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    四川省部分地区2023届高三二模英语试题分类汇编:阅读理解(Word版附答案)

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    四川省部分地区2023届高三二模英语试题分类汇编:阅读理解(Word版附答案)

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    这是一份四川省部分地区2023届高三二模英语试题分类汇编:阅读理解(Word版附答案),共26页。
    第一节(共15小题;每小题2分,满分30分)
    阅读下列短文,从每题所给的四个选项(À、B.C和D)中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。
    A
    Here are live nline cnversatins fr the Internatinal Bker Prize.
    At Night All Bld Is Black
    Thu 13 May 19:30-20:30
    French-Senegalese authr David Dip’s shrt nvel At Night All Bld Is Black, paints a cmpletely different picture f the cruel 1914-18 cnflict.
    This event includes a shrt perfrmed reading frm the nvel by actr Ken Nwsu.
    The Emplyees
    Thu 29 Apr 19:30-20:30
    Since she published her first nvel Celestine in 2015, Olga Ravn has cme t be regarded as ne f the mst influential writers in cntemprary Danish literature. Her new bk, The Emplyees takes readers abard the Six-Thusand Ship as it flies thrugh the far universe in the 22nd century.
    This event includes a shrt perfrmed reading frm The Emplyees by actr Lucy Phelps.
    We Cease t Understand the Wrld
    Thu 20 May19:30-20:30
    It is Labatut’s third bk, which has been translated frm the Spanish versin by writer and translatr Adrian Nathan West wh used his knwledge f Wrld War II and sught ut riginal dcuments frm scientific histry int English.
    This event includes a shrt perfrmed reading frm the nvel by actr Fina Shaw.
    The War f the Pr
    Thu 27 May 19:30-20:30
    Writer and film-maker Erie Vuillard became famus in his native France when he wn the Prix Gncurt in 2017 fr his nvel The Order f the Day, set in Austria during the Secnd Wrld War. He’ll jin us this evening t discuss his latest wrk.
    This event includes shrt perfrmed reading frm the nvel by actr Ken Nwsu.
    1. Wh wrte a bk abut space lie?
    A. David Dip.B. Olga Ravn.C. Labatut.D. Eric Vuillard.
    2. Which bk’s authr will appear in the nline cnversatins?
    A. At Night All Bld Is Black.B. The Emplyee
    C. We Cease t Understand the Wrld.D. The War f the Pr.
    3. What d the fur cnversatins have in cmmn?
    A. The guests d sme reading f the nvels.B. The guests have a talk abut the nvels.
    C. They refer t sme brief reviews.D. They start at the same time.
    B
    We sat at hme, waiting fr the COVID-19 cases t decrease and fr the weather t imprve. We all dreamed f what we wuld d when we culd finally g utside.
    I rde my ld bike faithfully fr almst 20 years befre getting the replacement, which gt stlen frcing me back t Old Faithful. The weak-minded might have abandned biking cmpletely at that pint, but nt me. Biking means freedm.
    Every spring I get Old Faithful ready. She is getting ld with mre replacement parts than riginals. But with all bike stres being lw n new mdels, she is all I have. On my bike, as lng as I’m alive and eating, I’ve gt fuel and can pedal t the ends f Earth if I want. N bstacle is impassable. Jammed rads mean nthing. I can still weave between cars in traffic. This memry f freedm means even mre t me with the experience f lckdwn.
    Sciety gritted its teeth (咬紧牙关) in the knwledge that we just had t tugh it ut fr a year t get t the ther side. Then Delta hit. Then Omicrn. A year turned int tw, and that’s when the walls really started clsing in. That’s when we really needed hpe. S, I cunt the days until I can return t my bike. On my bike, I achieve anther state f mind. I wuld push myself t reach the tp each time. I wanted t feel that little thrill f making it t the summit, knwing that ding s tld me nce again that I culd g anywhere and that nthing culd hld me back. I was free.
    Every few years I add a new ache r pain. I am starting t get ld. I can’t cycle as fast as I used t. But every time I encunter a hill, I dn’t give up. I’m waiting fr that first warm day when I’ll escape the pandemic walls. I want t put n my helmet and fr ne brief, beautiful mment, be free again.
    4. What caused the authr t ride Old Faithful?
    A. He had his bike stlen unluckily.B. He wanted t replace the ld ne.
    C. He hped t g thrugh his islatin.D. He wished t avid its becming dusty.
    5. What des Paragraph 3 want t say?
    A. The limitatin f driving vehicles.B. The advantages f riding his bike.
    C. The hardship t find bike riginals.D. The special experience f lckdwn.
    6. What des the underlined sentence “Sciety gritted ...” in Paragraph 4 mean?
    A. Keep smething fr a rainy day.B. Be a playby withut ambitin.
    C. A gd medicine tastes bitter.D. Hlding n makes life hpeful.
    7. What’s the main idea f the passage?
    A. Tugh situatins make me strnger and smarter.
    B. The pandemic lckdwn can nt lck my dreams away
    C. What I want t d when the pandemic lckdwn ends.
    D. Hw I relieved my pressure during the pandemic lckdwn.
    C
    WHAT’S FOR dinner? The answer matters, at every level. Glbally, fd prices have risen in 13 f the past 15 mnths and are clse t their peak f 2011, wing t pr weather and the utbreak f a swine-flu in2018. In reality, agriculture uses half the wrld’s habitable land and accunts fr mre than 30% f glbal emissins. When ne such factry in Teesside, in nrthern England, recently threatened t shut dwn because f high natural gas prices, the gvernment had t step in t prevent fd supply chains frm cllapsing.
    Frtunately, technlgies are emerging that prmise t prduce fd in new ways. These range frm bireactrs that grw meat t indr“vertical” farms and new ways f prducing fish. S it is easy t see hw steaks made frm plant-based prtein, r grwn in vats (桶) frm cells, culd greatly reduce factry farming and land and water use, and prduce fewer emissins.
    That des nt mean peple will be willing t eat it, hwever. Given fd’s cultural imprtance, peple dn’t respnd actively t new fdstuffs and prductin prcesses, because they feared it caused smething harmful.
    At the same time traditinal fds and farming mdel are adred. Many Western cnsumers are willing t pay extra fr fd, because it avids“chemicals”. Yet suppsedly timeless fd traditins are ften shallwer than they seem. Ptates were eventually widely adpted in Eurpe (the inventin f French fries helped). Cffee frm Arabia and tea frm China were unknwn in Eurpe befre the 17th century.
