上海市黄浦区2019届高三英语一模
2020年高三上海黄浦区英语一模试卷及答案

■二英iftut 表弟1页JGIO 页黄浦区2019学年度第一学期高三年级期终调研测试英语试卷(先卷计划:120分钟满分:140分)2019年12月第I 卷(共100分)I. IKlrnlngCoinpi'i-livnxkxiSection ADirrctia«i»: In Section A. you will hew ten shurl cotivcrution 、between two spc;ikcr> At the end of each con 、cmlon, i queuion will be axkct!whai was said. The ccnvcr^iikMH iind the quest kun uill be spoken onh* <wicr After you hear d cmcrylioi 】 aiul (hr quclion about it read the f<Mir [imsibk niUMcru on ytnif paper, atul tkeide whkh one i< the best answei to the question you have heard.Section BDirections: In Section B. you will hear two short passages and one longer conversation. After each passage or conxcmiion. you will be asked jevvrai queslions. The pa3age and ihc conscnonon will be read tuicc. but the quc«hons will be spoken only once When you hear a question, tvad the four possible answers on your paper and decide whtch one uould be the be" answer to the question you hnc beard. QuEixn II ihra 岫 13 arc basest OH the/ollowmg3. 5. A In a cosmetics shop ABcziind ycrcliiry C Studentand pfolciiwr.A Open J reckling com(>aiiyC Run his own bakery.B. In a hospital A The package i« too big io deliver. C The woman will hevc lunch with the ii»n. A He wa$ nun! ditTicull toC. He inspected tlic project regularly.C. In a nutrition dr[urlincnt □. In a supermarket. & Editor and publisher. D Wnlcr and reader. B Irv <t new rr5lainint. I). Buy wine insurance. B. The delivery can he ina<ic aufotnaticalt^.D. The min can mnkc the delivery tomerrnw morningB. He 田 nun) special requirementsI). I kas common as other customer5. X An nira/mg book. B. A great woman C \ scientific field. I). A strong voice.A He himself is a big tan of Hepburn.C. He felt puzzled by girb' love for Ilepbum \ When to do mind-uandermg.C. How to keep attentne in a lecture.A. Ordinary.B. Practical.A. Decorating the company.C Preparing a pn :5cntnt>on. B. He does not think rhe girl is like Hepburn I). He docs not know anything about Hepbum. B. U here to h ・、c ph>5ic3l activities. I). I low to take notes in a lecture. C. Disturbing. D. Unrealistic. B. Finishing a painting. II. A. 2.!2. A. A horse.13. A. Mwv annoyed. B. II. B. A dog. B. Lz anxious. C. More frighkrxxl. D. 50. D. A cat D. Lz thuckvd.QMCfixa 14 rhr^t^h 16 are Mwd g the folle^g pa^tge.QuEig 、17fh 「,*xh 20 are b**d on the ,。
黄埔2019一模高三英语卷词汇梳理

16周周考(2019黄埔一模)巩固学案【教学目标】1、掌握黄埔一模卷中的单词、词组和重点句型2、理解语篇含义,找准相关信息3、逐步掌握答题基本方法和技巧4、重点提高纠错能力和举一反三的能力【预习任务】1、用字典查出不认识的词,将其含义标注在书上2、在没有把握的题上做记号,并写出疑问所在3、按要求完成下列预习案,完成练习(十二)I. listening ComprehensionSection A1.阅读选项,写出下列单词、词组的中/英文表达。
1. make the delivery 进行投递2. inspect 视察,检查3. Unrealistic 不现实的4. its numerous applications 大量的应用5. its evaluation process 它的评价过程6. its solid foundation 它的坚实的基础7. jogging 慢跑二、听录音,根据录音完成下列句子1. at a time 一次2. a signature to confirm you have received it 一个确认你已经收到的签名3. on a regular basis 定期地4.refreshing 提神的,与众不同的5. my mind begins to wander 我开始走神了6. interact with travelers 与旅客互动7. This little bit of support makes a big difference. 这一点小小的支持有很大的作用。
8. therapy animal 治疗动物9. Due to its strict, fair, and independent evulation process 由于他严格,公平以及独立的评价过程10. administer 管理11. As far as particular sports are concerned, 就特定的运动而言12. come up with a more appealing slogan 想出更吸引人的标语13. becoming more conscious and concerned about staying fit 对于保持健康更有意识,更关注II. Grammar and vocabularySection A阅读篇章,写出下列单词、词组的中/英文表达。
2019年上海市高三高考仿真模拟考试英语试卷(一)及解析

2019年上海市高三高考仿真模拟考试英语试卷(一)★祝考试顺利★I. Listening ComprehensionSection A (10%)Directions: In Section A,you will hear ten short conversations between two speakers. At the end of each conversation,a question will be asked about what was said. The conversations and the questions 'will be spoken only once. After you hear a conversation and the question about it, read the four possible answers on your paper, and decide which one is the best answer to the question you have, heard.1. A. $10. B. $8. C. $16. D. $12.2. A. At a concert. B. At a restaurant.C. At an art museum.D. At a flower shop.3. A. A teacher. B. A policeman. C. A doctor. D. An athlete.4. A. Parent and child. B. Husband and wife.C. Teacher and student.D. Shop assistant and customer.5. A. A pair of trousers. B. A suit.C. A coat.D. A blouse.6. A. The man is planning a trip to Austin. B. The man has not been to Austin before.C. The man doesn’t like Austin.D. The man has been to Austin before.7. A. Find a larger room. B. Sell the old table.C. Buy two bookshelves.D. Rearrange some furniture.8. A. She is fond of pizza very much.B. She disagrees with the man.C. She doesn’t understand what the man says.D. She doesn’t like pizza very much, either.9. A. She doesn't mind it as the road conditions are good.B. She is tired of driving in heavy traffic.C. She is unhappy to have to drive such a long way every day.D. She enjoys it because she's good at driving.10. A. It was a long lecture, but easy to understand.B. It was not as easy as she had expected.C. It was as difficult as she had expected.D. It was interesting and easy to follow.Section B (15%)Directions : In Section B,you will hear two passages and one longer conversation. After each passage and conversation , you will be asked several questions. The passages and the conversation will be read twice,but the questions will be spoken only once. When you hear a question, read the jour possible answers on your paper and decide which one is the best answer to the question you have heard.Questions 11 through 13 are based on the following passage.11. A. Twin volunteers. B. Twin prisoners.C. Two police officers.D. Two patients.12. A. To see if tea and coffee would do any harm to people.B. To see how much tea and coffee one could drink a day.C. To see whether his people were telling a lie.D. To see whether the drinks had the same effect.13. A. They both lived a long life. B. One of them survived the experiment.C. Both of them died soon.D. They suffered a lot from the experiment. Questions 14 through 16 are based on the following passage.14. A. It is listed in the teaching program. B. It is important to English teaching.C. Effective listening results in good grades.D. It's more taught than。
2019年上海市浦东新区高考英语一模试卷(解析版)

2019年上海市浦东新区高考英语一模试卷Listening ComprehensionSection ADirections:In Section A,you will hear ten short conversations between two speakers. At the end of each conversation,a question will be asked about what was said. The conversations and the questions will be spoken only once. After you hear a conversation and the question about it,read the four possible answers on your paper,and decide which one is the best answer to the question you have heard. 1.(1分)A.Blue.B.Green.C.Yellow.D.Purple.2.(1分)A.7:15.B.7:45.C.8:00.D.8:15.3.(1分)A.In a restaurant.B.At the man's house.C.In a supermarket.D.In the hospital.4.(1分)A.The CEO won't be free at that time.B.The lecture hall isn't big enough.C.The equipment in the lecture hall is out of order.D.The lecture hall is not reserved early enough.5.(1分)A.An athlete.B.A fitness instructor.C.A mechanic.D.A medical doctor.6.(1分)A.Take a deep breath.B.Take some aspirin.C.See a doctor.D.Drive to the hospital.7.(1分)A.The man shouldn't order food in such awful weather.B.The delay of the delivery is caused by the awful weather.C.There is a problem with the policy of food delivery.D.The man should have his delivery fee returned.8.(1分)A.Having an outing.B.Ordering various drinks.C.Preparing for a party.D.Choosing suitable drinks.9.(1分)A.Thoughtful.B.Terrified.C.Apologetic.D.Annoyed.10.(1分)A.He followed his grandmother's steps of cooking.B.He has a great talent for cooking.C.He is a green hand in cooking.D.He improved the dish of his grandmother.Section BDirections:In Section B,you will hear two passages and a longer conversation,and you will be asked several questions on each of the passages and the conversation. The passages and the conversation will be read twice,but the question will be spoken only once. When you hear a question,read the four possible answers on your paper and decide which one is the best answer to the question you have heard.11.(4.5分)(1)A.Literature.B.Business.C.Cooking.D.History.(2)A.Christopher Columbus.B.People in Mexico.C.Hernando Cortez.D.Daniel Peter.(3)A.The development of chocolate.B.The introduction of Cortez.C.The contributions of Columbus.D.The usage of cocoa beans.12.(4.5分)(1)A.Les Misréables.B.Red.C.My Week with Marilyn.D.The Theory of Everything.(2)A.He rose to fame overnight.B.He has been a household name.C.He was recommended by Prince Harry.D.He first appeared in a stage play in 2004.(3)A.His small brown spots on the face.B.His graduation from famous schools.C.His remarkable gift for performing on stage.D.His involvement in various styles of performance.13.(6分)(1)A.A chef tends to work at entry level jobs.B.A chef works in a non﹣professional setting.C.A chef has the ability to create the recipe.D.A chef is as professional as a cook.(2)A.He received the training in the culinary (烹饪)school.B.He stuck to the traditional recipe without any change.C.He had a natural skill in cooking the cuisine.D.His latest book was on the list of NYT bestseller list.(3)A.Make some easy dishes like chopping vegetables.B.Cook with the accurate measurement and no spice.C.Make an efficient and delicate cooking.D.Cook with creativity and passion.(4)A.Working as a chef.B.Dos and don'ts about a chef.C.Tips for cooking.D.Recommendation of a bestseller.Grammar and VocabularySection ADirections: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.14.(10分)Is Climate Change Consuming Your Favorite Foods?Due to climate change,the world's endangered lists are no longer just for animals.We may not only need to adapt ourselves to living in a warmer world but a (1)(tasty)one as well.As the increased amount of carbon dioxide in the air linked to global warming (2)(continue)to affect weather,we often forget that they are also impacting the quantity,the quality,and the growing locations of our food.Some foods have already felt the impact while (3)may even become scarce within the next 30 years.Whether or not you try to limit yourself (4)one cup of coffee a day,the effects of climate change on the world's coffee﹣growing regions may leave you little choice.Rising temperatures and unpredictable rainfall patterns are reported to have been threatening coffee plantations in South America,Africa,Asia,and Hawaii.The result?Significant cuts in coffee yield.According to organizations like Australia's Climate Institute,half of the present coffee﹣producing areas (5)(estimate)not to be suitable by the year 2050,if current climate patterns continue.With temperatures continuously rising,oceans are absorbing some of the heat and undergoing warming of their own,(6)(cause)a decline in fish population,including in lobsters that are cold﹣blooded creatures,and in salmons (鲑鱼)(7)eggs find it hard to survive in higher water temperatures.Warmer waters also encourage some poisonous marine bacteria to grow and lead to illness in humans whenever (8)(take)with raw seafood,like oysters.And how about that satisfying "crack" which you get when you are eating crabs andlobsters?It could be silenced (9)shellfish have been struggling to build their calcium carbonate (碳酸钙)shells,which is a result of ocean acidification.Even worse is the possibility (10)we will have no seafood to enjoy at all.Ina 2006 Dalhousie University study,scientists predicted that if over﹣fishing and risingtemperature trends continued at their present rate,the world's seafood stocks would run out by the year 2050.Section BDirections:Fill in each blanks 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.15.(10分)Workforce of the FutureThe workplace is changing rapidly.Rather than the standard working day of nine to five,employees are working more flexibly to meet their busy home lives.Advances in technology are (1)the very nature of the tasks and skills required in the workplace.To gain a full perspective of how the workplace is set to change over the next decade,employee benefits provider Unum UK (2)with The Future Laboratory to survey 3,000 workers across several industries.They also interviewed industry experts and business leaders on topics from artificial intelligence and robotics to the increase of flexible working and an ageing workforce.The result outlines some of the employment changes that businesses can expect to see over the next decade and predicts the(3)of two worker cultures which will dominate the workforce.They are the obligated and the self﹣fulfilled workers."Obligated workers" refer to people with dependents and the sandwich generation,(4)raising children with caring for elderly parents.Therefore,they value a career (5)to life stages and events and financial security.Joel Defries,33,father of one kid and partner at London V odka said,"A flexible employer will allow me to have a long paternity leave (陪产假)and to value my family just as much as I value my job."Self﹣fulfilled workers are committed to life﹣long learning and acquiring new skillsrather than (6)to an employer.They actively look for personal development and want employee benefits that help them (7)both their personal and professional ambitions.They treat personal commitments and pursuits as (8)to professional commitments.Elly Kemp,31,(9) a full﹣time employee,now working part ﹣time in a caféand also assisting with her grandmother's care said,"My approach to work allows me the freedom to(10)my career at my own pace.I want my work to be fluid so I can change it when I want and do whatever makes me happy at the time."Reading ComprehensionSection ADirections:For each blank in the following passage there are four words or phrases marked A,B,C and D. Fill in each blank with the word or phrase that best fits the context.16.(15分)Early decision ﹣you apply to one school,and admission is binding (有法律约束力的)﹣seems like a great choice for nervous applicants.Schools (1) a higher percentage of early﹣decision applicants,which arguably means that you have a better chance of being enrolled.And if you do,you're done with the whole painful process by December.But most students and parents don't realize that schools have hidden (2)for offering early decision.Early decision,since it's binding,allows schools to fill their classes with qualified students;it allows (3)committees to select the students that are in particular demand for their college and know those students will come.It also gives schools a higher yield rate (优秀学生率),which is often used as one of the ways to(4)college selectivity and popularity.The problem is that this process effectively (5)the window of time students have to make one of the most important decisions of their lives up to that point.Under (6)admissions,seniors have to choose which school to attend until May 1;early decision effectively steals six months from them,months that could be used to visit more schools,do more research,speak to current students and alumni (校友)and make a more(7)decision.For any given student in America,whatever their levels are,there are a number of schools that are a great(8).When students become too fixed on a particular school early in the admissions process,that fixation can lead to(9)severe disappointmentif they don't get in or,if they do,it is likely that they are now bound to go to a school that,given time for further (10),may not actually be right for them.Early decision offers a genuine admissions edge.That advantage goes largely to students who already have(11)advantages.The students who use early decision tend to be those who have received higher﹣quality college guidance,usually a result of coming from a more advantaged background.