上海建平中学2025-2026学年第二学期期末教学质量检测高一英语试卷(含答案)

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上海建平中学2025-2026学年第二学期期末教学质量检测高一英语试卷(含答案)

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2025-2026学年第二学期期末教学质量检测高一英语试卷
一、单项选择(共10小题,每题1分,满分10分)
1. The research team found that the ancient tomb, ______ walls were decorated with precious paintings, ______ untouched for over 800 years.
A.whose; had remained B.which; remained
C.of which; had remained D.that; was remained
2. ______ many experts have pointed out, regular physical exercise, ______ properly arranged, can greatly relieve mental pressure and improve work efficiency.
A.While; if B.As; when C.Since; though D.Although; unless
3. The manager was annoyed at ______ waiting for two hours outside in the cold wind without any explanation.
A.being kept B.keeping C.kept D.having kept
4. You’d better take notes ______ you might miss some key points during the lecture.
A.so that B.now that C.in case D.as long as
5. By the time the rescue workers arrived at the flood-hit area, most of the local residents ________ by the volunteers.
A.have been helped B.had been helped C.were helped D.would be helped
6. ______ from the top of the mountain, the whole valley looks extremely beautiful, ______ thousands of tourists every year.
A.Seen; attracting B.Seeing; attracted C.Seen; attracted D.To see; attracting
7. Many people choose to work overtime ______ they can earn more money to support their families.
A.even if B.in case C.so that D.as though
8. The moment ______ we reached the top of the mountain is the one ______ we will never forget in our whole life.
A.when; that B.which; which C.that; what D.when; which
9. The student is reported ______ the first prize in the national English competition, which surprises his teachers a lot.
A.winning B.to win C.to have won D.having won
10. It was not until he failed in the exam ______ he realized that he ______ his time on meaningless online games.
A.when; had wasted B.that; had wasted C.where; was wasting D.as; was wasting
二、语法填空(共10空,每空1.5分,满分15分)
Years ago, I forced myself to use AI frequently so that I could gain firsthand experience for writing about it. However, an expanding body of recent research suggests that over-reliance on tools like ChatGPT 11____ damage creativity, memory and critical thinking—GPS once weakened our sense of direction and search engines reduced our willingness to retain information.
Scientists warn that AI undertakes most mental labor for us, inevitably 12____ (reduce) opportunities for cognitive exercise. Adam Green, a neuroscientist who directs the Laboratory for Relational Cognition at Georgetown University, explains if we cease engaging in certain types of thinking, our capacity to handle such tasks will gradually decline. It resembles attending a gym only to have a robot lift all the weights: you leave 13____ having gained any strength. We can adopt measures to minimize potential risks, 14____ now AI is nearly unavoidable in search engines and smartphones.
Jared Benge, a clinical neuropsychologist who teaches at the University of Texas, 15____ (emphasize) AI is not inherently beneficial or harmful; its impact depends entirely on usage patterns. He further clarifies that the key lies in maintaining metacognitive awareness, which means monitoring constantly 16____ AI is assisting or replacing your thought process. If it liberates mental resources for more complex tasks, it may enhance cognition. Conversely, if we uncritically accept its outputs, we risk “cognitive surrender”, a state 17____ we prioritize AI’s judgments over our own, even when the machine is making a mistake.
18____ (maintain) cognitive vitality, experts propose two core strategies. First, don’t outsource foundational thinking. Before consulting a chatbot, establish your own perspective so that AI serves to challenge your reasoning rather than construct it. Second, preserve cognitive effort. When learning, resist letting AI summarize difficult texts and 19____ (endure) the discomfort of struggling with complex problems, which is essential for deep comprehension.
AI is not an enemy to be abandoned. 20____ we keep control over its application, we can use its efficiency without sacrificing our most irreplaceable power: the capacity for independent thought.
三、选词填空(10小题,每题1分,满分10分)
A. demanding B. diversity C. exposed D. extreme E. instant F. perceived G. prioritize H. recall I. reflect J. specific K. survival
Recognizing people is a basic courtesy(礼貌) — especially in the workplace. But many people have felt the stress of desperately trying to 21____ the workmate sitting opposite them, only for a complete failure. Not only is it a source of embarrassment, but it can be 22____ as impolite: that someone hasn’t taken the time and effort to learn anything about the other person.
