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浙江省名校协作体2023-2024学年高三下学期开学联考英语试题

作者UID:14438328
日期: 2024-04-28
开学考试
第一部分,听力,第一节,听下面5段对话。每段对话后有一个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项。(共5小题;每小题1.5分,满分7.5分)
第一部分,听力,第二节,听下面5段对话或独白。每段对话或独白后有几个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项。(共15 小题;每小题1.5分,满分22.5分)
第二部分,阅读理解,第一节,阅读下列短文,从每题所给的A、B、C和D四个选项中,选出最佳选项。(共15小题;每小题2.5分,满分37.5分)
 阅读理解

Is it possible to build muscle and meanwhile lose fat? Please allow us to bring the following two facts to your attention first.

Fact1: Losing fat requires a caloric deficit, which means consuming less calories than your body needs so that stored body fat is used for energy instead.

Fact 2: Building muscle requires a caloric surplus, which means consuming more calories than your body needs so that new muscle tissue can be created.

And it's this realization that leads those of us who want to build muscle and lose fat ideally at the exact same time to wonder just how we're supposed to make it happen.

The 4-week Online Workout Course professionally designed by Super Fitness will perfectly resolve the conflict, making it possible for you to both build muscle and lose fat.

Targeted groups: Male and female willing to be athletic.

Simply follow us along and keep your ears open to the tips and suggestions we keep giving while working out.We'll also immediately reply to any doubts or questions.

What you're promised:

•Being able to lose two pounds of fat per week and get super fit.

•Saving a lot of time by taking the online course.No gym means no traffic!

•Saving a ton of money with 25% off at the Year End Promotion.

What you're required to have:

•Eagerness for a perfect figure.

·Willingness to tolerate some discomfort.

Contact Super Fitness by clicking here!

 阅读理解

In the joyful summer Chadalavada spent with Jayasree, his grandmother in 2018, the pair watched endless movies.Late one evening, Jayasree, who had recently been diagnosed(诊断)with Alzheimer's, got up in her nightdress and went to make tea at her home in India.After she returned to her bedroom, Chadalavada went into the kitchen to find that his grandmother had left the gas on!

Chadalavada decided to invent a wearable device to help people like his grandmother.Now aged 17, Chadalavada is ready to start making the Alpha Monitor.The device, which can be worn as an armband, sets off an alarm when the wearer with Alzheimer's starts to move and warns a caregiver if the patient falls or wanders off.

Most similar devices run on Wi-Fi or Bluetooth, so when a person moves out of their frequencies' limited range the connection is lost and with it the monitoring.But the Alpha Monitor can detect a person more than a mile away in cities and three miles in the countryside thanks to the long-range technology, known as LoRa, it uses.

Teaching himself with YouTube videos about robotics and electronics, Chadalavada has developed several prototypes(模型).To understand the needs of people with Alzheimer's, he spent time in a day centre run by the Alzheimer's and Related Disorders Society of India.There, the co-founder told him that the device "had to be something light that can be worn on any part of the body".She says: "Many patients don't like having to wear a watch and they take it off."

In March, when Chadalavada's school exams are over, he will put the finishing touches to the monitor, with the aim of getting the device ready for market by September.He is confident that it should be sold at an affordable price for most people.

Chadalavada hopes to study robotics at a university abroad.His aim is simple: "I want to create products to help people in India for the whole world."

 阅读理解

The impact of technology on language is a topic that often causes concern, with many assuming that it is simply ruining it.However, language experts resist such pessimism, noting that there is little evidence to support the view that speech is getting worse.Gretchen McCulloch, in her book Because Internet, focuses on what can be learned about language from the internet rather than talking about its supposed negative effects.

McCulloch compares studying language online to growing bacteria(细菌)in a Petri dish, where trends emerge and disappear quickly, allowing language experts to observe changes that would otherwise take a considerable amount of time.The influence of strong ties like friends or family vs weaker ties on language change is analyzed, with computer simulations(模拟)revealing that having both strong and weaker ties helps spread updates in a community.

The role of social media platforms in language change is also discussed.Twitter, with its mix of strong and weak ties, is shown to drive more language change than Facebook, which is controlled by stronger ties.Emoji is highlighted as a universal digital expression of gestures, not a language.Additionally, there is evidence that the use of internet "innovations" such as "omg" dates back to pre-computer eras.

McCulloch's book focuses on the birth of a new medium rather than a new language.The rise of mass writing on the internet, characterized by frequent, error-filled, and short-lived communication, challenges traditional ideas about writing's importance.McCulloch suggests future historians should see this as a return to more casual(随意的)language, paying more attention to the value of tools that improve social interaction online.The book argues against the idea that these changes might lead to the end of "real" writing, advocating for an appreciation of anything that enhances human connect ion and the enjoyment of each other's company.

 阅读理解

Bottled water has long been marketed as a safe drink—if it doesn't come straight from a mountain spring, it's at least clean and free of chemicals.But a new study demonstrates that bottled water may not be so safe when it comes to microscopic plastic pollutants capable of passing into the bloodstream.

For years scientists have raised the alarm over microplastics, which form when plastics break down into increasingly smaller particles(微粒), ranging from five millimeters down to one micrometer.Previous studies have found that a liter of bottled water can contain tens of thousands of identifiable plastic particles.But they stopped at the one micrometer level due to technological restrictions.

