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阅读理解-阅读单选(约370词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章先介绍美国缅因州海岸线的地质特点和形成原因,接着着重描述了其中一个最大的岛屿——Mt. Desert岛。

1 . The coast of the State of Maine is one of the most irregular in the world. A straight line running from the southernmost coastal city to the northernmost coastal city would measure about 225 miles. If you followed the coastline between these points, you would travel more than ten times as far. This irregularity is the result of what is called a drowned coastline. The term comes from the glacial (冰川的) activity of the Ice Age. At that time, the whole area that is now Maine was part of a mountain range that towered above the sea. As the glacier declined, however, it applied enormous force on those mountains, and they sank into the sea.

As the mountain s sank, ocean water charged over the lowest parts of the remaining land. And the highest parts of the former mountain range, nearest the shore, remained as islands. Marine fossils found here are 225 feet above sea level indicating the level of the shoreline prior to the glacier.

The 2,500-mile-long rocky and jagged (锯齿状的) coastline of Maine keeps watching over nearly 2,000 islands. Many of these islands are tiny and uninhabited, but many are home to blooming communities. Mt. Desert Island is one of the largest, most beautiful of the Maine coast islands left behind by the glacier. Measuring 16 miles by 12 miles, Mt. Desert was very nearly formed as two distinct islands. It is split almost in half by Somes Sound, a very deep and very narrow stretch of water seven miles long.

For years, Mt. Desert Island, particularly its major settlement, Bar Harbor, has afforded summer homes for the wealthy. Recently, though, Bar Harbor has become a new arts community as well. But the best part of the island is the unspoiled forest land known as Acadia National Park. Since the island sits on the border between two different geographical zones, the park supports the plants and animals of both zones. It also lies in a major bird migration lane and is a resting spot for many birds.

1. The large number of small islands along the coast of Maine is the result of ______.
A.the drowning of the Maine coastlineB.glacier’s forcing mountains into the sea
C.the irregularity of the Maine coastlineD.ocean water’s flooding the mountain range
2. What does the underlined word “charge” mean in paragraph 2?
A.To ask an amount of money.
B.To accuse someone publicly of doing something wrong.
C.To rush in a particular direction.
D.To pass electricity through something.
3. Which of the following statements best expresses the main idea of paragraph 4 of the selection?
A.The wealthy residents of Mt. Desert Island selfishly kept it to themselves.
B.Acadia National Park is one of the best national parks.
C.On Mt. Desert Island, there is great tension between the residents and tourists.
D.Mt. Desert Island supports an incredibly diverse animal and plant life.
4. From the passage, we learn that ________.
A.the coastline of Maine is ten times longer after the Ice Age
B.there are more than 2,500 islands along the Maine coastline
C.Mt. Desert Island has been broken apart by a 7-mile-long water stretch
D.an arts community gave way to the summer homes on Mt. Desert Island
今日更新 | 4次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市宝山区2023-2024学年高二下学期期末教学质量监测英语试卷
阅读理解-六选四(约260词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。主要介绍了慈善资本主义的弊端,以及新的一代的慈善家是如何进行慈善事业的。

2 . It is certainly difficult to make money. But should money be difficult to give away? In The Gilded Age, industrialists such as Andrew Carnegie and John D. Rockefeller worried about waste and misuse; Carnegie wrote in 1889 that $950 of every $1,000 that went to charity was “unwisely spent”.     1     Donors ran lengthy application processes, provided funds and fulfilled painstaking reporting requirements. In 2006 The Economist called it “philanthrocapitalism (慈善资本主义)”.

    2     The 400 richest Americans have given away just 6% of their combined fortunes, according to Forbes. At the last count in 2022, almost $1.2 trn was sitting in American private foundations and $230bn in donor-advised funds, a sort of savings account for donors. Plenty of money is being marked for charity. But it is not getting to worthy causes fast enough.

Fortunately, a new generation of donors is once again shaking up the world of big philanthropy (慈善事业). Leading the mission is MacKenzie Scott, who simplified the process of giving and is donating billions of dollars a year with few conditions. This “no-strings giving” is changing mega-donors’ long-held assumptions.     3    

One is the recognition that philanthropists do not have to do everything themselves.     4     An upside of a decades-long trend for businesslike philanthropy is that armies of consultants have emerged to help donors draw up a strategy and conduct due diligence on potential recipients. Donors can team up and share the work, too.

