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阅读理解-阅读单选 | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章介绍了,气候变化不仅威胁到我们所居住的环境。它还对我们的情绪健康构成了非常现实的威胁,因为对地球的未来状况极为担忧,许多人会有“生态焦虑”,作者解释了它的影响、好处和应对策略。

1 . A recent global study, which surveyed 10,000 young people from 10 countries, showed that nearly 60 percent of them were extremely worried about the future state of the planet. The report, which was published in The Lancet, also showed that nearly half of the respondents said that such distress affected them daily, and three quarters agreed with the statement that “the future is frightening.” This, along with many other studies, shows clearly that climate change is not just a threat to the environment that we inhabit. It also poses a very real threat to our emotional well-being. Psychologists have categorized these feelings of grief and worry about the current climate emergency, a common occurrence among youth today, under the label of “eco-anxiety”.

Eco-anxiety doesn’t just affect young people. It also affects researchers who work in climate and ecological science, burdened by the reality depicted by their findings, and it affects the most economically marginalized (边缘化的) across the globe, who bear the damaging impacts of climate breakdown.

In 2024, eco-anxiety will rise to become one of the leading causes of mental health problems. The reasons are obvious. Scientists estimate that the world is likely to breach safe limits of temperature rise above pre-industrial levels for the first time by 2027.

In recent years, we’ve seen wildfires tear through Canada and Greece, and summer floods ruin regions in Pakistan that are home to nearly 33 million people. Studies have shown that those impacted by air pollution and rising temperatures are more likely to experience psychological distress.

To make matters worse, facing climate crisis, our political class is not offering strong leadership. The COP28 conference in Dubai will be headed by an oil and gas company executive. In the UK, the government is backtracking on its green commitments.

Fortunately, greater levels of eco-anxiety will also offer an avenue for resolving the climate crisis directly. According to Caroline Hickman, a researcher on eco-anxiety from the University of Bath, anyone experiencing eco-anxiety is displaying entirely natural and rational reactions to the climate crisis. This is why, in 2024, we will also see more people around the world join the fight for climate justice and seek jobs that prioritize environmental sustainability. Campaigners will put increased pressure on fossil fuel industries and the governments to rapidly abandon the usage of polluting coal, oil, and gas.

It’s now clear that not only are these industries the main causes for the climate crisis, they are also responsible for the mental health crisis, which is starting to affect most of us. Eco-anxiety is not something we will defeat with therapy, but something we will tackle by taking action.

1. What can we learn from the passage?
A.The cause of eco-anxiety is emotions existing in our mind.
B.People in developed countries are more likely to suffer from eco-anxiety.
C.Eco-anxiety is a new kind of psychological disease due to climate change.
D.The author is disappointed about government behaviour towards climate crisis.
2. What does the underlined word “breach” in Paragraph 3 most probably mean?
A.Break.B.Reach.C.Raise.D.Affect.
3. As for Caroline Hickman’s opinion on eco-anxiety, the author is         .
A.puzzledB.favourableC.suspiciousD.unconcerned
4. What would be the best title for the passage?
A.Who Is to Blame for Eco-anxiety?
B.How Should You See Eco-anxiety?
C.How Will Eco-anxiety Be Resolved?
D.Why Do People Suffer from Eco-anxiety?
昨日更新 | 107次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届北京门市头沟区高三一模英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选 | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章介绍了研究表明在判断某些癌症的侵袭性方面人工智能的准确度几乎是活检的两倍,可以对肉瘤的风险进行分级。文章详细介绍了其研究过程,研究人员认为该算法未来可以应用于其他类型的癌症。

2 . Artificial intelligence is almost twice as accurate as a biopsy (活组织检查) at judging the aggressiveness of some cancers, experts say. Cancer kills 10 million people globally every year, according to the WHO. But for patients the disease can be prevented if detected instantly and dealt with quickly.

