山东省潍坊市2024届高三下学期三模试题 英语 Word版含答案

3.0 envi 2024-12-15 4 4 26.82KB 8 页 3知币
侵权投诉
试卷类型: A
潍坊市高考模拟考试
英 语
2024.5
注意事项:
1. 答题前, 考生先将自己的学校、班级、姓名、考生号、座号填写在相应位置。
2. 选择题答案必须使用 2B 铅笔(按填涂样例)正确填涂; 非选择题答案必须使用 0.5 毫米黑色
签字笔书写, 字体工整、笔迹清楚。
3. 请按照题号在各题目的答题区域内作答, 超出答题区域书写的答案无效; 在草稿纸、试题卷上
答题无效。保持卡面清洁, 不折叠、不破损。
第一部分 阅读(共两节, 满分 50 分)
第一节(共 15 小题; 每小题 2.5 , 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
National Geographic Film Concert: Secrets of the Whales
This month, the Jack Singer Concert Hall will invite audiences into the underwater world of legendary
photographer Brian Skerry and producer James Cameron in National Geographic Film Concert: Secrets of the Whales
on May 26-28. With none other than Jann Arden, celebrated musician, actor and author, as a guest commentator
guiding audiences into the complex and fascinating families, culture, and play that reveal the secret lives of whales,
the whole experience is brought to life by a full orchestra(管弦乐队)and world-class conductor Anthony Parnther.
Called "visually appealing" by The New York Times, this concert presentation brings the most powerful moments
of the Emmy-winning Disney+ series together, transporting audiences into the lives of five different whale families as
they adapt to ecological changes to their habitats.
"Secrets of the Whales was the most ambitious project of my career as a photographer. If we could see the ocean
and our planet through the lens(镜头)of the culture of another species, that could change our view of the natural
world and our relation to it," says Skerry. "Those connections, the communities and the cultures the whales share all
mirror human culture, but sometimes we forget about that."
Brian Skerry has spent nearly four decades exploring and documenting the world's oceans. He spent more than
three years in 24 locations shooting footage for the four-part series Secrets of the Whales. Now, with the most
powerful moments selected, the documentary has been edited for this live, two-hour concert performance. Projected
on a high-definition screen, the rich filmography and sweeping score is brought to life by a 40-piece orchestra. Join
Arts Commons Presents for this worldwide event, in the Jack Singer Concert Hall al Arts Commons. Get your tickets
today at artscommons.ca/whales.
1. What will Jann Arden act as in the film concert?
A. Explainer. B. Musician. C. Conductor. D. Director.
2. What is the project aimed at?
A. Advertising the concert. B. Researching human culture.
C. Protecting animals' habitats. D. Understanding nature better.
3. How long did Skerry spend filming the documentary?
A. Two hours. B. Four days.
C. Over three years. D. About four decades.
B
College professors these days face an ever-higher bar to grab the attention of their students, forced to compete
with the appeal of smartphones and laptops in large lecture halls. But when your professor is a social media star, it's a
little bit easier.
Tatiana Erukhimova, who leaches physics at Texas A&M University, has managed to get her students, as well as
future generations, excited about the science. Known as "Dr. Tatiana" to her students and online fan base, the
professor performs physics tricks with boundless energy and enthusiasm. Videos of her theatrical demonstrations have
got hundreds of millions of views across TikTok and other social media platforms. Her department's YouTube page
has about 2.5 million subscribers, an ineredible following even overshadowing the well-known Aggie athletics
program. She credits the university marketing team's videos of her lessons for her social media success.
In the kid-friendly videos, Erukhimova uses a range of everyday objects in her experiments, from toilet paper to
sweets, bicycle wheels and hair dryers. The sooner kids are taught physics and taught it well, the better, she suggests.
It's clear that she knows what it takes to get young people excited about a hard science. The key, she explains, has
been to make herself approachable and her instruction personal.
She's earned more than just recognition on social media. In February, she was honored with a national award for
science outreach "for leadership in bringing the excitement of physics through innovative education programs,
"including the well-attended annual TAMU Physics and Engineering Festival and the highly popular physics videos
on social media.
All Erukhimova says she can hope for is making physics less discouraging, and more exciting. "What will they
