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1 . Many cars in advertisements, exhibits and at car sales in the United States are red, blue or green —but almost 75 percent of new cars sold in the United States are black, white, silver or gray.

Jackson is a reporter who writes about cars. He says the car colors Americans choose do not show dirt as much as the colors of other cars. He says that means the owners wash their cars less, saving money. And he notes some areas that are suffering from water shortages do not permit people to wash their cars often, if at all.

Dan Benton works for a company called Axalta, which makes supplies for international car makers. He says when white cars are sold by their owners, they often sell for higher amounts than cars of other colors. And he notes that white cars “absorb less energy" than cars of other colors. This means temperatures inside them are lower in warmer areas.

Dan Benton also says research at Monash University in Australia suggests that there is a lower risk of crashes during the day for white cars compared with darker ones.

Axalta says about 11 percent of cars sold in North America are red and 8 percent are blue. In South America, 10 percent of new cars sold are red.

Car buyers in other countries also like white. Jane Harrington works for PPG Industries, a company that makes paint for cars. She said in China, buyers say white makes a small car look bigger.

Green has become less popular. Dan Benton notes that in the mid 1990s, “green was the most popular color in North America. Today, green is hard to find."

Sometime in the future, people may not have to choose the color of their car - technology may let owners change their car's paint color anytime.

1. According to Jackson, Americans favor cars of black mostly because they________.
A.stand washingB.don't look dirty
C.are environmentally friendlyD.aren't in need of cleaning often
2. What does the underlined word "they" in Paragraph 3 refer to?
A.White cars.B.Black cars.C.Car sellers.D.Car makers.
3. Who thinks that white seems to add the inside space of a car?
A.Dan Benton.B.Jane Harrington.C.Australians.D.Chinese.
4. What could be the most suitable title for the text?
A.Cares Are Different in Style
B.Colors Increase a Car's Popularity
C.What Are the Colors of Choice for Cars?
D.What Type of Car Sells Well in the Market?
2021-05-11更新 | 92次组卷 | 1卷引用:四川省泸州市2021届高三下学期第三次教学质量诊断性考试英语试卷(含听力)
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2 . Indonesian university student Tyas Sisianindita spends about eight hours a day on her phone. That time includes watching videos, chatting with friends and using social media. "At night, when I can't sleep, I can use my phone for up to five hours," she said, noting she checks her phone countless times from morning until night. She even checks it while in class.

Tyas goes to the University of Indonesia, where a team of students recently developed a device meant to fight phone addiction. The students spent three months creating the device, which can help internet users like Tyas diminish time they spend looking at their phones.

Inventor Irfan Budi Satria led the development team. The device is called “Nettox", which combines the words “internet" and "detox (排毒)". Users wear it on their arm. The device has a sensor that measures hemoglobin (红蛋白) oxygen levels and changes to the heart rate called HRV. Studies have found that using a mobile phone for long hours can lower HRV levels. The Nettox device makes a sound when HRV and blood oxygen levels fall, which reminds wearers to stop using their phones.

For people between the ages of 18 and 25, the HRV should stay above 60. At a recent trial, Tyas' HRV reading was 44.

Internet addiction is a growing social issue in Indonesia. In October, two teenagers were treated for their addiction to internet gaming, media reported.

Irfan Budi Satria's team is working to improve Nettox's accuracy. HRV readings can change depending on whether the user is a man or woman, and what their body shape and health conditions are.

The team aims to get a patent for their invention with the university by next year. Irfan says Nettox is for people already trying to change their behavior. "Our goal is to help people who want to free themselves from internet addiction," he said.

1. What can we learn about Tyas from Paragraph1?
A.She often sleeps late.B.She often skips classes.
C.She is addicted to phones.D.She is skilled in the media.
2. Which word may replace the underlined word “diminish" in Paragraph 2?
A.Kill.B.Treasure.C.Record.D.Reduce.
3. What does Paragraph 3 mainly talk about?
A.How the device works.B.Where Nettox is from.
C.When users wear the device.D.Why hemoglobin changes with HRV.
4. What is the team focusing on now according to the text?
A.Applying for a patent.B.Setting free phone addicts.
C.Bettering the device's accuracy.D.Studying internet addiction.
2021-05-11更新 | 95次组卷 | 1卷引用:四川省泸州市2021届高三下学期第三次教学质量诊断性考试英语试卷(含听力)
阅读理解-阅读单选(约350词) | 适中(0.65) |
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3 . A shocking news report has revealed that more than one in five species of maple trees faces extinction, warning that 75% of the threatened species are “geographically restricted” in their native regions.

