广东省2021届高三英语上学期12月综合能力测试试题.doc
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1、广东省2021届高三英语上学期12月综合能力测试试题注意事项:1.答卷前,考生务必将自己的姓名、准考证号及条形码填写和贴在答题卡对应位置上。2.回答选择题时,选出每小题答案后,用铅笔把答题卡上对应题目的答案标号涂黑。如需改动, 用橡皮擦干净后,再选涂其他答案标号。回答非选择题时,将答案写在答题卡上,写在本试卷 上无效。3.考试结束后,将本试卷和答题卡一并交回。4.本试卷共6页,满分120分,考试用时120分钟。第一部分阅读(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。AA few books recom
2、mended by Bill GatesReading is my favorite way to indulge (放纵)my desire to know the world. Although I get to meet with a lot of interesting people and visit fascinating places through my work, I still think books are the best way to explore new topics that interest you. Here are four amazing books I
3、 read recently:Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City, by Matthew Desmond. If you want a good understanding of how the issues that cause poverty are twisted (交织)together, you should read this book. Desmond gave me a better sense of what it is like to be poor in this country than anything e
4、lse I have read.Energy and Civilization: A History, by Vaclav Smil. Smil is one of my favorite authors, and this is his most famous book. He presents clearly how our need for energy has shaped human history. Its not the easiest book to read, but at the end youll feel smarter and better informed abou
5、t how energy innovation changes the course of civilizations.The Best We Could Do, by Thi Bui. This novel explores what it means to be a parent and a refugee (难 民).The authors family fled Vietnam in 1978. After giving birth to her own child, she decides to learn more about her parents5 experiences of
6、 growing up in a country tom apart by foreign occupiers.Believe Me: A Memoir of Love, Death, and JazzChickens, by Eddie Izzard. Izzards personal story in this book is attractive: he survived a difficult childhood and worked continuously to overcome his lack of natural talent and become an internatio
7、nal star. If youre a huge fen of him like I am, youll love this book. His written voice is very similar to his stage voice, and I found myself laughing out loud several times while reading it.1. What does Matthew Desmond try to explore?A. Different causes of poverty.B. The struggle of poor people.C.
8、 How to escape from poverty.D. Ways to live in a poor country.2. The book Energy and Civilization: A History fells into the category of.A. economy B. educationC. literatureD. history3.What do the last two books have in common?A. They are popular around the world.B. They are expected to inspire reade
9、rs.C. They focus on lives of ordinary people.D. They are based on personal experiences.BOne dilemma that the super famous face is balancing the needs of privacy and recognition.For some stars privacy is an overvalued thing. In 1919, Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford went on their European honeymoo
10、n. The two international idols had divorced their previous spouses (配偶)and were concerned about how they would be greeted. They neednt have worried. In London their car was surrounded by admiring women who pulled Mary out of the car to shake her hand, still grateful after two years for her efforts s
11、elling war bonds. In Paris they couldnt get any sleep with crowds gathering below their hotel room to sing and play for them. In Amsterdam they attended a party and were mobbed (包围)by other guests who wanted to get close to them. The athletic Fairbanks placed his wife on his shoulder and escaped thr
12、ough the window. Finally, they found privacy in Hamburg, where their movies were not shown because of World War I. For an hour the famous newly-married couple walked the streets unnoticed until the bored Mary turned to her husband and said, “Doug, Im sick of this. Lets go back to one of those countr
13、ies where they mob us.”Joan Crawford had similar feelings. Once in the 1930s she was staying in New York getting over her breakup with Clark Gable. Tired of staying around her hotel feeling so down she told her entourage (随从) 出ey should go out and get some fresh air. The entourage, who had trouble k
14、eeping up with the stars quick pace, were shocked when she walked away from their planned road. Oh my God. Shes going into Grand Central Station! Someone shouted, “Look, its Joan Crawford! And she was mobbed. It took them thirty minutes to escape the crowd and get back to their hotel suite. Her hair
15、 disheveled (凌乱),her dress tom and her face scratched, Crawford leaned against the door out of breath. Oh.,. oh my. That was wonderful. Lets do it again!”4. What did Douglas and Mary worry about before going to Europe?A. Nobody would greet them.B. They wouldnt be welcomed.C. Their war bonds wouldnt
16、sell well.D. Their schedule would be made public.5. What does Marys words in the second paragraph suggest?A. Hamburg was too quiet a place for her.B. Her movies werent shown in Hamburg.C. She fell ill after arriving in a new place.D, She didnt really enjoy privacy so much.6. What did Joan Crawford t
17、hink of her being mobbed in New York?A. Amusing. B. Enjoyable.C. Dangerous.D. Embarrassing.7. The author tells stories about the movie stars to show that.A. they may feel down from time to timeB. they deserve peoples love and respectC. they need both privacy and public attentionD. they are not alway
18、s popular around the worldCThe next time your brain refuses to recall a simple fact or name, be thankful. That could be a sign that your brain is getting rid of unnecessary information so that it can operate more efficiently, and help you make better decisions.Researchers who study how the brain sto
19、res information find that when neurons (神经元)are connected to the hippocampus a region of the brain that plays a significant role in learning and remembering - they overwrite (覆盖)old memories, making them harder to access.Why does the brain spend so much energy erasing memories? Researchers believe t
20、hat forgetting old information makes the brain more efficient. In a 2016 study, a team of scientists taught a group of mice to locate a maze (迷宫).The researchers erased the memories of some mice with drugs and moved the maze. The mice who still had memories of its original location had a harder time
21、 finding the new site than those that had no memory.Additionally, the team believes that keeping too much detail could prevent people from making good decisions. In fact, evolution has shaped our memory not to win a game of unimportant matters, but to make intelligent decisions. And when we look at
22、whats needed to make intelligent decisions, we would argue that that its healthy to forget some things.The scientists say what the brain decides to forget is determined by our daily life. The memories the brain decides to lose are exactly those details from your life that dont actually matter and th
23、at may be keeping you from making good decisions.So the next time you are unable to recall a seemingly important fact, dont be hard on yourself. Your brain is making room for information that can contribute to making you smarter! Remember, even Albert Einstein was absent-minded!8. What does the unde
24、rlined word “them” in Paragraph 2 refer to?A. Old memories. B. New memories. C. Neurons. D. Researchers.9. What does the 2016 study suggest?A. Old memories affects decision-making.B. Old memories cant be erased by drugs.C. Mice cant locate a maze without memories.D. Drugs make mice smarter in locati
25、ng a maze.10. What does the last sentence of the text imply?A. It isnt easy to make intelligent decisions.B. Einstein was as ordinary as normal people.C. Ifs normal for people to forget small things.D. Einstein is a good example of absent-mindedness.11. Which is the best title for the passage?A. How
26、 Does Your Brain Work?B. How Can We Become Smarter?C. Forgetting Makes You SmarterD. Brain Chooses What To MemorizeDHow would it feel to be the last person on Earth who speaks your language? For those of us whose native languages have millions of speakers, its almost impossible to imagine. And yet l
27、anguages have come and gone throughout human history, and they continue to do so. Linguists estimate that of the worlds approximately 6,900 languages, more than half are at risk of dying out by the end of the 21st century.Sometimes languages die out quickly. This can happen when small communities of
28、 speakers are wiped out by disasters or war. In El Salvador, for example, speakers of the indigenous (土生土长的)Lenca and Cacaopera abandoned their languages to avoid being identified as Indians after Salvadoran troops killed tens of thousands of mostly indigenous peasants in 1932 in order to put down a
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