2020년 3월 고1 모의고사
28 카드 | classcard
세트공유
Dear Ms. Spadler,

You’ve written to our company complaining that your toaster, which you bought only three weeks earlier, doesn’t work. You were asking for a new toaster or a refund. Since the toaster has a year’s warranty, our company is happy to replace your faulty toaster with a new toaster. To get your new toaster, simply take your receipt and the faulty toaster to the dealer from whom you bought it. The dealer will give you a new toaster on the spot. Nothing is more important to us than the satisfaction of our customers. If there is anything else we can do for you, please do not hesitate to ask.

Yours sincerely,
Betty Swan

*warranty: 품질 보증(서)
고장 난 제품을 교환하는 방법을 안내하려고
I was diving alone in about 40 feet of water when I got a terrible stomachache. I was sinking and hardly able to move. I could see my watch and knew there was only a little more time on the tank before I would be out of air. It was hard for me to remove my weight belt. Suddenly I felt a prodding from behind me under the armpit. My arm was being lifted forcibly. Around into my field of vision came an eye. It seemed to be smiling. It was the eye of a big dolphin. Looking into that eye, I knew I was safe. I felt that the animal was protecting me, lifting me toward the surface.
*prodding: 쿡 찌르기
frightened → relieved
Keeping good ideas floating around in your head is a great way to ensure that they won’t happen. Take a tip from writers, who know that the only good ideas that come to life are the ones that get written down. Take out a piece of paper and record everything you’d love to do someday—aim to hit one hundred dreams. You’ll have a reminder and motivator to get going on those things that are calling you, and you also won’t have the burden of remembering all of them. When you put your dreams into words you begin putting them into action.
하고 싶은 일을 적으라.
We all know that tempers are one of the first things lost in many arguments. It’s easy to say one should keep cool, but how do you do it? The point to remember is that sometimes in arguments the other person is trying to get you to be angry. They may be saying things that are intentionally designed to annoy you. They know that if they get you to lose your cool you’ll say something that sounds foolish; you’ll simply get angry and then it will be impossible for you to win the argument. So don’t fall for it. A remark may be made to cause your anger, but responding with a cool answer that focuses on the issue raised is likely to be most effective. Indeed, any attentive listener will admire the fact that you didn’t “rise to the bait.”
lose your temper
Practically anything of value requires that we take a risk of failure or being rejected. This is the price we all must pay for achieving the greater rewards lying ahead of us. To take risks means you will succeed sometime but never to take a risk means that you will never succeed. Life is filled with a lot of risks and challenges and if you want to get away from all these, you will be left behind in the race of life. A person who can never take a risk can’t learn anything. For example, if you never take the risk to drive a car, you can never learn to drive. If you never take the risk of being rejected, you can never have a friend or partner. Similarly, by not taking the risk of attending an interview, you will never get a job.
위험을 무릅쓰지 않으면 아무 것도 얻지 못한다.
Although individual preferences vary, touch (both what we touch with our fingers and the way things feel as they come in contact with our skin) is an important aspect of many products. Consumers like some products because of their feel. Some consumers buy skin creams and baby products for their soothing effect on the skin. In fact, consumers who have a high need for touch tend to like products that provide this opportunity. When considering products with material properties, such as clothing or carpeting, consumers like goods they can touch in stores more than products they only see and read about online or in catalogs.
*property: 속성
touch as an important factor for consumers
In life, they say that too much of anything is not good for you. In fact, too much of certain things in life can kill you. For example, they say that water has no enemy, because water is essential to all life. But if you take in too much water, like one who is drowning, it could kill you. Education is the exception to this rule. You can never have too much education or knowledge. The reality is that most people will never have enough education in their lifetime. I am yet to find that one person who has been hurt in life by too much education. Rather, we see lots of casualties every day, worldwide, resulting from the lack of education. You must keep in mind that education is a long-­term investment of time, money, and effort into humans.
*casualty: 피해자
Too Much Education Won’t Hurt You
The above graph shows the numbers of total speakers and native speakers of the five most spoken languages worldwide in 2015. ①English is the most spoken language worldwide, with 1,500 million total speakers. ②Chinese is second on the list with 1,100 million total speakers. ③In terms of the number of native speakers, however, Chinese is the most spoken language worldwide, followed by Hindi. ④The number of native speakers of English is smaller than that of Spanish. ⑤French is the least spoken language among the five in terms of the number of native speakers.
4
Ellen Church was born in Iowa in 1904. After graduating from Cresco High School, she studied nursing and worked as a nurse in San Francisco. She suggested to Boeing Air Transport that nurses should take care of passengers during flights because most people were frightened of flying. In 1930, she became the first female flight attendant in the U.S. and worked on a Boeing 80A from Oakland, California to Chicago, Illinois. Unfortunately, a car accident injury forced her to end her career after only eighteen months. Church started nursing again at Milwaukee County Hospital after she graduated from the University of Minnesota with a degree in nursing education. During World War II, she served as a captain in the Army Nurse Corps and received an Air Medal. Ellen Church Field Airport in her hometown, Cresco, was named after her.
자동차 사고로 다쳤지만 비행기 승무원 생활을 계속했다.
Science Selfie Competition

