还剩15页未读,继续阅读
本资源只提供10页预览,全部文档请下载后查看!喜欢就下载吧,查找使用更方便
文本内容:
绝密★启用前年高考英语考前信息必刷卷202303上海专用上海高考英语试卷坚持以英语学科素养为导向,全面测量考生综合运用语言的能力,突出思辨能力和学习能力的考查试题所选取的语料真实鲜活,话题多样,体裁丰富;试卷结构稳定,难易度适中,区分度理想,测试任务不乏新意年月上海高考英语试题鲜活新颖、彰显能力,以现实生活中缓解交通对环境造成的破坏为内容的阅20227读语篇,要求考生理解语篇内容并推断作者写作意图及概括主要观点,全面考查考生阅读能力及思辨能力;以分析飞机上的食物难吃的原因为内容的阅读语篇,要求考生具备在跨学科情景下迁移并运用新知识开展探究性学习的能力(考试时间分钟试卷满分分)V/150140注意事项答题前填写好自己的姓名、班级、考号等信息
1.请将答案正确填写在答题卡上
2.I.Listening Comprehension(分)Section A10Directions:In Section A,you willhear tenshort conversationsbetween twospeakers.At the end ofeach conversation,aquestion will be askedabout whatwas said.The conversationsand the questions will be spokenonly once.After youheara conversation and thequestion aboutit,read thefour possibleanswers onyour paper,and decidewhich oneis thebestanswer to thequestionyou haveheard.
1.A.2hours.B.2hours10minutes.C.2hours20minutes.D.2hours25minutes.
2.A.The manwas seriouslyinjured in the car accident.B.The manhad poorimagination becauseof thecaraccident.Medical Research Foundation is a charityregistered inEngland andWales Reg.Charity No.
1138223.
56.What can be learnedabout the Medical Research FoundationA.It is a UK-based medicalcenter forrare diseases.B.It isbreaking groundin tacklingantimicrobial resistance.C.It isfamous fortraining next generations of scientists.D.It isa sectionof the Medical ResearchCouncil.A.fill in the format thebottom B.scan theQR codeon therightC.click theprovided websitelink D.send anemail to the foundation
58.The wholepage isdevoted toA.advocating onecharitable agencyB.introducing somebrilliant scientistsC.launching anappeal fordonations D.raising awareness of global health challenges
57.If Jennywould like to bekept informedof thework of the Medical ResearchFoundationvia email,she should.Every yearmillions ofbreeding monarch butterflies in the U.S.and southernCanada searchfor milkweedplants on居住地which tolay theireggs.Concern overshrinking habitathas urgedconservationists tocreate monarch-friendlyspaces alongroadsides,which aremore thanenough within the butterfliesrange andusually publiclyowned.But trafficnoisestresses monarch caterpillars out,a newstudy finds.They eventually do become desensitized to it——but thatmightcause troubleto themlater on,too.Noise pollutionis knownto affectthe livesof birds,whales and other creatures.But untilrecently,scientists hadnevertested whetherit leadsto astress responsein insects.When Andy Davis,a conservationphysiologist at theUniversity ofGeorgia,noticed onlinevideos ofroadside monarch caterpillars apparentlytrembling ascars cameby,hewondered howthe constantnoise mightaffect them.Davis builta customcaterpillar heartmonitor,fitting asmall sensorinto a microscopeto preciselymeasure monarchcatcrpillars,heart ratesas theylistened torecordings oftraffic soundsinthe laboratory.The heartsof caterpillarsexposed tohighway noisefor twohours beat17percent fasterthan thoseof cateipillarsin asilentroom.But the heart ratesof thenoise-exposed groupreturned tobaseline levelsafter hearingthe trafficsoundsnonstop for their entire12-day developmentperiod,Davis andhis colleaguesreported inMay inBiology Letters.This desensitizationcould beproblematic whenthe caterpillarsbecome adults,Davis says.A rapidstress responseisvital formonarchbutterflieson theirtwo-month journeyto spendwinters inMexico,as theynarrowly escapepredators(捕食者)and fightwind currents.Whether anoisy developmentalperiod reducesmonarchs survival rates remainsunknown,notes Ryan Norris,anecologist at the Universityof Guelphin Ontario,who wasnot involved in thestudy.But in any case,he believesroadsidehabitat almost certainly driveup thebutterflies9death ratesas aresult ofcrashes with cars.There isso muchpotentialroad habitatfor monarchsand otherinsects——it wouldbe sucha nicething tocapitalize on,“Norris says.But youjustcant getaround the traffic.Davis adds:I thinkroads andmonarchs justdont,
59.By Theyeventuallydobecomedesensitizedtoitthe writermeans that.A.monarch caterpillarsreact lessstrongly tonoiseB,monarch caterpillarsare stressedout byroad noiseC.conservationists areworried aboutbutterflies habitatD.conservationists nolonger createmonarch-friendly spaces
60.What inspiredAndy Davisto explorethe effectof noiseon monarchcaterpillarsA.There hadbeen littleresearch onmonarchcaterpillars.B.Videos showedcars crashedinto monarchcaterpillars.C.There wasno suchrecord ofmonarchcaterpillars9heart rates.D.He foundthat monarchcaterpillars shookwithcarsmoving by.
