高三英语一模汇编--十一选十

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上海市高考英语专题冲刺-十一选十 解题策略与练习巩固

上海市高考英语专题冲刺-十一选十 解题策略与练习巩固

上上上2020届上上上上上上上上上四上—— 十一选十(小猫钓鱼)一、题型特征及考点十一选十只考察四类实词,即:名词、动词、形容词、副词。

做题看所给词汇时,我们要么在内心谨记题目中所给的十一个词中每个词的多种词性和意思,只可惜有时候你可能会很难做到这一点,所以还是老老实实花个一两分钟左右仔细看清每一个单词,记住都有谁,并在每个单词旁边按注其含有的词性及诸如现在分词、过去分词、动名词以及各种分词式的形容词这类非词性方面的语法层次的特征(只出现在分词中)。

这样接下来在面对某一个空格时,只要根据上下文的语法结构或逻辑关系不再是从10个词中去选1个答案了,可以是4选1甚至2选1,从而缩小了选择的范围,提高做题的准确率。

1、选词填空的特点1) 文章长度一般350字左右;2) 第一句是主题句,一般均不设空(各种题型第一句话几乎均不设空);3) 每隔15-30个词有一个空,共10空;4) 方框中词汇兼顾一词多性、一词多义、派生【即前缀、后缀】、合成词、引申义等方面综合考察;5) 文章略低于完形填空、阅读理解C篇的难度。

2、选词填空的考点1)词汇方面:考察4类实词,即:名词、动词、形容词、副词;2) 语法方面:考察词性之间关系和句子结构分析的能力;3) 逻辑方面:考察上下文逻辑分析及语篇分析的能力。

3、需要注意的五个要点:(1) 词性判断(2) 常用搭配(3) 内在逻辑(4) 感情色彩(5) 语法常识二、解题步骤第一步:通读全文通读全文是用较快速度,一行一行地读,目的是把握至少90% 的内容。

选词填空的选项词义互不关联,词性也不同,而且还有干扰项,一定要先了解文章大意,带着文章脉络去找选项。

务必先沉着地把文章读一遍,尤其注意横线前后的位置,为寻找正确选项打下铺垫。

提醒:通读就是根据首段原则以及首末句原则,迅速抓出文章的主题。

判定文章主题对于篇章的整体把握具有很大的积极意义。

第二步:整理选项classify the options我们应该根据词性把选项中的每个单词进行分类归纳标,标出它们的词性。

2024上海市高三英语一模各区《11选10》分类汇编

2024上海市高三英语一模各区《11选10》分类汇编

2024届上海高三英语一模分类汇编11选101.2024届宝山区高三英语一模Section BDirections: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.invaluableB.roughlyC.satisfyingD.distractionE.simplyF.advantageG.reasonableH.performedI.scheduleJ.plannedK.excellencePeople tend to think that productivity involves doing several things at once,but according to Cal Newport,the secret to success is the opposite of multitasking.Newport is the author of Deep Work,a book that describes the benefits of focusing on one thing and doing it with31.Newport defines deep work as"the ability to focus without32on a cognitively(认知地) demanding task."It's the opposite of shallow work,which is made up of simple tasks that are usually33while distracted.According to Newport,deep work is a(n)34skill in today's economy.It allows you to learn difficult things quickly and produce at a high level.Most people are distracted when they work,so you learn to work without distraction,that gives you35.Deep work enables you to produce to the best of your ability and acquire new skills quickly.Developing excellence in one's craft can be a deeply36try.But deep work itself is also a skill,which means the more time you spend at it,the easier it gets.Moreover,if you only work at a shallow level,your ability to do deep work decreases.So how do you conduct deep work into your work life or your studies?It's essentially important to37deep work into your day.Otherwise,it's easy to let your time fill up with shallow work.Newport recommends doing deep work as your first task of the day.That way you get it done before distractions build up.Shallow work does need to get done,but if you save it for later in the day,you can get your deep work done,too.Scheduling deep work sessions for the same time every day can turn them into a habit.This makes it easier to spend time on them.Because deep work is by definition cognitively demanding,you won't be able to do it all day. Beginners can usually only focus on deep work for38an hour,and even experts have trouble going more than four hours.So set39goals for yourself.If you really focus,you'll be surprised at how much you accomplish in a few hours.By focusing on40sessions of deep work,you can get more done in less time and feel more satisfied.2.2024届崇明区高三英语一模Directions:After reading the passage below,fill in each blank with a proper word given in the box.Each word can only be used once.Note that there is one word more than you need.A.B.anticipatingC.digitallyD.facilitatingE.geometryF.giant advantageI.potentially J.reopened K.soughtG.initiated H.painstakinglyHow Digital Modeling Plays a Key Role in Restoring the Notre Dame Cathedral(巴黎圣母院) It’s been more than four years since a fire damaged Notre Dame,the Catholic cathedral in Paris that’s historically drawn millions of visitors every year.Since then,people from around the world have united to support an effort,31by French President,that’s intended to have the building back open to the public by the end of next year.Teams working to restore the Gothic cathedral have32to rebuild much of the damaged sections using materials like oak wood(橡木)and stone that have stood the test of centuries.But the builders,architects and engineers do have the33of some21st century technologies,including modern building information modeling(BIM)software that enables them t o w o r k w i t h a(n) 34detailed3D digital model of the cathedral and surrounding site,backed by powerful cloud computing technology.“It allows you to really understand a lot of how a building fits together,how it’s constructed,”says Andrew Anagnost,CEO of design software35Autodesk.It has contributed technical consulting,software and financial assistance to the project since shortly after the fire.A digital model,which took more than a year to create,includes more than12,000objects.It was a complex process.Onsite workers captured the point-by-point3D36of the cathedral with laser(激光)and photo equipment.Then,others turned the data points from that process into detailed shapes and objects,down to individual building stones.That let experts see how the building shifted in the fire—important for37any stability issues—and plan out the process of reconstruction.“It’s like Mission:Impossible when they plan,”says Nicolas Mangon,VP of architecture, engineering and construction industry strategy at Autodesk.“Every little piece is done38, and with the3D model you can simulate(模拟)everything.”Even when the cathedral is39,the model may still serve important roles.Mangon says the company is currently in discussions about using it to manage aspects of the complex going forward,40using sensors that could show the exact location of any future fires.3.2024届虹口区高三英语一模Section BDirections:Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box.Each word can be used only once.Note that there is one word more than you need.A.arrivesB.observableC.boundlessD.containedE.distancingF.expansionG.liesH.parallelI.perceivingJ.threadsK.volumeWhat Comes After Space?Looking at a clear night sky,you witness the vastness of space,which holds everything humans know to exist.To find out what31beyond,a good place to start is to determine where the universe ends.However,the problem is that scientists are uncertain about where space ends or whether it ends at all.The32universeThe furthest humans can see out into space,using all the technology currently available to us,is46billion light-years(a light-year is the distance that light can travel in one year,and is equivalent to about9.5million million kilometres).The33of space that humans can see is called the visible universe.Beyond this,it remains a mystery whether it’s an expanse of more galaxies and stars or possibly the edge of the universe.Some think that the universe is34, meaning space goes on forever in every direction.In this case,there is nothing after space, because space is everything.Moving further awayExperts have captured images of the entire Earth from space,and some astronauts have personally witnessed its beauty from orbit.Perhaps35the limits of the universe would alsobe possible too,if only humans knew where to go to look for it.Another challenge is the universe’s rapid36.As galaxies move further away,their light takes longer to reach us.Eventually,some galaxies may be so distant that their light never37. This might imply that any edge—and whatever is on the other side—is increasingly38 itself from us.Regardless of these uncertainties,scientists still spend a lot of time thinking about what comes after space.Many universes?It’s possible that there isn’t just one universe,and that our universe is just one small part of a “multiverse”.Perhaps our universe is39within its own distinct region of space,separated from others by vast expanses of nothingness.Or maybe40universes exist,pressed tightly against each other.Getting an idea of the universe’s true shape may help astronomers find out whether it has an edge.What comes after that could be an even great mystery.参考答案:31-40GBKCI FAEDH4.2024届黄浦区高三英语一模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.airflowsB.blockC.challengesD.coolE.criticallyF.disproportionatelyG.principlesH.reducesI.sensitiveJ.site-specificK.stretchesSkywellA skywell,or“tian jin”,as it is commonly called,is a typical feature of atraditional home in southern and eastern China.Skywells were designed toreduce temperature in buildings well before air-conditioning existed.Whenwind blows above a skywell house,it can enter the indoor space through theopening.Because outdoor air is often cooler than indoor air,the incomingwind travels down the walls to the lower stories and creates__31__byreplacing warmer indoor air,which rises and leaves through the opening.The main purpose of a skywell is to allow in light,improve ventilation(通风)and harvest rainwater.In Huizhou,a skywell is small but tall,and the rooms around it__32__out sunlight on hot days,enabling the bottom of the skywell to stay cool.Meanwhile,hot air inside the house can rise and escape through the opening above the skywell.Architects are now looking towards the__33__behindskywells while designing new buildings to save energy.Oneexample is the National Heavy Vehicle EngineeringTechnology Research Centre in the eastern Chinese city ofJinan.The18-storey glass-walled tower block has a giant inner skywell in the middle,which__34__from the fifth to the top floor.The elevators,toilets and meeting rooms are all situated around this channel,which helps improve the lighting and ventilation and__35__the overall energy consumption.Ancient“green wisdom”such as skywells continue to inspire today’s climate adaptive design and innovations in methods that depend on design and technology to__36__a building without the use of power.However,there are some__37__for bringing skywells into modern designs.The mechanisms of courtyards facilitating natural lighting,ventilation and rain collection are well known,but applying these methods needs to be__38__.Because traditional skywells had different shapes, sizes and features,which were__39__dependent on their natural surroundings,adding skywells into modern buildings requires designers to be__40__to their project’s context and situation, making it difficult to apply them as a universal solution.参考答案:31-35ABGKH36-40DCJEI5.2024届金山区高三英语一模Directions:After reading the passage below,fill in each blank with a proper word given in the box.Each word can be used only once.Note that there is one word more than you need.Unlocking The Vatican MuseumsGianni Crea has,almost every morning for the past decade,unlocked the doors to the Vatican Museums.He has seen the splendor of the Sistine Chapel and admired the textures of ancient Egypt.“Yes,I’m a key keeper.But the doors I open are the ones to the history of art,and it’s here that exists the biggest and most beautiful history in the world,”says Crea.The Vatican Museums have(31)______collections since the15th century,including tens of thousands of artworks and artifacts spanning prehistory to modern times.The most(32)______ one of them,according to Crea,is Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel.He recalls being(33)______ with emotion the first time he accompanied the former head key keeper to open the chapel more than20years ago.Since then,he’s witnessed people of all faiths(34)______at the chapel’s loveliness,something the church believes is increasingly vital during these unsettled times.“In the difficult current context the world is experiencing,in which sadness and(35)______ seem to have the upper hand,art is more necessary than ever,because beauty is always a source of joy,”Pope Francis said last year.There is also(36)______scientific evidence to support this view.A2019WHO analysis revealed that artistic and cultural activities(37)______physical and psychological health.In fall 2022,physicians at Brussels’hospitals partnered with the city to launch a six-month(38)______ study examining the benefits of“museum prescriptions as supplemental treatment for stress, burnout,and anxiety”.It’s the first investigation of its kind in Europe and is expected to have(39) ______effects across the continent.And in the wake of the pandemic(疫情),which forced the Vatican Museums to close three times between2020and2021,there’s a growing movement for wider and easier access to the arts for people’s well-being.“The Vatican Museums must open their doors to people from all over the world,as a(n)(40)______of dialogue between cultures and religions,”Pope Francis wrote in his2015publication.“Everyone can find something beautiful and moving here,”says Crea,who always welcomes travelers from around the world to accompany him during his morning routine on select dates.“The Vatican Museums will give you an understanding of art and history regardless of your faith.”参考答案:31~40AKBED CHIGF6.2024届静安区高三英语一模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.smoothingB.remainC.switchedD.likelihoodE.impactF.tipG.broadlyH.headedI.boomingJ.positioningK.reliablySea-level rise predictionsA team of University of Idaho scientists is studying a fast-moving glacier in Alaska in hopes of developing better predictions on how quickly global sea levels will rise.Tim Bartholomaus,a professor in the Department of Geography and Geological Sciences, spent several weeks on Turner Glacier in Alaska's southeastern31near Disenchantment Bay.The glacier is unique because,unlike other glaciers,it rises greatly every five to eight years.A surging glacier is defined,32,as one that starts flowing at least10times faster than normal.But the how and why of that glacial movement is poorly understood,although recent research suggests that global climate change increases the33of glacial surging.During Turner's surges,the mass of ice and rock will increase its speed from roughly3feet a day to65feet per day.All of that is important because glaciers falling into the ocean are a major contributor to sea level rise,and current climate change models don't34account for these movements.For example,Greenland's glaciers are one of the leading contributors to global sea-level rise.Since the early2000s,Greenland35from not having any effect on world sea levels,to increasing sea level by about1millimeter per year.Half of that yearly increase is due to warmer average temperatures,which leads to more ice melting.The other half,however,is because glaciers in Greenland are,as a whole,moving faster and running into the ocean more frequently.Glacial movement has something to do with water running underneath the glacier.Glaciers are full of holes,and water runs through those holes.When the water pressure is high underneath a glacier,it starts to move,partly because it's lifting the mass of ice and rock off the ground and partly because it's36the underside of the glacier.But how exactly does that water move through the glacier,and how does the movement37 the glacier’s speed?Those are the questions the scientists hope to answer.Bartholomaus,some graduate students and researchers from Boise State University,38 onto the ice in August.They set up a base camp at the toe of the glacier and spent their days flying in on helicopters.They placed roughly30instruments,burying them deeply into the glacier and 39them on rock outcroppings(露岩)alongside the glacier.This summer the team will return to get the instruments and replace batteries.Those instruments will40on and around the glacier until the glacier surge stops,providing researchers with before and after data.参考答案:31-35FGDKC36-40AEHJB7.2024届闵行区高三英语一模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.mineB.criteriaC.catalogedD.candidateE.delayF.anticipatingprisedH.perceivingI.initiativepoundsK.unfavorableWhat Lies Beneath“Earth”has always been an odd choice of name for the third planet from the Sun.After all, an alien(外星人)examining it through a telescope would note that two-thirds of its surface is 31not of land but of oceans of water.Marine biologists think the oceans might host more than2,000,000species of marine animals,of which they have so far32perhaps a tenth.A new33hopes to change this.Smoothly launched in London on April27th,Ocean Census(海洋普查)aims to discover100,000new species of marine animal over the coming decade.The attempt is happening now for two reasons.One is that,the longer scientists34,the fewer there will be to document.Climate change is heating the oceans,as well as making them more acidic as carbon dioxide is absorbed into the water.The second one is technological.Marine biologists discover about2,000new species a year, a rate hardly changed since Darwin’s day.Ocean Census is35it can go faster.“Cyber taxonomy (网络分类学)”,for instance,involves feeding animal DNA information into computers,which can quickly decide whether it meets the36for a new species.Exactly what the new effort might turn up,of course,is impossible to forecast.But history suggests it will be fruitful.Half a century ago scientists detected hot openings on the sea bed that were home to organisms living happily in conditions that,until then,had been thought37to life.These days,such openings are one credible38for the origin of all life on Earth.More practical benefits can’t be ignored.Many drugs,for example,come originally from biological39.An ocean full of unrecorded life will almost certainly prove a rich seam(矿层)from which to40more.To help make use of its data,Ocean Census plans to make it attainable to scientists and the public without charge,who will be able to search it for anything valuable or unexpected.参考答案:31-40GCIEF BKDJA8.2024届青浦区高三英语一模Directions:Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box.Each word can be used only once.Note that there is one word more than you need.Magical Creatures:AN APPRECIATION OF AUTUMN MOTH(蛾) Moths seem to have a bit of a bad reputation:to some they are ill indications or something scary,to others they are dull in comparison to our well-loved butterflies.But moths are an essential part of a(n)__31__,and important food sources for species like birds and bats.And for me,moths are far from dull.My first meeting with an Angle Shades moth was nearly a non-encounter.I almost passed by without noticing it,thinking it was a fallen leaf on a fence post.But there was something about it that stopped me in my tracks.Its angular shape perhaps?Or the way it sat,__32__,despite the breeze.Closer__33__revealed cream and buff shell-shaped wings,painted with triangles of light pink and brown.Suddenly,it transformed from a(n)__34__leaf into a living thing before my eyes. I’ve been fascinated ever since.The Canary-shouldered Thorn,with its hairy buttercup-coloured body and yellow and orange wings,reminds me of a fallen silver birch(白桦树)leaf.A night-flyer,it favours gardens and woodlands,and is often drawn to__35__light,meaning that your torch beam may be attracting moths as well as lighting your way in the dark.It’s also worth double-checking any leaves in farm houses,as these sheltered spots are a favourite hiding place of another overwintering__36__:the Herald moth.This elegant creature’s beautiful wings look as though they’ve been__37__by hand and painted with bronze.There’s more to these imitators than fallen leaves.The Green-spotted Crescent,which __38__disappears on rough branches,has metallic green spots integrating with the moss(苔藓). Maybe I’ve already__39__crossed paths with one,though.As we dig out our big coats and slip on boots for walks beneath branches,how many moths are we missing?These clever creatures aren’t bad indications,but__40__parts of nature,with a gift for fancy-dress.参考答案:31-40C I K H D J A G B E9.2024届松江区高三英语一模Section BDirections:After reading the passage below,fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box.Each word can be used only once.Note that there is one word more than you need. A.attractive B.bothered C.building D.contrastsE.crossedF.demonstratesG.dramaticallyH.greyedI.instrumental J.sustaining K.vividlyA Review on OppenheimerOppenheimer is Christopher Nolan's film about J.Robert Oppenheimer,the man known as "the father of the atomic(原子的)bomb".As a drama about genius,pride and error,it ___31___the life of the American theoretical physicist who helped research and develop the two atomic bombs that were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki,two cities in Japan,during World War II.Oppenheimer is a great achievement,partly because it___32___relates that period of history thanks to Nolan's lifelike filmmaking.Nolan goes deep and long on the___33____of the bomb, but he doesn't restage the attacks and there are no documentary images of the dead or cities in ashes.The story tracks Oppenheimer across decades,starting in the1920s with him as a young adult and continuing until his hair___34___.The film touches on his personal and professional milestones,the controversies that___35___him,and the attacks that nearly ruined him. Besides,the friendships and romances___36___him,yet also troubling,are also described.The path of Oppenheimer's life___37___shifted at Berkeley.He was once only an academic there,but his identity changed after Germany entered Poland by force.By that time, Oppenheimer had become friends with Emest Lawrence,a physicist who invented the historic particle accelerator(粒子加速器)and played a(n)___38___role in the Manhattan Project.And Oppenheimer also met the project's military head and was then made director of Los Alamos, where much of his later research on nuclear weapons took place.Francois Truffaut once wrote that"war films,even those who support peace,even the best, willingly or not,present wars in a certain___39___way.”That is why Nolan refuses to show the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki,killing millions of souls.In the film,you hear that Oppenheimer's famous words___40___his own mind as the mushroom cloud rose:“Now I am become Death,the destroyer of worlds."Nolan is actually reminding audience to reconsider the roles they can play in the world.参考答案:31-40FKCHB JGIAE10.2024届徐汇区高三英语一模Directions:Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box.Each word can be used only once.Note that there is one word more than you need.A.attractionB.waitingC.mysteryD.uniqueE.simplyF.originallyG.stable H.popularity I.donating J.searching K.interfereThere’s a rarely-visited,dusty corner of the world where something magical happens.The place,which looks like Mars with its red rock landscape,is the Tatacoa Desert,in Colombia.Tatacoa is located in the region of Huila,south of the country’s capital Bogotá.Although Tatacoa,with its protruding cacti and red rippled rocks,is called a desert,it is in fact a dry tropical forest.But the exciting,and very(31)_______,feature of this desert,is what happens above it,at night.Thanks to its remote location–it’s almost30miles and an hour’s drive over bumpy winding roads to the nearest town–Tatacoa has no light pollution to(32)_______with the night sky.Up to88constellations(星座)are visible on a clear night,as well as both hemispheres–something that happens nowhere else in the world.The warm and dry climate helps with stargazing;a(33)_______atmosphere,which happens in dry spots or places of high elevation,decreases something called scintillation,which is when a star’s light rises and falls rapidly.It’s why stars twinkle,which looks beautiful but isn’t so great for astronomers.Not only is Tatacoa a natural wonder,but the DIY observatory that’s run by a Colombian man named Javier Fernanda Rua Restrepo has become a star(34)_______too.In fact,this humble building attracts stargazers from all over the world,from China to Iceland to Australia.And Restrepo has also become well-known in astronomer circles,with a few scientists(35)_______ their own telescopes to support the grassroots observatory.The Colombian,who is(36)_______from Cali,fell in love with the stars thanks to his father’s interest in astronomy and science,and first visited Tatacoa in1997,to try to see the Comet Hale-Bopp.He stayed for a couple of days before heading back to his hometown.But within a month,he returned to Tatacoa–and never left,camping out for weeks on end(37) _______for the night to come so that he could watch the stars.At first Restrepo had worked at the Colombian government’s observatory,which he helped staff for15years.But after budget cuts meant he lost his job,he figured he would(38)_______ build his own.In2015,Restrepo opened the doors to his observatory–Tatacoa Astronomia–with just one telescope.Now,as Colombia has grown in(39)_______as a tourist destination,hundreds flock to Restrepo’s star party,which he holds once a year in July.Tatacoa Astronomia is only open on starry nights,and Restrepo remains the sole employee. But that doesn’t distract from the intimacy and the specialness of the place.The structure sits on a small patch of land that Restrepo bought himself,and is cordoned(隔离)off by tarpaulin(油布)to add an extra sense of(40)_______and intrigue(阴谋)for visitors.“The stars…they put my life into its tiny perspective,”he says,“and they constantly remind me there are greater things out there.”11.2024届杨浦区高三英语一模Directions:Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box.Each word can be used only once.Note that there is one word more than you need.A.normallyB.boostC.sustainD.gainsE.assessingF.substantiallyG.effortsH.mixedI.surprisingJ.anticipateK.assignedYour Social-Media Detoxes(脱瘾治疗)Probably Aren’t Helping YouWe’ve all heard the supposed benefits of unplugging from digital devices,even for24hours.Such breaks are said to(31)_________self-confidence,reduce social competitiveness and fears of missing out,and make room for more-enriching, in-person interactions.Yet studies exploring those effects have produced(32) ________results.So a global research team set out to systematically test the idea that social media detoxing delivers meaningful psychological(33)_________.The researchers recruited600undergraduate students in three places:the United States,the United Kingdom,and Hong Kong.All participants were randomly (34)_________to keep away from social media on either the first or the second day of a two-day experiment.On the other day,they were to interact with digital platforms as they(35)________would.Each evening they answered survey questions aimed at(36)________various aspects of well-being.Contrary to the researchers’expectations,the one-day detox made no noticeable impact on positive or negative emotions,self-confidence,or daily satisfaction.When it did have an effect,it decreased daily satisfaction and social relatedness,although the changes were not significant once the analysis was adjusted to control for gender.Just as(37) _________,people didn’t use the time freed up from looking at screens for other forms of socializing.In fact,they reported(38)________lower levels of face-to-face, phone,and email interactions on their detoxing days.Even short social-media breaks can be hard to(39)_______—indeed,only half the participants in the experiment did what was required and these results suggest that they may not be worth the(40)_______.“We did not find any evidence that social media detoxing for one day had significant positive impacts on psychological well-being,”the researchers write.12.2024届长宁区高三英语一模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.objectedB.choicesC.inequalitybinationE.paidF.respondG.personalityH.fadeI.reduceJ.inheritedK.environmentalWhat makes us happy?You probably know the type of personality in some people:they seem to be hopeful in almost everything.Are they simply born happy?Is it the product of their environment?Or does it come from their life decisions?If you are familiar with genetics research,you will have guessed that it is a31 of all three.A2018study of1516Norwegian twins suggests that around30%of the differences in people’s life satisfaction is32.Much of this seems to be related to personality traits.To put this in context,the heritability of IQ is thought to be around80%,so33 factors clearly play a role in our happiness.These include our physical health,the size and strength of our social network,job opportunities and income.It seems that the absolute value of our salary matters less than whether we feel richer than those around us,which may explain why the level of34predicts happiness better than GDP.Interestingly,many important life35have only a little influence on our happiness.Consider marriage.A2019study found that,on average,life satisfaction does rise after the wedding,but the feeling of happiness tends to36over middle age.Parenthood is even more complex.For decades,social scientists have found that people with children at home are significantly less happy than those without.More recent research,however, suggests that there are important regional differences.Analyses show that these differences can be almost completely explained by variations in 37parental leave,flexible working hours,affordable childcare and holiday leave,which together38the potential for work-family conflict.The effects of these policies may play out across generations.In addition to the legacy of their genes,parents’own emotional well-being will influence the family vigour,which will,in turn,shape the39of their children.Our life satisfaction,then,is shaped by our genes,health,economic prospects,relationships and the culture around us.While many of these things may be beyond your control,there is now good evidence that certain psychological strategies will help you to40to your circumstances in the happiest way possible.。

2018上海各区高三英语一模——11选10(包含答案)

2018上海各区高三英语一模——11选10(包含答案)

【2018-宝山区一模】Section BDirections: After reading the passage below, fill in each blank with a proper word given in the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one more word than you need.The discovery builds on earlier findings showed that a class of genes called splicing (胶接) factors is progressively switched off as we age. The research team found that splicing factors can be switched back on with chemicals, making aging cells not only look ____31____ younger, but start to divide like young cells.The researchers applied compounds chemicals based on a ____32____ naturally found in red wine, dark chocolate, red grapes and blueberries, to cells in culture. The chemicals ____33____ splicing factors, which are progressively switched off as we age to be switched back on. Within hours, the cells looked younger and started to rejuvenate, behaving like young cells.The discovery has the ___34_____ to lead to therapies that could help people age better, without experiencing some of the degenerative effects of getting old. Most people by the age of 85 have experienced some kind of chronic illness, and as people get older they are more prone to stroke, heart disease and cancer.Professor Harries as saying, “This is a first step in trying to make people live ___35_____ lifetime, but with health for their entire life. Our data suggests that using chemicals to switch back on the major class of genes that are switched off as we age might provide a means to ____36____ to old cells.”Dr Eva Latorre, Research Associate at the University of Exeter, who carried out the experiments, was surprised by the ____37____ and rapidity of the changes in the cells.“When I saw some of the cells in the culture dish ___38_____ I couldn’t believe it. These old cells were looking like young cells. It was like magic,” she said. “I repeated the experiments several times and in each case the cells rejuvenated. I am very excited by the implications and potential for this research.”As we age, our tissues accumulate senescent cells which are alive but do not grow or ____39____ as they should. These old cells lose the ability to correctly regulate the output of their genes. This is one reason why tissues and organs become susceptible to disease as we age. When activated, genes make a message that gives the ____40____ for the cell to behave in a certain way. Most genes can make more than one message, which determines how the cell acts.Splicing factors are crucial in ensuring that genes can perform their full range of functions.31. I 32. B 33. H 34. D 35. C 36. J 37. A 38. E 39. G 40. F【2018-崇明区一模】Section BCompany Builds World’s First Automobile V ending Machine(自动贩卖机)Thanks to used-car website Carvana, it is now possible to buy your own set of wheels at the touch of a button, from the world’s first and only coin-operated car vending machine in Nashville, Tennessee. It’s quick, easy, and not cheap, but cheaper than buying a car the old way.The company has been working on the concept for the past two years. Their __31__ car vending machine was installed in Atlanta in 2013. But they’ve spent time improving the design, in order to take user experience to the next level. “Our new Vending Machine is a state-of-the-art, multi-story structure that delivers our customers’ cars by merely __32__ a special coin,” said Carvana CEO Ernie Garcia.The machine consists of a five-story glass tower that can hold up to 20 cars at a time. The tower basically serves as a(n) __33__ point for used cars that customers purchase through the website, enabling __34__ pricing and eliminating delivery costs.Customers can access a long list of specifications, ratings, reviews, and lots of other details about the cars they’re interested in on the Carvana website. They even get __35__ tours that point out every scratch on the body of the car. Once the car is chosen and paid for, the company usually delivers the car to the customer for a seven-day trial period. This usually means the delivery costs are worked into the the __36__ of the vehicle.But with the Vending Machine, customers are able to go to pick up their cars straight away. It’s a win-win __37__ that allows Carvana to cut down on staff and overhead(间接费用), and save customers about $2,000 as well. According to the company, it also makes for a great __38__ experience – placing an oversized coin in a slot(硬币投币口)and watching their car roll down automatically.“Carvana’s __39__ is to create a better way to buy a car, and this n ew Vending Machine will be a one-of-a-kindexperience, __40__ just how simple and easy we’ve made it to buy a car online,” Garcia said. He added the company plans to build more car vending machines in the future.31. E 32. C 33. D 34. B 35. J 36. G 37. A 38. K 39. F 40. H【2018-奉贤区一模】Section BThere’s nothing more annoying than settling down to sleep and hearing the sound of a mosquito buzzing around you.The only thought most of us ever give to this noise is “I need to get rid of this insect, immediately”, but it turns out that the mosquito is actually quite a(n) __31__ creature.A term of scientists from Oxford University in the UK, in __32__ with the Royal Veterinary College in London and Chiba University in Japan, recently published a study that found some interesting facts about the world’s most __33__ insect.By placing eight cameras inside a tiny film studio, the scientists could study several mosquitoes up close. The high-tech cameras filmed the insects at 1,000 frames per second, meaning the scientists were able to study the insects’ __34__ in never-before-seen detail. However, it wasn’t always straightforward.“Recording mosquitoes during free-flight represented a huge technical challenge due to their small size, __35__ wing beat frequency, and the presence of large antennae and legs that can __36__ the view of their wings,” S imon Walker of Oxford University, co-author of the study, wrote.Published in the journal Nature, the study found that mosquitoes flap their wings around 800 times a second. As a __37__, house flies flap their wings about 200 times a second, and hummingbirds 50 times a second.Richard Bomphrey of the Royal Veterinary College, the study’s leader, believes that mosquitoes have a unique flying method that sets them apart from other flying insects.“We predicted that they must make use of clever tricks, as t he wings __38__ their direction at the end of each。

外文改编十一选十+专项训练2 高三英语一轮复习+

外文改编十一选十+专项训练2 高三英语一轮复习+

时文改编十一选十2篇(一)Worn-out cells eventually stop dividingA.otherwiseB. worsenC. accumulatingD. eliminatedE. absentF.ceaselesslyG. limitsH. assumedI. RemovalJ. declineK. automaticallyCells divide many times throughout their lives. But they cannot do it _____1_____. Once they have reached the _____2_____ of their reproductive powers, they enter a state called “senescence”, in which they carry on performing thei r duties but stop making new copies of themselves. For years it was _____3_____ that, apart from their refusal to divide, senescent cells were _____4_____ identical to their replicating companions.There is mounting evidence, though, that this is untrue. One study in 2016 reported that senescent cells in the kidneys and heart produce a protein that causes nearby healthy tissues to _____5_____. Another study published in Nature this week, suggests the accumulation of senescent cells within the brains of mice causes the animals todevelop neurodegenerative(神经退化的) diseases—and that the _____6_____ of thesecells can help prevent them.Working with a team of colleagues, Dr Baker obtained a population of mice that had been genetically engineered to quickly develop fibrous tangles of protein in their brains. These tangles are associated with the _____7_____ in mental abilities caused by diseases like Alzheimer’s. When the mice were four months old, Dr Baker collected brain tissue from some, and found senescent cells _____8_____ in the hippocampus, a seahorse-shaped region of the brain involved with learning and memory. By six months old, they built up in the cerebral cortex as well—as were the tangles that are associated with neurological degeneration.To see what role, if any, senescent cells were playing in their decreasing brainpower, Dr Baker genetically altered some mice so that their senescent cells could be _____9_____ with a twice-weekly dose of a specific chemical. That left a subgroup of mice that sti ll genetically tended to develop neurological diseases, but which also had their brains cleared of senescent cells. By the time these mice reached six months old, the tangles were almost entirely _____10_____. When the mice were presented with objects they had encountered before, they approached them without hesitation, as healthy mice should. In contrast, mice whose brains were full of senescent cells approached the objects cautiously , as if they had never seen them before.【答案】FGHAB IJCDE【解析】1.根据句意,缺副词,细胞在一生中分裂多次,但是他们不可能无休止地分裂。

