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    考点05 阅读理解之段落大意-【专项突破】2024年高考英语二轮复习核心考点精讲

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    考点05 阅读理解之段落大意-【专项突破】2024年高考英语二轮复习核心考点精讲

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    这是一份考点05 阅读理解之段落大意-【专项突破】2024年高考英语二轮复习核心考点精讲,文件包含考点5阅读理解之段落大意原卷版docx、考点5阅读理解之段落大意解析版docx等2份试卷配套教学资源,其中试卷共15页, 欢迎下载使用。


    一、在复习语言点的时候,要依据语言的横向组合和纵向聚合,按照“点—线—面”顺序,构建知识网络环境。
    二、多做高考题,少扣模拟题
    1、时间的把控。
    2、总结一下各部分的得分情况,了解自己的强弱项。
    3、留意出题点,揣摩不同内容出题人的着眼点在哪里,做到知己知彼。
    三、多攻词汇表,少记课外词
    四、写作。研究高考写作命题话题范围,根据测试的频度和交际场景的生活化程度进行分类。
    考点5 阅读理解之段落大意
    Part 1 题型详解:
    主旨大意之段落大意考点是高考中的必考点。这些设置题目的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。
    Part 2 常见设问方式:
    What is this paragraph mainly abut?
    The main idea f paragraph 2 and 3
    What’s the main idea f
    Part 3 解题方法指导:
    1.了解篇章结构,段落大意题目仍然是概括性的题目,段落大意应围绕主题发展。
    2. 关注段首,段尾,段落中有关转折、递进的句子。
    Part 4 真题检测
    2023年全国乙卷英语真题
    If yu want t tell the histry f the whle wrld, a histry that des nt privilege ne part f humanity, yu cannt d it thrugh texts alne, because nly sme f the wrld has ever had texts, while mst f the wrld, fr mst f the time, has nt. Writing is ne f humanity’s later achievements, and until fairly recently even many literate (有文字的) scieties recrded their cncerns nt nly in writing but in things.
    Ideally a histry wuld bring tgether texts and bjects, and sme chapters f this bk are able t d just that, but in many cases we simply can’t. The clearest example f this between literate and nn-literate histry is perhaps the first cnflict, at Btany Bay, between Captain Ck’s vyage and the Australian Abriginals. Frm the English side, we have scientific reprts and the captain’s recrd f that terrible day. Frm the Australian side, we have nly a wden shield (盾) drpped by a man in flight after his first experience f gunsht. If we want t recnstruct what was actually ging n that day, the shield must be questined and interpreted as deeply and strictly as the written reprts.
    In additin t the prblem f miscmprehensin frm bth sides, there are victries accidentally r deliberately twisted, especially when nly the victrs knw hw t write. Thse wh are n the lsing side ften have nly their things t tell their stries. The Caribbean Tain, the Australian Abriginals, the African peple f Benin and the Incas, all f whm appear in this bk, can speak t us nw f their past achievements mst pwerfully thrugh the bjects they made: a histry tld thrugh things gives them back a vice. When we cnsider cntact (联系) between literate and nn-literate scieties such as these, all ur first-hand accunts are necessarily twisted, nly ne half f a dialgue. If we are t find the ther half f that cnversatin, we have t read nt just the texts, but the bjects.
    1.What is the first paragraph mainly abut?
    A.Hw past events shuld be presented.B.What humanity is cncerned abut.
    C.Whether facts speak luder than wrds.D.Why written language is reliable.
    2023年新课标全国Ⅰ卷英语真题
    On March 7, 1907, the English statistician Francis Galtn published a paper which illustrated what has cme t be knwn as the “wisdm f crwds” effect. The experiment f estimatin he cnducted shwed that in sme cases, the average f a large number f independent estimates culd be quite accurate.
    This effect capitalizes n the fact that when peple make errrs, thse errrs aren’t always the same. Sme peple will tend t verestimate, and sme t underestimate. When enugh f these errrs are averaged tgether, they cancel each ther ut, resulting in a mre accurate estimate. If peple are similar and tend t make the same errrs, then their errrs wn’t cancel each ther ut. In mre technical terms, the wisdm f crwds requires that peple’s estimates be independent. If fr whatever reasns, peple’s errrs becme crrelated r dependent, the accuracy f the estimate will g dwn.
