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2026年高考英语(全国一卷)冲刺模拟试卷1(含答案)
展开 这是一份2026年高考英语(全国一卷)冲刺模拟试卷1(含答案),共9页。
注意事项:
1.答卷前,考生务必将自己的姓名、准考证号等填写在答题卡和试卷指定位置上。
2.回答选择题时,选出每小题答案后,用铅笔把答题卡上对应题目的答案标号涂黑。如需改动,用橡皮擦干净后,再选涂其他答案标号。回答非选择题时,将答案写在答题卡上。写在本试卷上无效。
3.考试结束后,将本试卷和答题卡一并交回。
第一部分 听力(共两节,满分30分)
做题时,先将答案标在试卷上,录音内容结束后,你有两分钟的时间将试卷上的答案转涂到答题卡上。
第一节(共5小题;每小题1.5分,满分7.5分)
听下面5段对话。每段对话后有一个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项。听完每段对话后,你都有10秒钟的时间来回答有关小题和阅读下一小题。每段对话读两遍。
1. What des the man want t drink?
A. Cffee. B. Tea. C. Juice.
2. When will the wman leave?
A. On Mnday. B. On Tuesday. C. On Wednesday.
3. What is the relatinship between the speakers?
A. Dctr and patient. B. Teacher and student. C. Husband and wife.
4. Why is the wman calling?
A. T cancel an rder. B. T change an appintment. C. T ask fr directins.
5. What is the man ding?
A. Shpping nline. B. Returning a prduct. C. Cmparing prices.
第二节(共15小题;每小题1.5分,满分22.5分)
听下面5段对话或独白。每段对话或独白后有几个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项。听每段对话或独白前,你将有时间阅读各个小题,每小题5秒钟;听完后,各小题将给出5秒钟的作答时间。每段对话或独白读两遍。
听第6段材料,回答第6、7题。
6. What sprt des the wman play?
A. Tennis. B. Basketball. C. Swimming.
7. Hw ften des she practice?
A. Every day. B. Three times a week. C. Once a week.
听第7段材料,回答第8至10题。
8. What did the man lse?
A. His passprt. B. His driver's license. C. His library card.
9. Where des the wman suggest he check first?
A. The plice statin. B. His car. C. The restaurant.
10. What will the man d next?
A. Call his wife. B. File a reprt. C. Retrace his steps.
听第8段材料,回答第11至13题。
11. What mvie genre des the wman prefer?
A. Hrrr. B. Cmedy. C. Science fictin.
12. Why desn't the man want t see the actin mvie?
A. It's t vilent. B. It's sld ut. C. It's t lng.
13. What d they decide t watch?
A. A rmantic drama. B. An animated film. C. A dcumentary.
听第9段材料,回答第14至17题。
14. Where are the speakers?
A. At an airprt. B. At a train statin. C. At a bus terminal.
15. What prblem are they discussing?
A. Delayed departure. B. Lst tickets. C. Overbked seats.
16. What cmpensatin des the man request?
A. A full refund. B. A free meal vucher. C. An upgrade t first class.
17. Hw des the wman respnd t his request?
A. She agrees immediately. B. She declines plitely. C. She ffers an alternative.
听第10段材料,回答第18至20题。
18. What is the speaker's main tpic?
A. Urban farming. B. Rftp gardens. C. Cmmunity cmpsting.
19. Hw much fd waste des the city prduce annually?
A. 500 tns. B. 5,000 tns. C. 50,000 tns.
20. What des the speaker encurage listeners t d?
A. Start a hme garden. B. Vlunteer at the farm. C. Dnate leftver fd.
第二部分 阅读(共两节,满分50分)
第一节(共15小题;每小题2.5分,满分37.5分)
阅读下列短文,从每题所给的A、B、C和D四个选项中选出最佳选项。
A
Five years after launching its first cean cleanup system, Dutch nn-prfit The Ocean Cleanup has shifted fcus upstream. Their latest inventin, the Interceptr, is a slar-pwered barge that extracts plastic frm rivers befre it reaches the sea. Twenty-three Interceptrs nw perate in eight cuntries, remving 5 millin kilgrams f trash annually.