2020届高三英语一模十一选十(小猫钓鱼)汇编

2020届高三英语一模十一选十(小猫钓鱼)汇编

2020届高三英语一模16区(15份)十一选十(小猫钓鱼)汇编01. 黄浦区Beyond Mobile Money: The Future of Asia’s FinTechMobile money has been the hottest part in financial technology for the last few years. But FinTech is more than just how people store money and transact (交易)– the space is much more horizontal, shortcutting how we create, share, and protect value.The latest product of FinTech companies to ___31___ in Asia Pacific illustrates the many ways the space can help consumers beyond just their mobile wallet. It is important for all businesspersons to be aware of these trends, as their success opens up all sorts of possibilities for companies to ___32___ with them. And, on a much deeper level, new FinTechs may ___33___ consumer expectations in even other tech industries.The Smartphone Emerges as a Credit-Scoring StandardWith close to half a billion ___34___ consumers in Southeast Asia alone, there is an entire industry of FinTechs devoted to finding ways to accurately determine their credit-worthiness to give them ___35___ to finance. Unfortunately, since they don’t have bank accounts, such FinTechs cannot rely on___36___ financial information or credit card payments.One credit scoring source emerging as a new standard in the field is smartphone-based credit scoring. It has ___37___ broad global support, including from the likes of the World Bank. In one of its reports, the Asian Development Bank even stated that mobile data was a key to financial ___38___, as it could improve customer recording, and, in turn, get an access to credit.AI Combines with the Wisdom of the CrowdThe most common slogan in today’s tech headlines is the “artificial intelligence”. Readers are fascinated with how AI has the ___39___ to transform every consumer and enterprise(企业) industry. While such focus is appropriate that AI will ___40___ change the world, it leaves out a crucial element that will go hand-in-hand with its rise: the wisdom of the crowd.31-35 BEGKA 36-40 JHCFDSimba, everyone’s favorite baby lion, returns to movie theaters July 19th (in the U.S.). This time around, though, he will be much more 31 through the magic of CGL (电脑合成影像). The much-loved classic, The Lion King, will open for the 25th anniversary of the 32 movie.The 1994 film proved to be one of Hollywood’s best-loved vivid movies! It made almost US$970 million worldwide. The film went on to win numerous awards for its music and its later stage shows. Simba’s story opened on Broadway in 1997, followed by theatrical 33 around the world. Today, audiences on six continents have seen The Lion King34 on stage. Now, more than 20 years later, it is still one of Broadway’s most popular shows.Great 35 is building for the new movie. Disney released its first official video clip during Thanksgiving Day football games last year. The trailer (预告片) was viewed more than 224 million times in the first 24 hours!The trailer was received very positively, especially because of its realism. Some fans, though, noticed that the clip of the new film was 36 the same as in the 1994 opening scene. One Disney executive quickly gave some 37 . He said the movie kept the best of the original, while adding in some new elements.One thing that excited many viewers was the 38 of a very familiar voice. James Earl Jones, with his famous low but strong voice, has returned as Simba’s father Mufasa. Jones is the only one of the original voice actors to return in the new film.Many well-known people provide character voices, including popstar Beyonce and actor Seth Rogan. Director Jon Favreau expressed his excitement over 39 his all-star cast to such a great story. “It’s a director’s dream to 40 a talented team... to bring this classic story to life.”31. E 32. K 33. A 34. I 35. B 36. C 37. H 38. D 39. J 40. FStephen Hawking: The Extraordinary Scientist Who Changed Our Understanding of Physics There aren’t very many scientists who achieved rock star status. Stephen Hawking was definitely one of them.Hawking was a theoretical physicist whose early work on black holes 31 how scientists think about the nature of the universe. Lawrence Krauss, a theoretical physicist from Arizona State University and a friend and colleague of Hawking’s, says that at a young age, Hawking 32 something “truly remarkable”. Krauss says before Hawking, physicists thought that the large gravity of a black hole 33 everything in and nothing could escape. But by combining quantum mechanics (量子力学) and the theory of relativity, Hawking showed something and changed everything about the way we think about gravity. Krauss says Hawking pointed out a(n) 34 problem in the way physicists understand our world—a problem that Krauss says has yet to be resolved.But his fame wasn’t just a(n) 35 of his research. Hawking, who had a rare disease that made it impossible for him to move or speak, was also a popular public 36 and best-selling author. When he came to scientific conferences, the audience focused their attention on him. And it wasn’t just the scientists but the general public as well who showed great 37 for him. His popular book about his work, A Brief History of Time, was a best-seller. But he agreed that that book was probably the least-read, most-bought book ever. This showed H awking’s sense of humor.That sense of humor, along with his fame, 38 Hawking to appear on The Simpsons several times—as well as on a number of other popular shows.Toward the end of his life, Hawking’s disease left him almost paralyzed (瘫痪的). It took an enormous 39 for Hawking to communicate, using the tiny movements he could make to control a computer. It’s tempting to say that Hawking achieved his fame in spite of his 40 challenges.31. D 32. F 33. A 34. J 35. C 36. H 37. I 38. B 39. G 40. EIs it possible to make paper without trees? Australian businessmen Kevin Garcia and Jon Tse spent a year researching a possible ___31___ that could serve as a possible raw material for making paper. Then Garcia read about a Taiwanese company making commercial paper out of stone and a(n) ___32___ struck.A year later, in July 2017, they launched Karst Stone Paper. The company produces paper without using wood or water. Their source is stone waste ___33___ from construction sites and other industrial waste dumps.“If you look at the whole process of h ow paper is traditionally made, it ___34___ chopping trees, adding chemicals, using lots of water and then ___35___, drying and flattening it into sheets of paper,” said Garcia. “It contributes to high carbon emission and deforestation.”In 2019, Garcia es timates Karst’s paper production has helped save 540 large timber trees(成材木) from being deforested, 83,100 liters (21,953 gallons) of water from being used and 25,500 kilograms (56,218 pounds) of carbon dioxide from being ___36___.“We collect disposed limestone (石灰石) from wherever we can find it, wash it, and grind it into fine powder,” he said. The powder is mixed with a HDPE resin (高密度聚乙烯树脂), which ___37___ over time from sunlight, leaving only calcium carbonate (碳酸钙) behind.The paper can be as thin as notebook paper or as thick as a cardboard paper and is waterproof, ___38___ and difficult to tear. The notebooks cost $10 to $25. Karst’s products are mainly sold through the company’s website, but are also stocked in 100 stores, ___39___ throughout Aust ralia, the United States and the United Kingdom. “Over 70% of the customers are US-based,” he said.They hope to have the notebooks in 1,000 stores by the end of the year. Garcia said they are now thinking about ___40___ investors for the first time in order to scale up their operations. They declined to reveal how much the company makes or their annual revenue.31----40. DGJHI KCFEAHow do Cigarettes Affect the Body?Cigarettes aren’t good for us. But how exactly do cigarettes harm us? Let’s look at what happens as their ingredients make their way through our bodies, and how we benefit (31) ______ when we finally give up smoking.Inside the airways and lungs, smoke increases the (32) ______ of infections as well as long-lasting diseases. It does this by damaging the tiny hair-like tissueswhich keep the airw ays clean. That’s one of the reasons smoking can lead to oxygen loss and (33) ______ of breath.Within about 10 seconds, the bloodstream carries a stimulant called nicotine to the brain, creating the (34) ______ sensations which make smoking highly addictive. Nicotine and other chemicals from the cigarette, at the same time, cause tightness of blood tubes, restricting blood flow. These effects on blood tubes lead to (35) ______ of blood tube walls, increasing the possibilityof heart attacks and strokes.Man y of the chemicals inside cigarettes can activate dangerous (36) ______ in the body’s DNA that make cancers form. In fact, about one of every three cancer deaths in the United States is caused by smoking. And it’s not just lung cancer. Smoking can cause cancer in multiple tissues and organs, as well as damaged eyesight and (37) ______ bones. It makes it harder for women to get pregnant. And in men, it can cause long-term damages of body functions.But for those who quit smoking, there’s a huge positive upsi de with almost (38) ______ and long-lasting physical benefits. A day after ceasing, heart attack risk begins to decrease as blood pressure and heart rates (39) ______. Lungs become healthier after about one month, with less coughing. After ten years, the chances of developing fatal lung cancer go down by 50%, probably because the body’s ability to repair DNA is once again restored.There’s no point pretending this is all easy to achieve. Quitting can lead to anxiety and depression. But fortunately, such effects are usually (40) ______. Advice and support groups and moderate intensity exercise also help smokers stay cigarette-free. That’s good news, since quitting puts you and your body on the path back to health.31. G 32. C 33.I 34.A 35.E 36.B 37.K 38.F 39.J 40. HMicroplastic PollutionIn the past few years, scientists have found microplastics in our soil, tap water, bottled water, beer and even in the air we breathe. And there’s growing concern about the _____31_____ health risks they pose to humans.The new analysis in the UK have discovered microplastics widely _____32_____ across all 10 lakes and rivers sampled. More than 1,000 small pieces of plastic per litre were found in the River Tame, which was _____33_____ last year as the most polluted place tested worldwide. Even in relatively remote places such as the Falls of Dochart and Loch Lomond in Scotland, two or three pieces per litre were found.Microplastics are not a _____34_____ kind of plastic, but rather any type of small pieces of plastic that is less than5 mm in length according to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. They may _____35_____ froma variety of sources, including cosmetics, clothing, and industrial processes.Humans are known to _____36_____ the tiny plastic particles through food and water, but the possible health effects on people and ecosystems have yet to be determined. One study, in Singapore, has found that microplastics can _____37_____ harmful microbes (微生物).Research by the National University of Singapore found more than 400 types of bacteria on 275 pieces of microplastic collected from local beaches. They included insects that cause gastroenteritis (肠胃炎) and wound _____38_____ in humans.“Microplastics are being found_____39_____ everywhere but we do not know the harm they could be doing,” said Christian Dunn at Bangor University, Wales, who led the work. “It’s no use looking back in 20 years’ time and saying: ‘If only we’d realized just how bad it was.’ We need to be monitoring our waters now and we need to think, as a country and a world, how we can be reducing our _____40_____ on plastic.”31-40 GAKHI DECBFEmphasizing social play in kindergarten improves academicsEmphasizing social play and students helping one another in kindergarten improves academic outcomes, self-control and attention regulation, finds new UBC research. The study, published in the journal PLoS One, found this approach to kindergarten curriculum also ____31____children’s joy in learning and teachers’ enjoyment of teaching.“Before children have the ability to sit for long periods ____32____information, they need to be allowed to be ____33____and be encouraged to learn by doing,” said Dr. Adele Diamond, the study’s lead author. “Indeed, people of a ll ages learn better by doing than by being told.”Through a controlled experiment, Diamond and her colleagues ____34____the effectiveness of a curriculum called Tools of the Mind (Tools). The curriculum was introduced to willing kindergarten teachers and 351 children with different backgrounds in 18 public schools.Tools was developed in 1993 by two American researchers. Its basic ____35____is that social-emotional development and improving self-control is as important as teaching academic skills and content. The Tools ____36____ the role of social play in developing skills such as self-control, selective attention and planning. “Skills like self-control and selective attention are necessary for learning. They are often more strongly associated with school readiness (入学准备) than intelligence quotient (IQ),” said Diamond. “This experiment is the first to show ____37____ of a curriculum emphasizing social play.”Teachers reported more ____38____ behavior and greater sense of community in Tools classes. Late in the school year, Tools teachers reported they still felt ____39____ and excited about teaching, while teachers in the control group were exhausted. “I have enjoyed seeing the ____40____ progress my students ha ve made in writing and reading.” said a Tools teacher in Vancouver. “I have also enjoyed seeing the students get so excited about coming to school and learning. They loved all the activities so much that many students didn’t want to miss school, even if they were sick.”31—35:GHFJB 36—40: AIDECIn between all the measures to battle the severe air pollution levels in Delhi, there’s one more option for you — a bar that has “pure air”. Delhi’s first-ever oxygen bar —named “Oxy Pure” — offers 15 minutes of 80-90 percent pure oxygen starting from Rs 299.The bar, __31__ in May, also offers its customers several aromas(香味)to choose from that can be filled with oxygen. The aromas include lemongrass, cherry, mango and more.Customers are given a lightweight tube, used for supplementary oxygen __32__. The device is placed near the customer’s nose through which they are advised to breathe in the aroma-filled oxygen.According to the aroma you choose, each session __33__ to improve one’s sleep patterns and digestion, cure headaches and even claims to work as a remedy for __34__.“I was passing by and saw that they were offering pure oxygen. I thought I would give it a try and went for the lemongrass flavour. It was __35__,” Manjul Mehta, a customer at Oxy Pure told Delhi Daily.Speaking to Delhi Daily, Bonny Irengbam, senior sales assistant at the bar, said customers were __36__ positively after a few sessions.“Some people, who try it for the first time, will feel relaxed and fresh. But only people who undergo the sessions regu larly will get real __37__ of the aroma,” he added. “Though we have regular customers, we don’t encourage back-to-back sessions, as __38__ levels of oxygen in the body can make a person dizzy. It is __39__ to do it once or twice a month or to stick with the 10-15 minute sessions a day,” he said.Dr. Rajesh Chawla, a senior consultant in medicine said that though such sessions do not have any side-effects, it does not help in the long run either. “Even if you breathe in the so-called pure oxygen for two hours in a day, you will go back to breathing the polluted air for the rest of the 22 hours”, he said. He added that the concept is purely a(n) __40__ move.31-40 F H C K B J A E I DBottle Found at Sea Used for Scientific PurposeCombing the beach for shells, sea glass, or colorful rocks is a leisure activity enjoyed by many. Some even use metal detectors to find buried treasure or other objects. Only the lucky few have ___31___ a message in a bottle that was dropped off by the tide. The tradition of putting a letter to an unknown recipient into a bottle and throwing it into the ocean has an interesting past. An early ___32___ use for the practice was revealed when the oldest recorded message in a bottle was found by Tonya on a beach near Wedge Island, Australia.Tonya was on a family outing when she noticed the antique glass bottle in the sand and thought it would make a nice ___33___. While she was cleaning the sandy gin bottle, a rolled up paper tied with a ___34___ fell out. The damp page was a message written in German and dated June 12, 1886. According to official documents from the German sailing vessels, Paula, a crew member tossed the bottle overboard a(n) ___35___ 950 km off the coast of Western Australia. Further research authenticated(验证)the letter, which had been sent afloat 132 years ago and is the oldest message in a bottle ever ___36___.Historians confirm that thousands of similar bottles were cast overboard by German ships between 1864 and 1933. And ___37___ inside were official documents written by the captain of the ship, ___38___ routes, coordinates, and other information. These early messages in a bottle were an attempt by the German Naval Observatory to map ocean ___39___ around the world.On the back of the notes were ___40___ to write the time and place the bottles were found and return them to the German Naval Observatory in Hamburg or the nearest German authorities. Using this information for reference was an early system of studying patterns in nature and the vast ocean in particular.31. H 32. E 33. K 34. A 35. I 36. G 37. B 38. D 39. F 40. J10. 长宁、金山区Marketing the MoonAn astronaut, a little hop and a witty quote: Neil Armstrong’s first lunar (月球的) footstep is deep-rooted in the minds of all humankind. But that first moon landing might not have been such a(n) 31 moment if it weren’t for NASA’s clever PR (Public Relat ions) team.Richard Jurek is a marketing 32 and co-author of the book Marketing the Moon: The Selling of the Apollo Lunar Program. He says NASA’s move to real-time, open communication made the 1969 Apollo 11 landing “the first positive viral event that 33 the world’s attention.”Before NASA was established in 1958, rockets were the military’s territory; that secretiveness carried over into the space agency’s early days. At first, NASA followed a “fire in the tail” rule, only 34 a rocket’s launc h when it was successfully in the air. But as the agency evolved, it started announcing more details about the Apollo program. It 35 its astronauts, talked openly about mission goals and challenges, and shared launch times so people could watch. “If it had been run like it was under the military,” Jurek says, “we would not have had that sense of drama, that sense of involvement, that sense of wonder, that 36 .” Instead, all the PR and press promotion in the years ahead of Apollo 11 brought the human spaceflight program into people’s living rooms and imaginations.As the drama neared its peak, NASA’s PR officials pushed for live TV broadcasts of the first humans to walk on the moon. Not everyone thought it was a good idea. The technology for live lunar broadcasts, and cameras small enough to keep the cargo 37 , didn’t exist at that point. Some engineers worried that developing that equipment would 38 from efforts to achieve the landing itself. But NASA’s communications team argued that telling th e story was as vital as the 39 itself. Live TV would bring the American people—and international viewers—along for the ride.Come landing day, which 40 fell on a Sunday, more than half a billion people worldwide crowded around TVs and radios for th e historic moment. “We were able to come together and do something that was exciting and interesting and brought the world together,” says David Meerman Scott, marketing strategist and co-author of Marketing the Moon. “I don’t know that we’ve done anything like that since.”31-35 HFBIC 36-40 KGEAD11. 浦东新区Criticism of the Fast FashionIn the 2006 film version of The Devil Wears Prada, Miranda Priestly, played by Meryl Streep, scolds her unattractive assistant for imagining that high fashion doesn’t affect her. Priestly explains how the deep blue color of the assistant’s sweater was ____31____ over the years from fashion shows to departments stores and to the bargain bin in which the poor girl probably found her clothes.This top-down concept of the fashion business couldn’t be more out of date or in conflict with the mad world described in Overdressed, Elizabeth Cline’s three-year accusation of “fast fashion”. In the last decade or so, ____32____ in technology have allowed mass-market labels such as Zara, H&M, and Uniqlo to react to trends more quickly and predict demand more ____33____. Quicker turnarounds mean less wasted stock, more frequent release, and more profit. These labels encourage style-conscious consumers to see clothes as disposable—meant to last only a wash or two, although they don’t advertise that—and to ____34____ their wardrobe (衣橱) every few weeks. By offering on-trend items at dirt-cheap prices, Cline argues, these brands have controlled fashion cycles, shaking an industry long ____35____ to a seasonal pace.The ____36____ of this revolution, of course, are not limited to designers. For H&M to offer a $5.95 knit miniskirt in all its 2,300-plus stores around the world, it must rely on low-wage overseas labor, order in volumes that ____37____ natural resources, and use massive amounts of harmful chemicals.Towards the end of Overdressed, Cline introduced her ideal, a Brooklyn woman named Sarah Kate Beaumont, who since 2008 has made all of her own clothes — and beautifully. But as Cline is the first to note, it took Beaumont decades to perfect her craft; her example can’t be imitated.Though several fast-fashion companies have made efforts to ___38___ their impact on labor and the environment —including H&M, with its green Conscious Collection line —Cline believes lasting change can only be made by customers. She exhibits the idealism ___39___ to many advocates of sustainability, be it in food or in energy. Vanity (虚荣心) is a constant; people will only start shopping more ___40___ when they can’t afford not to.31-40 HBGIA KEFDJFounding Father of China’s Nuclear ProgramUnder the terms of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (不扩散核武器条约), only five countries are considered to be “nuclear-weapon states.” China is one of them. This military achievement would have been __31__ without the contribution of Deng Jiaxian, a leading organizer of China’s nuclear weapon programs.Deng went to the United States in 1948 for further study, and received a doctorate in physics two years later. Just nine days after graduation, the then 26-year-old returned to the newly-founded People’s Republic of China with __32__ physics knowledge. He became a research fellow under the leadership of Qian Sanqiang and started his theoretical nuclear research in cooperation with Yu Min.From1958 on, Deng spent over 20 years working __33__ with a team of young scientists on the development of China’s first atomic and hydrogen bombs. Originally, they were prepared to receive training by experts from the Soviet Union. Soon after, however, the Soviet government tore up its __34__ with China and removed all its experts. Deng had to lead the team of 28 members with an average age of 23 on a mission to __35__ the mysterious power of atomic physics.There was ridicule(嘲笑) following the __36__ of the Soviet experts that China wouldn’t be able to build an atomic bomb within 20 years. Deng said to his colleagues, “It is in the interest of the Chinese peo ple to develop nuclear weapons. We must be willing to be unknown heroes for our lifetime. It is worth the risk of suffering, and it is worth our __37__ to this cause.”As the leader of China’s atomic bomb design, Deng gave lessons himself and organized a team to translate and study the __38__ foreign language materials. In the meantime, he never stopped thinking about the direction of atomic bomb development.Following the successful test of the first atomic bomb in 1964, Deng joined the research group led by Yu Min. They immediately started the design of the hydrogen bomb, which was __39__ in 1967. From the first atomic bomb to the first hydrogen bomb, China spent only two years and eight months on development .Deng passed away in 1986 because of cancer. In the last month of his life, the 28-year secret experience of this great scientist was __40__, and his reputation began to spread throughout China. In 1999, along with 22 other scientists, he was awarded the special prize of “Two Bombs, One Satellite Meritorious Medal” for his contribution to Chinese military science.31-40 KFACG IEBDHTime: is there ever enough of it? In today’s modern world, most of us are 31 with so-called time-saving devices and technological advancements and work less both at the office and at home. But why do we still feel busier?A study by Derek Thompson on t he “myth” of being busy suggests that while 32 brought us convenience, it also brought us new headaches. Consider the idea of FOMO (fear of missing out). Knowing exactly what we’re missing out makes us feel guilty or anxious about the 33 of our time and our ability to use it effectively.While being informed is important, it can lead to anxiety about keeping up with the times. If you find yourself unable to stop scrolling through Twitter, turn off the phone and take a mental break. Practice JOMO (joy of missing out), a(n) 34 on life that’s a direct contradiction to FOMO. Get rid of feelings of guilt and “shoulds” and replace them with mindfulness and living in the moment.Another thing technology has 35 us is the blurring (难以区分) between work and downtime. While constant connection has made the workday much more flexible, it’s also harder to turn off at the end of the day. Always being “on” is a(n) 36 state of mind. Consider putting a hard stop on media and electronic devices an hour or two before bed.Of course, if you want to move up the corporate ladder and get a bigger paycheck, working long hours has long been a 37 strategy. But if you don’t have passion for your job or care about what you do, you might just be working yourself into more 38 .People working the same hours feel completely different levels of time pressure depending on their passion. If most of the hours are spent doing something you don’t feel39 about, it’s no wonder you start to feel out of control and anxio us about your time. Taking back control of your time can ease this mental stress. Therefore, your time management goal shouldn’t be to figure out how to do more, but 40 to figure out how to want less.31. J 32. A 33. E 34. H 35. G 36. K 37. I 38. B 39. F 40. CAutism Spectrum DisorderAutism Spectrum Disorder, or ASD, affects how people communicate with and relate to others. Most people with autism don’t understand some of the basic social __31__ that others take for granted. They might have trouble making eye contact, holding a conversation, or recognizing gestures. And over one-third of people with ASD are nonverbal, meaning they don’t use speech. Along with communication __32__, people with autism often like to follow certain patterns or __33__ behaviors. Many are sensitive to bright light or loud noises, and others have physical problems, like trouble walking or picking up small objects. Some have __34__ disabilities, but about half have average or above average IQs. It’s also common for people with autism to have a great long-term memory for certain details, and many excel in math, science, music, or art.With such a wide variety of symptoms, no two people with ASD are alike. The behaviors vary so much that they used to be __35__ as different disorders. One was Asperger Syndrome, where people obsess over particular topics, __36__nonverbal social cues, and may not understand appropriate social behaviors.Even though there’s no cure for ASD, therapy and medication can help people adjust. Scientists are also doing clinical __37__ t o find other solutions. They’ve learned that 1 out of every 68 children in the US has the disorder, but they still aren’t sure what causes it. No matter why it happens, ASD is being __38__ at a higher rate every year. This doesn’t mean it’s becoming more c ommon. It just means more people are aware of the condition and getting professional help early, and awareness is __39__. The more we learn about autism, the more we can understand and relate to those who have it.It’s important to note that people with A SD deserve the same respect, fairness and chances that people without ASD receive. This will help people with ASD __40__ and grow in our communities.31-40 B G J F C I K E D A。

2020上海高考英语一模十一选十小猫钓鱼汇编

2020上海高考英语一模十一选十小猫钓鱼汇编

上海高考英语题型训练:十一选4 2020高三第一学期期末质量抽查Section BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.松江Is it possible to make paper without trees? Australian businessmen Kevin Garcia and Jon Tse spent a year researching a possible __31__ that could serve as a possible raw material for makingpaper. Then Garcia read about a Taiwanese company making commercial paper out of stone and a(n) __32__ struck.A year later, in July 2017, they launched Karst Stone Paper. The company produces paperwithout using wood or water. Their source is stone waste __33__ from construction sites and other industrial waste dumps.“If you look at the whole process of how paper is traditionally made, it __34__ chopping trees,adding chemicals, using lots of water and then __35__, drying and flattening it into sheets of paper, “ said Garcia. "It contributes to high carbon emissand deforestation. ”In 2019, Garcia estimates Karst paper production has helped save 540 large timber trees.(成材木)from being deforested, 83,100 liters (21,953 gallons) of water from being used and 25,500 kilograms (56,218 pounds) of carbon dioxide from being __36__.“We collect disposed limestoneH 灰石)from wherever we can find it, wash it, and grind it into fine powder, “ he said. The powder is mixed with a H DPEresin 度聚乙烯树脂) ,which __37__ over time from sunlight, leaving only calciumcarbonate (碳酸钙)behind.The paper can be as thin as notebook paper or as thick as a cardboard paper and is waterproof, __38__ and difficult to tear. The notebooks cost $10 to $25. Karst ' s products are mainly sold through the company ' s website, but are also stocked in 100stores, __39__ throughout Australia, the United States and the United Kingdom.“ Over 70% of theustomers are US -based, " he said.The hope to have the notebooks in 1,000 stores by the end of the year. Garcia said they are now thinking about __40__ investors for the first time in order to scale up their operations. They declined to reveal how much the company makes or their annual revenue.黄浦Mobile money has been the hottest part in financial technology for the last few years. But FinTech is more than just how people store money and transact 交易)-- the space is much more horizontal, short cutting how we create, share, and protect value.A. approachingE. primarilyI. squeezingB. temporarily F. recyclable J. minedC. decomposesD. alternative G. inspiration H. involves K. emittedThe latest product of FinTech companies to __31__ in Asia Pacific illustrates the many ways the space can help consumers beyond just their mobile wallet. It is important for all businesspersons to be aware of these trends, as their success opens up all sorts of possibilities for companies to __32__ with them. And, on a much deeper level, new FinTechs may __33__ consumer expectations in even other tech industries.The Smart-phone Emerges a Credit - Scoring StandardWith close to half a billion __34__ consumers in Southeast Asia alone, there is an entire industry of FinTechs devoted to finding ways to accurately determine their credit - worthiness to give them __35__ to finance. Unfortunately, since they don' t have bank accounts, such FinTechs cannot rely on __36__ financial information or credit card payments.One credit scoring source emerging as a new standard in the field is smart-phone-based credit scoring. It has __37__ broad global support, including from the likes of the World-Bank. In one of its reports, the Asian Development Bank even stated that mobile data was a key to financial __38__, as it could improve customer recording, and, in turn, get an access to credit.AI Combines with the Wisdom of the CrowdThe most common slogan in today ' s tech headlines is the " artificial intelligence. Readers are fascinated with how AI has the __39__ to transform every consumer and enterprise 企业)industry. While such focus is appropriate that AI will __40__ change the world, it leaves out a crucial element that will go hand - in - hand with its rise: the wisdom of the crowd.崇明A. drewB. allowedC. resultD. transformedE. physicalF. discoveredG. effortH. figureI. respectJ. fundamentalK. mutualStephen Hawking: The Extraordinary Scientist Who Changed Our Understanding of Physics There aren ' very many scientists who achieved rock star status. Stephen Hawking was definitely one of them.Hawking was a theoretical physicist whose early work on black holes __31__ how scientists think about the nature of the universe. Lawrence Krauss, a theoretical physicist from Arizona State University and a friend and colleague of Hawking's, says that at a young age. Hawking __32__ something “trulyremarkable "Kr auss says before Hawking , physicists thought that the large gravity of a black hole __33__ everything in and nothing could escape. But by combining quantum mechanics 量子力学)and the theory of relativity, Hawking showed something and changed everything about the way we think about gravity. Krauss says Hawking pointed outa(n) __34__ problem in the way physicists understand our world - a problem that Krauss says has yet to be resolved.But his fame wasn ' t just a(n) __35__ of his research. Hawking, who had a rare disease that made it impossible for him to move or speak, was also a popular public 36 and best-selling author. When he came to scientific conferencesthe audience focused their attention on him. And it wasn ' t just the scientists but the general public as well who showed great __37__ for him. His popular book about his work, A Brief History of Time, was a best-seller. But he agreed that that book was probably the least-read, most-bought book ever. This showed Hawking's sense of humor.That senseof humor, along with his fame, __38__ Hawking to appear on TheSimpsons several times as well as on a number of other popular shows.Toward the end of his life, Hawking s disease left hi imlOlmost .It look anenormous __39__ for Hawking to communicate, using the tiny movements he could make to control a computer. It ' s tempting to say that Hawking achieved his fame inspite of his __40__ challenges.虹口Cigarettes aren t good for us. But how exactly do cigarettes harm us? Letsat what happens as their ingredients make their way through our bodies, and how we benefit(31)when we finally give up smoking.Inside the airways and lungs, smoke increases the (32)of infections as well as long - lasting diseases.It does this by damaging the tiny hair - like tissues which keep the airways clean. That ' s one of the reasons smoking can lead to oxygen loss and (33)of breath.Within about 10 seconds, the bloodstream carries a stimulant called nicotine to the brain, creating the (34)sensations which make smoking highly addictive. Nicotine and other chemicals from the cigarette, at the same time, cause tightness of blood tubes, restricting blood flow. These effects on blood tubes lead to (35) of blood tube walls, increasing the possibility of heart attacks and strokes.Many of the chemicals inside cigarettes can activate dangerous (36)in the body' D NA that make cancers form. In fact, about one of every three cancer deaths in the United States is caused by smoking. And it ' not just lung cancer. Smoking can cause cancer in multiple tissues and organs, as well as damaged eyesight and (37)bones. It makes it harder for women to get pregnant. And in men, it can cause long-term damages of body functions.But for those who quit smoking, there s a huge positive upside with almost (38) and long-lasting physical benefits. A day after ceasing, heart attack risk begins to decreaseas blood pressure and heart rates (39). Lungs become healthier after about one month, with less coughing. After ten years, the chances ofdeveloping fatal lung cancer go down by 50%, probably because the body s ability to repair DNA is once again restored.There' no point pretending this is all easy to achieve. Quitting can lead to anxiety and depression. But fortunately, such effects are usually (40). Advice and support groups and moderate intensity exercise also help smokers stay cigarette - free. That' good news, since quitting puts you and your body on the path back to health.徐汇In the past few years, scientists have found microplastics in our soil, tap water, bottled water, beer and even in the air we breatheAnd there ' s growing concern aboutthe 31 health risks they pose to humans.The new analysis in the UK have discovered microplastics widely ________ 32across all 10 lakes and rivers sampled. More than 1,000 small pieces of plastic per litre were found in the River Tame, which was 33 last year as the most polluted place tested worldwide. Even in relatively remote places such as the Falls of Dochart and Loch Lomond in Scotland, two or three pieces per litre were found.Microplastics are not a 34 kind of plastic, but rather any type of small pieces of plastic that is less than 5 mm in length according to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. They may 35 from a variety of sources, including cosmetics, clothing, and industrial processes.Humans are known to 36 the tiny plastic particles through food and water, but the possible health effects on people and ecosystems have yet to be determined. One study, in Singapore, has found that microplastics can 37 harmful microbes (微生物).Research by the National University of Singapore found more than 400 types of bacteria on 275 pieces of microplastic collected from local beaches.They included insects that cause gastroenteritis!(胃炎)and wound 38 in humans.“Microplasticsare being found 39 everywhere but we do not know the harm they could be doing, " said Christian Dunn at Bangers UniWales, who led the work. “It nos use looking back in 20 years time and saying: ' Ifonly we' d realized just how bad it was. ' We need to be monitoring our waters now and we need to think, as a country and a world, how we can be reducing our 40 on plastic. ”松江31-40 DGJHI KCFEA 崇明31-40 DFAJC H1BGE 徐汇31-40GAKHI DECBF黄浦31- 40 BEGKA JHCFD虹口31-40 GCIAE BKFJH。

