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2025届江苏省淮安市观音寺中学高三下学期开学回头考自选模块试题考生须知全卷分选择题和非选择题两部分,全部在答题纸上作答选择题必须用铅笔填涂;非选择题的答案必须用黑色字迹
1.2B的钢笔或答字笔写在“答题纸”相应位置上请用黑色字迹的钢笔或答字笔在“答题纸”上先填写姓名和准考证号
2.保持卡面清洁,不要折叠,不要弄破、弄皱,在草稿纸、试题卷上答题无效
3.第一部分(共小题,每小题分,满分分)20L
5301.It wasnot until3days laterthat theboy cameback tolife andexplained to the policewhat to him.A.was happeningB.was tohappen C.had happenedD.has happened
2.The solution to aproblem,we aretokL oftencomes to thinkers in a flashofA.inspiration B.insightC・invitation D・innovation•一
3.Alan seems a lottaller thanwhen Ilast saw him.一.He・Hes growna footsince yousawhimin Shanghai.A.is B.will beC.has beenD.was
4.-It isreally funto hikeand Ioften gohiking in the forest.-But hikingalone in the forestbe verydangerous.A.can B.must C.shall D.will
5..There arevarious thingson sale,so you can chooseinterests you.A.whoever B.no matterwhoC.whatever D.no matterwhat
6.So absorbed in heryoga exercisesthat shetook nonotice of the heavyrain outside.A.Mary wasB.Mary has beenC.was MaryD.has Marybeen
7.That childrenmeet withsetbacks is a matterof necessityas they,so parentsdon worryabout that.A.shall;grew up B.must;grew upC.can;grow upD.will;grow up
8.Is itcommon practicethat salesmenreceive aof10percent on all salesmadeA.deposit B.receiptC.pension D.commission
9.Our societywould bebetter offbut for the fact that theeconomy by the currentglobal flnancialcrisis.A.had beenaffected B.were affectedC.should beaffected D.is affected
10.—Whats therecent progressin Xiongan NewArea,first announcedtwo yearsago—It increasingattention fromforeign companiesgiven itshuge developmentpotential.consultation.When heheard thename of the townshe camefrom,a strangelight30his eyes.Immediately,heand wentdown throughthe hospitalhall into her room.3132in hisdoctors gownhe wentin to see her.He33her atonce.He wentback to the consultationroom and34to dohis bestto saveher life.From thatday on,he gave35attention toher case.After along36the battlewas won.Dr.Kelly37the businessoffice topass thefinal billtohimforapproval.He lookedat itand thenwrote somethingon the side.The billwas senttoherroom.She was afraid toopen itbecauseshe was38that itwould takethe restof herlife to pay itoff.Finally she looked,and the note on thesideof thebillcaught her
39.She readthese words...“Paid infull with a glass of Dr.Howard KellyTearsof joyflooded hereyes asshe40silently.Thank you,God.Your lovehas spreadthrough humanhearts andhands.”
