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广东省佛山市顺德区容山中学学年高三上学期十2023-2024月月考英语试题学校:姓名班级考号
一、阅读理解World BookDay author A.M.Dassu sharessome tipsWhilehelping outat herchildrens swimminglessons,authorA.M.Dassu noticedthat oneboyalways puton hissocks toosoon afterwards.He inspiredher to write apicture bookthat shecalledSoggy Socks.Today,many yearslater,Dassu haspublished lotsof childrensbooks.Every day,after takingherchildren toschool,Dassu goesto herdesk towrite.I leavemy phoneupstairs so I dontgetdistracted,and trytowrite800words everyday,“she says.Dassu believesthat the key to being asuccessfulwriter isnot necessarilytalent butgetting yourbottom on the seat”.The cyclistwith farto goAfter527days,Liam Garnerhas completedan amazingachievement.He hascycled almost20,000miles from Alaska,in thevery northof theUS,to Ushuaia-the worldssouthernmost city-inthe SouthAmerican countryof Argentina.Gamer,who was17years oldwhen heset off,said histripwas inspiredby abook heread abouta similarjourney.Gamer alwayswanted tohave abig adventure”.During histrip,Garner travelledthrough14countries.He campedoutside,stayed inhostels orwas hostedby localfamilies.He facedsomechallenges,including anaccident thatmeant hehad totake sometime off.However,he recoveredandfinally reachedhis goalof beingthe youngestperson everto cyclefromAlaskato Argentina.A plastic-waste warriorLicypriyaKangujam won an internationalaward whichcelebrates peoplewho sparkglobalchange.Licypriya,who is11and fromIndia,won itfor herPlastic MoneyShop,where peoplecantrade in their singlc-usc plasticwaste foruseful itemssuch asstationery,rice oryoung treesto plant.
1.What isthekeyto beinga successfulwriter according to DassuA.Talent.B.Experience.C.Education.D.Effort.
2.What madeLiam Gamersbicycle tripuniqueThe wholeclass wasexcited aftergetting the permission.We gatheredtogether afterschooland plannedfor theparty.After somedebate anddiscussion wefinally agreedon thethings weneededto do.On the following Friday,after wecame into the classroom,we hidthe drinks,food,and thefarewell gift-the CompleteSherlock Holmes”-in acorner so that Mr.Read wouldnot seethem aswewanted tosurprise him.On the last period of school,our classmonitor,Aaron,approached Mr.Readjust as he was about to begin the next lesson.“Sir,we haveobtained permissionfrom theheadmaster totreat youto asimple farewellparty/9注意续写词数应为左右;
1.150请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答
2.Immediately thepupils broughtout thedrinks andfood.After Mr.Reads speech,I wasgiven thehonour ofpresenting ourfarewellgiftto him.A.The distancehe covered.B.The challengeshe faced.C.The agewhen hecompleted thetrip.D.The meansof transportationhe chose.
3.Which areadoes Licypriyas award probablybelong toA.Business.B.Environment.C.Finance.D.Economy.Growing upin the Philippines,construction workerJohnny Manlugaycombs thebeaches eachnightfor the eggs ofsea turtles.He knowsexactly whatto lookfor,ashe was trainedasa child byhisgrandfather on how tolocate theanimals andtheir eggs.Back then,his familytraded orate them.Itwasnt aboutgetting richas muchas it was justa part of life.Manlugay hassince turnedover a new leaf.Instead,he useshis trackingskills toprotect theseaturtles thatvisit thebeaches helives by.Ive learnedto lovethis work^Manlugay acknowledgedin aninterview.We didntknow(偷猎)poaching was illegal and that weshould noteat turtleeggs andmeat.^^Manlugay delicatelytransferred eachegg into a buckethe broughtwith him,as wellas somesandfrom the turtle nests,to behanded overto CoastalUnderwater ResourceManagement Actions()CURMA,the groupleading theconservation programonthebeaches.Established in2009,the CURMAconservation efforthas graduallytransformed sea turtle(盟友).poachers intovaluable alliesThey managethis byoffering trainingto ultimatelysavethousands of turtles andkeep theireggs fromending upeverywhere but their nests.“We talkedto thepoachers,and itturned outpoaching wasjust anothermeans for them toearn「a livingexplained CarlosTamayo,the directorof operations.They hadno choice.On average,sea turtleslay100eggs in a nest.The numberof nestsin the area rangesbetween35and40each season,which runsfrom Octoberto February.Tamayo notedthat thefigures haddoubledduring the first yearof theCOVID pandemic.Last season alone,fbr example,we had75nests andwe releasedclose to9,000hatching Jheshared.(孵化场)Once collected,theeggs are thentransferred toCURMAs hatcherytobereburied inprotectedareas.Another formerpoacher,Jessie Cabagbag,grew upeating turtlemeat andeggs like、many peoplethere.stopped poachingwhen weunderwent trainingand weretaught thatwhat wehavebeen doingwasillegalandthat these speciesofturtlesare endangered^he explained.Now,headmits/I amtruly proud.I amhappy thatI getto contributeto theconservation of the turtles.
