新疆师范大学附属中学2022届高三上学期一模仿真训练(四)英语试题 WORD版含答案.doc
- 1.请仔细阅读文档,确保文档完整性,对于不预览、不比对内容而直接下载带来的问题本站不予受理。
- 2.下载的文档,不会出现我们的网址水印。
- 3、该文档所得收入(下载+内容+预览)归上传者、原创作者;如果您是本文档原作者,请点此认领!既往收益都归您。
下载文档到电脑,查找使用更方便
7 0人已下载
| 下载 | 加入VIP,免费下载 |
- 配套讲稿:
如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。
- 特殊限制:
部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。
- 关 键 词:
- 新疆师范大学附属中学2022届高三上学期一模仿真训练四英语试题 WORD版含答案 新疆 师范大学 附属中学 2022 届高三 上学 模仿 训练 英语试题 WORD 答案
- 资源描述:
-
1、新疆师大附中2022届高三年级一模仿真训练四英语试卷测试时间:100分钟 全卷满分:150分第一部分阅读理解(共两节,满分40分)第一节(共15小题;每小题2分,满分30分)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。A Canadian journeys Travel brings the joy of new worlds, different ways of living, art, and storytelling over shared meals. Often we seek travel in a foreign country to brighten ou
2、r life this way. But over the past decades, Canadian hosts have developed exceptional experiences that explore geography and diverse cultures closer to home. At Maple Leaf Adventures, weve been part of that evolution(演变) of travel on the West Coast. We design locally run and environmentally consciou
3、s trips that are off the beaten track. The following are some short getaways and longer journeys weve developed to take you away from everyday life and into the magicof discovering beauty, ideas and joy in attractive places.Wild BC Coastal Summer These 5-to-9-day trips along the wild outer coast exp
4、lore whales and other marine mammals(海洋哺乳动物),and the remote beaches and rainforest inlets that make British Columbia (BC) an impressive nature getaway. Every July and August, charging $4, 500 per person plus taxes.Great Bear Rainforest These 5-to-9-day trips explore the fjords(峡湾)and islands of the
5、worlds largest temperate rainforest. Highlights include bears, coastal wolves, whales and new research uncovering their wonders. Every spring, summer and fall, charging $5,300 per person plus taxes.Salish Sea Culinary(烹饪的)Adventures Explore the breadth of BC food, drinks, people and places through t
6、hese 5-day culinary adventures in the beautiful southern Vancouver Island / Salish Sea region. Every October, charging $3, 200 per person plus taxes.Haida Gwaii These 8-day adventures explore the breadth of Haida Gwaii, from ancient to modern, north to south, rainforest to outer islands, including a
7、 week in Gwaii Haanas, a place of some well-known Haida village sites. Typically, each spring and summer, charging $6,950 per person plus taxes.21. Who might be the author of the text?A. A villager from Gwaii Haanas. B. A tourist traveling on the West Coast. C. A travel agent of Maple Leaf Adventure
8、s. D. A Canadian working in a foreign country.22. What do we know about the tour of Great Bear Rainforest? A. It is available in all seasons except winter. B. It is especially designed for bear lovers. C. It provides food and drinks for free. D. It charges no taxes.23. Of the following trips, which
9、one would cost a tourist the least? A. Haida Gwaii. B. Great Bear Rainforest. C. Wild BC Coastal Summer. D. Salish Sea Culinary Adventures.BFor as long as I can remember, Ive been coming up with ambitious little business ideas. The Eco Denim Movement is the fourth business Ive founded. Last year, I
10、built this business on three strong passions of mine: business, op-shopping and saving our world. Recently, I did a project on the cotton industry and found out some true facts in the production phases of cotton. I couldnt believe that a single pair of jeans took around 10,000 litres of water to pro
11、duce. My project promotes slow fashion and encourages people to purchase my used and repurposed denim(斜纹粗棉布). The denim industry is one of the biggest water consumers in our world-there are 2.7 billion people in our world currently facing water scarcity(缺乏). Every year, the denim industry uses over
12、12 trillion litres of water. This is enough to supply each of those 2.7 billion people with 4 years worth of water. Reselling denim, which has already made it through the water-draining production stages, means that with every purchase of secondhand jeans over brand new ones we are saving 10,000 lit
13、res of valuable water. Ive sourced denim from my family, friends and op-shops all over Adelaide-the capital city of the state of South Australia. But the most difficult part about starting my business as a girl was that there were a lot of expenses involved in starting up: buying all the pieces of d
14、enim, getting all the equipment required for my business, and purchasing my website domain(域名). However, that didnt stop me. No one is ever too young to start a business. So many people feel like they are not skilled enough or dont have the brains to start a business, but thats not true! All you nee