1、A.call B.make C.beg D.prepare
2、A.while B.when C.though D.unless、3A.thirsty B.lazy C.tired D.hungry、4A.slowly B.unexpectedly C.steadily D.hurriedly、5A.announced B.shook C.replied D.doubted、6A.reward B.kindness C.hand D.value
7、A.physically B・mentally C.normally D.properly
8、A.upB.for C.on D.in
9、A.rich B.famous C.observant D.vivid10A.fixed B.consulted C.filled D.concentrated、12A.Worn B.Having C.putting D.Dressed
13、A.recognized B.knew C.spared D.regained
14、A.desired B.declared C.determined D.declined
15、A.special B.ordinary C.normal D.no、B.preparation C.struggle D.debate16A.decision
17、A.ordered B.requested C.confused D.compressed、B.uncertain C.positive D.obvious18A.negative
19、A.presentation B.preference C.attention D.arrangement、11A.rose B.raised C.got D.left、20A.praised B.pretended C.pressed D.prayed第二节(每小题分,满分分)阅读下面材料,在空白处填入个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式L5151(分)」()
27.15Kiwis areendangered littlebirds nativeto New Zealand It1believe that these smallbirds existasaresult of New(隔离)()(进化)Zealands isolationfrom theother partsof the world,forcing animalsthere2adapt andevolve soas to be able to()survive andreproduce Theevolution iswhat hasled to the present
3.appear of the kiwibird()Kiwis area nationalsymbol ofNew Zealand,with thename kiwi
4.be associatedwith manythings inNewZealand includingtheir famousrugby nationalteam」()Kiwis haveexcellent memoriesand canremember somethingthat5happen aslong asfive yearsback Even though they have()feathers,their featherslook andfeel
6.much likehair rather than feathers」()This enables them to be able to hidein abush andgo7complete unnoticedby theirnatural enemies(猎物)Unlike mostbirds,the kiwibird hasa greatsense ofsmell
8.enablesthemto sniffout preyhidden inbushes andundergroundThesmallest kiwibird has
9.height of45centimeters andwight of2kilograms whilethe largestkiwi cangrow
10.50centimeterstall andcan weigh
11.5kilograms第四部分写作(共两节)第一节短文改错(满分分)10(分)假定英语课上老师要求同桌之间交换修改作文,请你修改你同桌写的以下作文文中共有处语言错误,
28.1010每句中最多有两处每处错误仅涉及一个单词的增加、删除或修改增加在缺词处加一个漏字符号
(八),并在其下面写出该加的词删除把多余的词用(\)划掉修改在错的词下画一横线,并在该词下面写出修改后的词注意、每处错误及其修改均仅限一词;
1、只允许修改处,多者(从第处起)不计分21011Last weekend,after paya visit to the city ofNew York,I visitedthe SmithsonianInstitutions NationalAir andSpaceMuseum,where liesin Washington,D.C.、The museum,which coversa area of18,000square meters,is madeof24exhibition hallsAll kindsof planes,rockets,missiles and spaceship ofgreat importance and variouslyold instruments that famous pilots and astronauts usedare on、display In addition,I seecopies of some satellites and aircraftMore interestingly,I tried operating onsome aircraftbymyself During the visit,I tooklots ofpictures as wellThis briefvisit helpedmyself learnmuch about the history of humans space explorationIt mademe moreinteresting in第二节书面表达(满分分)science and technology13825(分)假如你是李华,你校外教春节期间看到邻居房门上的福字是倒着贴的,感到很好奇,写信向你
29.25Mr.Brown询问此事请你给他回一封信,介绍福字倒贴的原因和这一传统的寓意,同时邀请他高考后来你家过端午节参考词汇端午节the Dragon BoatFestival;福字the character Fu注意词数左右;L
100.可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯;
2.开头和结尾已经为你写好,不计入总词数3Dear Mr.Brown,Im reallyglad toreceive yourletter.Looking forwardto yourreply.Yours,Li Hua参考答案第一部分(共小题,每小题分,满分分)20L
530、1C、2B、3A、4A、5C、6C、7D、8D、9D、10A、11C、12B、13C、14B、15B、16C、17C、18C、19D、20C第二部分阅读理解(满分分)阅读下列短文,从每题所给的、、、四个选项中,选出最佳选项40A BC D、
211.A
2.D
3.B
4.A、
221.D
2.B
3.C
4.B
5.C
6.A、
231.B
2.C
3.C、
241.D
3.A
4.A、
251.A
2.D
3.B
4.C第三部分语言知识运用(共两节)第一节(每小题分,满分分)阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的、、
1.530A BC和四个选项中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项.D、
261.C
2.B
3.D
4.A
5.C
6.B
7.A
8.D
9.B
10.C
11.A
12.D
13.A
14.C
15.A
16.C
17.B
18.C
19.C
20.D第二节(每小题分,满分分)阅读下面材料,在空白处填入个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式L
