湖北省部分名校2026届高三下学期4月联考英语试卷(含解析,无听力音频有听力原文)

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湖北省部分名校2026届高三下学期4月联考英语试卷(含解析,无听力音频有听力原文)

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高三英语参考答案
听力:
1-5 CABAC
6-10 AABCB
11-15 BCCAA
16-20 CACBB
阅读理解:
21-23BAC
24-27 ABDB
28-31 BCDA
32-35 CDCD
36-40 GEABD
完形填空:
41-45 ABCBD
46-50 ADCBC
51-55 BCDAD
语法填空:
56.what
57.evaluating
58.trained
59.a
60.has been celebrated
61.contains
62.but/vet/while
63.largely
64.individuals
65.into
应用文:
参考范文:
Dear Editor,
I'm Li Hua,a Grade 3 student.Learning that our school English newspaper plans to add a fun
learning column,I'd like to recommend the Crossword Puzzle from our textbook.
Crossword puzzles make learning enjoyable.They help us remember new words and spellings in
an interesting way.Besides,the clues are often given in English,which helps us better understand and
memorize words through context.Solving puzzles also develops logical thinking and problem-solving
skills.To make the column more attractive,I suggest designing puzzles based on different themes,such
as animals,school life,or traditional culture.Meanwhile,the difficulty should be appropriate for
students of different levels to ensure everyone can participate.Offering small prizes for correct answers
might encourage greater participation.
I hope my suggestion helps.Thank you for your time!
Yours,
Li Hua
读后续写:
参考范文:
Then one day,an unexpected email arrived.As Diane scrolled through her inbox,a name jumped
out at her:Erika.Heart racing,she clicked it open."I can't believe it,"Erika wrote."Your message sat
forgotten in my old account for months.I never stopped wondering if anyone would find that bottle!"
Tears welled up as Diane read those words-the bottle on her shelf was no longer a mystery,but a
miracle.She replied instantly,and soon emails flew across the ocean.With each reply,the distance
between them shrank,and before long,a date was set to finally meet on the beach where the bottle
landed.
第1页共19页高三英语
第一部分 听力(共两节,满分30分)
第一节(共5小题;每小题1.5分,满分7.5分)
听下面5段录音。每段录音后有一个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C 三个选项中选出最佳选项。 听完每段录音后,你都有10秒钟的时间来回答有关小题和阅读下一小题。每段录音播放两遍。
1. Why was Lisa absent from the meeting
A.She was ill. B.She went for a drive. C.She visited her mother.
2.Where are the speakers
A.In a restaurant. B.In a supermarket. C.In a hotel.
3.What does the woman think of the man's suggestion
A.Serious. B.Impractical. C.Simple.
4.What are the speakers talking about
A.A delayed interview. B.A terrible rainstorm. C.An international flight.
5. What will the man do next
A.Go upstairs. B.Make a phone call. C.Turn to a receptionist
第二节(共15小题;每小题1.5分,满分22.5分)
听下面5段录音。每段录音后有几个小题,从题中所给的 A、B、C 三个选项中选出最佳选 项。听每段录音前,你将有时间阅读各个小题,每小题5秒钟;听完后,每小题都有5秒钟的作 答时间。每段录音播放两遍。
听第6段录音,回答第6、7题。
6.What is the relationship between the speakers
A.Co-workers. B.Neighbors. C.Sports teammates.
7.What might the speakers do together
A.Go for a walk. B.Swim in a lake. C.Read a book.
听第7段录音,回答第8、9题。
8. What does the woman want to do
A.Go to see a doctor. B.Hand in her paper late. C.Get help in choosing a subject.
9. What will the woman offer
A.A sick note. B.A doctor's certificate. C.Her medical record.
听第8段录音,回答第10至12题。
10.What was rearranged about the man's business tour
A.What to do. B.When to go.
11.What relation is Jessie to the man
A.His customer. B.His wife.
12.What is Jessie going to do next
A.Do some shopping. B.Pack the suitcase.
听第9段录音,回答第13至16题。
13.What is the man dissatisfied with about the food
A.The taste. B.The price.
14.What is the man's opinion of the service on board
A.Slow. B.Efficient.
15.What prevented the man from sleeping on the plane
A.The broken seat.
B.The person next to him.
C.The entertainment facilities.
16.What can the man get
A.A free hotel stay.
B.A cheap flight ticket.
C.Discounted accommodations.
听第10段录音,回答第17至20题。
17.What makes the theater famous nowadays
A.The celebrity artists.