15、d to start a successful business is ambition and a whole lot of passion.24. How did the fact mentioned in paragraph 1 make the author feel?A. Ashamed. B. Confused. C. Shocked. D. Relieved.25. What do the figures in paragraph 2 suggest?A. The popularity of slow fashion. B. Different methods of saving
16、 water. C. Huge profits from selling used jeans. D. The significance of reselling denim.26. What was a major headache for the author while starting her business? A. The tight budget. B. The source of denim. C. Her lack of practical experience. D. Bitter opposition from her family.27. What can we say
17、 about the author? A. She is a girl of determination. B. She is too young to do business. C. She shows no interest in shopping. D. She is a kind-hearted and generous girl.CHuman laughter is common, but its a somewhat unexplained part of our evolution. Its clear to evolutionary scholars that we laugh
18、 as a part of play, signaling our cooperation or friendliness. But how did laughter evolve? And are humans the only ones who do it? Not a chance: Animals laugh too, researchers have observed. In a new article published in the journal Bioacoustics, Sasha Winkler, a graduate student from UCLA and Greg
19、 Bryant, a professor of communication at UCLA, take a closer look at the phenomenon of laughter across the animal kingdom. The pair examined the existing scientific literature on animal play behavior, looking for mentions of vocal(声音的)play signals-or what might be thought of as laughter. They found
20、such vocal play behavior documented in at least 65 species. That list includes a variety of primates(灵长类动物), domestic cows and dogs, foxes, and seals, as well as three bird species. This work lays out nicely how a phenomenon once thought to be particularly human turns out to be closely tied to behav
21、ior shared with species separated from humans by tens of millions of years, Bryant said. The researchers looked for information on whether the animal vocalizations were recorded as loud or quiet, short or long, a single call or a rhythmic pattern-seeking known features of play sounds. Theres much ex
22、isting documentation of play-based body language among animals, such as what is known as play face in primates or play bows in dogs, the researchers noted. Since what makes up play in much of the animal kingdom seems savage behavior in some ways, which often looks like fighting, play sounds can help
23、 emphasize non-aggression during such physical moments, the article suggests.While Winkler and Bryant say that further observation and research into vocalizations would be fruitful, they also note that such observations can be hard to come by in the wild, especially for animals whose play sounds mig
24、ht be quieter. Paying attention to other species in this way helps to explain the form and function of human laughter, the researchers write, and helps us to better understand the evolution of human social behavior.28. Which question does the author try to answer in the text?A. Can animals understan
25、d human laughter?B. How did laughter evolve?C. Why do humans laugh?D. Do animals laugh?29. What have Winkler and Bryant found? A. Primates have unique ways to hunt. B. Animals laugh more than humans do. C. Many animals can make play sounds. D. Birds tend to be more active than dogs.30. What does the
26、 underlined word savage in paragraph 4 probably mean? A. Friendly. B. Violent. C. Illegal. D. Individual.31. What is the main purpose of this text? A. To report a research result. B. To encourage readers to laugh a lot. C. To give a brief introduction of primates. D. To discuss the human-animal rela
27、tionship.DCengiz Ozek sits at his desk in the poorly lit back office of his shadow theater near Taksim Square in central Istanbul. The theater is one of the last in operation in the city. He holds a piece of camel leather, a sheet of paper with some drawings on it, and a small cutter. In front of hi
28、m are a few bottles of paints that he will use to create jointed puppets(皮影人偶). Ozek, one of the most influential contemporary Turkish puppeteers, hopes to appeal to a younger audience and boost the culture of Turkish shadow theater. “There might be around 50 people, more or less, who do shadow thea
29、ter in Turkey today, but only five or six of them are real professionals who are completely devoted to it, says Ozek while he works on a figure of Karagoz, the most famous figure in Turkish shadow theater-so famous is the character that the art itself is often called Karagoz. To date, scholars have
展开阅读全文
课堂库(九科星学科网)所有资源均是用户自行上传分享,仅供网友学习交流,未经上传用户书面授权,请勿作他用。
链接地址:https://www.ketangku.com/wenku/file-346715.html


鄂教版七年级语文下册第8课《诗两首》精题精练.doc
