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1、2023届广东省茂名市高三二模英语试题学校:姓名:班级:考号:一、阅读理解World Book Day author A. M. Dassu shares some tipsWhile helping out at her childrens swimming lessons, author A. M. Dassu noticed that one boy always put on his socks too soon afterwards. He inspired her to write a picture book that she called Soggy Socks.Today,
2、many years later, Dassu has published lots of childrens books. Every day, after taking her children to school, Dassu goes to her desk to write. I leave my phone upstairs so I dont get distracted, and try to write 800 words every day,“ she says. Dassu believes that the key to being a successful write
3、r is not necessarily talent but getting your bottom on the seat”.The cyclist with far to goAfter 527 days, Liam Garner has completed an amazing achievement. He has cycled almost 20,000 miles from Alaska, in the very north of the US, to Ushuaia-the worlds southernmost city-in the South American count
4、ry of Argentina. Garner, who was 17 years old when he set off, said his trip was inspired by a book he read about a similar journey.Garner always wanted to have a big adventure”. During his trip, Garner travelled through 14 countries. He camped outside, stayed in hostels or was hosted by local famil
5、ies. He faced some challenges, including an accident that meant he had to take some time off. However, he recovered and finally reached his goal of being the youngest person ever to cycle from Alaska to Argentina.A plastic-waste warriorLicypriya Kangujam won an international award which celebrates p
6、eople who spark global change. Licypriya, who is 11 and from India, won it for her Plastic Money Shop, where people can trade in their single-use plastic waste for useful items such as stationery, rice or young trees to plant.1. What is the key to being a successful writer according to Dassu?A. Tale
7、nt.B. Experience. C. Education.D. Effort.2. What made Liam Gamers bicycle trip unique?A. The distance he covered.B. The challenges he faced.C. The age when he completed the trip. D. The means of transportation he chose.“Linda, I like your idea. Would you please follow me to the office and talk about
8、 it?”Er. Yes, madam!” Linda was puzzled because she thought her idea was no better than anyone elses. Like others, she also described the black dot only and ignored the white part of the paper.注意:1 所续写短文的词数应为150左右;2 .每段的开头语已为你写好。Feeling nervous, Linda went into Mrs. Greens office.Mrs. Green is right
9、. I should focus more on the white part of the paper!” Linda got refreshed.3. Which area does Licypriyas award probably belong to?A. Business.B. Environment.C. Finance.D. Economy.二、未知Growing up in the Philippines,construction worker Johnny Manlugay combs the beaches each night for the eggs of sea tu
10、rtles. He knows exactly what to look for,as he was trained as a child by his grandfather on how to locate the animals and their eggs. Back then,his family traded or ate them. It wasnt about getting rich as much as it was just a part of life.Manlugay has since turned over a new leaf. Instead,he uses
11、his tracking skills to protect the sea turtles that visit the beaches he lives by.Tve learned to love this work,Manlugay acknowledged in an interview.We didnt know poaching(偷猎)was illegal and that we should not eat turtle eggs and meat”Manlugay delicately transferred each egg into a bucket he brough
12、t with him,as well as some sand from the turtle nests,to be handed over to Coastal Underwater Resource Management Actions(CURMA).the group leading the conservation program on the beaches.Established in 2009,the CURMA conservation effort has gradually transformed sea turtle poachers into valuable all
13、ies(盟友).They manage this by offering training to ultimately save thousands of turtles and keep their eggs from ending up everywhere but their nests.“We talked to the poachers,and it turned out poaching was just another means for them to earn a living,explained Carlos Tamayo,the director of operation
14、s/They had no choice.”On average,sea turtles lay 100 eggs in a nest. The number of nests in the area ranges between 35and 40 each season,which runs from October to February. Tamayo noted that the figures had doubled during the first year of the COVID pandemic/Last season alone9fbr example,we had 75
15、nests and we released close to 9,000 hatching,9,he shared.Once collected,the eggs are then transferred to CURMAs hatchery(孵化场)to be reburied in protected areas. Another former poacher,Jessie Cabagbag,grcw up eating turtle meat and eggs like many people there.I stopped poaching when we underwent trai
16、ning and were taught that what we have been doing was illegal and that these species of turtles are endangered Jhe explained. Now,he admits/i am truly proud. I am happy that I get to contribute to the conservation of the turtles/94. Why did Johnny Manlugay hunt turtles as a child?A. To make a living
17、. B. To make a fortune. C. To protect them. D. To locate them. 5. How does Johnny Manlugayc deal with the turtle eggs nowadays?A. To sell them.B. To hatch them.C. To hand them over to a conservation organization.D. To bury them under some sand near the turtle nests.6. On average,how many sea turtle
18、eggs are laid in the area seasonally?A. About 7500.B. Close to 9.000.C. From 3500 to 4000.D. Between 3500 and 10000.7. Whats the best title for this passage?A. Sea Turtles are Well Protected in the Philippines.8. Local People in the Philippines Search the Beaches for Sea Turtle Eggs.9. The Conservat