61.According toAndyDavis,how willexposure tonoise influencemonarch butterfliesA.They arelikely toneed moretime todevelop.B.They arelikely to lose theirway on their journey.C.They aremore likely to bekilled in their migration.D.They aremore likelyto diebefore theybecome adults.
62.What isRyanNorrismost likelyto agreewithA,Monarchs5survivalratesare decreasingeach year.
63.It isnot recommendedthat roadsidehabitat bebuilt forinsects.
64.More capitalis needed to studymonarchs developmentalperiod.
65.Butterflies5rising deathrates havenothing todo withmoving cars.Building goodtransportation isa goodidea.To haveenvironmental value,new transportationhas tosufficientlyreplace oreliminate drivingto cutenergy consumptionoverall.That meansthat a new trafficsystem hasto besupported byreductionin caruse.Traffic lanesshould beeliminated orconverted intobike orbus lanes.Ideally,these shouldbecombined withhigher fueltaxes,and parkingfees.Needless tosay,I have to struggleto makemyself extensivelyunderstood.But theyrenecessary,because youcant makepeople driveless,in thelong run,by takingsteps that makedriving morepleasant,economical,and productive.(通勤)Lengthy commuting time isa forcefulfactor which can slowthe growthof suburbs.The fartherpeople liveawayfrom cities,the longercommuting timethey need,which meansmore pollution their carsproduce.If,in amisguidedeffort todo somethingof environmentalvalue,governments takesteps thatmake long-distance carcommuting fasterormore convenient-by addinglanes,building bypass,employing traffic-control measuresthatmakeit possiblefor existingroadsto accommodatemore carswith fewerdelays-we areactually encouragingpeople tolive stillfarther from their jobs,stores,and schools.As aresult,governments areforced tofurther extendroad networks,water lines,andotherfacilities.Ifyou cutcommuting timeby10percent,people whonow drivefifty mileseach way to workcan findreason tomove fivemilesfarther out,because theirtravel timewont change.(拥堵)Traffic congestionisnt anenvironmental problem;traffic is.Relieving congestionwithout doinganything toreducethe totalvolume ofcars can only makethe realproblem worse.Highway engineershave knownfor along timethatbuilding newcar lanesonly temporarilyreduces congestion,because the new lanesadd additionaldriving.Widening roadsmakestraffic movefaster in the shortterm,but theimproved conditionseventually attractadditional drivers,andcongestion reappears.With morecar on the roads,people thinkabout wideningroads again.Moving driversout ofcars andintoother formsof transportationcan havethe sameeffect,if existingtraffic lanesare keptin service:road spacestimulatesroad use.One of the argumentsthat citiesinevitably makein promotingtransportation plansis that thenewsystem,byrelieving automobilecongestion,will improvethe livesof thosewho continueto drive.No oneever promotesatransportation systemby arguingthat itwould maketravelling lessconvenient-even though,from anenvironmentalperspective,inconvenient travelisaworthy goal.
63.In the first paragraph,the authorgives usthe hintthat hisrecommendations are_________.A.not widelysupported B.costly tocarry outC.generally recognizedD.temporarily beneficial
64.According tothe passage,what willhappen ifcommutingtimefor driversis reducedA.Drivers willbecome moreproductive employees.B.Mass transportationwillbeextended fartherinto suburbanareas.C.Drivers willbe morewilling tolive fartherfrom theirworking place.D.Mass transportationwill carryfewer passengersand receiveless governmentfunding.
