2026届北京市西城区下学期4月高三统一测试英语试卷(含答案)

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2026届北京市西城区下学期4月高三统一测试英语试卷(含答案)

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西城区高三统一测试试卷
英语
本试卷共 13 页,共 100 分。考试时长 90 分钟。
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。
We are told never to judge a book by its cover, but few of us actually follow that advice. I
used to think I had a good _____ on people. Quiet meant cold, and confident meant arrogant (自大的). I was especially sure of this when it came to Marcus Greene, who sat behind me in chemistry class. He was the type of person who never raised his hand and rarely made eye contact. , I assumed he thought he was too good for the rest ofus. Distant. Maybe even rude.
One day in class, we were paired up for a group project. When the teacher announced our names together, I heavily. He looked over and gave me a small nod. No smile, no
greeting, just that. I rolled my eyes.
Our first meeting was in the library after school. I expected it to be , maybe even
annoying, but to my surprise, Marcus came prepared. He had notes and questions. Not only that,
but he even had suggestions for how we could divide the work fairly. I asked “Are you always this ” He said, “Only when I care about something.”
Over the next two weeks, we worked side by side. He wasn’t the person I thought he was. He didn’t look down on others; he was just shy. He didn’t avoid people; he just didn’t know how to . Slowly, I learned more about him. None of that arrogance I’d to him was real. It had been nothing more than my assumption, wrapped up in his silence.
The day we presented our project, our teacher praised us for our . I turned to Marcus and said, “I’m glad we got paired up.” He looked down, smiled faintly, and replied, “Me too.”
That was the day I realized I was wrong about him. And more importantly, it was the day I realized how easy it is to someone when you don’t bother to look deeper. Since then, I’ve tried to listen more closely, judge more slowly, and give people the to show me who they
are.
1 .A .read B .focus C .comment D .impression
2 .A .Luckily B .Naturally C .Hopefully D .Suddenly
3 .A .cried B .sighed C .protested D .sweated
4 .A .formal B .smooth C .urgent D .awkward
5 .A .relaxed B .critical C .organized D .confident
6 .A .hang on B .show off C .reach out D .make up
7 .A .assigned B .owed C .explained D .presented
8 .A .ambition B .curiosity C .tolerance D .cooperation
9 .A .ignore B .describe C .recognize D .misunderstand
10 .A .space B .reason C .guidance D .pressure
第二节 (共 10 小题; 每小题 1.5 分, 共 15 分)
A
阅读下面短文,根据短文内容填空。在未给提示词的空白处仅填写 1 个恰当的单词,在给出提示词的空白处用括号内所给词的正确形式填空。
I sat in my professor’s office and spoke out everything that had been troubling me for
months: the stress and the self-doubt. He 11 (calm) listened and said, “You are here to learn to ride a bicycle, not to invent a bicycle.” That sentence opened something up. This experience marked a turning point, 12 I realized the need to refocus on my initial purpose. I 13
(seek) to worry less, and every project became a meaningful step forward and a story worth sharing, whether it failed or succeeded.
B
阅读下面短文,根据短文内容填空。在未给提示词的空白处仅填写 1 个恰当的单词,在给出提示词的空白处用括号内所给词的正确形式填空。
Do you ever struggle to stay focused and get tasks 14 (do) If so, you can try the
Pomodoro Technique, a time management tool. It involves dividing work tasks into 25-minute
periods, known as pomodoros, with breaks scheduled 15 periods. Introduced in the 1980s, the Pomodoro Technique 16 (gain) greater popularity over the past years thanks to its ability to
help prevent burnout and bining focused work with brief breaks 17 (allow) people to achieve more without losing concentration or getting stressed.
C
阅读下面短文,根据短文内容填空。在未给提示词的空白处仅填写 1 个恰当的单词,在给出提示词的空白处用括号内所给词的正确形式填空。
Professor Zhao Haiying leads a team combining AI, big data and archaeology (考古学)
18 (build) a “digital gene bank of Chinese civilization”. Her inspiration came through carpets while she was studying 19 one art form connects countries and regions. Her team has defined six core categories of cultural genes, which is essential for revealing patterns of evolution through time and space. 20 (partner) with various museums, they have interconnected millions of
digital artifacts. “Our mission is connection, not just collection,” Zhao says.
