资源简介 英语本试卷满分150分,考试用时120分钟。第一部分听力(共两节,满分30分)第二部分阅读(共两节,满分50分)第一节(共15小题;每小题2.5分,满分37.5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。AThe greening of planes,trains and automobilesMoving goods and people around the world is responsible for a large part of globalCO,emissions().As the world races to decarbonize everything,it faces particularproblems with transportation-which accounts for about a quarter of our energy-relatedgreenhouse gas emissions.Here's the breakdown of the emissions in 2018 for differentmodes of transport.SHIPPING OTHERROAD VEHⅡCLES10.6%2.2%S88888888888889888ROAD (PASSENGER)ROAD (GOODS)45.1%29.4%AIRPLANESRAIL11.6%1%The fuels for transport need to be not just green,cheap and powerful,but alsolightweight and safe enough to be carried around.Each mode of transport has its specific fuelneeds.Much is still to be settled,but here are some of the solutions to get us going green.PLANES-Synthetic hydrocarbonsCARS—BatteriesThe hardest sector to decarbonize isBatteries are energy-efficient and electricaviation.One long-term option forcars can plug into existing systems andsustainable fuel for planes is to makeservices.New solid-state batteries willhydrocarbons from recycled air.take a car farther on a single charge.FUTURE FUELSTRAINS-ElectricityTRUCKS-HydrogenSHIPS-Liquid ammoniaSome trains are alreadyfuel cellsLiquid ammonia is easyelectrified through railsHydrogen fuel cells are ato keep and transport,butor wires;others can belighter choice than batteriesit is hard to ignite(点燃)made electric in prettyfor trucks,but making greenand requires an enginesimple ways.hydrogen is expensive.redesign.This energy transition()is global,and the amount of renewable energy theworld will need is "a little bit mind-blowing,says mechanical engineer Keith Wipke atthe National Renewable Energy Laboratory.It's estimated that the global demand forelectricity could more than double by 2050.Fortunately,analyses suggest thatrenewables are up to the task."We need to speed up the development of green energy,and it will all get used,says Wipke.21.What percentage of global transport emissions did road vehicles account for in 2018 A.11.6%.B.45.1%.C.74.5%.D.86.1%.Part1 听力Text 1:【旅客申报行李丢失及航空公司处理流程】M:Excuse me, l just arrived on the flight from Melbourne, and my suitcase ismissing.W: We're very sorry, sir, could you put down your information in this form We'll do everything we can to find your suitcase.M:Okay.Text 2:【讨论毕业后计划】M: Have you talked over your future plan with your parents, Sarah W:Well,my parents would like me to do my Masters after graduation. l'mthinking of volunteering asa social worker for a year.M:Good for you.Text 3:【讨论搬家意向及郊区看房计划】W:We really need to move, Steve. So many cars go byevery day and no suncomes through the windows.M:Yeah, this house is kind of old. What do you have in mind W: Maybe we should have a look in the suburbs.Text 4:【初次滑雪体验及感受)M:Do you often ski here W:No, this is my first time.M:So how do you like it so far W:The snow is brilliant. lt would be better if there were fewer peopleText 5:【指路与目的地确认】W: Now we've crossed the stone bridge, turn right again.Look ! Here'sthe Art Center. The GrandTheatre is two blocks away.M:Nearly there.We won't be late then.Text 6:【交通违章处理(学校区域超速)】M: Miss,l'llneed to see your driver's license.W: Was l doing something wrong M: You're driving in a school zone around the time school lets out.The speedlimit is 15 miles anhour, and you were going 35,W: Butit's only 2:10 p.m..The students aren't dismissed until3:30M:Today is Wednesday. Students are dismissed an hour and a halfearlier on Wednesdays.W: Oh, no, you're right. l just forgot that.Text 7【: 偶遇熟人并邀请聚餐】M : Hi, Grace. Haven't seen you for some time!W: Oh, Kevin. Niceto see you. Are you also here for dinner M: Yes. My cousin Fiona isn't in town, and this is herfavorite steakhouse. Youmet her last year, right W: Yes, at Jennifer's wedding.M: Right Look, are you here alone Would you like to join us W: That's very nice of you, but l'mmeeting David and some other friends fordinner. You remember, David, from Class Two M: Of course. He was the captain of our school's basketball team. l haven'tseen him sincegraduation.W: He worked abroad for 3 years and has just come back.M: Well,i'll go and say a quick hello. Wedefinitely should get togethersometime and have a drink.Text 8【: 探讨电视节目类型(教育性与娱乐性)】W: There's nothing decent to watch these days onTV.M: Nothing decent There's tons of stuff.W: They've cut down on the number of newsprograms, and the number ofdocumentaries. All have been replaced by these stupid realityshows andgame shows,you know.M: Well, they often make me laugh. People want to watch that kind of thing.It's good, you know.As long as there's a balance, there's a bit of this, a bit ofthat.W: Should we be giving people what they want to watch Or should we be.you know, trying toeducate them M: Well, Ty is there for entertainment. lf you want an education, you gotouniversity or college or something, don't you W: No. l really don't think so.Text 9:【学校服务项目介绍(家校与社区互动)】W:Welcome to Education Update. This is Kathy.We have Robert Halfrom Mountainside High School with us today. Hello, Mr. Hall. Could you telusabout the service program in your school M: Okay.lt goes like this.On certain days each month ,adults from theneighborhood sit in class with the students and see what's going on in theschool.W: That's interesting. What else can they do M: They can also take adult courses in the eveningsfor both fun and seriouslearning.W: What about the students What can they do in the program M: Well, they can change placeswith adults and go working on a farm or in afactory or taking care of the housework.W: Good.This helps them better understand the lives of their parents andknow more about theirneighborhood.M: Yes. Students have a chance to work in hospitals, nursing homes, librariesandeven in government offices.W: So the school is not only part of the student's lives, but also part of theneighborhood.M:That's exactly what our service program is forW: Great. Thank you, Mr. Hall.Text 10:【艺术项目如何传播气候变化意识】Good evening. Tonight, I'll continue to share how we can use art to spreadthe word aboutthe changing climate.In our day-to-day lives, climate changecan be hard to see, but some placeswill feel the changes sooner than others.The city l live in is very flat and close to the water line.And rising sea levelsare already creating floods. So l decided to do something to makeitimpossibletoignore.startedprojectanartcalled Underwater Homeowners ’ Association andpainted numbers ontothousands of large signs. Each number showed how high someone'shousewas above sea level. A one would mean that if the sea level rose one foot, thebuildingwould flood.l gave the signs to homeowners who put them in theiryards. Kids painted more signsand put them near their schools and alongbusy roads. The project has already had a real worldeffect. The people whoput the signs in their yards created a real homeowners association toaddressclimate change in their communities.Part 2 阅读阅读 A 篇探讨交通运输领域的碳排放问题,通过数据对比和利弊分析指出未来能源改革的方向,强调加快绿色能源的发展。阅读 B 篇老师教学生写文章,学生也让老师学到了东西。主旨是教学相长。主要讲述了一位老师带领发现当思考写作时,学生只能反馈出寥寥几行的文字,然而当他提出一些创作型命题时,学生文思泉涌,会创造出很多有美好品格的人物。这使我意识到,我所提的问题应该激发学生创作欲望。老师教学生写文章,学生也让老师学到了东西。