However, being able to memorize someone’s appearance, particularly if they’re relatively unfamiliar, and recollect them in a(n) 23____ — days, weeks, or maybe months later — needs a vast suite of cognitive resources: from parts of the brain 24____ to facial recognition, to visual processing and long-term memory. Learning and recognizing faces is one of the most cognitively 25____ and neurologically complex tasks we engage in.
But alongside science, there are cultural and societal factors at play that can leave us blanking on who is making conversation with us at work. Not only do we tend to remember people who look more like us, but we also 26____ learning the faces of those we consider to be of greater importance to our lives: senior members of the staff, or those in positions of power.
Throughout a lifetime, humans learn to recognize thousands of faces. Some research has shown that at the 27____ end, the figure can be as high as 10,000.
Generally, people are skilled at learning and recognizing so many faces, as 28____ once depended on it. The evolutionary need to be able to quickly tell friend from enemy explains why people are hardwired to remember the faces of loved ones and those most familiar.
In the modern world, people are frequently 29____ to more faces in a single day than across their ancestor’s entire lifetimes. It means they’re more likely to be in a situation in which they draw a facial blank.
However, recognizing people is a skill. If people want to bring forth change and greater 30____ among offices, it’s beneficial to really try and remember the faces of people who fall into an individual’s ‘unlikely to recognize’ pool.
四、完形填空(两篇,每篇15空,每空1分,满分30分)
A
On China’s livestream platforms, there is now a good chance that the host urging you to buy products is a digital figure.
Live commerce is a 31____ industry in China. Millions of people host livestreams, 32____ everything from lipstick to real estate. In 2023, the livestream e-commerce market was worth 4.9 trillion yuan.
However, e-commerce companies are increasingly 33____ their human hosts with AI bots. During this year’s “618” shopping festival, digital figures hosted livestreams for over 5,000 brands on the e-commerce platform . These AI-hosted shows reportedly received over 100 million views and generated over five million interactions.
Chinese vendors (商贩) are mostly 34____ AI hosts as a way to cut costs. A digital figure costs only a few thousand yuan and can livestream for 24 hours a day. It also saves 35____ on hiring a livestream studio and support staff. In 2023, digital figure brought in revenues worth over 333 billion yuan in China. This amount is believed to reach 640 billion yuan by 2027.
However, not everyone agrees with the use of AI hosts in live commerce. These bots are known for woodenly 36____ to the script and are likely to make mistakes. Both consumers and vendors have 37____ that digital figures “say everything in the same way, and sometimes don’t 38____.” They also struggle to answer specific questions from consumers.
Some vendors remain 39____ about using digital figures. Current AI bots, they suggest, could damage their brand reputation, which rely on building trust and emotional connections with 40____.
The rise of AI hosts is also creating 41____ issues. As digital figures become ever more 42____, it’s becoming harder for consumers to tell them apart from human beings. This opens the door for scammers (敲诈者), who use these figures to trick shoppers into buying 43____ goods. Yu Zhinong, a lawyer, stressed the legal risks for creators of digital figures. Using someone’s actual voice could lead to fraud (诈骗) charges, and generating fake audio for illegal activities may result in criminal liability (刑事责任). It’s also essential to obtain permission from anyone whose portrait is used in creating a digital figure, he added.
In May 2023, Douyin introduced rules to 44____ the use of virtual figures. It requires that any AI livestream must be monitored by a real person. 45____, the owners of digital figures are asked to register using their real identities. Chinese authorities are also seeking to supervise the use of AI hosts in e-commerce.
31.A.fragile B.massive C.digital D.risky
32.A.processing B.delivering C.selling D.stocking
33.A.replacing B.bombarding C.interfering D.identifying
34.A.reflecting upon B.turning to C.taking over D.operating on
35.A.labour B.storage C.maintenance D.budget
36.A.sticking B.objecting C.appealing D.adding
37.A.maintained B.complained C.announced D.realized
38.A.make sense B.stand out C.give way D.take place
39.A.optimistic B.enthusiastic C.cautious D.curious
40.A.lawyers B.agents C.reporters D.consumers
41.A.technical B.practical C.legal D.ethical
42.A.realistic B.costly C.flexible D.stylish
43.A.outdated B.delicate C.discounted D.fake
44.A.understate B.ban C.overlook D.regulate
45.A.However B.Meanwhile C.Conversely D.Otherwise
B
Removing trash from the ocean may not be as harmless as it seems. That’s the conclusion of new research, which finds that marine dumps, known as “garbage patches (区域)”, are 46____ to countless delicate creatures that could end up dying when people collect trash from the sea.
