内容正文:
华东师大二附中2025届高三英语测试
(2025. 5)
(考试时间:105分钟 卷面满分:115分)
I. Grammar and Vocabulary (20%)
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 ward; for the other blanks, use one word that best fits each blank.
Concerns Regarding Deep-Sea Tourism
The depths of the oceans, with their charming mysteries, continue to capture the human imagination. For many, deep-sea tourism provides an opportunity to have a thrilling adventure unlike any ____1____
With greater commercial access, deep-sea tourism ____2____ (move) from an upper-class activity to a more accessible venture over the past few years. Various underwater adventures are now available. Luxury operations such as “Lovers Deep,” a St Lucia submarine hotel, cost $300,000 a night. Other, ____3____ (price-friendly), encounters are the Maldives submarine experience where tourists pay $1,500 for an hour-long dive.
Despite the industry’s expansion, safety is an important issue. On March 27, a tourist submarine sank off the Egyptian Red Sea city of Hurghada. The sub was said ____4____ (experience) mechanical failure prior to sinking. The accident occurred more than a year after the OccanGate Titan submersible (潜水器) explosion on a dive to the Titanic wreck site. Safety concerns point to a lack of regulatory oversight. Submarines and submersibles sail without uniform international regulations, with safety practices ____5____ (leave) mostly in the hands of private operators.
Certified submersibles undergo close inspections by independent organizations. These inspections cover the vessel's structure, life-support systems, and mechanical integrity. The need for third-party inspection ____6____ not be overstated. However, OceanGate’s Titan submersible notably avoided this process, claiming certification would slow down innovation.
Certified submarines are generally safe, but any form of extreme underwater exploration involves certain risks. If something goes wrong, rescue operations for deep-sea vessels are complex and time-sensitive. Most tourist submarines operate at depths ____7____ divers or other submarines can assist in emergencies. However, vessels like the Titan, which dove to 12,500 feet, exceed most rescue capabilities.
Typical tour submarines don’t dive ____8____ 150 feet. At that depth, scuba divers can help if needed. But the deeper you go, the more difficult and slower a rescue becomes. ____9____ submarines operate also impacts rescues. In places such as Antarctica or the mid-Atlantic, conditions and logistical obstacles hinder quick rescue.
In spite of recent tragedies, international regulation of deep-sea tourism is still low and governments do not usually regulate businesses _____10_____ there are repeated failures. Hopefully, high-profile accidents like OceanGate’s explosion or the sinking of Hurghada might alter that.
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. complex
B. form
C. handful
D. largely
E. occasionally
F. preferred
G. resistant
H. survived
I. sensitive
J. sporting
K. suggesting
Thermae Romae (罗马浴场)
When considering the legacy of ancient Rome, most scholars focus on the gladiatorial (角斗) games and republican institutions. Often ignored are Rome’s countless baths. Although ____11____ abandoned by the Western world today, public bathing was a cornerstone of Roman civilization.
The baths even ____12____ the fall of Rome itself, continuing to operate into the Early Middle Ages. But what was it about these places that made them so ____13____ to historical change? As it turns out, there’s a lot more to them than rest and relaxation.
The oldest of the Thermae Romae dates to the 2nd century BC, and they increased in both size and numbers as time went on. In 33 BC, the number of baths in the Eternal City alone had risen from a(n) ____14____ to more than 170. By the early 5th century AD, that quantity had climbed to an astonishing 856.
Though many baths prioritized ____15____ over function, the most impressive of them were architectural wonders. The greatest of the greatest, the Terme di Caracalla, rivals the Forum and Pantheon in scale. Spanning 11 hectares and decorated with mosaics and statues, the ____16____ seems to have been capable of accommodating as many as 2,500 guests. Roman baths were also marvels of engineering. Water, carried over by channels, was heated before being poured into various pools.
Versatility was the name of the game, with even the smallest public baths ____17____ at least three different pools: a warm pool; a hot pool; and, finally, a cold pool. Medium-sized thermae also featured steam rooms, similar to saunas. The biggest thermae went even further, offering outdoor courtyards where people could socialize or exercise, as well as gardens and libraries. While the ____18____ sports varied from one Italian region to another, common activities included boxing, wrestling, discus throwing, and weightlifting.