(12),there's an argument against early decision,as students from lower﹣income families are far less likely to have the admissions know﹣how (招生诀窍)to(13)figure out the often confusing early deadlines.Students who have done their research and are confident that there's one school they would be thrilled to get into should,under the current system,probably (14)under early decision.For students who haven't yet done enough research,or who are still constantly changing their minds on favorite schools,the early﹣decision system needlessly and prematurely (15)the field of possibility just at a time when students should be opening themselves to a whole range of thrilling options.(1)A.let in B.turn down C.make up D.give away (2)A.dangers B.costs C.assumptions D.purposes(3)A.admissions B.joint C.inquiry D.investigative (4)A.detail B.measure C.achieve D.represent(5)A.neglects B.provides C.shortens D.marks(6)A.future B.regular C.random D.compulsory (7)A.informed B.honoured C.imposed D.complicated (8)A.fit B.aid C.hit D.net(9)A.therefore B.otherwise C.however D.furthermore (10)A.comment B.enhancement C.implication D.reflection (11)A.mutual B.favourite C.numerous D.temporary (12)A.In other words B.In this regard C.In particular D.In brief(13)A.hesitantly B.relatively C.deliberately D.efficiently (14)A.consult B.volunteer C.adjust D.apply(15)A.occupies B.encloses C.narrows D.explores Section BDirections:Read the following three passages. Each passage is followed by several questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A,B,C and D. Choose the one that fits best according to the information given in the passage you have just read.17.(8分)One recent night,while I was leafing through its pages of an old journal,my eyes met a quote by the British writer Graham Greene that I had marked."A prejudice had something in common with an ideal." In other words,ideals ﹣general descriptions of people's expectations of themselves and others ﹣can often lead us to unreasonable ideas.It got me thinking about how we often allow ourselves to generalize about groups of people.We like to stereotype people by the color of their skin,the year of their birth or any other related factors.I grew up in a multi﹣racial corner of America.The different groups were often subjectto narrow stereotypes:Jewish people were "greedy," Mexicans were "poorly educated," and Asians were "good at math." These labels were taught to us from a young age.They wormed their way into our belief systems,harming how we came to see others.It made me sad growing up to see people repeat these stereotypes as if they were true.The rush﹣to﹣judgment of people breeds a culture of discrimination (歧视).You can also see these over﹣generalized description being made against today's Chinese people.Whether it be a lack of interest or worry among millennials (千禧一代)being described as "monkish," or "dad﹣fashion (复古作风)" which has given the "greasy middle ﹣aged men" tag,stereotypes always seem to gain a foothold in the consciousness of our society.But these generalizations do real harm as these myths may become part of the wider population.It's about time that we,as a society,walked away from generalizations and stereotypes.I leave you with the words of Martin Luther King Jr.from his famous "I Have a Dream" speech:"I look to a day when people will not be judged by the color of their skin,but by the content of their character." By reserving judgment and really getting to know the individual,you might just find your irrational ideas have no foundation.(1)According to the passage,how do people tend to judge others?A.By describing people's personalities.B.By truly getting to know those around.C.By observing their noticeable features.D.By following Martin Luther King's speech.(2)According to the author, a culture of discrimination appears because.A.people live in places of various racesB.people are born with unreasonable ideasC.prejudices slightly influence people's belief systemD.people usually make judgments without thinking twice(3)Examples of "millennials" and "dad﹣fashion" are mentioned in Paragraph 3 to reveal.A.generalizations have unfavourable position in societyB.generalizations have a negative influence on our societyC.generalizations are found peculiar to the middle﹣aged ChineseD.generalizations make today's Chinese people lack interest or worry(4)The passage is mainly concerned with.A.the common prejudiceB.people's expectation of themselvesC.the groundless worriesD.the famous speech of Martin Luther King18.(6分)When you cross deep water driving too fast,you risk splashing water up into the air box and having it get sucked into the internal engine,which is more common than you think.There are a few steps you should take to clear the water out before you try to start it:1.First,drain the fuel tank,fuel lines and the oil.While it's draining,put a fan on the wiring and dry it out.Remove and clean the carburetor (化油器).2.Take the plugs out of the engine and turn it over to force any water out.Water will come out with the oil.Add oil to the engine and turn it over again,without the plug in.Let it sit for a while,then observe the oil to tell if there's any water in it (it will look like a whitemilky substance if there is water mixed with the oil).If it's there,drain it again and start over until there is little or no white showing in the oil.3.Now re﹣install the spark plug,add gas,then try to start the engine.You should have a can of ether (乙醚)handy just in case it's stubborn,but don't use too much.If it starts,let it run for a few minutes without making it work faster.4.After it runs for several minutes,shut it off,drain the oil and change the filter(过滤网).Run it again for a few minutes then shut it off and checks again for milky colored oil.If you have none,you should be good to go.5.If you cannot start the engine,you may have already ruined it and you will probably need to seek a professional to repair it,or,more likely,you'll have to replace it.(1)According to the passage,a driver turns the engine over after oil is added to it so that he can.A.drain the oil and change the filter without any difficultyB.re﹣install the spark plug and get ready to start the car againC.make a milky substance which is the mixture of water and oilD.see whether there is any water in the engine by checking the oil(2)The underlined word "stubborn" in paragraph 4 may probably means.A.reluctant to changeB.hard to switch onC.insufficient to burnD.unable to take in(3)This passage may be most helpful to.A.a policeman who knows much about car accidentsB.a secretary who has just driven across a small pondC.a driver who is incapable of fixing the car by himselfD.a teacher who is to carry out her routine car maintenance19.(8分)One of the features of a successful business is its ability to employ creativity to constantly push into new territory.Without growth and innovation,businesses eventually fade away.Those with staying power,however,have mastered an often﹣overlooked factorthat allows them to focus on the future clearly:empathy (共情).While that may surprise many,I am certain that the ability to connect with and relate to others ﹣empathy in its purest form ﹣is the force that moves businesses forward.Though the concept of empathy might go against the modern concept of a traditional workplace ﹣competitive,the reality is that for business leaders to experience success,they need to not just see or hear the activity around them,but also relate to the people they serve.Some may think they want the results from doggedly (顽强地)pursuing their goals without much thought for other people.This attitude works for some,but at some point ﹣often sooner rather than later ﹣everyone needs to rely on their relationships and established personal and professional connections.These relationships are the product of taking an honest and dedicated interest in others and their businesses.Successful people do not operate alone;each of us needs the support of others to achieve positive results that push us toward our goals.True empathy combines understanding both the emotional and the logical rationale(根据)that goes into every decision.Effectively understanding empathy involves viewing it as each person's connection to the people and marketplace that surround them.A biological principle known as co﹣evolution explains that the adaptation of an organism is caused by the change of a related object.Similarly,businesses and their leaders participate in co﹣evolution﹣type relationships.Business success depends on empathetic leaders who are able to adapt,build on the strengths around them,and relate to their environment.When businesses fail,it is often because leaders have stopped focusing on understanding their environment and instead stay separated in their own operations.Successful business leaders are receptive to disturbance and aware of what is going on in their organizations both internally and externally.To develop an effective workforce,we must be willing to give in and meet people where they are.This can be frustrating and uncomfortable,particularly when you feel like your position makes more sense or offers a better solution.A critical part of developing empathy,however,is learning to understand,respect and implement another individual's point of view rather than forcing your own.(1)In the author's opinion,if a company wants to achieve success,it must.A.frequently develop in new areasB.always stay pure and powerfulC.concentrate on its future developmentD.value much thought for others(2)It can be inferred from the passage that.A.empathy generally depends on logical reasonsB.supports from others help to achieve ambitionsC.competition rarely exists in traditional workplacesD.striving for goals on one's own is the key to success(3)Which of the following examples can best illustrate the co﹣evolution principle?A.The boss is too occupied to realize that his employees' income is below the average.B.The head of the news agency offers little bonus to the journalists who work extra hours.C.The principal promises flexible working hours after the school moves to the countryside.D.The factory director insists on increasing the output despite the declining market demand.(4)What can be the best title of this passage?A.Empathy and Business SuccessB.The Formation of EmpathyC.Empathy and AggressivenessD.The Importance of EmpathySection CDirections:Read the following passage. Fill in each blank with a proper sentence given in the box. Each sentence can be used only once. Note that there are two more sentences than you need.20.(8分)We need to do more to help the teachers who are exhausted and stressed Teaching should not be one of the most stressful jobs in the US.But it is."The only other profession that comes close to us for stress is nursing ﹣and we still have the numbers…by a lot.(1)""Nobody realizes how horrific working conditions are for teachers throughout the country," Brice﹣Hyde says,an experienced teacher in New York who is part of the national group Badass Teachers Association (BAT).(2)So they did a national study of teacher working conditions around issues like stress,work﹣life balance,respect,and more.The results are both surprising ﹣and not.If you've been seeing the stories about teacher walkouts and pay inequality,you probably aren't all that shocked to see these things like:61 percent of educators find work "always" or "often" stressful;27 percent of educators said they've been threatened or bullied;86 percent of educators feel disrespected by US Secretary of Education Betsy DeV os.Teachers are stressed out,and turnover is high.No wonder we're seeing more stories about the importance of self﹣care,classroom burnout,and mental health days for teachers.Yet,self﹣care doesn't seem to come easily for people,and this is definitely true for teachers.(3)We think it's time to change that,though.So in honor of World Mental Health Day,we are working to change the dialogue about teacher mental health.Below are some of the top challenges people give for not seeking therapy,or even basic self﹣care,along with possible solutions and workarounds for each one.We hope you share this article widely,giving support and love to your fellow educators.(4)And it's pretty much guaranteed to help you do what you set out to in the first place ﹣be a good teacher.Summary Writing21.(10分)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.Online Pharmacy (药店):A Foreseeable TrendOnline pharmacies may replace corner drugstores in the future,which would be of benefit to all of us.Sadly,current Federal Drug Administration (FDA)restrictions prevent many Americans from gaining access to the medicines they require online.Fortunately,online pharmacies offer these drugs and provide patients with more treatment options at lower prices.Those calling for the restrictions are wrong.Online pharmacies are crucial to numerous people.While some drugs sold online aren't FDA﹣approved,customers shouldn't be prevented from buying them.Many of the herbal remedy (草药)online pharmacies offer have been used for hundreds of years,especially in Asian countries,and they have strong safety records.Other medicines may come from foreign countries,but they aren't harming the people who use them in their own countries.Take depression pills as an example.It has been used safely for many years in France and other European countries,yet it's just now being tested in the U.S.Nowadays,just getting in to see a doctor seems to take forever,not to mention the time and money to get tests done and await the results.Thanks to the Internet,customers now know more about available medicines than ever before and are therefore able to take them without having to consult a doctor.The Internet,after all,is filled with information about all kinds of drugs.Much of it has even been written by doctors and pharmaceutical companies themselves.Another issue to consider is money.Health care costs in America are rising every year,and pharmaceutical companies are making billions.Online pharmacies typically sell their drugs at lower prices than hospital pharmacies and corner drugstores.Consumers shouldn't be blamed for seeking cheaper alternatives and refusing to line the pockets of already wealthy companies and stores.TranslationDirections:Translate the following sentences into English,using the words given in the brackets.22.(3分)这场因无视规则引发的事故值得我们深思.(ignore)23.(3分)梦想还是要有的,但不努力就不可能实现.(unless)24.(4分)正是这次经历才让我明白,我不该太过忙碌而错过生活的恩赐.(It)25.(5分)当前有一个非常令人费解的现象:一些年轻父母们宁愿把很多钱投资在早教上,也不愿意带娃旅行开阔眼界.(would rather)Guided Writing26.(25分)Directions:Write an English composition in 120﹣150 words according to the instructions given below in Chinese.网络时代,人们常常不辨别真假就在社交媒体上疯狂点赞(give the thumbs﹣up)或转发(forward),这种行为有实际意义吗?请就此现象谈谈你的看法,并结合生活中的实例加以说明.2019年上海市浦东新区高考英语一模试卷参考答案与试题解析Listening ComprehensionSection ADirections:In Section A,you will hear ten short conversations between two speakers. At the end of each conversation,a question will be asked about what was said. The conversations and the questions will be spoken only once. After you hear a conversation and the question about it,read the four possible answers on your paper,and decide which one is the best answer to the question you have heard. 1.【解答】B2.【解答】C3.【解答】A4.【解答】A5.【解答】B6.【解答】C7.【解答】B8.【解答】C9.【解答】D10.【解答】BSection BDirections:In Section B,you will hear two passages and a longer conversation,and you will be asked several questions on each of the passages and the conversation. The passages and the conversation will be read twice,but the question will be spoken only once. When you hear a question,read the four possible answers on your paper and decide which one is the best answer to the question you have heard.11.【解答】11~13 DCA12.【解答】14~16 DBD13.【解答】17~20 CADAGrammar and VocabularySection ADirections: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.14.【解答】1.less tasty.考查比较级,没那么好吃,表示比较,故填less tasty.2.continues/is continuing.考查动词,as引导的时间状语从句,表示"随着",从句中缺少动词,主语是amount of carbon dioxide ,故填continues或者is continuing.3.others.考查代词,some…others:一些…另一些…,是常见句型,故填others.4.to.考查介词,limit…to:把…限制在…,故填介词to.5.are estimated.考查被动,主语是areas,因为是现在的动作,而且是被估计,故填are estimated.6.causing.考查非谓语,oceans与cause是主动关系,故填现在分词做状语,故填causing.7.whose.考查连词,whose引导定语从句,先行词是salmons,与eggs是从属关系,故填关系代词whose.8.taken.考查非谓语,主语主语与从句主语一致,而且从句中有系动词be,故从句主语和系动词be都可以省略,所以该句中省略bacteria are,故填taken.9.because/since/as.考查连词,因为贝壳很难建造碳酸钙壳,引导原因状语从句,故填because/since/as.10.that.考查连词,that引导同位语从句,解释说明possibility的内容,故填that.Section BDirections:Fill in each blanks 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.15.【解答】GABIE KFJCD1.G.句意理解题.根据句意可知,技术的进步正在改变工作场所所需要的任务和技能的性质.故选G.2.A.句意理解题.根据句意可知,为了全面了解未来10年工作场所将如何变化,员工福利提供商Unum UK与Future Laboratory合作,对多个行业的3000名员工进行了调查.故选A.3.B.句意理解题.根据句意可知,研究结果概述了未来10年企业可能看到的一些就业变化,并预测了两种工人文化的演变,这两种文化将主导劳动力市场.故选B.4.I.句意理解题.根据句意可知,"Obligated workers"指的是有家眷的人和"三明治一代",他们在抚养孩子和照顾年迈父母之间保持平衡.故选I.5.E.句意理解题.根据句意可知,因此,他们看重人生阶段、事件和经济保障量身打造的职业.故选E.6.K.句意理解题.根据句意可知,自我实现的员工致力于终生学习和获取新技能,而。
