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全国乙卷大联考英语试题(音频暂未更新)

作者UID:9673734
日期: 2024-11-12
高考模拟
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)
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)
阅读理解(共15小题,每小题2分,满分30分)
阅读理解

UNDERGRADUATE APPLICATIONS

We are committed to making the admissions process as smooth as possible for our applicants.

Live chat available Monday-Friday (excluding public holidays) 9 am-5 pm.

Please email all queries(询问)toadmissions@keele. ac. uk.

Applications for all undergraduate courses at Keele should be made online through UCAS.

UCAS stands for the Universities and Colleges Admissions Service. It is the charitable(慈善的) organization through which applications to universities in the UK are processed. By completing a UCAS application, you can apply for up to five courses at a single university or different institutions. You will be charged a small application fee.

●Your application should include:

●Your personal details and qualifications. Your course choices

●A personal statement

●A reference from a teacher, adviser or professional who knows you academically Keele UCAS Code

The UCAs code for Keele is K12.

UCAS APPLICATION DEADLINE DATES

15 October—Deadline for applications for Medicine and Veterinary Medicine courses is 15 October.

15 January—To guarantee" equal consideration" of your application you must submit your application to UCAS by 18:00(GMT) on 15 January. "Equal consideration" means your application will be reviewed in the same way as all other applications received by this deadline. However, for the majority of our courses, we welcome applications after this date, please see our A-ZUG listing for more details.

11 February—"UCAS Extra" opens.

30 June—Last date to apply to UCAS in the "Main Cycle". Applications submitted after this date will automatically be entered into Clearing.

Please also see UCAS Key Dates for more information.

阅读理解

We don't know the exact number of dead insects in the collection at the Natural History Museum in London, but it's more than 34 million.

Our collections, for me, are a place of wonder, The specimens(标本) they contain are the biological heritage of the planet: Splendid to look at and packed with genetic information about the past. Some have come to us from across the globe, and make me feel how small I am, as part of nature.

The insect collection stretches back hundreds of years. For example, we have a robber fly caught in 1680 by the queen's gardener at Hampton Court Palace. near London.

Flies are my focus. Not only are they amazingly diverse, but they're cute. We've got stalk-eyed flies; flies that are lousy then a millimetre in sizes and my favourites, Mallophora robber flies, which look like massive bumble-bees and are highly poisonous. I also have a soft spot for botflies, one species of which matures in camels' noses.

The collection isn'tstatic; there's so much research going on. We're always updating the system of naming the in sect so raisin s evolutionary family trees and describing new species.

The museum lends specimens by post, and we host not just scientists, but visitors such as designers looking for inspiration. We're also trying to digitize the entire collection so that anyone can access it.

I'm working with Mara Lawniczak at the Well come Sanger Institute in Hinxton, UK. We're trying to recover genomes(基因组) from mosquito samples collected over the past century. In the past, people would cut off legs or destroy whole specimens—which fills a director like me with terror. Instead, we are washing the specimens with chemical solutions to obtain DNA. Genetic analysis will help us to distinguish between old mosquito specimens that look similar, and to learn how populations have changed.

阅读理解

In today's throwaway society, it's all too easy to buy goods as and when we need them and simply bin them once they've served their purpose, and a surprising amount of perfectly usable stuff ends up as waste—and it's not just what we can see in the bin either.

When we throw away a product—be it a toy, a T-shirt or a tomato we're wasting more than the product and the money we spent on it, we're wasting all the effort that went into it growing it or mining the materials to make it, manufacturing it, packaging it for sale, and transporting it to the shop or to our door, for example, a cheeseburger has a carbon footprint of around 10 kg CO2eq. That's 30 times higher than its weight. 98% of a cheeseburger's total carbon impact actually comes from its production. Its waste impact accounts for just 2%. Similarly, despite weighing just io9 grams on average, the waste footprint of a smartphone is more than 500 times higher at a massive 8o kg. I hat s including the waste generated in mining materials to make it, like precious metals, but doesn't even include emissions(排放) generated in the manufacturing process.

In Scotland, 80% of carbon footprint comes from all the goods, materials and services which we produce, use and often throw out after just one use. What's more, around half of those emissions are produced overseas in countries poorer and more polluting than Scotland. Not good news.

There are signs of hope. More and more people are beginning to realize how serious this waste is and to use that knowledge to inform our purchases. We need to face the wastefulness of our consumer culture, but we have a mountain to climb.

阅读理解

Risky play gives children a feeling of thrill and excitement. Risk is an essential component of a balanced childhood. Exposure to healthy risks, particularly physical, enables children to experience fear, and learn the strengths and limitations of their own body.

For this generation of children, always from scheduled soft play, to school, to club, to sofa, we've got a lot of work to do. As parents, many of us are unused to allowing even the tiniest degree of danger to enter the lives of our children. Surely it's the job of a good parent to keep them safe. That's why roaming-distance—how far children play from home—has decreased by 90% in the past 30 years. We are a nation of stubborn helicopter parents managing a schedule of activities and waiting below our children on the monkey bars in case they should slip. It's no wonder that the virtual risk of computer games is so appealing and addictive-—the real world seems rather mild in comparison.

So how can we put some of that danger and excitement back into the lives of our children?

The answer is step by step and in an age appropriate way. First, the outdoors is key. Outdoors time every day is essential, and don't just head to the neat and controlled environment of the play area.

Permit your primary-age children to leave your sight. Risky sports are a reasonably controlled way to allow your children to feel fear. Horse riding or skiing might be expensive, but what about skateboarding, tree-climbing or rock-climbing? Your child could fall at some stage, and they will probably feel out of control一but wow, they'll feel alive. Water, too, is essential healthy risk. Let them climb in streams, slide in mud and fall over in the sea wearing all their clothes. Your job as an adult is to manage the risk.

任务型阅读(共5小题,每小题2分,满分10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。

You may have witnessed this yourself, but I know when I'm walking outdoors or walking in a green environment, I feel less stressed, a sense of calm. And the walk doesn't need to be a major hike nor for hours on end.

Listen carefully to hear the birds singing and the wind rustling(沙沙作响) in the leaves of the trees or hear the running water.Keep yourself from listening to music on this particular walk. You should be sure to have all your senses available to hear the sounds of nature.

Look at the variations of the color green in the forest or colors within the body of the water you are experiencing. How many different shapes of leaves do you see? Are there waves in the water you are viewing or is the water still and calm?

When you're outside—whether it's in a forest, on a beach or simply outside your home-take a moment to breathe in deeply, smelling and tasting the air; place your hands on a tree or a finger in the water to experience the feel of nature.

It is a combination of all these senses you have opened by participating in this experience.

If you cannot go outdoors-either due to the time of day or night, weather or physical limitations—there are options to still gain this experience.  It is best to experience forest bathing in person, but it's always good to have a second option.

A. The last sense is the state of mind.

B. The green forest is the best place for walking.

C. Log onto a video or look for apps with views of forests or oceans.

D. Make sure to take notice of the shape, color and size of your surroundings.

E. If you are walking alone, it is more likely that all your senses can be activated.

F. A 10- to 15-minute walk can help with your mood and psychological well-being.

G. If walking on sand near the water, listen to the sand surrounding your footsteps.

完形填空(共20小题,每小题1.5分,满分30分)
语法填空(10小题,每小题1.5分,满分15分)
短文改错(共10小题,每小题1分,满分10分)
书面表达(满分25分)
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