山东省蓬莱第二中学2021-2022学年高二英语下学期期末模拟考试试题(Word版附答案).doc
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- 山东省 蓬莱 第二 中学 2021 2022 学年 英语 学期 期末 模拟考试 试题 Word 答案
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1、高二英语期末考试模拟试题(全国新卷)第二部分 阅读(共两节,满分50分)第一节 (共 15小题;每小题 2.5分,满分 37.5分)阅读下列短文,从每题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中选出最佳选项。ASchaumburg District 54, a school district in Schaumburg, Illino, has implemented a happiness curriculum.A key component of the curriculum is gratitude, where students develop four habits that take up j
2、ust 21 minutes each day through exercises and learn to be thankful for not what they may want, but what makes them happy right now. And the four happiness habits are listed.Two minutes of emailingWrite a two-minute maximum email each day praising or thanking a different person in your life. Not only
3、do you often receive positive emails back, but this habit significantly increases your social connection, which is the greatest predictor of long-term happiness and is also as predictive of how long you will live as obesity or high blood pressure.Fifteen minutes of movementFifteen minutes of movemen
4、t each day can be the equal of taking an antidepressant, and acts as a gateway drug because people who do this start adding on entire groups of positive habits.Two minutes of meditation(冥想)Two minutes of meditation-simply watching your breath go in and out -improves accuracy on tasks by 10 percent,
5、significantly reduces stress, improves sleep and raises engagement scores.Two minutes of journalTwo minutes of journal about a positive, meaningful experience each day can significantly decrease pain symptoms and stress and increase the amount of meaning you feel in your life. Simply think of one me
6、aningful event that happened over the past 24 hours and then on a sheet of paper, write down some details you can remember, which is called “Doubler”. Your brain struggles to tell the difference between visualization and actual experience, so you are doubling a meaningful event each day.121. What do
7、es the new curriculum focus on?A. Being grateful. B. Being energetic. C. Physical health. D. Interpersonal relationship.22. Which habit promote you to develop good habits?A. Two minutes of journal. B. Two minutes of emailing.C. Two minutes of meditation. D. Fifteen minutes of movement.23. What is th
8、e benefit of keeping a diary?A. Improving sleep.C. Gaining insight into life.B. Boosting optimism.D. Increasing social connection.BIf you live in Shanghai, you might have to take a lesson in sorting garbage, as the city recently introducednew garbage-sorting regulations. Its now required that people
9、 should sort garbage into four categories, namely recyclable, harmful, dry and wet waste. However, if people fail to sort their garbage properly, they can be fined up to 200 yuan. More cities are introducing similar regulations, following the practice in Shanghai. By the end of 2020, garbage-sorting
10、 systems will have been built in 46 major Chinese cities, including Beijing and Shenzhen, reported Peoples Daily.According to a study by the Policy Research Center for Environment and Economy, under the Ministry ofEcology and Environment, over 90 percent of the public believe that garbage sorting is
11、 important for the protection of the environment. However, garbage sorting is still a big problem in China. Only 30 percent of participants said they think they are adequately sorting their trash, the study noted.According to Xinhua News Agency, its partly because many people lack the willingness to
12、 sort their ownwaste, In the past. Some previous garbage regulations didnt give clear fines for people who failed to sort garbage. Its a must to have a legal guarantee to promote garbage sorting. Liu Jianguo, a professor from Tsinghua University, told China Daily. He also added the importance of the
13、 new regulations in Shanghai is to change the past voluntary action into compulsory action for everyone.Aside from China, many other foreign countries have also introduced garbage-sorting regulations. In Japan,waste sorting has become a basic survival skill, reported Xinhua. There is a fixed time fo
14、r disposal of each kind of garbage and littering can result in high fines and even jail time. In Germany too, people are asked to sort waste into specific categories, reported HuffPost. For example, in Berlin, people have yellow bins for plastic2and metals and blue bins for paper and cardboard.24. W
15、hat can we learn from paragraph 1?A. All the cities use the same regulations as Shanghai.B. Shanghai works as a pioneer in garbage sorting.C. Poisonous waste belongs to four categories in sorting.D. People will be fined not less than 200 yuan.25. Which statement is true according to the passage?A. N
16、ot all the public attach importance to garbage sorting.B. Garbage-sorting system have been built in 46 major cities.C. People may be put in prison because of littering in Germany.D. People arent fined clearly if they fail to sort garbage now.26. What can be inferred from Liu Jianguos words?A. The so