5151、
271.is believed
2.to adapt
3.appearance
4.being
5.happened
6.more
7.completely
8..that/which
9.a
10.to第四部分写作共两节第一节短文改错满分分10Last weekend,after paypayingavisitto thecityofNewYorkJ visitedthe SmithsonianInstitutions NationalAir andSpaceMuseum,wherewhich liesin Washington,D.C.The museum,which coversa anareaof18000square metersjsmadeAup of24exhibition halls.All kindsof planes,:rockets missilesandspaceshipspaceshipsof greatimportanceandvariously variousoldinstrumentsthatfamouspilotsand,」astronauts usedare ondisplay.Inadditionseesaw copies去掉ofsomesatellitesandaircraft.More interestingly,!triedoperatingon oi^some aircraftbymyself.Duringthevisitl tooklots ofpictures aswell.This briefvisit helpedmyselfmeleani muchabout the history ofhumansspaceexploration.lt mademe moreinterestmginterestedin scienceandtechnology.、28第二节书面表达满分分2529Dear Mr.Brown,Im reallyglad toreceive yourletter.As youhave seen,many Chinesechoose tostick the characterFuon thedoor upsidedownduring theSpring Festival.This actuallyexpresses theirbest wishesfor the new year.In Chinese,the characterfor“upsidedown“sounds thesame asthecharacterforto arrive“so thismeans thathappiness isarriving.Quite interesting,isnt itBythe way,Id liketo inviteyou tocelebrate theDragonBoatFestival withmy familyafter theCollege EntranceExam.Its adayin memoryof thegreat poetQu Yuanand weusually eatzongzi andenjoy dragonboat races.Ifll bea goodopportunity toexperiencetruly Chineseculture andtradition.Looking forwardto yourreply.Yours,Li HuaA.has beenattractingB.had attractedC.would beattracting D.was attracting
11.some leadersand scientistshave praisedChinas achievementin spacetechnology,others regardChinas progressas athreat.A.Unless B.OnceC.EventhoughD.Now that
12.With MothersDay aroundthe corner,1have takensome moneyout of the bankpresents formymother.A.buy B.to buyC.buying D.having bought
13.We firmlybelieve thatthenewexamination systemcomes intoexistence,completely newsituations willarise.A.considering B.supposed C.providing D.given一
14.Have you seen JiangWens movieLefthe BulletsF/yrecently—Yes.I ittwice lastweek,At homeandin the theatre.A.had enjoyedB.enjoyed C.have enjoyedD.was enjoying
15.It isbeyond awkwardwhen everyonearound youlaughing ata jokethat youdo notfind funny,especially if its ajoke toldinaforeign language.A.run intoB.bursts outC.yells outD.falls into
16.While hisapproach wasa completefrom establishedpractices,the resultwas satisfactory.A.separation B.prohibition C.departureD.judgment
17.—I wenttoseeThe WanderingEarth lastnight.It wasfantastic!■一You wereso lucky!How Iwish Ithe tickettoo.A.get B.gotC.had gotD.would get一
18.Are weabout tohaving dinner—Yes,it in the diningroom.A.serve B.is servingC.is beingserved D.has beenserving
19.She wassuch aproud personthat she would dieshewouldadmit shewas wrong.A.since B.whenC.unless D.before
20.Try tobe independent,for yourparents cantdo foryou allyour life.A.something B.nothingC.everything D.anything第二部分阅读理解(满分分)阅读下列短文,从每题所给的、、、四个选项中,选出最佳选项40A BC D(分)
21.6When peoplefind outthat I am ajournalist,they oftenask me:What doyou thinkaboutthe future ofnewspapersI tellthem thatI thinkthe future of communicationsis movingonline.People expectme tobe fearfulfor the future of print.Afterall,in somepeoples mindsI wouldntbe able to builda careerin journalismif itall movesonline.However,strangely enough,Imactually comfortedbythefactthatonline journalismis becomingusual.Iama bloggerwho hasalways beenable tofind ahome formywriting online.Since Ibegan writingblogs,I havebecome aware of howmany peopleyoucanreach withonline writing.Compare thisto thenewspaperscirculation base,and you will havea strongreason foronline journalism.In hersuccessful blog post titledThe JobI havespent