2019-2020学年上海市高三英语一模汇编(16区)——完型填空

2020宝山一模Monaco Grand PrixThe air is fresh with the heat of early summer as you arrive in the beautiful country of Monaco on the day of the race. Your ___41____ to the Monte-Carlo neighborhood is bursting with color as classic styles of European architecture catch your eye. When you reach the race course area, you are led to the harbor where you will watch the race from the____42____ of a friend’s yacht (游艇).Soon, the Formula One cars will pull onto the starting point and the race will begin.Each of the cars in the Monaco Grand Prix is ____43____, but all of them are fast and modern. The race course also____44____ as being complex and difficult, with a frightening hairpin (发夹)turn along a very narrow street. ____45____ these streets at speeds over 150 kilometers per hour, drivers must take over. Even the slightest _____46____ could turn a multi-million dollar car into a pile of waste. The driver who claims first place receives an award and will go down ____47____as one of the world’s finest drivers.Indianapolis 500On race day the grandstands (大看台)are filled with excitement as you enter the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. You find your seat, ____48____ yourself against the harsh heat and marvel at the huge black oval (椭圆形的)track below. Moments later, a fleet of Indy Cars rolls onto the track,____49____ themselves in 11 neat rows of three. The sound of 33 turning engines rings in your ears, and you cheer with the crowd as the powerful cars take off from the starting line.Unlike Monaco Formula One cars, Indy cars are more uniform in their ____50____. They tend to be much longer, and reach 260 kilometers per hour. Since the drivers must race for 500 miles, the race is quite long, ____51____ three to five hours. The resulting wear and tear on each car is managed with short stop. The driver’s excellent team performs ____52____ at amazing speeds. The dangerous nature of this race requires ____53____ communication between the drivers and their teams. They must plan short stops ____54____ or the driver loses precious time and it could _____55____ them the race.1/ 3041. A. memory B. aim C. anxiety D. ride42. A. comfort B. position C. bottom D. direction43. A. colorful B. fashionable C. unique D. similar44. A. comes out B. stands out C. turns out D. points out45. A. Crossing B. Constructing C. Driving D. Competing46. A. touch B. spot C. error D. hole47. A. in history B. in advance C. in return D. in all48. A. pushing B. drawing C. fighting D. fanning49. A. following B. arranging C. warning D. urging50. A. design B. preparation C. display D. regulation51. A. timing B. extending C. delaying D. lasting52. A. check B. maintenance C. device D. condition53. A. short B. special C. constant D. loud54. A. professionally B. positively C. directly D. carefully55. A. cost B. sacrifice C. defeat D. fail.41-45 DACBA 46-50 CADBA 51-55 DBCDA2020崇明一模What did we do to deserve cats and dogs? Not only are they super cute and make us smile on a daily basis, scientists from Washington State University have now proved that touching our favourite__41__ friends gently for just ten minutes is an effective way to reduce stress levels.In findings published in A ERA Open — an open access journal published by the American Educational Research Association — last month, scientists showed that the general __42__ of students improves quickly, with even those who are highly stressed showing ''significant” reduction in cortisol levels — a chemical produced by our bodies in limes of stress.Many universities have adopted "Pet Your Stress Away" programs where students can __43__ cats or dogs and it appears to be showing both psychological and physiological benefits now.The research, conducted by Washington State University (WSU), shows that pets improve students' moods, and their __44__ as stress-relieving physiological benefits. “Just 10 minutes can have a significant __45__,” said Patricia Pendry, an associate professor in WSU's Department of Human Development.This is the first study that has demonstrated reductions in students' cortisol levels during a __46__ intervention (介入).The team chose 249 college students and put them into tour random groups and compared the effects of different __47__ to animals. The first group were provided 10 minutes of actual interaction with dogs and cats. The second group waited in line while__48__others petting the animals. The third group watched a slide-show of the same animals, while the fourth group had to __49__ and was told they would be allowed to sec the animals after 10 minutes.Salivary cortisol __50__ were collected from each participant starting from the moment they woke up in the morning. There was significantly less cortisol in the saliva of students who had __51__ interaction with the pets.Many universities have started these __52__ where students can interact with cats or dogs to help relieve the pressures of higher education. “We already knew that students enjoy interacting with animals, and that it helps them experience more__ 53 __ emotions,” Dr Pendry said. “What we wanted to learn was whether this exposure would help students reduce their stress in a less __54__3/ 30way. And it did, which is __55__because the reduction of stress chemicals may, over time, have significant benefits for physical and menial health.”41. A. new B. furry C. close D. personal42. A. endurance B. awareness C. education D. well-being43. A. glance at B. focus on C. interact with D. escape from44. A. presence B. performance C. intelligence D. perseverance45. A. potential B. problem C. chance D. impact46. A. real-life B. part-time C. first-rate D. high-quality47. A. responses B. exposures C. contributions D. approaches48. A. keeping B. preventing C. observing D. catching49. A. swear B. wait C. supervise D. appreciate50. A. samples B. levels C. injections D. tips51. A. little B. harmonious C. informal D. direct52. A. campaigns B. programs C. researches D. majors53. A. complex B. intense C. familiar D. positive54. A. subjective B. risky C. mysterious D. effective55. A. demanding B. challenging C. exciting D. disappointing41. B 42. D43. C44. A45. D46. A47. B48. C49. B50. A51. D 52. B53. D54. A55. C2020奉贤一模Ecology is a complicated thing. Given the facts that elephant damage often kills trees and bush fires often kill trees, it would be 41 to assume that a combination of the two would make things worse. Contrary to this assumption, 42 , as the recently-published research by Benjamin Wigley shows, if a tree has already been damaged, fire can 43 help to make things better.One common way in which elephants harm trees is by stripping(剥) them of their bark(树皮). Dr Wigley, who did indeed start from the obvious 44 , set off to find out how much worse bush fires would make the effects of this bark stripping. To serve this purpose, he set up a study in the Kruger National Park. Since 1954, the Kruger has been the site of experiments in which plots of land have been burned 45 , to understand the effects of fire on plain ecology. In these experiments, Dr Wigley looked at trees in three different zones, in one of which, the trees were burned every year; in the second, they were burned every other year, while the third zone, by contrast, was actively 46 fire. To keep things consistent, he looked at the fate of the same tree species, the marula(马鲁拉树), in all three zones. He picked marulas because they are particular 47 of elephant activity. Their fruit are delicious, and prized by elephants and people alike. But elephants also seem to enjoy eating their bark. In July 2016 he and his colleagues identified 20 marulas in every zone and used special tools to 48 from each of them a circular section of bark 5 cm in diameter. Having imposed this damage, they 49 the wounds over the course of the following two years, to see what would happen. To their 50 , they discovered that the wounds of trees in fire zones recovered far better than those of trees that had seen no fires at all. Wounded trees in the annual burn zone re-grew 98% of their lost 51 during the two years of the study. Those living in the biennial(两年一次的) burn zone re-grew 92% of it. But those in the zone where fires were 52 re-grew only 72%.The researchers also found something else when they were measuring the trees’ wounds: ants. Ten of the 20 trees in the fire-prevention zone developed ant colonies in their wounds. The ants in question were a species that is known to damage trees and is supposed to 53 tissue healing. By contrast, only five trees in the biennial burn zone and three in the annual zone developed ants’5/ 30nests in their wounds. It looks, therefore, as if bush fires are treating trees’ wounds by killing antsthat might 54 colonize and damage them. Though such fires are surely harmful to healthytrees, it seems, in an example of two negatives making a positive, as if they are actually 55 tosick ones.41. A. difficult B. reasonable C. necessary D. awful42. A. however B. therefore C. furthermore D. somehow43. A. uniquely B. barely C. actually D. merely44. A. phenomenon B. evidence C. imagination D. assumption45. A. equally B. regularly C. severely D. purposely46. A. burnt with B. protected from C. covered by D. exposed to47. A. participants B. partners C. victims D. friends48. A. mark B. remove C. hit D. measure49. A. regulated B. checked C. healed D. monitored50. A. disappointment B. surprise C. joy D. relief51. A. vitality B. height C. bark D. strength52. A. controlled B. prevented C. started D. boosted53. A. disturb B. promote C. impact D. quicken54. A. therefore B. nevertheless C. then D. otherwise55.A. beneficial B. unbelievable C. effective D. cruel41-55 BACDB BCBDB CBADA2020虹口一模 Inc. is checking out of China’s fiercely competitive domestic e-commerce market. The company told sellers on Thursday that it would no longer __41__ its third - party online marketplace or provide seller services on its Chinese website, . ___42___,domestic companies will no longer be able to sell products to Chinese consumers on its e-commerce platform.The decision marks an end to a long ___43___ by America’s e-commerce giants in the Chinese market. The firms entered the Chinese market with great attention in the early 2000s, only to ___44___ in the face of competition from China’s faster - moving Internet giants.Amazon has been in talks to ___45___ its e-commerce business for goods imported into China with a Chinese competitor, NetEase Inc.’s Kaola, in a stock - for - stock transaction(交易), according to a person familiar with the matter. That would remove the Amazon name from ___46___ e-commerce in China. Neither company would confirm the progress or details of those ___47___, nor would they say if they are continuing.In a written statement, Amazon said it remained ___48___ to China through its global stores, Kindle businesses and web services. Amazon China’s president would leave to take on another role within the company, the company said. The China consumer - business team will report ___49___ to the company’s global team.When Amazon first entered China in 2004 with the ___50____ of , it was the largest online seller for books, music and video there. Most Chinese consumers were using cash - on - delivery as their to form of ___51___. Today, Amazon China chiefly caters to customers looking for imported international goods such as cosmetics and milk powder and is a(n) ___52___ player in the booming Chinese e-commerce market.Amazon China commanded just 6% of gross market volume in the niche(细分的)cross - border e-commerce market in the fourth quarter of 2018, versus NetEase Kaola’s 25% ___53___ and the 32% held by Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.’s Tmall InternationalChinese consumers are becoming more fascinated with ___54___ brands. In 2011, 85% of Chinese consumers said they would always buy a foreign brand over a domestic one. By 2016, 60% of respondents said they preferred domestic over foreign brands. Shaun Rein, China Market research’s founder, said American e-commerce giants ___55___ obstacles in China because they7/ 30didn’t offered the products or user experience that consumers were looking for.41. A. assist B. expand C. operate D. tailor42. A. As a result B. By contrast C. For example D. In addition43. A. criticism B. negotiation C. struggle D. resolution44. A. interact B. withdraw C. split D. survive45. A. associate B. combine C. exchange D. supply46. A. time - consuming B. long - suffering C. ever - lasting D. consumer - facing47. A. talks B. businesses C. competitions D. instructions48. A. related B. accustomed C. exposed D. committed49. A. automatically B. directly C. regularly D. secretly50. A. breakdown B. improvement C. purchase D. participation51. A. refund B. payment C. sponsorship D. trade52. A. complicated B. critical C. original D. insignificant53. A. share B. budget C. volume D. maximum54. A. foreign B. luxurious C. domestic D. fashionable55. A. dealt with B. forgot about C. got through D. came across41 - 45 CACBB 46 - 50 DADBC 51 - 55 BDACD2020黄浦一模Endangered languages can be found throughout the world. Many languages now have fewer than 100 or even fewer than 10 speakers. The crisis is not limited to remote regions of