2026届重庆市第一中学高三4月二诊考试英语试题(PDF版,无答案)

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2026届重庆市第一中学高三4月二诊考试英语试题(PDF版,无答案)

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重庆一中高 2026届高三 4月二诊考试
英语试题
注意事项:
1答卷前,考生务必将自己的姓名 准考证号等填写在答题卡和试卷指定位置上
2回答选择题时,选出每小题答案后,用铅笔把答题卡上对应题目的答案标号涂黑 如需改动,用橡皮擦干净后,再
选涂其他答案标号 回答非选择题时,将答案写在答题卡上 写在本试卷上无效
3试卷由术圈"整理排版 考试结束后,将本试卷和答题卡一并交回
第一部分听力(共 20小题,满分 30分)
第一节听下面 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 does the man want a haircut
A. He wants to look cute. B. He likes the latest trend. C. He cares about his image.
2. How is the woman feeling now
A. Anxious. B. Relieved. C. Angry.
3. When does the movie probably start tonight
A At 10:00. B. At 12:00. C. At 2:00.
4. What is the probable relationship between the speakers
A. Brother and sister. B. Husband and wife. C. Parent and child.
5. Where might the speakers be
A. In a train waiting room. B. At a bus stop. C At a gas station.
第二节听下面 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 woman's suggestion for staying healthy in winter
A. Watching what you touch outdoors.
B. Washing hands more often.
C. Wearing warm clothes.
7. What is the woman most concerned about
A. Frequent social activities. B Personal living habits. C. Seasonal travel plans.
听第 7段录音,回答第 8至 10题。
8. What is the man going to buy
A. Some food for dinner.
B. Some Christmas presents.
C. Some construction tools.
9. Why does the man want to pick up the woman
A. The bus doesn't always arrive on time.
B. He wants to go shopping with her.
C. The mall will be crowded.
10. What will the man do first when he gets home
A. Clean his home. B. Eat a small dinner. C. Make space in his car.
听第 8段录音,回答第 11至 13题。
11. Why does the man think fewer people are coming to the speech
A. It lacks an attractive topic.
B. It is scheduled for a weekday.
C. It is held in an inconvenient place.
12. How will people get the woman's message without attending
A By word of mouth. B. By magazine articles. C. By printed advertisements.
13. How does the woman sound
A. Confident. B. Surprised. C. Disappointed.
听第 9段录音,回答第 14至 17题。
14. Where did the man know about the salesman job
A. From the woman. B. From the Internet. C. From the newspaper.
15. Who is the company looking for according to the woman
A. Someone with experience.
B. Someone who is hard-working.
C. Someone who is highly focused.
16. What is the reason for the man being paid half the salary
A. Inability to start work timely.
B. Lack of car sales background.
C Need for professional training.
17. What is the main topic of the conversation
A. A salary discussion. B. A job interview. C. A training plan.
听第 10段录音,回答第 18至 20题。
18. What did the first European settlers come to Waterloo Village for
A. Looking for diamonds. B Trading animal skins. C. Growing food.
19. What is the main purpose of Waterloo Village today
A To spread Lenape culture. B. To hold music festivals. C. To sell handmade gifts.
20. Who is Frederick
A. A reporter. B. A history expert. C. A gift shop owner.
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, 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,选出最佳答案。
A
Creamy Miso-Peanut Noodle Bowl
If you' re short on time but wanting big flavours, these noodles are your new 30-minute hero.
SERVES: 4 PEOPLE
●240g noodles (or pasta) ●1tbsp olive oil
●440g firm organic tofu ●1tsp garlic oil
●240g broccoli (西兰花) ●60ml apple vinegar
●120g carrots ●Salt and freshly ground black pepper
●4 spring onions ●100g mung bean sprouts (绿豆芽)
●120g natural peanut butter ●2 lemons, cut into quarters
Method
1. Cook the noodles(or pasta) to desired doneness.
2. Slice the tofu into 1cm cubes and set aside in a small bowl.
3. Make the sauce while the noodles are cooking: Combine the peanut butter, vinegar and garlic oil in a bowl.
4. Stir-fry the broccoli for 3 minutes. Add the carrots and stir-fry for 2 minutes. Season with salt and pepper.
5. Dry the noodles, and then add to the pan with the vegetables. Stir in the cubed tofu and sauce and mix well to combine the
ingredients.
6. To serve: Divide among 4 bowls. Top each bowl with spring onions, mung bean sprouts,chopped peanuts and lemon
quarters.
Topping Composition (per bowl, by visual volume)
21. Which ingredient amount is correct for a single-serving Noodle Bowl
A.60g noodles. B. 1 tbsp olive oil. C.60ml apple vinegar. D.1 lemon.
