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阅读理解-阅读单选(约360词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文为记述文。文章主要讲述Kevin Pang和父亲合作教做中国菜的故事。

1 . The relationship between Jeffrey Pang and his son, Kevin Pang, was like hot-and-sour soup. It boiled over easily. The Pangs, who moved to the United States in 1988, wanted their son and daughter to know Chinese culture. As a video game-playing American teen, Kevin wasn’t interested.

But when Kevin became a food writer for the Chicago Tribune, he realized he had a valuable resource: his cook-laving dad. “My father and I shared, for the first time, a common interest. I would call to ask about recipes and cooking techniques. He would school me on the world of Chinese food,” Kevin writes in the introduction to the cookbook he has just published.

When it comes to cooking Chinese food, he points out that there is no one definition of Chinese food. “Chinese cooking is not hidebound. For example, consider baked pork chop rice, popularized in Hong Kong. It is a pork chop with egg-fried rice. And then you top it with this thick tomato sauce,” explains Kevin. “And then you top that with some cheese. It’s a very interesting combined dish that has some Western British influences, and it’s altogether very Chinese as well.”

By the time Kevin joined America’s Test Kitchen (ATK) staff in 2020 as its editorial director for digital content, his dad had become an Internet celebrity demonstrating the family’s recipes. Kevin recognized an opportunity not only to share his own family’s food stories but also to apply the ATK method of breaking down recipes into simple steps for the home cook.

“I think this cookbook can teach fathers and sons how to connect, how to find a common interest and improve their relationship, ” Kevin says. That feeling has found an enthusiastic fan base, generating nearly 3 million views, for their online cooking series “Hunger Pangs”, where viewers speak highly of their father-son bond as much as they do of their attractive dishes. Today the Pangs’ relationship is rarely sour or hot.

1. Why would Kevin phone his father after becoming a food writer?
A.To publish his Chinese cookbook.B.To inquire about hot-and-sour soup.
C.To seek permission for video games.D.To ask about cooking Chinese food.
2. What does the underlined word “hidebound” in paragraph 3 mean?
A.Inflexible.B.Inclusive.C.Unpleasant.D.Uncertain.
3. What can we infer about Kevin and his father from the passage?
A.Their relationship has improved.B.They run America’s. Test Kitchen.
C.They do dishes to attract followers.D.Their cookbook is about low-fat food.
4. What is the best title of the passage?
A.Cooking at home helps you cook well for less.B.Father and son jointly teach Chinese cooking.
C.Chinese culture is becoming popular in the us.D.Recipes and cooking techniques are really easy.
完形填空(约190词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇记叙文。主要说明了中国一名40岁的男子李伟在失业20多年后找到了自己的使命——在社交媒体上教授量子力学。

2 . A 40-year-old man in China found his calling — teaching quantum mechanics (量子力学) on social media — after being unemployed for more than 20 years. Li Wei, from Qinghai province in northwestern China, became ________ for teaching science in an easy-to-understand way on his Douyin account.

Such is his popularity, he has ________ 1.8 million followers. “I don’t like ________ people,” Li said. He ________ a bachelor’s degree in law 20 years ago, but he did not find ________ in that field because of his personality. “I suffered a great failure,” he said. The turning point in his ________ came two years ago when he ________ his friend in the photovoltaic (光伏电池的) business and was ________ to find that lots of people have no knowledge of the technology.

Photovoltaic ________ a special electrical system that produces energy from a ________ and inexhaustible source, usually the sun. With a strong ________ to help people understand, Li came up with the idea of creating clips to teach science using simple everyday words ________ of terms. As he created more teaching videos, he began to realize he was good at it and ________ his subjects to include quantum mechanics and life sciences. Despite experiencing a series of failures, he finally found his ________. It’s never too ________ to do what we enjoy.

1.
A.evidentB.attractiveC.effectiveD.popular
2.
A.accumulatedB.toldC.urgedD.admired
3.
A.listening toB.waiting forC.dealing withD.talking about
4.
A.neededB.gainedC.offeredD.refused
5.
A.employmentB.expertsC.informationD.applications
6.
A.gameB.careerC.relationshipD.growth
7.
A.leftB.savedC.joinedD.believed
8.
A.anxiousB.horrifiedC.surprisedD.eager
9.
A.results inB.responds toC.looks forD.refers to
10.
A.strangeB.reputableC.secretD.renewable
11.
A.desireB.traditionC.characterD.knowledge
12.
A.fullB.freeC.trueD.aware
13.
A.introducedB.expandedC.foundD.chose
14.
A.caringB.endingC.settingD.calling
15.
A.lateB.busyC.goodD.easy
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。主要报道了Richard Branson及其团队完成首次商业太空旅行的历史性事件,标志着太空旅游时代的开启,并提及了未来普通民众也有机会参与太空旅行的展望。

