2024年6月10日发(作者:)

2020年长宁区高三英语在线学习效果评估试卷

(考试时间120分钟;满分140分)

I. Listening Comprehension

Section A

Directions: In Section A, you will hear ten short conversations between two speakers. At the end of each

conversation, a question will be asked about what was said. The conversations and the questions will be

spoken only once. After you hear a conversation and the question about it, read the four possible answers on

your paper, and decide which one is the best answer to the question you have heard.

1. a hotel.

2. A. Classmates.

3. A. $150.

a garden.

and athlete.

B. $200.

C. In a park.

rs.

C. $300.

is a fast reader.

D. The book is not too long.

her laundry once again.

her clothes for twenty more minutes.

B. The woman should have worn a sweater.

D. The woman needn’t have brought the coat.

B. Have her parents stay on campus.

D. Look for vacant rooms near the campus.

B. She has already finished her report.

will help the man withhisoutline.

B. The departure time remains unknown.

mechanical problems have been fixed.

car has run out of gasoline.

man can’t read the instrument.

D. In a café.

D. Teacher and student.

D. $600.

4. A. He hasn’t started to read.

C. The book is very attractive.

5. A. Take the clothes out of the dryer.

C. Examine the dryer for maintenance.

6. A. His sweater is not warm enough.

coat is similar to the woman’s.

7. the local hotels again in a few days.

the Lake District Inn for a reservation.

8. man should have attended the class.

C. The man has enough time to finish his report.

9. plane will leave at 9:30 sharp.

woman has just missed her plane.

10. A. The man only filled his tank half full.

C. The car is breaking down on the way.

Section B

Directions: In Section B, you will heartwo passages and one longer each passage and

conversation, you will be asked several passages and the conversation will be read twice, but the

questions will be spoken only once. When you hear a question, read the four possible answers on your paper,

and decide which one is the best answer to the question you have heard.

Questions 11 through 13 are based on the following passage.

11. A. Bus tours around some fascinating European cities.

B. Voyages with interesting stops on the Danube River.

C. Journeys to some magnificent opera houses in Austria.

D. Bicycle rides through beautiful countryside in Germany.

高三英语试卷第1页共10页

12. A. Nuremberg. B. Melk. C. Vienna. D. Budapest.

13. A. A good way to explore the city is going on a free bus tour.

and remains are everywhere to be seen in the city.

C. The city got its name from two once separate towns.

D. It is a historic city full of a musical atmosphere.

Questions 14 through 16 are based on the following passage.

14. A. They are the first three-brother group to row across the Atlantic.

crossed the Atlantic without the help of electronic devices.

are the only bagpipes players among the competitors.

arrived sixteen days earlier than their competitors.

B. They accidentally fell into the ocean.

all had got dead batteries.

B. He asked his brothers to take up the challenge.

D. He regarded the rowing as aprecious experience.

15. were left home with charging cables.

were damaged by salty seawater.

16. A. He designed the engine of their rowingboat.

C. He organised a charity named Children First.

Questions 17 through 20 are based on the following conversation.

17. A. The definition of responsibility.

C. The equality of husband and wife.

B. Tending children.

B. Good manners in public.

D. Traditional views on marriage.

ng home. D. Making money.

18. g housework.

19. A. Men should treat women like baby dolls in their family life.

B. Men should have more social responsibilities than women.

C. Women should support their families as well.

should be treated equally in public.

20. shouldobserve the rule of lady first.

B. Husband should treat his wife like a friend.

C. Roles of man and woman in a family should differ.

d and wife should both earn their own living.

II. Grammar and Vocabulary

Section A

Directions:After reading the passage below, fill in the blanks to make the passage coherent and grammatically

correct. For the blanks with a given word, fill in each blank with the proper form of the given word; for the

other blanks, use one word that best fits each blank.

The family who eats together

What’s the price of a family meal? For many families in the world’s wealthiest countries, the answer

seems to be, ‘too much’. For instance, in the United States, (21) ______ is often a trendsetter in such things,

the majority of families report eating a single meal together fewer than five days a fact, the frequency

of shared meals(22) ______ (decrease) in American families by 33 per cent over the last twenty years. The

meals (23) ______ have shortened too: from an average of 90 minutes to just 12 minutes.

