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阅读理解-阅读单选(约350词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章介绍了一项关于宠物主人更爱狗还是更爱猫的研究,研究发现,在丹麦、奥地利和英国,宠物主人更爱狗,但不同国家之间存在差异,这可能是由于文化差异和对宠物的态度造成的。

1 . Pet owners love their dogs more than their cats. Although previous studies have already suggested this finding, scientists from the University of Copenhagen wanted to research more deeply into whether cultural factors affected the results. Their findings are published in the journal Frontiers in Veterinary Science.

In the survey across Denmark, Austria and the United Kingdom, 844 dog owners, 872 cat owners and 401 people who owned both dogs and cats were asked questions about their pets. Overall, the participants had higher attachment scores for dogs than for cats. Owners were more likely to insure (给……投保) their dogs and paid more to dogs’ treatment. However, the results differed dramatically across countries. For example, the United Kingdom’s results were in favor of dogs, although only slightly. Australia had a very clear preference for dogs. Emotional attachment to dogs was highest in Denmark. The Danes were also less likely to buy insurance for their cats, compared with their dogs.

“While people care more about their dogs than their cats in these countries, the degree of difference varied between countries,” Professor Peter Sandoe of the University of Copenhagen, the study’s first author, said in a press release. “It doesn’t therefore seem to be a universal phenomenon (现象) that people care much less about their cats than their dogs.”

The difference between countries may be due to cultural differences and attitudes toward pets, the study suggested. This may be the result of the country’s history with rural animals and how often they interacted with people. These factors may have influenced societal attitudes toward pets in modern times.

“Our study only looks at three countries in Europe,” professor Clare Palmer of Texas A&M University, a co-author of the paper, said in the press release. “It raises interesting questions regarding what comparative studies of other countries might find,” she went on. “Perhaps there are countries where the level of care for and attachment to cats is, in fact, higher than dogs?”

1. What’s the writer’s main purpose of writing paragraph 1?
A.To state a widely acknowledged fact.
B.To analyze the cause of a phenomenon.
C.To introduce the topic of a new study.
D.To compare two different studies.
2. How did the researchers conduct their study?
A.By asking questions.
B.By doing an experiment.
C.By collecting data online.
D.By keeping track of pet owners’ daily life.
3. What can we infer from Sandoe’s words?
A.Not all the people in the world prefer dogs to cats.
B.People in the three surveyed countries prefer dogs to cats.
C.The levels of care for cats are the same as dogs in the world.
D.People in the world care less about their cats than their dogs.
4. What can we know from the passage?
A.Pet owners love their dogs more than their cats.
B.Culture may influence people’s preference to dogs.
C.Pet owners should care about their cats as much as their dogs.
D.People hold different attitudes toward pets in three European countries.
2024-02-18更新 | 37次组卷 | 1卷引用:湖南省益阳市2023-2024学年高一上学期期末考试英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约390词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了一个名为Kangaroo Kids的精密跳绳队,介绍了这项运动的特点以及组织成立情况。

2 . The Kangaroo Kids is a precision jump rope team based in Maryland. Precision jump rope is a sport in which one or more people jump rope in precise routines set to music. It is also called synchronized jump rope, meaning people jump at the same time with each other often using more than one rope. Kangaroo Kids has been performing for 45 years. Members often jump together at the same time, which can be very challenging.

The team started as a small fitness club at Atholton Elementary School in Columbia, Maryland, in 1978. Today, It has over 200 athletes from Howard County and is run as nonprofit Organization. That means they are not focused on making a lot of money.

Nicole Meek, in Ellicott City, Maryland, served in several roles within the program for 15 years. She is now the director of coaching and operations for Kangaroo Kids. She’s also the mom of three of its members. She said it means a lot for the organization to be celebrating its 45th year. Three of Meek’s four children are competitive jump ropers. They are Devin, Jenna and Mason. Devin began training when he was 6 years old. He advanced to intermediate classes. He later landed spots on the competition, performing and travel teams for Kangaroo Kids. Her husband, Brian, serves as president of the board of directors.

