2021年北京市朝阳区高三(上)期中英语试卷(含答案)

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1、2 2021021 北京朝阳北京朝阳高三(上)高三(上)期中英语期中英语试卷试卷 (考试时间 90 分钟 满分 100分) 本试卷共 10页。考生务必在答题卡指定区域作答,在试卷上作答无效。 第一部分 知识运用(共两节,30 分) 第一节(共 10 小题;每小题 1.5 分,共 15分) 阅读下面短文,掌握其大意,从每题所给的 A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。 Marty Verel,a 59-year-old man who had had a kidney(肾脏)transplant in Ohio,should have been near the top

2、 of the list to receive a COVID-19 vaccine (疫苗) Yet like millions of others, he wasnt having any _1_ scheduling. Marty and his wife, Nancy Verel, would sit with computers on their laps trying for hours to book on different sites, all of which were slow and complicated. “I felt _2_,”Nancy says. Then

3、Nancy heard about Marla Zwinggi, who was spending up to ten hours a day online trying to book appointments for vulnerable(弱势的) individuals So Nancy _3_ Zwinggi on Facebook:Can you help? Twenty-five minutes later, Zwinggi responded by asking for Martys personal information. Nine minutes after that,Zw

4、inggi _4_ back-Marty had an appointment to get the vaccine. Zwinggis vaccine _5_ started on February 1, when she learned that her seriously sick parents were unable to get appointments themselves. Clicking around on vaccine registration sites, Zwinggi discovered just how _6_ it was to book an appoin

5、tment. She applied _7_ that web insiders are familiar with. “Im determined. I drink a lot of coffee, and Im a fast typer,” she says. Soon enough, Zwinggi had _8_ appointments for both of her parents. Zwinggi decided that helping others would be her way of _9_ .“I feel like I need to will us out of t

6、his pandemic,” she says. On February 10, she logged on to Facebook to let people know that she was assisting with bookings. By March 2,shed booked appointments for 400 people, an impressive achievement that made Nancy _10_,“Zwinggi is some sort of COVID angel(天使).” 1. A. advice B. fun C. money D. lu

7、ck 2. A. safe B. hopeless C. ashamed D. positive 3. A. messaged B. greeted C. accepted D. recognized 4. A. paid B. looked C. reported D. travelled 5. A. developing B. hunting C. testing D. giving 6. A. difficult B. necessary C. expensive D. normal 7. A. standards B. materials C. resources D. strateg

8、ies 8. A. offered B. checked C. secured D. cancelled 9. A. giving in B. giving back C. giving up D. giving away 10. A. guess B. vote C. share D. conclude 第二节(共 10 小题;每小题 1.5 分,共 15分) 阅读下列短文,根据短文内容填空。在未给提示词的空白处仅填写 1个适当的单词,在给出提示词的空白处用括号内所给词的正确形式填空。请在答题卡指定区域作答。 A A London Marathon runner saw a competit

9、or who needed help. The competitor had fallen to the ground, so he_11_ (pick) him up. When he fell down again, he decided to support him to the finish line 200 metres away. Matthew, the runner who _12_ (selfless) helped his competitor, became famous on the Internet. The two runners became friends an

10、d _13_ (meet) at next years London Marathon, hopefully. B Depop is a shopping app which young people use to buy and sell _14 _ (use) clothes. More than 30 million people from 150 countries use the app, and some experts believe that Depop will have a big impact on global clothes companies. One of the

11、 people _15_ sells clothes on Depop is 20-year-old Moira Campos. She has about 40,000 followers and _16_ (sell) clothes online is her job. Moira and her brother buy old clothes, take photos of them, and then sell them. Young people like sustainable shopping _17_ it is better for the planet. C The Ch

12、inese company, Neolix, invented driverless cars that have been put in use during the COVID-19 _18_ (deliver) medical supplies to hospitals. Recently, Neolix has partnered with KFC to introduce driverless food trucks. Customers scan a code with their phones, and they choose _19_ they want in an app.

