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1、湖北省重点高中智学联盟2024年春季高二年级5月联考英语试题第一部分 听力(共两节,满分30分)第一节(共5小题;每小题1.5分,满分7.5分)听下面5段对话。每段对话后有一个小题。从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项,并标在试卷的相应位置。听完每段对话后,你都有10秒钟的时间来回答有关小题和阅读下一小题,每段对话仅读一遍。例:How much is the shirt?A. 19.15. B. 9.18. C. 9.15.1. 【此处可播放相关音频,请去附件查看】How does the man usually go to school?A. By bus.B. By taxi.C.
2、 By bike.2. 【此处可播放相关音频,请去附件查看】Which book does the woman like most?A. Great Expectations.B. David Copperfield.C. Oliver Twist.3. 【此处可播放相关音频,请去附件查看】Why does the man get up late?A. He doesnt have to work today.B. He forgot to set an alarm clock.C. He stayed up late last night.4. 【此处可播放相关音频,请去附件查看】When
3、is the woman likely to buy a computer?A. In September.B. In July.C. In June.5. 【此处可播放相关音频,请去附件查看】What are the speakers mainly talking about?A. An interview.B. A job offer.C. A company.第二节(共15小题;每小题1.5分,满分22.5分)听下面5段对话或独白。每段对话或独白后有几个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项,并标在试卷的相应位置。听每段对话或独白前,你将有时间阅读各个小题,每小题5秒钟;听完
4、后,各小题将给出5秒钟的作答时间。每段对话或独白读两遍。听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题。【此处可播放相关音频,请去附件查看】6. What would the woman like to have?A. Kung Pao Chicken.B. Tomato and egg soup.C. Roast duck.7. Where are the speakers?A. At home.B. In the supermarket.C. In the restaurant.听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题。【此处可播放相关音频,请去附件查看】8. Which university will the
5、 woman graduate from?A. Stanford University.B. Yale University.C. Kyoto University.9. What can we learn about Kyoto University?A. Students make creative hats at the graduation ceremony.B. Students wear their own clothes to attend the graduation ceremony.C. Students bow to their parents at the gradua
6、tion ceremony.10. What is the conversation mainly about?A. Preparations for graduation.B. The time of graduation.C. Graduation traditions.听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题。【此处可播放相关音频,请去附件查看】11. When does the conversation take place?A. At 7:40.B. At 8:00.C. At 8:20.12. What did the woman have difficulty choosing yest
7、erday?A. What to eat.B. Which color clothes to wear.C. Where to travel.13. What does the man think of the difficulty in making decisions?A. Its beneficial.B. Its meaningless.C. Its wrong.14. What is the probable relationship between the speakers?A. Husband and wife.B. Fellow students.C. Colleagues.听
8、下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题。【此处可播放相关音频,请去附件查看】15. What extreme sports did the woman play?A. Free climbing.B. Skateboarding.C. Base jumping.16. How does the man feel about extreme sports?A. Interested.B. Unconcerned.C. Scared.17. Why does the woman mention her dog?A. To show how smart it is.B. To express her lov
9、e of freedom.C. To prove safety is more important than freedom.听下面一段独白,回答以下小题。【此处可播放相关音频,请去附件查看】18. How many languages can Persephone use to answer questions?A. 1.B. 30.C. 33.19. Why does Kartalis want to improve Persephone?A. It can only speak limited languages.B. It moves quite slowly.C. It has po
10、or communication skills.20. What is Karaferas attitude towards robots future?A. Disapproving.B. Supportive.C. Objective.第二部分 阅读理解 (共两节,满分50分)第一节(共15小题; 每小题2.5分,满分37.5分)阅读下列短文,从每题所给的四个选项(A 、B 、C 和 D )中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。AQS Asia University Rankings 2022Featuring 687 institutions, our 2022 ranking of
11、 the top Asian universities is the biggest yet. As in last years rankings, its Mainland China that boasts the most universities126 out of the 687 schools featuredwith India and Japan in second and third place. This year also sees strong representation from South Korea.No. 1 National University of Si
12、ngapore (Singapore) A leading global university centred in Asia, the National University of Singapore (NUS) is Singapores flagship university, which offers a global approach to education and research, with a focus on Asian perspectives and expertise. Over 38,000 students from 100 countries enrich th
13、e community with their diverse social and cultural perspectives.No. 2 Peking University (Beijing, Mainland China)The oldest higher education institution in China, Peking University (PKU) was founded in 1898. The university grounds are home to museums, such as the. Museum of University History and th
14、e Arthur M. Sackler Museum of Art and Archaeology, in which students can view objects dating back thousands of years. Its an environment to feed the enquiring minds of young students.No. 3 The University of Hong Kong (Hong Kong, SAR China) The University of Hong Kong (HKU) has 6 subjects placed amon
15、gst Top 10 worldwide, while HKU Dentistry programme has been ranked 1st in the world for the second consecutive (连续的) years. For the last 11 years, more than 99.4% of our graduates have received at least one job offer in every academic year, with many embarking on careers in fields as diverse as fin
16、ance, law, engineering and technology.21. Which country has the greatest number of universities in 2022 rankings?A. China.B. India.C. Japan.D. South Korea.22. What does NUS feature?A. Its long history.B. Its high employment rate.C. Its special museums.D. Its multicultural community.23. Which subject
17、 is considered the best in HKU this year?A. Finance.B. Law.C. Dentistry.D. Engineering.BIf you learned about Thanksgiving in an American elementary school, chances are that the holiday is in honor of how the Pilgrim (清教徒) of Plymouth, Mass, celebrated the harvest by enjoying a dinner with their frie
