2023届江苏省南京市镇江市高三上学期第一次八校联考英语试题.docx
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- 2023 江苏省 南京市 镇江市 上学 第一次 联考 英语试题
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1、高三年级学情调查考试英语试题本试卷共12页,满分120分。考试用时120分钟。第一部分 听力(共两节,满分30分)第一节(共5小题;每小题1.5分,满分7.5分)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。听完每段对话后,你都有10秒钟的时间来回答有关小题和阅读下一小题。每段对话仅读一遍。1. How does the woman feel about the mans idea?A. Worried. B. Satisfied. C. Disappointed.2. What does the man want to be?A. A reporter.
2、 B. A lawyer. C. A designer.3. Where are probably the speakers?A. In the hotel. B. In the office. C. At the hairdressers.4. How much does the man charge the woman at first?A. $100. B. $1,050. C. $1,150.5. Why does Steven refuse Mandys invitation?A. He has to prepare for a game.B. He failed to win a
3、contest.C. He dislikes doing sports.第二节(共15小题;每小题1.5分,满分22.5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。听每段对话或独白前,你将有时间阅读各个小题,每小题5秒钟;听完后,各小题将给出5秒钟的作答时间。每段对话或独白读两遍。听第6段材料,回答第6、7题。6. Which movie are the speakers going to see?A. Jaws. B. Saving Private Ryan. C. Jurassic Park.7. How will the speak
4、ers go to the cinema?A. By car. B. By subway. C. By bus.听第7段材料,回答第8至10题。8. Where are probably the speakers?A. At home. B. In the office. C. In a store.9. Which key is the man looking for?A. His office key. B. His house key. C. His car key.10. What will the man do next?A. Attend a meeting.B. Go to th
5、e kitchen.C. Search for his bag.听第8段材料,回答第11至13题。11. Which of the following is the mans favorite chocolate?A. White chocolate.B. Milk chocolate.C. Dark chocolate.12. Who brought cocoa powder to Europe?A. The Indian. B. The Mexican. C. The Spanish.13. What does the woman think of chocolate?A. Its qui
6、te tasty. B. Its too bitter. C. Its too sweet.听第9段材料,回答第14至17题。14. What does the man want to do at first?A. Borrow something.B. Ask for advice.C. Make an invitation.15. Why does the woman dress up today?A. To attend a wedding.B. To go to a party.C. To go on a date.16. What does the man say about the
7、 womans clothing?A. Its too formal. B. Its a bit tight. C. Its pretty.17. What will the woman do in the end?A. Try other clothes.B. Date with the man.C. Start to lose weight.听第10段材料,回答第18至20题。18. How do most people go to Glacier Bay National Park?A. By car. B. By ship. C. By plane.19. What can visit
8、ors do if they stay locally at a hotel?A. Take a route from UnCruise.B. Have a flightseeing trip.C. Experience Alaska Adventure Sailing.20. What do we know about Glacier Bay National Park?A. Its part of the World Heritage Site.B. Its home to more than 200 species of butterflies.C. Its the worlds sec
9、ond largest internationally protected area.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。AHave you ever been really hungry, but there wasnt much to eat in your kitchen? Did you throw together a bunch of stuff you had on hand and were pleasantly surprised when it tasted
10、good? You arent alone. Some of our favorite foods were created by accident. Heres a sample menu of some familiar foods that never would have happened if someone hadnt created them by mistake.POTATO CHIPSOne of the worlds favorite snacks is the result of a complaint. In 1853, a man was eating dinner
11、at Moons Lake House in Saratoga Springs, New York. He ordered fried potatoes, a popular side dish. But when they came out of the kitchen, he didnt think they were crispy enough. He sent them back to the kitchen, where Chef George Crum was so angry at having his cooking criticized that he sliced the
12、potatoes really thin, put lots of salt on them, and fried them. Not only did the diner love them, but everyone else did, too. They soon became a specialty of the restaurant.TOFUTofu, or bean curd, is made by curdling (使凝结) fresh soya milk, pressing it into a solid block, and then cooling it. Tofu wa
13、s accidentally invented in China 2,000 years ago, when a cook added seaweed to soya milk, which made it curdle. This is the same process that is used for making cheese. Like cheese, tofu is a great example of how really messing up a recipe can create something unexpectedly good.CHEESE PUFFSDid you e
14、ver wonder who thought up cheese puffs? The company that invented them wasnt even trying to make food for people. It was trying to make animal feed. In the 1930s, the Flakall Company of Wisconsin made animal food from small, flaked pieces of grain. One day, an employee, Edward Wilson, watched worker
15、s pouring cornmeal (谷粉) into the flaking machine, wetting it to keep it from clogging (堵塞). Because the machine was very hot, the wet cornmeal came out of it in puffy ribbons that hardened when they hit the air. Wilson took some of the ribbons home, added oil and flavoring to them, and voila! Cheese
