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阅读理解-阅读单选(约350词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。主要介绍了2035年未来生活可能的样子。

1 . It’s 2035. You have a job, a family and you’re about 40 years old! Welcome to your future life.

Getting ready for work, you pause in front of the mirror. “Turn red,” you say. Your shirt changes from sky blue to deep red. Tiny preprogrammed electronics (电子器件) are rearranged in your shirt to change its color. Looking into the mirror, you find it hard to believe you’re 40. You look much younger. With amazing advances in medicine, people in your generation may live to be 150 years old. You’re not even middle­aged!

As you go into the kitchen and prepare to pour your breakfast cereal into a bowl, you hear, “To lose weight, you shouldn’t eat that,” from your shoes. They read the tiny electronic code (电子源码) on the cereal box to find out the nutrition details. You decide to listen to your shoes. “Kitchen, what can I have for breakfast?” A list of possible foods appears on the counter as the kitchen checks its food supplies.

“Ready for your trip to space?” you ask your son and daughter. In 2005 only specially trained astronauts went into space—and very few of them. Today anyone can go to space for day trips or longer vacations. Your best friend even works in space. Handing your children three strawberries each, you add, “The doctor said you need these for space travel.” Thanks to medical advances, vaccination shots (防疫针) are a thing of the past. Ordinary foods contain specific vaccines. With the berries in their mouths, the kids head for the front door.

It’s time for you to go to work. Your car checks your fingerprints and unlocks the doors. “My office. Autopilot,” you command. Your car drives itself down the road and moves smoothly into traffic on the highway. You sit back and unroll your e­newspaper. The latest news downloads and fills the viewer. Looking through the pages, you watch the news as video film rather than read it.

1. What changes the color of your shirt?
A.The mirror.B.The shirt itself.
C.The counter.D.The medicine.
2. How do the shoes know that you shouldn’t eat cereal for breakfast?
A.By pouring the breakfast into a bowl.
B.By listening to the doctor’s advice.
C.By testing the food supplies in the kitchen.
D.By checking the nutrition details of the food.
3. The strawberries the children eat serve as ________.
A.breakfastB.lunch
C.vaccinesD.nutrition
4. How is the text organized?
A.In order of time.B.In order of frequency.
C.In order of preference.D.In order of importance.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约380词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。主要描绘了人类未来的生活。

2 . It’s 2035. You have a job, a family and you’re about 40 years old! Welcome to your future life.

Getting ready for work, you pause in front of the   mirror. “Turn red,” you say. Your shirt changes from   sky blue to deep red.Tiny preprogrammed electronics   (智能电子元件) are rearranged in your shirt to change its color. Looking into the mirror, you find it hard to believe you’re 40. You look much younger. With amazing advances in medicine, people in your generation may live   to be 150 years old. You’re not even middle­aged!

As you go into the kitchen and prepare to pour your breakfast cereal into a bowl, you hear, “To lose weight, you shouldn’t eat that!” from your shoes. They read the tiny electronic code(电子源码) on the cereal box to find out the nutrition details. You decide to listen to your shoes. “Kitchen, what can I have for breakfast?”A list of possible foods appears on the counter as the kitchen checks its food supplies.

“Ready for your trip to space?” you ask your son and daughter. In 2015 only specially trained astronauts went into space—and very few of them. Today anyone can go to space for day trips or longer vacations. Your best friend even works in space. Handing your children three strawberries each, you add, “The doctor says you need   these   for   space   travel.” Thanks to medical advances, vaccination shots (防疫针) are a thing of the past. Ordinary foods contain special vaccines. With the strawberries in their mouths, the kids head for the front door.

It’s time for you to go to work. Your car checks your fingerprints and unlocks the doors. “My office. Autopilot,”you command. Your car drives itself down the road and moves smoothly into traffic on the highway. You sit back and unroll your e­newspaper. The latest news downloads and fills the viewer. Looking through the pages, you watch the news as video film rather than read it.