Influenced by their family’s passion and encouragement, fifteen-year-old Eliza Kim, one of Devin’s friend, is a member of the competition and travel teams. She has been involved in the program for seven years, saying she has made friends across the county. Jasmine Wright, who is also 15, has been engaged in the program for about seven years, also telling that being a part of the team has brought camaraderie to him.

Nicole Meek tells BBC, “I hope to spread the sport of jump rope and to raise awareness for it and show that it’s more than just a playground activity that people think it is”, adding that the biggest challenge she faces is convincing the public that jump rope is not just for children, and that she hopes to use her position to help it become more mainstream in the future.

1. What can we know about the Kangaroo Kids from the text?
A.Focusing on making much money.
B.Having 200 athletes from all over the country.
C.Using over one rope to jump set to music at the same time.
D.Jumping ropes in precise routines set to music individually.
2. What can we learn from paragraph 3?
A.Brian Meek’s coaching style.B.Nicole Meek’s volunteer work.
C.The work of the board of directors.D.The passion of the Meeks for the sport.
3. What does the underlined word “camaraderie” in paragraph 4 mean?
A.Security.B.Friendship.C.Achievement.D.Pride.
4. What is the most difficult problem of Nicole Meek?
A.The lack of money and support.B.Fewer children interested in the sport.
C.Having no time to train.D.Persuading more people to take part in the sport.
2024-02-18更新 | 34次组卷 | 1卷引用:湖南省益阳市2023-2024学年高二上学期1月期末英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约390词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了宜家十分受欢迎,这家连锁店的三个特点非常突出:他们对研究的投入、实惠的价格和环保的声誉。

3 . In this entry to my blog series about successful multinational companies, I will check out the furniture chain IKEA. IKEA has been the world’s dominant furniture chain since 2008, according to Forbes magazine.

Swedish entrepreneur Ingvar Kamprad was only 17 years old when he started the company in 1943. These days, the chain has about 400 stores selling appliances, furniture and other household items in over 40 countries around the world. So how have they managed to become such a global hit, to me it seems that three features of the chain stand out: their dedication to research, their affordable prices and their eco-friendly reputation.

The executives of IKEA have long understood the need to research other markets in order to succeed globally. The company is constantly conducting research on how people use their furniture and what they are looking for. They recently conducted research in eight cities worldwide. This is how they learned, for example, that Korean customers want a special kimchif refrigerator.

But in order to sell at discount prices, they need to make and sell a lot of the same thing to keep costs low. This way, they can get low prices from suppliers, and charge super-low prices to their customers. As a result, they can keep their prices economical even during periods of inflation. This is why they will show the same products in different ways in their stores, depending on the local culture. A British bedroom display might have a British flag bedspread on it, whereas one in Tokyo may have a traditional mat on the floor. In China, IKEA’s fastest-growing market, domestic manufacturers make most of the products they sell in order to keep transport costs low.

A final selling point of the company is eco-friendly. A company representative recently said that they are working on creating new products out of materials we currently throw away, such as recycled plastic and foil. In some markets, they plan to market an electric bicycle, and in Seoul, they recently planted a tree to celebrate the opening of a new store.

Next week, I’ll look at other multinational companies which specialize in household goods and automobile production.

1. What’s one of the following reasons contributing to IKEA popularity in the world?
A.The fashionable feature.B.The variety of furniture.
C.The devotion to study.D.The automobile design.
2. How does IKEA sell products in low price?
A.By making all the products in China.
B.By adjusting the price in different periods.
C.By showing different products in the same way.
D.By producing and setting large amounts of the same products.
3. Why does IKEA have an eco-friendly reputation?
A.It has made some electric bicycles.
B.It has planted some trees.
C.New products out of recycled materials are created.
D.It keeps transport cost low for most of the products.
4. What’s the writer probably according to the passage?
A.A blogger.B.A reporter.C.A teacher.D.A salesman.
2024-02-18更新 | 20次组卷 | 1卷引用:湖南省益阳市2023-2024学年高二上学期1月期末英语试题
书面表达-读后续写 | 较难(0.4) |
4 . 阅读下面材料,根据其内容和所给段落开头语续写两段,使之构成一篇完整的短文。续写的词数应为150左右。

I blame it all on my dad’s good intentions. You see, my writing career started when I was in elementary school, where there were various writing contests throughout the years. I’m assuming it was in the hopes of trying to get our young, little minds excited about the possibilities that writing could offer us in our lives. Then I’d come home, show my parents and my dad would say, “You did such a great job, honey! Wow, you must be a great writer!” I was probably a better writer in 5th grade than my average students at the time. I even went to the special advanced classes for the “gifted” kids for a few years.

