上海师范大学附属嘉定高级中学2024-2025学年高三上学期期中考试英语试题(原卷版)-A4
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这是一份上海师范大学附属嘉定高级中学2024-2025学年高三上学期期中考试英语试题(原卷版)-A4,共13页。试卷主要包含了 A等内容,欢迎下载使用。
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Ⅰ. Listening Cmprehensin
Sectin A
Directins: In Sectin A, yu will hear ten shrt cnversatins between tw speakers. At the end f each cnversatin, a questin will be asked abut what was said. The cnversatins and the questins will be spken nly nce. After yu hear a cnversatin and the questin abut it, read the fur pssible answers n yur paper, and decide which ne is the best answer t the questin yu have heard.
1. A. She desn’t need a new car. B. She has just bught a secnd-hand car.
C. She desn’t drive her car a lt. D. She prefers little cars t big nes.
2. A. Chse the gift she will buy. B. Decide n the paper fr the gift.
C. G t Custmer Service. D. Wrap the gift herself.
3 A. Water the plants mre ften.
B. Mve the plants away frm the windw.
C. Let her take care f the plants fr a while.
D. Put the plants where there is mre sunlight.
4. A. She annyed the waiter. B. She spilt sme red wine.
C. Her jeans gt lst. D. Her trusers gt dirty.
5. A. She needs t call her sister first.
B. The silver chain is t heavy t carry
C. She isn’t ging t buy the silver chain.
D. The silver chain is t expensive fr her.
6. A. The wman’s camera is brken.
B. He wasn’t at Dan and Linda’s wedding.
C. Smene else at the wedding tk gd pictures.
D. Dan and Linda didn’t hire a prfessinal phtgrapher.
7. A. She desn’t think Sally listens well.
B. Sally shuld think mre befre talking.
C. She desn’t understand the man’s pint.
D. Sally is preparing fr her rle in a play.
8. A. He expects t meet the wman at the meeting.
B. The meeting is nt expected t last a lng time.
C. Members will be tld t be brief in their cmments.
D. Cmmittee members will be infrmed befre the meeting.
9. A. The wman gt a bargain.
B. The frame is nt t expensive.
C. The wman paid t much fr the pster.
D. The pster lks better withut the frame.
10. A. She expects Mary t win.
B. The man shuld vte fr Mary in the electin.
C. Mary shuldn’t have campaigned against Steve.
D. She thinks Mary will run again in the next electin.
Sectin B
Directins: In Sectin B, yu will hear tw passages and ne lnger cnversatin. After each passage r cnversatin, yu will be asked several questins. The passages and the cnversatin will be read twice, but the questins will be spken nly nce. When yu hear a questin, read the fur pssible answers n yur paper and decide which ne is the best answer t the questin yu have heard.
Questins 11 thrugh 13 are based n the fllwing passage.
11. A. T rebuild itself. B. T clse fr gd.
C. T mve t anther site. D. T keep mre wild animals.
12. A. It is the wrld’s fifth-ldest cnservatin site.
B. It has been where it is fr almst tw hundred years.
C. It prvides animals with a natural envirnment t live in.
D. It has helped many endangered animals t return t the wild.
13. A. Supprtive. B. Wrried. C. Negative. D. Uncncerned.
Questins 14 thrugh 16 are based n the fllwing passage.
14. A. A well-knwn writer. B. Hw scial trends spread.
C. Hw peple get infected. D. A marketing strategy.
15. A. The brand beat thers in a design cmpetitin.
B. The cmpany increased its investment.
C. They wn fashin designers’ favur.
D. They were seen as ld-fashined.
16. A. Wrd-f-muth marketing wrks as well as advertising.
B. Levels f expsure is determined by a cmpany’s fame.
C. Advertising campaign desn’t lead t widespread publicity.
D. Scial media hasn’t increased the rle f marketing.
Questins 17 thrugh 20 are based n the fllwing cnversatin.
17. A. She can’t find her luggage.
B. Her flight has been cancelled.
C. She hasn’t arrived at the airprt n time.
D. Her tur guide has given her wrng infrmatin.
18. A. In Beijing B. In Shanghai.
C. With anther passenger. D. With her husband.
19. A. Her bags will be sent there. B. Her bags will be picked up there.
C. He will g there with the wman. D. He will call the htel tmrrw mrning.
20. A. Cntented. B. Relieved. C. Indifferent. D. Unsatisfied.
Ⅱ. Grammar and Vcabulary
Sectin A
Directins: After reading the passage belw, fill in the blanks t make the passages cherent and grammatically crrect. Fr the blanks with a given wrd, fill in each blank with the prper frm f the given wrd; fr the ther blanks, use ne wrd that best fits each blank.
