2024届上海市松江区高三下学期模拟考质量监控英语试卷(原卷版+解析版)
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3. 答题纸与试卷在试题编号上是一一对应的,答题时应特别注意,不能错位。
Ⅰ. Listening Cmprehensin
Sectin A
Directins: In Sectin A, yu will hear ten shrt cnversatins between tw speakers. At the end f each cnversatin, a questin will be asked abut what was said. The cnversatins and the questins will be spken nly nce. After yu hear a cnversatin and the questin abut it, read the fur pssible answers n yur paper, and decide which ne is the best answer t the questin yu have heard.
1. A. At 8:00. B. At 8:15. C. At 8:30. D. At 8:45.
2. A. A prfessr. B. A cach. C. An engineer. D. A nurse.
3. A. In a restaurant. B. In a hairdresser’s. C. At a cinema. D. At a tailr’s.
4. A. Ways t visit a university. B. Tw student tur guides.
C. A tur f Fudan University. D. The campus f Fudan University.
5. A. They did nt make it there finally.
B. They were nt well received there.
C. They experienced smething unpleasant n the way.
D. They had a wnderful time befre they arrived there.
6. A. Excited. B. Interested. C. Cnfused. D. Annyed.
7 A. Practice the presentatin in frnt f him. B. Watch hw he makes a presentatin.
C. Reduce the time spent in practicing. D. Find ut wh her audience will be.
8. A. She is always absent-minded. B. She frgt t tell the man abut it.
C. She is unclear abut Sphie’s plan. D. She slipped in the neighbring twn.
9. A. Because it tk him much time t g t wrk.
B. Because he had t save mney fr his jurney.
C. Because the jb arranged many business jurneys.
D. Because he cnsidered it unlucky t have that jb.
10. A. Buy a new printer with less nise. B. Ask the man t brrw a printer.
C. Read a bk n hw t fix the printer. D. Get smene t repair the printer.
Sectin B
Directins: In Sectin B, yu will hear tw passages and ne lnger cnversatin. After each passage r cnversatin, yu will be asked several questins. The passages and the cnversatin will be read twice, but the questins will be spken nly nce. When yu hear a questin, read the fur pssible answers n yur paper, and decide which ne is the best answer t the questin yu have heard.
Questins 11 thrugh 13 are based n the fllwing passage.
11 A. Hw encres came int existence. B. Hw bands perfrm encres prperly.
C. Why audiences used t need encres. D. Why encres are part f a perfrmance.
12. A. The 17th century. B. The 18th century. C. The 19th century. D. The 20th century.
13. A. French peple were mre interested in encres than thers.
B. Bands usually prepare mre than tw encres fr each shw.
C. Recrding technlgy bsted audiences’ needs fr encres.
D. Musicians can get recharged during the break befre encres.
Questins 14 thrugh 16 are based n the fllwing passage.
14. A. Because f the rule fr the class. B. Because f the curse materials.
C. Because the speaker changed his tpics. D. Because the speaker disliked technlgy.
15. A. The students d nt assess the speaker’s class fairly.
B. The students are satisfied with the class envirnment.
C. The speaker did nt favr leaving technlgy at the dr.
D. The speaker were wrried abut students’ evaluatin n him.
16. A. It will stp students getting n well tgether.
B. It may help students better understand themes.
C. It will imprve teaching effect by giving students mre help.
D. It may distract students frm digging deep within themselves.
Questins 17 thrugh 20 are based n the fllwing cnversatin.
17. A. Dctr and patient. B. Salesman and custmer.
C. Teacher and student. D. Emplyer and emplyee.
18. A. Fishing industry. B. Statistics. C. Cmputer mdeling. D. Nte-taking.
19. A. She is gd at making mdel cmputers. B. She has decided n the title f the essay.
C. She is uninterested in cping with statistics. D. She has always been weak at nte-taking.
20. A. Learn t take ntes immediately. B. Find ut pssible strategies alne.
C. Read fr mre useful infrmatin. D. Wrk n her weaknesses by herself.
Ⅱ. Grammar and Vcabulary
Sectin A
Directins: After reading the passage belw, fill in the blanks t make the passage cherent and grammatically crrect. Fr the blanks with a given wrd, fill in each blank with the prper frm f the given wrd; fr the ther blanks, use ne wrd that best fits each blank.
