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学年徐汇区高三英语一模卷高三英语试卷2022(满分分,考试时间分钟)
1401202022.12I.Listening ComprehensionsectionADirections:In SectionA,you willhear tenshort conversationsbetween twospeakers.At theend ofeach conversation,aquestion will be askedabout whatwas said.The conversationsand the questions will be spoken only once.After youhear aconversation and thequestion aboutit,read thefour possibleanswers onyour paper,and decidewhich oneis the best answerto thequestion you have heard.
1.A.To thebank.B.To thegrocery store.C.To thedrugstore.D.To thebarbershop.
2.A.Washing thedishes.B.Taking outthe rubbish.C.Doing someironing.D.Preparing fordinner.
3.A.It is affordable forevery family.B.It ispopular forits freedelivery.C.It can be boughtonline only.D.It ishighly spokenof amongusers.
4.A.He is in urgentneed of a talk.B.He isfully occupiedright now.C.He runsa labin themiddle of the city.D.He isdoing anexperiment at the moment.
5.A.They area familywithout kids.B.They adoptedchildren fromAfrica.C.They havemany Africanfriends.D.They makedonations tohelp children.C.Shes gotgood resultsfrom herhard work.D.She doesn11need totake the course.
7.A.The manis notsuitable for the position.B.The jobhas beengiven to someone else.C.She hadreceived only one applicationletter.D.The applicationarrived earlierthan expected.
8.A.Hang outwith friends.B.Go toa movie.C.Hike in the woods.D.Prepare forexams.
6.A.She musthave paidmuch for thecourse.
8.She is too lazyto keepgood figure.
9.A.The beginningis trulydissatisfactory.B.The end of thebook isdisappointing.C.Looking into the futureis itsselling point.D.It isgood in spite of the scarypart.
10.A.He willpurchase surgicalmasks.B.He insistson buyingN95masks.C.He willgo toanother drugstore.D.He supportsthe medicalworkers.Section BDirections:In SectionB,you willhear twoshort passages and onelonger conversation,and youwillbe asked severalquestionson eachof the passagesand the conversation.The passagesand theconversation willbe readtwice,but thequestionswillbespokenonly once.When youhear aquestion,read thefour possibleanswers onyour paperand decidewhichone would be the best answerto thequestionyouhaveheard.Questions11through13are based on the following passage.
11.A.You aretrying toactively recallthe information.B.You maythink that you alreadyknow the information.C.You maylose yoursense ofspeed andfluency.D.You arespending toomuch timememorizing theinformation.
12.A.Because studentsmay havea falsesense ofunderstanding.B.Because studentsmay misssome importantinformation.C.Because studentsmay highlightunimportant details.D.Because studentsmay notunderstand the higher-level concepts.
13.A.Organize studygroups.B.Practice onold exams.C.Read throughthe exampaper.D.Explain conceptsto others.Questions14through16are basedon the following passage.
14.A.Buying fewerclothes.B.Renting clothes.C.Buying second-hand clothes.D.Tailoring clothes.
15.A.Young peoplecant affordto buymany newclothes.B.It iseasy tobuy andsell second-hand clothingonline.C.People are more awareof thedestructive impactof fastfashion.D.Organic andrecycled materialsaremorewidely used.
16.A.Development intechnology transformsthe fashionindustry.B.Consumers changepurchasing habitsin responseto risingprices.C.Second-hand clothinghelps reducingfashion footprint.D.Fast fashiondoes greatharm toenvironment.Questions17through20are basedon the following conversation.
17.A.Receptionist andguest.B.Colleagues.C.Classmates.D.Waiter anddiner.
18.A.To opennew markets.B.To acceptan award.C.To attenda conference.D.To negotiatecontracts.
19.A.Using yourchopsticks topass foodto others.B.Refilling the glasses of people seatedbeside you.C.Tipping thewaiters for their goodservice.D.Offering tosplit thecost with the host.