18、ndly Indian neighbors. This story is inspired by a real 1621 meal, which reflects neither the 17th century nor the 21st century understanding of it.An 1889 novel that described Thanksgiving as an outdoor feast became a best-seller. The growing Ad industry helped spread popular images of the tale. By
19、 the 1920s, Thanksgiving was the most talked-about holiday in U.S. classrooms. The parts that made the colonists (殖民者) look bad were left out.However, many classrooms are beginning to change. And on a recent Saturday morning in Washington D.C., about two dozen teachers went to the National Museum of
20、 the American Indian to learn a better way to teach the Thanksgiving story. When Gokey, the museums teacher-services worker, explained that early Thanksgivings celebrated the burning of a Pequot village in 1637 and the killing of Wampanoag leader Massasoits son, listeners felt shocked.“I look back n
21、ow and realize I was teaching a lot of wrong facts and ideas,” Tonia Parker, a second-grade teacher told TIME.Teachers like the ones at the workshop know that change is coming, and state social-studies standards increasingly encourage students to look at history from multiple angles. Moreover, teach
22、ing a better lesson about thankfulness is something anyone can support.At the workshop in Washington, after learning something new, participants learned to say “Wado”. That Cherokee word means “Thank you”.24. What did Americans learn about Thanksgiving from the elementary school?A. It was first cele
23、brated in 1889.B. It was a family feast for the Pilgrims.C. It reflected the real history of the 17th century.D. It showed the friendship between the Pilgrims and Indians.25. Why did some teachers go to the National Museum of the American Indian?A. To confirm the importance of the holiday.B. To prep
24、are for the changing of the classroom.C. To find a more appropriate way to teach Thanksgiving.D. To correct their misunderstanding about Thanksgiving.26. What can we infer from the last two paragraphs?A. All Americans support teaching a better lesson about thankfulness.B. Lessons about thankfulness
25、are increasingly popular.C. Participants at the workshop learned to support each other.D. Students are encouraged to see history from different aspects.27. What would be the best title of the text?A. The Importance of Thanksgiving EducationB. Thanksgiving: a Holiday with a Hidden TruthC. Thanksgivin
26、g: a Holiday Popularized by a NovelD. The Reform of Education in American ClassroomsCIn the winter of 1985, my hometown, Buffalo, experienced a blizzard (暴风雪) not an uncommon occurrence for the region. But this was a big one, and the citys mayor, Jimmy Griffin, was at pains to persuade people to sto
27、p trying to go about their business as conditions worsened. He urged Buffalonians to “relax, stay inside, and grab a six-pack of beer,” which must be the best advice in an emergency situation.Theres something cartoonish about the threat of a blizzard, in which natures anger assumes a fluffy (蓬松的) fo
28、rm and tries to kill you. Its meteorologically (气象学上) similar to getting attacked by the Stay Puft Marshmallow Man. And yet, it does kill, through car accidents and heart attacks and other misadventures, usually involving people trying, unwisely, to do something.Mr. Griffin, therefore known as Jimmy
29、 Six-Pack, understood this. The Snow Gods reserve special hatred for those who dont respect their ability to bring human activity to a standstill. The snow cares not for your deadlines or your happy hour plans. It wants only to fall on the ground and lie there. And it wants you to too.Needless to sa
30、y, you should. A snowstorm rewards indolence and punishes busy bees, which is only one of the many reasons why its the best natural disaster.Time has partly buried my childhood memories of Buffalos mighty blizzard of 1985, but I still recall the great drifts (雪堆) that climbed over houses, the specta
31、cle of a world made surprisingly new. Its a vision that often comes back to my mind every now and then, as we face the terrible prospect that a climate changed by human appetites the future winters, damp and snow-less, may well await us. So let us all now pause, perhaps over a six-pack, and bear wit
32、ness as the climate changes us.28. The writer mentions the mayor of Jimmy Griffin in order to_.A. introduce a proper way to deal with blizzardsB. appreciate his contribution to the citys developmentC. highlight how the climate worsened in his termD. explain why blizzards were not uncommon in Buffalo
33、29. The underlined word “indolence” is closest in meaning to _.A. angerB. diligenceC. intelligenceD. laziness30. It can be inferred from the last paragraph that the writer feels_ the possible winters.A shocked byB. amazed atC. pleased withD. unhappy about31. Which of the following might be the best
34、title for the passage?A. Blizzard: a Thing of the Past.B. In Case of a Snowstorm: Do Nothing.C What Will the Future Winters Be Like?D. Witness to Climate Change.DJournal-based peer review the process of subjecting a scientific research paper to the inspection of others who are experts in the same fi
35、eld is generally held up as the quality assurance mechanism for research. It claims to be an essential measure which prevents publishing faulty papers. Reviewing a paper can delay its publication by up to a year; is that a price worth paying to ensure the trustworthiness of the published literature?