Remte Wrk Slws Senir Husing Market Recvery
With the rise f remte wrk, the market fr senir husing has met with prblems in its recvery. Only a few ld peple chse t live in senir-living cmmunities ___1___ the grwing senir ppulatin and the cancelatin f COVID-19 restrictins nce making family visits difficult. ___2___ this trend suggests is that peple’s shift t remte wrk cntributes t the slw rebund f the senir husing market. That is, remte wrk is keeping many lder Americans frm mving int senir-living cmmunities nce warmly ___3___ (welcme).
When mre adults began wrking remtely during the pandemic (流行病), they were able t check in n aging parents easily — they ___4___ take care f their parents’ issues n shrt ntice.
Experts have been analyzing the phenmenn in different ways. Sme fund that the greater flexibility t care fr parents ___5___ (mean) peple’s delay in sending aged parents t expensive senir-husing accmmdatins. Therefre, markets with high levels f peple wrking frm hme usually have lwer senir-husing ccupancy rates. Others said remte wrk might have sme effect but als pinted t different factrs. Fr instance, many senirs think that their family wallets are getting thinner, making sme f them reluctant ___6___ (send) t senir-living cmmunities.
The age at which peple enter senir husing is als increasing, ___7___ serves as anther sign that shws peple are chsing t delay transitining. The rising cst f senir living weighs heavily n that decisin. The CPI (cnsumer-price index) fr nursing hmes and adult day services rse 4.5% last May cmpared with ___8___ in May, 2022.
Still, many senir-husing peratrs are ptimistic. When ___9___ (illustrate) their pint, they shwed an increase in the number f peple turning 80 years ld ver the fllwing years and the actual wealth they have cllected. Mrever, they find remte wrk arrangements are decreasing in sme parts f the cuntry, ____10____ emplyees there have seen their lwered prductivity while wrking frm hme.
Sectin B
Directins: After reading the passage belw, fill in each blank with a prper wrd chsen frm the bx. Each wrd can be used nly nce. Nte that there is ne wrd mre than yu need.
Brain Signals fr Lasting Pain
Brain signals that reveal hw much pain a persn is in have been discvered by scientists wh say the wrk is a step twards new treatments fr peple living with lasting pain.
It is the first time researchers have decded the brain activity ___11___ patients’ lasting pain. That has raised the hpe that brain stimulatin treatment already used fr Parkinsn’s and majr depressin can help thse running ut f any ther ___12___. “We’ve learned that lasting pain can be tracked and predicted in the real wrld,” said Prasad Shirvalkar, lead researcher n the prject at the University f Califrnia.
Lasting pain affects nearly 28 millin adults in the UK alne, and the causes are ___13___. ranging frm cancer t back prblems. That being the case, lasting pain has ___14___ a rise in taking pwerful painkillers. But n medical treatments wrk well fr the cnditin, ___15___ experts t call fr a cmplete rethink in hw health services handle patients with lasting pain.
Fr the latest study, Shirvalkar and his clleagues ___16___ implanted electrdes(电极) int fur patients with lasting pain hard t deal with after the lss f legs. The devices ___17___ the patients t recrd activity and cllect data in tw brain regins— the ACC and the OFC—at the press f ne buttn n a remte handset. Several times a day, the vlunteers were asked t cmplete shrt surveys n the ___18___ f pain, meaning hw strng the pain was, and then recrd their brain activity. These scientists, armed with the survey respnses and brain recrdings, fund they culd use cmputers t predict a persn’s pain based n the electrical signals in their OFC. “We fund very different brain activity ___19___ severe pain and have develped an bjective bimarker fr that kind f pain,” said Shirvalkar. The finding may explain, at least in part, why ___20___ painkillers are less effective fr lasting pain. “The hpe is that we can use the infrmatin t develp persnalized brain stimulatin treatment fr the mst severe frms f pain.”
Ⅲ. Reading Cmprehensin
Sectin A
Directins: Fr each blank in the fllwing passage there are fur wrds r phrases marked A, B, C and D. Fill in each blank with the wrd r phrase that best fits the cntext.