Each Interceptr prcesses 50,000 kilgrams f waste daily, perating autnmusly with minimal human versight. A cnveyr belt lifts flating debris nt a shuttle, which distributes trash amng six dumpsters. When full, the system texts lcal peratrs fr cllectin. "Rivers are the arteries carrying plastic t the cean's heart," explains funder Byan Slat. "Stp the flw at the surce."
Jakarta's Citarum River, nce called the wrld's mst plluted, hsts three Interceptrs. Since installatin, plastic pllutin dwnstream drpped 65%. Lcal fisherman Wars, wh previusly caught mre trash than fish, nw nets 30 kilgrams daily. "I thught my river was beynd saving," he says. "Nw children swim here again."
Critics nte that Interceptrs treat symptms, nt causes. "We're still prducing 400 millin tns f plastic annually," says envirnmental plicy expert Dr. Lisa Chen. "Technlgy alne wn't slve addictin t dispsables." Slat agrees: "Interceptrs buy time. Real slutin requires reducing prductin."
The rganizatin has pen-surced Interceptr designs, encuraging lcal fabricatin. India built fur using dmestic materials at half the cst. "Our gal isn't mnply—it's multiplicatin," Slat says. Next target: the 1,000 mst plluting rivers, respnsible fr 80% f cean plastic. "That's achievable by 2030 if gvernments partner with us."
21. What is the primary purpse f the Interceptr?
A. Cleaning cean plastic. B. Remving river plastic befre it reaches ceans.
C. Recycling plastic waste. D. Mnitring water pllutin levels.
22. Hw des the Interceptr ntify wrkers t cllect waste?
A. Thrugh daily emails. B. Via autmated text messages.
C. By sunding an alarm. D. Thrugh mbile apps.
23. What des the example f India demnstrate?
A. Interceptrs are t expensive. B. Lcal manufacturing reduces csts.
C. India has the mst plluted rivers. D. Technlgy cannt be shared.
B
In Nrway's Svalbard archipelag, reindeer have learned a surprising trick: stealing birds' eggs. Fr generatins, researchers assumed reindeer were strict herbivres, surviving n lichen, grass, and leaves during brief Arctic summers. But camera traps installed in 2023 revealed a different stry.
Ftage shws reindeer appraching Arctic tern nests, waiting fr parents t leave, then swallwing eggs whle—shell and all. "We've dcumented 47 egg-eating events acrss three summers," says eclgist Dr. Anna Lindqvist. "This isn't desperatin. It's learned behavir passed t calves." Genetic analysis cnfirms that reindeer in egg-eating regins have elevated chlesterl-prcessing genes, suggesting adaptatin ver decades.
Climate change may drive this dietary shift. Warmer summers cause plants t flwer earlier, mismatching with reindeer birthing seasns. When mther reindeer lack prtein frm peak vegetatin, eggs prvide critical nutritin. "We're watching evlutin in real-time," Lindqvist ntes. "But it's evlutin frced by warming."
The behavir has cascading effects. Arctic tern ppulatins in egg-eating areas declined 30% cmpared t predatr-free znes. Meanwhile, reindeer calf survival rates increased 15% during pr plant years. "Nature desn't have mral judgments," says bilgist Dr. Paul Andersen. "It has trade-ffs."
Svalbard's gvernment is cnsidering supplemental feeding prgrams t reduce egg predatin. But Lindqvist warns against quick fixes: "Intervening in ne species affects thers. We need lng-term study befre acting." The reindeer's new diet has becme a case study in hw climate change rewrites eclgical rules—smetimes with species eating breakfast fds their grandparents never imagined.