remember 10, 15 years, 20 years later?" she wonders. "If they remember my class, I could not ask for a better reward."
4. What can we learn from the first paragraph?
A. Students perform worse than expected. B. Colleges need more professional teachers.
C. Digital devices should be banned on campus. D. Internet celebrity professors are more favored.
5. What does Dr. Tatiana owe her online success to?
A. Her love for teaching. B. Her school's promotion.
C. Her followers' support. D. Her talent for performing.
6. How does Dr. Tatiana make physics interesting for young minds?
A. By encouraging hands-on experiments. B. By adopting a down-to-earth teaching style.
C. By motivating young learners' curiosity. D. By possessing professional physics knowledge.
7. Which of the following can best describe Dr. Tatiana?
A. Brave and resourceful. B. Optimistic and devoted.
C. Sociable and humorous. D. Passionate and creative.
C
The color blue is very rare in nature, with fewer than one in 10 plants sporting the common human favorite. To
present this color, they have to perform tricks to make themselves blue to the human eyes. In some lowers like
bluebells, it primarily occurs when naturally occurring pigments(色素)are mixed the way you can mix different
paints to change the color.
For blueberries, the blue comes on the naturally produced thin layer of wax(蜡)on their skin, which often
serves as a self-cleaning coating or for added protection in the plant kingdom. "The blue of most fruits is in their
pigmented juices. That isn't the case with blueberries," says Rox Middleton, co-author of a study published in Science
Advances.
In the study, Middleton and his team examined the wax of a blueberry using an electron microscope. They found
that the layer of wax is composed of tiny structures that work by scattering(散射)blue and UV light from the sun,
while absorbing most of other colors of light. The arrangement makes the berries appear blue to humans and blue/UV
to birds and other species that can see UV light, despite not having blue pigments in the waxy skin itself.
To look closer, they removed the outer wax and reshaped it on a black card. They created a new blue-UV coating
and removed a very thin substance that creates color called a colorant from the skin. "The colorants scatter blue and
UV, letting the other colors pass through without absorption," says Middleton. "That's why it's so important that there
are dark pigments underneath to 'mop up' the rest of the light. If there was a bright pigment or white scattering
material underneath, that light would come through, and the color would look mixed or washed out."
The study does show that nature has developed a "really neat trick" in the form of a very thin layer for an
important colorant. Reproducing this colorant in the lab could make a way for new methods of creating pigments.
8. How do bluebells present blue to humans?
A. By blocking natural light. B. By combining the pigments.
C. By changing the outer colour. D. By producing various paints.
9. What did Middleton's team discover about the wax layer on blueberries?
A. Its colorful pigments. B. Its internal mechanism.
C. Its chemical changes. D. Its unique components.
10. Which of the following can replace the underlined phrase "mop up" in paragraph 4?
A. Mix. B. Reflect. C. Recognize. D. Absorb.
11. What is a suitable title for the text?
A. The Science Behind Plant Colors B. The Invisible Pigments Of Blueberries
C. Technically, Blueberries Aren't Blue D. Indeed, Color Blue Is Human Favorite
D
In recent years, much of my life as a consumer has shifted to what I like to call background spending as I`ve
subscribed to more apps and streaming platforms.
While this explosion of subscriptions was sold to me on the idea that it would make my life more convenient,
there was a certain sticker shock I felt upon discovering how much I was spending without realizing each month—
after I'd already spent it, of course. You see, the thing about background spending is that it tends to happen, well, in
the background without your full attention. And there lies the point.
"Hand over your credit card details and let us take care of the rest," these companies promise us. But by agreeing
山东省潍坊市2024届高三下学期三模试题 英语 Word版含答案.docx

共8页,预览3页

还剩页未读, 继续阅读

作者:envi 分类:分省 价格:3知币 属性:8 页 大小:26.82KB 格式:DOCX 时间:2024-12-15

开通VIP享超值会员特权

  • 多端同步记录
  • 高速下载文档
  • 免费文档工具
  • 分享文档赚钱
  • 每日登录抽奖
  • 优质衍生服务
/ 8
客服
关注