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。
A
Loved Before
The first eco-friendly,fully sustainable soft toy adoption agency
“Several years back, during my time as a volunteer at a charity shop, I observed the arrival of second-hand toys at the store. These pre-loved toys, often handed over with cherished
memories and emotional significance, were carelessly cast aside, sometimes became dog toys or, even more dishearteningly, destined for the landfill.
It became evident to me how the love, lively life, and stories of these eco-toys were at risk of being lost and forgotten in an instant. That was when Loved Before was born with the mission to revolutionize our perspective on sustainable toys.”
---Charlotte, Founder
What we do
□ Your pre-loved toys arrive at our headquarter where they officially become Loved
Befores and have a tailored and thorough “Spa” treatment to make them clean.
□ Each toy will have its own photoshoot, be added to the store along with the story of their previous lives and adventures, and be re-homed to their new family!
□ At least half of the profit from every one of our sustainable toys once adopted goes to Make-A-Wish, a non-profit organization who creates and fulfils life-changing wishes for children living with critical illnesses.
What we believe
□ Imperfect I’m perfect: Our collections showcase toys that have weathered the
journey of life---worn and beautifully imperfect. Loved Before believes that in the world of love and acceptance, “imperfections” hold no weight. True beauty lies in the individuality of each toy, and there’s no such thing as “perfect” .
□ Saving the world, one teddy at a time: While our passion for teddies is undeniable, at Loved Before, we view our mission as a driving force for a broader shift in mindset---one where
sustainable toys, particularly our eco-friendly teddies, mark just the beginning! We passionately believe that the world is already filled with enough soft toys to last a lifetime, eliminating (消除) the necessity to produce more. By shifting perceptions of pre-loved items, we’re on a mission to revolutionize the toy industry forever. Our collection is a movement towards a greener, more
conscious playtime.
21 .What inspired Charlotte to start Loved Before
A .The improper treatment of old toys. B .The new attitude toward dog toys.
C .The profits from charities. D .The donations from kids.
22 .According to the passage, Loved Before .
A .fulfils toy owners’ wishes B .helps to cure sick children
C .shares the toys’ life stories D .buys thoroughly cleaned toys
23 .What is the significance of Loved Before
A .Achieving perfection in life. B .Stressing the impact of teddies.
C .Promoting the production of toys. D .Raising environmental awareness.
B
I have always felt most comfortable in the classroom, and I enjoy the recognition from
family and teachers for accomplishing a job well. Although I was a high achiever, I was not a
student who joined every club. Throughout my life, I wanted to learn more than I wanted to be in a bunch of extracurriculars (课外活动).
My academic journey continued at a community college, where I joined the student
newspaper. In the newsroom, I discovered an engaging, fast-paced world that allowed me to never stop learning. It was just what I had expected. Now my transfer (转学) to Drake University for a journalism degree was a no-brainer. It was exciting to see my future become clear, but I never
pictured the shock waves headed my way.
The campus phenomenon known as “Drake Busy” was completely unexpected. The term
describes the idea that constant busyness is the main indicator of college success. Within the first week, I felt heavy pressure to be active in all the ways my peers (同伴) were. I saw students trying to balance multiple jobs and organizations alongside schoolwork. As a student used to having
confidence in the classroom, I felt this new standard threatened my identity and worsened my
anxiety. I spent my first term struggling with doubts about my worthiness. My anxious thoughts
tricked my mind into believing lies like “You’re not good enough.” A part of my mind realized
those thoughts were not true, but that sensible voice was a whisper compared to the shouts of
doubt. As a witness to this battle every day, I have learned that sometimes it just takes time to chip away at my mind’s inventions.
In time, I recognized that my experience as a transfer student was different but valuable.
The outsider perspective helped me tackle “Drake Busy”. I watched people trying to do too much at the expense of their well-being. I wanted to shake them and say, “Why do this to yourself ”
Instead of fighting the current, I eventually learned to swim in my own lane. The pressure didn’t disappear, but my need to give in to it did. I realized that my worth wasn’t calculated by the number of meetings on my calendar, but by the real satisfaction I felt in my work. On the days I
managed to balance my ambition with my peace of mind, I felt most motivated. I discovered that:
true success is defined internally, not by the noise around you.
24 .Before entering Drake University, the author .
A .adopted a relaxing lifestyle B .longed to become a teacher
C .struggled to choose a major D .performed well academically
25 .How did the author feel within the first week at Drake University
A .Unaccustomed. B .Relieved. C .Regretful. D .Expectant.