Besides evidence from written sources, archaeological evidence can give us an even clearer picture of what went on inside these places. The evidence includes not only the remains of the baths themselves, but also the objects that researchers have been able to recover from their ____19____ undamaged drainage systems. Archacologists recovered nail cleaners, needles, and food remains, ____20____ some baths may have been fitted with medical facilities, textile workshops, and food stands.
II. Reading Comprehension (45%)
Section A
Directions: 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.
Feeling unproductive even after working all day?
Do you ever feel guilty for relaxing, even after you’ve worked hard all day? Do you feel like you should be doing more despite working full hours and nearing burnout?
You may be experiencing productivity dysmorphia. Although not a scientific term, it’s a helpful way to describe the feeling of ____21____ to recognize your accomplishments and wanting to continue doing more, even when you’re completely drained. It’s the pursuit of productivity that motivates you to do more while ____22____ you of the ability to enjoy any success along the way.
Productivity dysmorphia may look like working ____23____ on the weekends because you think you should be doing more, even though you did more than your share of work throughout the week. It could look like feeling ashamed of yourself when watching a movie or hanging out with friends because it feels like you’re ____24____ time that you could have spent working.
Highly competitive, work-oriented cultures ____25____ this constant pursuit of productivity that affects other areas of life. ____26____, you’re often praised for putting productivity above your well-being. Remember how schools rewarded perfect attendance? ____27____, companies prefer employees who get the maximum work done while taking the fewest possible breaks. ____28____ like these stress that rest is bad and that being constantly at work is the right thing to do.
Sometimes called “____29____ capitalism,” this mindset pushes people to force their minds and bodies to work even though they’re ____30____. The problem isn’t that the boss tells them to do it, but rather the social pressure to find self-worth in work achievements encourages people to dedicate their free time to extra work, ____31____ the family dinners to cat in front of a computer, and take work devices on vacations so they can wrap up a project on the plane.
There’s a difference between enjoying work, working a lot, and feeling compelled to work ____32____ whether you enjoy it. Popular quotes like “if you do what you love, you don’t work a single day in life” may normalize overworking under the assumption that if you’re ____33____ about something, you won’t ever get tired.
As people place more and more importance on work, it becomes harder to justify something if it doesn’t lead to productivity. Some writers have even begun describing rest as ____34____, as if people should stop relaxing if it doesn’t improve performance in some way. Not only does this mindset make it difficult to view and celebrate your achievements, but it also pushes you to build your entire life around work. The only milestones that mater are achieving work goals. The worst part? There’s no sense of ____35____ when you reach these goals.
21. A. hesitating B. learning C. agreeing D. failing
22. A. assuring B. convincing C. robbing D. accusing
23. A. alone B. extra C. later D. reluctantly
24. A. finding B. investing C. wasting D. saving
25. A. discourage B. evolve C. normalize D. criticize
26. A. In fact B. In other words C. On the contrary D. By comparison
27. A. Reversely B. Consequently C. Alternatively D. Similarly
28. A. Shares B. Breaks C. Habits D. Rewards
29. A. internalized B. rejected C. civilized D. classified
30. A. standing out B. breaking down C. catching up D. showing off
31. A. take B. enjoy C. skip D. extend
32. A. irrespective of B. associated with C. as a result of D. in spite of
33. A. particular B. passionate C. pessimistic D. curious
34. A. essential B. desirable C. productive D. imaginary
35. A. humor B. fulfillment C. timing D. justice
Section B
Directions: 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)
Some famous novels show that being the side character can give us access to deeper truths and a richer appreciation of the human condition than those too busy propelling the story forward.
Sherlock Holmes by Arthur Conan Doyle
“He possesses two out of the three qualities necessary for the ideal detective. He has the power of observation and that of deduction. He is only wanting in knowledge.”
There is little doubt that Sherlock Holmes is the most famous detective in literature. Arthur Conan Doyle’s stories now exist in over 70 languages, and Holmes is the most portrayed literary character in film and television history.
As a detective, Holmes often takes the lead in solving mysteries, but the story is told from the perspective of Dr. John H. Watson, Holmes’s loyal friend and companion.
There are many advantages to this. First, Holmes is odd and tends to focus on minor details. Telling a short story from his perspective would make it anything but short. Dr. Watson translates Holmes’s oddity into something less tiring for the reader.
On a literary level, having the story told by the companion helps keep the reader in suspense. If we had access to everything Holmes knew, the game would be over before it was happening. By seeing the Victorian world through Watson’s eyes, not only are we provided a picture that non-detectives can comprehend, but we get to enjoy Sherlock’s exciting adventures spoiler-free.