24. What did researchers previusly believe abut reindeer?
A. They nly eat plants. B. They hunt small animals.
C. They migrate lng distances. D. They hibernate in winter.
25. What evidence suggests this behavir is learned, nt instinctual?
A. Reindeer teach their yung. B. Only lder reindeer eat eggs.
C. The behavir appears suddenly. D. Genetic changes supprt adaptatin.
26. Why are reindeer turning t eggs accrding t the passage?
A. Plants have becme pisnus. B. Bird ppulatins are increasing.
C. Climate change affects plant availability. D. Reindeer ppulatins are t high.
27. What dilemma des Svalbard face?
A. Prtecting reindeer r birds. B. Stpping climate change r adapting.
C. Feeding reindeer r reducing turism. D. Tracking reindeer r saving plants.
C
The wrld's largest bidiversity database just gt bigger—and greener. Brazil's Ri de Janeir Btanical Garden has digitized 2.5 millin plant specimens spanning 400 years, using AI t transcribe handwritten labels in Prtuguese, Latin, and even 19th-century German cursive. The cllectin, nw freely nline, helps scientists track extinctin rates and climate impacts.
"This isn't just abut preservatin—it's abut cnnectin," says directr Dr. Lucia Mendes. "A German btanist in 1882 described a plant nw extinct. A researcher in Kenya can use his ntes t understand why." The AI, trained n 50,000 manually transcribed labels, achieves 96% accuracy, reducing 400 years f catalging wrk t 18 mnths.
The cllectin includes specimens frm Captain Ck's Pacific vyages, Darwin's Beagle expeditin, and plants that inspired mdern chemtherapy drugs. "When we digitize labels, we're decding histry's scientific cnversatins," says archivist Carls Silva. "Handwriting reveals urgency: neat labels mean rutine cllectin; shaky script suggests malaria r seasickness."
Climate scientists use the database t measure changes. One 1883 specimen f Brmeliad was cllected at 800 meters elevatin. Tday, the same species grws at 1,100 meters—chasing cler temperatures upward at 5 meters annually. "That's three times the glbal average," says Dr. Mendes. "Brazil's muntains are warning us."
The prject faced near-cancellatin when funding dried up in 2024. Lcal tech cmpanies dnated servers, and 3,000 vlunteers transcribed 100,000 labels frm hme during lckdwns. "This cllectin belngs t humanity," Mendes says. "We fund a way."
Next phase: phtgraphing pllen samples under electrn micrscpes t train AI predicting future plant distributins. "Imagine knwing in 2026 which trees will survive 2050's climate," Mendes envisins. "That's nt science fictin. That's ur next grant prpsal."
28. What challenge did the digitizatin prject vercme?
A. Translating extinct languages. B. Reading 400 years f handwriting varieties.
C. Preserving fragile specimens. D. Cnvincing scientists t share data.
29. Hw des shaky handwriting n labels help researchers?
A. It identifies the plant's medicinal uses. B. It suggests the cllectr's physical state.
C. It indicates the specimen's age. D. It reveals the cllectin lcatin.
30. What des the Brmeliad elevatin change demnstrate?
A. Plants adapt quickly. B. Climate warming is ccurring.
C. Brazil's muntains are grwing. D. Specimen labels are inaccurate.
31. Hw was the prject saved frm cancellatin?
A. Gvernment emergency funds. B. Crprate and vlunteer supprt.
C. Internatinal dnatins. D. Selling access t the database.
D
Every mrning, 70-year-ld Mei Xiang walks 30 minutes t a "time bank" in her Shanghai neighbrhd, where she trades tw hurs f tutring migrant children fr "time credits" she spends n acupuncture sessins. N mney changes hands. Just time.
Shanghai's Elderly Time Bank, launched in 2019 and nw spanning 200 cmmunities, allws retirees t depsit vlunteer hurs and withdraw services later—frm husekeeping t nursing care. "Yung peple wrk; lder peple have skills and time," explains prgram directr Feng Jian. "Why nt exchange bth?"