Humans can run fr lng distances at a sustained pace
Why can humans run fr lng distances? Bilgists have identified a mutated (变异) gene that might explain ______1______ humans are s gd at endurance running, Prf Ajit Varki f the University f Califrnia, San Dieg, explains.
Hw d humans cmpare against ther animals?
Many animals are capable f shrt-distance running, but ______2______ d endurance running, besides hrses, wlves and striches. Humans are very unusual because we can run fr very lng distances at a sustained pace as lng as yu’re _____3_____ reasnable physical cnditin.
Which genes influence endurance running?
CMAH is the first knwn gene ______4______ might cntribute t endurance running—it’s been arund fr 500 millin years and gt lst in ur ancestrs. The gene prduces an enzyme (酶) ______5______ (add) an additinal xygen atm t mlecules n the cell surface, called sialic acid. Thrughut the bdy, sialic acid enables cells ______6______ (interact) with ne anther. We still have the same amunt f ttal sialic acid, but we lst ne majr frm due t a mutatin in the CMAH gene abut 2-3 millin years ag, which _____7_____ (cincide) with when ur ancestrs gained the ability t run lng distances.
Yu made mice with human-like mutated genes. Hw did they run?
There were tw tests. One was a stress test: we put nrmal and mutant mice n treadmills (跑步机) and they ran _____8_____ they reached exhaustin. The regular mice ran fr 25 minutes, but the mice with human-like CMAH genes ran fr 35 minutes. Imprtantly, thse mice _____9_____ (nt train). Then we put running wheels int the cages; mice lve t run-they run kilmetres at night. Initially there was nt much difference, but ver 10-15 days, the _____10_____ (humanise) mice gt better. And when we tk thse trained mice and put them back n the treadmill test, the difference is even mre bvius: the mutant mice ran fr 60 minutes instead f 40, s arund 50 per cent lnger.
Sectin B
Directins: After reading the passage belw, fill in each blank with a prper wrd given in the bx. Each wrd can be used nly nce. Nte that there is ne mre wrd than yu need.
Hw t Find a Shting Star
“It’s all abut just lking up at the sky,” says Hakeem Oluseyi, authr f A Quant Life: My Unlikely Jurney frm the Streets t the Stars. “The questin is, are yu nticing it?” Yu dn’t need ____11____ equipment; the naked eye is best. “Typically, any technical equipment that yu use is ging t ____12____ yur field f view,” Oluseyi says. Get away frm city light—“the darker, the better,” he says—and find a place with as much visible sky as pssible, like a(n) ____13____ in the muntains r desert. Clse yur eyes fr a few minutes, t speed up their ____14____ t the dark. “If yu have t have lights,” Oluseyi says, “they shuld be red lights.”
What we call shting stars are parts frm cmets and asterids (彗星和小行星) that can be seen year-rund. But many mre shting stars are visible when the earth passes thrugh debris (碎片)fields at the same time every year. “We call thse meter shwers,” Oluseyi says. The Perseids and Lenid (英仙座和狮子座) are typically the mst ____15____, in August and Nvember. During ther times f year, check the Natinal Oceanic and Atmspheric Administratin’s Space Weather Predictin Center fr ____16____ “It’s just like taking a fishing trip: Yu check the weather first because yu’d want t knw what’s happening in the sky befre yu g,” Oluseyi says. Check the earth weather in advance t.
Even in clear skies, it can take a while, smetimes a few hurs, befre yu see what yu want, s g with friends t make the lng utings mre ____17____. Yu dn’t have t limit yurself t waiting fr nly shting stars. Indeed, smetimes it helps t ____18____ fr ther things. “Yu can lk fr satellites and duble stars,” Oluseyi says. “Yu can try t find Andrmeda. Every time I g smewhere new, all ver the earth, I gtta see what the night sky lks like frm where I am.” Lk up and let the shting stars ____19____ yu: “Suddenly yu see smething ut f the crner f yur eye and yu turn yur head and this bright, like ‘W’ thing _____20_____.”
Ⅲ. Reading Cmprehensin
Sectin A
Directins: Fr each blank in the fllwing passage there are fur wrds r phrases marked A, B, C and D. Fill in each blank with the wrd r phrase that best fits the cntext.
