河北保定地区2025-2026学年高二下学期6月阶段检测英语试题(含答案)

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河北保定地区2025-2026学年高二下学期6月阶段检测英语试题(含答案)

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2025-2026学年高二下学期6月阶段检测英语试题
一、阅读理解
A
Come and see some special events around the world.
Maine Lobster Festival, Rockland, New England, USA
What started as a community initiative to boost interest in local seafood has become a world-regarded festival. Each year, plenty of delicious seafood is cooked up with melted butter. You can have fun at the Lobster Crate (龙虾笼) Race, where competitors jump from crates to crates across the open water. With cooking demonstrations and competitions, you can take a little lobster inspiration from the locals back home with you.
MAD Symposium (研讨会), Copenhagen, Denmark
Founded in 2011 by a well-known Danish chef, the symposium has been running with increasing reputation, whose philosophy is to expand knowledge of food to make every meal delicious. Given that good cooking and a healthy environment can and should go hand in hand, it invites guest speakers to give people new ideas on the future of food.
Agit gueda Art Festival, gueda, Portugal
With hundreds of colourful umbrellas above the city’s streets, the festival aims to promote new musical and artistic projects with a competition for emerging artists. Other parts of the urban landscape, like park benches and stairs, are also painted in colourful examples of street art. With the festival extending over three weeks with national and international acts, visitors have enough time to see some free musical acts performed in the main tent.
South by Southwest, Austin, Texas, USA
Having more than 2,000 different acts from all over the world, South by Southwest overruns the Austin city streets with new music, art, comedy, and movies, along with speaking panels packed with a who’s who of pop culture and new media. With expert speakers, the interactive workshops on issues as diverse as design, technology, urban strategy, fashion, broadcasting, travel, and gaming will bring you different perspectives.
1. Which event was initially intended to promote the local marine products
A.Maine Lobster Festival. B.MAD Symposium.
C.Agit gueda Art Festival. D.South by Southwest.
2. What does MAD Symposium focus on
A.Philosophy. B.Agriculture. C.Artistic culture. D.Dietary culture.
3. What do Agit gueda Art Festival and South by Southwest have in common
A.They cover musical performances. B.They are held in Europe.
C.They cover interactive workshops. D.They hold competitions for artists.
B
For years, Shay Taylor walked the halls of Yale New Haven Hospital with a floor brush and cleaning cart, ensuring patient rooms were spotless. Soon, she would walk those same halls with a clinical listening tool — as a doctor.
Taylor’s journey was anything but traditional. After graduating from the top 10 percent of her high school class, Taylor had great potential but no guidance. Her single mother knew nothing about financial aid or college applications, leaving her at a loss.
At 18, needing to earn a living, Taylor took a cleaning job at the hospital, a practical decision that turned into nearly a decade of hard work. Life changed dramatically when a house fire left her mother with severe lung damage, and doctors interpreted her symptoms as psychological problems. Feeling desperate, Taylor reached out to the hospital’s CEO — whose office she cleaned — and asked for help. Her mother soon got a new medical team and a diagnosis: vocal cord dysfunction (声带功能障碍), a rarely overlooked condition.
That moment inspired Taylor’s goal: to become a doctor and advocate for unheard patients. The road was tough. Taylor taught herself each step, enrolled in college, earned a master’s degree to complete the requirements for medical school, and continued working as a cleaner at night to save money for application fees and the Medical College Admission Test (MCAT). Her resolution paid off. She was accepted into Howard University College of Medicine and recently matched for her residency — at Yale New Haven Hospital, the same place where her journey began. In a viral video, she celebrated joyfully, overcome by excitement. “I would have never imagined this,” she said. “To come back here means everything.”
Now preparing as an anesthesiology (麻醉学) resident, Taylor hopes to care for patients and ensure their voices are heard. Wanting her story to inspire others, she says, “Keep going, and don’t take a ‘no’ as the final answer.” Her journey — from cleaning rooms to saving lives — proves life paths can always be redefined, no matter the start or struggles.
4. How did Taylor feel about college applications
A.Confused. B.Uninterested. C.Carefree. D.Hopeful.
5. What made Taylor decide to be a doctor
A.The support from the hospital’s CEO.
B.The desire to help overlooked patients.
C.Her work experience as a hospital cleaner.
D.Her wish to earn more money for her family.
6. Which words can best describe Taylor
A.Pure and innocent. B.Respectful and cautious.
C.Determined and considerate. D.Courageous and imaginative.
7. What can be concluded from the text
A.Health is above wealth. B.Many hands make light work.
C.Action speaks louder than words. D.It’s never too late to rewrite your story.