20.A.They emptytheir glasses.B.They puttheglassesaside.C.They tellthe hostdirectly.D.They leavetheir glassesfull.II.Grammar andVocabularySection ADirections:After readingthe passagebelow,fill in the blanksto makethepassagecoherent andgrammatically correct.For theblankswith agiven word,fill ineach blankwith theproper formof thegiven word;fortheother blanks,use oneword thatbestfits each blank.What isProsopagnosiaImagine livingin aworld whereeveryone looksvaguely familiar;but younever knowfor certainexactly whoanyone is.Yourold classmates,your coworkers,your friends,and evenyour familymembers canappear21first glanceto befriendlystrangers whoseem toknow you.Thats22life is like forpeople with prosopagnosia,or face blindness.神经性的Prosopagnosia isa neurologicaldisorder thatcauses someoneto havetrouble recognizingpeople they know,ordistinguishing betweendifferent peoplesfaces.23difficulties inface recognitionwere notedover ahundred yearsago,understanding ofprosopagnosia isstill unfolding.The conditionhas receiveda significantshare of the public,s attentionafterAmerican authorJean Gilbertpenned downher struggleswithprosopagnosiain herbook,The PicassoMirror.24,such aswell-known Britishanthropologist DrJane Goodalland Hollywoodactor BradPitt,have alsorevealed that they havefaceblindness.A studyfrom Harvardand UniversityCollege Londonfound thatprosopagnosia mayaffect upto2%of thepopulation,25mean theremay bemillions offace-blind people.For manypeople justrealising that their difficultiesare theresult of arecognised neurologicalcondition and that they are“not alonen26make ahuge difference.For typicalobservers facerecognition isbasedon the wholeface,but forprosopagnostics isit theopposite—they aremorefocused on27isolate features.They oftenhave torely onclues otherthan someone7s facialfeatures,such ashairstyle,clothing,or voice,28identify thepeople theyknow.It29be verydisturbing forthe personwho hasfaceblindness,as theydo not knowhow torelate with02/9people.This wouldhold especiallytrue ifthe personisnt awarethat theymight haveprosopagnosia.They could become sociallywithdrawn,30could leadto depression,panic attacks,social isolationor socialanxiety.Section BDirections:Complete thefollowing passageby using the wordsin the box.Each wordcan onlybe usedonce.Notethat there is oneword more than you need.A.approaches B.demonstrates C.memorial D.analytics E.assumptionH.complicate Iclarity J.promotional F.removeG.insightsK.tendencyThe magicnumbers This is theage of the datascientist.Employers ofall kindsprize people with theskills toobtain and analyze enormousamounts ofinformation,to spotpatterns inthedata and to turnthem into useful_31_.But some of the most valuablefigures inbusiness needneither an_32_teamnor knowledgeof Python.They aresimple toremember anduseful inevery organization:Zero:Doing nothingcan be the mostvaluable thinga managercan do,as thestory ofAtwoods duck_33_.It waswell knownthatthe higher-ups hadto makea changeto everythingthat wasdone.The_34_was thatsubconsciously theyfelt thatifthey didnt,they wererrt addingvalue.The artistworking on the queenanimations forBattle Chesswas awareof this_35_/and cameup with an innovativesolution.He didthe animationsforthe queen theway that he feltwould bebest,with oneaddition:he gavethequeena petduck.Eventually,it cametime forthe higher-ups toreview theanimation setforthequeen.Sure enough,they askedthe programmerto doonlyonething:_36_the bird.矩阵One:Thisisthe numberof bossespeople shouldhave.In reality,matrix structuresand team-based_37_mean thatteammembers reportto multipleleaders.This canhave benefits,but_38_is notone of them.The Galluppoll showedthatthose whowork in a matrixare lesslikely toknow whatis expectedof them,and more likely tospend theirday inendlessinternal meetings.While theintention of the matrixis to benefit teams,it may_39_projects andmuddy theoverall process.Three:Good marketingfollows certainuniversal truths.In apaper publishedin2013,two academicstested whetherthere wasaperfect numberof claimsthat marketersshould makefor theirproducts andservices in_40_messages.They foundthatmaking threeclaims wasbest:any fewerand consumersfelt theylacked enoughinformation to make theirminds upabout a〃product;any