    The new fds and prcesses n ffer tday present pprtunities t create delicius and sustainable new traditins. Western cnsumers shuld put aside their reservatins abut eating crickets and give plant-based burgers and 3D-printed steaks a try. Regulatrs shuld be mre pen t gene-editing crps, and speed up apprval f eatable insects fr animal feed and human cnsumptin.
    8. What des the authr aim t stress in paragraph 1?
    A. Fd system faces pressure frm sme factrs.B. Fd prductin causes mre serius pllutin.
    C. Agriculture plays imprtant rles in the wrld.D. Fd safety is vitally significant fr peple
    9. What can we infer frm Paragraph 2?
    A. Livestck tends t decline in the future
    B. Plant-based prtein will be mre ppular.
    C. Technlgy will make a huge difference.
    D. Agricultural land shuld be well prtected
    10. What’s cnsumers’ attitude t new fdstuff?
    A. Favrable.B. Skeptical.C. Indifferent.D. Unclear.
    11. What’s the suitable title fr the passage?
    A. T eat r nt t eat: that’s a questin that yu have.
    B. What yu eat: a diverse fd culture appealing t yu
    C. New ways t make fd are cming-but will yu bite?
    D. A new era in technlgy is appraching-but are yu ready?
    D
    Fr years, the cnventinal wisdm amng Silicn Valley futurists was that artificial intelligence and autmatin indicated dm (厄运) fr blue-cllar wrkers whse jbs invlved repetitive physical labr. Truck drivers, retail cashiers and warehuse wrkers wuld all lse their jbs t rbts, they said, while wrkers in creative fields like art, entertainment and media wuld be safe. Well, an unexpected thing happened recently: AI entered the creative class.
    In the past few mnths, AI-based image generatrs like DALL-E 2, Midjurney and Stable Diffusin have made it pssible fr anyne t create unique, hyper-realistic images just by typing a few wrds int a text bx. These apps, thugh new, are already surprisingly ppular.
    It’s still t early t tell whether this new wave f apps will end up csting artists and illustratrs their jbs. What seems clear, thugh, is that these tls are already being put t use in creative industries.
    Sarah Drummnd, a service designer in Lndn, started using AI-generated images a few mnths ag t replace the black-and-white sketches she did fr her jb. These were usually basic drawings that visually represented prcesses she was trying t design imprvements fr.
    Instead f spending hurs creating what she called blb drawings manually, Ms. Drummnd, 36, nw types what she wants int DALL-E 2 r Midjurney. Ms. Drummnd acknwledged that AI image generatrs had limitatins. They aren’t gd at mre cmplex sketches, fr example, r creating multiple images with the same character. And like the ther creative prfessinals, she said she didn’t think AI designers wuld replace human illustratrs cmpletely.
    “Wuld I use it fr final utput? N. I wuld hire smene t fully make what we wanted t realize,” she said. “But the thrwaway wrk that yu d when yu’re any kind f designer, whether it’s visual, architectural, urban planner—yu’re sketching, sketching sketching. And s this is a sketch tl.”
    12. What’s the cnventinal wisdm abut?
    A. AI can learn t create unique images.B. Rbts will be ppular in all the fields
    C AI will take the place f physical labr.D. Apps will give birth t sme prblems.
    13. What’s the character f DALL-E 2 r Midjurney accrding t Sara?
    A. It gets drawing skills imprved.B. It helps in sme basic drawings
    C. It makes sketches mre diverseD. It is creative as well as humans.
    14. What des the underlined wrd “manually” in Paragraph 5 mean?
    A. By machine.B. By imaginatinC. By technlgy.D. By hand.
    15. What’s the passage mainly abut?
    A. AI-generated art is already transfrming creative wrk.
    B. The apps are getting artists lsing their jbs at present being.
    C. Science and technlgy cmpletely change peple’s life nw.
    D. Tw useful drawing tls are designed fr artists in their life.
    2023届四川省泸州市高三第二次教学质量诊断性考试英语试题
    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,选出最佳选项。
    A
    Explre Yur Passin at Harvard University
    Yur educatin desn’t stp at the classrm dr. Student activities are a vital part f the Harvard experience, balancing yur studies and creating pprtunities fr friendship and self-discvery.
    Athletics
    Harvard Athletics ffers frty-tw intercllege teams fr wmen and men - mre than any ther cllege des ——as well as numerus sprts clubs and recreatinal activities. Mre than eighty percent f ur students participate in athletics f sme kind.
    Student rganizatins
    Jin ur cmmunity f ver 500 student rganizatins. Yu can get t knw student rganizatins at ur Student Organizatin Fair, an annual traditin that takes place the first week f class. Yu can als write fr the student newspaper n the Assciated Press. Even if yu dn’t see a club that matches yur interests, we’re ready t help yu set up ne! Des that sund amazing t yu?
    Cmmunity service
    Giving back t cmmunities is an ideal fundamental t Harvard’s missin. The Phillips Brks Huse Assciatin and the Cllege Public Service Netwrk ffers mre than 120 service initiatives (方案)and prgrams - frm instructing lcal yuth t prmting envirnmental sustainability and running a hmeless shelter. Fr thse dedicated t cmmunity initiatives, Harvard als ffers a variety f funding surces 一 that supprt yur gals t serve thse arund yu.
    Leadership
    The Institute f Plitics (IOP) at the Harvard Kennedy Schl cnnects students with plitical leaders and experienced civil servants. Harvard undergraduates have access t the Institute’s Jhn F. Kennedy Jr. Frum, ne f the wrld’s best grunds fr plitical speech, discussin, and debate.
    Click here t keep track f relevant infrmatin.
    1. Which activity seems attractive t mst students?
    A. Athletics.B. Student rganizatins.C. Cmmunity service.D. Leadership.
    2. What can yu d if there is n club fit fr yu?
    A. Jin a student rganizatin.B. Ask fr help t create ne.
    C. Set up a recreatinal activity.D. Serve the peple arund yu.
    3. Hw can yu get t knw mre abut these activities?
    A. By writing fr the schl newspaper.B. By referring t the service initiatives.
    C. By paying a visit t Harvard graduates.D. By surfing the related schl website.
    B
    Silent films set up America’s mvie industry. But many f these films frm the early 1900s n lnger exist. A new prject aims t represent the flavr f these mvies by digitizing (数字化)ld advertisements fr them and publishing the materials nline.
    The idea fr the prject came frm Chicag-based cllectr Dwight Cleveland, wh was intrduced t the silent mvie advertisements, als called lbby (大厅)cards, as a high schl student in the 1970s. He then fell in lve with the clrs, designs and ther elements used in the mvie cards. That enjyable experience made him want t start his wn cllectin. “It just srt f screamed ut, ‘Take me hme!’“ Cleveland said.