The math seems prmising. China's ver-60 ppulatin will reach 400 millin by 2035. Meanwhile, prfessinal caregivers face severe shrtages. Time banking desn't replace paid care but supplements it—67% f participants reprt reduced lneliness, and 42% say they've avided hspital visits thrugh early interventin frm nurse vlunteers.
Nt everyne is cnvinced. Critics nte that cmplex services like dementia care require prfessinal training, nt time credits. "Yu can't trade babysitting hurs fr brain surgery," says gerntlgy expert Dr. Han Wei. Additinally, withut frmal valuatin, a dentist's hur equals a driver's hur—ptentially discuraging high-skill vlunteers.
Feng acknwledges limitatins: "Time banking cmplements, nt cmpetes with, prfessinal care." The prgram is testing "skill multipliers" where ne hur f specialized service earns 3-5 credits. A retired surgen earned 200 credits teaching first aid—enugh fr a year f grcery delivery.
Similar prgrams perate in the UK, Japan, and Switzerland. But Shanghai's versin includes blckchain technlgy preventing fraud and enabling crss-district credit transfers. "My credits fllw me if I mve," Mei Xiang explains. "That's security."
The central gvernment plans natinal expansin by 2027. "Aging isn't a crisis—it's a redesign pprtunity," Feng says. "Time banking reminds us: everyne has smething t give."
32. What is the main functin f the Time Bank?
A. Prviding free healthcare t retirees. B. Exchanging vlunteer hurs fr services.
C. Emplying senirs in childcare. D. Funding nursing hmes.
33. What prblem des the Time Bank attempt t address?
A. High unemplyment rates. B. Shrtage f prfessinal caregivers.
C. Lw retirement savings. D. Lack f cmmunity centers.
34. Hw des Shanghai's Time Bank differ frm internatinal versins?
A. It uses blckchain technlgy. B. It serves nly wealthy senirs.
C. It requires cash payment. D. It fcuses n medical care.
35. What is Feng Jian's attitude tward the Time Bank's future?
A. Cautiusly ptimistic. B. Deeply skeptical. C. Fully cnfident. D. Cmpletely indifferent.
第二节(共5小题;每小题2.5分,满分12.5分)
阅读下面短文,从短文后的选项中选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为多余选项。
Synthetic media is becming harder t detect. Here's what experts recmmend fr identifying AI-generated vides spreading nline.
Lk at lighting and shadws. 36 AI ften struggles with cnsistent shadws acrss mving bjects. If a persn's face is lit frm the left but their shulder shws right-side shadw, suspect manipulatin.
Check skin texture. Deepfake algrithms smth skin unnaturally, remving pres, freckles, and small scars. 37 Pause the vide and zm in. Des skin lk like plastic r wax? That's a red flag.
Watch muth mvements. 38 Humans blink, swallw, and make micr-expressins. AI typically generates perfect, symmetrical muth mvements that ignre tngue psitin r teeth visibility. If speech seems "t clean," it might be fake.
Examine eyes. Many deepfakes fail t replicate realistic blinking patterns. 39 Als check fr incnsistent catchlights—the reflectins in eyes shuld match the scene's lighting surce.
Test audi-vide sync. 40 Watch fr mismatched jaw mvements r unnatural pauses between lip mvement and sund.
A. If smething feels wrng, trust yur gut.
B. Humans require air, s muths pen slightly between wrds.
C. Sme systems blink t rarely r with synchrnized eyes.
D. Deepfakes ften fail t synchrnize lips with audi precisely.
E. Real vides have natural skin irregularities AI cannt reprduce.
F. Lighting incnsistencies ften reveal digital manipulatin.
G. Backgrund elements give away many deepfake vides.
第三部分 语言运用(共两节,满分30分)
第一节(共15小题;每小题1分,满分15分)
阅读下面短文,从每题所给的A、B、C和D四个选项中选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。
The letter arrived n a Tuesday, tucked between a pizza cupn and an electric bill. But fr 12-year-ld Elena, it might as well have been a time machine. "Dear Elena," the handwritten nte began, "I fund yur message in a bttle n a beach in Csta Rica. I'm 70 years ld, and it's the mst ___41___ thing that's ever happened t me."