65.Which of the followingcan be inferred about the authorsattitude towardsthe measuresto improvetrafficA.They areenvironmentally beneficialand shouldbe carriedout immediately.B,They arewell intentionedbut ultimatelylead toenvironmental harm.C.They willdefinitely arousepeoples awarenessof environmentalprotection.D.They willonly workif theycan makedriving moreeconomical andproductive.
66.The authorwrote thismassage mainlyto.A.support theclaim thatefforts toreduce trafficactually increasetraffic.B.oppose thebelief thatimproving masstransportation systemsis goodfor theenvironment.C.provide abalance betweensuburban expansionand trafficcongestion.D.indicate thatmaking drivingless agreeableisawaytoreduce negativeeffects oftraffic.(共题,每小题分,满分分)Section C428Directions:Complete the following passageby using the sentencesgiven below.Each sentencecan be used only once.Note that there aretwo moresentences than you need.Why DoesFood TasteBad onAirplanes(淡而无味)How many times haveyou complainedabout airlinefood beingbland andtasteless Howmany timeshaveyou stoppedfrom orderingany foodat allduring aflight becausewe findit unappetizingSadly,we mighthave justbeenproven tosimply betoo critical.According topopularly acceptedstudies,the reason for thebad food5might justbea change in ourability toperceive taste.The FraunhoferInstitute,a researchorganization basedin Germany,conducted astudy onwhy adish thatwould beperfectlyacceptable ina finedining restaurantwould seembland whilein the air.67What ishappening,thenTo maintain the pressureinside thecabin,airlines mustclosely regulatetheairinside.This involveschanging thecompositionof airthat webreathe.The airinside airplanecabins is15percent drierthan theair webreathe when we9re onthe ground.68Scent actuallystarts todeteriorate themoment youstep ona plane.The situationworsens oncethe airplane(脱水)begins toclimb,which makespassengers moredehydrated anddry-mouthed.No onecan denythat aglass oflemonadegoes greatwith ameal ona sunnyday,but itfeels moreacidic whenyou takea sipten kilometersabove theground.Although thecabin ispressurized tomimic theair pressureyou wouldfeel on theground,its stillless thanthe(体液)pressure wewould normallyexperience atsea level.In thissituation,our bodilyfluids willmove upwardsand the(鼻腔)nasal cavitiesswell.The swellingmesses with our tastebuds,making thefood tasteunappealing.69Research hasalso shownthatthelower temperatureand airpressure onan airplaneboth makeit harderto detectodorants,which areairborne moleculesthat stimulatethe nosessensory cellsand play an importantrole in the tastingprocess.(分贝),70These collectivelyproduce arather constantnoise thatcanbe as loudas85decibels which isequivalent tocity traffic.It mightseem likea weirdreasonforfood to taste bland,but researchershave foundthat loudnoisesinhibit ourability to appreciate sweetflavors.A.Essentially,its harderto smellonanairplane,so itsalso hardertotaste.B.You mightknow howdining in such conditionsfeel,since weveall foughtcolds orflu in the past.C.In anenvironment likethis,your powersof tasteand smellbegin todrift away.D.Since sweetand saltyfoods sufferthe most,airlines havebegun toadd moresalt andspice togive theirfoodsome addedvigor.E.In amock aircraftcabin,researchers triedout ingredientsat bothsea leveland ina pressurizedcondition and thedifferences intaste werestartling.(机身),F.Flight noisesinclude vibrationsfromtheair strikingthe hullas wellas theroaring of the enginesandwinds.(满分分)IV SummaryWriting10()