    The cards were made t be placed inside the area utside theater entrances, als knwn as lbbies. The cards infrmed film-gers abut what mvies were currently playing as well as films that wuld arrive next. They advertised all that early Hllywd had t ffer, including cmedies, lve stries and actin mvies.
    Abut 90 percent f all silent films have been lst. One f the main reasns fr this is that the chemicals used t make many f the early films brke dwn ver time. ”What that means is that these mvie cards are the nly prf that these films even existed, Cleveland said.
    Cleveland has been sending examples frm his persnal cllectin t Dartmuth’s Media Eclgy Prject, which is led by Mark William, a prfessr f film studies. When cmpleted, it will becme part f a large cllectin f rare and valuable elements relating t early and mstly lst American films.
    William said the main gal f the prject is t make the material available t early mvie fans and schlars alike. He added that he believes publishing the cllectin will lead t a new interest in the silent film time.
    4. Why did Cleveland have the idea f cllecting lbby cards?
    A. T decrate his hme.B. T hld a card exhibitin.
    C. T design different advertisements.D. T get pleasure frm them.
    5. What culd the cards be used fr?
    A. Beautifying the theater lbby.B. Recrding varius early films.
    C. Making mvie infrmatin knwn.D. Shwing film-gers t their seats.
    6. What is William’s attitude twards the prject?
    A. Cnfident.B. Cautius.
    C. Dubtful.D. Wrried.
    7. Which can be a suitable title fr the text?
    A. Lst Materials: Cme t LifeB. Silent Mvies: Disappear fr Ever
    C. Lbby Cards: Express Silent FilmsD. America Mvies: Change with Time
    C
    Chinese elements are seen everywhere at the 2022 FIFA Wrld Cup in Qatar, frm stadium cnstructin and brand marketing t masct manufacturing (制造), prviding strng supprt fr the grand ftball event.
    The glden-bwl shaped stadium is lcated 15 kilmeters nrth f Dha, capital f Qatar. Serving as the largest sprting venue in Qatar, it hsts imprtant matches. T make the ftball pitch (场地)and the audience area cler and mre cmfrtable, independent cling statins were built utside the stadium, sending cl breezes int the stadium. Hassan Al Thawadi said the cmplex structure prves the great skills and service ability f Chinese firms, adding that thse wh watch the games in the venue shuld be grateful t Chinese engineers and cnstructrs.
    In 2020, Chinese manufacturer Yutng was selected t prvide service vehicles fr the Qatar Wrld Cup. The cmpany equipped its buses with a device that prtects the mtrs frm sand and mud, emplyed liquid-cling pwer batteries and adpted an intelligent temperature cntrl in the buses. It is reprted that Qatar has imprted 1,500 buses frm China, including 888 electric nes t meet the transprtatin demand. It marked the first time fr a majr glbal sprts event t use Chinese new energy buses in such large quantities.
    In a desert 80 kilmeters west f Dha, there is a vast phtvltaic (PV) pwer statin with a ttal area equal t 1,400 standard ftball pitches. Built by the PwerChina Guizhu Engineering C., Ltd., the 800 MW Al Kharsaah Slar Pwer Plant has ver 2 millin PV panels that are able t generate 1.8 billin kilwatt hurs f clean electricity fr Qatar each year. It can supply arund 300,000 lcal husehlds and mainly reduce 900,000 tns f CO2 emissins n an annual basis.
    Mre Chinese elements can be seen bth n and ff the field in Qatar. The appearance f referees Ma Ning, Shi Xiang and Ca Yi marks the first time in the recent 20 years fr Chinese referees t judge Wrld Cup games.
    8. What can we learn abut Hassan Al Thawadi frm Paragraph 2?
    A. He thinks much f Qatar’s climate.B. He knws the stadium’s functin well.
    C. He speaks highly f ftball watchers.D. He greatly praises Chinese cntributins.
    9. What d we knw abut the Chinese Yutng buses?
    A. They are cheap and cmfrtable.B. They are used in many fields.
    C. They are prvided with high technlgy.D. They are easy t make and perate.
    10. Hw is Paragraph 4 develped t intrduce the PV pwer statin?
    A. By giving advice.B. By listing numbers.
    C. By making cmparisn.D. By explaining reasns.
    11. What is the passage mainly abut?
    A. Chinese elements shine at Qatar Wrld Cup.
    B. Chinese gds becme quite ppular in Qatar.
    C. Chinese referees first judge Wrld Cup games.
    D. Chinese cmpanies make great effrts fr Qatar.
    D
    Many diseases and medical cnditins are caused by things ut f ur cntrl. Yet experts say yu can cntrl and even prevent many f the risk factrs that increase yur chances f dying. S dctrs urge us t eat healthy fds, get exercise, stp smking and limit ur alchl intake. But there is smething else yu can d. And it is free and easy — Smile!
    Anand Chckalingam is a heart disease specialist at University f Missuri Health Care in Clumbia, Missuri. He advises his patients t smile, “When we smile, the brain wiring gets influenced. The chemicals that are released are mre psitive.” He says smiling is a first step in fighting physical and emtinal stress. This is nt just New Age advice. Several studies are in favr f Dr. Chckaligam’s prescriptin (处方) t smile mre.
    The main cause f heart attacks and strkes are blckages in bld vessels (血管). These prevent bld frm flwing t the heart r the brain. The mst cmmn reasn fr these blckages is a build-up f fatty depsits n the inner walls f the arteries.
    When yu feel stressed r under pressure, yur bdy releases many natural hrmnes (激素) including adrenaline and crtisl. Adrenaline increases yur heart rate and bld pressure. Crtisl is the bdy’s main stress hrmne. It increases sugar in the bldstream. If yu are truly in danger, these hrmnes can help yu. They are part f what we call ur fight-r-flight respnse.
    Hwever, when stressed fr a lng perid, these stress hrmnes are ever-present in ur bdies. And that, medical researchers warn, may lead t health prblems.
    Dr. Chckalingam says a smile may be ne way t help. He tells his patients t smile 20 times an hur. T sme, that might seem like a lt f smiling. Or sme might even feel flish ... smiling fr seemingly n reasn. But a smile des nt invlve drugs r peratins. It is free and it has n bad side effects.
    “Once peple smile, they are relaxing. This relaxatin directly lwers bld pressure, and imprves sugar levels in the bld. If we are smiling, we are breaking that link between stress and health,” and it just may prvide a little extra prtectin t everyne’s heart health.
