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    1. 2021-2023年三年高考真题考点分布
    2. 命题规律及备考策略
    【命题规律】近3年新高考卷对于阅读理解中文章标题的考查共计8次,主要考查:
    根据阅读文章全部内容确定文章的标题,概括文章标题。概括文章标题的方法:1.利用主题句;2.没有主题句,总结概括出文章标题;3.文章标题是对整个文章的高度概括;可以采用逆向思维的方法,假设文章标题,你怎么写这个文章,如果和给出的文章吻合,就是正确标题。4.文章标题一定要和文章的内容相符合,不能太宽,也不能太窄。5.文章标题的特点,简短明晰。
    【备考策略】系统归类文章标题的总结方法,尤其是主题句、同义句表达的技巧;熟练掌握阅读技能。
    【命题预测】
    2024年阅读理解对文章标题的考查仍然是重点。
    【2024年高考命题预测】
    文章标题考点是高考中的必考点。标题位于文章之首,用来高度概括文章内容,点明文章主题。它是段落中心思想最精练的表达形式。标题可帮助读者迅速推测出整篇文章的主要内容,抓住文章的中心,把握作者的观点和意图。预测在2024高考中,文章标题题会继续在高考阅读理解中呈现。
    【主旨大意之文章标题考点指南】
    选择文章标题,首先可以按照主旨大意的确定方式,先弄清文章的主旨大意,再定标题。
    首先,要考虑标题对文章的概括性或覆盖面如何。一般要求能覆盖全文内容,体现文章主旨。要避免下列三种情况:①概括不够(多表现为部分代整体,从而导致范围太小);②过度概括(多表现为脱离本文章内容的发挥);③以事实、细节替代抽象具体的大意。
    其次,要考虑标题的针对性,即标题范围要恰当,针对性强。要在阅读原文的基础上,仔细考虑所选标题与文章主题是否有密切的关系。既不能太大,也不能太小,太大则中心就不突出,太小也发挥不了应起的作用;精确度高,不能随意改变语言的表意程度及色彩。它可以是单词、短语,也可以是句子。
    再次要注意标题的醒目性,标题的选择要简洁、突出、新颖,标题是文章的点睛之笔,是文章的灵魂和门面。标题的好坏往往影响了文章的可读性,读者常常从标题上决定文章的阅读取舍。故标题一般比较醒目,甚至比较离奇,以此来吸引读者对文章的兴趣。
    最后要注意,要恰当地选好标题,还需要了解标题的基本拟定方法。一般说来,拟定标题是以话题为核心,与控制性概念的词按一定的语法浓缩为概括主题句或中心思想的词组。
    文章标题题常考问题:
    Which f the fllwing is the best title f the passage?
    The best title fr the passage wuld be …
    1. [2023·新高考全国Ⅱ卷]
    B
    Turning sil, pulling weeds, and harvesting cabbage sund like tugh wrk fr middle and high schl kids. And at first it is, says Abby Jaramill, wh with anther teacher started Urban Spruts, a schl garden prgramme at fur lw-incme schls. The prgramme aims t help students develp science skills, envirnmental awareness, and healthy lifestyles.
    Jaramill?s students live in neighburhds where fresh fd and green space are nt easy t find and fast fd restaurants utnumber grcery stres. “The kids literally cme t schl with bags f snacks and large bttles f sft drinks,” she says. “They cme t us thinking vegetables are awful, dirt is awful, insects are awful.” Thugh sme are initially scared f the insects and turned ff by the dirt, mst are eager t try smething new.
    Urban Spruts? classes, at tw middle schls and tw high schls, include hands-n experiments such as sil testing, flwer-and-seed dissectin, tastings f fresh r dried prduce, and wrk in the garden. Several times a year, students ck the vegetables they grw, and they ccasinally make salads fr their entire schls.
    Prgramme evaluatins shw that kids eat mre vegetables as a result f the classes.“We have students wh say they went hme and talked t their parents and nw they?re eating differently,” Jaramill says.
    She adds that the prgramme?s benefits g beynd nutritin. Sme students get s interested in gardening that they bring hme seeds t start their wn vegetable gardens. Besides, wrking in the garden seems t have a calming effect n Jaramill?s special educatin students, many f whm have emtinal cntrl issues. “They get utside,” she says, “and they feel successful.”
    ( )27.What can be a suitable title fr the text?
    A.Rescuing schl gardens
    B.Experiencing cuntry life
    C.Grwing vegetable lvers
    D.Changing lcal landscape
    2.【2023年1月·浙江卷】D
    Accrding t the Slar Energy Industry Assciatin, the number f slar panels installed(安装)has grwn rapidly in the past decade, and it has t grw even faster t meet climate gals. But all f that grwth will take up a lt f space, and thugh mre and mre peple accept the cncept f slar energy, few like large slar panels t be installed near them.
    Slar develpers want t put up panels as quickly and cheaply as pssible, s they haven’t given much thught t what they put under them. Often, they’ll end up filling the area with small stnes and using chemicals t cntrl weeds. The result is that many cmmunities, especially in farming regins, see slar farms as destryers f the sil.
    “Slar prjects need t be gd neighbrs,” says Jrdan Macknick, the head f the Innvative Site Preparatin and Impact Reductins n the Envirnment(InSPIRE)prject. “They need t be prtectrs f the land and cntribute t the agricultural ecnmy.” InSPIRE is investigating practical appraches t “lw-impact” slar develpment, which fcuses n establishing and perating slar farms in a way that is kinder t the land. One f the easiest lw-impact slar strategies is prviding habitat fr pllinatrs(传粉昆虫).
    Habitat lss, pesticide use, and climate change have caused dramatic declines in pllinatr ppulatins ver the past cuple f decades, which has damaged the U.S. agricultural ecnmy. Over 28 states have passed laws related t pllinatr habitat prtectin and pesticide use. Cnservatin rganizatins put ut pllinatr-friendliness guidelines fr hme gardens, businesses, schls, cities—and nw there are guidelines fr slar farms.
    Over the past few years, many slar farm develpers have transfrmed the space under their slar panels int a shelter fr varius kinds f pllinatrs, resulting in sil imprvement and carbn reductin. “These pllinatr-friendly slar farms can have a valuable impact n everything that’s ging n in the landscape,” says Macknick.
    35.Which f the fllwing is the best title fr the text?
    A.Pllinatrs: T Leave r t StayB.Slar Energy: Hpe fr the Future
    C.InSPIRE: A Leader in AgricultureD.Slar Farms: A New Develpment
    规律方法 如何精确归纳标题?
    1、利用主题段来概括标题
    主题段一般在文章的第一段和最后一段,一般来说第一段经常提出文章的主题或最后一段总结文章的主题,知道了文章的主题也就知道了文章的中心,把中心概括成一句话或一个短语——文章的标题。
    2、利用主题句来概括标题
    解题的关键是要抓住每一段的首尾句,要注意贯穿文章始终的词语。通过寻找文章的主题句,并对主题句进行概括和提炼,从而确定文章的标题。
    做此类题时,要避免以下三种错误:
    (1)概括不够(多表现为部分替代整体,从而缩小了范围);
    (2)过度概括(多表现为人为扩大范围);
    (3)以事实、细节替代文章大意。
    1.【2023届浙江省四校(杭州二中、温州中学、绍兴一中、金华一中)高三5月联考】
    In the animal kingdm, mimics (模仿) are nt rare. Stick insects pretend t be twigs. Hawk mth caterpillars resemble pisnus snakes. The examples, thugh, are visual. Auditry mimicry is rarer. Danil Russ f the University f Naples Federic II thinks he has fund a nvel case f it, as he describes in Current Bilgy. Sme bats, he believes, mimic angry bees in rder t scare away wls that might therwise eat them.
    Dr. Russ first nticed bat buzzing a few years ag. The nise struck him as similar t the sund f sme bees. He wndered whether bat buzzing was a frm f mimicry which helped t scare ff wuld-be predatrs.
    T test this idea, he and his clleagues first recrded the buzzing that captured bats made. Then, with prtective clthing, they began the mre dangerus task f recrding the buzzing made by different bees. Cmputer analysis revealed that bees’ and bats’ buzzing were, indeed, similar.
    Then the researchers recruited several wls. They put the wls, ne at a time, in an enclsure with branches fr them t stay n, and tw bxes with hles in them. They placed a ludspeaker alngside ne f the bxes and, after the birds had settled in, bradcast thrugh it five secnds f uninterrupted bat buzzing and a similar amunt f insect buzzing three times in a rw fr each nise. As a cntrl, they bradcast in like manner several nn-buzzing sunds made by bats.
    During the bradcasts and fr five minutes thereafter, they videed the wls. After analysis, the results were unequivcal. When they heard bth the bat buzzing and the bee buzzing, the wls mved as far frm the speakers as they culd. In cntrast, when the nn-buzzing bat sunds were played, they crept clser.
    Dr. Russ believes this is the first reprted case f a mammal using auditry mimicry t scare away a predatr. They strngly suspect, hwever, that it is nt unique. Anecdtes suggest several birds als make buzzing nises when their nests are disturbed. And with the result f the experiment, he therefre predicts that auditry mimicry is far mre widespread than currently realized.
    35.What is a suitable title fr the text?
    A.A New Trick t Scare Away OwlsB.Animal Mimicry: Buzz ff
    C.A Self-prtectin Behavir amng AnimalsD.Bats: N Mre Victim t Owls
    2.【2023届重庆市普通高中高三第三次联合诊断测】
    Making day-t-day activities mre intense fr a few minutes — such as briefly stepping up the pace f a walk — culd ffer peple wh dn’t exercise sme f the health benefits that exercisers enjy, accrding t a new study f rughly 25, 000 adults wh reprted n exercise in their free time.
    Thse wh include three ne- t tw-minute bursts f intense activity per day saw a nearly a 40 percent drp in the risk f death frm any cause cmpared with thse withut such activity. The risk f death frm cancer als fell by nearly 40 percent, and the risk f death frm cardivascular (心血管的) disease drpped almst 50 percent, researchers reprt nline December 8 in Nature Medicine.
    “This study adds t ther literature shwing that even shrt amunts f activity are beneficial,” says Lisa Cadmus-Bertram, a physical activity epidemilgist (流行病学家) at the University f Wiscnsin-Madisn. “S many peple are daunted by feeling that they dn’t have the time, mney, mtivatin, transprtatin, etc. tg t a gym regularly r wrk ut fr lng perids f time,” she says. “The message we can take is that it is abslutely wrth ding what yu can.”
    The researchers were lking fr bursts f intense activity that met a definitin determined in a labratry study, like reaching at least 77 percent f maximum heart rate and at least 64 percent f maximum xygen cnsumptin. In real life, the signs that smene has reached the needed intensity level are “an increase in heart rate and feeling ut f breath” in the first 15 t 30 secnds f an activity, Stamatakis says.
    Regular daily activities ffer several pprtunities fr these bursts, he says. “The simplest ne is maximizing walking pace fr a minute r tw during any regular walk.” Other ptins, he says, include carrying grcery bags t the car r taking the stairs. “The largest ppulatin health gains will be realized by finding ways t get the least physically active peple t mve a little mre.”
    35.What might be a suitable title fr the text?
    A.The Simplest Daily Exercise Activities
    B.Brief Intense Activities Can Be Helpful
    C.The Guidance n Brief Intense Activities
    D.Regular Exercise Is Necessary fr Everyne
    3.【湖北省十堰市部分重点中学2022-2023学年高二3月联考】
    Sugar cane(甘蔗)cntains arund 10% sugar. But that means it cntains arund 90% nn-sugar—the material knwn as bagasse (甘蔗渣)which remains nce the sugar-bearing juice is squeezed ut. Wrld prductin f cane sugar was 185 millin tnnes in 2017 , which results in a lt f bagasse.
    At the mment, mst f it is burned. But Zhu Hngli, a mechanical engineer at Nrtheastern University, in Bstn, thinks it can be put int better use. As she, and her clleagues describe, in Matter this week, with a bit f imprving bagasse makes an excellent and bidegradable (可生 物降解的)replacement fr the plastic used fr dispsable fd cntainers such as cffee cups.
    Dr. Zhu is nt the first persn t have this idea. But previus attempts tended nt t survive cntact with liquids. She knew frm previus research that the main reasn why past effrts fell t pieces when wet is that bagasse is cmpsed f shrt fibres which are unable t hld the finished prduct. She therefre sught' t insert a suitably lng-fibred substance.
    Bamb seemed t be the best chice. It grws quickly /degrades readily and has apprpriately lng fibres. And it wrked. When the researchers blended bamb remaining int bagasse, they fund that the result had a strng crssing f shrt and lng fibres.
    T put their new material thrugh its paces, Dr. Zhu and her clleagues first pured ht il nt it and fund that, rather than passing thrugh the material, as it wuld have with previus, bagasse prducts, the il was resisted by their inventin.
    They als fund that when they made a cup ut f the stuff and filled it with water heated almst t biling pint, the cup remained unbrken fr mre than tw hurs. Thugh this is nt as lng as a plastic cup wuld Hast, it-is lng enugh fr all practical purpses.
    11.What wuld be the best title fr the text?
    A.New Bamb CntainersB.A New Applicatin f Fibres
    C.Yung and Prmising MaterialsD.A Perfect Mix f Cane and Bamb
    4.【2023届贵州省遵义市高三三模】
    Angela Zhang, a Mandpp(华语流行乐)star brn n the island f Taiwan, recently appeared n the ht Chinese mainland prduced music shw Infinity and Beynd. During the shw, Angela Zhang sang Yeliya Girl, a sng written 34 years ag that witnessed the birth f Mandpp’s “glden age”. After the shw, she talked abut her music career with the Glbal Times and said that “Mandpp has becme a glbal trend.”
    Speaking f Mandpp’s “glden age”, Zhang tld the Glbal Times that 1980s’ pp sngs like Jeff Chang’ sAi Ru Chashui(Lve Like Tidewater)left a deep impressin n her when she was a little girl. With this appreciatin, Zhang finally brke ut in the beginning f the 21st century, Mandpp’s peak n the island f Taiwan. “I think ne f the great charms f that time was that each singer had a unique persnal style and vice t,” Zhang tld the Glbal Times.
    Alng with ther stars like Jay Chu, Mandpp gained mre ppularity amng audience arund the wrld ver the decades.
    Zhang tld the Glbal Times that the themes in Mandpp have als been shifting frm lve rmance t inner cultivatin(修养). “Music is mre a reflectin f the current state f sciety. Art and ur lives are clsely related,” Zhang nted. The 2006 sng Invisible Wings brught Zhang sme “healing” as it nce actually saved a yung girl’s life. When buried during an earthquake, the girl kept singing this sng, which led t her final rescue.
    She said that Mandpp is nw receiving mre ntice frm the wrld with inspiratins and treasures frm ur rts. “Our Chinese culture has lasted fr mre than 5,000 years and it is necessary t cntinue t pass it dwn. They are ur rts,” said Zhang.
    7.Which f the fllwing might be the prper title fr the passage?
    A.Mandpp’s Glden Age.B.Mandpp’s Glbal Ppularity.
    C.Angela Zhang’s Incredible Sngs.D.Angela Zhang’s Life Experiences.
    5.【2023届湘豫名校联考高三第三次模拟】
    Fr the first 18 years f my life, my mm cked Chinese fd every day, all served family-style. But when it came time fr me t teach myself hw t ck, I didn’t ask my mm fr help. Instead, like s many yung peple, I turned t the nline recipes. By the time I gt married, I culd ck many dishes. What I didn’t really knw hw t ck at all, hwever, was Chinese fd.
    Part f the prblem was that I nly knew hw t ck by fllwing recipes. And up until maybe 5 r 10 years ag, the number f English-language recipes fr Chinese dishes yu culd find in a ckbk r n the Internet still felt extremely limited —at least when it came t hmey(家乡菜), everyday recipes written with a yunger Chinese American audience in mind.