The Great Gatsby by E. Scot Fitzgerald
“Yet high over the city, our line of yellow windows must have contributed their share of human secrecy to the casual watcher in the darkening streets, and I was him too, looking up and wondering. I was within and without, simultaneously enchanted and repelled by the inexhaustible variety of life.”
F. Scott Fitzgerald’s best-known work is a meditation on class in the supposedly egalitarian (平等主义) United States, the excesses of the 1920s, and how horrible it can be when the American Dream comes true. The story is told from the perspective of Nick Carraway, a young man who has moved to Long Island in hopes of becoming a stockbroker and cashing in on the 1920s boom. As the title suggests, the real hero of the story is his mysterious neighbor, Jay Gatsby.
The difficulty of the story centers on Gatsby’s attempts to pursue Nick’s married cousin Daisy, his dreams of reliving the past, and his efforts to climb into the upper-class of American society. Nick, who is an unreliable narrator, is present for many of the main events in the story. However, as hinted at in the above quote, he considers himself an observer rather than a driver of those events.
This allows us to get an outside view of the situation from somebody who admits he doesn’t entirely fit into the world he’s participating in while still being an intimate companion of those who do. The resulting commentary on the life of the American upper crust (症结) has been debated for a century.
36. If written from the perspective of Sherlock Holmes instead of Dr. John Watson, the book Sherlock Holmes would be ________.
A. short and to the point B. incomprehensible and long
C. full of spoiler and suspense D. interesting but too professional
37. What can be inferred from The Great Gatsby written by F. Scott Fitzgerald?
A. Nick Carraway is not just as observer but a driver of the story events.
B. The real mysterious hero behind the title of the novel is Nick Garraway.
C. Readers will know more about the American upper class from the perspective of Jay Gatsby.
D. The unreliable narrator prevents the reader from grasping the harms of pursuing the American Dream.
38. Quotes from Sherlock Holmes and The Great Gatsby given below the title respectively in order to ________.
A. stick to the traditional pattern of a famous novel
B. indicate the side character’s role as the narrator
C. remind readers of the theme and plot of the novels
D. explain the main character’s neglect of deep truths
39. What’s the message the author of the passage wants to convey through the two books mentioned?
A. Classical novels must have quotes that have enduring power among readers.
B. Stories told from the most important character’s perspective are still the mainstream.
C. Individual, or historical eras can be deeply explored from a unique sideline perspective.
D. Side characters in novels are usually dismissed as unimportant and can’t get their name in the title.
(B)
Faced with multiple transformational changes-the impact of automation on job roles, remote and hybrid working conditions, and increasing labor shortages, to name a few-what can organizations do to thrive, not just survive?
Crafting an upskilling strategy that prepares today’s workforce for tomorrow’s opportunities is a step in the right direction. For ideas of how to put this into practice, we can look to a few companies that have successfully developed upskilling programs, including Amazon, Salesforce, and PwC.
Amazon-Upskilling 2025
Amazon’s upskilling program offers job assistance and tuition-free training that employees complete during their workday. Through Upskilling 2025, employees can participate in a variety of opportunities, including:
Machine Learning University (MLU): Taught by Amazon’s own, this program is on track to train thousands of employees in machine learning skills. It requires a time commitment of four to eight hours per week, for each six-week module.
A2Tech: Fulfillment center employees can complete this 90-day program to develop IT support technician skills and eventually, complete the A+ certification test.
AWS Training and Certification: To address the cloud skills shortage, Amazon offers free AWS training and discounted certification exams. Classes are offered in-person and online.
Amazon Technical Academy: Designed for employees in non-technical roles, this program seeks to move employees into software engineering professions through hybrid instruction, project-based activities, and real-world application.
PwC - New World. New Skills.
Over the next several years, PWC plans to invest $3-billion in upskilling. As part of its “New World. New Skills” initiative, the company offers in-person, digital upskilling programs where participants learn how to use tools from automation to robotics. The Virtual Digital Academy lasts from one to two days and is offered at both standard and advanced levels.
To upskill their 50,000 U.S.-based employees, PwC also created the Digital Fitness app with training tools for a variety of in-demand topics such as artificial intelligence, machine learning, and augmented reality. Through the app, which is now available to the public, employees and others can earn micro-degrees and certifications.