A recent study suggested an AI algorithm (算法) was far better than a biopsy at correctly grading the aggressiveness of sarcomas (肉瘤), a rare form of cancer. Researchers hope AI will improve outcomes for patients by giving doctors a more accurate way of grading tumours (肿瘤). Because high-grade tumours can indicate aggressive disease, the tool could help ensure those high-risk patients are identified more quickly and treated instantly. Low-risk patients could also be spared unnecessary treatments, follow-up scans and hospital visits.

Researchers say the algorithm could be applied to other types of cancer in future. The team specifically looked at retroperitoneal sarcomas, which develop at the back of the abdomen and are difficult to diagnose (诊断) and treat due to their location. They used CT scans from 170 patients with the two most common forms of retroperitoneal sarcoma — leiomyosarcoma and liposarcoma. Using data from these scans they created an AI algorithm, which was then tested on 89 patients in other countries. In grading how aggressive the tumour was, the technology was accurate in 82% of the cases, while biopsies were 44%.

AI could also recognize leiomyosarcoma and liposarcoma in 84% of sarcomas tested, while radiologists were able to identify them in 65% of the cases. Christina Messiou, the study leader, said: “We’re incredibly excited by the potential of this state-of-the-art technology, which could lead to patients having better outcomes through faster diagnosis. As patients with retroperitoneal sarcoma are routinely scanned with CT, we hope this tool will eventually be used globally, ensuring that not just specialist centres can reliably identify and grade the disease.”

Richard Davison, chief executive of Sarcoma UK, said the results looked “very promising”. He added: “People are more likely to survive sarcoma if diagnosed early. One in six people with sarcoma cancer wait more than a year to receive an accurate diagnosis, so any research that helps patients receive better treatment and support is welcome.”

1. According to the passage, AI is capable of        .
A.grading the risk of sarcomas
B.measuring the scale of sarcomas
C.providing cancer treatment for clinicians
D.classifying cancers with its advanced algorithm
2. What can be inferred from this passage?
A.More sarcomas can be detected with the help of AI.
B.Biopsies will be replaced by AI algorithm in identifying cancers.
C.More patients suffering from cancers will benefit from AI algorithm.
D.AI algorithm has been applied in hospitals for detecting most cancers.
3. What is the passage mainly about?
A.AI has a profound market in curing cancers.
B.New treatments for sarcomas are well underway.
C.AI helps identify high-risk and low-risk patients.
D.AI does better in assessing some types of sarcomas.
昨日更新 | 95次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届北京门市头沟区高三一模英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选 | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:这是一篇记叙文。文章讲述了,作者母亲常年心脏不好,现在需要进行心脏移植,家人虽担心母亲是否能心脏移植成功,但大家相信她最终会成功,最终心脏移植手术很成功,作者感谢献出心脏的家庭。

3 . “Your mother needs a new heart,” my father told me when I called on that December afternoon. An unrelenting optimist, he spoke as if she merely needed to have a part replaced. But, although my two sisters and I knew that our mother had heart problems, this news still made us frozen for a while with our eyes widening in disbelief.

Dr. Marc Semigran of the transplant team reviewed my mother’s medical history. She’d had an irregular and rapid heartbeat for most of her life. Her present treatment — the use of a series of cardioversions, or electric jolts, to restore a normal heartbeat — would not work in the long-term. She had an enlarged and weakened heart, as well as a faulty valve.

“With medication,” Dr. Semigran said, “you have a 60 percent chance of living six months. You could have a longer life with a transplant, but there are risks. You’re at the top end of the age group of sixty years old. The lungs and other organs must be healthy and strong. While the transplant surgery is actually a straightforward procedure, acceptance by the body is the difficult thing.”

My family came together, trying to provide strength and work out what to do. We’d already gone from shock, over our mother’s condition, to worry that she wouldn’t be a suitable recipient. Despite of the risk, we chose to believe that she would make it eventually.

Word came later in December that she had been accepted into the programme. Dr. Jeremy Ruskin told us one of the reasons she had been accepted was that she had such strong family support.