22. What should be done before the noodles are added with the vegetables
A. Adding the cubed tofu to the pan. B. Cooking the noodles to your liking.
C. Mixing the ingredients with sauce. D. Plating the finished dish in bowls.\
23. What does the bar chart above intend to convey
A. The great flavor of all toppings. B. The amount of each topping by weight.
C. The ideal placement of toppings. D. The relative proportion of each topping.
B
ColorWalk, also referred to as Color Hunting overseas, offers a fresh approach to reducing daily anxiety and managing
emotions.
ColorWalk requires no complicated preparation or specific destination. The rules are simple:before heading out, choose a
color to focus on, then walk with the sole aim of spotting everything in that color. This simple act initiates a relaxing
journey. Many people find that this“purposeful walking” helps them temporarily escape mental friction and rediscover the
small, beautiful moments in daily life.
Ms. Kang, troubled by anxiety due to overtime work, chose green for her first ColorWalk.During the 20-minute walk,
she focused solely on finding green, and the tightness in her chest gradually faded. A college student used ColorWalk to
cope with finals week. When overwhelmed by studying, she went out in search of bright yellow and discovered sunsets,
winter jasmine flowers,and warm yellow signs. Her mood immediately lifted.
This simple task activates areas of the brain responsible for attention control. By actively choosing where to focus,
people can step back from repetitive worries, returning to“the present moment.” In a world of fragmented information,
mental exhaustion is common. ColorWalk provides an easy way to keep our mind healthy, offering overworked brains a
brief opportunity to reset and recover.
Observing colors is also a vital part of the healing process. Different colors, with their unique light wavelengths, evoke
varied feelings in the nervous system. Soft tones like blue and green quickly calm people, which is why they are often used
in hospitals and counseling rooms. Bright colors such as yellow and orange are energetic and help lift low moods.
24. What is the primary rule of ColorWalk
A. To head for a predetermined destination. B. To make detailed preparations in advance.
C To focus on a specific color in the walk. D. To document the journey on social media.
25. What does the example of Ms. Kang and the college student show
A. The scientific basis of ColorWalk. B. Different reactions to ColorWalk.
C. The wide appeal of ColorWalk. D. The practical benefits of ColorWalk.
26. How does ColorWalk affect the brain
A. It increases disordered information. B. It refreshes mental concentration.
C. It keeps the brain stuck on worries. D. It offers a lasting cure for tiredness.
27. How does the author develop the last paragraph
A. With examples and effects. B. With a list of some light colors.
C. With historical background. D. With a contrast of different ideas.
C
White Rabbit candy has not changed in 60 years. But some other things have changed. When a pop-up (快闪) shop
in Shanghai began selling drinks flavored like White Rabbit candy, people queued for up to four hours for a cup priced at 20
yuan ($2.9). China's nostalgia (怀旧) economy has reshaped how brands are marketed.
However, the White Rabbit milk tea is itself a warning tale. Once customers reached the counter after four hours,
many were disappointed." It tastes just like any regular bubble tea(珍珠奶茶 ) out there,” one told reporters. Another
posted:" It's just exploiting the classic brand."
The comments point to the central weakness of the nostalgia economy. When heritage is used primarily as a good
pricing reason, when nostalgic packaging is the product and what is inside is ordinary, consumers notice. The
disappointment runs deeper than a normal commercial letdown,because something more personal has been involved.
There are more risks. When nostalgic design becomes a recipe, the symbols stop carrying weight. And a nostalgia
economy that speaks only to one generation's memories is not building a shared culture. When the pop-up closes and the
limited edition sells out, what remains If the answer is nothing but the memory of a queue, the brand has wasted its
heritage rather than grown it.
The question facing China's nostalgia economy is not whether there is a market for continuity but whether the industry
will serve that market with depth or exploit it with shortcuts. Some of us grew up with White Rabbit candy. Others were
born too late to. But we are all looking for the same thing: a cultural identity with roots deep enough to hold, and a sense
that what is being built today is worth remembering tomorrow. Nostalgia does not offer the past. It offers a reason to feel at
home in the present.
28 What has changed about White Rabbit
A. Its drink price. B. Its brand marketing.
C. Its candy recipe. D. Its target customers.
29. Why does the author mention the customers' comments about the drink
A. To suggest the decline of the brand. B. To note the popularity of regular bubble tea.
C. To prove the high price of the drink. D. To show the trap of nostalgia-based selling.
30. What is the author's suggestion for China's nostalgia economy
A. Serving the market with shortcuts. B. Focusing on one generation's memories.
C. Using the past to root today's culture. D. Copying the past exactly as it once was.
31. What is the best title for the text
A. Nostalgia marketing puts heritage at risk. B. White Rabbit candy remains unchanged.
C. Nostalgia economy saves brand heritage. D. White Rabbit milk tea fails to satisfy fans.
D
Growing resistance to antibiotics(抗生素) is getting worse. In a July 2025 essay in Physical Review Letters, de la
Fuente, a bioengineer and computational biologist, warned of a“post-antibiotic” era.