C
Crop straw (秸秆) in many rural areas across China used to be commonly used for cooking or feeding farm animals. However, with the decline in rural populations and the increasing use of gas stoves and machinery in rural China, straw has been reduced to waste.
However, in Jingmen, Hubei Province, this waste has undergone a remarkable transformation, developing from mere refuse into a valuable resource. Not only has it facilitated carbon emission reduction, but it has also played a vital role in promoting economic growth. Straw remnants have been creatively repurposed into green materials used in the production of furniture.
At the foot of Shengjing Mountain in Jingmen’s Dongbao District lie 32 cottages of various shapes and sizes. The builder of the cottages claims all materials used in their construction are grown from the earth. At first sight, all cottages appear as if they were built with standard materials, but on closer inspection of the floor, for example, the structure is similar to a three-layer sandwich.
“These straw boards are primarily made from agricultural and forestry remains,” says Yang Zhijian, the general manager of a company that is the builder of the cottages. He indicates that the middle layer is made from tree branches, and the outer two are from straw, which work well as natural fire-resistant materials and dampness barriers.
Jin Peng, an assistant chairman of the company, says that using straw in board manufacturing is economical and contributes to reduced carbon emissions. On average, the company uses 600,000 to 700,000 metric tons of straw a year, according to pared with other types of agricultural and forestry remains, the price per ton of straw is about 40yuan cheaper. The company can annually reduce greenhouse gas emissions equivalent (相等的) to 384,700 tons of carbon dioxide.
Previously considered waste, straw was broken down and returned to the field by farmers, but now it is recognized for its economic benefits and potential to boost farmers’ income.
8. What creative use do people in Jingmen make of crop straw now
A.They use it to feed animals. B.They burn it for farm fertilizer.
C.They recycle it into some boards. D.They cook it for food ingredients.
9. What is special about the cottages
A.They are designed for forest conservation.
B.They have the similar structure and shape.
C.They are built with standard artificial materials.
D.They adopt natural materials with special functions.
10. What does Jin Peng think of the use of straw
A.It is low-profit and low-tech. B.It is time-saving and labor-saving.
C.It is cost-effective and eco-friendly. D.It is time-consuming and material-consuming.
11. Which of the following is the best title for the text
A.Modern Equipment Changes Rural Life Greatly.
B.Innovation Turns Agricultural Waste into Wealth.
C.Green Construction Materials Win Wide Popularity.
D.Environmental Protection Reduces Farmers’ Burden.
D
In the TV series, Doctor Who, treeborgs supply fresh air to spaceship passengers. Part tree, part robot, these devices transform starlight into oxygen. In Nnedi Okorafor’s novel, Zahrah the Windseeker, children receive their own “flora (植物群) computers”. These are personal machines made of leaves, grown from CPU seeds and shaped into useful tech. Although these devices may be fictional, flower-powered machines are getting real. This new generation of devices is a type of biohybrid technology.
Engineers have attempted to make robots that work like living things. “But re-creating the complex functions of a hand or a leaf is impossible with artificial materials,” says Anand Mishra, an engineer at Cornell University in Ithaca, N. Y. Using life-forms to build machines can overcome some limits of human technology, though. Researchers like Mishra are looking at how fungi (真菌) and plants can give machines abilities they couldn’t achieve with electronics alone. Among these life-forms, fungi have drawn special attention for their unique biological features.
Fungi aren’t plants. They’re more closely related to animals. But Mishra used one of the fungi’s most plantlike features, mycelia (菌丝), to help his bots sense their surroundings. Fungi use these rootlike structures to tunnel through soil for nutrients. Mycelia also detect environmental cues such as light, heat, and chemicals.
Mishra’s team grew mycelia directly into electrodes (电极) on two robots. The fungi communicated with the robots via electrical signals known as action potentials, whose electrical pulses are similar to those generated by the human heart and nerve cells. Mycelia could produce natural action potentials, and such random electrical bursts enabled the biobots to walk or move around. When exposed to external light, mycelia sent out stronger electrical pulses, which changed the robots’ gait and proved their ability to sense environmental changes.
Using fungi in biohybrid robots is still “pretty new”, Mishra says. His team now hopes to test how such tech responds to other cues, such as gases and chemicals. One day, their robots’ sensory superpowers may help out in agriculture. Future mushroom bots may walk through crop fields, testing soil health and other conditions as they go.
12. How does the author introduce the topic of the text
A.By giving examples. B.By analyzing causes.
C.By raising questions. D.By making comparisons.
13. Why did Mishra choose mycelia for the research
A.Because of its rich nutrients. B.Because of its limited forms.
