2024—2024学年度上学期六校协作体高三期初联合考试
英语试题
本试卷共150分,共页,答题时间100分钟。 第一部分 听力(略)
第二部分 阅读理解(共两节,满分40分)
第一节 (共15小题;每小题2分,满分30分)
阅读下列短文,从每题所给的A、B、C和D四个选项中,选出最佳答案。
A
Summer Activities
Experience the romance of Paris with an unforgettable night out that combines three of the top tours in the City of Lights. Choose from dinner at the Eiffel Tower’s unique restaurant against the night sky, at Les Ombres restaurant, a particular meal aboard a dining cruise down the Seine River or cap off the night with a Parisian cabaret show at the Moulin Rouge nightclub. Activity Description Cost Settle in to your private table at the modern 58 Tour Eiffel restaurant for a 3-course meal of classic French Eiffel Tower style accompanied by your choice of wine. The dining Dinner room are around the first-floor observation deck of the Eiffel Tower 58 meters (190 feet) above ground, so you can enjoy city views through expansive picture windows. Step into a 3-course dinner aboard the Marina de Paris floating restaurant. While you dine, cruise past the Seine River famous monuments of Paris, including the Louvre, Notre Cruise Dame cathedral(大教堂), the Eiffel Tower and several Dinner of the city’s historic bridges. At the end of your dinner cruise, visit the twinkling Eiffel Tower for an hour. Les Ombres Enjoy a 3-course meal dinner at Les Ombres restaurant, restaurant all drinks included and a glass of champagne. Dinner Following your dinner option, travel by air-conditioned coach to the district of Montmartre, the heart of Paris. Head to the Moulin Rouge nightclub Moulin Rouge and settle in to your seats for the classic Parisian Show cabaret show which features more than 100 talented performers. Be attracted by a parade of bejeweled and feathered costumes as dancers perform.
$318.10 $313.37 $282.62 $348.84 1
21. Which activity will you choose if you want to see cabaret show?
A. Eiffel Tower Dinner B. Seine River Cruise Dinner C. Les Ombres restaurant Dinner D. Moulin Rouge Show
22. What will the visitors do at the end of the Seine River dinner cruise? A. visit the Louvre B. visit the Eiffel Tower
C. visit the Notre Dame cathedral D. visit the district of Montmartre
23. How much does the Les Ombres restaurant Dinner cost?
A. $282.62 B. $313.37 C. $318.10 D. $348.84
B
What can be better than a sweet treat with health benefits? As it happens, our favourite February food, chocolate, has a few shinning characteristics. It comes from the Theobroma cacao tree (food for the Gods), from a bean that grows on that tropical tree. Chocolate originated in Mexico and Central and South America, but West Africa now produces most of the world’s cocoa. Look for fair trade chocolate that meets environmental and labour standards at natural foods markets in Kitsilano and the West End, at Karmavore in New Westminster and at Nature’s Fare Markets throughout the province.
Dark or semisweet chocolate is typically a vegan(素食) product. Because chocolate contains antioxidants(抗氧化剂) that prevent the oxidation (氧化)of LDL (bad) cholesterol(胆固醇), it has gained a reputation of being beneficial for our heart health. Eaten in an appropriate amount, chocolate may lower blood pressure.
Chocolate is also a source of iron – a “precious metal” when it comes to human health. As part of red blood cells, iron plays a central role in transporting oxygen to the body and carrying away the waste product carbon dioxide. Each day, we lose tiny amounts of iron in cells that are missing from skin and the inner lining of the intestine(肠壁). If our intake is not enough to replace our losses, a tired feeling and sensitivity to cold may develop. With further consuming, people feel exhausted, chilly and even headaches; the skin may appear pale. Since iron absence is such an obvious condition and easily diagnosed, if you have any doubts about your iron level, have a lab test done.
We are good at recycling iron, however, losses must be replaced. Two of the Chocolate Butter Balls in the recipe(食谱) below will provide one quarter of the recommended intake of eight mg iron for the day.