    That was the experience, t, fr sisters Sarah and Kaitlin Leung. Like s many ther ABCs (American-brn Chinese) and yunger first- and secnd-generatin Chinese immigrants(移民), the Leung sisters reached a pint in their adult lives when they started t lve t eat the fd they’d grwn up n, but fund it really difficult t learn hw t prepare it.
    As it turns ut, thugh, the Leung sisters were uniquely psitined t d smething abut it: Their father had spent years cking at his family’s Chinese American takeut restaurant. Their mm had deep knwledge abut traditinal Shanghainese cking. Meanwhile, the tw sisters had grwn up in New Yrk, eating their parents, fd, but als immersed(沉浸)in America’s wn fd culture.
    S, in 2013, the Leungs started a fd blg “The Wks f Life”. What made their blg different frm ther blgs was that the intergeneratinal transfer f knwledge that the Leungs were s eager fr was baked right int the cncept: The fur family members tk turns psting recipes, each sharing their wn favrites. In that way, Sarah says, the blg reflected — and cntinues t reflect — the diversity f the Chinese diaspra(华侨).
    7.What can be the best title fr the text?
    A.The Ppularity f “The Wks f Life”
    B.The Cmeback f Chinese Fd in America
    C.Take a Glance f the Daily Life f Overseas Chinese
    D.Help a New Generatin f Chinese Americans Learn t Ck
    基础过关
    (最新模拟试题演练)
    1.【2023届福建省福州市普通高中毕业班5月质量检测】
    Feeling a hug frm each ther via the internet may be a pssibility in the near future. A research team led by City University f Hng Kng recently develped a wireless, sft e-skin that can bth detect and deliver the sense f tuch, and frm a tuch netwrk allwing ne-t-multiuser interactin. It ffers great ptential fr imprving the distance tuch cmmunicatin.
    While there are numerus devices in the market t simulate (模拟) the sense f tuch in the virtual wrld, they prvide nly tuch sensing r tuch respnse. The uniqueness f the nvel e-skin is that it can perfrm self-sensing and tuch reprducing functins n the same interface.
    The e-skin is a 7cm×l0cm, 4.2mm-thick device cntaining 16 flexible actuatrs (驱动器), a micrcntrller unit, a Bluetth mdule, and ther electrnics n a flexible circuit bard. The actuatr serves as the cre part f the e-skin. Once the actuatr is pressed and released by a frce, a current is prduced t prvide electrical signals that are turned int digital signals by a cnverter (转换器) and then sent t anther e-skin via Bluetth. When the signals are received, a current is caused t reprduce the tuch respnse n the receiver’s e-skin thrugh mechanical vibratin (振动). The prcess can be reversed t deliver vibratins frm the receiver’s e-skin t the crrespnding actuatr f the sender’s.
    The e-skin can cmmunicate with Bluetth devices and send data thrugh the internet with smartphnes and cmputers t perfrm lng-distance tuch, and t frm a tuch Internet f Things (IT) system, where ne-t-ne and ne-t-multiple tuch delivery culd be realized. Friends and family in different places culd use it t “feel” each ther. This frm f tuch vercmes the limitatins f space and greatly reduces the sense f distance in human cmmunicatin.
    Next, the research team will fcus n practical applicatins fr peple with visual disability, wh culd wear the e-skin t gain remte directinal guidance and read Braille messages.
    12.What is the unique feature f the e-skin?
    A.It prvides hugs fr users.
    B.It builds a scial netwrk.
    C.It prvides tuch sensing and cpying,
    D.It mnitrs the prcess f self-sensing.
    13.What des the underlined wrd “reversed” mean?
    A.Started.B.Disturbed.C.Cmpleted.D.Exchanged.
    14.What can we learn abut e-skin?
    A.It strengthens bnds acrss distance.
    B.Its cnverter vibrates when wrking.
    C.It sends electrical signals t receivers.
    D.Its system delivers tuch with phnes.
    15.What wuld be the best title f the text?
    A.A signal-sending applicatin
    B.An inventin fr the disabled
    C.A device fr virtual interactin
    D.A lng distance cmmunicatin
    2.【2023届安徽省合肥市第八中学高三最后一卷】
    The ability t use tls is rare in the animal wrld. Recently, ravens(渡鸭)have been prven capable f mre than just using tls.
    Accrding t a paper published in Current Bilgy in April, 2023, scientists designed varius tasks fr a grup f ravens. The first task was getting a nut ut f a puzzle bx, requiring tw tls: first a shrt, sharp tl used t cut the membrane (薄膜), then a lng stick t get the nut ut f a hle, Five ut f 10 ravens were able t reach the nut.
    In the fllwing tasks, the ravens were bserved picking up tls befre ding the task, shwing their ability t plan ahead. Researchers als nticed that each raven had a different way f carrying and using the tls.
    Using a set f tls means that the animal can “slve prblems thrugh flexibly applying sme insight f a given situatin,” Mark Briffa at the University f Plymuth, UK, tld CNN.
    The great intelligence f ravens makes them ppular pets—they can imitate sunds and dance t music. Hwever, these smart birds may suffer frm mental health issues as well. Cmmn signs f stress and anxiety include biting and feather picking, accrding t the PetMD website. Biting is ften regarded as a frm f attack, but smetimes ravens bite thers due t stress and fear. Feather picking can be a mre serius sign that the raven is unhappy. In extreme cnditins, a raven may pluck(拔)ut all f its feathers.
    Sme ther pets shw similar trubling behavirs t. Fr example, accrding t Discver magazine, pet dgs may chew their nails r lick their bdies s much that they frm ulcers(溃疡). Pets desire attentin, jy and excitement. As scientists learn mre abut animal intelligence, we shuld keep in mind that they may suffer frm psychlgical illnesses just like we d.
    8.What was the first task?
    A.Picking up a nut using a lng stick.
    B.Breaking pen a nut with a sharp tl.
    C.Carrying a set f tls t a specific lcatin.
    D.Cutting a hle in a puzzle bx and reaching a nut inside.
    9.What did scientists discver abut the ravens frm their studies?
    A.They were unable t plan ahead.B.They culd nt create a set f tls.
    C.They used the tls in different ways.D.Mst f them managed t reach the nut.
    10.What is a sign f stress and anxiety in ravens, accrding t the article?
    A.Develping ulcers.B.Imitating sunds.
    C.Quickly flapping their wings.D.Plucking and picking at their feathers.
    11.Which f the fllwing is a suitable title fr the text?
    A.What makes ravens a ppular pet?
    B.Ravens suffer frm mental prblems
    C.Ravens are smarter than ther birds
    D.Ravens’ high intelligence is a mixed blessing
    3.【2023届湖南省衡阳市高中毕业班联考(三)】
    Three astrnauts statined in China’s Tiangng space statin are preparing fr their return trip in the middle f April, packing up persnal items, experimental prducts and ther materials, putting equipment int place and exercising t prepare their bdies fr Earth’s gravity.
    The astrnauts, Zhai Zhigang, Wang Yaping and Ye Guangfu, have t tidy up a large number f materials, including gds n the Tianzhu 3 carg spacecraft, said Zhng Weiwei, an assciate researcher at the China Astrnaut Research and Training Center.
    Living in space abut six mnths, a recrd in China’s histry, they have cmpleted mre than 20 scientific tasks and will bring back samples with them, accrding t Zhng.
    He said the astrnauts have t put all equipment in place since there will be a gap f mre than ne mnth befre the astrnauts f ShenzhuⅩⅣ enter the space statin.
    The physical cnditins and psychlgical states f the three astrnauts are better than expected, meeting the requirements fr a return trip, said the assciate researcher frm the center’s aerspace medical engineering ffice.
    Based n their in-rbit physical examinatins and data, experts have adjusted exercise plans fr them t keep fitness in rder t ensure a safe landing, Zhng said.
    The Shenzhu ⅩⅢ missin was launched n Oct 16 by a Lng March 2F carrier rcket that blasted ff frm the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in nrthwestern China’s Gbi Desert, with the crew sn entering the Tiangng statin.
    Besides their tasks, they have als delivered tw live lectures frm the space statin, shwing the students their living and wrking areas at the Tianhe cre mdule and several scientific experiments under zer-gravity cnditins and answering real-time questins frm students.
    8.What recrd did the three astrnauts make in China’s histry?
    A.They have finished ver twenty scientific missins
    B.They have lived in space abut six mnths.
    C.They will bring back sme samples frm space.
    D.They have made great cntributins t China’s space explratin.
    9.Which f the fllwing abut the astrnauts is true accrding t the passage?
    A.The astrnauts gave tw lessns in space t the students n the earth.
    B.The astrnauts adjusted their exercise plans due t bad bdy cnditin.
    C.The astrnauts nly need t keep physically healthy befre returning.
    D.The astrnauts have already put all equipment in the right place.
    10.Which f the fllwing has the similar meaning t the underlined part in paragraph 7?
    A.g ffB.bsted ffC.tk ffD.put ff
    11.What’s the best title f the passage?
    A.Successful returning frm space.B.Big recrd made by China’s astrnauts.
    C.Great cntributins f China’s astrnauts.D.Preparatins fr returning the Earth.
    4.【2023届广东省八市高考4月二联考】
    Culd the next Ernest Hemingway r Jane Austen be a well-engineered AI sftware prgram? It’s a questin becming increasingly pressing as machine language-learning sftware cntinues t evlve.
    Much f this is just nerves. Tday’s AI creative writing prgrams are nt yet at a stage f develpment where they pse a serius threat t Clleen Hver r Charles Dickens. But while attentin cntinues t fcus n the pssibility f a blanket takever f human literature by AI, far less cnsideratin has been given t the prspect f AI c-wrking with humans.
    Earlier this mnth, American sci-fi writer Ken Liu, wh had been awarded Hug and Nebula t his name, jined 12 ther prfessinal authrs fr a writing wrkshp n Ggle’s Wrdcraft. This AI tl, a language generating mdel, is nt yet publicly available but is advertised as an AI-pwered writing assistant that can, when given the right instructin frm the writer, prvide helpful descriptins, create lists f bjects r emtinal states, and even brainstrm ideas.
    The writers at the wrkshp, hwever, emerged with mixed reprts. “Wrdcraft is t sensible. Ww!” Rbin Slan wrte. “But ‘sensible’ is anther wrd fr predictable, verused and bring. My intentin here is t prduce smething unexpected.”
    I’m uncnvinced that writers awarded the Nbel Prize have much t fear frm AI. Their wrk, and that f cuntless ther nvelists, shrt stry writers, dramatists and pets, is t particular, t beautifully unique. Even if a mdel learned what they had dne in the past, it wuld nt be able t predict where their creativity might take them in the future. But fr authrs wh write fllwing a pattern, AI might step in, first as assistants befre sme day t authrship.
    Prductin-line nvels are nthing new. In the 1970s, Barbara Cartland, wh wrte mre than 723 bks in her lifetime, many f which are rmance bestsellers, wuld read her nvels fr her secretary t type up at the remarkable rate f rughly seven chapters a week. But already machine has replaced the secretary’s rle. Perhaps creative writing sftware isn’t that far frm replacing the Mrs. Cartlands f tday.
    8.Which aspect f AI calls fr mre attentin?
    A.Its damage t ur nerves.
    B.Its prgress in literary studies.
    C.Its cperatin with humans.
    D.Its influence n human literature.
    9.What can we learn abut Wrdcraft frm the text?
    A.It generates nvels autmatically.
    B.It utperfrms prfessinal writers.
    C.Its wrks receive praises frm the public.
    D.Its wrks bear similarity t existing nes.
    10.What can writers d t avid the threat frm AI?
    A.Increase writing speed.
    B.Use diverse resurces.
    C.Prduce creative wrks.
    D.Fllw the latest patterns.
    11.Which f the fllwing is the best title fr the text?
    A.Will AI Replace Human Writers?
    B.AI Warns Mrs. Cartlands f Tday
    C.Is Writing Running int a New Era?
    D.Wrd craft Lies at the Center f Debate
    5.【2023届广东省深圳市高级中学高三模拟预测】
    Next time yu are struggling with the crsswrd, try putting the kettle n. Drinking a cup f tea can imprve creativity, a study suggests.
    Researchers gave men and wmen either tea r water and then asked them t cmplete a wrd assciatin game, which was used t measure a frm f creativity knwn as cnvergent thinking (聚合思维).
    In the game, the participants were given sets f wrds such as “same, tennis, head” and asked t find a meaningful link between them. The answer, in this case, wuld be “match?”. After analysing the results in a way that ruled ut the ptential effects f a persn’s intelligence and language ability, the researchers, frm Peking University in China, fund that thse wh drank the tea perfrmed significantly better in the wrd assciatin game. The tea drinkers scred an average f 13. 89 in the wrd assciatin game cmpared with 12. 94 fr water drinkers.
    The researchers said it was nt clear why tea has this beneficial effect. Tea cntains caffeine and theanine, which can imprve attentin, but the 100 participants in the study drank nly a small amunt f tea—90ml, n average—and caried ut the tests very sn after cnsuming it, meaning any effect wuld have been ignred. “This result shwed that the tea drinking event itself—rather than the bilgical cm-pnents f tea—played a psitive rle,” the researchers said.
    “Previus research has fund that peple tend t assciate tea drinking with a specific set f persnality traits, such as smart, creative, elegant, cnfident, and stable. It may be that when participants are stimulated (刺激) by tea, the mental representatin f a tea drinker is als activated, and they uncnsciusly think that they shuld be smarter and mre creative,” they added, “Future research shuld fcus n specific mechanisms (机制) and clarify which variables mderate the impact f tea cnsumptin n cnvergent thinking.
    12.What did the participants have t d in the study?
    A.Pair the wrds with each ther.
    B.Guess the meaning f the wrds.
    C.Find a cnnectin between the wrds.
    D.Tell the differences amng the wrds.
    13.What helped a participant get a higher scre accrding t the researchers?
    A.The actin f drinking tea itself.
    B.The participant’s intelligence.
    C.The participant’s language ability.
    D.The bilgical cmpnents f tea.
    14.What can be inferred frm the previus research?
    A.Drinking tea makes peple mre active.
    B.Drinking tea is ppular amng the yuth.
    C.Peple tend t drink tea mre than befre.
    D.Peple drinking tea are ften thught smart.
    15.Which f the fllwing can be the best title f the text?
    A.Drinking Tea Is Gd fr Health.
    B.Drinking Tea Is A Ppular Trend.
    C.Drinking Tea Makes fr Creativity.
    D.Drinking Tea Matters A Lt in Life.
    6.【2023届海南省海南中学、海口一中 、文吕中学、嘉积中学高三4月联考】
    With nly abut 1,000 pandas left in the wrld, China is desperately trying t clne the animal and save the endangered species. That’s a mve similar t what Texas A & M University researchers have been undertaking fr the past five years in a prject called Nah’s Ark.
    Nah’s Ark is aimed at cllecting eggs, embrys(胚胎), semen and DNA f endangered animals and string them in liquid nitrgen. If certain species shuld becme extinct, Dr. Duane Kraemer, a prfessr in Texas A & M’s Cllege f Veterinary Medicine, says there wuld be enugh f the basic building blcks t reintrduce the species in the future.
    It is estimated that as many as 2,000 species f mammals, birds, reptiles will becme extinct in ver 100 years. The panda, native nly t China, is in danger f becming extinct in the next 25 years.
    This week, Chinese scientists said they grew an embry by intrducing cells frm a dead female panda int the egg cells f a Japanese white rabbit. They are nw trying t implant the embry int a hst animal. The entire prcedure culd take frm three t five years t cmplete.
    “The nuclear transfer(核子移植) f ne species t anther is nt easy, and the lack f available panda eggs culd be a majr prblem,” Kraemer believes. “They will prbably have t d several hundred transfers t result in ne pregnancy. It takes a lng time and it’s difficult, but this culd be grundbreaking science if it wrks. They are certainly nt putting any live pandas at risk, s it is wrth the effrt,” adds Kraemer, wh is ne f the leaders f the Prject at Texas A & M, the first-ever attempt at clning a dg.