The trees are experiencing a vast decline in habitat, due to urban development, wood harvesting and agricultural expansion. Time is running out for the world's biodiversity. Every recent survey of plants and animals in the wild points to this. This is happening nearly everywhere rarer maples exist. And because of climate change, the narrow habitats that support species at the edges of dry places and at the tops of mountains are quickly disappearing.

The trees can be found in subtropical and tropical regions, as far south as Indonesia. The only species found in the UK, the field maple is not under threat. Not only are the trees a popular attractive feature in parks and public spaces, but they are a key part of the natural ecosystem in woodlands, as well as being an important wood crop in several countries. Although the sugar maple in North America, which produces maple juice, is not endangered, two of the closest relatives to the species are endangered.

The report notes that conserving at-risk species in their natural habitat is the best conservation tactic. But collections in botanical gardens and seed banks-called "ex situ collections" can act as insurance policies against extinction. There are currently 14 species of maple, including four that are critically endangered, which are absent from these types of collections.

One species in Mexico, the Acer binzayedii, is in “desperate need of conservation"”despite only being discovered in 2017. “It is at risk from climate change in its cloud forest habitat and threatened by logging and forest fires while it is also absent from 'ex situ collections',” the report adds. The report recommends developing conservation plans, monitoring species currently not at risk to ensure populations are maintained, and adding those missing maple species to seed banks.

1. What is paragraph 2 mainly about?
A.Action to protect maple trees.B.The dangerous situation of maple trees.
C.Various maple trees' habitats in the world.D.The conditions for diversity in maple trees.
2. What do the field maple and the sugar maple have in common?
A.They cannot produce juice.B.They are found in America.
C.They are not at risk of extinction.D.They have two endangered relatives.
3. What does the underlined word “tactic” in paragraph 4 probably mean?
A.Topic.B.Approach.C.Result.D.Conclusion.
4. What's the main purpose of the report?
A.To offer a proposal.B.To recommend a product.
C.To introduce maple species.D.To warn people of disasters.

4 . When you hear the beginning of your favorite song from the radio, suddenly your neck is covered in goose bumps.

It's such a thing that a group of scientists call “skin excitement”—a feeling of cold caused not by a drop in temperature or sudden scare, but by the sense of beauty. “Skin excitement” can come from a song, a painting, a moving movie scene, or even a beloved memory-pretty much anything that causes the giving out of pleasure-soaked dopamine in your brain. But it does not come for all of us.

Your favorite music uncovers a lot about your personality,and so does how you respond to that music. Studies suppose that as few as 55 percent of people experience “skin excitement” when listening to music. And if you count yourself among this group, the goose bumps on your skin aren't the only giveaway—scientists can read it in your brain, too. In a new study published in the journal Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, Harvard researchers performed brain scans on 10 students who said they reliably got cold when listening to music, and 10 students who didn't. They found that the cold-prone brains may really be excited by stronger emotions.

Cold-prone brains are generally more likely to show stronger emotional intelligence than no-cold brains. Cold-prone minds tend to have unusual active imagination, reflect more deeply on their emotions, and appreciate nature and the beauty of music and art to a stronger degree than no-cold brains.

So, what type of music causes the chills? It seems that the type is not so important; participants in the new study reported getting cold from songs of every kind. And any song connected with a strong emotional memory of the listener can produce the most reliable results. For me, that's the song Sailing to Philadelphia by Mark Knopfler, which I listened to as a kid in the car with my dad, on the way to the summer camp.

1. What can we learn about “skin excitement” in the text?
A.It helps to produce doparmine.B.It is caused by the pain in the skin.
C.It can be experienced by every music listener.D.It is the human body's reaction to something nice.
2. What does the new study by Harvard researchers mainly find?
A.The percentage of music lovers in students.
B.The solutions to the goose bumps on one's skin.
C.The differences between cold-prone and no-cold brains.
D.The relationship between one's music preference and personality.
3. What are people with cold-prone brains like?
A.Beautiful and intelligent.B.Emotional and dishonest.
C.Imaginative and sensitive.D.Brave and strong-minded.
4. Which of the following can be the best title for the text?
A.Responses to Music Vary among PeopleB.A Feeling of Cold Is Caused by Horrible Music
C.Your Favorite Music Reveals Your PersonalityD.Favorite Music May Bring Forth Goose Bumps

5 . In Japan, some workers who regularly drink beer at the end of the day are giving their livers a rest by turning to beer that is free, or nearly free of alcohol.The liver is the organ that works to remove alcohol from the body. Masuda, one of beer lovers, said he is paying more attention to his health now that he is older.

