2026届江苏省苏州市高考英语自编模拟卷

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普通解析音频原文文字版答案
2026-05-17
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资源信息

学段 高中
学科 英语
教材版本 -
年级 高三
章节 -
类型 试卷
知识点 -
使用场景 高考复习-模拟预测
学年 2026-2027
地区(省份) 江苏省
地区(市) 苏州市
地区(区县) -
文件格式 ZIP
文件大小 22.02 MB
发布时间 2026-05-17
更新时间 2026-05-22
作者 木易工
品牌系列 -
审核时间 2026-05-17
下载链接 https://m.zxxk.com/soft/57905977.html
价格 1.50储值(1储值=1元)
来源 学科网

摘要:

**基本信息** 融合科技前沿(AI工具、药物研发)与文化传承(玛雅文明),通过真实情境与梯度设问,全面检测语言能力、思维品质及跨文化理解。 **题型特征** |题型|题量/分值|知识覆盖|命题特色| |----|-----------|----------|----------| |听力|20题/30分|日常交际、科技应用(AI文件处理)、情感健康(动物咖啡馆)|情境贴近生活,如第2题检测AI工具使用,第10题关注心理健康,培养信息提取与推理能力| |阅读理解|20题/50分|文化(玛雅历法)、社会(网络认知偏差)、科技(AI药物研发)|A篇结合图文考查数学思维,C篇分析“多数幻觉”提升批判性思维,D篇探讨AI对医药行业影响,体现学科融合| |完形填空|15题/15分|叙事类文本(父爱与成长)|通过残疾男孩种树故事,渗透情感教育,如52题考查上下文推理,培养逻辑思维| |写作|2题/40分|应用文(校园体育计划)、读后续写(兄弟情感)|应用文贴近校园生活,续写题注重情感表达与情节连贯,提升语言输出与思维创新|

内容正文:

1.How does the man feel while playing matches? A. Excited. B. Worried. C. Determined. 【答案】B 【解析】 【原文】M: My teammates are always so exciting during matches. I feel that way in practice. But I get nervous when competing. W: You know we’re proud of you, even if you lose, right? M: Thanks. I’m just worried about making errors. 2. What has the man used AI tools for? A. Translating files. B. Creating messages. C. Summarizing documents. 【答案】A 【解析】 【原文】M: I had no idea these AI tools could create messages that must save time. W: Of course, I use language models to write and to gather main ideas from documents. M: I’ve only used them to switch pages from Chinese into English. 3. How many cookies will each child get? A. Six. B. Eight. C. Ten. 【答案】B 【解析】 【原文】W: I need to divide these cookies equally among our three children. M: How many cookies do you have in total? W: I baked 30 cookies, but I want to keep six for the guests coming tomorrow. 4. Where did the speakers probably run before? A In a public park. B. On nearby streets. C. Inside a fitness center. 【答案】C 【解析】 【原文】W: Now that we have this running track in our neighborhood park, we won’t need to jog on indoor running machines anymore. M: Agreed. And it’s only two streets away from our building so we can go daily. 5. Why did the man make this list of songs? A. To be famous. B. To focus deeply. C. To become active. 【答案】B 【解析】 【原文】W: Wow, I love your playlist. Music like this somehow makes me feel relaxed. M: I play it when I need to block everything else out and get things done. I’ll make others for exercising soon, too. 第二节(共15小题;每小题1.5分,满分22.5分) 听下面5段录音。每段录音后有几个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项。听每段录音前,你将有时间阅读各个小题,每小题5秒钟;听完后,每小题都有5秒钟的作答时间。每段录音播放两遍。 听下面一段对话,回答以下小题。 6. What’s the probable relationship between the speakers? A. Classmates. B. Family members. C. Teacher and student. 7. What does the woman mainly use this method for? A. Sports events. B. School exams. C. Social situations. 【答案】6. A 7. B 【解析】 【原文】M: I’m actually worried about this biology test and don’t know what to do. W: Let me teach you a trick my mom taught me. Take a slow breath in and then blow out for 10 seconds. When you breathe out longer than usual, you signal your brain that you’re safe so it can slow down and relax. M: Wow, it’s like our emotions have a key built into our bodies. W: Exactly. Besides calming you, it helps you perform better. M: It’s already working. I just need to remember this during stressful social moments. W: I mostly use it before tests. If only I could remember to use this method while exercising or socializing. 听下面一段对话,回答以下小题。 8. What are the speakers mainly talking about? A. The management of daily tasks. B. The importance of scheduled rest. C. The adjustment of work schedules. 9. What does the man spend most time doing at work? A. Organizing tests. B. Attending meetings. C. Sending messages. 【答案】8. B 9. C 【解析】 【原文】W: I’ve decided that focused work requires focused rest, and I work too hard to have focused rest periods after work. M: Interesting. Do you think I should try this too? W: Let me test it first. For now, I spend at least an hour after work on quiet time. M: That sounds great. I rescheduled my late meetings and now organize the next day in the afternoon. W: Good idea, since you spend most days writing and replying to emails. Scheduled rest could help you, too. 听下面一段对话,回答以下小题。 10. Why did the man first create this place? A. To sell drinks. B. To teach about animal care. C. To improve people’s emotional health. 11. Where did the man first get this idea? A. From a friend. B. From an animal shelter. C. From a foreign pet café. 12. What tasks does the man mainly do now? A. Cooking. B. Caring for pets. C. Serving customers. 13. What will the man probably do next? A. Create a social media channel. B. Open branch stores. C. Organizing volunteer programs. 【答案】10. A 11. C 12. C 13. B 【解析】 【原文】M: Hi, thanks for coming and supporting my pet care cafe. W: Thank you for this idea. It’s so good to have a place for great coffee and time with lovely animals. M: Actually, I originally imagined a quiet place just serving drinks. We added animals later. W: That’s so interesting. Who led you to rescue all these animals? M: I saw a pet cafe on vacation in Seoul, South Korea. I’d never seen one in our city, so I brought the idea home. Soon after, a friend and I realized we could help many animals, too, so we partnered with the local shelter. W: Amazing and animals help people as well. M: Exactly. Spending just 20 minutes with a pet can lift your mood. We also have many volunteers now. They care for the animals and post videos of our pets while the staff prepare food and drinks. That way I can focus on moving from table to table and making sure everyone feels welcome. W: Wonderful, I hope you open more cafes around the city. M: We’re already looking for new locations. 听下面一段对话,回答以下小题。 14. Where are the speakers probably? A. At home. B. In a classroom. C. In a computer lab. 15. How does the man usually start his research? A. By asking others. B. By watching videos. C. By gathering articles. 16. What is the man most careful about now? A. Comparing reports. B. Explaining his opinions. C. Getting reliable perspectives. 【答案】14. A 15. A 16. C 【解析】 【原文】W: Hey, dad, do you know if this video is real? M: I’m not sure. You’d better ask your computer teacher tomorrow, but why are you watching this? W: I’m researching a project about social concerns around the world. M: Well then, you shouldn’t start with social media videos. W: I know. I usually begin with articles, but this interview looked interesting. M: That’s fine, but I like starting to look into a new topic by talking to people I trust. W: I thought getting enough information was most important. M: Quality and source matter more than quantity always check who posted it. Then compare it with other reports from reliable places. W: So I should gather many resources and see if they agree. M: Sure. Also, these days I pay most attention to whether the viewpoints come from dependable sources. W: Good idea. 听下面一段独白,回答以下小题。 17. What did most of the class probably focus on? A. Bad eating habits. B. Poor sleeping routines. C. Relationship problems. 