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四川省部分名校2022-2023学年高三下学期期末教学质量检测英语试题(音频暂未更新)

作者UID:14438328
日期: 2025-01-07
期末考试
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

May 18th is International Museum Day. Let's take a look at some of the strangest museums around the world. 

Giant Shoe Museum

Located in the famous Pike Place Market of Seattle, the Giant Shoe Museum is a single exhibit wall located on the outside of the Old Seattle Paperworks store and brings a lot of business to the shop as a result. A variety of giant shoes include a size 37 shoe worn by the world's tallest man, a real clown shoe and the world's largest collection of giant shoes. 

Washington Banana Museum 

Ann Mitchell Lovell really loves bananas. In fact, she loves them enough to not only run the Washington Banana Museum, which features almost 4,000 items related to the world's best-selling fruit, but to also upload photos of her favorite items from the museum online so those who can't make it to the physical location can still enjoy the virtual Banana Museum. 

Roswell UFO Museum 

Visitors can ask as many questions as possible about the Roswell incident of 1947, and know about what was spotted in the sky that fateful night. Exhibits include information on the event, crop circles, other UFO sightings, Area 51, and so on. Regardless of your personal opinion about UFOs, there's no denying that the museum has been quite successful. Since it opened its doors in 1992, it has outgrown two different locations, and now occupies an old movie theater. 

Beijing Tap Water Museum 

One of the key ingredients you need to make ramen is water, so when you're done with weird (怪异的) museums in Japan, maybe you should head to China to learn more about tap water, specifically the history of the first water plant in Beijing. Here you can study over 300 items to better familiarize yourself with the 100-year-old history of tap water in China. The best thing about this museum is that any of its drinking fountains can provide you with an enduring souvenir of your trip. 

 阅读理解

Good Morning Britain (GMB) launches special "listening benches" in order to solve loneliness. EastEnders star Maisie Smith joined Susanna and Martin in the studio to talk about her involvement in a special part of the 1 Million Minutes campaign —GMB's special "listening benches" across the country.

Six special "listening benches" have been designed by six celebrities, and can be found in six cities across the UK—and they're in place to encourage people to strike up a conversation. Maisie joined the show to share why the campaign is important to her.

"I'm always very open about mental health," Maisie explained. "It doesn't matter who you are, where you're from, what you have—everyone is going through something and I just think the world would be a kinder place if everyone understood that."

"I think especially growing up in the limelight(引人注目)as a teenager, you're very judgemental of yourself when you do see comments of other people judging you. It can add to the stress of the things you're already going through. I think people do think I'm confident because I cover my nerves with a big smile and that's what I've been doing in my whole life."

Susanna asked Maisie if she had a technique for dealing with her nerves. "It depends on what it is," said Maisie. "A lot of the time— and it's going to sound really stupid—but I write a script. I write down all of the questions that I could be asked and try to come up with something so that my brain won't go blank when I'm under pressure."

 阅读理解

Many people try to make society change for the better. The real challenge is how to get good solutions to scale up(按比例放大)for major change. New research suggests that social change may depend on the relationship between beneficial behaviors and policies.

The research, conducted by the University of Maine, University of Vermont and Université Laval in Quebec, Canada, attempted to understand how society can accomplish major, transformative social change, particularly the kind of social change necessary to solve the growing problem of climate change.

The researchers studied a behavior that benefits groups, but does not spread without policy support, such as a costly measure to relieve the effects of climate change. They created a mathematical model, which simulates(模拟)a society where agents live in groups and adopt the beneficial behavior of peers. That behavior, given the right conditions, can spread like viral, but not if the institutional costs are too high.

"Large-scale social change is not just policy or behavior, but the emergence of a new self-reinforcing(自我强化)system that combines both. This allows us to ask new questions, such as ‘how would a new pattern of behavior and policy spread?'" says Laurent Hébert-Dufresne, lead author of the study.

The results showed that both behavioral change and policy change are required to achieve large-scale social change—and that they need to happen together. Though neither can get the job done on its own, policy change is especially critical. They found that sometimes the beneficial behavior can spread too far. In some cases, the spread of behavior beyond groups with supporting policy can reduce its perceived success and slow the spread of the policy, thereby limiting beneficial social change overall.

In future research, the team aims to apply these types of models to all sorts of beneficial social change, particularly the challenge of tackling climate change.

 阅读理解

The area of tropical forest destroyed in 2021 was enough to cover the entire island of Cuba, and sent more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere as India does in an entire year from burning fossil fuels, according to an analysis published on Thursday.

Some 11.1 million hectares(around 43,000 square miles)of forest was destroyed, mainly by logging(伐木)as well as fires, the analysis by the World Resources Institute's Global Forest Watch and the University of Maryland found. Some of those fires were deliberately lit to clear land and many were deteriorated by climate change.

The loss was less severe than that in 2020, but deforestation(毁林)is still occurring at an alarming rate in the tropics. Of the area lost, 3.75 million hectares were primary tropical forest at the equivalent of 10 soccer fields every minute, WRI reported.

