2021届上海市高考冲刺模拟英语试卷03(word考试版+答案版+听力)
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第 1 页 2021年高考英语冲刺模拟试卷3 (上海) I. Listening Comprehension Section A Directions: In Section A, you will hear ten short conversations between two speakers. At the end of each conversation, a question will be asked about what was said. The conversations and the questions will be spoken only once. After you hear a conversation and the question about it, read the four possible answers on your paper, and decide which one is the best answer to the question you have heard. 1. A. The beach was closed as planned. B. She doesn’t enjoy going to the beach. C. There wasn’t enough food at the barbecue. D. They didn’t have the barbecue due to the weather. 2. A. The doctor can see the man this week. B. Appointments must be made two weeks in advance. C. The man should call back on Friday. D. The doctor canceled his appointments on Friday. 3. A. The woman will have enough sleep this weekend. B. The woman should type the reports in the morning. C. The woman should rest before she begins typing. D. The woman will have to work day and night. 4. A. The man missed the turn. B. They need to turn up as planned. C. She doesn’t know where State Street is. D. There was no left turn at the last crossing. 5. A. He wants to recopy his notes. B. He has already seen the movie. C. He wishes he could go to the movie. D. He plans to go to the movie tomorrow. 6. A. She prefers big bills when traveling. B. She’d rather take a credit card than cash. C. It’s convenient to have cash on hand. D. Credit cards don’t fit in her wallet. 7. A. Professor Brown hasn’t finished grading the exams. B. She doesn’t think Professor Brown will give an exam. C. Exams are usually given during the last week of classes. D. Professor Brown probably won’t change the exam date. 8. A. They must buy something for her brother. B. There aren’t many posters to choose from. C. She wants the man to see the poster she bought. D. They promised to meet her brother at the gift shop. 9. A. He takes delight in fishing. B. He gets on well with Susan. C. He loves talking with Susan’s father. D. He met Susan’s parents last weekend. 10. A. She’d like to recommend a magazine to the man. B. She’s been sitting in the waiting room too long. C. Dr. Smith isn’t a good choice for the man. D. She’s never been treated by Dr. Smith. 第 2 页 Section B Directions: In Section B, you will hear two short passages and one longer conversation, and you will be asked several questions on each of the passages and the conversation. The passages and the conversation will be read twice, but the questions will be spoken only once. When you hear a question, read the four possible answers on your paper and decide which one is the best answer to the question you have heard. Questions 11 through 13 are based on the following passage. 11. A. They should leave school at the age of 18. B. They can decide whether to go to school. C. They must learn a kind of handicraft. D. They will choose to go to university. 12. A. Different forms of tests. B. Repeated practice. C. Hands-on experience. D. Storytelling skills. 13. A. Methods of learning. B. Two education experts. C. One of our current schools. D. Principles in QI school. Questions 14 through 16 are based on the following passage. 14. A. She translated only those she was interested in. B. She removed the Russian touch from the novels. C. She translated quickly and made some mistakes. D. She produced too many translations in her life. 15. A. Kornei Chukovsky and Joseph Brodsky’s. B. Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky’s. C. Kornei Chukovsky and Larissa Volokhonsky’s. D. Richard Pevear and Joseph Brodsky’s. 16. A. He stuck to the original. B. He lengthened the story. C. He changed some plots. D. He omitted the war. Questions 17 through 20 are based on the following conversation. 17. A. To collect money for some medical research. B. To recover from the loss of family members. C. To realize the dream of their parents. D. To become more physically fit. 18. A. She never tried running before. B. She found a running expert to train her. C. She stopped running if it rained. D. Gradually she ran about 15 to 20 km daily. 19. A. It might distract her while running. B. It helped her perform better in a race. C. It got her to be more motivated. D. It might annoy some other friends. 20. A. It was exhausting. B. It was rewarding. C. It was disappointing. D. It was unexpected. 