C.Because of its sensory ability. D.Because of its external features.
14. What does the underlined word “gait” in paragraph 4 refer to
A.The source of light. B.The way of walking.
C.The reason for change. D.The potential for growth.
15. What does the last paragraph stress about fungal robots
A.Their weaknesses. B.Their prospects.
C.Their research process. D.Their production background.
二、七选五
To break the cycle of procrastination (拖延症), Canadian writer Robin Sharma introduced the 90-90-1 Rule, a practical method to reshape your daily lifestyle. ___16___ It requires you to focus on your single most important goal for the first 90 minutes of each workday over the next 90 days.
Crucially, the rule demands that you zero in on just one goal, rather than dealing with a dozen priorities (优先事项). Whether it is launching a passion project or leveling up a skill, you pick the one objective that matters most and give it your full attention. Furthermore, you focus deeply for 90 minutes and devote yourself fully to the task. This engagement drives a flow state of heightened attention. ___17___
To successfully observe the 90-90-1 Rule, preparation and environmental control are essential. Once you have selected a meaningful project, you must block the first 90 minutes of your workday and protect that time. ___18___ A writer might dedicate the time to drafting pages. Someone learning a new language can use the block for intensive study and practice. Similarly, a businessman might use the first 90 minutes to conduct market research.
However, sticking to such a structured routine is full of challenges. ___19___ It may require waking up earlier or rearranging schedules. If the full 90 minutes feels impossible, it is acceptable to start with 30 minutes for 30 days, to prevent burnout.
___20___ The truth is that real progress does not come from irregular bursts of massive effort, but from steady, focused efforts over time.
A.The concept is simple yet strict.
B.A student easily gets distracted in class.
C.This means clearing all distractions for focused work.
D.Above all, procrastination comes from a lack of responsibility.
E.The most common barrier is finding 90 minutes at the start of the day.
F.With such deep concentration, you can achieve far higher efficiency than usual.
G.In short, the 90-90-1 Rule is not about working harder, but about working smarter.
三、完形填空
As a student, I once sank into helplessness. My dream of joining the school basketball team was broken after I ___21___ the tryout. I grew withdrawn, ate meals alone, and spent days ___22___ staring at the basketball court.
What I didn’t know was that my friends, Lily and Clara, were quietly watching. One morning, I opened my textbook, and a piece of ___23___ fell out, on which was Lily’s handwriting. It was a short poem, and one line ___24___ me deeply: “Even roots grow in the dark.” I was taken aback — poetry, which had seemed ___25___ to me in real life, now felt near at hand. I secretly put it into my pocket.
The next day, another poem appeared in my drawer — Clara’s ___26___ . One core sentence read: “The fall is not the end, but the place where you learn to ___27___ .” Looking around, I found Lily whispering to Clara, both ___28___ nothing had happened.
In the following days, the poems kept coming. Each verse carried magic, ___29___ ordinary moments into something alive. I felt the weight of something far greater than words: the ___30___ of friendship.
One afternoon, I ___31___ Lily and Clara behind the library, writing in a shared notebook. When they noticed me, Lily smiled shyly. “We’ve been taking ___32___ lessons. We are sticking to writing simple poems, hoping you can ___33___ where you fell,” she admitted. Deeply touched, I realized poetry warmed my heart, and their sincere friendship turned small ___34___ into the brightest light guiding me through ___35___ days. I made up my mind to train hard and step back onto the basketball court bravely.
21. A.got B.broadcast C.dominated D.failed
22. A.fortunately B.enthusiastically C.desperately D.confusingly
23. A.paper B.cloth C.wood D.chocolate
24. A.upset B.struck C.amused D.tricked
25. A.distant B.simple C.influential D.comprehensive
26. A.ball B.meal C.note D.book
27. A.adapt B.rise C.share D.write
28. A.tolerating B.regretting C.expecting D.pretending
29. A.putting B.breaking C.transforming D.dividing
30. A.treasure B.price C.load D.fall
31. A.invited B.guided C.spotted D.disturbed
32. A.drama B.painting C.science D.literature
33. A.stand out B.pick up C.leave behind D.look around
34. A.words B.jokes C.lies D.secrets
35. A.lively B.free C.guilty D.tough
四、语法填空
Through Chinese efforts ___36___ (preserve) the centuries-old traditional design and practices for building Chinese wooden arch bridges, advanced technology, including AI and VR, is injecting new vitality into the timeless craft.
The wooden arch bridges, ___37___ (find) mostly in eastern China’s Fujian and Zhejiang provinces, are built without a single metal nail, ___38___ (rely) instead on complicated wooden structures. Therefore, the bridges can be damaged easily by fire and flooding. Over the years, the tradition ___39___ (decline).