13、When they pay, the trucks door opens and they take the food out. _20_ the outbreak of COVID-19, people did not like cars without a driver. Now, the situation has changed and people see the benefits of them. 第二部分 阅读理解(共两节,38 分) 第一节(共 14 小题;每小题 2分,共 28 分) 阅读下列短文,从每题所给的 A、B、C、D 四个选项中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑

14、。 A Lets be honest: it can be hard to get motivated to do your schoolwork even in the best of times. So finding the motivation, while youre learning from home, is extra challenging. Here are a few tips that could maximize your motivation. 1.Guard Your Time You do not need large amounts of time to be

15、 productive. Instead, be focused in short blocks when you can work without interruption. Protect these open times by setting up your workspace to minimize distractions-including silencing notifications (通知) on your cellphone or laptop. 2. Determine How Much Work Is Needed Write down the work you nee

16、d to achieve, because there is a limit to how much information you can recall and process at one time. Examine the remaining projects, and estimate the amount and type of effort each requires. 3. Break Large Projects into Smaller Ones Breaking big projects into smaller and more manageable tasks allo

17、ws you to achieve maximum efficiency and effectiveness. Your assigned tasks should follow a logical order. Also, making a list and crossing things off that list is really satisfying. 4. Set Goals Set goals related to effort. For example, plan to spend 60 minutes at a specific time of the day studyin

18、g a pre-determined concept. Also, set goals related to the completion of specific tasks or projects. For instance, give yourself a deadline to read and take notes on a specific article for a certain paper you must write. 5. Identify the Rewards It pays to clarify the rewards this term-whether those

19、rewards are internal, such as the feeling of accomplishment that comes from understanding a difficult concept well, or external, such as getting a good grade. Work to build good habits and strategies now. It will pay off in the future. 21. What skills do the first two tips relate to? A. Writing skil

20、ls. B. Social skills. C. Teamwork skills. D. Time management skills. 22. According to the passage, which can help you most when you are faced with a big task? A. Tip 2. B. Tip 3. C. Tip 4. D. Tip 5. 23. What is the main purpose of the passage? A. To show students how to stay focused on schoolwork. B

21、. To analyze students difficulties of learning from home. C. To offer students advice on how to improve productivity. D. To summarize some tips for parents to share with their children. B Depression Discussions Alison Malmon was a freshman at the University of Pennsylvania when she got a call from h

22、er mother that would change her life: Her fun, outgoing older brother, Brian, had killed himself. When Malmon returned to school after Brians funeral(葬礼)that spring of 2000, she was still extremely sad. But when she looked for help on campus, there was no place to turn. “Back then, students werent e

23、ncouraged to talk about their mental health. I started reflecting on the fact that there was an enormous need to get that conversation going,” says Malmon. She was only 19 and had no experience with mental health issues, but that didnt stop her from launching Open Minds at Penn. Now, 20 years later

24、and with a new name Active Minds, it is the largest young adult mental health advocacy organization in America, with more than 550 chapters at high schools and colleges. “What Im most inspired by is that my generation and the generations coming behind me are taking on mental health as a social justi

25、ce issue,” says Malmon. “Our tools are changing not only their campuses, but also their families.” The mental health statistics on college campuses are alarming. The American College Health Associations 2019 National College Health Assessment found that 45% of students reported feeling so depressed

26、in the previous 12 months that it was difficult to function; 66% felt great anxiety; and 13% seriously considered taking their own life. So Active Minds peer-to-peer education techniques are more important than ever. “I wanted to educate students about the issues, about the signs and symptoms(症状),an

27、d about where-on campus and off campus and online-they can get help for free. Active Minds chapters empower young adults to speak openly about mental health so that everybody who needs help gets it as early as possible. We cant make it uncomfortable for students to come forward with their stories,”

28、she says. “Because thats how were going to have more students graduate and go on to become productive members of society, and not feel so ashamed like my brother did. ” 24. In the spring of 2000, Alison Malmons older brother Brian A. attended a funeral B. took his own life C. returned to school D. s

29、ought help from Open Minds 25. Why did Alison Malmon set up Active Minds? A. To make big profits. B. To help depressed young adults. C. To get a good reputation. D. To help graduates build skills for jobs. 26. What can we learn from Alison Malmons story? A. Great minds think alike. B. Think twice be

30、fore acting. C. Positive actions make huge differences. D. Hope for the best, prepare for the worst. C Making predictions gets in the way of the brains ability to remember the present moment, new research suggests. The hippocampus, a brain structure usually associated with remembering events, also u

31、ses experiences to make forecasts ( neuroscientists call this “statistical learning”). But scientists writing in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA have now demonstrated that the latter function can influence the former. Researchers showed participants a series of photographs on

32、 a screen without telling them that some image categories always followed others: mountains always came immediately after beaches, for example. They were intended to subconsciously learn these associations and begin to expect these pairings. Later, the participants were shown the same photos again,