19、ion Program Aims to Save Endangered Turtles.10. Former Turtle Egg Poachers in the Philippines Turn Protectors.Do you often compare yourself to other people? Comparisons can help to make decisions and motivate you but they can also pull you into a comparison trap.Whether its the number of goals youve
20、 scored at football or how many books youve read,its easy to compare yourself to someone else.Scientists say its a natural behaviour that helps humans learn from each other,live happily together and achieve more. Although comparing can be good fbr you, its not always helpful and you can find yoursel
21、f stuck in a comparison trap.This is when you always measure yourself against others and base your feelings on how well they seem to be doing.Becky Goddard-Hill is a child therapist (someone who helps children understand their feelings) and author of Create Your Own Confidence.She says that comparis
22、ons can make us feel good and bad about ourselves. Comparing upmeans seeing someone doing better than you and using that to inspire yourself to aim higher and try harder.However,Goddard-Hill saysSometimes it can make you feel rubbish about yourself and knock your confidence/6 Comparing downs when yo
23、u see someone who seems like theyre not doing as well as you.This might make you feel youre doing well,says Goddard-Hill,but it can also stop you wanting to improve.If your feelings depend on what other people are doing, Surround yourself with cheerleaders J suggests Goddard-Hill. Notice how people
24、make you feel and spend time with friends who celebrate your strengths rather than compare themselves to you.If you follow social media accounts that make you feel you are failing in any way, unfbllow them/Tind ones that make you laugh or show you lovely places instead,“she says.Finally,fbcus on you
25、r own achievements and how you can improve.The best person you can compete with is yourselfsays Goddard-Hill.8 . How does a comparison trap affect us?A. It makes us focus on our own behaviour.B. It stops us from learning from each other.C. It prevents us from living happily together.D. It bases our
26、feelings on others achievements.9. Whats true aboutComparing upandComparing down”?A. Both of them usually enhance our confidence.B. Both of them have advantages and disadvantages.C. The former is positive while the latter is negative.D. The former makes us feel good while the latter makes us feel ba
27、d.10. What does Goddard-Hill suggest?A , Aiming to be our best.B. Trying to be the best.C. Trying to be a cheerleader.D. Valuing someone elses achievements.11. In which section of the magazine can you find the passage?A. Achievement. B. Entertainment. C. Health.D. Politics.Holding the large and heav
28、y brickcellphone hes credited with inventing 50 years ago,Martin Cooper talks about the future.Little did he know when he made the first call on a New York City street from a heavy Motorola proto type(原型)that our world would come to be encapsulated on a sleek glass sheath where we search, connect,li
29、ke and buy.Cooper says he is an optimist. He believes that advances in mobile technology will continue to transform lives but he is worried about risks smartphones pose to privacy and young people.“My most negative opinion is we dont have any privacy anymore because everything about us is now record
30、ed someplace and accessible to somebody who has enough intense desire to get it/the 94-year-old said in an interview in Barcelona at MWC,the Mobile World Congress,the worlds biggest wireless trade show, where he was getting a lifetime award.Cooper sees a dark side to the advances,including the risk
31、to children. One idea, he said, is to havectvarious Internets intended for different audiences/9Cooper made the first public call from a handheld portable telephone on a Manhattan street on April 3,1973,using a prototype device his team at Motorola had started designing just five months earlier.Coop
32、er used the Dyna-TAC phone to famously call his opponent at Bell Labs, owned by AT&T,It was literally the worlds first brick phone,weighing 2.5 pounds and measuring 11 inches.Cooper spent the best part of the next decade working to bring a commercial version of the device to market.The call helped k
33、ick-start the cellphone revolution (革命).Cooper said hesnot crazyabout the shape of modem smartphones. He thinks they will develop so that theyll be distributed on your body,” possibly as sensorsmeasuring your health at all times.”Batteries, he said, might be replaced by human energy.The body makes e
34、nergy from food,he argues, so it could possibly also power a phone.Instead of holding the phone in the hand,for example,the device could be placed under the skin.12. What does the underlined parta sleek glass sheathtcin paragraph 2 refer to?A.A smartphone.B.A Motorola prototype.C.A brick cellphone.D
35、.An original cellphone.13. What is Coopers attitude about the future of the mobile phone?A.Most negative.B.Very subjective.C.Doubtful and Disapproving.D.Optimistic but also concerned.14. What can be inferred about children from paragraph 5?A. They should be provided with a different Internet from ad
36、ults.B. They should have easy access to various Internets.C. They should be introduced to different audiences.D. They should use various Internets for learning materials.15 . According to Cooper,how might smartphones be powered in the future?A. By body sensors.B. By human body.C. By solar energy.D.