    But a new study led by Jaquin Navajas ffered an interesting twist (转折) n this classic phenmenn. The key finding f the study was that when crwds were further divided int smaller grups that were allwed t have a discussin, the averages frm these grups were mre accurate than thse frm an equal number f independent individuals. Fr instance, the average btained frm the estimates f fur discussin grups f five was significantly mre accurate than the average btained frm 20 independent individuals.
    In a fllw-up study with 100 university students, the researchers tried t get a better sense f what the grup members actually did in their discussin. Did they tend t g with thse mst cnfident abut their estimates? Did they fllw thse least willing t change their minds? This happened sme f the time, but it wasn’t the dminant respnse. Mst frequently, the grups reprted that they “shared arguments and reasned tgether”. Smehw, these arguments and reasning resulted in a glbal reductin in errr. Althugh the studies led by Navajas have limitatins and many questins remain, the ptential implicatins fr grup discussin and decisin-making are enrmus.
    5.What is paragraph 2 f the text mainly abut?
    A.The methds f estimatin.B.The underlying lgic f the effect.
    C.The causes f peple’s errrs.D.The design f Galtn’s experiment.
    2022年新高考全国Ⅰ卷英语真题
    Human speech cntains mre than 2,000 different sunds, frm the cmmn “m” and “a” t the rare clicks f sme suthern African languages. But why are certain sunds mre cmmn than thers? A grund-breaking, five-year study shws that diet-related changes in human bite led t new speech sunds that are nw fund in half the wrld’s languages.
    Mre than 30 years ag, the schlar Charles Hckett nted that speech sunds called labidentals, such as “f” and “v”, were mre cmmn in the languages f scieties that ate sfter fds. Nw a team f researchers led by Damián Blasi at the University f Zurich, Switzerland, has fund hw and why this trend arse.
    They discvered that the upper and lwer frnt teeth f ancient human adults were aligned (对齐), making it hard t prduce labidentals, which are frmed by tuching the lwer lip t the upper teeth. Later, ur jaws changed t an verbite structure (结构), making it easier t prduce such sunds.
    The team shwed that this change in bite was cnnected with the develpment f agriculture in the Nelithic perid. Fd became easier t chew at this pint. The jawbne didn’t have t d as much wrk and s didn’t grw t be s large.
    Analyses f a language database als cnfirmed that there was a glbal change in the sund f wrld languages after the Nelithic age, with the use f “f” and “v” increasing remarkably during the last few thusand years. These sunds are still nt fund in the languages f many hunter-gatherer peple tday.
    This research verturns the ppular view that all human speech sunds were present when human beings evlved arund 300,000 years ag. “The set f speech sunds we use has nt necessarily remained stable since the appearance f human beings, but rather the huge variety f speech sunds that we find tday is the prduct f a cmplex interplay f things like bilgical change and cultural evlutin,” said Steven Mran, a member f the research team.
    11.What is paragraph 5 mainly abut?
    A.Supprting evidence fr the research results.
    B.Ptential applicatin f the research findings.
    C.A further explanatin f the research methds.
    D.A reasnable dubt abut the research prcess.
    2022年全国甲卷英语真题
    Smetime in the early 1960s, a significant thing happened in Sydney, Australia. The city discvered its harbr. Then, ne after anther, Sydney discvered lts f things that were just srt f there — brad parks, superb beaches, and a culturally diverse ppulatin. But it is the harbr that makes the city.
    Andrew Reynlds, a cheerful fellw in his early 30s, pilts Sydney ferrybats fr a living. I spent the whle mrning shuttling back and frth acrss the harbr. After ur third run Andrew shut dwn the engine, and we went ur separate ways — he fr a lunch break, I t explre the city.
    “I’ll miss these ld bats,” he said as we parted.
    “Hw d yu mean?” I asked.
    “Oh, they’re replacing them with catamarans. Catamarans are faster, but they’re nt s elegant, and they’re nt fun t pilt. But that’s prgress, I guess.”
    Everywhere in Sydney these days, change and prgress are the watchwrds (口号), and traditins are increasingly rare. Shirley Fitzgerald, the city’s fficial histrian, tld me that in its rush t mdernity in the 1970s, Sydney swept aside much f its past, including many f its finest buildings. “Sydney is cnfused abut itself,” she said. “We can’t seem t make up ur minds whether we want a mdern city r a traditinal ne. It’s a cnflict that we aren’t getting any better at reslving (解决).”