    12. What des the writer want t highlight in Paragraph 1?
    A. Taking mre exercise.B. Smiling mre.
    C. Aviding smking and alchl.D. Cntrlling illness and death.
    13. Why is Anand Chckalingam mentined?
    A. T shw his talent.B. T supprt a cnclusin.
    C. T describe several new studies.D. T analyze his patients’ prescriptins.
    14. What des the underlined wrd “these” in Paragraph 3 prbably refer t?
    A. heart attacksB. bld vessels
    C. strkesD. blckages
    15. What is the last paragraph mainly abut?
    A. The benefits f smiling.B. The advantages f relaxatin.
    C. The effect f lw bld pressure.D. The way f preventing stress hrmne.
    2023届四川省绵阳市高三第二次诊断性考试英语试题
    第一节 (共15小题;每小题2分, 满分30分)
    阅读下列短文, 从每题所给的四个选项 (A、B、C和D)中, 选出最佳选项。并在答题卡上将该选项涂黑。
    A
    The fllwing list fcuses n the tp 4 nt-t-be-missed wrld-class museums, helping turists explre and experience the best the New Yrk City has t ffer.
    COOPER HEWITT, SMITHSONIAN DESIGN MUSEUM
    The Cper Hewitt, Smithsnian Design Museum (CHSDM)was funded in 1897. It is the nly museum in the U.S. devted t histric and cntemprary design. Exhibitins feature mre than 650 bjects thrughut fur flrs f the building, many f which draw frm the museum’s permanent cllectin f mre than 210, 000 bjects. Free guided turs are prvided frm 11:30 AM t 1:30 PM n weekdays and 1 PM t 3 PM n weekends.
    MUSEUM OF THE MOVING IMAGE
    The Museum f the Mving Image (MOMI) is hused n the riginal 13-acre lt that made up the histric Kaufman Astria Studis. Lse yurself in the permanent exhibit, Behind the Screen, which intrduces visitrs t the histry f the mving image frm 19th-century ptical (视觉)tys t tday’s digital tls used t edit and prduce films.
    AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY
    One f the wrld’s largest natural histry museums with mre than 33 millin exhibits, the AMNH educates and entertains visitrs, keeping them busy fr hurs n end. The museum ffers self-guided turs, including ne featuring exhibits frm the mvie, Night at the Museum with Ben Stiller. There are a handful f places t eat inside shuld the kids get hungry. The kid sleepvers at the AMNH are impressive.
    NEW-YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY
    The New-Yrk Histrical Sciety (NYHS)was funded in 1804 as New Yrk’s first museum. The Henry Luce II Center fr the Study f American Culture n the furth flr has been redesigned t shwcase The Gallery f Tiffany lamps, displayed in a glass gallery. The Center fr Wmen’s Histry is the first f its kind in a devted t this subject. It ffers free daily turs at 2 and 3:30 PM.
    1. When can yu get free guided turs at the CHSDM?
    A. At 12:30 PM Mnday.B. At 2:30 PM Thursday.
    C. At 10:30 AM Saturday.D. At 11:30 AM Sunday.
    2. Which museum prvides special care fr children?
    A. CHSDMB. MOMI.C. AMNH.D. NYHS.
    3. What is special abut NYHS?
    A. It has the lngest histry.
    B. It fcuses n human histry.
    C. It prvides free turs all day lng.
    D. It tells the histry f the mving image.
    B
    What are the mst sustainable crps t grw fr fd security? Perhaps, in yur grwing znes, ranges r peaches win fr best fruit crp.Ht, dry climates might call fr dates r grapes.Fr me, grwing rganic apples is the best.Perhaps that’s because my hmetwn knws mre abut grwing and preserving apples than any ther fruit.
    Sme apples may have wrms in them.“It’s nt that bad. It’s rganic.Just cut the wrm ut.”I laugh even as I type this.Fr us, “rganic”is hw we grw apples, but it des mean carving gd fruit away frm black wrm hles.Mdern techniques fr grwing rganic apples include wrm traps, fruit barriers, and rganic insecticides, like bacterial pisns that nly target wrms.
    Wrmy apples are just fine fr apple juice and jam, Mm says.Cut ff the gd part and thrw it in the pt.Thrw the bad part t the chickens.Bil the fruit and put juice int canning jars.Apple jam becme pancake tpping and the replacement “il” in recipes — that is, if we dn’t eat it directly ut f the jar.
    Apples are nw s symblic t American life that ther cuntries try ut the market.When I was yunger, I might have laughed at that because f hw cnnected apples and American stries have becme, despite the fact that apples aren’t native t Nrth America.But a gd friend, after visiting several farms in his mtherland Nigeria, shwed me phts f Nigerian apples. The skin texture (质地) and clr resembled American apples, but they were shaped mre like xheart tmates.S even thugh apples have taken n symblic significance in America, they can cntribute t fd security in all kinds f places.
    4. What’s the passage mainly abut?
    A. Organic fd and mdern techniques.
    B. American and African apples.
    C. Climate and grwing crps.
    D. Apples and fd security.
    5. What happens t the gd parts f wrmy apples?
    A. They are thrwn away.B. They are made int apple juice.
    C. They are sld t custmers.D. They are fed t the chickens.
    6. What des the authr learn frm his friend?
    A. Apples are nt native t Nrth America.
    B. Other cuntries are als grwing apples.
    C. Apples utside America are ugly-lking.
    D. Peple f ther cuntries dn’t like apples.
    7. What can be inferred frm the passage?
    A. America prduces the best apples f the wrld.
    B. Pisns are n lnger used n apples in America.
    C. The authr is prud f apples grwn in his hmetwn.
    D. Apple juice and jam are actually made frm wrmy apples.
    C
    Kjell Inge Rekke is a billinaire wner f an il cmpany frm Nrway. As a yung man, he was a high schl drput wh mved t the US t becme an rdinary fisherman. Nw he is the tenth-richest man in his cuntry. Wrth tw billin dllars, he plans t give much f his mney away and is starting with cleaning up ur ceans. In the Pacific Ocean, there is an island called the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, which is twice the size f the cntinental United States. It cnsists f nthing but small pieces f plastic and the dead bdies f sea life and birds. The billinaire is buying a state-f-the-art ship. With the latest equipment n bard, the ship will remve five tns f plastic frm ur ceans daily.