the world. When Europeans first arrived in North America, 312 different languages were __41__, of which 123 are now known to be extinct. Of the __42__ languages, most speakers are grandparents and great - grandparents.Different researchers offer different definitions of “endangered”. The system of __43__ used by the Catalogue of Endangered Languages evaluates languages in four areas: the __44__ of all the speakers, how often the language is conveyed to the next __45__, the rate at which it is losing speakers and the __46__ in which it is used. Based on this data, languages are ranked on a six - point scale from “safe” to “severely endangered.” The midpoint, “endangered” refers to language with between 100 and 1,000 speakers who represent about half of the language’s community or ethnic group. The language is spoken only by some parents, of whom very few teach it to their children. It is __47__ used at home and is not taught in schools or used for government business.Languages become endangered due to a number of __48__ factors including globalization, economics, technology, education policy, and changes in __49__ attitudes. As the forces of globalization make the world more interconnected, previously __50__ language communities come under pressure to participate in a larger economy, which means learning the area’s majority language. __51__, local schools often begin to teach the majority language instead of the local tongue. Local languages also __52__ as communities adopt mobile phones and computers most of which run on software that has been translated into only a handful of languages. This trend __53__ as these devices connect users to the Internet. At this point, many communities undergo a cultural __54__ in which parents no longer value the language enough to teach it to their children.Initiatives to __55__ endangered languages have become more numerous in recent years. These efforts tend to focus on two main areas: the documentation of endangered languages, and efforts to increase the use of endangered languages among younger speakers and in the community at large.9/ 3041. A. at hand B. at risk C. in use D. in view42. A. ancient B. evolving C. local D. surviving43. A. assessment B. classification C. description D. research44. A. age B. background C. number D. religion45. A. committee B. century C. generation D. government46. A. content B. occupations C. situations D. themes47. A. advisedly B. efficiently C. primarily D. rarely48. A. balancing B. complicating C. historical D. interrelated49. A. cultural B. mental C. moral D. religious50. A. foreign B. informal C. isolated D. national51. A. For example B. In contrast C. In response D. Vice versa52. A. boom B. develop C. disappear D. suffer53. A. ceases B. changes C. increases D. starts54. A. difference B. influence C. shift D. variety55. A. enrich B. purify C. refresh D. standardize41-50 CDAAC CDDAC BCCCC2020嘉定一模In product design, imagining user’s feelings leads to more original outcomes Researchers find that in a new product design, connecting with user’s heart, rather than their head, can lead to more original and creative outcomes.Developing original and __41__ products is critical to a company’s long-term success. Thus, understanding what influences originality can have important and potentially __42__ consequences for businesses. Ravi Mehta, a professor of business administration, shows that adopting a(n) __43__ that imagines how the user would feel while using a product leads designers to experience greater empathy(同感), which __44__ creativity and, in turn, outcome originality for new product design.There are two ways that the product designer can __45__ the consumer’s product usage. One focuses on objective use of the product - how consumers might use the product, that is, an “objective - imagination” approach. The other focuses on feelings - how the product makes the consumer feel, a “feeling-imagination” approach.Consumers always want to have new products that solve problems more efficiently and at a less cost. So product designers __46__ this trap of being very objective in focusing on the use of a product. That’s important, leads designers to experience greater empathy, which makes them more __48__, the feelings-imagination approach leads designers to experience greater empathy, which makes them more __49__ to the consumers’ ideas. This leads to greater outcome originality. Mehta said, “when you imagine consumers and focus on their feelings, that’s powerful and will lead to something much more innovative than only focusing on a product’s usage.” The research shows that a feelings - based approach is __50__ to the commonly used objective - based approach, the researchers wrote. It not only helps product designers build a better product, but is also them create more innovative products.The implications of the findings extend to everyday consumers, who now play a role in shaping companies design. Mehta said, “Marketers are increasingly __51__ consumers for new product ideas.” __52__, there was very successful campaign a few years ago focused on getting consumers to create a new potato chip flavor.The experiments demonstrated a __53__ effect of adopting a feelings - imagination approach. That suggest that these designers may __54__ imagining users’ feelings. In this way, designers candevelop products the could __55__ to the masses. Companies can easily adopt this process and promote feelings-imagination exercise through their websites or social media.41. A. primary B. innovative C. natural D. domestic42. A. temporary B. slight C. indefinite D. profitable43. A. policy B. proposal C. approach D. standard44. A. enhances B. exhibits C. illustrates D. explores45. A. recommend B. extend C. exploit D. imagine46. A. fall apart B. figure out C. fall into D. turn into47. A. originality B. objectivity C. creativity D. flexibility48. A. In conclusion B. In addition C. As a result D. By contrast49. A. open B. harmful C. resistant D. equal50. A. evident B. superior C. relevant D. alert51. A. joining in B. applying to C. turning to D. taking to52. A. In reality B. In other words C. What’s more D. For example53. A. dramatic B. positive C. negative D. serious54. A. depend on B. benefit from C. contribute to D. involve in55. A. appeal B. refer C. adapt D. commit41-45 BDCAD 46-50 CBDAB 51-55 CDBBA2020静安一模In the Fake News Era, Building Trust with Consumers Is CrucialWith consumers growing increasingly frustrated with online advertising and privacy concerns, how do you convince shoppers to buy your narrative (叙述), let alone your product?A recent report by TrustRadius, a software review company that connects buyers and vendors (供应商), may be able to shed some light. Among other interesting findings, it turns out that it may actually benefit brands to be painfully __41__ about their products.Consumer awareness of influencer marketing tactics (策略) is increasing. __42__, according to the report, most consumers trust online peer __43__ as much as recommendations from friends — and well above company advertising message. Feedback from everyday folks, it seems, actually carries more __44__ than a brand ambassador (大使) from an out-of-reach personality.Transparency (透明度) is crucial. The report found that there is a large trust __45__ between vendors and buyers. While vendors believe they are transparent, most buyers don’t appear to see it. During the sales process, for example, 85 percent of vendors __46__ to be open about their product’s limitations during the sales process — but only 36 percent of buyers share that same view. The reality is, consumers don’t expect any products to be __47__ — they just want to enter relationships with their eyes wide open so that they can __48__the options that are best for them. They also want brands to be more __49__. 66 percent of consumers say they will leave a company if they feel they are being treated like a number and not an individual.Along with the combination of fake news, advertising fraud, and data leaks, there have been fake reviews as well. Review sites have been __50__giving preferential (优惠的) treatment to paid advertisers, and consumers are increasingly discerning (有辨别力的), as a result. __51__, review sites are not our only source of peer reviews, with social media providing customer experiences on a second-to-second basis. When brands treat every __52__ with a customer as a potential review, they’ll start paying more attention to detail, and being alert to delivering a valued and memorable experience every time. Taking feedback seriously also lets current customers feel valued and respected and makes your business seem more approachable. This helps secure __53__, and often, these customers will become brand ambassadors to their friends, family and people they meet online.The challenge for brands today is determining how to use the __54__ of the consumer to theiradvantage. In an age of cutting-edge technology, artificial intelligence, and self-service customer care, it’s odd to acknowledge that the best way to build trust with your customers is by holding an open __55__ with your customers. Being more human, transparent, and listening to what people are saying will see your company thrive in an era marked by consumer suspicion.41.A. nervous B. honest C. careful D. particular42.A. Instead B. Otherwise C. Moreover D. However43.A. reviews B. reactions C. experiences D. instructions44.A. weight B. risks C. warnings D. burdens45.A. relationship B. influence C. gap D. extension46.A. refuse B. hesitate C. desire D. claim47.A. advanced B. perfect C. remarkable D. unique48.A. consider B. offer C. select D. exercise49.A. efficient B. profitable C. human D. responsible50.A. associated with B. mistaken by C. praised as D. criticized for51.A. On the contrary B. In fact C. By contrast D. In a word52.A. cooperation B. complaint C. interaction D. appointment53.A. safety B. loyalty C. convenience D. employment54.A. money B. choice C. habit D. voice55.A. dialogue B. debate C. competition D. contract41-55BCAAC DBCCD BCBDA2020闵行一模The expression, “everybody’s doing it,” is very much at the center of the concept of peer pressure. It is a social influence applied on an individual in order to get that person to act or believe in a(n) __41__ ways as a larger group. This influence can be negative or positive, and can exist in both large and small groups.People are social creatures by nature, and so it is hardly __42__ that some part of their self-respect comes from the approval of others. This instinct explains why the approval of peers, and the fear of __43__, is such a powerful force in many people’s lives. This instinct drives people to dress one way at home and another way at work, or to answer a simple “fine” when a stranger asks “how are you?” even if it is not necessarily true. There is a(n) __44__ aspect to this: it helps society to function efficiently, and encourages a general level of self-discipline that __45__ day - to - day interaction between people.For certain individuals, seeking social acceptance is so important that it becomes a(n) __46__: in order to satisfy the desire, they may go so far as to __47__ their sense of right and wrong. Teens and young adults may feel forced to use drugs, or join gangs that __48__ criminal behavior. Mature adults may sometime feel __49__ to cover up illegal activity at the company where they work, or end up in debt because they are unable to hold back the desire to buy a house or car that they can’t afford in an effort to __50__ the peers.However, peer pressure is not always negative. A student whose friends are good at __51__ may be urged to work harder and get good grades. Players on a sports team may feel driven to play harder in order to help the team win. This type of __52__ can also get a friend off drugs, or to help an adult take up a good habit or drop a bad one.Although peer pressure is sometimes quite obvious, it can also be so __53__ that a person may not even notice that it is affecting his or her behavior. For this reason, when making important decisions, simply going with a(n) __54__ is risky. Instead, people should seriously consider why they feel drawn to taking a particular action, and whether the real __55__ is simply that everyone else is doing the same thing.41. A. traditional B. similar C. peculiar D. opposite42. A. understandable B. believable C. acceptable D. surprising43. A. disapproval B. failure C. absence D. independence44. A. uncertain B. practical C. impossible D. vague45. A. promotes B. prevents C. simplifies D. increases46. A. challenge B. inspiration C. promise D. addiction47. A. recognize B. abandon C. decrease D. define48. A. avoid B. encourage C. decline D. punish49. A. pressured B. respected C. delighted D. regretted50. A. catch sight of B. stay away from C. make fun of D. keep up with51. A. competitions B. interaction C. academics D. adaptation52. A. knowledge B. interest C. assistance D. influence53. A. abstract B. ridiculous C. subtle D. reasonable54. A. consciousness B. motivation C. instinct D. encouragement55. A. motivation B. danger C. support D. achievement41-55 BDABC DBBAD CDCCA2020浦东一模The networked computer is an amazing device. It is the first media machine that serves as the mode of production (you can make stuff), means of distribution (you can upload stuff to the network), site of 41 (you can download stuff and interact with it), and place of praise and criticism (you can comment on the stuff you have downloaded or uploaded). 42 , the computer is the 21st century’s culture machine.But for all the reasons there are to 43 the computer, we must also act with caution. This is because the networked computer has started a secret war between downloading and uploading—between passive consumption and active 44 —whose outcome will shape our collective future in ways we can only begin to imagine.All animals download, but only a few upload anything besides faces and their own bodies. Humans are 45 in their capacity to not only make tools but then turn around and use them to create superfluous( 过剩的) material goods (paintings, sculpture and architecture) and superfluous experiences (music, literature, religion and philosophy). 46 , it is precisely these superfluous things that define human culture and ultimately what it is to be human. Downloading and consuming culture requires great skills, but 47 to move beyond downloading is to rob oneself of a defining ingredient of humanity.Despite the possibilities of our new culture machines, most people are still 48 download mode, brought about by television watching. Even after the 49 of widespread social media, a pyramid of production remains, with a small number of people uploading material, a slightly larger group commenting on or modifying that content, and a huge percentage remaining satisfied to just 50 .The networked computer offers the first chance in 50 years to 51 the flow caused by TV viewing, to encourage thoughtful downloading and, even more importantly, meaningful uploading. The computer offers the opportunity to bring about a complete 52 from the culture of television and a shift from a consumption model to a production model. This is a historic opportunity. Fifty years of television dominance has given birth to an unhealthy culture. The 53 is now in our collective grasp. It involves controlling our intake, or downloading, and 54 our levels of activity—uploading.。
