab costs has forced scientists to make some difficult choices. Scientific budgets are pretty fixed. If theypay double for something, it means they’re not buying something else. Scientists can keep their research projects moving
forward, but to avoid overspending on their budgets, they’ll probably need to adjust their buying habits and take steps to
make their labs more efficient.
Julien Sage, a cancer researcher and geneticist at Stanford University in California, estimates that lab supplies
historically account for roughly 20%of his overall budget, but he says that the balance is shifting.
Without significant boosts in funding to keep pace with inflation, it’s up to scientists to find creative ways to diminish
costs. One option is to rethink experimental design.
“It will probably take more than discounts from lab-supply companies to truly protect scientists from the impact of
rising prices,” Sage says. “Unless something is done on a large scale to either stabilize costs or increase funding, science is
likely to suffer. If you have less money, you’re going to have fewer people or be less productive, which means you’re going
to have fewer grants (拨款) which means you’re going to have fewer people. That’s probably happening to a lot of labs
these days, and the question is: When is it going to stop?”
12.For what did Olorunnisola visit some labs in different places?
A.Seeing how researchers struggle against inflation.
B.Proving everyone has to face the rising price.
C.Learning about the pressure of researchers.
D.Helping researchers overcome economic difficulty.
13.What is paragraph 2 mainly about?
A.The cause of increasing lab costs. B.The effects of the rising lab costs.
C.The tough choices of researchers. D.The ways of making labs efficient.
14.What does the underlined word “diminish” mean in paragraph 4?
A.Reduce. B.Calculate. C.Restore. D.Keep.
15.Which can be a suitable title for the text?
A.Scientists face many problems B.The price of goods is rising quickly
C.Labs have to tighten supplies budgets D.People hold different opinions of price
2.【2023届广东省部分学校高三5月联合考试模拟预测】
Born in France, but raised in Spain, linguistics and literature professor Juan José Ciruela Alferez from the University of
Granada is passionate about Chinese literature and has been doing some research about it. With painstaking effort, his
Spanish translation of a Chinese classic was published last year.
Ciruela said translating the novel was an interesting challenge. In recent years, many Chinese works have been
introduced to Spain. However, as most of them had been translated first into English and then from that language into
Spanish, much of the originality was lost. For this reason, when the Spanish publishing house Kailas contacted Ciruela to
translate it directly from Chinese, he accepted the mission immediately, even if it presented difficulties like a heavy
workload within a short time limit.
“I encountered various difficulties, especially at the beginning of the task,” said Ciruela in an interview. “This novel, in
particular, needs a prior reading process in which the translator gets into the plot and the characters, since at first it is
difficult to enter the world that the novel constantly raises. So I read the novel first in Chinese, paying attention to all those
details and how all of that could be translated in a way that the Spanish readers would understand.
For Ciruela, the most important criterion when translating is fidelity (忠诚) to the original text. While it is true that one
cannot always be strictly faithful, he believes translators should not be too far from original texts. For example, the
translation of culturemes (expressions of culture in language)is quite complicated due to the cultural gap between Spanishand Chinese. Ciruela believes that these must always be appropriate to the specific function they perform within the text, in
each specific case and moment.
4.What does the underlined phrase “that language” probably refer to?
A.Spanish. B.English. C.Chinese. D.French.
5.What caused Ciruela to translate the Chinese classic?
A.His passion for Spanish literature. B.His determination to popularize it.
C.The lack of its direct translation into Spanish.D.The loss of diversity in Spanish translation.
6.What aspect of the translation task does paragraph 3 mainly talk about?
A.Its barrier. B.Its principle. C.Its style. D.Its meaning.
7.What does Ciruela think is the most important in translation?
A.Meeting readers’ needs. B.Targeting cultural phenomena.
C.Bridging the cultural gap. D.Being loyal to the original text.
3.【2023届海南省海口市高考模拟】
A new device known as Shark Guard is being trialed which gives off a pulse to protect sharks and rays from fishing
hooks (鱼钩). The data so far suggests that it has been very effective in reducing the number of sharks and stingrays caught
by commercial fishing equipment.
Commercial fishing is known to threaten sharks and rays worldwide. Research has found that 24 per cent of the
average monthly space used by sharks around the world falls under the-footprint of distant long line fisheries. This is when
hooks hang near the surface to catch fish like tuna and swordfish. A quarter of shark habitats are within active fishing zones.