16、 puffs!1Which of the following statements is TRUE according to the passage?ASeaweed is also used for making cheese.BChef George Crum didnt like to criticize others cooking.CHot wet cornmeal hardened when they hit the air.DBean curd dates back 2000 years in China .2What do the three foods have in com
17、mon?AThey are the results of complaints.BThey were not created on purpose.CThey werent originally made for people.DThey are all popular throughout the world.3Whats the purpose of the text?ATo compare the features of some foods.BTo inform readers of some foods.CTo recommend some foods .DTo introduce
18、the origins of some foods.BSome of my earliest memories involve sitting with my dad in his study every night when he came home from the office. Id watch as he put his personal items away: his watch, wallet, comb and car keys. They would always occupy the same spot on the table every time.Dads comb w
19、as jade green. I heard he bought it when he married Mum. Every night, he would smile, hand me the comb and say, “Be a good girl and help Daddy clean it, OK?”I was more than happy to do it. At age five, this kind of task brought me such joy. I would excitedly turn the tap on, and then brush the comb
20、with a used toothbrush as hard as I could. Satisfied that Id done a good job, I would proudly return the comb to Dad. He would smile at me, and place the comb on top of his wallet.About two years later, Dad left his sales job and started his own wholesale business. I started primary school. That was
21、 when things started to change. Dads business wasnt doing so well, and our stable life started getting shaky. He didnt come home as much as he used to. And when he did come home, it was always late and Id already be in bed. I started to get mad. Why didnt he listen to Mum and just stick to his old j
22、ob? Why take the risk and place the whole family in trouble? Over the years, I stopped waiting for him to come home, and stopped going downstairs to check on him.Now 28, Ive graduated from college and got a job. Dads business has also started to get back on track. Yet the uncomfortable silence betwe
23、en Dad and me went on.Two days before my birthday last year, Dad came home early. On that evening, I helped him carry his bags into his study as usual. When I turned to leave, he asked me to clean his comb. I looked at him for a while, then took the comb and headed to the sink.It was a new comb. Thi
24、s one was brown. I hadnt noticed that hed changed it. After cleaning it, I passed it back to Dad. He looked at it and smiled. But this time, I noticed something different. My dad had aged. He had wrinkles next to his eyes when he smiled, yet his smile was still as heartwarming as before.4From the fi
25、rst three paragraphs, we can learn _.Athe precious green comb of Dad was made of jadeBthe earliest memories with Dad were full of joyCthe author wasnt willing to clean the comb for DadDthe author would study together with Dad every evening5What probably made Dad decide to resign from his original jo
26、b to start his own business?AThat he was fired and had to make a living.BThat he was eager to get everything on track.CThat he hoped to earn a better life for the family.DThat he wanted to keep the life for his family stable.6What emotional changes did the author experience when staying with Dad the
27、se years?Amad satisfied warmBsatisfied worried angryCwarm concerned uncomfortableDcheerful mad warm7What could be the best title for the text?AEvenings with DadBA Comb of Jade GreenCMy Earliest Memories with DadDDads Sales Job & His Wholesale BusinessCBeing highly connected to a strong social networ
28、k has its benefits. Now a new study is showing the same goes for trees, thanks to their underground neighbors. The study is the first to show that the growth of adult trees is linked to their participation in fungal (真菌) networks living in the forest soil. Though past research has focused on young t
29、rees, these findings give new insight into the importance of fungal networks to older trees which are more environmentally beneficial for functions like capturing carbon.“Large trees make up the main part of the forest, so they drive what the forest is doing,” said researcher Joseph Birch, who led t
30、he study. When they live in the forest soil, fungal networks act as a sort of highway, allowing water, nutrients and compounds to flow back and forth among the trees. The network also helps nutrients flow to resource-limited trees like family units that support one another in times of stress.Cores t