1. What changes the color of your shirt?
A.The mirror.
B.The preprogrammed electronics.
C.The sunlight.
D.The medicine.
2. How do the shoes know that you shouldn’t eat the breakfast cereal?
A.By pouring the breakfast into a bowl.
B.By getting the doctor’s advice.
C.By testing the food supplies in the kitchen.
D.By checking the nutrition details of the food.
3. The strawberries the children eat serve as ________.
A.breakfastB.lunch
C.vaccinesD.nutrition
4. How is the text organized?
A.In order of time.
B.In order of space.
C.In order of preference.
D.In order of importance.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约390词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了作者预测未来手机可能会出现的功能。

3 . Forecasting the technological future is difficult. Back in the 1980s, the thought of carrying around a small, portable phone seemed to belong in the world of science fiction. Then in the 1990s, imagining a phone that would allow you to surf the Internet something that didn’t even exist until 1990 was unheard-of. Today, smartphones can surf the Web, run applications and play games,and those with a near field communication (NFC) chip can act as a way to make purchases. And they can still make phone calls, too.

So what will phones look like in 2050? Based upon phone customer behavior, I imagine the future phones will rely more on combiningour physical lives with our digital lives. They probably won’t be similar to the ones we’re reusing now. They’ll be built into other devices and products. Imagine a pair of glasses that can display a digital overlay on top of your physical surroundings.

I don’t think video chat is taking off despite services like Skype and FaceTime. Rather, the trend seems to be toward asynchronous (非同步的) communication. That means the two or more people in a conversation complete a discussion over time.

We might even see the phone part of phones disappear. Recent phone customer behavior suggests that texting is a more popular way to communicate than telephone calls. Future phones will need a way to display messages but don’t necessarily include voice communication.

Since we’re talking about 2050 here, there’s even the possibility that research into brain-computer interfaces (脑机接口) will have reached a point in which we won’t need a physical screen or microphone at all. Electronics could be built into clothing. You’d link the devices to an interface connected to your brain and post messages just through thought. I’d be a form of telepathy (心灵感应).

But what do you think? Will we be wearing devices that let us communicate easily? Or will we be carrying around the iPhone 47 and answering texts between games of Angry Birds? Let us know your predictions.

1. What will future phones be like according to the author?
A.Texting may disappear.
B.NFC chips can be used for purchasing.
C.Phones will combine our lives with our work.
D.Phones may be built into other products.
2. With the development of brain-computer interfaces,                      .
A.we may send messages just through thought
B.phones can be connected directly to your brain
C.clothing may be made into the screen of phones
D.telepathy between people and animals may come true
3. From the text, we know that          .
A.people started surfing the Internet in the 1980s
B.we will be carrying around the iPhone 47 in 2050
C.the author’s prediction about phones is based on phone customer behavior
D.the author is negative about the development of brain-computer interfaces
4. Which column of the newspaper does the passage come from?
A.Economy.B.Science.
C.Health.D.Entertainment.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约220词) | 容易(0.94) |
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文章大意:这是一篇记叙文。文章讲述了在未来的生活将不同于今天的生活。人口增长很快。世界上会有很多的人,他们中的大多数人会比现在活得更长。计算机将更小、更有用,并且在每个家庭将至少有一台。

4 . Life in the future will be different from the life today. Between then and now many changes will happen. But what will the changes be?

The population is growing fast. And most of them will live longer than people now.

Computers will be much smaller and more useful, and there will be at least one in every room. And computer studies will be one of the important subjects in schools then. People will work fewer hours than they do now and they will have more free time for sports, watching TV and travel. Travelling will be much cheaper and easier. And many more people will go to other countries for holidays.

There will be changes in our food, too. More land will be used for building new towns and houses for all the people. Then there will be less room for cows and sheep, so meat will be more expensive. Maybe no one will eat it every day. Instead, they will eat more fruits and vegetables. Maybe people will be healthier. Work in the future will be different, too. Robots will do dangerous and hard work. Because of this, many people will not have enough work to do. This will be a big problem.

1. In the future there will be________.
A.fewer vegetablesB.much more fruit
C.more peopleD.less people
2. In the future people don’t have to________.
A.walk on footB.work long hours
C.work fastD.eat meat
3. One big problem in the future is that________.
A.people will eat more fruits and vegetables
B.many people may not be able to find work
C.room for growing fruits and vegetables will reduce
D.all the work will be done by robots
阅读理解-阅读单选(约320词) | 较易(0.85) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。未来学家对我们未来的生活做了很多预测,他们预测未来30年我们将如何旅行、工作和生活。到2048年,一些未来学家预测,一些会说话的“建筑”将出现在我们的生活中。同时文章描述了未来智能建筑可能具备的功能和外观。

5 . Futurologists are making a lot of predictions about our future life and they are predicting how we will travel, work and live in the next 30 years. By 2048, some futurologists foresee that some “talking” buildings will appear in our life.

