高考英语 定语从句百题拔高专练(十二)-2026届高考英语一轮复习专项

2026-01-11
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学段 高中
学科 英语
教材版本 -
年级 高三
章节 -
类型 题集-专项训练
知识点 定语从句
使用场景 高考复习-一轮复习
学年 2026-2027
地区(省份) 全国
地区(市) -
地区(区县) -
文件格式 DOCX
文件大小 48 KB
发布时间 2026-01-11
更新时间 2026-01-11
作者 老九书斋
品牌系列 -
审核时间 2026-01-11
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高考英语 定语从句百题拔高专练(十二) 原创作者:老九书斋 于:2026.1 1.The best thing could happen for you right now would be a nice nonlethal injury to take you out of the game. 2.It's not as if it's the first time we've saved the fairy world. 3.We can't afford to miss a word these people say.  4.Technically,' she said, 'the only crime we are guilty of is fare-dodging, and perhaps not even that. 5.How can you kidnap something is not supposed to exist? 6.The girl, had been smiling still at her quark joke, switched to irritated mode. 7. If a single person uncovers a single detail of our plan, everything we have worked for could be ruined. 8.All of would have been a perfectly acceptable code, had there not been a camera pointed right at them. 9.Artemis was speaking into his little finger transmitted the  vibrations to the fairy phone in his palm. 10.There was an observation tower on the building's southern corner afforded any sentry a 360-degree view of any avenue of approach.  11.The Market District was a lowlife zone, as much as you could have a lowlife zone on a street boasted two hundred cameras and a permanent LEP cabin on the corner. 12.There was something about thievery made his heart sing.  13.The last time I saw Doodah, he was scraping dwarf gunge off his boots. 14.Mulch followed the transmitter's signal through the main restaurant down a shabby corridor and into the restrooms, were even shabbier.  15.He wormed his way through into a far more salubrious room than the one he had just left. 16.'He's crazy,' he gibbered, tumbling from the hatch of a tiny titanium pod, had been landed expertly on a flat patch not much bigger than a postage stamp. 17.But all I really want to know is whether you can make it to the septic tank. 18. He could tell from a single glance that this toy wouldn't do much more than walking speed, would be zero use to him in an emergency.  19.Artemis glanced across at Butler, was lying beside him on the verge and couldn't help overhearing the entire exchange. 20.Instead he squatted on his hunkers, ran his fingers through Manga hair and lit a cigarette, Minerva promptly plucked from his lips and squashed underfoot. 21.Minerva's gaze swept past the rock cluster and rested on the line of bushes they were hiding.  22.Wang Yi, a member of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and foreign minister, visited Tanzania on Friday and Saturday, during he met with his counterpart, Mahmoud Thabit Kombo. 23.The two ministers spoke highly of the traditional friendship between China and Tanzania, is built on trust and mutual respect, said the communique. 24. The lower classes spoke the English of the original Piers Plowman text, would be considerably more obscure than their superiors' French if the two were now reproduced or imitated. 25.The most the chronicles can do is to catch the cadence and style of their talk, and to infuse here and there such a dash of the archaic as may indicate their fashion of speech. 26.I am aware that there are incidents may strike the modern reader as brutal and repellent.  27.There is no incident in the text for very good warrant may not be given. 28. I look round my study table and I survey those lie with me at the moment, before I happily disperse them forever.  29.They crept into the churches the trembling people were blessed and shriven by the trembling priests.  30.All was still, and nothing moved, save only the great cloud rolled up and onward, with fold on fold from the black horizon. 31.They feared a famine, but it was worse than famine was in store for them. 32.For the rain had ceased at last, and a sickly autumn sun shone upon a land these people ever lived with their families. 33.Wet and rotten leaves reeked and festered under the foulest haze rose from the woods.  34.Of those were stricken none recovered, and the illness was ever the same—gross boils, raving, and the black blotches  gave its name to the disease.  35. Then at last the spring came with sunshine and health and lightness and laughter—the greenest, sweetest, tenderest spring England had ever known—but only half of England could know it. 36.No high turret nor cunning moat could keep out that black commoner struck them down. 37.Therefore the few should be freemen, name their own price, and work where and for they would. 38.Those were rich became poor, but the ones were poor already, and especially those were poor with the burden of gentility upon their shoulders, found themselves in a perilous state.  