26 .What does the author think of the “Drake Busy” lifestyle
A .It lowers students’ learning efficiency. B .It indicates students’ future success.
C .It threatens students’ well-being. D .It erases students’ self-doubt.
27 .What message does the passage deliver
A .Outsiders rarely win. B .Your own pace matters.
C .Busyness equals worthiness. D .Your anxiety drives you forward.
C
Intelligence is changing. For most of modern history, IQ was treated as the gold standard
for potential, and later, EQ became the best way to succeed in relationship-driven spaces. Now,
both are being challenged because AI models can complete cognitive (认知的) tasks with superior speed and accuracy while simulating (模拟) emotional connections with users in ways that feel
increasingly realistic.
Many of the abilities we once relied on to stand out are no longer exclusively human. Once, being the smartest in the room ensured success. Today, this advantage weakens---AI drafts
complex strategies and processes information at a range and speed no human can match. The
differentiator shifts from accessing information to interpreting it wisely, leaving many questioning their place as human skills are easily automated.
One capacity gaining attention is spiritual intelligence (SQ). Although the term is often
misunderstood as religious, most researchers use it in a worldly way to describe how people find meaning and direction in their lives. The common thread is that SQ can influence how we orient (标定方向) ourselves when familiar strategies fail, encouraging us to question whether
productivity alone can sustain a meaningful life.
SQ can serve as a framework to exercise our agency and stay connected to what matters
during periods of rapid change and uncertainty. Unlike IQ and EQ, SQ resists automation because it develops through lived experience and the ongoing process of making meaning in our lives. It
helps us perceive not only what we can do, but why it matters.
Current research has associated higher levels of SQ with greater resilience (韧性), more moral leadership behaviors, higher well-being, and stronger interpersonal trust. One credible
explanation is that SQ strengthens our sense of agency: when we root our decisions in meaning, we approach complexity with intentionality instead of urgency. Such value is reflected in its key qualities.
Three key qualities of people who have developed SQ are often identified in research. First is systems awareness. Scholars believe SQ enables a broader perspective to spot event patterns
and connections, with qualitative studies showing high SQ scorers often think interdependently.
Besides, individuals with strong SQ tend to exhibit a purpose-driven orientation. Cambridge
research suggests that having a sense of purpose is linked to motivation, creativity and well-being. SQ centers on purpose, though the direct causal pathway between SQ and purpose remains more correlational than definitive. Equally important is the quality of presence. Practices like
mindfulness tied to SQ reduce reactivity and boost attention regulation, helping individuals stay grounded under stress for intentional actions.
Perhaps SQ’s most notable trait is its gradual growth, with no dramatic reinvention needed. It emerges through honest reflection and a willingness to revisit long-held beliefs, accessible to
anyone willing to engage with themselves intentionally and curiously. As AI advances, human
uniqueness may shift from what we can produce to how we interpret, make choices, and live out our values. IQ and EQ will remain valuable, but no longer define our uniqueness. SQ---the ability to find consistence amid rapid change---may become our most essential human skill.
28 .What are the first two paragraphs mainly about
A .Why new competitive skills are challenged.
B .When traditional human advantages will fail.
C .How human uniqueness is shifting in the AI era.
D .What makes AI superior in information processing
29 .What can be inferred about spiritual intelligence
A .It proves to be the cause of purpose.
B .It grows by abandoning long-held beliefs.
C .It helps people stay rooted amid uncertainty.
D .It facilitates urgent decisions in complex situations.
30 .Which would be the best title for the passage
A .SQ’s Advantages Over IQ & EQ
B .The Rise of Spiritual Intelligence
C .The Development of Human Intelligence
D .How Human Intelligence Outperforms Al
D
Pictures and videos ofall sorts of animals regularly go viral these days because people connect with the apparent joy, friendship and playfulness of these animals. Unfortunately, the initial enthusiasm of these posts is often squashed by someone rightly noting that the animal’s reaction is not joy or pleasure, but fear, anger or pain.
The reason we often get cases like this wrong is that we interpret the emotional content of many behaviors automatically and unconsciously. This is a version of anthropomorphism:
interpreting animals as we would interpret another human. The standard view has been that
anthropomorphism is primarily an error of overestimating the intelligence of animals. In recent
decades, many authors have pushed back against this attitude towards anthropomorphism, arguing animals are a lot like us and that many “anthropomorphic” claims about animals are actually true.