To date, technology has made these bridges ___40___ (access) to a wider public. As their design is ___41___ (close) integrated with the natural environment, people are increasingly able to experience them beyond geographic limits through 3D models, virtual reality, and interactive 3D puzzles.
Matthew Wood, an Australian lecturer at Wenzhou-Kean University, is developing a VR prototype for wooden arch bridges with his students ___42___ part of a summer project this year. Rather than simply viewing ___43___ (photo), the VR experience allows users to walk around and even fly above the bridge, ___44___ offers a more engaging and genuine sense of its environment.
“ ___45___ makes bridges such a positive symbol is that they unite and bring people together as a symbol of adaptation. Over centuries, these bridges have survived floods and been rebuilt after their destruction. Their continuity is part of their identity,” Wood says.
五、书面表达
第一节 新闻报道
46. 假定你是李华,6月8日是世界海洋日,你校英文报举办了以“Protecting Our Ocean”为主题的英语演讲比赛。请你写一篇报道,内容包括:
(1)比赛现场描述;
(2)师生反响。
注意:
(1)写作词数应为100个左右;
(2)请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答。
A Memorable Ocean-themed Speech Contest
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
第二节 读后续写
47. 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。词数150左右。
I used to be a boy who had little interest in science, and I often got distracted in physics classes. Nothing seemed exciting enough to stir my plain teenage life until I accidentally picked up a science fiction book on my parents’ bookshelf last summer. The blue cover, printed with shining stars, immediately caught my eye. Without hesitation, I started to read it, unaware that this casual choice would quietly reshape my perspective towards the world. The book described vivid adventures in outer space, telling how humans explored unknown planets and bravely overcame countless difficulties in the universe.
At first, I read the book merely to kill time. Gradually, however, I was deeply absorbed in the magical sci-fi world. The author described starry skies, vast outer space and mysterious alien creatures with delicate wording. What impressed me most was a simple sentence: Exploration is the eternal (永恒的) fuel for human progress. For a long time, I had been passive in studying, never daring to explore beyond textbooks. The sci-fi book awakened my long-buried passion for natural science and the mysterious universe.
Instead of putting the book aside after finishing it, I made up my mind to turn fictional imagination into real practice. I even became remarkably focused in physics classes, which took my teachers and classmates completely by surprise. One day, my physics teacher, Mr Smith, stared at me in surprise and whispered, “You have never been so devoted in class before.” Inspired by his words, I became more determined.
I searched for popular science videos online and recorded detailed notes about astronomical knowledge. I also saved my pocket money to buy a cheap astronomical telescope. Every clear night, I would set up the telescope on my balcony, aiming it at the quiet night sky. I tried to identify stars, observe the faint moonlight and then take some photographs of them, attempting to touch the magnificent universe described in the science fiction book with my own eyes.
However, my family and classmates thought my hobby was impractical.
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Then Mr Smith recommended me to enter the city star photography competition.
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
参考答案
1.A 2.D 3.A 4.A 5.B 6.C 7.D 8.C 9.D 10.C 11.B 12.A 13.C 14.B 15.B
16.A 17.F 18.C 19.E 20.G
21.D 22.C 23.A 24.B 25.A 26.C 27.B 28.D 29.C 30.A 31.C 32.D 33.B 34.A 35.D
36.to preserve 37.found 38.relying 39.has declined 40.accessible 41.closely 42.as 43.photos 44.which 45.What
写作范文
46. 新闻报道
A Memorable Ocean-themed Speech Contest
To mark World Ocean Day on June 8, our school held an English speech contest themed "Protecting Our Ocean". Many students delivered wonderful speeches, talking about ocean pollution and practical ways to protect marine resources. The whole hall was full of warm atmosphere.
Both teachers and students spoke highly of the activity. They said it not only improved our English skills but also raised everyone’s awareness of ocean protection. We all realize it’s our duty to guard the beautiful ocean.
47. 读后续写
However, my family and classmates thought my hobby was impractical. They advised me to spend more time on school subjects instead of staring at the sky every night. Some even laughed at my star photos. I felt upset and hesitated whether to keep my hobby. Seeing my trouble, Mr Smith encouraged me not to give up what I truly loved. His words gave me new strength.
Then Mr Smith recommended me to enter the city star photography competition. I spared no effort to take more exquisite photos in my spare time. Finally, I won the second prize. My family and classmates changed their views and praised me. From then on, I stuck to exploring the stars. This special hobby has become an important part of my life and keeps my passion for exploration alive.

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