What phne shuld I get? That was an imprtant questin immediately after the arrival f the iPhne and its cmpetitrs. But tday’s smartphnes (and tablets) are nearly ____21____. Apple and Ggle (maker f Andrid phne sftware) have cpied each ther’s ideas s cmpletely that the resultant phnes are incredibly clse in lks, price, speed and features.
These days the Apples and Ggles f the wrld are ____22____ n a different battlefield: they’re racing t build the best ecsystem. Each is creating a huge series f intercnnected prducts and services, making it easy fr yu t accept its fferings and as hard as pssible t ____23____ a cmpetitr’s. Fr cnsumers, the chice is nw what set f prducts they like best.
If yu’re ne f these cmpanies, thugh, yu’ve gt a difficult decisin t make: Shuld yu ____24____ yur services t peple wh use yur cmpetitrs’ prducts? On ne hand, making yur sftware available t thse utside yur ecsystem culd intrduce the rest f the wrld t the ____25____ f yur prducts—and pssibly bring in new cnsumers. On the ther hand, yu wuld lse the ____26____ f thse services as an advantage. Why wuld anyne switch if she r he can already get the best f a cmpetitr’s fferings?
S what apprach are the giants taking? It’s a(n) ____27____ bag.
Apple is the mst clsed. ____28____, it writes apps nly fr iPhnes and iPads. Yu can’t, fr example, run the Apple Maps app n ther cmpanies devices. And yu can’t use the Apple Watch with anything but an iPhne. Ggle ges t great lengths t make its wares available t ther platfrms. If yu have an iPhne, yu can use Ggle’s apps, services and even digital stre. Yu can even link an Andrid Wear smartwatch with an iPhne.
Why such ____29____?
It helps t understand the individual crprate ______30______. Althugh the tw cmpanies ffer s many similar devices and services, each is actually running n an entirely different business mdel. Apple is primarily in the business f selling hardware; Micrsft, sftware. Each has different ______31______ in calculating what t pen up.
And Apple and Ggle cntinue t______32______; bth nw ffer, if yu can believe it, sftware fr yur car dashbard (仪表盘) and hme-autmatin system designed t wrk with their respective smartphnes.
Yu, the cnsumer, shuld be delighted by this ______33______. Yu shuld be happy there’s cmpetitin, which always brings abut innvatin (and ften lwer prices). And yu shuld be pleased that verall the trend seems t be fr these cmpanies t make mre f their services ______34______, n matter which phne r cmputer yu wn.
Eventually the ______35______ may well becme nearly the same, t. Maybe at that pint, the questin will nce again becme, “What phne shuld I get?”
21. A. unimaginableB. straightfrwardC. widespreadD. identical
22. A. cmpetingB. cperatingC. shrinkingD. multiplying
23. A. switch tB. evlve intC. stand frD. set aside
24. A. put upB. take ffC. pen upD. cut ff
25. A. dimensinB. superirityC. criterinD. spnsrship
26. A. battleB. businessC. uniquenessD. flexibility
27. A. expandedB. filledC. mixedD. deserted
28. A. In generalB. By cntrastC. What’s mreD. On average
29. A. availabilityB. incnsistencyC. thughtfulnessD. independence
30. A. clientsB. accuntsC. investrsD. mtives
31. A. cursesB. cnsideratinsC. cnservatinsD. circumstances
32. A. burst utB. scale upC. turn upD. branch ut
33. A. traditinB. tensinC. subscriptinD. directin
34. A. accessibleB. interactiveC. affrdableD. permanent
35. A. cmpaniesB. devicesC. ecsystemsD. prices
Sectin B
Directins: Read the fllwing three passages. Each passage is fllwed by several questins r unfinished statements. Fr each f them there are fur chices marked A, B, C and D. Chse the ne that fits best accrding t the infrmatin given in the passage yu have just read.
(A)
In 2018, the New Yrk Times published a stry abut Amade García, the last living speaker f Taushir. He lives in the Amazn, and the article lked at hw he came t be the nly speaker left f his mther tngue. It’s a burden n his shulders: he was the last hpe fr passing his language dwn t his children and allwing it t live at least ne mre generatin.
UNESCO reprts that in Eurpe alne, there are 640 languages currently in danger f extinctin, with anther 228 n lnger spken. With the influence f English acrss the internet arund the wrld, there’s been talk f languages dying ut faster than ever befre. The Guardian recently reprted n the lw status f Icelandic due in large part t the use f English nline. Every language isn’t autmatically supprted nline. The languages yu can use the mst ften are the languages mst widely spken in the wrld.