thelast yearlearning is not theone Iwill have,author JennySurane states,Print is an expensiveproduct tolove.And generalmanagers,publishers andeditors mustnow figureout aprofitable wayto gettheirnews into readers1heads.She goesontostate thatpeople dontfeel likepicking upa newspapernow andwould ratherscroll(滚屏)through theirTwitter feed,and getnews frommany differentsources.If printis dying,then anew formof communicatinginformation isbeing born.The needfor informationhas notdied.If anything,it hasincreased.What hasdied,rather,is theway inwhich informationis presented.Now morethan ever,in thisage ofinformation,there isa desirefor storieson thesame topicfrom differentpoints ofview.Theprinting industrycan keeppate with the needof providinga varietyof sources,ifitchooses to.Is the future ofprint grimMaybe,But isthe futureof journalismof communicatinginformation topeople,grim aswellDefinitely not.、1According toParagraph2,the authorfeels.A.confident aboutthefutureof hiscareerB.worried aboutthefutureof printC.tired ofbeing anewspaper journalistD.embarrassed aboutonline writing
2、What informationis conveyedin Jenny*s blogpost,A.Twitter isnot verypopularB.It ishard tomanage onlinejournalismC.Prim stillhas itsadvantagesD.People havemore choicesto getinformation、3What doesthe underlinedword grimin thelast paragraphprobably meanA.Promising B.DepressingC.Unforgiving D.Encouraging、4What isthe authorspurpose inwriting the textA.To explorethefutureof journalismB.To analyzethe causeofprintdeclineC.To explainthe brightfutureof a journalistD.To introducea successfulblogpostabout print(分)
22.8In AHistory ofReading,the Canadiannovelist AlbertoManguel describesa remarkabletransformation ofhumanconsciousness,which tookplace aroundthe10th centuryA.D.:the arrival of silent reading.Human beingshave beenreading forthousandsof years,but inancient times,the normalthing wastoreadaloud.With thearrival ofsilent reading,Manguel writes,...thereader wasat lastabletoestablish anunrestricted relationshipwiththebook and the words.The wordsno longerneeded tooccupy thetimerequired topronounce them.The readersthoughts inspectedthem atleisure,drawing newideas from them,allowing comparisonsfrommemory orfrom otherbooks.©To readsilently isto freeyour mindto reflect,to remember,to questionand compare.The cognitivescientist MaryanneWolfcalls thisfreedom thesecret giftof time to think”.A thousandyears later,critics fearthat digital technology hasput thisgift indanger.The Internetsflood ofinformation,together withthe distractionsof socialmedia,threatens tooverwhelm thespace ofreading,leavingus inwhat thejournalist NicholasCarr hascalled theshallows,,.In Carrsview,the endless,tempting buzz“of the Internet endangersourvery being:“One ofthe greatestdangers weface/9he writes,“aswegive upcontrol overthe flowof our thoughts and memories toapowerful electronicsystem,isaslow damageto our humanness andour humanity.”
②Theres noquestion thatdigital technologypresents challenges to the reading brain.But seenfrom ahistorical perspective,digital readingand silentreading looklike differencesof degree,ratherthanof kind.To theextent thatdigital readingrepresentssomething new,its potentialcuts bothways.Done badly,the Internetreduces usto mindlessclickers,racing numblytothebottom ofa(沉的)bottomless feed;but donewell,it hasthe potentialto expandthe verycontemplative spacethat we have prizedin ourselveseversince welearned toread withoutmoving ourlips.
③In thefifth centuryB.C.,Socrates worriedthat writingwould weakenhuman memory,and stifle(扼杀)judgment Infact,asWolf notesin her2007book ProustandtheSquid:the Stoiyand ScienceoftheReading Brain,the oppositehappened:Faced withthewritten page,the readersbrain developsnew capacities.