Instead of getting caught in a black-and-white debate, however, I want a more complicated, informed discussion of competing ideas. Once we agree that animals do in fact, have emotions, we can acknowledge that the anthropomorphic mistake is not seeing emotion where there is none---it is seeing the wrong emotion.
Each of us has a set of perceptual, emotional and cognitive capacities that allow us to
engage and understand one another socially. These capacities help guide and structure all sorts of interactions, and we are generally not even aware we are using them. They are generally, but not perfectly, tuned for human interaction. Things can get messy, though, when we use them to
interpret animals. Perhaps the best-studied version of this is the primate “grin” (灵长类动物的咧嘴笑). The animal is not happy, it turns out. The exact signaling function varies by species, but it usually signals something more like fear or anxiety, often by a submissive individual in a tense
social situation. This is, in fact, anthropomorphism, because you are interpreting an animal’s
behavior in the same way we would interpret human behavior. This kind of anthropomorphism is a form of cognitive bias (偏见) resulting from shortcuts taken by our reasoning processes, usually without our awareness.
We should approach the topic of anthropomorphism from the angle of bias. Traditionally,
assumptions about how and when people anthropomorphise have been so fixed that the
psychology did not seem worth investigating. Slightly different attitudes can be found. For
example, even though they advocate for anthropomorphic views of animals, the zoologists Jesus
Rivas and Gordon Burghardt memorably note that it can be tricky: “Anthropomorphism comes in many forms and can catch you off guard!” While the recognition of “many forms” is progress, it makes the need for evidence-based research only more pressing. By focusing on implicit (隐性的) anthropomorphism, we shift attention from debating specific “humanlike” features to examining the deeper psychological mechanisms that make anthropomorphism so slippery. This, I believe, is the most challenging and most significant dimension of the problem.
31 .What does the word “squashed” underlined in Paragraph 1 probably mean
A .Awakened. B .Dampened. C .Misguided. D .Underestimated.
32 .What can we learn about anthropomorphism
A .It turns animals’ negative emotions into positive ones
B .It underrates the emotional capacities of animal species.
C .It contributes to the shortcuts of our reasoning processes.
D .It reflects the projection of human qualities onto animals
33 .The author quotes Jesus and Gordon to .
A .confirm the value of anthropomorphism
B .highlight the complexity of anthropomorphism
C .warn us of the limitations of anthropomorphism
D .remind us to view anthropomorphism positively
34 .What does the author intend to do by writing this passage
A .Propose a fresh perspective. B .Analyze a worrying tendency.
C .Evaluate the credibility of a theory. D .Explore the origin of a phenomenon.
第二节 (共 5 小题; 每小题 2 分, 共 10 分)
根据短文内容, 从短文后的七个选项中选出能填入空白处的最佳选项, 并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。选项中有两项为多余选项。
Cut your sugar, get some exercise, eat your vegetables, sleep well. Every day, we are
surrounded by information about how to live longer, healthier, happier lives. 35 It is to engage in the arts.
Over the past few decades, evidence has been increasing to suggest that being more creative works wonders for our health. 36 And the results are astonishing, from music in surgery
reducing the amount of painkillers and anti-anxiety medicines needed, to dance programs helping people with Parkinson’s disease to walk.
But the arts aren’t just there for us when we are sick. As a public health scientist. I spend
my days looking at data from studies---massive datasets that contain thousands of individuals who have completed questionnaires, had nurse interviews, donated blood samples and undergone brain imaging every few years of their lives. 37 Using complex statistical methods, we can look at the long-term relationship between everyday arts engagement and dozens of health outcomes.
The results are remarkable. Children who engage more with the arts have a reduced risk of developing problems like depression later in life. Adults who participate more frequently in the
arts and visit cultural venues are happier and feel more satisfied with their lives over the years and decades that follow
38 Kindergarteners who engage in music activities have increased prosocial skills as they head into primary school. Teenagers who are involved in bands, dance and editing school newspapers are less likely to get involved in antisocial behaviors or crime.
I want to be clear: I am not suggesting the arts can solve all problems. 39 But the
evidence remains that engaging regularly in creative activities that you enjoy is an investment in your health that is worth making.
A .The benefits aren’t just psychological either.
B .Regular arts engagement goes beyond boosting physical health.