It is estimated that over 20,000,000 sharks are caught as bycatch every year. Stingrays are also frequently caught as
bycatch. “Bycatch” refers to unwanted fish and marine creatures caught by commercial fishing equipment, and is typically
discarded (丢弃) overboard either dead or dying.
Shark Guard was designed by marine scientists to protect sharks and rays from fishing equipment. It is a small battery-
powered device that can be fastened on the line next to a baited hook and gives off a short pulse every two seconds.
Study found that the device reduced the number of blue sharks caught in a French long line tuna fishery in the
Mediterranean by 91 per cent, and stingrays by 71 per cent. These are promising numbers, although Dr. Phil Doherty, lead
author of the study, said that Shark Guard should “be designed on a case-by-case basis to ensure it’s fit for purpose.”
28.What is the new device used to do?
A.Stop sharks being caught. B.Reduce the number of sharks.
C.Confirm a scientific guess. D.Prevent commercial hunting.
29.What is paragraph 2 mainly about?
A.The places fishing hooks hang. B.The range of commercial fishing.
C.The benefits of protecting sharks. D.The harm of commercial fishing.
30.What does Phil Doherty think of the device?
A.It is promising. B.It is ineffective.
C.It needs improving. D.It is perfectly designed.
31.What is the text?
A.A diary entry. B.A news report.
C.A fantasy story. D.A book review.
4.【2023届海南省海南中学、海口一中 、文吕中学、嘉积中学高三4月联考】
Every time I stare at the rows of jars filled with my parents’ homemade tomato sauce, I wonder: “Should I really useone?”
I have been keeping these jars like precious treasures. No matter how hard I try to find alternatives, nothing compares.
Store-bought sauce? It just doesn’t taste right. Even if I try to recreate it, it will never taste the same.
While growing up, I hated the tomato season. My parents would use the basement to ripen the tomatoes they had
collected locally in September. Like the other Italian families in the area, we would then take them to the garage when they
were ripe enough. There they were cleaned and boiled.
Having been stewed (炖), whole tomatoes were passed through my father’s homemade machine to separate the sauce
from the skins. Jars at the ready, we filled them with sauce and seasoning. The jars would be hot for a few days, sealed to
keep their own heat. They would then be lined up and ready to use.
This tradition was hard to carry on when my father got ill. After being diagnosed with cancer in 2019, he spent most of
his time in hospital. In September that year he came home, and on the weekend we decided to continue the tradition. I have
glorious memories of that day as we once again made the sauce. It was a beautiful but short-lived moment. My father died
soon after.
I can’t keep these jars forever. But it doesn’t make it any easier to open one. Every time I go to reach for one,
something stops me. My mother, ever practical, is visiting us recently and just stares at them.
“You should use these or they will go to waste.”
What will it feel like to use that last jar? It would mean the end of an era. Who knows? Maybe it’s time to bring new
traditions into life.
4.What stops the author from using the tomato sauce?
A.It has gone bad. B.He doesn’t like tomato sauce
C.He values it too much. D.He keeps it for future use.
5.What do Para.3 and Para.4 mainly talk about?
A.The tomato harvest. B.The homemade machine.
C.The fruitful tomato season. D.The making of tomato sauce.
6.What will the author most probably do next?
A.Open one jar. B.Keep the jars.
C.Collect tomatoes. D.Make tomato sauce
7.Which of the following can describe the author?
A.Practical. B.Faithful. C.Affectionate. D.Sensitive.
5.【2023届河北省高三适应性考试】
Teens interested in losing weight, for instance, got advertisements for unhealthy tips on how to become anorexic (厌食
者). Such advertisements targeted these kids in hopes of persuading them to try things that were either dangerous or illegal
at their age.
Advertisements are just one example of persuasion—trying to change another’s mind. Advertisements may try to
convince us to buy something or do something new and different. Marketing is a field of persuasion designed to sell things,
notes Jacob Teeny. Persuasion can be used to sell things. At its worst, it can be used to control people. Clearly, persuasion
can be used for good and bad.
People open to new experiences tend to be more easily persuaded, Teeny says. But open-minded people can resist some
persuasive arguments—such as the idea that eating junk food is cool. And closed-minded people can sometimes be
persuaded. “If you haven’t really thought about the arguments” ahead of time, Teeny says, you’re going to be “much more
persuadable.”