2019届江苏省扬州高三考前最后一卷(5月)英语.docx
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1、江苏省扬州2019届高三考前调研测试试题英语本试卷分五部分。满分120分。考试时间120分钟。第I卷(选择题,三部分,共75分)第一部分听力(共两节,满分20分)做题时,现将答案标在试卷上,录音内容结束后,你将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分,满分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,并标 在试卷的相应位置。听完每段对话后,你都有10秒钟的时间来回答 有关小题和阅读下题。每段对话仅读 一遍。例: How much is the shirt?A. 19. 15 B, 9. 18 C. 9. 15答案是C
2、。1. What are the speakers talking about?A. Having a birthday party.B. Doing some exercise.C. Getting Lydia a gift.2. What is the woman going to do?A. Help the man. B. Take a bus. C. Get a camera.3. What does the woman suggest the man do?A. Tell Kate s to stop. B. Call Kate s friends. C. Stay away fr
3、om Kate.4. Where does the conversation probably take place?A. In a wine shop. B. In a supermarket. C. In a restaurant.5. What does the woman mean?A. Keep the window closed.B. Go out for fresh air,C. Turn on the fan.第二节(共15小题;每小题1分,满分15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“As a parent who p
4、rizes his own mental and physical health, “ says Robert Crosnoe, a sociology professor who is also at the University of Texas at Austin, “I had to stop at two, because this new style of intensive parenting that people feel they have to follow these days really wears one out. ”At the same time, havin
5、g only one kid means parents miss out on the opportunity to have at least one boy and one girl, an arrangement they have tended to prefer for half a century. Though in the long run, one researcher found that having all girls or all boys doesn, t meaningfully affect the happiness of mothers who wante
6、d at least one of each.Perhaps the most meaningful difference isn, t a matter of going from one to two children, or two to three, but from zero to one. Having just one child makes various aspects of adults lives一how time, money, emotion, and mind are used and how new social networks are formed一child
7、-centered, “ says Kei Nomaguchi, a sociologist at Bowling Green State University. “If you want to enjoy adult-centered life, love expensive leisure activities, cherish close relationships with your partner, and both you and your partner want to devote your time to your careers, zero kids would be th
8、e choice. ”Mothers, of course, stand to lose more than fathers when they have kids in their household. Having children is more stressful for women than it is for men, and mothers suffer professionally after having children in a way that fathers don t.Whether the ideal number of children is greater t
9、han zero is a question many researchers have tried to address. A 2014 review of existing research, whose authors were skeptical of overgeneralizations that most parents are miserable or that most parents are joyful, “ discovered other broad patterns: Being a parent tends to be a less positive experi
10、ence for mothers and people who are young, single, or have young children. And it tends to be more positive for fathers and people who are married or who became parents later in life.61. Which of the following can be best filled in the blank in paragraph 3?A. The costs of raising children are not ju
11、st financial.B. Families with two children have been popular since then.C. Besides, the ways of raising children have changed.D. Many parents also find raising children quite annoying.62. According to Kei Nomaguchi, a female candidate for department manager may decide toA. to have no childB. have on
12、e boy and one girlC.devote more time to children D. sacrifice her career for children 63. It can be inferred from the passage that.A. more women feel disappointed with their childrenB. couples with one boy and one girl feel the happiestC. fathers don t have any problems with their careersD. the happ
13、iness of having children varies individually 64. The passage mainly talks about .A. the ideal number of children families prefer to haveB. the reasons behind the change in people s idea of raising kidsC. what number of children makes parents happiestD. different opinions researchers have of whether
14、to have kidsDRecently I rolled into a local restaurant to try an Impossible Burger, an all-plant meat-like pie invented by the Silicon Valley pany Impossible Foods. It s famous for having a weirdly chewy, even bloody, meat-like quality, a surprising verisimilitude (追真)that has made it uperhaps the c
15、ountrys most famous burger, “ as New York magazine recently wrote. One bite into its gorgeous, smoky flavor, and I was convinced.This is good news, because the time has e to mass-produce faked段的)meat, fast. Why? Because in the fight to ease climate change, meat replacement is one of the lowest-hangi
16、ng fruits.Meat production chews up land and lets out methane(沼气)by the kiloton, accounting for about two-thirds of all greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture. A University of Oxford study recently found that, to keep global warming below 2 degrees this century, we need to be eating 75 percent les
17、s beef and 90 percent less pork globally. Without concentrated change, we really risk going beyond key environmental limits, “ Marco Springmann, one of the Oxford researchers, warns me.Diets are culturally enshrined (神圣的),so changing them will be hard. Fake meat can help camouflage (掩饰)that dramatic
18、 transformation with slight adjustment.Still, even the most exceptional substitutes for meat face a huge challenge if they re going to replace 75 to 90 percent of beef and pork. The first taste of an Impossible Burgera moment when low expectations work a powerful magic in the product? s favoris one
19、thing. But how do you keep meat-eaters asking for more after their sixth, and their 26th?Fortunately, the science here is playing an important role. Impossible Foods owes much of its appeal to a bioengineering process that turns out big, blood-red tanks of “heme, “ a crucial molecule (分子)that gives
20、veggie (素食主义者)meat “that slightly metallic bloody flavor, as David Lipman, chief science officer of Impossible Foods, tells me. Meanwhile, ucultured meat, “ created by growing actual animal cells in a basin, is being a reality. In New York, the scientists at Ocean Hugger Foods have engineered a proc
21、ess to transform tomatoes into mock tuna. And over in the Netherlands, a pany called The Vegetarian Butcher is developing a Nespresso-style device: You pour in a bag of vegetable protein (蛋白质)and out pops fake meat. The pany aims to release it in two years.To get to true mass adoption, fake meat wil
22、l need to pete favorably with the real thing on multiple fronts. Impossible Foods goal is to drive the price of its product below that of Safeway, s 80/20 hamburger meat, at which point people will simply vote with their wallets. The new industry also wants to improve on animal flesh in various ways
23、. Fake meat will outpete traditional meat because “you won t need to refrigerate it if you re making it as you go, ” co-founder Niko Koffeman says. That d give unmeat an enormous advantage for energy-poor developing regions. Plus, fake meat could provide more choices. “You could have very soft and t
24、ender meat for elderly people, “ Koffeman adds. You could have a custom meat for whatever you need. ”We could speed this dietary shift with smart public policy too. Beginning in 2006, New York City cut the number of adults consuming one or more sugary drinks per day by 35 percent by running appealin
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