71.Directions:Read thefollowing passage.Summarize themain ideaand themain pointsof the passagein nomorethan60words.Use yourown wordsas faras possible.Cities in the Sea(珊瑚虫),They maybe small,but they build bigthings!Coral polypswhich live inthewarm,shallow partsof theEarthsoceans,are probablythe biggestbuilders on the planet.Coral polypsturn calciumfrom seawaterintoahard(骨架)material calledlimestone.Slowly,theybuildup ahard skeletonaround theirbodies.When polypsdie,theirskeletons remain.Young polypsattach themselves totheold skeletonsand makenew skeletons.Over time,weird and(珊瑚礁).wonderful shapesare slowlybuilt upinto amazingcoral reefsScientistssometimes thinkof coral reefs asunderwater cities.A quarterof allknown marinespecies livein reefhabitats—there arenearly athousand coralspecies.Reefs are also hometo millionsof seacreatures,like fish,crabs,turtles,and sharks.Humans dontliveincoralreefcities,but webenefit fromthem.Reefs createjobs fbrpeople inthe fishingindustryand otherrelated businesses.Coral reefsarealsopopular fordivers——many countriesbenefit fromthe touriststhat theyattract.Lastly,chemicals fromreef creatureshelp scientistscreate newmedicines,which helpdoctors treatdifferentillnesses.Coral reefsare veryimportant,yet we dont takegood careof them.Environmental problemshave alreadykilledabout twentypercent of the worldsreefs.About halfof theremaining reefsare dying,and expertsbelieve allof Earthscoralreefs willbeindanger by
2050.Why are the reefsinsuchtrouble Forone thing,people catchtoo manyreef fishand oftendamage thereefs-diverssometimes breakoff piecesof coral.Polluted wateralso causesproblems becausereef-destroying algaegrows indirty water.Even airpollution hurtscoralreefs.Global warmingcauses warmerocean water,which cancause polypstolosehelpful algae.Without thatalgae,coralturns white.This iscalled bleaching”,and ifit continues,the coraldies.共题,共分V Translation415Directions:Translate thefollowing sentencesinto English,usingthe words giveninthebrackets..体育的价值不仅仅是强身健体,还在于培养锻炼青少年的责任感和意志力72lie.在中国传统文化中,红灯笼象征生活美满和生意兴隆,通常在春节等节日悬挂73symbolize.与同类产品相比,这款产品实现了体积更小、重量更轻、功能更全、精度更高的目标74achieve那篇小学生作文之所以得到人们的共鸣,就是因为它指出了我们对日常生活的漫不经心
75.The reason满分分VI GuidedWriting
2576.Directions:Write anEnglish compositionin120-150words according totheinstructions givenbelow inChinese.假设你是浦润中学高三学生李青,你校校刊上的“展望未来”栏目正在征文,请以年后的学校”为题“50写一篇文章投稿你的稿件必须包括描述年后的学校里的一个场景;谈谈现在的你置身其中的感受50(注文中不得出现真实的姓名及学校名称)C.The manwasnt wearingthe seat belt whenthe accidenthappened.D.The mansdaughter advisedhim towear theseatbeltbefore heleft home.
3.A.The womanlikes thisapartment.B.The couplehas limitedbudget tobuy anapartment.C.The apartmentwithout balconyis thebest choicefor thecouple.D.The apartmentwith abalcony facingnorth wouldbe hotinthesummer.
4.A.She enjoystraveling thissummer vacation.B,She had an unpleasantexperience inSydney.C.She isconsidering whetherto travelabroad.D.She speakshighly of her experiencelast year.
5.A.She willprobably goto seea doctorright away.B.She hasrefused totake medicinefor herthroat.C.Shed betteravoid speakingeven ina lowvoice.D.She cantmake herselfunderstood whenwhispering.
6.A.Wait tilltheendoftheyear.B.Walk tohis workplace.C.Take publictransportation.D.Buy thecar rightnow.
7.A.The womannever spokeEnglish whenin London.
8.The womanshould havemoved toLondon earlier.
9.One canimprove onesEnglish quicklyif livingamong nativespeakers.
10.Native speakersin differentareas speakEnglish withdifferent accents.
8.A.She^unwilling todo itB,She isafraid ofdonating blood.C.Shes readyto donateblood.D.Donating bloodis noneofherbusiness.
9.A.She doesn^like the painting.B.She hasntvisited themans office.C.Shell hangthe paintingonthewall.D.She doesntknow whereto putthepainting.
10.A.She issorry aboutwhat shedid.B.She thinkshe shouldwash hisshoes himself.C.She thinkshis sonis quitelazy.D.She wondersif hewill goto school.(分)Section B15Directions:In Section B,you willhear twoshort passagesand alonger conversation,and you willbeasked severalquestionson eachof them.The passageand theconversation willbe readtwice,but thequestions willbe spokenonlyonce.When youhear aquestion,read thefour possibleanswers onyour paperand decidewhich oneis thebest answerto thequestionyou haveheard.Questions11through13are basedonthefollowing passage.
11.A.
13.B.
31.C.
113.D.
131.
12.A.More womenwill winawards thanmen inthe future.B.Bettozzi is thefirstwoman towin the Nobel Chemistry Prize.C.Inequality inthe Nobel Prize selectionprocess isdecreasing.D.Two Danishscientists havewon theNobelPrizefor Chemistry.