What happens t culture when a language dies? Every language reflects a unique wrld-view with its wn value systems, philsphy and particular cultural features. The extinctin f a language results in the irrecverable lss f unique cultural knwledge. When a language belnging t peple in the Amazn dies, s t des that peple’s knwledge f the rainfrest, hw they discuss and interpret certain aspects f hw t live in and with that envirnment and the uses fr plants that may still be unknwn t the rest f the wrld.
Knwledge f the wrld isn’t the nly aspect f culture that language is intimately tied t: language frms a critical aspect f a persn’s and a cmmunity’s identity as well. Because language disclses cultural and histrical meaning, the lss f language is a lss f that link t the past.
The lss f language, and therefre that cultural identity, can als lead t wrse mental health within that cmmunity. A study published in 2007 in the jurnal Cgnitive Develpment lked at the link between language knwledge and yuth suicide rates amng the abriginal (土著) ppulatin in British Clumbia. The results shwed that yuth suicide rates effectively drpped t zer in thse few cmmunities in which at least half the band members reprted a cnversatinal knwledge f their wn native language.
36. Amade Garcia shulders the respnsibility f ________.
A. preserving the dying language f his wn culture
B. giving birth t mre children in the Amazn
C. intrducing his mther tngue in interviews
D. prtecting the Amazn fr at least ne mre generatin
37. The underlined phrase “the lw status” in this passage refers t “________”.
A. Iceland is n lnger regarded as a develped natin
B the native language f Iceland can hardly be fund n the internet
C. languages in Iceland are dying ut faster than ever befre
D. languages mst widely spken are autmatically supprted nline
38. Accrding t the passage, the lss f a language can lead t many cnsequences EXCEPT that ________.
A. we will fail t knw the culture linked t the extinct language
B. peple will nt be able t figure ut wh they actually are
C. yung peple are mre likely t suffer frm mental prblems
D the cgnitive develpment f abriginal peple will drp t zer
39. Which f the fllwing can be the best title fr this passage?
A. Language Extinctin and Cultural Cllapse
B. The Negative Impacts f Language Extinctin
C. The Last Living Speaker f Taushir in Amazn
D. The Lss f Culture, Cmmunity and Mental Health
(B)
Fresh air and the right chairs are the key t a happy, healthy wrkfrce, accrding t a new survey. We went t an ffice in an advertising agency, t find ut hw healthy and happy they were as wrking envirnments. Amng ur experts were a building healthy cnsultant; an ergnmist, wh studies peple’s wrking cnditins; and an ccupatinal psychlgist. Here are what they said.
Building Health Cnsultant: This ffice is abut as simple as it culd pssibly be; n central heating, n mechanical ventilatin (通风设备), windws pening t straight nt the street. It is difficult t see why this space wrks but the ccupants, wh are part f a small dynamic team, appear t have few cmplaints. They adapt t the changing seasns by pening drs and rf panels r switching n electric radiatins-pretty much, perhaps, as they d in their wn hmes. This may be the key: a team f seven peple have created a happy, hmely wrking envirnment and d nt have t put up with any externally impsed discmfrt.
Ergnmist: The furniture here has evlved; n tw pieces match. Much f it actually created bad wrking pstures. Chairs are ld, mst aren’t adjustable and many are brken. Althugh in that way this envirnment is pr, the persnnel have a varied wrk schedule, which they cntrl — ffice wrk, ut meeting clients, making presentatins, and s n. This variety reduces the risk f exhaustin, bredm r muscular prblems.
Occupatinal psychlgist: Staff are delighted with the variety f wrk and the multiple functins f the ffice space. They said their ffice was ‘neither t big nr t small’— small enugh t knw what clleagues were ding, large enugh t be able t be n yur wn and fcus n persnal wrk. I fund the ffice attractive and fun, cnveying images f efficiency and creativity at the same time.