    “They are trying t d smething that’s never been dne, and this is very similar t ur wrk in Nah’s Ark. We’re bth trying t save animals that face extinctin. I certainly appreciate their effrt and there’s a lt we can learn frm what they are attempting t d. It’s a research that is very much needed.”
    8.What is the aim f Nah’s Ark prject?
    A.T save endangered animals frm dying ut.
    B.T make effrts t clne the endangered pandas.
    C.T cllect DNA f endangered animals t study.
    D.T transfer the nuclear f ne animal t anther.
    9.Accrding t Prfessr Kraemer, the majr prblem in clning pandas wuld be shrt f _________.
    A.hst animalsB.enugh mney
    C.qualified researchersD.available panda eggs
    10.What can we learn frm the passage?
    A.Scientists try t implant a panda’s egg int a rabbit.
    B.Kraemer and his team have succeeded in clning a dg.
    C.Tw thusand species will prbably die ut in ver a century.
    D.Kraemer will wrk with Chinese scientists in clne researches.
    11.Which can be a suitable title fr the passage?
    A.China’s Success in Pandas Clning
    B.The First Clned Panda in the Wrld
    C.Explring the Pssibility t Clne Pandas
    D.China—the Native Place f Pandas Frever
    7.【2023届湖北省武汉市武昌区高三5月质量检测】
    As energy csts rise acrss Eurpe, sme peple are taking an pprtunity t head ff t warmer climates in rder t cut dwn n bills. Greece is ne f a number f cuntries trying t draw visitrs in fr the winter-with a $20 millin advertising campaign.
    Famus fr its sun, glden beaches and medieval city, the island f Rhdes in the suth Aegean Sea is a magnet(磁铁)fr nrthern Eurpeans. Mre than three millin flck t the island every summer, but sme als cme in the winter.
    In rder t capitalize n the energy crisis, the Greek gvernment launched a series f winter turism campaigns aimed at attracting Eurpean visitrs seeking an alternative t the bitter cld and high energy bills. Places like Santrini, Crete and Rhdes were high n the list, as temperatures there remain in the high teens.
    Hwever, the campaign t advertise Greece abrad hasn’t attracted as many visitrs as expected. “The campaign frm the ministry is in the right directin-I think they’re ding things right,”says Dinissis Tsiligiris, turism marketing directr fr the Rds Palace htel and cnventin center in Rhdes. “But when it cmes t winter turism, Spain will always be the first chice,”Tsiligiris cntinues. Htels and tur peratrs there just have mre expsure. S cmpeting fr winter turism is very difficult, as it’s a smaller market.
    While it’s true that fewer peple travel abrad than in the summer,entering the winter market culd seem quite easy when yu have the tw key ingredients-almst guaranteed sun and well-established turist facilities. But what’s making it difficult, accrding t Ashley Quint, senir hliday designer at a UK travel agency, is the message the gvernment is sending. “Turist bards and lcal gvernments can vercmplicate things smetimes and the message desn’t necessarily cme acrss. In this case, there needs t be a simple and clear message. In additin, bradening it ut a little bit may be better, because we see very little here. ”
    It seems that making Greece a winter destinatin fr travelers t enjy and save might need mre than just the attractin f warmer weather.
    8.Why d sme Eurpeans g t warmer cuntries fr winter?
    A.T avid energy expense.
    B.T decrease the heating fee.
    C.T enjy sunshine and beaches.
    D.T explre winter travel ptins.
    9.What mainly results in the disappinting result f Greece’s campaign?
    A.Ministry’s pr marketing.
    B.Operatr’s limited expsure.
    C.Turists’ cmmn preference.
    D.Gvernment’s inapprpriate plicies.
    10.What shuld Greece’s campaign fcus n accrding t Ashley Quint?
    A.Sending the message glbally.
    B.Getting ideas easily understd.
    C.Beating the ptential cmpetitrs.
    D.Advertising key turist resurces.
    11.What might be the best title fr the passage?
    A.Greece Ready t Take Winter Turist Market
    B.Greece Cnfident t Win the Turism Campaign
    C.Greece Eager t Draw Winter Turists t the Sun
    D.Greece Determined t Be a Winter Turist Destinatin
    8.【2023届江苏省徐州市高三5月考前模拟】
    At a restaurant in Singapre, a server is busy swerving between tables and bringing dishes t hungry custmers. Hwever, the server is nt a human but a delivery rbt develped by Shanghai-based unicrn Keenn Rbtics. The restaurant’s cute cartn-like emplyee adds a sense f warmth t help persnalize the dining experience.
    In recent years, delivery rbts have been ppular in freign cuntries. Accrding t Li Tng, funder and CEO f Keenn Rbtics, sales revenue f Keenn almst dubled last year and mre than half f the cmpany’s rbts were shipped t freign markets in 2022.
    Funded in 2010, Keenn Rbtics leverages its fully autnmus psitining and navigatin technlgy t ffer rbts bth at hme and abrad, including server, disinfectin, delivery and lgistics rbts.
    “In the field f industrial rbts, which is knwn as ‘the crwn jewel f manufacturing’, Chinese cmpanies have already turned frm fllwers t leaders. Cre cmpnents used t rely heavily n imprts, but in recent years we have achieved breakthrughs in crucial technlgies and are quickly catching up.” Li said.
    China is the wrld’s largest market fr the industrial rbt industry. Sales f industrial rbts in China reached ver 300,000 units last year, accunting fr mre than half f glbal sales. A research reprt said the wrld’s service rbtics market is prjected t grw frm $36.2 billin in 2021 t $103.3 billin by 2026 and high returns n investment is the key factr driving the service rbtics market.
    With such advantages as relatively lw manufacturing cst and a sund dmestic supply and industrial chain, Chinese rbtics cmpanies are expected t further knck n the drs f rising markets glbally. Hwever, Zhang Weijing, a prfessr frm the China Eurpe Internatinal Business Schl, pinted ut that there are still prblems. They must abide by the laws and regulatins verseas and fllw varius industrial and technical standards. Therefre, they need t establish crrespnding channels and teams t facilitate rbtics prducts t enter the internatinal market.
    12.What cntributes t the arising f the Chinese service rbts verseas?
    A.Lwered prices.B.Enhanced purchasing pwer.
    C.Mastering cre technlgy.D.Enugh human resurces.
    13.What des the underlined wrd “leverages” mean in paragraph three?
    A.Applies.B.Imprts.C.Changes.D.Evaluates.
    14.What des Prfessr Zhang Weijing emphasize?
    A.The advantages f Chinese rbtic cmpanies.
    B.The glden pprtunity t expand rbt exprt.
    C.Cmparisns f dmestic and verseas markets.
    D.A few challenges facing Chinese rbtics firms.
    15.Which f the fllwing culd be the best title fr the passage?
    A.Bsting f verseas marketB.Ppularity f delivery rbts
    C.Crwn jewel f manufacturingD.Rising f Chinese industrial rbts
    9.【2023届辽宁省辽东南协作校高三第三次模拟】
    Abut 400 high schl students frm Western Pennsylvania and the neighbring state f Ohi jined a heated discussin recently n “China: What Des the Future Hld?”
    “It’s either ging t turn ut really gd r really bad—wh knws?” said Braveen Ragunathan, a senir frm an Ohi high schl. In his mind all Americans are cnnected t China in sme way.
    The frum was held in Pittsburgh, nce a US industrial center, nw facing jb-cuts because f cmpetitin brught abut by glbalizatin. The aim f the frum is t help American students learn mre abut the utside wrld.
    Ellitt Blackwell, a junir at the Neighbrhd Academy, said the frum let him knw mre abut hw China’s ecnmic develpment will affect America in the future.
    Sme students, althugh impressed by China’s ecnmic bm, expressed uneasiness abut the natin’s practices and differences frm the American way f ding business and plitics.
    “China is a pwer cming up, s they might challenge us,” Paul Amn, a junir frm Oil City High Schl, said. “I’d hpe that China can be ur partner but I think that we’d clash alng the way because we’re t different,” he added.
    Gerge Riley, a teacher explained: “The view f China is usually negative and I think that’s fueled by the media.”
    Hwever, sme negative feelings are nt frm the media. Merri Ebel is a senir at East Allegheny High Schl nrth f Pittsburgh. Bth her parents lst their jbs recently. The cmpany they wrked fr said it was cheaper t prduce gds in China rather than the US.
    “China is just this big questin mark. China was just a big cuntry with millins f peple that n ne really knew abut because it was s far away and ur class was mre American histry based,” she said.
    Fr better r wrse US teenagers are eager t knw mre abut China, the frum shws.
    8.Frm the passage we knw that mst US teenagers ________.
    A.knw nly a little abut ChinaB.knw much abut China
    C.knw nthing abut ChinaD.like China very much
    9.What d the underlined wrd in Para 6 mean?
    A.cnflictB.supprtC.cperateD.help
    10.The main reasn why China in their eyes is usually negative is prbably that ________.
    A.what their teachers say affects themB.Hw their classmates behave affects them
    C.newspapers and nline news affects themD.the frum being held affects them
    11.What is the best title f the passage?
    A.Teenagers in the US.B.Jb-cuts in Pittsburgh.
    C.Cheaper gds in China.D.China in American teenagers’ eyes.
    10.【2023届辽宁省辽东南协作校高三第三次模拟】
    Fashin always influences peple, Isabella Springmuhl Tejada frm Guatemala, ne f the first prfessinal fashin designer with Dwn syndrme, is prving that fashin ges beynd nrmal limits.
    Tejada wh discvered her hbby in childhd said, “I think that fashin design is in my bld.” After all, her grandmther had a studi where she prduced Guatemalan-style clthing. And, when she was yung, Tejada’s mther gave her fashin magazines t read. Tejada spent hurs f her childhd reading the magazines and designing paper dresses fr her dlls. By the time she reached high schl, Tejada had decided t enter the wrld.
    After being refused by several fashin schls because f her Dwn syndrme, Tejada fund her wn path. She signed up fr a clthing-making curse, where she began t make clthing fr “wrry dlls”, finger-sized traditinal Guatemalan dlls. And she created life-sized dlls and dressed them in the clrful clthes that she’s nw famus fr. This-design experience greatly helped Tejada. She fell in lve with traditinal Guatemalan patterns and clrs. She explained, “I’m lucky t wrk with traditinal clth, inspired by ur culture and representing ur cuntry.”
    Tejada als pineered fashin design fr peple with Dwn syndrme. She said, “It is difficult fr peple like me t find suitable clthes. We can be shrter r weaker. That’s why I decided t design clthes that wuld be perfect fr peple with Dwn syndrme.”
    Tejada has created her brand, Dwn t Xjabelle. The new brand tk ff right away. It made it all the way t Lndn Fashin Week. And the great designer has plans fr the future as well. Tejada said, “I want peple all ver the wrld t knw my designs and t knw that peple with Dwn syndrme can d what they set ut t d. I want t be able t live n my wn.”
    4.What awakened Tejada’s lve fr fashin design?
    A.Her visit t a design schl.B.Her family’s strng influence.
    C.Her effrts t fight her disease.D.Her wrk experience in a famus cmpany.
    5.What effect did designing clthes fr dlls have n Tejada?
    A.It prved her ability t run a business.
    B.It inspired her t learn abut different cultures.
    C.It strengthened her wish t travel arund the wrld.
    D.It increased her interest in traditinal design styles.
    6.What des Tejada want t cnvey thrugh her wrds in the last paragraph?
    A.She wn’t let her disability limit her.
    B.Her illness has been successfully cured.
    C.Her brand is facing serius cmpetitin.
    D.She can’t please nrmal custmers with her design ideas.
    7.What may be the best title fr the text?
    A.A special designer turns her dream int reality.
    B.Fashin is clsely cnnected with daily life.
    C.Learn the value f traditinal culture.
    D.Develp a hbby frm an early age.
    真题感知
    1.C【2021·全国新高考II卷】
    A British wman wh wn a S1 millin prize after she was named the Wrld's Best Teacher will use the cash t bring inspiratinal figures int UK schls.
    Andria Zafiraku,a nrth Lndn secndary schl teacher, said she wanted t bring abut a classrm revlutin (变革). “We are ging t make a change, ”she said.“I’ve started a prject t prmte the teaching f the arts in ur schls.”
    The prject results frm the difficulties many schls have in getting artists f any srt - whether an up-and-cming lcal musician r a majr mvie star - int schls t wrk with and inspire children.
    Zafiraku began the prject at Alpertn Cmmunity Schl, her place f wrk fr the past twelve years. “I've seen thse magic mments when children are talking t smene they are inspired by - their eyes are shining and their faces light up,” she said. “We need artists . mre than ever in ur schls."
    Artist Michael Craig-Martin said: “Andria's brilliant prject t bring artists frm all fields int direct cntact with children is particularly welcme at a time when the arts are being dwngraded in schls." It was a mistake t see the arts as unnecessary, he added.
    Histrian Sir Simn Schama is als a supprter f the prject. He said that arts educatin in schls was nt just an add-n. “It is abslutely necessary. The future depends n creativity and creativity depends n the yung. What will remain f us when artificial intelligence takes ver will be ur creativity, and it is ur creative spirit, ur visinary sense f freshness,that has been ur strength fr centuries."
    8.What will Zafiraku d with her prize mney?
    A.Make a mvie.B.Build new schls.
    C.Run a prject.D.Help lcal musicians.
    9.What des Craig-Martin think f the teaching f the arts in UK schls?
    A.It is particularly difficult.B.It increases artists' incme.
    C.It pens children's mind.D.It deserves greater attentin.
    10.What shuld be stressed in schl educatin accrding t Schama?
    A.Mral principles.B.Interpersnal skills.
    C.Creative abilities.D.Psitive wrldviews.
    11.Which f the fllwing is a suitable title fr the text?
    A.Bring Artists t SchlsB.When Histrians Meet Artists
    C.Arts Educatin in BritainD.The Wrld's Best Arts Teacher
    2.D【2021·英语全国甲卷】
    Wh is a genius? This questin has greatly interested humankind fr centuries.
    Let's state clearly: Einstein was a genius. His face is almst the internatinal symbl fr genius. But we want t g beynd ne man and explre the nature f genius itself. Why is it that sme peple are s much mre intelligent r creative than the rest f us? And wh are they?
    In the sciences and arts, thse praised as geniuses were mst ften white men, f Eurpean rigin. Perhaps this is nt a surprise. It's said that histry is written by the victrs, and thse victrs set the standards fr admissin t the genius club. When cntributins were made by geniuses utside the club—wmen, r peple f a different clr r belief—they were unacknwledged and rejected by thers.
    A study recently published by Science fund that as yung as age six, girls are less likely than bys t say that members f their gender(性别)are “really, really smart.” Even wrse, the study fund that girls act n that belief: Arund age six they start t avid activities said t be fr children wh are “really, really smart.” Can ur planet affrd t have any great thinkers becme discuraged and give up? It desn't take a genius t knw the answer: abslutely nt.
    Here's the gd news. In a wired wrld with cnstant glbal cmmunicatin, we're all psitined t see flashes f genius wherever they appear. And the mre we lk, the mre we will see that scial factrs(因素)like gender, race, and class d nt determine the appearance f genius. As a writer says, future geniuses cme frm thse with “intelligence, creativity, perseverance(毅力), and simple gd frtune, wh are able t change the wrld.”
    15.What is the best title fr the text?
    A.Geniuses Think AlikeB.Genius Takes Many Frms
    C.Genius and IntelligenceD.Genius and Luck
    3.C【2021·全国新高考I卷】
    When the explrers first set ft upn the cntinent f Nrth America, the skies and lands were alive with an astnishing variety f wildlife. Native Americans had taken care f these precius natural resurces wisely. Unfrtunately, it tk the explrers and the settlers wh fllwed nly a few decades t decimate a large part f these resurces. Millins f waterfwl ( 水 禽 ) were killed at the hands f market hunters and a handful f verly ambitius sprtsmen. Millins f acres f wetlands were dried t feed and huse the ever-increasing ppulatins, greatly reducing waterfwl habitat.