18. Who mainly inspired the speaker to try this plan? A. Her friends. B. Her teachers. C. Her parents. 19. What probably surprised the speaker most? A. How difficult the plan was. B. How much time she saved. C. How many people supported her. 20. What will the speaker probably do first? A. Tell a story. B. Collect data. C. Show a report. 【答案】17. A 18. A 19. B 20. C 【解析】 【原文】W: First off, congratulations to us all on the progress we’ve made since setting our new year’s resolutions. Most of you choose to redesign habits around diet, but my focus was on my use of technology. I realized my phone was controlling my life. It hurt my sleep, my relationships and my ability to work or relax. Phones are not bad. It’s the way we use them that can be bad. After talking about this with my friends, they encouraged me to try a new and exciting idea. I turned off all alarms and bells and limited myself to one hour on my phone each day. I knew it would be hard but my teachers and parents supported me so much. The biggest shock was all the hours I suddenly got back. At first I didn’t know what to do with myself. Then it clicked. I read books and took long walks. Overall, I felt more satisfied than ever before. Before I share more stories, I want to show you one more thing. Here is the research data on how lower phone use can reduce stress. Let’s take a look. 学科网(北京)股份有限公司 $南通市2026届高三第一次调研测试英语科听力部分,该部分分为第一第二两节。注意,回答听力部分时,请先将答案标在试卷上。听力部分结束前,你将有两分钟的时间将你的答案转涂到答题卡上。现在是听力试音时间。Hello, international friends club, can I help you? Oh, hello. I read about your club in the paper today, and I thought i'd phone to find out a bit more. Yes, certainly. Well, we're a sort of social club for people from different countries. It's quite a new club. We have about fifty members at the moment, but we're growing . all the time. That sounds interesting. I'm british actually. And I came to washington about three months ago. I'm looking for ways to meet people. Air, what kinds of events do you organize? Well, we have social get togethers and sports events, and we also have language evenings. Could you tell me something about the language evenings? Yes, every day, except thursday, we have a language evening. People can come and practice their languages, you know, over a drink or something. We have different languages on different evenings. Monday spanish, tuesday italian, wednesday german and friday french. On thursday, we usually have a meal in a restaurant for anyone who wants to come. Well, that sounds great. I really need to practice my french. okay? Well, if you can just give me your name and address, i'll send you the form and some more information. If you join now, you can have the first . month free试音到此结束。听力考试正式开始。请看听力部分第一节,第一节听下面五段录音,每段录音后有一个小题,从题中所给的ABC3个选项中选出最佳选项。听完每段录音后,你都有10秒钟的时间来回答有关小题和阅读下一小题。每段录音播放两遍。现在你有5秒钟的时间阅读第一小题的有关内容。听下面的录音,回答第一小题。My teammates are always so exciting during matches. I feel that way in practice, but I get nervous when competing. You know, we're proud of you. even if you lose, right? thanks. I'm just worried about making errors. My teammates are always so exciting during matches. I feel that way in practice, but I get nervous when competing. You know, we're proud of you even if you lose. right? thanks. I'm just worried about making errors. 听下面的录音,回答第二小题。I had no idea these AI tools could create messages that must save time. Of course. I use language models to write and together, main ideas from documents. I've only used them to switch pages from chinese into english. I had no idea these AI tools could create messages that must save time. Of course. I use language models to write and together, main ideas from documents. I've only used them to switch pages from chinese into english. 听下面的录音,回答第三小题。i need to divide these cookies equally among our three children. How many cookies do you have in total? I bake thirty cookies, but I want to keep six for the guests coming tomorrow. I need to divide these cookies equally among our three children. How many cookies do you have in total? I baked thirty cookies, but I want to keep six for the guests coming tomorrow. 听下面的录音,回答第四小题。Now that we have this running track in our hood park, we won't need to drag on indoor running machines anymore, agreed. And it's only two streets away from our building so we can go daily. Now that we have this running track in our neighbourhood park, we won't need to draw on indoor running machines anymore. agreed. And it's only two streets away from our building so we can go daily. 听下面的录音,回答第五小题。Wow, I love your playlist. Music like this somehow makes me feel very relaxed. I play IT when I need to block everything else out and get things done. I'll make others for exercising soon, too. Wow, I love your playlist. Music like this somehow makes me feel relaxed. I play IT. When I need to block everything else out and get things done. I'll make others for exercising soon, too. 第一节到此结束,第二节听下面5段录音。每段录音后有几个小题,从题中所给的ABC3个选项中选出最佳选项。听每段录音前,你将有时间阅读各个小题,每小题5秒钟,听完后,每小题都有5秒钟的作答时间,每段录音播放两遍。听下面的录音,回答第六和第七小题。现在你有10秒钟的时间阅读这两个小题。I'm actually worried about this biology test and don't know what to do. Let me teach you a trick. My mom taught me, take a slow breath in and then blow out for ten seconds. When you breathe out longer than usual, you signal your brain that you are safe, so IT can slow down and relax. Wow, it's like our emotions have a key built into our bodies . exactly besides calming you. IT helps you perform Better. It's already working. I just need to remember this during stressful social moments. I mostly use IT before tests. If only I could remember to use this method while exercising or socializing. I'm actually worried about this biology test and don't know what to do. Let me teach you a trick. My mom taught me, take a slow breath in and then blow out for ten seconds. When you breathe out longer than usual, you signal your brain that you are safe, so IT can slow down and relax. Wow, it's like our emotions have a key built into our bodies . exactly besides calming you. IT helps you perform Better. It's already working. I just need to remember this during stressful social moments. I mostly use IT before tests. If only I could remember to use this method while exercising or socializing. 听下面的录音,回答第八和第九小题。现在你有10秒钟的时间阅读这两个小题。I've decided that focused work requires focused rest, and I work too hard to have focused rest periods after work. interesting. Do you think I should try this too? Let me test IT first. For now, I spend at least an hour after work on quiet time. That sounds great. I really scheduled my late meetings and now organize the next day in the afternoon. Good idea. Since you spend most days writing and replying to emails, scheduled rest could help you too. I've decided that focused work requires focused rest, and I work too hard to have focused rest periods after work. interesting. Do you think I should try this too? Let me tested first. For now, I spend at least an hour after work on quiet time. That sounds great. I really scheduled my late meetings and now organized the next day in the afternoon. Good idea. Since you spend most days writing and replying to emails, scheduled rest could help you too. 