2023届上海市高考英语模拟试卷笔试部分(iRead23010)含详解.pdf
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1、2022-2023学年全国普通高等学校招生统一考试上海英语模拟试卷I.Listening comprehension略II.Grammar and VocabularySection ADirections:After reading the passage below,fill in the blanks to make the passage coherent and grammatically correct.Forthe blanks with a given word,fill in each blank with the proper form of the given word;
2、for the other blanks,use one wordthat best fits each blank.Cats are actually surprisingly bad at catching ratsIf you are annoyed by rats,think twice about getting a cat.A cat might lead to the appearance of a rat-free home,but itturns out that the rats are still there.They are just keeping a low pro
3、file.“Cats are not the natural enemy of rats,“says Michael Parsons of Fordham University,New York.t4They prefer smallerprey.”His team (study)a rat colony at a recycling plant in New York in the past few years.When cats moved intothe plant last year,the researchers were disappointed,but decided to se
4、t up cameras 2(monitor)the area.Over five months,they saw just three attempts by cats to catch rats,only two of 3 succeeded.Cats have good reasons to be cautious.The common rat has large teeth that can give a painful bite and carry lots ofdiseases.They also 4(weigh)340 grams on average一compared with
5、 25 grams for a mouse.Parsons thinks that only starving cats will attempt to catch rats,5 the rats are sick or injured.The two rats6(kill)during the teams study may have been weakened by eating poisoned food,he says.However,cats do have a big influence on rat behaviour.44Rats overestimate the risk c
6、aused by cats,“says Parsons.Histeam found that when cats are in the area,rats spend much more time in 7(hide)and move around cautiously.Thatmeans they are much less likely to be seen by people,which could explain 8 most people wrongly think cats aregood at killing rats.S ome cat owners may 9(convinc
7、e)their pets are excellent ratters.But Parsons has found that many peoplemistake mice 10 rats.That said,it is possible there are a few exceptional cats that do take on healthy,adult rats,hesays.Section BDirections:Complete the following passage by using the words in the box.Each word can only be use
8、d once.Note thatthere is one word more than you need.A.contributors B.describing C.distinct D.favorites E.invitations F.limitsG.name H.pleasurable L recall J.unexplored K.usefulThe unique joy of learning new wordsWith all thats happening in the news,life can feel like an exercise in determining the
9、particular kind of bad we areexperiencing.Are we anxious or depressed?Lonely or stressed?Tim Lomas,a senior lecturer in positive psychology at the University of East London,is engaged in the opposite effort:analyzing all the types of well-being that he can find.S pecifically,Lomas is seeking to unco
10、ver psychological insights bycollecting untranslatable words that describe 11 feelings we dont have terms fbr in English.Its almost like eachone is a window onto a new landscape,Lomas says.S o far,with the help of many 12 he has collected nearly1,000 in what he calls a positive lexicography(词典学)Peop
11、le are fascinated with untranslatable words in part because they are 13:How else could we talk to eachother about the guilty pleasure of schadenfreude?But Lomas also sees them as a means of showing us“new possibilities fbrways of living,describing them as 14 for people to experience happy phenomena
12、that may previously have been“hidden from them“or to take delight in feelings they couldnt previously 15.Consider the Japanese ohanami,aword for gathering with others to appreciate lowers.Linguists(语言学家)have long argued about how much the language we speak-partly determined by factors likegeography
13、and climate 16 the thoughts we are capable of having or the actions we can take.The worlds inwhich different societies live are 17 worlds not merely the same world with different labels attached,wrote thetheorist Edward S apir.S tudying the words in Lomas collection,at the least,is a means of reflec
14、ting on ways that we can feel good.Whenasked fbr one of his 18,the psychologist lists the German Femweh,which describes a longing to travel to distantlands,a kind of homesickness fbr the 19.Also delightful is the Danish m o rg e n f ris k,20 thesatisfaction one gets from a good nighfs sleep,and the
15、Latin otium,highlighting the joy of being in control of ones owntime.ILL Reading ComprehensionSection ADirections:For each blank in the following passage there are four words or phrases marked A,B,Cand D.Fill in each blank with the word or phrase that best fits the context.Most forms of conventional
16、 advertising-print,radio and broadcast television-have been losing ground to onlineads for years;only billboards,dating back to the 1800s,and TV ads are holding their own.S uch out-of-home advertising,asit is known,is expected to 21 by 3.4%in 2022,and digital out-of-home(DOOH)advertising,which inclu
17、des theLCD screens found in airports and shopping malls,by 16%.S uch ads draw viewers5 attention from phones and cannot beskipped or 22、unlike ads online.Billboard owners are also 23 the location data that are pouring off peoples smartphones.Information abouttheir owners5 locations and online browsi
18、ng gets collected and sold to media owners.They then use these data to work outwhen different groups “business travellers,say walk by their ads.That 24 is added to insights into traffic,weather and other external data to produce highly relevant ads.DOOH 25 can deliver ads for coffee when it iscold a
19、nd iced drinks when it is warm.S uch 26 works particularly well when it is accompanied by“programmatic“advertising methods,a term thatdescribes the use of data to automate and improve ads.In the past year billboard owners such as Clear Channel andjcDecaux have 27 programmatic platforms which allow b
20、rands and media buyers to select,purchase and place adsin minutes,rather than days or weeks.It is said that outdoor ads will increasingly be bought like online ones,based onaudience and views as well as 28That is possible because billboard owners claim to be able to 29 how well their ads are working
21、 eventhough no“click-through rates are involved.Data firms can tell advertisers how many people walk past individualadvertisements at particular times of the day.Advertisers can estimate how many individuals 30 to an ad fbr ahandbag then go on to visit a nearby shop(or website)and buy the product.S
22、uch metrics make outdoor adsmore 31-driven,automated and measurable,argues Michael Provenzano,co-founder of Vistar Media,an ad-techfirm in New York.However,the outdoor-ad revolution is not 32-free.The collection of mobile-phone data raises privacyconcerns.And 33 of the online-ad business for being v
23、ague,and occasionally dishonest,may also be targeted atthe OOH business as it becomes bigger and more complex.The industry is ready to 34 such concerns,says Jean-Christophe Conti,chief executive of VIOOH,a media-buying platform.One of the 35 of following the oniine-adpioneers,he notes,is learning fr
24、om their mistakes.21.A.shrinkB.growC.disappearD.emerge22.A.obtainedB.blockedC.separatedD.arranged23.A.making progress inB.getting engaged inC.becoming part ofD.taking advantage of24.A.valueB.recordC.knowledgeD.feeling25.A.opponentsB.providersC.learnersD.instructors26.A.addingB.collectingC.targetingD
25、.producing27.A.changedB.forbiddenC.clearedD.launched28.A.marketingB.evolutionC.locationD.branding29.A.measureB.wonderC.noticeD.forget30.A.devotedB.opposedC.relatedD.exposed31.A.conceptB.dataC.customerD.research32.A.stressB.conflictC.injuryD.problem33 A.aspectsB.demandsC.criticismsD.details34.A.addre
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