    In 1934, with the passage f the Migratry Bird Hunting Stamp Act (Act), an increasingly cncerned natin tk firm actin t stp the destructin f migratry ( 迁徙的) waterfwl and the wetlands s vital t their survival. Under this Act, all waterfwl hunters 16 years f age and ver must annually purchase and carry a Federal Duck Stamp. The very first Federal Duck Stamp was designed by J.N. “Ding” Darling, a plitical cartnist frm Des Mines, lwa, wh at that time was appinted by President Franklin Rsevelt as Directr f the Bureau f Bilgical Survey. Hunters willingly pay the stamp price t ensure the survival f ur natural resurces.
    Abut 98 cents f every duck stamp dllar ges directly int the Migratry Bird Cnservatin Fund t purchase wetlands and wildlife habitat fr inclusin int the Natinal Wildlife Refuge System — a fact that ensures this land will be prtected and available fr all generatins t cme. Since 1934, better than half a billin dllars has gne int that Fund t purchase mre than 5 millin acres f habitat. Little wnder the Federal Duck Stamp Prgram has been called ne f the mst successful cnservatin prgrams ever initiated.
    31.Which f the fllwing is a suitable title fr the text?
    A.The Federal Duck Stamp StryB.The Natinal Wildlife Refuge System
    C.The Benefits f Saving WaterfwlD.The Histry f Migratry Bird Hunting
    4.C【2021·全国高考乙卷】
    Yu’ve heard that plastic is plluting the ceans — between 4.8 and 12.7 millin tnnes enter cean ecsystems every year. But des ne plastic straw r cup really make a difference? Artist Benjamin Vn Wng wants yu t knw that it des. He builds massive sculptures ut f plastic garbage, frcing viewers t re-examine their relatinship t single-use plastic prducts.
    At the beginning f the year, the artist built a piece called “Strawpcalypse,” a pair f 10-ft-tall plastic waves, frzen mid-crash. Made f 168,000 plastic straws cllected frm several vlunteer beach cleanups, the sculpture made its first appearance at the Estella Place shpping center in H Chi Minh City, Vietnam.
    Just 9% f glbal plastic waste is recycled. Plastic straws are by n means the biggest surce(来源)f plastic pllutin, but they’ve recently cme under fire because mst peple dn’t need them t drink with and, because f their small size and weight, they cannt be recycled. Every straw that’s part f Vn Wng’s artwrk likely came frm a drink that smene used fr nly a few minutes. Once the drink is gne, the straw will take centuries t disappear.
    In a piece frm 2018, Vn Wng wanted t illustrate(说明) a specific statistic: Every 60 secnds, a trucklad’s wrth f plastic enters the cean. Fr this wrk, titled “Trucklad f Plastic,” Vn Wng and a grup f vlunteers cllected mre than 10,000 pieces f plastic, which were then tied tgether t lk like they’d been dumped(倾倒) frm a truck all at nce.
    Vn Wng hpes that his wrk will als help pressure big cmpanies t reduce their plastic ftprint.
    31.Which f the fllwing can be the best title fr the text?
    A.Artists’ Opinins n Plastic Safety
    B.Media Interest in Cntemprary Art
    C.Respnsibility Demanded f Big Cmpanies
    D.Ocean Plastics Transfrmed int Sculptures
    5.2022年全国甲卷之C篇
    Gffin’s cckats, a kind f small parrt native t Australasia, have been shwn t have similar shape-recgnitin abilities t a human tw-year-ld. Thugh nt knwn t use tls in the wild, the birds have prved skilful at tl use while kept in the cage. In a recent experiment, cckats were presented with a bx with a nut inside it. The clear frnt f the bx had a “keyhle” in a gemetric shape, and the birds were given five differently shaped “keys” t chse frm. Inserting the crrect “key” wuld let ut the nut.
    In humans, babies can put a rund shape in a rund hle frm arund ne year f age, but it will be anther year befre they are able t d the same with less symmetrical (对称的) shapes. This ability t recgnize that a shape will need t be turned in a specific directin befre it will fit is called an “allcentric frame f reference”. In the experiment, Gffin’s cckats were able t select the right tl fr the jb, in mst cases, by visual recgnitin alne. Where trial-and-errr was used, the cckats did better than mnkeys in similar tests. This indicates that Gffin’s cckats d indeed pssess an allcentric frame f reference when mving bjects in space, similar t tw-year-ld babies.
    The next step, accrding t the researchers, is t try and wrk ut whether the cckats rely entirely n visual clues (线索), r als use a sense f tuch in making their shape selectins.
    24. Hw did the cckats get the nut frm the bx in the experiment?
    A. By fllwing instructins.B. By using a tl.
    C. By turning the bx arund.D. By remving the lid.
    25. Which task can human ne-year-lds mst likely cmplete accrding t the text?
    A. Using a key t unlck a dr.B. Telling parrts frm ther birds.
    C. Putting a ball int a rund hle.D. Gruping tys f different shapes.
    26. What des the fllw-up test aim t find ut abut the cckats?
    A. Hw far they are able t see.B. Hw they track mving bjects.
    C. Whether they are smarter than mnkeys.D. Whether they use a sense f tuch in the test.
    27. Which can be a suitable title fr the text?
    A. Cckats: Quick Errr CheckersB. Cckats: Independent Learners
    C. Cckats: Clever Signal-ReadersD. Cckats: Skilful Shape-Srters
    6.2022年全国乙卷之C篇
    Can a small grup f drnes (无人机) guarantee the safety and reliability f railways and, at the same time, help railway peratrs save billins f eurs each year? That is the very likely future f applying tday’s “eyes in the sky” technlgy t making sure that the millins f kilmetres f rail tracks and infrastructure (基础设施) wrldwide are safe fr trains n a 24/7 basis.
    Drnes are already being used t examine high-tensin electrical lines. They culd d precisely the same thing t inspect railway lines and ther vital aspects f rail infrastructure such as the crrect psitin f railway tracks and switching pints. The mre regularly they can be inspected, the mre railway safety, reliability and n-time perfrmance will be imprved. Csts wuld be cut and peratins wuld be mre efficient (高效) acrss the bard.
    That includes huge savings in maintenance csts and better prtectin f railway persnnel safety. It is calculated that Eurpean railways alne spend apprximately 20 billin eurs a year n maintenance, including sending maintenance staff, ften at night, t inspect and repair the rail infrastructure. That can be dangerus wrk that culd be avided with drnes assisting the crews’ effrts.
    By using the latest technlgies, drnes culd als start prviding higher-value services fr railways, detecting faults in the rail r switches, befre they can cause any safety prblems. T perfrm these tasks, drnes fr rail dn’t need t be flying verhead. Engineers are nw wrking n a new cncept: the rail drnes f the future. They will be mving n the track ahead f the train, and prgrammed t run autnmusly. Very small drnes with advanced sensrs and AI and travelling ahead f the train culd guide it like a c-pilt. With their ability t see ahead, they culd signal any prblem, s that fast-mving trains wuld be able t react in time.
    28. What makes the applicatin f drnes t rail lines pssible?
    A. The use f drnes in checking n pwer lines.B. Drnes’ ability t wrk at high altitudes.
    C. The reductin f cst in designing drnes.D. Drnes’ reliable perfrmance in remte areas.
    29. What des “maintenance” underlined in paragraph 3 refer t?
    A. Persnnel safety.B. Assistance frm drnes.
    C. Inspectin and repair.D. Cnstructin f infrastructure.
    30. What functin is expected f the rail drnes?
    A. T prvide early warning.B. T make trains run autmatically.
    C T earn prfits fr the crews.D. T accelerate transprtatin.
    31. Which is the mst suitable title fr the text?
    A. What Faults Can Be Detected with Drnes
    B. Hw Prductin f Drnes Can Be Expanded
    C. What Difficulty Drne Develpment Will Face
    D. Hw Drnes Will Change the Future f Railways
    7.2022年1月浙江卷之C篇
    The benefits f regular exercise are well dcumented but there’s a new bnus t add t the ever-grwing list. New researchers fund that middle-aged wmen wh were physically fit culd be nearly 90 percent less likely t develp dementia in later life, and as they did, it came n a decade later than less sprty wmen.
    Lead researcher Dr. Helena Hrder, f the University f Gthenburg in Sweden, said: "These findings are exciting because it’s pssible that imprving peple's cardivascular (心血管)fitness in middle age culd delay r even prevent them frm develping dementia. "
    Fr the study, 191 wmen with an average age f 50 tk a bicycle exercise test until they were exhausted t measure their peak (最大值的) cardivascular capacity. The average peak wrklad was measured at 103 watts.
    A ttal f 40 wmen met the criteria fr a high fitness level, r 120 watts r higher. A ttal f 92 wmen were in the medium fitness categry; and 59 wmen were in the lw fitness categry, defined as a peak wrklad f 80 watts r less, r having their exercise tests stpped because f high bld pressure, chest pain r ther cardivascular prblems.
    These wmen were then tested fr dementia six times ver the fllwing fur decades. During that time, 44 f the wmen develped dementia. Five percent f the highly fit wmen develped dementia, cmpared t 25 percent f the wmen with medium fitness and 32 percent f the wmen with lw fitness.
    "Hwever, this study des nt shw cause and effect between cardivascular fitness and dementia, it nly shws an assciatin. Mre research is needed t see if imprved fitness culd have a psitive effect n the risk f dementia and als t lk at when during a lifetime a high fitness level is mst imprtant. " She als admitted that a relatively small number f wmen were studied, all f whm were frm Sweden, s the results might nt be applicable t ther grups.
    7. What is n the ever-grwing list mentined in the first paragraph?
    A. Psitive effects f ding exercises.
    B. Exercises suitable fr the middle-aged.
    C. Experimental studies n diseases.
    D. Advantages f sprty wman ver man
    8. Why did the researchers ask the wman t d bicycle exercise?
    A. T predict their maximum heart rate.
    B. T assess their cardivascular capacity
    C. T change their habits f wrking ut
    D. T detect their ptential health prblems
    9. What d we knw abut Dr Hrder's study?
    A. It aimed t find a cure fr dementia.
    B. Data cllectin was a lengthy prcess.
    C. Sme participants withdrew frm it.
    D. The results were far frm satisfactry.
    10. Which f the fllwing is the best title fr the text?
    A. Mre Wmen Are Exercising t Prevent Dementia
    B. Middle-Aged Wmen Need t D Mre Exercise
    C. Fit Wmen Are Less Likely t Develp Dementia
    D. Biking Imprves Wmen's Cardivascular Fitness
    8.2021年新高考I卷之C篇
    When the explrers first set ft upn the cntinent f Nrth America, the skies and lands were alive with an astnishing variety f wildlife. Native Americans had taken care f these precius natural resurces wisely. Unfrtunately, it tk the explrers and the settlers wh fllwed nly a few decades t decimate a large part f these resurces. Millins f waterfwl ( 水 禽 ) were killed at the hands f market hunters and a handful f verly ambitius sprtsmen. Millins f acres f wetlands were dried t feed and huse the ever-increasing ppulatins, greatly reducing waterfwl habitat.
    In 1934, with the passage f the Migratry Bird Hunting Stamp Act (Act), an increasingly cncerned natin tk firm actin t stp the destructin f migratry ( 迁徙的) waterfwl and the wetlands s vital t their survival. Under this Act, all waterfwl hunters 16 years f age and ver must annually purchase and carry a Federal Duck Stamp. The very first Federal Duck Stamp was designed by J.N. “Ding” Darling, a plitical cartnist frm Des Mines, lwa, wh at that time was appinted by President Franklin Rsevelt as Directr f the Bureau f Bilgical Survey. Hunters willingly pay the stamp price t ensure the survival f ur natural resurces.
    Abut 98 cents f every duck stamp dllar ges directly int the Migratry Bird Cnservatin Fund t purchase wetlands and wildlife habitat fr inclusin int the Natinal Wildlife Refuge System — a fact that ensures this land will be prtected and available fr all generatins t cme. Since 1934, better than half a billin dllars has gne int that Fund t purchase mre than 5 millin acres f habitat. Little wnder the Federal Duck Stamp Prgram has been called ne f the mst successful cnservatin prgrams ever initiated.
    28. What was a cause f the waterfwl ppulatin decline in Nrth America?
    A. Lss f wetlands.B. Ppularity f water sprts.
    C. Pllutin f rivers.D. Arrival f ther wild animals.
    29. What des the underlined wrd “decimate” mean in the first paragraph?
    A. Acquire.B. Exprt.
    C. Destry.D. Distribute.
    30. What is a direct result f the Act passed in 1934?
    A. The stamp price has gne dwn.B. The migratry birds have flwn away.
    C. The hunters have stpped hunting.D. The gvernment has cllected mney.
    31. Which f the fllwing is a suitable title fr the text?
    A. The Federal Duck Stamp StryB. The Natinal Wildlife Refuge System
    C. The Benefits f Saving WaterfwlD. The Histry f Migratry Bird Hunting
    9.2021年全国甲卷之D篇
    Wh is a genius? This questin has greatly interested humankind fr centuries.
    Let's state clearly: Einstein was a genius. His face is almst the internatinal symbl fr genius. But we want t g beynd ne man and explre the nature f genius itself. Why is it that sme peple are s much mre intelligent r creative than the rest f us? And wh are they?
    In the sciences and arts, thse praised as geniuses were mst ften white men, f Eurpean rigin. Perhaps this is nt a surprise. It's said that histry is written by the victrs, and thse victrs set the standards fr admissin t the genius club. When cntributins were made by geniuses utside the club—wmen, r peple f a different clr r belief—they were unacknwledged and rejected by thers.
    A study recently published by Science fund that as yung as age six, girls are less likely than bys t say that members f their gender(性别)are “really, really smart.” Even wrse, the study fund that girls act n that belief: Arund age six they start t avid activities said t be fr children wh are “really, really smart.” Can ur planet affrd t have any great thinkers becme discuraged and give up? It desn't take a genius t knw the answer: abslutely nt.
    Here's the gd news. In a wired wrld with cnstant glbal cmmunicatin, we're all psitined t see flashes f genius wherever they appear. And the mre we lk, the mre we will see that scial factrs(因素)like gender, race, and class d nt determine the appearance f genius. As a writer says, future geniuses cme frm thse with “intelligence, creativity, perseverance(毅力), and simple gd frtune, wh are able t change the wrld.”
    12. What des the authr think f victrs' standards fr jining the genius club?
    A. They're unfair.B. They're cnservative.
    C. They're bjective.D. They're strict.
    13. What can we infer abut girls frm the study in Science?
    A. They think themselves smart.
    B. They lk up t great thinkers.
    C They see gender differences earlier than bys.
    D. They are likely t be influenced by scial beliefs
    14. Why are mre geniuses knwn t the public?
    A. Imprved glbal cmmunicatin.
    B. Less discriminatin against wmen.
    C. Acceptance f victrs' cncepts.
    D. Changes in peple's scial psitins.
    15. What is the best title fr the text?
    A. Geniuses Think AlikeB. Genius Takes Many Frms
    C. Genius and IntelligenceD. Genius and Luck
    10.2021年全国乙卷之C篇
    Yu’ve heard that plastic is plluting the ceans — between 4.8 and 12.7 millin tnnes enter cean ecsystems every year. But des ne plastic straw r cup really make a difference? Artist Benjamin Vn Wng wants yu t knw that it des. He builds massive sculptures ut f plastic garbage, frcing viewers t re-examine their relatinship t single-use plastic prducts.
    At the beginning f the year, the artist built a piece called “Strawpcalypse,” a pair f 10-ft-tall plastic waves, frzen mid-crash. Made f 168,000 plastic straws cllected frm several vlunteer beach cleanups, the sculpture made its first appearance at the Estella Place shpping center in H Chi Minh City, Vietnam.
    Just 9% f glbal plastic waste is recycled. Plastic straws are by n means the biggest surce(来源)f plastic pllutin, but they’ve recently cme under fire because mst peple dn’t need them t drink with and, because f their small size and weight, they cannt be recycled. Every straw that’s part f Vn Wng’s artwrk likely came frm a drink that smene used fr nly a few minutes. Once the drink is gne, the straw will take centuries t disappear.
