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书面表达-读后续写 | 较难(0.4) |
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1 . 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。

In 1940, I worked in the checkroom of the railway station. I saw everybody that came up the stairs.

Harry was a young man who came to the station and waited at the head of the stairs for the passengers from the 9:05 train.

I remembered seeing Harry that first evening. He wasn’t much more than a thin, anxious kid then. He was all dressed up and I knew he was meeting his sister, who he hadn’t seen for many years.

Well, the passengers came up and I had to get busy. I didn’t look toward the stairs again until nearly time for the 9:18 and I was very surprised to see that the Harry was still there. His sister didn’t come on the 9:18 either, nor on the 9:40, and when the passengers from the 10:02 had all arrived and left, Harry was looking pretty upset. Pretty soon he came close to my window so I called out and asked him what his sister looked like.

“She’s small and dark. She is nineteen years old and very neat in the way she walk,” he said. “She has a face that has lots of spirit. I mean she can get mad but she never stays mad for long, and her eyebrows come to a little point in the middle. She’s got a brown fur, but maybe she isn’t wearing it.”

“I couldn’t remember seeing anybody like that,” I told him.

He showed me the telegram he’d received: ARRIVE THURSDAY. MEET ME AT THE STATION. MAY. It was from Omaha, Nebraska. “Well,” I finally said, “why don’t you phone to your home? She’s probably called there if she got in ahead of you.”

He gave me a sick look. “I’ve only been in the town for two days. We were going to meet and then drive down to the south of the city where I’ve got a job. She doesn’t have my address.”


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。

When I came on duty the next day, Harry was still there and I asked more about his sister.


___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

One day, after about two weeks, I thought I could say something encouraging to him.


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听力选择题-长对话 | 较难(0.4) |
2 . 听下面一段较长对话,问答以下小题。
1. What is Jennifer doing?
A.Hosting a meetingB.Serving a customerC.Having an interview
2. What does Jenmfer learn from her previous job?
A.Sales techniquesB.Interpersonal skillsC.Language knowledge
3. What was Jennifer’s worst experience at work?
A.Dealing with a complaint.
B.Arguing with the manager.
C.Receiving an unreasonable phone call
4. What will Jennifer do next?
A.Apply for the positionB.Make a decisionC.Wait for a call.
2023-08-01更新 | 95次组卷 | 1卷引用:内蒙古赤峰市2022-2023学年高一下学期期末市级联考英语试卷
阅读理解-阅读单选(约470词) | 较难(0.4) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章讲述生命科学像宇宙一样复杂,随着生命科学工具的迅速改进,科学家们就能够更深入地研究生命的组成部分并且取得很大的成就,并且作者认为应优先发展生命科学。

3 . Arguably, the biggest science development of the year to date has been the images of the very depths of the universe taken by the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). Those images beg a comparison between the external and internal universes that science is bent on observing and understanding.

Decades ago, astrophysicist Carl Sagan famously said, “The universe is also within is. We’re made of star-stuff. We are a way for the universe to know itself. ” He was commenting then on the reality that our internal universe was as complex and as fantastic as the outer space.

There are many similarities between the progress we’ve made in understanding the universe and in piecing together life’s inner workings. Like the technological developments that took us from Galileo’s telescope to the Hubble to the JWST, life science tools have also improved rapidly. From early light microscopes to modern super-resolution ones, these developments have afforded researchers a deep look into biology’s infinitesimal (无限小的) landscape. Learning that living things were composed of cells was, not a terribly long time ago, a revolutionary observation. Since then, scientists have been able to dive ever deeper into the components of life.

Going beyond merely observing the complicated makeup of organisms, life scientists can now discover the workings of molecules (分子). And that is where scanning the universe differs from peering into biology. Understanding the universe, especially from a functional standpoint, is not necessarily an immediate urgency. Understanding biology on that level is. Simply observing the amazing internal structure of cells is not enough. Biologists must also characterize how all those parts interact and change in different environments and when faced with various challenges. Being able to image a virus or bacterium is nice at the level of basic science. But knowing how viruses gain entry into cells and spread, infect, and disable can literally save lives. Through time, biology has risen to this mechanistic challenge. Not only can life science tools produce images of cell components, even more importantly, they can help predict the effects of drugs on receptors, of immune cells on foreign invaders (入侵者), and of genetic perturbations (基因干扰) on development and aging.