高三英语试卷第2页共10页

So perhaps we’re better off asking ourselves (24) ______ the cost of not eating together is. Once again,

we could turn to the figures. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development has found that

15-year-olds who reported not regularly (25) ______ (share) family meals were twice as likely to be absent

from school. In Europe, research has suggested that children who don’t eat dinner with their parents at least

twice a week face a 40 per cent higher risk of fatness. Another study, (26) ______ (conduct) by the National

Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse (

滥用

) at Columbia University, found that kids who eat dinner with

their parents five or more times a week are (27) ______ (likely) to have problems with drugs and alcohol.

But those numbers, impressive (28) ______ they seem, may be beside the point. After all, having a meal

together is more than just a preventive measure (29) ______ future misfortune. The primary cost of the family

meal is also the very thing that makes it important: time.

The time spent together over food leads to all the positive outcomes that are measured in the studies. That

time spent together has less noticeable—but no less real—effects too. So often, (30) ______ is at the family

meal that the family as such—the family as an organic unit with shared memories and feelings and

ambitions—is made.

Section B

Directions: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once.

Note that there is one word more than you need.

A. flexible B. genetically ally D. included E. populations F. previous

I. solid J. suspects ions G. restricted H. seldom

Wearing shoes can weaken ankle bones

Your shoes are changing your feet. The ankles of people who 31wear shoes are different to those of

people who tend to walk barefoot. In many industrial societies, people tend to wear shoes from a young age.

However, many people around the world often go barefoot, or wear only very thin footwear.

“We know that there are some 32 in the feet of modern humans, due to the use of shoes,” says Rita

Sorrentino at the University of Bologna in Italy. But most 33 findings relate to the front and middle of the

foot. She and her team have focused on the ankle instead. They studied 142 ankle bones from 11 34

from North America, Africa and Europe. These 35sandal-wearing (

穿凉鞋的

) Nguni farmers in southern

Africa, people living in New York and bones from Stone Age hunter-gatherers.

The hunter-gatherers’ ankle bones were significantly shorter than those of people living in modern cities,

and there were other differences in the shape. “They are mostly related to footwear-related behaviours

and movement behaviours,” says Sorrentino. The hunter-gatherers walked barefoot for long distances every

day over natural land. Their ankles were relatively 36. In contrast, people who live in big cities, who wear

tight footwear and walk short distances on flat surfaces like concrete roads, had more unbending ankles.

Changes to ankle bones take place over the course of a person’s life, and there is no evidence that these

alterations canbe passed on 37.

According to Sorrentino, 38 evidence for people wearing shoes only exists for the past 10,000 years.

For instance, a sandal from a Missouri cave may be 8300 years old. Early shoes were all fairly soft, so

wouldn’t have 39 the motion of the ankle much.

It is an open question whether shoes have disadvantages, but Sorrentino 40 that the firmness of modern

shoes causes our bones to become weaker and more likely to suffer from breaking.

高三英语试卷第3页共10页

III. Reading Comprehension

Section A

Directions: For each blank in the following passage there are four words or phrases marked A, B, C and D.

Fill in each blank with the word or phrase that best fits the context.

Why do so few people find fulfillment in their work? Amy Wrzesniewski, a Yale School of Management

professor who studies these issues, offered an explanation that made a lot of 41 . Students, she said, “think

their calling is under a rock, and if they 42 enough rocks, they will find it.”

Surveys confirm that meaning is the top thing Millennials (

千禧一代

) say they want from a job. And yet

her research shows that less than 50% of people see their work as a calling. So, many of her students are left

feeling anxious, 43, and completely unsatisfied by the good jobs and careers they do secure.

What they—and many of us, I think—fail to realize is that work can be 44 even if you don’t think of it

as a calling. The four most common occupations in America are retail (

零售

) salesperson, cashier, food

preparer/server, and office clerk—jobs that aren’t typically 45 “meaning.” But all have something in

common with those professions that are, such asteachersand doctors: They exist to help others. And as Adam

Grant, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania, has shown, people who see their work as a form of

46 always rank their jobs as more meaningful.

That means you can find meaning in nearly any role in nearly any organization. 47, most companies

create products or services to fill a need in the world, and all employees contribute in their own ways. The key

is to become more conscious about the service you’re providing— 48 and personally.

How? One strategy is to constantly remind yourself of your organization’s main 49. Life Is Good is a

clothing company best known for colorful T-shirts with stick-figure designs, but its mission is to spread

50and hope throughout the world, and that’s something even storeroom employees understand. If you work for

an accounting firm, you’re helping people or companies with the51 task of doing their taxes. Each job serves

a purpose in the world.

