广东省汕头市金山中学2022-2023学年高三英语上学期第二次月考试卷(Word版含答案).doc
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1、汕头市金山中学2023届高三第一学期第二次月考英 语本试卷共8页,满分120分。考试用时120分钟。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。ASkillshare is a video lesson app which has become highly popular nowadays. It will likely appealmore to older kids (age 14+) since classes focus primarily on professional dev
2、elopment with topics likedigital design,technology and marketing. There are also plenty of art and music classes for morecreative learners. Read the developers privacy policy for details on how your kids information iscollected,used and shared,and any choices you may have in the matter,and this priv
3、acy policy appliesto all users.What is it about?Skillshare has a large database of online lessons taught by industry experts. Kids can search for aclass by topic or by entering key words. Each class contains a series of video lessons that are taught asa lecture. Some classes have only a few lessons,
4、while others have 10 or more. In fact,one guitar classhas more than 100 lessons. Many classes include projects,and most end with a brief Final Thoughtslesson to sum up the class content. Theres a review section where users can leave advice. Kids canwatch the lessons within that class directly from t
5、he app. They can also save classes to watch later,andany classes they begin are automatically saved to a watch list. Many classes are offered in the freeversion of the app,and a paid version gives users access to a much more extensive class list-more than28,000 lessons.Is it any good?All the teacher
6、s in the app are passionate about their work,so its an excellent way to foster thesame passion in your kids,as long as there is a genuine interest in the content being offered.What kind of membership are you interested in?1 month6 months12 months36 months$14.99 per month$12,99 per month$10.99 per mo
7、nth$6.99 per monthYou can cancel any time.Email address for contact:skillsharegdpr-21The passage is intended for .Akids Bparents Cteachers Dindustry experts22How much should you pay monthly for an annual membership?A$14.99. B$12.99. C$10.99. D$6.99.23What can we learn from the passage?ASkillshare al
8、lows curious older kids to learn at their own pace. BThe privacy policy is limited to the registered members of Skillshare. CSubscribers can only cancel the order within one month of its purchase. DEach class has more than 100 career-related lessons in the Skillshare app.B81-year-old Paul Harvey bec
9、ame well-known last September after his son Nick had recorded histwo-minute piece from four notesF natural,A,D,and B naturaland posted it on Twitter.Nick posted the piece online to show how musical ability can survive memory loss and Paul wonthe hearts of the British nation when he played the piano
10、from his home in Sussex live on theTelevision.To mark a year since he played his composition,Paul was invited to conduct the BBCPhiharmonic orchestra playing two of his compositions at the studio in Salford. He spent an emotionalafternoon with the orchestra,during which he conducted both Four Notes,
11、while his son Nick playedthe piano,and an older composition of his called Wheres the Sunshine.Paul,a former music teacher and classical pianist,said. “It was magical,it was very,very specialto work with such wonderful musicians. It made me feel alive,I couldnt believe that an orchestra wasplaying my
12、 music and I was standing in front of it conducting them.”Five years ago,Paul moved into sheltered accommodation as part of his dementia(痴呆症)care.Nick,who joined Paul on the triporganized by Music For Dementiahad seen his dad “comealive again”since the video of him playing piano went online.He said,
13、“His short term memory is generally shot to pieces but when big events like this happenits like a branding iron on his brain. From my experience with dad,the right piece of music at the righttime can be absolutely incredible. For the first time in years he has got active again. It really broughthim
14、back to life again.”Campaign Director at Music for Dementia,Grace Meadows said. “Seeing Paul performing beyondhis dementia and having the contact with the musicians was a wonderful thing. It was very emotional.”24What made Paul popular with people?AA musical he recorded. BThe movie he starred in.CA
15、video of him playing the piano. DHis extraordinary memory for music.25Why was Paul invited to perform his work?ATo show off his musical talent.BTo work with excellent musicians.CTo set an example for people with dementia.DTo mark the first anniversary of his online video.26What does Nick say about P
16、auls experience?AShort-term memory is changeable.BPlaying the piano can cure diseases.CThe impact of the right music is huge.DMore videos should be taken for the elderly.27What is the best title for the text?A“It was a dream!” B“It was magical!”C“He was gifted!” D“He was a success!”CThe ruins of a h