上海高考英语一模写作大全.doc

上海高考英语一模写作大全.doc2 0 1 9年上海高考英语一模写作汇编1.上海市黄浦区 2019 年高三英语一模写作假设你是明启中学高三学生卢平,你的网友王磊近日就学习时如何记好笔记发邮件向你求教,请给他回复一封电子邮件,邮件必须包括以下内容:●描述两到三个不同的笔记类型及其特征●如何记好笔记的建议2.上海市普陀区 2019 年高三英语一模写作2018 年 11 月 5 日-10 日,首届中国国际进口博览会在上海成功举行。
假设你是明启中学的高三学生卢平,学校英语报向全体高三学生进行征文,题目为“The CIIE in My Eyes”。
你有意投稿,撰写一篇文章。
稿件内容必须包含:1.对“新时代,共享未来( New Era, Shared Future )”的理解;2.首届进博会向世界传递了什么信息?对中国发展有何深远的影响?(中国国际进口博览会:China International Import Expo简称CIIE)3.上海市徐汇区 2019 年高三英语一模写作学校将组织一次“我心目中的英雄”主题班会活动,请你以Heroes in My Heart为题,写一篇演讲稿。
基本要求如下:你心目中英雄的标准;你心目中英雄的事迹简介(请举1-2 例);从这些英雄事迹中,你学到了些什么?4.上海市杨浦区 2019 年高三英语一模写作请简要描述图片,并结合生活实际谈谈你的看法。
5.上海市崇明区 2019 年高三英语一模写作中华中学为了进一步规范学校的社团建设,提高社团活动的品质,向广大师生征求意见。
假设你是该校学生王敏,写一封电子邮件给负责社团的林老师,就你所了解的1-2 个学校社团发表意见。
你的邮件需包括:你所了解的学校社团的现状(亮点和不足)及其原因;提出你对改进学校社团建设的建议。
6.上海市长宁嘉定区 2019 年高三英语一模写作假设你是明启中学的高三学生王蕾。
学校正在招募话剧团( drama club )和机器人社团(robot club )新成员。
2019届上海市高三一模阅读C篇专项归纳

1宝山区(C)Are you worried about money? If so, I have some good news for you. Someone once said, “If all your problems can be solved with money, then you don't have any.” I get the point. Unless you are on the edge of losing everything and living in your car (which is a very sad thing that happens to people every day), your perceptions of your problems may not be serving you well.Let's take a look. Can you pay your living expenses and support your family? If so you are OK. Even if you are a family that just barely breaks even every month, you have to count that as a blessing, Most of us also have those terrible, surprising unexpected bills. But unless you you’re your job or your mind, don't you always find a way to take care of those expenses?PERTINENT(切中要害的) QUESTIONSTo see if you worry too much about finances, ask yourself a couple of questions Do you wake up worried about money? Do you check your bank balance and look at upcoming bills more than once every few days or even multiple times a day? If so, then you may have a little financial insecurity going on. Let's look at getting it under control. If it's making you crazy, it can make your family a little crazy too. This type of anxiousness is passed on to others, which is important to remember whenever you have the urge to share your fears.TOO MUCH INFORMATIONTMI (too much information) happens because it seems that by releasing Pent-up(压抑的)feelings of anxiety you will feel better and hopefully more supported and that this can happen but not with your loved ones because they will take all your fair and magnify it. Talk instead with your financial advisor, your bank manager or your therapist. Laying your financial fears at the feet of your family is not good for them or for you. Yes, be honest about any problems, but if you get emotional, so will those closest to youPOSITIVE ACTIONIt's hard to be this passionate about money, but honestly, it's really the best way to get this issue solved. You have to look at it from a practical standpoint. Go over your debts, look closely at your assets and determine the best thing for you to do with your time right now.Maybe you need to use this time to get your books and other only your computer or use it to job hunt or to promote your business. Then again you may need to hire an accountant and go on some interviews. The point is simple: the only way to relieve yourself of the uncomfortable feeling of financial pressure is to take some kind of positive action.63. Which of the following is true according to the passage?A. Financial problems are not vital ones in everyone's daily life.B. You'd better calm down when you have financial problems.C. You needn't worry about unexpected bills even if you're out of work.D. When you have financial fears, remember to share feelings with others.64. The passage implies that ______.A. the best way to deal with money problem is to take positive actionB. as long as we share feelings with others, money fear will disappearC. we should have an optimistic attitude toward financial fearsD. any problem we meet can be solved with the help of money65. The phrase lay your financial fears at the feet of your family in the sixth paragraph probably means ______.A. to solve financial fears caused by your familyB. to help your family smartly avoid financial fearsC to make your family responsible for financial fearsD. to encourage your family to face financial fears bravely66. The best title of the passage is ______.A. Perceptions of money and valueB. Passion, money and familyC. Keeping balance of psychologyD. Dealing with money worries56—59 ADAB 60—62 CBD 63—66 BCCD 67—70 DCEB2崇明区( C )A portrait created by artificial intelligence, or AI, made a historicappearance on the auction(拍卖) block at Christie’s in New York Ci ty. It is the first artwork created by an algorithm(算法) to be offered for auction in the world of fine art.The odd-looking painting of a fictitious man in a dark frockcoat left the auction block at Christie’s for a whopping US$432,500 on Oct. 25 in New York City.The portrait —designed in the “Old Master” style reminiscent of European fine artists from centuries ago —only partially fills the canvas, leaving empty space around the central figure. It appears to represent a man with a blurred face, dressed in clothing similar to that worn by subjects painted by the Dutch artist Rembrandt van Rijn in the 17th century.Of course, a computer didn’t automatically pick up a brush and become an artist. The AI that created the image had human programmers---a Paris ian art collective called Obvious, Christie’s reported. Their cooperation, titled “Portrait of Edmond De Belamy, ” is part of a series of paintings of the fictional Belamy family and was expected to fetch $7,000 to $10,000, according to Christie’s.To create the portrait, the Obvious team first fed the network a diet of 15,000 images painted between the 14th and 20th centuries, to train it to recognize visual elements in fine art, Obvious artists Hugo Caselles-Dupre’ told Christie’s. The algorithm that eve ntually created an original image had two parts that worked against each other, called the Generator (that makes the art) and a Discriminator(that tries to spot the difference between human-created and AI-created images), Caselles-Dupre’ explained: they called this AI “generate adversarial network”(GAN), Casells-Dupre’ explained.GAN’s final image was then printed and framed, according to Obvious. At the bottome of the portrait is a mathematical formula(公式) representing the algorithm that created it, a nod to the relationship between the Generator and the Discriminator, Obvious artists wrote on the collective’s website.The goal of the painting and of Obvious, also co-founded by Hugo Caselles-Dupre and Gauthier Vernier, wasto prove “artificial intellige nce can do more than operate driverless cars or transform manufacturing---it can be creative,” Consumer News and Business Channel reported.Portraiture is a tough task for AI to take on, according to Christie’s, “since humans are highly accustomed to the c urves and complexities of a face in a way that a machine cannot be.” This difficulty was part of Obvious’ thinking when they created the portrait.“Edmond de Belamy” is one of eleven AI paintings made by Obvious.63. It can be learned from the passage th at the portrait “Edmond de Belamy”________.A. was sold at an unexpected high priceB. was the first artwork sold at an auctionC. is a painting created by means of brushD. is a man who once appeared at the auction64. To create a portrait, AI needs to ________.A. learn from plenty of imagesB. use an algorithm with many partsC. work against human paintersD. recognize its human programmers65. What can be conclude from the passage?A. The mathematical formula at the bottom of the portrait is meaningless.B. The portrait was made to prove algorithms are able to imitate creativityC. It is more difficult for AI to operate driverless cars than to paint a portrait.D. AI is better at painting the curves and complexities of a face than a human66. The passage mainly tells us that ________.A. AI will soon replace man in some fieldsB. an AI-created portrait sells high at an auctionC. a proper algorithm is the key for AI to create artD. AI-created paintings are better received at auctions56. D 57. C 58. C 59. B 60. D61. C 62. A 63. A 64. A 65. B 66. B3普陀区(C)Is Paperless Office Really Paperless?A rising economy increased paper sales by 6 yo 7 percent each year in the early to mid-1990s, and the convenience of desktop printing allowed office workers to indulge anything and everything. In 2004, Ms Dunn, a communications supplies director, said that plain white office paper would see less than a 4 percent growth rate, a primary reason for which is that some 47 percent of the workforce entered the job market after computers had already been introduced to offices.For office innovators, the dream of paperless office is an example of high-tech arrogance(傲慢). Today’s office service is overwhelmed By more newspapers than ever before. After decades of development, the American government can finally get rid of the madness on paper. In the past, the demand for paper has been far ahead of growth in the American economy, but the sales have slowed markedly over the past two to three years, despite the good economic conditions.“Old habits are hard to break,”says Ms. Dunn.“There are some functions that paper serves where a screen display doesn’t work. Those funcitons are both its strength and its weakness.”Analysts attribute the decline to such factors as advances in digital databases and communication systems. Escaping our craving for paper, however, will be anything but an easy affair.“We’re finally seeing a reduction in the amount of paper being used per worker in the workplace,”says John Maine, vice presid ent of a paper economic consulting firm.“More information is being transmitted electronically, and an increasing number of people are satisfied that information exists only in electronic form without printing multiple backups.”To reduce paper use, some companies are working to combine digital and paper capabilities. For example, Xerox is developing electronic paper: thin digital displays that respond to a stylus, like a pen on paper. Marks can be erased or saved digitally. Even with such technological advances, the increasing amounts of electronic data necessarily require more paper.“The information industry today is composed of a thin paper crust surrounding an electronic core,”Mr. Saffo wrote. The growing paper crust is most noticeable, but the hidden electronic core is far larger and growing more rapidly. The result is that we are becomign paperless, but we hardly notice at all.“That’s one of the greatest ironies of the information age,”Saffo says.“It’s just common sense that the more you talk to someone by phoen or computer, it inevitably leads to a face-to-face meeting. The best thing for the aviation industry was the Internet.”63. Which of the following statements is NOT a reason for the slowdown in American paper sales?A. Workforce with better computer skills.B. Slow growth of the U.S. economy.C. Changing patterns in paper use.D. Changing employment trends.64. What does the last sentence in Para 3 mean?A. We have to look at paper consumption from different angles.B. There is little chance that paper consumption will fall in the digital age.C. Paper consumption will be greatly reduced in the digital age.D. People are no longer so addicted to paper in the digital age.65. The innovations from Xerox and other companies feature ___.A. the intergration of digital technology with traditional paperB. the chance from traditional paper to digital technologyC. the combination of the use of computer screens and cell phonesD. a new type of computer writing and communciation66. What can we draw from the example of the aviation industry in the last paragraph?A. The dream of the paperless office will be realized some day.B. People usually prefer to have face-to-face meetings instead of using computers.C. More digital data use leads to greater paper use in the digital time.D. Some people are no longer opposed to video-conferencing.56-59 C B D C 60-62 D C B 63-66 B B A C4青浦区(C)Medicine is the most noble of all the arts, but owing to the ignorance of those who practice it, and those who inconsiderately form a judgment of them, it is now far behind all the other arts. Their mistake appears to me to arise principally from the fact that there is no punishment for the practice of medicine except disgrace, and that does not hurt those who are familiar with it. Such persons are like the figures introduced in tragedies, for as they have the shape, and dress, and appearance of an actor, but are not actors, so also physicians are many in title but very few in reality.Whoever is to acquire a competent knowledge of medicine ought to possess the following advantages: a natural character; instruction; a favorable position for the study; early tuition; love of labor; leisure. First of all, a natural talent is required, for Nature leads the way to what is most excellent; then instruction in the art takes place,which the student must try to adopt by reflection, becoming an early pupil in a place well adapted for instruction. He must also bring to the task a love of labor and perseverance to ensure the instruction takes root.Instruction in medicine is like the culture of the productions of the earth. For our natural character, is, as it were, the soil; the principles of our teacher are, as it were, the seed. Instruction in youth is like the planting of the seed in the ground at the proper season. Diligent study is like the cultivation of the fields; and it is time which passes on strength to all things and brings them to maturity.Having brought all these essentials to the study of medicine, and having acquired a true knowledge of it, we shall thus, in travelling around, be respected physicians not only in name but in reality. Inexperience is a bad trait, and does harm to those who possess it, nurturing either timidity or audacity(胆大妄为). For timidity reveals a want of powers, and audacity a lack of skill. Physicians who are eager for power or those who are undertrained are not a blessing to a community.Those things which are sacred or noble, are to be delivered only to sacred persons; and it is wrong to import them to the profane until they have been initiated in the mysteries of the science.63. Based on paragraph 1, which of the following best characterizes bad physicians?A. They are greedy.B. They are pretenders.C. They are difficult to contact.D. They are the minority.64. According to paragraph 2, what must accompany the personal quality of a physician?A. A good education.B. A supportive family.C. Approval from the authority.D. Popularity in the community.65. If the author of the passage were to use a heading for each paragraph, which heading would fit best before paragraph 3?A. An Herbal Treatment.B. Medicine and Gardening.C. The Growth of a Physician.D. Understanding Agriculture First.66. Based on the under lined sentences in paragraph 5, what is the relationship between the words “sacred” and “profane”?A. The two words are exactly the same in meaning.B. The two words are similar in meaning.C. The two words are of the same root.D. The two words are opposites.56-59 BDBC 60-62 DBA 63-66 BACD5松江区(C)The Paris climate agreement finalised in December last year indicated a new era for climate action. For the first time, the world’s nations agreed to keep global warming well below 2℃.This is vital for climate-vulnerable nations. Fewer than 4% of countries are responsible for more than half of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions. In a study published in Nature Scientific Reports, we reveal just how deep this injustice runs.Developed nations such as Australia, the United States, Canada, and European countries are essentially climate “free-riders”: causing the majority of the problems through high greenhouse gas emissions, while paying few of the costs such as climate changes impact on food and water. In other words, a few countries are benefiting enormously from the consumption of fossil fuels, while at the same time contributing disproportionately to the global burden of climate change.On the other hand, there are many “forced riders”, who are suffering from the climate change impacts despite having scarcely contributed to the problem. Many of the world’s most climate-vulnerable countries, the majority ofwhich are African or small island states, produce a very small quantity of emissions. This is much like a non-smoker getting cancer from second-hand smoke, while the heavy smoker is fortunate enough to smoke in good health.The Paris agreement has been widely considered as a positive step forward in addressing climate change for all, although the details on addressing “climate justice” can be best described as incomplete.The goal of keeping global temperature rise “well below” 2℃deserves to be praised but the emissions reduction promises submitted by countries leading up to the Paris talks are very unlikely to deliver on this.More than $100 billion in funding has been put on the table for supporting developing nations to reduce emissions. However, the agreement specifies that there is no formal distinction between developed and developing nations in their responsibility to cut emissions, effectively ignoring historical emissions. There is also very little detail on who will provide the funds or, importantly, who is responsible for their provision. Securing these funds and establishing who is responsible for raising them will also be vital for the future of climate-vulnerable countries.The most climate-vulnerable countries in the world have contributed very little to creating the global disease from which they now suffer the most. There must urgently be a meaningful mobilization of the policies outlined in the agreement if we are to achieve national emissions reductions while helping the most vulnerable countries adapt to climate change.And it is clearly up to the current generation of leaders from high-emitting nations to decide whether they want to be remembered as climate change tyrants (暴君) or pioneers.63. The author is critical of the Paris climate agreement because ________.A. it is unfair to those climate-vulnerable nationsB. it aims to keep temperature rise below 2℃ onlyC. it is beneficial to only fewer than 4% of countriesD. it burdens developed countries with the full responsibility64. Why does the author call some developed countries climate “free-riders”?A. They needn’t worry about the fo od and water they consume.B. They are better able to cope with the global climate change.C. They hardly pay anything for the problems they have caused.D. They are free from the greenhouse effects affecting “forced riders”.65. What does the author say about the $100 billion funding?A. It will motivate all nations to reduce carbon emissions.B. There is no final agreement on where it will come from.C. There is no clarification of how the money will be spent.D. It will effectively reduce greenhouse emissions worldwide.66. What urgent action must be taken to realize the Paris climate agreement?A. Encouraging high-emitting nations to take the initiative.B. Calling on all the nations concerned to make joint efforts.C. Pushing the current world leaders to come to a consensus.D. Putting in effect the policies in the agreement at once.(A) 56----59 CACD (B) 60----62 CBD (C) 63----66 ACBD6徐汇区CPhilosophy of Education is a label applied to the study of the purpose, process, nature and ideals of education. It can be considered a branch of both philosophy and education. Education can be defined as the teaching and learning of specific skills, and the imparting of knowledge, judgment and wisdom, and is something broader thanthe societal institution of education we often speak of.Many educationalists consider it a weak and imprecise field, too far removed from the practical applications of the real world to be useful. But philosophers dating back to Plato and the Ancient Greeks have given the area much thought and emphasis, and there is little doubt that their work has helped shape the practice of education over the millennia.Plato is the earliest important educational thinker, and education is an essential element in “The Republic” (his most important work on philosophy and political theory, written around 360 B.C.). In it, he advocates some rather extreme methods: removing children from their mothers’ care and raising them as wards of the state, and differentiating children suitable to the various castes(社会等级), the highest receiving the most education, so that they could act as guardians of the city and care for the less able. He believed that education should be holistic(全面的), including facts, skills, physical discipline, music and art. Plato believed that talent and intelligence is not distributed genetically and thus is to be found in children born to all classes, although his proposed system of selective public education for an educated minority of the population does not really follow a democratic model.Aristotle considered human nature, habit and reason to be equally important forces to be cultivated in education, the ultimate aim of which should be to produce good and virtuous citizens. He proposed that teachers lead their students sys tematically, and that repetition be used as a key tool to develop good habits, unlike Socrates’ emphasis on questioning his listeners to bring out their own ideas. He emphasized the balancing of the theoretical and practical aspects of subjects taught, among which he clearly mentions reading, writing, mathematics, music, physical education, literature, history, and a wide range of sciences, as well as play, which he also considered important.During the period of Middle Age, the idea of Perennialism was first formulated by St. Thomas Aquinas in his work “De Magistro”. Perennialism holds that one should teach those things deemed to be of everlasting importance to all people everywhere, namely principles and reasoning, not just facts (which are apt to change over time), and that one should teach first about people, not machines or techniques. It was originally religious in nature, and it was only much later that a theory of worldly Perennialism developed.During the Renaissance(文艺复兴), the French doubter Michel de Montaigne (1533 - 1592) was one of the first to critically look at education. Unusually for his time, Montaigne was willing to question the conventional wisdom of the period, calling into question the whole structure of the educational system, and the assumption that university-educated philosophers were necessarily wiser than uneducated farm workers, for example.56.Why do many educationists consider philosophy a ‘weak and imprecise field’?A. It is the practical applications of the real world.B. Its theoretical concepts are easily understood.C. It is irrelevant for education.D. It is not practically applicable.57.What is the difference between the approaches of Socrates and Aristotle?A. Aristotle felt the need for repetition to develop good habits in students; Socrates felt that studentsneed to be constantly questioned.B. Aristotle felt the need for rote-learning; Socrates emphasized on dialogic learning.C. There was no difference.D. Aristotle emphasized on the importance of paying attention to human nature; Socrates emphasizedupon science.58.According to the passage, the underlined word “Perennialism” most probably refers to something_____________A. that is unnecessary.B. that is of ceaseless importance.C. that is abstract and theoretical.D. that exists no more.59.Why did Aquinas propose a model of education which did not lay much emphasis on facts?A. Facts are not important.B. Facts do not lead to holistic education.C. Facts change with the changing times.D. Facts are frozen in time.56-59 ADCC 60-62 BAB 63-66 DABC7杨浦区区(C)You're walking down a quiet street and suddenly you hear some footsteps. Undoubtedly, it means that there's someone around. But have you ever wondered why it occurs to us that it's someone else's footsteps, not ours?According to a new study published in the journal Nature in September, this phenomenon arises from a function in our brain to ignore the noise we make ourselves.In order to explore how our brain does this, a group of scientists carried out an experiment with mice at Duke University. The research centered on an intuition (直觉) -- that we are usually unaware of the sound of our own footsteps -- as a vehicle for understanding larger neural(神经系统的)phenomena: how this behavior reveals the ability to monitor, recognize, and remember the sound of one's own movements in relation to those of their larger environments.In the experiment, researchers controlled the sounds a group of mice could hear, reported Science Daily. During the first several days, the mice would hear the same sound each time they took a step. This was just like "running on a tiny piano with each key playing exactly the same note", senior study author Richard Mooney, a professor of neurobiology at Duke University, told Live Science.Scientists found that their auditory cortex(听觉皮层) -- the area of the brain that processes sound -- became active at first but decreased its response to the sound after two or three minutes when the mice became familiar with it."It's almost like they were wearing special headphones that could filter(过滤) out the sound of their own movements," David Schneider, an assistant professor at the Center for Neural Science at New York University, told HuffPost.But once the sound changed, their auditory cortex became active again. This suggests that the "sensory filter" in a mouse's brain could help it detect new sounds or abnormal noise in the environment easily after tuning out familiar sounds."For mice, this is really important," said Schneider. "They are prey animals, so they really need to be able to listen for a cat creeping up on them, even when they're walking and making noise.Being able to ignore the sounds of one's own movements is likely important for humans as well. But the ability to predict the sounds of our own actions is also important for more complex human behaviors such as speaking or playing an instrument."When we learn to speak or to play music, we predict what sounds we're going to hear -- such as when we prepare to strike keys on a piano -- and we compare this to what we actually hear," explains Schneider. "We use mismatches between expectation and experience to change how we play -- and we get better over time because our brain is trying to minimize these errors."63. What can be discovered about mice in the experiment?A. Their brain responds inactively to the familiar sounds.B. They are able to detect sounds other animals don't notice.C. They cannot identify different sounds except their own footsteps.D. Different areas of their brain are responsible for different sounds.64. What’s the function of the sensory filter?A. Getting used to abnormal or unfamiliar sounds.B. Ignoring the sounds made by our companions.C. Identifying the sounds from a larger environment.D. Being sensitive to the sounds of our own movement.65. Why can a good symphony conductor immediately recognize it when a wrong note is played?A. He has the ability to match the wrong note with the instrument player.B. He has an intuition that he should ignore the sound of his own movement.C. He has a low expectation and knows where players are likely to make errors.D. He has a good prediction of how each note should be played in the orchestra.66. What can be inferred from the passage?A. Noise-filtering ability ensures us a quiet and undisturbed environment.B. The ability to ignore familiar noises helps to detect potential dangers.C. The activeness of auditory cortex determines our activity performance.D. Sound-predicting ability seems not so important for humans as for animals.56-59 A D D D 60-62 D C B 63-66 A C D B8长宁区(C)The term ‘dark tourism’ is far newer than the practice, which long predates Pompeii's emergence as a dark attraction. Dr Philip Stone, perhaps the world's leading academic expert on dark tourism, considers the Roman Colosseum to be one of first dark tourist sites, where people travelled long distances to watch death as sport. Later, until the late 18" century, the appeal was crueler still in central London, where people paid money to sit in grandstands to watch mass hangings. Dealers would sell pies at the site, which was roughly where Marble Arch stands today.It was only in 1996 that ‘dark tourism' entered the scholarly vocabulary when two academics in Glasgow。
2019届上海市各区高三英语一模试卷题型分类专题汇编--阅读理解A篇--老师版(纯净word带答案已校对终结版)