3 . English businessman Richard Branson made history on July 11, 2021 as he and three other crewmates became the world’s first space tourists. The flight was made by a spacecraft named VSS Unity that was built by Branson’s company, Virgin Galactic. The flight lasted slightly more than an hour, and took Branson and crew to an altitude (海拔) of 53.5miles above the Earth, just a little above the boundary (边界) of space which lies 50 miles above the Earth.

At that height, the atmosphere turns into the black of outer space and the Earth becomes a bent ball of blue. Travelers also exhibit weightlessness as there is no gravity, the force that keeps our bodies walking on the Earth’s surface. Therefore, Branson and his fellows were able to float around in VSS Unity while enjoying the views. They were able to do that for three minutes before the spacecraft began its downward journey. It landed back at Virgin Galactic’s space port in New Mexico, United States, which is the same place from where it had taken off 90 minutes before.

On landing back, Branson said, “I have dreamt of this moment since I was a kid but honestly, nothing could prepare you for the view of the Earth from space. It was just magical. I’m just taking it all in, and it’s unreal.”

July 11’s flight is the start of space tourism for one and all. In early 2022, customers who can afford a ticket for a quarter of a million dollars can line up for a seat on a trip to space. And guess what — they will have a choice of spacecraft. Jeff Bezos, who owns a famous company, is all set to launch himself into space on July 20 on board a spacecraft built by his new branch company Blue Origin. Blue Origin will also carry tourists to space.

1. What is Richard Branson famous for?
A.His success in tourism.
B.His company of Virgin Galactic.
C.His spaceship named VSS Unity.
D.His first commercial space travel in history.
2. What does Branson think of his space travel?
A.Unbelievable.B.Adventurous.C.Regrettable.D.Worthless.
3. What do space tourists have to do?
A.Take a spacecraft of Virgin Galactic.
B.Pay $250,000 for the rocket tour.
C.Pass the fitness test for astronauts.
D.Line up for a position in Blue Origin.
4. What can we infer from the last paragraph?
A.Humans will move to other livable planets.
B.Ordinary people will soon land on the moon.
C.Private rocket space travel is growing gradually.
D.Some companies abandon their proper business.
书面表达-读后续写 | 较难(0.4) |
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4 . 阅读下面材料,根据其内容和所给段落开头语续写两段,使之构成一篇完整短文。

In December, an unseen disease arrived in a village. Ally was one of the victims. She lay, barely moving, in her bed staring at a wall out of the window under her blanket.

The doctor took her father, who was a painter, aside and claimed, “She has one chance in—let us say, ten. And that chance is for her to want to live. Try to encourage her to think more hopeful thoughts, about the future, about living.”

Her father took some paper and a pen into Ally’s room and began a pen drawing, in an attempt to raise Ally’s spirits. Ally’s eyes were open, but they weren’t watching him. Instead, she stared out the window and counted backwards, “Ten, nine, eight, seven…”

“What are you counting, dear?” asked her father. “They’re falling faster now,” replied Ally.

“Three days ago there were almost a hundred. But now there are only five left now. Five leaves on the ivy vine (常春藤). When the last one falls, I must go, too.”

“Oh, I never heard of such nonsense,” quickly replied her father. But Ally’s mind was made up. “I want to see the last one fall. I want to go sailing down, down, just like one of those poor, tired leaves.”

“Try to sleep,” said her father. Ally closed her eyes quietly. Watching her daughter’s pale face, he was lost in deep thought. As a painter, he had never produced a masterpiece he longed to paint in 40 years. As a father, he even couldn’t help her daughter cheer up. Looking out of the window, he noticed that there was just one remaining leaf. What’s more, a cold rain was falling mixed with snow. “Are there people in the world that are foolish to think they’ll die because leaves drop off from an ivy vine? This is not a place in which Ally shall lie sick.” He made up his mind to do something.

The next morning, Ally woke and asked for the curtains to be opened. One leaf remained on the ivy vine, bravely holding on in the wind and rain. “It will fall today. And I will die with it.”

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

The following day, Ally asked again for the curtains to be opened.

____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

A few weeks later, Ally recovered completely and the secret was revealed.