Salesforce-Trailhead
Salesforce predicts it will create over four million jobs by 2026. To prepare current and prospective employees to fill these roles, the company invites its workforce and external learners to “skill up for the future” through its digital upskilling program, Trailhead.
Through the online platform, learners can develop in-demand skills and earn credentials. To begin, participants select a career path (such as developer or data analyst) and then complete the “trail” for that career. Trails include eLearning modules and projects that help learners upskill for a new role.
Alternatively, participants can create a custom “trailmix,” pulling learning components from various trails to form a personalized learning plan. Along their learning journeys participants earn badges and certifications to showcase on their resumes.
40. Based on the article, which of the following best defines the term “upskilling”?
A. Replacing employees with automation tools to reduce labor costs
B. Providing short-term training for employees to adapt to their current roles.
C. Cultivating employee capabilities to meet current and future hiring needs.
D. Encouraging self-directed learning without structured programs or certifications.
41. Suppose you recently left a non-technical role at a tech company but haven’t made a clear career plan. Which of the following upskilling programs would be most suitable for you?
A. Amazon-A2Tech B. Amazon-Amazon Technical Academy
C. PwC-Digital Fitness app D. Salesforce-Trailhead
42. What can be inferred about the practice of opening upskilling programs to external learners?
A. Companies hope to cultivate a talent pool and address skill gaps.
B. Training programs needn’t consider external learners’ working schedules.
C. Remote and hybrid working conditions make large-scale training possible.
D. Having more participants means reducing the tuition cost for every trainer.
(C)
Like millions of Americans, I am dyslexic (诵读困难者). I can’t remember which side is my right and which is my left.
I know this makes no sense. After all, I have no problem telling the difference between other things. I know up from down. I know black from white. I know forks from spoons. And yet, I do not know left from right. My brain is not wired that way. This is true for many dyslexics, and I suspect multimodal large language models (MLLMs) may be dyslexic too.
As a kid with dyslexia, school was very hard for me. For example, we humans created two lowercase letters in the English alphabet — “b” and “d” — that are only different because one points left and one points right. For decades, I could not tell the difference. This is a very common problem among dyslexics. The same is true for telling time on traditional clock faces — it only makes sense if you know the difference between clockwise and counterclockwise. These challenges don't end in elementary school. I still remember getting a problem wrong in a physics class at Stanford because I applied the “right-hand rule” with my left hand.
Dyslexia has nothing to do with focus or intelligence — your brain just works differently from the people who created the cultural conventions we use in symbolic languages, mathematics, and many branches of science. I surely know what’s going on. It all relates to the “mind’s eye.” By this, I mean the way I visualize things inside my mind and store spatial elements in memory. When I recall things in my mind (objects, environments, images, or text), I don’t visualize them from a fixed first-person perspective. I think about them from all directions at once, more as a vague cloud of perspectives than a single, grounded orientation.
This brings me back to multimodal large language models that process and interpret images and videos. These models are remarkable. They can match or exceed human performance on countless tasks, for example, diagnosing cancers from visual slides better than any human. And yet, a recent study found a surprising result: All major MLLMs currently struggle to tell time on analog clocks. According to the study, GPT-4.0 was only able to correctly read clock faces 8% of the time. Claude-3-5-sonnet was worse at 6%. Gemini 2.0 was the best, but still at only 20%.
These numbers are surprisingly low, especially when you consider that these AI models can perform so well in other contexts. This is surprisingly similar to dyslexia in humans, not just in the simple artifacts that cause problems likes clocks, but in the contradictory mix of strengths and weaknesses that enables a person like me to earn a PhD and work successfully as a computer scientist and engineer, and yet still fail the “turn left here” test.
43. The phrase “mind’s eye” (paragraph 4) refers to ________.
A. Literal visual perception through biological eyes B. A medical device used to treat dyslexia
C. The brain’s ability to form and store mental images D. A metaphor for intelligence quotient (IQ)
44. Why do multimodal language models (MLLMs) struggle to read analog clocks accurately, according to the passage?
A. Their cognitive process of spatial information is similar to that of dyslexic humans.
B. They were primarily trained on digital clocks, leaving analog clock recognition underdeveloped.
C. Clock faces require understanding of cultural conventions, which AI lacks compared to humans.
D. Their visual recognition systems focus more on object detection like cancer diagnosis than directional interpretation.