Asahi is a large beverage company in Japan, which made 20 percent more money from low-alcohol beer in 2020 compared to the year before. Kirin is another company that makes things to drink. It saw sales grow by 10 percent last year and expects another increase this year.

The increase in sales of non-alcoholic beer might be the result of many Japanese people spending more time at home. In the past, they would order beers together while going out. More people are trying to stay healthy as well. Also, fewer people are drinking beer, as wine and other alcoholic drinks become more popular. But the new interest in low-alcohol beer has helped the beverage industry in Japan.

In recent years, many companies started making non-alcoholic beers. They caught on in places like Australia and Germany but not in Japan – until this year.

The chief of Suntory, another large beverage company in Japan, said people only responded to non-alcoholic beer advertising when the product started to taste better. Many people agree that today's non-alcoholic beers taste better than they used to. Asahi's "Beery" has very little alcohol. But it is supposed to have more taste than earlier versions of low-alcohol beer because of a new way of removing the alcohol. The company plans to offer more low-alcohol beers in coming years.

Kazuo Matsuyama is marketing chief for Asahi, who said most beer companies used to advertise to people who had a drink every day. That was about 20 million people. But there are about 80 million people in Japan between the ages of 20 and 60." But now we need to look at others." Matsuyama said.

1. Why do some Japanese workers turn to beers free of alcohol nowadays?
A.To appreciate a tasty flavor.B.To ensure a healthier lifestyle.
C.To get rid of liver cancer.D.To relieve stress in their life.
2. What’s the author’s statement on beverage companies’ excellent sales in 2020 based on?
A.Beverage company traditions.
B.Financial reports.
C.Published statistics.
D.Public opinions.
3. What’s Australian’s attitude to non-alcoholic beers?
A.Enthusiastic.B.Indifferent.C.Critical.D.Objective.
4. What’s the text mainly about?
A.New lifestyles in Japan.
B.The development of Asahi.
C.Introductions of different beers.
D.Popularity of alcohol free beers.

6 . Wouldn’t it be great if you could correct your eyesight, especially nearsightedness, and reduce your dependence on glasses and needn’t have eye surgery? The solution is called orthokeratology, or ortho-k (角膜塑形镜).

What is ortho-k?

Orthokeratology( ortho- k)is the fitting of specially designed contact lenses (隐形眼镜) that you wear overnight while you are asleep, the lenses gently reshape the front surface of your cornea (角膜) so you can see clearly the following day after you remove the lenses when you wake up.

How long does the ortho-k effect last?

You should be able to see acceptably well without glasses or contact lenses for a day or two, sometimes longer. For best results, one should wear the ortho- k lenses every might.

Who are good candidates for ortho-k?

Most people with mild to average nearsightedness are good candidates for ortho-k. Because the cornmeal reshaping effect is temporary, little risk is involved, and you can discontinue wearing the lenses at any time. Children and young adults who want to be gases-free but are too young for eye surgery or are afraid of taking the surgery often are good candidates for ortho-k. People who participate in contact sports or work in dusty environments that can have problems for contact lens wear also can be good candidates.

How much does ortho-k cost?

Costs also can vary based on the region of the country and the type of practice where you have the procedure performed. Ortho-k prices in the US generally range from $1, 000 to $2, 000 But particularly difficult cases of ortho-k can cost as much as $4.000.

There are additional costs for lens care solutions and following up exams, which can total about $300 to $ 500 per year.

Finally, keep in mind that, as with all contact lenses, there are some possible side effects of wearing ortho-k lenses. Ask your eye doctor for details.

1. According to the passage, which way is introduced to correct eyesight?
A.Performing an operation of the cornea.
B.Applying contact lenses in the daytime.
C.Fitting proper glasses during the night.
D.Wearing especially designed contact lenses.
2. Which of the following statements is right?
A.You have to wear ortho-k day and night to ensure good results.
B.Ortho-k is a good choice for a man with average nearsightedness.
C.The cast of ortho-k in the city is higher than that in the countryside.
D.There is no need for people to worry about the side effects of ortho-k.
3. How much will a person pay for using otho-k for the first year at least?
A.1, 000.B.$1, 300.C.$1, 500.D.$2, 000.
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7 . With the world’s attention on vaccines (疫苗), now feels like a good moment to sing the praises of an often forgotten contribution to their development. Three hundred years ago this month, Lady Mary Wortley Montagu got her daughter inoculated (接种) against smallpox, making her child the first person in the West to be protected in this way. Without Montagu’s willingness to adopt a practice she had learned from other cultures, the introduction of vaccines around 80 years later would never have taken place.