B.The well-known musicals.
C.The ancient building.
18.What can the visitors get from the Market Place
A.Drink. B.Food.
19.When will the visitors go to the Regional Food Center A.At about 9:40. B.At about 10:45.
20.Why will the visitors go to the Regional Food Center A.To buy cheese.
B.To have a lunch break.
C.To learn to make juice.
C.Where to go.
C.His secretary.
C.Go to the cleaner's.
C.The amount.
C.Professional.
C.Handiwork.
C.At about 11:00.
第 2 页 共 1 2 页
第二部分 阅读理解(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 和 D 四个选项中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将 该项涂黑。
A
Join us for the third annual BrainFest,a day of brainy fun for all ages.Explore hands-on activities, learn about cutting-edge neuroscience(神经科学)research,and even touch a real brain!
10:00-10:45 a.m. Live Science Stage Brain Trivia Challenge:Interactive Trivia Game Learn fascinating facts about the most incredible organ in your body with this interactive trivia game(知识问答游戏)for all ages!
11:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m PACCAR IMAX Theater Guided Tour of the Brain:Human Brain Dissection Join local neuroscientists to explore the structures of the brain, featuring a real human brain donated to the University of Washington for educational use. Recommended for ages 10+.
2:00-3:00 p.m. Laser Dome Laser Show:Pre-show Talk on Lasers in Neuroscience Before your laser(激光)show,enjoy a short talk by a neuroscientist from the Allen Institute exploring how we use laser technology to better understand the brain.
3:00-4:00 p.m. Live Science Stage Future Brain Tech:The Great Debate How could futuristic brain technologies change our society Join University of Washington students in a mind-expanding tournament to explore the social impacts of emerging brain technologies.
3:30-4:30 p.m. Willard Smith Planetarium The Universe Inside Your Head:A Journey through the Brain What happens in your brain when you see a star Learn how your eyes and brain interpret visual information while enjoying stunning imagery of real neurons.
A limited quantity of free tickets are available on site.First come,first served.
Guests may also purchase a General Admission ticket online in advance.Whether you're new to this field or simply fascinated by how(the mind works,BrainFest 2026 promises a full day of discovery,inspiration,and wonder.
BRAINFEST
21.Where can participants observe a genuine brain firsthand
A.Live Science Stage. B.PACCAR IMAX Theater.
C.Laser Dome. D.Willard Smith Planetarium.
22.What can participants do at 3:10 p.m.
A.Engage in a stimulating event.
B.Appreciate a grand laser show.
C.Visit University of Washington.
D.Listen to a brain technology speech.
23.Who is BrainFest intended for
A.Science experts. B.Laser show goers.
C.Neuroscience enthusiasts. D.Science-fiction fans.
B
In kindergarten,my teacher handed me child-safe scissors.As I squeezed my fingers into the handles,the paper turned into a mess.She sighed,"Try harder.”What she didn’t know was that I had just begun my lifelong fight against a world built for the right hand.
That fight follows me everywhere.Lecture seats with desks on the right twist my body like a knot and leave handwriting that looks like a doctor's notes.Scissors,zippers,notebooks and even door handles seem to work against us.When I took up guitar in college,my instructor looked at me as if I had done something strange.Apparently,left-handed guitars are “special order”—code for twice the price,half the sympathy.
You'd think a few legends would change things.Paul McCartney flipped his bass and changed music forever.Rafael Nadal trained his left hand to become a tennis champion.Even Isaac Newton was left-handed.But no.Despite all these famous lefties,the world still treats us like some kind of oddity. My grandmother,for instance,once tied my left hand behind my back.“Use your right,”she ordered.I triedand spilled a whole bowl of soup on the floor.She gave up,muttering,“Maybe she's special.”I think she meant “hopeless.”
Science,of course,has my back.Researchers say lefties are more creative and better at problem-solving.It's no surprise we're common among artists,musicians,and athletes.When you've spent your life wrestling with scissors and doorknobs that don’t fit,a blank page or a tennis racket feels like child's play.
Even so,the daily comedy continues,At restaurants,I’ve developed a sixth sense for table positioning always to the left of right-handers. People still stare sometimes,but I've come to enjoy it. Being left-handed isn't just about using a different hand—it's about thinking differently,adapting constantly,and laughing through the chaos.After all,in a right-handed world,being left isn't wrong—it's just brilliantly inconvenient.
24.What do we know about the author's guitar instructor
A.He thought her playing odd.
B.He placed a special guitar order.