阅读 C 篇Why the rush A new book about urban mobility invites us to think differently about our streets: who dothey belong to, what are they for, who gets to decide SARAH BARNS BOOKS 21 JANUARY 2023 2641 WORDSWalkable, loveable, liveable: the streets of Amsterdam. Franklin Heijnen/FlickrWhat do you see when you look out your front door It’s probably a street, and on thatstreet cars are likely to have right of way over any other form of movement. If you want to leaveyour house, you’re going to need to negotiate around these cars. And if you have a small childwith you, you’ll need to pay special attention to holding their hand tight lest they run on to thestreet and risk being killed or seriously injured.This small child doesn’t know that the street out the front of their house is, potentially, avery dangerous place. A very dangerous place: the street outside is something all parents takegreat care to teach their children to be wary of, never to linger on, never to cross without anadult. Remember: Look right, then left, then right again.Luckily, pedestrian fatalities in Australia are slowly decreasing. In 1998 398 pedestrians died,but by 2018 the number had fallen to 177, though this past decade the figure has remainedpretty steady. Worldwide, some 270,000 pedestrians are killed each year on roads, and thisnumber also shows a downward trend over time.So are our streets becoming less dangerous to walk on Not necessarily. While safetyimprovements might have been made in our streets in recent years, many traffic studies alsoshow declines in pedestrian mobility, especially among young children.When quizzed on these trends, close to 70 per cent of parents in New South Wales saidthere’s too much traffic on the roads for their children to walk safely to school in the morning.Many parents of small children will bundle them into the car instead — much safer.Dutch authors Thalia Verkade and Marco te Br mmelstroet are bothered by facts like these.In their new book Movement: How to Take Back Our Streets and Transform Our Lives they call fora radical rethink of our streets and the role they play in our lives.Verkade and te Br mmelstroet lead with a series of provocations: Why do we think aboutstreets first and foremost as places to move from A to B Why does the need for speed andefficiency triumph over other kinds of use And do we even know how to imagine alternatives Questions like these hadn’t occurred to Verkade, a Rotterdam-based journalist, until shemet te Br mmelstroet, otherwise known as “ the Cycling Professor,” at the University ofAmsterdam. On assignment to write a series on bicycle superhighways, Verkade’s interview withte Br mmelstroet completely upended how she thought about streets, inspiring the three-yearjourney of discovery recounted in Movement.“Be warned,” she writes, “Read this book and you might never look at the street outsideyour front door in the same way again.”THE CARS THAT ATE PARIS — AND LOS ANGELES, SYDNEY AND DELHI TOOIt’ s hard to overestimate how radically the automobile has transformed how we livetogether in communities. With the mass adoption across developed nations in the twentiethcentury came the wholesale reconstruction of city neighbourhoods.The principle of circulation took hold: looking down on Manhattan in the 1930s from hisprivileged view in an aeroplane, Le Corbusier was struck by a vision of the city as a body in needof fluidity of movement. He called motor cars “machines of circulation” and likened roads tohuman arteries, promoting flow and reducing stagnation. Instead of crooked lane-ways anddense housing, motorways were built to clear congestion and connect far-flung suburbs.Before the transformation: Cunningham Place, The Rocks. State Library of NSW Resumptionphotographic survey/Museums of History NSWLife on city streets changed. Playing on the street became more dangerous as more andmore