By the middle of the century, it’s believed that buildings will be able to “talk” to people through various sensors when the heating needs to be turned on. As a result, there will be no switches. Instead, a lot of networks will appear, which can be compared to a human nervous system. In the next 30 years, buildings will be made from concrete plastics and shape-changing materials. All of them can heal themselves at that time. As architects are racing to develop the world’s tallest buildings, there will be a need for new kinds of elevators, through which vehicles could even travel into the buildings. German engineers have already started working on such technology called Multi.

By mid-century, scientists believe that buildings will be miles tall. Some of them may be very large and they can function as small cities. By comparison, at present, the world’s tallest building, the Burj Khalifa Tower in Dubai, measures 828 metres high. As the future building can rise through the clouds, their windows will be replaced by virtual screens. In this way, people can choose any view as they like.

At height extremes, a London Spaceport is also likely to come into being by 2048 as the space industry develops very quickly. There is a huge cost advantage going to space from as high a base as possible, so a spaceport is very likely to be over 10km and even as much as 30km, using carbon - based materials.

1. How will the heating system be controlled in the future?
A.Through the net.B.Through sensors.
C.Through switches.D.Through mobiles.
2. What might happen to the future buildings in a disaster?
A.They can recover by themselves.B.They can seek help automatically.
C.They can transport people into space.D.They can protect people against harm.
3. What’s likely to be the advantage of Multi?
A.Seeing the scenes as you please.B.Allowing vehicles to travel into buildings.
C.Connecting the earth with the space.D.Making it possible to build high buildings.
4. What does the underlined word “they” in Paragraph 3 most probably refer to?
A.ScientistsB.German engineers
C.Future buildingsD.Virtual screens.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约310词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇新闻报道。报道杂志Big Think就40年后的世界会如何这一话题,邀请了各行各业的精英人士发表评论。并展示了评论内容。

6 . Recently, the magazine Big Think asked top minds from a variety of fields to comment on what the future holds 40 years from now. The result is as follows.

It’s likely that by 2050 the majority of the people in the world will live in urban (城市的) areas, and will have a much higher average age than people today. Cities theorist Richard Florida thinks urbanization will reinvent the education system of the United States, making our economy less real estate (房地产) driven and erasing(消除) the divisions between home and work.

And rapidly advancing technology will continue ever more rapidly. Cities of the future won’t look like “some sort of science-fiction fantasy”, but it’s likely that technological advances and information overlays (VR and AR) will greatly change how we live. Self-driving cars will make the roads safer and provide faster transports. A larger version of driverless cars-driverless trucks - may make long-distance drivers out of date.

Some long view predictions are completely dire. Environmentalist Bill McKibben says that if we don’t make great progress in fighting global warming, it’s likely we could see out-of-control rises in sea levels, huge crop shortfalls, and wars over limited freshwater resources.

In terms of how we will eat, green markets founder and “real food” supporter Nina Planck believes that there will be more small milk processing plants, and more regional food operations and we’ll be healthier as a result. New York Times feature writer Mark Bittman thinks that people will eat fewer processed foods, and eat foods grown closer to where they live. And Anson Mills farmer Glenn Roberts thinks that more people will be aware of the “ethical(道德的) responsibility” to grow and preserve land-raised farm systems.

1. What may happen by 2050?
A.Most people will live in cities.B.The aging population will drop.
C.Home education will become a trend.D.The economy will be driven by real estate.
2. What do we know about technology in the future?
A.It will give cities a science-fiction appearance.
B.It will greatly change the way people live.
C.It will lead to an increase in the number of cars.
D.It will ensure faster transports with fast cars.
3. What does the underlined word “dire” in the fourth paragraph mean?
A.Interesting.B.Daring.C.Terrible.D.Creative.
4. What does Mark Bittman think of foods in the future?
A.People will eat healthier and fresher foods.
B.Land-raised farm systems will be improved.
C.There will be more regional food operations.
D.Food supplies will become more limited than before.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约490词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇夹叙夹议的文章。主要讲述了作为餐厅评论员在饭店所经历的变化,也反映了美国家庭收入和思想观念的改变。

7 . If you had asked me then if I would accept a job as a restaurant critic for The New York Times or others, I would have replied, “Definitely not! ” This was partly because I did not want to think of myself as an ambitious sort. Working in restaurants was honest labor, and anyone could see that. Writing about them for the mainstream press was not.