4.Why didJohnny Manlugayhunt turtlesasachildA.To makea living.B.To makea fortune.C.To protectthem.D.To locatethem.
5..How doesJohnny Manlugaycdeal with theturtleeggs nowadaysA.To sellthem.B.To hatchthem.C.To handthem overtoaconservation organization.D.To burythem undersome sandnear theturtle nests.
6.On average,how manyseaturtleeggsarelaid in theareaseasonallyA.About
7500.B.Close to
9.
000.C.From3500to
4000.D.Between3500and
10000.
7.Whats the best titlefor thispassageA.Sea Turtlesare WellProtected inthePhilippines.B.Local PeopleinthePhilippines Searchthe Beachesfor Sea Turtle Eggs.C.The ConservationProgram Aimsto SaveEndangered Turtles.D.Former TurtleEgg PoachersinthePhilippines TurnProtectors.Do youoften compare yourself toother peopleComparisons canhelp to make decisionsandmotivate youbut theycan alsopull youinto a comparison trap.Whether itsthe numberof goalsyouve scoredat footballor howmany booksyouve read,itseasy tocompareyourselfto someoneelse.Scientists sayits anatural behaviourthat helpshumanslearn fromeach other,live happilytogether andachieve more.Although comparingcan begood foryou,its notalways helpfuland you can findyourself stuckinacomparison trap.This is when youalwaysmeasure yourselfagainst othersand baseyour feelingsonhowwell theyseem tobe doing.Becky Goddard-Hill isachildtherapist someonewho helpschildren understandtheir feelingsandauthor ofCreate YourOwn Confidence.She saysthat comparisonscan makeus feel good andbadabout ourselves.Comparing up“means seeingsomeone doingbetter thanyou andusing thattoinspire yourselfto aimhigher andtry harder.However,Goddard-Hill says,Sometimes itcan makeyou feel rubbishabout yourselfand knockyour confidence.”Comparing down“iswhenyou seesomeonewho seemslike theyrenot doingas wellas you.This mightmake youfeel youredoingwell,says Goddard-Hill,but itcan alsostop youwanting toimprove.If your feelings dependon whatother peopleare doing,Surround yourselfwithcheerleaders,“suggests Goddard-Hill.Notice howpeople make youfeeland spendtime withfriendswho celebrateyour strengthsrather thancompare themselvesto you.If youfollow socialmediaaccounts that makeyoufeel youare failingin anyway,unfbllow them.Find onesthatmakeyoulaugh orshow youlovely placesinstead/9she says.Finally,focus onyour ownachievements andhowyoucanimprove.The bestperson youcan competewith isyourself/9says Goddard-Hill.
8.How doesacomparisontrap affectusA.It makes us focuson ourown behaviour.B.It stopsus fromlearning fromeach other.C.It preventsus fromliving happilytogether.D.It basesourfeelingson othersachievements.
9.Whafs trueabout Comparingup andComparing down”A,Both of them usuallyenhance ourconfidence.B.Both of them haveadvantages anddisadvantages.C.The formeris positivewhile thelatter isnegative.D.The formermakesus feelgoodwhile thelatter makesusfeelbad.
10.What doesGoddard-Hill suggestA.Aiming tobe ourbest.B.Trying tobe thebest.C.Trying tobe acheerleader.D.Valuing someoneelses achievements.