39.On many a manor-house there came evil times, and on none more than on the Manor of Tilford, for many generations the noble family of the Lorings had held their home. 40.There was a time the Lorings had held the country from the North Downs to the Lakes of Frensham, and their grim castle-keep rising above the green meadows border the River Wey had been the strongest fortalice betwixt Guildford Castle in the east and Winchester in the west. 41. It lingered on for years, this great lawsuit, and when it was finished the men of the Church and the men of the Law had divided all was richest of the estate between them.  42.There was still left the old manor-house from with each generation there came a soldier to uphold the credit of the name and to show the five scarlet roses on the silver shield it had always been shown—in the van. 43.There were twelve bronzes in the little chapel  Matthew the priest said mass every morning, all of men of the house of Loring.  44.We trace the feud betwixt the monks and the house of Loring, with those events it gave birth, ending with the coming of Chandos, the strange spear-running of Tilford Bridge and the deeds with Nigel won fame in the wars. 45. Those love him may read herein those things went to his making.  46.The day was the first of May, was the Festival of the Blessed Apostles Philip and James.  47.All around for many a mile on every side stretched the fertile and flourishing estate of he was the master. 48. From across the cloister there rolled the distant rise and fall of a Gregorian chant, the precentor was hard at work upon the choir. 49.He looked out at the greensward of the cloister, and at the graceful line of open Gothic arches skirted a covered walk for the brethren within.  50.He held the scales of justice in all the only Abbey banlieue stretched over many a mile of Hampshire and of Surrey. 51. Brother Samuel the sacrist, office, corresponding to that of the layman's bailiff, placed the material interests of the monastery and its dealings with the outer world entirely under his control, subject only to the check of the Abbot. 52.Brother Samuel was a gnarled and stringy old monk stern and sharp-featured face reflected no light from above but only that sordid workaday world toward it was forever turned.  53. There is  Sergeant Wilkins, the lawyer of Guildford, I will warrant to draw up such arrears of dues and rents and issues of hidage and fodder-corn that these folk, are as beggarly as they are proud, will have to sell the roof-tree over them ere they can meet them. 54.At every turn he was made to feel how thin was the veil, and how easily rent, screened him from the awful denizens of the unseen world. 55.Hence the wild announcement of the frightened monk seemed terrible rather than incredible to those he addressed. 56. He clutched the monk's arm with a grip left its five purple spots for many a day to come. 57.It is the horse of Franklin Aylward, my father, has been distrained by us because he owes the Abbey fifty good shillings and can never hope to pay it.  58.Such a horse, they say, is not to be found betwixt this and the King's stables at Windsor, for his sire was a Spanish destrier, and his dam an Arab mare of the very breed Saladin, soul now reeks in Hell, kept for his own use, and even it has been said under the shelter of his own tent.  59. I ordered the varlets had haltered him to leave him alone in the water-meadow, for I have heard that the beast has indeed a most evil spirit, and has killed more men than one. 60.Had two of these ropes settled upon the horse, and had their throwers found some purchase of stump or boulder by they could hold them. 61.But the brains were themselves at fault imagined that one such rope would serve any purpose save to endanger the thrower. 62.On the very road led to the old dark manor-house upon the side of the hill a youth had been riding. 63. The man, hardly deigning to glance at his fell neighbor, passed on to the wounded forester, raised him in his arms with a strength could not have been expected in so slight a body, and carried him, groaning, to the wall, a dozen hands were outstretched to help him over. 64.Then, at his leisure, the young man also climbed the wall, smiling back with cool contempt at the yellow horse, had come raging after him once more. 65.if you were to speak to the holy Father Abbot in a manner suited to his high rank and to that respect is due to a Prince of the Church. 66.Ill fare the day that ever I took the beast from the Castle stud at Guildford, they could do nothing with it and no rider could be found bold enough to mount it!  67.A hard brown old woodman had been shooting vermin in the Abbey groves stepped forward with a grin of pleasure. 68.After a lifetime of stoats and foxes, this was indeed a noble quarry  was to fall before him.  69.Would you take life from a creature only fault is that its spirit is so high that it has met none yet dare control it?  70.At the first words had shown him the turn affairs had taken he had run swiftly to the spot where he had left his pony.  71. Yet I thank you, for there are two things upon earth for I have ever yearned, and my thin purse could never buy.  72.The one is a noble horse, such a horse as my father's son should have betwixt his thighs, and here is the only one of all others I would have chosen. 