But de la Fuente is using artificial intelligence to bring about a different future. His team is training Al tools to search
for peptides with antibiotic properties. His vision is to organize those peptides — molecules(分子 ) made of up to 50 amino
acids linked together — into various arrangements, including some never seen in nature. The results, he hopes, could defend
the body against bacteria that withstand traditional treatments.
In August 2025 , his team, described peptides hiding in the genetic code of ancient single-celled organisms. And in an
ongoing project de la Fuente calls" molecular de-extinction," he and his team have been scanning published genetic
sequences of extinct species for potentially functional molecules. In the history of life on Earth, de la Fuente reasons, maybe
some organism evolved an antimicrobial (抗菌的) defense that could be helpful today.
Biology is an information source, de la Fuente explains:" It's like a bunch of code." The code of DNA has four letters;
proteins and peptides have 20, where each" letter" represents an amino acid. De la Fuente says his work amounts to training
Al models to recognize sequences of letters that encode antimicrobial peptides, or AMPs." If you think about it that way," he
says," you can design programs to mine the code and identify functional molecules, which can be developed into various
drugs: antimicrobials to fight infections, antimalarials to combat malaria, or anticancer agents to treat tumors.
Practically speaking, we' re still not there: These peptides haven't yet been transformed into usable drugs that help
people. But AMPs are appealing because the body already uses them. They' re a critical part of the immune system and
often the first line of defense against infections. Unlike conventional antibiotics, which typically have one trick for killing
bacteria, AMPs often exhibit a multimodal approach. They may destroy the cell wall and the genetic material inside as well
as a variety of cellular processes.
32. What does“the results” in paragraph 2 refer to
A. Artificial peptides. B. Drug-resistant bacteria.
C. Trained AI tools. D. Antibiotics.
33. What can we learn about" molecular de-extinction" project
A. It aims to bring extinct species back to life. B. It focuses on how organism evolved.
C. It explores genetic resources from the past. D. It has already produced usable drugs.
34. What is the main idea of paragraph 4
A. Where scientists find functional molecules. B. Why DNA has fewer letters than proteins.
C. What diseases have been cured by AMPs. D. How AI models work for drug discovery.
35. What is the advantage of AMPs over conventional antibiotics
A. They form the first line of defense. B. They attack through multiple modes.
C. They interrupt healing processes. D. They accelerate body recovery.
第二节(共 5小题;每小题 2.5分,满分 12.5分)
阅读下面短文,从短文后选项中选出可填入空白处最佳选项。选项中有两项为多余选项。
Our solar system is named after the Latin word for sun,“Sol” The thing about our solar system is that while there are
lots of other suns and planets out there, 36
Most other systems feature planets orbiting closer to their parent sun than Mercury(水星) does,the closest planet to
Sol. Other systems also have“super Earths”. 37 And these systems usually have“hot Jupiters (木星)”, which are gas
giants orbiting very close to their sun.
38 Other systems have planets with highly non-circular orbits, similar to those of comets(彗星). In our solar
system, the planetary orbits are nearly circular and the planets are widely spaced. Other systems have planets grouped
closely together, like peas in a pod.
Astronomers, and scientists in general don't like“special” things. They like things that are“usual” or“typical” because
that allows explanation. Yet, when faced with something unusual, they seek to understand it as well. 39 One theory
states that at an early stage, Jupiter may have migrated through our solar system clearing out an initial group of large planets
orbiting closer to Sol,before it settled in its current orbit. Another, more interesting, approach is to ask whether our solar
system seems different simply because we have evolved to notice its uniqueness. 40 Or there are yet other possibilities.
A. our system is just a bit different.
B. there are more of them to be found.
C. The orbits of planets in our solar system are different too.
D. The act of observation may have changed what is observed.
E. So, of course, there are theories on why our solar system is different.
F. They are rocky planets larger than Earth but smaller than Neptune(海王星)
G. In fact, some planetary systems have orbits just as circular as those in ours.
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。
Matt Eicheldinger is a former sixth-grade teacher. He recalled a time when a student had 41 into his class from a
different country in the middle of the school year. The boy brought with him a special necklace that, at first glance,
appeared to be quite 42 —— a thick, green pendant(吊坠 )hanging from a leather string around his neck. Yet as
Eicheldinger 43 the boy day after day, he began to sense that there was something more to this simple piece of jewelry,
and he would later be proven right.
“He had a really bright smile. He was 44 to engage in class, and he made friends really quickly," Eicheldinger said.
But he noticed something about the boy's 45 : every time the boy talked to someone, his hand would rise to his chest,
fingers 46 the thick, green pendant. The necklace looked extremely 47 , as if it had been handled countless times over
many years.Eventually, 48 got the better of him, and he 49 the boy with a smile to ask about what the story was behind
his necklace and why it was so special to him.