One Monday in May, at about 8 p. m., my mother received a phone call from the hospital that a heart was available. As she was about to be wheeled off, my father took her face in his hands and looked into her eyes. His look said everything about their 42-year relationship.

The heart transplant operation was successful and the conditions could not have been better.

The irony of the transplant process is that one family’s loss is another’s gain; that tragedy begets fortune. It is a kind of life after death, our hearts beating beyond us. We developed a feeling of love for this new part, of gratitude for the doctors, for the process, and for those people who made a decision just for humanity.

1. How did the sisters feel to the news that their mother needed a new heart?
A.Frightened.B.Astonished.C.Worried.D.Annoyed.
2. Which is the factor to affect the possibility of their mother’s heart transplant?
A.Her abnormal heart beat.
B.The age of over sixty years old.
C.Her willingness to the transplant.
D.The adaptation of the new heart in the body.
3. What made the transplant team decide to have the operation?
A.That her lungs were healthy.
B.That a new heart had been found.
C.That her family were expecting the operation.
D.That her family trusted the doctors' medical level.
4. What can we learn from the passage?
A.Family support is of great importance.
B.Fortune favors those who are optimistic.
C.Confidence helps patients overcome difficulties.
D.Getting prepared before accepting a treatment matters.
7日内更新 | 111次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届北京门市头沟区高三一模英语试题
文章大意:这是一篇记叙文。这篇文章主要讲述了作者的一次经历。作者为同事送电脑包在返回的路上,遭遇了暴风雪而失去方向,分享被困位置停车等待救援时,一位叫安德烈的人帮助自己摆脱困境,这次经历让作者改变了应对挑战的态度,也从此与安德烈相识。

4 . It was 4:30 pm. As I was packing up, I noticed my colleague had left his laptop bag in the office. So I decided to bring it to him. It took me about 15 minutes to get to his house, where I _____ the bag and got right back on the road.

Suddenly a snowstorm came and within minutes I was in a whiteout. I stopped because I was afraid of driving into a farmer’s field, or worse. I kept the car _____ to stay warm and called 911.They told me to sit tight and wait things out for the night.

Those seconds after the call were _____. Breathe, I told myself. Panicking won’t help.

I texted my colleague, joking about my good deed ending in _____. He suggested I share a satellite view of my _____ on my social media. And I did so, praying that anyone who knew the residents of the nearby farms could get me rescued.

Waiting in the car, I doubted whether _____ would be able to come. Soon enough, though, I got a message from someone who was going to put me in touch with them.

At 8 pm, I saw a tall figure in a yellow raincoat striding toward me in the dark, carrying a flashlight. I’d never been more _____ to see someone in my life. It was André Bouvier, who’d walked about 550 yards to come get me, fighting the wind and snow each step of the way.

He turned around and started to trudge through the snow, sure of the direction. I drove behind him, feeling my heart begin to beat more _____. When we reached his house, I burst into tears, all my fears turning into relief and _____.

The experience has been a game changer for me. I now ______ challenges with a sense of calm I’d not known before. But best of all, it brought André into my life.

1.
A.dropped offB.filled upC.set asideD.put away
2.
A.lockedB.parkedC.signalingD.running
3.
A.painfulB.criticalC.disappointingD.impressive
4.
A.failureB.smokeC.disasterD.mystery
5.
A.routeB.locationC.directionD.destination
6.
A.newsB.helpC.hopeD.faith
7.
A.satisfiedB.surprisedC.relievedD.worried
8.
A.slowlyB.excitedlyC.nervouslyD.strongly
9.
A.recognitionB.admirationC.satisfactionD.appreciation
10.
A.identifyB.presentC.approachD.anticipate
7日内更新 | 117次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届北京市海淀区高三下学期一模英语试题
智能选题,一键自动生成优质试卷~
阅读理解-阅读单选 | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:这是一篇记叙文。这篇文章主要讲述了作者学习中国书法的经历和感悟,包括初次接触书法时的情景,名字的由来,在美国放弃中文名,回到香港学习书法的原因,老师对自己的评价,以及通过书法对自身的思考和认识等。

5 . At my first lesson in Chinese calligraphy, my teacher told me plainly: “Now I will teach you how to write your name. And to make it beautiful.” I felt my breath catch. I was curious.