The way f recrding things has never ceased t develp. In the 1980s, as sales f vide recrders went up, ld 8mm hme mvies were gradually replaced by VHS (vide hme system)tapes. Later, vide tapes f family hlidays lst their appeal and the use f DVDs ___21___. Thse, t, have had their day. Even thse hlding their childhd memries in digital files n their laptps nw knw these files face the risk f ___22___.
Digitising histrical dcuments brings huge benefits—files can be ___23___ and distributed, reducing the risk f their entire lss thrugh physical damage caused by fire r flding. And develping digital versins reduces ___24___ n the riginal items. The Internatinal Dunhuang Prject, ___25___, has digitised items like manuscripts (手稿) frm the Mga caves in China, enabling schlars frm arund the wrld t access recrds easily withut tuching the real items.
But the news that the Ministry f Justice f the UK is prpsing t scan the 110 millin peple’s wills it hlds and then destry a handful f ___26___ after 25 years has shcked histrians. The ministry cites this as a way f prviding easier access fr researchers. But that nly justifies digitisatin, nt the ___27___ f the paper cpies. The fficials nte the change will be ecnmically efficient (saving arund £4.5m a year) while keeping all the essential infrmatin.
Schlars ___28___. Mst significantly, physical recrds can themselves carry imprtant infrmatin — the kind f ink r paper used may be part f the histry that histrians are ___29___. and errr s are ften made in scanning. Besides, digital cpies are arguably mre ___30___ than the material items, just in different ways. The attack frm the Internet n the British Library last Octber has prevented schlars frm ___31___ digitised materials it hlds: imagine if researchers culd nt return t the riginals. Sme even think digitised infrmatin can easily be lst within decades n matter what ___32___ are put in place.
The gvernment says that it will save the riginal wills f “famus peple fr histric recrd”, such as that f Princess Diana’s. Hwever, assuming that we knw wh will ___33___ t future generatins is extrardinarily prud. Mary Seacle, a pineering nurse wh nw appears n the natinal schl curse in the UK, was largely ___34___ fr almst a century.
The digitisatin f ld dcuments is a valuable, even essential measure. But t destry the riginals nce they have been scanned, is nt a matter f great ___35___, but f huge damage.
21.
A. pausedB. bmedC. recveredD. disappeared
22.
A. getting utdatedB. cming int styleC. being finedD. making an errr
23.
A. deletedB. namedC. cpiedD. altered
24.
A. fight r flightB. life r deathC. wear and tearD. awe and wnder
25.
A. unfrtunatelyB. additinallyC. in summaryD. fr example
26.
A. the riginalsB. the essentialsC. the visualisedD. the digitised
27.
A. preservatinB. classificatinC. publicatinD. destructin
28.
A. applaudB. disagreeC. discriminateD. withdraw
29.
A. revisingB. abandningC. uncveringD. enduring
30.
A. meaningfulB. favurableC. resistantD. delicate
31.
A. inventingB. adjustingC. accessingD. damaging
32.
A. utcmesB. safeguardsC. deadlinesD. byprducts
33.
A. matterB. respndC. lseD. live
34.
A. sparedB. discussedC. frgttenD. prtected
35.
A. sacrificeB. curageC. efficiencyD. admiratin
Sectin B
Directins: Read the fllwing three passages. Each passage is fllwed by several questins r unfinished statements. Fr each f them there are fur chices marked A, B, C and D. Chse the ne that fits best accrding t the infrmatin given in the passage yu have just read.
(A)
Charles Rbert Darwin was brn n 12 February 1809 in Shrpshire, England. Darwin’s childhd passin was science, and his interest in chemistry, hwever, was clear; he was even nicknamed ‘Gas’ by his classmates.
In 1825, his father sent him t study medicine at Edinburgh University, where he learned hw t classify plants. Darwin became passinate abut natural histry and this became his fcus while he studied at Cambridge. Darwin went n a vyage tgether with Rbert Fitzry, the captain f HMS Beagle, t Suth America t facilitate British trade in Patagnia. The jurney was life-changing. Darwin spent much f the trip n land cllecting samples f plants, animals and rcks, which helped him t develp an understanding f the prcesses that shape the Earth’s surface. Darwin’s analysis f the plants and animals that he gathered led him t express dubts n frmer explanatins abut hw species frmed and evlved ver time.