听下面的录音,回答第十至第十三小题。现在你有20秒钟的时间阅读这四个小题。Hi, thanks for coming in supporting my pet care cafe. Thank you for this idea. It's so good to have a place for great coffee and time with lovely animals. Actually. I originally imagined a quiet place just serving drinks. We added animals later. That's so interesting. Who LED you to rescue all these animals? I saw a pet cafe on vacation in soil, south korea. I've never seen one in our city. So I brought the idea home. Soon after a friend and I realized we could help many animals too. So we partnered with the local shelter. amazing. And animals help people as well. Exactly. spending just twenty minutes with a pet can lift your mood. We also have many volunteers now. They care for the animals and post videos of our pets while the staff prepare food and drinks. That way, I can focus on moving from table to table and making sure everyone . feels welcome. wonderful. I hope you open more cafes around the city. We're already looking for new locations. Hi, thanks for coming in supporting my pet care cafe. Thank you for this idea. It's so good to have a place for great coffee and time with lovely animals. Actually. I originally imagined a quiet place just serving drinks. We added animals later. That's so interesting. Who LED you to rescue all these animals? I saw a pet cafe on vacation in soil, south korea. I've never seen one in our city, so I brought the idea home. Soon after, a friend and I realized we could help many animals too. So we partnered with the local shelter. amazing. And animals help people as well. exactly. Spending just twenty minutes with a pet can lift your mood. We also have many volunteers now. They care for the animals and post videos of our pets while the staff prepare food and drinks. That way, I can focus on moving from table to table and making sure everyone . feels welcome. wonderful. I hope you open more cafes around the city. We're already looking for new locations. 听下面的录音,回答第十四至第十六小题。现在你有15秒钟的时间阅读这三个小题。Hey, dad, do you know if this video is real? I'm not sure you'd Better ask your computer teacher tomorrow. But why are you watching this? I'm researching a project about social concerns around the world. Well then you shouldn't start with social media videos. I know I usually begin with articles, but this interview looked interesting. That's fine, but I like starting to look into a new topic by talking to people I trust. I thought getting enough information was most important. Quality and source matter more than quantity. Always check who posted IT, then compare IT with other reports from reliable places. so I should gather many resources and see if they agree. sure. Also, these days, I pay most attention to whether the viewpoints come from dependable sources. Good idea. Hey, dad, do you know if this video is real? I'm not sure you'd Better ask your computer teacher tomorrow, but why are you watching this? I'm researching a project about social concerns around the world. Well, then you start with social media videos. I know I usually begin with articles, but this interview looked interesting. That's fine, but i'd like starting to look into a new topic by talking to people I trust. I thought getting enough information was most important. Quality and source matter more than quantity. Always check who posted IT, then compare IT with other reports from reliable places. So I should gather many resources and see if they agree. sure. Also, these days, I pay most attention to whether the viewpoints come from dependent sources. Good idea. 听下面的录音,回答第十七至第二十小题。现在你有20秒钟的时间阅读这四个小题。First off, congratulations to us all on the progress we've made since setting our new year's resolutions. Most of you choose to redesign habits around diet, but my focus was on my use of technology. I realized my phone was controlling my life. IT hurt my sleep, my relationships and my ability to work or relax. Phones are not bad. It's the way we use them that can be bad. After talking about this with my friends, they encouraged me to try a new and exciting idea. I turned off all alarms and bells and limited myself to one hour on my phone each day. I knew IT would be hard, but my teachers and parents supported me so much. The biggest shock was all the hours I suddenly got back. At first, I didn't know what to do with myself. Then I clicked. I read books and took long walks. Overall, I felt more satisfied than ever before. Before I share more stories, I want to show you one more thing here is the research data on how lower phone use can reduce stress. Let's take a look. First off, congratulations to us all on the progress we've made since setting our new year's resolutions. Most of you choose to redesign habits around diet, but my focus was on my use of technology. I realized my phone was controlling my life, IT hurt my sleep, my relationships and my ability to work or relax. Phones are not bad. It's the way we use them that can be bad. After talking about this with my friends, they encouraged me to try a new and exciting idea. I turned off all alarms and bells and limited myself to one hour on my phone each day. I knew IT would be hard, but my teachers and parents supported me so much. The biggest shock was all the hours I suddenly got back. At first, I didn't know what to do with myself. Then I clicked. I read books and took long walks. Overall, I felt more satisfied than ever before. Before I share more stories, I want to show you one more thing here is the research data on how lower phone use can reduce stress. Let's take . a look. 第二节到此结束,现在你有两分钟的时间将试卷上的答案转涂到答题卡上。听力部分到此结束。 2026届江苏省苏州市高考英语自编模拟卷参考答案 参考答案: 1—5 BABCB 6—10 ABBCA 11—15 CCBAA 16—20 CAABC 21—23 CBD 24—27 CABB 28—31 CABD 32—35 DBAC 36—40 BGAEF 41—45 BDACA 46—50 BDCBA 51—55 CADBD 56.officially 57.in 58.and 59.based 60.certainty 61.have totaled 62.pushing 63.are shipped 64.whose 65.to conduct 66.应用文 Health First, Sports for All To promote students’ physical and mental health, our school has launched a new sports plan with the theme of “Health First, Sports for All.” Every student is encouraged to master at least one sport. Class leagues and school leagues have been organized, and rooftops have been turned into “sky playgrounds” where we jump rope, play ball, and enjoy climbing activities during breaks. The whole campus is full of energy. The plan has brought great changes to my classmates. Many have become more energetic and focused in class. Some who used to avoid exercise now look forward to every break on the playground. Most importantly, we are developing a lifelong habit of staying active — a true gift for our health. 67.