Our planet’s oceans have five major garbage patches. They form far from land where strong currents move quickly together, 47____ trash of all sizes. The largest of these marine fields is known as the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. Spanning 1.6 million square kilometers midway between Hawaii and the coast of California, it was first 48____ in 1997 by oceanographer Charles Moore. The patch escaped 49____ for so long because most of its contents are not easily spotted from afar.
To see whether the Great Pacific Garbage Patch was harboring a vast number of floating creatures 50____ waste, a crew sailed through the patch for 80 days, collecting samples from Hawaii to the coast of San Francisco. “These mysterious regions are largely 51____,” says Rebecca Helm, a biologist at Georgetown University. The samples revealed high concentrations of three species that live at the ocean’s surface. They included blue button jellies, by-the-wind sailors, and violet snails. Blue button jellies and by-the-wind sailors — two types of jellyfish — feed on plankton (浮游生物) and serve as food for violet snails.
The scientists matched the locations of these creatures with high concentrations of plastic waste. It 52____ that ocean currents affect all of these floating objects — both life and trash — in the same way, the team reported last month.
Helm says that the 53____ of these creatures implies a complex ecosystem in which they serve as food for predators like sea turtles and seabirds. “These animals don’t exist in 54____,” she says. “The food web they’re a part of affects the whole ocean.”
This could 55____ efforts to clean up these patches. Some environmental organizations aim to 56____ the waste by skimming the surface with nets. But just as similar fishing methods lead to 57____, such cleanup efforts would likely catch surface-inhabitants along with the plastic waste, Helm says. 58____, a modeling study published in April in Aquatic Biology found such efforts could potentially threaten the survival of species that have existed for millions of years.
In March, nearly 200 countries agreed to a new high seas treaty (公海条约) that will eventually allow the creation of protected areas in international waters. If garbage patches were also 59____, cleanup efforts would be paused long enough for scientists to better understand potential impacts. Still, Helm argues that the most 60____ solution is to prevent plastic from getting into the ocean in the first place by reducing our reliance on it.
46.A.opposite B.harmful C.home D.familiar
47.A.carrying B.destroying C.sorting D.accessing
48.A.approved B.identified C.promoted D.released
49.A.searches B.crowds C.memory D.notice
50.A.in addition to B.in contrast to C.in place of D.on account of
51.A.unlimited B.unexplored C.unavoidable D.unthinkable
52.A.guarantees B.maintains C.strengthens D.hints
53.A.presence B.competition C.separation D.transformation
54.A.motion B.danger C.isolation D.harmony
55.A.complicate B.reverse C.neutralize D.strengthen
56.A.classify B.replace C.monitor D.remove
57.A.waste B.bycatch C.delay D.risk
58.A.Indeed B.Otherwise C.However D.Thus
59.A.extended B.involved C.prohibited D.defined
60.A.immediate B.costly C.flexible D.effective
五、阅读理解
A
After working in plastic surgery and medical aesthetics for the past 10 years, I’ve realized how many people struggle with a distorted self-image or an inaccurate perception of themselves. Many examine their own appearance under a microscope, focusing on every perceived flaw while overlooking qualities that others admire without hesitation. Many thought that a different nose, smoother skin, or a more balanced face would finally change them from an unattractive outsider to a stunning head-turner.
However, one patient, in particular, changed the way I thought about beauty.
Several years ago, a woman in her forties came to my clinic. She was a successful architect who carried herself with remarkable confidence. Unlike many patients, she did not arrive with a long list of complaints. Instead, she smiled and said, “I’ve never disliked my appearance, but there is one thing I’ve always wanted to change.”
She explained that a childhood accident had left her nose slightly crooked. The feature had never prevented her from building a successful career, maintaining close friendships, or feeling comfortable in public. Yet whenever she looked in the mirror, she felt that one small detail did not quite reflect the person she knew herself to be.
What struck me was her attitude. She never spoke of becoming prettier or looking like a celebrity. She never compared herself with what was presented on social media. Nor did she believe that surgery would transform her life. She simply wanted her outward appearance to match the confidence she already felt within.
Several months after the procedure, she returned for a follow-up appointment. The change was subtle, but she seemed genuinely pleased.
“I don’t feel like a different person,” she told me. “I feel more like myself.”
Her words stayed with me long after she left. I’ve come to realize a difference between seeking treatment as a healthy form of self-improvement and pursuing it out of a persistent belief that one is never “good enough.” The former can be empowering; the latter is rarely satisfied, no matter how successful the procedure may be.