    On the ther hand, being yung and ld at the same time has its attractins. I cnsidered this when I met a thughtful yung businessman named Anthny. “Many peple say that we lack culture in this cuntry,” he tld me. “What peple frget is that the Italians, when they came t Australia, brught 2000 years f their culture, the Greeks sme 3000 years, and the Chinese mre still. We’ve gt a fundatin built n ancient cultures but with a drive and dynamism f a yung cuntry. It’s a pretty hard cmbinatin t beat.”
    He is right, but I can’t help wishing they wuld keep thse ld ferries.
    13.What is the first paragraph mainly abut?
    A.Sydney’s striking architecture.B.The cultural diversity f Sydney.
    C.The key t Sydney’s develpment.D.Sydney’s turist attractins in the 1960s.
    2021年北京市英语高考真题
    Early fifth-century philspher St.Augustine famusly wrte that he knew what time was unless smene asked him.Albert Einstein added anther wrinkle when he therized that time varies depending n where yu measure it.Tday's state-f-the-art atmic(原子的) clcks have prven Einstein right.Even advanced physics can't decisively tell us what time is, because the answer depends n the questin yu're asking.
    Frget abut time as an abslute.What if,instead f cnsidering time in terms f astrnmy,we related time t eclgy?What if we allwed envirnmental cnditins t set the temp(节奏) f human life?We're increasingly aware f the fact that we can't cntrl Earth systems with engineering alne,and realizing that we need t mderate(调节)ur actins if we hpe t live in balance.What if ur definitin f time reflected that?
    Recently,I cnceptualized a new apprach t timekeeping that's cnnected t circumstances n ur planet,cnditins that might change as a result f glbal warming.We're nw building a clck at the Anchrage Museum that reflects the ttal flw f several majr Alaskan rivers,which are sensitive t lcal and glbal envirnmental changes.We've prgrammed it t match an atmic clck if the waterways cntinue t flw at their present rate.If the rivers run faster in the future n average,the clck will get ahead f standard time.If they run slwer,yu'll see the ppsite effect.
    The clck registers bth shrt-term irregularities and lng-term trends in river dynamics.It's a srt f bservatry that reveals hw the rivers are behaving frm their wn tempral frame(时间框架),and allws us t witness thse changes n ur smartwatches r phnes.Anyne wh pts t g n Alaska Mean River Time will live in harmny with the planet.Anyne wh cnsiders river time in relatin t atmic time will encunter a majr imbalance and may be mtivated t cunteract it by cnsuming less fuel r supprting greener plicies.
    Even if this methd f timekeeping is nvel in its particulars,early agricultural scieties als cnnected time t natural phenmena.In pre-Classical Greece,fr instance,peple“crrected”fficial calendars by shifting dates frward r backward t reflect the change f seasn.Tempral cnnectin t the envirnment was vital t their survival.Likewise,river time and ther timekeeping systems we're develping may encurage envirnmental awareness.
    When St.Augustine admitted his inability t define time, he highlighted ne f time 's mst nticeable qualities:Time becmes meaningful nly in a defined cntext.Any timekeeping system is valid,and each is as praisewrthy as its purpse.
    17.What is the main idea f Paragraph 1?
    A.Timekeeping is increasingly related t nature.
    B.Everyne can define time n their wn terms.
    C.The qualities f time vary with hw yu measure it.
    D.Time is a majr cncern f philsphers and scientists.
    2021年浙江卷英语真题(7月)
    If yu ever get the impressin that yur dg can “tell” whether yu lk cntent r annyed, yu may be nt smething. Dgs may indeed be able t distinguish between happy and angry human faces, accrding t a new study.
    Researchers trained a grup f 11 dgs t distinguish between images (图像) f the same persn making either a happy r an angry face. During the training stage, each dg was shwn nly the upper half r the lwer half f the persn’s face. The researchers then tested the dgs’ ability t distinguish between human facial expressins by shwing them the ther half f the persn’s face n images ttally different frm the nes used in training. The researchers fund that the dgs were able t pick the angry r happy face by tuching a picture f it with their nses mre ften than ne wuld expect by randm chance.
    The study shwed the animals had figured ut hw t apply what they learned abut human faces during training t new faces in the testing stage. “We can rule ut that the dgs simply distinguish between the pictures based n a simple cue, such as the sight f teeth,” said study authr Crsin Muller. “Instead, ur results suggest that the successful dgs realized that a smiling muth means the same thing as smiling eyes, and the same rule applies t an angry muth having the same meaning as angry eyes.”