Even if you can’t get excited about your company’s mission or customers, you can still adopt a service

attitude by thinking about how your work 52 those you love. Consider a study of women working in a shoe

factory in Mexico. Researchers found that those who described the work as dull were generally less productive

than those who said it was 53. But the effects went away for those in the former group who saw the work

(however boring) as a way to support their families. With that attitude, they were just as productive and

54as the workerswho didn’t mind the task.

Not everyone finds their one true calling. But that doesn’t mean we’re fated to work meaningless jobs. If

we 55 our tasks as opportunities to help others, any occupation can feel more significant.

41. ss

42. A. carve out

43. A. frustrated

44. A. meaningful

45. A. distinguished from

46. A. understanding

47. conclusion

48. A. as a whole

49. A. advantage

50. A. optimism

B. trouble

B. turn over

B. shocked

B. demanding

B. exposed to

B. existing

all

B. in this way

B. business

B. information

C. sense

C. pile up

C. inspired

C. repetitive

ated with

C. producing

C. By comparison

C. in public

ive

C. designs

ence

D. keep off

D. excited

D. challenging

d as

D. giving

D. In addition

average

uction

D. strategies

高三英语试卷第4页共10页

51. A. unpleasant

52. A. gathers

53. A. embarrassing

54. A. relaxed

55. A. assign

Section B

B. dangerous

B. benefits

B. rewarding

B. surprised

B. abandon

C. productive

C. worries

C. rough

C. confused

C. neglect

D. urgent

D. entertains

ary

zed

D. reframe

Directions: Read the following three passages. Each passage is followed by several questions or

unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that

fits best according to the information given in the passage you have just read.

(A)

When an editor called to ask if I could photograph a story about fireflies in Mexico, I didn’t check my

schedule before I said yes. I’d seen these insects light up the forests in Tlaxcala once before, and I jumped at

the chance to go back.

I had three nights to capture the magical scene in the forest. Camera stand in hand, I hiked with my

colleagues into the foggy forest at dusk. According to our guides, visitors are usually not allowed to

photograph the fireflies because the presence of artificial light from electronics can affect their habits. As I

started shooting, I adjusted my exposures constantly to account for the fading light. In order to get the

composition that I wanted, I placed my camera stand on a steep, rocky path and had to steady it during the

long exposures. Normally this wouldn’t be a big deal, but the fireflies were very interested in the camera and,

by extension, in me. I stood completely still while they crawled all over me—my arms, my hair, my face—and

tickled(

呵痒

) my nose and cheeks. From what I observed, peak firefly presence happens for only about 20

minutes each night, so I had time for just a few tries.

On the last night everything came together. The weather cooperated. I had improved my method for

focusing and composing in the dark with quick flashes from a powerful flashlight—and I’d grown accustomed

to insects on my face. I was rewarded with the image you see here. Each spot of light is one of several bursts

that a firefly makes as it travels in a 30-second exposure. You can trace the insects’ paths: Some make small

circles, like those in the bottom center of the frame, while others move steadily in one direction or another.

The first time I visited the fireflies, I didn’t have the pressure of trying to capture and convey this

astonishing scene. That will always be my favorite experience with these shining creatures.

56. According to the passage, the author most probably is a(n) ______.

A. field biologist B. insect observer C. expert photographer in hiker

57. The author placed the camera stand on a steep and rocky path to ______.

A. make up for the dying light

C. obtainan ideal image

B. keep away from the annoying fireflies

D. catch peak firefly presence

58. We can learn from the passage that the author ______.

A. was accused of capturing wild fireflies

tired of the exposure to dark forests

B. endured physically to get first-hand firefly shots

D. got his most satisfying image on the second night

59. What does the author think of his experience in the forest?

A. Fascinating. B. Passionate. sing. D. Miserable.

高三英语试卷第5页共10页

(B)

All written work should be proofread to give it that final polish and professional edge.

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customers if you learn to proofread to a high standard.

In just a few short months our home-study Continuing Professional Development (CPD) Certificate

course—with expert personal tuition—teaches you how to proofread and copy edit to a professional

level. You’ll brush up on your punctuation, spelling and grammar, learn what to look out for and how to

mark up on paper and screen.

You can use your new skills to proofread your own work, in your current job, or add them to your

résuméto help you find a new position or gain promotion. But that’s not all. You also learn how to set

up as a freelancer and how to find customers so you can work at home for an extra or full-time income

potentially earning ₤25 per hour. Once you have the skills the choice is yours.

The course is ideal for beginners or to use as a refresher. 15-day trial. Request your free course

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 Specialist course on proofreading and copy

editing.

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 Four tutor-marked assignments.

