广东名校联盟2025-2026学年高三7月质量水平测试英语试卷(含答案)

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广东名校联盟2025-2026学年高三7月质量水平测试英语试卷(含答案)

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广东名校联盟2025-2026学年高三7月质量水平测试
英语试卷
一、阅读理解
A
Best Practices for Using AI Effectively
Do:
Give clear, detailed prompts (代码). The more context you provide, the better the output.
Break large tasks into smaller steps. Guide the AI through the process incrementally (逐步地).
Review and edit all AI outputs. Use AI as a first-draft assistant, not a final authority.
Combine multiple tools. Build a stack where each tool handles a specialized task.
Don’t:
Blindly trust the output. Always fact-check data and verify critical information.
Over-automate strategic decisions. AI is for execution, not for replacing your judgment.
Ignore privacy and security. Never input sensitive personal or company data into public AI models.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Tool Overload: Signing up for every new AI app is a recipe for distraction. Start with one tool that solves your biggest bottleneck, master it, and then expand.
Poor Prompt Design: Vague prompts lead to generic results. Learn to provide context, define the audience, and specify the desired format. This is the single most important skill for effective AI use.
Replacing Thinking Entirely: AI is a powerful assistant, but it lacks creativity, critical thinking, and ethical judgment. Use it to augment your abilities, not replace them.
Not Validating AI Outputs: AI models can “hallucinate” and invent facts. Always treat their outputs as a starting point for verification, not a final, trusted source.
Productivity Gains You Can Expect
When implemented correctly, the impact of using AI for productivity is significant and measurable.
Writing: 2-3× faster content creation and drafting.
Research: 5× faster information synthesis (合成) and analysis.
Admin Tasks: Up to a 70% reduction in time spent on scheduling, transcribing, and organizing.
Overall Weekly Time Saved: A realistic estimate of 8-15 hours reclaimed per week.
This recovered time allows you to focus on high-impact strategic work, develop new skills, or simply achieve a better work-life balance.
1. What are we advised to do for getting the most output of AI
A.Provide sufficient prompts and general instructions
B.Use a mix of AI apps for more polished writing
C.Use AI for incremental analysis for pre-decision
D.Treat the result cautiously with entire consideration
2. The section “Common Mistakes to Avoid” is mainly based on ______.
A.AI nature B.AI misuse C.AI limits D.AI errors
3. Who will likely find this text most satisfying
A.An original novel writer
B.A clerk with high-pressure work
C.A scholar conducting creative research
D.A coder pursuing fast coding
B
Woollen Smiles
From the human compassion of a fallen soldier,
To the love of a soldier’s mother
The very idea, created in memory cast
An idea that would pass through hundreds of hands
From the colourful threads, of many a ball
A knitted doll called Izzy is born again
The doll that has breached, so many a distant border
A journey so far, not many can comprehend
Each story so different than the other,
Each resolve, always the same
The Woolen Smiles that are created,
Are just not from the children who receive them
The love from those who create them
Passes through our very hands, before passed to another
It is the creator’s dedication and love,
That the soldiers feel and possess
A strengthening of spirits
And memories frozen in time, that will last forever
A testament to the goodness that still exists
In each and everyone of us
Their simple gestures are not only a dedication to our fallen
But to the living as well
The support of a quiet nation,
That each and every soldier feels.
Author’s Notes
This poem is dedicated to the late Carol Isfeld, the mother of Master Corporal Isfeld and to all those ladies who have created so many smiles across the world.
I have handed out over 700 Izzy dolls in my career to date and just wanted to honour the hundreds and hundreds of ladies who have taken time out of their busy lives to honour not only our fallen soldiers, but to allow your soldiers of the Canadian Forces to spread the true meaning of what being a soldier is all about.
A simple idea and gesture were nurtured between a mother and a son, out of compassion and caring. That idea has passed through your hands, back into your soldier’s hands.
If there was one wish I could give you in return, it would be for you all to experience not only the smile of a child, but the smile you created in the life of a soldier. In a world so consumed by hatred, there is always time to smile. Thank you for allowing me to smile.
4. What can we infer about the Izzy doll from the text
A.It spreads widely among people.
B.It pays tribute to the women volunteers.
C.It is a carrier for showing love for children.
D.It originates from a mother and a son.
5. Which word best captures the poem’s mood
A.Innocent and calm B.Warm and touching
C.Dignified and tender D.Small and powerful
6. What does the author crave most in the end
A.Knitters feel their own worth
B.Children wear bright smiles
C.Soldiers live pain-free lives
D.Hatred vanishes from the world
7. What does the poem convey
A.Love can spread through every tiny deed.