④The Internetmay causeour mindsto wanderoff,and yeta quicklook atthehistoryof bookssuggests thatwehavebeen一wandering offall along.When weread,the eyedoes notprogress steadilyalong theline oftext;it alternatesbetween saccadeslittlejumps-and briefstops,not unlikethe movementofthemouses cursoracross ascreen ofhypertext.Its truethat studieshave foundthat readersgiven text onascreen doworse onrecall andcomprehension teststhan readersgiventhe sametextonpaper.But a2015study bythe Germaneducator JohannesNaumann suggeststhe opposite.He gavea groupofhigh-school studentsthe jobof trackingdown certainpieces ofinformation onwebsites;he foundthatthestudents whoregularly didresearchonline werebetter atthis taskthan studentswho usedthe Internetmostly tosend email,chat,and blog.A newgeneration ofdigital writersprefers to include interactivefeatures.The2014iPad novel,Pty,tells thestoryofa demolition(爆破)expert returninghome fromthe firstGulf War.The storyis toldin text,photographs,video clips,and audio.It usesan interface(界面)that allowsyou tofollow theaction andshift betweenlevels ofawareness.As youread texton thescreen,describing charactersandplot,you drawyour fingersapart andsee aphotograph ofthe chiefcharacter,his eyesopening on theworld.Pinch yourfinger shutandyou visithis troubledunconscious;words and images raceby,as ifyou areinside hismemory.Pry isthe oppositeofashallow work;its wholeplay isbetween thesurface andthe depthsofthehuman mind.Reading itis stimulating.、1In AlbertoManguefs opinion,silentreading.A.isanabnormal thingto humanconsciousness B.offers readersmind freedomand、timetothink C,strengthens readerspower ofmemory andreflection D.allows readersto gainan insightinto booksand words2Why isdigitaltechnologyconsidered tohave endangeredour beingA.It presentschallengestothereadingbrain.B.It harmsourhumannessand humanitygradually.、C.It isvery likelyto expandour contemplativespace.D.It leavesourthoughtsandmemoriesout of control.3The sentence“The fearoftechnology isnot new.should beplaced in.A.
①B.
②C.
③D.@、4What canwe inferfrom JohannesNaumanns studyA.Its easierto collectinformation onthe Internetthan inbooks.B.Peoples habitof usingtheInternetinfluences theirperformance.C.The Internetisnt supposedtobeused asa toolof entertainment.、D.Paper readingis betterthan screenreading inimproving comprehension.5The2014iPad novel,Pry,is mentionedinthelastparagraph to.A.introduce theoccurrence ofa readingrevolutionB.show thetechnology employedin digitalreading C,prove digitalreading notshallow butattractiveD.illustrate theimpact digitalreading hason ourlife.、6What isprobably thebest titleforthe passageA.The deepspace ofdigital readingB.The timelyarrivalofsilent readingC,The developmentof traditionalreadingD.The potentialdamage ofelectronic books(分)
23.8Why dontquiet carriageswork,and howmight theybe maketo Quietcarriages ontrains area niceidea:travelersvoluntarily maketheir phonessilent,turn stereosoff andkeep chatterto aminimum.However,in reality,there isusually atleast one(喋喋不休的人)silly tobreak thesilence.A coupleof problemsprevent peacefultrips.First,there isa sortingproblem:some passengersend upinthe quiet carriagebyaccident andare notawareofthe rules.Second,there isa commitmentproblem:noise issometimes madeby travelerswho choosethequiet carriagebut findan importantcall hardto ignore.The trainoperators aretrying tofind answers.Trains inQueensland Australia,are havingpermanent signsadded toshow exactlywhatis expected;a Britishoperator hasinvested insome technologyto preventphone calls.