people drove cars. Whole neighbourhoods were demolished to make way for new roadnetworks. Kids learned to play elsewhere.Some communities fought back. Most famously, a Canadian journalist who had moved herfamily to Manhattan in the early 1950s, resisting the pull of low-rise suburbia in favour ofcheaper inner-city housing and street buskers, found herself leading a community campaign tostop the demolition of her local park, Washington Square. Describing her alarm at its proposedreplacement with a sunken expressway, Jane Jacobs called on her mayor to champion“New Yorkas a decent place to live, and not just push through.”Jacobs would go on to lead a successful ten-year battle to save the park and the surroundingGreenwich Village, inspiring community campaigns across the world. In Amsterdam, Verkade andte Br mmelstroet write, a mass campaign of tactical resistance from community and activistgroups prevented the demolition of the city centre to make way for a new road network.何必匆忙?——一本关于城市交通的新书,邀我们重新审视街道:归属谁、为何用、谁来定?莎拉·巴恩斯 书评 2023 年 1 月 21 日 共 2641 词可步行、可爱、宜居:阿姆斯特丹的街道。(图片来源:富兰克林·海涅恩/Flickr)当你望向家门口,映入眼帘的大抵是一条街道。在这条街上,汽车很可能比其他任何出行方式都享有优先通行权。若你想出门,得小心避让这些车辆;若带着小孩,更要紧紧握住他们的手,以防他们跑到街上,遭遇伤亡风险。小孩子并不知道,家门前的街道可能是个极其危险的地方。“外面的街道很危险”——这是所有父母都会反复叮嘱孩子的话:别在路边逗留,没有大人陪同绝不能横穿马路。记住:先看右边,再看左边,最后再看右边。幸运的是,澳大利亚的行人死亡人数正缓慢下降:1998 年有 398 人丧生,到 2018 年降至 177 人,不过过去十年这一数字基本稳定。全球范围内,每年约有 27 万行人死于道路事故,这一数字也呈逐年下降趋势。那么,我们的街道是否变得更安全了?未必。尽管近年来街道安全设施有所改善,但多项交通研究显示,行人的出行活跃度在下降,尤其是儿童群体。当被问及这一趋势时,近 70%的新南威尔士州父母表示,早高峰交通太拥堵,孩子无法安全步行上学。许多有小孩的父母会选择开车送孩子——毕竟这样“更安全”。荷兰作家塔莉娅·维尔卡德和马尔科·特·布罗梅尔斯托特,对这类现象深感忧虑。在她们的新书《流动:如何夺回街道,重塑生活》中,呼吁人们重新思考街道的角色,以及它在我们生活中扮演的意义。维尔卡德和特·布罗梅尔斯托特以一系列尖锐提问开篇:为何我们首先将街道视为“从A 到 B 的通行工具”?为何速度和效率的优先级,远超街道的其他用途?甚至,我们真的懂得想象“另一种可能”吗?在遇到阿姆斯特丹大学的“自行车教授”特·布罗梅尔斯托特之前,鹿特丹记者维尔卡德从未思考过这些问题。当时,她受命撰写一组关于“自行车超级公路”的报道,而与特·布罗梅尔斯托特的访谈,彻底颠覆了她对街道的认知,也促成了《流动》一书中,那段历时三年的探索之旅。“警告:读完这本书,你看待家门前街道的眼光,可能再也回不去了。”她写道。吞噬巴黎的汽车——洛杉矶、悉尼、德里亦未能幸免汽车如何彻底改变了我们的社区生活,再怎么高估都不为过。20 世纪,随着汽车在发达国家大规模普及,城市街区也经历了全盘重构。“流通至上”的原则占据了主导:20 世纪 30 年代,勒·柯布西耶从飞机上俯瞰曼哈顿,突然意识到“城市应像生命体般流动”。他将汽车称为“流通机器”,把道路比作人体动脉——促进流动,消除停滞。于是,弯曲的小巷和密集的住宅被拆除,高速公路取而代之,只为疏导拥堵、连接远郊。变革前的景象:岩石区的坎宁安广场(图片来源:新南威尔士州历史博物馆/岩石区收回计划摄影调查)城市街道的生活彻底改变:越来越多人开车,在街上玩耍变得危险;整片社区被拆除,为新路网让路;孩子们只能去别处找乐子。一些社区开始反抗。最著名的案例来自 20 世纪 50 年代初:一位加拿大记者举家搬至曼哈顿,拒绝“低层郊区”的诱惑,选择更廉价的市中心住房和街头艺人的氛围。却意外发现自己领导了一场社区运动——阻止当地华盛顿广场公园被拆除,以修建下沉式高速公路。简·雅各布斯呼吁市长:“纽约应是宜居之地,而非任人‘硬闯’的通道。”雅各布斯随后领导了长达十年的斗争,成功保住了公园和周边的格林威治村,也激励了全球的社区运动。维尔卡德和特·布罗梅尔斯托特写道,在阿姆斯特丹,社区与活动家发起的“策略性抵抗运动”,阻止了市中心被拆除以修建新路网的计划。阅读 D 篇——NewScientistBoiling tap water can remove 80 per cent of the microplastics in itTap water contains tiny particles of plastic and we don’t know how they affect our health– now it seems that boiling the water for 5 minutes can remove most of themBy Chris Stokel-Walker28 February 2024Boiling tap water before use can remove at least 80 per cent of the tiny, potentially harmfulplastic particles it contains.Nano and microplastics (NMPs) are pieces of plastics like polystyrene, polythene andpolypropylene that range from between 0.001 to 5 millimetres in diameter. Their impact onhealth is still being studied, but researchers suspect they are damaging to humans.Eddy Zeng at Jinan University in China and his colleagues took samples of tap water andmeasured their levels of NMPs, finding an average concentration of 1 milligram per litre. Theythen boiled the samples for 5 minutes, before allowing them to cool. The levels of NMPs werethen remeasured and found to have reduced by more than 80 per cent.