For a chance to win science goodies, just submit a selfie of yourself enjoying science outside of school!

Deadline: Friday, March 20, 2020, 6 p.m.
Details:
• Your selfie should include a visit to any science museum or a science activity at home.
• Be as creative as you like, and write one short sentence about the selfie.
• Only one entry per person!
• Email your selfie with your name and class to mclara@oldfold.edu.

Winners will be announced on March 27, 2020.

Please visit www.oldfold.edu to learn more about the competition.
1인당 사진 여러 장을 출품할 수 있다.
Toy & Gift Warehouse Sale

at Wilson Square
from April 3 to April 16

We carry items that are in stock at bigger retailers for a cheaper price. You can expect to find toys for children from birth to teens. Ten toy companies will participate in the sale.

Wednesday – Friday: 10 a.m. – 6 p.m.
Saturday & Sunday: 11 a.m. – 5 p.m.
Closed on Monday & Tuesday

Returns must be made within one week of purchase.

For more information, please visit us at www.poptoy.com.
월요일과 화요일에는 운영되지 않는다.
“You are what you eat.” That phrase is often used to ①show the relationship between the foods you eat and your physical health. But do you really know what you are eating when you buy processed foods, canned foods, and packaged goods? Many of the manufactured products made today contain so many chemicals and artificial ingredients ②which it is sometimes difficult to know exactly what is inside them. Fortunately, now there are food labels. Food labels are a good way ③to find the information about the foods you eat. Labels on food are ④like the table of contents found in books. The main purpose of food labels ⑤is to inform you what is inside the food you are purchasing.
*manufactured: (공장에서) 제조된
**table of contents: (책 등의) 목차
2
다음 글의 밑줄 친 부분 중, 문맥상 낱말의 쓰임이 적절하지 않은 것은? [3점]

We often ignore small changes because they don’t seem to ①matter very much in the moment. If you save a little money now, you’re still not a millionaire. If you study Spanish for an hour tonight, you still haven’t learned the language. We make a few changes, but the results never seem to come ②quickly and so we slide back into our previous routines. The slow pace of transformation also makes it ③easy to break a bad habit. If you eat an unhealthy meal today, the scale doesn’t move much. A single decision is easy to ignore. But when we ④repeat small errors, day after day, by following poor decisions again and again, our small choices add up to bad results. Many missteps eventually lead to a ⑤problem.
3
Remember that __________ is always of the essence. If an apology is not accepted, thank the individual for hearing you out and leave the door open for if and when he wishes to reconcile. Be conscious of the fact that just because someone accepts your apology does not mean she has fully forgiven you. It can take time, maybe a long time, before the injured party can completely let go and fully trust you again. There is little you can do to speed this process up. If the person is truly important to you, it is worthwhile to give him or her the time and space needed to heal. Do not expect the person to go right back to acting normally immediately.
*reconcile: 화해하다
patience
Although many small businesses have excellent websites, they typically can’t afford aggressive online campaigns. One way to get the word out is through an advertising exchange, in which advertisers place banners on each other’s websites for free. For example, a company selling beauty products could place its banner on a site that sells women’s shoes, and in turn, the shoe company could put a banner on the beauty product site. Neither company charges the other; they simply exchange ad space. Advertising exchanges are gaining in popularity, especially among marketers who do not have much money and who don’t have a large sales team. By ___________, advertisers find new outlets that reach their target audiences that they would not otherwise be able to afford.
*aggressive: 매우 적극적인  
**outlet: 출구
trading space
Motivation may come from several sources. It may be the respect I give every student, the daily greeting I give at my classroom door, the undivided attention when I listen to a student, a pat on the shoulder whether the job was done well or not, an accepting smile, or simply “I love you” when it is most needed. It may simply be asking how things are at home. For one student considering dropping out of school, it was a note from me after one of his frequent absences saying that he made my day when I saw him in school. He came to me with the note with tears in his eyes and thanked me. He will graduate this year. Whatever technique is used, the students must know that you ___________. But the concern must be genuine—the students can’t be fooled.
care about them
Say you normally go to a park to walk or work out. Maybe today you should choose a different park. Why? Well, who knows? Maybe it’s because you need the connection to the different energy in the other park. Maybe you’ll run into people there that you’ve never met before. You could make a new best friend simply by visiting a different park. You never know what great things will happen to you until you step outside the zone where you feel comfortable. If you’re staying in your comfort zone and you’re not pushing yourself past that same old energy, then you’re not going to move forward on your path. By forcing yourself to do something different, you’re awakening yourself on a spiritual level and you’re forcing yourself to do something that will benefit you in the long run. As they say, ___________.
variety is the spice of life
Ideas about how much disclosure is appropriate vary among cultures.[/bold]

