内容正文:
上海市七宝中学2025-2026学年高三下学期5月练习
英语试卷
时间: 120分钟 总分: 150分
I. Listening Comprehension (10'+20'=30')
Section A
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. A laundry staff member. B. A tailor for men's clothes.
C. A telephone operator. D. A mine worker.
2.A. Driving. B. Reading. C. Shopping. D. Walking.
3.A. $15. B. $5. C. $10. D. $20.
4.A. A yellow light. B. A road accident. C. A robbery. D. A TV program.
5.A. There will be too many people at the party.
B. He feels sorry that the woman is not coming.
C. It makes people happier to have more parties.
D. The woman can bring her brother to the party.
6.A. The woman could use his ruler.
B. He's faster at doing calculations.
C. He'll finish the measurement soon.
D. The woman's ruler is better than his.
7.A. The final begins next week.
B. The man should check with his doctor again.
C. She wants the man to attend the final with her.
D. She hopes the man will be able to play in the final.
8.A. He's angry.
B. He feels sick.
C. He gets on well with others.
D. He prefers to study alone.
9.A. It provides reading materials for waiting people.
B. He had to wait a long time for a seat there.
C. The seats used there are uncomfortable.
D. He wasn't able to find a seat there.
10.A. Go to the ballet later in the year.
B. Take ballet lessons with his sister.
C. Find a schedule of future performances.
D. Get a ticket from his sister.
Section B
Directions: In Section B, you will hear two short passages and one longer conversation, and you will be asked three questions on each of the passages and the conversation. The passages and the conversation will be read twice, but the questions will be spoken only once. When you hear a question, read the four possible answers on your paper and decide which one would be the best answer to the question you have heard.
Questions 11 through 13 are based on the following passage.
11. A. Colleagues have face-to-face conversation with her.
B. Colleagues in the same office email her at work.
C. She has to use LinkedIn for work and jobs.
D. She feels isolated from her family.
12.A. Time travel. B. 3D printers. C. Internet of things. D. Fitness apps.
13.A. Curious. B. Doubtful. C. Uninterested. D. Confident.
Questions 14 through 16 are based on the following passage.
14. A. A social trend. B. A writer. C. A shoe company. D. A book.
15.A. New styles of shoes were developed.
B. Designers started wearing the shoes.
C. The company made efforts to advertise its shoes.
D. Manhattan clubs promoted the shoes to the customers.
16.A. They will spread much faster.
B. Advertising campaigns stopped.
C. Only a few people will notice them.
D. Word-of-mouth marketing began to work.
Questions 17 through 20 are based on the following conversation.
17. A. Classmates. B. Roommates. C. Cousins. D. Colleagues.
18.A. He couldn't decide on a topic for his paper.
B. He hadn't heard from his family in a while.
C. He thought the woman had been ill.
D. He thought his paper was late.
19.A. To classify different kinds of honey. B. To find their way back home.
C. To locate favourite plants. D. To identify relatives.
20.A. Write a paper. B. Visit his parents.
C. Plan a family reunion. D. Observe bees in the lab.
II. Grammar and Vocabulary (15'+10'=25')
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.
About the Gunman at the White House Correspondents' Dinner
A California man was arrested Saturday night in connection with a shooting at the White House Correspondents' Dinner in Washington, law enforcement officials said. The man, 21.__________ (identify) as Cole Thomas Allen, 31, of Torrance, Calif, was taken into custody shortly after the shooting at the Washington Hilton hotel.
Officials said evidence suggested that the suspect 22.__________(intend) to target government officials, potentially including President Trump. He was armed with a knife, a shotgun and a handgun, according to two law enforcement officials, 23.__________ spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss an ongoing investigation.
The suspect was known to law enforcement before the attack, officials said, 24. __________ he provided no details about previous contacts. He is expected to appear in federal court in Washington on Monday to face charges including using a firearm during a crime of violence and assaulting federal officers with a dangerous weapon.