读后续写 I pulled back the curtain and couldn’t believe what I saw. Leo was standing in the pouring rain, holding a pile of wooden planks. He was completely soaked, but he didn't seem to notice. He was building something-not the old tree house, but a small platform with a roof- that was stronger and safer than before. He hammered each nail carefully and measured each plank twice, wiping rain from his eyes from time to time so he could see. He had never built anything delicate like this in his life. Suddenly, the hammering from the garage over the past weeks made sense-he had been teaching himself how to build, just for me. Filled with guilt and gratitude, I climbed up to see what he had made. The tree house was designed with great attention and managed to block wind and rain completely. In the center sat a new wooden box, on which was a note in his handwriting, “I’m sorry. I can’t bring back the old one, but I can help you build a better one.” At that moment, memories of how I had locked him out of my room, thrown away all his sincere notes, and even whispered the hurtful words “I hate you” flooded my mind. Tears filling my eyes. I walked inside and hugged Leo tightly. Wearing a warm smile, he held out a hammer to me. “Shall we finish it together?” I nodded firmly, realizing it was not the tree house that matters, but the relationships where brothers cherished each other deeply. 21.C 22.B 23.D 【知识点】历史知识、说明文 【导语】文章主要介绍了玛雅人在数学和历法方面的成就,包括其二十进制计数系统、数字符号的表示方式以及三种不同用途的日历。 21.细节理解题。根据玛雅计数规则,数字按从下到上的“1s、20s、400s”三列书写。最下方1s列:有2条线(每条代表5)和4个点(每个代表1),计算:2×5+4×1=14;中间20s列:是贝壳符号(代表0),即0×20=0;最上方400s列:有1个点(代表1),即1×400=400。将三列数值相加:400+0+14=414。 22.细节理解题。根据文章倒数第二段“When talking about events long ago, they used a calendar called the ‘long count.’(在谈论很久以前的事情时,他们使用了一种叫做“长计数”的历法。)”可知,长计历是用于谈论很久以前发生的事件,即记录古代历史事件。 23.推理判断题。文章通篇讲述玛雅人的二十进制数学系统、数字符号写法以及三种日历(科学历法),这都属于古代文明的科学成就范畴。因此该文本最适合用于制作关于“玛雅科学成就”的海报。 24.C 25.A 26.B 27.B 【知识点】记叙文、个人经历、生活故事 【导语】文章主要讲述了退休城市规划师米娅·伍兹为应对退休后可能失去职业身份认同的焦虑,通过每天烤一个派并送给他人这一日常行动,重新认识自我价值、建立生活秩序并延续创造力的故事。 24.细节理解题。根据第一段““I was worried about losing my identity as a professional. What else can I be?” she thought. (“我担心自己作为专业人士的身份会丧失。那我还能做些什么呢?”她这样想。)”可知,她退休时的担忧是失去职业身份,害怕除了职业身份之外自己不知还能成为什么样的人。选项C“Having no identity beyond career (除了职业之外没有其他身份认同)”与此直接对应。 25.细节理解题。根据第三段“She baked her first pie and gave it to her 88-year-old aunt, Carol. As a teenager, Mia had moved in with her aunt’s family when her mother became ill. “They gave me stability... It was the perfect first pie,” she says. She went on giving pies to former colleagues, grocery clerks, even a homeless man. As word spread, she got known as “the pie lady”. (她做了第一个馅饼,并送给了她 88 岁的姑妈卡罗尔。在十几岁的时候,米娅曾因母亲生病而搬到了姑妈家。那时的姑妈家给了她一种稳定的环境……把第一个馅饼送给姑妈是最合适的选择。她继续把馅饼送给以前的同事、杂货店店员,甚至一个无家可归的人。随着消息的传播,她被称为“馅饼女士”。)”可知,米娅年少时因母亲生病而搬去与姨妈一家同住,姨妈家为她提供了稳定的家庭环境。她把第一个派送给姨妈,是因为姨妈曾给予她一个家、一份依靠,这符合选项A“She had given Mia a home (她曾给米娅一个家)”的表述。 26.推理判断题。根据第四段““I’m a planner by nature, training and profession. What I really liked about it was that planning takes time, chaos, many different components, puts them all together and makes them into something manageable.” She sees the same in baking pies: “You take a bunch of ingredients and create something out of them.”( “我天生就是个规划师,这是我的训练和职业。我真正喜欢的是规划工作,规划需要时间,它要把混乱和众多不同的要素整合起来,使之变得井然有序。”她在烘焙馅饼时也发现了同样的道理:“你将各种食材混合在一起,就能创造出新的成果。”)”可知,通过米娅的类比,两者的共同之处在于都是将纷繁杂乱的不同元素组合成有序、有意义的整体,即选项B“Both make sense of mixed elements (两者都让混合的元素变得有条理) ”。 27.推理判断题。根据倒数第二段““What really came out of it was the understanding that I was someone who could do new things,” she reflects. “And my professional identity wasn’t critical to who I am.”(最重要的是,这件事让我明白自己能够尝试新事物,”她回忆道,“而且我的职业身份并不决定我的本质。”)”可知,她通过尝试新事物认识到自己有能力应对改变,并重新定义了自我价值,不局限于职业身份。这体现了选项B“New challenges redefine who we are (新挑战重新定义了我们是谁)”的内涵。 28.C 29.A 30.B 31.D 【知识点】说明文、社会问题与社会现象 【导语】本文是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了网络世界与现实世界之间的差异,指出人们往往高估网络上的有害行为,并分析了造成这种认知偏差的原因及其影响,最后提出了缩小这一差距的建议。 28.词句猜测题。根据第一段中“You leave an hour of online surfing with the sense that the world is falling apart. In the real world, however, a neighbor you disagree with politically helps you start your car. The dissonance is no accident. (你上网一小时后,感觉世界要崩溃了。然而,在现实世界中,一个与你政治观点不同的邻居却帮你发动了汽车。这种dissonance并非偶然)”可知,前一句描述了网络世界带来的负面感受,后一句则通过现实中的例子展示了与网络世界截然不同的积极体验,两者形成对比。由此可推测,划线词dissonance指的是这种“对比”,与C项“Contrast”意思相近。故选C项。 29.词句猜测题。根据第二段中“Most offensive posts come from a small group of highly active users, whose outsized posts shape public beliefs, creating the “majority illusion” that makes this minority seem like the norm, drowning out the silent majority.(大多数冒犯性帖子来自一小群高度活跃的用户,他们过度的帖子塑造了公众的信念,制造了一种“多数错觉”,使这一少数群体看起来像是常态,淹没了沉默的大多数)”可知,少数高度活跃的用户通过发布大量帖子,使公众误以为他们的行为是大多数人的行为,从而形成了一种“错误的印象”。由此可推测,“majority illusion”指的是“错误的印象”。故选A项。 30.主旨大意题。根据第三段“Our brains are wired to notice threats and moral breaks — negative content sticks in our minds. Additionally, social media algorithms (算法) prioritize content that causes strong reactions to keep users engaged, with falsehoods spreading faster than truth. Bot networks (僵尸网络) add to the noise: it has been reported that bad bots make up roughly a third of global web traffic, misleading what trends and who appears popular.(我们的大脑天生就会注意到威胁和道德上的缺陷——负面内容会留在我们的记忆中。此外,社交媒体算法会优先考虑能引起强烈反应的内容,以保持用户的参与度,而虚假信息的传播速度比真实信息更快。僵尸网络增加了噪音:据报道,恶意机器人约占全球网络流量的三分之一,误导了哪些趋势和谁看起来受欢迎)”可知,本段主要分析了为什么少数高度活跃的用户会感觉像多数,即解释了“多数错觉”产生的原因。故选B项。 31.推理判断题。根据最后一段中“The key lies in recognizing online engagement doesn’t equal approval: skip “most engaging” feeds and ground our views in actual world connections. Imagine a public square where the loudest few don’t seize the microphone — disagreement remains, but the air resounds with daily life: neighbors helping start cars, strangers holding doors. Online, we can make that reality visible again.(关键在于认识到网络参与并不等于认可:跳过“最吸引人”的动态,将我们的观点建立在现实世界的联系上。想象一个广场,在那里,声音最大的几个人不会抢走麦克风——分歧依然存在,但空气中回荡着日常生活:邻居帮忙发动汽车,陌生人为你开门。在网上,我们可以让这种现实再次可见)”可知,作者建议人们应该重视现实生活中的互动,而不是仅仅关注网络上的动态。故选D项。 32.D 33.B 34.A 35.C 【知识点】人工智能、说明文、医疗 【导语】本文是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了生成式AI如何通过提高药物发现效率、降低成本并加速临床试验,从而改变传统药物开发高风险、长周期的现状,同时指出仍需调整监管与专利政策以确保各方受益。 32.细节理解题。根据第一段中“Drug development has long been known as a high-risk and high-cost process.(药物开发一直被认为是一个高风险、高成本的过程。)”以及“The journey from initial discovery to a marketable drug often spans 10 to 15 years, and the cost for a single drug is estimated at roughly $2.8 billion.(从最初的发现到上市药物的过程通常需要10到15年,而一种药物的成本估计约为28亿美元。)”可知,传统药物研发本身具备周期长、成本高、风险高的特点,因此,传统制药公司的主要挑战是研发周期长和经济负担重。故选D。 33.细节理解题。根据第二段中“In addition, they can improve clinical trials by analysing health records to identify patients most likely to benefit from new treatments.(此外,它们可以通过分析健康记录来识别最可能从新治疗中获益的患者,从而改进临床试验)”可知,AI通过帮助选择合适患者使临床试验受益。故选B。 34.主旨大意题。第四段首句“The rise of AI is transforming how the drug industry works.(AI的崛起正在改变制药行业的运作方式)”点明主旨:人工智能改变制药行业的运作方式;随后通过AI原生生物技术公司的涌现、制药公司与科技巨头的合作、计算机模拟设计药物平台以及谷歌AlphaFold的例子,详细阐述了AI给制药行业带来的改变。因此第四段主要讲AI驱动的制药行业变革。故选A。 35.推理判断题。根据最后一段中“Governments may need to speed up regulatory reviews as the number of drug candidates increases. Patient data sharing must also be encouraged in privacy-protecting ways. Furthermore, patent rules may require adjustment if AI reduces the cost and risk of innovation. AI brings good news for medicine, but ensuring it benefits both drugmakers and patients requires the industry and regulators to adjust to this new reality.