Growing up in Singapore, I had an unusual relationship with my Chinese name. My parents are ethnically Chinese, so they asked fortune tellers to decide my name, aiming for maximum luck. As a result, I ended up with a nonsense and embarrassing name: Chen Yiwen, meaning, roughly, “old”, “barley (薏米)” and “warm”.

When I arrived in America for college at 18, I put on an American accent and abandoned my Chinese name. When I moved to Hong Kong in 2021, after 14 years in the States, I decided to learn calligraphy. Why not get back in touch with my heritage? I thought.

In calligraphy, the idea is to copy the old masters’ techniques, thereby refining your own. Every week, though, my teacher would give uncomfortably on-the-nose assessments of my person. “You need to be braver,” he once observed. “Have confidence. Try to produce a bold stroke(笔画).” For years, I had prided myself on presenting an image of confidence, but my writing betrayed me.

I was trying to make sense of this practice. You must visualize the word as it is to be written and leave a trace of yourself in it. As a bodily practice, calligraphy could go beyond its own cultural restrictions. Could it help me go beyond mine? My teacher once said to me, “When you look at the word, you see the body. Though a word on the page is two-dimensional, it contains multitudes, conveying the force you’ve applied, the energy of your grip, the arch of your spine.” I had been learning calligraphy to get in touch with my cultural roots, but what I was really seeking was a return to myself. Now I have sensed that the pleasure out of calligraphy allows me to know myself more fully.

During a recent lesson, my teacher pointed at the word I had just finished, telling me: “This word is much better. I can see the choices you made, your calculations, your flow. Trust yourself. This word is yours.” He might as well have said, “This word is you.”

1. What did the author initially think of her name “Chen Yiwen”?
A.It was lucky so she gladly accepted it.B.She felt proud of its symbolic meaning.
C.She understood the intention but still disliked it.D.Its strange pronunciation made her embarrassed.
2. The author decided to learn calligraphy to ______.
A.pick up a new hobbyB.reconnect with her origin
C.gain insights into a new cultureD.fit in with local community
3. From the teacher’s words, the author learns that calligraphy ______.
A.reflects the creator’s spiritsB.comes from creative energy
C.highlights the design of strokesD.depends on continuous practice
4. What does the author intend to tell us?
A.Appreciate what our culture offers.B.Find beauty from your inner self.
C.A great teacher leads you to truth.D.We are the sum of what we create.
7日内更新 | 144次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届北京市海淀区高三下学期一模英语试题
阅读理解-七选五 | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文为一篇说明文,介绍了大多数成年人的学习能力和思维能力早在30岁时就开始衰退,年龄越大,衰退得越明显。而这一现象是可以解决的,文章通过实验证明了这一点,且表示社会应最大限度地增加成年人继续学习的机会。

6 . In most adults, learning and thinking begin to decline as early as age 30. People start to perform slightly worse in tests of cognitive abilities such as the rate at which someone does a mental task.     1    

These changes are often considered normal aging. But they may instead represent something more like the “summer slide” that some schoolchildren experience in academic progress during summer break. Recent research suggests that a pause of learning is indeed a problem causing cognitive reduction.    2    

In a three-month intervention, the researchers provided an encouraging learning environment for 24 older adults. They took at least three classes to learn three new skills. They also discussed issues related to learning barriers and motivation. Over the course these participants’ cognitive scores for memory and flexibility significantly improved. In a follow-up study, the researchers discovered amazingly that they had improved further:    3     In other words, giving these seniors a multicourse routine seemed to bring up their abilities to levels similar to those of college students.