No government officials were injured in the attack. A hotel worker suffered minor injuries and was treated at the scene.
The shooting 25.__________(unfold) during the annual dinner, a black-tie event attended by journalists, politicians, celebrities and administration officials. President Trump was at the dinner and had delivered remarks shortly before the shooting. Panic spread quickly through the ballroom 26.__________ guests heard gunshots and saw law enforcement officers rushing to respond. Many described a chaotic scene with people diving under tables, rushing for exits and calling family members 27. __________fear.
Investigators were examining a manifesto-style document that the suspect had posted online before the attack, officials said. The document expressed anti-government and anti-Christian views, according to three people who have reviewed parts of it. "It is not Christian 28.__________(turn) the other cheek when others are oppressed," the document said. "That is complicity in the crimes of the oppressor."
During an interview on Fox News 29.__________ President Trump mentioned about the document amounted to the fact that the suspect "had a manifesto" and "hates Christians." "This was a man with a lot of turmoil inside," the president said.
Having long been a symbol of press-government relations, the White House Correspondents' Dinner grew tense this year amid harsh criticism from the president, and the shooting has sparked fresh concerns over security at high-profile political events and threats 30. __________(face) officials and journalists.
Law enforcement agencies continued to investigate the suspect's motives, contacts and plans on Sunday. Additional security measures are expected at political gatherings in the capital in the wake of the attack.
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. committees B. Profoundly C. channels D. coverage E. persists
F. resumes G. manual H. spans I. Notably J. distinct
K. dynamics
To gain an in-depth understanding of China's urban labor market, the Institute of Population and Labor Economics at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (IPLE-CASS) conducted the fifth wave of the China Urban Labor Survey in 2023, which 31.__________ five rounds over more than two decades and covers eight major representative cities. The survey collected 9,122 household questionnaires and 26,145 individual questionnaires from 381 neighborhood 32. __________. Graduate students from the University of Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (UCASS) were recruited to serve as supervisors and reviewers. Quality control included facial recognition, GPS verification, automated detection of paradata anomalies and questionnaire data outliers, and 33. __________ review.
Based on this data, the report systematically analyzes employment, wages, educational attainment, and social security among China's urban workforce. Additionally, job search methods combine market-based 34. __________ with traditional social networks.
Key findings include an inverted U-shaped age pattern of labor force participation, with a widening gender gap after childbearing age. Compared with men, women's age-related labor participation distribution more clearly demonstrates the impact of childbearing. While, generally stable from 30 to 50, women face a 35. __________ slump in participation during the childbearing years (ages 30–35). Participation rebounds somewhat after age 35, but it never fully recovers to its peak level. It then 36. __________ a gradual decline and begins a sharp descent from age 50 onward.
37.__________, the gender wage gap 38. __________ and widens over the life cycle, while employed women now have higher average years of schooling than men. Rural-to-urban migrants show higher labor force participation rates but remain disadvantaged in wages, education, and social security 39. __________. By rigorously tracking labor market 40. __________ and household welfare through standardized surveys, this work fulfills an urgent need for theoretical and policy development in labor economics. Thus, this survey provides a comprehensive picture of the structural characteristics and challenges of China's urban labor market, providing a solid data foundation for academic research and public policy design.
III. Reading Comprehension (15'+30'=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.
Will It Work for His Successor?
Sometimes a company reflects the spirit of its time. Ford's Model T 41. __________ the go-getting mood of the Roaring Twenties; IBM embodied the tech optimism of the computer age; and in recent years, Apple has stood as the 42. __________ brand of our era. Its iPhone, a sleek gateway to the app economy, has become as iconic as big hair was to the 1980s, while its 43. __________ of globalization—especially its focus on China as a manufacturing and sales hub—has 44. __________ its success. This focus on China has not only made the country a key production base but also a major market, with Apple's revenue from China growing exponentially under Tim Cook's leadership, accounting for more than 12% of its total revenue by 2013.