    In a piece frm 2018, Vn Wng wanted t illustrate(说明) a specific statistic: Every 60 secnds, a trucklad’s wrth f plastic enters the cean. Fr this wrk, titled “Trucklad f Plastic,” Vn Wng and a grup f vlunteers cllected mre than 10,000 pieces f plastic, which were then tied tgether t lk like they’d been dumped(倾倒) frm a truck all at nce.
    Vn Wng hpes that his wrk will als help pressure big cmpanies t reduce their plastic ftprint.
    28. What are Vn Wng’s artwrks intended fr?
    A. Beautifying the city he lives in.B. Intrducing ec-friendly prducts.
    C. Drawing public attentin t plastic waste.D. Reducing garbage n the beach.
    29. Why des the authr discuss plastic straws in paragraph 3?
    A. T shw the difficulty f their recycling.
    B. T explain why they are useful.
    C. T vice his views n mdern art.
    D. T find a substitute fr them.
    30. What effect wuld “Trucklad f Plastic” have n viewers?
    A. Calming.B. Disturbing.
    C. Refreshing.D. Challenging.
    31. Which f the fllwing can be the best title fr the text?
    A. Artists’ Opinins n Plastic Safety
    B. Media Interest in Cntemprary Art
    C. Respnsibility Demanded f Big Cmpanies
    D. Ocean Plastics Transfrmed int Sculptures
    11.2021年新高考II卷之C篇
    A British wman wh wn a S1 millin prize after she was named the Wrld's Best Teacher will use the cash t bring inspiratinal figures int UK schls.
    Andria Zafiraku,a nrth Lndn secndary schl teacher, said she wanted t bring abut a classrm revlutin (变革). “We are ging t make a change, ”she said.“I’ve started a prject t prmte the teaching f the arts in ur schls.”
    The prject results frm the difficulties many schls have in getting artists f any srt - whether an up-and-cming lcal musician r a majr mvie star - int schls t wrk with and inspire children.
    Zafiraku began the prject at Alpertn Cmmunity Schl her place f wrk fr the past twelve years. “I've seen thse magic mments when children are talking t smene they are inspired by - their eyes are shining and their faces light up,” she said. “We need artists . mre than ever in ur schls."
    Artist Michael Craig-Martin said: “Andria's brilliant prject t bring artists frm all fields int direct cntact with children is particularly welcme at a time when the arts are being dwngraded in schls." It was a mistake t see the arts as unnecessary, he added.
    Histrian Sir Simn Schama is als a supprter f the prject. He said that arts educatin in schls was nt just an add-n. “It is abslutely necessary. The future depends n creativity and creativity depends n the yung. What will remain f us when artificial intelligence takes ver will be ur creativity, and it is ur creative spirit, ur visinary sense f freshness, that has been ur strength fr centuries."
    8. What will Zafiraku d with her prize mney?
    A. Make a mvie.B. Build new schls.
    C. Run a prject.D. Help lcal musicians.
    9. What des Craig-Martin think f the teaching f the arts in UK schls?
    A. It is particularly difficult.B. It increases artists' incme.
    C. It pens children's mind.D. It deserves greater attentin.
    10. What shuld be stressed in schl educatin accrding t Schama?
    A. Mral principles.B. Interpersnal skills.
    C. Creative abilities.D. Psitive wrldviews.
    11. Which f the fllwing is a suitable title fr the text?
    A. Bring Artists t SchlsB. When Histrians Meet Artists
    C. Arts Educatin in BritainD. The Wrld's Best Arts Teacher
    12.2021年6月浙江卷
    We live in a twn with three beaches. There are tw parts less than 10 minutes’ walk frm hme where neighbrhd children gather t play. Hwever, what my children want t d after schl is pick up a screen — any screen — and stare at it fr hurs. They are nt alne. Tday's children spend an average f fur and a half hurs a day lking at screens, split between watching televisin and using the Internet.
    In the past few years, an increasing number f peple and rganisatins have begun cming up with plans t cunter this trend. A cuple f years ag film-maker David Bnd realised that his children, then aged five and three, were attached t screens t the pint where he was able t say “chclate” int his three-year-ld sn’s ear withut getting a respnse. He realised that smething needed t change, and, being a Lndn media type, appinted himself “marketing directr frm Nature”. He dcumented his jurney as he set abut treating nature as a brand t be marketed t yung peple. The result was Prject Wild Thing, a film which charts the birth f the Wrld Netwrk, a grup f rganisatins with the cmmn gal f getting children ut int nature.
    “Just five mre minutes utdrs can make a difference,” David Bnd says. “There is a lt f really interesting evidence which seems t be suggesting that if children are inspired up t the age f seven, then being utdrs will be n habit fr life.” His wn children have gt int the habit f playing utside nw: “We just send them ut int the garden and tell them nt t cme back in fr a while.”
    Summer is upn us. There is an amazing wrld ut there, and it needs ur children as much as they need it. Let us get them ut and let them play.
    4. What is the prblem with the authr’s children?
    A. They ften anny their neighburs.B. They are tired f ding their hmewrk.
    C. They have n friends t play withD. They stay in frnt f screens fr t lng.
    5. Hw did David Bnd advcate his idea?
    A. By making a dcumentary film.B. By rganizing utdr activities.
    C. By advertising in Lndn media.D. By creating a netwrk f friends.
    6. Which f the fllwing can replace the underlined wrd “charts” in paragraph 2?
    A. recrdsB. predictsC. delaysD. cnfirms
    7. What can be a suitable title fr the text?
    A. Let Children Have FunB. Yung Children Need Mre Free Time
    C. Market Nature t ChildrenD. David Bnd: A Rle Mdel fr Children
    13.2021年6月天津卷之D篇
    Art is everywhere. Any public space has been carefully designed by an artistic mind t be bth functinal and beautiful. Why, then, is art still s widely cnsidered t be "the easy subject" at schl, insignificant t wider sciety, a waste f time and effrt?
    Art can cnnect culture with cmmercial prducts in a way that nt many ther things can; art generates mney and hlds significant emtinal and cultural value within cmmunities. When peple attend a cncert, they are paying fr music, sure, maybe even htel rms, meals, and transprt, but they als gain an incredible experience, a unique atmsphere and a memry that will g thrugh the rest f their lives. Peple dn't just want material things anymre, they want t experience life一the arts are a perfect crssver(交迭)between culture and cmmerce.
    Furthermre, the arts can bring cmmunities tgether, reducing lneliness and making peple feel safer. Scial bnds are created amng individuals when they share their arts experiences thrugh reflectin and discussin, and their expressin f cmmn values thrugh artwrks in hnur f events significant t a natin's experience.
    The arts clearly have a pretty psitive impact n physical and psychlgical health. It is fund that peple wh frequent cultural places r participate in artistic events are mre likely t gain gd health cmpared t thse wh d nt; mre engagement with the arts is linked t a higher level f peple's wellbeing. The Ryal Sciety f Public Health discvered that music and art, when used in hspitals, help t imprve the cnditins f patients by reducing stress, anxiety and bld pressure.
    Children wh are invlved with the arts make greater achievements in their educatin: thse engaged with drama have greater literary ability while thers taking part in musical practice exhibit greater skills in math and languages. Kids with preference fr the arts have a greater chance f finding emplyment in the future. Participating in the arts is essential fr child develpment; encuraging children t express themselves in cnstructive ways culd help t frm healthy emtinal respnses in later life.
    Vital t human life, art is celebrated and used by natins acrss the wrld fr varius purpses. Life withut art wuld be bring and dead still, fr art is a part f what makes us human.
    51. Art prducts differ frm mst ther cmmercial prducts because .
    A. mst peple purchase them fr cllectin
    B. they are mre expensive and less accessible
    C. they have bth cmmercial and cultural values
    D. their prices may climb up as time passes
    52. By sharing their arts experiences, cmmunity members can .
    A. keep the cmmunity safe frm illnesses
    B. develp a strnger tie between them
    C learn t appreciate their wn wrks f art
    D. ffer hnurable slutins t their prblems
    53. What can we learn abut peple wh are invlved in artistic activities?
    A. They enjy better living cnditins.
    B. They like t cmpare themselves with thers.
    C. They are particularly gd at bth music and art.
    D. They tend t be healthier physically and mentally.
    54. Hw des kids' engagement with the arts benefit them?
    A. It prmtes their academic perfrmance and emtinal grwth.
    B. It gives them mre cnfidence in exhibiting their learning skills.
    C. It inspires their creativity in designing their future career.
    D. It helps t make respnsible peple ut f them.
    55. What is the best title fr this passage?
    A. Hw Art Cures Our Hearts
    B. Art: A Blessing t Humankind
    C. Hw Art Benefits Cmmunities
    D. Art: A Bridge Between Cultures
    14.2021年3月天津卷之D篇
    There is smething t be said fr being a generalist, even if yu are a specialist. Knwing a little abut a lt f things that interest yu can add t the richness f a whle, well-lived life.
    Sciety pushes us t specialize, t becme experts. This requires cmmitment t a particular ccupatin, branch f study r research. The drawback t being specialists is we ften cme t knw mre and mre abut less and less. There is a great deal f pressure t master ne's field. Yu may pursue training, degrees, r increasing levels f respnsibility at wrk. Then yu discver the pressure f having t keep up.
    Sme peple seem willing t wrk arund the clck in their narrw specialty. But such cmmitment can als weaken a sense f freedm. These specialists culd wrk at the ffice until ten each night, then lk back and realize they wuld have lved t have gne hme and enjyed the sweetness f their family and friends, r traveled t exciting places, meeting interesting peple. Mastering ne thing t the exclusin (排 除)f thers can hld back yur true spirit.
    Generalists, n the ther hand, knw a lt abut a wide range f subjects and view the whle with all its cnnectins. They are peple f ability, talent, and enthusiasm wh can bring their brad perspective (视角)int specific fields f expertise (专长).The dctr wh is als a pet and philspher is a superir dctr, ne wh can give s much mre t his patients than just gd medical skills.
    Things are cnnected. Let yur expertise in ne field fuel yur passins in all related areas. Sme f yur interests may nt appear t be cnnected but, nce yu explre their depths, yu discver that they are. My editr Tni, wh is als a writer, has edited several histry bks. She has decided t study Chinese histry. Fascinated by the structural beauty f the Frbidden City as a painter, she is equally interested t learn mre abut Chinese philsphy. "I dn't knw where it will lead, but I'm excited I'm n this pursuit."
    These expansins int new wrlds help us by giving us new perspectives. We begin t see the intercnnectedness f ne thing t anther in all aspects f ur life, f urselves and the universe. Develp brad, general knwledge and experience. The universe is all yurs t explre and enjy.
    51. T becme a specialist, ne may have t_____.
    A. narrw his range f knwledge
    B. avid respnsibilities at wrk
    C. knw mre abut the sciety
    D. braden his perspective n life
    52. The specialists mentined in Paragraph 3 tend t______.
    A. treasure their freedm
    B. travel arund the wrld
    C. spend mst time wrking
    D. enjy meeting funny peple
    53. Accrding t the authr, a superir dctr is ne wh_____.
    A. is fully aware f his talent and ability
    B. is a pure specialist in medicine
    C. shuld lve petry and philsphy
    D. brings knwledge f ther fields t wrk
    54. What des the authr intend t shw with the example f Tni?
    A. Passin alne des nt ensure a persn's success.
    B. In-depth explratin makes discveries pssible.
    C. Everyne has a chance t succeed in their pursuit.
    D. Seemingly unrelated interests are in a way cnnected.
    55. What culd be the best title fr the passage?
    A. Be Mre a Generalist Than a Specialist
    B. Specialist r Generalist: Hard t Decide
    C. Turn a Generalist int a Specialist
    D. Ways t Becme a Generalist
    15.2021年1月浙江卷之C篇
    Researchers say they have translated the meaning f gestures that wild chimpanzees (黑猩猩) use t cmmunicate. They say wild chimps cmmunicate 19 specific messages t ne anther with a "vcabulary" f 66 gestures. The scientists discvered this by fllwing and filming grups f chimps in Uganda, and examining mre than 5,000 incidents f these meaningful exchanges.
    Dr Catherine Hbaiter, wh led the research, said that this was the nly frm f intentinal cmmunicatin t be recrded in the animal kingdm. Only humans and chimps, she said, had a system f cmmunicatin where they deliberately sent a message t anther grup member.
    "That's what's s amazing abut chimp gestures," she said. "They're the nly thing that lks like human language in that respect. ”
    Althugh previus research has shwn that apes and mnkeys can understand cmplex infrmatin frm anther animal's call, the animals d nt appear t use their vices intentinally t cmmunicate messages. This was a significant difference between calls and gestures, Dr Hbaiter said.
    Chimps will check t see if they have the attentin f the animal with which they wish t cmmunicate. In ne case, a mther presents her ft t her crying baby, signaling:" Climb n me. " The yungster immediately jumps n t its mthers back and they travel ff tgether. "The big message frm this study is that there is anther species (物种) ut there. that is meaningful in its cmmunicatin, s that's nt unique t humans," said Dr Hbaiter.
    Dr Susanne Shultz, an evlutinary bilgist frm the University f Manchester, said the study was praisewrthy in seeking t enrich ur knwledge f the evlutin f human language. But, she added, the results were "a little disappinting".
    "The vagueness f the gesture meanings suggests either that the chimps have little t cmmunicate, r we are still missing a lt f the infrmatin cntained in their gestures and actins," she said. "Mrever, the meanings seem t nt g beynd what ther animal cnvey with nn-verbal cmmunicatin. S, it seems the gulf remains. "
    44.What d chimps and humans have in cmmn accrding t Dr Hbaiter?
    A.Memrizing specific wrds.B.Understanding cmplex infrmatin.
    C.Using vices t cmmunicate.D.Cmmunicating messages n purpse.
    45.What did Dr Shultz think f the study?
    A.It was well designed but prly cnducted.
    B.It was a gd try but the findings were limited.
    C.It was inspiring but the evidence was unreliable.
    D.It was a failure but the methds deserved praise.
    46.What des the underlined wrd "gulf" in the last paragraph mean?
    A.Difference.B.Cnflict.C.Balance.D.Cnnectin.
    47.Which f the fllwing is the best title fr the text?
    A.Chimpanzee behaviur study achieved a breakthrugh
    B.Chimpanzees develped specific cmmunicatin skills
    C.Chimpanzees: the smartest species in the animal kingdm
    D.Chimpanzee language: cmmunicatin gestures translated
    16.2020年全国II卷之D篇
    I have a special place in my heart fr libraries. I have fr as lng as I can remember. I was always an enthusiastic reader, smetimes reading up t three bks a day as a child. Stries were like air t me and while ther kids played ball r went t parties, I lived ut adventures thrugh the bks I checked ut frm the library.
    My first jb was wrking at the Ukiah Library when I was 16 years ld .It was a dream jb and I did everything frm shelving bks t reading t the children fr stry time.
    As I grew lder and became a mther, the library tk n a new place and an added meaning in my life. I had several children and bks were ur main surce(来源) f entertainment. It was a big deal fr us t lad up and g t the lcal library, where my kids culd pick ut bks t read r bks they wanted me t read t them.
    I always read ,using different vices ,as thugh I were acting ut the stries with my vice and they lved it !It was a special time t bnd with my children and it filled them with the wnderment f bks .
    Nw, I see my children taking their children t the library and I lve that the excitement f ging t the library lives n frm generatin t generatin.
    As a nvelist, I’ve fund a new relatinship with libraries. I encurage readers t g t their lcal library when they can’t affrd t purchase a bk. I see libraries as a safe haven(避风港) fr readers and writers, a bridge that helps put tgether a reader with a bk. Libraries, in their wn way, help fight bk piracy(盗版行为) and 1 think all writers shuld supprt libraries in a significant way when they can. Encurage readers t use the library. Share library annuncements n yur scial media. Frequent them and talk abut them when yu can.