    “With ur study, we think we can nw cnfidently cnclude that at least sme dgs can distinguish human facial expressins,” Muller tld Live Science.
    At this pint, it is nt clear why dgs seem t be equipped with the ability t recgnize different facial expressins in humans. “T us, the mst likely explanatin appears t be that the basis lies in their living with humans, which gives them a lt f expsure t human facial expressins, and this expsure has prvided them with many chances t learn t distinguish between them,” Muller said.
    23.What is the last paragraph mainly abut?
    A.A suggestin fr future studies.B.A pssible reasn fr the study findings.
    C.A majr limitatin f the studyD.An explanatin f the research methd.
    2021年全国乙卷英语真题
    When almst everyne has a mbile phne, why are mre than half f Australian hmes still paying fr a landline (座机)?
    These days yu’d be hard pressed t find anyne in Australia ver the age f 15 wh desn’t wn a mbile phne. In fact plenty f yunger kids have ne in their pcket. Practically everyne can make and receive calls anywhere, anytime.
    Still, 55 percent f Australians have a landline phne at hme and nly just ver a quarter (29%) rely nly n their smartphnes accrding t a survey (调查). Of thse Australians wh still have a landline, a third cncede that it’s nt really necessary and they’re keeping it as a security blanket — 19 percent say they never use it while a further 13 percent keep it in case f emergencies. I think my hme falls int that categry.
    Mre than half f Australian hmes are still chsing t stick with their hme phne. Age is naturally a factr (因素)— nly 58 percent f Generatin Ys still use landlines nw and then, cmpared t 84 percent f Baby Bmers wh’ve perhaps had the same hme number fr 50 years. Age isn’t the nly factr; I’d say it’s als t d with the makeup f yur husehld.
    Generatin Xers with yung families, like my wife and I, can still find it cnvenient t have a hme phne rather than prviding a mbile phne fr every family member. That said, t be hnest the nly peple wh ever ring ur hme phne are ur Baby Bmers parents, t the pint where we play a game and guess wh is calling befre we pick up the phne (using Caller ID wuld take the fun ut f it).
    Hw attached are yu t yur landline? Hw lng until they g the way f gas street lamps and mrning milk deliveries?
    24.What des paragraph 2 mainly tell us abut mbile phnes?
    A.Their target users.B.Their wide ppularity.
    C.Their majr functins.D.Their cmplex design.
    Part 5 模拟练习
    2024届河南省信阳市浉河区信阳高级中学高三上学期一模英语试题
    Cities are difficult t navigate (导航) at the best f times, but fr peple with disabilities they can be like curses with hurdles and bring incnvenience t disabled peple.
    A UK natinal travel survey fund that adults with mbility difficulties tk 39% fewer trips than thse with n disability in 2017. Yet that culd change as devices and cities grw smarter. Assistive tech is playing a big rle in the transfrmatin. The glbal value f the industry is expected t increase frm $14 billin in 2015 t $30.8 billin in 2024, accrding t Zin Market Research.
    One f the things that culd transfrm lives is a smart walking stick designed by engineers frm Yung Guru Academy (YGA) in Turkey. The WeWalk stick has a sensr that detects hurdles abve chest level and uses vibratins (振动) t warn the user. It can be paired with a smartphne t help navigatin, and is cnnected with a vice assistant and Ggle Maps.
    Ceylan, wh has been blind since birth, says that cnnecting the stick t the Internet f Things and smart city slutins makes it user-friendly. “As a blind persn, when I am at the Metr statin I dn’t knw which is my exit ... I dn’t knw which bus is appraching ... which stres are arund me. That kind f infrmatin can be prvided with the WeWalk,” he says.
    “The smart walking stick is really an exciting initiative that will make a huge difference t sme peple,” says Anna Lawsn, the directr f the Center fr Disability Studies at Leeds University in the United Kingdm. “But they are very expensive ... they’re nt ging t be available t the vast majrity f disabled peple,” she added.
    Bryan Matthews, a lecturer at the Institute fr Transprt Studies at the University f Leeds, shares the cncerns abut cst. He says there shuld als be a fcus n inclusive design, and anything that helps peple navigate their envirnment is psitive.
    29.What des paragraph 3 mainly talk abut?