For the past 15 years, Apple has been led by Tim Cook. Though Steve Jobs 45. __________ up the iPhone, it was Mr. Cook who turned it into a global phenomenon, putting the device into 1.5 billion pockets and making the Apple logo a familiar 46. __________ from San Francisco to Seoul. Under his leadership, Apple's market value soared; and its shareholders reaped huge rewards—with cumulative profits that run into the trillions. Now, Mr. Cook will 47. __________ down, and his successor John Ternus faces a critical question: does the winning formula that drove Apple's success—smartphones, global supply chains, and a focus on China—still 48. __________ in an era of AI and shifting global dynamics?
Mr. Cook's 49. __________ was a bet on globalization: he leaned into global supply chains and China's growing market, turning Apple into an empire. Yet his term saw no products as 50. __________ as the iPhone or iPad, even the Vision Pro, with its 51. __________ price tag, failed to make a lasting mark. 52. __________, he built his legacy on refining what worked—improving the iPhone, expanding its reach, and 53. __________ its place in the global market.
This approach thrived in an era of open trade, but the world is changing. Geopolitical tensions are rising, trade barriers are returning, and AI is reshaping the tech 54. __________. Ternus, who has worked at Apple since 2001 and currently serves as senior vice president of hardware engineering, overseeing products like the iPhone and Vision Pro, faces the daunting task of adapting Apple's strategy. For Mr. Ternus, the challenge is clear: to 55. __________ Apple's formula for a new age, integrating AI into its core products without losing the core that made it great—quality, innovation, and global appeal.
41.A. captured B. featured C. advocated D. guaranteed
42.A. spreading B. trending C. defining D. lasting
43.A. integration B. embrace C. challenge D. nature
44.A. pursued B. achieved C. promised D. shaped
45.A. dressed B. dreamed C. held D. set
46.A. brand B. device C. sight D. touch
47.A. step down B. carry on C. show up D. give in
48.A. hold B. hit C. stick D. count
49.A. command B. preference C. approval D. strategy
50.A. fashionable B. transformative C. favorable D. accessible
51.A. decent B. advanced C. aggressive D. steep
52.A. Meanwhile B. Besides C. Instead D. Therefore
53.A. solidifying B. reclaiming C. occupying D. acquiring
54.A. impact B. landscape C. product D. service
55.A. create B. abandon C. maintain D. update
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)
Often when we're confronted with situations of feeling out of place or unqualified, we try to "fake it till we make it."
It doesn't work—and trust me, I've tried.
Years ago, when I was in college, I had an enduring feeling of uncertainty and self-doubt. As one of four females majoring in electrical engineering, I had a fear of being stereotyped so I tried to act the part of the masculine persona typical of engineering majors. I postured and pretended, but no matter what amount of "faking it" I put out, I found myself with more self-doubt than when I started. Even after college, in a new role at a company, I discovered that my go-to solution to the problems involved in constantly being on the outside of the "elite" in-circle was to, as a friend put it, act with the confidence of a "plain white male."
I am hardly the only person who has tried this approach to no avail. In one paper on authenticity, my colleagues and I have noted that being inauthentic has negative effects on perceptions of performance in the long term. This negative side certainly held true for me. Overwhelmingly, when I acted like a man—or how I thought a man would act—I got pushback. People saw me as aggressive. I felt superficial, came across as inauthentic and wasn't getting the sort of support or social acceptance that my "elite" male peers were.
But before long, I discovered that I too had the ability to make honest and authentic connections with senior leaders in my organization. Once I accidentally shared a ride with the senior VP of my division. Over the course of the drive, we had a natural conversation where I felt confident and comfortable. I asked him for advice on things that came up organically. And he saw that I was a smart, insightful person. He even invited me to give a presentation to his internal team. To this day, he remains one of my most trusted mentors.
It's important to remember that we all have something that others are judging us on. In the long term, on a macro level, posturing and faking it provides only temporary value. What ends up being more long-standing is a belief that inevitably holds people back—a feeling of uncertainty and self-doubt.