第 3 页 II. Grammar and Vocabulary Section A Directions: After reading the passage below, fill in the blanks to make the passage coherent and grammatically correct. For the blanks with a given word, fill in each blank with the proper form of the given word; for the other blanks, use one word that best fits each blank. One Friday morning, before Michael was leaving for work he told his wife that he had finally determined to ask his boss for a salary raise. All day Michael felt nervous and anxious as he thought about the upcoming showdown. (21) _____ if Mr. Duncan refused to grant his request? Michael had worked so hard in the last 18 months and brought some great benefits to Braer and Hopkins Advertising Agency. Of course, he deserved (22) _____ wage increase. The thought of walking into Mr Duncan’s office left Michael weak in the knees. Late in the afternoon he was finally courageous enough (23) _____ (approach) his superior. To his delight and surprise, the ever-frugal (一惯节 省的) Rowland Duncan agreed to give Michael a raise! Michael arrived home that evening—(24) _____ breaking all city and state limits—to a beautiful table set with their best china, and candles lit. His wife, Cassie, had prepared a delicate meal (25) _____ (include) his favourite dishes. Immediately he thought someone from the office (26) _____( tip) her off! Next to his plate Michael found a beautiful lettered note. It was from his wife. It read: “Congratulations, my love! I knew you’d get the raise! I prepared this dinner to show just how much I love you. I am so proud of your accomplishments!” He read it and stopped to think about (27) _____ sensitive and caring Cassie was. After dinner, Michael was on his way to the kitchen to get dessert when he observed that a second card had slipped out of Cassie’s pocket onto the floor. He bent forward to pick it up. It read: “Don’t worry about not getting the raise! You (28) _____ deserve one! You are a wonderful provider and I prepared this dinner to show you just how much I love you (29) _____ _____ you did not get the increase.” Suddenly tears swelled in Michael’s eyes. Total acceptance! Cassie’s support for him was not conditional upon his success at work. Often the fear of rejection (30) _____ (soften) and we can undergo almost any setback or rejection when we know someone loves us regardless of our success or failure. Section B Directions: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need. Computer programs recognise white men better than black women Software that recognises faces has bounded ahead in recent years, aroused by a boom in a form of artificial intelligence called deep learning. Several firms now offer face recognition as a commercial service, via their __31__ clouds. The ability to recognise in faces such things as an individual’s sex has improved too, and this is also commercially __32__. A. involved B.accurately C. present D. arises E. existing F. accuracy G. moderate H. available I. processing J. respective K. closely 第 4 页 The algorithms __33__ have, however, long been suspected of bias. Specifically, they are declared to be better at __34__ white faces than those of other people. Until now, that suspicion has been unsupported by evidence. But next week, at Fairness, Accountability and Transparency, a conference in New York, Joy Buolamwini of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology will __35__ work which suggests it is true. Ms Buolamwini and her colleague Timnit Gebru looked at three sex-recognition systems, those of IBM, Microsoft and Facebook. They tested these on a set of 1,270 photographs of parliamentarians(国会议员) from around the world and found that all three classified lighter faces more __36__ than darker ones. All also classified males more accurately than females. IBM’s algorithm, for example, got light male faces wrong just 0.3% of the time. That compared with 34.7% of the time for dark female faces. The other two systems had similar gulfs in their performances. Probably, this bias __37__ from the sets of data the firms concerned used to train their software. Ms Buolamwini and Ms Gebru could not, however, test this because those data sets are __38__ guarded. IBM has responded quickly. It said it had retrained its system on a new data set for the past year, and that this had greatly improved its __39__. When testing the new system on an updated version of the set of politicians Ms Buolamwini and Ms Gebru had used, the firm said it now achieved an error rate of 3.46% on dark-skinned female faces—a tenth of that the two researchers had found using the __40__ system. For light-skinned males the error rate also fell, to 0.25%. III. Reading Comprehension Section A Directions: For each blank in the following passage there are four words or phrases marked A, B, C and D. Fill in each blank with the word or phrase that best fits the context. The fact that people are no longer tied to specific places for functions such as studying or learning, says William Mitchell, a professor of architecture and computer science at MIT, means that there is “a huge drop in demand for traditional, private, enclosed