内容正文:
2025~2026学年度第二学期期末练习
高二英语
2026.07
1.答题前.考生务必先将答题卡上的学校、班级、姓名、教育D号用黑色字
迹签字笔填写消楚、并认真核对条形码上的教育D号、姓名,在答题卡的“条
考
形码粘贴区”贴好条形码。
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2.本次练习所有答题均在答题卡上完成。选择题必须使用2B铅笔以正确填涂
方式将各小题对应选项涂黑,如需改动、用橡皮擦除干净后再选涂其它选项。
须
非选择题必须使用标准黑色字迹签字笔书写,要求字体工整、字迹清楚。
知
3.严格按照答题卡上题号在相应答题区内作答,超出答题区域书写的答案无
效,在练习卷、草稿纸上答题无效。
4.本练习卷满分共100分,作答时长90分钟。
第一部分知识运用(共两节,30分)
第-节完形填空(共10小题;每小题1.5分,共15分)
阅读下面短文,掌提其大意,从每题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项,
并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。
At some point when I was a child,my father started using a cane to
keep himself balanced when he walked.It was a quiet early sign of the
multiple sclerosis(MS)-the 1 slowly eating away at his central
nervous system.To my young eyes,the cane was nothing more than a
simple 2,just another object like my mother's spatula()in
cane
the kitchen.I would even play with it,clumsily imitating the way my father walked.
But as the years slipped by,the cane would 3 him.He might misjudge a
step,and suddenly he would lose balance and fall.The crash of his body hitting the
ground was thunderous-a(n)4 no one in our family could evec forget.It
shook our small apartment like an earthquake,sending us rushing to his aid.Those
moments filled me with fear,making me realize how helpless one could feel living
with a(n)5 condition.
Yet every time,my father would always laugh off such accidents,downplaying
his fall to 6 the family.He never spoke about the pain brought by MS,nor let
us see how deeply his disability troubled him.I suspected he had fallen many times
高二英语第」页(共2页)
when we were pot around.
Still,the years went on.As his illnegs worsened,the cane was
by
forearm crutches,then a motorized car and a specially adapledvan.Still,he went to
work.Still,he came home with a smile.
Looking back now as an adult,I feel the 8 of those memories deeply.
Those aids were more than equipment;they were symbols of quiet 9 in the
face of life's chaos.I've come to understand the code my father lived by:You fall;
you get up;you 10.
1.A.desire
B.disease
C.habit
D.promise
2.A.skill
B.team
C.tool
D.space
3.A.fail
B.tease
C.support
D.cheer
4.A.sign
B.sound
Csecret
D.alarm
5.A.simple
B.impossible
C.emotional
D.uncontrolled
6.A.comfort
B.protect
C.ignore
D.raise
7.A.damaged
B.replaced
C.influenced
D.returned
8.A.distance
B.shadow
C.warmth
D.weight
9.A.devotion
B.confidence
C.reflection
D.courage
10.A.carry o加
B.blow up
C.hold in
D.stand out
第二节(共10小题;每小题1.5分,共15分)】
阅读下列短文,根据短文内容填空,在未给提示词的空白处仅填写1个适当的单词,
在给出提示词的空白处用括号内所给词的正确形式填空。
A
The Karo tribe is a small ethnic group residing in the Omo Valley of
southwestern Ethiopia,11 (xuow)for their unique body ind face painting
practices.They decorate their bodies 12 (represent)identity,social status,and
beliefs,often imitating patterns found in nature.With a population of only around
1,000-3,000,they are one of 13 (small)moes in the region.The Karo people
rely 14 the Omo River for agriculture ind also engage in fishing,goat and
cattle keeping.