We can't try to cater to what we think others want, because we have no idea how to do that or exactly what they want. Instead, we have to be smart enough to seize chances to demonstrate who we really are, being unapologetic and confident.
56.The root cause of the author's "faking it" is probably ________.
A. her gender and major
B. her self-doubt and fear
C. her desire to be typical
D. her confidence in males
57.What may be the negative effect of being inauthentic on a person who "fakes it"?
A. Trying the approach of "faking it" to no avail.
B. Overwhelming perceptions of performance.
C. Meeting resistance to the supposed aggression.
D. Being regarded as unsupportive and unaccepted.
58.The author suggests that we should
A. remember to ask others to judge us on something
B. eliminate the temporary value "faking it" provides
C. hold back the feeling of uncertainty and self-doubt
D. display our true selves confidently at the right time
59.Which is the best title for this passage?
A. Why "Fake It Till You Make It" Is Terrible Advice
B. Make It Rather Than Fake It Or Doubt Yourself
C. Stop Faking the Fake, Start Trusting the Trusted
D. Don't Let the Chances Slip Through Your Fingers
(B)
The Shimmering State
by Meredith Westgate. Atria Books, 2021($27)
Memoroxin, a personalized pill that replaces memories in people with Alzheimer's, is being abused as a recreational drug. Disconnected from reality, Lucien and Sophie meet at a "Mem" health recovery center in Los Angeles, where personal psychological traumas, along with foreign memories, can be removed. They feel drawn to each other—have they met before? Like the film Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, The Shimmering State explores whether the joys and pains of love can ever be fully erased. Through interconnected relationships, the novel delves into some of the moral dilemmas of a technology that can catalog and edit consciousness.
—Jen Schwartz
Dark and Magical Places: The Neuroscience of Navigation
by Christopher Kemp. W. Norton, 2022 ($26.95)
Navigation is one of the most complex cognitive tasks humans engage in daily. In this fascinating dive into the brain, neurobiology researcher Christopher Kemp explores how we orient where we're going, why we lose our way, and what scientists know about how we do both these things. Kemp's explanations of concepts such as grid cells are clear and engaging, but the book shines brightest in his entertaining descriptions of his own chronic lost-ness, as well as in surprisingly moving stories about people who have wandered dangerously off route. Some make it home, but others don't.
—Tess Joosse
Secret Worlds: The Extraordinary Senses of Animals
by Martin Stevens. Oxford University Press. 2021 ($25.95)
Ecologist Martin Stevens catalogs animals' sensory systems and how they exceed our own while informing—and challenging—our reality as humans. The book has a narrative and inquisitive style that will appeal to a wide audience. Stevens explores dozens of sensory systems through examples of the amazing capabilities they allow, from nocturnal dung beetles that orientate by using the Milky Way to sea turtles that navigate currents by reading the earth's magnetic fields. Secret Worlds is filled with lessons on how different species evolved to perceive the world.
—Jen St.Jude
Once There Were Wolves
by Charlotte McConaghy. Flatiron Books, 2021 ($27.99)
Australian writer Charlotte McConaghy (author of Migrations) delivers a thrilling and touching novel about a woman named Inti Flynn and her team of biologists who reintroduce gray wolves into Scotland's remote Highlands. At first, the wolves seem to thrive, but when a farmer gets attacked, locals blame the animals. Inti, however, reaches a different—and tragic—conclusion: she suspects the man she loves. Her story unfolds as a meditation on the social and scientific consequences of influencing ecosystems, while reminding us that humans and animals alike can break our hearts.
—Amy Brady
60.What can we infer from the introduction of The Shimmering State?
A. Memoroxin, which cures Alzheimer, is a recreational drug.
B. Lucien and Sophie feel drawn to each other for foreign memories.
C. The book suggests the joys and pains of love should be completely removed.
D. Editing consciousness by a technology may bring about some moral problems.
61.It can be learned from the whole passage that ________.