(随着候选药物数量的增加,政府可能需要加快监管审查的速度。还必须以保护隐私的方式鼓励患者数据共享。此外,如果人工智能降低了创新的成本和风险,专利规则可能需要调整。人工智能给医药带来了好消息,但要确保它对制药商和患者都有利,就需要行业和监管机构适应这一新的现实。)”可知,AI应用仍存在挑战,需要监管层调整政策:加快审批流程、调整专利规则、在保护隐私前提下共享患者数据,最终才能让AI同时惠及药企和患者,即政策应进行调整以便从AI中获益。故选C。 36.B 37.G 38.A 39.E 40.F 【知识点】生活故事、记叙文 【导语】本文主要讲述作者长期刻意疏远身边邻居,一场暴风雨停电的经历,让其打破隔阂,领悟到成熟并非封闭自我。 36.上文“For years, I kept a careful distance from the people around me. Living in a busy city apartment, I learned to move through shared spaces quietly. (多年来,我与周围的人保持着谨慎的距离。住在繁华的城市公寓里,我学会安静穿行于公共区域)”讲述作者刻意与人保持距离,B选项“I avoided eye contact and unnecessary conversation. (我避免眼神交流和多余交谈)”承接上文,具体说明作者疏远他人的表现,语境连贯。 37.上文“Independence mattered to me, and needing no one felt like part of being a grown-up.(独立对我来说很重要,不需要任何人感觉像是成年人的一部分)”说明作者的想法,下文“Without warning, the power went out. (毫无征兆地,停电了)”引出突发意外事件,G选项“That belief was challenged one night when a violent storm swept through the city. (一晚暴风雨席卷城市,我的固有想法受到了挑战)”起到承上启下的作用,引出停电变故。 38.上文“She held a candle and mentioned that a few residents were gathering in the hallway and invited me to join them. I hesitated. Staying alone felt safe, but something felt unsettled.(她拿着蜡烛,提到有几个居民聚集在走廊里,并邀请我加入他们。我犹豫了一下。独自待着感觉很安全,但有些事情让人感到不安)”说明邻居手持蜡烛邀请作者去走廊相聚,作者内心犹豫纠结,A选项“After a moment, I stepped outside. (片刻之后,我走了出去)”承接情节发展,体现作者最终接受邀请。 39.上文“People sat on the floor, sharing blankets, tea, and quiet conversation.(人们坐在地板上,共享毯子、茶和安静的谈话)”以及“The man I had once assumed was unfriendly turned out to be a retired doctor with a dry sense of humour.(我曾经认为不友好的那个人原来是一个幽默感很强的退休医生)”描写邻里相聚、相处融洽,作者看到了邻居不一样的一面,E选项“As the night progressed, my long-held belief began to loosen. (夜色渐深,我长久以来的固有观念开始动摇)”衔接场景,引出作者内心的思想转变。 40.上文“I didn’t suddenly become outgoing, nor did I abandon my need for space.(我并没有突然变得外向,也没有放弃对空间的需求)”说明作者没有变得外向,也没有放弃独处需求,F选项“But I understood something new: maturity isn’t about shutting others out. (但我有了新的领悟:成熟并非隔绝他人)”转折升华主旨,契合全文感悟。 41.B 42.D 43.A 44.C 45.A 46.B 47.D 48.C 49.B 50.A 51.C 52.A 53.D 54.B 55.D 【知识点】记叙文、生活故事、励志故事 【导语】本文是一篇记叙文。主要讲述的是身患残疾的小男孩在父亲默默关爱下重拾自信,最终成长成才的感人故事。. 41.考查形容词词义辨析。句意:小儿麻痹症使他的腿瘸了,牙齿参差不齐且向外突出。A. unnoticed被忽视的;B. uneven不平整的,参差不齐的;C. unidentified无法辨认的;D. uninformed不知情的。根据前文“Poliomyelitis made his leg lame”以及后文“protrudent”可知,疾病导致他外貌有缺陷,牙齿长得不整齐。故选B项。 42.考查动词词义辨析。句意:他很少和同学们玩儿;并且当老师叫他回答问题时,他总是低下头一言不发。A. nodded点头;B. buried埋藏;C. covered覆盖;D. lowered低下。根据前文“He seldom played with his classmates”以及男孩自卑内向的性格可知,他被提问时会低下头。故选D项。 43.考查名词词义辨析。句意:他(指父亲)让孩子们每人种一棵树,并说谁种得最好就给谁买礼物。A. tree树;B. bush灌木;C. seed种子;D. vegetable蔬菜。根据前文“the boy’s father asked for some young trees from the neighbor”可知,父亲要了树苗,让孩子们种树。故选A项。 44.考查副词词义辨析。句意:但是看到他的兄弟们不知疲倦地给树浇水,他突发奇想希望自己的树快点死掉。A. carelessly粗心地;B. randomly随意地;C. tirelessly不知疲倦地;D. occasionally偶尔。根据后文“anyhow, he hit upon an idea: he hoped the tree he planted would die soon”可知,男孩看到兄弟们认真、不辞辛劳地照料树,才产生了放弃自己那棵树的想法。故选C项。 45.考查动词短语辨析。句意:所以只浇过一两次水后,他就再也没有照料过它。A. attended to照料,打理;B. led to导致;C. responded to回应;D. appealed to吸引。根据前文“he hoped the tree he planted would die soon”可知,他不想照料自己种的树。故选A项。 46.考查形容词词义辨析。句意:几周后,小男孩再次去看他的树时,惊讶地发现,和哥哥们的树相比,它不仅没有枯萎,反而显得更加翠绿、生机勃勃了。A. disappointed失望的;B. surprised惊讶的;C. annoyed恼怒的;D. overjoyed狂喜的。根据前文“he hoped the tree he planted would die soon. So watering it once or twice, he never _______ it.”可知,他本以为树会死掉,结果却长势良好,因此感到十分惊讶。故选B项。 47.考查形容词词义辨析。句意:几周后,小男孩再次去看他的树时,惊讶地发现,和哥哥们的树相比,它不仅没有枯萎,反而显得更加翠绿、生机勃勃了。A. fragile脆弱的;B. fragrant芳香的;C. delicate精致的;D. vigorous生机勃勃的。根据前文“not only didn’t wilt, but appeared greener”可知,树木长得十分旺盛。故选D项。 48.考查名词词义辨析。句意:父亲说从他种的树来看,他长大后会成为一名出色的植物学家。A. writer作家;B. lawyer律师;C. botanist植物学家;D. historian历史学家。根据后文“The little boy didn’t turn botanist”可知,父亲曾预言他会成为植物学家。故选C项。 49.考查名词词义辨析。句意:一天,小男孩躺在床上,凝视着窗外明亮的月光。A. sunlight阳光;B. moonlight月光;C. flame火焰;D. rainbow彩虹。根据前文“lay on the bed”和后文“plants generally grow faster at night”可知,当时是夜晚,窗外是月光。故选B项。 50.考查动词词义辨析。句意:他突然想起生物老师曾经说过——植物通常在夜间生长得更快。A. recollected想起,回忆起;B. reassured使安心;C. repeated重复;D. revised修改。根据前文“One day, the little boy lay on the bed and stared up at the bright ________outside the window. He just couldn’t fall asleep.”可知,他在失眠时忽然回忆起老师讲过的知识。故选A项。 51.考查动词词义辨析。句意:当他踮着脚尖悄悄溜到院子里时,发现父亲正用长柄勺在树下泼洒东西。A. hurried匆忙;B. rushed冲;C. slipped悄悄溜走,潜行;D. marched行进。根据后文“on tiptoe”可知,他不想被发现,轻手轻脚地溜进院子。故选C项。 52.考查动词词义辨析。句意:他突然明白,父亲一直在偷偷给小树施肥。A. fertilizing施肥;B. preserving保存;C. cutting切割;D. beating击打。根据前文“he found his father was splashing something under his tree with a ladle”以及小树无人照料却长势旺盛的事实,可知父亲在悄悄施肥。故选A项。 53.考查名词词义辨析。句意:几十年过去了,小男孩没有成为植物学家,却成了一名律师。A. Days天;B. Weeks周;C. Months月;D. Decades数十年。根据前文小男孩从自卑的孩童成长为职业人士,以及后文“became a lawyer”可知,时间过去了很多年。故选D项。 54.考查名词词义辨析。句意:爱是生命最好的滋养品。A. amusement娱乐;B. nourishment营养品,滋养物;C. encouragement鼓励;D. development发展。根据前文“Even if it is just one ladleful of clear water, it can make the tree flourish”可知,父亲的关爱像养分一样滋养了小树与男孩的成长。故选B项。 55.考查形容词词义辨析。句意:即使只是一勺清水,也能让树木枝繁叶茂,甚至长成参天大树。A. rewarding有益的;B. demanding要求高的;C. charming迷人的;D. towering高耸的,参天的。根据前文“make the tree flourish”以及小树在关爱下不断成长的寓意,可知最终会长成高大的树。故选D项。 56.officially 57.in 58.and 59.based 60.certainty 61.have totaled 62.pushing 63.are shipped 64.whose 65.to conduct 【知识点】交通与运输 、政治政策、新闻报道 【导语】这篇文章主要报道了秘鲁钱凯港2024 年11月正式启用,开通与上海的直航走廊,显著提升了两地贸易量,当地还推出项目助力小企业参与外贸发展。 56.考查副词。句意:然而,在 2024 年 11 月钱凯港口正式启用后,这一切都发生了变化。由副词修饰动词可知,此处为副词officially修饰动词 initiated(启动),表示“正式启动”。 57.考查固定短语。句意:自那时起,载货船只的数量达到了前所未有的水平。分析句子可知,此处为固定搭配 in record numbers,意为“以创纪录的数量”。 58.考查连词。句意:随着与上海开通了直达航线,船只现在每周运行两次,运载着诸如鱼粉、水果和金属等货物向东航行,并从亚洲各地的大型生产线带回各种工业产品。根据句意可知,此处为连词and连接两个并列的现在分词短语(carrying... 和 bringing...),作伴随状语,描述船只往返运输的双向动作。 59.考查非谓语动词。句意:随着与上海开通了直达航线,船只现在每周运行两次,运载着诸如鱼粉、水果和金属等货物向东航行,并从亚洲各地的大型生产线带回各种工业产品。分析句子可知,此处为非谓语动词作后置定语修饰industrial goods,industrial goods和base为被动关系,所以为过去分词形式。 60.考查名词。句意:对于出口商和进口商来说,这种定期服务确保了速度和可靠性。分析句子可知,此处与speed 并列作宾语,需用名词形式;certainty 意为“确定性”,对应前文 “定期航班服务”带来的稳定预期。 61.考查动词时态和主谓一致。句意:迄今为止,沿钱凯-上海航线的货物运输总量已达 78000 吨,价值 17.2 亿元,使这两个港口之间的贸易增长了近 35%。时间状语So far(迄今为止)提示使用现在完成时;主语shipments 为复数,所以填have totaled。 62.考查非谓语动词。句意:迄今为止,沿钱凯-上海航线的货物运输总量已达 78000 吨,价值 17.2 亿元,使这两个港口之间的贸易增长了近 35%。分析句子可知,此处为非谓语动词作伴随状语,push和逻辑主语前面整句话为主动关系,所以为现在分词形式,表示前文“货运量达 7.8 万吨”这一事实自然而然带来的结果。 63.考查动词时态和语态。句意:像鳄梨、芒果和蓝莓这样的产品每天都有更大的运输量直接运往中国。主语 Products 与 ship(运输)为被动关系,且时间状语every day 提示使用一般现在时的被动语态。 64.考查定语从句。句意:为了帮助小企业参与这一繁荣景象,钱凯商业协会推出了“进口很简单”计划,其目的是指导企业通过海关、规范化流程以及接入全球供应链。分析句子可知,设空处引导非限制性定语从句,先行词为 program,在从句中作aim的定语,故用 关系代词whose引导。 65.考查动词不定式。句意:秘鲁的一位专家表示:“这些举措非常重要,因为它们为当地用户提供了开展外贸业务所需的工具和建议,从而能够更高效地进行相关活动。”分析句子可知,此处为固定搭配 require to do sth.,意为“需要做某事”,此处用不定式作目的状语。 学科网(北京)股份有限公司 $ 2026届江苏省苏州市高考英语自编模拟卷 第一部分 (共两节,满分30分) 第一节 (共5小题: 每小题1.5分, 满分7.5分) 听下面5段录音。每段录音后有一个小题,从题中所给的A,B,C三个选项中选出最佳选项。听完每段录音后,你都有10秒钟的时间来回答有关小题和阅读下一小题。每段录音播放两遍。 1. How does the man feel while playing matches? A. Excited. B. Worried. C. Determined. 2. What has the man used AI tools for? A. Translating files. B. Creating messages. C. Summarizing documents. 3. How many cookies will each child get? A. Six. B. Eight. C. Ten. 4. Where did the speakers probably run before? A In a public park. B. On nearby streets. C. Inside a fitness center. 