Another lesson from the no-strings crowd is that philanthropists can trust recipients to put money to good use once the proper due diligence is in place. That means analyzing a nonprofit organization’s annual reports and interviewing its leaders and other funders.

A.It offers lessons for those struggling to get money out of the door.
B.In addition to that, her charity work is too numerous to mention.
C.However, this idea that charities’ money is wasted has been proven wrong by evidence.
D.Mega-donors no longer need to endure the trouble of setting up a foundation and hiring staff.
E.Two decades on, however, it’s become clear that all this paperwork puts the brakes on giving.
F.Around the turn of the millennium donors looked to data and rules as a way to stop waste.
昨日更新 | 7次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市宝山区2023-2024学年高二下学期期末教学质量监测英语试卷
阅读理解-阅读单选(约440词) | 较难(0.4) |
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了大脑如何创造意识、情绪及自我认知等心理活动的现代理解与研究进展。

3 . The ancient Egyptians thought so little of the brain that when a king died, they removed the brain from his body and threw it away. The Egyptians assumed, like many people before and after them, that consciousness — your mind and your thoughts existed in the heart.

Now we know that the mind is a product of the brain, but how exactly does this 1.5-kilo piece of matter create a mind that allows you to think about yourself, experience happiness and anger, or remember events that happened 20 minutes or 20 years ago? This isn’t a new question. Today, however, powerful new techniques for visualizing the sources of thought, emotion, behavior, and memory are transforming the way we understand the brain and the mind it creates.

Have you ever stopped and thought, “What’s wrong with me today? I just don’t feel like myself”? Perhaps you were more tired or worried than usual — but somehow, you knew that something was different about you. This self-awareness - the ability to think about yourself and how you’re feeling-is an important part of being human.

This part of of your mind has its origins in the prefrontal cortex — a region of your brain just behind your forehead that extends to about your ears. Before this area began to function (around age two), you didn’t understand that you were a separate individual with your own identity. As this part of your brain developed, you became more aware of yourself and your thoughts and feelings.

Though humans may share certain emotions and recognize them in others, we don’t all have the same emotional response to every situation. In fact, most emotional responses are learned and stored in our memories. The smell of freshly cut grass, for example, will generate happy feelings in someone who spent enjoyable childhood summers in the countryside, but not in someone who was forced to work long hours on a farm. Once an emotional association like this is made, it is very difficult to reverse it. “Emotion is the least flexible part of the brain,” says psychologist Paul Ekman. But we can learn to control our emotions by becoming consciously aware of their underlying causes and by not reacting automatically to things in our environment.

For centuries, people have studied the brain, but it is only in recent years that we have really started to learn how it works. Nevertheless, there is still a long way to go before we understand our mind’s many complexities.