spaces” such as offices or classrooms, and simultaneously “a huge rise in demand for semi-public spaces that can be informally appropriated to ad-hoc(革新的) work spaces”. This shift, he thinks, amounts to the biggest change in ___41___ in this century. In the 20th century architecture was about ___42___ structures—offices for working, cafeterias for eating, and so forth. This was necessary because workers needed to be near things such as landline phones, fax machines and filing cabinets. The new architecture, says Mr. Mitchell, will “make spaces intentionally ___43___ ”. Architects are thinking about light, air, trees and gardens, all in the service of human connections. Buildings will have much more ___44___ shapes than before. ___45___ , people working on laptops find it comforting to have their backs to a wall, so hybrid spaces may become curvier, with more nooks (角落,凹处), in order to maximize the surface area of their inner walls. This “___46___” is what separates successful spaces and cities from unsuccessful ones, says Anthony Townsend, an urban planner at the Institute for the Future, a think-tank. Almost any public space can ___47___ some of these features. For example, a not-for-profit organization in New York has ___48___ Bryant Park, a once- abandoned but charming garden in front of the city’s public library, into a hybrid space popular with office workers. The park’s managers noticed that a lot of visitors were using mobile phones and laptops in the park, so they installed Wi-Fi and added some chairs with fold-able lecture desks. The idea was not to distract people from the 第 5 页 flowers but to let them ___49___ their little bit of the park. The academic name for such spaces is “third places”, a term originally coined by the sociologist Ray Oldenburg in his 1989 book, “The Great, Good Place”. At the time, long before mobile technologies became widespread, Mr. Oldenburg wanted to ___50___ between the sociological functions of people’s first places (their homes), their second places (offices) and the public spaces that ___51___ safe, neutral and informal meeting points. As Mr. Oldenburg saw it, a good third place makes admission free or cheap—the price of a cup of coffee, say— offers creature comforts, is within walking distance for a particular neighborhood and draws a group of ___52___ . As more ___63___ places pop up and spread, they also change entire cities. Just as buildings during the 20th century were specialized by ___54___ , towns were as well, says Mr. Mitchell. Suburbs were for living, downtowns for ___55___ and other areas for playing. But urban nomadism makes districts, like buildings, multifunctional. Parts of town that were monocultures, he says, gradually become “fine-grained mixed-use neighborhoods” more similar in human terms to pre-industrial villages than to modern suburbs. 41. A. development B. architecture C. technology D. purpose 42 A. specialized B. detailed C. outstanding D. unusual 43. A. attractive B. cooperative C. multifunctional D. agreeable 44. A. varied B. dynamic C. artificial D. patterned 45. A. In addition B. For instance C. On the contrary D. Meanwhile 46. A. orientation B. division C. flexibility D. simplicity 47. A. justify B. convert C. ruin D. assume 48. A. manufactured B. transformed C. introduced D. expanded 49. A. customize B. overlook C. supervise D. review 50. A. judge B. balance C. choose D. distinguish 51. A. serve as B. originate from C. differ from D. integrate into 52. A. third-parties B. architects C. competitors D. regulars 53. A. leisure B. public C. appealing D. third 54. A. function B. interest C. organization D. block 55. A. entertaining B. working C. socializing D. gathering Section B Directions: Read the following three passages. Each passage is followed by several questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that fits best according to the information given in the passage you have just read. (A) Teresa Freding met Annie virtually through way of Facebook. She was in the midst of opening up a new local preschool, but was set back after discovering she had to install a very expensive fire alarm system. “She [Annie] learned of this and without ever even meeting me, she said, ‘We’re going to get through this!’ I was so moved by the attitude of ‘we’ in her words,” says Freding. Thanks to KidsCycle, $1,000 was raised that went to the preschools fire alarm system. Another time, a KidsCycle member reached out that a friend lost everything in a fire. The KidsCycle community sprung into immediate action. 