5. Why did the man make this list of songs? A. To be famous. B. To focus deeply. C. To become active. 第二节(共15小题;每小题1.5分,满分22.5分) 听下面5段录音。每段录音后有几个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项。听每段录音前,你将有时间阅读各个小题,每小题5秒钟;听完后,每小题都有5秒钟的作答时间。每段录音播放两遍。 6. What’s the probable relationship between the speakers? A. Classmates. B. Family members. C. Teacher and student. 7. What does the woman mainly use this method for? A. Sports events. B. School exams. C. Social situations. 听下面一段对话,回答以下小题。 8. What are the speakers mainly talking about? A. The management of daily tasks. B. The importance of scheduled rest. C. The adjustment of work schedules. 9. What does the man spend most time doing at work? A. Organizing tests. B. Attending meetings. C. Sending messages. 听下面一段对话,回答以下小题。 10. Why did the man first create this place? A. To sell drinks. B. To teach about animal care. C. To improve people’s emotional health. 11. Where did the man first get this idea? A. From a friend. B. From an animal shelter. C. From a foreign pet café. 12. What tasks does the man mainly do now? A. Cooking. B. Caring for pets. C. Serving customers. 13. What will the man probably do next? A. Create a social media channel. B. Open branch stores. C. Organize volunteer programs. 听下面一段对话,回答以下小题。 14. Where are the speakers probably? A. At home. B. In a classroom. C. In a computer lab. 15. How does the man usually start his research? A. By asking others. B. By watching videos. C. By gathering articles. 16. What is the man most careful about now? A. Comparing reports. B. Explaining his opinions. C. Getting reliable perspectives. 听下面一段独白,回答以下小题。 17. What did most of the class probably focus on? A. Bad eating habits. B. Poor sleeping routines. C. Relationship problems. 18. Who mainly inspired the speaker to try this plan? A. Her friends. B. Her teachers. C. Her parents. 19. What probably surprised the speaker most? A. How difficult the plan was. B. How much time she saved. C. How many people supported her. 20. What will the speaker probably do first? A. Tell a story. B. Collect data. C. Show a report. 第二部分 阅读理解(共两节,满分50分) 第一节(共15小题;每小题2.5分,满分37.5分) A The Maya (玛雅人) were good at math. They counted in groups of 20, not 10. They wrote numbers in columns going up. The bottom row was the “1s” column, the next row up was 20s, then 400s, and so on. For digits, they used a dot for 1, a line for 5, and a shell shape to show zero. Numbers 1 to 19 were written with a combination of lines and dots. The number 1209 (three 400s + no 20s + nine 1s) would look like this: A Maya village might keep a record of the pumpkins they harvested like this: The Maya also kept three different calendars. The first divided the year into 18 months of 20 days each, plus a short month of 5 days. The short month was believed to be unlucky, a time when spirits walked. The second calendar repeated every 260 days. This was used to plan celebrations and predict future. This calendar counted 13 months of 20 days each. Each date had its own set of 3 symbols (day, month, and year). When talking about events long ago, they used a calendar called the “long count.” This covered about 5,125 years. Year 1 on this calendar was 3114 BCE on our calendar. Each city and village had a calendar keeper, who was in charge of saying when to celebrate holidays and when to expect rain or plant crops. But farmers could probably also tell the time of the year from the sun and stars. 21.How many pumpkins did the Maya village harvest according to Figure 3? A.114. B.409. C.414. D.439. 22.What could the “long count” calendar be used for? A.Marking the unlucky days. B.Recording ancient events. C.Dividing the year into 18 months. D.Predicting and making future plans. 23.Which learning project would this text be most suitable for? A.Design a travel plan to the Maya ruins B.Write a report on the Maya agriculture C.Give a presentation on Maya artistic symbols D.Make a poster of Maya scientific achievements B When Mia Woods retired at 61, she knew she needed a plan. “I was worried about losing my identity as a professional. What else can I be?” she thought. The year before, she had been told she had a mild memory problem. “I was trying to show myself that I could still think and be creative,” she says. So she decided to do — rather than be — something new: bake a pie every day for a year and give each pie away. “It made me reach out every day to somebody, so I wouldn’t be alone. And it gave me a routine,” she says. She baked her first pie and gave it to her 88-year-old aunt, Carol. As a teenager, Mia had moved in with her aunt’s family when her mother became ill. “They gave me stability... It was the perfect first pie,” she says. She went on giving pies to former colleagues, grocery clerks, even a homeless man. As word spread, she got known as “the pie lady”. For more than 30 years, Mia had worked as a city planner. “I’m a planner by nature, training and profession. What I really liked about it was that planning takes time, chaos, many different components, puts them all together and makes them into something manageable.” She sees the same in baking pies: “You take a bunch of ingredients and create something out of them.” Twelve years on, Mia has continued to invent new projects, including writing a letter a day, and painting pictures of her local sky. She is writing a book about the pie experience. But she has learned more than baking. “What really came out of it was the understanding that I was someone who could do new things,” she reflects. “And my professional identity wasn’t critical to who I am.” “Even now, after I have an encounter with somebody, I think: ‘There’s a person I wish I could give a pie to.’” says Mia. 24.What was Mia’s worry when she retired? A.Her serious mental problem. B.Her being cut off from others. C.Having no identity beyond career. D.Having to change her daily routine. 25.Why did Mia give her first pie to her aunt? A.She had given Mia a home. B.She had cared for Mia’s mum. C.She was the oldest in the family. D.She had built Mia’s stable character. 26.What do city planning and baking pies have in common according to Mia? A.Both require professional training. B.Both make sense of mixed elements. C.Both create something out of nothing. D.Both connect people with one another. 