17、uge Maya city have been discovered in Guatemala with the help of the remotesensing technique LiDAR,according to the National Geographic on Thursday.This breakthrough was possible thanks to LiDAR sensors,which can survey landscapes in 3D byreflecting laser pulses off the ground from unmanned air vehi
18、cles and others. LiDAR is exceptionallyuseful for detecting archaeological sites(考古遗址),as it gets through jungles and other features thathold up exploration on the ground. The technique has been the activator(催化剂)of many discoveriesin recent years. For instance,major finds at Angkor,Cambodia and Car
19、acol,Belize can explain what itdid.This large lost city envelops sites like Tikal,Holmul,and Witznaknown for their temples andpyramidsbut shows that these famous heritage areas are the tip of the iceberg of this lost urbannetwork.Hidden under the jungles of the Maya Biosphere Reserve,more than 60,00
20、0 human-madefeatureshomes,canals,highways,some of which can even reach the modernized standardhavebeen identified by an international cooperation of researchers headed by the PACUNAM Foundation,aMaya cultural and natural heritage organization. Those have experts rethinking the outlines andcomplexity
21、 of the Maya empire.These ancient peoples obviously established these imaginative cultures based on their knownrelics,but the new research has shown that the scale of this lost society is far beyond what experts hadimagined. The findings will be explored in an hour-long documentary called Lost Treas
22、ures of theMaya Snake Kings,premiering(首映)Tuesday,February 6 on the National Geographic Channel. “There are entire cities we didnt know about now showing up in the survey data,”said FranciscoBelli,one of the lead archaeologists on the project. “There are 20,000 square kilometres more to beexplored a
23、nd there are going to be hundreds of cities there that we dont know about,and we will pushthe frontiers,”he added.28What can we know about LiDAR?AIts a breakthrough in archeology.BIts major equipment in air forces.CIt was first used in discovering a Maya city.DIts a remote sensing technique using la
24、ser pulses.29What does the underlined word “Those”in paragraph 4 refer to?AThe jungles of the Reserve.BThe outlines of the Maya empire.CThe researchers of the organization.DThe man-made projects of the Reserve.30Which of the following words can best describe the Maya empire?AFamous and dangerous. BV
25、ast and highly developed.CMountainous and aggressive. DEnormous and traditional.31What do archaeologists hope to do next?ARestudy the history of Maya. BUse the LiDAR sensors as usual.CContinue to explore the unknown. DStudy the documentary more carefully.DYou may be familiar with the statistic that
26、90% of the worlds data were created in the last fewyears. The biggest setback with such a rate of information increase is that the present moment willalways emerge far larger than the past. Shortsightedness is built into the structure,in the form of anoverwhelming tendency to over-estimate near-term
27、 messages at the expense of history.To understand why this matters,consider the findings from social science about recency bias(倾向),which describes the tendency to assume that future events will closely resemble recent experience.People tend to base thinking disproportionately(不成比例地)on whatever come
28、s most easily to mind.Its also worth remembering that novelty tends to be a dominant consideration when deciding whatdata to keep or delete. Out with the old and in with the new. Thats the digital trend in a world wheresearch algorithms(算法)are systematically biased towards freshness. They are design
29、ed in line withhuman preference. Such a bias towards the present is structurally rooted in the human weakness that wekeep deserting things we once cherished simply because we grow tired of them.Whats really needed is something thought of as “intelligent forgetting”:learning to let go of theimmediate
30、 past in order to keep its larger continuities in view. Its an act similar to organizing aphotograph album - although with more maths. When are two million photographs less valuable thantwo thousand?Many data sets are irreducible and most precious when complete:gene sequences;demographic(人口的)data;th
31、e raw,hard knowledge of geography and physics. The softer the science,however,the more likely that scale is reversely connected with quality. In these cases,time itself israther important as a touch stone to judge the value of data. Either we choose carefully what endures,matters and meaningfully ca
32、ptures our past - or its foot print is silently replaced by the presentsgrowing noise. Mere gathering is no cure-all answer. In an era of bigger and bigger data,the leadingwarning for those who have to make decisions is that what you choose not to know matters just asmuch as what you do.32What is th
33、e major problem with the explosion of recent information?ATrends are too quickly produced.BPeople have poor eyesight after viewing too much information.CPresent information is given too much emphasis.DPrediction for future developments largely depends on the past information.33What causes widespread
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