02 十一选十-2021年上海市高三英语一模专项汇编

02 十一选十-2021年上海市高三英语一模专项汇编

02-2021年上海市高三英语一模真题专项训练之十一选十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.2021黄浦一模Science Isn't Always Perfect—But We Should Still Trust It From environment pollution to climate change, we make decisions every day that involve us in scientific claims.Are genetically modified crops safe to eat? Is climate change an emergency? In recent years, many of these issues have become politically polarized, with people rejecting scientific evidence that is opposite their political ____31____. When Greta Thunberg, the youthful climate activist, was asked by one member why we should trust the science, she replied, "because it's science!"For several decades, there has been a(n) ____32____ and organized campaign intended to produce distrust in science, funded by regulated industries and libertarian think-tanks whose interests and beliefs are ____33____ by the findings of modern science. In response, scientists have tended to stress the success of science. After all, scientists have been right about most things,from the structure of the universe to the relativity of time and space.That answer isn't wrong,but for many people it's not ____34____.After all,just because scientists more than 400 years ago were right about the structure of the solar system doesn't prove that a different group of scientists are right about a different issue today.An alternative answer to the question-Why trust science?—is that scientists use "the scientific method." If you've got a high school science textbook lying around the house, you'll probably find that answer in it. But this answer is wrong. But what is ____35____ declared to be the scientific method—develop a hypothesis(假设), then design an experiment to test it-isn't what scientists actually do. Historians of science have shownthat scientists use many different methods, and these methods have changed with time. Science ___36_____ changes:new methods get invented, old ones get ____37____, and any particular point in time scientists can be found doing many different things. And that's a good thing,because the so-called scientific method doesn't work. False theories can produce true results, so even if an experiment works, it doesn't prove the theory that was ____38____to test it is true.There also might be many different theories that could produce that same_____39___result. On the contrary,if the experiment fails,it doesn't prove the theory is wrong; it could be that the experiment was badly conducted or there was a fault in one of the ____40____.答案31.C 32.J 33.A 34.K 35.D 36.I 37.G 38.B 39.E 40.H2021崇明一模A Tennis Tournament (锦标赛) with TraditionToday, July 2nd kicks off t ennis’s major event: The Championships, Wimbledon, more commonly known as just Wimbledon. Held in London at the All England Club, it is the oldest tennis tournament in the world.Over its long history, the tournament has developed traditions which help to ___31___ it among sports events. During the tournament, players must follow a dress code and compete wearing all-white clothing. This allows the competitors to stand out ___32___ among those dressed in the tennis club’s official colors of dark green and p urple. Wimbledon’s most ___33___ tradition, however, is that all matches are played on outdoor grass courts. In fact,Wimbledon is the only major tennis tournament still played on grass. Several of the courts at the All England Club are only used for two weeks a year, during the championships. For Wimbledon players, it’s the honor of a lifetime to play the gamethey love on the tennis world’s center stage. In addition to the ___34___ and recognition for the winners is the annually increasing prize money the champions take home. Wimbledon consists of five main events with several ___35___ events and invitation events. Men and women, or gentlemen and ladies as they’re called at Wimbledon, compete in singles and doubles matches. There is also mixed doubles, where one man and one woman make up a team. Events are mostly single ___36___ tournaments. Only the gentlemen’s, senior gentlemen’s and ladies’ invitation doubles are round-robin (循环赛) tournaments.During the 14 days of ___37___ competition, nearly 500,000 people will attend the event, including members of the royal family. On occasion this has included the Prince of Wales and Her majesty the Queen. One of Wimbledon’s past traditions required players to bow toward the tournament’s honored guests. Some player s still ___38___ observe the tradition even though the players are no longer required to do so.As the players compete, the tennis fans also participate in another tournament tradition by consuming the ___39___ strawberries and cream.With the tennis wor ld’s ___40___ now set on Wimbledon, don’t miss the opportunity to catch this much-loved sporting event.答案31. B 32. D 33. K 34. H 35. J 36. C 37. F 38. I 39. A 40. G 2021宝山一模Don't abandon the written WordWay back in 2012, Kyle Wiens. CEO of IFIX wrote in a blog post for Harvard Business Review that he wouldn't hire anyone who used poor grammar. In fact, he __31__ all applicants to take a grammar test before moving forward.According to Wiens, he’s "found that people who make fewer mistakes on a grammar test also make fewer mistakes when they are doing something __32__ unrelated to writing―like stocking shelves or labeling parts. What's more, he believes that grammar skills indicate several other valuable __33__, including learning ability, professional credibility(信用) and attention to detail. Another CEO named Brad Hoover noted that good grammar is a predictor of professional success.Honestly ask yourself whether you'd hire someone with a poorly written resume. Will this person be able to deliver on your business plan? How __34__ will they be able to communicate your goals and expectations? How likely is it that they will be able to successfully __35__ with others and build your brand? In short, if you want to succeed―as a boss or an employee―good grammar is __36__.“Great leaders can understand how to use it well in context,” wrote Kevin Daum in an article. As a leader, you must be able to manage, organize, __37__ and support your team. Strong communication skill both written and verbal, allow you to accomplish that. If you sent an employee poorly written instructions, how probable is it that you'll both be __38__ in the outcome-and each other?Writing, specifically by hand has numerous __39__ for your health and well-being. Researchers have also found that handwriting, in particular the forming of letters, is the key to not only __40__ your memory but also forming new ideas and learning. In fact, if you want to slow down mental aging, writing by hand is your best bet because it forces you to use more of your motor skills.答案31-35HDAIC 36-40JGEBF2021徐汇一模China has for years been protecting and restoring natural ecology and the environment, and has established a target responsibility system to improve ecological and environmental quality, developed innovative systems of (31) _______, inspection and accountability(责任), and greatly raised the level of biodiversity conservation. It has also made steady progress in the (32) _______ of 25 pilot projects for ecological protection and restoration of mountains, rivers, forests, lakes and grasslands, and put 90 percent of the earthly ecosystems and 85 percent of key wildlife populations under (33) _______ regulations.While (34) _______ ways to ensure harmonious coexistence between humans and nature, in line with the goals and vision of the UN Convention on Biological Diversity, China is also helping build a global ecological civilization. China was the first country to (35) _______ the National Implementation Plan on the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, has contributed to and participated in the Convention on Biological Diversity, and made notable progress toward 17 of the 20 Aichi Biodiversity Targets and achieved some of them before schedule. (According to the (36) _______ released Global Biodiversity Outlook 5, only six Aichi Targets have been partly met at the global level).Also, the United Nations has labelled the Kubuqi Desert in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region (内蒙古自治区) as a desert ecological-economic (37) _______ area. And the Saihanba Afforestation Community and the “1,000 Villages in Demonstration and 10,000 Villages in Renovation” project in Zhejiang Province have won the UN “Champions of the Earth” award.Further, China has announced its carbon emissions will peak before 2030 and it will reach carbon neutrality (中和,中性) by 2060 and thus boost the global fight against climate change and help (38) _______ biodiversity.To (39) _______ ecological and environmental protection, China has shifted from quantitative (量的,定量的)economic growth to high-quality, green development. China understands the organic yet complex relationship between humans and nature, between the environment and people’s livelihoods, and between conservation and development.And it has been making efforts to better understand the development model of (40) _______ civilization that is different from that of industrial civilization, in order to build a green society, which will ensure harmonious coexistence of humans and nature as well assustainable development.答案31-35 K F J A G 36 -40 H D I B C2021青浦一模Water on the MoonNASA says there are water molecules (分子) on our neighbor's sunny surface. NASA has confirmed the presence of water on the moon's sunlit surface, a breakthrough that suggests the chemical __31__ that is vital to life on Earth could be distributed across more parts of the lunar surface than the ice that has __32__ been found in dark and cold areas."We don't know yet if we can use it as a resource," NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said, but he added that learning more about the water is __33__ to U.S. plans to explore the moon.The discovery comes from the space agency's Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy, or SOFIA——a(n) __34__ Boeing 747 that can take its large telescope high into Earth's atmosphere, at altitudes up to 45,000 feet. Those heights allow researchers to peer at objects in space with __35__ any visual disturbance from water vapor. To detect the molecules, SOFIA used a special camera that can distinguish between water's specific wavelength of 6.1 microns and that of its close chemical relative hydroxyl, or OH.The data confirm what experts have __36__, that water might exist on the moon's sunny surface. But in recent years, researchers had been able to document only water ice at the moon's poles and other darker and colder areas.Experts will now try to figure out exactly how the water came to form and why it __37__. NASA scientists published their findings in the latest issue of Nature Astronomy."Data from this location reveal water in __38__ of 100 to 412 parts per million—roughly __39__ to a 12-ounce bottle of water—trapped in a cubic meter of soil spread across the lunar surface," NASA said in a release about the discovery."Without a thick atmosphere, water on the sunlit lunar surface should just be lost to space," said Casey Honniball, the lead author of a study about the discovery. "Yet somehow we're seeing it. Something is producing the water, and something must be trapping it there."There are several possible explanations for the water's presence, including the possibility that it was delivered to the surface by stony microobjects __40__ the moon. Small balls of glass from that process could trap water, according to the researchers' paper.答案31-40 D J I A E B G K C H2021普陀一模Food Waste in the NetherlandsUneaten bread, yellowed vegetables, overcooked rice or noodles are all thrown away by the Dutch, which is a problem in the Netherlands. In 2010, each person there threw away about 48 kilograms of food per year, (31)________ with 41 kilograms in 2016, a slight improvement.A food industry expert says the problem in the Netherlands is that everyday food is so cheap that people (32)________ have no idea. But don’t forget that a family throws away 50 Euros worth of food every month, that is, 600 Euros a year, and that adds up to a lot of money, doesn’t it? He offers a number of tips on how to deal with (33)________ food wa ste. For example, take your shopping list to the supermarket so you can cut down unnecessary food (34)________. As far as cooking is concerned, do as much as you can eat. “So if you’re measuring for four people, don’t take it for granted, but use a measuri ng cup to measure it (35)________,” she said. “We waste a lot of rice and cooked pasta. Turn the refrigerator to 4 degrees instead of 6 or 7 degrees. So you can keep the food longer. If you have a lot left over after dinner, you can (36) ________ it and ju st put it in the microwave one day a week. It’s easy and it saves money.”In recent years, the Netherlands has taken many measures to deal with food waste. For example, since its launch in January 2018, it has used an APP called Too Good to Go, which allows hotels, supermarkets and bakeries to (37)________ how much food they have left each day, and nearby consumers can use the APP to find out where they can pay a small amount of money for the leftover food. The Grand, a five star hotel in Amsterdam, is also (38)________. “In the past, we threw out all the cheese, sandwiches, meat and other products from the breakfast buffet (自助餐), and it was a (39)________ waste,” said a staff member, “Now we don’t waste so much, so this application is really a good (40)________.” The idea for the APP came from Denmark, and the application is now up and running in nine countries.答案31-35 BDACK 36-40 FEHGJ2021虹口一模The Correct Answer to the QuestionThe usual answer to the greeting “How are you?” is generally “Not too bad.” Why? Because it’s all-purpose. Whatever the circumstances, whatever the conditions, “Not too bad” will get you through. On an average day it __31__ a confusing modesty. In good times it implies a decent pessimism (悲观), a kind of __32__ to express oneself. And when things are rough, really rough and annoying, it becomes a heroic __33__, as if everything goes well. Best of all, it gently prevents further inquiry with all three syllables (音节) equally __34__, because it is -- basically -- meaningless.Americans are small-talk artists. They have to be. This is a wild country. The weakest agreement __35__ one pe rson to the next. So the “Have a nice day”, the “Hot enough for you”, and the “How about those guys” serve a vital purpose. Without these little commonly-used phrases and the __36__ social contract that they represent, to calm people, the streets would be a free-for-all exhibition of disaster.But that’s the negative view. Some of my happiest interactions with other human beings have been glancing moments of small talks. It’s an extraordinary thing. A person stands before you, a complete stranger, and the best everyday small talk can have his or her soul __37__ in front of your eyes.I was out walking the other day when a UPS truck pulled to the side of the road. As the driver leaped from his cab to make a __38__, I heard relaxing music coming out of the tr uck’s speakers -- a kind of familiar and weightless blues music, and it’s my favorite tune. “China Cat Sunflower?” I said to the UPS guy as he rushed back to his truck. He __39__ showed a huge smile, “You got it, babe!”The exchange of feelings, the perfect understanding, the simplest small talk that emerged instantly between us, and, most of all, the __40__ “babe” -- I was high as a kite for the next 10 minutes after such a pure small talk.答案31 - 35 CEIAG 36 - 40: DBKHF2021闵行一模I’ve been writing for most of my life. The book Writing Without Teachers introduced me to one distinction and one practice that has helped my writing __31__ greatly. The distinction is between the creative mind and the critical mind. While you need to employ both to get to a final result, they cannot work in __32__no matter how much we might like to think so.Trying to criticize writing while it is still in progress is most possibly the single greatest __33__ to writing that most of us meet with. If you are listening to that 5th grade English teacher correct your grammar while you are trying to seize a fleeting (稍纵即逝的) thought, the thought will die. If you capture the fleeting thought and simply share it with the world in raw form, no one is likely to understand. You must learn to __34__ first and then criticize if you want to make writing the tool for thinking that it is.The practice that can help you pass your __35__ bad habits of trying to edit as you write is what Elbow calls “free writing”. In free writing, the __36__ is to get words down on paper non-stop, usually for 15-20 minutes. No stopping, no going back, no criticizing. The goal is to get the words __37__. As the words begin to go smoothly, the ideas will come from the shadows and let themselves be __38__ on your notepad or your screen.Now you have raw materials that you can begin to work with using the critical mind that you’ve pers uaded to sit on the side and watch quietly. Most likely, you will believe that this will take more time than you actually have and you will end up staring blankly at the pages as the deadline draws near.Instead of staring at a blank screen, start filling it with words no matter how bad they are. Halfway through your __39__ time, stop and rework your raw writing into something closer to a(n) __40__ product. Move back and forth until you run out of time and the final result will most likely be far better than your current practices.答案31. B 32. E 33. G 34. D 35. A 36. I 37. K 38. H 39. F 40. J2021长宁一模A. curiosityB. inspiredC. visionD. communicationE. possibilitiesF. committedG. hookedH. investigateI. challengingJ. recognizeK. attentionI've always been an optimist and I suppose that is rooted in my belief that the power of creativity and intelligence can make the world a better place. For as long as I can remember, I've loved learning new things and solving problems in seventh grade. So whenI sat down at a computer for the first time. I was __31__. It was an old Teletype machine. But it changed my life. When my friend and I started Microsoft, we had a __32__ of "a computer on every desk and in every home," which probably sounded too optimistic, but we believed personal computers would change the world. And they have.After 30 years, I'm still as __33__ by computers as I was back in seventh grade. I believe computers are the most incredible tool we can use to feed our __34__ andinventiveness to help us solve problems. Computers have transformed how we learn, giving kids everywhere a window into all of the world's knowledge. They're helping us build __35__ around the things we care about and stay close to the people who are important to us, no matter where they are.Like my friend Buffett, I feel particularly lucky to do something every day that I love to do. He calls it "tap-dancing to work." My job at Microsoft is as __36__ as ever, but what makes me "tap-dance to work" is when we show people something new, like a computer that can __37__ your handwriting or your speech, and they say, "I didn't know you could do that with a PC!"I believe that my own fortune brings with it a responsibility to give back to the world. My wife and I have __38__ to improving health and education in a way that can help as many people as possible. I'm still optimistic, and I believe that progress on even the world's toughest problems is possible. We're seeing new drugs for deadly diseases, and new __39__ paid to the health problems in the world.I'm excited by the __40__ I see for medicine, for education and of course for technology. And I believe that through our natural inventiveness, creativity and willingness to solve tough problems, we're going to make some amazing achievements inall these areas in my lifetime.答案31-35 GCBAD 36-40 IJFKE2021浦东新区一模Work is necessary to earn an income, and if you get good job (31) _________, it’s a bonus! But what can make it more worthwhile are the extra perks (工资外的补贴) that your employer offers you as a reward for your loyalty and commitment.Employee (32) _________ are commonplace these days. Traditionally, these have included a good pension and extra days off work. But when a job used to be for life, there wasn’t much incentive to try and keep staff. Now when millennials are (33) _________ a position, they want to know the benefits they’ll get on top of their pay.But these perks come at a cost to an employer, and now technology is being used to discover if and when they offer value for money. The idea aims to enable a company to tailor what it can offer to (34) _________ and retain the right staff.As an example, at merchant bank, Close Brothers, AI has been used to develop chatbots that can help employees to find information on subjects ranging from mental health to saving for retirement at any time. And Microsoft has developed software to help businesses (35)_________ their employee’s well-being needs. Anna Rasmussen, founder of Open Blend, told the BBC “It shows companies what their employees need to stay (36) _________ and reach their full potential in real-time.” Insurance company Vitality offer wearable technology to track employees’ movements. Staff can earn ‘(37) _________’ by having their activity tracked. A study found that by (38)_________ participant’s performance, they did the equivalent of 4.8 extra days of activity per month.It seems that if used in the right way, technology can provide greater (39) _________ between an employee and the company. That can lead to a happier, healthier and (40) _________ work force. But human resources experts warn against relying solely on tech for deciding on employee benefits provision, they say.答案31-40 KAJBD IHECF2021松江一模This corona-virus affects everyone, but not equally. Because of covid-19, the number of extremely poor people would rise by 70,000,000 to 100,000,000 this year, the World Bank predicted. Using a broader measure, including those who lack basic ____31____ or clean water and children who go hungry, the poor would rise by 240,000,000 this year, said the UN. That could ____32____ almost a decade of progress. Vaccination (疫苗注射) will to some extent help economies recover, but ____33____ vaccination will take years and the very poor cannot wait that long.The IMF and World Bank have ____34____ lending, but only 31% more of the bank’s money has reached poor countries, says the Centre for Global Development. Governments in poor countries need to spend their money wisely. Even when money is ____35____ for good purposes, it is too often wasted or stolen.The best way to help the poor is to give them money in a direct manner. With a little ____36____ cash in their pockets, the poor can feed their children and send them back to school, which will help them make a living in the future. One country that has done well getting cash into poor pockets is Brazil, despite President Jair Bolsonaro’s habit of understating the effects of covid-19. Various measures of poverty there have actually fallen. A(n) ____37____ for governments should be basic health care, which the corona-virus has interrupted so badly that vaccination rates for children have been set back about 20 years. The crisis requires politicians to make hard choices quickly, and they can follow the example of China.Mistakes are unavoidable, given how much remains unknown about the disease, but some are ____38____. India’s sudden lockdown forced millions of migrant workers to head back to their villages on foot or crowded trains, spreading the virus far and wide. Politicians ____39____ remotely from their comfortable home offices should think harder about how their decisions might affect those whom covid-19 is plunging back into extreme poverty. It is shameful when their ____40____ to covid-19 adds to the suffering of the least fortunate.答案31---40 DCGAI KFBEJ2021杨浦一模Ancient Civilizations Had Game Nights Too!Morten Ramstad, a researcher at the University of Bergen, Norway, and his team spotted one of the rare objects while unearthing the remains of an Early Iron Age(400- 300 BC)burial site in Western Norway. Burying loved ones with basic necessities like ceramic pots and clothing, to ensure their (31)_________ in the afterlife, was a fairly common tradition in ancient cultures. However, the families of some lucky individuals went a step further by (32)_________ a board game for entertainment.Though the game board was (33)_________, the archeologists, who revealed their findings on April 5, 2020,managed to recover the dice(骰子) and 18 circular game pieces. Unlike the modern-day cubica(立体的) dice, which are(34)_________ with a different number of dots from one to six on each face, the ancient game counter was square and had bulls-eye like (35)_________ which indicated zero to five on each of its four faces. The researchers suspect it may have been ( 36 )_________ by the oldest-known board game — the “Game of Mercenaries”. The two-person strategy game, which dates back to the 3rd century BC, was believed to be similar to modern-day chess. The archeologists, who also unearthed remains of pottery jars and a bronze needle at the burial site believe the game pieces indicate the dead was wealthy individual. In ancient civilizations, board games were a status symbol, signifying the owner’s high social and economic (37)_________. They indicated an individual’s intellectual ability and also proved he/she could afford to spend time on such activities.“These are status objects that bear witness to(38)_________ with the Roman Empire, where they liked to enjoy themselves with board games,” Ramstad said. “People who played games like this were from the upper class. The game showed that they had the time, profits, and ability to think strategically.”The researchers planned to put the (39)_________ game pieces in a museum as the discovery provides insights into Norway’s social structure during the Early Iron Age and gives some ideas of what tabletop (40)_________ looked like during ancient times, at least for the upperclass.答案31-35. G A E J B 36-40 I C K D F2021奉贤一模Cambridge Dictionary’s Word of the Year 2020Quarantine has been named Word of the Year 2020 by Cambridge Dictionary, a website where editors use data from the website, blogs, and social media to identify and prioritize new additions. On the New Words Blog, _____31_____ new additions are posted weekly for readers to cast their votes on whether they feel these words should be added. Surprisingly, “Quarantine” has defeated “lockdown” and “pandemic” to be _____32_____ Word of the Year 2020 after data showed it to be one of the most highly searched for on the Cambridge Dictionary.The Cambridge Dictionary editors have also tracked how people were using the word quarantine and discovered a new meaning _____33_____ : a general period of time in which people are not allowed to leave their homes or travel freely, so that they do not catch or spread a disease.Research shows the word is being used _____34_____ to lockdown, particularly in the United States, to refer to a situation in which people stay home to avoid catching the disease.This new _____35_____ of quarantine has now been added to the Cambridge Dictionary, and marks a shift from the existing meanings, which relate to _____36_____ a person or animal suspected of being infectious.Neither corona virus nor COVID-19 appeared among the words that Cambridge Dictionary users searched for most this year. We believe this indicates that people have been _____37_____ confident about what the virus is. Instead, users have been searching。

(完整word)上海市一模英语11选10填空汇编_Word,.docx

(完整word)上海市一模英语11选10填空汇编_Word,.docx

Section B宝山Directions: Complete the following passage by using the words in the box. Each word canonly be used once. Note that there is one word more than you need.A. packageB. appealingC. eliminationD. alternativeE. limitedF. practicallyG. matchedH. creativelyI. uniqueJ. temporaryK. enclosedWhen young people begin to live independently, home-hunting can involve some stress. But they would do well to remember that a new __41__ is available --micro-homes.Called "tiny houses," these houses have all living necessities in a small __42__, including kitchen, bedroom and bathroom. Generally under 50 square meters, most tiny houses accommodate just one or two people though some claim the space for more. What'slost in size is not lost in design as these homes are often quite unique and modern in design.Besides an attractive appearance, tiny houses can also boast __43__ practical features. Making the best of urban space, the 72-to 122-centimeter-wide Keret House in Warsaw, the world's narrowest home, filled in a corridor. The prototype ( 原型 ) home Ecocapsule uses solar power, wind power and rainwater collection to enable its owner to live __44__ anywhere. A system of rails allows the DALE micro-home to adjust room size and number as well as adding the option of an open or __45__ courtyard.Visually __46__ as micro-homes are, there are a few drawbacks to consider before getting comfortable on a mini-couch. Moving into a tiny house requires the __47__ of most non-essentials, no matter the emotional connection to them. Guests will also mostly be out of the question as the __48__ space may even cause an unaccompanied individual to experiencesome cabin fever. And finally, a micro-home is likely a(n) __49__ living option for most people since they will probably start families and acquire more possessions.Though the limitations will scare some, there is usually a benefit. A small size results ina small price tag and small bills, making tiny houses easier to save up for and budget.And though you won't have much stuff around the house, this can provide the comfort of simple living and maintenance. Micro-homes are also practically mobile and boast eco-friendlinessthat can't be __50__ by other homes. They probably aren't for everyone or forever, but whenit comes to your next (or first) home, they could be just what you need.Section B普陀Directions: Complete the following passage by using the words in the box. Each word canonly be used once. Note that there is one word more than you need.mentplexC.depressionD.expectE. equivalentF. holdG.mappedH.recommendedI.handleJ.notedK.severeBeing sociable looks like a good way to add years to your life. Relationships with family, friends, neighbours, even pets, will all do the trick, but the biggest longevity (长寿 ) boost seems to come from marriage or a(n) __41__ relationship. The effect was first __42__ in1858by William Farr, who wrote that widows ( 寡妇 )and widowers were at a much higher riskof dying than their married peers. Studies since then suggest that marriage could add as muchas seven years to a man’ slife and two to a woman’ s.The effects __43__ for all causes ofdeath, whether illness, accident or self-harm.Even if the odds are stacked against you, marriage can more than compensate. LindaWaite of the University of Chicago has found that a married older man with heart disease can__44__ to live nearly four years longer than an unmarried man with a healthy heart. Likewise, amarried man who smokes more than a pack a day is likely to live as long as a divorced man whodoesn ’ t smoke. There flip’side,a however, as partners are more likely to become ill ordie in the couple of years following their spouse’ s death, and caring for a spouse with mental disorder can leave you with some of the same __45__ problems. Even so, the odds favourmarriage. In a 30-year study of more than 10,000 people, Nicholas Christakis of HarvardMedical School describes how all kinds of social networks have similar effects.So how does it work? The effects are, __46__ affected by socio-economic factors, health-service provision, emotional support and other more physiological ( 生理的 )mechanisms. For example, social contact can boost development of the brain and immunesystem, leading to better health and less chance of __47__ later in life. People in supportiverelationships may __48__ stress better. Then there are the psychological benefits of asupportive partner.A life partner, children and good friends are all __49__ if you aim to live to 100. Theultimate social network is still being __50 __ out, but Christakis says: “ People are interconnected, so their health is interconnected.”Section B(10分)松江Directions: Complete the following passage by using the words in the box. Each word can onlybe used once. Note that there is one word more than you need.A. primarilyB. delayedC. interactD. equivalentE. identifiedF. intentionsG. acquisitionH. overwhelmingI. permanentlyJ. comparativek. necessityQuite often, educators tell families of children who are learning English as a secondlanguage to speak only English, and not their native language, at home. Although theseeducators may have good ___41___, their advice to families is misguided, and it arises from misunderstandings about the process of language ___42___. Educators may fear that childrenhearing two languages will become ___43___ confused and thus their language developmentwill be ___44___. Children are capable of learning more than one language, whethersimultaneously ( 同时地 ) or sequentially ( 依次地 ). In fact, most children outside of the UnitedStates are expected to become bilingual or even, in many cases, multilingual. Globally, knowingmore than one language is viewed as an asset ( 资产 ) and even a ___45___ in many areas.It is also of concern that the misguided advice that students should speak only English isgiven ___46___ to poor families with limited educational opportunities, not to wealthier familieswho have many educational advantages. Since children from poor families often are___47___ as at-risk for academic failure, teachers believe that advising families to speakEnglish only is appropriate. Teachers consider learning two languages to be too ___48___ for children from poor families, believing that the children are already burdened by their home situations.If families do not know English or have limited English skills themselves, how can they communicate in English? Advising non-English-speaking families to speak only English is___49___ to telling them not to communicate with or ___50___ with their children. Moreover,the underlying message is that the family’ s native language is not important or valued. Section B 闵行A. indicatorB. predictC. processD. movementE. adaptF. trackedG. formationH. deliberateI. similarJ. advantageousK. surprisedDogs Used to Be More Like CatsResearchers studyingfossils ( 化石 ) of the early ancestors of dogs that livedup to 40 million years ago believe the predators (捕食性动物 ) evolved as a direct consequence of climate change. The study claims the (41)______ transformedman’ s best friend from a creature that behaved more like a cat, into thecanine (犬 ) we know and love today.Ancestors of dogs living in North America 40 million years ago were ambush (伏击式 ) predators— in a(n) (42)______ way to cats ’But. a million years later,the thick forest that once covered the continent began to give way to grasslands. This led to a(n) (43)______ in the body shape and hunting behavior of dogs,turning them into animals that no longer (44)______ their prey (猎物 ), but chasedit down instead.This evolutionary transition was (45)______ by the scientists who examinedthe elbows and teeth of 32 species of dogs that lived between 40 million andtwo million years ago.“ The elbow is a really good (46)______ of what carnivores ( 食肉动物 ) are doing with their forelimbs (前肢 ), which tells their entire (47)______ abilities,”said Brown University’ stineChrisJanis, who led the study.The research was based on an analysis of fossil specimens (标本) in the American Museum of Natural History in New York. It suggests dog evolution was directly related to climate change. After all, it was not (48)______ to operate as a pursuit-and-pounce predator until there was room to run.If predators evolved with climate change over the last 40 million years, the authors argue they may continue to (49)______ in response to the present globalwarming trend. In this way, the results of the study could help(50)______ how animals may look in the future.Section B 金山Directions: Complete the following passage by using the words in the box. Each word canonly be used once. Note that there is one word more than you need.A. moderatelyB. chancesC. accommodateD. volumeE. conflictingF. flowG. constant H. tapped I. instinct J. seemingly K. slowingThere ’nothings that will ruin your day faster than being stuck in a traffic jam all morning, and it’ s even worse when there(41)’s no reason for it. There’ s a lot of interesting science behind traffic, though, and while understanding it might not make sitting init any better, it can teach you how to avoid some of the mistakes we all make behind thewheel.1. The way we merge (合并 ) causes problemsWhether you ’ re merging from the left or the right, (42) ________are good that you’ re doing it wrong and causing all sorts of problems. When most people see that they need tomerge, their first (43) ________ is to do it right away. They brake, slow down, speed up, andchange lanes in between oncoming traffic.According to the Minnesota department of Transportation, that’ s completely wrong. Sudden (44) ________ causes traffic to back up, a problem that’ s made worse by sudden lane changesand other cars braking to (45) ________the merging traffic.So what should you do? Exactly what you probably blame drivers for doing: waitinguntil the last minute. If you do that, traffic will fall into a more natural pattern called a“ zippermerge ”,meaning there are no surprises, no sudden braking, and a smoother transition fromone lane to another, which cuts down on backups. This does, of course, rely on other driversto let you in at the last minute and be polite enough not to cut you off, which causes all sortsof other problems.2. You are causing the traffic Jams you hateTraffic jams have long been chalked up to( 取决于 ) the (46) ________ of traffic on theroads, but it turns out that even heavy traffic can (47) ________ smoothly if people maintain a(48)________ speed. The problem is that we can ’ t.Researchers have found that just oneperson even slightly stepping on their brakes can have a terrible effect on the traffic aroundthem.On even (49) ________ busy road, it can be only a few minutes for traffic to a completehalt behind someone who (50) ________ their brakes to let another driver merge. The standstillusually occurs several minutes after the braking, well after the person that causes the problemin the first place has gone on his way.Section B 崇明Directions: Complete the following passage by using the words in the box. Each word canonly be used once. Note that there is one word more than you need.A. shrunkB. lazinessC. limitedD. squeezedE. gravityF. literaryG. meltingH. elementI. targetedJ. futureK. time-consumingAs further proof that you can now3D-print anything, a company called NaturalMachines has introduced a 3D printer for food.The “ Foodini, as”it ’ s called, isn’ t too different from a regular 3D printer, but instead of printing with plastics, it prints eatable ingredients41out of steel capsules (容器 ): “ It’ sthe same technology,says”Lynette Kucsma,co-founder of Natural Machines,“ butwithplastics there’ s just one42point, while with food it has different temperatures and consistencies ( 粘稠度 ). Also,43works a little bit against us, as fo od doesn ’ t hold the shape as well as plastic.”At the Web Summit technology conference in Dublin,the Barcelona-based startup isshowing off the machine, which it says is the only one of its kind capable of printing a widerange of dishes.“ Infact, this is a mini food manufacturing plant44down to the size of an oven,”Kucsma said, pointing out that at least in the initial stage the printer will be45mostly atprofessional kitchen users, with a consumer version to follow.In principle, the Foodini sounds like the final46aid: press a button to print yourfood . But Natural Machines is quick to point out that it’ s designed to take care only of the difficult and47parts of food preparation that discourage people from cooking at home, and that it promoteshealthy eating by requiring fresh ingredients prepared before printing.Nevertheless, the company is working with major food manufacturers to createpre-packaged plastic capsules that can just be loaded into the machine to make food, eventhough they assure these will be free of preservatives, with a shelf life48to five days.The printing process is slow, but faster than regular3D printing.Other than beingcapable of creating complex designs, the Foodini can be useful for recipes that requireaccuracy and skillfulness, like homemade pizza or filled pasta.Currently, the device only prints the food, which must be then cooked as usual. But a(n)49model will also cook the preparation and produce it ready to eat.The idea also comes with a social 50 too. “ There ’ s a touchscreen on the front that connectsto a recipe site in the cloud, so it ’ans internet -of-things, connected kitchen appliance, said”Kucsma. Users will also be able to control the device remotely using a smartphone, and share theirrecipes with the community.Section B 长宁Directions: Complete the following passage by using the words in the box. Each word canonly be used once. Note that there is one word more than you need.A. accommodateB. alternativeC. boastD. budgetE. eliminationF. enclosedG. maintainingH. possessionsI. regulateJ. temptingK. unaccompaniedWhen young people begin to live independently, home-hunting can involve some stress.But they would do well to remember that a new _____41_____ is available - micro-homes.Fondly called‘tiny houses,’these houses have all living necessities in a small package, including kitchen,bedroom and bathroom. Generally under 50 square meters, most tiny houses _____42_____ just one or two people though some claim the space for more. What’s lost in size is not lost in design as these homes are often quite unique and modern in design.Besides an attractive appearance, tiny houses can also _____43_____unique practical features. Making the best of urban space, the 72-to122-centimeter-wide Keret House in Warsaw, the world ’s narrowest home, filled in an alley(小巷 ). The sample home Ecocapsule uses solar power, wind power and rainwater collection to enable its owner to live practicallyanywhere. A system of rails allows the DALE micro-home to _____44_____ room size andnumber as well as adding the option of an open or _____45_____ courtyard.As visually_____46_____ as micro-homes are, there are a few disadvantages to consider before getting comfortable on a minicouch. Moving into a tiny house requires the _____47_____of most non-essentials, no matter the emotional connection to them. Guests will also mostly be out of the question as the limited space may even cause a(n) _____48_____ individual to experience some cabin fever. And finally, a micro-home is likelya temporary living option for most people since they will probably start families and acquiremore _____49_____.Though the limitation will scare some, there is usually a benefit. A small size results in a small price tag and small bills, making tiny houses easier to save up for and _____50_____.And though you won’t have much stuff around the house, this can provide the comfort of simple living and maintenance. Micro-homes are also practically mobile and claim eco-friendliness that can ’tbe matched by other homes. They probably aren’tfor everyone or forever, but when it comes to your next (or first) home, they could be just what you need.Section B 青浦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. enhancedB. obviousC. feedbackD. primarilyE. headF. increasinglyG. sharedH. consistentI. capacityJ. impactK. interactOur world is changing, and the business world is on an evolutionary path that is virtually unstoppable. Knowledge base managementis a very good example of such developments. With time the need to bring the customers closer hasbecome even more41, and this has further resulted in companies taking measuresto respond better to their customers.When discussing trends in knowledge management systems, it is almost impossible to ignore the42that cloud computing has had on it. The application of cloud computing has not only43efficiency, but has further improved productivity. Through cloud computing,virtual offices are being operated almost everywhere around the globe. All it takes is the click of a button! As for companies, it is vital for them to hire professionals from all over the world.For businesses that rely greatly on customer satisfaction and approvals,44 on their services is very important. Customers in particular are able to45 with the staff on the other end, and provide their feedback as to the quality of services that they have received. The role of most knowledge managers is to ensure that information is kept current, accurate and46 . Significant developments in the database management systems have made it easier to achieve this goal, and there can only be so much to look forward to as we47into the future.At the moment,48information that passes through these systems can be run through different forms. There was a time when such information was49document-based. Today however, reports and other relevant information can be presented to the seeker through different media.The most efficient knowledge base managementsystems in the market at the moment are built with the 50 to handle all kinds of information. One of the other things that we cannot forget to mention is the mobile functionality of these programs. They are compatible(兼容的) with users across all platforms, and this makes them even more convenient than before.Section B 静安Directions: Complete the following passage by using the words in the box. Each word canonly be used once. Note that there is one word more than you need.A. chasingB. dramaticallyC. entertainD. extremely WeE. overnightF. presenceG. revealH. tracking areI. transformation J. virtual K. random familiarwith pop culture, but what is peep culture?In pop culture,we turn on the TV and watch ourfavouritecelebrities__41__ us with their performances. In peep culture, we turn on thecomputer, we move through people’lives on reality TV, blogs, Face book and You Tube.Instead of getting our entertainment from scripted performances, we get our entertainmentfrom peeping into other people’ s lives. It can be friends and family. But it’ s just likely t people we have never met from around the world.Suddenly, we spend all of our time__42__ other people. And we also invite them towatch us! People __43__ themselves to get attention and to feel like they are part of acommunity. In peep culture, ordinary people are turned into celebrities.This has never happened before, turning the spotlight on __44__regular people. Therearen ’ t secrets anymore. The notion of private life has changed.As society has become __45__ fast-paced, most of us are really unaware of thesechanges in our lives. We are moving into a time when our __46__ personality is going to bemore important than our actual physical __47__. What we have online is going to be moreimportant than what we do offline. We are now socially judged by our virtual profiles.In the age of “ peep culture,-all,” ashowtell-all, know-all digital phenomenon is __48__changing notions of privacy, individuality, security, and even humanity. Susan Boyle becamea(n) __49__ celebrity because of peep culture. The entire world was staring at her after her__50__ from a resident of a small Scottish town to a global celebrity. We like the storybecause she’ s like a movie,but she’s real.。