27.What is Mia’s reflection on her experience? A.Everyone in the world deserves a pie. B.New challenges redefine who we are. C.Opening up to changes takes courage. D.Simple acts can bring people together. C You leave an hour of online surfing with the sense that the world is falling apart. In the real world, however, a neighbor you disagree with politically helps you start your car. The dissonance is no accident. It is how today’s Internet works. To better understand this gap, researchers surveyed 1,090 adults and found that people dramatically overestimate how common harmful behavior on the Internet is. On Reddit, participants thought harmful commenters were 13 times more common, estimating 43% of users post harmful content, while the actual figure is just 3%. Most offensive posts come from a small group of highly active users, whose outsized posts shape public beliefs, creating the “majority illusion” that makes this minority seem like the norm, drowning out the silent majority. Our brains are wired to notice threats and moral breaks — negative content sticks in our minds. Additionally, social media algorithms (算法) prioritize content that causes strong reactions to keep users engaged, with falsehoods spreading faster than truth. Bot networks (僵尸网络) add to the noise: it has been reported that bad bots make up roughly a third of global web traffic, misleading what trends and who appears popular. Measuring online harmful content is tricky, as automated tools often miss unobvious aggressive remarks. But what matters more is not “how harmful is the Internet,” but what ordinary users perceive as normal. Social psychologists call this dynamic “pluralistic ignorance”: people privately reject harmful norms but go along with them publicly. This misconception formed online creates a dangerous gap, fueling public distrust, preventing public participation, and lowering moral standards — if we think “everyone is awful,” we’re less likely to be kind. While there is no silver bullet, practical steps — rooted in policy and personal awareness — can narrow the gap. The key lies in recognizing online engagement doesn’t equal approval: skip “most engaging” feeds and ground our views in actual world connections. Imagine a public square where the loudest few don’t seize the microphone — disagreement remains, but the air resounds with daily life: neighbors helping start cars, strangers holding doors. Online, we can make that reality visible again. 28.What does the underlined word “dissonance” in Paragraph 1 probably mean? A.Disorder. B.Prejudice. C.Contrast. D.Debate. 29.What does the “majority illusion” refer to in the text? A.A false impression. B.A harmful behavior. C.An overestimated post. D.A minority of commenters. 30.What is Paragraph 3 mainly about? A.Why global web traffic misleads people. B.Why the minority feels like the majority. C.How we identify online harmful content. D.What harm online misconception causes. 31.What is the author’s suggestion in the last paragraph? A.Acting like the loudest few. B.Improving moral standards. C.Avoiding online engagement. D.Valuing real-life interactions. D Drug development has long been known as a high-risk and high-cost process. On average, only one in every ten drug candidates that enter human trials eventually reaches the market. The journey from initial discovery to a marketable drug often spans 10 to 15 years, and the cost for a single drug is estimated at roughly $2.8 billion. This high risk and cost, coupled with the eventual loss of patent protection, creates constant pressure on drug companies to find the next breakthrough treatment. In recent years, generative AI has begun to change this picture. The drug industry is rapidly adopting AI technologies that can analyse massive biological data sets. These AI tools can identify promising drug targets and propose novel molecules (分子) that might interact with them. They can also screen libraries of data to predict the effectiveness and safety of candidates before any lab work begins. In addition, they can improve clinical trials by analysing health records to identify patients most likely to benefit from new treatments. Although the technology is still developing, early signs suggest it could make drug discovery faster, cheaper and more competitive. One encouraging result is seen in early-stage trials. AI-designed molecules have shown success rates of 80-90% in early-stage safety tests, far higher than the historical average of 40-65%. AI is also improving efficiency in other areas of the industry, from clinical paperwork to human resources. Some analysts estimate that the drug industry can gain up to $110 billion each year if AI is fully used. The rise of AI is transforming how the drug industry works. AI-native biotech businesses are emerging, especially in the U. S. and China. Drug firms are partnering with these biotech companies and also with tech giants like Amazon, Google and Microsoft. Some tech firms are even developing platforms to design drugs entirely through computer simulations. For instance, Google’s AlphaFold has already solved complex problems regarding protein structures. However, challenges remain. Governments may need to speed up regulatory reviews as the number of drug candidates increases. Patient data sharing must also be encouraged in privacy-protecting ways. Furthermore, patent rules may require adjustment if AI reduces the cost and risk of innovation. AI brings good news for medicine, but ensuring it benefits both drugmakers and patients requires the industry and regulators to adjust to this new reality. 32.What is the primary challenge for traditional drug companies? A.The shortage of breakthrough treatments. B.Inability to discover effective drug candidates. C.Limited access to cutting-edge research technologies. D.Long duration and economic burdens of drug development. 33.From paragraph 2, how does AI benefit clinical trials? A.By designing new molecules. B.By helping select suitable patients. C.By discovering new effective drugs. D.By detecting proper drug targets. 34.What is paragraph 4 mainly about? A.AI-driven changes in the drug industry. B.The rise of AI-native biotech firms. C.Google’s achievements in protein structures. D.Tech giants’ partnerships with drugmakers. 35.What can be inferred from the last paragraph? A.Patent rules are fixed for AI innovation. B.Faster reviews can protect patient data privacy. C.Policies should be revised for the benefits from AI. D.Advanced systems are essential for drug innovation. 第二节(共5小题;每小题2.5分,满分12.5分) For years, I kept a careful distance from the people around me. Living in a busy city apartment, I learned to move through shared spaces quietly. 36 It wasn’t that I disliked others; keeping to myself just seemed easier. Independence mattered to me, and needing no one felt like part of being a grown-up. 37 Without warning, the power went out. The building fell into complete darkness. I sat alone in my apartment, the cold air pressing in as my phone went dead. The silence was familiar. Yet this time, it seemed different. Less comforting. More exposed. A soft knock broke the stillness. It was my neighbour from 3B, someone I recognised but hardly knew. She held a candle and mentioned that a few residents were gathering in the hallway and invited me to join them. I hesitated. Staying alone felt safe, but something felt unsettled. 38 People sat on the floor, sharing blankets, tea, and quiet conversation. I listened more than I spoke. The man I had once assumed was unfriendly turned out to be a retired doctor with a dry sense of humour. 39 I realized how easily distance can turn into detachment (疏离). When the lights finally returned, the hallway looked the same, but it felt different. I didn’t suddenly become outgoing, nor did I abandon my need for space. 