24. Which region produces most of the world’s cocoa now? A. Mexico B. Central America C. South America D. West Africa 25. Why is chocolate beneficial for our heart health?
A.It contains antioxidants B.It comes from the cacao tree. C.It originates in Mexico. D.It is a sweet treat. 26. What does “chilly” in the third paragraph mean?
A. easy to be angry B. having a fever C. sensitive to cold D. feeling tired 27. From which is the text probably taken?
A. A biology textbook. B. A health magazine. C. A research paper. D. A travel brochure.
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C
According to a Pew Research Center report from November 2013, “71% of those 10-18 turn to the internet as a main news source.” Another Pew report found from 2012 says that on an average day, 29 percent of young people were “newsless” meaning they did not get any news, from traditional platforms, mobile phones, or even social networks.
Despite the fact that both my husband and I are in journalism, my husband as a design editor and myself as a writer, I have often wondered if our four sons would grow up to read printed pages with their own children someday.
I got my answer last week when my failure to renew us living in a newspaper desert for two weeks. Normally we get both The Virginian-Pilot (the paper for which my husband works) and The Christian Science Monitor Weekly print edition. Our four sons have grown up with a variety of print newspapers available daily. That has changed slightly since our youngest, Quin, 10, has also become an online news tracker.
However, it wasn’t until the newspapers stopped coming to our doorstep seven days a week that I learned how deeply attached they all are to the printed, paper, page. That’s when we decided to make a list of what we have come to rely on newspapers to do cheaply and immediately.
Here’s the list we made together of what our newspaper is used for beyond learning the news itself: as an umbrella when caught in rain; to stuff in wet shoes overnight to dry; to stuff in hats to keep their shape; to stuff under doors and in cracks to stop cold wind from coming in; to wallpaper for a doll house (my dad did that once)….
Despite the growing list of household uses, my sons’ love for reading the paper before it becomes cage liner has helped me to realize that there is still hope that our kids and future generations will continue to value the printed news as more than just a means to a crafting project end, but to getting a more touchable grasp on the issues they may face in life.
28. What is the Pew Research Center report probably about? A. Children’s news source. B. Quality of journalism.
C. Children’s after-class activities. D. Parent-child relationships.
29. When did the author learn how deeply attached her children are to newspapers? A. our four sons would grow up to read printed pages with their own children
B. our youngest, Quin, 10, has also become an online news addict C. the newspapers stopped coming to our doorstep seven days a week D. we decided to make a list of what we have come to rely on newspapers 30. Which is not on the list of using newspapers for household? A. to wallpaper for a doll house. B. to get news from social networks.
C. to act as an umbrella when caught in rain.
D. to stuff under doors and in cracks to stop cold wind coming in.
31. How should children and future generations continue to value the newspaper? A. using it as a means to a crafting project end. B. relying on it to do cheaply and immediately.
C. growing up with a variety of print newspapers available daily. D. getting a more touchable grasp on the issues they may face in life.
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D
You already know that making a good first impression can go a long way. But forget all the advice you’ve received about dressing to impress or putting on a cheesy smile. It turns out that the true secret to building a lasting connection reaches much deeper than what you wear.
According to Amy Cuddy, a Harvard Business School professor who has researched first impressions for more than 15 years, everyone asks two questions when they meeting someone new: Can I trust this person? And can I respect this person?
Both questions help you measure a person’s warmth and competence, respectively. But, Cuddy says, you should put gaining your peers’ trust over winning their respect—even in a workplace setting. “If someone you’re trying to influence doesn’t trust you, you’re not going to get very far; in fact, you might even draw suspection because you come across as a controller,” Cuddy wrote in her book Presence: Bringing Your Boldest Self to Your Biggest Challenges. “A warm,
trustworthy person who is also strongly admired, but only after you’ve established trust does your strength become a gift rather than a threat.”