11.In whichsection ofthe magazinecan youfind thepassageA.Achievement.B.Entertainment.C.Health.D.Politics.Holding thelarge and heavy“brick cellphonehes creditedwith inventing50years ago,MartinCooper talksabout thefuture.Little didhe knowwhen hemade the first callonaNew YorkCity streetfrom aheavy(原型)Motorola prototypethat ourworld wouldcome tobe encapsulatedonasleek glasssheathwhere wesearch,connect,like andbuy.Cooper sayshe isan optimist.He believesthat advancesin mobiletechnology willcontinue totransformlives buthe isworried aboutrisks smartphonespose toprivacy andyoung people.“My mostnegative opinionis wedont haveany privacyanymore becauseeverything aboutusis nowrecorded someplaceand accessibleto somebodywho hasenough intensedesire toget it,“the94-year-old saidin aninterview inBarcelona atMWC,the MobileWorld Congress,the worldsbiggestwireless tradeshow,where hewas gettinga lifetimeaward.Cooper seesa darkside to the advances,including therisk tochildren.One idea,he said,is tohavevarious Internets intendedfbr differentaudiences.Cooper madethefirstpublic callfrom ahandheld portabletelephone ona Manhattanstreet onApril3,1973,using aprototype devicehis teamat Motorolahad starteddesigning justfive monthsearlier.Cooper usedthe Dyna-TAC phoneto famouslycall hisopponent atBell Labs,owned byATamp;T.It wasliterally theworlds firstbrick phone,weighing
2.5pounds andmeasuring11inches.Cooper spentthebestpartofthenextdecade workingto bringa commercialversion ofthe devicetomarket.(革命).The callhelped kick-start thecellphone revolutionCoopersaid hesnot crazy“about theshape ofmodem smartphones.He thinksthey willdevelopsothat theyll bedistributed onyour body,possibly assensorsmeasuring yourhealth atalltimes.”Batteries,he said,might bereplaced byhuman energy.The bodymakes energyfrom food,heargues,so itcould possiblyalso powera phone.Instead ofholding thephone inthe hand,for example,the devicecould beplaced underthe skin.
12.What doesthe underlinedpart asleek glasssheath^^in paragraph2refer toA.A smartphone.B.A Motorolaprototype.C.A brick”cellphone.D.An originalcellphone.
13.What isCoopers attitudeabout thefuture ofthe mobilephoneA.Most negative.B.Very subjective.C.Doubtful andDisapproving.D.Optimistic butalso concerned.
14.What canbe inferredabout childrenfrom paragraph5A.They shouldbe providedwith adifferent Internetfrom adults.B.They shouldhave easyaccess tovariousInternets.C.They shouldbe introducedto differentaudiences.D.They shoulduse variousInternets forlearning materials.
15.According toCooper,how mightsmartphones bepowered inthe futureA.By bodysensors.
8.By humanbody.C.By solarenergy.D.By advancedbatteries.
二、七选五For generations,the longestdistance thatmany villagersin Zhadong,South ChinasGuangxiZhuang autonomousregion,could understand was thatofthejourney betweentheir villageandNanning,the regionalcapital.16(土“The first time Icame toZhadong village,I wasimpressed byits naturalbeauty.The adobe砖)homes fitperfectly with the greenenvironment.recalls HansenNico Rene,a63-year-old retiredpoliceman.
17.There wasa fireplace,a table,and somechairs.Thebathroom,if therewas one,was inthe pigsty.There wasvery littleto suggestthattheywere livinginthe21st Century/9The villageHansen visitedis ina remotemountainous areain GuangxisHechi city.In2015,of(贫困)some600residents inthe village,over halflived underthe nationalpoverty line.At thetimeof Hansensfirst visit,there werestill someparts ofthe villagethat werenot accessibleby road.18“People surroundedhim outof curiosity.They tookpictures ofhim with their phones,as itwas thefirsttime wehad seena foreignerin ourvillage/9During thatvisit,Hansen metXie Wanju,then thefirst Partysecretary of Zhadong/We willneverforget thefirst momentwe metbecause thischanged mywhole life.I metthefirst Partysecretaiy,andhewas workingforthegovernment forpoverty relief.That wasamazing.I saidif youneedhelp,I havetime,“Hansen said.19Under Hansensassistance,Xie,withthe villages officialsand otherpoverty reliefworkers,developed featuredindustries,including cattleand sheepraising andfruit planting.20By November2020,the wholeofZhadongvillage hadsuccessfully wipedout poverty.Now localauthorities are(振兴).leading thevillagers ona newjourney torural vitalizationA,Their effortspaid off.B.That,in myview,is alsoa corespirit ofthe Party.C.But whenI enteredthe houses,I foundpeople werepoor.D.Villager BiYonghong,41,remembers thefirsttimehe sawHansen.E.Hansen returnedtothecity inMay2021after finishinghis voluntarywork.F.In2018,the arrivalof a man fromLuxembourg expandedtheir horizonsacross continents.G.Since then,he becameknown byanewidentity-thevillagesfirstPartysecretarysassistant.