Montagu first witnessed inoculation when she accompanied her husband to Turkey in 1717. Inoculation had started in Asia, probably in China, as early as the 10th century AD. Montagu observed how older women in Turkey took a tiny amount of pus (脓) from a person with smallpox. They then used needles to make cuts on people’s wrists and ankles and added the pus to their bloodstream. This helped people gain immunity from future infection.

Like other visitors to the country, Montagu took steps to ensure that her son was inoculated in Turkey. This worked well, but she knew that trying it in England would be far more challenging. Inoculation performed by unlicensed amateurs would threaten doctors’ professional standing and potentially rob them of valuable income. Churchmen also disagree with the practice, as they saw it as going against nature.

Back in England, Montagu observed the increased severity of smallpox infections. Eventually, in April 1721, she decided to use the Turkish practice to have her daughter inoculated, because she believed that the rewards would outweigh the risks. After a safe time had passed following the inoculation, Montagu allowed doctors to examine her daughter.

Doctors in Britain gradually accepted the practice. About so years later, a pioneering physician found smallpox vaccines to destroy smallpox completely. As early as last century, academics argued that Montagu was no more than an enthusiastic amateur. In truth, she made a vital scientific contribution towards finding the cure for smallpox.

1. What is the second paragraph mainly about?
A.The origin of smallpox inoculation.
B.Montagu’s first access to inoculation.
C.The benefits from smallpox inoculation.
D.Turkish women’s invention of inoculation.
2. Montagu found it difficult to try inoculation in England because ________.
A.it was against human natureB.it might harm doctors’ interests
C.it was beyond doctors’ abilitiesD.it might shake churchmen’s belief
3. What led doctors in Britain to accept inoculation?
A.The increased severity of smallpox infections.
B.A physician’s discovery of smallpox vaccines.
C.The result of Montagu’s daughter’s inoculation.
D.Montagu’s focus on its rewards rather than its risks.
4. What might be the best title of the test?
A.An unsung heroB.No limit to creation
C.Development of vaccinesD.A historic medical innovation
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8 . In the winter of 1910, Dr. Wu Lien-teh stepped off a train in the northern Chinese city of Harbin. He was there to solve a medical mystery, at great personal risk. Over the past few months, an unknown disease had swept along the railways of northeast China, killing 99.9%of its victims. The Qing Imperial court had sent the Cambridge-educated Dr. Wu north to stop the epidemic (流行病).

When Dr Wu arrived in Harbin on Christmas Eve, 1910, he carried little in the way of medical instruments and had only one assistant. One of Wu’s first acts upon arrival was to set up special quarantine (隔离) units and to order lockdowns to stop infected persons from traveling and spreading the disease. He had teams check households for possible cases, and even managed to convince authorities to completely close the railways in the early weeks of 1911. Of particular concern was the upcoming Chinese New Year holiday, which had become a great annual migration of people traveling across the country to see their families.

Thanks to Dr. Wu’s efforts, the number of victims began to die down, and by March 1, 1911, the epidemic was fully contained. The pneumonic plague outbreak of 1910-1911 lasted nearly four months, affected five provinces and six major cities, and accounted for over 60,000 deaths. It is clear that without the brave and decisive actions taken by Dr. Wu, it could have been much worse. Had the epidemic gone unchecked, allowing holiday rail passengers to spread the disease to the rest of China could have meant a catastrophic loss of life and possibly a global health crisis.

In April 1911, Dr. Wu chaired an International Plague Conference in Shenyang, attended by scientists from 11 counties including the United States, Great Britain, Russia, Japan and France. They praised Dr. Wu for his handling of the 1910-1911 outbreak. For a time, Dr. Wu was the world’s most famous plague fighter, a title be defended in a malaria epidemic in China in 1919, and a return of plague in 1921.

1. What was Dr Wu’s mission in 1910?
A.To take personal risk.B.To provide medical education.
C.To end an epidemic.D.To investigate the number of victims.
2. Which of Dr Wu’s acts stopped the disease from spreading nationwide?
A.Setting up special organizations.B.Convincing authorities to close railways.
C.Carrying with him medical instruments.D.Checking households for possible cases.
3. What can we infer from the third paragraph?
A.The disease worsened after Mach 1,1911.
B.The world was saved from a major epidemic in 1911.
C.60,000 people would have died without Dr. Wu’s efforts.
D.A global health crisis followed the 1910-1911 outbreak.
4. What can we know about Dr. Wu from the last paragraph?
A.He was infected with malaria in 1919.
B.He travelled worldwide hosting conferences.
C.He claimed epidemic would never happen again.
D.He continued to fight epidemics in China after 1911.
2021-05-08更新 | 57次组卷 | 1卷引用:四川省南充市2021届高三3月第二次高考适应性考试英语试题
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9 . A study by Harvard researchers found that mind wandering, or daydreaming, consumes an average of 47% of peoples’ waking hours. This brings about the question:If mind wandering is so costly to our well-being, then why in the world are we so willing to spend nearly half of our lives in this mental state?