moreand theybecame confused.The“rule ofthree isuseful inmany othersettings,too,from pointsinpresentations topricing optionsfor customers.III.Reading ComprehensionSectionA Directions:For each blank in the followingpassagethere are four wordsor phrasesmarked A,B,C andD.Fill ineachblankwiththeword orphrase thatbest fitsthecontext.Are youa digitalhoarder囤积Most people are familiar with hoardingand thepsychological issuesassociated withit.Hoarding leadsto messyhomesand difficulty_41_with itemsthatyoudont useand donteven need.But hoardingcan alsooccur in the digitalworld.Digital hoarding,also known as e-hoarding,is toomuch acquisitionand_42_to deleteelectronic materialno longervaluableto theuser.Most computerusers savedigital filestosomeextent,andthat1s expected.With digitalhoarding,however,theact ofsaving thefiles becomesan uncontrollable_43_.Digital hoardersmay collectemails,photos,articles,podcasts,or anytypeof computerfiles theybelieve theymay want to revisit in thefuture,and ultimately,in mostcases,they_44_get toactuallyuse itor listento itor readit.Digital hoardingalso occurswhen someoneis too_45_to thedata evento considergetting ridof it.This caninclude chatsandphotos ofan oldpartner;_46_sent bya long-lost friend,or evenscreenshots collectedseveral yearsago.Researchershave_47_digital hoardersinto4different types,according to their characteristics.Collectors vare organized,_48_and incontrolof theirdata.Accidental hoarders,also called“_49_or disorganizedhoarders n,dont intentionallysaveunnecessary data.They justdont knowhow toorganize it.〃The hoardersby instructionkeep dataon behalf of theircompany evenwhen theycould deletemuch ofit.Finally,Uanxious hoardershave strongemotional_50_to theirdata----------and areworried aboutdeleting it.The problemhasonly gottenworse sincewe havemore_51_to digitalstorage thanever.In addition,cloud storagemakes itincredibly easytopurchase morestorage asneeded.With_52_cloud space,its logicalwhen networkusers dontthink twiceabout savingfiles.However,studies foundthat digitalhoarders experienceincreased levelsof stressand nowresearchers areobserving thatthenegative consequencesof digitalhoarding maybe similar to thoseof_53_hoarding._54_,its importantto settime asidetohave agood clear-out,in thesame waywe doin thephysical world.By organizingand_55_useless filesinaregular way,peoplewiththis problemcan easesomeof their distressand cleartheir ownmind aswell.
41.A.stocking B.binding C.living D.partingA.reluctance B.eagerness C.perspective D.fantasy
42.A.obstacleB.boost C.urge D.streamA.substantially B.frequently C.autonomously D.rarely
43.A.transmitted B.closed C.attached D.assignedA.flowers B.texts C.gifts D.letters
44.A.regulated B.categorized C.integrated D.stimulatedA.rigid B.generous C.patriotic D.systematic
45.A.disengaged B.enthusiasticC.reliable D.discriminatedA.appeals B.conflictsC.issues D.ties
46.A.access B.concernC.desire D.excuseA.multipleB.secure C.limitless D.meaningless
47.A.massive B.regularC.casual D.physicalA.Instead B.However C.Otherwise D.Therefore
48.A.making useof B.taking careofC.getting ridofD.getting usedtoSection BDirections:Read thefollowing threepassages.Each passageis followedby severalquestions orunfinished statements.Foreach of them there arefourchoices markedA,B,C andD.Choose theone thatfits bestaccording totheinformationgiven inthepassage youhave justread.AJacob hatedfinishing thingsalmost asmuch as he lovedstarting them.As aresult,he hadgotten into a millionhobbies andactivities,but he never stuck with anyof themlong enough to getany good.He beggedhis motherfor monthsfor aguitar so that he could playBlack EyedPeas songsto Angie,a girlhe liked,but afterhefinally gotone forChristmas,he foundout thatguitars dontplay themselves.He tooka fewlessons,but thestrings hurthisfingers and he didntlike holdingthe pick,so nowthe five-hundred dollarguitar livesunder hisbed.After readingan adin thebackof one of hiscomic books,Jacob decidedthathewanted aWonder-Sweeper5000metal detector,sothathecouldfindburied treasure.So hemowed lawnsall summerand shoveleddriveways allwinter.He didntspend hismoney onice-creamlike hisyounger brother,Alex.By the time springcame he had saved$200,andhepurchased theWonder-Sweeper5000metaldetector.He beepedit aroundthe parkfor a04/9while,be hesoon foundout thatno onehad everleft anytreasure inhisneighborhood.He buriedthe metaldetector inhis closest.Given Jacobshistory withhobbies,it wasno surprisethat Jacobs father wasreluctant tobuy hima magicians kit forhisbirthday.Jacob wasinsistent.