高考英语十一选十之200词

高考英语十一选十之200词

1.access |'?kses| n. 入,使用2. accommodate |??k?m?de?t| vt. 容 ,使适,向⋯ 供给住;vi. 适于 , 解,停 **3.accomplished |??k?mpl??t| adj.有造的4.acquisition | ??kw ??z??n| n. 得,得,得物 (acquire)5.actually | ??kt ?u?li| adv.上 , 确 , 事上6.adapt |?'d?pt| vt. 使适,改; vi. 适 (adaptation)7.address |??dres| n. 地点,演,称号; v. 在⋯上写姓名地点,向⋯表演8.advance |?d'va:ns| n.展,前 v.提出,付,使⋯⋯前 advanced9.advantageous |?dv ?n'te?d??s| adj. 有利的,有利的10.agricultur al |??gr ?k?lt?? r?l| adj. 的 , 生的 , 学的 , 耕的 (agriculture)11.alert |?'l?:t| adj. 警惕的; v.警示12.alternative | ?:l?t?:n?t?v| adj.代替的 , 另的 ,的 ;n.可供的事物 ****13.analyze |??n ?la?z| v. 剖析,解; (analysis)14.anxious |'??(k) ??s| adj.焦的( anxiety)15.appealing |??pi ?l??| adj. 有吸引力的 , 求的16.application | ??pl ??ke??n| n. 申,施,用17.apply |?'pla?| v.申,用18.approval |??pru?vl| n. 同,同意; (approve)19.assign |?'sa?n| v.分派,指派( assignment)20.available |??ve?l?bl| adj.可得的 , 有空的 , 可得的 , 能找到的 **21.boast |b??st| vt. 夸口 , 自吹自擂 , 以有⋯而骄傲 ; n.夸口 ,自夸的 , 言22.budget |?b?d??t| n.算 ; v.把⋯入算 ; 慎花 ; adj.价钱便宜的23.calculating | ?k?lkjule ?t??| adj. 算(用)的 , 谨慎的 ; v.算24.capacity |k??p?s ?ti| n. 容的能力,能力; (capable)25.celebration |?sel??bre??n| n.祝 ,祝会(式) ,26.chance |t??ns| n. 时机,可能性;vt. 有时生27.chase |t?es| v. 追赶28.classify |'kl?s ?fa?| v.分( classification )29.coating |k??t| n.外衣; v.覆盖⋯的表面 covering30.coincide | ?k???n?sa?d| vi. 符合 , 与⋯一致 ,ment |?k?ment| n. 价; v.mercial | k ??m?:?l | adj. 商的 , 易的 ;n.(台或播放的)广告mit |k ?'m?t| v.犯法,使承parative |k?m?p?r ?t?v| adj. 相的,比的;n. 比pletely |k ?m'pli ?tl ?|adv. 完好地,底地,完好地**plex |?k?mpleks| adj.复的 ; n.建筑群position |k ?mp?'z??( ?)n| n.作文38.concern |k?n's?:n|n.关怀; v.关系到,波及39.confirm |k ?n'f ?:m|v. 确,确信( confirmation )40.conflicting |k ?n'fl ?kt??| adj. 矛盾的,相矛盾的** (conflict)41.consistent |k?n?s?st?nt| adj. 一的,不的,一致的42.constant |'k?nst(?)nt| adj. 恒定的,常的;n. 常数,恒量43.creatively |kri ??e?t?vli| adv. 造性地44.crisis |'kra?s?s| n.危机45.decide |d?'sa?d| v.决定( decision)46.dedicated | ?ded?ke?t?d| adj. 用的 , 注的 ,献身的 ; v.奉献47.delay |d??le?| v. postpone 推,延,迟延;n.延,推48.deliberate |d?'l?b(?)r?t| adj. 成心的,沉思熟的; vt. 仔考,商49.delicate |'del?k?t|adj.奇妙的,精巧的( delicacy )50.deliver | d?'l?v?| v.表 , 送,交托51.delivery |d ??l?v?ri| n. 送,投,送交,送物,,临盆,宣告52.depression |d??pre?n| n. 抑郁 , 沮 , 条53.determine |d??t??m?n| v. 明,决定54. disaster | d??zɑ:st?(r) | n. 灾 ,底的失,不幸,患55.disturbingly |d ??st??b??li| adv. 令人不安地; (disturb)56.dramatically |dr ?'m?t ?k?l?| adv. 地,惹人注视地57.element |?el?m?nt| n. 基本部分 , 要素 **58.elimination | ??l ?m?'ne??n| n. 裁减 , 清除 , 除掉 ,消除 **59.elsewhere |els'we?| adv.在60.enclose | ?n?kl ??z| vt. (用、笆等)把⋯起来 ; 把⋯装入信封 ;附入 **61.engage |?n?ge?d?| v. 吸引,使参加,理,从事;(engagement)62.enhance |?n?hɑ?ns, American - ?h?ns| v.提高,提高,改良; n.增添63.enormously |??n??m?sli| adv. 极其,特别; (enormous)64.entertain |ent?'te?n| vt. ,款待; vi. 款待65.enthusiast | ?n' θ ju:z??sts |n.心人,衷者66.equivalent |??kw?v?l ?nt|n. 相等物 ; adj. 相等的 **67.expect |?k?spekt| v.,盼望,要求; (expectation)68.extraordinary | ?k?str??dnri| adj. 非凡的 , 特的69.extremely | ?k'strimli| adv. 特别,极端地70.fascinate |'f?s ?ne?t| v.使入迷( fascination )71. fashionable |?f? ?n?bl | adj. 流行的 , 髦的 ; n.髦的人72.feedback |?fi ?db?k| n. 反信息,反73.figure |'f ?g?|v. 算,; n.数字,人物74.fix |f ?ks| v.使固定,维修75.float |fl ??t| v. 浮,飘荡,使⋯浮起,使⋯漂流76.flow |fl ??| vi. 流, ; vt. 淹没,溢; n. 流;77.force | f?:s | n.力 , 武力 ,(社会)力 ,气魄 ;vt.迫 ,行 ,促进, 推78.formation | ?'d?pt| vt. 使适,改; vi.适79.function |'f ??(k) ?(?)n| n.功能; v.运转**80.genetic |d??'net?k| adj. 的,基因的81.gentle |'d?ent(?)l| adj.平和的82.gravity |?gr?v ?ti| n. 重力,重性83.handle |?h?ndl| v. 把手; v.待,管理,付84. head |hed| n.,,人数,源,;v. 朝某方向行85.hold |h??ld| v.握着,容,拥有,行,86.identify |a ??dent?fa?| v. 辨,出; v. 与某人生共 **87.immigrant |' ?m?ɡr?nt| n.移民88.impact |??mp?kt| n. 触犯,影响,作用;v.影响 ***89.impose |?m'p??z|v.利用,施加影响90.inconvenience |?nk?n'vi ?n??ns| n. 不便,麻; vt. 麻;打91. increased | ?n'kri:st | adj.增添的,增的; v.增 ,增添,增大,增加**92.indication | ?nd?'ke??(?)n| n.指示,指出( indicate)93.indicator |' ?nd?ke?t?| n. 指示器,指示94.influential | ??nfl ??en?l| adj. 有影响力的,有的95.innovative |' ?n?v?t?v| adj.改革的( innovation )96.instead |?n'sted| adv.反而97.instinct |' ?nst??(k)t| n. 本能,直; adj. 充着的98.intellectual | ??nt??lekt???l| adj.智力的 ; n. 知分子99.intention | ?n?ten?n| n. 意,划; (intend)100.interact |??nt?r??kt| v. 互相作用,沟通 (interaction) **101.invader |?n?ve?d?(r)| n. 侵略者; (invade)bel |'le?b(?)l| n. 商标; v.标明unch |l?:nt?| n.发射; v.发射,倡始ziness |?le?z?n?s| n. 懒散105. limited|?l?m?tid| adj. 有限的106.literary | ?l?t?r?ri| adj. 文学的,博学的107.locate |l?(?)'ke?t|v.位于( location )108.maintain |me?n'te?n| v.保持;持续( maintenance)109.maintaining | me ?n'te?n??| v. 养护 , 坚持 , 保持 ,捍卫110.map |m?p| n. 地图; v. 在地图上标出111.matched |m?t ?t| adj.般配的112.melt |melt| v. 消融 , 交融113.messy |?mesi| adj. 纷乱的,凌乱的,杂乱的,棘手的114.minerals |'m?n?r?lz|n. 矿物质 , 矿石 , 矿物 , 汽水115.miraculously |mi'r?kjul?sli| adv.奇观般地,奇特地(miracle )116.mix |m ?ks| v. 混淆;n. 混淆物117.moderately |?m?d?r?tli | adv 适量地,有克制地118.moderation |m?d?'re??(?)n| n.适量,克制( moderate)119. monitor | ?m?n?t?(r) | n. 监测仪 , 显示器 ;监控人员,班长vt. 监察 , 监控,测定 ; vi. 监督120.movement |'mu?vm( ?)nt| n. 运动,活动,乐章121.narrow| ?n?r ??| adj.狭小的 , 狭小的 ; v.限制,限制 ,缩短 ; n.狭路 , 狭小的水道 ; vi. 变窄122.necessary |?n?s?s?r?| adj.必需的123.necessity |n??ses?ti| n. 必需,必需品,必需的举措124.noted |'n?utid| adj. 有名的125.objective |?b?d?ekt?v| adj.公正的 , 客观的 ; n. 目标126.obvious |??bv??s| adj. 明确的 , 显然的; n. 不言而喻的事127.occur |??k??(r)| v. 发生,出现 **128.opened | '??p?nd | adj.翻开的,断开的 ; v.(打)开129.original | ??r?d??nl | adj. 原始的 , 最先的 , 独创的 ;n.原件 , 原文 , 原型130.overnight |??v?'na?t| adv. 彻夜; adj. 夜晚的; vi.过一夜; n. 一夜的停留131.overwhelm | ???v??welm| v. 淹没,淹没,压垮,战胜; (overwhelming)132.package |?p?k ?d?| n. 包裹 , 一组事物 , 包133.partially |'p ɑ ??( )l ?| adv. 部分地,偏袒地134. pattern |?p?tn| n. 图案,式样,模式;v. 模拟135. permanently |?p??m?n?ntli| adv. 永远地; (permanent)136.population | ?p?pju?le??n | n.人口 , 全体居民 , 特定 [生物 ] 种群137.possessions | p??ze?ns | n.拥有 , 领地 , 财富 , 全部权,据有物,全部物138.potential |p??ten?l| adj. 可能的; n. 潜力,可能性139.pouring | p ?:r??| n.传播 ; v.倾注 , 涌出 , 倾,倒 , 涌流140.practically | ?pr?kt ?kli| adv. 几乎,脚踏实地地141.predict |pr?'d?kt| vt. 预告,预知; vi. 作出预知142.presence |'prez(?)ns| n. 存在,列席143.previously |'privi ?sli| adv.从前,早先( previous )144.primarily | ?pra?m?r?li| adv. 主要地 **145.priority| pra ???r?ti| n.优先 , 优先权 , 优先考虑的事146.process |?pr??ses| n. 过程,进度,程序;v. 加工,办理 ***147.profitable | ?pr?f?t?bl| adj. 有利可图的,有利的 ,可赚钱的,合算的148.prospective |pr?'spekt?v|n.预期,展望149.purchase | 'p?:t??s?z| n.购买,购买 , 买到的东西 ;v.购买150.qualify |'kw ?l?fa?| vt. 限制,使拥有资格;vi. 获得资格,有资格151.random |'r?nd ?m| adj. 随机的,任意的;n. 任意; adv. 胡乱地152.recall |r?'k?:l| v. 召回,回忆起153.recommend |?rek??mend| v.介绍,建议( recommendation)154.regulate | ?regjule ?t | vt. 调理,调整 , 校准 , 控制,管理155.relatively | ?rel?t?vli| adv. 相当,相对156.release |r??li ?s| v. 开释; n.刊行,公映157.relieve |r?'li:v|v. 排除,减少)( relief )158.rescue |?reskju ?| v. 拯救,救援,拯救159.response |r??sp?ns| n. 回复,反响160.restore |r?'st?:| v.恢复,修复,送还161.restricted |r?'str?kt?d| adj. 受限制的; v. 限制( restrict)162. reveal |r?'vi ?l| vt.显示,流露;n. 揭穿,裸露163.reverse |r?'v?:s| v.颠倒164.risky |'r ?sk?| adj. 危险的,冒险的165.ruined |'ru?nd| adj. 毁坏的,荒弃的;v. 毁坏( ruin 的变形)166.sales | se?lz | adj.销售的,销售的 ;n.销售额 ,销售, 卖,销路167.seemingly |'sim ??li| adv. 看来仿佛,表面上看来168.separate |'sep(?)re?t| adj. 独自的; v.使分别169.serious |'s??r??s| adj. 严肃的,严重的,仔细的170.serve |s??v| v. ⋯服,⋯效劳,款待,供171.severe |s??v??(r)| adj. 重的 , 的172. share |?e?(r)| n. 一份,付出的部分,股份;v. 公用,分享,分担,参加173.shortage|'??:t?d??z| n.不足 , 缺乏 , 缺乏量 , 不足174.shrink |?r ??k| v. 减少 , 退175. signal | ?s?gn?l| n.信号,暗号 ; vt. 向⋯信号 ,用作(手表示)**176.similar |'s ?m?l ?| adj. 相像的; n. 似物177.simply |'s ?mpl ?| adv.地178.slowing |slo ??| n. 放慢,减速179.solution |s?'lu??(?)n| n. 解决方案,溶液180.squeeze |skwi?z| v. ,榨181.superior |su:?p??r??| adj.上的,秀的182.supporting |s??p??t??| adj. 支承的,副角的183. surprised |s?'pra?zd| adj. 感觉惊的v. 使诧异( surprise)184.tapped |t?pt| adj. 分接的; v. 掘,拔出185.target |?tɑ?gt| n.目; v. 把⋯准 , 把⋯作象186.technically |'tekn ?kl?| adv. 技上,地187.temporary |?tempr?ri| adj. 短期的,的188. tempting | ?tempt??| adj.人的 ;吸引人的;v.引或恿(某人)做(tempt) 189.threatening |?θ retn??| adj. 威的 , 阴森沉的190.time-consuming |k ?n?sju?m??| adj. 耗的191.track | tr?k] | n. 小道,小道 , 印迹,踪影 , 道 ,路 ;vt.追踪 , 追踪 ,看, ** 192.transformation | ,tr?nsf ? 'me??n| n. ,形193.unaccompanied | ??n??k?mp?nid| adj.无人陪同的 ,无伴的 ; 无伴奏的194.unique |ju??ni ?k| adj. 独一的 ,独到的195.unpleasant |?n'plez(?)nt| adj. 的,令人不快乐的196.virtual |'v ??tj??l| adj. 虚的,事上的197.visible | ?v?z?bl| adj. 看得的,明的,惹人注视的;(visibility)198.volume |'v ?lju ?m| n. 量,音量; adj. 大批的; vi.成卷起;vt. 把⋯采集成卷199.wander |?w ?nd?(r)| v. 游 ,走神200.weight | we ?t | n.重量,体重 , 重担 , 重; vt.加重于,使重。

2019上海高三一模11选10汇编(学生版)

2019上海高三一模11选10汇编(学生版)

In most democracies today, people expect women to vote. Women are just as able to make decisions about their ___31___ leaders as men. But 200 years ago, most people didn't think so.As late as the middle of the 19 century only men voted in most Western countries. A few countries or states let women vote in local elections. But women voting was far from ___32____. At that time, people believed that women belonged in the home. That meant they should not get involved with public life.But women in Europe, North America and New Zealand began ___33___ this situation. They believed that they should have a(n) ____34___ in their government's leaders. In 1792 an English novelist named Mary Wollstonecraft ___35____ that women should be able to vote, In the United States, Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton were important figures. They met while campaigning to put a(n) ___36___ to slavery. In the process, they decided that women also should have more ___37___.Yet despite the ___38___ of these women neither Great Britain nor the United States was the first country to let women vote. That honor goes to New Zealand, which changed their law on September 19, 1893. This was because of women like Kate Shepherd. She led a group that presented petitions (请愿书) to their parliament three years in a row. Shepherd is now honored on New Zealand's s10 bill.New Zealand was followed by Australia in 1902 and Finland in 19 zero six. By this time, some U.S. states and territories allowed women to vote. But the country as a whole didn't give women the right until after World War I.In many countries, the right to hold political office came along with the right to vote. And women have ___39___ that right. In many countries, women have even held their country's highest office. All of that is due to the efforts of women who fought for a(n) ___40___ voice.Aurora (极光): wonders or disturbancesCanada, February 2017: I stood in the snow on a frozen lake, watching as the sky twisted in front of me. Green bands of light ___31___ out in the darkness. Slowly the colours twisted and broke and reappeared elsewhere until, suddenly, a whole band flowed and pulsed across the sky, ____32___ with delicate yellow. pinks and purples. It was as dramatic as thunderstorm, yet calm. Gentle, yet ____33___. Most of all, it was a gift.This was my fifth aurora trip and the first time I had seen fast movements and bright colours. The calm green aurora displays that many people see are driven by a(n) ___34___ stream of particles (微粒) from called the solar wind. But when the sun throws us extra hot fast particles, this process goes overdrive-we get much more movement and colour. It is glorious! Aurora-spotters long for it!But for some, the wild movements of the heavens can have serious ____35___ -- Satellites' electronics are affected or damaged by incoming fast particles, ___36___ industries that rely on them. Flights may need to change course to avoid radio ___37___ around the poles, or to protect aircrew from enhanced radiation exposure. During a solar storm, aircrew may receive their annual radiation limit over a single flight.Stormy space weather affects us on the ground, too. A larger storm in 1989 caused a 10-hour electrical blackout over Canada's Quebec Province, costing the economy a(n) ___38___ C$10 billion. Disturbance of the atmosphere causes problems with radio broadcast and GPS. In September 2017, a huge solar fame ____39____ just as Hurricane Iran hit the Caribbean. The resultant HF radio blackout held up the emergency response. Meanwhile, beautiful aurora displays were seen in England. Place its beauty aside, then, and the aurora ___40___ is nothing other than a giant planetary disturbance, more of a worry than a wonder for some people. Yet seldom do such disturbances have such fascinating side effects as that of the aurora dancing across our Arctic skies.People Think Meals Taste Better If They Are ExpensiveIt is said that there’s no such thing as a free lunch, but even if you manage to bag a bargain meal, it will not taste as good as a more expensive meal, according to scientists.A new study has found that restaurant __31__ who pay more for their meals think the food is tastier than if it is offered for a smaller price. The experts think that people tend to associate cost with quality and this changes their __32__ of how food tastes.Scientists at Cornell University in New York studied the eating habits of 139 people enjoying an Italian buffet (自助餐) in a restaurant. The price of the food was set by the __33__ at either $4 or $8 for the all-you-can-eat meal. Customers were asked to __34__ how good the food tasted, the quality of the restaurant and to leave their names.The experiment __35__ that the people who paid $8 for the food enjoyed their meal 11 percent more than those who ate the “cheaper” buffet. Interestingly those that paid for the $4 buffet said they felt guiltier about loading up their plates and felt that they __36__. However, the scientists said that both groups ate around the same quantity of food in total, according to the study __37__ at the Experimental Biology meeting this week.Brian Wansink, a professor of __38__ behavior at the university, said: “We were fascinated to find that pricing has little impact on how much one eats, but a hug e impact on how you __39__ the experience.” He thinks that people enjoyed their food more as they associated cost with quality and that small changes to a restaurant can change how tasty people find their meals.In a(n) __40__ study, scientists from the university showed that people who eat in dim lighting consume 175 less calories(卡路里) than people who eat in brightly lit areas.Welcome to Windsor CastleWindsor Castle is the oldest and largest occupied castle in the world and the Official Residence of the Queen of Britain. Over a period of nearly 1,000 years it has been (31)______ continuously, and altered and redecorated by monarchs (君主) one after the other. Some were great builders, strengthening the Castle against (32)_______ and rebellion; others, living in more peaceful times, created a grand Royal residence. William the Conqueror chose the site, high above the river Thames and on the edge of a Saxon hunting ground. It w as a day’s march from the Tower of London and intended to guard the western (33)_______ to the capital. The outer wa lls of today’s structure are in the same position as those of the (34) ______ castle built by William the Conqueror in the 1070s.The Queen uses the Castle both as a private home, where she usually spends the weekend, and as a Royal residence at which she undertakes certain formal duties. Windsor Castle is (35)_______ used by the Queen to host State Visits from overseas monarchs and presidents. Every year the Queen takes up official residence in Windsor Castle for a month over Easter (March-April).The Castle is huge, so people tend to head for the most (36)_______ bits -- the State Apartments, St. George’s Chapel, the Gallery and the delightful Queen Mary’s Dolls House. Works of art, antique furniture, curiosities and impressive architecture reflect the tastes of many different royal generations. The State Apartments are (37)_____ decorated formal rooms still used for state and official functions.The magnificent and beautiful St. George’s Chapel was started in 1475 by Edward IV and was completed 50 years later by Henry VIII. It (38)_______ among the finest examples of late medieval architecture in the UK. The Drawings Gallery (39)______ the exhibition “The Queen: 60 Photographs for 60 Years”. The exhibition presents portraits of the Queen (40)______ in brief moments on both official occasions and at relaxed family gatherings.Overcoming Obstacles: How Your Biggest Failure Can Lead to Your Success There's been a lot written on the theme of failure and how essential it is to success. In a world where ___31___ is given for people's accomplishments, failing feels dangerous. The fear of failure can stop people taking disks that might lead to success.Heidi Grant Halvorson, a psychologist, points out much of success is ___32___ not on talent but on learning from your mistakes.About half of the people in the world hold that ability in an area -- be it creative or social skill -- is natural. The other half believes, instead, that someone might have a preference or something -- say painting or speaking foreign languages but this ability can be improved through ___33___ practice or training.It’s almost impossible to think rationally (理性地) while shouting at yours elf, “I’m a failure”. But when you ___34___ your thinking, you will probably see what you can control -- your behavior, your planning, your reactions -- and change them.The primary ___35___ between successful people and unsuccessful people is that the successful people fail more. If you see failure as a monster approaching you, take another look.Success is as scary as failure. Researchers report that satisfaction grows on challenges. Think about it -- a computer game you can always win is boring; one you can win ___36___, and with considerable effort, is fun. In pursuit of success, failure exposes areas that you need to ___37___. So the failure serves as a brick wall to test how you apply yourself to ___38___ your objectives and how much you want them.There is a way to distinguish whether a failure ___39___ you to double down or walk away, says Halvorson. If, when things get rough, you remain fascinated by your goal, you should keep going. If what you’re doing is costing you too much time and energy or it’s not bringing you joy, you should give second thought to the ___40___ of your goal and even set a new one.The NileThe ancient Greek writer Herodotus once described Egypt -- with some envy -- as ‘the gift of the Nile’. The Egyptians depend on the river for food, for water and for life. The Ancient Egyptians were able to control and use the Nile, creating the earliest irrigation systems and developing a prosperous ___31___.Snaking through the deserts, the Nile would flood almost ___32___ each year in June. Once the water subsided, a rich deposit of sand was left behind, making an excellent topaoil. Seeds were sown, yielding wheat, barley, beans, lentils and leeks. Drought could spell disaster for the Egyptians, so during the dry seasons, they dug basins and channels to deliver water to their land. They also devised simple channels to transfer water at the peak of the flood.An early system of ___33___ a Nilometer, was used to de determine the size of the floods. Later, during the New Kingdom, a lifting system called a shaduf was used to raise water from the river -- ___34___ to the way in which a well is used today.The Egyptians took up some of the earliest trading missions. Without a(n) ___35___ system they exchanged goods, bringing back timber, precious stones, pottery, spices and animals. Their efforts in medicine were also ___36___ advanced: surgeons performed operations to remove cyst (囊肿). Mummification gave them great understanding of the human body -- yet they also relied heavily on various medicines to prevent disease, and discoveries were often confused with superstition (迷信). And while a great deal of time was dedicated to ___37___ -- the Egyptians thought the stars were gods.By the 16th century Egypt was under the Ottoman Empire until Britain seized control in 1882. What is now mostly Arabic Egypt only won ___38___ from Britain after World War Ⅱ. The Suez Canal, opened in 1869, ___39___ the country as a center for world transportation. But it, and the completion of the Aswan High Dam in 1971 ___40___ the ecology of the Nile, which now struggles to satisfy the country’s rapidly growing population, currently more than 76 million -- the largest in the Arab world.Getting help with parenting makes a difference -- at any ageNew Oxford University study finds that parenting interventions (育儿干预) for helping children with behavior problems are just as effective in school age, as in younger children.There is a dominant view among scientists and policy-makers. They believes, for the greatest effect, interventions need to be __31__ early in life, when children’s brain function and behavior are thought to be more flexible. However, according to the new research, it’s time to stop focusing on when we intervene with parenting, and just continue helping children in need of all ages.Just published in Child Development, the study is one of the first to __32__ this age assumption. Parenting interventions are a common and effective tool for reducing child behavior problems, but studies of age effects have produced different results until now.A team led by Professor Frances Fardner __33__ data from over 15,000 families from all over the world, and found no evidence that earlier is better. Older children benefited just as much as younger ones from parenting interventions for reducing behavior problems. There was no evidence that earlier interventions are more powerful. This was based on __34__ data from more than 150 different experiments.What’s more, their economic analysis found that interventions with older children were __35__ more l ikely to be cost-effective.Professor Gardner commented: “When there is __36__ about behavioral difficulties in younger children, our findings should never be used as a reason to delay intervention, otherwise, children and families will suffer for longe r.” She continued, “As for __37__ parenting interventions for reducing behavior problems in childhood, we should stick to the principle, ‘it’s never too early, never too late’, rather than ‘earlier is better’.”The study draws the conclusion that it makes sense to invest in parenting interventions for children at all ages with behavioral difficulties, because they are no more likely to be __38__ in younger than older children, at least in the pre-adolescents.Of course, there’s more work to be done. T he experiments conducted were __39__ to pre-adolescents, to shorter-term effects, and parent-reported assessment of child outcomes. Future studies are needed that focus on adolescents, longer-term outcomes, and using multiple sources for __40__ child behavior problems.Want to figure out if someone is a psychopath (精神变态者)? Ask them what their favourite song is. A New Yor k University study last year found that people who loved Eminem’s Lose Yourself and Justin Bieber’s What Do You Mean? were more likely to (31)________ highly on the psychopathy scale than people who were into Dire Straits.Over the past few years, Spotify has been enhancing its data analytic (32)________ in an attempt to help marketers (33)________ consumers with adverts tailored to the mood they're in. They infer this from the sort of music you're listening to, (34)________ with where and when you're listening to it, along with third-party data that might be available.Now, to be clear, there's nothing particularly (35)________ about what Spotify is doing with your data. I certainly don't think that they are working with shadowy consulting firms to serve you ads promoting a culture war while you're listening to the songs that (36)________ you might be in a casually racist mood. Nevertheless, I find it (37)________ that our personal private moments with music are increasingly being turned into data points and sold to advertisers.You can see where this could go, can’t you? As ad targeting gets ever more complicated, marketers will have the ability to target our emotions in (38)________ exploitative ways. According to one study, titled Misery Is Not Miserly, you are more likely to spend more on a (39)________ if you’re feeling sad. You can imagine some companies might take advantage of that. And on that note, I’m feeling a little down about all this. I'll (40)________ off to treat myself to something expensive.Artificial skin is a substitute for human skin produced in the laboratory, typically used to treat burns. Different types of artificial skin differ in their complexity, but all are designed to __31__ at least some of the skin's basic functions, which include protecting against wetness and infection and regulating body heat.Skin is primarily made of two layers: the uppermost layer, the epidermis, which serves as a protection against the environment; and the dermis, the layer below the epidermis. The dermis also contains substances, which help to make the skin __32__ and maintain its biological functions.Artificial skins close wounds, which prevents bacterial infection and water loss and in result the wounded skin can __33__. For example, one commonly used artificial skin, Integra. functions as a support between cells that helps regulate cell behavior and causes a new dermis to form by promoting cell growth and collagen (胶原质) __34__. The Integra “dermis” is also biodegradable (可生物降解的). It is gradually absorbed and replaced by the new dermis.Aside from its uses in the clinical __35__, artificial skin may also be used to model human skin for research. For example, artificial skin is used as an alternative in animal testing. Such testing may cause __36__ pain and discomfort to the animals and it does not __37__ predict the response of human skin. Some companies like L’óreal have already used artificial skin to test many __38__ ingredients and products. Other research applications include how skin is affected by UV exposure and how certain substances in sunscreen and medicines are transported through skin.Today new technology has been developed by growing __39 __ of skin taken from the patient or other humans. One major source is the foreskins of newborns. Such cells often do not stimulate the body's immune system -- a mechanism that allows babies to develop within their mother’s body -- and hence are much less likely to be __40__ by the patient's body.They're still kids, and although there's a lot that the experts don't yet know about them one thing they do agree on is that what the kids use and expect from their world has changed rapidly. And it's all because of technology.To the psychologists, sociologists, and media experts who study them, their digital devices set this new group ___31___, even from their Millennial (千禧年的) elders, who are quite familiar with technology. They want to be constantly connected and available in a way even their older brothers and sisters don't quite get. These differences may seem slight, but they ___32___ the appearance of a new generation.The ___33___ between Millennial elders and this younger group was so evident to psychologist Larry Rosen that he has ___34___ the birth of a new generation in a new book, Rewired: Understanding the ingeneration and the Way They Learn, out next month. Rosen says the technically ___35___ life experience of those born since the early 1990s is so different from the Millennial elders he wrote about in his 2007 book, Me, MySpace and I: Parenting the Net Generation, that they distinguish themselves as a new generation, which he has given them the nickname of "ingeneration".Rosen says portability is the key. They are ___36___ from their wireless devices, which allow them to text as well as talk, so they can be constantly connected -- even in class, where cell phones are ___37___ banned.Many researchers are trying to determine whether technology somehow causes the brains of young people to be wired differently. "They should be distracted and should perform more poorly than they do," Rosen says, "But findings show teens ___38___ distractions much better than we would predict by their age and their brain development.Because these kids are more devoted to technology at younger ages, Rosen says, the educational system has to change ___39___."The growth on the use of technology with children is very rapid, and we run the risk of being out of step with this generation as far as how they learn and how they think. We have to give them options because they want their world ___40___," Rosen says.Workforce of the FutureThe workplace is changing rapidly. Rather than the standard working day of nine to five, employees are working more flexibly to meet their busy home lives. Advances in technology are ___31___ the very nature of the tasks and skills required in the workplace.To gain a full perspective of how the workplace is set to change over the next decade, employee benefits provider Unum UK ___32___ with The Future Laboratory to survey 3,000 workers across several industries. They also interviewed industry experts and business leaders on topics from artificial intelligence and robotics to the increase of flexible working and an ageing workforce.The result outlines some of the employment changes that businesses can expect to see over the next decade and predicts the ___33___ of two worker cultures which will dominate the workforce. They are the obligated and the self-fulfilled workers.“Obligated workers” refer to people with dependents and the sandwich generation, ___34___ raising children with caring for elderly parents. Therefore, they value a career ___35___ to life stages and events and financial security. Joel Defries, 33, father of one kid and partner at London V odka said, “A flexible employer will allow me to have a long paternity leave (陪产假) and to value my family just as much as I value my job.”Self-fulfilled workers are committed to life-long learning and acquiring new skills rather than ___36___ to an employer. They actively look for personal development and want employee benefits that help them ___37___ both their personal and professional ambitions. They treat personal commitments and pursuits as ___38___ to professional commitments. Elly Kemp, 31, ___39___ a full-time employee, now working part-time in a café and also assisting with her grandmother’s care said, “My approach to work allows me the freedom to ___40___ m y career at my own pace. I want my work to be fluid so I can change it when I want and do whatever makes me happy at the time.”The Father of 3D PrintingAbout twenty years ago, the surgeons at the Wilford Hull medical center working to separate a pair of conjoined (连体的) twins thought that only one would be able to walk after the operation. After a model of the girls’ bone structure was (31)________ using 3D printing, however, they found a shared upper leg bone to be bigger than expected and split it successfully, (32)________ in both twins being able to walk. Now eighty and still working as chief technology officer of 3D Systems. Chuck Hull is enjoying some minor (33)________ 31 years after he first printed a small black eye-wash cup using a new method of manufacturing known as 3D printing.At the time, he was working for a company that used UV light to put thin layers of plastic coats on tabletops and (34)________. He had an idea that if he could place thousands of thin layers of plastic on top of each other and then cut their shape using light, he would be able to form three dimensional objects. After a year, he (35)________ a system where light was shone into a bottle of photopolymer – a material which changes from liquid to plastic-like solid when light shines on it – and traces the shape of one level of the object. Subsequent layers are then printed until it is (36)________.After patenting the invention, he set up 3D Systems, (37)________ getting $6m (£3.5m) from a Canadian investor. The first (38)________ product came out in 1988 and proved a hit among car manufacturers, in the aerospace sector and for companies designing medical equipment. The possibilities appear endless –from home-printed food and medicine to (39)________ that pictures of objects be able to be taken in shops and then recreated using plans downloaded from the Internet Although deliberate in his responses, there is one moment when the (40)________ spoken Chuck Hull tells of his surprise about what exactly his creation was capable of achieving.Is climate change consuming your favorite foods?Coffee: Whether or not you try to limit yourself to one cup of coffee a day, the effects of climate change on the world’s coffee-growing regions may leave you little choice. Coffee __31__ in South America, Africa, Asia, and Hawaii are all being threatened by rising air temperatures and unstable rainfall patterns, which invite disease and __32__ species to live on the coffee plant and ripening beans. The result? Significant cuts in coffee yield and less coffee in your cup. It is estimated that, if current climate patterns continue, half of the areas __33__ suitable for coffee production won’t be by the year 2050.Tea: When it comes to tea, warmer climates and unstable quantity of water falling to earth aren’t only __34__ the world’s tea-growing regions, they’re also messing with its distinct flavor. For example, in India, the Indian Monsoon has brought more intense rainfall, making tea flavor weaker. Recent research coming out of the University of Southampton suggests that tea-producing areas in some places, __35__ East Africa, could decline by as much as 55 percent by 2050 as the quantity of water falling to earth and temperatures change. Tea pickers are also feeling the __36__ of climate change. During harvest season, increased air temperatures are creating an increased risk of heatstroke for field workers.Seafood: Climate change is affecting the world’s aquaculture as much as its agriculture. As air temperatures rise, oceans and waterways absorb some of the heat and __37__ warming of their own. The result is a decline in fish population, including in lobsters (who are cold-blooded creatures), and salmon (whose eggs find it hard to survive in higher water temperature). Warmer waters also __38__ toxic marine bacteria, like Vibrio, to grow and cause illness in humans whenever ingested with raw seafood, like oysters or sashimi.And that __39__ “crack” you get when eating crab and lobster? It could be silenced as shellfish struggle to build their calcium (碳) carbonate shells, a result of ocean acidification (absorb carbon dioxide from the air). According to a study, scientists predicted that if over-fishing and rising temperature trends continued at their present rate, the world’s seafood __40__ would run out by the year 2050.The ability of the herd mentality (从众心理) to increase people’s chances of liking or believing something may help explain a wide variety of phenomena. Aral (A managerial economist at the Massachusetts institute of technology) says, from housing ___31___ to gold prices and from political polls to restaurant reviews, the ___32___ that other people like something has a powerful ability to make people like it themselves.The new study ___33___ how simple it would be for companies to control reviews of their products by simply adding a few positive ___34___ of their own early reviews in the process, Aral adds.It found that effects were strongest when stories were about politics, business and cultures than for fun or lifestyle pieces. In situations where there are more ___35___ news reviews, you have to be a little more cautious about interpreting likes and dislikes.“Think twice before you trust, how many likes something has,” he adds. “That’s something you have to ___36___ with a grain of salt (持怀疑态度).” And it’s a situation many online users ___37___ on a daily basis.Aral recently went to review a restaurant with a plan to give it three out of five stars, but when he got to the ___38___, he was shown how other people describe the same place and those reviews include someone with five stars. Seeing those positive reviews made him think twice about his own ___39___ average opinion.“A woman ___40___ how great it is, how great her great prices are and how the lemon sauce is so great,” h e says. “Maybe it’s not such a good idea to say some rating right before you make your own.”。