B.A small act of kindness goes a long way.
C.Children bear the brunt of war.
D.Gratitude is the art of seeing blessings.
C
There has been an explosion of interest in ‘creative AI’, but does this mean that artists will be replaced by machines No, definitely not, says Anne Ploin, Oxford Internet Institute researcher and one of the team behind today’s report on the potential impact of machine learning (ML) on creative work. Despite it was 2022, it still valuable now.
Ploin states machine learning has become a tool for artists, but will never substitute them. Mx Ploin emphasizes human agency in creativity is irreplaceable: while AI can automate parts of creation like generating multiple image versions, current AI cannot replicate the core creative decision-making that makes real art. Artistic creativity relies on personal choices, life experience, social and political context, and human emotion — elements data-driven AI can never copy, as life experience cannot be translated into data for now. AI models lack autonomy and cannot launch new artistic movements independently; they only produce unexpected variations of existing works.
According to Mx Ploin, ‘We interviewed 14 experts who work in the creative arts, including media and fine artists whose work centred around generative ML techniques. We also talked to curators and researchers in this field. This allowed us to develop fuller understanding of the implications of AI — ranging from automation to complementarity — in a domain at the heart of human experience: creativity.’
They found a range of responses to the use of machine learning and AI. New activities required by using ML models involved both continuity with previous creative processes and rupture from past practices. There were major changes around the generative process, the evolving ways ML outputs were conceptualised, and artists’ embodied experiences of their practice.
And, says the researcher, the use of ML models was a “step change” from past tools, according to many artists. While the machine learning models could help produce ‘surprising variations of existing images’, practitioners felt the artist remained irreplaceable in making artworks. But, she maintains, while the machine learning models could help produce ‘surprising variations of existing images’, practitioners felt the artist remained irreplaceable in terms of giving images artistic context and intention — that is, in making artworks.
Ultimately, most agreed that despite the increased affordances of ML technologies, the relationship between artists and their media remained essentially unchanged, as artists ultimately work to address human — rather than technical — questions.
Don’t let it put you off going to art school. We need more artists.
8. How did the writer start the essay
A.By raising a controversial crisis
B.By asking a rhetorical question
C.By stating a unusual opinion
D.By creating an abnormal suspense
9. Why is Ploin’s 2022 study still valuable
A.Highlights AI as step change
B.Notes AI’s image variations
C.Draws on real art practitioners
D.Stresses artistic intention alone
10. What is the artists’ core conflict
A.AI assistance vs human artistry
B.AI variation vs human art context
C.AI upgrade vs creation logic
D.AI output vs human art intention
11. What ability should art students develop according to the text
A.Equipped with proper AI skills
B.Cultivate art skills to solve academic issue
C.Keep human creative essence
D.Combine AI with artistic creation rationally
D
A newly engineered molecule acts like a “rechargeable” solar heat battery, storing sunlight and releasing it on demand. Solar energy has one persistent weakness: it disappears at sunset. Finding a reliable way to store that energy for later use remains one of the biggest obstacles to expanding renewable power.
A research team at UC Santa Barbara may have found an unexpected workaround. Instead of relying on conventional batteries, they created a small organic molecule that captures sunlight, locks that energy into its structure, and releases it later as heat.
To understand the idea, Nguyen points to a familiar example. “Think of photochromic sunglasses. When you’re inside, they’re just clear lenses. You walk out into the sun, and they darken on their own. Come back inside, and the lenses become clear again,” Nguyen said. “That kind of reversible change is what we’re interested in. Only instead of changing color, we want to use the same idea to store energy, release it when we need it, and then reuse the material over and over.”
To build this molecule, the researchers turned to DNA for inspiration. The pyrimidone structure resembles a DNA component that can reversibly change its form when exposed to UV light. By creating a synthetic version, the team designed a molecule capable of repeatedly storing and releasing energy. They worked with Ken Houk, a distinguished research professor at UCLA, using computational modeling to understand how the molecule can hold energy while remaining stable for years.
“We prioritized a lightweight, compact molecule design,” Nguyen said. “For this project, we cut everything we didn’t need. Anything that was unnecessary, we removed to make the molecule as compact as possible.”Unlike solar panels that generate electricity, this system stores solar energy in chemical form. The molecule behaves like a coiled spring. When exposed to sunlight, it shifts into a strained, high energy configuration. It remains in that state until triggered by heat or a catalyst, which allows it to return to its original form and release the stored energy as heat.
“We typically describe it as a rechargeable solar battery,” Nguyen said. “It stores sunlight, and it can be recharged.”The critical breakthrough for Han’s group was translating high energy density into a tangible result. In the study, the researchers demonstrated that the heat released from the material was intense enough to boil water — a feat previously difficult to achieve in this field.