Creative thinkers know, despite what their parents, teachers and school leaders might have told them, that daydreaming is hardly a waste of time. But unfortunately, many students learn to suppress their natural instincts to dream and imagine-instead, they’re taught to fit into a standardized model and to learn by the book, in a way that may not feel natural and that very well may suppress their natural desire to create. But as two famous psychologists recently noted, “Not all minds who wander are lost”-in fact, the mind’s wandering is vital to imagination and creative thought.

Nearly 50 years ago, psychologist Jerome L. Singer established that daydreaming is a normal and indeed widespread aspect of human experience. He found that many people are “happy daydreamers” who enjoy their inner imagery and fantasy. According to Singer, these daydreamers “simply value and enjoy their private experiences, are willing to risk wasting a certain amount of time on them, but also can apparently use them for effective planning and for self-amusement during periods of routine task activity or boredom.”

Singer coined the term positive-constructive daydreaming to describe this type of mind wandering, which he distinguished from poor attention and anxious, obsessive fantasies. By making these important distinctions, Singer was able to highlight the positive, adaptive role that daydreaming can play in our daily lives, under the right circumstances.

1. Who are aware that daydreaming is not a waste of time?
A.Teachers.B.Parents.C.School leaders.D.Creative thinkers.
2. According to the passage, daydreaming is very important to ______.
A.learning by the bookB.imagination and creation
C.suppression of inner desiresD.instincts and amusements
3. What does the underlined word “them” in the third paragraph refer to?
A.Private experience.B.Circumstances.C.Fantasies.D.Happy dreamers.
4. What is true of positive-constructive daydreaming according to the passage?
A.It is a useful mental state.B.It is similar to poor attention.
C.It is an anxious. obsessive fantasy.D.It is a standardized model.
2021-05-08更新 | 158次组卷 | 3卷引用:四川省南充市2021届高三3月第二次高考适应性考试英语试题

10 . The native Americans, the people we call the “Indians”, had been in America for many thousands of years before Columbus arrived in 1492. Columbus thought he had arrived in India, so he called the native people “Indians”.

The Indians were kind to the early settlers. They were not afraid of them and they wanted to help them. They showed the settlers the new world around them. They taught them about the local crops like sweet potatoes, corn and peanuts. They introduced the Europeans to chocolate and to the turkey and the Europeans did business with the Indians.

But soon the settlers wanted bigger farms and more land for themselves and their families. More and more immigrants were coming from Europe and all these people needed land. So the Europeans started to take the land from the Indians. Naturally, when the whites started taking all the Indians’ land, the Indians started fighting back.

But the whites were stronger and cleverer. Slowly they pushed the Indians into those parts of the continent that the whites didn’t want- the parts where it was too cold or too dry or too mountainous to live comfortably. By 1875 the Indians were living in special places called “reservations”. But even here the whites took land from them- perhaps the whites wanted the wood, or perhaps the land had important minerals in it, or they even wanted to make national parks there. So even on their reservations the Indians were not safe from the whites.

There are many Hollywood films about the fight between the Indians and the whites. Usually in these films the Indians are bad and the whites are good and brave. But was it really like that? What do you think? Do you think the Indians were right or wrong to fight against the whites?

1. Why did Columbus call the native people “Indians”?
A.Because he thought he had arrived in India.
B.Because he liked Indian culture very much.
C.Because he knew they were from India.
D.Because he was an Indian himself.
2. Which of the following statements is TRUE according to the passage?
A.The Indians gave up their land willingly.
B.The settlers wanted to buy land from the Indians.
C.The whites even wanted more land on Indians’ reservations.
D.The Indians were stronger and cleverer than the white settlers.
3. We can learn from the last paragraph that______.
A.the Indians are usually beautified in the films
B.the author is doubtful about what the films show to us
C.films about fights are the most popular ones in the market
D.films about the fight between the Indians and the whites are very limited
4. The passage is most probably taken from the ______ column of a newspaper.
A.entertainmentB.historyC.economyD.industry
2021-05-08更新 | 94次组卷 | 1卷引用:四川省南充市2021届高三3月第二次高考适应性考试英语试题
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