“This is an extremely helpful course both for

those starting proofreading and for those who, like

me, need to be reminded of everything we have

forgotten. Above all, I thoroughly enjoyed that

 Help and advice from our experienced

tone of voice of the author—he writes with

Student Advisory Team.

authority but manages to keep a light touch.”

 Flexible study programme.

 Specialist advice on how to find work.

 Enroll when it suits you.

 Instant access to course material when you

enroll online.

 15 days trial.

 Advice on how to set yourself up in business.

 Continuing

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Dorothy Nicolle

“I am an English honours graduate but even so I

discovered that my grammar was not as perfect as

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& Copy Editing course I set myself up as a

part-time freelance proofreader with a small band

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高三英语试卷第6页共10页

Professional Development

of regular customers.”

ing to the brochure, “a freelancer”(paragraph 3) refers to someone who ______.

A. finds customers mainly online

C. longs for the freedom of being alone

B. gets promoted at work easily

D. works for oneself with a flexible schedule

you are interested in this course but have not enrolled yet, youmay______.

A. make your decision after a half-month try

to show your CPD Certificate

B. have free access to the course material

D. help tutors mark some homework

62. It can be concluded from the brochure that ______.

A. the course is more beneficial to experts than to green hands

B. proofreading and copy editing are normally paper-pen tasks

C. there is a good market for proofreading and copy editing

D. high-level proofreaders and copy editors are rareto find

(C)

A secretive facial recognition program “could announce the end of public anonymity(

匿名

),” said Kashmir

Hill in The New York Times. While police departments have used facial recognition tools for years, they’ve

been limited to searching government-provided images, for example driver’s license photos. Now an app

called Clearview AI can remove images of faces “from across the internet”—including social media sites like

Facebook and Twitter, employment sites, even Venmo—gathering a database of more than 3 billion photos.

“Until now, technology that readily identifies everyone based on his or her face has been forbidden because of

its invasion of privacy.” Clearview licenses its technology to more than 600 law implementation agencies.

New York City passed on the app after a 90-day test, worried about potential misuse. Clearview’s investors

“predict that its app will eventually be available to the public.” Soon, “searching someone by face could

become as easy as Googling a name.”

We’ve been building toward this moment for a long time, said Adrian Chen in The California Sunday

Magazine. In the late 1800s, the French police officer Alphonse Bertillon devised the first “method for

identifying criminals based on their physical features,” using 11 physical measurements. But scale changes

everything. The Department of Homeland Security plans to scan “97 percent of all passengers on outgoing

international flights.” And the technology has been improved and commercialized to the point where you can

search a database and buy scans for as little as “40 cents an image if you opt for Amazon’s facial recognition

software plan.”

All this has already led to growing fears about facial recognition, said JanoschDelcker and Cristiano Lima

in , but “efforts to check its spread are hitting a wall of resistance on both sides of the Atlantic.” A

two-party push to limit the government’s use of facial recognition has been delayed in Congress. The European

Union (EU) is discussing a five-year temporary ban, but European privacy rules contain “a broad carve-out for

public authorities.” And authorities are using it: London’s police just last week enabled live facial recognition

for cameras across the city.

Even if some bans on the technology succeed, said Bruce Schneier in The New York Times, we’re still

building an “observation society.” Facial recognition is just one identification technology among many. An

entirely unregulated data industry is already creating “descriptions of who we are and what our interests are”

by tracking our movements, purchases, and interactions. “We are being identified without our knowledge, and

society needs rules about when that is permissible.”

高三英语试卷第7页共10页

far Clearview’s customers are ______.

ors of AI apps

C. small groups of private users

B. social media sites

D. government departments

64. By “But scale changes everything.” (paragraph 2), the author means that______.

identification technology has gone far beyond its original purpose

should be scanned through moreavailable physical measurements

security inspection has broughtcommercialization of identification software

D. widespreadcheap images are becoming a drawback for facial recognition technology

65. What can be inferred from the passage?

A. Rules concerning anti-invasion of privacy are practicable around the world.

B. Facial recognition technology is too irresistible to set aside for governments.

C. Efforts to stop misuse of facial identification have achieved an initial success.

D. Prohibition on identification technology has gained support from governments.

66. Which of the following is the best title of the passage?

A. Facial recognition is under control

face is now public property

Section C

Directions: Read the following passage. Fill in each blank with a proper sentence given in the box. Each

sentence can be used only once. Note that there are two more sentences than you need.