37、By advanced batteries.For generations, the longest distance that many villagers in Zhadong, South Chinas Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region,could understand was that of the journey between their village and Nanning, the regional capital.16“The first time I came to Zhadong village,! was impressed by it
38、s natural beauty.The adobe(土询homes fit perfectly with the green environment, “ recalls Hansen Nico Rene, a 63-year-old retired policeman/20 By November 2020, the whole of Zhadong village had successfully wiped outpoverty.Now local authorities are leading the villagers on a new journey to ruralvitali
39、zation(振4).A. Their efforts paid off. That,in my view,is also a core spirit of the Party.C. But when I entered the houses, I found people were poor.D. Villager Bi Yonghong,41 remembers the first time he saw Hansen.17 .There was a fireplace,a table,and some chairs.The bathroom, if there was one, was
40、in the pigsty. There was very little to suggest that they were living in the 21st Century.”The village Hansen visited is in a remote mountainous area in Guangxis Hechi city.In 2015, of some 600 residents in the village, over half lived under the national poverty(贫 H)line.At the time of HansenE. Hans
41、en returned to the city in May2021 after finishing his voluntary work.F. In 2018,the arrival of a man from Luxembourg expanded their horizons across continents. G. Since then,he became known by a new identity-the villages first Party secretaryss first visit,there were still some parts of the village
42、 that were not accessible by road. 18 People surrounded him out of curiosity. They took pictures of him with their phones, as it was the first time we had seen a foreigner in our village.,9During that visit, Hansen met Xie Wanju, then the first Party secretary of Zhadong.6tWe will never forget the f
43、irst moment we met because this changed my whole life.I met the first Party secretary,and he was working for the government for poverty relief.That was amazing.I said if you need help,! have time JHansen said. 19Under Hansens assistance,Xie,with the villages officials and other poverty relief worker
44、s,developed featured industries,including cattle and sheep raising and fruit planting.assistant.A 3-year-old girl is back home after a man found her wandering on the citys southwest side early Sunday morning.Botello, who works for Villa Pizza and has seven children, said he was in the middle of aaro
45、und 3a.m. when he saw a young girl around the McConnell parking lot.“I ran to the door and gave people their food Jsaid Botello.I went back looking for her but failed,so I drove around for a minute. Without finding her,I started pulling into the parking lots. He finally the girl who was curled(蜷缩)up
46、 between twoblocks,nothing but a T-shirt,diaper(尿裤),and socks. Botello wrapped her in a hoodie(连 帽衫),then called the police.I had some in my car,so she was drinking some water and Irubbed her backsetting her know she was okay and she started falling asleep J saidBotello. She was so and cold. When of
47、ficers arrived, they managed to make withthe little girfs mother,who didnt she was missing and thought she was asleep. Itsunclear how the girl got out or for how long,but the police believed it was an accident.“I cannot how her parents feel, but want them to go easy.I dont think it wasanything, nobo
48、dy lets a little kid out. said Botello.just did what I could.I assume somebody would do the same for my kids. Botello added that rather than cast, he hoped this incident pushed people to offer in someones time of need.Sometimes you want toturn a eye but,you never know who youre savingsaid Botello.Anybody couldhavethat little girl,there?s lots of foot traffic over thereto Imglad shemade ithome safe/921. A. deliveryB. trainingC. dreamD. meal22. A. dancingB. runningC. drawingD. riding23. A. hitB. mi