(A) On the other hand, Japanese tend to do little disclosing about themselves to others except to the few people with whom they are very close. In general, Asians do not reach out to strangers.

(B) Those born in the United States tend to be high disclosers, even showing a willingness to disclose information about themselves to strangers. This may explain why Americans seem particularly easy to meet and are good at cocktail­-party conversation.

(C) They do, however, show great care for each other, since they view harmony as essential to relationship improvement. They work hard to prevent those they view as outsiders from getting information they believe to be unfavorable.

*disclosure: (정보의) 공개
(B)-(A)-(C)
A god called Moinee was defeated by a rival god called Dromerdeener in a terrible battle up in the stars. Moinee fell out of the stars down to Tasmania to die.[/bold]

(A) He took pity on the people, gave them bendable knees and cut off their inconvenient kangaroo tails so they could all sit down at last. Then they lived happily ever after.

(B) Then he died. The people hated having kangaroo tails and no knees, and they cried out to the heavens for help. Dromerdeener heard their cry and came down to Tasmania to see what the matter was.

(C) Before he died, he wanted to give a last blessing to his final resting place, so he decided to create humans. But he was in such a hurry, knowing he was dying, that he forgot to give them knees; and he absent­-mindedly gave them big tails like kangaroos, which meant they couldn’t sit down.
(C)-(B)-(A)
In the U.S. we have so many metaphors for time and its passing that we think of time as “a thing,” that is “the weekend is almost gone,” or “I haven’t got the time.”[/bold]

There are some cultures that can be referred to as “people who live outside of time.” The Amondawa tribe, living in Brazil, does not have a concept of time that can be measured or counted. (①) Rather they live in a world of serial events, rather than seeing events as being rooted in time. (②) Researchers also found that no one had an age. (③) Instead, they change their names to reflect their stage of life and position within their society, so a little child will give up their name to a newborn sibling and take on a new one. (④) We think such statements are objective, but they aren’t. (⑤) We create these metaphors, but the Amondawa don’t talk or think in metaphors for time.
*metaphor: 은유  
**sibling: 형제자매
4
Of course, within cultures individual attitudes can vary dramatically.