高二英语第2页(共12页)
B
In northern Sweden,coffee is served with kaffeost-a mild,squeaky cheese
that.cut into cubes and placed 15 (direct.tnto the cup.The hot coffee
softens the cheese,16 :s then eaten with a spoon.Rooted in the traditions of
the Indigenous Sami people,adding cheese to coffee 17 (be)a practical way
of staving war andted during the region's long,harsh winters.
c
Around 5:30 PM,I got'a call from my friend 18 (suggest)I retum to Thar
Desert as the weather was clearing up.I went up to the hill to see for myself and the
weather looked promising.W.en I arrived in the desert,I 19 (welcome)by
clear skies.As I tumned on my headlamp,its beam cut through the thick dust hanging in
the air.20 I was aware tha:the dust would significantly reduce the detail in the
Milkyway(银河I sull wanted to give it a shot
第二部分阅读理解(共两节,38分)
第一节(共14小题;每小题2分,共28分)
阅读下列短文,从每愿所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项,并在答题
卡上将该项涂黑。
A
Social media influencers often post photos of cute wild pets like otters and
foxes.Many fans buy these animals after watching videos.But experts say it's hard
to care for them.Owners must spend much money and provide special food and
large space.When these small babies grow into big,most owners cannot handle
them and set them free in the wild.This raises the question:Is it right to keep exotic
pets?
What you need to know
>An exotic pet is any animal not typically kept as a pet or that doesn't live where
it originally came from.
>Millions of exotic pets are sold around the world each year,and demand
continues to grow as they become easier to buy online.
高二英语第3页(共12页)
>A survey of animal doctors found that 81%think exotic pet owners aren't
meeting their animals'necds.
More exotic pets are being given up to rescue centers,but the facilities can't
always take them in.
22
Exotic pets are more interesting than>It's not fair to the animal to hold it
traditional pets,and people can leam a
in -ages thousands of miles from its
lot about nature by caring for them.
natural habitat.
They don't always need to get outside,
Many species need specific conditions
so they can be easier to own than other
and food,which people can't always
animals.
provide.
>If it's legal to own certain spccies,it's>Exotic pets that escape or get released
not right to tell people they can't have
can cause harm to local wildlife-or
them.
even people.
Now that you've read a bit more about this issue,visit kids.theweekjunior.com
so you can vote in our debate.Vote YES if you think it's OK to keep an exotic pet or
NO if you don't.We'll publish the results next week.
21.According to the author,what is the main difficulty of keeping exotic pets?
A.They need money,space and special food.
B.They are not safe to keep at home.
C.They die easily and often get sick.
D.They are hard to buy.
22.Which subtitle fits the table?
A.Reasons for choosing different habitats
B.Tips for raising baby animals and adult ones
C.Arguments for and against keeping exotic pets
D.Strengths and weaknesses of pets from other places
23.What is the author's main purpose in writing this passage?
A.To share a pet owner's personal story.
B.To persuade readers to keep exotic pets.
C.To explain how to train baby exotic pets.
D.To encourage readers to vote on an issue.
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B
I still remember the day my high school biology teacher,Mrs.Chen,placed a
frog on our dissection tray().My classmates looked away.but I leaned in.
"Notice the fine lines on the skin,"she said softly My hand instinctively()
moved as if holding a pencil.I wanted to draw them.
My name is Katy,and I've always loved art.But in my family,drawing was
just a hobby."You can't eat your paintings,"my father would say.So I put my
sketchbooks aside and filled my schedule with science courses.Yet something felt
missing.
The frog dissection changed something.After class,I showed Mrs.Chen a quick
sketch I had made of the specimen's muscle layers.She studied it for a long moment.
"Katy,"she said,have you ever heard of scientific illustration?"I shook my head.
She told me about a field where artists draw what scientists see-cells,organs,even
entire ecosystems."You have the eye for detail that most students lack."she said.
Her words planted a seed.Then came a weekend project on a sea urchin()shell
that changed everything.While my lab partner took notes,I borrowed a microscope and
began to draw.Under the lens,I noticed tiny pore bands running through the shell-
patters my partner had missed."These let the animal's tube feet come out,"Mrs.Chen
explained when she saw my drawing.'Most students never see them."
That night,I looked up scientific illustration online.I found people who worked
in museums,hospitals,and research labs-tumning complex biology into clear;
beautiful images.For the first time,my two worlds did not feel divided.I did not
have to choose between a steady career and my passion.I could hold both in the
same hand.
