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听力选择题-短文 | 适中(0.65) |
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1 . 听下面一段独白,回答以下小题。1.
A.They support human lives.
B.They cure human discases.
C.They estimate species.
D.They stop plant extinction.
2.
A.Polluting the environment.
B.Destroying wildlife habitat.
C.Organizing activities.
D.Introducing new species.
3.
A.To analyze the main causes of the disappearing of some wild animals.
B.To appeal to people to protect wildlife.
C.To emphasize the importance of the earth.
D.To describe different ways to stop pollution.
7日内更新 | 8次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市闵行(文绮)中学 2023-2024学年高三下学期5月月考英语试题
选词填空-短文选词填空 | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇议论文,文章讨论了动物实验的争议性,指出老鼠基因组与人类有95%的基因相似,但动物实验仍受批评。动物保护组织认为其科学价值有限,而科学家则在寻找减少动物痛苦的方法,并探索替代实验的领域。
2 . Directions: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.
A. alternative       B. astonishing             C. computerized       D. contribution             E. developing
F. rate             G. modified             H. perfect          I. reject          J. relevance          K. sufficient

Using animals to test drugs intended for humans is controversial, with critics arguing there are other ways to ensure new medicines are safe and effective. But the scientists who carry out the research say animal studies remain necessary. Statistics indicate that in the UK around three million mice are being used for research and tens of millions worldwide.

Despite the difference in appearances, the genetic similarities with humans are     1    . The mouse genome (基因组) shares over 95% of its genes with humans. The animal acts as a “model”, genetically     2     to develop a human disease. But the use of mice, like any animal, in research is criticized by some.

Animal Defenders International (ADI) is one of the groups that campaigns for an end to the use of animals in research. “We would argue that it is extremely outdated, and not very good science for humans,” says Fleur Dawes of ADI. Ms. Dawes believes the suffering that the animals go through does not legalize their     3     to science and medicine for humans.” There is a big problem with that because there are huge differences between the species. And even though there are similarities with humans and mice, they react very differently to each other when experimented on. So what works in one animal is not an indication that that is how things work in other animals.”

However, Dr. Wells from Mary Lyon Centre (MLC) says they are constantly trying to     4     the process to reduce the suffering of mice.” If it’s a procedure where you can anaesthetize (麻醉) the mice, then you do it to reduce their stress. And if there is a (n)     5     method that doesn’t involve mice, you are not legally and normally allowed to do the procedure.”

If we     6     animal research, are there alternatives? Dr. Wells says, “There is a massive field     7     on alternatives, and we are very supportive of that field and we always keep track of what is going on in that field, because maybe we can replace one of our models. “Those alternatives include chips on human organs to study their function, micro-dosing treatments in humans and     8     models.” Lots of people say that there is a computer now to model what is going to happen in diseases,” Dr. Wells adds, “But we still don’t know enough to program those computers with     9     knowledge to be able to model what’s happening in every disease.”

Fleur Dawes agrees one alternative is not enough. But she says, “By combining the different alternatives, you can actually get a much better picture that is of much better     10     to humans.”

2024-05-23更新 | 26次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市建平中学2023-2024学年高三英语3月检测英语试题
书面表达-概要写作 | 适中(0.65) |
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3 . Directions: Read the following passage. Summarize in no more than 60 words the main idea of the passage and how it is illustrated. Use your own words as far as possible. 

Are we greening our cities, or just greenwashing them?

Architecture and urban design is chasing a green fever dream. Everywhere you look, there are plans for “sustainable” buildings, futuristic eco-cities and aquaponic farms on the roof, each promising to add a green touch to the modern city.

All of these are surely good ideas at some level. They are trying to repair some of the damage our lifestyle has done to the planet. But, despite the rhetoric of reuniting the city with nature, today’s green urban dream is too often about bringing a technologically controlled version of nature into the city and declaring the problem solved, rather than looking at the deeper causes of our environmental and urban problems.