Primary tropical forests in particular are crucial for the ecological balance of the planet, providing oxygen that supports life and as biodiversity hotspots. They are also rich in stored carbon, and when these forests are logged or burned, they release carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, contributing to global warming.

"What's important to understand is that forests, especially tropical forests, are part of the global climate system," WRI senior fellow Frances Seymour told CNN. "So they're not mechanical carbon storage devices. They actually influence the energy transfer and the moisture content of the atmosphere in ways that affect rainfall and global circulation patterns."

"When deforestation happens, when forests are lost, it not only contributes carbon to the atmosphere, but also disrupts rainfall patterns and increases local temperatures in some ways. For example, it makes remaining forests more vulnerable to fire and the warmer, drier conditions that come with climate change," Seymour said.

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。

In stressful times, the art of making people laugh could help to relieve pressure. We all know that laughter is the best medicine.  It creates physical changes in your body that accelerate healing and protect you from harm. Scientists tell us that people who can laugh at their own misfortunes bounce back faster and stronger.

If you have trouble seeing the funny side of your own failures, then you might find some useful advice in the story of a friend of mine, who developed an unpleasant reaction to garlic for which his doctor prescribed(开处方)a short course of ointment(药膏)and suppositories(栓剂).

After a few minutes, the chemist, standing at the far back of the shop, shouted at the top of her voice, "I've got your ointment, but I'll have to order your suppositories!"

Following a short yet strongly uncomfortable silence, she came forwards to the counter and said, "" "Yes, you did," was my friend's quiet reply. I asked him how he was able to see the funny side of such an embarrassing incident and he said, "If I was standing in the shop and this had happened to someone else, it would have been funny. "

Laughing at yourself doesn't make you a fool. It makes you strong, confident and self-assured. We all make mistakes; we all forget, trip, take wrong turns. They cannot learn and will repeat the same mistakes, over and over again.


A. Sorry, I shouted that, didn't I?

B. Sorry, you didn't hear what I shouted, did you?

C. So it's no less funny, just because it happened to me.

D. When someone denies a mistake, they become proud.

E. He took the prescription to the drug store and waited patiently.

F. The feeling you get when you feel bad about a mistake is embarrassment.

G. There is much scientific research proving that laughter does more than cheer you up.

完形填空(共20小题;每小题1.5分,满分30分)
 阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的A、B、C和D四个选项中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。

Liz Woodward was on her midnight shift at the Route 130 Diner located in Delran, New Jersey. At around 5 in the morning, she noticed two 1 come into the diner. When she asked what they 2 , they asked for their "biggest" cup of coffee.

The poor firefighters, Tim and Paul, looked 3 . A nearby warehouse was on fire. It was one of the biggest 4  of the news that day. She 5  that the two men came from their shift. She knew they had a 6  night.

After helping with the fire for 12 long hours, they badly needed coffee. When they asked for the 7 , the two men were surprised when they saw a note. The note 8 , "Your breakfast is on me today. Thank you for all that you do, for 9 others and for running into the places everyone else runs away from." As it 10 , their waitress, Liz Woodward, heard everything, and she was so grateful for the 11 of the front-liners that she 12 to take care of their bill.

Touched by the waitress' 13 , Tim decided to post it on social media, and it went viral. What they didn't expect was that Liz, 14 needed help. Tim and Paul 15 a GoFundMe page that Liz had started a year before. It was for her father, Steve, who was badly ill. They needed a custom 16 , a wheel-chair accessible van(面包车).

When the 17 became viral, more people donated to the GoFundMe account. A famous maker of the vehicle they wanted 18 a MV-1 to Steve! Liz and her family couldn't believe how her simple act of kindness created a chain of 19 events. For Liz, she was just thankful that there are people who would devote their lives to serving the country and its people. She didn't expect anything 20 but got so much for her kindness anyway.

语法填空(共10小题;每小题1.5分,满分15分)
 阅读下面短文,在空白处填入1个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。

NASA is planning its first-ever mission to bring dirt and rocks from Mars back to Earth, but before that historical event happens, the space agency has to figure out (exact)how to protect our home planet from any alien microbes(微生物)that might come along.

This week, the agency is holding public meetings and looking for feedback on its plan (land)a spacecraft carrying Martian specimens at a U. S. Air Force testing range in Utah in the early 2030s.

"Maybe this is the most important environment al (assess)that humans have ever done," says Peter Doran, a geologist at Louisiana State University who studies life in extreme environments. Having a rock sample from Mars here on Earth would let researchers run detailed lab tests to look for evidence of this cold, harsh, rocky world was once habitable(可居住的)or maybe even inhabited.

For researchers, this is long-held dream. Discussion about such a miss ion (go)on for decades, and it will take billions of dollars to accomplish. Until recently, there hasn't been a lot of focus on the details of the sample return facility because (science)didn't think it was going to happen.

NASA officials are working out a plan to safely collect the samples: A spacecraft would land on Mars and launch a container full of the previously (collect)rock samples into orbit around the planet. Once in orbit, this container could be swallowed by another container— a big fish eating a little fish—to keep anything that had touched Mars in-side and then it would (seal).

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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