And as I grew older, I remembered those experiences and what my dad was always telling me, and it just sort of stuck with me, and became part of my subconscious (潜意识) —that I was a great writer. I always did well in all my classes because I had this confidence. I didn’t like all subjects particularly, but I got good grades. I was pretty self-assured in my abilities as a student. Then, fast forward to my freshman year of high school. By this time, I had started to even out (相等) with the rest of my peers, in terms of intellect. And then, it happened, the day that I was shattered.

It was all because of my English teacher Ms. Moon. The year started out like any other. Jexpected to do well; I worked hard and knew that my dedication would pay off, like it always had in the past. But something started happening. I started getting Cs on my papers! I don’t think I’d ever even seen that letter, except in the spelling of my first name. And, not only was I not getting good grades in her class, but her comments were off the charts shocking. My papers were full of red marks, and I was being asked to re-do many assignments to even get a passing grade.


注意:
1.所续写短文的词数应为150左右;
2.请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答。

One day, Ms. Moon handed my paper to me and whispered, “It’s still not good enough.”


___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Very soon it was time for my final exam result.


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智能选题,一键自动生成优质试卷~
书面表达-读后续写 | 较难(0.4) |
5 . 阅读下面材料,根据其内容和所给段落开头语续写两段,使之构成一篇完整的短文。

We moved here a few days ago, and I don’t know anyone, not one person, at the new place. Dad says things will get better. He says I’ll take to city living just like I took to climbing trees and playing ball. I look out the window of our new apartment.

“This was a good move for us, Sonny,” Dad says, “You’ll see.”

“I miss the guys,” I say. “I miss Michigan. I miss” — I gaze up and down the street — “trees.”

“Los Angeles isn’t a bad place,” he says. Then he tells me about a park he saw down the street. “It has a couple of basketball courts. Get out there and sweat today. You’ve kept yourself inside too long.” I nod.

That afternoon, I grab my basketball and head down the street to find the courts. Dad was right about being kept inside too long. It’s about time to shake the cobwebs(蜘蛛网)off my basketball legs, see if I can still dribble(运球)with both hands, and remain a good shooter. I walk past all the shops with bars on their windows. This is home?

When I get to the courts, I see three guys shooting around. They’re playing some kind of one-on-one, taking turns with the third guy in. Two of them are taller than me, but one is about my size. I can tell that the short kid knows how to play by the way he handles the ball, dribbling well with either hand. But the other guys are too tall for him. One-on-one isn’t his game. He needs someone to pass to.

I go down to the other basket to shoot around. I’m pretty cold at first. But after I warm up, the old feelings come back — the proper knee bend, the feel of releasing the ball just right.

“Hi, there.”


注意:1. 续写词数应为150左右;2. 请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答。
I stop and turn around, catching sight of the short kid.
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Without hesitation I accept his invitation to play in the upcoming League Cup.
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
2024-02-18更新 | 33次组卷 | 1卷引用:湖南省益阳市2023-2024学年高三上学期期末英语试卷
完形填空(约240词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文是一篇记叙文。文章讲述了导游坦普勒在赞比亚带领皮划艇队游猎时遭遇河马的一次惊险经历。

6 . Templer was a tour guide in Zimbabwe, leading a canoe (皮划艇) safari down the Zambezi River. During the expedition, Templer’s canoe _______ the way, with the other two canoes to follow.

Things were going the way they were supposed to go. Everyone was having a pretty good time. Eventually, they _______ a dozen hippos, which were territorial animals. That’s not _______ on the Zambezi, Africa’s fourth-longest river. They weren’t alarmed at first as they were at a safe _______.