31、aken from 350 Douglas firs (花旗松) showed that annual tree ring growth was related to the extent of fungal connections a tree had with other trees. They had much higher growth than those that had only a few connections. The research also showed that trees with more connections to many unique fungi had
32、 much greater growth than those with only one or two connections. “If you have this network that is helping trees grow faster, that helps capture more carbon year after year. These networks may help trees grow more steadily even as conditions become more stressful, and could even help protect them a
33、gainst death.” said Birch.Birch hopes his findings lead to further studies in different kinds of forests in other geographical areas, because its likely that the connections among trees change from year to year. He said, “Knowing whether fungal networks are operating the same way in other tree speci
34、es could inform how we reforest areas after harvesting them, and inform how we plant trees to preserve these networks.”8In what way do the new findings differ from the previous ones?AThey reveal the value of fungal networks to adult trees.BThey clarify misunderstandings of fungal networks.CThey demo
35、nstrate a new way to capture carbon.DThey confirm the benefits of fungal networks.9How do fungal networks help trees?ABy acting as the center of family units.BBy maintaining the balance of resources.CBy fighting against diseases.DBy bettering forest soil conditions.10What does the underlined “those”
36、 refer to in Paragraph 3?ATree rings.BCores from Douglas firs.CDouglas firs.DFungal networks.11What can be inferred from what Joseph Birch has put?AThe fungal networks support one another in times of stress.BThe fungal networks enable us to know more about reforestation.CThe findings can apply to di
37、fferent kinds of forests in other geographical areas.DThe fungal networks will help trees grow more steadily if conditions become more stressful.DWith no special equipment, no fences and no watering, two abandoned agricultural fields in the UK have been rewilded (重新野化), in large part due to the effo
38、rts of jays, which actually “engineered” these new woodlands. Researchers now hope that rewilding projects can take a more natural and hands-off approach and that jays can shed some of their bad reputations.The two fields, which researchers have called the New Wilderness and the Old Wilderness, had
39、been abandoned in 1996 and 1961 respectively. The former was a bare field, while the latter was grasslandboth lay next to ancient woodlands. Researchers had suspected that the fields would gradually return to wilderness, but it was impressive to see just how quickly this happened, and how much of it
40、 was owed to birds.Using aerial data, the researchers monitored the two sites. After just 24 years, the New Wilderness had grown into a young, healthy wood with 132 live trees per hectare, over half of which (57%) were oaks. Meanwhile, the Old Wilderness resembled a mature woodland after 39 years, w
41、ith 390 trees per hectare.“This native woodland restoration was approaching the structure (but not the species composition) of long-established woodlands within six decades,” the researchers explained in the study.Part of this reforestation was done by the wind, and researchers suspect that previous
42、 ground disturbance may have aided the woodland establishmentwhich is good news, as it would suggest that agricultural areas may be reforested faster than anticipated. However, animalsEurasian jays, thrushes, wood mice, and squirrelsalso played an important role in helping the forests take shape. Th
43、is handful of species provided much of the natural regeneration needed for the forest to develop. Jays, in particular, seem to have done a lot of heavy lifting.12What does the underlined word “shed” in Paragraph 1 refer to?ABe opposed to.BBe ashamed of.CGet used to.DGet rid of.13Which aspect of the
44、changes in the two fields impressed the researchers?AThe scale of the woodlands.BThe diversity of the fields.CThe rate of the changes.DThe frequency of the wilderness.14What does the author want to tell us by providing some data in Paragragh 3?AThe woodland restoration was approaching the structure
45、of long-established ones.BMuch of the wilderness of the fields was owed to birds.CPrevious ground disturbance aided the woodland establishment.DHow quickly the fields returned to wilderness over time.15What does the last paragraph mainly talk about?AThe essential role of humans in the reforestation.