    32. Which wrd best describes the authr’s relatinship with bks as a child?
    A. Cperative.B. Uneasy.C. Inseparable.D. Casual.
    33. What des the underlined phrase “an added meaning” in paragraph 3 refer t?
    A. Pleasure frm wrking in the library.
    B. Jy f reading passed n in the family.
    C. Wnderment frm acting ut the stries.
    D. A clser bnd develped with the readers.
    34. What des the authr call n ther writers t d?
    A. Spnsr bk fairs.B. Write fr scial media.
    C. Supprt libraries.D. Purchase her nvels.
    35. Which can be a suitable title fr the text?
    A. Reading: A Surce f Knwledge
    B. My Idea abut writing
    C. Library: A Haven fr the Yung
    D. My Lve f the Library
    17.2020年北京卷之C篇
    Fr the past five years, Paula Smith, a histrian f science, has devted herself t re-creating lng-frgtten techniques. While ding research fr her new bk, she came acrss a 16th-century French manuscript(手稿)cnsisting f nearly 1,000 sets f instructins, cvering subjects frm tl making t finding the best sand.
    The authr's intentin remains as mysterius(神秘)as his name; he may have been simply taking ntes fr his wn recrds. But Smith was struck mainly by the fact that she didn't truly grasp any f the skills the authr described. "Yu simply can't get an understanding f that handwrk by reading abut it," she says.
    Thugh Smith did get her hands n the best sand, ding things the ld-fashined way isn't just abut playing arund with French mud. Recnstructing the wrk f the craftsmen(工匠)wh lived centuries ag can reveal hw they viewed the wrld, what bjects filled their hmes, and what went n in the wrkshps that prduced them. It can even help slve present-day prblems: In 2015, scientists discvered that a 10th-century English medicine fr eve prblems culd kill a drug-resistant virus.
    The wrk has als brught insights fr museums, Smith says. One must knw hw n bject was made in rder t preserve it. What's mre, recnstructins might be the nly way t knw what treasures lked like befre time wre them dwn. Schlars have seen this idea in practice with ancient Greek and Rman statues. These sculptures were painted a rainbw f striking clurs. We can't appreciate these kinds f details withut seeing wrks f art as they riginally appeared-smething Smith believes yu can d nly when yu have a rad map.
    Smith has put the manuscript's ideas int practice. Her final gal is t link the wrlds f art and science back tgether: She believes that bringing the ld recipes t life can help develp a kind f learning that highlights experimentatin, teamwrk, and prblem slving.
    Back when science—then called “the new philsphy”—tk shape, academics lked t craftsmen fr help in understanding the natural wrld. Micrscpes and telescpes were invented by way f artistic tinkering(修补), as craftsmen experimented with glass t better bend light.
    If we can rediscver the values f hands-n experience and craftwrk, Smith says, we can marry the best f ur mdern insights with the handiness f ur ancestrs.
    38. Hw did Smith, feel after reading the French manuscript?
    A. Cnfused abut the technical terms.
    B. Impressed with its detailed instructins.
    C. Discuraged by its cmplex structure.
    D. Shcked fr her wn lack f hand skills.
    39. Accrding t Smith, the recnstructin wrk is dne mainly t _____________.
    A. restre ld wrkshpsB. understand the craftsmen
    C. imprve visual effectsD. inspire the philsphers
    40. Why des the authr mentin museums?
    A. T reveal the beauty f ancient bjects.
    B. T present the findings f ld science.
    C T highlight the imprtance f antiques.
    D. T emphasise the values f hand skills.
    41. Which wuld be the best title fr this passage?
    A. Craftsmen Set the Trends fr Artists
    B. Craftsmanship Leads t New Theries
    C. Craftsmanship Makes Better Scientists
    D. Craftsmen Reshape the Future f Science
    18.2020年新课标Ⅰ卷之D篇
    The cnnectin between peple and plants has lng been the subject f scientific research. Recent studies have fund psitive effects. A study cnducted in Yungstwn,Ohi,fr example, discvered that greener areas f the city experienced less crime. In anther,emplyees were shwn t be 15% mre prductive when their wrkplaces were decrated with huseplants.
    The engineers at the Massachusetts Institute f Technlgy(MIT)have taken it a step further changing the actual cmpsitin f plants in rder t get them t perfrm diverse,even unusual functins. These include plants that have sensrs printed nt their leaves t shw when they’re shrt f water and a plant that can detect harmful chemicals in grundwater. "We’re thinking abut hw we can engineer plants t replace functins f the things that we use every day,"explained Michael Stran, a prfessr f chemical engineering at MIT.
    One f his latest prjects has been t make plants grw(发光)in experiments using sme cmmn vegetables. Stran’s team fund that they culd create a faint light fr three-and-a-half hurs. The light,abut ne-thusandth f the amunt needed t read by,is just a start. The technlgy, Stran said, culd ne day be used t light the rms r even t turn tree int self-pwered street lamps.
    in the future,the team hpes t develp a versin f the technlgy that can be sprayed nt plant leaves in a ne-ff treatment that wuld last the plant’s lifetime. The engineers are als trying t develp an n and ff"switch"where the glw wuld fade when expsed t daylight.
    Lighting accunts fr abut 7% f the ttal electricity cnsumed in the US. Since lighting is ften far remved frm the pwer surce(电源)-such as the distance frm a pwer plant t street lamps n a remte highway-a lt f energy is lst during transmissin(传输).
    Glwing plants culd reduce this distance and therefre help save energy.
    32. What is the first paragraph mainly abut?
    A. A new study f different plants.
    B. A big fall in crime rates.
    C. Emplyees frm varius wrkplaces.
    D. Benefits frm green plants.
    33. What is the functin f the sensrs printed n plant leaves by MIT engineer?
    A. T detect plants’ lack f water
    B. T change cmpsitins f plants
    C. T make the life f plants lnger.
    D. T test chemicals in plants.
    34. What can we expect f the glwing plants in the future?
    A. They will speed up energy prductin.
    B. They may transmit electricity t the hme.
    C. They might help reduce energy cnsumptin.
    D. They culd take the place f pwer plants.
    35. Which f the fllwing can be the best title fr the text?
    A. Can we grw mre glwing plants?
    B. Hw d we live with glwing plants?
    C. Culd glwing plants replace lamps?
    D. Hw are glwing plants made pllutin-free?
    19.2020年新课标ⅠI卷之D篇
    I have a special place in my heart fr libraries. I have fr as lng as I can remember. I was always an enthusiastic reader, smetimes reading up t three bks a day as a child. Stries were like air t me and while ther kids played ball r went t parties, I lived ut adventures thrugh the bks I checked ut frm the library.
    My first jb was wrking at the Ukiah Library when I was 16 years ld .It was a dream jb and I did everything frm shelving bks t reading t the children fr stry time.
    As I grew lder and became a mther, the library tk n a new place and an added meaning in my life. I had several children and bks were ur main surce(来源) f entertainment. It was a big deal fr us t lad up and g t the lcal library, where my kids culd pick ut bks t read r bks they wanted me t read t them.
    I always read ,using different vices ,as thugh I were acting ut the stries with my vice and they lved it !It was a special time t bnd with my children and it filled them with the wnderment f bks .
    Nw, I see my children taking their children t the library and I lve that the excitement f ging t the library lives n frm generatin t generatin.
    As a nvelist, I’ve fund a new relatinship with libraries. I encurage readers t g t their lcal library when they can’t affrd t purchase a bk. I see libraries as a safe haven(避风港) fr readers and writers, a bridge that helps put tgether a reader with a bk. Libraries, in their wn way, help fight bk piracy(盗版行为) and 1 think all writers shuld supprt libraries in a significant way when they can. Encurage readers t use the library. Share library annuncements n yur scial media. Frequent them and talk abut them when yu can.
    32. Which wrd best describes the authr’s relatinship with bks as a child?
    A. Cperative.B. Uneasy.C. Inseparable.D. Casual.
    33. What des the underlined phrase “an added meaning” in paragraph 3 refer t?
    A. Pleasure frm wrking in the library.
    B. Jy f reading passed n in the family.
    C. Wnderment frm acting ut the stries.
    D. A clser bnd develped with the readers.
    34. What des the authr call n ther writers t d?
    A. Spnsr bk fairs.B. Write fr scial media.
    C. Supprt libraries.D. Purchase her nvels.
    35. Which can be a suitable title fr the text?
    A. Reading: A Surce f Knwledge
    B. My Idea abut writing
    C. Library: A Haven fr the Yung
    D. My Lve f the Library
    20.2020年新课标ⅠII卷之D篇
    We are the prducts f evlutin, and nt just evlutin that ccurred billins f years ag. As scientists lk deeper int ur genes (基因), they are finding examples f human evlutin in just the past few thusand years. Peple in Ethipian highlands have adapted t living at high altitudes. Cattle -raising peple in East Africa and nrthern Eurpe have gained a mutatin (突变) that helps them digest milk as adults.
    On Thursday in an article published in Cell, a team f researchers reprted a new kind f adaptatin - nt t air r t fd, but t the cean. A grup f sea-dwelling peple in Sutheast Asia have evlved int better divers. The Bajau, as these peple are knwn, number in the hundreds f thusands in Indnesia, Malaysia and the Philippines. They have traditinally lived n husebats; in recent times, they’ve als built huses n stilts (支柱) in castal waters. “They are simply a stranger t the land,” said Redney C. Jubilad, a University f Hawaii researcher wh studies the Bajau.
    Dr. Jubilad first met the Bajau while grwing up n Samal Island in the Philippines. They made a living as divers, spearfishing r harvesting shellfish. “We were s amazed that they culd stay underwater much lnger than us lcal islanders,” Dr. Jubilad said. “I culd see them actually walking under the sea.”
    In201, Melissa Ilard, then a graduate student in genetics at the University f Cpenhagen, heard abut the Bajau. She wndered if centuries f diving culd have led t the evlutin f physical characteristics that made the task easier fr them. “it seemed like the perfect chance fr natural selectin t act n a ppulatin,” said Dr. Ilard. She als said there were likely a number f ther genes that help the Bajau dive.
    32. What des the authr want t tell us by the examples in paragraph 1?
    A. Envirnmental adaptatin f cattle raisers.B. New knwledge f human evlutin.
    C. Recent findings f human rigin.D. Significance f fd selectin.
    33. Where d the Bajau build their huses?
    A. In valleys.B. Near rivers.C. On the beach.D. Off the cast.
    34. Why was the yung Jubilad astnished at the Bajau?
    A. They culd walk n stilts all day.B. They had a superb way f fishing.
    C. They culd stay lng underwater.D. They lived n bth land and water.
    35. What can be a suitable title fr the text?
    A. Bdies Remdeled fr a Life at SeaB. Highlanders’ Survival Skills
    C. Basic Methds f Genetic ResearchD. The Wrld’s Best Divers
    21.2020年江苏卷之D篇
    I was in the middle f the Amazn (亚马逊) with my wife, wh was there as a medical researcher. We flew n a small plane t a faraway village. We did nt speak the lcal language, did nt knw the custms, and mre ften than nt, did nt entirely recgnize the fd. We culd nt have felt mre freign.
    We were raised n bks and cmputers, highways and cell phnes, but nw we were living in a village withut running water r electricity It was easy fr us t g t sleep at the end f the day feeling a little misunderstd.
    Then ne perfect Amaznian evening, with mnkeys calling frm beynd the village green, we played sccer. I am nt gd at sccer, but that evening it was wnderful. Everyne knew the rules. We all spke the same language f passes and shts. We understd ne anther perfectly. As darkness came ver the field and the match ended, the gal keeper, Juan, walked ver t me and said in a matter-f-fact way, “In yur hme, d yu have a mn t?” I was surprised.
    After I explained t Juan that yes, we did have a mn and yes, it was very similar t his, I felt a srt f awe (敬畏) at the pssibilities that existed in his wrld. In Juan’s wrld, each village culd have its wn mn. In Juan’s wrld. the unknwn and undiscvered was vast and marvelus. Anything was pssible.
    In ur sciety, we knw that Earth has nly ne mn. We have lked at ur planet frm every angle and fund all f the wildest things left t find. I can, frm my cmputer at hme, pull up satellite images f Juan’s village. There are n mre cntinents and n mre mns t search fr, little left t discver. At least it seems that way.
    Yet, as I thught abut Juan’s questin, I was nt sure hw much mre we culd really rule ut. I am, in part, an ant bilgist, s my thughts turned t what we knw abut insect life and I knew that much in the wrld f insects remains unknwn. Hw much, thugh? Hw ignrant (无知的) are we? The questin f what we knw and d nt knw cnstantly bthered me.
    I began cllecting newspaper articles abut new species, new mnkey, new spider…, and n and n they appear. My drawer quickly filled. I began a secnd drawer fr mre general discveries: new cave system discvered with dzens f nameless species, fur hundred species f bacteria fund in the human stmach. The secnd drawer began t fill and as it did I wndered whether there were bigger discveries ut there, nt just species, but life that depends n things thught t be useless, life even withut DNA. I started a third drawer fr these big discveries. It fills mre slwly, but all the same, it fills.
    In lking int the stries f bilgical discvery, I als began t find smething else, a cllectin f scientists, usually brilliant ccasinally half-mad, wh made the discveries. Thse scientists very ften see the same things that ther scientists see, but they pay mre attentin t them, and they fcus n them t the pint f exhaustin (穷尽), and at the risk f the ridicule f their peers. In lking fr the stries f discvery, I fund the stries f these peple and hw their lives changed ur view f the wrld.
    We are repeatedly willing t imagine we have fund mst f what is left t discver. We used t think that insects were the smallest rganisms (生物), and that nthing lived deeper than six hundred meters. Yet, when smething new turns up, mre ften than nt, we d nt even knw its name.
    65. Hw did the authr feel n his arrival in the Amazn?
    A. Out f place.B. Full f jy.C. Sleepy.D. Regretful.
    66. What made that Amaznian evening wnderful?
    A. He learned mre abut the lcal language.
    B. They had a nice cnversatin with each ther.
    C. They understd each ther while playing.
    D. He wn the sccer game with the gal keeper.
    67. Why was the authr surprised at Juan’s questin abut the mn?
    A. The questin was t straightfrward.
    B. Juan knew s little abut the wrld.
    C. The authr didn’t knw hw t answer.
    D. The authr didn’t think Juan was sincere.
    68. What was the authr’s initial purpse f cllecting newspaper articles?
    A. T srt ut what we have knwn.
    B. T deepen his research int Amaznians.
    C. T imprve his reputatin as a bilgist.
    D. T learn mre abut lcal cultures.
    69. Hw did thse brilliant scientists make great discveries?
    A. They shifted their viewpints frequently.
    B. They fllwed ther scientists clsely.
    C. They ften criticized their fellw scientists.
    D. They cnducted in-depth and clse studies.
    70. What culd be the mst suitable title fr the passage?
    A. The Pssible and the Impssible .
    B. The Knwn and the Unknwn .
    C. The Civilized and the Uncivilized .
    D. The Ignrant and the Intelligent.
    22.2020年天津卷之D篇
    After years f bserving human nature, I have decided that tw qualities make the difference between men f great achievement and men f average perfrmance curisity and discntent. I have never knwn an utstanding man wh lacked either. And I have never knwn an average man wh had bth. The tw belng tgether.
    Tgether, these deep human urges (驱策力) cunt fr much mre that ambitin. Galile was nt merely ambitius when he drpped bjects f varying weights frm the Leaning Twer at Pisa and timed their fall t the grund. Like Galile, all the great names in histry were curius and asked in discntent, “Why? Why? Why?”
    Frtunately, curisity and discntent dn’t have t be learned. We are brn with them and need nly recapture them.
    “The great man,” said Mencius (孟子), “is he wh des nt lse his child’s heart.” Yet mst f us d lse it. We stp asking questins. We stp challenging custm. We just fllw the crwd. And the crwd desires restful average. It encurages us t ccupy ur wn little crner, t avid flish leaps int the dark, t be satisfied.
    Mst f us meet new peple, and new ideas, with hesitatin. But nce having met and liked them, we think hw terrible it wuld have been, had we missed the chance. We will prbably have t frce urselves t waken ur curisity and discntent and keep them awake.