第 6 页 “The children were the same size as mine and I started filling bags with clothes and toys,” says Crysdale. “My 5- year-old daughter asked what I was doing, and when I explained what it would be like if we had a fire, she started collecting items too and asking if I thought the baby would like this.” Recently, a family posted that their young son was diagnosed with leukemia. The boy was no longer able to share a bed with his sibling because of his weakened immune system. The family mentioned that they were looking to purchase a new bed. “Within an hour, the page was filled with hundreds of comments from members donating beds, bedding, clothes, money for medical bills, etc,” says Kristin Belkofer. “The family was overwhelmed with gratitude.” It’s small, simple acts like these that speak for KidsCycle’s generous and kind spirit. Most of the time it’s strangers helping other strangers, since the majority of communication is done online. Yet even though it’s all virtual, these families are able to form real friendships. Strangers become neighbors. And among those strangers, KidsCycle is a completely judgment-free forum. Parents trade tips on all things related to being a parent: the good, bad, and the ugly. While nothing is too embarrassing to post, administrators have the option to post anonymously, allowing the group to tackle deeper issues like divorce, addiction, custody, and counseling. The Facebook group also has dedicated days to encourage members to speak freely, like Vent Friday and Gratitude Monday. “What makes the group so special is everyone’s willingness to help and be involved. No one just watches stuff go by,” says Crysdale. “Not a day goes by that you don’t see acts of kindness.” 56. The word “we” in the paragraph 2 implies ______. A. Annie would face the difficulty and solve the problem together with her. B. Terasa had asked Annie to be a partner and Annie agreed. C. Annie would install the fire system for the preschool. D. They would donate the money needed to install the fire system. 57. Kidscycle members would do the all the following except ______. A. donating money to the people who lost their homes in a fire. B. donating stuff such as clothes, bedding, etc. for people who needed. C. making real friends online and sharing their difficulties. D. posting information for certain people. 58. “Kidscycle is a judgement-free forum” means that _______. A. members should stick to the rules and use their words carefully. B. members, as strangers, don’t care others’ judgement. C. members are too occupied to make any judgement. D. members focus on solving problems, not gossip on other personal stuff. 59. According to the passage, which of the following statements is NOT TRUE? A. Possible Teresa and Annie have never met each other. B. Kidscycle was established by Facebook users. C. Parents should use their real names before posing any problem. D. Kidscycle is a online community dedicated to helping others. 第 7 页 (B) A familiar voice is just few digits away from you. Whether you prefer high-tech options or more traditional landlines, there are affordable ways to call home when you travel abroad, even if you don’t carry an internationally- capable cellphone. Repaid Calling Cards Repaid calling cards provide the ultimate in flexibility: they can be used from most locations, including pay phones, cell phones and landlines. But not all calling cards are equal, especially overseas. Compare the rate options associated with different cards, whether you buy them before you travel or on the road. Some charge a pre-connection fee as well as a per minute fee, for example. Callback Service As the name suggests, these services call you and then place your call at cheaper rates. You initiate the call by dialing a “trigger number –a connection to the call-back service’s computers. Let the call ring once and then hang up. The computer calls you back from the United States using lower international rates and makes the connection after verifying your account number. Often cheaper than direct-dial calls, but the services may not work at hotels, where staff may not accept the return calls. The service is welcome to those who make lots of international calls. Voice Over Internet Protocol (VoIP) VoIP works by digitalizing your voice and sending it via the Internet to the person you’re calling, who hears it on his PC speakers, or by routing it through regular telephone lines to anyone’s standard phone line. VoIP services generally work best with a broadband or wireless Internet connection and can be used from hotel rooms, Internet cafes or wireless hot spots if you have a notebook computer. Since most calls use the Internet, and connections into and out of the Internet are typically local calls, the rates are astonishing low. 60. According to the passage, if computer technology is not available, travelers are advised to call by _______. A. landline B. repaid calling card C. callback service D. pay phone 61. What is focused on in the callback service? A. Making a phone call as brief as possible. B. Taking advantage of the hotel phone call service. C. Saving on calls by calling from home. D. Using the bank account for call pay in any country. 