13.A.NobePs lifestory.B.Three NobelChemistry Prizewinners.C.The NobelChemistryPrize.D.The votingprocess for theNobelPrize.Questions14through16are basedonthefollowing passage.
14.A.They featurein Britishrural culturallife.B,They areresponsible forthetrafficaround schools.C.They helppupils crossstreets inthe neighbourhood.D.They aredressed inred withlarge yellowsticks onhead.
15.A.She wassuspected oftheft.B.She couldnot findher wayhome.C.She wasmentally disabled.D.She wouldbe takento courtfor trial.
16.A.Why Lindawas removedfrom herduty.B,How Michaelhelped asick stranger.C.What Michaelneededto make public.D.Where Lindawas foundin trouble.Questions17through20are basedonthefollowing conversation.
17.A.Judging directionand distance.B.Using thenavigation app.C.Working inall weathers.D.Lack oftaxi drivingexperience.
18.A.Seeing differentbeautiful buildingsoutdoors.B.Taking longdrives outsidethe city.C.Being outdoorsand seeingthe citychange.D.Driving indifferent weatherconditions.
19.A.Driving onher own.B.Taking atrain.C.Booking airlinetickets.D.Being drivenby others.
20.A.She isnot satisfiedwith herpresent job.B.She hasten daysof annualleaves withpay now.C.She hasbeen drivinga taxifor20years.D.She maychange herjob inthe future.题,每小题分,满分分II.Grammar andvocabulary20120Section ADirections:After readingthe passagebelow,fill inthe blanksto makethe passagecoherent andgrammatically correct.Forthe blankswith agiven word,fill ineach blankwith theproper formofthegiven word;fortheother blanks,use onewordthat bestfits eachblank.“The dangerousthing aboutlying ispeople dontunderstand howthe actchanges usJ saysDan Ariely,behaviouralpsychologist atDuke University.Psychologists havedocumented childrenlying asearly as the ageof two.Lying isevenconsidered21developmental milestone,like crawlingand walking,with sophisticatedplanning andattention22require.But,for mostpeople,lying getsincreasingly limitedas wedevelop asense ofmorality and the ability to self-regulate.According toAriely,lying takeswork.Tn studies,he havesubjects achance todeceive formonetary gainswhileexamining theirbrains ina functionalMRI machine.Some peopletold thetruth instantly.But othersopted to lie,and they颅腔壁的showed increasedactivity in their frontalparietal controlnetwork,whichisinvolvedincomplex thinking.Itsuggested thatthey weredeciding betweentruth anddishonesty,and afterthinking aboutit,神经的23choose thelatter.For afollow-up analysis,he foundthat peoplewhose neuralreward centerswere24active when they won money wereless likelyto beamong thegroup ofliars,andtheopposite wasseen amongthoseso-called habitualliars,suggesting thatlying25havetodo withthe inabilityto resisttemptation.External conditionsalso matterin termsof whenand howoften welie.We aremore likelytolie,research shows,when wesee othersbeing dishonest.And weare lesslikelytolie whenwe thinkothers arewatching.We26a societyneed tounderstand that,whenwedont punishlying,we increasethe probabilityof27happening again,influencing allof usJ Arielysaid.In a2016study,Ariely andcolleagues showedhow dishonestyalters peoplesbrains,making iteasier totell liesin thefuture.When peopletold alie,the scientistsnoticed aburst ofactivity in their amygdala,a crucialpart ofthebrain thatproduces fearand guilt.But whenscientists hadtheir subjects28playagame inwhich theywonmoneybydeceiving theirpartner,they noticedthe negativesignals fromthe amygdalabegan todecrease.“Not onlythat,“said Arielyinan interviewwith NationalScience Channel,29people tendedto liemorewhentheyfaced noconsequences fordishonesty.This meansthat ifyou givepeople multipleopportunities tolie fortheirown benefit,they startwith littlelies,30get biggerover time.”Section BDirections:Complete thefollowing passageby usingthe wordsinthebox.Each wordcanonlybeusedonce.Note thatthere is oneword more thanyouneed.A.implications B.piece C.survival D.revolution E.varying F.climatic G.stretchingH.delicately I.migrate J.merely K.shiftsClimate ChangeWhenglobal warmingfinally came,it cameaggressively.In someregions,temperatures roseseveral degreesin lessthana century.Sea levelsshot upnearly40feet,flooding coastalsettlements andforcing peopleto31inland.Deserts spreadthroughout theworld asvegetation shiftedgreatly inNorth America,Europeand Asia.After drivingmany ofthe animalsaround themto nearextinction,people wereforced to abandon theirold