1. What is the passage mainly about?
A.How we create and control emotions.B.How the mind works.
C.How human beings are distinct.D.How emotions are processed.
2. Why does the author mention the ancient Egyptians’ practice in the very beginning?
A.To illustrate the importance of the heart in ancient Egyptian culture.
B.To introduce the core theme of the mind-body connection and evolution.
C.To provide an example of how the brain has been misunderstood throughout history.
D.To contrast the ancient Egyptians’ views on the brain with the modern one.
3. Which of the following statement is NOT true?
A.Self-awareness develops before the age of two.
B.The prefrontal cortex affects a person’s emotions.
C.The prefrontal cortex is located at the front of the brain.
D.Self-awareness strengthens with the development of the brain.
4. What does the passage suggest about the flexibility of emotions?
A.Emotions are universal and do not change over time or with individual experiences.
B.Emotions are generally learned and stored in our memories, making them quite flexible.
C.Emotions are influenced by our personal experiences and can vary from person to person.
D.Emotions are the least flexible part of the mind, and they cannot be controlled.
昨日更新 | 22次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市宝山区2023-2024学年高二下学期期末教学质量监测英语试卷
阅读理解-阅读单选(约330词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。主要讲的是Strojnik博士对直接探测系外行星等同于直接成像的观念提出了挑战。虽然她承认将行星的光从恒星中分离出来是一项重大成就,但她认为,仅仅是一个亮点并不能构成系外行星的真实图像。从她作为光学科学家的角度来看,系外行星天文学中的“直接成像”一词可能会产生误导,因为它涉及到广泛的处理和理论建模,以区分行星的光线。Strojnik强调了直接探测和真实成像之间的区别,认为将亮点解释为行星需要主观的解释,而不是清晰的视觉证据。
4 .
To the Editors:
I am surprised to read that Dr. Strojnik (“Direct Detection of Exoplanets,” September-October2023) states that we have not yet and cannot directly image exoplanets (外部行星). This is incorrect. NASA/IPAC has a list at exoplanetarchive.ipac.caltech.edu/docs/imaging.html.
One example is an image of 51 Eridani b. The planet is 2.6 times as massive as Jupiter and has the same radius (半径).
Gerard Kriss
Space Telescope Science Institute
Dr. Gerard:
I am pleased that my article brought a response. The phrase “planet detection” arouses in people’s imaginations beautiful images of planets that are creative artistic representations of novel worlds. But a blur of brightness is not an image.
Exoplanet researchers routinely call videos such as the one below of 51 Eridani b “direct images” because the planet’s light has been separated from that of its star. “Directly imaged” is the standard language of exoplanet astronomy. But to an optical (光学的) scientist such as myself, there is a strong distinction between direct detection (the planet’s light separated from the light of its star) and direct imaging (a proven picture of the exoplanet). From an optical researcher’s perspective, a single bright spot simply is not an image.
Indeed, even the word “direct” in direct detection is debatable from an optical researcher’s point of view. The detection of the light of the exoplanet requires significant processing, adding multiple images and removing starlight based on theoretical models of the source signal.
But the interpretation of a bright spot as a planet is only possible upon visual inspection and optimistic thinking. As an optical scientist, I cannot look at a single spot and call it an image of exoplanets. A trajectory (轨迹), or a series of bright points, is not an image of a planet, although it very likely represents something that nowadays is described as an exoplanet.
Marija Strojnik

1. ________ is the main disagreement between Marija Strojnik and Gerard Kriss.
A.The definition of a planetB.The importance of detecting exoplanets
C.The artistic representation of exoplanetsD.The use of the term “direct imaging”
2. How does Dr. Strojnik feel about the interpretation of a bright spot as an exoplanet?
A.She supports it, as it is a common practice in exoplanet astronomy.
B.She approves of it, although it does not provide a clear picture of the exoplanet.
C.She believes it is only possible through visual observation and positive assumption.
D.She considers the interpretation to be debatable, as it requires significant processing.
3. Where can you find these two letters?
A.In the textbook.B.In a local newspaper.
C.In a published essay.D.In a science journal.
昨日更新 | 8次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市宝山区2023-2024学年高二下学期期末教学质量监测英语试卷
语法填空-短文语填(约390词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。主要介绍了《夏洛特的网》于1952年10月15日首次出版,是一本受欢迎的儿童读物,由美国著名作家E. B.怀特撰写,加思·威廉姆斯配图,主题涉及友谊、失去、命运、接受和重生的本质。
5 . Directions: After reading the passage below, fill in the blanks to make the passage 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.

First published on October 15, 1952, “Charlotte’s Web” is a popular children’s book written by well-known American author E. B. White and     1    (illustrate)by Garth Williams that deals with themes of the nature of friendship, loss, fate, acceptance, and renewal. The story centers on a pig named Wilbur and the unlikely but deep friendship     2     shares with an uncommonly talented spider named Charlotte.

While it’s normal in the course of events on a farm for pigs     3    (kill)when they reach a certain size and age, clever Charlotte works out a scheme to keep Wilbur from his fate by weaving words into her web to create what amounts to a one-pig publicity campaign. By promoting Wilbur to celebrity status, Charlotte ultimately saves him     4     his date with the butcher’s knife.