45. Why does the author emphasize that he failed a physics task due to left-right confusion yet ultimately earned a PhD?
A. To argue that universities should relax academic standards for dyslexic students
B. To suggest AI could compensate for human cognitive limitations in scientific research.
C. To demonstrate that physics is uniquely difficult for people with spatial processing differences.
D. To highlight that dyslexia's challenges are specific rather than reflective of overall intellectual ability.
46. Which of the following might be the best title of the passage?
A. The Complete Guide to Dyslexia Treatments
B. When Machines Mirror Human Learning Disabilities
C. Are Large Language Models Dyslexic?
D. Why Schools Must Adapt to Dyslexic Students
Section C
Directions: 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.
Hit by Natural Disasters
The planet is at a climate crossroads. Natural disasters are increasing so much in frequency and intensity that even places once believed to be safe from the worst of what's to come-the cool, wet Pacific Northwest, for example-are experiencing greater effects from wildfire, storms, flooding, landslides and drought.
These events severely harm local communities not just as the tragedy unfolds but long after it’s over. ____47____ Houston, which was devastated by Hurricane Harvey in 2017, bounced back more quickly than expected because its economy was split among a wide variety of industries, including health care, aerospace, shipping, manufacturing and technology. Those sectors that couldn’t immediately resume business were balanced out by those that could.
“But when a community is dependent on a single industry, rebuilding can be much harder,” says Paloma Zapata, CEO of Sustainable Travel International, an organization working to help the global travel industry strengthen its climate resilience.
Tourism destinations hit by natural disasters need visitors in order for local people and businesses to survive. But important questions underlie tourists’ return: Is restoring the tourism to its previous form the best future for a destination that’s been impacted by natural disaster? ____48____
The answer is complicated. “Typically, a destination that relies on tourism is not going to stop relying on tourism just because of a natural disaster,” says Zapata. ____49____
“In other words, there needs to be a balance between economic development, conservation, community well-being and the visitor experience,” she continues.
____50____ If visitors do not return, the entire tourism will collapse. Ironically, because tourism is a major driver of carbon emissions and human-caused climate change, restoring high numbers of visitors could also have a similarly negative impact on the community in the long run. Thus, it’s important for destinations to give serious thought to the kind of tourism they want back following a natural disaster.
A. While economic diversification could help, the reality is that usually tourism-dependent economies don’t have a choice.
B. Those with diverse economies can be somewhat quick in their recovery
C. Lower visitor numbers continue to affect local businesses and the slow recovery has resulted in many people's relocation.
D. Should the media create global impressions that these events are nothing short of disastrous for local communities?
E. Would it be better for local communities and environments if a pre-disaster form of tourism never returned at all?
F. But natural disasters can act as a turning point for overdeveloped places to re-evaluate the sustainability of their behavior.
III. Summary Writing (10%)
51. 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.
A Tennessee Couple Rescued a Kitten... It Turned Out to Be a Bobcat (山猫)
Staff at True Rescue in Mount Juliet, Tennessee, have handled their fair share of kittens over the years. So all it took was one look at the head and paws of a kitten that was rushed to the animal shelter last week to tell that they were dealing with a case of mistaken identity.
The seemingly distressed kitten found on the back deck of a Middle Tennessee couple’s home was actually a baby bobcat. Whoops! “We definitely knew it wasn’t a regular kitten,” Amy Simcik, founder and executive director of True Rescue, told McClatchy News. “It was very big-big head, big feet... wild and musky (麝香的) kind of smelling.” Simcik also noted the kitten’s distinctive fur and birdlike vocalizations. Unlike domestic kittens, bobcat kittens rarely meow. They also have very short tails.
While the couple meant well, humans should avoid removing young wild animals from their environment. Doing so can prevent them from ever returning to the wild. “We always recommend people to search online for exactly what to do,” she told McClatchy. “Most of the time, the results will say to leave it. You’re endangering it far more trying to pull it out of that environment and care for it yourself than leaving it.”
The baby bobcat, who was later named Pearl, was recently transferred from Walden’s Puddle to For Fox Sake Wildlife Rescue in Chattanooga, where she can interact with another bobkitten named Ruby. The two kittens will be raised as siblings before being released back into the wild.