Section BDirections:Read the following three passages. Each passage is followed by several questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that fits best according to the information given in the passage you have just read.(A)There aren’t many actors around the world who have enough selfconfidence to turn down an offer from Steven Spielberg. Maybe thatwas why Juliette Binoche gave him a choice. She said she’d be happyto be in Jurassic Park as long as she could play a dinosaur. Of coursehe turned her down and it was probably a good thing. It’s difficult toimagine Juliette ripping people apart with her teeth. However, herdecision doesn’t seem to have done her career any harm. She has gone on to make a string of hits, including The Unbearable Lightness of Being, The English Patient (for which she won an Oscar) and Chocolat.Success in the United States has not been so easy for otherforeign stars. Gerald Depardieu is a good example. Since his firstfilm in 1967, his filmography(影片集锦) lists 172 acting credits.But he has struggled on the other side of the pond. While some ofhis films have been popular in the US, they have usually beenFrench films that travelled. One possible exception was Green Card, directed by Peter Weir, where he plays a French immigrant who goes through a fake wedding in order to stay and work in the United States. This is a predictable but sweet romantic comedy which typecasts (分配同一类型角色) its lead actors in terms of national stereotypes. While some reviewers were kind, others shredded both the film and Depardieu’s performance.While Monsieur Depardieu has n’t received the recognition he would have liked in the United States, one Mexican actor has achieved almost instant success. Gael Garcia Bernal first gained recognition in Amores Perros in 2000 and a year later in Y tu mama tambien. Since then he has appeared with hometown hero, Brad Pitt in Babel and, under the direction of top producer and director, Jim Jarmusch, he starred in Limits of Control. He hasn’t picked up an Oscar yet, but hewas nominated for a BAFTA(英国电影电视艺术学院奖) in 2005 for his performance as the South American hero revolutionary Che Guevara, in Motorcycle Diaries. In the same year he played American music icon Elvis Presley in The King.56. It can be inferred from the passage that Juliette Binoche ______.A. very much wanted to be in Jurassic ParkB. didn’t want to be in Jurassic ParkC. really wanted to play a dinosaur in Jurassic ParkD. was hesitant whether she could play a dinosaur well57. According to the writer, Gerald Depardieu’s most popular films ______.A. have been made in HollywoodB. have only been seen in EuropeC. have been made in France, but seen in other countries, tooD. have been made in Hollywood, but well received in France58. The last sentence in Para 2 “o thers shredded both the film and Depardieu’s performance”means others thought Depardieu’s performance and the film were ______.A. complexB. interestingC. terribleD. impressive59. The writer’s purpose in writing this article is to suggest that ______.A. Foreign actors generally do well in the United StatesB. American actors are able to earn more money than foreign actorsC. Foreign actors are playing an irreplaceable role in the United StatesD. a successful career in Europe or Latin America doesn’t guarantee success in the USA Keys: 56-59 BCCDSection BDirections:Read the following three passages. Each passage is followed by several questions or unfinished statements. For each of them. There are four choices marked A, B, C and D. choose the one that fits best according to the Information given in the passage you have just read.(A)Despite an advertisement campaign suggesting wall-to-wall special effects, “Bridge of Terabithia” is grounded in reality far more than in fantasy. Adapting Katherine Paterson’s award-winning novel, the screenwriters David Paterson and Jeff Stockwell have produced a thoughtful and extremely affecting story of a transformative friendship between two unusually gifted children. The result is a movie whose emotional depth could appeal more to adults than to their children.Jess Aarons (Josh Hutcherson) is a sixth grader with four sisters, financially tensed parents and a talent for drawing. An introverted(内向的) kid who is regularly picked on by the school buses, Jess forms a bond with a new student named Leslie (Anna Sophia Robb), a free spirit whose parents, both writers, are fondly neglectful. An attraction between outsiders, their friendship feeds on her words and his pictures; together they create an imaginary kingdom in the woods behind their homes, a world they can control and where their minds can wander free.Beautifully capturing a time when a bully in school can occur as large as a monster in a nightmare and the encouragement of a teacher can alter the course of a life, “Bridge to Terabithia” keeps the fantasy in the background to find magic in the everyday. Gabor Csupo directs this, his first feature, like someone close to the pain of being different, fascinated in tiny, perfect details.With strong performances from all the leads, “Bridge to Terabithia” is able to handle adult topics with sensitivity. As the emotional landscape darkens, those who haven’t read the book may be surprised at the sorrow the filmmakers cause without ever resorting to horror or terror. In other words, you r children may cry, but they won’t be traumatized so badly.Consistently smart and delicate as a spider web, “Bridge to Terabithia” is the kind of children’s movie rarely seen nowadays. At a time when many public schools are being forced to cut music and a rt from the curriculum, the story’s insistence on the healing power of a cultivated imagination is both welcome and essential.56. The second paragraph indicates that Jess and Leslie ________.A. lost their control over the imaginary kingdomB. looked down on their individual realitiesC. formed a good friendship despite their different talentsD. wrote a book about a magical land called Terabithia57. Which of the following words is most likely to replace “traumatized” (paragraph 4)?A. criticizedB. ignoredC. delightedD. shocked58. The two children most likely ________.A. skipped school to play in the woods behind their campusB. created an imaginary world as an escape from realityC. disappointed their parents with their over-active imaginationsD. won against the bullies at school with strong performances59. Which of the following statements will the author most probably agree with?A. The fantasy components of the movie were too over-done.B. The movie is motional but not much too dramatic.C. “Bridge to Terabithia” has a negative impact on public school education.D. Children shouldn’t watch the film as they are too young to understand the topics.Keys: 56-59 CDBBSection BDirections: Read the following three passages. Each passage is followed by several questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C, and D. Choose the one that fits best according to the information given in the passage you have just read.(A)One recent night, while I was leafing through its pages of an old journal, my eyes met a quote by the British writer Graham Greene that I had marked. “A prejudice had something in common with an ideal.” In other words, ideals---general descriptions of people’s expectations of themselves and others---can often lead us to unreasonable ideas. It got me thinking about how we often allow ourselves to generalize about groups of people. We like to stereotype people by the color of their skin, the year of their birth or any other related factors.I grew up in a multi-racial corner of America. The different groups were often subject to narrow stereotypes: Jewish people were “greedy,” Mexicans were “poorly educated,” and Asians were “good at math.” These labels were taugh t to us from a young age. They wormed their wayinto our belief systems, harming how we came to see others. It made me sad growing up to see people repeat these stereotypes as if they were true. The rush-to-judgment of people breeds a culture of discrimination(歧视).You can also see these over-generalized description being made against today’s Chinese people. Whether it be a lack of interest or worry among millennials(千禧一代) being described as “monkish,” or “dad-fashion(复古作风)” which has given the “greasy midd le-aged men” tag, stereotypes always seem to gain a foothold in the consciousness of our society. But these generalizations do real harm as these myths may become part of the wider population.It’s about time that we, as a society, walked away from general izations and stereotypes. I leave you with the words of Martin Luther King Jr. from his famous “I Have a Dream” speech: “I look to a day when people will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.” By reserving judgmen t and really getting to know the individual, you might just find your irrational ideas have no foundation.56. According to the passage, how do people tend to judge others?A. By describing people’s personalities.B. By truly getting to know those around.C. By observing their noticeable features.D. By following Martin Luther King’s speech57. According to the author, a culture of discrimination appears because __________.A. people live in places of various racesB. people are born with unreasonable ideasC. prejudices slightly influence people’s belief systemD. people usually make judgments without thinking twice58. Examples of “millennials” and “dad-fashion” are mentioned in Paragraph 3 to reveal _______.A. generalizations have unfavourable position in societyB. generalizations have a negative influence on our societyC. generalizations are found peculiar to the middle-aged ChineseD. generalizations make today’s Chinese people lack interest or worry59. The passage is mainly concerned with ________.A. the common prejudiceB. people’s expectation of themselvesC. the groundless worriesD. the famous speech of Martin Luther KingKeys: 56-59 CDBASection BDirections:Read the following three passages. Each passage is followed by several questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that fits best according to the information given in the passage you have read.(A)What to endure before publication?It takes a lot to write a novel. Even those who haven’t tried would say, “Well, duh!” to this. But it’s not much the mind space or the considerable time it takes to write a novel that is as discouraging as how many times any writer must go back to the drawing board for yet another draft. To really ready a novel for publication, a writer must spend time with his or her book. Like any promising relationship, you, the writer , must date your novel, take it out to dinner, meet its parents, and see it through its most trying and desperate times. As a writer, you have to stay up all night with your novel crying and talking and sometimes even pulling your hair out before that perfect moment of inspiration can truly help you cross the finish line.For many published authors I know, myself included, a completed novel takes them about 10, that’s right, 10 drafts, and at least a year of real editing. Will you be spending every single second editing your novel? No, of course not. Just as drafts need some real time on the surgery table, they also need rest in the recovery room. You don’t nurse a relationship by spending every waking second with them until you can’t stand the sight of each other, and you can’t produce a novel by breathing down its literary neck. However, a novel should undergo many drafts---and different kinds of drafts—before declaring it ready for an agent or editor to see.Everyone has their own way to write a novel, and not all craft advice (or even craft “rules”) should all be followed by everyone, but when it comes to the many drafts of a novel, there are specific things a writer should focus on during each revision to help create a smooth transition from the initial idea to final products.56. People are discouraged from writing a novel mainly because it requires _____.A. a good publisherB. too much thinkingC. tons of working timeD. frequent revisions57. What do writers do in the course of creating a novel?A. They spend every minute with the novel.B. They treat the novel as a lover.C. They go out with some readers for dinner.D. They hurt themselves to stay awake.58. By “breathing down its literary neck” in Paragraph 2, the author most probably means _____.A. writing casually thus failing to take readers’ breath awayB. letting go a single mistake thus annoying the readersC. X-raying the work thus finding each literary mistakeD. sticking too close to the work thus causing anxiety59. Which of the following is most likely to come after the last paragraph?A. The importance of using proper transitional words in writing.B. The writing experience shared by famous successful write.C. Tips on how to make ten drafts to complete a good novel.D. Setbacks writers may suffer if ignoring the craft advice.Keys: 56-59 DBDCSection BDirections: Read the following three passages. Each passage is followed by several questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that fits best according to the information given in the passage you have just read.(A)The lives of the Ancient Greeks revolved(运转) around Eris, a concept by which they defined the universe. They believed that the world existed in a condition of opposites. If there was good, then there was evil;if there was love, then there was hatred; joy, then sorrow; war, then peace; andso on. The Greeks believed that good Eris occurred when one held a balanced outlook on life and coped with problems as they arose. It was a kind of ease of living that came from trying to bring together the great opposing forces in nature. Bad Eris was evident in the violent conditions that ruled men’s lives. Although these things were found in nature and sometimes could not be controlled, it was believed that bad Eris occurred when one ignored a problem, letting it grow larger until it destroyed not only that person, but his family as well. The Ancient Greeks saw Eris as a goddess: Eris, the Goddess of Discord, better known as Trouble.One myth that expresses this concept of bad Eris deals with the marriage of King Peleus and the river goddess Thetis. Zeus, the supreme ruler, learns that Thetis would bear a child strong enough to destroy its father. Not wanting to father his own ruin, Zeus convinces Thetis to marry a human, a mortal(凡人) whose child could never challenge the gods. He promises her, among other things, the greatest wedding in all of Heaven and Earth and allows the couple to invite whomever they please. This is one of the first mixed marriages of Greek Mythology and the lesson learned from it still applies today. They do invite everyone . . . except Eris, the Goddess of Discord. In other words, instead of facing the problems brought on by a mixed marriage, they turn their backs on them. They refused to deal directly with their problems and the result is tragic. In her fury(狂怒), Eris arrives, ruins the wedding, causes a jealous argument between the three major goddesses over a golden apple, and sets in place the conditions that lead to the Trojan War. The war would take place 20 years in the future, but it would result in the death of the only child of the bride and groom, Achilles. Eris would destroy the parents’ hopes for their future, leaving the couple with no legal heirs (继承人) to the throne.Hence, when we are told, “If you don’t invite trouble, trouble comes,” it means that if we don’t deal with our problems, our problems will deal with us . . . with a revenge! It is easy to see why the Greeks considered many of their myths learning myths, for this one teaches us the best way to defeat that which can destroy us.56. Bad Eris is defined in the passage as _______.A. the violent conditions of life.B. the problems man encounters.C. the evil goddess who has a golden apple.D. the murderer of generations.57. Zeus married Thetis off because _______.A. he needed to buy the loyalty of a great king of mankind.B. he feared the gods would create bad Eris by competing over her.C. he feared the Trojan War would be fought over her.D. he feared being a father of a boy who would kill him in the future.58. Zeus did not fear a child of King Peleus because _______.A. he knew that the child could not climb Mt. Olympus and manage to kill a god.B. he knew that the child would be killed in the Trojan War which would happen in 20 years.C. he knew t hat no matter how strong a mortal child was, he couldn’t overthrow an immortal god.D. he knew that Thetis would always love him above everyone else.59. What does the myth in the passage want to tell us?A. Do not consider a mixed marriage.B. Do not anger the gods.C. Do not ignore the problems that arise in life.D. Do not take myths seriously.Keys: 56-59 ADCCSection BDirections:Read the following passages. Each passage is followed by several questions or Unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A. B. C and D. Choose the one that fits best according to the information given in the passage you have just read.