One of the most striking examples is Apple’s “spaceship” campus now under construction in Silicon Valley. Though it seems to be sustainable and energy efficient—80 percent of its 175-acre site is preserved for landscaping, it is by any measure a huge, expensive and massively resource-intensive project. As a suburban white-collar workplace, it must include vast garages for 13,000 Apple employees. Thus, it will leave no smaller environmental footprint than a traditional office park.

Designing a perfect green building or eco-city isn’t enough to save the world. Although our buildings, like our cars, have been inefficient environmentally, architecture isn’t directly responsible for humanity’s disastrous environmental impacts. An economic system based on the destruction of nature is the real problem. No green building can help us repair the ecological damage we have caused, nor can any number of aquaponic farms bring us back to the real nature.

Instead of adding “nature” to the urban lifestyle, architects may work to design better relationships between our cities and nature, and to promote just relationships between the people in them.

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2024-03-05更新 | 52次组卷 | 2卷引用:上海市晋元高级中学2023-2024学年高三上学期10月月考英语试题
语法填空-短文语填(约370词) | 较难(0.4) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍剑桥大学关注全球变暖情况,希望成为世界上节能建筑的领导者。
4 . Directions: After reading the passage below, fill in the blanks to make the passages coherent and grammatically correct. For the blanks with a given word, fill in each blank with the proper form of the given word; for the other blanks, use one word that best fits each blank.

What Can One City Do?

People around the world are concerned about global warming and are talking about ways to stop it. The city of Cambridge, Massachusetts, in the United States, is doing more than just talking. Cambridge wants to become a world leader in energy-efficient buildings.

Today, Naema Omar is improving her 80-year-old house in Cambridge. To keep the heat inside in the winter, she is filling the space inside the walls with insulation(绝缘). Insulation is usually made from chemicals, but in her house, she is using     1     new - insulation made from recycled blue jeans and other clothes. She has also put in a new type of light called an LED lamp    2     uses only a tiny amount of electricity. The light-bulbs in it last for 20 to 30 years before needing     3     (change).

But eco-friendly insulation and lighting are much more expensive than the usual kind     4     many people in Cambridge can’t afford them. A group called Cambridge Energy Alliance (CEA)     5     (work) to solve this problem. They want to help every resident and business in the city conserve energy. People can ask the group to come and look at     6     they can make their house or office building eco-friendly. The CEA then makes them a plan to save 15 to 30 percent on heating, gas, water, and electricity. Then the group help people borrow money to pay for the improvements. The money that people save by being     7     (efficient) should be enough to pay back the loan.

It was ten years ago that the city of Cambridge decided to try to reduce its carbon emissions. More than 80 percent of the carbon dioxide     8     (produce) in Cambridge comes from buildings - not from cars     9     successful, the program will not only save a lot of energy but also make new jobs for local people. Workers    10     (need) to put in insulation, install better doors and windows, and make other energy improvements on buildings. The CEA hopes that their program will be an example for other cities.

2023-12-04更新 | 315次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市华东师范大学附属东昌中学2023-2024学年高三上学期10月测评英语试题
智能选题,一键自动生成优质试卷~
选词填空-短文选词填空 | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。主要介绍了在过去的30年里,不寻常的暴雨变得越来越常见,使大量的人处于危险之中,以及造成这个结果的原因。
5 . Directions: Complete the following passage by using the words in the box. Each word can only be used once. Note that there is one word more than you need.
A. claimed     B. evacuate     C. fabrics     D. regular     E. significantly     F. sink
G. rainstorms     H. similar     I. initially     J. swallowing     K. thought

“It was a wave of water,” says Oulimata Sambe. She points out the still-sodden(湿透的) armchairs, muddy wardrobe and the water stain a metre and a half up the wall in her small house in Ngor, a fishing village within Dakar, the capital of Senegal. “I had two grandkids on my bed, I had to     1     them out of the window,” she adds. Not faraway, underpasses on Dakar’s scenic corniche(滨海路) became car-    2     lakes. Just weeks earlier another downpour had turned quiet streets in Dakar into raging rivers and collapsed a section of motorway.