But that’s not the only way you can start off on the right foot with a stranger. Your physical appearance matters, too. A 2017 study by psychologist Leslie Zebrowitz of Brandeis University found that people use four clues to judge your face:
babyfacedness, familiarity, fitness, and emotional resemblance. While you can’t control all of these factors, you can improve your “emotional resemblance” by using body language that builds trust naturally.
The next time you meet someone new, focus on gaining their trust—not winning them over with a firm handshake.
32. What’s the main misunderstanding described in the first paragraph? A. dressing to impress.
B. putting on a cheesy smile.
C. making a good first impression. D. building a lasting connection.
33. Which is more important in a workplace setting according to Amy Cuddy? A. gaining your peers’ trust. B. winning your peers’ respect.
C. trying to influence your peers. D. drawing your peers’ suspection as a controller. 34. What does Leslie Zebrowitz suggest in a 2017 study? A. You can control your “fitness”. B. You can control your “familiarity”.
C. You can improve your “babyfacedness”. D. You can improve your “emotional resemblance”. 35. What is the best title for the text? A. Judge one by a firmly-made handshake B. Judge one by a naturally-built trust C. Judge one by the first impression D. Judge one by the physical appearance 第二节 (共5小题;每小题2分,满分10分)
根据短文内容,从短文后的选项中选出能填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为多余选项。
__36__ When someone tells you something that is true, but leaves out important information that should be included, he can give you a false picture.
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For example, someone might say, “I just won a hundred dollars on the lottery (彩票). It was great. I took that dollar ticket back to the store and turned it in for one hundred dollars!”
__37__ Maybe, maybe not. We then discover that he bought $200 worth of tickets, and only one was a winner. He’s really a big loser!
He didn’t say anything that was false, but he left out important information on purpose. That’s called a half-truth. __38__
Some politicians often use this trick. Let’s say that during Governor Smith’s last term, her state lost one million jobs and gained three million jobs. __39__ One of her opponents says, “During Governor Smith’s term, the state lost one million jobs!” that’s true. However, and honest statement would have been, “During Governor Smith’s term, the state had a net gain of two million jobs.” Advertisers will sometimes use half-truths. __40__ An advertisement might say, “Nine out of ten doctors advised their patients to take Yucky Pills to cure toothache.” It fails to mention that they only asked ten doctors and nine of them work for the Yucky Company.
This kind of deception happens too of often. It’s a sad fact of life: Lies are lies, and sometimes the truth can lie as well. A. This guy’s a winner, right? B. Then she seeks another term.
C. Do you know of anyone who uses the truth to deceive?
D. Half-truths are not technically lies, but they are just dishonest. E. Half truths are aimed at economic and social science academics
F. It’s against the law to make false statements so they try to mislead you with
truth.
G. When it comes to advertisements, we must all use our intelligence and not be
a slave to them!
第三部分 语言知识运用(共两节,满分45分) 第一节(共20小题:每小题1. 5分,满分30分)
阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的A、B、C和D四个选项中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。
Experts say boredom is good for kids.It forces them to be creative,41 their imaginations and helps them discover new things.A(n) 42 in point is 13-year-old Luke Thill from Dubuque, Iowa.
Luke was 43 of playing video games and riding his bike, so he decided to build a tiny house in his backyard instead.He made money from cutting lawns(草坪)and 44 exchanged some services,such as gaining the help of an electrical engineer 45 sweeping his garage.Luke also 46 spare materials from his grandmother’s house and other 47 materials from his neighbors for some of the windows and the door. The 89-square—foot home cost $1,5 00 to build and 48 18 months.Inside there’s a kitchenette,a back sitting room,a table and a mounted(镶嵌的)TV,and an upstairs bedroom can be easily 49 by stairway. Although Luke did the 50 and learned how to do all the work.he had his father’s 51 throughout the project.Greg Thill was very happy that his son learned to stay
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