A. among the four books, only Dark and Magical Places touches upon the topic of navigation
B. the heroine in Once There Were Wolves doesn't believe the farmer is hurt by wolves
C. the highlights of Dark and Magical Places are Kemp's explanations of some concepts
D. McConaghy's novel merely focuses on the social and scientific impact on the ecosystems
62.If Bob is interested in science and wants to gain more insight into animals' perception of the world, which of the books should be recommended?
A. The Shimmering State
B. Dark and Magical Places
C. Secret Worlds
D. Once There Were Wolves
(C)
Types of Social Groups
Life places us in a complex web of relationships with other people. Our humanness arises out of these relationships in the course of social interaction. Moreover, our humanness must be sustained through social interaction—and fairly constantly so. When an association continues long enough for two people to become linked together by a relatively stable set of expectations, it is called a relationship.
People are bound within relationships by two types of bonds: expressive ties and instrumental ties. Expressive ties are social links formed when we emotionally invest ourselves in and commit ourselves to other people. Through association with people who are meaningful to us, we achieve a sense of security, love, acceptance, companionship, and personal worth. Instrumental ties are social links focused when we cooperate with other people to achieve some goal.
Occasionally, this may mean working with, instead of against, competitors. More often, we simply cooperate with others to reach some end without endowing the relationship with any larger significance.
Sociologists have built on the distinction between expressive and instrumental ties to distinguish between two types of groups: primary and secondary. A primary group involves two or more people who enjoy a direct, intimate, cohesive relationship with one another. Expressive ties predominate in primary groups; we view the people as ends in themselves and valuable in their own right. A secondary group requires two or more people who are involved in an impersonal relationship and have come together for a specific, practical purpose. Instrumental ties predominate in secondary groups; we perceive people as means to ends rather than as ends in their own right. Sometimes primary group relationships evolve out of secondary group relationships. This happens in many work settings. People on the job often develop close relationships with coworkers as they come to share complaints, jokes, gossip, and satisfactions.
A number of conditions enhance the likelihood that primary groups will arise. First, group size is important. We find it difficult to get to know people personally when they are wandering about and dispersed in large groups. In small groups we have a better chance to initiate contact and establish close relationship with them. Second, face-to-face contact allows us to size up others. Seeing and talking with one another in close physical closeness makes possible a subtle exchange of ideas and feelings. And third, the probability that we will develop primary group bonds increases as we have frequent and continuous contact. Our ties with people often deepen as we interact with them across time and gradually evolve interlocking habits and interests.
Primary groups are fundamental to us and to society. Sociologists view primary groups as bridges between individuals and the larger society because they transmit, mediate, and interpret a society's cultural patterns and provide the sense of oneness so critical for social unity. Primary groups, then serve both as carriers of social norms and as enforcers of them.
63.According to Paragraph 1, which of the following statements is TRUE of a relationship?
A. It is a structure of associations with many people.
B. It should be studied in the course of social interaction.
C. It places great demands on people.
D. It develops gradually over time.
64.Which of the following can be inferred from the author's claim that primary group relationships sometimes evolve out of secondary group relationships?
A. Secondary group relationships begin by being primary group relationships.
B. A secondary group relationship that is highly visible quickly becomes a primary group relationship.
C. Sociologists believe that only primary group relationships are important to society.
D. Even in secondary groups, frequent communication serves to bring people into close relationships.
65.The underlined phrase "size up" in paragraph is closest in meaning to "_________".
A. enlarge B. evaluate C. impress D. accept
66.This passage is developed primarily by _________.
A. drawing comparisons between theory and practice
B. presenting two opposing theories
C. defining important concepts
D. discussing causes and their effects
Section C
Directions: Read the passage carefully. 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.
(D)
A. The Microsoft start-up sound has taken on similarly negative associations.
B. SNeave these elements into an ad campaign, and we may be powerless to resist it.
C. You skip right past newspaper ads, never click on ads online and leave the room during TV commercials.
D. Rather, the sounds already had meaning and thus fueled a series of reactions: hunger, thirst, happy expectation.
E. Even when we solve the problem about when advertising works, we need to move on to the larger problem of predicting what works.