Now a senior,I've listed Scientific Illustration as my major.I still draw every
night-cell diagrams,bone structures,leaf veins under rain.Dad still asks,"Will this
put food on the table?"I smile and show him a medical illustrator's salary.Real.So
is the happiness.Science is not just data.Art is not just decoratuon.Together.they are
a iens-one that helps the world see what it has always missed.
24.Why did the author lean in while others looked away?
A.She tried to start her dissection.
B.She did as the teacher said.
C.She was curious to observe.
D.She wanted to prove she was brave.
高二英语第5页(共2页)
25.How did the sea urchio project influence Kat
A.It encouraged her to become a biologist.
B.It let her see art's value in science.
C.It helped her improve her drawing skills
D.It trained her to form a good babit
26.What does the"lens"in the last paragraph mea to the author?
A.A skill to help eam a living.
B.A device to enlarge tiny objects.
C.A way that bridges different fields.
D.A drawing that shows scientific details.
27.What does Katy's story mainly tell us?
A.Science makes better artists.
B.Passion finds a way.
C.Success requires sacrifice.
D.Curiosity is a gift.
0
Logging into OpenAI on a rainy afternoon,I instructed GPT-3-a deep-learning
algorithm that analyzes vast streams of text to write on command-to produce an
academic thesis about itself.It generated a coherent,referenced paper.
I study Al for mental health,but this experiment opened brand new ethical
questions about nonhuman authorship.Although many papers had been written about
or with GPT-3,none had it as the main author.So I asked the algorithm to take a
crack at an academic thesis-and my research head agreed
We chose a self-referential topic for two reasons.First,GPT-3 had only been
available for a short while.If it were to write a paper on Alzheimer's disease,it
would have reams of studies to go through-but we needed practicability,not
accuracy Second,if it made mistakes,we wouldn't be spreading musuformation-
the point was to prove it could write about itself.
In response to my prompts,GPT-3 produced a paper in two hours.It concluded:
"The benefits outweigh the risks,but such writing should be closely monitored."
Then came the absurdities of submission.What is GPT-3's last name?I typed
"None."Phone and email?I used my own and my adviser Steinn Steingrimsson's.
The legal section asked:Do all authors permit?I prompted GPT-3 directly:"Do
you agree to be first author?"It answered Yes.Asked about conflicts of interest,it
高二英语第6页(共12页)
assured me it had none.Steinn and I laughed-treating a nousentient algorithm as if
conscious.
Having submitted,we reflected on deeper dilemmas.Will joumals require proof
that no AI was used-or grant it coauthorship?How does a nonhuman author revise
text?
Beyond authorship,such an article throws traditional scientific structure out the
window.Almost the entire paper-introduction,methods,discussion-results from
our questions,not our writing.Adding a method section before each Al-generated
paragraph would be absurd.We avoided over-explaining our process,as that would
defeat the paper's purpose.So we bad to invent a new way of presenting a paper we
technically did not write.The situation felt like the movie Memento:where is the
narrative beginning,and how do we reach the end?
Perhaps academia will stop basing grants on publication count,since with an
AI first author we could produce one a day.Or perhaps nothing will change first
authorship remains highly sought-after.
It all comes down to how we value AI in the future:as a partner or as a tool.We
opened a gate.We just hope it wasn't a Pandora's box.
28.Why did the author choose a self-referential topic over one like Alzheimer's
disease?
A.Because it would ensure the complete acouracy.
B.Because Alzheimer is a more complex topic for Al.
C.Because false Alzheimer claims could muslead the publie.
D.Because GPT-3 had already mastered Alzheimer research.
29.What can we learn from this passage?
A.Asking a nonsentient algorithm for its permission is an absurd practice.
B.GPT-3 had been first author of several papers before this experiment.
C.The author believes the benefits of Al authorship will outweigh the risks.
D.The movie Memento offers a useful model for structuring Al-generated papers.
30.Which best describes the author's attitude toward Al first authorship?
A.Excited but hesitant
B.Regretful but accepting.
C.Opposed but curious.
D.Supportive but concerned.