上海高三英语一模考试11选10题汇编(word包含答案).docx

上海高三英语一模考试11选10题汇编(word包含答案).docx

备战 2020 上海高考2019 年上海高三英语一模考试11 选 10 题汇编(2019 宝山二模) Directions: After reading the passage below, fill in each blank with a properword given in the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one more word thanyou need.A. accessingB. nonessentialC. apparentD. technologyE. assignedF. contactG. particularly H. addiction I. associated J. automatically K. contributingWhen was the last time that you dialed a phone number from memory? It probably depends on how long you've been using31like a cellphone. While some generations can recall thedays of memorizing phone numbers, it's possible that members of Generation Z have never had toremember a single32. Why is this? Because smartphones offer quick and convenient waysfor storing and33information. There is no need to memorize anything. But this isn't without consequence. As digital devices develop, more and more users' heavy reliance on them may be having disabling effects. "Digital dementia (失智 )" is the term being used by medical professionals to identify some of these effects.Some professionals like Jim Kwik,an expert in memory improvement and optimal brain performance, are taking a closer look at this effect. Kwik describes digital dementia like this: "...we're34our brains to our smart devices. We're so reliant on our smartphones that our smartphones are making us stupid. As medical studies chart the decline in memory and cognitive skills among smartphone users, a connection is made between symptoms35with dementia."The seriousness of overuse becomes36when you consider just how young smartphone users are becoming. Author and speaker Simon Sinek points out that young minds "Are not readyfor it! Their minds cannot cope with the of screens and sounds lead to 37dopamine ( 多巴胺 ). " Consequently, the overstimulation more often than not. So now parents, teachers andmanagers are asking how to handle the influx (汇集 ) of young people with this kind of addiction.First, monitor your cellphone use. Keep downloading applications like Forest or Checky.Then cut back on any38usage. Set a specific goal of how much you think you shoulduse your phone.Determine39areas for cellphone use. For example, while you're at home, only allowyourself to check your phone somewhere like a home office. This way, the time inbetween tasks isn't 40 filled with staring at your screen.(2019 崇明二模) Directions: After reading the passage below, fill in each blank with a properword given in the box. Each word can only be used once. Note that there is one word more thanyou need.A. signB. wreckC. scheduledD. inappropriateE. exactF. initiativeG. tragedy H. repeat I. categorized J. accommodated K. unclearTitanic II Could Sail as Soon as 2022If you thought the long -delayed project to launch a full -size copy of the ill -fated Royal Mail Ship Titanic was sunk in the water — think again. Just like Celine Dion sang back in 1997, the travel project will“ go on and on.”Australian businessman and politician Clive Palmer, who is behind the31, announced in September that work on the ship had started again. The idea was first floated in 2012. It is saidthat the new ship will be a(n)32copy of the infamous ship, which sank in 1912 following acrash with an iceberg (冰山 ).To avoid a(n)33disaster, Titanic II will apparently be equipped with plenty of life boats, modern navigation(导航 ) and radar equipment. The first voyage,however, will takepassengers from Dubai to New York, reports CruiseArabia, with the first sailing34to takeplace in 2022. Blue Star Line says the nine-decked ship will be home to 835 cabins, and 2,435passengers will be35. You’ ll be able to buy first-second- and third -class tickets— just like in the original.Meanwhile tourists with plenty of money might soon have the chance to dive to the36 of the original Titanic. American company OceanGate has planned diving trips for 2019, costing$105,129 per person.Of course, the original Titanic voyage ended in 37 , with over 1,500 people losing their lives.For many, voyages to the original ship are in bad taste. Steve Sims, founder of The Bluefish,said earlier in 2018 that he doesn’ t see diving to the original38 one. asRealistically, it39’ s whether Titanic II will ever see the light of day— or whether the diving tours will happen soon. But one thing is for certain, more than 100 years after the Titanicfirst and only voyage, global interest in this ship shows no40of slowing down.(2019 虹口二模) Directions: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Eachword can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.A. scaleB. engagedC. disastrousD. hotspotsE. targetF. victimG. interwovenH. inevitableI. continuousJ. resolveK. riskyWhy Bike Theft Is Not Taken Seriously?For many people a bicycle is the only transport they can afford and it is very convenient forthem to use. Therefore, the impact of the loss of their bike can be __31__. But why is cycle theftso often seen as a minor crime?According to the police, 96,210 bikes w ere stolen in 2018, and about one in 50bicycle -owning households fall __32__ to cycle theft each year. Those who can afford a secondbike might have a “ beater ” , a cheap bike they leave in __33__ areas, and can afford to lose thosewho cannot make both ends meet, and live below the poverty line will find themselves cornered by biketheft.According to a survey for Bike Register, 50% of victims felt police didn ’investigate the crime, while those __34__ in cycle theft see it as low risk in terms of being caught. Police recoverjust 3% of stolen bikes. In fact, the problem is almost certainly much greater: People often donreport it thinking there ’nothings the police can do, so the full __35__ of the problem remainshidden.Cycle crime hotspots were identified as Cambridge, Oxford, Southampton, Bristol, etc. Most cycle thefts occur near or in people ’ s homes, but thieves also __36hubs (transport中心,枢纽 )and university campuses. In the meantime, the police have come up with a way to __37__ the issue.Training 23 officers in regional cycle crime taskforces is part of a national cycle crime strategy,__38__ with measures like education on safe locking techniques, working with websiteswhere more than half of stolen bikes are sold, and identifying cycle theft __39__ and priorities.If a bike is stolen, there is about a 20% chance the victim will not replace it, losing theirtransport, exercise, and potential access to local communities and service. It is widely acceptedthat police’ s __40__ effort is fundamental to a drop in cycle theft.(2019 黄浦二模) Directions: Complete the following passage by using the words in the box.A. processedB. increasingC. applicationsD. typingE. interpretingF. reflectedG. injected H. transforming I. connections J. remarkable K. superhumanThe Next frontier: Using Thought to Control MachinesTechnologies are often billed as transformative. For William Kochevar, the term is justified.Mr. Kochevar is paralysed below the shoulders after a cycling accident, yet has managed to feedhimself by his own hand. This31progress is partly thanks to electrodes, implanted in hisright arm, which stimulate muscles. But the real magic lies higher up. Mr. Kochevar can controlhis arm using the power of thought. His intention to move is32in neural (神经的) activityin his motor region; these signals are detected by implants in his brain and33into commands to activate the electrodes in his arms.An ability to decode thought in this way may sound like science fiction. But brain-computer interfaces(BCIs)like the BrainGate system used by Mr.Kochevar provide evidence thatmind -control can work. Researchers are able to tell what words and images people have heard andseen from neural activity alone. Information can also be encoded and used to stimulate the brain.Over 300,000 people have cochlear(耳蜗的)implants,which help them to hear by34sound into electrical signals and sending them into the brain. Scientists have35“ data into“monkeys heads, instructing them to perform actions via electrical pulses.As our Technology Quarterly in this issue explains, the pace of research into BCIs and thescale of its ambition are36. Both America’ s armed forces and Silicon Valley are starting to focus on the brain. Facebook dreams of thought-to-text37. Kernel, a startup, has $100m tospend on neuroethology. Elon Musk has formed a firm called Neuralink;he thinks that, if humanity is to survive the arrival of artificial intelligence,it needs an upgrade. Entrepreneurs imagine a world in which people can communicate using thoughts, with each other and withmachines, or acquire 38abilities, such as hearing at very high frequencies.These powers if they ever materialize, are decades away. But well before then, BCIs could open the door to wonderful new39. Imagine stimulating the visual region to help the blind, making new neural40in stroke victims or monitoring the brain for sighs of depression. By turning the firing of neurons into a resource to be used, BCIs may change the idea of what it means to be human.(2019 嘉定二模) Directions:After reading the passage below, fill in each blank with a proper word given in the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one more wordthan you need.A. picturingB. separatedC. vary F. vast G. roughly H. mythicalD. celebrationI. delicatelyE. complicatedJ. stress K. distinguishingThe United Nations’series of“ language days”are designed to promote the use of the sixofficial languages of the UN as well as to celebrate cultural and linguistic diversity(语言多样性) .Chinese Language Day is the 20th April. It’ s a time chosen to fit in with the Chinese31 of Guyu (古语), which honours Cangjie –the four -eyed 32 figure who is traditionallyunderstood to have created Chinese characters in the time of the Yellow Emperor, 5000 years ago.Mandarin(普通话)is the most-spoken language in the world, with over 1.5 billion speakers.When most people think of “ Chinese ”it is, Mandarin that they are33. But MandarinChinese is far from the only variant of the Chinese language — orthe only language spoken inChina. In fact, there are a great number of Chinese languages. Remember— this is a country which is both very large and very, very old.Different regions are within the34expanse ofterritory,that is, China can be35not only by great distances but also by broadlygeographical features such as mountain ranges.It is hard to guess how many dialects actually exist. In general, dialects can be36classified into one of the seven large groups: Putonghua (Mandarin), Gan,Kejia(Hakka),Min,Wu, Xiang, and Yue (Cantonese). Each language group contains a large number of dialects.Understanding the situation is37by the fact that, while many Chinese people indifferent geographical areas of the country may not understand each other when they speak theirregional dialect, they may share the same written language even if their pronunciation of differentcharacters within that language may_____38_____.A ____39____ feature across all Chinese languages is tone. For instance, Mandarin has fourtones and Cantonese has six tones. Tone, in terms of language, is the pitch (高音 ) in whichsyllables ( 音节 ) in words are spoken. In Chinese, different words ___40____different keys. Somewords even have pitch variations in one single syllable.(2019 长宁二模) 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. marginalB. personalC. slidingD. promiseE. countedF. gapsG. profits H. distributed I. relief J. maturing K. levelingBad News for Apple; Good News for HumanityWhen Apple cut its revenue estimate(收益预期) for the last quarter of 2018 because ofunexpectedly slow sales of iPhones, markets trembled. The company ’ share price, which hadbeen (31)________ for months, fell by a further 10% on January 3rd, the day after the news cameout. Apple’ s suppliers’ shares were also hit.Analysts assume that the number of smartphones sold in 2018 will be slightly lower than in2017, the industry’first ever annual decline. All this is terrible news for investors who had(32)________on continued growth. But step back and look at the bigger picture. That smartphonesales have peaked, and seem to be (33)________off at around 1.4 billion units a year, is goodnews for humanity. The slowdown is actually the result of market saturation ( 饱和 ),which hitsApple the hardest because, despite a relatively small market share (13% of smartphone users), itcaptures almost all of the industry’ s (34)________. But Apple’ s pain is humanity’ s gain. that the benefits of these magical devices are now so widely(35)________is something to becelebrated.Now many phones are used for longer than three years,often as hand-me-downs.Replacement cycles are lengthening as new models offer only(36)________improvements. Soeven with flat sales, the longer (37)________ between upgrades mean people who already havephones benefit. For all but the most addicted device fans, the slowing pace of upgrades comes as awelcome (38)________.Does that mean innovation is slowing?No. As computers become smaller, still more(39)________and closer to people’ s bodies, many technicians expect that wearable devices, fromsmart watches to AR headsets, will be the next big thing. Even so, finding another product with thescope of the smartphone is a tall order. The smartphone holds its (40)________ as the devicethat will make computing and communications worldwide. The recent slowing of smartphone sales isbad news for the industry, obviously. But for the rest of humanity it is a welcome sign that atransformative technology has become almost universal.(2019 静安二模) Directions: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Eachword can only be used once. Note that there is one word more than you need.A. involveB. strategicallyC. delicateD. shameE. weaknessesF. sensitivityG. superiorH. occasionalI. encounterJ. cluesK. collapseFor several decades, various types of artificial intelligence kept shocking the world. robotscould ___31___ people in highly competitive games and them quickly destroyed their humancompetitors.AI long ago mastered chess, the Chinese board game Go and even the Rubik’ s cube, which it managed to solve in just 0.38 second.Now machines have a new game that will allow them to ___32___ humans: Jenga, the populargame in which players ___33___ remove pieces from an increasingly unstable tower of 54 blocks,placing each one on top until the entire structure would ___34___.A newly released video from MIT shows a robot developed by the school’ s engineers playing the game with surprising accuracy. The machine is equipped with a soft gripper (夹子) , aforce -sensing wrist and an external camera, allowing the robot to detect the tower’ s ___35_ way a human might do.Unlike in purely recognitive tasks or games such as chess or Go, playing the game of Jengaalso requires mastery of physical acts such as pushing, pulling, placing, and arranging pieces. Itmust ___36___ interactive physical operation, where you have to touch the tower to learn how andwhen to move blocks.Imitating it is rather difficult, so the robot has to learn in the real world, by working with thereal Jenga tower. Recently, a relevant research was published in the journal Science Robotics.Researchers say the robot demonstrates that machines can learn how to perform certain taskssignificant, researchers say, because it provides further proof that robots can be used to perform___39___ tasks, such as separating recyclable objects from landfill trash and assembling consumer products.In a cellphone assembly line, the felling of any component is coming from force and touch rather than vision. To become an accomplished Jenga player, the robot did not require as much repetitive practice as you might imagine. Hoping to avoid reconstructing a Jenga tower thousands of times, researchers developed a method that allowed the robot to be trained on about 300 games. Researchers say the robot has already begun facing off against humans, who remain ___40___ players -- for now.2019 年上海高三英语一模考试11 选 10 题汇编( word 包含答案)(2019 浦东二模) Directions: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Eachword can be used only once. Not that there is one word more than you need.A. regionB. initiativeC. sticksD. domesticE. priorityF. shrinkingG. solidH.matters I. classic J. expanding K. indefinableUNIQLO’ s founder tries to find a way to beat Zara and H&MWhen asked what guides his vision of UNIQLO, Tadashi Yanai, its founder and chief executive, pulls off the shelf the 1987 autumn/winter collection catalogue of Next, a mass-marketBritish retailer. All of the clothes are so ___31___, he says, that they could be worn today. WhileZara of Spain and H&M of Sweden follow fashion trends without having any original thought,UNIQLO of Japan ___32___ to timeless basics.Mr. Yanai has a/an ___33___ base at home from which to develop into his Westerncompetitors ’ main markets of Europe and America. But instead his ___34___ remains Asia.is the engine of growth today,” he says, pointing to the millions of consumers across the ___35___ who are reaching the middle class. UNIQLO will open its first shop in India this year and isconsidering ___36___ into Vietnam and other countries (it has already opened networks of shops in Indonesia, Singapore and Thailand).The success or not of UNIPLO’ s overseas operations ___37___ greatly to investors athome. Fast Retailing since 2015, Analysts’ s shares---Mr. Yanai owns just over 20% of the firm --- have been rising estimate, largely owing to its international expansion and improvedlogistics(物流). At home the firm is closing stores because the population is ___38___. Last year UNIQLO’ s international profits overtook its ___39___ sales for the first time and its foreign operation profits almost equaled its Japanese equivalent.Though they are very different markets, Europe and America offer a cautionary tale.9 / 15America remains ___40___ for UNIQLO both there and in Europe. However, Mr. Yanai, anenthusiastic fan of globalization, is confident that he can guide UNIQLO through the changes needed.(2019 普陀二模) Directions: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Eachword can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.A. determinedB. entitledC. officiallyD. seekingE. versionF. establishmentG. rejectedH. variousI. completelyJ. pricedK. absorbedThe Historical Change of Reader’ s DigestDuring World War I, Mr. DeWitt Wallace was wounded in a battle. During his recovery in the hospital, he read a lot of magazines and (31) ___________ a lot of interesting information. At thesame time, he also found that few people had time to read so many magazines that he realized theidea of excerpting ( 摘录 ) these articles and publishing them.He was (32) ___________ to publish a pocket magazine they called Reader’ s Digest with his wife Lila Acheson. They opened an office downstairs in an illegal hotel in Greenwich Village,New York, and spent only $5,000 in capital and began (33) __________ subscribers. After aperiod of hard work, the first volume was (34) __________ published on February 5, 1922. Itspurpose is to inform the readers in daily life and give the readers entertainment, encouragementand guidance. The first article, (35) ___________ How to Stay Young Mentally , was one and a halfpages long.In 1920, he put (36) ____________ selected articles into Reader ’Digest samples and displayed them to major publishers in the United States. He hoped that someone would be willingto publish them, but they were all (37) ___________. Mr. Wallacedid not give up and decided to publish it himself. He worked athome with his wife, and finally published the first issue of Reader ’s Digest in February 1922. The first was printed in 5,000copies, (38) ___________ at 25 cents, and sent to 1,500 payment10 / 15subscribers by mail. By 1935, the circulation of Reader’ s Digest had reached one million copies.The Chinese (39) ___________ of Readerfirst editor-in-chief was Lin Taiyi, the daughter of ’ s Digest was first published in March 1965. The Mr. Lin Yutang, master of literature. InNovember 2004, Reader’ s Digest and Shanghai Press and Publication Bureau announced the (40)__________ of a long -term publishing cooperation.(2019 青浦二模) Directions:Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Eachword can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.A. forgottenB. hesitateC. initialD. marineE. marvelousF. leisurelyG. sources H. specific I. symphony J. tapped K. witnessedTouring CenotesMy parents and I traveled to Mexico to visit my grandparents last summer, and we visited thecenotes (say-NO -tays), the natural swimming holes located on the Yucatá n Peninsula. The term“ swimming hole ” might make you think that cenotes are just average, but cenotes are truly __31__. Ihad the most exciting experience of my life exploring these wonders of nature.Thousands of years old, the cenotes formed and created sinkholes underneath. Though theancient Mayans (玛雅人 ) used the cenotes as water __32__, people can now swim, dive, take photographs, and admire local trees and __33__ life, all through water as clear as liquid diamond.In Cenote Azul, my parents, my grandparents, and I swam through water that seemed too blueto be real. I __34__ countless younger kids diving into the water from a small cliff, but I dared not tojump at first. I finally worked up the courage, and my __35__ try instantly put all my worries to rest.A few days later, we went to Cenote Ponderosa. We stayed in the sun -covered pond, wherewe __36__ floated while others did diving and took underwater photographs. Being surrounded by avalley of trees made everything else in the world seem to disappear.Grutas de Loltú n were definitely the most magnificent of all the cenotes, even though therewas no swimming involved. Grutas are caves, and the Grutas de Loltúaren among the biggestcaves on the entire Peninsula. Our guide, Carolina, walked us through several caves, where wesaw many drawings thousands of years old on the cave walls! Just one brief look at thosedrawings made me feel like I had stepped back in time to a(n) __37__ era of history. Our groupthought Carolina was joking when she claimed she could make the stalagmites(石笋 ) sing for us,but when she __38__ them, we heard what sounded like the words“ Lol” and“ Tun”—the nam the caves! I cannot imagine that a(n) __39__ played at a concert at Carnegie Hall would have beenany better.Mexico ’ Yucats á Peninsula is filled with beauty, but the cenotes are a one-of-a-kindopportunity to commune with nature in a way that is impossible anywhere else on Earth, and Iwould not __40__ to do it all again.2019 年上海高三英语一模考试11 选 10 题汇编( word 包含答案)(2019 松江闵行二模) Directions: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen fro^ the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.A. apply G. optionsB. supposedH. natureC. accurateI. sensitiveD. consumeJ. addressE. existingK. willingnessF. maintainA recent troubling study showed that“ fakenews”spread significantly faster, deeper andmore broadly than the truth, and the effect is even more remarkable when regarding news asopposed to reporting on natural disasters, finance or science. So how can we encourageindividuals to seek____31____ online content? Leading scholars are trying hard to deal with thisquestion.Processing new information requires a considerable mental effort, especially ^when thatinformation seems to conflict with your ___32_____ worldview. It takes the ____33____ to admityou may be wrong. But with a great amount of conflicting information available, who’ sto saywhat ’ s actually true and what’ s false? If you can’ t tell, why not just make life easy and go with what supports your current beliefs?So what ____34____ do we have? Many suggest that we can, ____35____ the issue byreforming adult behavior, but this is aiming too far from source. An alternative solution is usingearly education to help individuals recognize these problems and ____36____ critical thinking tothe information they deal with. Currently, there is a push in the US to include Internet informationclasses into primary and secondary school curriculums. The movement, which has received somesupport, aims to make fact -checking seem like second ____37____ to individuals at an early age.Primary and secondary school are ___38_____ to be supplying students with the skills they2019 年上海高三英语一模考试11 选 10 题汇编( word 包含答案)need to develop into productive and informed members of our society. As our society develops,the curriculum we are teaching our students needs to develop as well.The Internet is an amazing tool, but to use it most effectively we have to accept its benefitswhile also understanding the ways in which it makes us dangerously ____39____. If students arestill learning the practices such as writing in school, shouldn ’they be learning how to____40____ the Internet responsibly as well?(2019 徐汇二模) Directions: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Eachword can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.A. declineB. investedC. scratchingD. harvestE. farmersF. barelyG. occurrence H. implementation I. unmarketable J. adjustments K. enemiesLike many people acting on the desire to eat healthy and local, Acropolis resident EduardoJimenez decided to plant a garden in his backyard. He ploughed the soil, he planted the seeds, and heeven set up a fence to keep out the deer. Eduardo did everything right. Or so it seems. However,when (31) _____ time has come, he has not one tomato, bean, or leaf of lettuce to show for hishard work. How did this happen? The answer comes in the form of a small, brown, particularlysmelly insect: the stink bug.Unlike their picky cousins, stink bugs feed on some 300 species of plants, including figs,blueberries, corn, and kiwi fruits as well as soybeans, peas, and weeds. Although they do littledamage to the plant itself, they make the fruits and vegetables (32) _______. For this reason, stinkbugs pose the most serious threat to the big agriculturalists and macro farm operators. Macrofarmers have more (33) _______ in their produce, and therefore have more to lose. Whilehobbyists like Eduardo are left to face the disappointment of an unsuccessful garden, macrofarmers are forced to live with the loss of entire tracts of cash crops—a fact that has left ma _______ able to clothe their children or put food on the table.Last season alone, several New Jersey pepper farmers saw 75% of their crops damaged.Pennsylvania lost half of its peach population, and, according to the US Apple Association, applefarmers in the mid -Atlantic states lost $37 million. This year could be worse. As a result of this(35)_______ in the supply of fresh fruits and vegetables, shoppers have seen (36)_______ — sometimes quite dramatic—in prices at the grocery store. Prices of apples in Maryland。

2020届上海市各区高三英语一模试卷题型分类专题汇编--十一选十--老师版(纯净word带答案已校对终结版)

2020届上海市各区高三英语一模试卷题型分类专题汇编--十一选十--老师版(纯净word带答案已校对终结版)

Section BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.How do Cigarettes Affect the Body?Cigarettes aren’t good for us. But how exactly do cigarettes harm us? Let’s look at what happens as their ingredients make their way through our bodies, and how we benefit (31) ______ when we finally give up smoking.Inside the airways and lungs, smoke increases the (32) ______ of infections as well as long-lasting diseases. It does this by damaging the tiny hair-like tissues which keep the airways clean. That’s one of the reasons smoking can lead to oxygen loss and (33) ______ of breath.Within about 10 seconds, the bloodstream carries a stimulant called nicotine to the brain, creating the (34) ______ sensations which make smoking highly addictive. Nicotine and other chemicals from the cigarette, at the same time, cause tightness of blood tubes, restricting blood flow. These effects on blood tubes lead to (35) ______ of blood tube walls, increasing the possibility of heart attacks and strokes.Many of the c hemicals inside cigarettes can activate dangerous (36) ______ in the body’s DNA that make cancers form. In fact, about one of every three cancer deaths in the United States is caused by smoking. And it’s not just lung cancer. Smoking can cause cancer in mu ltiple tissues and organs, as well as damaged eyesight and (37) ______ bones. It makes it harder for women to get pregnant. And in men, it can cause long-term damages of body functions.But for those who quit smoking, there’s a huge positive upside with al most (38) ______ and long-lasting physical benefits. A day after ceasing, heart attack risk begins to decrease as blood pressure and heart rates (39) ______. Lungs become healthier after about one month, with less coughing. After ten years, the chances of developing fatal lung cancer go down by 50%, probably because the body’s ability to repair DNA is once again restored.There’s no point pretending this is all easy to achieve. Quitting can lead to anxiety anddepression. But fortunately, such effects are usually (40) ______. Advice and support groups and moderate intensity exercise also help smokers stay cigarette-free. That’s good news, since quitting puts you and your body on the path back to health.Keys: 31-35 GCIAE 36-40 BKFJHSection BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.of its reports, the Asian Development Bank even stated that mobile data was a key to financial ___38___, as it could improve customer recording, and, in turn, get an access to credit.AI Combines with the Wisdom of the CrowdThe most common slogan in today’s tech headlines is the “artificial intelligence”. Readers are fascinated with how AI has the ___39___ to transform every consumer and enterprise (企业) industry. While such focus is appropriate that AI will ___40___ change the world, it leaves out a crucial element that will go hand-in-hand with its rise: the wisdom of the crowd.Keys: 31-35 BEGKA 36-40 JHCFDSection BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.Criticism of the Fast FashionIn the 2006 film version of The Devil Wears Prada, Miranda Priestly, played by Meryl Streep, scolds her unattractive assistant for imagining that high fashion doesn’t affect her. Priestly explains how the deep blue color of the assistant’s sweater was___31___ over the years from fashion shows to department stores and to the bargain bin in which the poor girl probably found her clothes.This top-down concept of the fashion business couldn’t be more out of date or in conflict with the mad world described in Overdressed, Elizabeth Cline’s three-year accusation of “fast fashion”. In the last decade or so,___32___ in technology have allowed mass-market labels such as Zara, H&M, and Uniqlo to react to trends more quickly and predict demand more ___33___. Quicker turnarounds mean less wasted stock, more frequent release, and more profit. These labels encourage style-conscious consumers to see clothes as disposable—meant to lastonly a wash or two, although they don’t advertise that—and to ___34___ their wardrobe( 衣橱) every few weeks. By offering on-trend items at dirt-cheap prices, Cline argues, these brands have controlled fashion cycles, shaking an industry long ___35___ to a seasonal pace.The ___36___ of this revolution, of course, are not limited to designers. For H&M to offer a $5.95 knit miniskirt in all its 2,300-plus stores around the world, it must rely on low-wage overseas labor, order in volumes that ___37___ natural resources, and use massive amounts of harmful chemicals.Towards the end of Overdressed, Cline introduced her ideal, a Brooklyn woman named Sarah Kate Beaumont, who since 2008 has made all of her own clothes—and beautifully. But as Cline is the first to note, it took Beaumont decades to perfect her craft; her example can’t be imitated.Though several fast-fashion companies have made efforts to ___38___ their impact on labor and the environment—including H&M, with its green Conscious Collection line—Cline believes lasting change can only be made by customers. She exhibits the idealism ___39___ to many advocates of sustainability, be it in food or in energy. Vanity( 虚荣心) is a constant; People will only start shopping more ___40___ when they can’t afford not to.Keys:31-35 HBGIA 36-40 KEFDJSection BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.Marketing the MoonAn astronaut, a little hop and a witty quote: Neil Armstrong’s first lunar(月球的)footstep is deep-rooted in the minds of all humankind. But that first moon landing might not have been such a(n) ___31___ moment if it weren’t for NASA’s clever PR (Public Relations) team.Richard Jurek is a marketing ___32___ and co-author of the book marketing the Moon: TheSelling of the Apollo Lunar Program. He says NASA’s move to real-time, open communication made the 1969 Apollo 11 landing “the first positive viral event that ___33___ the world’s attention.”Before NASA was established in 1958, rockets were the military’s territory; that secretiveness carried over into the space agency’s early days. At first, NASA followed a “fire in the tail” rule, only ____34____ a rocket’s launch when it was successfully in the air. But as the agency evolved, it started announcing more details about the Apollo program. It ____35____its astronauts, talked openly about mission goals and challenges, and shared launch times so people could watch. “If it had been run like it was under the military,” Jurek says, “we would not have had that sense of drama, that sense of involvement, that sense of wonder, that ____36____.” Instead, all the PR and press promotion in the years ahead of Apollo 11 brought the human spaceflight program into people’s living rooms and imaginations.As the drama neared its peak, NASA’s PR officials pushed for live TV broadcasts of the first humans to walk on the moon. Not everyone thought it was a good idea. The technology for live lunar broadcasts, and cameras small enough to keep the cargo ____37____, didn’t exist at the point. Some engineers worried that developing that equipment would ____38____ from efforts to achieve the landing itself. But NASA’s communications team argued that telling the story was as vital as the ____39____ itself. Live TV would bring the American people -- and international viewers -- along for the ride.Come landing day, which ____40____ fell on a Sunday, more than half a billion people worldwide crowded around TVs and radios for the historic moment. “We were able to come together and do something that was exciting and interesting and brought the world together,” s ays David Meer-man Scott, marketing strategist and co-author of Marketing the Moon. “I don’t know that we’ve done anything like that since.”Keys: 31-35 HFBIC 36-40 KGEADSection BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.Microplastic PollutionIn the past few years, scientists have found microplastics in our soil, tap water, bottled water, beer and even in the air we breathe. And there’s growing concern about the 31 health risks they pose to humans.The new analysis in the UK have discovered microplastics widely 32 across all 10 lakes and rivers sampled. More than 1,000 small pieces of plastic per litre were found in the River Tame, which was 33 last year as the most polluted place tested worldwide. Even in relatively remote places such as the Falls of Dochart and Loch Lomond in Scotland, two or three pieces per litre were found.Microplastics are not a 34 kind of plastic, but rather any type of small pieces of plastic that is less than 5 mm in length according to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. They may 35 from a variety of sources, including cosmetics, clothing, and industrial processes.Humans are known to 36 the tiny plastic particles through food and water, but the possible health effects on people and ecosystems have yet to be determined. One study, in Singapore, has found that microplastics can 37 harmful microbes (微生物).Research by the National University of Singapore found more than 400 types of bacteria on 275 pieces of microplastic collected from local beaches. They included insects that cause gastroenteritis (肠胃炎)and wound 38 in humans.“Microplastics are being found 39 everywhere but we do not know the harm they could be doing,” said Christian Dunn at Bangor University, Wales, who led the work. “It’s no use looking back in 20 years’ time and saying: ‘If only we’d realized just how bad it was.’ We need to be monitoring our waters now and we need to think, as a country and a world, how we can be reducing our 40 on plastic.”Keys: 31-35 GAKHI 36-40 DECBFSection BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.Time: is there ever enough of it? In today's modern world, most of us are ___31___ with so-called time-saving devices and technological advancements and work less both at the office and at home. But why do we still feel busier?A study by Derek Thompson on the “myth" of being busy suggests that while ___32___ brought us convenience, it also brought us new headaches. Consider the idea of FOMO (fear of missing out). Knowing exactly what we're missing out makes us feel guilty or anxious about the ___33___ of our time and our ability to use it effectively.While being informed is important, it can lead to anxiety about keeping up with the times. If you find yourself unable to stop scrolling through Twitter, turn off the phone and take a mental break. Practice JOMO (joy of missing out), a(n) ___34___ on life that's a direct contradiction to FOMO. Get rid of feelings of guilt and “shoulds" and replace them with mindfulness and living in the moment.Another thing technology has ___35___ us is the blurring(难以区分)between work and downtime. While constant connection has made the workday much more flexible, it's also harder to turn off at the end of the day. Always being "on" is a(n) ___36___ state of mind. Consider putting a hard stop on media and electronic devices an hour or two before bed.Of course, if you want to move up the corporate ladder and get a bigger paycheck, working long hours has long been a ___37___ strategy. But if you don't have passion for your job or care about what you do, you might just be working yourself into more ___38___.People working the same hours feel completely different levels of time pressure depending on their passion. If most of the hours are spent doing something you don't feel ___39___ about, it's no wonder you start to feel out of control and anxious about your time. Taking back control of your time can ease this mental stress. Therefore, your time management goal shouldn't be to figureout how to do more, but ___40___ to figure out how to want less.Keys: 31-35 JAEHG 36-40 KIBFCSection BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.Flood-hit Venice’s shrinking population faces mounting problems Venetians(威尼斯人) are fed up with what they see as inadequate respon ses to the city’s mounting problems: record-breaking flooding, environmental and safety threats from cruise ship traffic and the burden on services from over-tourism.They feel largely left to their own devices, with ever-fewer Venetians living in the historic part of the city to ___31___ its interests and keep it from becoming mainly a tourist land.The historic flooding this week---marked by three floods over 1.5 meters (nearly 5 feet) and the highest in 53 years at 1.87 meters(6 feet, 1 inch)---has ___32___ calls to create an administration that recognizes the uniqueness of Venice, for both its concentration of treasures and its ___33___ vulnerability.Flood damage has been ___34___ estimated at hundreds of millions of Euros (dollars), but the true range will only become clear with time. The frustration goes far beyond the failure to complete and ___35___ 78 underwater barriers that were designed to prevent just the kind of damage that Venice has ___36___ this week. With the system not yet completed or even ___37___ tested after 16 years of work and 5 billion Euros ($5.5 billion) invested, many are suspicious it will even work.At the public level, proposals for better administering the city including ___38___ some level of autonomy(自制) to Venice, already enjoyed by some Italian regions like Trentino-Alto-Adige with its German-speaking minority, or offering tax ___39___ to encourage Venice’s repopulation.Just 53,000 people live in the historic part of the city that tourists know as Venice, down by a third from a generation ago and dropping by about 1,000 people a year. That means fewer people watching the neighborhood, monitoring for public maintenance ___40___ or neighbors in need. Many leave because of the increased expense or the daily difficulties in living in a city of canals, which can make even a simple errand a hard journey.Keys: 31-35 BEAKJ 36-40 GCHFISection BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.Founding Father of China’s Nuclear ProgramUnder the terms of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (不扩散核武器条约), only five countries are considered to be “nuclear-weapon states.” China is one of them. This military achievement would have been ___31___ without the contribution of Deng Jiaxian, a leading organizer of China’s nuclear weapon programs.Deng went to the United States in 1948 for further study, and received a doctorate in physics two years later. Just nine days after graduation, the then 26-year-old returned to the newly-founded People’s Republic of China with ___32___ physics knowledge. He became a research fellow under the leadership of Qian Sanqiang and started his theoretical nuclear research in cooperation with Yu Min.From1958 on, Deng spent over 20 years working ___33___ with a team of young scientists on the development of China’s first atomic and hydrogen bombs. Originally, they were prepared to receive training by experts from the Soviet Union. Soon after, however, the Soviet government tore up its ___34___ with China and removed all its experts. Deng had to lead the team of 28 members with an average age of 23 on a mission to ___35___ the mysterious power of atomicphysics.There was ridicule (嘲笑) following the ___36___ of the Soviet experts that China wouldn’t be able to build an atomic bomb within 20 years. Deng said to his colleagues, “It is in the interest of the Chinese people to develop nuclear weapons. We must be willing to be unknown heroes for our lifetime. It is worth the risk of suffering, and it is worth our ___37___ to this cause.”As the leader of China’s atomic bomb design, Deng gave lessons himself and organized a team to translate and study the ___38___ foreign language materials. In the meantime, he never stopped thinking about the direction of atomic bomb development.Following the successful test of the first atomic bomb in 1964, Deng joined the research group led by Yu Min. They immediately started the design of the hydrogen bomb, which was ___39___ in 1967. From the first atomic bomb to the first hydrogen bomb, China spent only two years and eight months on development.Deng passed away in 1986 because of cancer. In the last month of his life, the 28-year secret experience of this great scientist was ___40___, and his reputation began to spread throughout China. In 1999, along with 22 other scientists, he was awarded the special prize of “Two Bombs, One Satellite Meritorious Medal” for his contribution to Chinese military s cience.Keys: 31-35 KFACG 36-40 IEBDHSection BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.Stephen Hawking:The Extraordinary Scientist Who Changed Our Understanding of Physics There aren’t very many scientists who achieved rock star status. Stephen Hawking wasdefinitely one of them.Hawking was a theoretical physicist whose early work on black holes ___31___ how scientists think about the nature of the universe. Lawrence Krauss, a theoretical physicist from Arizona State University and a friend and colleague of Hawking's, says that at a young age. Hawking ___32___ something “truly remarkable”. Krauss says before Hawking, physicists thought that the large gravity of a black hole ___33___ everything in and nothing could escape. But by combining quantum mechanics (量子力学)and the theory of relativity, Hawking showed something and changed everything about the way we think about gravity. Krauss says Hawking pointed out a(n) ___34___ problem in the way physicists understand our world--a problem that Krauss says has yet to be resolved.But his fame wasn’t just a(n) ___35___ of his research. Hawking, who had a rare disease that made it impossible for him to move or speak, was also a popular public ___36___ and best-selling author. When he came to scientific conferences,the audience focused their attention on him. And it wasn’t just the scientists but the general public as well who showed great ___37___ for him. His popular book about his work, A Brief History of Time, was a best-seller. But he agreed that that book was probably the least-read, most-bought book ever. This showed Hawking's sense of humor.That sense of humor, along with his fame, ___38___ Hawking to appear on The Simpsons several times as well as on a number of other popular shows.Toward the end of his life, Hawking’s disease left him almost(瘫痪的).It look an enormous ___39___ for Hawking to communicate, using the tiny movements he could make to control a computer. It’s tempting to say that Hawking achieved his fame in spite of his ___40___ challenges.Keys: 31-35 DFAJC 36-40 HIBGESection BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.Autism Spectrum DisorderAutism Spectrum Disorder, or ASD, affects how people communicate with and relate to others. Most people with autism don’t understand some of the basic social ___31___ that others take for granted. They might have trouble making eye contact, holding a conversation, or recognizing gestures. And over one-third of people with ASD are nonverbal, meaning they don’t use speech. Along with communication ___32___, people with autism often like to follow certain patterns or __33__ behaviors. Many are sensitive to bright light or loud noises, and others have physical problems, like trouble walking or picking up small objects. Some have ___34___ disabilities, but about half have average or above ave rage IQs. It’s also common for people with autism to have a great long-term memory for certain details, and many excel in math, science, music, or art.With such a wide variety of symptoms, no two people with ASD are alike. The behaviors vary so much that they used to be ___35___ as different disorders. One was Asperger Syndrome, where people obsess over particular topics, ___36___nonverbal social cues, and may not understand appropriate social behaviors.Even though there’s no cure for ASD, therapy and medication can help people adjust. Scientists are also doing clinical ___37___ to find other solutions. They’ve learned that 1 out of every 68 children in the US has the disorder, but they still aren’t sure what causes it. No matter why it happens, ASD is being ___38___ at a higher rate every year. This doesn’t mean it’s becoming more common. It just means more people are aware of the condition and getting professional help early, and awareness is ___39___. The more we learn about autism, the more we can understand and relate to those who have it.It’s important to note that people with ASD deserve the same respect, fairness and chances that people without ASD receive. This will help people with ASD ___40___ and grow in our communities.Keys: 31-35 B G J F C 36-40 I K E D ASection BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be usedIs it possible to make paper without trees? Australian businessmen Kevin Garcia and Jon Tse spent a year researching a possible ___31___ that could serve as a possible raw material for making paper. Then Garcia read about a Taiwanese company making commercial paper out of stone and a(n) ___32___ struck.A year later, in July 2017, they launched Karst Stone Paper. The company produces paper without using wood or water. Their source is stone waste ___33___ from construction sites and other industrial waste dumps.“If you look at the whole process of how paper is traditionally made, it ___34___ chopping trees, adding chemicals, using lots of water and then ___35___, drying and flattening it into sheets of paper,”said Garcia. “It contributes to high carbon emission and deforestation?”In 2019, Garcia estimates Karst’s paper production has helped save 540 large timber trees (成材木) from being deforested, 83,100 liters (21,953 gallons) of water from being used and 25,500 kilograms (56,218 pounds) of carbon dioxide from being ___36___.“We collect disposed limestone (石灰石) from wherever we can find it, wash it, and grind it into fine powder,” he said. The powder is mixed with a HDPE resin (高密度聚乙烯树脂), which ___37___ over time from sunlight, leaving only calcium carbonate (碳酸钙) behind.The paper can be as thin as notebook paper or as thick as a cardboard paper and is waterproof, ___38___ and difficult to tear. The notebooks cost $ 10 to $25. Karst's products are mainly sold through the company's website, but are also stocked in 100 stores, ___39___ throughout Australia, the United States and the United Kingdom. “Over 70% of the customers arc US-based?” he said.They hope to have the notebooks in 1,000 stores by the end of the year. Garcia said they are now thinking about ___40___ investors for the first time in order to scale tip their operations. They declined to reveal how much the company makes or their annual revenue.Keys: 31-35 DGJHI 36-40 KCFEASection BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.Bottle Found at Sea Used for Scientific PurposeCombing the beach for shells, sea glass, or colorful rocks is a leisure activity enjoyed by many. Some even use metal detectors to find buried treasure or other objects. Only the lucky few have ___31___ a message in a bottle that was dropped off by the tide. The tradition of putting a letter to an unknown recipient into a bottle and throwing it into the ocean has an interesting past. An early ___32___ use for the practice was revealed when the oldest recorded message in a bottle was found by Tonya on a beach near Wedge Island, Australia.Tonya was on a family outing when she noticed the antique glass bottle in the sand and thought it would make a nice ___33___. While she was cleaning the sandy gin bottle, a rolled up paper tied with a ___34___ fell out. The damp page was a message written in German and dated June 12, 1886. According to official documents from the German sailing vessels, Paula, a crew member tossed the bottle overboard a(n) ___35___ 950 km off the coast of Western Australia. Further research authenticated(验证)the letter, which had been sent afloat 132 years ago and is the oldest message in a bottle ever ___36___.Historians confirm that thousands of similar bottles were cast overboard by German ships between 1864 and 1933. And ___37___ inside were official documents written by the captain of the ship, ___38___ routes, coordinates, and other information. These early messages in a bottle were an attempt by the German Naval Observatory to map ocean ___39___ around the world.On the back of the notes were ___40___ to write the time and place the bottles were found and return them to the German Naval Observatory in Hamburg or the nearest German authorities. Using this information for reference was an early system of studying patterns in nature and thevast ocean in particular.Keys: 31-35 HEKAI 36-40 GBDFJSection BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.In between all the measures to battle the severe air pollution levels in Delhi, there’s one more option for you —a bar that has “pure air”. Delhi’s first-ever oxygen bar —named “Oxy Pure” —offers 15 minutes of 80-90 percent pure oxygen starting from Rs 299.The bar, ___31___ in May, also offers its customers several aromas(香味)to choose from that can be filled with oxygen. The aromas include lemongrass, cherry, mango and more.Customers are given a lightweight tube, used for supplementary oxygen ___32___. The device is placed near the customer’s nose through which they are advised to breathe in the aroma-filled oxygen.According to the aroma you choose, each session ___33___ to improve one’s sleep patterns and digestion, cure headaches and even claims to work as a remedy for ___34___.“I was passing by and saw that they were offering pure oxygen. I thought I would give it a try and went for the lemongrass flavour. It was ___35___,” Manjul Mehta, a customer at Oxy Pure told Delhi Daily.Speaking to Delhi Daily, Bonny Irengbam, senior sales assistant at the bar, said customers were ___36___ positively after a few sessions.“Some people, who try it for the first time, will feel relaxed and fresh. But only people who undergo the sessions regularly will get real ___37___ of the aroma,” he added. “Though we have regular customers, we don’t encourage back-to-back sessions, as ___38___ levels of oxygen in the body can make a person dizzy. It is ___39___ to do it once or twice a month or to stick with the10-15 minute sessions a day,” he said.Dr. Rajesh Chawla, a senior consultant in medicine said that though such sessions do not have any side-effects, it does not help in the long run either. “Even if you breathe in the so-called pure oxygen for two hours in a day, you will go back to breathing the polluted air for the rest of the 22 hours”, he said. He added that the concept is purely a(n) ___40___ move.Keys: 31-35 F H C K B 36-40 J A E I DSection BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.Simba, everyone’s favorite baby lion, returns to movie theaters July 19th (in the U.S.). This time around, though, he will be much more ___31___ through the magic of CGL (电脑合成影像). The much-loved classic, The Lion King, will open for the 25th anniversary of the ___32___ movie.The 1994 film proved to be one of Hollywood’s best-loved vivid movies! It made almost US$970 million worldwide. The film went on to win numerous awards for its music and its later stage shows. Simba’s story opened on Broadway in 1997, followed by theatrical ___33___ around the world. Today, audiences on six continents have seen The Lion King ___34___ on stage. Now, more than 20 years later, it is still one of Broadway’s most popular shows.Great ___35___ is building for the new movie. Disney released its first official video clip during Thanksgiving Day football games last year. The trailer (预告片) was viewed more than 224 million times in the first 24 hours!The trailer was received very positively, especially because of its realism. Some fans, though, noticed that the clip of the new film was ___36___ the same as in the 1994 opening scene. One Disney executive quickly gave some ___37___. He said the movie kept the best of the original,。