The study used a new technology to find even smaller particles, and detected an average 240,000 plastic particles per liter of bottled water.About 90% of the particles were considered nanoplastics, smaller than one micrometer. Unlike microplastics, they are capable of passing through some organs like lungs into the bloodstream.From there they can stay in the heart muscle and other organs, pass into the brain, and even into the bodies of unborn babies.

So far, little research shows what nanoplastics exactly do once they enter the bloodstream.But there is much evidence that chemicals used in plastic production are bad for human health.Even if nanoplastics themselves are not deleterious, they can serve as carriers for the dangerous chemicals, increasing the risk of cancer and impacting key organs such as the heart.

"There is a huge world of nanoplastics to be studied," said the researchers.Even if nanoplastics make up 90% of the number of plastic particles found in bottled water, they make up far less in mass, they said.However, this fact provides little comfort: It's the numbers rather than mass that matter, and the smaller things are, the more readily they can get inside us.

第二部分,阅读理解,第二节(共5小题;每小题2.5分,满分12.5分)
 根据短文内容,从短文后的选项中选出能填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为多余选项。

The art of learning how to think

Learning how to think is really the whole point of going to university because it is one of the few periods in your life when you get time to do it.

Like any skill, successful thinking takes practice.The more time you spend thinking and the more ideas you come up with, the more likely it is that some of them will be good ones. Your thinking will never improve if it consists entirely of thinking how much of a failure you are.

 Geniuses generally come up with their brilliant innovations by thinking about a subject in lots of different ways and establishing connections between apparently different ideas.On the other hand, there are times when you need to know what you are supposed to be thinking about and why, and to stay reasonably focused.

If you are having trouble thinking, it may be because you lack another skill that would make it easier.It could be that you don't have a wide enough vocabulary to put your thoughts into words. If you share a house with violinists and pianists, you may have trouble hearing yourself think.

One way to sharpen this skill is to think critically about what other people are thinking.Thinking is not always something that needs to be done alone. So, if your housemates ever abandon their instruments, engage them in conversation, look for holes in their arguments, and explain your own.

If you get really good at thinking while at university, you may be able to think of a way to carry that on.

A.Proper thinking is about creating an argument.

B.It enables us to become more independent thinkers.

C.If they're all rubbish, try not to keep thinking about it.

D.And thus it saves you actually doing anything once you leave.

E.You may also be in the wrong environment for productive thought.

F.Having a one-track mind won't improve your power of thinking anyway.

G.In fact, communicating your thoughts can help to develop and clarify them.

第三部分,语言运用,第一节(共15小题;每小题1分,满分15分)
第三部分,语言运用,第二节(共10小题;每小题1.5分,满分15分)
 阅读下面材料,在空白处填入适当的内容(1个单词)或括号内单词的正确形式。

What did you have for dinner Tuesday night of last week? If someone (ask)you that question Wednesday morning, you would (possible)have had no problem recalling what you had for dinner the night before.

But as days pass, the memories of all the other meals you (eat)since then start to interfere(干扰)with your memory of that one particular meal.This is a good example of  psychologists call the interference theory of forgetting.Forgetting is the result of (vary)memories interfering with one another.The more similar two or more events are  one another, the more likely interference will occur.

Getting rid of interference altogether is impossible, but there are a few things you can do to minimize its effects.One of the best things you can do is rehearse(排练)new information in order to better commit it to memory.In fact, many experts recommend overlearning important information,  involves rehearsing the material over and over again until it can be reproduced perfectly with no errors.Another strategy for fighting interference is to switch up your routine and avoid (study)similar material back to back.Sleep also plays an essential role in memory (form).Sleeping after you learn something new is  efficient way to turn new memories into lasting ones.

第四部分,写作(共两节,满分40分)
 阅读下面材料,根据其内容和所给段落开头语续写两段,使之构成一篇完整的短文。

I worked at a local station of the Berlin fire department.We got an alert(警报)around 8:25 pm that Friday and rushed to the fire engine, where the printout from the dispatcher(调度员)said there was a nine-year-old boy locked in a safe.

I asked myself: if it were a safe, would it be airtight? I was aware that it might already be too late by the time we arrived.I had to plan for a bad outcome.On the other hand, if we were in time, how long would it take us to open the safe? I knew it would be an incredibly difficult task.It's what safes are designed for—not to be opened.

It took less than five minutes to reach the property.When I saw a woman crying on the street, I knew the situation was serious.She was the boy's mother and she led us into the basement.She told us the boy was alive and we started talking to him; he was very calm.We asked how it had happened: during a game of hide and seek with his five-year-old brother, he had thought the safe would be a good place to hide.

The boy's parents had got the house from his mother's father.The unlocked safe had been there when they moved in and was in an area they didn't use much.The boy's little brother had shut the safe, then, when he couldn't open it again.The only person who knew the combination was the boy's late grandfather.

From the outset, the biggest priority was getting oxygen to the boy.We got oxygen from the hospital.The boy said that he could feel a thin stream of air.I asked his parents if anyone had opened the safe before and they said no.So we had to guess a six-digit code(密码).We started typing them in—but we had to wait 10 minutes between each attempt before we could try again. So quickly we tried them all.No luck.

注意:1.续写词数应为150左右;2.请按如下格式在答题卷的相应位置作答。

We were fully prepared at this point to open the safe by force, starting with a drill.

……

Then, just as we started to make the first cut, my workmate typed in the correct code.

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