Templer tried to steer (率领) the group safely around them. However, the third canoe was off the planned _______ and was attacked by an aggressive hippo. The guide named Evans on the canoe fell into the water. Templer went to _______ him. He was getting closer to Evans. He was _______— it was kind of a made-for-Hollywood movie — Evans was reaching up. Their _______ almost touched. And then the water between them just _______. Before he knew it, Templer was up to his waist down a hippo’s throat. His legs were trapped but his hands were ________. So he tried to hold onto the hippo’s tusks (长牙) to ________being torn apart. The hippo must have been uncomfortable because it spat him out. So he quickly burst to the ________, and breathed some fresh air. With others’ help, Templer and Evans made it out of the river.

Despite the unpleasant experience, Templer ________to work as a tour guide. He also became an advocate for hippo ________, recognizing that the animals were not inherently aggressive but were ________ defending their territory.

1.
A.madeB.foundC.ledD.wound
2.
A.encounteredB.interruptedC.savedD.killed
3.
A.unfortunateB.unexpectedC.uncertainD.unnecessary
4.
A.speedB.angleC.visionD.distance
5.
A.lineB.controlC.courseD.duty
6.
A.watchB.comfortC.stopD.rescue
7.
A.leaning overB.turning awayC.looking upD.calming down
8.
A.heartsB.fingersC.headsD.thoughts
9.
A.appearedB.flowedC.frozeD.erupted
10.
A.freeB.emptyC.hurtD.skinny
11.
A.riskB.avoidC.permitD.finish
12.
A.surfaceB.bottomC.bankD.sky
13.
A.hopedB.continuedC.refusedD.hesitated
14.
A.habitatB.safetyC.conservationD.suffering
15.
A.readilyB.finallyC.casuallyD.simply
2024-02-18更新 | 29次组卷 | 1卷引用:湖南省益阳市2023-2024学年高三上学期期末英语试卷
阅读理解-七选五(约310词) | 较难(0.4) |
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章介绍了休息对于缓解压力的重要性,并强调了身心之间的联系。

7 . The secret to stress relief: Why rest isn’t a waste of time

Stress is a modern epidemic, but among all the stress management strategies we are forgetting one essential remedy (疗法) — taking time for rest. For a long time, psychologists focused almost exclusively on what went on between our ears.     1     That was the field of medical doctors, physiotherapists and gym instructors. Recently, however, there has been a growing realization that the body and mind are deeply connected with each other.

The most recent insights have revealed that our mental health is determined to a large extent by our physical condition. Studies have shown that our brain processes “psychological” pain — such as the kind that arises out of social exclusion — the same way it does physical pain.     2    

It’s apparent that there is no clear division between body and mind in the case of stress. You suffer more from stress when you are suffering from a flu. If you have a bad night’s sleep, everything is more stressful the next day. But good news is that you can combat it by looking after your body.     3     A healthy sleeping pattern also offers protection agains all kinds of psychological disorders, and a healthy diet is known to reduce stress.

When you decide to do something about your stress levels, it doesn’t necessarily mean you have to turn your whole life upside down — quit your job, move to another country and so forth.     4     Moments of rest and relaxation ought to occupy a more significant place in our lives. These important moments should not be regarded as a kind of “breather” in between jobs but as a natural and fundamental part of our way of life.

    5     We need to see it as crucial time that we use to build up our reserves. It is only when we fully embrace rest that we will be able to take a stand against stress and burnout.

A.The body was not their responsibility.
B.The first step is to take better care of your body, instead.
C.In fact, you can even take an aspirin for that kind of pain.
D.For example, physical exercise helps to relieve depression.
E.You should ask if the health problems are caused by stress.
F.They all concentrate only on anxiety, depression and as such.
G.Getting enough rest is not just something we should do when we are exhausted.
2024-02-18更新 | 245次组卷 | 2卷引用:湖南省益阳市2023-2024学年高三上学期期末英语试卷
阅读理解-阅读单选(约360词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了维生素的名称由来和被发现的过程,说明其命名是按发现的先后顺序编号的,并解释了维生素K没有按该逻辑被命名为维生素F的原因。

8 . Vitamin C for a cold? A good dose of Vitamin D on a sunny day? We all know that vitamins are critical for our health, but how did they get their names and when were they discovered in the first place?