三、完形填空A3-year-old girlis backhome afteramanfound herwandering onthe cityssouthwest sideearlySunday morning.Botello,who worksfor VillaPizza andhas sevenchildren,said hewas inthe middleof a21around3a.m.when he saw ayoung girl22around theMcConnell parkinglot.“I rantothedoor andgave peopletheir food/9said Botello.I wentback lookingfor herbutfailed,soIdrove aroundfor aminute.Without findingher,I startedpulling intothe parkinglots.He(蜷缩)finally23the girlwho wascurled upbetween twoblocks,24nothing butaT-shirt,diaper(尿裤),(连帽衫),and socks.Botello wrappedher ina hoodiethen calledthe police.I hadsome25in mycar,so she was drinkingsome waterand Irubbed herback,letting herknow shewasokay andshe startedfalling asleep/7said Botello.“She wasso26and cold.When officersarrived,they managedtomake27withthelittle girlsmother,who didnt28shewasmissing andthought shewasasleep.Its unclearhow thegirl gotout orfor howlong,butthepolice believeditwasanaccident.“I cannot29how herparents feel,but wantthem togo easy.I dontthink itwas anything30,nobody letsa littlekid out.said Botello.I justdid whatT could.I assumesomebody woulddo thesamefor mykids.Botello addedthat ratherthan cast31,he hopedthis incidentpushed peopletooffer32in someonestime ofneed.Sometimes youwant toturn a33eye but,you neverknow whoyouresaving/9said Botello.Anybody couldhave34that littlegirl,theres lotsof foottraffic overthere,so Imglad she35made ithome safe/
521.A.delivery B・training C・dream D.meal
22.A.dancing B.running C.drawing D.riding
23.A.hit B.missed C.called D.spotted
24.A.wearing B,purchasing C,carrying D.begging
25.A.money B.water C.clothes D.pizzas
26.A.exhausted B.excited C.careless D.cautious
27.A.comparison B.trouble C.contact D.peace
28.A.admit B.realize C.regret D.cover
29.A.bear B.complain C.imagine D.doubt
30.A.hopeful B.thankful C,sorrowful D.purposeful
31.A.votes B.smiles C.light D.judgment
32.A.advice B.work C.praise D.help
33.A.critical B.sharp C.blind D.green
34.A.picked upB.turned downC.laughed atD.looked after
35.A.proudly B.secretly C.eventually D.hardly
四、用单词的适当形式完成短文阅读下面短文,在空白处填入个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式1Dutch artistJohannes Vermeeronly created37known worksduring hislifetime.Now,arthistory36lover havethe opportunityto see28of these pieces inthe37large exhibitionofVermeer paintingsever.38host atthe RijksMuseum inAmsterdam,the exhibitionfeatures aseriesof well-known piecesfrom theartisfs worksthat provewhy he39know asthe“Master ofLight.”Museums fromaround theworld lenttheir Vermeerpaintings forthe exhibitionthat openedonFebruary10,
2023.Johannes Vermeeris famousaround theworld40his paintingsof calmscenes indomesticsettings,and forhis41impress useof light,accordingtothe museum.Additionally,Vermeers mostfamous painting,Girl witha PearlEarring,42normal heldatthe Maritshuis museumin TheHague,is ondisplay atthe RijksMuseum for43limited time,whilethe restoftheexhibition continuesuntil June.The RijksMuseum isalso offeringa digitalVermeer experiencefor thosewho are44able toseethesepiecesin person.Titled Closer,this onlinegallery featuresthe voicesof StephenFry inEnglishand JoyDelimain Dutch,45give anoverview ofVermeers lifeand art.
五、开放性作文.你校上周六组织高三学生参观了新北机器人制造公司请你写一篇46Xinbei Robots观后感,给校英文报投稿,内容包括.参观过程;1•你的收获和感想2注意.写作词数应为左右
180.可适当增加细节,以使行文连贯2
六、读后续写.阅读下面材•料,根据其内容和所给段落开头语续写两段,使之构成一篇完整的短文47A FarewellPartyWe learnedthat ourclass teacher,Mr.Read,was abouttobetransferred toanother schoolin aweek.All thepupils adoredMr.Read ashewasa verygood anddedicated teacher.He nevershoutedat usandwasvery patientwiththeslower pupils.(告另)Our classdecided tohold afarewell Llparty forthis modelteacher.But weneeded tohavethe permissionoftheschoofs headmasterfirst.Judy wasgiven thetask ofwriting totheheadmaster forpermission tohold theparty asher handwritingwas theneatest andher languageskillswere excellent.After theletter waswritten,all thepupils inthe classsigned theletter andsixpupils,myself included,went tothe headmastersoffice onbehalf ofthe wholeclass.The headmasterwas mildlycurious whenhesawthe six of usin hisoffice.We gavehim theletterof requestand afterreading itin silence,he frowned.He saidthattherequest wasvery irregularbutafter thesixofus beggedhim genuinely,he finallychanged hismind andgave usthepermission.He allowedus tohold theparty duringthelastperiodofthefollowingFriday,which wouldbe Mr.Reads lastday ofteaching inour school.。