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7日内更新 | 29次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届辽宁省朝阳市建平县实验中学高三下学期第五次模拟考试英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约330词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。主要介绍了科学家对鸟类智能及其创新能力的探究。

5 . If you’ve ever seen a sparrow steal your dog food or a crow open a garbage bag, you get a sense of that some birds have learned to take advantage of new feeding opportunities—a clear sign of their intelligence. Scientists have long wondered why certain species of birds are more innovative than others, and whether these capacities stem from larger brains or from a greater number of neurons (神经元) in specific areas of the brain.

It turns out that it’s a bit of both, according to a recent study by an international team that included members from McGill University published in Nature Ecology and Evolution.

The researchers used a new technique to estimate the number of neurons in a specific part of the brain called the pallium in 111 bird species. The pallium in birds is equal to the human cerebral cortex (大脑皮层), which is involved in memory, learning, reasoning, and problem-solving, among other things. When these estimates about neuron numbers in the pallium were combined with information about over 4,000 feeding innovations, the team found that the species with the higher numbers of neurons in the pallium were also likely to be the most innovative.

“The amount of time chicks spend in the nest as their brains develop might also play a crucial role in the evolution of intelligence,” says McGill University Emeritus Professor Louis Lefebvre who spent more than 20 years gathering examples of feeding innovations. “Larger species of crows and parrots, which are known for their intelligence, spend longer in the nest, which allows more time for the brain to grow and accumulate pallial neurons.”

The results of the study help to deal with previously opposed views of the evolution and significance of brain size and show how a life-history perspective helps to understand the evolution of cognition.

1. What may a sparrow be thought of when it steals dog food?
A.It is lovely.B.It is immoral.C.It is heartbroken.D.It is intelligent.
2. What did researchers do with the 111 bird species?
A.Assessed the neurons in their pallium.
B.Tested a new technology on their brain.
C.Trained them to learn to feed individually.
D.Compared their pallium with the human cerebral cortex.
3. What is behind the intelligence of larger bird species?
A.Their large shape.
B.More time in their nest.
C.Their learning ability.
D.More feeding innovations.
4. In which section may the text appear in a newspaper?
A.Health.B.Society.C.Science.D.Culture.
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。文学主要介绍了研究结果显示,运动员的信念系统——尤其是非理性的信念——与自信心的下降有关,进而导致更严重的竞争焦虑和抑郁症状,后文介绍了运动员心理健康状况不佳的警告信号。

6 . More than 400 athletes across a variety of sports, ages and levels of experience were questioned for the study by sports psychology experts from Staffordshire University and Manchester Metropolitan University. The findings reveal that athletes’ belief systems — specifically irrational (非理性) beliefs — are related to poorer self-confidence, and in turn, greater competitive anxiety and depressive symptoms.

“Phrases that reflect self-depreciating (贬低) beliefs such as ‘If I lose, I’m a failure’ or ‘If I face setbacks, it shows how stupid I am’ are warning signs,” said the authors. Paul Mansell, Lecturer in Sport and Exercise Psychology at Staffordshire University, said, “Despite the psychological benefits of physical activity, studies frequently report poor mental health in athletes, which may be exacerbated by adversities, such as injury, de-selection, and performance pressure. We investigated athletes’ beliefs, how they view stress, their levels of self-confidence and put all this data together to work out what might predict psychological well-being. We found irrational beliefs to be a core reason for symptoms of poor mental health in athletes.”

This is the first known study that has examined irrational beliefs, self-confidence, and the psychological well-being of athletes all together. Irrational beliefs are extreme, rigid, and illogical ideas that people hold. For example, a person might believe that they “must” get what they want, or that just because they have failed, they are a “complete failure”.

“We can all work to help athletes develop mindsets that help them deal with the challenges of sport and life. By encouraging rational and logical beliefs about performance, we can help athletes to stay healthy amidst the high demands of competitive sport,” said Paul Mansell.

The author s propose Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy (REBT) as an effective tool for protecting self-confidence. REBT helps athletes to challenge these self-depreciating beliefs and develop beliefs that are more helpful and healthy. For example, rather than believe “I am a failure if I fail”, this might be countered with “Failing is not ideal, but it does not mean that I am a failure”.