阳劝阻)Microeconomics suggestsanother approach.Fining peoplefor makinga noisewould surely/the polluterand isa neatsolutionin theory,but itrequires costlymonitoring andenforcement.Another waywould be to useprices toseparate quietand noisypassengers—in effect,creating amarket forsilence.A simpleidea wouldbetosell accesstothequiet carriageas an optional extrawhenthe ticketis bought.Making thequiet coachboth anactive choiceandacostly onewould dissuademany ofthose whodont valueapeaceful ride.Charging mayalso solvethe commitmentproblem.This isparticularly tricky,as attitudesto noisecan changeduring thejourney.Some passengerswould paythequietpremium butstill chatteraway whensome vitalnews arrives.Schemes thatreward thesilent—arating systemamong fellowpassengers,for example—could help.The ideais thatlosing yourhard-won reputationoffsets theshort-term gainfrom usingthe phone.But sucha systemalso failsthe simplicitytest.A2010book byGeorge Akerlofand RachelKranton arguesthat“norms”—feelings abouthow everyone should behave—alsoplay arole indecision-making.Charging aprice,even ifjust atoken amount,means thequiet carriagebecomes aservice thatfellowpassengers havebought,not justa preferencetheyhaveexpressed.Perhaps differentnorms wouldcome intoplay,encouraging calm.Ifnot,a personal bubble is always anoption:noise-canceling headphonesstart ataround$
50.、1According tothe passage,what doesmicroeconomics suggestA.Finding thesource ofnoise.B.Putting aprice onnoise.C,Avoid usinga phoneinthecarriage.D.Investing moremoney inmonitoring andenforcement.、2By apersonalbubbleisalwaysanoptionJ theauthor means.A.one canmake hisown choiceB.one shouldrespect others9privacy、C.one cancreate hisown personalspace D.oneshouldstick tohis personalbudget3This passageis mainlyabout.A.peoples favouredtransportationB.effective methodsof monitoringnoise levelsC,possible solutionsto noisein traincarriages D.common formsof misbehaviorofpassengers(分)
24.8Norman Garmezy,a developmentpsychologist atthe Universityof Minnesota,met thousandsof childrenin hisfourdecades ofresearch.A nine-year-old boyin particularstuck withhim.He has an alcoholicmother andan absentfather.But eachday hewouldwalk into schoolwithasmile onhis face.He wantedto makesure thatno onewould feelpity forhim andno onewould knowhismothers incompetence.The boyexhibited aquality Garmezyidentified as“resilience”.(逆境)Resilience presentsa challengefor psychologists.People whoare luckyenough tonever experienceany sortof adversitywontknow howresilient theyare.Its onlywhen theyrefaced withobstacles,stress,and otherenvironmental threatsthat resilience,orthe lackof it,comes out.Some givein andsome conquer.Garmezys workopened thedoor tothe studyoftheelements thatcould enablean individuaPssuccess despitethe challengestheyfaced.His researchindicated that some elementshad to do withluck,but quitelarge setof elementswas psychological,and hadtodo(内with howthe childrenresponded tothe environment.The resilientchildren hadwhat psychologistscall aninternal lensof control控,点)They believedthat they,and nottheir circumstances,affected theirachievements.The resilientchildren sawthemselves asthearrangers oftheir ownfates.Ceorge Bonannohasbeenstudying resiliencefor yearsal ColumbiaUniversitys TeachersCollege.He foundthatsomepeople are(认矢口)far betterthan othersat dealingwith adversity.This differencemight comefrom perceptionwhether theythink ofan event(仓伤),as traumaticij orasanopportunity tolearn andgrow.“Stressful ortraumatic“events themselvesdont havemuch predictivepowerwhen itcomes tolife outcomes.Exposure topotentially traumaticevents doesnot predictlater functioning,Bonanno said.Itsonly predictiveif there*sa negative response.In otherwords,living throughadversity doesntguarantee thatyou1!!suffer goingforward.The goodnews isthat positiveperception can be taught.We canmake ourselvesmore orless easilyhurt byhow wethink aboutthings/Bonanno said.In researchat Columbia,the neuroscientistKevin Ochsnerhas shownthat teachingpeople tothink ofadversity indifferentways—to reframeit inpositive termswhen theinitial responseis negative,or ina lessemotional waywhen theinitial responseisemotionally hot”---changes howthey experienceand reacttotheadversity.