2023届河北省衡水中学高三下学期五调考试英语doc.doc
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1、20222023衡水中学下学期高三年级五调考试英 语本试卷8页。总分150分。考试时间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。1When will Cathy start? AAt 6:00. BAt 6:10. CAt 10:00.2How does the woman feel about her life? ABored. BWorried. CTired.3Wh
2、ere does the conversation most probably take place? AIn a food market. BIn a music concert. CIn a cafe.4How much will the woman pay? A$25 B$30 C$355Whats the possible relationship between the speakers? AWorkmates. BClassmates. CTeacher and student.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,
3、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。6What day is it today? ATuesday. BWednesday. CFriday.7Why is the man calling Maria? ATo tell her good news. BTo say goodbye to her. CTo invite her to go with him.听第7段材料,回答第8至10题。8What are the speakers ma
4、inly talking about? AThe upcoming vacation. BThe weather of Kunming. CThe Chinese language.9In which season are they going to Kunming? AAutumn. BSummer. CSpring.10Whats the womans advice before going to Kunming? ATaking a Chinese course. BBuying a map in Chinese. CPreparing a Chinese-English diction
5、ary.听第8段材料,回答第11至13题。11Which subject did the woman choose? APhysics. BGeography. CChemistry.12What is the hardest part of the mans physics learning?ARemembering many maps. BLearning basic theories. CDoing many experiments.13What does the woman usually do in class?AShe takes detailed notes. BShe pict
6、ures the lectures.CShe records the lectures.听第9段材料,回答第14至17题。14What is the woman most probably? AA hostess. BA music fan. CA teacher.15What made Tony become a singer? AEuropean music. BHis gift for music. CHis family background.16Who impresses Tony most? AJohnson. BAnderson. CHis uncle.17Why will To
7、ny leave for Europe?ATo have a trip. BTo give a performance. CTo change his music style. 听第10段材料,回答第18至20题。18What is Sununu encouraging girls to do?AGo back to school. BWork as a governor. CAsk him questions.19What do girls have to do in order to enter the competition? AWrite an article. BComplete a
8、 sentence. CMake a two-minute video.20How many ways do girls have to send their works to Sununu? A2 B3 C4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。ACall for Entries: Young Women Writers Competition Guardian Weekend magazine is launching a writing competition for UK
9、 women aged 16-21 on the theme of “Conversations”.How to Enter All you have to do is submit a 700-word personal essay that shows off your talents-on the theme of “Conversations”. Did you have an unforgettable conversation with your grandmother about her youth that changed how you viewed her? Do you
10、find having certain conversations really hard, and if so, why? Is there a conversation you regret, or one you regret you never had? Were keen to hear about your personal experiences.The Prizes There will be one winner and two runners-up. The three winners will each receive 250. The winners will be n
11、otified by email or telephone on or before June 30, 2023 and given details of how to claim their prizes. As part of the editing process, the three winners will participate in a video call with a Guardian Weekend editor to discuss and edit their essay for publication The one overall winner will also
12、receive a one-to-one workshop with an editor.Rules Follow all the rules carefully to prevent disqualification. Only one entry is permitted per person. Entries on behalf of another person will not be accepted and joint submissions are not allowed. The competition opens at 9:00 am on May 22, 2023 and
13、closes at 11:59 pm on June 9, 2023. Entries received outside this time period will not be considered. Your entry must not be copied, and must not contain any third-party materials or content that you do not have permission to use. You must include your name, age and contact details, including your e
14、mail address and phone number.21Whats the theme of the writing competition? ARegrets. BConversations. CGrandmothers youth. DPersonal experiences.22What extra prize will the overall winner receive? AAn additional 250. BA video of the competition. CA prior notification of the win. DA one-to-one worksh
15、op with an editor.23Which of the following will result in disqualification? ACo-authoring an entry. BIncluding contact details. CMailing your entry on June l, 2023. DUsing others content with permission.BMy eighteen-year-old daughter Julia called twenty minutes after she left, saying she had an acci
16、dent. I grabbed my shoes and was in the car in less than a minute. When I finally saw her, I hugged her tightly. Then I looked at the other driver. Learning that he fell asleep behind the wheel at about seventy miles an hour when the speed limit was forty-five, I could have choked him. “It could hav
17、e been worse,” I reminded myself as she cried all the way to the doctors office. Luckily, four days after the accident, Julia felt better. At her appointment, her doctor cleared her to resume normal activities, including driving. But I could tell by her look that she had no intention of getting behi
18、nd the wheel.Later that day, I sat with Julia as she spoke on the phone with our insurance agent. On the phone, she was professional, telling the agent what had happened in a clear, brief way. I realized she sounded like an adult. And adults drive cars. I realized that no matter how I felt about it,