*Dad,this timeI IIstick withit forreal.I promise!vJacob begged.Jacobs fathersighed.But hewasreminded ofhis ownyouth longago,when hequit footballand startedboxing practicebefore hardlygetting hisequipmentdirty.So whenJacobs birthdaycame around,Jacob wasboth surprisedand pleasedto find the magicianskitthathe haddesired sobadly.Jacob openedup thebox andunwrapped the many partsin thekit.He tookthe manyfake coins,trickcards,and ropepieces ofvarying lengthon the kitchen tableand imaginedpulling rabbitsout ofhis hat and turningthem intopigeonswith amysterious puffof smoke.As Jacobcontinued pullingplastic thumbs,foam balls,and giantplaying cardsout of the magickit,a commercialon theTVcaught hisattention.“Hey kids!Have youever wantedto go to spaceExperience whatits liketo be an astronautDo youwanttoexplore theuniverseWell,now you can.As thecommercial continuedplaying,Jacob walkedaway from the magickit onthekitchentableand staredattheTV screenlongingly.For only$195youcangoto space campand livelife like an astronautfor awholeweekend.Enroll nowfor aonce ina lifetime experience.Jacobs cryrang throughoutthe houseasheyelled,MOM!^Henow knewwhat histrue purposein lifewas.
49.Why didJacob stopplaying theguitarA.It hurthis fingers.B.Hed ratherplay drums.C.It wastoo expensive.D.He.became interestedin comicbooks.
50.Jacobsfatherdecided tobuy himthe magicianskit because.A.Jacob wasinsistent onhaving itB.Jacobs birthdaywas comingC.Jacob quitmany expensiveactivities D.Jacob remindedhisfather ofhimself
51.which of thefollowingis Jacobmost likelyto donext basedontheendof the storyA.Become agreat magician.B.Learn toplay guitarwell.C.Detect anincredible hiddentreasure.D.Raise moneyto gotospacecamp.
52.What can be learnedabout Jacobaccording tothe passageA.He waspersistent inpursuing hisdreams.B.He neverstuckwithanything forlong.C.He has always wantedto be a magician.D.He finallyfound histrue purposein life4BVanuatu isan islandnation in the SouthPacific.It isalso oneofthesmallest countriesin theworld.But forthose interestedinadventure andsport,thereisa lotto do.Some ofthebestsnorkeling浮7替canbefound here.Vanuatu7s islandsalsooffer visitorstwo ofthemostexciting and dangerous activitiesin theworld:volcano surfingand landdiving.Volcano SurfingOnTannaIsland,Mount Yasurrises300meters1,000feet into the sky.It isknown asthe LighthouseofthePacific becauseof itsregulareruptions forhundreds ofyears.For centuries,both islandlocals andvisitors haveclimbed thismountain tovisit thetop.Some visitorsfind Yasurterrifying;others captivating.Photographers arebeside themselvesattheopportunity tomakestunning artworkfrom sucha specialpoint.Recently,people havealso startedclimbing Yasurto surfthe volcano.In someways,volcano surfing,also commonlyknownasash boarding,islikesurfing in the sea,but inother waysitsvery different.It wasinvented byan adventurerjournalist namedZoltan Istvan,while ona tripto VanuatuIslands in
2002.Volcano surfingis consideredas anextreme sportand thereare notmany practicing it.A volcanosurfer sgoal isto escapetheerupting volcano------------------------without gettinghit byflying rocks!Riders hikeup thevolcano andslide down,sittingor standing,onathin plywoodor metalboard.\t,s fast,fun,anddangerous-----------the perfectextreme sport.Land DivingMostpeoplearefamiliarwithbungee jumping,but didyou knowbungee jumpingstarted onPentecost IslandinVanuatu andis almostfifteen centuriesold Theoriginal activity,called landdiving,is partofareligious ceremony.A manties(藤)tree vinesto hislegs.He thenjumps head-first from a hightower.It originatedasarite(仪工)of passagefor youngmen tryingto provetheir manhood.The ideaistojump fromas highas possible,andtolandas closetotheground as possible.It isalso aharvest ritual.The islandersbelieve thehigher thejumpers dive,thehigherthe()crops willgrow.Every spring,island nativesmen onlystill performthis amazingtest ofstrength.