Plastic surgery is a powerful, transformative, and deeply personal decision. I believe in it completely. I have watched it change lives, restore confidence, and give people the reflection they always felt they deserved. But the most beautiful results I have ever seen happen when a patient walks in already knowing their worth — and simply wants the outside to match how extraordinary they feel within.
61. What does the author mean by saying that many people “examine their own appearance under a microscope”
A.They are unable to see their appearance clearly.
B.They often seek professional medical examinations.
C.They compare themselves with scientists conducting research.
D.They pay excessive attention to their perceived imperfections.
62. Why was the author impressed by the architect’s attitude
A.She sought surgery to have a more successful career.
B.She expected surgery to completely transform her life.
C.She accepted herself while seeking a minor improvement.
D.She was determined to change every small detail of her life.
63. What can be inferred from the passage
A.Physical appearance is the only source of sense of achievement.
B.Most patients seek cosmetic procedures because of pressure from social media.
C.The architect had encountered many career failures before she had the plastic surgery.
D.A person’s attitude toward themselves may affect how satisfied they feel after treatment.
64. Which of the following best describes the author’s attitude toward plastic surgery
A.Uninterested in its influence on patients.
B.Completely supportive without reservation.
C.Cautiously positive while emphasizing self-worth.
D.Strongly opposed due to its stress on outward beauty.
B
POLICY ON DRESS CODE
Valid for all employees
The Company’s objective in establishing a formal dress code is to enable our employees to project the professional image that is in keeping with the needs of our clients and customers to trust us. Because our industry requires the appearance of trusted business professionals and we serve clients at our site on a daily basis, a formal dress code is necessary for our employees. You must project the image of a trustworthy, knowledgeable business professional for the clients who seek our guidance, input, and professional services.
Formal Dress Code Guidelines
In a formal business environment, the standard of dressing for men is a smart trouser with shirt that has the company logo or a suit if the occasion demands and for women, a dress that has the company logo paired with appropriate accessories. In our work environment, clothing should be pressed and never wrinkled.
Formal Business Attire Recommendations
This is an overview of appropriate formal business attire. The lists tell you what is generally acceptable as formal business attire and what is generally not acceptable as formal business attire.
Shoes and Footwear
Conservative walking shoes, dress shoes, Oxfords, loafers, boots, flats, dress heels, and backless shoes are acceptable for work. Not wearing stockings or socks is inappropriate. Athletic shoes, tennis shoes, thongs, flip-flops, Hawaiian slippers, and any casual shoe with an open toe are not acceptable in the office.
Accessories and Jewellery
Tasteful, professional ties, scarves, belts, and jewellery are encouraged. Jewellery should be worn in good taste, with limited visible body piercing.
Makeup, Perfume, and Cologne
A professional appearance is encouraged and excessive makeup is unprofessional. Remember that some employees are allergic to the chemicals in perfumes and makeup, so wear these substances with restraint.
Hats and Head Covering
Hats are not appropriate in the office. Head covers that are required for religious purposes or to honour cultural tradition are allowed.
Conclusion
If an employee fails to meet these standards,—Consequences as determined by the employee’s supervisor and Human Resources staff, the employee will be asked not to wear the inappropriate item to work again. If the problem persists, the employee may be sent home to change clothes and will receive a verbal warning for the first offense. All other policies about personal time use will apply. Progressive disciplinary action will be applied if dress code violations continue.
65. According to the policy, why does the company establish a formal dress code
A.To make employees feel more confident about their own appearance.
B.To ensure employees project a trustworthy professional image for clients.
C.To follow the general practice of most companies in the industry.
D.To distinguish its employees from those of competing companies.
66. Which of the following combinations is completely acceptable according to the dress code
A.Oxfords, backless shoes, and excessive visible body piercing.
B.Loafers, a religious head cover, and moderate jewellery.
C.Flip-flops, a company-logo dress, and no stockings.
D.Athletic shoes, a suit, and heavy makeup.
67. Where would this passage most likely be found
A.In a job advertisement for a client-facing company.
B.On a poster displayed in a shopping mall for general public.
C.In the employee handbook distributed by Human Resources.
D.In a fashion magazine offering advice on business attire.
C
Does a Robot Need a School
At a recent technology exhibition in Fuzhou, the largest crowds gathered not around the dancing humanoid robots, but around a worker wearing a VR headset and teaching a robot how to pick up a paper cup. For Chen Yishi, CEO of Joyful Embodied, this scene perfectly illustrated the real battleground in the AI race: it is not fancy hardware, but data.