Elena had ___42___ the bttle int the Pacific Ocean during a family trip t Oregn tw years earlier. Inside: her name, address, and a drawing f a whale. "I was bred," she ___43___. "Dad said messages in bttles ___44___ wrk. I wanted t prve him wrng."
She did—spectacularly. The bttle traveled 3,000 miles, ___45___ by currents that pushed it past Califrnia, Mexic, and Central America befre ___46___ n a remte Csta Rican beach. Retired marine bilgist Dr. Rbert Sanchez fund it while ___47___ sea turtle nests.
"I recgnized the whale drawing immediately," Sanchez writes. "It's a blue whale—my life's study. I've ___48___ them fr 40 years. The universe sent me a clleague."
That clleague is nw his pen pal. Elena and Sanchez exchange mnthly letters—his in careful English, hers with Spanish phrases she's learning. He ___49___ her whale anatmy; she sends pressed flwers frm her garden. When Elena's class studied cean currents, Sanchez vide-called t ___50___ hw bttles drift faster than scientists nce believed.
Their stry ___51___ news after Elena's teacher submitted it t a lcal paper. Nw, a nnprfit has launched "Message in a Bttle Prject," ___52___ kids and senirs wrldwide t exchange handwritten letters abut marine cnservatin. "They're building bridges acrss ___53___," says funder Maria Flres. "Each letter is a bttle cast int human cnnectin's cean."
Elena still keeps Sanchez's first letter taped abve her desk. "Adults always say 'stay in tuch' but never mean it," she reflects. "He ___54___ did. One bttle. Tw years. 3,000 miles. All because my dad said it ___55___ wrk."
41. A. frightening B. amazing C. dangerus D. expensive
42. A. drpped B. threw C. placed D. flated
43. A. admits B. denies C. argues D. basts
44. A. always B. ften C. never D. smetimes
45. A. pushed B. carried C. blwn D. pulled
46. A. resting B. landing C. waiting D. circling
47. A. mnitring B. building C. hiding D . drawing
48. A. prtected B. studied C. caught D. fed
49. A. asks B. teaches C. shws D. sends
50. A. explain B. cmplain C. questin D. dubt
51. A. avided B. made C. ignred D. fllwed
52. A. frcing B. helping C. pairing D. begging
53. A. generatins B. cntinents C. species D. ccupatins
54. A. unwillingly B . accidentally C. actually D. repeatedly
55. A. wuld B. shuld C. might D. culdn't
第二节(共10小题;每小题1.5分,满分15分)
阅读下面短文,在空白处填入1个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。
On a cludy mrning in western Turkey, archaelgists made a discvery that rewrites histry. Beneath 12 feet f sediment, they uncvered a wden tablet dating t 1200 BCE—the earliest knwn example f a ___56___ (write) cntract between tw merchants, cmplete with witness signatures and penalty clauses fr late delivery.
"Previusly, we believed such legal ___57___ (dcument) emerged in ancient Greece, 500 years later," says excavatin directr Dr. Ayşe Yılmaz. "This tablet prves cmmercial law existed in Brnze Age Anatlia." The tablet, preserved by a cllapsed rf that sealed it frm xygen, details a shipment f 200 clay jars ___58___ (fill) with live il.
The text, written in Luwian hierglyphs, includes ___59___ (surprise) mdern elements: "If gds arrive damaged, seller ___60___ (replace) within 30 days." A "frce majeure" clause excuses delays due t war r earthquakes, a cmmn risk in seismically active Turkey. "These weren't primitive traders," Yılmaz ntes. "They were sphisticated enugh t plan fr disasters."
___61___ tablet als reveals wmen's ecnmic rles. One witness signature belngs t "Tarhunza, merchant's wife," suggesting she c-wned the business. Anther tablet fragment mentins "daughter's share f prfits"—evidence f female inheritance rights ___62___ (previus) thught absent in the perid.