2020届上海高考英语专题讲解:十一选十学案(含答案)

2020届上海高考英语专题讲解:十一选十学案(含答案)

36:K由后面的名词可以判断空处应该是填形容词或名词,根据句意选择K。

37:E根据上下文这里缺主语,需要一个名词,且根据下文"he keeps perpetually busy, never loses his expectation of further promotion, and so remains happy and healthy, "可知,忽视,不在意自己的能力不足,会让人快乐。

38:F根据句意,这里缺一个动词,conflict with指与……有冲突,这里指Dr. Peters的话与众多专家建议员工要面对“残酷的现实”的建议相悖。

39:I由这一空前面的their判断这一空缺名词,根据句意是指如果老板能针对员工的弱点不足给出准确的反馈,他们就会在工作中更有动力去提升自己。

故选I。

40:C由上文搭配,be used to do判断这里填动词原形,根据句意,选择C。

【上海市松江区松江二中2016学年高二上开学英语试卷】Throughout the 20th century,Japanese towns and cities grew ___46___.Today about 80 percent of the Japanese people live in urban areas. The growth of towns and cities,called urbanization(城市化),happens in two ways. One way is ___47___ rural-urban migration,when people move to the city from the country. As cities prosper and grow,industries and services that ___48___ many people both as workers and consumers grow to meet the ___49___ of the increasing population.New industries and services emerge to support the growing business,and the region experiences an upward spiral of growth.The urban areas on the Japanese island of Honshu(本州岛)continue to grow ___50___ they attract more people,industries and business.These urban areas contain nearly two-thirds of Japan’s population and manufacturing.City suburbs are ___51___ in the rural spaces between the towns and cities,and Japan’s efficient and。

2020届各区一模十一选十汇编 高中英语

2020届各区一模十一选十汇编  高中英语

2020届宝山区高考英语一模Section BDirections:After reading the passage below, fill in each blank with a proper word given in the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one more word than you need.U.S.). This time around, though, he will be much more 31 through the magic of CGL (电脑合成影像). The much-loved classic, The Lion King, will open for the 25th anniversary of the 32 movie.The 1994 film proved to be one of Hollywood’s best-loved vivid movies! It made almost US$970 million worldwide. The film went on to win numerous awards for its music and its later stage shows. Simba’s story opened on Broadway in 1997, fol lowed by theatrical 33 around the world. Today, audiences on six continents have seen The Lion King34 on stage. Now, more than 20 years later, it is still one of Broadway’s most popular shows.Great 35 is building for the new movie. Disney released its first official video clip during Thanksgiving Day football games last year. The trailer (预告片) was viewed more than 224 million times in the first 24 hours!The trailer was received very positively, especially because of its realism. Some fans, though, noticed that the clip of the new film was 36 the same as in the 1994 opening scene. One Disney executive quickly gave some 37 . He said the movie kept the best of the original, while adding in some new elements.One thing that excited many viewers was the 38 of a very familiar voice. James Earl Jones, with his famous low but strong voice, has returned as Simba’s father Mufasa. Jones is the only one of the original voice actors to return in the new film.Many well-known people provide character voices, including popstar Beyonce and actor Seth Rogan. Director Jon Favreau expressed his excitement over 39 his all-star cast to such a great story. “It’s a director’s dream to 40 a talented team... to bring this classic story to life.”宝山区一模答案31. E 32. K 33. A 34. I 35. B 36. C 37. H 38. D 39. J 40. F2020届崇明区高考一模Section BDirections: After reading the passage below, fill in each blank with a proper word given in the box. Each word can only be used once. Note that there is one word more than you need.Stephen Hawking: The Extraordinary Scientist Who Changed Our Understanding of PhysicsThere aren’t very many scientists who achieved rock star status. Stephen Hawking was definitely one of them.Hawking was a theoretical physicist whose early work on black holes __31__ how scientists think about the nature of the universe. Lawrence Krauss, a theoretical physicist from Arizona State University and a friend and colleague of Hawking's, says that at a young age. Hawking __32__ something “truly remarkable”. Krauss says before Hawking,physicists thought that the large gravity of a black hole __33__ everything in and nothing could escape. But by combining quantum mechanics (量子力学)and the theory of relativity, Hawking showed something and changed everything about the way we think about gravity. Krauss says Hawking pointed out a(n) __34__ problem in the way physicists understand our world一a problem that Krauss says has yet to be resolved.But his fame wasn’t just a(n) __35__ of his research. Hawking, who had a rare disease that made it impossible for him to move or speak, was also a popular public____36____ and best-selling author. When he came to scientific conferences,the audience focused their attention on him. And it wasn’t just the scientists but the general public as well who showed great __37__ for him. His popular book about his work, A Brief History of Time, was a best-seller. But he agreed that that book was probably the least-read, most-bought book ever. This showed Hawking's sense of humor.That sense of humor, along with his fame, __38__ Hawking to appear on The Simpsons several times as well as on a number of other popular shows.Toward the end of his life, Hawking’s disease left him almost(瘫痪的).It look an enormous __39__ for Hawking to communicate, using the tiny movements he could make to control a comp uter. It’s tempting to say that Hawking achieved his fame in spite of his __40__ challenges.崇明区高考英语一模答案31.D 32. F 33. A 34. J 35. C 36. H 37.1 38. B 39.G 40. E2020届奉贤区高考英语一模Section BDirection: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be usedFlood-hit Venice’s shrinking population faces mounting problems Venetians (威尼斯人) are fed up with what they see as inadequate responses to the city’s mounting problems: record-breaking flooding, environmental and safety threats from cruiseship traffic and the burden on services from over-tourism.They feel largely left to their own devices, with ever-fewer Venetians living in the historic part of the city to (31)________ its interests and keep it from becoming mainly a tourist land. The historic flooding this week— marked by three floods over 1.5 meters (nearly 5 feet) and the highest in 53 years at 1.87 meters (6 feet, 1 inch) - has (32)________calls to create an administration that recognizes the uniqueness of Venice, for both its concentration of treasures and its (33)________exposure to threats..Flood damage has been (34)________estimated at hundreds of millions of Euros (dollars), but the true range will only become clear with time. The frustration goes far beyond the failure to complete and (35)________78 underwater barriers that were designed to prevent just the kind of damage that Venice has (36)________this week. With the system not yet completed or even (37)________tested after 16 years of work and 5 billion Euros ($5.5 billion) invested, many are suspicious it will even work.At the public level, proposals for better administering the city include (38)________some level of autonomy(自制)to Venice, already enjoyed by some Italian regions like Trentino-Alto-Adige with its German-speaking minority, or offering tax (39)________to en courage Venice’s re-population.Just 53,000 people live in the historic part of the city that tourists know as Venice, down by a third from a generation ago and dropping by about 1,000 people a year. That means fewer people watching the neighborhood, monitoring for public maintenance (40)__________or neighbors in need. Many leave because of the increased expense or the daily difficulties in living in a city of canals, which can make even a simple errand a hard journey.奉贤区高考一模答案31-40 BEAKJ GCHFT2020届虹口区高考英语一模Section BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be usedCigarettes aren’t good for us. But how exactly do cigarettes harm us? Let’s look at what happens as their ingredients make their way through our bodies, and how we benefit (31) ______ when we finally give up smoking.Inside the airways and lungs, smoke increases the (32) ______ of infections as well as long-lasting diseases. It does this by damaging the tiny hair-like tissueswhich keep the airways clean. That’s one of the reasons smoking can lead to oxygen loss and (33) ______ of breath.Within about 10 seconds, the bloodstream carries a stimulant called nicotine to the brain, creating the (34) ______ sensations which make smoking highly addictive. Nicotine and other chemicals from the cigarette, at the same time, cause tightness of blood tubes, restricting blood flow. These effects on blood tubes lead to (35) ______ of blood tube walls, increasing the possibilityof heart attacks and strokes.Many of the chemicals inside cigarettes can activate dangerous (36) ______ in the body’s DNA that make cancers form. In fact, about one of every three cancer deaths in the United States is caused by smoking. And it’s not just lung cance r. Smoking can cause cancer in multiple tissues and organs, as well as damaged eyesight and (37) ______ bones. It makes it harder for women to get pregnant. And in men, it can cause long-term damages of body functions.But for those who quit smoking, there’s a huge positive upside with almost (38) ______ and long-lasting physical benefits. A day after ceasing, heart attack risk begins to decrease as blood pressure and heart rates (39) ______. Lungs become healthier after about one month, with less coughing. After ten years, the chances of developing fatal lung cancer go down by 50%, probably because the body’s ability to repair DNA is once again restored.There’s no point pretending this is all easy to achieve. Quitting can lead to anxiety and depression. But fortunately, such effects are usually (40) ______. Advice and support groups and moderate intensity exercise also help smokers stay cigarette-free. That’s good news, since quitting puts you and your body on the path back to health.虹口区高考一模答案词汇部分:31. G 32. C 33.I 34.A 35.E 36.B 37.K 38.F 39.J 40. H 2020届黄浦区高考英语一模Section BDirections: Complete the following passage by using the words in the box. Each word canThe most common slogan in tod ay’s tech headlines is the “artificial intelligence”. Readers are fascinated with how AI has the ___39___ to transform every consumer and enterprise(企业) industry. While such focus is appropriate that AI will ___40___ change the world, it leaves out a crucial element that will go hand-in-hand with its rise: the wisdom of the crowd.黄浦区高考一模答案31-35 BEGKA 36-40 JHCFD2020届嘉定区高考英语一模Section B (10分)Directions: After reading the passage below, fill in each blank with a proper word given in the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one more word than you need.Emphasizing social play and students helping one another in kindergarten improves academic outcomes, self-control and attention regulation, finds new UBC research. The study, published in the journal PLoS One, found this approach to kindergarten curriculum also ____31____children’s joy in learning and teachers’ enjoyment of teaching.“Before children have the ability to sit for long periods ____32____information, they need to be allowed to be ____33____and be encouraged to learn by doing,” said Dr. Adele Diamond, the study’s lead author. “Indeed, people of all ages learn better by doing than by being told.”Through a controlled experiment, Diamond and her colleagues ____34____the effectiveness of a curriculum called Tools of the Mind (Tools). The curriculum was introduced to willing kindergarten teachers and 351 children with different backgrounds in 18 public schools.Tools was developed in 1993 by two American researchers. Its basic ____35____is that social-emotional development and improving self-control is as important as teaching academic skills and content. The Tools ____36____ the role of social play in developing skills such as self-control, selective attention and planning. “Skills like self-control and selective attention are necessary for learning. They are often more strongly associated with school readiness (入学准备) than intelligence quotient (IQ),” said Diamond. “This experiment is the first to show ____37____ of a curriculum emphasizing social play.”Teachers reported more ____38____ behavior and greater sense of community in Tools classes. Late in the school year, Tools teachers reported they still felt ____39____ and excited about teaching, while teachers in the control group were exhausted. “I have enjoyed seeing the ____40____ progress my students have made in writing and reading.” said a Tools teacher in Vancouver. “I have also enjoyed seeing the students get so excited about coming to school and learning. They loved all the acti vities so much that many students didn’t want to miss school, even if they were sick.”嘉定区高考一模答案31—35:GHFJB 36—40: AIDEC2020届静安区高考英语一模Section BDirections: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.Founding Father of China’s Nuclear ProgramUnder the terms of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (不扩散核武器条约), only five countries are considered to be “nuclear-weapon states.” China is one of them. This milita ry achievement would have been __31__ without the contribution of Deng Jiaxian, a leading organizer of China’s nuclear weapon programs.Deng went to the United States in 1948 for further study, and received a doctorate in physics two years later. Just nine days after graduation, the then 26-year-old returned to the newly-founded People’s Republic of China with __32__ physics knowledge. He became a research fellow under the leadership of Qian Sanqiang and started his theoretical nuclear research in cooperation with Yu Min.From1958 on, Deng spent over 20 years working __33__ with a team of young scientists on the development of China’s first atomic and hydrogen bombs. Originally, they were prepared to receive training by experts from the Soviet Union. Soon after, however, the Soviet government tore up its __34__ with China and removed all its experts. Deng had to lead the team of 28 members with an average age of 23 on a mission to __35__ the mysterious power of atomic physics.There was ridicule (嘲笑) following the __36__ of the Soviet experts that China wouldn’t be able to build an atomic bomb within 20 years. Deng said to his colleagues, “It is in the interest of the Chinese people to develop nuclear weapons. We must be willing to be unknown heroes for our lifetime. It is worth the risk of suffering, and it is worth our __37__ to this cause.”As the leader of China’s atomic bomb design, Deng gave lessons himself and organized a team to translate and study the __38__ foreign language materials. In the meantime, he never stopped thinking about the direction of atomic bomb development.Following the successful test of the first atomic bomb in 1964, Deng joined the research group led by Yu Min. They immediately started the design of the hydrogen bomb, which was __39__ in 1967. From the first atomic bomb to the first hydrogen bomb, China spent only two years and eight months on development .Deng passed away in 1986 because of cancer. In the last month of his life, the 28-year secret experience of this great scientist was __40__, and his reputation began to spread。

上海市高考英语十一选十练习第四期

上海市高考英语十一选十练习第四期

高考英语十一选十练习第四期(A)A.stimulateB. accelerateC. respectiveD. downgradingE. reboundF.preciseG.incentivesH. executivesI. chairedJ. reinforcingK.resumedAmid roaring machines and celebration ceremonies, factories in China's major industrialprovinces __(1)__ production on the first working day of the Year of the Rabbit on Saturday, asymbol of a good start for the country's economy in the first year after China further optimizedits COVID response by __(2)__the management of the virus.Efforts have been rolled out at both government and company levels to __(3)___production, such as sending chartered vehicles to transport employees and giving government__(4)__, as the world's second-largest economy gears up for a forceful economic recovery inearly 2023 that will pave the way for a robust whole-year economic performance.When delivering Spring Festival greetings to all Chinese at a reception in Beijingrecently, Chinese President Xi Jinping said that in traditional Chinese culture, the rabbit isconsidered smart and agile, pure and kind, as well as peaceful and happy, expressing his hopethat the people, especially the youth, can forge ahead with swift actions like rabbits, and fullydisplay their charm and abilities in their __(5)__ sectors, the Xinhua News Agency reportedon January 20.A State Council executive meeting __(6)__ by Chinese Premier Li Keqiang on Saturdayalso required sustained efforts to grasp the current economic and social development workand promote the steady __(7)__ of economic operations at the beginning of the year.Experts noted that officials are urging a good start in the manufacturing sector to __(8)__economic growth in the first quarter, as the more powerful China's economy presents at thebeginning of the new year, the more confidence investors will have in China's whole-yeareconomy for 2023, particularly from overseas business partners.In the workshop of Mexin, a door company based in Southwest China's Chongqing Municipality on Saturday, robots were conducting diverse tasks as their long arms danced andweaved, while workers upgraded the company's intelligent manufacturing lines to make theproduction process more __(9)__.This is the first day the door manufacturer began work after the Spring Festival holidays.During the festival, some personnel in charge of technical equipment had already begun workto inspect the equipment on the production lines to ensure their safe operation, Wang Wangui,director of Mexin's technology center told the Global Times.Some 1,700 kilometers away,more than 100 construction workers under the China Railway 14th Bureau Group Co werebusy __(10)__ formwork and erecting scaffolding on a subway construction site in Beijing.(B)A.optionB. approachableC. unveiledD. genderE. symptomsF. mirroredG. remotelyH. exploitI.recycledJ. hard-wearingK. closuresHSBC has become the latest big company to announce a shift to more casual uniformsfor 4,000 branch staff.The new range includes jumpsuits and "menopause(更年期)-friendly" garments forwomen, ethnic-wear, including tunics(束腰外衣) and hijabs(头巾), and chinos(斜纹布裤) andst month, British Airways __(1)___ its first new uniform for 20 years, including ajumpsuit for female ground staff and cabin crew.HSBC is to close 114 more UK branches from April, with about 100 jobs going.The banksaid the uniform re-design __(2)__ the "more casual new look of the banks' branches". HSBCUK's director of distribution, Jackie Uhi, said the days of "bowler-hatted bankers and intimidating bank branches with rows of screens" was over."The modern day banker is still smart and professional but much more casual and__(3)__," she said."Our branch colleagues are the public face of the bank, so what they weardoes not only need to reflect the brand, it needs to look good, be practical, comfortable and__(4)__, while taking into account specific human needs like those who are pregnant or goingthrough the menopause."The bank said the fit, style and material of the new outfits had been designed to provide "maximum comfort" when people were experiencing menopause __(5)__. They include afit-and-flare shape jersey dress, V-neck tunic, tailored jumpsuit(连身衣裤), jersey tees and achino knee-length skirt.It comes after Virgin Atlantic announced last year that it was taking a "fluid approach" touniforms which allowed staff to choose their clothing "no matter their __(6)__". The airlinewill allow male pilots and crew to wear skirts and female colleagues to choose trousers.Meanwhile BA plans to roll out its revamped(修改)uniforms, designed by Ozwald Boateng, for 30,000 staff this spring. Initially its jumpsuit will be for female ground staff butis set to be made available to cabin crew after further trials. The new BA uniform alsoincludes a tunic and hijab __(7)__.HSBC's said its new uniforms, which took two years to develop, were its "most sustainable" yet. They are made from __(8)__ polyester, dissolving plastic, ocean recoveredplastic and sustainable cotton.The unveiling comes months before HSBC begins another round of bank branch __(9)__in the UK, shutting 114 sites. It will leave the lender with 327 outlets.The bank has previously said banking __(10)__ was becoming the norm for "the vastmajority of us" and the number of people using banks was at an "all-time low".It has said it would try to redeploy affected staff, but about 100 would still lose their jobs.(C)A.distinctlyB. visibleC. uncommonD. confirmE.brightnessposedG. originatesH.spottingI. signatureJ. spectacleK. capturedNewly discovered green comet comes close to EarthAstronomers say the object's journey toward us took around 50,000 years.Photographs __(1)__ by astronomers show a distinct green hue(色彩) around the body ofthe comet. But those expecting a brilliant streak of emerald in the sky will be disappointed. Its__(2)___ is right at the threshold of what is visible to the naked eye."You might have seen these reports saying we're going to get this bright green objectlighting up the sky," says Dr Robert Massey, deputy executive director of the RoyalAstronomical Society. "Sadly, that's not going to be anything like the case."However, away from light pollution and below dark skies, you might be able to see asmudge in the sky - if you know what you're looking for. Would-be stargazers have a betterchance of __(3)__ it using binoculars, in which it will appear as a faint white blur."Even asmall pair of binoculars will help you find it," says Massey.Comets are mostly __(4)__ of ice and dust. As they approach the Sun, the ice is vaporised and the dust shaken off to create the __(5)__long tail. "If you're lucky, you'll see ahint of the tail coming off it, so it'll look more like a classic comet," says Massey.Astronomers discovered the comet C/2022 E3 (ZTF) last March at the Palomar Observatory in California.It has been __(6)__ to those in the Northern Hemisphere through binoculars for the past few weeks.But it will make its closest approach to Earth at around 41 million km (26 million miles) awaythis Wednesday.The object __(7)__ in the Oort cloud, a collection of icy bodies at the edge of the Solar System. To find it, Massey suggests first searching for the pole star, which is always in thesame place in the sky. You can identify the pole star by looking directly north and locating astar that hangs __(8)__ by itself. You can then use free planetarium(行星仪) software onlineto determine where the comet will be moving in relation to the pole star on the night you'relooking at it.The best time to view it will be in the early hours of Thursday morning when the Moonhas set. At that time the comet should appear just to the right of the pole star. A green appearance for comets is not __(9)__ and is usually the result of breakdown of a reactivemolecule called dicarbon - two carbon atoms joined together by a double bond.Such colour is better picked up by digital cameras, which are more sensitive to colour.The comet will not match the __(10)__ of the 2020 Comet NEOWISE - the brightest cometvisible from the Northern Hemisphere since 1997. But the Planetary Society said "an opportunity to see it will only come once in a lifetime".(D)A.enrolledB. maintainC. availabilityD. justifiedE. smoothF.onshoreG. boostH. accordinglyI.deliveredJ. nationalsK.perspectiveAfter China reversed its temporary rules in place during the COVID-19 pandemicallowing online courses from overseas universities to be __(1)__ to students within China,Chinese students - especially those__(2)__ at universities in the Southern Hemisphere - arerushing to prepare for a return.The Global Times learned that some universities in Australia are eagerly looking forwardto welcoming Chinese students and will continue to support those who may face challengesreturning to __(3)__ study.At the time of the announcement by the Chinese education authority, according to mediareports, about 50,000 Chinese __(4)__ with student visas for Australia but who had remainedoffshore are expected to rush into Australia. The new semester of most Australian universitiesand other universities in the Southern Hemisphere will start in late February or early March.This will surely help the Australian education sector recover and __(5)__ the comprehensive Australian economic development, Chinese education insiders told the GlobalTimes.The Chinese Service Center for Scholarly Exchange (CSCSE) under China's Ministry of Education issued an announcement on Saturday, saying that it had made the decision to cancelthe special degree certification rules during the pandemic in order to effectively protect theinterests of overseas students and __(6)__ educational equity.The center said it will no longer recognize overseas degrees obtained via online learning except in special circumstances, and it urged students to return to their overseas campuses as soon as possible."We can't wait to celebrate the return of our students to campus for Semester 1, and are planning __(7)__," a spokesperson of the University of Sydney told Global Times on Monday via email.The spokesperson said that the university staff expects the vast majority of students, including international students, to be on campus for the Semester 1 (February 20).The spokesperson noted that the school is aware of the logistical challenges for the students, particularly around visa processing, travel __(8)__ and accommodation, and they will continue consulting with the sector, governments and providers as required.The university will also continue to provide remote offerings wherever possible for offshore international students who are unable to return to Australia. However, the delivery of on-campus units remotely will be banned and pre-pandemic face-to-face teaching modes will return from September 2, according to the spokesperson.Also, Professor Sharon Pickering, deputy vice chancellor (education) and senior vice-president of Monash University in Australia, told the Global Times on Tuesday via email that "we welcome China's decision to encourage students to return to Australia and will work closely with the Australian government to ensure their __(9)__ return.""International students are an important part of the Monash community. Not only do they provide a global __(10)__ to our entire student experience, they add vitality to our campuses, and to the broader Victorian community," the university noted.Key:A 篇1.K 2.D 3. A 4. G 5. C 6. I 7. E 8.B 9. F 10. JB 篇1.C 2.F 3. B 4.J 5. E 6.D 7.A 8. I 9. K 10. GC篇 1.K 2.E 3.H 4.F 5.I 6.B 7.G 8.A 9.C 10.JD 篇1.I 2.A 3.F 4.J 5.G 6.B 7.H 8.C 9.E 10.K。

2020届上海市各区高考英语一模十一选十试卷专题汇编(10页)

2020届上海市各区高考英语一模十一选十试卷专题汇编(10页)

2020届上海市各区高考英语一模十一选十试卷专题汇编【杨浦区】Section BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each wordCombing the beach for shells, sea glass, or colorful rocks is a leisure activity enjoyed by many. Some even use metal detectors to find buried treasure or other objects. Only the lucky few have ___31___ a message in a bottle that was dropped off by the tide. The tradition of putting a letter to an unknown recipient into a bottle and throwing it into the ocean has an interesting past. An early ___32___ use for the practice was revealed when the oldest recorded message in a bottle was found by Tonya on a beach near Wedge Island, Australia.Tonya was on a family outing when she noticed the antique glass bottle in the sand and thought it would make a nice ___33___. While she was cleaning the sandy gin bottle, a rolled up paper tied with a ___34___ fell out. The damp page was a message written in German and dated June 12, 1886. According to official documents from the German sailing vessels, Paula, a crew member tossed the bottle overboard a(n) ___35___ 950 km off the coast of Western Australia. Further research authenticated(验证)the letter, which had been sent afloat 132 years ago and is the oldest message in a bottle ever ___36___.Historians confirm that thousands of similar bottles were cast overboard by German ships between 1864 and 1933. And ___37___ inside were official documents written by the captain of the ship, ___38___ routes, coordinates, and other information. These early messages in a bottle were an attempt by the German Naval Observatory to map ocean ___39___ around the world.On the back of the notes were ___40___ to write the time and place the bottles were found and return them to the German Naval Observatory in Hamburg or the nearest German authorities. Using this information for reference was an early system of studying patterns in nature and the vast ocean in particular.31. H 32. E 33. K 34. A 35. I 36. G 37. B 38. D 39. F 40. J【普陀区】Section BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.Autism Spectrum Disorder, or ASD, affects how people communicate with and relate to others. Most people with autism don’t understand some of the basic social __31__ that others take for granted. They might have trouble making eye contact, holding a conversation, or recognizing gestures. And over one-third of people with ASD are nonverbal, meaning they don’t use speech. Along with communication __32__, people with autism often like to follow certain patterns or __33__ behaviors. Many are sensitive to bright light or loud noises, and others have physical problems, like trouble walking or picking up small objects. Some have __34__ disabilities, but about half have av erage or above average IQs. It’s also common for people with autism to have a great long-term memory for certain details, and many excel in math, science, music, or art.With such a wide variety of symptoms, no two people with ASD are alike. The behaviors vary so much that they used to be __35__ as different disorders. One was Asperger Syndrome, where people obsess over particular topics, __36__nonverbal social cues, and may not understand appropriate social behaviors.Even though there’s no cure for ASD, therapy and medication can help people adjust. Scientists are also doing clinical __37__ to find other solutions. They’ve learned that 1 out of every 68 children in the US has the disorder, but they still aren’t sure what causes it. No matter why it happens, ASD is being __38__ at a higher rate every year. This doesn’t mean it’s becoming more common. It just means more people are aware of the condition and getting professional help early, and awareness is __39__. The more we learn about autism, the more we can understand and relate to those who have it.It’s important to note that people with ASD deserve the same respect, fairness and chances that people without ASD receive. This will help people with ASD __40__ and grow in our communities.31-40 B G J F C I K E D A【崇明区】Section BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each wordStephen Hawking:The Extraordinary Scientist Who Changed Our Understanding of Physics There aren’t very many scientists who achieved rock star status. Stephen Hawking was definitely one of them.Hawking was a theoretical physicist whose early work on black holes __31__ how scientists think about the nature of the universe. Lawrence Krauss, a theoretical physicist from Arizona State University and a friend and colleague of Hawking's, says that at a young age. Hawking __32__ something “truly remarkable”. Krauss says before Hawking, physicists thought that the large gravity of a black hole __33__ everything in and nothing could escape. But by combining quantum mechanics (量子力学)and the theory of relativity, Hawking showed something and changed everything about the way we think about gravity. Krauss says Hawking pointed out a(n) __34__ problem in the way physicists understand our world一a problem that Krauss says has yet to be resolved.But his fame wasn’t just a(n) __35__ of his research. Hawking, who had a rare disease that made it impossible for him to move or speak, was also a popularpublic____36____ and best-selling author. When he came to scientific conferences,the audience focused their attention on him. And it wasn’t just the scientists but the general public as well who showed great __37__ for him. His popular book about his work, A Brief History of Time, was a best-seller. But he agreed that that book was probably the least-read, most-bought book ever. This showed Hawking's sense of humor.That sense of humor, along with his fame, __38__ Hawking to appear on The Simpsons several times as well as on a number of other popular shows.Toward the end of his life, Hawking’s disease left him almost(瘫痪的).It look an enormous __39__ for Hawking to communicate, using the tiny movements he could make to control a computer. It’s t empting to say that Hawking achieved his fame in spite of his __40__ challenges.32. F 33. A 34. J 35. C 36.H 37.1 38. B 39. G 40. E 【青浦区】Section BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.In between all the measures to battle the severe air pollution levels in Delhi, there’s one more option for you —a bar that has “pure air”. Delhi’s first-ever oxygenbar —named “Oxy Pure” — offers 15 minutes of 80-90 percent pure oxygen starting from Rs 299.The bar, __31__ in May, also offers its customers several aromas(香味)to choose from that can be filled with oxygen. The aromas include lemongrass, cherry, mango and more.Customers are given a lightweight tube, used for supplementary oxygen __32__. The device is placed near the customer’s nose through which they are advised to breathe in the aroma-filled oxygen.According to the aroma you choose, each session __33__ to improve one’s sleep patterns and digestion, cure headaches and even claims to work as a remedy for __34__.“I was passing by and saw that they were offering pure oxygen. I thought I would give it a try and went for the lemongrass flavour. It was __35__,” Manjul Mehta, a customer at Oxy Pure told Delhi Daily.Speaking to Delhi Daily, Bonny Irengbam, senior sales assistant at the bar, said customers were __36__ positively after a few sessions.“Some people, who try it for the first time, will feel relaxed and fresh. But only people wh o undergo the sessions regularly will get real __37__ of the aroma,” he added. “Though we have regular customers, we don’t encourage back-to-back sessions, as __38__ levels of oxygen in the body can make a person dizzy. It is __39__ to do it once or twice a month or to stick with the 10-15 minute sessions a day,” he said.Dr. Rajesh Chawla, a senior consultant in medicine said that though such sessions do not have any side-effects, it does not help in the long run either. “Even if you breathe in the so-called pure oxygen for two hours in a day, you will go back to breathing the polluted air for the rest of the 22 hours”, he said. He added that the concept is purely a(n) __40__ move.31-40 F H C K B J A E I D【黄浦区】Section BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.A. accessB. ariseC. attachmentD. definitelyE. partnerF. potentialG. shap. H. stimulated I. subconsciously J. traditional K.unbankedBeyond Mobile Money: The Future of Asia’s FinTech Mobile money has been the hottest part in financial technology for the last few years. But FinTech is more than just how people store money and transact(交易)–the space is much more horizontal, shortcutting how we create, share, and protect value.The latest product of FinTech companies to 31 in Asia Pacific illustrates the many ways the space can help consumers beyond just their mobile wallet. It is important for all businesspersons to be aware of these trends, as their success opens up all sorts of possibilities for companies to 32 with them. And, on a much deeper level, new FinTechs may 33 consumer expectations in even other tech industries.The Smartphone Emerges as a Credit-Scoring StandardWith close to half a billion 34 consumers in Southeast Asia alone, there is an entire industry of FinTechs devoted to finding ways to accurately determine their credit-worthiness to give them 35 to finance. Unfortunately, since they don’t have bank accounts, such FinTechs cannot rely on 36 financial information or credit card payments.One credit scoring source emerging as a new standard in the field is smartphone-based credit scoring. It has 37 broad global support, including from the likes of the World Bank. In one of its reports, the Asian Development Bank even stated that mobile data was a key to financial 38 , as it could improve customer recording, and, in turn, get an access to credit. AI Combines with the Wisdom of the CrowdThe most common slogan in today’s tech headlines is the “a rtificial intelligence”. Readers are fascinated with how AI has the 39 to transform every consumer and enterprise (企业) industry. While such focus is appropriate that AI will 40 change the world, it leaves out a crucial element that will go hand-in-handwith its rise: the wisdom of the crowd.31-35 BEGKA 36-40 JHCFD【宝山区】Section BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each wordU.S.). This time around, though, he will be much more 31 through the magic of CGL (电脑合成影像). The much-loved classic, The Lion King, will open for the 25th anniversary of the 32 movie.The 1994 film proved to be one of Hollywood’s best-loved vivid movies! It made almost US$970 million worldwide. The film went on to win numerous awards for it s music and its later stage shows. Simba’s story opened on Broadway in 1997, followed by theatrical 33 around the world. Today, audiences on six continents have seen The Lion King34 on stage. Now, more than 20 years later, it is still one of Broad way’s most popular shows.Great 35 is building for the new movie. Disney released its first official video clip during Thanksgiving Day football games last year. The trailer(预告片) was viewed more than 224 million times in the first 24 hours!The trailer was received very positively, especially because of its realism. Some fans, though, noticed that the clip of the new film was 36 the same as in the 1994 opening scene. One Disney executive quickly gave some 37 . He said the movie kept the best of the original, while adding in some new elements.One thing that excited many viewers was the 38 of a very familiar voice. James Earl Jones, with his famous low but strong v oice, has returned as Simba’s father Mufasa. Jones is the only one of the original voice actors to return in the new film.Many well-known people provide character voices, including popstar Beyonce and actor Seth Rogan. Director Jon Favreau expressed his excitement over 39 his all-star cast to such a great story. “It’s a director’s dream to 40 a talented team... to bring this classic story to life.”31. E 32. K 33. A 34. I 35. B 36. C 37. H 38. D 39. J 40. F【虹口区】Section BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.How do Ci garettes Affect the Body?Cigarettes aren’t good for us. But how exactly do cigarettes harm us? Let’s look at what happens as their ingredients make their way through our bodies, and how we benefit (31) ______ when we finally give up smoking.Inside the airways and lungs, smoke increases the (32) ______ of infections as well as long-lasting diseases. It does this by damaging the tiny hair-like tissueswhich keep the airways clean. That’s one of the reasons smoking can lead to oxygen loss and (33) ______ of breath.Within about 10 seconds, the bloodstream carries a stimulant called nicotine to the brain, creating the (34) ______ sensations which make smoking highly addictive. Nicotine and other chemicals from the cigarette, at the same time, cause tightness of blood tubes, restricting blood flow. These effects on blood tubes lead to (35) ______ of blood tube walls, increasing the possibilityof heart attacks and strokes.Many of the chemicals inside cigarettes can activate dangerous (36) ______ in the body’s DNA that make cancers form. I n fact, about one of every three cancer deaths in the United States is caused by smoking. And it’s not just lung cancer. Smoking can cause cancer in multiple tissues and organs, as well as damaged eyesight and (37) ______ bones. It makes it harder for women to get pregnant. And in men, it can cause long-term damages of body functions.But for those who quit smoking, there’s a huge positive upside with almost (38) ______ and long-lasting physical benefits. A day after ceasing, heart attack risk begins to decrease as blood pressure and heart rates (39) ______. Lungs become healthier after about one month, with less coughing. After ten years, the chances of developing fatal lung cancer go down by 50%, probably because the body’s ability to repair DNA is once again restored.There’s no point pretending this is all easy to achieve. Quitting can lead to anxiety and depression. But fortunately, such effects are usually (40) ______. Advice and support groups and moderate intensity exercise also help smokers stay cigarette-free. That’s good news, since quitting puts you and your body on the path back to health.31. G 32. C 33.I 34.A 35.E 36.B 37.K 38.F 39.J 40. H【浦东新区】Section BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.Criticism of the Fast FashionIn the 2006 film version of The Devil Wears Prada, Miranda Priestly, played by Meryl Streep, scolds her unattractive assistant for imagining that high fashion doesn’t affect her. Priestly explains how the deep blue color of the assistant’s sweater was 31 over the years from fashion shows to departments stores and to the bargain bin in which the poor girl probably found her clothes.This top-down concept of the fashion business couldn’t be more ou t of date or in conflict with the mad world described in Overdressed, Elizabeth Cline’s three-year accusation of “fast fashion”. In the last decade or so,32 in technology have allowed mass-market labels such as Zara, H&M, and Uniqlo to react to trends more quickly and predict demand more 33 . Quicker turnarounds mean less wasted stock, more frequent release, and more profit. These labels encourage style-conscious consumers to see clothes as disposable—meant to last only a wash or two, although they don’t advertise that—and to 34 their wardrobe( 衣橱) every few weeks. By offering on-trend items at dirt-cheap prices, Cline argues, these brands have controlled fashion cycles, shaking an industry long 35 to a seasonal pace.The 36 of this revolution, of course, are not limited to designers. For H&M to offer a $5.95 knit miniskirt in all its 2,300-plus stores around the world, it must rely on low-wage overseas labor, order in volumes that 37 natural resources, and use massive amounts of harmful chemicals.Towards the end of Overdressed, Cline introduced her ideal, a Brooklyn woman named Sarah Kate Beaumont, who since 2008 has made all of her own clothes—and beautifully. But as Cline is the first to note, it took Beaumont decades to perfect her craft; her example can’t be imitated.Though several fast-fashion companies have made efforts to 38 their impact on labor and the environment—including H&M, with its green Conscious Collection line—Cline believes lasting change can only be made by customers. She exhibits the idealism 39 to many advocates of sustainability, be it in food or in energy. Vanity( 虚荣心) is a constant; people will only start shoppingmore 40 when they can’t afford not to. 31-40 HBGIA KEFD。