“We estimated that intakes of NMPs through boiled water consumption were two to fivetimes less than those through tap water on a daily basis,” says Zeng. “This simple but effectiveboiling-water strategy can ‘decontaminate’ NMPs from household tap water and has thepotential for harmlessly alleviating human exposure to NMPs through water consumption.”The NMPs were removed by becoming ensnared in crystalline structures of limescaleformed from the calcium in the water, says Zeng. More particles were removed from “hard”water – that containing high levels of calcium – than from “soft” water, which has lowerlevels of it.Allowing the water to reach boiling point was an important contributing factor to howefficiently those crystalline structures were created. “Boiling water has some other benefits,such as killing bacteria and parasites and removing trace heavy metals,” he says.“The way they demonstrated how things were deposited through the boiling process wasnice,” says Caroline Gauchotte-Lindsay at the University of Glasgow, UK. However, she adds thatthe world should be seeking to solve the problem of microplastics in drinking water long beforethey reach homes. “We should be looking into modifying drinking water treatment plants sothey remove microplastics,” she says.Part 3 七选五答案:EDCFG英文原文:Need a break between classes or just a pick - me - up The college offers more. Not onlydoes it serve drinks, it also serves smiles.Catherine Murphy, a cafe worker with a green shirt and black hat, makes sure customers getwhat they exactly want. She goes back and forth between machines to make drinks. Afterfinishing the order, she calls out the names on the cups. As the students grab the drinks, shesmiles and says "How is your day ". Even when the line is longer, she doesn't let it get in the wayof her genuine conversation.Murphy gets up at a quarter to five and drives 30 minutes every day to work on time.Sometimes she arrives early to work early. "I do so to make drinks for students. That is what theyneed." Being a mother and a wife, Murphy knows how to be there for others.One thing Murphy doesn't know is that her smile is contagious and can make a difference inher students having a much better day than they were having before meeting her. XX is a politicalscience major. She loves coffee and goes to the cafe at least 6 times a week. "Buying coffee herestarts my day well and gets me ready for class. Her huge smile puts me in a good mood."Murphy has served drinks for 23 years and never imagined working anywhere else. Sheloves the work and has every intention to continue the job.中文翻译:课间需要休息一下,还是只想来杯提神饮品?这所大学能提供的不止于此。它不仅供应饮品,还传递微笑。凯瑟琳·墨菲是校园咖啡馆的一名工作人员,身着绿色衬衫、头戴黑色帽子,确保每位顾客都能得到自己真正想要的东西。她在机器之间来回忙碌地制作饮品。完成订单后,她会喊出杯身上的名字。当学生们接过饮品时,她会微笑着问候:“今天过得怎么样?” 即使队伍排得很长,她也不会让忙碌影响真诚的交流。墨菲每天凌晨 4 点 45 分起床,驱车 30 分钟准时上班。有时她会提前到岗、提前开始工作。“我这样做是为了给学生们准备饮品,这是他们需要的。” 作为母亲和妻子,墨菲懂得如何为他人付出。有一件事墨菲不知道:她的微笑具有感染力,能让学生们的一天比遇见她之前更加美好。XX 是政治学专业的学生,她热爱咖啡,每周至少来这家咖啡馆 6 次。“在这里买咖啡让我每天都有好的开始,也让我为上课做好了准备。她灿烂的笑容让我心情舒畅。”墨菲已经从事饮品服务工作 23 年,从未想过在其他地方工作。她热爱这份工作,打算一直做下去。Part 4 完形填空答案:BDACB BACDA BCDAB(仅供参考)英文原文(完形填空):One August afternoon I sat in my kitchen, staring at the glass vase that hadn’t seen daylightsince my wedding.My husband and I had just sold our house and we were busy emptying out the belovedhome that family had spent 23 years filling up. We decided on key items for the apartment wewere moving to in town, donated what we could and rented a place to store supposedlyimportant things. That left a house stuffed with things that, while not particularly valuable, didn’t belong in a landfill.I took a picture of the vase and posted it online, for $10. A couple of messages came in, onewanting additional photos, another asking for a price cut. As our move day drew near, I settled ona new price ($0), and reposted it. The description: "I hate this vase maybe you won’ t." In aninstant, a woman raced into my house and left happily with the vase.Encouraged, I posted more. My daily posts and the visits I received became a precious ray oflight in the chaos of my house. Each exchange provides a chance to spare the landfill and toplease another person I might not otherwise have encountered.I sit in my apartment today, loving each of the belongings that share our small space. I takejoy in knowing that somewhere nearby, someone is appreciating something that couldn’t comewith us.