American nutrition scientist Elmer McCullum conducted a variety of feed experiments with different animal populations and discovered that an “accessory” substance contained in some fats was essential to growth. That fat-soluble (脂溶的) substance became known as Vitamin “A” for “accessory.”

McCollum and others also conducted further experiments with rice-bran-derived nutrient, naming it Vitamin “B” after beriberi, which can cause heart failure and a loss of sensation in the legs and feet. Eventually, it turned out that the substance known as Vitamin B was a complex of eight water-soluble vitamins, which were each given individual names and numbered in order of discovery.

The custom of naming vitamins alphabetically in order of discovery continued. Today, four fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, and K) and nine water-soluble vitamins (Vitamin C and the eight B vitamins) are considered essential to human growth and health. Only one vitamin bucked the oh-so-logical naming system: Vitamin K, discovered by Danish researcher Carl Peter Henrik Dam in 1929. The substance should have been in line to be called Vitamin F given its discovery date. But Dam’s research revealed that the vitamin is essential for blood coagulation (凝固) — known as Koagulation in the German journal that published his research — and his abbreviation for the vitamin somehow stuck.

It’s been decades since the last essential vitamin — Vitamin B12 — was discovered in 1948. It now appears unlikely that scientists will ever discover a new essential vitamin. But even if there’s no Vitamin F or G in our future, that doesn’t mean nutritional discovery has stopped completely. If the golden age of vitamin discovery was an appetizer (开胃菜) of sorts, scientists are devoted to the main course — a rapidly evolving understanding of the ways food shapes our lives, one microscopic substance at a time.

1. What can we learn from paragraph 2 and paragraph 3?
A.Vitamin A is a water-soluble substance.
B.Vitamin B was named after a kind of disease.
C.The eight B vitamins got names from their functions.
D.The subjects of McCullum’s experiments are home.
2. What does the underlined word “bucked” mean in paragraph 4?
A.Created.B.Destroyed.C.Broke.D.Followed.
3. What is the author’s attitude toward nutrition research?
A.Indifferent.B.Unclear.C.Doubtful.D.Confident.
4. Which of the following is the best title of the text?
A.How Do Vitamins Influence Our Health?
B.Who Discovered Various Vitamins for Us?
C.Why Is There a Vitamin K but No Vitamin F?
D.How Many Vitamins Are Still Left to Be Discovered?
2024-02-18更新 | 32次组卷 | 2卷引用:湖南省益阳市2023-2024学年高三上学期期末英语试卷
阅读理解-阅读单选(约370词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了风筝的历史、发展和现代应用,特别强调了风筝作为一种文化和艺术形式的价值。

9 . One night two millennia ago, a Han Dynasty general sent a square-shaped collection of bamboo and cloth into the air above enemy territory in central China. He was trying to measure how much earth his men would need to tunnel through to tear their enemies’ defense line.

It is one of the most famous early stories of kite-flying. Similar devices were later used by other Chinese armies; they launched them after dark in whipping winds in hopes that the noise would scare off enemies, and used them to deliver threats via missives (信函) tied to the kites’ tails.

Today, of course, these delicate aircraft — built from light wood or plastic frames shaped to create lift, covered in a thin material such as paper or silk, and piloted via long strings — are considered as toys. In the 1990s and early 2000s, kite-flying experienced a boom in the American West and parts of Europe, due in part to the popularization of kites surfing. Groups of kiters began to take interest in its lore (知识).

Thus a wave of younger artists have been inspired to pioneer new forms. In Austria, Anna Rubin, often employs ancient methods for her art, including hand-splitting the bamboo for the frames and using hand-pressed natural fibres to cover them. She wants to carry on traditions she fears may be lost by a culture fixated on the future, but she’s equally inspired by the joy of work. “Everyone should, once in their life, make a kite and fly it,” she says.