40. Bth Building Health Cnsultant and Ergnmist find that ________ f the advertising agency is/are far frm satisfactry.
A. the wrking hursB. the emplyers’ mental state
C. the management’s pliciesD. the physical envirnment
41. Accrding t the Occupatinal psychlgist, what d staff think f the ffice?
A. It has a perfect size.B. It prevents efficiency.
C. It has a creative design.D. It discurages cmmunicatin.
42. All the three experts have fund that ________.
A. the ffice space needs t be mre lively
B. the emplyees wrk happily in the agency
C. the emplyees’ health cnditins are wrrying
D the ffice space has discuraged attentin and cnfidence during wrking hurs
(C)
T the average persn, it must seem as if the field f artificial intelligence is making great achievement. Accrding t sme f the media accunts and press releases, OpenAI’s DALL-E2 can seemingly create spectacular images frm any text; and a system called Gat that was released in May by DeepMind, reprtedly wrked well n every task the cmpany culd thrw at it. One f the DeepMind’s high-level executives even went s far as t bast that in pursuing AI that has the flexibility and resurcefulness f human intelligence—knwn as artificial general intelligence, r AGI—“the game is ver.”
Dn’t be fled.
AI is getting better-synthetic images lk mre and mre realistic, and speech recgnitin can ften wrk in nisy envirnments-but we are still likely decades away frm general-purpse, human-level AI that can understand the true meanings f articles and vides r deal with unexpected barriers and interruptins. The field is stuck n precisely the same challenges that academic scientists have been pinting ut fr years: getting AI t be reliable and getting it t cpe with unusual circumstances.
Take DALL-E2. It culdn’t tell the difference between an image f a red cube n tp f a blue versus an image f a blue cube n tp f a red cube. A newer system, released this past May, culdn’t tell the difference between an astrnaut riding a hrse and hrse riding an astrnaut.
When image-creating systems like DALL-E2 make mistakes, the result can be amusing. But smetimes errrs prduced by AI cause serius cnsequences. A Tesla n autpilt recently drve directly tward a human wrker carrying a stp sign in the middle f the rad, slwing dwn nly when the human driver tk actin. The system culd recgnize humans n their wn and stp signs in their usual lcatins but failed t slw dwn when faced with the unfamiliar cmbinatin f the tw, which put the stp sign in a new and unusual psitin.
Unfrtunately, the fact that these systems still fail t wrk reliably and struggle with nvel circumstances is usually buried in the fine print. Gat, fr instance, wrked well n all the tasks DeepMind reprted but rarely as well as ther cntemprary systems. A lk at recent headlines, hwever, wuldn’t tell yu abut any f these prblems.
Fr nw we are trapped in a “lcal minimum” in which cmpanies pursue benchmarks rather than fundatinal ideas. Current engineering practice is far ahead f scientific skills: these departments fcus n making small imprvements with the prly understd tls they already have rather than develping new technlgies with a clearer theretical grund. This is why basic research remains crucial. That a large part f the AI research cmmunity (like thse wh shut, “Game ver”) desn’t even see that is, well, heartbreaking.
43. What des the DeepMind’s executive mean by “the game is ver” (paragraph 1)?
A. AGI is quite a frustrating area.
B. There has been great prgress in AGI.
C. N mre investment shuld be put int AGI.
D. Technlgy cmpanies has put t much emphasis n AGI.
44. The Tesla n autpilt is mentined in paragraph 5 in rder t illustrate that ________.
A. cnsequences caused by AI can be amusing
B. AI is reliable in handling familiar situatins
C. Tesla cars are nt a gd example f autpilt
D. AI cannt deal well with unexpected circumstances
45. It can be inferred frm the passage that the writer thinks that ________.
A. mre light shuld be cast n successful AI cmpanies
B. mre specific training prgrammes shuld be created fr AI
C. mre fundamental technlgies shuld be develped fr AI
D. mre reliable benchmarks shuld be established fr AI prducts
46. Which f the fllwing statements best summarizes the writer’s viewpint?
A Media shuld talk less abut AI.
B. It is t early t be cnfident f AI.
C. Human-level AI will sn be a fact f life.
D. AI practice falls far behind related theries.
Sectin C
Directins: Read the fllwing passage. Fill in each blank with a prper sentence given in the bx. Each sentence can be used nly nce. Nte that there are tw mre sentences than yu need.