    Hw shuld yu start? Mdestly, s as nt t becme discuraged. I think f ne friend wh culdn’t arrange flwers t satisfy herself. She was curius abut hw the experts did it. Hw she is ne f the experts, writing bks n flwer arrangement.
    One way t begin is t answer yur wn excuses. Yu haven’t any special ability? Mst peple dn’t; there are nly a few geniuses. Yu haven’t any time? That’s gd, because it’s always the peple with n time wh get things dne. Harriet Stwe, mther f six, wrte parts f Uncle Tm’s Cabin while cking. Yu’re t ld? Remember that Thmas Cstain was 57 when he published his first nvel, and that Grandma Mses shwed her first pictures when she was 78.
    Hwever yu start, remember there is n better time t start than right nw, fr yu’ll never be mre alive than yu are at this mment.
    51. In writing Paragraph 1, the authr aims t ________.
    A. prpse a definitin
    B. make a cmparisn
    C. reach a cnclusin
    D. present an argument
    52. What des the example f Galile tell us?
    A. Trial and errr leads t the finding f truth.
    B. Scientists tend t be curius and ambitius.
    C. Creativity results frm challenging authrity.
    D. Greatness cmes frm a lasting desire t explre.
    53. What can yu d t recapture curisity and discntent?
    A. Observe the unknwn arund yu.
    B. Develp a questining mind.
    C. Lead a life f adventure.
    D. Fllw the fashin.
    54. What can we learn frm Paragraphs 6 and 7?
    A. Gaining success helps yu becme an expert.
    B. The genius tends t get things dne creatively.
    C. Lack f talent and time is n reasn fr taking n actin.
    D. Yu shuld remain mdest when appraching perfectin.
    55. What culd be the best tile r the passage?
    A. Curius Minds Never Feel Cntented
    B. Reflectins n Human Nature
    C. The Keys t Achievement
    D. Never T Late t Learn
    23.2020年6月浙江卷之C篇
    Challenging wrk that requires lts f analytical thinking, planning and ther managerial skills might help yur brain stay sharp as yu age, a study published Wednesday in the jurnal Neurlgy suggests.
    Researchers frm the University f Leipzig in Germany gathered mre than 1, 000 retired wrkers wh were ver age 75 and assessed the vlunteers’ memry and thinking skills thrugh a battery f tests. Then, fr eight years, the scientists asked the same grup t cme back t the lab every 18 mnths t take the same srts f tests.
    Thse wh had held mentally stimulating(刺激), demanding jbs befre retirement tended t d the best n the tests. And they tended t lse cgnitive(认知) functin at a much slwer rate than thse with the least mentally challenging jbs. The results held true even after the scientists accunted fr the participants’ verall health status.
    “This wrks just like physical exercise, ” says Francisca Then, wh led the study. “After a lng run, yu may feel like yu’re in pain, yu may feel tired. But it makes yu fit. After a lng day at wrk-sure, yu will feel tired, but it can help yur brain stay healthy. ”
    It's nt just crprate jbs, r even paid wrk that can help keep yur brain fit, Then pints ut. A waiter’s jb, fr example, that requires multitasking, teamwrk and decisin-making culd be just as stimulating as any high-level ffice wrk. And “running a family husehld requires high-level planning and crdinating(协调), ” she says. “Yu have t rganize the activities f the children and take care f the bills and grceries. ”
    Of curse, ur brains can decline as we grw lder fr lts f reasns-including ther envirnmental influences r genetic factrs. Still, cntinuing t challenge yurself mentally and keeping yur mind busy can nly help.
    28. Why did the scientists ask the vlunteers t take the tests?
    A. T assess their health status.B. T evaluate their wrk habits.
    C. T analyze their persnality.D. T measure their mental ability.
    29. Hw des Francisca Then explain her findings in paragraph 4?
    A. By using an expert’s wrds.B. By making a cmparisn.
    C. By referring t anther study.D. By intrducing a cncept.
    30. Which f the fllwing is the best title fr the text?
    A. Retired Wrkers Can Pick Up New Skills
    B. Old Peple Shuld Take Challenging Jbs
    C. Yur Tugh Jb Might Help Keep Yu Sharp
    D. Cgnitive Functin May Decline As Yu Age
    24.2020年1月浙江卷之C篇
    Tday's wrld is nt an easy adjustment fr yung adults. Key skill set fr success is persistence (毅力), a characteristic that researchers say is heavily influenced by fathers. Researchers frm Brigham Yung University discvered that fathers are in a unique psitin t help their adlescent children learn persistence.
    BYU prfessrs Laura Padilla-Walker and Randal Day arrived at these findings after fllwing 325 American families ver several years. And ver time,the persistence gained thrugh fathers led t higher achievement in schl.
    "There are relatively few studies that stress the unique rle f fathers,"Padilla-Walker said. "This research als helps t prve that characteristics such as persistence-which can be taught-are key t a child's life success.”
    Researchers determined that dads need t practice an "authritative" parenting style. Authritative parenting is nt authritarian:rigid,demanding r cntrlling. Rather,an authritative parenting style includes sme f the fllwing characteristics:children feel warmth and lve frm their father;respnsibility and the reasns behind rules are stressed children are given an apprpriate level f autnmy(自主权).
    In the study,abut 52 percent f the dads exhibited abve-average levels f authritative parenting. A key finding is that ver time,children raised by an authritative father were significantly mre likely t develp persistence,which leads t better utcmes in schl.
    This particular study examined 11 t 14-year-lds living in tw-parent hmes. Yet the researchers suggest that single parents still may play a rle in teaching the benefits f persistence,which is an avenue f future research.
    27. What is special abut the BYU prfessrs' study?
    A. It centered n fathers' rle in parenting.
    B. It was based n a number f large families.
    C. It analyzed different kinds f parenting styles.
    D. It aimed t imprve kids' achievement in schl.
    28. What wuld an authritative father d when raising his children?
    A. Ignre their demands.B. Make decisins fr them.
    C. Cntrl their behavirs.D. Explain the rules t them.
    29. Which grup can be a fcus f future studies accrding t the researchers?
    A. Single parents.
    B. Children aged frm 11 t 14.
    C. Authritarian fathers.
    D. Mthers in tw-parent hmes.
    30. Which f the fllwing is the best title fr the text?
    A. Three Characteristics f Authritative Fathers.
    B. Key Skills fr Yung Adults t Succeed in Future.
    C. Children Tend t Learn Determinatin frm Father.
    D. Family Relatinship Influences Schl Perfrmance.
    25.2019年全国卷I之D篇
    During the rsy years f elementary schl(小学), I enjyed sharing my dlls and jkes, which allwed me t keep my high scial status. I was the queen f the playgrund. Then came my tweens and teens, and mean girls and cl kids. They rse in the ranks nt by being friendly but by smking cigarettes, breaking rules and playing jkes n thers, amng whm I sn fund myself.
    Ppularity is a well-explred subject in scial psychlgy. Mitch Prinstein, a prfessr f clinical psychlgy srts the ppular int tw categries: the likable and the status seekers. The likables’ plays-well-with-thers qualities strengthen schlyard friendships, jump-start interpersnal skills and, when tapped early, are emplyed ever after in life and wrk. Then there’s the kind f ppularity that appears in adlescence: status brn f pwer and even dishnrable behavir.
    Enviable as the cl kids may have seemed, Dr. Prinstein’s studies shw unpleasant cnsequences. Thse wh were highest in status in high schl, as well as thse least liked in elementary schl, are “mst likely t engage(从事)in dangerus and risky behavir.”
    In ne study, Dr. Prinstein examined the tw types f ppularity in 235 adlescents, scring the least liked, the mst liked and the highest in status based n student surveys(调查研究). “We fund that the least well-liked teens had becme mre aggressive ver time tward their classmates. But s had thse wh were high in status. It clearly shwed that while likability can lead t healthy adjustment, high status has just the ppsite effect n us."
    Dr. Prinstein has als fund that the qualities that made the neighbrs want yu n a play date-sharing, kindness, penness — carry ver t later years and make yu better able t relate and cnnect with thers.
    In analyzing his and ther research,Dr. Prinstein came t anther cnclusin: Nt nly is likability related t psitive life utcmes, but it is als respnsible fr thse utcmes, t. "Being liked creates pprtunities fr learning and fr new kinds f life experiences that help smebdy gain an advantage, ” he said.
    32. What srt f girl was the authr in her early years f elementary schl?
    A. Unkind.B. Lnely.C. Generus.D. Cl.
    33. What is the secnd paragraph mainly abut?
    A. The classificatin f the ppular.
    B. The characteristics f adlescents.
    C. The imprtance f interpersnal skills.
    D. The causes f dishnrable behavir
    34. What did Dr. Prinstein’s study find abut the mst liked kids?
    A. They appeared t be aggressive.
    B. They tended t be mre adaptable.
    C. They enjyed the highest status.
    D. They perfrmed well academically.
    35. What is the best title fr the text?
    A. Be Nice-Yu Wn’t Finish Last
    B. The Higher the Status, the Beer
    C. Be the Best-Yu Can Make It
    D. Mre Self-Cntrl, Less Aggressiveness
    26.2019年全国卷II之D篇
    Bacteria are an annying prblem fr astrnauts. The micrrganisms(微生物) frm ur bdies grw uncntrllably n surfaces f the Internatinal Space Statin, s astrnauts spend hurs cleaning them up each week. Hw is NASA vercming this very tiny big prblem? It’s turning t a bunch f high schl kids. But nt just any kids. It depending n NASA HUNCH high schl class, like the ne science teachers Gene Grdn and Dnna Himmelberg lead at Fairprt High Schl in Fairprt, New Yrk.
    HUNCH is designed t cnnect high schl classrms with NASA engineers. Fr the past tw years, Grdn’s students have been studying ways t kill bacteria in zer gravity, and they think they’re clse t a slutin(解决方案). “We dn’t give the students any breaks. They have t d it just like NASA engineers,” says Flrence Gld, a prject manager.
    “There are n tests,” Grdn says. “There is n graded hmewrk. There almst are n grades, ther than‘Are yu wrking twards yur gal?’ Basically, it’s ‘I’ve gt t prduce this prduct and then, at the end f year, present it t NASA.’ Engineers cme and really d an in-persn review, and…it’s nt a very nice thing at time. It’s a hard business review f yur prduct.”
    Grdn says the HUNCH prgram has an impact(影响) n cllege admissins and practical life skills. “These kids are s absrbed in their studies that I just sit back. I dn’t teach.” And that annying bacteria? Grdn says his students are emailing daily with NASA engineers abut the prblem, readying a wrkable slutin t test in space.
    32. What d we knw abut the bacteria in the Internatinal Space Statin?
    A. They are hard t get rid f.B. They lead t air pllutin.
    C. They appear different frms.D. They damage the instruments.
    33. What is the purpse f the HUNCH prgram?
    A. T strengthen teacher-student relatinships.B. T sharpen students’ cmmunicatin skills.
    C. T allw students t experience zer gravity.D. T link space technlgy with schl educatin
    34. What d the NASA engineers d fr the students in the prgram?
    A. Check their prduct.B. Guide prject designs
    C. Adjust wrk schedules.D. Grade their hmewrk.
    35. What is the best title fr the text?
    A. NASA: The Hme f Astrnauts.
    B. Space: The Final Hmewrk Frntier.
    C. Nature: An Outdr Classrm.
    D. HUNCH: A Cllege Admissin Refrm.
    27.2019年全国卷III之B篇
    Fr Western designers, China and its rich culture have lng been an inspiratin fr Western creative.
    "It's n secret that China has always been a surce(来源)f inspiratin fr designers," says Amanda Hill, chief creative fficer at A+E Netwrks, a glbal media cmpany and hme t sme f the biggest fashin(时尚)shws.
    Earlier this year, the China Thrugh A Lking Glass exhibitin in New Yrk exhibited 140 pieces f China-inspired fashinable clthing alngside Chinese wrks f art, with the aim f explring the influence f Chinese aesthetics(美学)n Western fashin and hw China has fueled the fashinable imaginatin fr centuries. The exhibitin had recrd attendance, shwing that there is huge interest in Chinese influences.
    "China is impssible t verlk," says Hill. "Chinese mdels are the faces f beauty and fashin campaigns that sell dreams t wmen all ver the wrld, which means Chinese wmen are nt just cnsumers f fashin — they are central t its mvement. "Of curse, nly are tday's tp Western designers being influenced by China-sme f the best designers f cntemprary fashin are themselves Chinese." Vera Wang, Alexander Wang, Jasn Wu are taking n Galian, Albaz, Marc Jacbs-and beating them hands dwn in design and sales," adds Hil.
    Fr Hill, it is impssible nt t talk abut China as the leading player when discussing fashin. "The mst famus designers are Chinese, s are the mdels, and s are the cnsumers," she says. "China is n lnger just anther market; in many senses it has becme the market. If yu talk abut fashin tday, yu are talking abut China-its influences, its directin, its breathtaking clthes, and hw yung designers and mdels are finally acknwledging that in many ways."
    24. What can we learn abut the exhibitin in New Yrk?
    A. It prmted the sales f artwrks.
    B. It attracted a large number f visitrs.
    C. It shwed ancient Chinese clthes.
    D. It aimed t intrduce Chinese mdels.
    25. What des Hill say abut Chinese wmen?
    A. They are setting the fashin.B. They start many fashin campaigns.
    C. They admire super mdels.D. They d business all ver the wrld.
    26. What d the underlined wrds "taking n" in paragraph 4 mean?
    A. learning frmB. lking dwn n
    C. wrking withD. cmpeting against
    27. What can be a suitable title fr the text?
    A. Yung Mdels Selling Dreams t the Wrld
    B. A Chinese Art Exhibitin Held in New Yrk
    C. Differences Between Eastern and Western Aesthetics
    D. Chinese Culture Fueling Internatinal Fashin Trends
    28.2019年浙江卷之C篇
    Califrnia has lst half its big trees since the 1930s, accrding t a study t be published Tuesday and climate change seems t be a majr factr(因素).
    The number f trees larger than tw feet acrss has declined by 50 percent n mre than 46, 000 square miles f Califrnia frests, the new study finds. N area was spared r unaffected, frm the fggy nrthern cast t the Sierra Nevada Muntains t the San Gabriels abve Ls Angeles. In the Sierra high cuntry, the number f big trees has fallen by mre than 55 percent; in parts f suthern Califrnia the decline was nearly 75 percent.
    Many factrs cntributed t the decline, said Patrick Mclntyre, an eclgist wh was the lead authr f the study. Wdcutters targeted big trees. Husing develpment pushed int the wds. Aggressive wildfire cntrl has left Califrnia frests crwded with small trees that cmpete with big trees fr resurces(资源).
    But in cmparing a study f Califrnia frests dne in the 1920s and 1930s with anther ne between 2001 and 2010, Mclntyre and his clleagues dcumented a widespread death f big trees that was evident even in wildlands prtected frm wdcutting r develpment.
    The lss f big trees was greatest in areas where trees had suffered the greatest water shrtage. The researchers figured ut water stress with a cmputer mdel that calculated hw much water trees were getting in cmparisn with hw much they needed, taking int accunt such things as rainfall, air temperature, dampness f sil, and the timing f snwmelt(融雪).
    Since the 1930s, Mclntyre said, the biggest factrs driving up water stress in the state have been rising temperatures, which cause trees t lse mre water t the air, and earlier snwmelt, which reduces the water supply available t trees during the dry seasn.