    Kjell started his business empire building industrial fishing bats. He believes he wes his frtune t the cean and wants t pay the debt back. “I want t give back t sciety the majrity f what I’ve earned. This ship is a part f it.” said the seaging man. Managed by the cnservatin rganizatin WWF, the ship’s missin is t get the pisnus things ut f the ceans.
    It culdn’t cme at a better time. Earlier this year a killer whale washed up n a UK shre was pisned by man-made chemicals. The whale called Lulu was the mst pisned n recrd. It was 20 years ld and had never reprduced because her bdy had been badly damaged.
    Kjell has given WWF cmplete cntrl f the bat. The cnservatin rganizatin is nt cmfrtable with the practices f the Nrwegian’s il business. Yet in the struggle t save the envirnment, unlikely partners must wrk tgether. Withut the wrld’s ceans, life n Earth wuldn’t exist.
    8. What has Kjell decided t d?
    A. Make ur ceans clean again.
    B. Put an end t his il business.
    C. Stp using plastics in his daily life.
    D. Remve the rubbish with his wn hands.
    9. What des “state-f-the-art” in Paragraph 4 prbably mean?
    A. Beautiful. B. Advanced. C. Expensive. D. Cmfrtable.
    10. Why is Lulu the whale mentined in the passage?
    A. T ask peple t help the creature.
    B T invite peple t jin in the effrt.
    C. T stress the cnsequence f the pllutin.
    D. T draw attentin t the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.
    11 Why des WWF decide t wrk with Kjell?
    A. Ocean pllutin calls fr cmbined actin.
    B. It is cmfrtable t wrk with a billinaire.
    C. His business is friendly t the envirnment.
    D. He has given up cntrl f his newly bught ship.
    D
    If yu are frgetful r make mistakes when in a hurry a new study frm Michigan State University (MSU) fund that meditatin (冥想) culd help yu t becme less likely t make mistakes.
    The research, published in Brain Sciences, tested hw pen mnitring meditatin (OMM) changed brain activity in a way that suggests increased errr recgnitin. The findings suggest that different frms f meditatin can have different effects. “Sme frms f meditatin have yu fcus n a single bject, cmmnly yur breath, but OMM is a bit different,” Lin said. “It has yu pay attentin t everything ging n in yur mind and bdy. The gal is t sit quietly and pay clse attentin t where the mind travels withut getting t caught up in the scenery.”
    Lin and his MSU c-authrs—William Eckerle, Ling Peng and Jasn Mser— emplyed mre than 200 participants t test hw OMM affected hw peple detect and respnd t errrs. The participants, wh had never meditated befre, were taken thrugh a 20-minute OMM exercise while the researchers measured brain activity thrugh EEG (脑电图) .
    While the meditatrs didn’t have immediate imprvements t actual task perfrmance, the researchers’ findings ffer a prmising windw int the ptential f sustained meditatin. “These findings are a strng demnstratin f what just 20 minutes f meditatin can d t enhance the brain’s ability t detect and pay attentin t mistakes,” Mser said. “It makes us feel mre cnfident in what meditatin might really be capable f fr perfrmance and daily functining right there in the mment.”
    Lking ahead, Lin said, “The next phase f research will determine whether changes in brain activity can translate t behaviral changes with mre lng-term practice. It’s great t see the public’s enthusiasm fr meditatin, but there’s still plenty f wrk frm a scientific viewpint t be dne t understand the benefits it can have, and equally imprtantly, hw it actually wrks.”
    12. Hw des OMM differ frm ther frms f mediatin?
    A. It fixes yur fcus n yur breath.
    B. It keeps yur mind and bdy calm.
    C. It makes yu caught up in the scenery.
    D. It enables yu t be aware f everything.
    13. What des the results f the research shw?
    A. The mediatrs acquire the habit f meditating regularly.
    B. The mediatrs can imprve their ability t recgnize errrs.
    C. Meditatin has an immediate influence n task perfrmance.
    D. Meditatin can increase peple’s cnfidence abut themselves.
    14. What will the research team try t find ut next?
    A. Hw t mnitr brain activity.
    B. Hw t sustain meditatin practice.
    C. Meditatin’s influence n behavir.
    D. The public’s respnse t meditatin.
    15. What can be a suitable title fr the text?
    A. Meditatin Helps Peple Sit Quietly
    B. OMM Helps Measure Peple’s Brain Activity
    C. Brain Activity Imprves Peple’s Perfrmance
    D. Meditatin May Help Peple Make Fewer Mistakes
    2023届四川省凉山州高三下学期二诊考试英语试题
    第一节(共15小题;每小题2分, 满分30分)
    阅读下列短文, 从每题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中, 选出最佳选项, 并在答题卡上将该选项涂黑。
    A
    A petry cmpetitin has been launched fr pupils. It invites yung peple t reflect n the “many ways we are cnnected t the universe". The cmpetitin is aimed at pupils aged 4-18.
    Winners will receive a range f ther prizes, including bks and chclate, plus cntinued develpment and caching pprtunities frm the Petry Sciety. The rules are as fllws:
    1. The cmpetitin is free t enter. Entries will be accepted frm anywhere in the UK. Entries frm utside the UK are nt accepted. If yu are aged 4-12, yur parents will need t give permissin fr yu t enter. 2. Yur entry must be the riginal wrk f the creatr. Yur wrk is accepted n the basis that this will be its first appearance anywhere in the wrld.
    3. Pems must be written in English r Welsh, but yu can include phrases in yur mther tngue r anther language. Pems must nt be lnger than 20 lines. Yu are free t write in any style r frm.
    4. Yu may enter either nline via website r by pst t the Petry Sciety, 22 Bettertn Street, Lndn. All nline entries must be received by 23:59 GMT n 19 December 2022. All pems entered by pst must be pst-dated n r befre 19 December 2022.
    If yu wuld like t enter nline, please cntinue thrugh the nline system n this website. Email AbutUspetrysciety.rg if yu have prblems with yur submissin.
    21. What is the theme f the cmpetitin?
    A. Reflectin n the envirnment.
    B. Cnnectin t the universe.
    C. Yung peple's passin fr petry.
    D. Natinal celebratin f creativity.
    22. What is the age range f the participants?
    A. 4-12. B. 4-18. C. Over 18. D. Belw 4.
    23. What shuld participants d, accrding t the rules?
    A. Enter their riginal wrks.
    B. Pay fr their entries.
    C. Send their pems by email.
    D. Ask their parents fr permissin.
    B
    Many African peple have always dreamed that ne day the capitals f all African cuntries will be linked by high-speed railway lines. Nw they have ne step clser t realizing that dream.