    A.The wrking principles f the WeWalk stick.
    B.The intrductin f the WeWalk stick inventrs.
    C.The transfrmatin caused by the WeWalk stick.
    D.The benefits brught abut by the WeWalk stick.
    2023届安徽省、云南省、吉林省、黑龙江省高三下学期2月适应性测试英语试题
    Fr years, David James, wh studies insects at Washingtn State University, had wanted t examine the migratin (迁徙)patterns f West Cast mnarch butterflies (黑脉金斑蝶). The rute the butterflies travel has been hardly knwn because the ppulatins are t small t fllw. Fr every 200 mnarchs tagged (打标签)by a researcher, nly ne is usually recvered at the end f its trip, James says, and finding even 200 in the wild t tag is unlikely. Knwing the rute is vital t cnservatin effrts, but James had n way t figure it ut- until he gt a phne call frm Washingtn State Penitentiary in Walla Walla.
    The prisn was lking fr new activities t imprve the mental health f thse serving lng-term sentences. S James began wrking with prisners t raise mnarchs thrugh the whle prcess f their transfrmatin. The adult insects were then tagged and released frm the prisn. Over five years, nearly 10, 000 mnarchs flew frm the facility. Elsewhere in Washingtn, Oregn and Idah, researchers released anther few thusand.
    The tags included email addresses, and sn after the first butterflies tk ff, James started receiving messages frm peple wh had sptted them. The butterflies, the reprts cnfirmed, wintered in castal Califrnia. Twelve f them landed at Lighthuse Field State Beach in Santa Cruz. Several mre headed t Blinas and Mrr Bay.
    The wrk helps researchers identify ideal places t plant milkweed and ther vegetatin that are imprtant t the life cycle f West Cast mnarch butterflies. It als brught ut the gentler side f sme f the prisners. “They were very wrried that they were ging t harm the butterflies, ”James says. Watching the mnarch change their frm als tuched the men. “This butterfly changed, ” James recalls prisners telling him, “and maybe we can t. ”
    35.What is the last paragraph mainly abut?
    A.The impact f the research.
    B.The findings f James’ study.
    C.The release f the prisners.
    D.The life cycle f the butterflies.
    2023届广东省深圳市高三年级第一次调研考试英语试题
    Frm cttages surrunded by impressive gardens t days spent explring sandy beaches and deep wds filled with wildlife, in My Family and Other Animals, English writer Gerald Durrell prvided a vivid accunt f his family’s time n the Greek island f Crfu in the 1930s.
    Cme fr the arresting descriptins f Crfu landscapes and stay fr Durrell’s laugh-ut-lud tales f his unusual family. This bk, Durrell wrte humrusly in the intrductin, “was intended t be a nstalgic (怀旧的) accunt f natural histry, but in the first few pages, I made the mistake f intrducing my family. ”
    Durrell, later knwn fr his z keeping and the preservatin f wildlife, was just a child during his family’s five-year stay in Crfu. He is 10-year-ld Gerry in the bk — curius, passinate abut animals and a detailed stryteller f his strange family: his imaginative elder brther Larry with his literary ambitins, lvestruck sister Marg, sprty brther Leslie and his ever-calm, lving mther.
    Durrell’s attentin t detail is what makes the bk s winning, with every sight, sund and smell f the island brught t life. One minute yu’ll be laughing as Larry’s clever literary friends walk dwn t the daffdil-yellw cttage, the next yu’ll be catching yur breath as Durrell describes swimming at night in the Inian Sea: “Lying n my back in the silky water, staring at the sky, nly mving my hands and feet slightly, I was lking at the Milky Way stretching like a silk scarf acrss the sky and wndering hw many stars it cntained. ”
    My Family and Other Animals is quite difficult t classify, being ne part travel, ne part autbigraphy, ne part natural histry, and ne part cmedy, with a thread f descriptive language running thrughut that smetimes raises it nearly t petry.
    As a real delight t read, it’s the perfect literary escapism fr any adult r lder teenager wh is currently walking dwn a tugh rad in life.
    38.What are paragraph 4 and 5 mainly abut?
    A.The bk’s writing feature.
    B.Durrell’s rich imaginatin.
    C.Sme interesting plts f the bk.
    D.Sme vivid descriptins f the island.