“He said it was a collection of 50 his family wrote for him —— peace, love, and kindness—— all folded up and
bound together,” Eicheldinger recalled.“He says,‘I rub it when I talk to people because I know not everyone has those things,
so I 51 my family's sincere wishes to them.’”
Eicheldinger 52 that those moments reminded him just how lucky he was to 53 the goodness that lives within
humanity —— especially when it flows so 54 from a child. The most profound lessons often come not from 55 , but
from the quiet, sincere kindness of a child —— a kindness that, like the wishes folded into that small necklace, has the
power to touch everyone it meets.
41. A. slipped B. transferred C. entered D. settled
42. A. valuable B unusual C. familiar D. ordinary
43. A. greeted B taught C. watched D. encountered
44. A. eager B. relaxed C. ashamed D. uneasy
45. A. routine B habit C. custom D. style
46. A. feeling B. pressing C. rubbing D. tapping
47. A. worn B. unique C. plain D. soft
48. A. anxiety B. sympathy C. curiosity D. enthusiasm
49. A. spotted B. approached C. gathered D. contacted
50. A. signals B. messages C. blessings D. thoughts
51. A pass on B. show off C. take up D. hand out
52. A. ignored B. remembered C. reflected D. doubted
53. A. witness B. cherish C. observe D. devote
54. A. gradually B. obviously C. smoothly D. naturally
55. A. rewards B. textbooks C. rules D. parents
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。
China has made significant progress in wildlife conservation, with 56 (improve)habitat quality and stable
population growth for 57 (number) endangered species, according to the National Forestry and Grassland
Administration.
Over 80 percent of key state-protected on-land wildlife species in the country have been brought 58
protection, the administration noted in a media release on Tuesday, 59 marked the United Nations World Wildlife Day.
The number of key state-protected wild animal and plant species now totals 988 and about1,200, 60
(respective), the administration said. And an updated protection list now includes 61 additional 1,924 on-land wild
animal species under the category of having significant ecological, scientific, or social value, it added.
The release highlighted an in-situ conservation system centered on national parks. The country's first group of five
national parks was established in 2021, now 62 (cover) nearly30 percent of key state-protected on-land wildlife species.
It added that China has designated the first 789 important habitats for on-land wildlife, 63 (identify)1,140 bird
migration routes and established over 500 in-situ conservation sites for rare and endangered wild plants.
The administration also noted a series of measures for wild plant conservation. China has established two national
botanical gardens and three key 64 (laboratory) for wild plants. By now a network of seven national forest and grass
gene banks 65 (set) up, collecting and preserving over 28,000 species of wild plants.
第四部分写作(共两节,满分 40分)
第一节应用文写作(满分 15分)
为了帮助同学们进行生涯规划,校英文报“Career Insight”栏目计划邀请一位职业规划顾问来分享经验。作为
栏目主编,请你给这位顾问写一封约稿信。内容包括:
1.说明约稿意图;
2.期待分享的具体内容;
3.表达对稿件的期待。
注意:1.词数:80词左右;2.可适当增加细节以使行文连贯。
Dear Career Consultant,
Yours sincerely,
Editor
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。
The afternoon of July 9, 2020, had moved slowly, the way summer days do in Cheyenne.Sunlight fell through the
maple leaves in scattered patches, and the air smelled of freshly cut grass and distant rain.
Six-year-old Bridger Walker was chasing his four-year-old sister around the backyard. She wore a yellow dress that
flashed bright as she ran, her bare feet touching the grass, her dark hair streaming behind her. They had been playing tag (捉
人游戏 ) for nearly an hour, and Bridger had let her win twice, laughing as she boasted about her victory. Their mother,
visible through the kitchen window, was assembling peanut butter and jelly sandwiches on a wooden cutting
board,occasionally glancing up with that peaceful expression parents wear when the world holds still for a moment.
The backyard was surrounded by a weathered wooden fence that had stood for twenty years,its paint coming off in
soft gray curls. Beyond it, the neighbor's German Shepherd usually slept in the shade, a chain-link barrier keeping the
worlds separate.
But that afternoon, something had shifted. The dog had been bothered by the heat, by the children's shouts, by some
private issues no one would ever know. It threw itself against the fence once, twice, and on the third impact, the rotted wood
gave way with a sharp crack. The dog—eighty pounds of muscle and sudden fury— burst through and ran straight for the
little girl in yellow. Bridger's sister stopped mid-step, one foot still in the air, her face pale, her small hands rising as if to
push away what was coming. Bridger felt his heart beating wildly. He saw his sister's frozen face, saw the dog's teeth, and
moved.
Without hesitation, Bridger threw himself between the dog and his sister.
In the ambulance, his sister's small hand found his and would not let go.

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