中文翻译:八月的一个下午,我坐在厨房,盯着那个自婚礼后就再没见过天日的玻璃花瓶。我和丈夫刚卖掉房子,正忙着清空这个家人花了 23 年填满的温馨家宅。我们选定了要带去镇上新家公寓(apartment)的重要物件,能捐赠的都捐了,还租了个地方存放(store)那些看似重要的物品。这让房子里塞满(stuffed)了各种东西——它们虽没多高价值(valuable),却也不该进垃圾填埋场(landfill)。我给花瓶拍了照,以 10 美元的价格挂到网上。几条留言传来:一条想要更多照片(photos),另一条要求降价。随着搬家日临近,我把价格定为 0 美元,重新发布时附上描述(description):“我不喜欢这花瓶,也许你会喜欢。” 眨眼间,一个女人冲进我家,开心地带着花瓶离开了。受到鼓舞(Encouraged),我发布了更多物品。日常的发布和收到的互动反馈(visits,意译“访客交流”),成了杂乱搬家过程中珍贵的光芒。每次交易,既让这些物件免于(spare)被丢进垃圾填埋场,也让我有机会邂逅原本不会遇见(encountered)的人,取悦他们。如今我坐在公寓里,爱着共处这小空间的每一件物件(belongings)。想到附近某个地方,有人在珍视(appreciating)那些没能跟我们搬来的东西,我便满心欢喜(joy)Part 5 语法填空源文来自中国日报https://www.chinadaily./a/202306/09/WS64824f27a31033ad3f7bb3dc.html英文文章(语法填空):An exhibition at the Liushi Art Museum in Shanghai is featuringartwork inspired by Go, one of the oldest board games in theworld, 56 which originated in China more than 4,000 years ago. Go,or weiqi in Chinese, is one of 57 the earliest binary - based games.The movements of the black and white pieces reflect basic ideas ofEastern philosophy, according to Tu Ningning, curator of theexhibition."The exhibition brings together Go culture, cutting - edgetechnology and contemporary art," says Tu. "We hope 58 topresent the rather abstract Go game and AI in a visual context, andinitiate dialogues with minimalism art, conceptual art andexpressionism.""Go is like the algorithms (算法) in your cell phone. You try tolead the opponent into your trap and force them to follow your 59guidance (guide)till they lose," explains Wang Wei, a Go playeramong the visitors to the exhibition."The players' personalities 60 are revealed during the game, andone's weaknesses are exposed to the opponent," she adds. "A decentwinner always 61 tries to outplay the opponent 62by no more than oneor two points as a gesture of modesty and respect for the other side."Tu says it was the balance between the black and white pieces, beautyin the 63 strategic ( strategy)placement of the pieces, 64 and theenergy flow following each move that inspired artists to create oilpaintings, sculptures, 65 digitally(digital)generated graphics and silk- screen prints for the show.中文解析(语法填空):1. 56. which考查定语从句关系词。引导非限制性定语从句,修饰先行词Go(指物),且在从句中作主语,故填 which。2. 57. the考查冠词。形容词最高级 earliest 前需用定冠词 the,构成“one of the + 最高级 + 名词 ”结构,故填 the。3. 58. to present考查非谓语动词。hope to do sth 为固定搭配(不定式作宾语,表“希望做某事”),故填 to present。4. 59. guidance考查词性转换。形容词性物主代词 your 后需接名词,故填guidance(guide 的名词形式,表“指引”)。5. 60. are revealed考查动词时态和语态。主语 personalities 与 reveal 构成被动关系,且描述客观事实用 一般现在时,主语为复数,故填 arerevealed。6. 61. tries考查动词时态和主谓一致。主语 a decent winner 为 第三人称单数,描述客观事实用一般现在时,故填 tries。7. 63. strategic考查词性转换。名词 placement 前需用 形容词 修饰,故填strategic(strategy 的形容词形式,表“策略性的”)。8. 64. and考查连词。“it was A, B, and C that…”为强调句的并列结构,连接 balance、beauty、energy flow 三个并列成分,故填 and。9. 65. digitally考查词性转换。过去分词 generated 前需用 副词 修饰,故填 digitally(digital 的副词形式,表“数字地”)。补充:“by”的用法解释文中 by no more than one or two points 中,by 表示 “以(某种幅度/数量)”,用于说明比赛中领先的具体分数差,常描述“差距、差值”(如分数、时间、距离等)。例句:She won the race by5 seconds.(她以 5 秒的优势赢得比赛。)Part 6 作文一Part 7 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。