This is not to belittle the work of scientists researching into universe. They should rightly be praised for delivering views of impossibly distant, impossibly massive phenomena. My aim is to celebrate these accomplishments while at the same time recognizing that science’s inward search for detail and insight is equally impressive and, in my view, more urgent. The output of both the outward and inward explorations should stimulate wonder in everyone. After all, it’s all star-stuff.

1. Why does the author quote Carl Sagan’s comment in Paragraph 2?
A.To introduce the background.B.To prove an assumption.
C.To make a comparison.D.To present an idea.
2. Like the study of the universe, life science has been advancing in ________.
A.study approachesB.system management
C.research facilitiesD.technology integration
3. We can infer from Paragraph 4 that biologists’ work is ________.
A.practicalB.riskyC.flexibleD.popular
4. As for life science, which would the author agree with?
A.It has received universal recognition.B.It should enjoy priority in development.
C.It can be applied in the majority of areas.D.It is more complicated than space science.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约330词) | 较难(0.4) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了科学家们现在已经使翻译人们的脑电波成为可能。FMRI装置具有极高的精确度,通过追踪脑细胞的氧气“读取”人们的思想,甚至可以用来复述参与者的所见所闻。

4 . Reading people’s minds seems to be a superpower that only exists in movies. But scientists have now made it possible to translate people’s brain waves!

Researchers at the University of California, San Francisco developed a new device. It can turn brain waves into words on a screen in front of the user. In the study, they tested it with a paralyzed (瘫痪) man.

“To our knowledge, this is the first successful demonstration of direct decoding of full words from the brain of someone who is paralyzed and cannot speak.” said Edward Chang, the senior author of the study. Each year, thousands of people lose the ability to speak due to accidents or diseases. With up to 93 percent accuracy, the new device shows “strong promise” to let these people fully communicate in the future.

One problem with such mind-reading machines, however, is that they have to put electrodes into people’s brains. It’s inconvenient and has health risks. But scientists from the University of Texas, US, have taken steps to change this. They tried to translate people’s thoughts without even touching their heads, reported Live Science.

The new brain scanning technique is called FMRI, or functional magnetic resonance imaging. It’s a safer way of “reading” brain activity. Active brain cells have more oxygen. By tracking this, scientists can translate brain activity.

The team asked participants to listen to 16 hours of radio shows while scanning their brains. Then they used a computer algorithm (算法) to create a story based on the FMRI recording. It matched the radio shows pretty well.

In other tests, the algorithm could basically explain the story of a silent movie that the participants watched. It could even retell a story that the participants imagined in their heads. Although it’s not a word-for-word translation, the technique provides many possibilities.

1. What do the words “strong promise” mean?
A.The device has high accuracy.B.The device can make a promise.
C.The device makes no mistakes.D.The device makes a paralyzed man speak.
2. How does FMRI “read” people’s minds?
A.It puts electrodes into people’s brains.
B.It tracks the oxygen of brain cells.
C.It makes predictions based on people’s habits.
D.It guesses people’s thoughts randomly.
3. What’s the advantage of FMRI compared to the first device mentioned in the story?
A.It’s safer.B.It’s cheaper.C.It’s smaller in size.D.It’s more accurate.
4. Which is TRUE about FMRI?
A.It can only record what participants hear.
B.It can record every detail of participants minds.
C.Its recordings can be used to retell what participants had seen and heard.
D.It is accurate because it can tell imagination from fact.
2023-02-27更新 | 270次组卷 | 3卷引用:内蒙古赤峰市红山区2022-2023学年高一上学期期末质量检测英语试卷
文章大意:本文是记叙文。本文通过讲述作者竞选学生会的经历,使他明白,人不仅需要自己努力,也需要得到周围人的支持。

5 . How perfect the wings of a bird are! However, they will never________the bird during flight if unsupported by the air. Upon graduation, I will be able to analyze ancient poems using________terms, and simplify a derivative (导数) problem. Despite knowing how to perform these________tasks, I currently fail to________how to change a tire or how to obtain an insurance policy.

I used to outdo my classmates________. At first, I was getting everything right. Then, I ran for Student Government but was________. How could that be? Someone must have made a(n)________. Little did I know, this was my first exposure to meaning beyond________. As I failed for the second year, I________I had been wrongfully measuring my life through my test scores. It was my________that I had never prioritized communication skills, which my fellow candidates________. I decided to change my mindset and take a new________to the way I lived. Soon I grew interested in the new viewpoints everyone around me could________. People interpret situations differently________their own cultural contexts, so I had to________to pay more attention to every point of view. To my________, I was elected to Student Government after my third year of trying.