wayoflife fora new32strategy thatresulted inwidespread starvationand disease.As environmentalistsmeet in Rio deJaneiro thisweek tothink carefullyabouttheglobal climateofthe future,earthscientists areinthemiddle ofan33in understandinghow climatehas changedinthe past andhowthose changes have transformedhuman existence.Researchers havebegun to34together aninspiringpicture ofthe powerfulgeological andastronomical forcesto changethe planefsenvironment fromhot tocold,wet todry andback againover atime period35back hundredsof millionsof years.Most importantly,scientists arebeginning torealize thatthe36changeshavehadamajor impactonthe evolutionofthe human species.New researchnow suggeststhat climate37played a key role innearly everysignificant turningpoint inhuman evolution.Indeed,thehumanhistory hasnot been38touched byglobal climate change.Some scientistsargue ithas insome instancesbeen drivenby it.The newresearch hasfar-reaching39fortheenvironment summitinRio.Among otherthings,thefindings demonstratethat dramaticclimatechangeis nothingnew forplanet Earth.The pleasantglobal environmentthathas existedover thepast10,000years isa merebright spotinamuch largerpattern ofwidely40climate overthe ages.Infeet,the patternof climatechangeinthepastreveals thatEarths climatewillalmostcertainlygo throughdramatic changesinthe future evenwithout theinfluence ofhuman activity.(满分分)Ill ReadingComprehension45(共题,每小题分,满分分)SectionA15115Directions:For eachblank inthefollowingpassage thereare fourwords or phrases markedA,B,C andD.Fill ineachblank withthewordorphrasethat bestfits thecontext.If atfirst you dont succeed,astheold sayinggoes,try,try again.Good advice,up toa point.But letme offera41:even whenyou dosucceed,try,try again.Tempting asit isto declarevictory andmove on,in manyendeavorsthereismuch tobe saidfor rethinkingan apparentlysatisfactory formula.Consider theadvice forjob interviewsin Talent,anewbook byeconomist TylerCowen andventure capitalistDaniel()Gross.They suggestasking an42question,such asgive mean example of whenyou resolvedadifficult challengeat work.Then askfbr anotherexample.And another.The patanswers willbe43quickly,and thecandidatewill haveto startimprovising,digging deep—or perhapsadmit tobeing stumped.Indeed,one wayto describethis tacticis thatthe intervieweris asking for answers in44rather thanfor answersinseries.Instead ofstringing togethera logicalsequence of17questions,the intervieweris askingfor17different answerstothe samequestion.While thatapproach is45in jobinterviews,it iscommon practiceamong designers.They oftenproduce several46attempts tomeet agiven brief,rather thanimmediately focusingon whatseems tobe thebest idea.In doingso,thedesigners forcethemselvesto47the fullrange ofpossibilities,to avoidthe riskof committingtoo earlytoaconcept thatseemsattractive butmay48beadead end.A strikingexampleofparallel designisthecreation ofthe Windows95startup sound.Microsoft waslooking foranopportunity to49the audiocapabilities ofthe computersoftheday,so itis commissionedthe famedmusic producerBrianEno todo so.Eno recallsreceiving abrief,askingformusic thatwas inspirational,sexy,driving,provocative,nostalgic...therewere about
15050.And thenatthebottom itsaid,and notmore than
3.8seconds long”.Eno describeshimself asbeing completelybereft ofideas”atthetime.He foundthe briefboth hilariousand inspiring.In theend he51morethan80tiny piecesof music.The finalresult wasa musicalsignaturethat hasstood thetest oftime andwas one that helpedto creativelyliberate Eno.It really52a logjaminmy ownwork Jhe toldThe SanFrancisco Chronicle.Bill Burnett and DaveEvans,in theirdelightful bookDesigning YourLife,suggest anexercise inwhich yousketchout avision forthe nextfive yearsof yourlife.What will you bedoing Wherewillyoulive andwith whomAreyou hopingto runa marathonStart abusiness Writea novelThisis oftena straightforwardact of53,but whatmakes theexercise excruciatingis whatcomesidea attheheartoftheplan isone thatis completelyforbidden:Forcing yourselfto goback tothe54board,not onlya second,but athird time.Ive triedthis myselfand seenothers tryit.People squirm.They protest.Sometimes theycry.And then,sooner orlater,the ideasstart pouringout.We allcontain
55.But wedont alwayslet themsee thelight ofday.Perhaps weshould tryproducinganswersinparallel moreoften.Even whenyoudosucceed,try,try again.