However, the renewing was fun, so much fun that when mainstream publishers started paying me for my opinions, I didn’t do the decent (体面的) thing, and before I knew it, I had stopped cooking professionally. Then I stopped cooking altogether. “She’s joined the leisure class.” my friend said.

I disarmed my critics by inviting them along; nobody I knew could afford to eat out and nobody refused. We went with equal amounts of guilt and pleasure, with a feeling that we were stepping onto the playgrounds of the rich.

We knew we didn’t belong to these grand restaurants. We always got the worst table, and since I didn’t own a credit card, I had to pay in cash. The year turned into two and three, and more. Then, I got a credit card as well as good clothes. I was writing for increasingly prestigious (声誉高的) publications. Meanwhile, a voice inside me kept whispering, “How could you?”

The voice is still there, never coming to a stop. When I receive weekly letters from people who think it is unacceptable to write about $100 meals while half the world is hungry, the voice rings right along, “They’re absolutely right, you elitist (精英) pig is not”. When it asks, “When are you going to grow up and get a real job?”, it sounds a lot like my mother.

It is just at that moment that I tell the voice to shut up because I realize all I’m doing with my life is telling rich people where to eat and how much the world has changed.

Yes, there are still restaurants where rich people go to remind themselves that they are different from you and me, but there are fewer and fewer of them. Going out to eat used to be like going to the opera; today, it is more like going to the movies.

Therefore, everyone has become a critic and I couldn’t be happier with this. The more people pay attention to what and how they eat, the more accustomed they become to their own senses and the world around them. As A. J. Liebling once said, all it really takes to be a restaurant critic is a good appetite.

1. What can we know from the first two paragraphs?
A.The author was too honest to work as a restaurant critic.
B.The author found it hard to work for the mainstream press.
C.The author didn’t think highly of the job as a restaurant critic.
D.The author wasn’t able to renew the work as a professional cook.
2. How did the author feel about eating out?
A.She felt like eating out with the rich.
B.She refused to eat out with the critics.
C.She had a mixed feeling about eating out.
D.She got much fun from being invited to eat out.
3. What does the author want to tell us by saying “The year turned into two, and three, and more.”?
A.She stayed in the career as a professional cook for years.
B.She took up the job of writing as a restaurant critic for years.
C.It took a long time for the publications to increase their prestige.
D.It was years before her application for a credit card got approved.
4. What changes have taken place to American restaurants?
A.Restaurants make people confused about their social status.
B.Rich people can get special treat in some restaurants.
C.Ordinary people have become accustomed to fancy restaurants. o
D.Restaurants have become affordable to common people.
5. Which of the following statements will the author probably agree with?
A.Eating out is not a privilege of the rich.
B.There is no need for restaurant critics at all.
C.The writer is getting tired of her current job.
D.Good appetite makes a good restaurant critic.
阅读理解-七选五(约170词) | 较易(0.85) |
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文章大意:本文为一篇说明文。从几个方面讲述了未来的生活。

8 . By 2050 we’ll be able to send memories, emotions and feelings across the Internet.     1     Teenagers will love it. Instead of putting an emoticon (表情符号) at the end of every sentence, they will use an emotion: anger, happiness, or excitement.

I’m talking about telepathy (心灵感应), really. We’ll still communicate the traditional way.     2     Our children will wonder, What is a keyboard? We will enter the age of the “brain net”.

Medicine will develop fast, too. We will have cured certain forms of cancer, and we will have begun to treat the disease like the common cold. We’ll live with it. It will no longer be deadly.     3     Technology will help in this respect.     4     Smart toilets will perform liquid biopsies (液体活检) to discover cancer cells. Smart objects like phones will check us over automatically.

    5     By 2050 I think we’ll be able to grow many of the important organs (器官) of the body and, rather than allow the organs we’re born with to become old and weak, we’ll replace them. That’s all coming. And it doesn’t take much imagination to realise it.

A.We will do a few tests.
B.People will live an easy life.
C.We won’t fear it like we used to.
D.Brain science will have changed communication.
E.We can already use human cells to grow skin, noses, ears, etc.
F.But communicating telepathically will avoid misunderstandings between people.
G.Our clothes will discover the beginnings of a heart disease, and advise us to get treatment.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约340词) | 较易(0.85) |
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文章大意:这是一篇记叙文。文章介绍了作者最喜欢的海滨小镇,作者小时候和父母在此地的回忆,以及四十年后作者和妻子在此地度假时的心情。

9 . Bournemouth in Dorset has always been my favourite seaside town. When I was growing up, Mum and Dad didn’t have much money, but they’d saved enough for a few days in Bournemouth. I was four years old at the time. I don’t actually remember much about the trip, apart from being devastated when we had to leave. Mum said I fell in love with the place and insisted on waving goodbye to the sea when it was time to go. So I grew up believing Bournemouth was a wonderful place.