上海市高三英语一模十一选十 汇编

上海市高三英语一模十一选十 汇编

2020届高三英语一模16区(15份)十一选十(小猫钓鱼)汇编01.黄浦区Beyond Mobile Money: The Future of Asia’s FinTechMobile money has been the hottest part in financial technology for the last few years. But FinTech is more than just how people store money and transact (交易)– the space is much more horizontal, shortcutting how we create, share, and protect value.The latest product of FinTech companies to ___31___ in Asia Pacific illustrates the many ways the space can help consumers beyond just their mobile wallet. It is important for all businesspersons to be aware of these trends, as their success opens up all sorts of possibilities for companies to ___32___ with them. And, on a much deeper level, new FinTechs may ___33___ consumer expectations in even other tech industries.The Smartphone Emerges as a Credit-Scoring StandardWith close to half a billion ___34___ consumers in Southeast Asia alone, there is an entire industry of FinTechs devoted to finding ways to accurately determine their credit-worthiness to give them ___35___ to finance. Unfortunately, since they don’t have bank accounts, such FinTechs cannot rely on ___36___ financial information or credit card payments.One credit scoring source emerging as a new standard in the field is smartphone-based credit scoring. It has ___37___ broad global support, including from the likes of the World Bank. In one of its reports, the Asian Development Bank even stated that mobile data was a key to financial ___38___, as it could improve customer recording, and, in turn, get an access to credit.AI Combines with the Wisdom of the CrowdThe most common slogan in tod ay’s tech headlines is the “artificial intelligence”. Readers are fascinated with how AI has the ___39___ to transform every consumer and enterprise(企业) industry. While such focus is appropriate that AI will ___40___ change the world, it leaves out a crucial element that will go hand-in-hand with its rise: the wisdom of the crowd.31-35BEGKA36-40JHCFDSimba, everyone’s favorite baby lion, returns to movie theaters July 19th (in the U.S.). This time around, though, he will be much more 31 through the magic of CGL (电脑合成影像). The much-loved classic, The Lion King, will open for the 25th anniversary of the 32 movie.The 1994 film proved to be one of Hollywood’s best-loved vivid movies! It made almost US$970 million worldwide. The film went on to win numerous awards for its music and its later stage shows. Simba’s story opened on Broadway in 1997, followed by theatrical 33 around the world. Today, audiences on six continents have seen The Lion King34 on stage. Now, more than 20 years later, it is still one of Broadway’s most popular shows.Great 35 is building for the new movie. Disney released its first official video clip during Thanksgiving Day football games last year. The trailer (预告片) was viewed more than 224 million times in the first 24 hours!The trailer was received very positively, especially because of its realism. Some fans, though, noticed that the clip of the new film was 36 the same as in the 1994 opening scene. One Disney executive quickly gave some 37 . He said the movie kept the best of the original, while adding in some new elements.One thing that excited many viewers was the 38 of a very familiar voice. James Earl Jones, with his famous low but strong voice, has returned as Simba’s father Mufasa. Jones is the only one of the original voice actors to return in the new film.Many well-known people provide character voices, including popstar Beyonce and actor Seth Rogan. Director Jon Favreau expressed his excitement over 39 his all-star cast to such a great story. “It’s a director’s dream to 40 a talented team... to bring this classic story to life.”31. E 32. K 33. A 34. I 35. B 36. C 37. H 38. D 39. J 40. FStephen Hawking: The Extraordinary Scientist Who Changed Our Understanding of Physics There aren’t very many scientists who achieved rock star status. Stephen Hawking was definitely one of them.Hawking was a theoretical physicist whose early work on black holes 31 how scientists think about the nature of the universe. Lawrence Krauss, a theoretical physicist from Arizona State University and a friend and colleague of Hawking’s, says that at a young age, Hawking 32 something “truly remarkable”. Krauss says before Hawking, physicists thought that the large gravity of a black hole 33 everything in and nothing could escape. But by combining quantum mechanics (量子力学) and the theory of relativity, Hawking showed something and changed everything about the way we think about gravity. Krauss says Hawking pointed out a(n) 34 problem in the way physicists understand our world—a problem that Krauss says has yet to be resolved.But his fame wasn’t just a(n) 35 of his research. Hawking, who had a rare disease that made it impossible for him to move or speak, was also a popular public 36 and best-selling author. When he came to scientific conferences, the audience focused their attention on him. And it wasn’t just the scientists but the general public as well who showed great 37 for him. His popular book about his work, A Brief History of Time, was a best-seller. But he agreed that that book was probably the least-read, most-bought book ever. This showed Hawking’s sense of humor.That sense of humor, along with his fame, 38 Hawking to appear on The Simpsons several times—as well as on a number of other popular shows.Toward the end of his life, Hawking’s disease left him almost paralyzed (瘫痪的). It took an enormous 39 for Hawking to communicate, using the tiny movements he could make to control a computer. It’s tempting to say that Hawking achieved his fame in spite of his 40 challenges.31. D32. F33. A34. J35. C 36. H37. I38. B39. G40. EIs it possible to make paper without trees? Australian businessmen Kevin Garcia and Jon Tse spent a year researching a possible ___31___ that could serve as a possible raw material for making paper. Then Garcia read about a Taiwanese company making commercial paper out of stone and a(n) ___32___ struck.A year later, in July 2017, they launched Karst Stone Paper. The company produces paper without using wood or water. Their source is stone waste ___33___ from construction sites and other industrial waste dumps.“If you look at the whole process of how paper is traditionally made, it ___34___ chopping trees, adding chemicals, using lots of water and then ___35___, drying and flattening it into sheets of paper,” said Garcia. “It contributes to high carbon emission and deforestation.”In 2019, Garcia estimates Karst’s paper production has helped save 540 large timber trees(成材木) from being deforested, 83,100 liters (21,953 gallons) of water from being used and 25,500 kilograms (56,218 pounds) of carbon dioxide from being ___36___.“We collect disposed limestone (石灰石) from wherever we can find it, wash it, and grind it into fine powder,” he said. The powder is mixed with a HDPE resin (高密度聚乙烯树脂), which ___37___ over time from sunlight, leaving only calcium carbonate (碳酸钙) behind.The paper can be as thin as notebook paper or as thick as a cardboard paper and is waterproof, ___38___ and difficult to tear. The notebooks cost $10 to $25. Karst’s products are mainly sold through the company’s website, but are also stocked in 100 stores, ___39___ throughout Australia, the United States and the United Kingdom. “Over 70% of the customers are US-based,” he said.They hope to have the notebooks in 1,000 stores by the end of the year. Garcia said they are now thinking about ___40___ investors for the first time in order to scale up their operations. They declined to reveal how much the company makes or their annual revenue.31----40. DGJHI KCFEAHow do Cigarettes Affect the Body?Cigarettes aren’t good for us. But how exactly do cigarettes harm us? Let’s look at what happens as their ingredients make their way through our bodies, and how we benefit (31) ______ when we finally give up smoking.Inside the airways and lungs, smoke increases the (32) ______ of infections as well as long-lasting diseases. It does this by damaging the tiny hair-like tissueswhich keep the airways clean. That’s one of the reasons smoking can lead to oxygen loss and (33) ______ of breath.Within about 10 seconds, the bloodstream carries a stimulant called nicotine to the brain, creating the (34) ______ sensations which make smoking highly addictive. Nicotine and other chemicals from the cigarette, at the same time, cause tightness of blood tubes, restricting blood flow. These effects on blood tubes lead to (35) ______ of blood tube walls, increasing the possibilityof heart attacks and strokes.Many of the chemicals inside cigarettes can activate dangerous (36) ______ in the body’s DNA that make cancers form. In fact, about one of every three cancer deaths in the United States is caused by smoking. And it’s not just lung cancer. Smoking can cause cancer in multiple tissues and organs, as well as damaged eyesight and (37) ______ bones. It makes it harder for women to get pregnant. And in men, it can cause long-term damages of body functions.But for those who quit smoking, there’s a huge positive upside with almost (38) ______ and long-lasting physical benefits. A day after ceasing, heart attack risk begins to decrease as blood pressure and heart rates (39) ______. Lungs become healthier after about one month, with less coughing. After ten years, the chances of developing fatal lung cancer go down by 50%, probably because the body’s ability to repair DNA is once again restored.There’s no point pretending this is all easy to achieve. Quitting can lead to anxiety and depression. But fortunately, such effects are usually (40) ______. Advice and support groups and moderate intensity exercise also help smokers stay cigarette-free. That’s good news, since quitting puts you and your body on the path back to health.31. G 32. C 33.I 34.A 35.E 36.B 37.K 38.F 39.J 40. HMicroplastic PollutionIn the past few years, scientists have found microplastics in our soil, tap water, bottled water, beer and even in the air we breathe. And there’s growing concern about the _____31_____ health risks they pose to humans.The new analysis in the UK have discovered microplastics widely _____32_____ across all 10 lakes and rivers sampled. More than 1,000 small pieces of plastic per litre were found in the River Tame, which was _____33_____ last year as the most polluted place tested worldwide. Even in relatively remote places such as the Falls of Dochart and Loch Lomond in Scotland, two or three pieces per litre were found.Microplastics are not a _____34_____ kind of plastic, but rather any type of small pieces of plastic that is less than5 mm in length according to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. They may _____35_____ froma variety of sources, including cosmetics, clothing, and industrial processes.Humans are known to _____36_____ the tiny plastic particles through food and water, but the possible health effects on people and ecosystems have yet to be determined. One study, in Singapore, has found that microplastics can _____37_____ harmful microbes (微生物).Research by the National University of Singapore found more than 400 types of bacteria on 275 pieces of microplastic collected from local beaches. They included insects that cause gastroenteritis (肠胃炎) and wound _____38_____ in humans.“Microplastics are being found _____39_____ everywhere but we do not know the harm they could be doing,” said Christian Dunn at Bangor University, Wales, who led the work. “It’s no use looking back in 20 years’ time and saying: ‘If only we’d realized just how bad it was.’ We need to be monitoring our waters now and we need to think, as a country and a world, how we can be reducing our _____40_____ on plastic.”31-40 GAKHI DECBFEmphasizing social play in kindergarten improves academicsEmphasizing social play and students helping one another in kindergarten improves academic outcomes, self-control and attention regulation, finds new UBC research. The study, published in the journal PLoS One, found this approach to kindergarten curriculum also ____31____children’s joy in learning and teachers’ enjoyment of teaching.“Before children have the ability to sit for long periods ____32____information, they need to be allowed to be ____33____and be encouraged to learn by doing,” said Dr. Adele Diamond, the study’s lead author. “Indeed, people of all ages learn better by doing than by being told.”Through a controlled experiment, Diamond and her colleagues ____34____the effectiveness of a curriculum called Tools of the Mind (Tools). The curriculum was introduced to willing kindergarten teachers and 351 children with different backgrounds in 18 public schools.Tools was developed in 1993 by two American researchers. Its basic ____35____is that social-emotional development and improving self-control is as important as teaching academic skills and content. The Tools ____36____ the role of social play in developing skills such as self-control, selective attention and planning. “Skills like self-control and selective attention are necessary for learning. They are often more strongly associated with school readiness (入学准备) than intelligence quotient (IQ),” said Diamond. “This experiment is the first to show ____37____ of a curriculum emphasizing social play.”Teachers reported more ____38____ behavior and greater sense of community in Tools classes. Late in the school year, Tools teachers reported they still felt ____39____ and excited about teaching, while teachers in the control group were exhausted. “I have enjoyed seeing the ____40____ progress my students have made in writing and reading.” said a Tools teacher in Vancouver. “I have also enjoyed seeing the students get so excited about coming to school and learning. They loved all the activities so much that many students didn’t want to miss school, even if they were sick.”31—35:GHFJB 36—40: AIDECIn between all the measures to battle the severe air pollution levels in Delhi, there’s one more option for you — a bar that has “pure air”. Delhi’s first-ever oxygen bar — named “Oxy Pure” — offers 15 minutes of 80-90 percent pure oxygen starting from Rs 299.The bar, __31__ in May, also offers its customers several aromas(香味)to choose from that can be filled with oxygen. The aromas include lemongrass, cherry, mango and more.Customers are given a lightweight tube, used for supplementary oxygen __32__. The device is placed near the customer’s nose through which they are advised to breathe in the aroma-filled oxygen.According to the aroma you choose, each session __33__ to improve one’s sleep patterns and digestion, cure headaches and even claims to work as a remedy for __34__.“I was passing by and saw that they were offering pure oxygen. I thought I would give it a try and went for the lemongrass flavour. It was __35__,” Manjul Mehta, a customer at Oxy Pure told Delhi Daily.Speaking to Delhi Daily, Bonny Irengbam, senior sales assistant at the bar, said customers were __36__ positively after a few sessions.“Some people, who try it for the first time, will feel relaxed and fresh. But only people who undergo the sessions regularly will get real __37__ of the aroma,” he added. “Though we have regular customers, we don’t encourage back-to-back sessions, as __38__ levels of oxygen in the body can make a person dizzy. It is __39__ to do it once or twice a month or to stick with the 10-15 minute sessions a day,” he said.Dr. Rajesh Chawla, a senior consultant in medicine said that though such sessions do not have any side-effects, it does not help in the long run either. “Even if you breathe in the so-called pure oxygen for two hours in a day, you will go back to breathing the polluted air for the rest of the 22 hours”, he said. He added that the concept is purely a(n) __40__ move.31-40 F H C K B J A E I DBottle Found at Sea Used for Scientific PurposeCombing the beach for shells, sea glass, or colorful rocks is a leisure activity enjoyed by many. Some even use metal detectors to find buried treasure or other objects. Only the lucky few have ___31___ a message in a bottle that was dropped off by the tide. The tradition of putting a letter to an unknown recipient into a bottle and throwing it into the ocean has an interesting past. An early ___32___ use for the practice was revealed when the oldest recorded message in a bottle was found by Tonya on a beach near Wedge Island, Australia.Tonya was on a family outing when she noticed the antique glass bottle in the sand and thought it would make a nice ___33___. While she was cleaning the sandy gin bottle, a rolled up paper tied with a ___34___ fell out. The damp page was a message written in German and dated June 12, 1886. According to official documents from the German sailing vessels, Paula, a crew member tossed the bottle overboard a(n) ___35___ 950 km off the coast of Western Australia. Further research authenticated(验证)the letter, which had been sent afloat 132 years ago and is the oldest message in a bottle ever ___36___.Historians confirm that thousands of similar bottles were cast overboard by German ships between 1864 and 1933. And ___37___ inside were official documents written by the captain of the ship, ___38___ routes, coordinates, and other information. These early messages in a bottle were an attempt by the German Naval Observatory to map ocean ___39___ around the world.On the back of the notes were ___40___ to write the time and place the bottles were found and return them to the German Naval Observatory in Hamburg or the nearest German authorities. Using this information for reference was an early system of studying patterns in nature and the vast ocean in particular.31. H 32. E 33. K 34. A 35. I 36. G 37. B 38. D 39. F 40. J10.长宁、金山区Marketing the MoonAn astronaut, a little hop and a witty quote: Neil Armstrong’s first lunar (月球的) footstep is deep-rooted in the minds of all humankind. But that first moon landing might not have been such a(n) 31 moment if it weren’t for NASA’s clever PR (Public Relations) team.Richard Jurek is a marketing 32 and co-author of the book Marketing the Moon: The Selling of the Apollo Lunar Program. He says NASA’s move to real-time, open communication made the 1969 Apollo 11 landing “the first positive viral event that 33 the world’s attention.”Before NASA was established in 1958, rockets were the military’s territory; that secretiveness carried over into the space agency’s early days. At first, NASA followed a “fire in the tail” rule, only 34 a rocket’s launch when it was successfully in the air. But as the agency evolved, it started announcing more details about the Apollo program. It 35 its astronauts, talked openly about mission goals and challenges, and shared launch times so people could watch. “If it had been run like it was under the military,” Jurek says, “we would not have had that sense of drama, that sense of involvement, that sense of wonder, that 36 .” Instead, all the PR and press promotion in the years ahead of Apollo 11 brought the human spaceflight program into people’s living rooms and imaginations.As the drama neared its peak, NASA’s PR officials pushed for live TV broadcasts of the first humans to walk on the moon. Not everyone thought it was a good idea. The technology for live lunar broadcasts, and cameras small enough to keep the cargo 37 , didn’t exist at that point. Some engineers worried that developing that equipment would 38 from efforts to achieve the landing itself. But NASA’s communications team argued that telling the story was as vital as the 39 itself. Live TV would bring the American people—and international viewers—along for the ride.Come landing day, which 40 fell on a Sunday, more than half a billion people worldwide crowded around TVs and radios for the historic moment. “We were able to come together and do something that was exciting and interesting and brought the world together,” says David Meerman Scott, marketing strategist and co-author of Marketing the Moon. “I don’t know that we’ve done anything like that since.”31-35 HFBIC 36-40 KGEAD11.浦东新区Criticism of the Fast FashionIn the 2006 film version of The Devil Wears Prada, Miranda Priestly, played by Meryl Streep, scolds her unattractive assistant for imagining that high fashion doesn’t affect her. Priestly explains how the deep blue color of the assistant’s sweater was ____31____ over the years from fashion shows to departments stores and to the bargain bin in which the poor girl probably found her clothes.This top-down concept of the fashion business couldn’t be more out of date or in conflict with the mad world described in Overdressed, Elizabeth Cline’s three-year accusation of “fast fashion”. In the last decade or so, ____32____ in technology have allowed mass-market labels such as Zara, H&M, and Uniqlo to react to trends more quickly and predict demand more ____33____. Quicker turnarounds mean less wasted stock, more frequent release, and more profit. These labels encourage style-conscious consumers to see clothes as disposable—meant to last only a wash or two, although they don’t advertise that—and to ____34____ their wardrobe (衣橱) every few weeks. By offering on-trend items at dirt-cheap prices, Cline argues, these brands have controlled fashion cycles, shaking an industry long ____35____ to a seasonal pace.The ____36____ of this revolution, of course, are not limited to designers. For H&M to offer a $5.95 knit miniskirt in all its 2,300-plus stores around the world, it must rely on low-wage overseas labor, order in volumes that ____37____ natural resources, and use massive amounts of harmful chemicals.Towards the end of Overdressed, Cline introduced her ideal, a Brooklyn woman named Sarah Kate Beaumont, who since 2008 has made all of her own clothes — and beautifully. But as Cline is the first to note, it took Beaumont decades to perfect her craft; her example can’t be imitated.Though several fast-fashion companies have made efforts to ___38___ their impact on labor and the environment — including H&M, with its green Conscious Collection line — Cline believes lasting change can only be made by customers. She exhibits the idealism ___39___ to many advocates of sustainability, be it in food or in energy. Vanity (虚荣心) is a constant; people will only start shopping more ___40___ when they can’t afford not to.31-40 HBGIA KEFDJFounding Father of China’s Nuclear ProgramUnder the terms of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (不扩散核武器条约), only five countries are considered to be “nuclear-weapon states.” China is one of them. This military achievement would have been __31__ without the contribution of Deng Jiaxian, a leading organizer of China’s nuclear weapon programs.Deng went to the United States in 1948 for further study, and received a doctorate in physics two years later. Just nine days after graduation, the then 26-year-old returned to the newly-founded People’s Republic of China with __32__ physics knowledge. He became a research fellow under the leadership of Qian Sanqiang and started his theoretical nuclear research in cooperation with Yu Min.From1958 on, Deng spent over 20 years working __33__ with a team of young scientists on the development of China’s first atomic and hydrogen bombs. Originally, they were prepared to receive training by experts from the Soviet Union. Soon after, however, the Soviet government tore up its __34__ with China and removed all its experts. Deng had to lead the team of 28 members with an average age of 23 on a mission to __35__ the mysterious power of atomic physics.There was ridicule(嘲笑) following the __36__ of the Soviet experts that China wouldn’t be able to build an atomic bomb within 20 years. Deng said to his colleagues, “It is in the interest of the Chinese people to develop nuclear weapons. We must be willing to be unknown heroes for our lifetime. It is worth the risk of suffering, and it is worth our __37__ to this cause.”As the leader of China’s atomic bomb design, Deng gave lessons himself and organized a team to translate and study the __38__ foreign language materials. In the meantime, he never stopped thinking about the direction of atomic bomb development.Following the successful test of the first atomic bomb in 1964, Deng joined the research group led by Yu Min. They immediately started the design of the hydrogen bomb, which was __39__ in 1967. From the first atomic bomb to the first hydrogen bomb, China spent only two years and eight months on development .Deng passed away in 1986 because of cancer. In the last month of his life, the 28-year secret experience of this great scientist was __40__, and his reputation began to spread throughout China. In 1999, along with 22 other scientists, he was awarded the special prize of “Two Bombs, One Satellite Meritorious Medal” for his contribution to Chinese military science.31-40KFACG IEBDHTime: is there ever enough of it? In today’s modern world, most of us are 31 with so-called time-saving devices and technological advancements and work less both at the office and at home. But why do we still feel busier?A study by Derek Thompson on the “myth” of being busy suggests that while 32 brought us convenience, it also brought us new headaches. Consider the idea of FOMO (fear of missing out). Knowing exactly what we’re missing out makes us feel guilty or anxious about the 33 of our time and our ability to use it effectively.While being informed is important, it can lead to anxiety about keeping up with the times. If you find yourself unable to stop scrolling through Twitter, turn off the phone and take a mental break. Practice JOMO (joy of missing out), a(n) 34 on life that’s a direct contradiction to FOMO. Get rid of feelings of guilt and “shoulds” and replace them with mindfulness and living in the moment.Another thing technology has 35 us is the blurring (难以区分) between work and downtime. While constant connection has made the workday much more flexible, it’s also harder to turn off at the end of the day. Always being “on” is a(n) 36 state of mind. Consider putting a hard stop on media and electronic devices an hour or two before bed.Of course, if you want to move up the corporate ladder and get a bigger paycheck, working long hours has long been a 37 strategy. But if you don’t have passion for your job or care about what you do, you might just be working yourself into more 38 .People working the same hours feel completely different levels of time pressure depending on their passion. If most of the hours are spent doing something you don’t feel39 about, it’s no wonder you start to feel out of control and anxious about your time. Taking back control of your time can ease this mental stress. Therefore, your time management goal shouldn’t be to figure out how to do more, but 40 to figure out how to want less.31. J32. A33. E34. H35. G36. K37. I38. B39. F40. CAutism Spectrum DisorderAutism Spectrum Disorder, or ASD, affects how people communicate with and relate to others. Most people with autism don’t understand some of the basic social __31__ that others take for granted. They might have trouble making eye contact, holding a conversation, or recognizing gestures. And over one-third of people with ASD are nonverbal, meaning they don’t use speech. Along with communication __32__, people with autism often like to follow certain patterns or __33__ behaviors. Many are sensitive to bright light or loud noises, and others have physical problems, like trouble walking or picking up small objects. Some have __34__ disabilities, but about half have average or above average IQs. It’s also common for people with autism to have a great long-term memory for certain details, and many excel in math, science, music, or art.With such a wide variety of symptoms, no two people with ASD are alike. The behaviors vary so much that they used to be __35__ as different disorders. One was Asperger Syndrome, where people obsess over particular topics, __36__nonverbal social cues, and may not understand appropriate social behaviors.Even though there’s no cure for ASD, therapy and medication can help people adjust. Scientists are also doing clinical __37__ to find other solutions. They’ve learned that 1 out of every 68 children in the US has the disorder, but they still aren’t sure what causes it.No matter why it happens, ASD is being __38__ at a higher rate every year. This doesn’t mean it’s becoming more common. It just means more people are aware of the condition and getting professional help early, and awareness is __39__. The more we learn about autism, the more we can understand and relate to those who have it.It’s important to note that people with ASD deserve the same respect, fairness and chances that people without ASD receive. This will help people with ASD __40__ and grow in our communities.31-40 B G J F C I K E D A。