Darwin’s wrk cnvinced him that natural selectin was key t understanding the develpment f the natural wrld. The thery f natural selectin says that individuals f a species are mre likely t survive when they inherit(经遗传获得) characteristics best suited fr that specific envirnment. These features then becme mre widespread and can lead eventually t the develpment f a new species. With natural selectin, Darwin argued hw a wide variety f life frms develped ver time frm a single cmmn ancestr.
Darwin married his cusin, Emma Wedgwd, in 1839. When Darwin’s eldest daughter, Annie, died frm a sudden illness in 1851, he lst his belief in Gd. His tenth and final child, Charles Waring Darwin, was brn in 1856. Significantly fr Darwin, this baby was disabled, altering hw Darwin thught abut the human species. Darwin had previusly thught that species remained adapted until the envirnment changed; he nw believed that every new variatin was imperfect and that a struggle t survive was what drve species t adapt.
Thugh rejected at the beginning, Darwin’s thery f evlutin by natural selectin is nwadays well accepted by the scientific cmmunity as the best evidence-based explanatin fr the diversity and cmplexity f life n Earth. The Natural Histry Museum’s library alne has 478 editins f his On the Origin f Species in 38 languages.
36. What made Darwin recnsider the rigin and develpment f species?
A. Examining plants and animals cllected.
B. His desire fr a vyage t different cntinents.
C. Classifying samples in a jurney t Suth America.
D. His passin fr natural histry at Edinburgh University.
37. We can learn frm paragraphs 1 t 3 that Darwin ________.
A. used natural selectin t develp new species
B. enjyed being called nicknames related t science
C. learned sme knwledge abut plants when studying medicine
D. argued with thers ver the diversity f life frms fr a lng perid
38 Which f the fllwing changed Darwin’s view n the human species?
A. That he had ten children in all.B. His yungest sn’s being disabled.
C. That he lst his eldest daughter.D. His marriage with Emma Wedgwd.
39. This passage is mainly abut ________.
A. Darwin’s passin fr medical scienceB. Darwin’s thery and experiments
C. Charles Darwin’s changing interestD. Charles Darwin’s life and wrk
(B)
Welcme t Muir Wds! This rare ancient frest is a kingdm f cast redwds, many ver 600 years ld.
Hw t get here?
Peple using persnal vehicles must have reservatins befre arriving at the park. (Details at )
Muir Wds Natinal Mnument is pen daily, 8 a. m. t sunset. Stp by Visitr Center t get trails (路线) and prgram infrmatin, and t take in exhibits.
What’s yur path?
Enjy a walk n the paved Redwd Creek Trail (als called Main Trail). Chse shrt, medium, r lng lps (环线). Other trails g deep int Muir Wds and Munt Tamalpais State Park.(Refer t the map f Muir Wds n the right fr details.)
Ready t explre mre?
Muir Wds is part f Glden Gate Natinal Recreatin Area, which includes Marin Headlands, Alcatraz, the Presidi, and Ocean Beach. Dwnlad the app at
Stay safe and prtect yur park.
Wi-Fi and cell service are nt available. ·Watch fr pisnus plants and falling branches. ·D nt feed r disturb animals. ·Fishing is prhibited in the park. ·D nt mark r remve trees, flwers, r ther natural features. ·G t the park website fr mre safety tips and regulatins.
Accessibility
We make a great effrt t make facilities, services, and prgrams accessible t all. Fr infrmatin, g t Visitr Center, ask a ranger, call, r check ur website.
Mre Infrmatin
Muir Wds Natinal Mnument Mill Valley, CA 94941-2696
40. Muir Wds will prbably attract ________.
①redwd lvers ②hunting lvers ③fishing lvers ④hiking lvers
A. ①②B. ③④C. ①④D. ②③
41. What can be learned frm the passage?
A. Muir wds is surrunded by highland and cean beaches.
B. Visitrs can read electrnic maps using Wi-Fi in Muir Wds.
C. Visitrs are advised t call Visitr Center fr safety tips and regulatins.
D. Reservatins shuld be made if visitrs drive private cars t Muir Wds.
42. Accrding t the map f Muir Wds, ________.
A. Bridge 4 is the farthest frm the parking lts f all bridges
B. Mill Valley is lcated n the suthwest side f Muir Beach
C. Btjack Trail can lead ne t Visitr Center frm Bridge 3
D. fd and gifts can be bught n varius sites in Muir Wds
(C)
Precgnitive dreams are dreams that seemingly predict the future which cannt be inferred frm actually available infrmatin. Frmer US President Abraham Lincln nce revealed the frightening dream t his law partner and friend Ward Hill Lamn, “…Then I heard peple weep… ‘Wh is dead in the White Huse?’ I demanded. ‘The President,’ ‘he was killed!’…” The killing did happen later.