F. Major companies realized the importance of taking advantage of consumers' curiosity about new commodities and make it a marketing strategy.
If you're like most people, you think you are smart enough to avoid advertising. 67. ________. That at least, is what we tell ourselves. But what we tell ourselves is wrong. Advertising works, which is why, even in hard economic times, Madison Avenue is a 34-billion-dollar-a-year business.
Lindstrom is a practitioner of neuromarketing research, in which consumers are exposed to ads while hooked up to machines that monitor brain activity, sweat responses and movements in face muscles, all of which are markers of emotion. According to his studies, 83% of all forms of advertising principally engage only one of our senses: sight. Hearing, however, can be just as powerful, though advertisers have taken only limited advantage of it. Historically, ads have relied on slogans to catch our ear, largely ignoring everyday sounds—a steak sizzling, a baby laughing and other noises our bodies can't help paying attention to. 68. ________.
To figure out what most appeals to our ear, Lindstrom wired up his volunteers, then played them recordings of dozens of familiar sounds, from McDonald's wide-spread "I'm Lovin' It" slogan to cigarettes being lit. The sound that blew the doors off all the rest—both in terms of interest and positive feelings—was a baby giggling. The other high-ranking sounds were less original but still powerful. The sound of a vibrating cell phone was Lindstrom's second-place finisher. Others that followed were an ATM distributing cash and a soda being burst open and poured. In all of these cases, it didn't take a professional to invent the sounds, infuse them with meaning and then play them over and over until the subjects internalized them. 69. ________.
TV advertisers aren't the only ones who may start putting sound to great use. Business people are also catching on. The 0101 department store in Japan, for example, has been designed as a series of soundscapes, playing different sound effects such as children at play, bird songs and lapping water.
Lindstrom is consulting with clients about employing a similar strategy in European supermarkets, piping the sound of fizzing soda into the beverage department.
None of this means that advertisers just have to turn the audio dials and consumers will come running. Indeed, sometimes, they flee. In the early years of mainstream cell-phone use, the Nokia ringtone was recognized by 42% people in the U.K. and soon became widely disliked. That, Lindstrom says, was partly because so few users practiced cell-phone etiquette and the blasted things kept going off in movie theatres. 70. ________. People so often hear it when they are rebooting after their computer has crashed. In these cases, manufacturers themselves must reboot by changing the offending sound slightly or replacing it entirely.
IV. Summary Writing (10')
Directions: Read the following passage. Summarize in no more than 60 words the main idea and the main point(s) of the passage. Use your own words as far as possible.
Take flu outbreaks far more seriously
The usual response to the annual flu is not enough to combat the risks we currently face, let alone prepare us for an ever deadlier pandemic flu that most experts agree will come in the future. People suffer and die needlessly. In the U.S. alone, seasonal flu can cause up to 36 million infections, three quarters of a million hospitalizations and 56,000 deaths. We are not taking the time and investing the resources needed to protect ourselves, our loved ones and our communities.
Why not? We haven't been hit by a truly devastating pandemic in a long time. So as individuals, we let down our guard as our leaders quietly defund and destaff the services we need to protect us. Since 2003 the federal government has cut per capita funding by 60% for the U.S. Public Health Emergency Preparedness program. This has contributed to the loss of more than 45,700 jobs at state and local health departments since 2008.
Why do we as a nation continue to leave ourselves vulnerable? The simple answer lies in our collective complacency. As soon as headlines about the flu are gone, hospitals are emptied of flu patients, schools are back in session and workplace absenteeism declines, we go back to business as usual.
At the personal level, you can learn the essentials of reducing flu transmission in your family and local community. You can make sure that everyone in your family receives the flu shot. And you can reach out to your congressional representatives to encourage them to support funding that strengthens local, state and national pandemic-preparedness programs. Your action today may be a matter of life and death for you and your loved ones.