C .But there is one piece of advice I bet you have never been given.
D .Many of these studies contain buried questions on arts engagement.
E .Arts can be inaccessible to people because of cost and other reasons.
F .Crafts, singing, theatre and writing are good for us as part of our daily lives.
G .Programs being developed around the world are starting to integrate the arts into healthcare.
第三部分 书面表达(共两节, 32 分)
第一节 (共 4 小题; 第 40 、41 题各 2 分, 第 42 题 3 分, 第 43 题 5 分, 共 12 分)
阅读表达
It often took me weeks or even months to begin writing something. I tended to put it off,
reasoning that at some point I would land in that perfect moment where my thoughts would flow. But that moment didn’t always arrive, and I ended up putting together a hurriedly written piece
only when the deadline became dangerously close.
It was 10 p.m. on a winter night and I was sitting at my laptop, staring at a blank Word
document. My thesis proposal deadline approached. I hadn’t written a word despite weeks of
thinking. Earlier that evening, when I met another Ph.D. student, Sachin, for our regular monthly dinner, he was equally stuck---buried under the weight of a fellowship application. We set out to make a change. So, we made a pact (约定): After dinner, we would sit together, laptops open,
phones away, no excuses. It was the fuel I needed to finally start writing.
Our informal pact soon became a habit. We scheduled weekly 90-minute sessions, which
gave us a distraction-free space to write something, however imperfect. We began each session by naming a small goal. That 5-minute planning made the rest ofthe session surprisingly productive. Instead of worrying about writing an entire proposal, we only had to finish a tiny piece of it. Those small wins built confidence. A few sentences grew into paragraphs, then into complete proposals with enough time before the deadline to get feedback from professors. Writing never got easy, as I’d hoped, but it became less isolating and more productive. Sachin and I had both seen our mates face similar challenges and wanted to bring this experience to a broader group. So we launched
co-working sessions for the students in our department. We started with 5 minutes of goal setting, followed by 75 minutes of silent, focused writing, and ended with a short reflection period.
Now dozens of students have attended. What began as two anxious students staring at blank screens has grown into a small community that makes writing less lonely. Our experience showed us that accountability and a shared sense of purpose can lower the barriers that make writing so
scary. No one should have to write alone
40 .What was the pact between the author and Sachin for writing
41 .Why did the author and Sachin start co-working sessions for their mates
42.Please decide which part is false in the following statement, then underline it and explain why.
The co-working sessions helped to remove the block that made writing frightening.
43 .Apart from making a pact, what other way(s) would you use to improve productivity (In about 40 words)
第二节 (20 分)
44.假设你是红星中学高三学生李华。你的英国好友 Jim 听说你参加了全球青少年机器人设计大赛,想了解相关情况。请你用英文给他发邮件,内容包括:
1. 介绍你的参赛作品:
2. 分享参赛感想。
注意:1. 词数 100 左右;
2. 开头和结尾已给出,不计入总词数。
Dear Jim,
Yours,
Li Hua
1 .A 2 .B 3 .B 4 .D 5 .C 6 .C 7 .A 8 .D 9 .D
10 .A
11 .calmly 12 .where/when 13 .sought
14 .done 15 .between 16 .has gained 17 .Allows
18 .to build 19 .how 20 .Partnering
21 .A 22 .C 23 .D
24 .D 25 .A 26 .C 27 .B
28 .C 29 .C 30 .B
31 .B 32 .D 33 .B 34 .A
35 .C 36 .G 37 .D 38 .A 39 .E
40.After dinner, they would sit together, laptops open, phones away, no excuses. 41.Because they had both seen their mates face similar challenges and wanted to bring this experience to a
broader group. 42 .The co-writing sessions helped to remove the block that made writing frightening.
The co-writing sessions helped to lower the barriers that made writing frightening. 43 .略
44 .范文:
Dear Jim,
Great to hear from you! You asked about the robot competition-honestly, it was the highlight of my year! Let me tell you more about it.
My teammates and I created a “Smart Companion Robot” designed to assist elderly people living alone. It can not only chat with users, but also detect falls, remind them to take medication, and even make emergency calls.
This competition was truly a rewarding and eye-opening experience. I improved my
programming skills and learned a lot about teamwork and time management. Also, seeing how young minds worldwide tackle global challenges was incredibly motivating.
What’s new with you Drop me a line when you can!
Yours,
Li Hua

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