    On Octber 10, 2016, Africa's first mdern electrified railway, the Ethipia-Djibuti railway, became fully peratinal. This railway, built by Chinese cmpanies, is the first railway built using a cmplete set f Chinese standards utside China.
    But it has nt been easy fr Chinese cmpanies t win Ethipian supprt fr the prject. The Ethipian gvernment nce cnsidered Western standards the best nes. But thanks t China's utstanding perfrmance in building and managing railways, Chinese firms ended up getting the prject.
    “After runds f talks, the Ethipian gvernment came t realize that Chinese standards are nt inferir(次于)t western nes, and mre imprtantly, they best suit the cuntry,” Meng Fengcha, bard chairman f China Railway Cnstructin Crp, tld Xinhua.
    This is just anther f China's recent achievements in railway building China has the wrld's lngest railway and they make up a huge 60 percent f the wrld's ttal. Besides length, China als des well in speed. China is the nly cuntry with trains running at 350 km per hur n lines such as Beijing-Tianjin and Beijing-Shanghai high-speed railways.
    Thanks t these achievements, it's easy t frget that China wasn't an early starter in the high-speed rail netwrk game. Japan started 50 years ag, while Germany began 20 years ag. China nly launched its high-speed railway14 years ag.
    Hw has China's high-speed railway been able t develp s quickly? The driving frce behind the fast develpment has been the cuntry's great need fr transprtatin.
    “The high-speed railway nt nly cvers the distance, but als cnnects peple, infrmatin and gds, greatly bsting the reginal ecnmy, peple's lives and turism, " Huang Xin, an fficial frm China Railway Crpratin, tld China Daily. The high-speed railway has becme the transprtatin f chice fr many Chinese peple. Accrding t China Railway Crp, abut 4, 200 bullet trains run in China each day, meaning that mre than 4. 5 millin passengers can travel.
    This is nly the beginning f China's high -speed railway develpment. The Natinal Develpment and Refrm Cmmissin said that China plans t have 38, 000 km f high-speed railways by 2025.
    24. What can be learned abut the Ethipia-Djibuti railway?
    A. It was still under cnstructin.
    B. It links capitals f several cuntries.
    C. It was the first electrified railway in Africa.
    D. It was a cmbinatin f Chinese and West standards.
    25. What is China's recent achievement in railway building?
    A. China helps many ther cuntries build railway.
    B. Chinese standards suit mst f the cuntries in the wrld.
    C. China excels at bth the length f railway and speed f trains.
    D. China is ne f the cuntries whse trains can run at 350km/h.
    26. Which statement is true accrding t the passage?
    A. China was the pineer f building high-speed rail netwrks.
    B. China spent 14 years building a lngest railway in the wrld.
    C. China's railway accunts fr less than 60% f the wrld's ttal.
    D. China's great need fr transprtatin has driven railway develpment.
    27. Which culd be the best title fr the text?
    A. China's Railways G t the Wrld.
    B. The Crpratin between China and Africa.
    C. The Railway Develpment in Africa.
    D. The Histry f High-speed Railway in the wrld.
    C
    Invlving little rte learning, a new teaching apprach is becming ppular where teachers encurage debate and discussin in the classrm. Hw will students cpe with this inspiring style f teaching? One way is thrugh critical thinking, which is a necessary skill.
    The easiest way t learn t think critically is t frce yurself t questin everything, accrding t Michael Tabachnick, a physics prfessr at Delaware Valley Cllege. “That des nt mean yu can't believe, but yu must questin. Is it true? Is it pinin? Is it justified by the fact?. . . Students eventually learn t analyze, " Tabachnick said.
    Yung learners cnstantly ask questins because they are curius abut the wrld that remains unknwn t them. But this natural curisity disappears with time.
    Hwever, questining yur teachers shuld be encuraged. After all, they are the nes wh have been educated, and have a lt mre experience and knwledge than students.
    When I taught in a cllege in Sctland, I enjyed answering students' questins. Sme f my students psted difficult queries (问题). I didn’t always knw the answers. If I didn’t, I’d admit it and try t find ut later.
    I still remember when I was at university, my peers and I were encuraged t challenge each ther and ur prfessrs. A student wuld write a paper n a subject, and fellw students wuld criticize it. It culd be very challenging. But it was a way f develping critical thinking and lgical thinking. Having a lgical mind can help develp critical thinking. Sme peple dn't have a lgical mind, but they d have emtinal intelligence, which is als imprtant fr critical thinking. Peple with high emtinal intelligence can understand ther peple's feelings, cmmunicate prperly with them, and read their persnalities. If yu can't at least try t put yurself in smene else's shes, hw can yu understand their situatins, their prblems and their issues?
    S, try t develp yur pwer f critical thinking. Start with bks, films, music and newspapers. And dn't believe everything yu read r see. Think fr yurself.
    28. Which f the fllwing is an example f an inspiring style f teaching?
    A. Students are rganized t have sme discussin.
    B. Students are asked t recite sme histrical facts.
    C. Students are required t cpy sme histrical facts.
    D. Students are quizzed n sme famus peple in histry.
    29. Hw can yu develp critical thinking as Michael Tabachnick says?
    A. Have a debate n a subject.
    B. D nt believe anything.
    C. Discuss a tpic with classmates.
    D. Ask a questin and analyze.
    30. What des the underlined wrd “it” in Paragraph 5 refer t?
    A. The fault in the answer I gave.
    B. The fact that I didn't knw the answers.
    C. The gd questins that students asked.
    D. The answers that I needed t find ut later.
    31. Hw can emtinal intelligence help critical thinking?
    A. Peple with high emtinal intelligence are pen-minded.
    B. Peple with high emtinal intelligence are gd at criticizing.
    C. High emtinal intelligence helps peple understand thers better.
    D. High emtinal intelligence helps peple think in a mre lgical way.
    D
    These days, Earth Day is celebrated every year n April 22 in schls and cities acrss the United States. There are class prjects, prgrams, tree plantings and many ther fficial events. S, it may be hard t realize that when it first started, Earth Day was cnsidered a radical(激进的) prtest.
    The mdern envirnmental mvement began in the 1960s. It was a time f the generatin gap. Yung peple were acting ut against their parents' way f life. Cllege campuses were rcked by demnstratin against the war in Vietnam and ther issues. In the middle f this, in 1970, a US senatr(参议员)frm Wiscnsin named Gaylrd Nelsn camp up with the idea fr Earth Day. As he later explained it, the idea was t channel “the student antiwar energy” int the envirnmental cause.