Christpher French, Prfessr in the Department f Psychlgy at Gldsmiths, stated the mst likely explanatin fr such a phenmenn was cincidence (巧合). “In additin t pure cincidences we must als cnsider the unreliability f memry”, he added. Asked what criteria wuld have t be met fr him t accept that precgnitive dreams were a reality, he said, “The primary prblem with tests f the claim is that the subjects are unable t tell when the event(s)they’ve dreamed abut will happen.”
Hwever, sme claimed t make such tests practicable. Prfessr Carline Watt at the University f Edinburgh, has cnducted studies int precgnitive dreaming. She stated that knwing future thrugh dreams challenged the basic assumptin f science — causality (relatinship f cause and effect).
Dick Bierman a retired physicist and psychlgist, wh has wrked at the Universities f Amsterdam, Utrecht and Grningen, has put frward a thery that may explain precgnitive dreams. It is based n the fact that when scientists use certain mathematical descriptins t talk abut things like electrmagnetism (电磁学), these descriptins favur the belief that time nly mves in ne directin. Hwever, in practice the wave that is running backwards in time des exist. This cncept is called the time symmetry, meaning that the laws f physics lk the same when time runs frward r backward. But he believes that time symmetry breaks dwn due t external cnditins. “The key f the thery is that it assumes that there is a special cntext that restres the brken time-symmetry, if the waves running backwards are ‘absrbed’ by a cnsistent multi-particle (多粒子) system. The brain under a dream state may be such a system where brken time-symmetry is partially restred. This is still nt a full explanatin fr precgnitive dreams but it shws where physics might be adjusted t accmmdate the phenmenn,” he explains.
Althugh Bierman’s explanatin is still based n guesses and has nt accepted by mainstream science, Watt des think it is wrth cnsidering. Fr nw, believing that it’s pssible t predict future with dreams remains an act f faith. Yet, it’s pssible that ne day we’ll wake up t a true understanding f this fascinating phenmenn.
43. Accrding t French, what makes it difficult t test precgnitive dreams?
A. Unavailability f peple’s dreams.
B. That cincidences happen a lt in reality.
C. That criteria fr dream reliability are nt trustwrthy.
D. Peple’s inability t tell when dreamt events will happen.
44. Believers in precgnitive dreams may questin the truth f ________.
A. the assumptin f causalityB. the time symmetry
C. memries f rdinary pepleD. mdern scientific tests
45. We can infer frm the passage that ________.
A. Lincln was warned f the killing by his friend
B. Watt carried ut several experiments n causality
C. researches n electrmagnetism are based n the time symmetry
D. time’s mving in tw directins may justify precgnitive dreams
46. Which might be the best title f the passage?
A. Shuld Dreams Be Assessed?
B. Can Dreams Predict the Future?
C. Hw Can Physics Be Changed t Explain Dreams?
D. Why Shuld Scientists Study Precgnitive Dreams?
Sectin C
Directins: Read the fllwing passage. Fill in each blank with a prper sentence given in the bx. Each sentence can nly be used nce. Nte that there are tw sentences mre than yu need.
Addictin t Labeling
Maybe yu’ve nticed it in the cmments sectin f ppular scial media psts abut anxiety. depressin r things alike, with a number f peple claiming t pick these labels fr themselves.
These days labeling is everywhere. ___47___ Hwever, the negative part is that it’s easy fr smene t identify with the characteristics withut truly recgnizing the cntext in which these characteristics wuld require diagnsis, accrding t Charltte Armitage, a registered integrative psychtherapist and psychlgist.