The researchers are still investigating why cognitive scores continued to climb after the program’s end, but one possibility is that the experience encouraged these older participants to continue learning and practicing new skills. Older adults are often assumed to be on a downward slide with unrecoverable loss. “Use it or lose it,” the saying goes.    4     Decline, as we so often see it, may not be certain. That’s why we need to create enriched learning environments for adults after their formal education and job training end.

    5     Educators know how to educate children and adolescents, and we can adapt that knowledge to develop learning opportunities for adults. Societies could also provide resources and paths toward lifelong learning to ensure that everyone can benefit. Let’s shift the conversation about adults from avoiding loss and decline to learning and growing.

A.But this decline can be addressed.
B.The slide becomes sharper in their mid-60s.
C.Interrupted learning may not only affect children.
D.The question now is how society can maximize adult’s chances to keep learning.
E.Their cognitive abilities after one year were close to those of adults 50 years younger.
F.Older adult research tends to emphasize skill learning only after daily functions start to decline.
G.However, the research suggests they can increase both skills and cognitive abilities over a long term.
2024-04-20更新 | 150次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届北京市朝阳区高三下学期一模考试英语试题
阅读理解-阅读表达 | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:这是一篇记叙文。这篇文章主要讲作者回忆自己年轻时协助摄影师David Liittschwager拍摄海洋生物的经历,通过David拍摄的鱼的照片,意识到摄影可以扩展视觉感知,让人重新看待世界,后来作者潜水时再次遇到小鱼,有了新的认知。
7 . 阅读下面短文,根据题目要求用英文回答问题。

As a kid, I dreamed of becoming a marine biologist and I lived out this fantasy by setting up aquariums(鱼缸) at home. Then, at 20, I was introduced to photographer David Liittschwager, who hired me to help him with a magazine assignment on marine life.

David’s assignment was to document the amazing biodiversity found in the ocean. My role was to collect species for him to photograph. Every night, I would cast a floating lamp. Like moths drawn to a flame, mysterious creatures would emerge from the depths in search of this light. I’d then set up aquariums to house them as they waited for David to take their shot.

Those evenings made me feel as if I were on another planet. I had never imagined such strange life-forms could exist in our oceans. But I didn’t grasp the true magic of what was in front of me until I saw the photographs David took.

The biggest surprise was his image of a baby flounder. I caught this fish by accident. Only later did I notice its two tiny eyeballs staring back at me. But David’s photograph of this flounder revealed a universe of detail that even my eager eyes had missed. His macro lens magnified its ribs. The lightning-fast exposure froze its motion. A precisely aimed light released the rainbow hidden in its skin. And the black background removed all distractions to focus our attention on the quiet beauty at hand.

Years after that project, I was snorkeling(潜水) on a shallow reef. Out of the darkness, another baby flounder emerged and settled on my mask. This time I knew what to look for. Before working for David, I had assumed the goal of photography was simply to reproduce an observation so that others could share the same experience. It had never occurred to me that photography could expand our visual perception and therefore teach us to see the world anew.

1. What was the author’s responsibility in David’s assignment?
___________________________________________________________________________________________
2. Why was David’s image of a baby flounder the biggest surprise to the author?
___________________________________________________________________________________________
3. Please decide which part is false in the following statement, then underline it and explain why.
Encountering a baby flounder while snorkeling deepened the author’s understanding that photography could reproduce an observation.
___________________________________________________________________________________________
4. What can help you see the world anew?(In about 40 words)
___________________________________________________________________________________________
2024-04-20更新 | 69次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届北京市海淀区高三下学期一模英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选 | 较易(0.85) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要是对一些常见的饮食相关的说法进行了分析和解释,以帮助人们更好地理解和选择饮食。

8 . With all the dietary information online, it can be hard to know what tips to follow. Watch out for these words and expressions.

Fat Is Good

It doesn’t matter if you are part of the fat is GOOD for you or BAD for you group, the important question to ask is the source of the fat. If it comes from a land-based animal, and is likely to be solid at room temperature, then it is saturated (饱和的) fat whereas if it comes from fish or plants, and it is likely to be liquid at room temperature, then it is unsaturated fat. All the evidence indicates that eating more unsaturated fat than saturated fat lowers your risk of dying early.