2020届上海高三英语一模汇编--十一选十

2020届上海高三英语一模汇编--十一选十

2020届长宁金山区高三英语一模试卷A.achievementB.capturedC.championedD.convenientlyE.distractF.executiveG.manageable H.memorable I.publicizing J.reluctantly K.revealMarketing the MoonAn astronaut,a little hop and a witty quote:Neil Armstrong’s first lunar(月球的)footstep is deep-rooted in the minds of all humankind.But that first moon landing might not have been such a(n)31moment if it weren’t for NASA’s clever PR(Public Relations)team.Richard Jurek is a marketing32and co-author of the book Marketing the Moon:The Selling of the Apollo Lunar Program.He says NASA’s move to real-time,open communication made the1969Apollo11landing“the first positive viral event that33the world’s attention.”Before NASA was established in1958,rockets were the military’s territory;that secretiveness carried over into the space agency’s early days.At first,NASA followed a“fire in the tail”rule,only34a rocket’s launch when it was successfully in the air.But as the agency evolved,it started announcing more details about the Apollo program.It35 its astronauts,talked openly about mission goals and challenges,and shared launch times so people could watch.“If it had been run like it was under the military,”Jurek says,“we would not have had that sense of drama,that sense of involvement, that sense of wonder,that36.”Instead,all the PR and press promotion in the years ahead of Apollo11brought the human spaceflight program into people’s living rooms and imaginations.As the drama neared its peak,NASA’s PR officials pushed for live TV broadcasts of the first humans to walk on the moon.Not everyone thought it was a good idea.The technology for live lunar broadcasts,and cameras small enough to keep the cargo37,didn’t exist at that point.Some engineers worried that developing that equipment would38 from efforts to achieve the landing itself.But NASA’s communications team argued that telling the story was as vital as the 39itself.Live TV would bring the American people—and international viewers—along for the ride.Come landing day,which40fell on a Sunday,more than half a billion people worldwide crowded around TVs and radios for the historic moment.“We were able to come together and do something that was exciting and interesting and brought the world together,”says David Meerman Scott,marketing strategist and co-author of Marketing the Moon.“I don’t know that we’ve done anything like that since.”宝山区2019学年第一学期期末A.productionsB.excitementC.exactlyD.soundE.realisticF.assembleG.particularly H.assurances I.performed J.matching K.originalSimba,everyone’s favorite baby lion,returns to movie theaters July19th(in the U.S.).This time around,though,he will be much more31through the magic of CGL(电脑合成影像).The much-loved classic,The Lion King,will open for the25th anniversary of the32movie.The1994film proved to be one of Hollywood’s best-loved vivid movies!It made almost US$970million worldwide. The film went on to win numerous awards for its music and its later stage shows.Simba’s story opened on Broadway in 1997,followed by theatrical33around the world.Today,audiences on six continents have seen The Lion King34 on stage.Now,more than20years later,it is still one of Broadway’s most popular shows.Great35is building for the new movie.Disney released its first official video clip during Thanksgiving Day football games last year.The trailer(预告片)was viewed more than224million times in the first24hours!The trailer was received very positively,especially because of its realism.Some fans,though,noticed that the clip of the new film was36the same as in the1994opening scene.One Disney executive quickly gave some37.He said the movie kept the best of the original,while adding in some new elements.One thing that excited many viewers was the38of a very familiar voice.James Earl Jones,with his famous lowbut strong voice,has returned as Simba’s father Mufasa.Jones is the only one of the original voice actors to return in the new film.Many well-known people provide character voices,including popstar Beyonce and actor Seth Rogan.Director Jon Favreau expressed his excitement over39his all-star cast to such a great story.“It’s a director’s dream to40a talented team...to bring this classic story to life.”崇明区2020届第一次英语高考模拟考试试卷A.drewB.allowedC.resultD.transformedE.physicalF.discoveredG.effort H.figure I.respect J.fundamental K.mutualStephen Hawking:The Extraordinary Scientist Who Changed Our Understanding of PhysicsThere aren’t very many scientists who achieved rock star status.Stephen Hawking was definitely one of them.Hawking was a theoretical physicist whose early work on black holes31how scientists think about the nature of the wrence Krauss,a theoretical physicist from Arizona State University and a friend and colleague of Hawking’s, says that at a young age,Hawking32something“truly remarkable”.Krauss says before Hawking,physicists thought that the large gravity of a black hole33everything in and nothing could escape.But by combining quantum mechanics(量子力学)and the theory of relativity,Hawking showed something and changed everything about the way we think about gravity.Krauss says Hawking pointed out a(n)34problem in the way physicists understand our world—a problem that Krauss says has yet to be resolved.But his fame wasn’t just a(n)35of his research.Hawking,who had a rare disease that made it impossible for him to move or speak,was also a popular public36and best-selling author.When he came to scientific conferences, the audience focused their attention on him.And it wasn’t just the scientists but the general public as well who showed great 37for him.His popular book about his work,A Brief History of Time,was a best-seller.But he agreed that that book was probably the least-read,most-bought book ever.This showed Hawking’s sense of humor.That sense of humor,along with his fame,38Hawking to appear on The Simpsons several times—as well as on a number of other popular shows.Toward the end of his life,Hawking’s disease left him almost paralyzed(瘫痪的).It took an enormous39for Hawking to communicate,using the tiny movements he could make to control a computer.It’s tempting to say that Hawking achieved his fame in spite of his40challenges.虹口区2019学年度第一学期期终学生学习能力诊断测试A.pleasurableB.alterationC.likelihoodD.fortunatelyE.thickeningF.immediateG.physically H.temporary I.shortness J.normalize K.weakenedHow do Cigarettes Affect the Body?Cigarettes aren’t good for us.But how exactly do cigarettes harm us?Let’s look at what happens as their ingredients make their way through our bodies,and how we benefit(31)______when we finally give up smoking.Inside the airways and lungs,smoke increases the(32)______of infections as well as long-lasting diseases.It does this by damaging the tiny hair-like tissueswhich keep the airways clean.That’s one of the reasons smoking can lead to oxygen loss and(33)______of breath.Within about10seconds,the bloodstream carries a stimulant called nicotine to the brain,creating the(34)______ sensations which make smoking highly addictive.Nicotine and other chemicals from the cigarette,at the same time,cause tightness of blood tubes,restricting blood flow.These effects on blood tubes lead to(35)______of blood tube walls, increasing the possibilityof heart attacks and strokes.Many of the chemicals inside cigarettes can activate dangerous(36)______in the body’s DNA that make cancers form.In fact,about one of every three cancer deaths in the United States is caused by smoking.And it’s not just lung cancer. Smoking can cause cancer in multiple tissues and organs,as well as damaged eyesight and(37)______bones.It makes it harder for women to get pregnant.And in men,it can cause long-term damages of body functions.But for those who quit smoking,there’s a huge positive upside with almost(38)______and long-lasting physical benefits.A day after ceasing,heart attack risk begins to decrease as blood pressure and heart rates(39)______.Lungs become healthier after about one month,with less coughing.After ten years,the chances of developing fatal lung cancer go down by50%,probably because the body’s ability to repair DNA is once again restored.There’s no point pretending this is all easy to achieve.Quitting can lead to anxiety and depression.But fortunately, such effects are usually(40)______.Advice and support groups and moderate intensity exercise also help smokers stay cigarette-free.That’s good news,since quitting puts you and your body on the path back to health.2019学年度嘉定区高三年级第一次质量调研A.emphasizesB.principleC.enormousD.helpingE.energizedF.activeG.increased H.absorbing I.benefits J.analyzed K.temperateEmphasizing social play in kindergarten improves academicsEmphasizing social play and students helping one another in kindergarten improves academic outcomes,self-control and attention regulation,finds new UBC research.The study,published in the journal PLoS One,found this approach to kindergarten curriculum also____31____children’s joy in learning and teachers’enjoyment of teaching.“Before children have the ability to sit for long periods____32____information,they need to be allowed to be ____33____and be encouraged to learn by doing,”said Dr.Adele Diamond,the study’s lead author.“Indeed,people of all ages learn better by doing than by being told.”Through a controlled experiment,Diamond and her colleagues____34____the effectiveness of a curriculum called Tools of the Mind(Tools).The curriculum was introduced to willing kindergarten teachers and351children with different backgrounds in18public schools.Tools was developed in1993by two American researchers.Its basic____35____is that social-emotional development and improving self-control is as important as teaching academic skills and content.The Tools____36____the role of social play in developing skills such as self-control,selective attention and planning.“Skills like self-control and selective attention are necessary for learning.They are often more strongly associated with school readiness(入学准备)than intelligence quotient(IQ),”said Diamond.“This experiment is the first to show____37____of a curriculum emphasizing social play.”Teachers reported more____38____behavior and greater sense of community in Tools te in the school year, Tools teachers reported they still felt____39____and excited about teaching,while teachers in the control group were exhausted.“I have enjoyed seeing the____40____progress my students have made in writing and reading.”said a Tools teacher in Vancouver.“I have also enjoyed seeing the students get so excited about coming to school and learning.They loved all the activities so much that many students didn’t want to miss school,even if they were sick.”黄浦区2019学年度第一学期高三年级期终调研测试The latest product of FinTech companies to___31___in Asia Pacific illustrates the many ways the space can help consumers beyond just their mobile wallet.It is important for all businesspersons to be aware of these trends,as their success opens up all sorts of possibilities for companies to___32___with them.And,on a much deeper level,new FinTechs may___33___consumer expectations in even other tech industries.The Smartphone Emerges as a Credit-Scoring StandardWith close to half a billion___34___consumers in Southeast Asia alone,there is an entire industry of FinTechs devoted to finding ways to accurately determine their credit-worthiness to give them___35___to finance.Unfortunately, since they don’t have bank accounts,such FinTechs cannot rely on___36___financial information or credit card payments.One credit scoring source emerging as a new standard in the field is smartphone-based credit scoring.It has___37___ broad global support,including from the likes of the World Bank.In one of its reports,the Asian Development Bank even stated that mobile data was a key to financial___38___,as it could improve customer recording,and,in turn,get an access to credit.AI Combines with the Wisdom of the CrowdThe most common slogan in today’s tech headlines is the“artificial intelligence”.Readers are fascinated with how AI has the___39___to transform every consumer and enterprise(企业)industry.While such focus is appropriate that AI will ___40___change the world,it leaves out a crucial element that will go hand-in-hand with its rise:the wisdom of the crowd.青浦区2019学年第一学期高三英语期终学业质量调研试卷A.benefitsB.refreshingC.promisesD.capitalisticE.increasedunchedG.nationwide H.intake I.advisable J.responding K.depressionIn between all the measures to battle the severe air pollution levels in Delhi,there’s one more option for you—a bar that has“pure air”.Delhi’s first-ever oxygen bar—named“Oxy Pure”—offers15minutes of80-90percent pure oxygen starting from Rs299.The bar,__31__in May,also offers its customers several aromas(香味)to choose from that can be filled with oxygen. The aromas include lemongrass,cherry,mango and more.Customers are given a lightweight tube,used for supplementary oxygen__32__.The device is placed near the customer’s nose through which they are advised to breathe in the aroma-filled oxygen.According to the aroma you choose,each session__33__to improve one’s sleep patterns and digestion,cure headaches and even claims to work as a remedy for__34__.“I was passing by and saw that they were offering pure oxygen.I thought I would give it a try and went for the lemongrass flavour.It was__35__,”Manjul Mehta,a customer at Oxy Pure told Delhi Daily.Speaking to Delhi Daily,Bonny Irengbam,senior sales assistant at the bar,said customers were__36__positively after a few sessions.“Some people,who try it for the first time,will feel relaxed and fresh.But only people who undergo the sessions regularly will get real__37__of the aroma,”he added.“Though we have regular customers,we don’t encourage back-to-back sessions,as__38__levels of oxygen in the body can make a person dizzy.It is__39__to do it once or twice a month or to stick with the10-15minute sessions a day,”he said.Dr.Rajesh Chawla,a senior consultant in medicine said that though such sessions do not have any side-effects,it does not help in the long run either.“Even if you breathe in the so-called pure oxygen for two hours in a day,you will go back to breathing the polluted air for the rest of the22hours”,he said.He added that the concept is purely a(n)__40__move.浦东新区2019学年度第一学期期末教学质量检测A.accustomedB.advancesmandmonE.drainF.minimizeG.precisely H.reduced I.renew J.sustainably K.victimsCriticism of the Fast FashionIn the2006film version of The Devil Wears Prada,Miranda Priestly,played by Meryl Streep,scolds her unattractive assistant for imagining that high fashion doesn’t affect her.Priestly explains how the deep blue color of the assistant’s sweater was____31____over the years from fashion shows to departments stores and to the bargain bin in which the poor girl probably found her clothes.This top-down concept of the fashion business couldn’t be more out of date or in conflict with the mad world described in Overdressed,Elizabeth Cline’s three-year accusation of“fast fashion”.In the last decade or so,____32____in technology have allowed mass-market labels such as Zara,H&M,and Uniqlo to react to trends more quickly and predict demand more____33____.Quicker turnarounds mean less wasted stock,more frequent release,and more profit.These labels encourage style-conscious consumers to see clothes as disposable—meant to last only a wash or two,although they don’t advertise that—and to____34____their wardrobe(衣橱)every few weeks.By offering on-trend items at dirt-cheap prices,Cline argues,these brands have controlled fashion cycles,shaking an industry long____35____to a seasonal pace.The____36____of this revolution,of course,are not limited to designers.For H&M to offer a$5.95knit miniskirt in all its2,300-plus stores around the world,it must rely on low-wage overseas labor,order in volumes that____37____ natural resources,and use massive amounts of harmful chemicals.Towards the end of Overdressed,Cline introduced her ideal,a Brooklyn woman named Sarah Kate Beaumont,who since2008has made all of her own clothes—and beautifully.But as Cline is the first to note,it took Beaumont decades to perfect her craft;her example can’t be imitated.Though several fast-fashion companies have made efforts to___38___their impact on labor and the environment—including H&M,with its green Conscious Collection line—Cline believes lasting change can only be made by customers.She exhibits the idealism___39___to many advocates of sustainability,be it in food or in energy.Vanity(虚荣心)is a constant;people will only start shopping more___40___when they can’t afford not to.松江区2019学年度第一学期期末质量监控试卷A.approachingB.temporarilyC.decomposesD.alternativeE.primarilyF.recyclableG.inspirationH.involvesI.squeezingJ.minedK.emittedIs it possible to make paper without trees?Australian businessmen Kevin Garcia and Jon Tse spent a year researching a possible___31___that could serve as a possible raw material for making paper.Then Garcia read about a Taiwanese company making commercial paper out of stone and a(n)___32___struck.A year later,in July2017,they launched Karst Stone Paper.The company produces paper without using wood or water. Their source is stone waste___33___from construction sites and other industrial waste dumps.“If you look at the whole process of how paper is traditionally made,it___34___chopping trees,adding chemicals, using lots of water and then___35___,drying and flattening it into sheets of paper,”said Garcia.“It contributes to high carbon emission and deforestation.”In2019,Garcia estimates Karst’s paper production has helped save540large timber trees(成材木)from being deforested,83,100liters(21,953gallons)of water from being used and25,500kilograms(56,218pounds)of carbon dioxide from being___36___.“We collect disposed limestone(石灰石)from wherever we can find it,wash it,and grind it into fine powder,”he said. The powder is mixed with a HDPE resin(高密度聚乙烯树脂),which___37___over time from sunlight,leaving only calcium carbonate(碳酸钙)behind.The paper can be as thin as notebook paper or as thick as a cardboard paper and is waterproof,___38___and difficult to tear.The notebooks cost$10to$25.Karst’s products are mainly sold through the company’s website,but are also stockedin100stores,___39___throughout Australia,the United States and the United Kingdom.“Over70%of the customers are US-based,”he said.They hope to have the notebooks in1,000stores by the end of the year.Garcia said they are now thinking about ___40___investors for the first time in order to scale up their operations.They declined to reveal how much the company makes or their annual revenue.2019学年第一学期徐汇区学习能力诊断卷A.distributedB.absolutelyC.infectionsD.consumeE.harborF.relianceG.potentialH.specificI.originateJ.respectivelyK.revealedMicroplastic PollutionIn the past few years,scientists have found microplastics in our soil,tap water,bottled water,beer and even in the air we breathe.And there’s growing concern about the31health risks they pose to humans.The new analysis in the UK have discovered microplastics widely32across all10lakes and rivers sampled. More than1,000small pieces of plastic per litre were found in the River Tame,which was33last year as the most polluted place tested worldwide.Even in relatively remote places such as the Falls of Dochart and Loch Lomond in Scotland,two or three pieces per litre were found.Microplastics are not a34kind of plastic,but rather any type of small pieces of plastic that is less than5mm in length according to the U.S.National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.They may35from a variety of sources,including cosmetics,clothing,and industrial processes.Humans are known to36the tiny plastic particles through food and water,but the possible health effects on people and ecosystems have yet to be determined.One study,in Singapore,has found that microplastics can37 harmful microbes(微生物).Research by the National University of Singapore found more than400types of bacteria on275pieces of microplastic collected from local beaches.They included insects that cause gastroenteritis(肠胃炎)and wound38in humans.“Microplastics are being found39everywhere but we do not know the harm they could be doing,”said Christian Dunn at Bangor University,Wales,who led the work.“It’s no use looking back in20years’time and saying:‘If only we’d realized just how bad it was.’We need to be monitoring our waters now and we need to think,as a country and a world,how we can be reducing our40on plastic.”杨浦区2019学年度第一学期高三模拟质量调研A.stringB.containedC.representingD.detailingE.scientificF.currentsG.recoveredH.encounteredI.estimatedJ.instructionsK.decorationBottle Found at Sea Used for Scientific PurposeCombing the beach for shells,sea glass,or colorful rocks is a leisure activity enjoyed by many.Some even use metal detectors to find buried treasure or other objects.Only the lucky few have___31___a message in a bottle that was dropped off by the tide.The tradition of putting a letter to an unknown recipient into a bottle and throwing it into the ocean has an interesting past.An early___32___use for the practice was revealed when the oldest recorded message in a bottle was found by Tonya on a beach near Wedge Island,Australia.Tonya was on a family outing when she noticed the antique glass bottle in the sand and thought it would make a nice ___33___.While she was cleaning the sandy gin bottle,a rolled up paper tied with a___34___fell out.The damp page was a message written in German and dated June12,1886.According to official documents from the German sailing vessels, Paula,a crew member tossed the bottle overboard a(n)___35___950km off the coast of Western Australia.Furtherresearch authenticated(验证)the letter,which had been sent afloat132years ago and is the oldest message in a bottle ever ___36___.Historians confirm that thousands of similar bottles were cast overboard by German ships between1864and1933. And___37___inside were official documents written by the captain of the ship,___38___routes,coordinates,and other information.These early messages in a bottle were an attempt by the German Naval Observatory to map ocean___39___ around the world.On the back of the notes were___40___to write the time and place the bottles were found and return them to the German Naval Observatory in Hamburg or the nearest German ing this information for reference was an early system of studying patterns in nature and the vast ocean in particular.。

2023届上海市高三英语16区三模汇编--十一选十

2023届上海市高三英语16区三模汇编--十一选十

2023届上海市高三英语16区三模汇编--
十一选十
一、前言
这份文档旨在为2023年高三英语考试做准备的学生提供帮助。

本文档为16个区的三模试卷的部分试题进行了汇编和整理,题型
涵盖了听力、阅读和写作,对于全面提升学科素养有很大的帮助作用。

二、试题分类
1.听力
听力部分包含10个短对话和2篇长对话,听力材料具有一定
的难度,需要同学们在平时进行反复练,提高听力水平,同时注意
听力过程中的时间控制。

2.阅读
阅读部分共有4篇文章,其中两篇是科普类文章,另外两篇是
社会实践类文章。

题型涵盖了单选、多选和填空题,需要考生注意
细节,掌握文章主旨大意。

3.写作
写作部分包含了一篇40分的作文,写作题目为“如何保持身心
健康”,需要考生充分准备参考材料和写作技巧,并注意文章结构
和语言表达。

三、备考建议
1. 建议同学们每日坚持练听力和阅读,并配合做官方模拟试卷,熟悉考试形式和题型。

2. 进行反复训练的同时,也要注意时间控制,模拟考试过程中
要尽量模拟真实考试情境,逐渐提高应变能力和心理素质。

3. 在写作部分,重点掌握文章结构和语言表达,多参考优秀范
文和老师的指导,注意文笔整洁、条理清晰。

四、总结
此次汇编的试题涵盖了高中英语考试的各个方面,同学们可以
通过反复训练,全面提升自己的英语水平,为顺利完成考试做好充
分准备。

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2018--2019学年高三英语一模选词填空汇编One【虹口区】Section BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.Overcoming Obstacles: How Your Biggest Failure Can Lead to Your Success There’s been a lot written on the theme of failure and how essential it is to success. In a world where ____31____ is given for people’s accomplishments, failing feels dangerous. The fear of failure can stop people taking risks that might lead to success.Heidi Grant Halvorson, a psychologist, points out much of success is ____32____ not on talent but on learning from your mistakes.About half of the people in the world hold that ability in an area --- be it creative or social skill --- is natural. The other half believes, instead, that someone might have a preference or something – say painting or speaking foreign languages – but this ability can be improved through ___33___ practice or training.It’s almost impossible to think rationally(理性地) while shouting at yourself, “I’m a failure”. But when you ___34___ your thinking, you will probably see what you can control –your behavior, your planning, your reactions – and change them.The primary ___35___ between successful people and unsuccessful people is that the successful people fail more. If you see failure as a monster approaching you, take another look.Success is as scary as failure. Researchers report that satisfaction grows on challenges. Think about it – a computer game you can always win is boring; one you can win ___36___, and with considerable effort, is fun. In pursuit of success, failure exposes areas that you need to ___37___. So the failure serves as a brick wall to test how you apply yourself to ___38___ your objectives and how much you want them.There is a way to distinguish whether a failure ___39___ you to double down or walk away, says Halvorson. If, when things get rough, you remain fascinated by your goal, you should keep going. If what you’re doing is costing you too much time and energy or it’s not bringing you joy, you should give a second thought to the ___40___ of your goal and even set a new one.Key: 31-40 DEAHB FCIJGTwo【黄浦区】Section BDirections: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.The NileThe ancient Greek writer Herodotus once described Egypt-with some envy-as‘the gi ft of the Nile’. The Egyptians depend on the river for food, for water and for life. The Ancient Egyptians were able to control and use the Nile, creating the earliest irrigation systems and developing a prosperous ___31___.Snaking through the deserts, the Nile would flood almost ___32___ each year in June. Once the water subsided, a rich deposit of sand was left behind, making an excellent topaoil. Seeds were sown, yielding wheat, barley, beans, lentils and leeks. Drought could spell disaster for the Egyptians, so during the dry seasons, they dug basins and channels to deliver water to their land. They also devised simple channels to transfer water at the peak of the flood.An early system of ___33___ a Kilometer, was used to de determine the size of the floods. Later, during the New Kingdom, a lifting system called a Shauf was used to raise water from the river--___34___ to the way in which a well is used today.The Egyptians took up some of the earliest trading missions. Without a(n) ___35___ system they exchanged goods, bringing back timber, precious stones, pottery, spices and animals. Their efforts in medicine were also ___36___ advanced: surgeons performed operations to remove cysts (囊肿). Mummification gave them great understanding of the human body-yet they also relied heavily on various medicines to prevent disease, and discoveries were often confused with superstition(迷信). And while a great deal of time was dedicated to ___37___ the Egyptians thought the stars were gods.By the 16th century Egypt was under the Ottoman Empire until Britain seized control in 1882. What is now mostly Arabic Egypt only won ___38___ from Britain after World War Ⅱ. The Suez Canal, opened in 1869, __________the country as a center for world transportation. But it, and the completion of the Aswan High Dam in 1971 ___40___ the ecology of the Nile, which now struggles to satisfy the country’s rapidly growing population, currently more than 76 million-the largest in the Arab world.Key: 31-40 G J A B D C E I H FThree【浦东新区】Section BDirections: Complete the following passage by using the words in the box. Eachword can only be used once. Note that there is one word more than you need.Puppy Dog Eyes Are for the Benefits of HumansDogs make puppy dog eyes for the benefit of humans and rarely use the pleasing facial expression when on their own, a new study has shown.It has long been assumed that animal facial expressions are involuntary and dependent on emotional state rather than a way to communicate.But scientists at the University’s Dog Cognition Centre at Portsmouth University have found that dogs mostly use facial expressions when humans are present, as a direct response to attention. Puppy dog eyes, in which the 31 is raised to make the eyes appear wider and sadder, was found to be the most 32 used expression in the study. Researchers do not know whether the dogs are aware they look sadder, or have just learned that widening their eyes invites 33 and affection in humans.Dog cognition expert Dr Juliane Kaminski: “We can now be 34 that the production of facial expressions made by dogs are dependent on the attention state of their audience and are not just a result of dogs being excited.”“In our study they produced far more expressions when someone was watching, but seeing food 35 did not have the same effect.”“The findings appear to support evidence dogs are 36 to humans’ attention and that expressions are 37 active attempts to communicate, not simple emotional displays.” The researchers studied 24 dogs of various breeds, aged one to 12. All were family pets. Each dog was tied by a lead a meter away from a person, and the dogs’ faces were 38 throughout a range of exchanges, from the person being oriented towards the dog, to being distracted and with her body turned away from the dog.They found that when a human was not watching the animal, they 39 facial expressions. Dr Kaminski said it is possible that dogs’ expressions have evolved as they were 40 . “Domestic dogs have a unique history –they have lived alongside humans for 30,000 years and during that time selection pressures seem to have acted on dogs’ ability to communicate with us, ”she said.KEY: 31-40 H D F K E G A B C IFour【长宁区】Section BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.Aurora (极光): wonders or disturbancesCanada, February 2017: I stood in the snow on a frozen lake, watching as the sky twisted in front of me. Green bands of light______31_____ out in the darkness. Slowly the colors twisted and broke and reappeared elsewhere until, suddenly, a whole band flowed and pulsed across the sky,____32_____ with delicate yellow, pinks and purples. It was as dramatic as thunderstorm, yet calm. Gentle, yet _____33_____. Most of all, it was a gift.This was my fifth aurora trip and the first time I had seen fast movement and bright colours. The calm, green aurora displays that many people see are driven by a(n)_____34____stream of particles(微粒) from the sun, called the solar wind. But when the sun throws us extra hot, fat particles, this process goes into overdrive—we get much more movement and colour. It is glorious! Aurora-spotters long for it.But for some, the wild movements of the heavens can have serious _____35___. Satellites’ electronics are affected or damaged by incoming fast particles, ____36____ industries that rely on them. Flights may need to change course to avoid radio___37____ around the poles, or to protect aircrew from enhanced radiation exposure. During a solar storm, aircrew may receive their annual radiation limit over a single flight.Stormy space weather affects us on the ground, too. A large solar storm in 1989 caused a 10-hour electrical blackout over Canada’s Quebec Province, costing the economy a(n)___38____C$10 billion. Disturbance of the atmosphere causes problems with radio broadcast and GPS. In September 2017, a huge solar flame ____39____ just as Hurricane Iran hit the Caribbean. The resultant HF radio blackout help up the emergency response. Meanwhile, beautiful aurora displays were seen in England. Place its beauty aside, then, and the auroral _____40______ is nothing other than a giant planetary disturbance, more of a worry than a wonder for some people. Yet seldom do such disturbances have such fascinating side effects as that of the aurora dancing across our Arctic skies.Key: 31-40 JBAED KCFGIFive【徐汇区】Section BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.The human body can tolerate only a small range of temperature, especially when the personis engaged in vigorous activity. Heat (31) _______ usually occur when large amounts of water and/or salt are lost through over sweating following exhausting exercise. When the body becomes overheated and cannot (32) _______ this over heatedness, heat exhaustion and heat stroke are possible.Heat exhaustion is generally (33) _______ by sweaty skin, tiredness, sickness, dizziness, plentiful sweating, and sometimes fainting, resulting from a(n) (34) _______ intake of water and the loss of fluids. First aid treatment for this condition includes having the victim lie down, (35) _______ the feet 8 to 12 inches, applying cool, wet cloths to the skin, and giving the victim sips of salt water (1 teaspoon per glass, half a glass every 15 minutes) over a 1-hour period.Heat stroke is much more serious; it is a(n) (36) _______ life-threatening situation. The characteristics of heat stroke are a high body temperature (which may reach 106° F or more); a rapid pulse; hot, dry skin; and a blocked sweating (37) _______. Victims of this condition may be unconscious, and first-aid measures should be (38) _______ at quickly cooling the body. The victim should be placed in a tub of cold water or (39) _______ sponged with cool water until his or her temperature is sufficiently lowered. Fans or air conditioners will also help with the cooling (40) _______. Care should be taken, however, not to over-chill the victim once the temperature is below 102° F.Key: 31-40 F H I A G J K E B CSix【闵行区】Section BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.They’re still kids, and although there’s a lot that the experts don’t yet know about them, one thing they do agree on is that what the kids use and expect from their world has changed rapidly. And it’s all because of technology.To the psychologists, sociologists, and media experts who study them, their digital devices set this new group 31 , even from their Millennial (千禧年的) elders, who are quite familiar with technology. They want to be constantly connected and available in a way even their older brothers and sisters don’t quite get. These differences may seem slight, but they 32 the appearance of a new generation.The 33 between Millennial elders and this younger group was so evident to psychologist Larry Rosen that he has 34 the birth of a new generation in a new book, Rewired:Understanding the ingeneration and the Way They Learn, out next month. Rosen says the technically 35 life experience of those born since the early 1990s is so different from the Millennial elders he wrote about in his 2007 book, Me, Myspace and I: Parenting the Net Generation, that they distinguish themselves as a new generation, which he has given them the nickname of “ingeneration”.Rosen says portability is the key. They are 36 from their wireless devices, which allow them to text as well as talk, so they can be constantly connected—even in class, where cell phones are 37 banned.Many researchers are trying to determine whether technology somehow causes the brains of young people to be wired differently. “They should be distracted and should perform more poorly than they do,” Rosen says. “But findings show teens 38 distractions much better than we would predict by their age and their brain development.”Because these kids are more devoted to technology at younger ages, Rosen says, the educational system has to change 39 .“The growth on the use of technology with children is ve ry rapid, and we run the risk of being out of step with this generation as far as how they learn and how they think. We have to give them options because they want their world40 ,” Rosen says.Key: 31-40 JEHAG K IBFCSeven【奉贤区】Section BDirections: Complete the passage with the words in the box. Each word can only be used once. Note that there is one word more than you need.Welcome to Windsor CastleWindsor Castle is the oldest and largest occupied castle in the world and the Official Residence of the Queen of Britain. Over a period of nearly 1,000 years it has been (31)continuously, and altered and redecorated by monarchs (君主) one after the other. Some were great builders, strengthening the Castle against (32)and rebellion; others, living in more peaceful times, created a grand Royal residence. William the Conqueror chose the site, high above the river Thames and on the edge of a Saxon hunting ground. It was a day’s march from the Towerof London and intended to guard the western (33)to the capital. The outer walls of today’s structure are in the same position as those of the (34)castle built by William the Conqueror in the 1070s. The Queen uses the Castle both as a private home, where she usually spends the weekend,and as a Royal residence at which she undertakes certain formal duties. Windsor Castle is (35) used by the Queen to host State Visits from overseas monarchs and presidents. Every year the Queen takes up official residence in Windsor Castle for a month over Easter(March-April).The Castle is huge, so people tend to head for the most (36)bits --the State Apartments, St. Geo rge’s Chapel, the Gallery and the delightful Queen Mary’s Dolls House. Works of art, antique furniture, curiosities and impressive architecture reflect the tastes of many different royal generations. The State Apartments are (37)decorated formal rooms still used for state and official functions.The magnificent and beautiful St. George’s Chapel was started in 1475 by Edward IV and was completed 50 years later by Henry VIII. It (38)among the finest examples of late medieval architecture in the UK.The Drawin gs Gallery (39)the exhibition “The Queen: 60 Photographs for 60 Years”.The exhibition presents portraits of the Queen (40)in brief moments on both official occasions and at relaxed family gatherings.Key: 31-40 IAHBC DFKEGEight【静安区】Section BDirections:Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can only be used once. Note that there is one word more than you need.Artificial skin is a substitute for human skin produced in the laboratory, typically used to treat burns.Different types of artificial skin differ in their complexity, but all are designed to ___31___ at least some of the skin’s basic functions, which include protecting against wetness and infection and regulating body heat.Skin is primarily made of two layers: the uppermost layer, the epidermis, which serves as a protection against the environment; and the dermis, the layer below the epidermis. The dermis also contains substances, which help to make the skin ___32___ and maintain its biological functions.Artificial skins close wounds, which prevents bacterial infection and water loss and in result the wounded skin can ___33___. For example, one commonly used artificial skin, Integra, functions as a support between cells that helps regulate cell behavior and causes a new dermis to form by promoting cell growth and collagen(胶原质)___34___. The Integra “dermis” is also biodegradable(可生物降解的). It is gradually absorbed and replaced by the new dermis.Aside from its uses in the clinical ___35___, artificial skin may also be used to model human skin for research. For example, artificial skin is used as an alternative in animal testing. Suchtesting may cause ___36___ pain and discomfort to the animals and it does not ___37___ predict the response of human skin. Some companies like L’ Ordeal have already used artificial skin to test many ___38___ ingredients and products. Other research applications include how skin is affected by UV exposure and how certain substances in sunscreen and medicines are transported through skin.Today new technology has been developed by growing ___39___ of skin taken from the patient or other humans. One major source is the foreskins of newborns. Such cells often do not stimulate the body’s immune system-a mechanism that allows babies to develop within their mother’s body-and hence are much less likely to be ___40___ by the patient’s body.Key: 31-40 FCEAI KJGBDNine【崇明县】Section BPeople Think Meals Taste Better If They Are ExpensiveIt is said that there’s no such thing as a free lunch, but even if you manage to bag a bargain meal, it will not taste as good as a more expensive meal, according to scientists.A new study has found that restaurant __31__ who pay more for their meals think the food is tastier than if it is offered for a smaller price. The experts think that people tend to associate cost with quality and this changes their __32__ of how food tastes.Scientists at Cornell University in New York studied the eating habits of 139 people enjoying an Italian buffet(自助餐) in a restaurant. The price of the food was set by the __33__ at either $4 or $8 for the all-you-can-eat meal. Customers were asked to __34__ how good the food tasted, the quality of the restaurant and to leave their names.The experiment __35__ that the people who paid $8 for the food enjoyed their meal 11 percent more than those who ate the “cheaper” buffet. Interestingly those that paid for the $4 buffet said they felt guiltier about loading up their plates and felt that they __36__. However, the scientists said that both groups ate around the same quantity of food in total, according to the study __37__ at the Experimental Biology meeting this week.Brian Wans ink, a professor of __38__ behavior at the university, said: “We were fascinated to find that pricing has little impact on how much one eats, but a huge impact on how you __39__ the experience.” He thinks that people enjoyed their food more as they associated co st with quality and that small changes to a restaurant can change how tasty people find their meals.In a(n)__40__ study, scientists from the university showed that people who eat in dim lighting consume 175 less calories(卡路里) than people who eat in brightly lit areas.Key: 31-40 IEDCJAGKHFTen【普陀区】Section A (10分)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.The Father of JD PrintingAbout twenty years ago, the surgeons at the Wilford Hull medical center working to separate a pair of conjoined(连体的) twins thought that only one would be able to walk after the operation. After a model of the girls’ bone structure was (31)________ using 3D printing, however, they found a shared upper leg bone to be bigger than expected and split it successfully, (32)________ in both twins being able to walk. Now eighty and still working as chief technology officer of 3D Systems. Chuck Hull is enjoying some minor (33)________ 31 years after he first printed a small black eye-wash cup using a new method of manufacturing known as 3D printing.At the time, he was working for a company that used UV light to put thin layers of plastic coats on tabletops and (34)________. He had an idea that if he could place thousands of thin layers of plastic on top of each other and then cut their shape using light, he would be able to form three dimensional objects. After a year, he (35)________ a system where light was shone into a bottle of photopolymer –a material which changes from liquid to plastic-like solid when light shines on it – and traces the shape of one level of the object. Subsequent layers are then printed until it is (36)________.After patenting the invention, he set up 3D Systems, (37)________ getting $6m (£3.5m) from a Canadian investor. The first (38)________ product came out in 1988 and proved a hit among car manufacturers, in the aerospace sector and for companies designing medical equipment. The possibilities appear endless – from home-printed food and medicine to (39)________ that pictures of objects be able to be taken in shops and then recreated using plans downloaded from the Internet Although deliberate in his responses, there is one moment when the (40)________ spoken Chuck Hull tells of his surprise about what exactly his creation was capable of achieving.Key: 31-40 ADCBF HGJEKEleven【嘉定区】Section BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.Getting help with parenting makes a difference -- at any age New Oxford University study finds that parenting interventions(育儿干预)for helping children with behavior problems are just as effective in school age, as in younger children.There is a dominant view among scientists and policy-makers. They believes, for the greatest effect, interventions need to be __31__ early in life, when ch ildren’s brain function and behavior are thought to be more flexible. However, according to the new research, it’s time to stop focusing on when we intervene with parenting, and just continue helping children in need of all ages.Just published in Child Development, the study is one of the first to __32__ this age assumption. Parenting interventions are a common and effective tool for reducing child behavior problems, but studies of age effects have produced different results until now.A team led by Professor Frances Fader __33__ data from over 15,000 families from all over the world, and found no evidence that earlier is better. Older children benefited just as much as younger ones from parenting interventions for reducing behavior problems. There was no evidence that earlier interventions are more powerful. This was based on __34__ data from more than 150 different experiments.What’s more, their economic analysis found that interventions with older children were __35__ more likely to be cost-effective.Professor Gardner commented: “When there is __36__ about behavioral difficulties in younger children, our findings should never be used as a reason to delay intervention, otherwise, children and families will suffer for longer.” She continued, “As for__37__ parenting interventions for reducing behavior problems in childhood, we should stick to the principle, ‘it’s never too early, never too late’, rather than ‘earlier is better’.”The study draws the conclusion that it makes sense to invest in parenting interventions for children at all ages with behavioral difficulties, because they are no more likely to be __38__ in younger than older children, at least in the pre-adolescents.Of course, there’s more work to be done. The experiments conducted w ere __39__ to pre-adolescents, to shorter-term effects, and parent-reported assessment of child outcomes. Future studies are needed that focus on adolescents, longer-term outcomes, and using multiple sources for __40__ child behavior problems.Key: 31-40 FKBAG CHEIJTwelve【金山区】Section BDirections: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.Want to figure out if someone is a psychopath(精神变态者)? Ask them what their favourite song is. A New York University study last year found that people who loved Eminem’s Lose Yourself and Justin Bieber’s What Do You Mean? were more likely to (31) highly on the psychopathy scale than people who were into Dire Straits.Over the past few years, Spotify has been enhancing its data analytic(32) in an attempt to help marketers(33) consumers with adverts tailored to the mood they’re in. They infer this from the sort of music you’re listening to,(34) with where and when you’re listening to it, along wit h third-party data that might be available.Now, to be clear, there’s nothing particularly(35) about what Spotify is doing with your data.I certainly don’t think that they are working with shadowy consulting firms to serve you ads promoting a culture war while you’re listening to the songs that(36) you might be in a casually racist mood. Nevertheless, I find it(37) that our personal private moments with music are increasingly being turned into data points and sold to advertisers.You can see where this cou ld go, can’t you? As ad targeting gets ever more complicated, marketers will have the ability to target our emotions in(38) exploitative ways. According to one study, titled Misery Is Not Miserly, you are more likely to spend more on a(39) if you’re feelin g sad. You can imagine some companies might take advantage of that. And on that note, I’m feeling a little down about all this. I’ll(40) off to treat myself to something expensive.Key: 31-40 I H F A K G D J E CThirteen【松江区】Section B (10分)Directions: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.The ability of the herd mentality(从众心理)to increase people’s chances of liking or believing something may help explain a wide variety of phenomena. Aral (A managerialeconomist at the Massachusetts institute of technology) says, from housing ___31___ to gold prices and from political polls to restaurant reviews, the ___32___ that other people like something has a powerful ability to make people like it themselves.The new study ___33___ how simple it would be for companies to control reviews of their products by simply adding a few positive ___34___ of their own early reviews in the process, Aral adds.It found that effects were strongest when stories were about politics, business and cultures than for fun or lifestyle pieces. In situations where there are more ___35___ news reviews, you have to be a little more cautious about interpreting likes and dislikes.“Think twice before you trust, how many likes something has,” he adds. “That’s something you have to ___36___ with a grain of salt (持怀疑态度).” And it’s a situation many online users ___37___ on a daily basis.Aral recently went to review a restaurant with a plan to give it three out of five stars, but when he got to the ___38___, he was shown how other people describe the same place and those reviews include someone with five stars. Seeing those positive reviews made him think twice about his own ___39___ average opinion.“A woman ___40___ how great it is, how great her great prices are and how the lemon sauce is so great,” he says. “Maybe it’s not such a good idea to say some rating right before you make your own.”Key: 31-40 GFIDC ABKEJFourteen【杨浦区】Section BDirections:Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used once. Note that there is one word more than you need.Dealing with Difficult RelationshipsEveryone has at least one awkward or ___31___ relationship. It may be with somebody who will ___32___ your energy whenever you are with them. Or worse, it could be someone who always cuts you down. This person may be a family member or even a friend. No matter who it is, it’s necessary that you learn to set boundaries for yourself. Otherwise this kind of relationship can chip away at your self-esteem.Setting boundaries for difficult relationships starts by ___33___ how you are affected by the relationship. Do they bring you closer to your goals or pull you farther away? For example, it’s time to study for tomorrow’s test. But your friend wants to take you to a party. Here, setting boundaries will help protect your ___34___ goals.。

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