41.A.suggestion B.promotion C.recommendation D.modification
42.A.routine B,academic C.personal D.controversial
43.A.presented B.exhausted C.challenged D.accepted
44.A.style B.parallel C.detail D.privacy
45.A.fundamental B.flexible C.unconventional D.practical
46.A.distinct B.determined C.deliberate D.vain
47.A.dismiss B.restrict C,explore D.overlook
48.A.inevitably B.accidentally C.theoretically D.eventually
49.A.scale upB,figure outC,experiment onD.show off
50.A.adjectives B.statements C.variables D.copyrights
51.A.purchased B.composed C,performed D.appreciated
52.A.exhibited B,created C,broke D.underestimated
53.A.C.wisdom D.willaggressiveness B.imagination
54.A.C.drawing D.noticedart B.score
55.A.C.desires D.multitudesemotions B.ambitions分)(共题,每小题分,满分22SectionB112一next:BurnettandEvans askyou todo itagain,only thistime,youre towrite anentirely differentprojection theDirections:Read thefollowing threepassages.Each passageis followedby severalquestions orunfinished statements.Foreach ofthem thereare fourchoices markedA,B,C andD.Choose theonethatfits bestaccordingtothe informationgivenin thepassage youhave justread.Gifts inWills couldbe thekey toprotecting thefuture ofhuman healthOurexperience ofWithout supportatthepower ofscience andare willingto leavea giftto medicalCOVID-19shows howcrucial earlystages,research intheir Wills.At theMedical ResearchFoundation,suddenly aglobalhealth researchers likeDr Kaforouover90%of ourvoluntary incomecomes fromindividualschallenge canappear.As canbe forcedtoabandonwho chooseto includea gift intheirWill-they arecrucial insomeoneinterested intheir passionand leavethe Foundationsabilitytofund researchthat willenable thescience,youwillscience altogether,with annextgenerationofscientiststomakereal worlddiscoveriesunderstand thatwhile immeasurableloss tofuture inthefuture.A giftin your Will totheMedicalResearchnobody canpredict whathuman health.Foundation isan excellentinvestment andwill haveawe willface next,we canGifts inWills providethe lastingimpact onscience andonthefuture ofhuman healthbecertain thatthefuturelong termfunding andintheUK.will bringmany moresecurity thatallows thethreatsto humanhealth.Foundation toinvest inAsChair oftheMedicalprojects likeDr Kaforou^sResearch Foundation-the andlay thefoundations forcharitablearm ofthe qualityresearch inyears toMedicalResearch come.Council-I haveseen theYour Willcan fundtheincredible impactthat rationalresponse tohealthindividuals whochallenges thatmedicalremember theFoundation scienceprovides.intheirWills canhave on“As scientists,our dutyisthe futureof ourhealth tosecure thefuture ofandwellbeing hereintheresearch fortheUK.generations thatfollow.”These giftsfund researchProfessor FionaWatt,and researcherswhichcanPresident ofthe Medicalhavefar-reaching ResearchFoundation andimplicationsfor humanExecutive Chairof thehealth.MedicalResearchCouncil.With agiftinyourWillWhile wedont knowwhat theyoucan playakeyroleinfuture holdsfor humanhealthproviding thescience thatintheUK,wedoknow thatwillprotect thehealthresearch,andthebrilliantof futurescientists drivingthat researchgenerations.forward,arethekey toRightnow,the meetingthose challengesforFoundation isfunding yearsto come.But manyofresearch totackle thesescientists relyon theantimicrobialresistance,generosity andforesight ofandinvesting inresearchers fellowmembers ofthelike Drpublic-people likeyou,whoMyrsini Kaforou一who understandthewill makethe fightagainstantimicrobial resistanceherlifes work.Name______________________________Address_____________________________postcode___________________________Email address_______________________We wouldliketocontact youfrom timeto timewithourlatest news.Please tickhere ifyou arehappy forus tocontact youviaemail.The MedicalResearchFoundationdoes notshare yourpersonal information.You canunsubscribe atanytime.、MedicalResearch啜%Foundation盥Foundation i。