“We are building a school for robots,” Chen explained. His company plans to construct a 3,000-square-meter training ground where humanoid, four-legged and wheeled robots will perform everyday tasks such as stacking cups, cleaning tables, sorting objects, and even folding clothes. Human operators will use VR gear and motion-control devices to guide the robots through thousands of repetitive movements from a distance. As the robots work, cameras and sensors record every angle, joint movement, pressure point, and force feedback, generating what Chen calls “high-quality fuel” for future AI systems.
“Without real-world data, even the most advanced large models are just empty brains,” Chen said. “Robots do not learn through assumptions. Every tiny movement — from grasping a cup to adjusting grip strength — has to be taught through data.” He added that each robot would operate around the clock, continuously producing fresh training examples. Unlike text or image data, physical interaction data is much harder to collect because it requires real hardware, real environments, and real-time human guidance.
This effort marks a significant shift in China’s AI industry — moving beyond chatbots toward embodied intelligence (具身智能), which refers to AI systems housed in physical machines capable of acting in real environments. Earlier this year, embodied AI was officially included in China’s Government Work Report as a strategic future industry, alongside other priorities like quantum computing and biotechnology.
While billions of dollars have been poured into robot hardware, experts now argue that high-quality training data has become the scarcest strategic resource. Unlike images or text, which can be easily copied from the internet, physical interaction data must be generated through real-world operations. Chen believes the industry’s economics will increasingly depend on data rather than hardware alone. “High-quality embodied AI training data are already priced by the hour,” he noted. According to Chen, each continuously operating robot in his company’s data center creates demand for roughly three technical jobs, including data annotation, algorithm optimization, and system maintenance. “The competition is no longer just about whose robot can walk or dance,” Chen concluded. “The real question is: whose robot can truly work.”
68. What did the scene at the Fuzhou exhibition suggest according to Chen Yishi
A.Humanoid robots are less appealing than expected.
B.The key to AI development lies in data rather than hardware.
C.VR technology has become more advanced than ever before.
D.Most people prefer watching robots perform simple tasks.
69. In paragraph 3, the phrase empty brains most likely refers to large models that ____.
A.lack sufficient real-world training data
B.are too small to store complex information
C.cannot be used in physical machines
D.produce too many assumptions on their own
70. Based on the last two paragraphs, what can be inferred about the current state of the robotics industry
A.The value of robot hardware has significantly decreased due to data pricing.
B.The shift toward data-driven competition creates more job opportunities.
C.Most companies have realized that hardware is no longer a priority.
D.The Chinese government’s policy has made data collection less expensive.
71. What is the main purpose of the passage
A.To introduce a new company and its robot training center.
B.To compare different kinds of robots in the AI industry.
C.To argue that training data is becoming the core of AI robotics.
D.To explain how embodied intelligence is applied in factories.
D
Appearance Anxiety in the Digital Age
In an era where digital platforms dominate daily life, a growing number of young people report feeling distressed about their physical appearance. 72____ It has become a widespread psychological concern among adolescents and young adults. Individuals experiencing this form of anxiety feel dissatisfaction with their body image, with perceived imperfections causing constant worry about negative judgment from others.
To understand this phenomenon, researchers often turn to social comparison theory. This theory suggests that individuals determine their own social and personal worth by comparing themselves to others. When people compare their own appearance to idealized images — often curated, filtered, or AI-enhanced — the inevitable gap leads to feelings of inadequacy and heightened anxiety. 73____ Adding to the problem is the widespread use of beauty filters by employing sophisticated algorithms to smooth skin, enhance facial features, and reshape bodies in real time.
The psychological consequences of these digital pressures are severe and well-documented. Longitudinal research (纵向研究) has found bidirectional relationships between upward social comparisons on social media and worsening mental health symptoms, including depression and body dissatisfaction. 74____ In a global survey spanning six countries, over 50% of youth participants reported some level of body dissatisfaction, with 35% expressing dissatisfaction with being “larger than ideal.”
75____ Psychological approaches, particularly those based on cognitive-behavioral principles, have shown promising results. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) helps individuals restructure thought patterns and reduce appearance-related anxiety. School-based programs designed to teach critical media literacy skills have also proven helpful. By learning to recognize image manipulation and question unrealistic beauty standards, young users can develop more resilient self-perceptions.
A.Research has shown that simply reducing daily social media use by 30 minutes can significantly lower appearance anxiety levels.
B.Appearance anxiety is commonly defined as the stress experienced in response to others’ evaluations of one’s looks.