(A)Once again DC Comics and Warner Bros. have divided fans and critics over their latest superhero film.There had been worrying news about Justice League in the months before its release, with a lot of reshoots of scenes, a new director being brought in to finish the film after original director Zack Snyder’s tragic loss of his daughter and, of course, a lot of talk about Ben Affleck’s future in the role of Batman.Some people are saying that Justice League is another big disappointment, that it could havebeen incredible and instead fails to really entertain. Others say that Warner Bros, have finally got it right and that the future for the League looks bright. My opinion lies somewhere in the middle. The film was by no means a disappointment: it was exciting, funny and a lot of fun to watch. There’s something special about watching the heroes from your childhood brought to life on the big screen and maybe that is affecting my opinion.However, I will say that a lot of work needs to be done if the producer wants to make a great success. Although the film was good, it was obvious which scenes had been reshot and how the characters had been changed. I also have to mention the several scenes in which the special effects were very badly done; there are the kinds of problems that you don’t expect to see in a film with such a big budget.Another point to add is that it is good to see the producer making Superman slightly a brighter character and adding some jokes to the plot to keep things fun. But the producer must be careful not to make the mistake that another film producer---here, not mentioning the name---is coming very close to doing: turning all of the films into bright and colorful shows and losing a lot of seriously good stories.In the end, Justice League is not a perfect film but it is definitely not a terrible one. A lot of work is still to be done but I hope that DC does not completely lose its darker side.56. Before the release of Justice League, many people showed their ________.A. pity for the director, Zack SnyderB. concern about the film’s qualityC. higher expectation of the new directorD. support for the actor, Ben Affleck57. According to the author, what’s special about Justice League?A. It advocates social justice.B. It brings lots of fun to the audience.C. It has some brave heroes.D. It brings back childhood memories.58. In Paragraph 5 the author mainly wants to express his _________.A. views on the film’s weaknessB. advice to the film’s directorC. love for the filmD. expectation of the film’s sequels59. The author mentioned another film producer to ________.A. stress the importance of fun in a filmB. show Justice League’s lack of a ser ious plotC. serve as a warning to the producer of Justice LeagueD. set an example for the producer of Justice LeagueKeys: 56-59 BDBCSection BDirections:Read the following passages. Each passage is followed by several questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that fits best according to the information given in the passage you have just read.(A)I’m a student in my fourth year of a biomedical science degree at Robert Gordon University in Aberdeen, but I also work 38 hours a week at Sainsbury’s to make ends meet. I do three night shifts a week, plus overtime if I can get it. Monday is the most occupied day for me -- I work from 10 pm until 8 am on Saturday and Sunday nights, earning just over £100 a night, and then I have to be at my first lecture at 9 am on Monday. By the time I finish lectures, at 2 p m, I’m exhausted, but I know I have to be back at work by 10 pm.I constantly have to force myself to stay awake, and to be alert, whatever it takes. A packet of Skittles and a Red Bull usually helps. The work I do at Sainsbury’s is very physical like stac king shelves. I’m lucky because I’m an active person and the amount I lift at work is nothing compared with the weights I lift in the gym. I know I have the strength to bear it.I’m originally from Nigeria. I came here when I was seven, growing up in Croyd on, south London. Money was tight. My parents gave me everything I needed, but there was no money to spend on luxuries. I worked hard at school though and, with the help of GT Scholars, I got some of the best A-level grades in my class.Unfortunately, thou gh I had applied for “settled” British residential status when very young, the Home Office waited until I was in sixth form to approve my application. That meant I wasn’t eligible for a student loan. The only way I could afford to go to university was that if I got a job that would pay for all my living costs and my parents, who work in market research, paid for my tuition fees. In Scotland, that’s about £7,000 a year.I don’t have much time to socialize because of my job. Ideally, I would also like to havemore time to study so I can excel at my course. Yes, I have a lot on my plate, but working hard isn’t new to me. Growing up, my parents and my mentors in the church and at GT Scholars cultivated in me the importance of working hard for what I want in life.My dream is to do an MA in physiotherapy next year and then get a job working for the NHS. But right now, I’m just focused on trying to get the best grades I can. Whenever I find life hard, I tell myself this is about my future. I don’t need much, but I would like to worry less about money and have more free time. That is what I look forward to the most.56. Why does the author work long hours and sometimes overtime every week?A. To help his parents pay off the debts.B. To pay for his tuition fees.C. To prove his ability to earn money.D. To pay for his own living expenses.57. The underlined word “eligible” in the passage can be replaced by ________.A. responsibleB. qualifiedC. feasibleD. anxious58. According to the passage, which of the following words can NOT be used to describe the author?A. Sociable.B. Diligent.C. Ambitious.D. Persistent.59. Which of the following proverbs can best summarize the passage?A. A penny saved is a penny earned.B. Actions speak louder than words.C. God helps those who help themselves.D. Where there is life, there is hope.Keys: 56-59 DBACSection BDirections:Read the following three passages. Each passage is followed by several questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that fits best according to the information given in the passage you have just read.(A)I boarded a small plane together with my sister and 42 other passengers. While flying over the mountains, the plane encountered violent airflow. Losing control suddenly, it hit an unknownmountain peak. The impact of the crash claimed the lives of a few passengers immediately, leaving many injured including my sister.Adding a slight chance of being found out, we waited in the open, as opposed to waiting in the plane, even though it was freezing cold. At night, we slept side by side to keep ourselves warm and melted snow into water. We knew our food couldn’t last us long, sticking to the hope that we would be rescued soon.We knew from radio that the outside world was trying to look for the missing aircraft. However, the aircraft was white and blended in with the snow, making it impossible to be seen from the sky. Later, our hope was dead when we found out via our radio that the rescue effort ended.Now climbing over the mountains ourselves to search for help seemed to be our only chance of survival. Although the crash site was an awful place, with urine(尿)everywhere and smelling of death, I still wished to stay there. But my sister would give in to her injuries soon if we were not rescued. Thus, together with two other people, Canessa and Vizintin, I decided to walk through the icy wilderness for help. Carrying some food and water, the three climbers started our journey. If we had known anything about climbing, we would have realized that we were already finished. The mountain we were about to challenge was one with slopes so steep that it would scare away a team of expert climbers. Our ignorance provided our only chance.We endured exhaustion and starvation and we had reached the top.To our horror, we found nothing. Disappointed, we were about to give up hope when I spotted a valley at the base of the mountain and again we started making our way down the mountain.Eventually, at the bottom of the mountain we were helped by a local farmer who called the police for help. I then guided the rescue team via a helicopter to the crash site. Finally, after we had endured nineteen cruel days, the world found out that there were 16 survivors who had cheated death despite the odds.56. Why did they stay outside the plane?A. Because they didn’t want to stay with dead people inside.B. Because it’s easier to obtain melted snow for water.C. Because they hoped to be seen by the rescue people.D. Because other passengers were against staying inside.57. Why did the author leave the crash site despite his wish to stay?A. Because he could get help from two experienced climbers.B. Because his sister might die without timely medical help.C. Because the crash site was too terrible for him to stay in.D. Because he would like to be tested by the steep mountain slopes.58. Which of the following statements is TRUE according to the passage?A. Rescue people didn’t notice the aircraft because of its color at the beginning.B. The public knew where the plane crashed from the radio.C. The author gave up the climb halfway due to disappointment.D. More than half of the plane passengers were finally rescued.59. The underlined sentence had cheated death despite the odds is closest in meaning to ________.A. had told lies about death in spite of realityB. had avoided death in spite of huge difficultiesC. had treated death with positive attitudeD. had almost died in spite of strange expectationKeys: 56-59 CBABSection BDirections:Read the following three passages. Each passage is followed by several questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that fits best according to the information given in the passage you have just read.(A)Flu is killing us. The usual response to the annual flu is not enough to fight against the risks we currently face, let alone prepare us for an even deadlier widespread flu that most experts agree will come in the future. Yes, we have an annual vaccine (疫苗), and everyone qualified should get。
- 1、下载文档前请自行甄别文档内容的完整性,平台不提供额外的编辑、内容补充、找答案等附加服务。
- 2、"仅部分预览"的文档,不可在线预览部分如存在完整性等问题,可反馈申请退款(可完整预览的文档不适用该条件!)。
- 3、如文档侵犯您的权益,请联系客服反馈,我们会尽快为您处理(人工客服工作时间:9:00-18:30)。
第 1 页 / 共 9 页 黄浦区2018学年第一学期期末质量试卷 高三英语 (满分140分,完卷时间120分钟) 2018.12
Ⅱ. Grammar and Vocabulary Section A 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.
Just How Buggy is Your Phone? What item in your home crawls with the most germs? If you say ___21___ toilet seat, you’re wrong. Kitchen sponges top the list. But cell phones are pretty dirty too. They contain around 10 times as many germs as toilet seats. People touch their phones, laptops, and other digital devices all day long, yet rarely clean them. In one incident, a thief paid a terrible price for stealing a germy cell phone. He stole it from a hospital in Uganda during a widespread of the deadly disease Ebola. The phone’s owner reported the theft before ___22___(die)from the disease. Soon, the thief began showing symptoms and finally ___23___(confess)to the crime. ___24___ in that unusual case a cell phone carried dangerous bacteria, not all germs are bad. Most cause no harm. In fact, they could provide helpful information. Look at the surface of your phone carefully. Do you see some dirty mars?“That's all you,”says microbial ecologist Jarrad Hampton-Marcell.“That’s biological information.” It turns out that the types of germs that you apply all over your phone or tablet are different from ___25___ of your friends and family. They’re like a fingerprint that could identify you. Some day in the future, investigators may use these microbial fingerprints to solve crimes. Phones and digital devices may be one of the best places to look for buggy clues. In a 2017 study, researchers sampled a range of surfaces in 22 participants’ homes, ___26___ countertops and floors to computer keyboards and mice. Then they tried to match the microbial fingerprints on each object to its owner. The office equipment was easiest to match to its owner. In an ___27___(early)study, a different group of researchers found that they could use microbial fingerprints to identify the person who ___28___(use)a computer keyboard even after the keyboard sat untouched for two weeks at room temperature. One day, microbial signatures might show ___29___ people have gone and what they have touched. They could prove ___30___ an unmarked device is yours. So, sure, your phone is pretty germy. Does that inspire you, or does it just bother you?
Section B 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. measurement B. similar C. remarkably D. monetary E. astronomy F. altered G. civilization H. defined I. independence J. invariably K. dominated
The Nile The ancient Greek writer Herodotus once described Egypt-with some envy-as‘the gift of the Nile’. The Egyptians depend 第 2 页 / 共 9 页
on the river for food, for water and for life. The Ancient Egyptians were able to control and use the Nile, creating the earliest irrigation systems and developing a prosperous ___31___. Snaking through the deserts, the Nile would flood almost ___32___ each year in June. Once the water subsided, a rich deposit of sand was left behind, making an excellent topaoil. Seeds were sown, yielding wheat, barley, beans, lentils and leeks. Drought could spell disaster for the Egyptians, so during the dry seasons, they dug basins and channels to deliver water to their land. They also devised simple channels to transfer water at the peak of the flood. An early system of ___33___ a Nilometer, was used to determine the size of the floods. Later, during the New Kingdom, a lifting system called a shaduf was used to raise water from the river--___34___ to the way in which a well is used today. The Egyptians took up some of the earliest trading missions. Without a(n) ___35___ system they exchanged goods, bringing back timber, precious stones, pottery, spices and animals. Their efforts in medicine were also ___36___ advanced: surgeons performed operations to remove cysts(囊肿). Mummification gave them great understanding of the human body-yet they also relied heavily on various medicines to prevent disease, and discoveries were often confused with superstition(迷信). And while a great deal of time was dedicated to ___37___ the Egyptians thought the stars were gods. By the 16th century Egypt was under the Ottoman Empire until Britain seized control in 1882. What is now mostly Arabic Egypt only won ___38___ from Britain after World War Ⅱ. The Suez Canal, opened in 1869, __________the country as a center for world transportation. But it, and the completion of the Aswan High Dam in 1971 ___40___ the ecology of the Nile, which now struggles to satisfy the country’s rapidly growing population, currently more than 76 million-the largest in the Arab world.