    2023届广东省广州市普通高中毕业班综合测试(一)英语试题
    Beavers(海狸), like humans, change their surrundings t fit their needs. Knwn as nature’s engineers, they tear trees dwn t build hmes t live in and dams t raise water levels fr prtectin frm enemies. Dams als slw water’s flw while blcking sediment(沉积物)that wuld therwise flw dwnstream. The resulting wetlands ften attract wildlife diversity where nne had existed. There are challenges, thugh. Beaver dams smetimes cause flding, and mst peple prefer trees alive and upright.
    Cmmunities face a delicate balancing act, learning t cexist with beavers. Last winter, many peple enjying Winstn Path became beaver fans as ne furry family transfrmed Swallw Pnd int an asis fr birds, frgs, turtles and deer.
    Yet such activity caused cncern. As beavers wrked, they raised water levels abut five feet. The increased depth allws beavers t survive underwater if the pnd ices ver. But cunty fficials were cncerned abut hw higher water wuld affect the sil bank supprting Winstn Path.
    T find a gd balance between prtecting the path and the beavers, the cunty intrduced a“ beaver baffle”— a pnd leveler.Beavers ften rush t fill hles in their dams.Baffles stabilize water levels by creating a hidden exit fr high water t escape thrugh the dam, unnticed by the beavers.
    Peple lve the beavers but they als lve the mature trees. Recently, Catherine Jnes,18, rganized a tree-caging event — putting wire clth arund large tree trunks t discurage beavers frm biting them. It als prtects peple frm injury due t randm trees falling.“We cver the trees we dn’t want them t eat, while planting peridically thers they like,“said Jnes.“We need-t learn t give up a little f ur wants t share the Earth’s resurces.”
    Swallw Pnd’s 2023 prject will restre prper water depth and imprve wildlife habitat withut creating prblems fr the path. The balancing act cntinues.
    40.What is the first paragraph mainly abut?
    A.Where beavers’ favrite surrundings are.
    B.What effects beavers have n their habitat.
    C.Why beavers are called nature’s engineers.
    D.Hw beavers help attract wildlife diversity.
    2023届江苏省苏锡常镇四市高三下学期3月教学情况调研(一)英语试题
    Ls Angeles native Randall Bartlett sat under the rftp f a traditinal Chinese schlar’s studi, ccasinally turning a page f his bk. The scene was in the repened Liu Fang Yuan garden at the Huntingtn Library, Art Museum and Btanical Gardens. Fr him, the garden brings t life the Chinese philsphies he learned frm bks.
    Phillip E. Blm, directr f the Center fr East Asian Garden Studies, said the idea fr Liu Fang Yuan ges back t the 1980s with the initial aim f creating a cllectin f Chinese plants, but after research, they realized plants alne were nt sufficient t demnstrate the essence f a Chinese garden. Eventually, it was decided t mdel a garden n 16th and 17th century schlarly retreats(隐居处)in Suzhu.
    The decisin was made partly due t the fame f Suzhu classical gardens, but als because similarities were fund between the Huntingtn and Suzhu gardens. Blm said that Henry Huntingtn, funder f the Huntingtn Library, was a successful US businessman wh used his frtune t cllect rare bks, artwrks and t create gardens. “Many Suzhu gardens were als created by rich peple wh tried t pursue a schlarly lifestyle,” he added.
    T preserve the character f the Suzhu gardens, the Huntingtn Library sught help frm Suzhu, giving rise t cllabratin between US and Chinese architects, cntractrs and designers. In all stages f cnstructin, artisans(工匠)frm Suzhu came t wrk n details f the venue.
    After three years f expansin frm 2018 t 2020, Liu Fang Yuan repened t the public with 4.6 hectares f new landscape, making it ne f the largest classical-style Chinese gardens in the wrld. The additins include curtyards displaying penjing, a schlar’s studi, a pavilin(亭子)situated at the garden’s highest pint, etc.
    Nw, it is meaningful t see hw peple frm lcal cmmunities interact with the garden. “A lt f vlunteers cme t different lectures and exhibitins abut Chinese culture hat we hld regularly,” Blm said. By expsing its visitrs t arts and literature, Liu Fang uan ges beynd internatinal bundaries and bridges the cultural gaps between the tw untries.
    45.What is paragraph 3 mainly abut?
    A.The intrductin t the funder.
    B.The fame f Suzhu classical gardens.
    C.The features f a schlarly lifestyle.
    D.The reasns fr mdeling a Suzhu garden.

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