    A lt f yung peple felt that science was the enemy. This was in spite f the fact that a lt f the peple wh were warning the public abut air and water pllutin and animals in danger were scientists. After all, wasn't it technlgy - cars, husing develpments and factries-that was causing the prblem by spreading pllutin and destrying nature? Sme adults wh had thught Earth Day supprters had gne t far made fun f them. They called them “tree huggers”.
    Envirnmentalists were right that technlgy had t be cntrlled. Laws and regulatins were needed t make sure that bth industry and science acted respnsibly. Still, science gt a bad name. It was as if yu had t chse either science r nature. Yu culdn't have bth.
    Lately, thugh, the situatin has changed. We have cme t see that science and the envirnment d nt have t be enemies. Technlgy can be used t prtect the envirnment, nt destry it. Lk at all the advances in clean energy that have cme frm science. Just as Earth Day has evlved, s has ur view f science and nature. We knw tday that we d nt have t chse between the tw. Instead, we understand that science is ne f the main tls we can use t prtect the envirnment. Yu can be a scientist and a “tree hugger”. That's big advancement fr science and great news fr trees.
    32. What can peple usually d n Earth Day?
    A. Cut dwn trees.
    B. Jin in a prtest.
    C. Launch an investigatin.
    D. Cmplete a class prject.
    33. Why did Gaylrd Nelsn suggest celebrating Earth Day?
    A. T encurage yung students t prtect nature.
    B. T direct the public's attentin t envirnmental changes.
    C. T take students' attentin away frm antiwar demnstratin.
    D. T narrw the generatin gap between yung peple and their parents.
    34. What did sme adults think f “tree huggers"?
    A. T extreme.
    B. Quite ratinal.
    C. Very knwledgeable.
    D. Really cnsiderate.
    35. Which statement is supprted by the authr?
    A. Peple have t chse either science r nature.
    B. Nwadays science can serve t prtect the envirnment.
    C. Science has been playing a psitive part the whle time.
    D. The develpment f science des harm t the envirnment.
    2023届四川省成都市高中毕业班第二次诊断性检测英语试题
    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, 选出最佳选项。
    A
    Hw d yu decide which charities t supprt? If a charity receives a high ranking, it must be effective at meeting its missin. Therefre, we pick sme internatinal charities that rank A+ in terms f financial health, accuntability, and transparency.
    Internatinal Children's Fund
    The missin f the Internatinal Children's Fund(ICF) is t cme t the aid f needy children wrldwide since 1987. This charity distributes life-saving fd, clthing, and medicine and it supprts the cnstructin f rphanages, schls, churches and vcatinal training centers acrss the African cntinent. ICF uses an impressive 99. 7 percent f its funding fr prjects.
    Direct Relief
    With a histry f ver 7 decades, Direct Relief (DR) is a humanitarian rganizatin with a missin t imprve the health and lives f peple affected by pverty and emergencies. DR's assistance prgrams fcus n emergency preparedness and disaster relief, disease preventin and treatment f the mst vulnerable ppulatins. DR uses a 99. 4 percent f its funding fr prgrams.
    MAP Internatinal
    Since its fundatin in 1954, MAP has served millins f peple. Its missin is t prvide medicines and health supplies t thse in need arund the wrld s they might experience life t thefullest. At present, MAP is respnding t recent emergencies that include areas hit by earthquakes r hurricanes, as well as helping refugees. Cntributins g a lng way here; a $ 25 dnatin prvides $1, 500 f medicine. A ntable 99 percent f its funding is used fr aid prgrams.
    Bks fr Africa
    Bks fr Africa rganizatin cllects, srts, ships and distributes bks that are dnated by publishers, schls, libraries, rganizatins, and individuals. Vlunteers chse bks that are age and subject apprpriate. Enugh bks fr entire classes are sent. T date, 41 millin bks have been distributed t nce-empty libraries and rural schls in every African cuntry. This rganizatin, funded 35 years ag, als uses 99 percent f its funding fr its missins.
    21. What des MAP fcus n?
    A. Building schls.
    C. Preventing natural disasters.
    B. Imprving peple's fitness.
    D. Supplying studying materials.
    22. Which charity has the lngest histry?
    A. Direct Relief.
    B. Bks fr Africa.
    C. MAP Internatinal.
    D. Internatinal Children's Fund. 23. What d the listed charities have in cmmn?
    A. The peple wh funded them.
    C. The rganizatin that spnsrs them.
    B. The regin they ffer help t.
    D. The reputatin they enjy wrldwide.
    B
    Chinese ink paintings nce were n the edge f being frgtten-at least accrding t a paper f Li Xiashan, a pstgraduate art student.
    At the time, many Chinese painting prfessinals passed away withut finding yunger artists t fill their shes. Yung artists were left n their wn t find breakthrughs and define themselves as artists. While extremely exaggerated(夸张), Li's cmment sent shck waves thrugh the Chinese painting cmmunity. Since then, many experimental painters have taken t their studis in China, creating many astnishing and inspiratinal ink paintings using new methds and cncepts, marking an imprtant step fr the develpment f cntemprary Chinese paintings.
    Sha Ge is a representative f this new frm. Brn t an rdinary family in Beijing in 1962, Sha was keen n traditinal Chinese paintings. As a child, he spent much f his time staring at the ink masterpieces in the Palace Museum. There was an elder neighbr, wh was gd at Chinese painting and calligraphy. In his spare time, the kind elder talked abut traditinal Chinese culture t yung Sha. Sme years later, Sha decided t study painting after graduating frm high schl. After graduating in the Beijing Arts and Crafts Schl in 1978, Sha was sent t wrk at a small crafts factry. Befre lng, the factry went bankrupt. Sha later passed an exam and became a painter fr RngBa Zhai, a famus Chinese art gallery established in 1672. This career jump allwed Sha t springbard int a lifetime f ink paintings.
    “At first, I just drew everything-landscapes, figures, flwers, birds, and fish, " Sha said. “But I sn fund sticking t traditinal thughts and skills f Chinese paintings wuld be a brake n my develpment as a prfessinal painter. Fr this reasn, I decided t innvate my wn style. "
    24. What d the underlined wrds “fill their shes” mean in Paragraph 2?
    A. Calm them dwn.
    C. Fcus n themselves.
    B. Ask them fr help.
    D. Take ver their rles.
    25. What des Paragraph 3 mainly intrduce abut Sha Ge?
    A. His jurney t art.
    B. His family backgrund.
    C. His neighbr's influence.
    D. His passin fr learning.
    26. What will be prbably talked abut in the next paragraph?
    A. Peple's view f Sha's painting.
    B. Sha's impact n Chinese painting.
    C. The develpment f traditinal painting.
    D. Sha's successful experiment in painting.
    27. In which clumn f a newspaper can this text prbably be fund?
    A. Fashin. B. Feature. C. Educatin. D. Literature.
    C
    Sme Italian architects have cmpleted the first 3D-printed hme made frm clay recently. It is called TECLA, which cmes frm “technlgy" and “clay”.