C.He suggested changing her habit.
D.He felt sympathy for left-handers.
25.Why does the author mention several celebrities
A.To celebrate influential figures.
B.To show fame fails to end bias.
C.To inspire disadvantaged groups.
D.To prove ability earns recognition.
26.What strength do left-handers possess according to researchers
A.Natural talent for children's games.
B.Smooth adaptation to surroundings.
C.Good command of regularly-used tools.
D.Exceptional competence in solving problems.
27.What is the author's present attitude towards being left-handed
A.Proud and casual. B.Relieved and optimistic.
C.Confused and hesitant. D.Resigned and unconcerned.
C
“Have you raised a lobster(龙虾)yet ”This question has been heard frequently across China recently.“Lobster”is the nickname for OpenClaw,a multi-purpose AI agent whose logo resembles a lobster.Unlike traditional chatbots that only provide answers,OpenClaw can open applications,search for information,compare prices,generate documents and complete multi-step tasks with minimal supervision.Thousands have lined up to try it,and tech giants are rushing to offer setup services. However,these powerful digital assistants are turning on their owners,raising urgent concerns about AI safety.
The core problem of “OpenClaw”lies in a dangerous capability mismatch.According to researchers from Harvard and Stanford,today's AI agents possess Level 4 autonomy,meaning they can independently complete complex,multi-step tasks.Yet their security judgment remains at basic Level2, roughly equal to a young kid's understanding of consequences.Security experts call this the "judgment-action gap,"which results in the “fatal trifecta (三连击)”: agents have system access, process untrusted inputs,and steal or leak data—all without proper boundaries.
To investigate these risks,researchers conducted controlled experiments with six OpenClaw instances,each given email access and maximum system permissions.The results were alarming.In one
experiment,an agent asked to delete a single email instead reset the entire account.In another,a simple display name change tricked an agent into deleting its own core files.Perhaps the most disturbing was a "constitution attack,"where hidden instructions secretly placed into a behavior guide caused the agent to disable other systems without question.These are not hypothetical—real-world incidents have already occurred.
The implications are obvious and pressing.As cybersecurity experts warn,OpenClaw's “blurred trust boundaries”and autonomous system access create unacceptable risks for average users.The technology itself is neither good nor bad—it can reduce stress and spark creativity when used properly. And experts recommend strict safety measures:limit permissions,run agents in separate environments, require human confirmation for destructive actions,and maintain inaccessible backups.Ultimately,with balanced usage and fundamental safety redesign,the “Iobster-raising”trend can become a safe and meaningful part of modern life
28.What does the underlined phrase “turning on”most probably mean
A.Keeping off. B.Going against. C.Appealing to. D.Caring for.
29.According to Paragraph 2,there is a mismatch between
A.high requirement and low capability
B.massive data and limited storage space
C.strong autonomy and low safety assessment
D.full system function and poor human supervision
30.What was the most worrying finding about OpenClaw
A.Deleting its own core files on purpose.
B.Resetting the whole account by mistake.
C.Hiding its own behavior instructions secretly.
D.Shutting down other systems unquestioningly.
31.Which of the following is recommended as a safety measure
A.Storing backups beyond AI's reach.
B.Running agents in shared digital spaces.
C.Preventing AI from dangerous operations.
D.Granting AI agents unrestricted system access.
D
Psychologists have long believed willpower is the ticket to a good life.So parenting experts advocate teaching children to use willpower to resist modern temptations(诱惑).It is thought that you can build a child's willpower the way athletes build up muscles,through practice.For example, exposing children to junk food more,they claim,helps them learn to resist it.However,this assumption has a fatal flaw:it doesn't work for very long.
In fact,trying to build up kids' willpower can have the opposite effect.Humans are biologically programmed to prefer fatty and sweet foods,so regularly offering these temptations only strengthens children's desire for them.Rather than teaching self-control,this approach actually makes resisting such foods more difficult.
New studies observe what people do in real life to meet their long-term goals,and they reveal something surprising:the more successful people don't have better willpower compared to those who are less successful.Instead,successful people expose themselves to fewer temptations so they don't need to use willpower frequently.In essence,parents don't need to teach kids how to say"no”to the marshmallow (棉花糖)sitting in front of them,but rather,how to avoid being in a room with marshmallows altogether. This principle applies beyond food.For example,parents can teach kids to leave their phone in another room when studying or to use apps that block distracting websites and games.