12. What is the key solution to solar energy’s biggest limitation
A.Using conventional batteries to store solar power
B.Applying the new organic molecule to store heat
C.Saving sunlight for nighttime electricity production
D.Updating solar devices to generate power nonstop
13. Why did the researchers simplify and compact the structure of the molecule
A.To copy the basic form of natural human DNA
B.To guarantee its high energy density for boiling water
C.To improve its practical performance in real-life application
D.To prevent it from changing forms under strong sunlight
14. Which diagram best shows the molecule’s energy storage and release process
15. Which of the following is the best title for the text
A.An Innovative Molecule: Rechargeable Solar Heat Storage
B.Daily Applications of Advanced DNA Technology
C.Comparison Between Solar Panels and New Batteries
D.Simple Methods to Produce Boiling Water
七选五
If I could grant my loved ones one wish, it would be happiness.16.___. I wish them fulfillment with their life’s path, self-understanding, and meaning from pursuing values-aligned goals, free from existential doubt and regret.
This lasting fulfillment is what Aristotle called “eudaimonia”: a deep, enduring sense of purpose from living a meaningful life. When we know ourselves and grow toward authentic goals, we achieve a stable happiness that temporary pleasures cannot match.
Yet society wrongly teaches that happiness lies in wealth, fame, power, and status. While money eases hardship, extra wealth beyond necessity does not improve long-term satisfaction.17.___, even for high-achieving careers. Material goods and social status only provide short-lived satisfaction, quickly overshadowed by comparison and emptiness.
True happiness demands conscious effort. Our brains are wired for survival, not constant joy, so we must practice mindfulness and gratitude to stay present and appreciate daily blessings.18.___; research confirms that meaningful connections are among the strongest foundations of lasting happiness. We should never sacrifice loved ones for status.
Happiness is not freedom from pain. Joy and struggle go hand in hand: meaningful moments often arrive with challenges.19.___.
In the end, pursuing success and wealth is not wrong. 20.___.Genuine, lasting fulfillment comes from caring relationships, consistent mindfulness, and embracing life’s challenges. This is the happiness I wish for those I love.
A.But they do not guarantee happiness
B.Nurturing close relationships is equally vital
C.Yet they only bring temporary satisfaction
D.Even great success in work brings little lasting satisfaction
E.Accepting this reality helps us form a balanced, honest view of happiness
F.Similarly, professional success often brings burnout and mental strain
G.Not the fleeting emotion most people mean, but something far deeper
二、完形填空
I’d always loved the coast, but my visit to the abandoned lighthouse changed me. It started when I 21___ a sun-faded flyer at a cafe: “Restore Old Point Lighthouse — volunteers needed.” Tired of a troubled career, I longed for 22___ from my chaotic routine.
At dawn, the coordinator handed me a rusty hammer. “Fix the railings,” she said. Salt-covered metal tested my strength; each swing was a 23___ against my frustration. By midday, my arms ached, but I noticed a teen beside me struggling with a nail. I knelt to help: her 24___ — a quick smile — felt like a small victory.
We repainted the railings and shared stories. A retired sailor said the lighthouse 25___ ships through stormy dark: “It didn’t just glow — it gave 26___.” The words stayed with me. When we finished the final 27___ — hanging a new lantern — we climbed to the top as the sun gilded the waves.
I realized the lighthouse wasn’t just a structure; it was a 28___ of hope. My own troubles felt smaller, like waves crashing harmlessly against rock. On the drive home, I stopped at a bookstore and bought a guide to lighthouse history — a 29___ to keep rebuilding, even when things feel hopeless.
Months later, I returned. A girl pointed: “This kept my great-grandpa safe.” In that breath, I realized small acts could 30___ light for others. It is about being light, even when you feel 31___ yourself.
The lighthouse taught me a 32___: restoration is piecing back parts of ourselves we’ve set aside. When 33___ come, I think of that hammer — one swing, 34___ with others, can 35___ what is worn into something whole.
21. A.designed B.spotted C.printed D.discarded
22. A.break B.solution C.signal D.reason
23. A.secret B.battle C.promise D.joke
24. A.confusion B.doubt C.response D.agreement
25. A.controlled B.followed C.guided D.stopped
26. A.advice B.judgment C.direction D.appointment
27. A.arrangement B.task C.behavior D.choice
28. A.memory B.resource C.symbol D.method
29. A.reminder B.reward C.record D.report
30. A.hide B.save C.borrow D.cast
31. A.bright B.broken C.calm D.busy
32. A.skill B.story C.rule D.lesson
33. A.setbacks B.chances C.moments D.volunteers
34. A.compared B.challenged C.competed D.joined
35. A.turn B.push C.pull D.knock
三、语法填空
As a featured segment of the 2026 China Internet Media Forum, a thematic forum named Telling Story Well: From Empathetic Communication to Cultural Identity 36.___ (hold) on March 28 in Zhengzhou, Henan province. It gathers global content creators, and 37.___ makes Martina Sicuso stand out is her genuine love for Chinese culture.