19、 allowing Julia to give in to her fear wasnt good for her. When she hung up, I hugged her. “Youre stronger than you think,” I said. “And tomorrow youre going to drive my car and meet your friends for lunch. You just have to push through the fear and do it, and it will get easier each time you do.” I
20、 ignored the fear in her eyes and the way my heart sped up when I thought about Julia behind the wheel again.The next day, Julia drove my car to meet her friends. As I watched her leave, I felt nervous and proud. She texted me when she got to the restaurant, and I felt my heart rate return to normal
21、. The tears Id been holding back all week flooded my eyes. Watching her leave the house without me for the first time since the accident was frightening, but it was also necessary.24What was the authors reaction to the drivers behavior? AShe almost burst with anger. BShe felt guilty for her daughter
22、. CShe felt sympathy for him. DShe was choked with sorrow.25What did the doctor suggest to Julia? AStaying away from driving. BAttending a driving lesson. CContacting the insurance agent. DRetaking her routine activities.26What did the author realize when Julia spoke on the phone? AThe driver took t
23、he blame for the accident. BThe accident had been worse than expected. CJulia should overcome the fear to drive. DJulia was smart to deal with any trouble.27Why did the author cry at Julias text? AJulia was good at learning to drive. BJulia recovered mentally and physically. CJulia had supportive fr
24、iends and parents. DJulia could look after herself when driving.CSet on a sloped plot(山坡) above Prague in the citys Troja district, Villa Sophia has no keys, no light switches and a piano that can play by itself. The house can close the windows when it rains and read aloud materials it has selected
25、from the Internet, based on the owners interests. “The house is like a brain,” said Michaela Pankova, who shares the home with her husband, Karel Panek, and their daughters. “It makes decisions for you based on previous experience.” The home, designed by the Prague-based firm Coll Coll, is intended
26、to go beyond automated to autonomous. “As we say, if we have to control it ourselves, its not smart enough,” said Mr. Panek, a computer scientist.The couple wanted no compromises in quality and efficiency. When they couldnt find a technology that met their standards, Mr. Panek, the brain behind his
27、homes brain, designed his own system. While family members go about their daily lives, the system collects data and evaluates that data in real time, then comes up with solutions and implements(实施) them. It can accept deliveries when the family isnt home, thanks to individual control of every door f
28、rom afar and evaluation of the homes external context. It can preheat the driveway to clear snow and ice(but only if it predicts its use, saving energy (otherwise) and lock the doors.Put energy efficiency, home security and convenience aside, the systems benefit is that in developing beyond a smart
29、home system to a smart home it frees the homeowner from the burden of constant control.Mr. Panek calls himself a technology optimist, but Mrs. Pankova said it took her some time to warm up to the system. “In the beginning I wasnt into the idea of living in an AI house,” she said. “During the time of
30、 the preparation and later the construction, I slowly started to be open to the idea.”28What can be inferred about the house from paragraph l? . AIt is located at the foot of a hill. BIt operates automatically. CIt frees the family from wind and rain. DIt is poorly equipped with furniture.29Who did
31、some extra work to improve the control system of the house? AColl Coll. BMrs. Pankova. CMr. Panek. DThe couples kids.30What is the best advantage of the smart home? APicking up deliveries. BSaving energy. CPreheating the driveway. DRemoving the task of constant control.31What do the underlined words
32、 warm up to probably mean in the last paragraph? AApply to. BAdapt to. CTurn to. DKeep to.DFoods high in sugar are unhealthy; but these additives are too delicious for many of us to give up or reduce in a way. What if we could somehow enjoy their taste without actually eating them? A student team ha
33、s now designed a spoon with a structure that stimulates taste buds(味蕾) to produce a sense of sweetness without adding calories or chemicals. The project follows previous work involving flavor-enhancing cutlery(餐具) like chopsticks that increase sweetness with a mild electric current.The five undergra
34、duate and graduate research students wanted to create a new spoon called Sugarware for people with disorders such as diabetes, with which sugar is largely off their menu.The new spoon would have several bumps(凸起) on its underside to press against the tongue. The bumps can be covered with a permanent
35、 layer of molecules(分子) called ligands. These ligands bond with taste-cell receptor proteins that typically react to sugar molecules or artificial sweeteners. The bond can activate nerve signals, causing the brain to register a sense of sweetness. A diner could thus stimulate sweetness receptors wit
36、hout actual intake of sugar or artificial sweeteners.This idea is similar to the previous work in that they all use cutlery to enhance taste without a user having to actually consume any sugar. “But the mechanism for stimulating the taste buds is completely different,” Shiyu Xu, one of the student r
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