C.Meta-analyses have demonstrated that social media use is both associated with and contributes to greater body dissatisfaction.
D.Parents and schools should take primary responsibility for monitoring adolescents’ online behavior to prevent body image issues.
E.Social media platforms, particularly highly visual ones like Instagram and TikTok, constantly expose users to such idealized standards, thereby intensifying the comparison process.
F.Fortunately, effective measures are emerging to address this growing crisis.
六、概要写作
76. Directions: Read the following passage. Summarize the main idea and the main point(s) of the passage in no more than 60 words. Use your own words as far as possible.
Stress and sugar
Have you ever found yourself enjoying a slice of cake after a stressful day Many people tend to reach for sweet food when under great pressure. Whether trapped in tight work deadlines or worn out by daily troubles, countless individuals choose sugary snacks to relieve tiredness. Experts find this comfort eating mainly arises from three different causes.
The first cause lies in physical biological reactions, which has been proved by an experiment led by Dr Giles Yeo together with scientists from Leeds University. When under stress, human bodies enter “fight or flight” mode. Because the body believes it’s under attack, it releases glucose into the blood to provide energy for muscles. However, if people don’t use that energy, the body then releases insulin to make the blood sugar levels drop. This drop causes a hunger response: you want to eat. And what people particularly crave is sugary food, which quickly restores lost energy.
Psychological reward mechanism serves as the second factor. Sweets can stimulate the brain to produce dopamine and serotonin, chemicals bringing instant pleasure and calming anxious feelings effectively. Faced with heavy pressure, people’s brain automatically seeks such quick emotional relief from sugary snacks instead of tough ways like regular exercise to ease stress. Most people avoid time-consuming relaxation methods and pick sweets for immediate comfort. In other words, sweet food works as a fast emotional fix for negative feelings caused by stress.
Thirdly, personal memory and lifelong eating habits push people to choose sweets under stress. From childhood, most kids receive candies or cakes as rewards for good performance or comfort when upset by failure. Parents often use desserts to comfort crying children or celebrate small achievements. Gradually, the brain links sweetness with happiness and safety deep in subconscious. Whenever trapped in stress later in life, the fixed memory awakens the desire for sweet treats naturally without conscious thinking.
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
七、翻译
77. 只有当演讲者投入感情,观众才能被感动和产生共鸣。(identify)
___________________________________________________________________________
78. 游客在偏远海滩度假胜地停留得越久,就越能领略当地文化独有的魅力。(the more...the more)
___________________________________________________________________________
79. 这座小岛为了开展生态保护和医疗项目,已经将资金与人力用到极致。(stretch)
___________________________________________________________________________
80. 这位工匠花了整整三年才将一块普通的木头雕刻成精美的艺术品,这件作品完美反映了他对传统文化的热爱。(before)
___________________________________________________________________________
参考答案
一、单项选择
1.A 2.B 3.A 4.C 5.B 6.A 7.C 8.A 9.C 10.B
二、语法填空
11.may/could 12.reducing 13.without 14.but/yet 15.emphasizes 16.whether/if 17.where shtur maintain 19.endure 20.If
三、选词填空
21.H 22.F 23.E 24.C 25.A 26.G 27.D 28.K 29.C 30.B
四、完形填空
第一篇
31.B 32.C 33.A 34.B 35.A 36.A 37.B 38.A 39.C 40.D 41.C 42.A 43.D 44.D 45.B
第二篇
46.C 47.A 48.B 49.D 50.A 51.B 52.D 53.A 54.C 55.A 56.D 57.B 58.A 59.D 60.D
五、阅读理解
A 61.D 62.C 63.D 64.C
B 65.B 66.B 67.C
C 68.B 69.A 70.B 71.C
七选五 72.B 73.E 74.C 75.F
六、概要写作范文
People turn to sweets under stress for three reasons. Physically, stress lowers blood sugar and creates desire for fast energy. Psychologically, sweets bring instant happy chemicals to ease anxiety. Also, childhood sweet rewards form long-term positive memories of sugar.
七、翻译参考答案
77. Only when the speaker pours emotion into the speech can the audience be moved and identify with him.
78. The longer tourists stay in remote beach resorts, the more they can appreciate the unique charm of local culture.
79. The small island has stretched its funds and manpower to the limit to carry out ecological protection and medical projects.
80. It took the craftsman a full three years before he carved an ordinary piece of wood into an exquisite work of art, which perfectly reflects his love for traditional culture.

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