And in New York, visual artists Jacob Hashimoto, assembles massive installations from dozens of palm-size kites to hang from the ceiling of his studio or gallery. He inherited (继承) his interest in kite-making from his father. “The kite-making is a pan-cultural practice that makes it a beautiful, democratic thing,” he says. “In many ways, it’s a global property — we all own the relationship between us and the sky.”

Their work is a reminder that kites offer us a means to defy gravity. In the hands a willing flier, they give us a way up and out.

1. What was the kite used for in ancient China?
A.A tool of warfare.B.A kind of recreation.
C.A sign of good luck.D.A way of communication.
2. What are today’s kites like?
A.They are lightly structured.B.They are widely used in Europe.
C.They are less popular in China.D.They are considered as a science.
3. What made Anna keep the tradition of kite-making?
A.The popularity of kites in Austria.
B.Her enthusiasm in Chinese culture.
C.Her father’s encouragement and support.
D.Its pleasure and her sense of responsibility.
4. Why does the author mention Anna and Jacob?
A.To remind us that kites will lose their cultural value in the future.
B.To tell us some young artists are taking kite-making to new heights.
C.To list some examples of the difficulties promoting kites in the world.
D.To show that only a few people consider kites worthy of preservation.
2024-02-18更新 | 43次组卷 | 1卷引用:湖南省益阳市2023-2024学年高三上学期期末英语试卷
阅读理解-阅读单选(约330词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文是一篇新闻报道。文章主要报道了上了年纪的Mavis Paterson骑行的故事,她通过骑行从自己的孩子相继去世的悲痛中恢复过来,还在骑行过程中为慈善机构筹集善款,她在沿途中也收获了友谊,并成为激励他人的人物。

10 . Cycling has become more than a habit for “Granny Mave,” as Mavis Paterson is known. It has become essential for her very being, her very reason for living after all three of her adult children passed away within four years of each other — Sandy in 2012, Katie in 2013 and Bob in 2016.

It was in memory of her children that the 85-year-old grandmother set out on her latest endurance challenge in May, cycling 1,000 miles around Scotland, beginning from the Mull of Galloway, before heading north, tracing the outline of the country until she reached the Mull of Galloway again.

“If I didn’t have my bicycle, and this is terrible to say, I don’t think I would want to live,” she told CNN Sport.

Paterson cycled every day for a month around Scotland, navigating its undulating (起伏的) landscape, exposed roads and unpredictable weather. Every day, she woke up early and set out riding — covering up to 50 miles a day — and raising money for British-based charity Macmillan Cancer Support.

Cycling has provided some comfort, some way for her to cope with unimaginable loss. All along the route, Paterson recalled other cyclists coming out to keep her company, offering “terrific support,” some of them riding with her for several days at a time. Such support was a constant throughout Paterson’s odyssey (跋涉) across Scotland, ending in a crowd at the finish line who had gathered to cheer her on.

“I know people have got on their bikes and thought, ‘If that old lady can do it, I can do it.’ And also people who have been a bit depressed and thought, ‘Oh gosh, I shouldn’t be like this. Look at poor Mave, she’s lost all her children.’ So a lot of people have taken up cycling because of my cycle rides and just inspired people apparently,” she said.

1. Why did Paterson start her cycling around Scotland?
A.To keep exercise and improve her health.
B.To take up the hobby of her three children.
C.To recover from the death of her children.
D.To be the oldest lady to ride around Scotland.
2. What can we say about the cycling around Scotland?
A.It is highly profitable and well-received.
B.It requires great effort and determination.
C.It needs professional training and equipment.
D.It aims to raise money for the disabled people.
3. What is paragraph 5 mainly about?
A.The support Paterson asked others for.
B.Some achievements Paterson achieved.
C.The challenges Paterson set for herself.
D.The friendship Paterson got along the way.
4. Which of the following can best describe Paterson?
A.A cyclist.B.A sponsor.C.A hopeless mother.D.An inspiration.
2024-02-18更新 | 34次组卷 | 1卷引用:湖南省益阳市2023-2024学年高三上学期期末英语试卷
共计 平均难度:一般