My wife and I wanted to share our new home with family and friends byhosting a small gathering in the early summer. She had prepared lots ofsnacks. There was plenty of space for the kids to run and play. There was justone thing I hadn't counted on: My brother chose to bring his dog Toby, a 50pound ball of fire. Though friendly, he could easily knock over my niece'ssmall boys and my six month old granddaughter. So, when my brothershowed up, I asked him to watch Toby and keep him outside.Unexpectedly, after supper, the weather changed. It started to rain andeveryone went indoors.It was an awkward moment. I didn't want Toby to be running around inthe house, and my brother wasn't happy with driving home with a wet dog.Eventually, my brother decided to leave rather than force the issue.A few days passed, and I hadn't heard anything from my brother. I textedhim and expressed wishes for him to come out again. His reply came as asurprise a shock, actually: "Not a chance." Clearly, he was unhappy over theway we had parted. After all, I had left him little choice. Well, he'll get over it,I reasoned.Two months passed. My wife suggested I get in touch with my brother,but I resisted, thinking he should call first. However, my conscience(良心) keptbothering me. I tried to put myself in my brother's shoes. He was facinghealth problems, and his wife of 35 years had passed away a few monthsearlier. Toby was his constant companion, the one who kept him going.注意:续写词数应为 150 左右;请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答。I realized it was me who was at fault.With the biscuits my wife had made, I arrived at my brother's door.详细思路和解析确定主题:文章核心是兄弟间因聚会中对狗的处理产生矛盾,后续应围绕和解展开,体现亲情的珍贵与包容。第一段续写:以 “I realized it was me who was at fault.” 开头,要深入描写 “我”反思过错的心理活动。比如回忆哥哥的遭遇,明白自己当时做法的不妥,从而决定主动修复关系,可写 “我” 思考如何向哥哥道歉。第 二 段 续 写 : “ With the biscuits my wife had made, I arrived at my brother'sdoor.” 接着写 “我” 带着诚意去道歉,着重描述见到哥哥后两人的对话、情感交流,最终实现和解。参考示例I realized it was me who was at fault. I thought about all that my brother hadbeen through. Losing his wife and facing health problems, Toby was his source ofcomfort. I shouldn't have been so inconsiderate about his feelings. I decided tomake things right. I called my wife and told her my plan. She was happy that I hadfinally seen the error of my ways. We discussed what I could do to show mybrother how sorry I was.With the biscuits my wife had made, I arrived at my brother's door. My heartwas pounding as I rang the doorbell. When he opened the door, I could see thesurprise on his face. "Hi," I said, feeling a bit nervous. "I came to apologize. I waswrong not to consider how much Toby means to you." He looked at me for amoment, and then his expression softened. "Come in," he said. As we sat downand shared the biscuits, we talked about everything. I apologized again, and heforgave me. With Toby by our side, our relationship was mended, and I knew ourbond as brothers was stronger than any misunderstanding.可能用到的语料1.表达愧疚与反思I felt a pang of guilt wash over me.(我感到一阵愧疚袭来。)I couldn't stop reproaching myself for my thoughtless actions.(我不停地责备自己的轻率行为。)2.描述情感和解The tension in the air melted away as we hugged each other.(当我们拥抱时,空气中的紧张感消失了。)Our eyes met and I could see the hurt replaced by warmth and understanding.(我们目光交汇,我看到伤害渐渐消退,取而代之的是温暖与理解。)3.关于陪伴的重要性In times of hardship, a loyal companion can be a ray of sunshine in the darkestdays.(在艰难时刻,一个忠诚的伙伴可以是黑暗日子里的一缕阳光。)He found solace in the unwavering loyalty of his pet.(他在宠物坚定不移的忠诚中找到了慰藉。)参考题目:---参考答案(仅供参考)---听力:1-5:CABAC 6-10:BCAAB11-15:CCABA 16-20:BACDC阅读理解:A 篇:21-23 CCB B 篇:24-27 DDBAC 篇:28-31 CABA D篇:34-35 CABB七选五:36-40 EDCFG完形填空:41-55 CDCAB, BDCDA, ABBAC语法填空:56.which 57.the 58.to present 59.guidance 60.within 61.are revealed 62.tries 63. strategic 64.and65.digitally 展开更多...... 收起↑ 资源列表 【新课标I卷】2025年安徽省普通高等学校招生全国统一考试英语听力.mp3 【新课标I卷】2025年安徽省普通高等学校招生全国统一考试英语试卷真题+参考答案.pdf 【新课标I卷】2025年安徽省普通高等学校招生全国统一考试英语试卷真题.pdf