    3     events regularly occur across the region. Recent flooding and landslides also killed eight people in Freetown, the capital of Sierra Leone. In June flooding killed 12 people in Abidjan, the commercial capital of Ivory Coast. Floods in Lagos, Nigeria’s commercial capital,     4     another seven lives. Even when they are not deadly, city floods ruin lives and livelihoods. Storm water recently flooded the biggest textile(纺织业) market in Kano, a city in northern Nigeria, destroying hundreds of thousands of dollars’ worth of     5    .

Unusually heavy rains have become     6     more common over the past 30 years, leaving huge numbers of people at risk. In places this is partly because of deforestation. A recent study by Christopher Taylor of the UK Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, a research institute, and his coauthors found that afternoon     7     in deforested parts of coastal west Africa happen twice as often compared with 30 years ago. Their frequency went up by only about a third in places that kept their forests.

Yet     8     flooding of cities in west Africa is not only caused by heavier rain. Unplanned urbanization is also to blame. As cities have grown, builders have thrown up concrete walls with little     9     about providing drainage, making it harder for water to find a clear path to the sea. As ever larger areas have been paved over, there has been less exposed soil into which water can gently     10     away. And as cites get more packed with new arrivals, their few functioning drains get overwhelmed or clogged.

2023-10-24更新 | 103次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市育才中学2023-2024学年高三上学期10月第一次阶段检测英语试卷
完形填空(约490词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇议论文。文章主要论述的是电影和电视需要反映气候变化对我们日常生活的各种影响。

6 . The Grey’s Anatomy doctors are navigating the patients that have kept them on our screens for some 400 episodes of the show. But in this episode, for the first time, the _______ to the drama is the very real issue of climate change. It’s a relatively rare example of the many kinds of climate-related storylines that are typically missing from _______ TV and film worlds. Social scientists argue that climate is a topic that belongs in many kinds of on-screen stories, not just the _______ climate-disaster thriller.

But can seeing the realities of climate change affecting characters on the screen help us relate _______ to the unfolding climate crisis – to cope better, or even change our behavior?

Non-profit storytelling consultancy Good Energy believes it can. It is among a small but growing number of organizations _______ far more TV and film scripts to _______ climate-related storylines. In April 2022, it released its Good Energy Playbook, a set of guidelines for embedding climate change into any on-screen story. It joins other initiatives in drawing attention to the need for film and TV to _______ the numerous ways climate change leaves its mark on our everyday lives.

The Good Energy Playbook’s suggestions are appropriately wide-ranging: characters with climate anxiety and those fighting against injustice; utopian (乌托邦的) narratives that explore climate solutions; storylines that quietly _______ climate references into their characters’ worlds.

The playbook was created by Good Energy founder Anna Jane Joyner, “It started as a personal _______, where I just got on the phone with as many screenwriters as I could,” she says. She quickly learned that writers wanted to talk about climate, but “didn’t really have the support and toolset to be able to do it”.

Many research studies looked at the impact introducing climate stories had on viewers, and found it prompted greater concern about climate change. It also ________ people’s understanding of it and made them more likely to take action to reduce their emissions. ________, science tells us that stories have a power that hard facts often don’t. Research has long established that the human brain finds it easier to understand and remember information delivered as a ________, and has even found that stories can influence behavior.

Climate stories, then, seem like a pretty good idea. But these sorts of narratives have been few and far between. Julie Doyle, professor of media at the University of Brighton in the UK, says climate change has ________ for years to get into any form of fictional film or TV representation. “There’s been a silence around it,” she says.

It’s time to break the climate silence, says Doyle. “Mainstream media has tended to follow rather than lead, and it would be great if mainstream media could lead this.” Day-to-day mentions of climate change in media are especially important because, while blockbuster climate films can have a positive impact on awareness and action, the effect is sadly __________. People can feel inspired to take action in the moment, but the feeling __________ in a matter of weeks.