33、mixed in with new examples, and were asked if they had spotted any of them before. They accurately recalled seeing random images at a much better rate than the predictive ones (like the beach pictures). The scientists repeated this process while scanning participants brains with fMRI(功能性核磁 共振).Each

34、image category caused a distinct neural (神经的) activity pattern, and the patterns for predictable categories were seen in the hippocampus when the corresponding predictive category was displayed. Moreover, this effects strength in fMRI corresponded inversely with participants memory task scores. “The

35、 more evidence for prediction we saw, the worse their memory was for those predictive items,” such as a particular beach scene, says study lead author and Yale University cognitive(认知) neuroscientist Brynn Sherman. This suggests that predictive images caused the hippocampus to shift toward predictio

36、n-and away from encoding(编码) a new memory. The study is among the first to demonstrate how making predictions affects human memory. Scientists previously suspected that the hippocampus had a role in statistical learning but did not know how it interacts with memory formation. “This paper is a really

37、 nice demonstration of the balance where the hippocampus is doing both these things, says University of Virginia cognitive neuroscientist Nicole Long. The team says this compromise occurs because remembering and predicting both use some of the same biological pathways. In the paper, the authors comp

38、are it with using ones right foot to operate both the brake(刹车)and gas pedals(油门) in a car.but not both at the same time. “This system could prevent memory redundancies(冗余)and thus conserve brainpower,” Sherman says. “We still need further research,” Long says. “For instance, how much repetition is

39、needed before the hippocampus shifts from recording to predicting and whether it is possible to train the structure lo improve both modes at the same time.” 27.We can learn from the passage that_. A. predictive images stimulated memory formation B. the hippocampus has nothing to do with predicting C

40、. researchers revealed how to balance predicting and remembering D. the participants remembered random images more quickly and accurately 28.What does the underlined word “inversely” in Paragraph 3 probably mean? A. In an opposite way. B. Exactly. C. In the same direction. D. Closely. 29.Why does th

41、e author mention the brake and gas pedals? A. To present an accurate picture of how to drive a car. B. To illustrate that predicting interacts with remembering. C. To stress the difficulties of operating them at the same lime. D. To show the importance of using the same biological pathways. 30.Which

42、 would be the best title for this passage? A. The Role of the Hippocampus within Memory B. Predicting a Situation Benefits Memory Formation C. Forecast or Remember: The Brain Must Choose One D. Forecast and Remember: The Brain Can Do Both at the Same Time D In the USA,youth curfews(宵禁)are traditiona

43、lly issued by a parent in the interest of safety. This type of curfew is personal, and rightfully so. However, to stop teenagers committing crimes, some officials have turned youth curfews from family decisions into public laws. The idea may have been thought to have good intentions. In practice, ho

44、wever,these policies have been shown to be unfair and unconstitutional, according to the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). In the town of Sumner, Washington, a father allowed his fourteen-year-old son to go to a convenience store after 11:00 p.m. Sumner had adopted a curfew law that prohibited

45、people under the age of eighteen from being in public places past that hour. The father was fined, and then he pursued a legal challenge against the town. The ACLU, which filed the case on behalf of the father, claimed the curfew laws had violated (侵犯) parents rights. In the end,Sumners curfew laws

46、were struck down. But isnt it irresponsible not to enforce a curfew on teenagers? Curfew laws supporters argue that officials should provide a curfew to ensure teens are home by a reasonable hour. The risk of a serious accident is three times as high for drivers aged sixteen to nineteen as for drive

47、rs over twenty. And dangers only increase at night. This indicates to some that a law keeping teens off the road late at night is a positive safety measure. Still, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) says that the best ways for drivers to increase safety are by obeying the spe

48、ed limit, wearing a seat belt, and paying attention. The NHTSA makes no mention of youth curfews making driving safer. In cities, curfew enforcement has been ineffective or even had a negative impact on communities. Most crimes committed by teens actually happen around 3:00 p.m.,cright after school.

49、 On non-school days, that time shifts to between 7:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m. The curfew hours, usually between 10:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m., occur at a time of day when teenage crime is at its lowest. Meanwhile, violent crime rates peak around 10:00 p.m. for adults. When law enforcement performs the teen cu

50、rfew sweep, policemen are distracted from the more serious violent crimes being committed by adults at that time. Also troubling is the racial discrimination in cities with curfews. For example, recent data have found that in Minneapolis, Minnesota, 56% of youths charged with breaking curfews were A

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