17、rting action should be changed from compulsory to voluntary.B. He thinks highly of the legal regulations in garbage sorting.C. There is a growing concern over garbage sorting worldwide.D. Legal guarantee is a must to promote garbage sorting.27. Which of the following can be the best title for the te
18、xt?A. Regulations Are of Great Importance B. Shanghai Puts Garbage-sorting Into PracticeC. Cities Get Serious About Waste D. Garbage Is Hard to Recycle AppropriatelyCWe use what is known as inner speech, where we talk to ourselves, to evaluate situations and make decisions. Now, a robot has been tra
19、ined to speak aloud its inner decision-making process, giving us a view of how it responds to contradictory demands.Arianna Pipitone and Antonio Chella at the University of Palermo, Italy, programmed a humanoid robotnamed Pepper, with software that models human cognitive processes, which allowed Pep
20、per to search for. relevant information from its memory and find the correct way to act based on human commands, as well as a text-to speech processor. It allowed Pepper to voice its decision-making process while completing a task, “With3inner speech, we can better understand what the robot wants to
21、 do and what its plan is,” says Chella.The researchers asked Pepper to set a dinner table according to etiquette(礼仪) rules they had programmedinto the robot. Inner speech was either enabled or disabled to see how it affected Peppers ability to do what was instructed.When instructed to place a napkin
22、 on a fork with its inner speech coabled, Pepper asked itself what theetiquette required and concluded that this request went against the rules it had been given. It then asked the researchers if putting the napkin on the fork was the correet action. When told it was, Pepper said “OK, I prefer to fo
23、llow your desire,” and explained how it was going to place the napkin on the fork.When asked to do the same task with inner speech disabled, Pepper knew this contradicted etiquette rules,so it didnt perform the task or explain why.With the potential for robots to become more common in the future, th
24、is type of programming could helpthe public understand their abilities and limitations, says Sarah Sebo at the University of Chicago. “It maintains peoples trust and enables cooperation and interactions between humans and robots,” she says.However, this experiment only used a single human participan
25、t, says Sebo. “Its unclear how their approachwould compare across a wide range of human participants,” she says.28. Why does the author mention how people make decisions in the first paragraph?A. To introduce the topic. B. To provide background information.C. To give an example. D. To arouse readers
26、 interest.29. How did Pepper react to the contradictory instruction with its inner speech enabled?A. It failed to complete the task. B. It obeyed the etiquette rules.C. It made a random decision. D. It communicated with the researchers.30. What did Sarah Sebo think of the research?A. It was creative
27、 but worthless in daily life.C. It was inspiring but needed further evidence.31. Which of the following is the best title for the text?B. It was a meaningful try but the result was a failure.D. It was perfectly designed but poorly performed.A. Robot Taught To Be Polite To Humans as ProgrammedB. Robo
28、t Able To Explain Its Decision-making ProcessC. Robot Making Decisions Faces Great Challenges4D. Robot-Human Communication: Soon to Be RealizedDOn a dark night, 11-year-old Joe was playing hide-and-seek with his friends in the backyard when he thought he saw Magellana huge housecat. However, when th
29、e cat suddenly jumped on his head, Joe found it turned out a young cougar. He backed away from the animal, then turned and ran inside the house.Cougar encounters like this one are becoming increasingly common in the U.S. Most people assume thatsbecause cougar populations are growing, or because the
30、big cats are coming into closer contact with the expanding web of human suburbs. But Professor Robert Wielgus at Washington State University argues that poorly designed hunting policies might be causing an increase in cougar-human conflicts.Wielguss research teams have been fitting the big cats with
31、 radio collars and monitoring their movements.They find that the cougar population is actually declining rapidly and almost no male cougars are over four years of age. And a study shows that the heavily hunted area has five times as many cougar complaints as the lightly hunted areaeven though the de
32、nsity of cougars is about the same in both areas.Wielgus suspects that hunting policies, which allow older males to be killed to keep cougar populations incheck, were the culprit and teenage cougars in the heavily hunted area may be responsible for most of the trouble. To test his theory, he adds tw
33、o more groups of cougars to the tracking programone in a heavily hunted area and another in a comparable but lightly hunted area. He concludes that heavy hunting indeed almost wipes out older males and the population structure in the heavily hunted area shifts toward younger animals.With these findi
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