广东省湛江市2023届高三下学期二模英语试卷 含答案

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2023 年湛江市普通高考第二次模拟测试
英 语
注意事项:
1.答题前,考生务必将自己的姓名、考生号、考场号、座位号填写在答题卡上。
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3.考试结束后,将本试卷和答题卡一并交回。
第二部分 阅读(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 ABCD四个选项中选出最佳选项。
A
We offer art and performing classes to children, teens and adults. Our classes are listed on our website with
direct links to register. Registration for our classes begins on May 25th.
Our Classes
We teach after-school programs, private and semi-private art classes. Summer.March Break and Christmas Day
camps are available as well. Check out our online classes.
Join our art classes and develop your skills and creativity in painting, printmaking draw-ing- architecture,
sculpture, fabric art, movie making, script writing, poetry confidence building skills and more. New programs are
always being developed and are rarely repeated.
What Else WVe Do
We offer fun and exciting performance classes in our home base. Our home base is a beau-tiful studio designed
by an architect as well as our two studios by the sea in Ambleside. We provide a creative setting for a hand on art and
acting experience through classes and work-shops. Specialized art education develops engaged, confident, well-
rounded and creative chil-dren.Artistic activities train the brain to think spatially (空间地),solve problems
creatively and support development in other subjects. Our elementary school programs bring exciting opportuníties
for students to explore techniques and materials that are often beyond schools' art classroom resources.
Where We Offer Classes
For parents looking for the convenience of extracurricular opportunities for their chil-dren, they can have
experience by bringing our classes to their local school with a choice of lunchtime and after-school classes. We love
our group of mobile schools with their greatly supportive volunteers! ()r you can have us come to you for private
classes!
21.How can the readers register the class?
A. By telephone.
C.By telegraph.
B.By website.
D. By mobile app.
22.What can students learn in the studios by the sea in Ambleside?
C.Dancing. D.Paintin
23. What can we know about the class from the last paragraph?
A.Most parents want extra classes for their children.
B. Students can have classes in their local schools.
C.Volunteers in the training offer lunch to students.
A.Performance.
B. Architecture.
D.Students can choose any place to attend the training.
B
I look forward to my half hour train ride to work every morning. I can look out of the window as it
twists and turns itself through neighborhoods with the sun casting its strong lighting on the floor of the
train car. I sometimes get lost in thought while following the light. But the reason I love this ride is that it's
a reminder of how neighborhoods can change from block to block.
For almost a year now I have been riding this train as I head into the office where I work as a reporter for a
local magazine. I am one of 13 journalists who help report community news in areas that are often forgotten. And for
me, that means covering areas like the one I grew up in.
Last week, as I was on the way to my office, I started wondering how neighborhoods have changed since the
2008 housing crisis. I searched addresses on the city's southwest side, a neighborhood that has seen a significant
number of residential homes pulled down, I scanned the street views recorded on my phone and saw how the
neighborhood looked in 2007. Then I set out to visit the city block, and that's when I met 3-year-old Harmony.
Harmony loved collecting rocks for me to hold as I walked down the street with her mother,
Marquita. I already knew what the neighborhood looked like in the past, but Mar-quita shared more details
of the people who once lived on her block, who were really friendly to each other. However, people today
in the neighborhood are busy with life and seldom say hello to each other. Marquita has lived on this block
her entire life, and Harmony has for most of her short life as well. But the neighborhood that Marquita
grew up in will be one obviously different than the one Harmony will grow to know.
In the end, they smiled at my camera. And then I got back on the train and headed'back to the office
to tell their stories.
24.What makes the author love his train ride to work?
A. Being lost in thought.
B.Admiring the outside views.
C.Enjoying the warm sunshine.
D.Knowing the change of blocks.
25.How did the author find out what the city's southwest side looked like in the past?
A.By reading earlier reports.
B.By interviewing local people.
C.By watching past street views.
D.By searching his memories.
26.How might Marquita feel when she talked with the author?
C. Touched. D.Confused.
27.What is the main purpose of the text?
A. To share a pleasant train ride with us.
B. To tell us the workof a news reporter.
C.To show us a crowded community.
D.To introduce a new neighborhood.
C
As you walk around the UK in March, you might notice that some people are wearing a daffodil (水仙花on
their coats. The British wear these yellow flowers to show they support one of this country's best-known charities:
the Marie Curie Cancer Care.
B.Nervous.
A.Sad.
B.Nervous.
The Marie Curie Cancer Care tries to ensure everyone diagnosed with cancer is cared for in the best possible
way. It also helps fund research into possible cures through other organi-zations. Founded in 1948, it has been
continuing with its goal ever since.
The charity was named after Marie Curie, a renowned scientist. She experimented with newly-discovered
elements to create the theory of radioactivity.Unfortunately,over-exposure to the radioactive elements made her
develop a disease and die in 1934. Marie Curie won the Nobel Prize in two different fields. Because of her
pioneering work which led to chemotherapy (化学疗法),the charity shared the name of Marie Curie.
The daffodil is one of the first plants to flower during spring in the UK,which marks the return of flowering
plants to the ecosystem after winter. Because of this, the charity uses the daffodil as a metaphor for bringing life to
other people through charitable giving.
Everyone you see wearing a daffodil has donated money to the charity, but each daffodil is worth only what
you want to pay. for it. The charity does ask that you stick to a minimum amount of £1.
The charity encourages people to start wearing their daffodils at the start of March,when the “Great Daffodil
Appeal” kicks off. But that doesn't mean you can only wear them in March. People are sometimes seen walking
around with daffodils on their clothes all year round.
28.What does it mean when the British wear a daffodil on their coats?
A. They support a charity.
B.They are recovering from cancer.
C.They've been helped by a charity.
D.They've been diagnosed with cancer.
29.What does the underlined word “renowned" in paragraph 3 mean?
A.Beautiful
B.Famous
C.Modest
D. Humorous
30.Why was the charity named after Marie Curie?
A.Because patients required that.
B.Because it was launched by her.
C.Because it could show respect for her.
D.Because she greatly supported it.
31. What can we learn about the daffodil from the text?
A.It can be used as medicine.
B.It's widely worn worldwide.
C. It's sold to the wearers at a high price.
D.It's thought to stand for hope.
D
Sulphur-crested cockatoos鹦鹉are common in western Australiawhere they normally live in
wooded areas. But as forests have been cut down, cockatoos have gotten used to living near people. Scientists report
that people in Sydney, Australia are in a battle with these birds.
Last year, scientists at the Max Planck Institute reported that the cockatoos had learned how to open the covers
of trash bins. That's not an easy job. The cockatoos must lift the heavy cover with their beaks and then walk
广东省湛江市2023届高三下学期二模英语试卷 含答案.docx

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作者:envi 分类:分省 价格:3知币 属性:10 页 大小:43.88KB 格式:DOCX 时间:2024-11-30

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