53.Which ofthefollowingcanbelearned fromthe passageA.Mount Yasurisalight toweronthePacific Ocean.B.The historyof volcanosurfing datesback centuries.C.Bungee jumpinggrew outof landdiving.D.Land divingcame toVanuatu fromanother country.
54.The underlinedword captivatingis closestin meaningto.A.distressing B.charming C.disappointing D.relievingWhich ofthefollowingcould bethebesttitle ofthis passageA.Untouched Beauty:VANUATU B.Volcano Adventure:VANUATUC.Extreme Destination:VANUATU D.Preserved Culture:VANUATU()C Arich burialwas unearthedby archaeologistsat La Almoloya,southeastern Spainthat isthe cradleoftheEl Argarcivilization,which lived in theregion duringthe Bronze Age.La Almoloyawas aprimary centerof politicsand wealthin theEl Argarterritory,and althoughthe discoverywas madein2014,experts arenow takinga closerlook atthe sociologicaland politicalcontext ofthe unearthedtreasure.The remainsofawoman,along witha manwho mayhave beenher husband,were discoveredin theforested hillsofthearea.Radiocarbon datingsuggests theburial happenedaround1700BC.The pairwere foundwith30objects containingprecious(王冠),(颅骨)metals andsemi-precious stones,including thesilver diademwhich encircledthe skullofthe woman.Experts believethattheman inthe grave was probablya warrior;wear andtear onhis bonesindicate hespent a lot oftime onhorseback,and hisskull haddeep scarsfromafacial injury,while gold plugs through his earlobesindicated he was someoneofdistinction.〃The woman,named thePrincess ofLa Almoloya,was burieda shorttime aftertheman,with vastquantities ofjewellery:bracelets,earlobe plugsand rings,to namea few.The gravegoods ofthewomanwere worthtens ofthousands ofdollars intodaysmoney.“We havetwo waysof interpretingthis,“says archaeologistRoberto RischoftheAutonomous Universityof Barcelona.Eitheryou say,its justthe wifeoftheking;or yousay,no,shes apolitical personalityby herselfRisch isa co-author ofa studythatwas recentlypublished aboutthe importantfindings,that notedthe buildingunder whichthe gravewas foundwas ofequal〃交掘),importance—a buildingspecifically dedicated to governingpurposes inWestern Europe.A widehall wasexcavatedwith highceilings,a raisedplatform,andacapacity formore than50people tosit onbenches thatlined thewalls.Its abuildingwhere peoplecould besitting listeningto eachother,or tosomeone explainingsomething//says Risch,uThere isnoevidence offood andno clear-cut religiousartefacts,so itdoesnt looklikeahome ora temple.,zThe discovery at La Almoloyashed newlight onthe politicsand genderrelations inoneofthe firsturban societiesoftheWest.Previous findingshaverevealed thatwomen wereconsidered adultsat amuch youngerage thanboys were.Excavated gravegoods havehighlightedthat girlsas youngas sixwere buried with knives06/9and tools,but boyswouldbein theirteens bythetimethey wouldbeburied alongsidesuch objects.politics.,.y,the gravesof somewomen fromEl Argarwere reopenedgenerations laterto buryother menand women,anunusual practicethat expertsbelieve wouldhave beena veryhigh honor.What exactlytheir politicalpower was,we dontknow/Risch adds.But thisburial atLaAlmoloyaquestions therole of women in[Bronze Age]politics...it questionsa lotofconventional wisdom.nThe womandiscovered atLaAlmoloya.A.proved tobeaprincess duringthe BronzeAge B.was buriedlong afterher husbandsdeathC.livedinan ancientsocietycalled El Argar D.was holdinga silverdiadem whenunearthed