The discvery challenges assumptins abut literacy. "We assumed nly scribes culd read," says linguist Dr. Markus Wagner. "But witnesses signed their ___63___ (individual) names, meaning cmmn peple culd write." This pushes back the timeline f widespread literacy by centuries.
The Turkish gvernment has declared the excavatin site a prtected zne. Meanwhile, the tablet ___64___ (tur) majr museums, with Barcelna hsting it next spring. "Every artifact ___65___ (tell) a stry," Yılmaz says. "This ne tells us that business cntracts—and clever ways t avid blame—are ancient human traditins."
第四部分 写作(共两节,满分40分)
第一节(满分15分)
假定你是李华,你校正在开展"校园减塑"(Plastic-Free Campus)活动。请你给校英文报写一篇倡议书,呼吁同学们减少使用一次性塑料制品,内容包括:
1. 塑料污染的危害;
2. 具体行动建议(自带水杯、使用布袋等);
3. 发出呼吁。
注意:1. 词数80左右;2. 可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯。
Dear fellw students,
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
The Student Unin
Li Hua
第二节(满分25分)
阅读下面材料,根据其内容和所给段落开头语续写两段,使之构成一篇完整的短文。
注意:1. 续写词数应为150个左右;
2. 请按如下格式在答题纸的相应位置写出。
The abandned subway statin beneath Lndn's King's Crss had been sealed fr 40 years—until architect Tm Hartwell fund a frgtten dr during a survey in 2023. What he discvered wasn't trash r rats. It was a jungle.
In the absence f humans, nature had reclaimed the 10,000-square-ft space. Ferns grew frm platfrms. Birds nested in signal lights. A small pnd, frmed frm leaking pipes, supprted frgs and newts. "I expected dust," Hartwell recalls. "Instead, I fund a secret ecsystem."
DNA analysis later identified 127 plant species, including three believed extinct in Lndn. The statin's cnstant 15°C temperature and 90% humidity created a micrclimate similar t prehistric peat bgs. "This isn't just abandned," said eclgist Dr. Helen Oknkw. "It's actively rewilding itself."
The discvery sparked fierce debate. Shuld Lndn preserve this accidental nature reserve r redevelp the statin fr husing? The site sits abve tw planned rail lines. Prperty develpers argued fr demlitin: "Thusands need hmes, nt a museum t rats and weeds." But schlchildren launched a "Save the Subterranean Jungle" campaign, gathering 50,000 signatures.
Hartwell prpsed a cmprmise: glass flrs allwing cmmuters t see the ecsystem belw while building abve. "Dn't pave paradise—display it," he argued. But engineers wrried abut light damaging plants, and csts tripled initial estimates.
As the debate cntinued, smething unexpected happened: the jungle's existence was leaked t internatinal media.
Paragraph 1:
Within a week, scientists frm six cuntries requested access t study the statin.
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Paragraph 2:
The jungle taught Lndn an unexpected lessn abut resilience.
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
听力原文及答案
听力原文
Text 1
W: Wuld yu like cffee r tea with yur breakfast?
M: Just sme range juice, please. I'm trying t cut back n caffeine.
Text 2
M: Are yu still leaving n Mnday?
W: I pushed it t Wednesday. My sister wants t have dinner tgether n Tuesday.
Text 3
W: Have yu been taking yur medicatin as prescribed?
M: Yes, but my knee still hurts when I walk upstairs.
W: Let me schedule an X-ray t be sure.
Text 4
M: Hell, this is Dr. Chen's ffice.
W: Hi, I have a 3 'clck appintment, but I'm stuck in traffic. Can I cme at 3:30 instead?
Text 5
M: This shirt desn't fit. The sleeves are t lng.
W: D yu have the receipt? Yu can exchange it within 30 days.
Text 6
W: I have tennis practice every mrning at 6 AM. It's exhausting but wrth it.