    Its funder, Mari Cucinella, pints ut that building hmes frm earth is nt new. Adbe-made frm a mix f earth, water and rganic material-is ne f the wrld's earliest cnstructin materials, knwn fr its firmness, and bi-degradability. He hpes that its design can becme a practical ptin t huse peple wh lack adequate husing due t financial issues.
    Over the past few years, many 3D-printed hmes and cmmunities have been cnceptualized, prmising lw cnstructin csts. But while previus structures were built using cncrete r plastic, TECLA was mainly built frm sil at the site mixed with water and fibers frm rice husks. Cucinella believes this apprach can be adpted in different parts f the wrld, using whatever lcal materials are available, and culd be particularly helpful in remte areas, where industrial cnstructin materials are harder t cme by.
    Printing with clay has its drawbacks. It's a much slwer prcess than quick-drying cncrete 3D-printed hmes and all-clay skyscrapers are nt likely in the future. Hwever, the use f available sil and the prgram's ease f cnstructin mean that TECLA culd be well-suited t prvide husing in many different cuntries. It is estimated that by 2030, 3 billin peple will require access t accessible and affrdable residences. “Yu can build this kind f huse in many mre places when yu are nt dependent n sme specific prduct, ”Cucinella explained.
    TECLA has drawn wide attentin. “I’m nt in the psitin t say this will be the future f all huses n the planet, “Russ, anther 3D-printing architect said. Hwever, he added, “I think this revlutin f 3D printing is t give peple a degree f freedm in hw t d things, withut being cnnected t a big, prfessinal industry. ”
    28. What's the purpse f TECLA?
    A. T make 3D-printed hmes firmer.
    B. T assist in slving husing issues.
    C. T prvide alternatives fr huse buyers.
    D. T help the pr thrugh financial difficulty.
    29. What can we learn abut the cnstructin f TECLA?
    A. It's quite expensive.
    C. It's a demanding prcess.
    B. It takes a shrter time.
    D. It's flexible in material selectin.
    30. What is Russ's attitude t TECLA?
    A. Favrable. B. Critical. C. Dubtful. D. Tlerant.
    31. What's the text mainly abut?
    A. A design that can replace the previus patterns.
    B. A technlgy that takes the lead in architecture.
    C. A structure where traditin meets new technlgy.
    D. A trend where technlgy is cupled with architecture.
    D
    In 2007 a team led by Stefan Rahmstrf cmpared actual bservatins with predictins made by theretical mdels fr three key climate indicatrs: carbn dixide, glbal temperature and sea-level rise. While the predictins gt CO2 levels right, they were lw fr real temperature and sea-level rise.
    Climate scientists have a surprising habit: They ften underestimate the climate threat. The articles reprting the underestimates have been widely cited, s ne might think that scientists have taken crrective steps. But recent studies f Arctic warming suggest that the prblem may nt have gne away. As plar ice melts because f glbal warming, the Arctic Ocean absrbs mre heat, which causes the Arctic t warm even mre. It shuld surprise n ne that the area is warming fast. Yet scientists have been caught ff-guard by just hw fast the regin is heating up.
    In 2013, a paper was published pinting ut that these underestimates represent subcnscius bias(偏向)caused by defensiveness. Scientists tended tward lwer and misleading predictin because they did nt want t be accused f making dramatic and verstressed claims. Even nw scientists cntinue t be accused f verestimating climate risks by wrrying figures which get much media attentin, thus biasing their mdels t be unrealistically cnservative.
    If scientists have underestimated Arctic warming, they have likely minimized amunts f permafrst(永久冻土)melting and methane(甲烷)release as well. And that culd be truly dire because the permafrst hlds abut 1.5 billin tns f rganic carbn, twice as much as nw in the atmsphere. Were that carbn t be rapidly released, it culd cause a picture: a runaway greenhuse effect. Whatever the cause, it's time that scientists lked seriusly at whether their measuring mdels cntinue t underestimate critical aspects f the climate prblem. Lw estimates can create the false impressin that we have mre time t fix the prblem than we actually d.
    32. Why is Rahmstrf’s research in Paragraph 1 mentined?
    A. T highlight the urgency in glbal warming.
    B. T shw the inaccuracy f climate predictins.
    C. T state the imprtance f precise measurement.
    D. T express the difficulty in making right plicies.
    33. Why d climate scientists always underestimate climate threats?
    A. They are misled by the statistics.
    B. Their reprts have been widely cited.
    C. They want t avid blame fr causing anxiety.
    D. They aim t defend themselves frm fake infrmatin.
    D. Discuraging. 34. What des the underlined wrd “dire” in Paragraph 4 prbably mean?
    34. What des the underlined wrd “dire” in Paragraph 4 prbably mean?
    A. Disastrus. B. Cnfusing. C. Impressive. D. Discuraging.
    35. What's the best title f this text?
    A. The Arctic Ocean Is Calling fr Help
    C. The Warming Pace Is Underestimated
    B. Climate Scientists Are Under Fire
    D. Climate Predictins Prve Crrect
    答案:
    2023届四川省德阳市高中英语质量监测考试(二)
    【答案】1. B 2. D 3. C
    【答案】4. A 5. B 6. D 7. C
    【答案】8. A 9. C 10. B 11. C
    【答案】12. C 13. B 14. D 15. A
    2023届四川省泸州市高三第二次教学质量诊断性考试英语试题
    【答案】1 A 2. B 3. D
    【答案】4. D 5. C 6. A 7. C
    【答案】8. D 9. C 10. B 11. A
    【答案】12. B 13. B 14. D 15. A
    2023届四川省绵阳市高三第二次诊断性考试英语试题
    【答案】1. A 2. C 3. A
    【答案】4. D 5. B 6. B 7. C
    【答案】8. A 9. B 10. C 11. A
    【答案】12. D 13. B 14. C 15. D
    2023届四川省凉山州高三下学期二诊考试英语试题
    21-23 BBA 24-27 CCDA 28-31 ADBC 32-35 DCAB
    2023届四川省成都市高中毕业班第二次诊断性检测英语试题
    21~25 BADDA 26~30 DBBDA31~35 CBCAC

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