1.
A.resistanceB.backgroundC.responseD.application
2.
A.fictionalB.scientificC.educationalD.theoretical
3.
A.logicalB.moralC.occasionalD.spiritual
4.
A.differentlyB.effortlesslyC.reluctantlyD.systematically
5.
A.depending onB.referring toC.identifying withD.calling for
6.
A.restoreB.featureC.demonstrateD.sponsor
7.
A.reflectB.maintainC.eliminateD.strengthen
8.
A.integrateB.reverseC.initiateD.publish
9.
A.transitionB.campaignC.achievementD.association
10.
A.transferredB.promotedC.shiftedD.underestimated
11.
A.For exampleB.As a resultC.On the contraryD.In addition
12.
A.narrativeB.characterC.plotD.memory
13.
A.exploredB.competedC.struggledD.appealed
14.
A.narrow-mindedB.ever-changingC.short-livedD.far-sighted
15.
A.resumesB.fadesC.deepensD.increases
听力选择题-短文 | 适中(0.65) |
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7 . 听下面一段独白,回答以下小题。1.
A.In order to protect the weak and old ones.
B.In order to show beautiful shape of them.
C.In order to maintain physical strength.
D.In order to keep teamwork spirit.
2.
A.How the birds decide the order of the group.
B.How the birds decide the route of the group.
C.How the birds decide the time of flying of the group.
D.How the birds decide who takes charge of the group.
3.
A.Birds’ ability to keep order.B.Birds’ flying pattern as a team.
C.Birds’ intention to migrate.D.Birds’ skills to tell directions.
2023-10-13更新 | 113次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市格致中学2023-2024学年高三9月月考英语试卷(含听力)
阅读理解-阅读单选(约450词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇记叙文。文章讲述了去年,在路易斯安那州巴吞鲁日那场鲜为人知的洪水中,作者的家人失去了一切,红十字会称之为“自飓风桑迪以来美国最严重的灾难”。

8 . My family lost everything in the little-known flood of Baton Rouge, Louisiana last year that the Red Cross called the “Worst US disaster since Hurricane Sandy.”

It began raining in mid-August. Then it rained some more, got more powerful, and didn’t stop for days. There was talk that the local rivers were going to crest (到达顶点)and cause some pretty serious flooding. We lived somewhat close to the Amite River, but our senior neighbors told us that our neighborhood hadn’t flooded in over 100 years.

Local news said that the nearby high school may get a little bit of water inside from the rising river. We thought we had a couple of days to plan on how we were going to shelter in place because of the weather forecast.

On the 13th of August I woke up, walked outside and headed toward the direction of the river. Some of the lower areas were collecting water but there was no standing water anywhere near my house or even my neighborhood. I went back home and told my wife we should probably get some supplies in case this got serious; that maybe we should even pack a car in case we needed to leave though I was fairly certain there was nothing to worry about.

About 30 minutes into slowly packing there was a loud banging on my front door. It was my wife’s cousin. I opened the door and she said, “What are you doing?! Get out of the house!” I looked behind her and noticed my entire yard underwater and the waterline only about a half-inch from going over my doorstep and into my house.

I was floored. The river wasn’t supposed to crest until the next day. I thought we had more time.

I yelled at my wife, “We have to get out of the house. Now!”

We packed up both our cars in about 10 minutes with only our most precious memories. Everything else we had built during a 10-year marriage was left behind. We evacuated about 5 miles east away from the river to my wife’s grandmothers.

After being there for about an hour someone came to the front door and said, “You guys ned to get out. The river is coming.”

Sure enough, her yard was flooding too.

We evacuated a second time in as many hours to her cousin’s house even further east. After only an hour we were told again that the river was on the way and we had to leave.