As I further accept new life skills, I realize how much remains________in the world. What I can do is prepare myself to take on the unknown.________, my wings will continue enabling me to fly,________it is going to take more than just me and my wings; I have to continue putting my________in the air around me.

1.
A.assistB.feedC.followD.guide
2.
A.musicalB.politicalC.literaryD.economic
3.
A.urgentB.impossibleC.dangerousD.particular
4.
A.considerB.understandC.mentionD.remember
5.
A.physicallyB.emotionallyC.psychologicallyD.academically
6.
A.rejectedB.ignoredC.blamedD.interrupted
7.
A.attemptB.mistakeC.decisionD.promise
8.
A.wordsB.bordersC.numbersD.expectations
9.
A.appreciatedB.reportedC.discoveredD.Recommended
10.
A.faultB.businessC.excuseD.dream
11.
A.admittedB.neededC.receivedD.possessed
12.
A.messageB.approachC.programD.campaign
13.
A.offerB.gainC.orderD.select
14.
A.as forB.apart fromC.due toD.instead of
15.
A.learnB.affordC.demandD.pretend
16.
A.regretB.delightC.amusementD.embarrassment
17.
A.undoneB.unusualC.unfortunateD.uncertain
18.
A.SurprisinglyB.GraduallyC.HopefullyD.Suddenly
19.
A.soB.butC.ifD.before
20.
A.viewB.powerC.honorD.faith
2023-02-27更新 | 220次组卷 | 4卷引用:内蒙古赤峰市红山区2022-2023学年高二上学期期末质量检测英语试卷
阅读理解-阅读单选(约310词) | 较难(0.4) |
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文章大意:本文是说明文。主要介绍了叶卡捷琳娜·斯基通过画各种濒危物种的画来保护动物。

6 . Ekaterina Sky is a wildlife conservation (保护)artist. She began her art journey at the School of Fine Arts in Yaroslavl, Russia. There, she completed a fine arts program, which gave her the background she needed to become a conservation artist. She also received a scholarship to the Art School of Museum of Tel-Aviv. There, she expanded upon her knowledge and skills, learning to create her own unique style. She combined her love for animals and art to create the works we see today.

Ekaterina painted pictures at wildlife reserves and rescue centers, in high schools and in visitors’centers. She painted a piece for the Burning Man festival, choosing to paint primates(灵长类动物的)eyes since they are closely related to humans. This piece gave her the confidence to start a world tour, as she had never painted a picture that size before.

Ekaterina went on a tour to different countries worldwide, painting pictures of various endangered species. She hoped that her paintings would encourage viewers to look deeply into their own lifestyles and question how they might harm animals. She said, “We all can make a difference if we look at ourselves as a small piece of a greater whole.”

With each picture, she made the audience look directly into the animals’ eyes. She painted pictures to encourage people to show more compassion and care to animals and raise awareness of the importance of efforts in wildlife conservation. “As I believe, we connect through our eyes, which are windows into our soul, and I believe that when we get to meet someone’s soul, we don’t have a heart to hurt them,” she said.

1. What does paragraph 1 mainly tell us about Ekaterina Sky?
A.Her art works.B.Her unique drawing skills.
C.Her love for animals.D.Her road to a conservation artist.
2. Why does Ekaterina Sky paint primates’ eyes for the Burning Man festival?
A.The painting gave her confidence.B.Primates are closely related to humans.
C.She’d like to make more money.D.She wanted to expand on her skills.
3. What does the underlined word “compassion” in the last paragraph probably mean?
A.Pity.B.Blame.C.Motivation.D.Gratefulness.
4. What are Ekaterina Sky’s art works intended for?
A.Reducing garbage thrown by tourists.B.Introducing various animals worldwide.
C.Drawing attention to endangered animals.D.Advertising the school she graduated from.
2023-02-25更新 | 237次组卷 | 2卷引用:内蒙古阿拉善盟第一中学2022-2023学年高二上学期期末考试英语试题
书信写作-其他应用文 | 较难(0.4) |
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7 . 俗话说“Good habits make a lifetime and bad habits destroy a person’s future.”,故英文报纸“Life & Study”栏目面向中学生征稿,请你根据以下要点写一篇短文投稿。
1.个人经历;
2.好习惯养成的秘诀及好处。
注意:1.词数80左右。