If yu have dne yur research and genuinely feel that yu have sme frm f mental health cncern, then finally having a name fr yur behavirs can be great. But the risk is that many peple will seek labels and interventin fr any behavir, pattern r emtin that is utside f the permanent happy grup that sciety has set as the nrm. “___48___ Then the saying ‘a little bit f knwledge is dangerus’ springs t my mind,” Armitage adds.
___49___ “Children are still develping and evlving, and many childhd behaviral features may seem like thse f a disrder when there’re ther ptential explanatins fr that behavir,” Armitage ntes. Ideally, a diagnsis fr a child shuld be carried ut by a qualified mental health prfessinal. S it is with an adult.
Nevertheless, the mst imprtant thing t bear in mind is that diagnsis desn’t mean t indicate that yu are brken r less capable. ___50___ And if yu g deeper, it can alert yu t the fact that yu are nt alne, and that many peple experience life in the same way as yu d.
A. Labeling pses even mre f a prblem when it cmes t kids.
B. It can be helpful fr thse nt quite able t understand why they feel the way they d.
C. There seems t be a desire t see negative emtins as smething requiring interventin r diagnsis.
D. Labeling leads t children’s vercming their addictin t what is psted nline.
E. Smene has had nly a certain experience and judges all behavir with that experience.
F. The basic functin f a diagnsis is t give yu a name fr thse behavirs nce felt unusual.
Ⅳ. Summary Writing
51. Directins: Read the fllwing passage. Summarize the main idea and the main pint(s) f the passage in n mre than 60 wrds. Use yur wn wrds as far as pssible.
Why Willing t Wait?
First it was the fried chicken. Then a variety f fancy milkshakes. N matter what time it is r hw bad the streets smell, there are plenty f peple waiting in line fr hurs t get their hands n the fd that everyne’s talking abut. If yu are nt the type f persn crazy fr trendy fds, yu prbably wnder why smene wuld like t wait in a lng line just t get a taste f a ppular cream tea. There is a bit f psychlgy behind the craze f waiting befre getting ne’s chpsticks n a trendy fd.
Peple are brn curisity hunters, especially fr fresh ideas, accrding t sme experts. At the sight f a lng waiting line, they just can’t help having a try. And when the trendy fds are nvel in lks and favrs, even innvative in their sales envirnment, the desire fr them is upgraded. All thse stimulate peple t investigate mre—t deal with their curisity.
In additin, having access t smething that is sught ut but hard t pssess equips peple with a feeling that imprves their self-definitins. When smene is envied due t smething he gained with effrts, his self-wrth gets enhanced. Althugh it is yet t be determined whether the number f likes he receives n the phts f fds he’s psted nline is cnnected with the level f envy frm n-lkers, that feeling autmatically becmes strnger.
Even mre, “mb psychlgy” cmes int play: when many peple are ding smething—waiting in line fr the sught-after milkshakes, fr instance —thers are eager t be part f the grup and share such a type f scial familiarity, kind f like the natural pursuit f a sense f belnging. Tasting the same wait-wrthy fd has smething in cmmn.
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Ⅴ. Translatin
Directins: Translate the fllwing sentences int English, using the wrds given in the brackets.
52. 大多数中国人喜欢在生日的时候吃碗面。(tend) (汉译英)
_______________________________________________________________________________
53. 这家软件公司会从技术上保护设计师的创意。(perspective) (汉译英)
_______________________________________________________________________________
54. 她原以为没多少人会来体育馆看比赛,结果看台上座无虚席。(it) (汉译英)
_______________________________________________________________________________
55. 这位摄影师觉得去热门景点拍照没意思,他已计划好要去沙漠找灵感。(instead) (汉译英)
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Ⅵ. Guided Writing
56. Directins: Write an English cmpsitin in 120—150 wrds accrding t the instructins given belw in Chinese.
你是新华中学的高三学生张敏。临近毕业,同学间正在互留赠言。假设李华是你的同班好友,请给他/她写一封邮件,你需要在邮件中:
1)写明你给他/她的临别赠言;
2)结合李华的高中生活经历,谈谈你送他/她该赠言的理由。
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
听力 1—5 CDBCC 6—10 DABAD 11—13 DCD 14—16 ABD 17—20 CADCA. accmpanied B. allwed C. feasibly D. fueled
E. intensity F. ptin G. prmpting H. rutine
I. surgically J. underlying K. varied
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