Natural Sugar Is Better

The vast majority of sugar we consume is sucrose (蔗糖). It is the white powdered stuff we cook with and is made up of glucose and fructose. How about sugar from honey? It is often marketed as natural and better for you. Actually, it just has its own distinct flavour, but is as sweet because of glucose and fructose.

High-pH Water

Some people think we need to eat alkali (碱) food to maintain our blood at a pH of 7.4. But everything we eat or drink passes through the stomach, which, at a pH of 1.5, is the most acidic part of the body. It is then neutralised to a pH of 7. So, nothing we eat will change the pH of our blood.

Don’t Eat Anything That You Can’t Pronounce

Whether foods are natural or highly processed, they are all full of chemicals. Are you supposed to fear “phenylthiocarbamide”, because you can’t pronounce it? This is simply the chemical responsible for the bitter taste found in brassicas, the plants in the cabbage and mustard family.

Don’t Eat Food With More Than Five Ingredients(佐料)

Simple foods are not necessarily healthier for you. If I, for instance, use Chinese five spice powder in a recipe, that would count as one of the five ingredients. However, what if I added the typical components of five spice powder separately into a dish? Does that mean my recipe suddenly becomes bad because it has more than five ingredients?

1. According to the passage, healthier fat ______.
A.can be found in fish and plantsB.comes from land-based animals
C.remains solid at room temperatureD.can lower the death rate of elders
2. The passage suggests that ______.
A.diets can help adjust the pH of our bloodB.honey sugar can do more good than sucrose
C.foods with more ingredients may be as healthyD.chemicals we can recognize are safer to take in
3. What is the main purpose of the passage?
A.To compare tips on food choices.B.To introduce different health concepts.
C.To recommend fitness recipes to readers.D.To warn us of some dietary misunderstandings.
2024-04-20更新 | 86次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届北京市海淀区高三下学期一模英语试题
语法填空-短文语填 | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要讲述了在过去的十年里,中国见证了消费者行为的转变,一种强调民族主义品牌的趋势,即“国潮”开始兴起。
9 . 阅读下列短文,根据短文内容填空。在未给提示词的空白处仅填写1个恰当的单词,在给出提示词的空白处用括号内所给词的正确形式填空。

For brands to succeed, they must grasp and adapt to evolving consumer taste. Over the past decade, China     1    (witness) a shift in consumer behavior marked by the rise of guochao, a trend emphasizing nationalistic branding. Chinese consumers displayed a strong     2    (prefer) for locally-made products. Therefore, it’s crucial for brands to genuinely comprehend and honor local customs, traditions, and values. While integrating Chinese elements into marketing strategies can be effective, it should be handled thoughtfully     3    (avoid) cultural insensitivity.

2024-04-20更新 | 82次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届北京市海淀区高三下学期一模英语试题
语法填空-短文语填 | 适中(0.65) |
名校
文章大意:本文是一篇记叙文。文章主要讲述了1995年发生的一场灾难,导致Reeve受伤。他在骑马时被摔下来,颈部骨折。直到他的妻子、父母和朋友们的持续支持,他才最终找到了重新生活的意愿。
10 . 阅读下列短文,根据短文内容填空。在未给提示词的空白处仅填写1个适当的单词,在给出提示词的空白处用括号内所给词的正确形式填空。

Unfortunately, in 1995 disaster     1     (strike) Reeve. While horseback riding, he was thrown     2     his horse and broke his neck. His injuries were so severe that he had no     3     (move) or feeling in his body at all and even needed a machine to help him breathe. He wished that he was dead and even thought of ending his life. He fell into a depression     4     lasted for many months. It was only due to the ongoing support of his wife, parents and friends that he eventually found the will to live again.

2024-04-20更新 | 11次组卷 | 1卷引用:北京市第十四中学2020-2021学年高一下学期期中英语试题
共计 平均难度:一般