Martina’s bond with China started at 17, when she was captivated by the pictographic beauty of Chinese characters. She devoted six years 38.___ (earn) bachelor’s and master’s degrees in oriental languages, and in 2023, she won a scholarship to study at Wuhan University. The strong sense of security in China left a lasting 39.___ (impress) on her.
Before joining the Henan tour from March 22 to 25, she 40.___ (live) in China for nearly three years. The “Yang Friend” channel documents 41.___ (foreign) daily lives and experiences in China, boasting 591,000 followers. At the upcoming forum, she will share her stories 42.___ (sincere) to build 43.___ (close)cultural ties.
She holds a firm belief that appreciating ancient Chinese poems can narrow the cultural gap, especially works by Tao Yuanming. She misses Wuhan deeply, 44.___ she never feels anxious or restricted here, and she treasures every opportunity 45.___ (spread) vivid Chinese culture overseas.
四、写作
46 书信写作
假定你是李华,即将完成高中学业。如果可以回到过去,你想给刚进入高一的自己写一封信。内容包括:
1.送上鼓励;
2.给出最真心的建议;
3.表达期许。
词数80左右。
47 读后续写
Marnie and Jude had been best friends since they were toddlers, two girls who fit together like no one else. Marnie was bright, outgoing, and mad about photography — she carried an old film camera everywhere, freezing small, warm moments of daily life. Jude was quiet, gentle, and gifted at writing poetry, but she always hid her works, convinced she was too plain and boring to be seen.
For years, they did everything together. Marnie would take photos of Jude reading under the old oak tree, and Jude would write soft poems for Marnie, tucking them into her camera bag. They walked home together every afternoon, shared snacks on the playground, and promised to stay close long after high school ended.
Everything changed as graduation neared. Marnie started acting distant. She left Jude waiting alone after class, lied about being busy, and stopped asking Jude to hang out. She would sneak off alone, her camera in hand, and come back with her eyes red, as if she had been crying. Jude’s heart sank deeper every day. She thought Marnie had grown tired of her quiet company, that Marnie was ready to leave her behind for more exciting people and brighter futures.
Heartbroken and ashamed, Jude stopped trying to reach out. She stuffed all her poems into a wooden box and planned to give it to Marnie as a final goodbye gift. One afternoon, Jude found Marnie’s camera left on the library bench, the memory card slot open. Curiosity and sorrow mixed inside her, and she gently pulled out the memory card.
Jude plugged the memory card into a nearby library computer, her hands cold and trembling.
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
Before Jude could hide the memory card, soft footsteps rushed toward her.
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
标准答案
阅读理解
1-3 ACB 4-7 DBAB 8-11 BCDC 12-15 BCDA
七选五
16G 17D 18B 19E 20A
完形填空
21-25 BABCC 26-30 CBCAD 31-35 BDADA
语法填空
36.was held
37.what
38.to earning
39.impression
40.had lived
41.foreigners’
42.sincerely
43.closer
44.where
45.to spread
46 满分范文
Dear Me at Senior 1,
Hi! I am the you three years later.
Looking back, I know high school may seem tough and challenging at first, so I want to tell you to stay confident and brave. Here are my sincere suggestions. Firstly, focus on steady progress rather than quick results. Secondly, value every minute and keep a balanced lifestyle.
I hope you can cherish your youth, stick to your goals and grow into a better self step by step.
Yours,
Li Hua
47 读后续写范文
Jude plugged the memory card into a nearby library computer, her hands cold and trembling. To her great surprise, every single photo was about her. There were pictures of her reading under the oak tree, writing poems quietly and walking home after school. Marnie had secretly recorded all her gentle moments. At the end of the album was a note, saying she was diagnosed with anxiety and feared dragging Jude down, so she chose to stay distant. Tears flooded Jude’s eyes instantly.
Before Jude could hide the memory card, soft footsteps rushed toward her. It was Marnie. Seeing the screen, Marnie froze, her face turning pale. Without hesitation, Jude held out the wooden box full of poems and hugged her tightly. She told Marnie that true friendship meant sharing pain as well as joy. Moved deeply, Marnie cried and promised never to hide her troubles again. The two best friends reconciled, their bond becoming stronger than ever.

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