“Pearl is in great shape,” rescuers wrote in a Facebook update Sunday. “We’re thankful to True Rescue for bringing Pearl to Walden’s Puddle and to Walden’s Puddle for transferring her to us,” the post continues. “Both Pearl and Ruby have a much better chance at a happy, free life in the wild because they will be able to be together.”
Good luck, little ladies!
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
IV. Translation (15%)
Directions: Translate the following sentences into English, using the words given in the brackets.
52. 死记硬背语法规则却不知如何在真实语境中灵活运用,有何意义? (point) (汉译英)
_____________________________________________________________________________________
53. 机器人与人类选手肩并肩冲过半程马拉松终点线,在那一瞬间,人们欢呼雀跃,庆祝这一象征科技进步的历史性突破。 (The instant) (汉译英)
_____________________________________________________________________________________
54. 尽管一起看电视剧这类被动活动轻松愉快,但若想维系友谊,深入交流的作用远胜于此。(as...as)(汉译英)
_____________________________________________________________________________________
55. 专家们在会议上提出建议,对许多国内企业而言,全球化扩张战略不仅意味着产品出口,更需要提供优质服务,从而实现更高效的跨行业整合。 (recommendation) (汉译英)
_____________________________________________________________________________________
V. Guided Writing (25%)
56. Directions: Write an English composition in 120-150 words according to the instructions given below in Chinese.
城市公园不再是传统意义上的仅供老年人锻炼身体、社交聊天的场所。根据你最近的一次游园感受,写一份建议信给公园领导,提出一些切实可行的改进意见,从而充分利用公园的各项设施,为游客创造最佳的游园体验。
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
华东师大二附中2025届高三英语测试
(2025. 5)
(考试时间:105分钟 卷面满分:115分)
I. Grammar and Vocabulary (20%)
Section A
【1~10题答案】
【答案】1. other
2. has moved
3. more price-friendly
4. to have experienced
5. left 6. can
7. where 8. below
9. Where 10. unless
Section B
【11~20题答案】
【答案】11. D 12. H
13. G 14. C
15. B 16. A
17. J 18. F
19. E 20. K
II. Reading Comprehension (45%)
Section A
Directions: 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.
【21~35题答案】
【答案】21. D 22. C 23. B 24. C 25. C 26. A 27. D 28. D 29. A 30. B 31. C 32. A 33. B 34. C 35. B
Section B
Directions: 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)
【36~39题答案】
【答案】36. B 37. A 38. B 39. C
(B)
【40~42题答案】
【答案】40. C 41. B 42. A
(C)
【43~46题答案】
【答案】43. C 44. A 45. D 46. C
Section C
Directions: 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.
【47~50题答案】
【答案】47. B 48. E 49. F 50. A
III. Summary Writing (10%)
【51题答案】
【答案】A Tennessee couple mistakenly rescued a baby bobcat, thinking it was a domestic kitten. Animal shelter staff identified the wild animal by its features. Experts advise against removing wild animals from their habitats, as it can hinder their chances of survival. The bobcat, named Pearl, was transferred to a wildlife rescue to be raised with another bobkitten before release.
IV. Translation (15%)
Directions: Translate the following sentences into English, using the words given in the brackets.
【52题答案】
【答案】What’s the point of memorizing grammar rules by rote without knowing how to use them flexibly in real contexts?
【53题答案】
【答案】The instant a robot and a human athlete crossed the half-marathon finish line side by side, people cheered and celebrated this historic breakthrough symbolizing technological progress.
【54题答案】
【答案】Although watching TV dramas together is as relaxing and pleasant as passive activities can be, having in-depth conversations is far more effective in maintaining friendships.
【55题答案】
【答案】The experts put forward the recommendation at the meeting that for many domestic enterprises, the globalization expansion strategy not only means product export but also requires the provision of high-quality services, so as to achieve more efficient cross-industry integration.
V. Guided Writing (25%)
【56题答案】
【答案】
Dear Park Leaders,
I recently enjoyed a visit to our city park, which now bustles with visitors of all ages. To optimize its use and enhance everyone’s experience, I suggest a few improvements.
Firstly, introduce more engaging activities, such as nature walks with guides or weekend markets, to attract diverse groups. Secondly, enhance signage to help visitors navigate and discover hidden gems. Lastly, maintain facilities regularly, ensuring playgrounds are safe and picnic areas are clean.
These steps will make our park a vibrant destination for all. Thank you for considering my suggestions.
Yours faithfully,
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