M: Every day? That's dedicatin. I can barely wake up fr wrk.
W: Three times a week, actually. Mnday, Wednesday, Friday. Weekends are fr recvery.
Text 7
M: I can't find my driver's license anywhere. I need it t pick up a package.
W: When did yu last use it? At the restaurant last night?
M: Yes! I shwed it fr a discunt. It must be n the table.
W: Call them first. If nt, the DMV can issue a temprary ne.
Text 8
W: Let's see what's playing. Hrrr? T scary. Actin? T lud.
M: Hw abut that new cmedy with the British actr?
W: I saw it last week. What abut the sci-fi film abut Mars?
M: That's tw hurs lng. My back will hurt. Let's just watch cartns.
Text 9
W: Attentin passengers: Flight 407 t Chicag is delayed tw hurs due t weather.
M: Tw hurs? I have a cnnecting flight! This is unacceptable.
W: I can rebk yu n the next direct flight, but it leaves at 9 PM.
M: Can yu at least give me a meal vucher fr the incnvenience?
W: Certainly. Please prceed t custmer service desk C fr cmpensatin.
Text 10 (Mnlgue)
Hi everyne, and thanks fr cming t the cmmunity meeting. I'm here t talk abut ur new rftp farm prject. Last year, this city prduced 50,000 tns f fd waste. Our farm will turn 500 tns f that int cmpst fr urban gardens. We need vlunteers every Saturday t srt waste and water plants. If yu can't cme, cnsider dnating a trash can r sil. Tgether, we can feed ur neighbrs instead f landfills. Sign-up sheets are by the dr.
听力答案
1-5 CCABB 6-10 ABBCB 11-15 CCBAA 16-20 BABCB
阅读答案
21-25 BBBAA 26-30 CABBB 31-35 CBBAC 36-40 AEFCD
七选五答案
36. F 37. E 38. B 39. C 40. D
完形填空答案
41-45 BAACB 46-50 BABBA 51-55 BCACD
语法填空答案
56. written 57. dcuments 58. filled 59. surprising 60. will replace 61. The 62. previusly 63. individual 64. is turing 65. tells
书面表达
第一节(满分15分)
Dear fellw students,
Our schl's "Plastic-Free Campus" campaign reminds us: single-use plastics chke ur planet. One plastic bttle takes 450 years t decmpse, harming wildlife and plluting ceans.
Let's act nw! Bring yur wn water bttle—ur schl has refill statins. Use clth bags at the campus stre. Say n t plastic straws. Small actins, massive impact.
Jin us this Friday at nn in the cafeteria fr a reusable cup giveaway. Tgether, we can turn the tide n plastic pllutin. Our planet can't wait.
The Student Unin
Li Hua
第二节(满分25分)
Paragraph 1:
Within a week, scientists frm six cuntries requested access t study the statin. Bilgists discvered bacteria that digest plastic waste—a ptential slutin t cean pllutin. Btanists fund that ferns had evlved larger spres fr lw-light envirnments. The statin became a living labratry. Lndn's mayr declared it a prtected research site, and UNESCO prvided emergency funding. Prperty develpers withdrew their plans. "Smetimes the best use f space is n use at all," Hartwell said. Glass viewing platfrms were installed at street level, allwing cmmuters t watch the jungle thrive belw withut disturbing it.
Paragraph 2:
The jungle taught Lndn an unexpected lessn abut resilience. Schl curriculums added "urban rewilding" units. Other cities—Paris, New Yrk, Tky—began surveying their wn abandned spaces. "We spent centuries fighting nature," Oknkw reflected. "This statin prves nature fights back quietly, beautifully, effectively." On the first anniversary f the discvery, Hartwell returned with his daughter. She pressed her face against the glass platfrm, watching a fx drink frm the pnd. "Daddy," she whispered, "can we build mre jungles?" Hartwell smiled. In that frgtten statin, buried under cncrete and histry, Lndn had fund its future.
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