    27. What is the secnd paragraph mainly abut?
    A. The seriusness f big-tree lss in Califrnia.
    B. The increasing variety f Califrnia big trees.
    C. The distributin f big trees in Califrnia frests.
    D. The influence f farming n big trees in Califrnia.
    28. Which f the fllwing is well-intentined but may be bad fr big trees?
    A. Eclgical studies f frests.
    B. Banning wdcutting.
    C. Limiting husing develpment.
    D. Fire cntrl measures.
    29. What is a majr cause f the water shrtage accrding t Mclntyre?
    A. Inadequate snwmelt.B. A lnger dry seasn.
    C. A warmer climate.D. Dampness f the air.
    30. What can be a suitable title fr the text?
    A. Califrnia's Frests: Where Have All the Big Trees Gne?
    B. Cutting f Big Trees t Be Prhibited in Califrnia Sn
    C. Why Are the Big Trees Imprtant t Califrnia Frests?
    D. Patrick Mclntyre: Grw Mre Big Trees in Califrnia
    29.2019年江苏卷之D篇
    The 65-year-ld Steve Gdwin was fund suffering frm early Alzheimer’s(阿尔楚海默症). He was lsing his memry.
    A sftware engineer by prfessin, Steve was a keen lver f the pian, and the nly musician in his family. Music was his true passin, thugh he had never perfrmed utside the family.
    Melissa, his daughter, felt it mre than wrthwhile t save his music, t which she fell asleep catch night when she was yung. She thught abut hiring a prfessinal pianist t wrk with her father.
    Nami, Melissa’s best friend and a talented pianist, gt t knw abut this and shwed willingness t help.
    “Why d this?” Steve wndered.
    “Because she cares.” Melissa said.
    Steve ndded, tears in eye.
    Nami drve t the Gdwin hme. She tld Steve she’d lve t hear him play. Steve mved t the pian and sat at the bench, hands trembling as he gently placed his fingers n the keys.
    Nami put a small recrder near the pian, Starts and stps and mistakes. Lng pauses, heart sinking. But Steve pressed n, playing fr the first time in his life fr a stranger.
    “It was beautiful." Nami said after listening t the recrding. “The music was wrth saving.”
    Her respnsibility, her privilege, wuld be t rescue it. The music was still in Steve Gdwin. It was bidden in rms with drs abut t be lcked.
    Nami and Steve met every ther week and spent hurs tgether. He’d mve his fingers clumsily n the pian, and then she’d take his place. He struggled t explain what he heard in his head. He std by the pian, eyes clsed, listening fr the first time t his wn wrk being played by smene else.
    Steve and Nami spke in musical cde lines, beats, intervals, mving frm the rt t end a sng in a new key. Steve heard it. All f it. He just culdn’t play it.
    Wrking with Nami did wnders fr Steve. It had excited within him the belief he culd write ne last sng. One day, Nami received an email. Attached was a recrding, a recrding f lss and lve, f the fight. Steve called it “Melanchly Flwer”.
    Nami heard multiple stps and starts, Steve struggling, searching while his wife Jni called him “hney” and encuraged him. The task was s hard, and Steve, angry and upset, said he was quitting. Jni praised him, telling her husband this culd be his signature piece.
    Nami managed t figure ut 16 f Steve’s favrite, and mst persnal sngs. With Nami’s help, the Gdwin family fund a sund engineer t recrd Nami playing Steve’s sngs. Jni thught that wuld be the end. But it wasn’t.
    In the mnths leading up t the 2016 Oregn Repertry Singers Christmas cncert, Nami tld the directr she had a special ne in mind: “Melanchly Flwer”
    She tld the directr abut her prject with Steve. The directr agreed t add it t the playing list. But Nami wuld have t ask Steve’s permissin. He cnsidered it an hnr.
    After the cncert, Nami tld the family that Steve’s music was beautiful and prfessinal. It needed t be shared in public.
    The family rented a frmer church in dwntwn Prtland and scheduled a cncert. By the day f the shw, mre than 300 peple had said they wuld attend.
    By then, Steve was having a hard time remembering the names f sme f his friends. He knew the path his life was nw taking. He tld his family he was at peace.
    Steve arrived and sat in the frnt rw, surrunded by his family. The huse lights faded. Nami tk the stage. Her fingers. His heart.
    65. Why did Melissa want t save her father’s music?
    A. His music culd stp his disease frm wrsening.
    B. She wanted t please her dying ld father.
    C. His music deserved t be preserved in the family.
    D. She wanted t make her father a prfessinal.
    66. After hearing Steve’s playing, Nami ________.
    A. refused t make a cmment n it
    B. was deeply impressed by his music
    C. decided t free Steve frm suffering
    D. regretted ffering help t her friend
    67. Hw can the prcess f Steve’s recrding be described?
    A. It was slw but prductive.
    B. It was beneficial t his health.
    C. It was tiresme fr Nami.
    D. It was vital fr Nami’s career.
    68. Befre Steve finished “Melanchly Flwer," his wife Jni _______.
    A. thught the music talent f Steve was exhausted
    B. didn’t expect the damage the disease brught abut
    C. didn’t fully realize the value f her husband’s music
    D. brught her husband’s music career t perfectin
    69. Hw did Steve feel at the cncert held in dwntwn Prtland?
    A. He felt cncerned abut his illness.
    B. He sensed a respnsibility fr music.
    C. He regained his faith in music.
    D. He gt int a state f quiet.
    70. What can be a suitable title fr the passage?
    A. The Kindness f FriendsB. The Pwer f Music
    C. The Making f a MusicianD. The Value f Determinatin
    30.2018年全国II卷之D篇
    We’ve all been there: in a lift, in line at the bank r n an airplane, surrunded by peple wh are, like us, deeply fcused n their smartphnes r, wrse, struggling with the uncmfrtable silence.
    What’s the prblem? It’s pssible that we all have cmprmised cnversatinal intelligence. It’s mre likely that nne f us start a cnversatin because it’s awkward and challenging, r we think it’s annying and unnecessary. But the next time yu find yurself amng strangers, cnsider that small talk is wrth the truble. Experts say it’s an invaluable scial practice that results in big benefits.
    Dismissing small talk as unimprtant is easy, but we can’t frget that deep relatinships wuldn’t
    even exist if it weren’t fr casual cnversatin. Small talk is the grease(润滑剂) fr scial cmmunicatin, says Bernard Carducci, directr f the Shyness Research Institute at Indiana University Sutheast. "Almst every great lve stry and each big business deal begins with small talk," he explains. "The key t successful small talk is learning hw t cnnect with thers, nt just cmmunicate with them."
    In a 2014 study, Elizabeth Dunn, assciate prfessr f psychlgy at UBC, invited peple n their way int a cffee shp. One grup was asked t seek ut an interactin(互动) with its waiter; the ther, t speak nly when necessary. The results shwed that thse wh chatted with their server reprted significantly higher psitive feelings and a better cffee shp experience. "It’s nt that talking t the waiter is better than talking t yur husband," says Dunn. "But interactins with peripheral(边缘的) members f ur scial netwrk matter fr ur well-being als."
    Dunn believes that peple wh reach ut t strangers feel a significantly greater sense f belnging, a bnd with thers. Carducci believes develping such a sense f belnging starts with small talk. "Small talk is the basis f gd manners," he says.
    32. What phenmenn is described in the first paragraph?
    A. Addictin t smartphnes.
    B. Inapprpriate behaviurs in public places.
    C. Absence f cmmunicatin between strangers.
    D. Impatience with slw service.
    33. What is imprtant fr successful small talk accrding t Carducci?
    A. Shwing gd manners. B. Relating t ther peple.
    C. Fcusing n a tpic. D. Making business deals.
    34. What des the cffee-shp study suggest abut small talk?
    A. It imprves family relatinships. B. It raises peple’s cnfidence.
    C. It matters as much as a frmal talk. D. It makes peple feel gd.
    35. What is the best title fr the text?
    A. Cnversatin Cunts B. Ways f Making Small Talk
    C. Benefits f Small Talk D. Uncmfrtable Silence
    31.2018年全国III卷之D篇
    Adults understand what it feels like t be flded with bjects. Why d we ften assume that mre is mre when it cmes t kids and their belngings? The gd news is that I can help my wn kids learn earlier than I did hw t live mre with less.
    I fund the pre-hlidays a gd time t encurage yung children t dnate less-used things, and it wrked. Because f ur effrts, ur daughter Gergia did decide t dnate a large bag f tys t a little girl whse mther was unable t pay fr her hliday due t illness. She chse t sell a few larger bjects that were less ften used when we prmised t put the mney int her schl fund(基金)(ur kindergarten daughter is serius abut becming a dctr).
    Fr weeks, I've been thinking f bigger, deeper questins: Hw d we make it a habit fr them? And hw d we train urselves t help them live with, need, and use less? Yesterday, I sat with my sn, Shepherd, determined t test my wn thery n this. I decided t play with him with nly ne ty fr as lng as it wuld keep his interest. I expected that ne ty wuld keep his attentin fr abut five minutes, ten minutes, max. I chse a red rubber ball-simple, universally available. We passed it, he tried t put it in his muth, he tried buncing it, rlling it, sitting n it, thrwing it. It was ttally, cmpletely enugh fr him. Befre I knew it an hur had passed and it was time t mve n t lunch.
    We bth became absrbed in the simplicity f playing tgether. He had my full attentin and I had his. My little experiment t find jy in a single bject wrked fr bth f us.
    32. What d the wrds “mre is mre” in paragraph 1 prbably mean?
    A. The mre, the better. B. Enugh is enugh.
    C. Mre mney, mre wrries. D. Earn mre and spend mre.
    33. What made Gergia agree t sell sme f her bjects?
    A. Saving up fr her hliday B. Raising mney fr a pr girl
    C. Adding the mney t her fund D. Giving the mney t a sick mther
    34. Why did the authr play the ball with Shepherd?
    A. T try ut an idea
    B. T shw a parent's lve
    C. T train his attentin
    D. T help him start a hbby
    35. What can be a suitable title fr the text?
    A. Take It r Leave It B. A Lessn frm Kids
    C. Live Mre with Less D. The Pleasure f Giving
    32.2018年天津卷之C篇
    There’s a new frntier in 3D printing that’s beginning t cme int fcus: fd. Recent develpment has made pssible machines that print, ck, and serve fds n a mass scale. And the industry isn’t stpping there.
    Fd prductin
    With a 3D printer, a ck can print cmplicated chclate sculptures and beautiful pieces fr decratin n a wedding cake. Nt everybdy can d that — it takes years f experience, but a printer makes it easy. A restaurant in Spain uses a Fdini t “re-create frms and pieces” f fd that are “exactly the same,” freeing cks t cmplete ther tasks. In anther restaurant, all f the dishes and desserts it serves are 3D-printed, rather than farm t table.
    Sustainability(可持续性)
    The glbal ppulatin is expected t grw t 9.6 billin by 2050, and sme analysts estimate that fd prductin will need t be raised by 50 percent t maintain current levels. Sustainability is becming a necessity. 3D fd printing culd prbably cntribute t the slutin. Sme experts believe printers culd use hydrcllids (水解胶体) frm plentiful renewables like algae(藻类) and grass t replace the familiar ingredients(烹饪原料). 3D printing can reduce fuel use and emissins. Grcery stres f the future might stck "fd" that lasts years n end, freeing up shelf space and reducing transprtatin and strage requirements.
    Nutritin
    Future 3D fd printers culd make prcessed fd healthier. Hd Lipsn, a prfessr at Clumbia University, said, “Fd printing culd allw cnsumers t print fd with custmized nutritinal cntent, like vitamins. S instead f eating a piece f yesterday’s bread frm the supermarket, yu’d eat smething baked just fr yu n demand.”
    Challenges
    Despite recent advancements in 3D fd printing, the industry has many challenges t vercme. Currently, mst ingredients must be changed t a paste(糊状物) befre a printer can use them, and the printing prcess is quite time-cnsuming, because ingredients interact with each ther in very cmplex ways. On tp f that, mst f the 3D fd printers nw are restricted t dry ingredients, because meat and milk prducts may easily g bad. Sme experts are skeptical abut 3D fd printers, believing they are better suited fr fast fd restaurants than hmes and high-end restaurants.
    46. What benefit des 3D printing bring t fd prductin?
    A. It helps cks t create new dishes.
    B. It saves time and effrt in cking.
    C. It imprves the cking cnditins.
    D. It cntributes t restaurant decratins.
    47. What can we learn abut 3D fd printing frm Paragraphs 3?
    A. It slves fd shrtages easily.
    B. It quickens the transprtatin f fd.
    C. It needs n space fr the strage f fd.
    D. It uses renewable materials as surces f fd.
    48. Accrding t Paragraph 4, 3D-printed fd _____________.
    A. is mre available t cnsumers
    B. can meet individual nutritinal needs
    C. is mre tasty than fd in supermarkets
    D. can keep all the nutritin in raw materials
    49. What is the main factr that prevents 3D fd printing frm spreading widely?
    A. The printing prcess is cmplicated.
    B. 3D fd printers are t expensive.
    C. Fd materials have t be dry.
    D. Sme experts dubt 3D fd printing.
    50. What culd be the best title f the passage?
    A. 3D Fd Printing: Delicius New Technlgy
    B. A New Way t Imprve 3D Fd Printing
    C. The Challenges fr 3D Fd Prductin
    D. 3D Fd Printing: Frm Farm t Table
    33.2018年浙江卷之B篇
    Steven Stein likes t fllw garbage trucks. His strange habit makes sense when yu cnsider that he’s an envirnmental scientist wh studies hw t reduce litter, including things that fall ff garbage trucks as they drive dwn the rad. What is even mre interesting is that ne f Stein's jbs is defending an industry behind the plastic shpping bags.
    Americans use mre than 100 billin thin film plastic bags every year. S many end up in tree branches r alng highways that a grwing number f cities d nt allw them at checkuts(收银台) . The bags are prhibited in sme 90 cities in Califrnia, including Ls Angeles. Eyeing these headwinds, plastic-bag makers are hiring scientists like Stein t make the case that their prducts are nt as bad fr the planet as mst peple assume.
    Amng the bag makers' argument: many cities with bans still allw shppers t purchase paper bags, which are easily recycled but require mre energy t prduce and transprt. And while plastic bags may be ugly t lk at, they represent a small percentage f all garbage n the grund tday.
    The industry has als taken aim at the prduct that has appeared as its replacement: reusable shpping bags. The strnger a reusable bag is, the lnger its life and the mre plastic-bag use it cancels ut. Hwever, lnger-lasting reusable bags ften require mre energy t make. One study fund that a cttn bag must be used at least 131 times t be better fr the planet than plastic.
    Envirnmentalists dn't dispute(质疑) these pints. They hpe paper bags will be banned smeday t and want shppers t use the same reusable bags fr years.
    24. What has Steven Stein been hired t d?
    A. Help increase grcery sales.B. Recycle the waste material.
    C. Stp things falling ff trucks.D. Argue fr the use f plastic bags.
    25. What des the wrd “headwinds”in paragraph 2 refer t?
    A. Bans n plastic bags.B. Effects f city develpment.
    C. Headaches caused by garbage.D. Plastic bags hung in trees.
    26. What is a disadvantage f reusable bags accrding t plastic-bag makers?
    A. They are quite expensive.B. Replacing them can be difficult.
    C. They are less strng than plastic bags.D. Prducing them requires mre energy.
    27. What is the best title fr the text?
    A. Plastic, Paper r NeitherB. Industry, Pllutin and Envirnment
    C. Recycle r Thrw AwayD. Garbage Cllectin and Waste Cntrl
    考点
    题型
    文章标题
    阅读理解
    2023
    试卷类型
    设问
    考点
    【2023年1月·浙江卷】D
    35.Which f the fllwing is the best title fr the text?
    文章标题
    [2023·新高考全国Ⅱ卷]B
    27.What can be a suitable title fr the text?
    文章标题
    2022
    2022年全国甲卷
    阅读C27. Which can be a suitable title fr the text?
    文章标题
    2022年全国乙卷
    阅读C31. Which is the mst suitable title fr the text?
    文章标题
    2021
    2021年新高考I卷
    C篇31. Which f the fllwing is a suitable title fr the text?
    文章标题
    2021年全国甲卷
    D篇15. What is the best title fr the text?
    文章标题
    2021年全国乙卷
    C篇31. Which f the fllwing can be the best title fr the text?
    文章标题
    2021年新高考II卷
    C篇11. Which f the fllwing is a suitable title fr the text?
    文章标题

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