Cmputatinal Thinking in Science
Thrughut mst f the histry f science and technlgy, there have been tw types f characters. One is the experimenter wh gathers data t reveal when a hypthesis (假设) wrks and when it des nt. The ther is the theretician, wh designs mathematical mdels t explain what is already knwn and uses the mdels t make predictins abut what is nt knwn. The tw types interact with ne anther because hyptheses may cme frm mdels, and what is knwn cmes frm previus mdels and data. ____47____
When prjects t build electrnic cmputers started in the 1940s, scientists began discussin hw they wuld use these machines. Nearly everybdy had smething t gain. Experimenters lked t cmputers fr data analysis-lking thrugh large data sets fr statistical patterns. ____48____
Using the cmputer t speed up the traditinal wrk f experimenters and thereticians was a revlutin f its wn. ____49____ Scientists wh used cmputers fund themselves rutinely designing new ways t advance science. Simularin (模拟)is a gd example. By simulating airflws arund a wing with a type f equatin (called Navier-Stkes) that is brken ut ver a grid surrunding a simulated aircraft, aernautical engineers largely eliminated the need fr wind tunnels and test flights. Simulatin allwed scientists t reach where thery and experiment culd nt. Scientists became cmputatinal designers as well as experimenters and thereticians.
Anther imprtant example f hw cmputers have changed hw science is dne has been the new way f treating a physical prcess as an infrmatin prcess, which allws mre t be learned abut the physical prcess by studying the infrmatin prcess. ____50____ Data analysts als have fund that deep learning mdels enable them t make surprisingly accurate predictins f prcesses in many fields. Fr the quantities predicted, the real prcess behaves as an infrmatin prcess.
A. Thereticians lked t them fr calculating the equatins f mathematical mdels.
B. Bilgists have made significant advances with this technique, ntably with sequencing and editing genes.
C. The experimenter and the theretician were active in the sciences well befre cmputers came n the scene.
D. The infrmatin prcess prvides a simulatin fr the physical prcess it mdels.
E. But sme experts argue that it depends n hw peple define cmputer using in science and experiments.
F. But smething mre happened.
Ⅳ. Summary Writing
51. Directins: Read the fllwing passage. Summarize the main idea and the main pint(s) f the passage in n mre than 60 wrds. Use yur wn wrds as far as pssible.
D Weird (古怪的) Peple Make Better Artists?
In ne published experiment (there was a whle series f them), the participants were shwn ne f the tw pictures f an imaginary artists called Stefassn. One was an rdinary-lking male in his twenties, while the ther was a man f the same age wh “had lng hair” and “had nt shaved fr several days”.
The results were interesting. The peple wh were shwn the untidy Stefassn liked his wiled, uncnventinal art mre than thse wh were shwn the clean-shaven, suit-wearing Stefassn. The researchers say this preference is due t ur desire fr “sincerity” in an artist. What they mean by “sincerity” is that an artist’s style and appearance shuld g tgether. It sunds like a nble idea, but in fact, a huge bdy f great art, literature and music was created by artists wh did nt lk weird. Are we suppsed t label these lt f classic wrks bring and insincere? If s, we wuld miss an awful lt f classic wrks, like Bach’s musical cmpsitins and Shakespeare’s pems.
We are t much in lve with the uncnventinal frms f art and the uncnventinal types that prduce them. It is a strange srt f blindness t the fact that a lt f gd art has been prduced by peple wh were mdels f cnventinality. Wesley Kant, a leading figure f abstract art, and Eric Cper, pineer f musical mdernism, bth dressed like bankers. Larry White, ne f the funders f literary mdernism, set ut t lk perfectly clrless in his suit and hat, just s he culd fade int the backgrund. It is the gap between their bring appearance and their wild inner wrld that makes these creatrs s attractive.
S as we explre the vast landscape f artist expressin, let us nt be blinded by the charm f the weird.
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Ⅴ. Translatin
Directins: Translate the fllwing sentences int English, using the wrds given in the brackets.
52. 丢了手机这件事似乎完全没有令他不安。(seem) (汉译英)
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53. 她做出一副对歌剧感兴趣的样子, 但事实并非如此。(pretend) (汉译英)
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54. 这位世界游泳冠军的教练认为,不同年龄段有各自应该培养的技能。(maintain) (汉译英)
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55. 这家野生动物园推出了新项目,游客可以近距离观察珍稀动物,并为它们制作早餐。(which) (汉译英)
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Ⅵ. Guided Writing
56. Directins: Write an English cmpsitin in 120-150 wrds accrding t the instructins given belw in Chinese.
假设你是明启中学高三学生李明,最近收到英国笔友Marylin的邮件。在邮件中,她提到自己对于高中毕业后是留在英国升造还是来中国留学犹豫不决,想听听你的意见。回复一封邮件,内容须包括:
1) 你的建议;
2) 你的理由。
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A. adaptatin B. engaging C. fancy D. happens E. reliable F. restrict
G. respnsible H. scan I. spt J. surprise K. updates
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