1. The author realized the arrival of the flood when ______.
A.the rain started to fall heavily and non-stop
B.the nearby high school was slightly affected
C.there was standing water in some lower areas
D.he was informed by his wife’s cousin at the door
2. What does the author mean by saying “I was floored” in the 6th paragraph?
A.He was clam enough to cope with the flood.
B.He became trapped by the rising floodwater.
C.He was shocked by the early arrival of the flood.
D.He lost his temper with his wife for being unprepared.
3. From the story, what do we know about the author’s evacuation?
A.He didn’t take action immediately despite his neighbor’s warning.
B.He trusted the weather forecast so that he prepared himself in advance.
C.He and his wife brought some supplies and valuable belongings with them.
D.He was forced to leave the temporary homes again and again to avoid danger.
4. Which of the following might be the best title of the passage?
A.Mutual Support in DisastersB.Baton Rouge Flooding
C.How to Survive a FloodD.Methods of Predicting Floods
听力选择题-短文 | 适中(0.65) |
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9 . 听下面一段独白,回答以下小题。1.
A.The location.B.The scenery.C.The seafood.D.The culture.
2.
A.Attract whales to the closer shore.B.Tell people where to see whales.
C.Warn people to stay away from shore.D.Go around to gather enough visitors.
3.
A.It is held every other year in summer.
B.It helps Whale Crier to show his talents.
C.It guarantees everyone to find something to enjoy.
D.It is one of the best eco-arts festivals in South Africa.
2023-05-19更新 | 115次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市杨浦区同济大学第一附属中学2022-2023学年高三下学期5月月考英语试题(含听力)
阅读理解-六选四(约310词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本是一篇说明文。主要介绍了猫喜欢盒子的原因。

10 . Why Do Cats Love Boxes So Much?

There is an object that’s pretty much guaranteed to arouse your cat’s interest. That object, as the Internet has so thoroughly documented, is a box. Any box, really. Like many other really strange things cats do, science hasn’t fully cracked this particular feline (猫科的) mystery.

    1     In fact, when you look at all the evidence together, it could be that your cat may not just like boxes, he may need them.

The box-and-whisker plot

Understanding the feline mind is extremely difficult. Still, there’s a sizable amount of behavioral research on cats who are, well, used for other kinds of research. These studies have been taking place for more than 50 years and they make one thing quite clear:     2    

This is likely true for a number of reasons, but for cats in stressful situations, a box or some other type of separate enclosure can have a strong impact on both their behavior and physiology.

Ethologist Claudia Vinke of Utrecht University in the Netherlands is one of the latest researchers to study stress levels in shelter cats. Working with domestic cats in a Dutch animal shelter, Vinke provided hiding boxes for a group of newly arrived cats while keeping another group from them entirely.     3     In effect, the cats with boxes got used to their new surroundings faster, were far less stressed early on, and were more interested in interacting with humans.

The ‘If it fits, I sits’ principle

Some feline observers will note that in addition to boxes, many cats seem to pick other odd places to relax. Some curl up in a bathroom sink.     4     This brings us to the other reason why your cat may like particularly small boxes: It’s really cold out.

So there you have it: Boxes are insulating, stress-relieving, comfort zones—places where cats can hide, relax, sleep, and occasionally launch a surprise attack against the huge, unpredictable apes they live with.

A.Your furry companion obtains comfort and security from enclosed spaces.
B.Others prefer shoes, bowls, shopping bags, coffee mugs, empty egg cartons, and other small, enclosed spaces.
C.She found a significant difference in stress levels between cats that had the boxes and those that didn’t.
D.A box, in this sense, can often represent a safe zone, a place where sources of anxiety, hostility (恶意), and unwanted attention simply disappear.
E.So rather than work things out, cats tend to simply run away from their problems or avoid them altogether.
F.Thankfully, behavioral biologists and veterinarians have come up with a few interesting explanations.
2023-05-07更新 | 278次组卷 | 2卷引用:上海市大同中学2022-2023学年高三3月月考英语试卷(含听力)
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