55.The maninthegravewasbelieved tobeawarrior mainlybecause.A.he hadgoldplugsthroughhisearlobes B.he wasburied nexttothewomanC.hewasburied withknives andtoolsD.hehadinjuries andscars onhis bones
56.According toRisch,the ancientbuilding seemedto.A.have beenused forpolitical meetingsB.have servedsome religiouspurposesC.bethefirst templebuilt inWestern EuropeD.be speciallydedicatedtofood trading
57.What canbe inferredfromthediscoveryatLa AlmoloyaA.Women wereburiedwithmore richesthan menintheBronzeAge.B.The roleofwomenin BronzeAge politicshad beenoverestimated.C.Women mayhave beenpowerful rulersintheElArgarcivilization.D.Women wereconsidered adultsatamuch youngerage thanboys.Section CDirections:Read thefollowing passage.Fill ineachblankwithaproper sentencegiven inthebox.Each sentencecanbe usedonlyonce.Note that therearetwo moresentences thanyouneed.A.Supporters arguethat quiet quitting isa way to safeguardyour mentalhealth.B.They setclear boundariesto improvework-life balance.C.Regular supportand praisethat makeemployees feelvalued andconnected canget lost.D.Managers mustlearn how to haveconversations tohelp employeesreduce disengagementand burnout.E.However,quietquittingcouldbea signthat anemployee isnot happyin theirposition.F.Employees aremorelikelytobeengaged when they havespecific targets.Quiet QuittingWhilenot anew concept,the termQuiet quittinghas recentlygained popularityon socialmedia.What isquiet quittingQuietquitting doesntmean anemployee hasleft their job,but ratherhas limitedtheir tasksto avoidworking longerhours.67They stickto whatisintheirjobdescription andwhentheygo home,they leavework behindthem andfocus onnon-workduties andactivities.68lt mayalso meantheyareready tochange positionsor maybe currentlylooking for another job.Why areemployees quietquittingQuietquitting maybeapopular term,but thispractice isntnew.Workers havequietly quittheir jobsfor yearsto lookforsomething new,whether itwas becauseof poorpay,unmanageable workload,burnout orlack ofgrowth opportunities.Working fromhome hasalso changedthe dynamicsoftheworkplace becauseemployees andmanagers arecommunicating indifferentways throughonline meetings.These interactionsmay feelmore formalthan thechat sessionsthat happenin anoffice.Limited meetingscan causea disconnectbetween employeesand management.69How canbusinesses helpemployeesThebiggest wayto preventdisengagement isto improvethe employeeexperience.Talk toemployees,gather theirfeedbackand discusswhat canbe donetomakethem feelappreciated.Make sureworkloads arerealistic andthatthereare appropriateboundariesto maintaina work-life balance.It*s importantto checkin withemployees tomake surethese boundariesare clearandhelp establishan openand honestrelationship.Further;managers shouldclearly outlinepaths ofcareer progressionto eachemployee.70A recentreport revealedthat morethanhalfofemployees surveyedwould accept10%less payin exchangefora“more interestingcareer pathor moreopportunitiesto learnnew skillsv.IV.Summary WritingDirections:Read thefollowing passage.Summarize themain ideaand themain pointsofthepassage innomorethan60words.Use yourown wordsas faraspossible.Why DontWe Usethe MathWe Learnin SchoolHowmuch ofthe mathyouve learnedin schoolis usedin everydaylife Forthe majorityofpeople,the answeris surprisinglylittle.Clearly,some peoplelearn mathvery welland applyitineveryday problem-solving settings.The questionis whymostpeople