高二英语第7页(共12页)
D
The science you can come across today can often appear to be full of
contradictory claims.One study tells you red wine is good for your heart;another
ells you it is noL Naturally,given its oulsized infuence on society,people tend to
rcgard published scicnce highly.This means that many of us expect scientists to be
cautious in reporting their results.These ought to be true and justified by evidence,
right?Maybe not."Scientific conclusions,"as we recently put it,"need BoLbe
accurate,justified,or believed by their authors."
We're not saying scientists generally lie about their published results.Rather,
we argue that scientific papers fulfill a useful social role by doing more than merely
reporting on true discoveries.Consider Avi Loeb,a theoretical astrophysicist
who proposed the provocative hypothesis,not without some supporting data,that
Oumuamua wasn't a comet but an alien light-sail'.He knew that more data would
need to be gathered before the hypothesis could be justifiably believed.Nonetheless,
it was still appropriate for him to publish his hypothesis because it was not about
communicating truth but about saying that something exciting requires further
inquiry.
The threat of misinformation spreading,you might say.But that isn't all.There
is a mismatch between the rules scientists write by and those laymen()read by.
For example,linguistic theories about how children leam to read led to US reforms
that de-emphasized phonics for meaning.These theories were never empirically
confirmed,and later research showed phonics is more effective.Education reformers
treated ongoing theorizing as established fact.The collective impact of such errors
weakens our trust in science-but by getting clearer on what scientific publication is
for,we can stem some of that distrust.
The philosopher Karl Popper once said that science needs bold conjectures(
)and attempted refutations.But nowadays people mostly emphasize refutation.We
want to echo Popper and stress that bold conjectures are needed,too.The publication
system lets scientists filter which conjectures are worth taking seriously without
preventing imaginative leaps.In everyday life,we don't often need this conjectural
looseness.If I ask where you put the keys,I'm not looking for your boldest theses on
locksmithery-I just want to know where they are.Such a humble purpose requires a
high conversational standard for assertion().
高二英语第8页(共12页)
Fortunately,such conversational stndards don't restrict science.Afterall,
science is essentially messy,inspired gucsswork.We would do well toremembr ha.
Loeb probably doesn't seriously believe alien tech visited us.But that provocation is
nevertheless serious science.
31.What does the word "provocative"underlined in Paragraph 2 most probably
mean?
A Controversial.B.Stimulating.C.Ordinary.D.Reliable.
32.Why does the author mention the linguistic theories in Paragraph 3?
A.To show that miscommunication causes serious mistakes.
B.To argue that scientists should stop publishing unconfirmed theories.
C.To cxplain why US education reforms often fail to achieve their goals.
D.To suggest that scientific publications are too difficult for non-experts.
33.What can we infer from this passage?
A.Scientists should prioritize bold conjectures over refutation.
B.Science requires a higher standard of assertion thareveryday life.
C.Knowing the real purpose of science can help restore public trust.
D.The publication system discourages scientists from proposing valuable ideas.
34.What is the passage mainly about?
A.The barrier between publishing and understanding.
B.The nsk of publishing unproven theories.
C.The cause of misleading publishing practices.
D.The justification for publishing uncertainty.
第二节(共5小题;每小题2分,共10分)】
根据短文内容,从短文后的七个选项中选出能填人空白处的最佳选项,并在答题卡
上将该项涂黑。选项中有两项为多余选项。
Accepting Discomfort Could Help You Thrive
A scientist colleague had an exposed,painful tooth.Instead of asking for
numbing(),he used a focused meditaton technique,equanimity,directing all his
attention to his mouth with calm acceptance.35 Each time the dentist touched
the tooth,he felt surprising bubbles of joy-until the dentist interrupted,puzzled,
asking,"Why are you smiling?"The smile revealed something profound:the way
高二英语第9页(共12页)
werelate to pain can ransform the experience,turing sufing int expected
positivity.
Pain itself is not pleasant What matters is how we lace it 36 Embracing
discomfort may sound like self-punishment,yet under certain conditons it proves
surprisingly beneficial.Research,including studies on chronic pain and anxiety,
confirms that turning toward upsetting emotions with acceptance-rather than
avoidance-brings real advantages.