40 It’s about knowing when to let them in. Now, when I step into the elevator, I don’t automatically lower my eyes. Sometimes, I look up. A.After a moment, I stepped outside. B.I avoided eye contact and unnecessary conversation. C.I began to question my decision to join the conversation. D.Most neighbours in the building kept to themselves as well. E.As the night progressed, my long-held belief began to loosen. F.But I understood something new: maturity isn’t about shutting others out. G.That belief was challenged one night when a violent storm swept through the city. 第三部分 语言运用(共两节,满分30分) 第一节 完形填空(共15个小题;每小题1分,满分15分) 阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的A、B、C和D四个选项中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。 A little boy almost thought of himself as the most unfortunate child in the world. Poliomyelitis (小儿麻痹症) made his leg lame and his teeth 41 and protrudent (突出的). He seldom played with his classmates; and when the teacher asked him to answer questions, he always 42 his head without a word. One spring, the boy’s father asked for some young trees from the neighbor. He told his children to plant a 43 each, adding, “Whoever grows the best seedling, I will buy him a gift.” The boy also wanted to get his father’s gift. But seeing his brothers carrying water to the trees 44 , anyhow, he hit upon an idea: he hoped the tree he planted would die soon. So watering it once or twice, he never 45 it. A few weeks later, when the little boy went to see his tree again, he was 46 to find it not only didn’t wilt (枯萎), but appeared greener and more 47 , compared with the trees of his brothers. His father kept his promise, and said to him: from the tree he planted, he would become an outstanding 48 when he grew up. Since then, the little boy slowly became optimistic. One day, the little boy lay on the bed and stared up at the bright 49 outside the window. He just couldn’t fall asleep. Suddenly he 50 what the biology teacher once said — plants generally grow faster at night. Why not go to see the tree? When he 51 to the courtyard on tiptoe, he found his father was splashing something under his tree with a ladle (长柄勺). All of a sudden, he understood: his father had been secretly 52 his small tree! He returned to his room, tears running down his face. 53 passed. The little boy didn’t turn botanist, but he became a lawyer. Love is the best 54 of life. Even if it is just one ladleful of clear water, it can make the tree flourish and even grow into a 55 one. 41.A.unnoticed B.uneven C.unidentified D.uninformed 42.A.nodded B.buried C.covered D.lowered 43.A.tree B.bush C.seed D.vegetable 44.A.carelessly B.randomly C.tirelessly D.occasionally 45.A.attended to B.led to C.responded to D.appealed to 46.A.disappointed B.surprised C.annoyed D.overjoyed 47.A.fragile B.fragrant C.delicate D.vigorous 48.A.writer B.lawyer C.botanist D.historian 49.A.sunlight B.moonlight C.flame D.rainbow 50.A.recollected B.reassured C.repeated D.revised 51.A.hurried B.rushed C.slipped D.marched 52.A.fertilizing B.preserving C.cutting D.beating 53.A.Days B.Weeks C.Months D.Decades 54.A.amusement B.nourishment C.encouragement D.development 55.A.rewarding B.demanding C.charming D.towering 第二节(共10小题;每小题1.5分,满分15分) 阅读下面短文,在空白处填入1个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。 For decades, Chancay was a quiet town north of Lima, Peru, better known for its fishing community and slow pace. That changed after the Chancay Port was 56 (official) initiated in November 2024. Since then, goods ships have been arriving 57 record numbers. Following the launch of a direct corridor (走廊) with Shanghai, ships now run twice a week, carrying goods such as fish meal, fruits and metal eastward 58 bringing back various industrial goods from different large production lines 59 (base) in Asia. For exporters and importers, this regular service has ensured speed and 60 (certain). Figures reflect how the enormous port is reshaping trade. So far, shipments along the Chancay-Shanghai corridor 61 (total) 78, 000 tons with a value of 1.72 billion yuan, 62 (push) trade between the two ports up by nearly 35 percent. Products, like avocado, mango and blueberry, 63 (ship) directly to China in greater volumes every day. To help small businesses participate in the prosperity, the Chancay Business Association launched its “Importing is Easy” program, 64 aim is to guide companies through customs, formalization and access to global supply chains. “These initiatives are important because they provide local users with the tools and advice they require 65 (conduct) their foreign trade operations efficiently,” said an expert in Peru. 第4部分 写作(共两节,满分40分) 66.第一节(满分15分) 假定你是李华,你校正在推行“健康第一,人人运动”校园体育计划。请你为校英文报写一篇短文投稿,内容包括: 1. 具体做法; 2. 收获与变化。 注意: 1. 写作词数应为80个左右; 2. 请按如下格式在答题纸的相应位置作答。 Health First, Sports for All _________ ___________________________________________________________________________________________ 第二节(满分25分) 67. 阅读下面材料,根据其内容和所给段落开头语续写两段,使之构成一篇完整的短文。 My older brother, Leo, has always been the responsible one—the rule-follower, the organizer, the one who made sure everything was in its proper place. I used to admire that about him. Until the summer I turned sixteen. That was the summer I built my treehouse. It wasn’t fancy—just a few wooden planks nailed between the strong branches of the old oak in our backyard. But it was mine. I painted the railings (围栏) blue, hung a wind chime(铃) I made from bottle caps, and placed a small wooden box inside where I kept my treasures: a fossil I had found, a letter from my best friend, and a photo of our dog Max, who had passed away the year before. That treehouse was my world, the place where I felt safe and free. And Leo knew it. One afternoon, I came home from a friend’s house to find Leo in the backyard with a saw(锯子) in his hand. The blue railings were gone. The wind chime lay broken on the grass. The treehouse was half destroyed, its wooden planks scattered on the ground like fallen leaves. “What did you do?” I screamed, my voice shaking with disbelief. Leo didn’t look up. “Dad said it was unsafe. The branches were rotting. It could have fallen at any time.” “You didn’t even ask me!” I shouted back. I stood there, trembling with anger. He had taken something I loved and torn it apart without a word. “I hate you,” I whispered. Then I turned and walked away, my eyes burning with tears. For two weeks, I didn’t speak to him. He left notes on my desk. I threw them away. He knocked on my door. I locked it. During those weeks, I noticed he spent every evening in the garage, and I could hear the sounds of hammering and sawing late into the night. I assumed he was working on some project of his own — something he had always done. I didn’t ask. I didn’t care. Then, on a rainy Sunday morning, I heard a noise in the backyard. 注意: 1. 续写词数应为150左右; 2. 请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答。 I pulled back the curtain and couldn’t believe what I saw. __________ Filled with guilt and gratitude, I climbed up to see what he had made. __________ 1 学科网(北京)股份有限公司 $

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