dont,inspiteof spendingmany yearspracticingit.The firstexplanation blamesthe failureof education.One ofthe majorbarriers tousing askill inreal lifeis automaticity.Wetend tofindtheleast-effort solutionto ourproblem.If strugglingthrough amath problemis hardfor you,you IIfind adifferentwaytosolve itthat doesntrely onmath.The familiarmodel forteaching mathematicsrevolves aroundteacherstelling studentscertain rules,applying thoserules toexamples andstudents thenpracticing problemssimilartothe examplesseenin class.By teachingin thisway,alotofthework and deep thoughtthat wentinto thecreation ofthese mathematicalrulesis lost.In thatsense,people werenever taughtmath thoroughlyenoughtouse itautomatically inreal life.The secondexplanation isa littledifferent.It arguesthat peoplemay developcompetence inmath classes,but theystruggle totranslatereal-life problemsintoaformat wherethey canuse theirmathematics knowledge.This seemsmost apparentinthe(代数).case ofapplying algebraStudents strugglewith algebra,but theyparticularly strugglewith wordproblems.Yet,theequivalent real-life problemsare typicallymuch harderthan wordproblems.From thisperspective,what peoplestruggle withisnot doingmath,but recognizingwhere andhow toapply math to real problems.Educational researchersnow emphasizethe importanceof transferanddeepunderstanding.They believewe needto givestudentsmore training in noticingand convertingeveryday situationsintothemath problemstheyknowhow tosolve.By usingreal-life mathapplications,students canmake connectionsbetween mathand everydaylife.V TranslationDirections:Translate thefollowing sentencesinto English,usingthewords giveninthebrackets..这位诗人偏爱乡间那悠闲的生活节奏().无论经受了怎样的磨难,他也从未丧失对生活的信心()1prefer faith.该自然保护区蕴藏着极为丰富的旅游资源,具有广阔的开发前景()随着智能手机的普及和社交媒2tremendous.体的快速发展,一些人沦为谣言的受害者,甚至在无意间成为谣言的传播者()fallVI.Guided WritingDirections:Write anEnglish compositionin120-150words accordingtotheinstructions givenbelow in假定你是李华,你在香港读大学的朋友最近想找份兼职,为暑假旅游筹集旅费他对以下三份工作Chinese.Terry都有兴趣,难以抉择,因此发邮件征求你的意见给回复一封邮件,在邮件中你必须)推荐其中一份兼Terry1职;)通过比较,说明你推荐该份兼职的理由2服装销售助理•时薪元Fashion salesassistant80•工作时间周
六、周日()主要职责主要处理客人查询及投诉1200-2200-语言教师•时薪元Language teacher150•工作时间周
二、周四()周六()1900-21001400-1600•主要职责主要辅导本地小学生学习英语字幕翻译•时薪元•工作时间:无固定时间Subtitle translator200•主要职责电影或电视节目的字幕翻译学年第一学期徐汇区学习能力诊断卷高三英语答案2022(每小题分)I.Listening Comprehension11-10BDDBD CBCAA(每小题分)L511-13BCB14-16DBC17-20BCBDII.Grammar andVocabulary(每小题分)
121.at
22.what
23.Though/Although/While
24.Others
25.meaning
26.makes
27.isolated
28.to identify
29.can/could
30.which31-40GDBEK FAIHJReadingComprehension(每小题分)(每小题分)141-45DACDC46-50BBDAD51-55ACDDC256-59ADDB60-62CBC63-66CDAC67-70BECF参考答案(仅供阅卷老师参考),III.Summary Mostpeople dont usemath in life afterlearning itfor years.One explanationis that wedonotlearn mathwell enoughtouseit effortlessly.The otheristhatwe failto recognizewhere andhowtoapply(mathtorealproblems.Educational researcherssuggest moretraininginturning real-life situationsinto mathproblems.56)(分)words V.Translation
151.The poetprefers therelaxed paceof lifeinthecountry.
2.No matterwhat hardshipshe suffered,heneverlost faithinlife.
3.The naturalreserve containsextremely richtourism resourcesand enjoystremendous prospectsfor development.
4.With thepopularity ofsmart phonesandtherapid developmentof socialmedia,some peoplefall victimto rumors,or evenbecomethose whospread rumors/rumor mongersunconsciously/unintentionally/without realizingit.。