A. As a result, names and files are usually arranged in alphabetic order.

B. It means words must be written using combinations of several symbols.

C. It is a set of letters or symbolsin a fixed order used for writing a language.

D. Aside from the alphabet, there are two other modern writing systems.

s the most important divisions happened between 3000 and 2000 years ago.

F. In some parts of the world, alphabets have been imposed on people by empire builders.

How we write today

The alphabet was born about 3800 years ago. After a slow start, it has produced dozens of

offspring(

后代

). 67 Near the beginning of this period, the Phoenician alphabet—a direct offspring of the

first one—gave rise to the Greek and Aramaic alphabets. The Greek alphabet then led to a huge variety of

forms, from the Cyrillic family used in south-east Europe and northern Asia to the Latin/Roman family that

includes English, German and French. The Aramaic alphabet, meanwhile, developedinto a group that includes

the Hebrew and Arabic alphabets. It probably also gave rise to the Brahmi script, another distinct type of

alphabet that is itself the parent of dozens more used across south and South-East Asia.

68 In the first—of which Chinese text is the only real example still in use—signs represent full words.

In the other, signs represent syllables (

音节)

. Japanese uses many Chinese “word” characters, but has two other

writing systems based on syllable signs. The few other syllable-based systems include the Cherokee one used

in the south-east US.

高三英语试卷第8页共10页

your facial identification ready

ish a larger face database

The variety and global dominance of the alphabet isn’t necessarily a sign of its superiority to other writing

systems, says Amalia Gnanadesikan, recently retired from the University of Maryland. 69For instance, they

are used across north Asia, Africa and the Americas because of Russian and western European expansionism.

The fact that alphabets use a smaller set of characters than other writing systems isn’t entirely beneficial

either, says Gnanadesikan. 70Take the phrase “dog bites man”. Someone learning Chinese has to understand

just three signs—rather than 11 letters—to read and write the sentence. “So you get a very rapid ability to

translate what you’re learning into use,” she says. Moreover, children in Japan learn the hiragana (

平假名

)

syllable-based writing system so easily that they can often start reading aged 3.

IV. Summary Writing

Directions: Read the following passage. Summarize the main idea and the main point(s) of the passage in no

more than 60 words. Use your own words as far as possible.

Scottish summers set to keep getting warmer, study shows

Cold, wet summers could become a thing of the past in Scotland, according to a new study. Researchers

from Edinburgh and Oxford universities and the Met Office, the UK’s official weather service, say that

summer temperatures of 30°C could become common in the future because of climate change.

Climate change is long-term changes in the world’s weather patterns, including rising temperatures.

Human activities such as burning fossil fuels (coal, oil and natural gas), farming and cutting down forests are a

major cause of changing weather patterns around the world. When fossil fuels are burned, for example, they

release gases such as carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. These gases are called greenhouse gases. Their

emissions contribute to climate change.

People experienced hot and dry conditions during a heatwave in the summer of 2018. The team found that

climate change would lead to those conditionsbecoming more frequent in Scotland. Lead researcher Professor

Simon Tett, from Edinburgh University, said that carbon dioxide emissions had to be cut around the world in

order to prevent this from getting worse.

The study also looked into the direct effects of the unusual weather in 2018 on people, animals and

landscapes in Scotland. Among these were a thirty per cent increase in demand for water, an increase in

harmful insects such as flies and mosquitoes, and a fall in the amount of peas, potatoes, carrots and onions that

were harvested. The populations of some types of birds declined because of a lack of water. There was also

disturbance to trains because rails were bent by the heat.

Tett explained, “Despite its cool climate, Scotland must start to prepare now for the impact of high

temperature extremes. The bottom line is that heatwaves have become more likely because of the climate

change caused by human activities.”

V. Translation

高三英语试卷第9页共10页

Directions: Translate the following sentences into English, using the words given in the brackets.

72.我真不明白为啥他总是对别人的家事指手画脚。(affair)

73.生活中我们要学会倾听,即便是与自己相悖的意见。(opposing)

74.在英国除了急症,没有预约有病也看不了。(unless)

75.这对夫妇刚要吃饭,门铃响了,是女儿送给他们的纪念日鲜花到了。(Scarcely)

VI. Guided Writing

Directions:Write an English composition in 120-150 words according to the instructions given below in

Chinese.

假如你是明启中学的学生李平,写信给你在海外的笔友王平,与他分享这段时间在线学习生活的

感受。你的信必须包括:

 在线学习与在校学习的不同;

 你更偏爱的学习方式,并说明理由。

(信的开头已经为你写好。)

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