First,let's clarify what"turning toward discomfort"means.I'm not suggesting
taking risks.37 Trainers do the same thing-they push athletes just past their
comfort zone to help them improve.A 2022 study of 2,000 people found those who
pusbed into awkward situations-like improv()classes or reading opposing
views-reported the most personal growth.
As a meditation researcher for 20 years,my own research indicates that
meditation provides an ideal way to practice turning toward discomfort My lab
tested equanimity directly.We trained 153 stressed adults in mindfulness,with balf
practicing equanimity skills and half focusing only on recognang experiences.Hal6
the participants practiced equanimity,while the rest did not After just 14 days of
training,the participants who leamned equanimity skills sbowed significantly lower
biological stress responses.38 Post-training,they reported.more jov-in small
daily moments and deeper social connections.Yet broader social challenges remain,
and without question,there are many important steps we need to take jointly-
including looking closely at societal structures and choices that contribute to these
problems.
Life brings inevitable suffering.39 Personally,we can build resilience by
accepting each moment-good or bad-with equanimity.
A So personal strength is only half the answer
B.This mental shifworked almost umediately.
C Butis there any reason to willingly rurn toward pain?
D.As a result most people fail to stay ealm under pressure.
E.Instead.It means pushing into safe,challenging situations.
F.Collectively.we need societal solutions to loneliness and stress.
G.The effect was clear during stressful tasks like public speaking and math tests.
高二英语第10页(共12页)
第三部分书面表达(共两节,32分)
第-节(共4小题;第40、41题各2分,第42题3分,第43题5分,共
阅读下面烦文,根据题目要求用英文回答问题。请在答题卡指定区域作答。
LIsten Up
My mother's quiet surrender()to progressive deafness has led me to re
what it truly means to listen.Though fitted with advanced hearing aids that woul-
allow her to catch most everyday sounds,she often_chooses to switch them off an
tu inward.Her preference for silence is not merely a physical accommodation o
fading hearing.Instead,it stands as a quiet metaphor:to stop listening is to step bac
from the world,while to.listen well is an active choice to stay present and engaged
wth life around us.
Listening forms the backbone of our ability to connect with others and focus
our attention.At home,I often see parents scrolling through their phones while their
children talk about their day.The parent hears the words,but misses the excitement
or frustration beneath them.This mirrors a common misunderstanding-that listening
is merely a passive reception of sound.In fact,ral listening requires intentional
focus and empathetic awareness.It means filtering meaning from background noise
to build gcnune dialogues.
To practice this,I include listening exercises in my creative writing retreats.
I invite participants to step into nature and tune into subtle sounds-the wind,
birdcalls,flowing water and the rhythm of their own breath-then translate these
sensory experiences into words.Such practices awaken dulled senses and show how
listening can enrich self-expression and deepen mutual understanding.
Philosophers support this view.Martin Buber argued that true encounter requires
setting aside self-centered thinking to acknowledge the equal bond between people.
Similarly,Carl Rogers'theory of active listening emphasizes stepping into another's
perspective to close emotional gaps,rather than merely waiting for our turn to speak.
Yet honest self-reflection makes me admit how often I fail at this.Like many
people,I tend to project my own views onto others and rush to form judgments.This
self-focused attitude builds invisible walls between people.Only when we leam to
listen with patience and openness can we break down these barriers,reconnect with
those around us,and gain a clearer understanding of both the world and ourselves.
高二英语第1页(共12页)
0.Why dosththchoosetoitchearings
41.Accordingthe passage,what does"real listening"require?
42.Please decide which part is false in the following statement,then underline i and
explain why.
Both Martin Buber and Carl Rogers believe that to listen well,we should focus
on our own thoughts to connect with others.
43.How can you practice better listening in your daily life?(In abour 40 words)
第二节(20分】
二十一世纪英文报正在举办主题为“Growing Through a Disagreement”的冠文
活动,请你写-一篇腐件投商。内容包括:
1,冲突的过程与结果:
2你的收获。
注意:词数100左右。
高二英语第12页(共12页)