1. What did the study centre on?
A.Physical health of athletes.
B.The competition state of athletes.
C.Psychological health of athletes.
D.Competition habits of athletes.
2. Which can best replace the underlined word “exacerbated” in paragraph 2?
A.Worsened.B.Examined.C.Promoted.D.Recognized.
3. Which of the following is a sign of irrational beliefs?
A.Setbacks won’t stop me.
B.If I fail, I will lose everything.
C.It is a world full of competition.
D.What doesn’t kill me makes me stronger.
4. What can be a suitable title for the text?
A.Psychological benefits of physical activity
B.Effective tools for protecting self-confidence
C.Rational and logical beliefs about performance
D.Warning signs of poor mental health in athletes
书面表达-读后续写 | 较难(0.4) |
7 . 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。

When I started high school, I was fourteen years old and six foot tall. The scary thing about being so tall when you’re so young is that people automatically teat you as if you’re older. Yes, I was the size of an adult (actually, bigger than most! ) , but I was still just a kid. And acting more like an adult wouldn’t win me any fiends. As a card-carrying Good Boy, I wanted to meet adults’ expectations and get their praise, but as a Regular Kid, I wanted to be like my peers and get their friendship.

I walked into school that first day in my bluejacket and trousers, the school uniform. I noticed some of my old classmates from my junior high, the ones who had turned their backs on me, and we continued our policy of actively ignoring one another. I felt the pain of their betrayal (背叛) , but I forced my face to remain expressionless. I was here to study hard at academics and to work hard at basketball under my new coach, Jack Donahue. I was here to be excellent. Nothing else mattered.

Indeed I was excellent. I made the honor roll in the first semester, pleasing my parents and teachers. Leaming came naturally to me. I loved reading, especially about history and adventure stories like The Three Musketeers. Basketball, however, I had to work at to do well in.

As a freshman, my style of play reflected my personality: politely passive. I had some skills, but I didn’t have an aggressive nature: The good player around me knew how to play rough, use their bodies with authority, and power their way to a rebound (抢篮板球) . I knew I had to toughen up, and I was committed to getting better, but it wasn’t happening fast enough.

One morning, our school team was scheduled to play a game against Erasmus Hall High School in Brooklyn, and Coach Donahue surprised me by taking me into his office. I figured he was going to discuss his disappointment in my progress as a player, maybe even say something about it all being a big mistake.

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。

To my surprise, he handed me a team uniform.

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All day, I allowed myself to imagine the game.

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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。南极洲并不总是一片荒凉的冰雪之地,这块地球最南端的大陆曾经是布满河流和森林,以及孕育着生命的家园。科学家们利用卫星观测和透冰雷达,一睹南极洲“失落的世界”。

8 . Antarctica has not always been a land of ice and snow. Earth’s southernmost continent once was home to rivers and forests full of life.

Scientists are using satellite observations and radar imagery to look deep under the ice. The researchers report finding a large ancient landscape buried under the continent’s ice sheet. It is full of valleys and ridges (山脊) , shaped by rivers before being covered by glaciers long ago.

The landscape is located in East Antarctica’s Wilkes Land area bordering the Indian Ocean. The researchers said the landscape appears to date back to at least 14 million years ago and perhaps beyond 34 million years ago, when Antarctica entered its deep freeze.

“It is difficult to know what this lost world might have looked like before the ice came along, but it was certainly warmer back then,” said Stewart Jamieson, a professor at Durham University. “Depending how far back in time you go, you might have had climates that ranged anywhere from the climate of present-day Patagonia through to something more approaching tropical.”

“Such an environment likely would have been populated by wildlife”, Jamieson said. “But the area’s fossil record is too incomplete to know which animals may have lived there.”

The researchers said the surface of the planet Mars is better known than the earth surface below the ice in Antarctica. They said one way to learn more would be to drill through the ice and take a piece of the earth below. This could uncover evidence showing ancient life, as was done with samples taken in Greenland dating back two million years ago.

Jamieson said the researchers think that when Antarctica’s climate was warmer, rivers flowed toward a continental coastline that was created as the other land masses broke away. When the climate cooled, some small glaciers formed on hills next to the rivers. When the climate cooled even more, an ice sheet grew which covered the whole continent, the landscape got preserved, likely for 34 million years.