V. Translation (15')
72.放学后,务必把教室门窗关好。(see to)
73.站在山顶,大自然的壮美让我们惊叹不已。(amaze)
74.一个新的科学真理不是因为说服了它的反对者而胜出的,而是因为熟悉这个想法的新一代人长大了。(convince)
75.你可曾料到,自己多年前直播助农的决定会让自己在网上爆火,一夜之间收获成千上万的粉丝?(occur)
VI. Guided Writing (25')
Directions: Write an English composition in 120–150 words according to the instructions given below in Chinese.
76.随着 AI 作业助手 (AI homework assistants) 的普及,越来越多中学生开始用它们完成作业、解答难题。有人认为这类工具能帮学生高效解决学习难点,节省时间;也有人担心过度依赖会削弱学生的独立思考能力和解题能力。假设你是高中生李华,在校园论坛上看到相关讨论,决定回帖表达你的看法。回帖内容应包括:
1.你对中学生使用 AI 作业助手的态度;
2.你的理由(至少两点)。
2025 学年第二学期高三英语练习 (5 月) 标准答案
II. Grammar and Vocabulary
Section A
21. identified 22. had intended 23. who 24. though/but 25. unfolded
26. when/as 27. in 28. to turn 29. what 30. facing
Section B
31. H 32. A 33. G 34. C 35. J
36. F 37. I 38. E 39. D 40. K
III. Reading Comprehension
Section A 完形
41.A 42.C 43.B 44.D 45.B
46.C 47.A 48.A 49.D 50.B
51.D 52.C 53.A 54.B 55.D
Section B 阅读理解
56.B 57.C 58.D 59.A
60.D 61.B 62.C
63.D 64.D 65.B 66.C
Section C 六选四
67.C 68.B 69.D 70.A
IV. Summary Writing(参考范文)
71. Not taking flu seriously make it hard for us to deal with the risk of a deadly flu. The absence of a pandemic flu leads to inadequate preparedness. What’s more, people’s satisfaction with current situation leaves vulnerable. We should learn about flu transmission, persuade our family to get flu shots and urge the government to support preparedness programs.
1. 观点: Not taking flu seriously makes it hard for us to deal with the risk of a deadly flu.
(lack of investment in time and energy failed to protect us from a deadly flu.)
2. 原因: 1. absence of a pandemic flu
2. people’s satisfaction (our collective complacency)
3. 措施: 三个点: learn about flu transmission; persuade our family to get flu shots; urge the government to support preparedness programs.
3分: 写到以上三个方面
4分: 原因两个写全或措施写到两个或两个以上
5分: 原因两个写全且措施写到两个或两个以上
V. Translation
72. See to it that the doors and windows of the classroom are closed after school./ See to it that you close the doors and windows of the classroom after school.
(See to it that 1分; close the doors and windows of the classroom after school 1分)
73. Standing on the top of the mountain, we are amazed at/by the magnificence of nature.
(are amazed at/by 1分; the magnificence of nature 0.5分, nature 前加了冠词扣0.5分; stand on the top of the mountain 词组0.5分; Standing…, we are 非谓语结构1分)
74. A new scientific truth triumphs doesn’t succeed because it has convinced its opponents but rather because a new generation that is familiar with the idea has grown up.
(A new scientific truth 0.5分; convinced its opponents 1分; doesn’t succeed because…but rather because 句型1分; a new generation that is familiar with the idea 1分; has grown up 0.5分, 整句时态混乱倒扣1分 )
75. Did it occur to you that your decision years ago to become a livestreamer to help farmers would make you become an Internet sensation and gain thousands of followers overnight?
(Did it occur to you that 1分; your decision years ago to do 1分; become a livestreamer 0.5分; help farmers 0.5分; make you become an Internet sensation/become a hit/popular 1分; gain thousands of followers overnight 1分)
前后时态不一致扣1分 did it occur to you…would
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