36、 Well, yes and no.Im not yet ready to abandon journal-based peer review. Id still like to see all papers pass some sort of checking stage before formal publication, but I feel the ground moving. The growing use of preprints, drafts of papers which are posted online without having been peer reviewed,
37、 is a crucial part of that shift because they bring academics back to what research publication is all about: the rapid circulation of new results so they can be read, analyzed and built upon. Publication in journals has become more about fame and this has affected both the motivations of authors an
38、d the job of reviewers.Competition for prized spots in journals drives scientists to do some of their best work. But the excessive (过多的) rewards for publishing in top journals are encouragements to corner-cutting, as stories polished by leaving out inconvenient data are more likely to be taken up. A
39、nd the job of the reviewer also becomes distorted: it is more often now to decide not whether a paper is any good, but whether it is good enough for the journal considering publication. For top journals, that can depend as much on newsworthiness as scientific quality.These problems are well known, b
40、ut the tragedy for science is that few people are willing to break away from the present system. However, as biologist Ron Vale argued recentlyfittingly, in a preprint preprints may be a way out because they dont involve a major shift away from the norm. That may seem an odd claim given that preprin
41、ts have been in existence for twenty years, yet have not been adopted universally. This slow uptake is not only a reflection of the built-in conservatism of scientists, but also a result of the widespread misunderstanding that journals wont accept manuscripts which have been posted online as preprin
42、ts. There is also a fear that publication of papers without peer review risks opening the floodgates to “junk science” something which, so far at least, has yet to occur.Preprints enable the informal scientific discussions once restricted to correspondence between individuals. They could also become
43、 an effective outlet for negative results a vital aspect of the scientific process often ignored by the journals excessive preoccupation (关注) with new discoveries. Furthermore, preprints significantly increase the number of times papers are read and cited by others. By taking advantage of the webs c
44、ulture of openness and accessibility, preprints should help to refocus attention where it matters on the work itself, not where it is published.32. According to Paragraph 1, what is the popular opinion on peer review?A. It limits the number of research works.B. It ensures the quality of scientific p
45、apers.C. It removes public doubts about publication.D. It changes the process of scientific publishing.33. The author may agree that scientific journals _.A. urge scientists to pursue integrity in their workB. rely on reviewers to revise faulty research papersC. choose articles for their appeal over
46、 scientific valueD. try to cut costs to maintain their position in the field34. Whats the authors opinion on the growing use of preprints?A. It will contribute to junk science.B. It may end the practice of peer review.C. It promotes the spread of research findings.D. It improves the quality of scien
47、tific publication.35. This is basically a passage to _.A. make comparisonB. confirm a conceptC encourage innovationD. propose a practice第二节(共5小题;每小题2.5分,满分12.5分)根据短文内容,从短文后的选项中选出能填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为多余选项。How to Build the Most Powerful Mindset for SuccessIn the past decade or so, you may have heard the
48、 term “growth mindset” thrown around a lot. But what is a growth mindset? How can we cultivate a growth mindset in ourselves? Here are a few ways you can start training your brain to think with a growth mindset instead of a fixed one:1. Stop worrying about if youre smart enough, start worrying if youre working hard enough.As Dr. Carol Dwek, an American psychologist, explains: “Genius is not enough;