Avoiding temptation is only half the strategy.The great thing is that parents can help kids fall in love with healthier alternatives.To shape their preferences,give your kids loads of opportunities to experience the pleasure of these healthy options.Besides,pay attention to how you talk about healthy foods and activities.Don't present them as burdens,sacrifices,or punishments.Above all,whether it's eating healthier food,doing physical exercise,or reading good books,if you make the experience more fun for your kids,then they are more likely to do it again.
32.What is a common practice to build up willpower
A.Staying away from junk food.
B.Engaging in more athletic activities.
C.Putting oneself in tempting situations.
D.Exposing oneself to their inner desire.
33.What can we learn from the new studies
A.Willpower ensures lifelong success.
B.Willpower drops with frequent use.
C.Success requires long-term planning.
D.Successful people avoid temptations.
34.What advice does the author give to parents in the last paragraph
A.Punish for giving in to desires.
B.Reinforce willpower strategies.
C.Make healthy experiences enjoyable.
D.Offer more healthy options as rewards.
35.What is the best title for the text
A.Build Willpower,Form Good Habits
B.Resist Temptation,Practice Self-Control
C.Change Parenting,Strengthen Willpower
D.Avoid Temptation,Love Healthier Choices
第二节(共5小题;每小题2.5分,满分12.5分)
阅读下面短文,从短文后的选项中选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为多余选项。
Elevators can trick your sense of gravity.Your actual weight doesn't change,yet the number on the scale tells a different story.When the elevator starts going up,the number jumps.When it stops,the number falls.Going down does the opposite. 36
The answer lies in how physicists define“weight.”Your mass remains constant.Gravity near Earth's surface stays essentially unchanged. 37 That upward push—called the normal force—is what a scale actually measures.
This distinction reveals something surprising:you cannot feel gravity.Astronauts aboard the space station prove this.Earth's gravity up there is still about 90%as strong as at the surface. 38 This is because they are falling together with the station at the same rate,so the floor never pushes up on them.Without that supporting force,they experience the sensation of weightlessness.
An elevator briefly changes how hard the floor pushes back.When it starts rising,it must accelerate (加速)you upward.The floor pushes harder than normal. 39 That extra push might add about 10%to the scale reading.Once the elevator reaches a steady speed,acceleration stops and the reading returns to normal.When it slows at the top,the opposite happens—the floor pushes less,so you feel lighter.The same pattern plays out on the way down.
40 It connects to one of Einstein's most important ideas.He realized that gravity and acceleration are fundamentally linked—an insight that helped him develop general relativity.
A.But they feel weightless.
B.For a second,you feel heavier.
C.Still,is this effect permanent,or just a feeling
D.This everyday experience turns out to be profound.
E.What changes is how hard the floor pushes upward.
F.That is because the scale reading jumps when you go up.
G.So why do you feel heavier or lighter at certain moments
第三部分 语言运用(共两节,满分30分)
第一节(共15小题;每小题1分,满分15分)
阅读下面短文,从每题所给的A 、B 、C 、D四个选项中选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。
It all started with a late-night video,in which a woman claimed she 41 no waste for a whole year.Staring at my garbage can,already full,I felt 42 and determined to try composting(堆肥)in my dorm to make the best of leftover food.How hard could it be
I placed a small bin by my desk.For the first week,I felt like a 43 ,putting in apple cores, banana peels and coffee grounds.But soon,tiny flies 44 ,flying around my room as if they owned the place.My roommate 45 me with cold,angry looks.
One day,I was mixing the overfilled bin when it 46 .A dark,wet mess spread under my bed and 47 my roommate's bag.We spent an hour cleaning while she made a serious "never again”. 48 .All of a sudden,there was a 49 .The dorm manager stood outside,saying someone had 50 an unpleasant smell.I stood there like a kid caught stealing cookies, 51 explaining everything.The manager then suggested I try the dining hall compost program,a reasonable 52 for sure.I threw away my bin that night and my zero-waste journey,which lasted three weeks,ended in 53
I still care about waste but stop trying to be 54 .Now I carry a reusable cup,bring my own bag and use the dining hall compost bin.Saving the planet means doing what you can.Every small step 55 .Especially the ones that don't attract flies.