1. What can we learn about the ancient landscape?
A.It locates in the center of Antarctica.B.It’s discovered by drilling through the ice.
C.It’s once a warmer area than it is now.D.It has a history of no more than 14 million years.
2. In Stewart Jamieson’s opinion, why is it hard to know Antarctica’s past animals?
A.There is a lack of complete fossil record.
B.The ice sheet of Antarctica is melting quickly.
C.Scientists lack enough advanced equipment.
D.Climate conditions vary greatly from place to place.
3. Why is the planet Mars mentioned in paragraph 6?
A.To attract more scientists to study Antarctica.
B.To strengthen the importance of the Mars.
C.To indicate the complex situations of the Mars.
D.To show the difficult to know Antarctica’s earth surface.
4. What made the landscape get preserved for such a long time?
A.The colder climate.B.The protection offered by coastlines.
C.Other land masses’ reduction.D.A decrease in the number of wildlife.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约300词) | 较易(0.85) |
文章大意:本文为应用文, 主要内容为由Changi Community Club组织的参观Green Ark Fish Farm的介绍。

9 . Changi Community Chub Visit

To Green Ark Fish Farm

WHAT

Green Ark is one of the fish closed fish farms in the world. It is a floating structure about the size

of the two classrooms.
WHERE

Located 5km off Chang Point, the farm can produce 166, 000 kilograms of fish a year. The fish are housed in four enormous tanks. The raised fish include barramundi, red snapper and grouper. They are mainly for local consumption.

HOW

The fish are sale from threat such as all spills (溢油) and other chemicals which could kill them. The aa waler they live in is really clean. Bacteria and viruses are destroyed by ozonation (臭氧化). In this process, oxygen is blown into the tanks every hour. “All these improved conditions ensure that the waler quality remains high. This enables our fish to become healthier,” said Mrs. Linda Tan, spokesperson of Green Ark Fish Farm.

Would you like a glimpse of Green Ark Fish Farm?

For the very first time, Changi Community Club is organizing 5 small-group tours (25 persons each) to Green Ark Fish Farm on the following Saturdays: 6, 13, 20, 27 July. You will have first- hand knowledge of how fish is raised there. The highlight of the tour will be tasty meal of fresh fish chosen by the chefs of Changi Cafe.

TimeScheduleCost
1: 00 p. m.Meet at Changi Ferry Point$40 per person; Changi Community Club members pay $30 each
1: 15 p. m.Depart for Green Arh
1: 30 p. m.Tour of Green Ark
2: 30 p. m.Return to Changi Point
2: 45 p. mDory Fish &Chips Meal at Changi Cafe

For enquiries, please visit the website at 222. changicc. com. sg. Registration will be on a. first-come, first-served basis. Book early to avoid disappointment!

1. What can we know about the fish raised by Green Ark Fish Farm?
A.They are in danger of oil spills.B.They can swim freely in the ocean.
C.They are mainly sold to local buyers.D.They could be killed by other chemicals.
2. What does Mrs. Linda mean when she says “the water quality remains high”?
A.The water level is high enough for fish.
B.The water is the same as water from the sea.
C.The water doesn’t contain viruses or bacteria.
D.The water has enough space for fish to swim in.
3. What do you have to do if you want a guaranteed place on the tour?
A.Send an email to the club.B.Join Changi Community Club.
C.Pay booking fee ahead of time.D.Register before the places are filled up.
阅读理解-七选五(约220词) | 较易(0.85) |
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文章大意:本文为一篇说明文,介绍了保护听力的一些措施。

10 . Loud noise can be very damaging to your hearing, whether it’s a loud burst or years of exposure. Approximately 15 percent of adults 18 years of age or older report some trouble hearing.     1     The good news is that taking action now may protect you from hearing loss later in life.

Get a baseline hearing test. Most people have never had a hearing test.     2     At your next physical, ask for a hearing test as part of your routine checkup. A hearing test gives your audiologist a baseline that they can compare with future results to monitor the progression of hearing loss.

    3     While you are watching TV or using mobile devices, keep the volume at a comfortable level. It should be loud enough to make sure you can hear very well, but not so loud that when you leave the room, you can still hear it from another part of your home.

Wear protective hearing devices. Think ear protection before you’re exposed to any noisy environment, such as rock concerts or airports. When you are in a noisy environment, wear protective hearing devices such as earplugs or protective earphones.     4    

Have proper earphones. If you often listen to music on earphones using a portable music or video device, it’s a good idea to have earphones that fit the unique shape of your ear canal, and block outside noise.     5    

A.The risk rises as we age.
B.Monitor the volume of your devices.
C.However, it benefits you to go against that trend.
D.Meanwhile, you will find the sound truly superior.
E.You can find them at your local drugstore or music supply shop.
F.Think about buying appliances and devices that have low noise ratings.
G.You must do something to keep age-related hearing loss from getting worse.
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