The ending of the “Charlotte’s Web” is bittersweet, however,     5     while Wilbur survives, Charlotte does not. But even Charlotte’s passing is a lesson-for Wilbur and those reading his story-about the nature of death and renewal.

Death and destiny are both themes that the book explores. While Charlotte is willing to help Wilbur avoid a destiny that’s being imposed on him by outside forces beyond his control, she also understands that some fates are inevitable: All living creatures are born,     6    (have)a life cycle, and die. Charlotte accepts her role in this natural circle without regret.

Charlotte helps Wilbur realize that immortality is not about living forever, but rather,     7    (ensure)that new generations will follow. She also helps him understand that love and friendship are not fixed in quantity. While we may lose a friend, new friendships can come along, not as replacements for     8     we’ve lost, but as blessings to build on what we’ve learned.

“Charlotte’s Web” got its inspiration from true experiences that author E. B. White had on his farm in Maine,     9     he penned the book and lived until his death in 1985.While the author claims that the book     10     never be considered a moral tale, certain messages related to moral principles, or rights and wrongs, are obviously established in “Charlotte’s Web”.

昨日更新 | 9次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市宝山区2023-2024学年高二下学期期末教学质量监测英语试卷
6 . 为了培养学生地道的口音,该大学计划从国外聘请一些英文老师。(handful)(汉译英)
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7日内更新 | 5次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市宝山区2023-2024学年高二下学期期末教学质量监测英语试卷
7 . 校餐也要以其他食品的推销方法推销给孩子。(the same way)(汉译英)
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7日内更新 | 5次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市宝山区2023-2024学年高二下学期期末教学质量监测英语试卷
翻译-整句汉译英 | 适中(0.65) |
8 . 与这位家喻户晓的建筑师一起工作是一次难忘的经历,是我职业生涯迄今为止的一个亮点。(highlight) (汉译英)
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7日内更新 | 5次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市宝山区2023-2024学年高二下学期期末教学质量监测英语试卷
9 . Directions: Read the following passage. Summarize the main idea and the main point(s) of the passage in no more than 60 words. Use your own words as far as possible.

For thousands of years, Chinese people have valued the large family with three, four, or even five generations living under the same roof. That's what we call an extended family. Now it is changing. Compared to extended families. nuclear families which involve only two generations living together are becoming the trend. Apart from family size, these families are also featured by reduced dependence on the last generation. Young people are able to make decisions on their own and children are less likely to be brought up by their grandparents.

The reason for the tendency of nuclear families can be reflected as follows. It's a time when young people think highly of individual freedom. Young people like to have personal space that won't be disturbed by the old generations. In this way, they are more likely to avoid conflicts caused by different living habits from their parents.

It's also a time when social welfare institutions are highly advanced for old people to lead a comfortable life . Senior citizens can live together in some nursing homes and be taken good care of by specialized nursing workers, which may base young people's heavy burden of attending their aging parents.

However, the problem concerning attending to children turns up as the number of nuclear families increases. Young people are busy with their work and spend less time with their children. As a result, lacking enough care both from their parents and grandparents during their growth, children may develop mental illnesses like loneliness and depression. Many young people, therefore, hire babysitters to look after and keep company with their children, which adds a financial burden to them.

Facing the problem above, young people can seek help from old generations, communities and government. Old generations are welcomed to take care of their grandchildren, especially when young people are asked to work overtime. Communities ought to organize some volunteers to look after unattended kids. And government can set up special loads for young people to relieve their financial problem. With the joint efforts, nuclear families are expected to fit in well with the development of the society.

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7日内更新 | 6次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市宝山区2023-2024学年高二下学期期末教学质量监测英语试卷
书信写作-投稿征文 | 适中(0.65) |
10 . Directions: Write an English composition in 120-150 words according to the instructions given below in Chinese.
假设你是明启中学的学生吴磊,你校英文报《英语拾零》(English Sidelights)正庆祝创刊十周年,请你写一篇文章投稿,内容包括:
● 读报的经历;
● 喜爱的栏目;
● 期望和祝福。
(文中不得出现真实姓名和学校名称)
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7日内更新 | 7次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市宝山区2023-2024学年高二下学期期末教学质量监测英语试卷
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