62. The passage is mainly intended to __________. A. offer tips to travelers on how to call home for less B. help travelers find the easiest way to call back home C. introduce the optional approaches to family connection D. advise travelers to call home through broadband or wireless Internet 第 8 页 (C) Foreseeing a time when a patient’s own cells may be harvested, multiplied, and fashioned into a replacement organ, researchers in Boston have successfully transplanted laboratory grown bladders (肾) into six dogs. For a century, physicians have replaced diseased or damaged bladders by removing sections of a person’s intestines (肠子) and shaping them into a substitute bladder. While the procedure offers some relief to patients, complications often develop because nature designs intestinal tissue for a purpose—absorbing nutrients—other than holding waste liquid of the body. “You start absorbing stuff that should be removed,” says Anthony Atala of the Children’s Hospital in Boston. Other physicians have turned to human-made materials to create artificial bladders, but those efforts have also run into problems. Consequently, to build a better bladder, Atala and his colleagues decided to employ the organ’s own cells. To turn the cells into an organ, the researchers first form plastic which can break down naturally into bladder- shaped shell. They then coat its outside and inside with layers of cells needed. To test this strategy, Atala’s group obtained bladder tissue from dogs and grew it into organs. After removing the dogs’ bladders, the investigators implanted the artificial ones coming from the dogs’ own cells. Within a month, the organs began to perform like normal bladders. Within three months, the plastic shells had broken down naturally, and the implanted organs were hard to distinguish from natural ones. Blood vessels( 血 管 ) quickly grew into them. Moreover, nerves seem to form proper connections with the new organs, allowing the dogs to regain normal control of their bladders. Some dogs have had the artificial bladders for nearly a year without any problems. While the bladders of dogs closely resemble those of people, Atala warns that more testing of this transplant strategy must occur before artificial bladders are ready for the clinic. 63.The traditional method of shaping parts of intestines into a substitute bladder _______. A. allows the patient to absorb useless things B. brings the patient a lot of sufferings C. prevents the patient from absorbing nutrients D. worsens both the function of the intestines and the bladder 64. The artificial bladders implanted in dogs _______. A. worked perfectly as long as three months B. began to work as well as a normal one in a few weeks C. proved to be able to work for several years D. did not work properly until after a month 65. Why is it suggested that more testing should be made? A. What suits dogs’ bladders will also suit human bladders. B. Dogs’ bladders can be implanted into human bodies. C. Human bladders may well be different from dogs. D. Artificial bladders grown in dogs can be used for human beings. 66. What does the passage mainly talk about? A. The way of turning intestines into bladders. B. The prospect of manufacturing plastic bladders. C. The history of making artificial bladders. D. The possibility of making bladders from their own cells. 第 9 页 Section C Directions: Read the following passages. Fill in each blank with a proper sentence given in the box. Each sentence can be used only once. Note that there are two more sentences than you need. Dolphins learn special foraging(捕食) techniques from their mothers and it's now clear that they can learn from their buddies as well. ____67____ It turns out that they learn this skill by watching their pals do the job. The discovery, reported in the journal Current Biology, helps reveal how groups of wild animals can transmit learned behaviors and develop their own distinct cultures. "Dolphins are indeed very clever animals. So it makes sense that they are able to learn from others," says Sonja Wild, a researcher at the University of Konstanz in Germany. ___68___ This study, however, shows that dolphins are also motivated to learn from their peers in addition to mimicking their mothers. The bottle-nose dolphins that live in Shark Bay, Western Australia, have been studied for decades, and scientists have identified over a thousand individuals by looking at the unique shape and markings of their dorsal fins. Researchers know what families the dolphins belong to, and keep track of their close associates. Wild and her colleagues have closely examined how dolphins learn particular strategy for catching