41.A.produced B.expected C.recycled D.collected
42.A.hopeless B.ashamed C.anxious D.disappointed
43.A.looker-on B.know-it-all C.green hero D.role model
44.A.left B.gathered C.hid D.rested
45.A.signaled B.ignored C.greeted D.eyed
46.A.tipped over B.emptied out C.wore down D.rolled away
47.A.approached B.passed C.skipped D.reached
48.A.joke B.apology C.warning D.promise
49.A.noise B.knock C.chaos D.quarrel
50.A.announced B.confirmed C.reported D.created
51.A.briefly B.awkwardly C.secretly D.calmly
52.A.decision B.reminder C.alternative D.innovation
53.A.peace B.trouble C.surprise D.failure
54.A.ideal B.sensitive C.honest D.tolerant
55.A.starts B.connects C.costs D.counts
第二节(共10小题;每小题1.5分,满分15分)
阅读下面短文,在空白处填入1个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。
The art of Chinese calligraphy has been regarded not just as a visual art but as a reflection of one's character and cultivation.It was believed that we could judge a person's integrity and wisdom
by 56 naturally flows from their brush.When 57 (evaluate)calligraphy,experts look
for “spirit resonance”(气韵)—a quality extremely difficult to define,yet instantly recognizable to the 58 (train)eye.It is this pursuit of spiritual expression that lifts calligraphy to a high art form.
This philosophical depth is evident in the works of Wang Xizhi, 59 calligrapher of the Eastern Jin Dynasty,whose masterpiece “Lantingji Xu” 60 (celebrate)for centuries as the “world's best running script,"not only for its artistic excellence but also for the philosophy it 61 (contain).The preface(序言)is a beautiful essay reflecting on the passing nature of life and the joy of friendship.The original work is lost to history, 62 its aesthetic principles live on through countless copies.
Today,although typing has 63 (large)replaced handwriting in daily life,calligraphy is experiencing a revival.It serves as a balance to the digital world,offering 64 (individual)a way to slow down,focus their minds,and reconnect with their cultural heritage.What makes this art form enduring is how it transforms ink on paper 65 a living record of the human spirit.
第四部分 写作(共两节,满分40分)
第一节(满分15分)
假定你是李华,你校英语报计划增设一个趣味英语学习栏目,你觉得课本中的“Crossword Puzzle(填字游戏)”是一个不错的选择。请给报社编辑写一封信,推荐增设“填字游戏”,内容 包括:
1. 推荐理由;
2. 栏目建议。
注意:
1 .词数80左右;
2. 按如下格式在答题卡相应位置作答。
Try to guess the animal words according to the clues. Write one letter in each square.
Animals Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Big animal that has one horn
3 This animal has a very long neck
6 Man's best fiend
8 Lives in the cold and waddles
9 Slow moving amd has a shel
12 Stiped animal that looks like a borse
13 Can swim under water and walk on lnnd and has a big bite
DOVN
2 This animal has a long trunk
4 This anmal likes to eat carrots and sugar cubes
5 This animal loves bananas
7 Some say this animal has nine lives
10 Has big ears and likes to bop
11 King of the jangle
Dear editor, I’m Li Hua,a Grade 3 student.
Yours, Li Hua
第二节(满分25分)
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。
On an ordinary morning,Diane was taking her usual walk along a beach in Tasmania when something unusual caught her eye in the surf—a bottle rolling in on the waves.Curious,she picked it up and discovered a note inside.To her surprise,the message was written in Spanish.Determined to figure out what it said,Diane sought help from locals,including her brother,who had just returned from Chile with a Spanish dictionary.Word by word,they struggled to piece together a rough translation:“Life has taught me that anything is possible."
But the most important clues were easy to spot:a name,a Colombian address and an email.Those details led Diane to Erika,a woman from Colombia,who had been working on a cruise ship years earlier.One evening,bored and looking for something fun to do,Erika wrote a note,sealed it in an
empty bottle,and threw it overboard.She had imagined it reaching someone,though the possibility felt impossibly small.As life grew busy—work,family,the endless routines of daily life—she rarely checked that old email account.Yet on quiet evenings,she sometimes caught herself wondering:had anyone ever found that bottle She once mentioned to her family that if someone did,she would love to meet them—maybe even walk together on the very beach where it landed.
Diane stared at the faded ink on the note,wondering who this stranger was and how her message had traveled so far.She decided to send an email to the address,sharing the story of finding the bottle and expressing her curiosity.
Days turned into weeks,then months.No reply ever came.Each time she opened her inbox,her hope faded a little more.Had the address changed Had Erika ever received it Diane placed the bottle on her shelf,a quiet reminder of the mystery that might never be solved.
注 意 :
1. 词数150左右;
2. 按如下格式在答题卡相应位置作答。
Then one day,an unexpected email arrived.
The big day they had long imagined finally came.

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