Forty years on, my wife and I returned for a week’s break. I was nervous, wondering if I’d be able to bring back that delight I’d felt as a child. I needn’t have worried. We had a fantastic time. It helped that the British weather had decided to provide us with high temperatures and plenty of sun. But it was Bournemouth that kept me spellbound, making me feel like a child again.

Bournemouth and its neighbour, Boscombe, are always busy, alive with chatter, music and other lively sounds. But as we stepped into Boscombe Chine Gardens, all the noise faded away. A sense of peace spread through us as we meandered along the paths, delighting in the squirrels climbing up and down the trees and the bright colours of the pretty plants.

One morning, we made a short trip to Poole Quay and took the ferry to Brownsea Island. Owned by the National Trust, it’s a feast for the eyes, from its mock Tudor entrance, to the many peacocks walking around, to the magnificent views of the sun sparkling on the shining waters and boats bobbing up and down, seen from the island’s highest point.

Before we knew it, it was time to return home—but not before waving goodbye to the sea.

1. Which of the following best explains “devastated” underlined in Paragraph 1?
A.Sorrowful.B.Surprised.
C.Thrilled.D.Desperate.
2. What made the author feel nervous?
A.The fear of losing childhood memories.
B.The adjustment to the new circumstances.
C.The uncertainty of recalling childhood delight.
D.The exposure to high temperatures and sunshine.
3. What does the author think about Boscombe Chine Gardens?
A.It boasts seaside views.B.It belongs to wild animals.
C.It is free of the town’s noise.D.It reminds him of his childhood.
4. What is the text mainly about?
A.Farewell to Bournemouth.B.Working in a wonderful place.
C.A childhood unforgettable story.D.Revisiting a childhood favourite.
2022-10-09更新 | 397次组卷 | 6卷引用:2023届广西南宁市第三中学高三上学期第一次适应性考试英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约320词) | 较易(0.85) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。短文设想了2025年的月球之旅是什么样子的。

10 . Since several organisations plan to put the first man on Mars by 2030, new trips to the Moon will take place around 2025. If you go to the Moon, you need a place to stay in. So what will it be like? Maybe the following article can give us some inspiration.

August 23, 2025—Today a new chapter in space travel was written. Rod Markham and his wife-to-be Susan Millster arrived safely on the Moon to spend 5 nights as the first guests at the Starbright Hotel that was set up for this purpose two years ago.

Not only are they the first hotel guests on the Moon, but they also set a new record for expensive accommodation since the price was $3.7 million per night, per person. However, the move from the Earth to the hotel is included in the price.

The hotel itself will probably have a hard time just to try to gain one star in any hotel rating system, because there is no room service. The guests have to do the cleaning of the room themselves and there is no bathroom in it. However. they have more stars than they need just outside their windows.

Rod and Susan will get married by linking their local minister in San Diego, California at 9:00 p.m. EST tonight, and the wedding will be broadcast live by several major TV networks in a 1-hour special report, including the preparations for the trip.

Six astronauts are along with them and during the stay they’ll set up further accommodations for the guests who have made reservations at the Starbright Hotel next year. The hotel has no employees, only some workers when guests stay at it.

1. What does the new chapter in space travel refer to according to paragraph 2?
A.That humans landed on Mars for the first time.
B.That the first hotel on the Moon was set up.
C.That the first hotel guests landed on the Moon.
D.That the hotel on Mars welcomed its first guests.
2. What's the meaning of the underlined sentence “there is no room service”?
A.They can't find much help.
B.They will get five-star service.
C.They have to cook food themselves.
D.They can use the bathroom in their room.
3. What can we learn about the wedding of Rod and Susan?
A.It will last for an hour.
B.It can be watched live on the Earth.
C.A minister on the Moon will host it.
D.Their relatives and friends will be present.
4. What will the six astronauts do during the stay of Rod and Susan?
A.Accept reservations from others.
B.Improve room service for the couple.
C.Look for several employees for the hotel.
D.Prepare accommodations for future guests.
2022-09-03更新 | 102次组卷 | 4卷引用:重庆市合川太和中学2022-2023学年高三上学期入学考试英语试题
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