fish---one that involves using the empty shells of large sea snails. A dolphin will chase a fish to one of these shells, and then they insert their beak into the shell, bring the whole thing up to the face. After that, they shake it up above the water surface to drain the water out of the shell until the fish basically falls into their open mouth. Whether or not dolphins caught fish in this way didn't seem to be explained by how many shells were lying around their hunting area, nor whether a dolphin was genetically related to another dolphin that knew how to do it. _____69_____ Previously, it's been shown that humpback whales seem to learn hunting techniques from their peers in a similar way. The new observations of wild dolphins learning from their peers is "exciting, "says Diana Reiss, a dolphin cognition researcher at Hunter College, CUNY, "It tells us about the source of some these behaviors. It seems like they're not relying on just leaming from mom when they're out there. They seem to be observing others, watching what they're doing and acquiring it from others in their social group." Being able to learn from peers may help animal populations survive in a changing environment. _____70_____ "In unstable environments that are changing, it's more beneficial to kind of look around and see what others are doing" says Wild, "and maybe adopt their behavioral innovations that may be more adaptive to the new environmental conditions." IV. Summary Writing Directions: Read the following passage. Summarize the main idea and the main point(s) of the passage in no more than A. The best explanation is that dolphins learned this method from a close associate. B. Research shows that this behavior gets passed down almost exclusively through the maternal line. C. Young dolphins spend years in close association with their mothers and naturally tend to adopt their mothers' ways D. Because while knowledge from previous generations has been tested by time, certain behaviors may become less useful if conditions change. E. Take, for example, the clever trick that some dolphins use to catch fish by trapping them in seashells. F. Based on this assertion, we can't discount the possibility that they innovate individually on their own. 第 10 页 60 words. Use your own words as far as possible. Living to 100 Since the mid 1950s, life expectancy around the world has increased dramatically, and many scientists believe that this trend is likely to continue in the future. The main reason for the increase during this period was the decline in infant mortality (死亡). Fewer childrendied atan earlyage,and this was mainly because ofimproved healthcare and betterfoodproduction. Most experts believe that people will continue to live longer in the future because of medical advances. Researchers predict that at leasthalfof the North American andJapanese babies born since the year 2000 willlive to an age of90, and ten percentto 100 years old. Furthermore, new drugs are being developed which will slow down the ageing process. These will be available in a few years, and they willenablepeople to live 20years longer. If the current older populations in many countries become healthier, wealthier and live longer, the trend will have important consequences for people and governments. The cost of medical care for older people will rise, and governments will have to start thinking hard about how to fund state pensions for older citizens. Some people will want to keep on working later in their life, which could lead to changes in the age of retirement in many countries. Others would prefer to retire early to enjoy having more time for themselves. This will create business opportunities for companies in the leisure and entertainment industries and open up new segments of the market. The effect on the world population will be great. Europe’s population has been in decline for several years now as people prefer to have fewer children and families tend to be smaller. However, “the population will not decline as anti-ageing drugs start to becomewidely available”, as an experton population, ProfessorShripad Tuljapurkar, says in his recently-released book. 71: _________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________ V. Translation Directions: Translate the following sentences into English, using the words given in the brackets. 72. 远足是我们接触大自然最简单的方式之一。(expose) 73.尽管困难重重,他们还是打算采用新措施。(Despite) 74. 尽管外面寒风凛冽,但顾客依然在这家面包店门口排起了长队,等着买刚出炉的面包。(there be) 75. 鉴于编程被视为21世纪必备的生活技能之一,这所小学从一年级开始开设编程课,此举获得家长交口称赞。 (available) VI. Guided Writing Directions: Write an English composition in 120-150 words according to the instructions given below in Chinese. 现在中国购物网站非常繁荣,很多人选择网上购物而不是去商场实体店购物,你更倾向于哪种购物方式,并说 出你的理由。 注意:请勿出现真实的学校及姓名。 第 11 页 第 12 页

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