2.可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯。


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阅读理解-阅读单选(约390词) | 较难(0.4) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。主要讲述了现代电子媒体不仅改变了我们的习惯,也改变了我们的大脑。

8 . The power of modern electronic media-the net, mobile phones and video games to capture the attention of the human mind particularly the young mind and then distract it, has lately become a subject of concern. We are, say the worriers, losing the ability to apply ourselves properly to a single task, like reading a book in its entirety or mastering a piece of music on an instrument with the result that our thinking is becoming shallower

Nicholas Carr, the American writer, has explored this theme for his new book The Shallows, in which he argues that new media are not just changing our habits but our brain too. It turns out that the mature human brain is not an immutable seat of personality and intellect but a changeable thing, subject to “neuroplasticity” (神经可塑性). When our activities alter so does the architecture of our brain “I’m not thinking the way I used to think,” writes Carr. “I feel it most strongly when I’m reading.” Years of internet use have, he suspects, dented his ability to read deeply to absorb himself in books: “My brain wasn’t just drifting. It was hungry. It was demanding to be fed the way the net fed it.” He describes getting fidgety when faced with a long text: “When we go online, we enter an environment that promotes cursory reading, hurried and distracted thinking, and superficial learning.”

Carr cites research by Gary Small, a professor of psychiatry at UCLA, who concluded that constant exposure to modern media strengthens new neural pathways while weakening older ones. Just five hours of internet use is enough to awaken previously dormant parts of the brain’s prefrontal cortex (前额叶皮层), concluded Small. For Carr, this is proof that the net can rewire the mind. He sees dangers. Deep thought, the ability to immerse oneself in an area of study, to follow a narrative, to understand an argument and develop a critique, is giving way to skimming. Young users of the Internet are good at drawing together information for a school project, for example, but that does not mean they have digested it.

1. The underlined word “dented” in paragraph 2 means ______.
A.strengthenedB.exhaustedC.stimulatedD.damaged
2. In his new book, The Shallows, Nicholas Carr believes that ______.
A.five hours of net use can rewire the mind
B.modern electronic media help focus users attention on the task
C.electronic media have affected his fulfillment of reading books
D.our brain evolves when fed with information and knowledge from the net
3. What can we learn from the passage?
A.The sharper the attention, the sharper the memory.
B.Nicholas Carr’s book on the subject is a bestseller.
C.Superficial thinking and learning are associated with the new media.
D.Years of internet use do harm to people’s management over multi-tasking.
4. What is the overall danger of the Internet that Carr pointed out in the last paragraph?
A.Young users cannot digest information from the Internet.
B.Using the Internet will cause damage to our prefrontal cortex.
C.Constant internet use will impair our intensive reading ability
D.The Internet can waste young users’ time to an alarming extent
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章通过指出一个人们对于盲人的偏见——有视力的人对盲人能做什么和不能做什么的存在着错误的假设,这些错误的假设即偏见导致很少有盲人在STEM领域工作。为此作者建议,对于盲人来说,让世界变得更便利并不局限于发明一项为盲人提供生活便利的新技术,也需要从观念上进行改变,摈除错误假设,构建无障碍的世界。

9 . What do you think about when you wait at a crosswalk? What about checking out your friends’ new posts? Chances are, if you’re not visually impaired, you don’t think much about these everyday activities as you’re doing them. But for blind and low-vision(视力低下的)people, these kinds of things can be difficult if the people designing them don’t take steps to make them accessible.

One big problem blind people always face is the assumptions of sighted people about what they can and can’t do. Everette Bacon, President of the Utah chapter of the National Federation of the Blind, says more than once he’s had a stranger grab his arm, thinking he needs help.

“ It’s impressions about blindness that are far more threatening to blind people than the blindness itself,” says Daniel Kish, president of World Access for the Blind.

People’s assumptions about capability(能力)contribute to a low number of blind people working in or studying STEM( science, technology, engineering, and math) fields. People with low or no vision have a lot to offer in these fields. They are just as capable as anyone else at experimenting and making new discoveries.