The natural world provides a rich source of symbols used in art and literature. (①) Plants and animals are central to mythology, dance, song, poetry, rituals, festivals, and holidays around the world. (②) Different cultures can exhibit opposite attitudes toward a given species. (③) Snakes, for example, are honored by some cultures and hated by others. (④) Rats are considered pests in much of Europe and North America and greatly respected in some parts of India. (⑤) For instance, in Britain many people dislike rodents, and yet there are several associations devoted to breeding them, including the National Mouse Club and the National Fancy Rat Club.
*pest: 유해 동물  
**rodent: (쥐, 다람쥐 등이 속한) 설치류
5
Paying attention to some people and not others doesn’t mean you’re being dismissive or arrogant. ①It just reflects a hard fact: there are limits on the number of people we can possibly pay attention to or develop a relationship with. ②Some scientists even believe that the number of people with whom we can continue stable social relationships might be limited naturally by our brains. ③The more people you know of different backgrounds, the more colorful your life becomes. ④Professor Robin Dunbar has explained that our minds are only really capable of forming meaningful relationships with a maximum of about a hundred and fifty people. ⑤Whether that’s true or not, it’s safe to assume that we can’t be real friends with everyone.
*dismissive: 무시하는  
**arrogant: 거만한
3
While there are many evolutionary or cultural reasons for cooperation, the eyes are one of the most important means of cooperation, and eye contact may be the most powerful human force we lose in traffic. It is, arguably, the reason why humans, normally a quite cooperative species, can become so noncooperative on the road. Most of the time we are moving too fast—we begin to lose the ability to keep eye contact around 20 miles per hour—or it is not safe to look. Maybe our view is blocked. Often other drivers are wearing sunglasses, or their car may have tinted windows. (And do you really want to make eye contact with those drivers?) Sometimes we make eye contact through the rearview mirror, but it feels weak, not quite believable at first, as it is not “face-­to-­face.”
*tinted: 색이 옅게 들어간

While driving, people become ____(A)____, because they make ____(B)____ eye contact.
uncooperative - little
Many high school students study and learn inefficiently because they insist on doing their homework while watching TV or listening to loud music. These same students also typically (a)interrupt their studying with repeated phone calls, trips to the kitchen, video games, and Internet surfing. Ironically, students with the greatest need to concentrate when studying are often the ones who surround themselves with the most distractions. These teenagers argue that they can study better with the TV or radio (b)playing. Some professionals actually (c)oppose their position. They argue that many teenagers can actually study productively under less­-than­-ideal conditions because they’ve been exposed repeatedly to “background noise” since early childhood. These educators argue that children have become (d)used to the sounds of the TV, video games, and loud music. They also argue that insisting students turn off the TV or radio when doing homework will not necessarily improve their academic performance. This position is certainly not generally shared, however. Many teachers and learning experts are (e)convinced by their own experiences that students who study in a noisy environment often learn inefficiently.
Studying with Distractions: Is It Okay?
Many high school students study and learn inefficiently because they insist on doing their homework while watching TV or listening to loud music. These same students also typically (a)interrupt their studying with repeated phone calls, trips to the kitchen, video games, and Internet surfing. Ironically, students with the greatest need to concentrate when studying are often the ones who surround themselves with the most distractions. These teenagers argue that they can study better with the TV or radio (b)playing. Some professionals actually (c)oppose their position. They argue that many teenagers can actually study productively under less­-than­-ideal conditions because they’ve been exposed repeatedly to “background noise” since early childhood. These educators argue that children have become (d)used to the sounds of the TV, video games, and loud music. They also argue that insisting students turn off the TV or radio when doing homework will not necessarily improve their academic performance. This position is certainly not generally shared, however. Many teachers and learning experts are (e)convinced by their own experiences that students who study in a noisy environment often learn inefficiently.
(c)
(A) Dorothy was home alone. She was busy with a school project, and suddenly wanted to eat French fries. She peeled two potatoes, sliced them up and put a pot with cooking oil on the stove. Then the telephone rang. It was her best friend Samantha. While chatting away on the phone, Dorothy noticed a strange light shining from the kitchen, and then (a) she remembered about the pot of oil on the stove!

(B) A while later, after the wound had been treated, the family sat around the kitchen table and talked. “I learned a big lesson today,” Dorothy said. Her parents expected (b) her to say something about the fire. But she talked about something different. “I have decided to use kind words more just like you.” Her parents were very grateful, because Dorothy had quite a temper.

(C) Dorothy dropped the phone and rushed to the kitchen. The oil was on fire. “Chill! Take a deep breath,” (c) she said to herself. What did they teach us not to do in a situation like this? Don’t try to put it out by throwing water on it, because it will cause an explosion, she remembered. She picked up the pot’s lid and covered the pot with it to put out the flames. In the process she burned her hands. Dorothy felt dizzy and sat down at the kitchen table.