46、BThe factors that contribute to the reforestation.CThe importance of woodland establishment.DThe threats faced by a handful of wild animals.第二节(共5小题:每小题2.5分,满分12.5分)阅读下面短文,从短文后的选项中选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为多余选项。The Spotlight EffectHave you ever felt as if the entire world was watching while you made a m
47、istake? Well, heres some good news: its likely that no one even noticed._16_We have this experience not only when we make mistakes but also when we perform well. Every time we do something that is a little different from what we usually do, we may assume that everyone around us will notice. The spot
48、light effect might happen when we make a mistake in a game, have a bad hair day, or give a terrible answer in class._17_In these moments, it feels like everyone is watching.The spotlight effect exists because we all get used to seeing things through our own eyes. Every person is the main character i
49、n his or her story, and the events of our lives seem to have great importance._18_The spotlight effect is a very common part of the human experience. However, in some cases, it can lead to extreme social anxiety and nervousness around other people. Everyone suffers some degree of social anxiety. We
50、all care about what others think, and we all want to be liked. Its normal to wonder about what effect we have on other people._19_If someone is so nervous that they cant make good decisions, then its time to take action and improve the situation.Learning about the spotlight effect is important becau
51、se it can help us reduce our anxiety. Next time you feel like everyone is staring at you, remind yourself that its just your mind playing tricks on you. _20_If you fill your mind with thoughts of your friends and family, it will help you be less self-conscious.AHowever, this can be a problem when th
52、e anxiety is too much to handle.BThats why fewer people notice the embarrassing circumstances they encounter.CAnother good exercise is to make an effort to notice the people around you, rather than focusing on yourself.DThe spotlight effect is a trick of the mind that makes us believe that people no
53、tice us more often than they really do.EWhat you can do at this moment is to ignore them.FWe are so busy examining ourselves that we actually observe very little about everyone around us.GIt can also appear when we score a big goal, ask someone on a date, or do a good deed.第三部分 语言运用(共两节,满分30分)第一节(共1
54、5小题; 每小题1分,满分15分)阅读下面短文,从每题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。One summer night, my friends and I stole into the Jordans backyard and started harvesting their sweet, juicy raspberries (树莓). We were enjoying every bite of the tasty berries_21_Mr Jordan came charging outside all of a sudden.“What are you bo
55、ys doing out here?” he yelled as my friends ran off_22_all directions. He attempted to catch one or two as they rushed past him, but they were too_23_for the older gentleman to catch. Within seconds, the boys_24_into the dark of the summer night. All except me.However, speed was never my_25_. I took
56、 the tongue-lashing(痛骂) that Mr Jordan gave me as he marched me down the block to my house, where my mother took over and scolded me_26_. My friends said they could hear every_27_word she spoke from the darkness of our backyard, where they had gathered to_28_their escape and to observe my capture.Th
57、ey teased me about it for days afterwards, while all I could do was complain about how_29_it was that I was the only one who had to pay the price. After about a week of this, I complained to my father about the inequality of the situation. Dad said, “You took raspberries without_30_, and you get exa
58、ctly the punishment you deserved.”“But what about the other guys?” I asked. “They didnt get punished at all!”“Thats not my concern nor should it be yours,” Dad said. “You cant_31_what happens to others. You can only_32_what happens to you. You made a bad choice that night, and you were punished for
59、it.”_33_the duration of the following years, I come to realize there is no guarantee that life will treat us fairly. Thats why we cant_34_comparing our lives with the lives of others. Like Dad said, that isnt our_35_.21AbeforeBwhileCwhenDafter22AtowardsBinCatDfrom23AsmartBfoxyCswiftDintelligent24Ahi
60、dBmarchedChurriedDdisappeared25AstrengthBpowerCintentionDoption26AcruellyBbitterlyCmercilesslyDpitifully27AcolorfulBoffensiveCviolentDcreative28AnegotiateBcelebrateCplotDcongratulate29AunhappyBfrustratingCdisappointingDunfair30AthinkingBwarningCaskingDinforming31AcontrolBpredictCacceptDexplain32Aput
61、 up withBget away withCagree withDdeal with33AInBForCThroughDSince34Aget stuck inBget engaged inCbe involved inDbe buried in35AproblemBcomplaintCconcernDchoice第二节(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。The governments of Shanghai, Jiangsu and Zhejiang_36_(joint) released a guideline on
62、 Thursday, which facilitates the high-quality development of the Yangtze River Delta region. It is the second set of policies the governments_37_(introduce) to advance the integrated development of the region._38_(feature) 17 detailed measures, the newly introduced guideline touches upon 10 major ar
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2019届人教A版数学必修二同步课后篇巩固探究:2-1-1 平面 WORD版含解析.docx