One tool that provides accessible ways to help the blind interact (互动)with data and scientific equipment is the Sci-Voice Talking LabQuest 2. It reads aloud data from over 70 sensors(传感器)commonly used in science experiments. Cary Supalo invented this device to help students experience hands-on science learning. He has been blind since the age of seven. “ For kids who are blind or vision impaired, before this technology existed, they had to be told what happened,”he says.

Making the world more accessible isn’t limited to inventing a cool new piece of technology, though. If you’re posting a picture on social media, adding a specific description of what’s happening in the picture, called alt text, can help blind people understand your post without having to rely on sight. If you’re building a website, or know someone who is, follow accessibility guidelines.

1. What does Bacon think of the stranger’s help?
A.It should be given more politely.
B.It showed people’s good hearts.
C.It was unnecessary.
D.It set a good example.
2. What makes a low number of blind people get involved in STEM?
A.People’s prejudice
B.Their limited intelligence
C.A lack of blind-friendly labs
D.Their sensitive characteristics
3. What advice does the author give in the last paragraph?
A.Follow government guidelines.
B.Describe pictures in the alt text.
C.Add a voice document
D.Use a special website
4. What can be the best title for the text?
A.more light, more happinessB.your legal disability rights
C.what you assume mattersD.a world of accessibility
2022-07-29更新 | 113次组卷 | 1卷引用:内蒙古呼伦贝尔市满洲里市第一中学2021-2022学年高二下学期期末考试英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约340词) | 较难(0.4) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要讲述了自从1904工业捕鲸开始之后,南极蓝鲸的数量急剧减少。研究人员研究了过去30年中所有南极蓝鲸的数据,他们发现,最近蓝鲸的目击纪录接近60条。这说明如果给予足够的保护,南极蓝鲸的数量可用从从非常低的水平恢复。

10 . Antarctic blue whales have been perceived again in the sub-Antarctic island of South Georgia. An international-team of researchers discovered the animals five decades after whaling (捕鲸业) nearly caused them to disappear forever. “The ocean resources at South Georgia were heavily developed during the early 20th-century industrial whaling,” says lead author Susannah Calderan, an ecologist with the Scottish Association for Marine Science.

Antarctic blue whales were plentiful in the area until whaling began there in 1904, kicking off the beginning of industrial whaling in the Southern Ocean. While hunters originally focused on species that could be easily caught, like the humpback whale, the focus quickly moved to the blue whale. Between 1904 and 1973, 345,775 Antarctic blue whales were killed in the Southern hemisphere (半球)and in the northern Indian Ocean. Around South Georgia, blue whale catches were reported year-round without stopping. Between 1904 and 1971, industrial whaling caused 42, 698 blue whales’ death, Blue whales almost disappeared in these areas.

Researchers studied all Antarctic blue whale data from the last three decades. They examined sightings (目睹)from scientific surveys collected by observers on ships, as well as opportunistic sightings reported by seamen and ship passengers to the South Georgia. They also examined acoustic(声音的)recordings of blue whale.

They found that whale surveys from ships off South Georgia resulted in just one blue whale sighting between 1998 and 2018. But more recent surveys suggest better news. A survey in February of 2020 found nearly 60 blue whale sightings, and several acoustic detections (探测).A total of 41 blue whales have been recognized through photos from South Georgia between 2011 and 2020.

“Their return is very meaningful, as it was widely thought that blue whales at South Georgia might have been hunted beyond a point where they could recover, and might never be seen again in great numbers at South Georgia,” Calderan says. “Our research shows that, populations can recover even from very low levels if they’re given enough protection.”

1. What does the underlined word “perceived” in paragraph 1 mean?
A.Kept.B.Found.C.Hunted.D.Destroyed.
2. What does paragraph 2 mainly want to tell us?
A.The development of industrial whaling.
B.The cause of blue whales’ disappearance.
C.The wide spread of blue whales in the past.
D.The tricks of catching blue whales easily.
3. What did the researchers find through their surveys in South Georgia?
A.There is an increasing return of blue whales.
B.Blue whales are in a more dangerous situation.
C.More and more people like watching blue whales.
D.South Georgia is a good place to watch blue whales.
4. What might be discussed in the following paragraph?
A.The risk of killing whales at higher rates.
B.The sign of Antarctic blue whales’ return.
C.The way of protecting Antarctic blue whales.
D.The effect of the great loss of ocean resources.
共计 平均难度:一般