、1According tothepassage,resilience isan individuafsability.A.tothinkcritically B.to decideones ownfateC.to livea betterlife D.to recoverfrom adversity、2What doesthe underlinedword they”in Paragraph3refer toA.The psychologistsB.The resilientchildrenC.Positive elementsD.Internal locusofcontrol、3According toParagraph4,we canlearn that.A.your positiveperception mayturn adversityaroundB.stressful eventsare morepredictive thandelightful eventsC.experiencing adversitypredicts thatyouwillgo onsufferingD.anegativeresponse doesntguarantee youwill sufferall thetime、4What isthe authorspurpose ofwriting thispassageA.To teachpeople howtoberesilientB.To encouragepeople tolive throughadversityC.To indicatepeoples perceptionvaries fromeach otherD.To comparedifferent researchfindings aboutresilience.(分)2510The regularworld presentedto usby ourfive senses——you couldcall itreality
1.0——isnotalways themostuser-friendly ofplaces.We getlost inunfamiliar cities;we meetpeople whoselanguage wedont understand.So whynot trythe()(图像)improved version:augmented realityAR orreality
2.0AR technologyadds computer-produced imagesonthe real worldviaa mobilephone cameraor special video glasses.Early formsof ARare alreadyhere.With theright downloads,smart phonescan deliverinformation aboutnearby ATMsandrestaurants andother pointsof interest.But thafsjust thebeginning.A fewyears from now thequantity ofinfbnnation availablewillhave increasedhugely.You willnot onlysee thattheres aChinese restaurantonthe next block,but youwill beabletosee themenu andreadreviews ofit.(界面)This iswhere thenext revolutionin computingwill takeplace:intheinterface betweentherealworld andthe informationbroughtto usvia theInternet.Imagine bubblesfloating beforeyour eyes,filled withcool informationabout anythingand everythingthatyouseein front of you.Lefs jumpahead toten yearsfromnow.A persontrying tofix theircar wontbe readinga bookwith pictures;they will be wearingadevice thatprojects animated3-D computergraphics onto the equipmentunder repair,labelling partsand givingstep-by-stepguidance.The windowontotheAR worldcanbea smartphone orspecialvideoglasses.But inten years5time thesewill havebeen(隐形眼镜)replaced bycontact lenseswith tiny LEDs,which presentsomething ata readabledistance infrontofthe eye.So adeafperson wearingthese lenseswillbeabletosee whatpeople aresaying.The questionis,while weare allabsorbedinour newaugmented realityworlds,how willwe becommunicating witheach other、1What doesthetextmainly talkaboutA.The nextinformation technologyrevolution.B.Early formsof augmentedreality technology.C.The differencesbetween reality
1.0and reality
2.
0.D.The relationshipbetween peopleliving inreality
2.
0.、2What doesthe underlinedword refertoinParagraph2A.The menu.B.The block.C.The revolution.D.The restaurant.、3What aretinyLEDsused todoA.Protect peopleseyes.B.Show textandimages.C.Warn usersof dangers.D.Replace videoglasses.、4Whats theauthors attitudetowards ARtechnologyA.Doubtful.B.Disapproving.C.Favourable.D.Ambiguous.第三部分语言知识运用(共两节)第一节(每小题分,满分分)阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的、、和L530A BC四个选项中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项.D(分)完形填空(共小题;每小题分),满分分)
26.30III.
201.530阅读下面短文,掌握其大意,然后从36-55各题所给的四个选项(A,B,C和D)中,选出最佳选项One day,a poorboy whowas tryingtopayhis waythrough schoolby sellinggoods fromdoor todoor foundthat heonlyhad onedime left.He washungry sohe decidedto21for a meal atthenexthouse.However,he losthis nervewater.She thoughthelooked23so shebrought hima largeglassofmilk.He drankit24,and then22a lovelyyoung womanopened thedoor.Instead ofamealhe askedfor adrink ofasked,How muchdo Iowe you”“You dontowe meanything,she
25.Mother hastaught menever toaccept payfor a26He said,Then Ithank youfromthebottom ofmy heart.^^As Howard Kelly leftthat house,henotonly feltstronger27,but italso increasedhis faithin Godand humanrace.He wasabout togive upand quitbefore thispoint.Years laterthe youngwoman becamecritically ill.The localdoctors werebaffled.They finallysent hertothebig city,wherespecialists canbe called28to studyher raredisease.Dr.HowardKelly,now29,was calledin forthe。
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