73.But the lithe figure on his back, bending like a reed in the wind to every movement, firm below, pliant above, with calm inexorable face, and eyes danced and gleamed with the joy of contest, still held its masterful place for all the fiery heart and the iron muscles of the great beast could do. 74.He would break in red ruin at the base of it if he could but dash forever the life of this man, claimed mastery over that had never found its master yet. 75. What were those straps   galled the tossing neck, this band spanned its chest? 76. He loathed this place, these people, all and everything threatened his freedom.  77.Let him away to the uttermost parts of the earth, to the great plains freedom is.  78.Anywhere over the far horizon he could get away from the defiling bit and the insufferable mastery of man. 79.Through the deep heather, down the gullies, over the watercourses, up the broken slopes, Pommers flew, his great heart bursting with rage, and every fiber quivering at the indignities  he had endured. 80.The red eye rolled up at him, but it was wonder not hatred, a prayer and not a threat, he could read in it.  81.Here lived Charles the page, Peter the old falconer, Red Swire had followed Nigel's grandfather to the Scottish wars, Weathercote the broken minstrel, John the cook, and other survivors of more prosperous days, still clung to the old house as the barnacles to some wrecked and stranded vessel. 82.The supper had been removed, and so had the trestle tables upon it had been served, so that the room seemed bare and empty. 83.The stone floor was strewed with a thick layer of green rushes, was swept out every Saturday and carried with it all the dirt and debris of the week. 84.Several dogs were now crouched among these rushes, gnawing and cracking those bones had been thrown from the table.  85.But if the actual fittings of the room would have appeared scanty to one had lived in a more luxurious age, he would have been surprised on looking up to see the multitude of objects were suspended above his head.  86.Then from side to side the room was spanned by heavy oaken beams from a great number of objects were hanging.  87.And even of the heavy oak staff with she supported her failing limbs, was widespread through all the country round. 88.Yet if she was feared she was also respected, for in days books were few and readers scarce, a long memory and a ready tongue were of the more value. 89.Poor as she was, there was no one in Surrey guidance would be more readily sought upon a question of precedence or of conduct than the Dame Ermyntrude Loring. 90.Yet the horse you brought home was a very different horse I wot, to that was given you.  91.But your father and Sir Lorredan of Genoa, commanded the Christopher, fought upon the high poop. 92.But now all are of a level, and only here and there one like yourself, fair son, reminds me of the men who/that are gone. 93. And you—it will be a blessed day for you, since I have held you back from that world your brave spirit longs to plunge. 94.There is Sir John Chandos, has won such credit in the French wars and rides ever by the King's bridle-arm.  95.Trouble will come of it, Nigel, for the Abbot of Waverley is not one will hold back the shield of the Church from those are her servants. 96.He bore a great sheet of parchment with a fringe of dangling seals, he held aloft as he entered. 97. There was a time ten knights, forty men-at-arms and two hundred archers would march behind the scarlet roses.  98.Who are you, you rascal robbers, dare to misuse the King's name and to lay hands upon one smallest drop of blood has more worth than all your thrall and caitiff bodies? 99.There is a law of England, mark you, and there are those serve and uphold it, are the true men and the King's own lieges. 100.Such a one is this graceless old man with the ax, I have seen already this day.  高考英语 定语从句百题拔高专练(十二) 答案 (1--10) 1.that 2. that 3.that/which that 5. that 6.who 7. that 8.which 9.which/that 10.which/that (11--20) 11.which/that 12. that 13. that 14.which 15. that 16.which 17. that 18. which 19.who 20.which (21--30) 21.where 22.which 23.which 24. which 25.that 26.which/that 27.which 28. which 29. where 30. which/that (31--40) 31. which/that 32.where 33.that 34.who;which/that 35.that 36.who/that 37.whom 38.who;who;who 39.where 40.when;when;which/that (41--50) 41. that 42.which;where 43.where 44.to which;which 45. who;which 46. which 47.which 48.where 49.which/that 50.that (51--60) 51. whose 52.whose;which 53. whom;who 54.which 55.whom/who 56. which/that 57.which 58.that;whose 59. who/that 60.which (61--70) 61.which/that 62.that 63. which/that;where 64.which 65. which 66. where 67.who/that 68.which/that 69.whose;who 70. that;which/that (71--80) 71.which;which 72.that 73.which/that;that 74.who;which 75. which;which/that 76.that 77. where 78. where 79.which/that 80.which (81--90) 81.who/that;who 82.which 83.which 84.which 85.who;which/that 86.which 87.which 88. when 89.whose 90.which/that;which (91--100) 91.who 92.who 93. into which 94.who;who 95.who;who 96.which 97. when 98.who;whose 99.who;who100.whom 1 学科网(北京)股份有限公司 $

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高考英语 定语从句百题拔高专练(十二)-2026届高考英语一轮复习专项
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高考英语 定语从句百题拔高专练(十二)-2026届高考英语一轮复习专项
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高考英语 定语从句百题拔高专练(十二)-2026届高考英语一轮复习专项
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