(D) A couple of minutes later, her parents came rushing into the house. Samantha had suspected that something might be wrong after Dorothy dropped the phone just like that, and (d) she had phoned Dorothy’s parents. Dorothy started to cry. Her mother hugged her tightly and looked at the wound. “Tell me what happened,” she said. Dorothy told her, sobbing and sniffing. “Aren’t you going to yell at me?” (e) she asked them through the tears. Her father answered with a smile, “I also put my lid on to keep me from exploding.” Dorothy looked at him, relieved. “But be careful not to be so irresponsible again.”
* sob: 흐느껴 울다 ** sniff: 코를 훌쩍거리다
(C)-(D)-(B)
(A) Dorothy was home alone. She was busy with a school project, and suddenly wanted to eat French fries. She peeled two potatoes, sliced them up and put a pot with cooking oil on the stove. Then the telephone rang. It was her best friend Samantha. While chatting away on the phone, Dorothy noticed a strange light shining from the kitchen, and then (a) she remembered about the pot of oil on the stove!

(B) A while later, after the wound had been treated, the family sat around the kitchen table and talked. “I learned a big lesson today,” Dorothy said. Her parents expected (b) her to say something about the fire. But she talked about something different. “I have decided to use kind words more just like you.” Her parents were very grateful, because Dorothy had quite a temper.

(C) Dorothy dropped the phone and rushed to the kitchen. The oil was on fire. “Chill! Take a deep breath,” (c) she said to herself. What did they teach us not to do in a situation like this? Don’t try to put it out by throwing water on it, because it will cause an explosion, she remembered. She picked up the pot’s lid and covered the pot with it to put out the flames. In the process she burned her hands. Dorothy felt dizzy and sat down at the kitchen table.

(D) A couple of minutes later, her parents came rushing into the house. Samantha had suspected that something might be wrong after Dorothy dropped the phone just like that, and (d) she had phoned Dorothy’s parents. Dorothy started to cry. Her mother hugged her tightly and looked at the wound. “Tell me what happened,” she said. Dorothy told her, sobbing and sniffing. “Aren’t you going to yell at me?” (e) she asked them through the tears. Her father answered with a smile, “I also put my lid on to keep me from exploding.” Dorothy looked at him, relieved. “But be careful not to be so irresponsible again.”
* sob: 흐느껴 울다 ** sniff: 코를 훌쩍거리다
(d)
(A) Dorothy was home alone. She was busy with a school project, and suddenly wanted to eat French fries. She peeled two potatoes, sliced them up and put a pot with cooking oil on the stove. Then the telephone rang. It was her best friend Samantha. While chatting away on the phone, Dorothy noticed a strange light shining from the kitchen, and then (a) she remembered about the pot of oil on the stove!

(B) A while later, after the wound had been treated, the family sat around the kitchen table and talked. “I learned a big lesson today,” Dorothy said. Her parents expected (b) her to say something about the fire. But she talked about something different. “I have decided to use kind words more just like you.” Her parents were very grateful, because Dorothy had quite a temper.

(C) Dorothy dropped the phone and rushed to the kitchen. The oil was on fire. “Chill! Take a deep breath,” (c) she said to herself. What did they teach us not to do in a situation like this? Don’t try to put it out by throwing water on it, because it will cause an explosion, she remembered. She picked up the pot’s lid and covered the pot with it to put out the flames. In the process she burned her hands. Dorothy felt dizzy and sat down at the kitchen table.

(D) A couple of minutes later, her parents came rushing into the house. Samantha had suspected that something might be wrong after Dorothy dropped the phone just like that, and (d) she had phoned Dorothy’s parents. Dorothy started to cry. Her mother hugged her tightly and looked at the wound. “Tell me what happened,” she said. Dorothy told her, sobbing and sniffing. “Aren’t you going to yell at me?” (e) she asked them through the tears. Her father answered with a smile, “I also put my lid on to keep me from exploding.” Dorothy looked at him, relieved. “But be careful not to be so irresponsible again.”
* sob: 흐느껴 울다 ** sniff: 코를 훌쩍거리다
아버지의 말을 듣고 화를 냈다.
학원에서 이용중인 교재의 어법/문법 연습문제 또는 듣기시험을 10분만에 제작하여
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