2023届安徽省合肥市高三第二次教学质量检测英语试题.docx
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1、2023届安徽省合肥市高三第二次教学质量检测英语试题学校:姓名:班级:考号:一、阅读理解Summer Programs are available to students upon application. Please consult individual course descriptions for restrictions and requirements.Intensive Beginning SwahiliIntensive Beginning Swahili is a summer abroad course for students who have no prior prof
2、iciency (熟练)in the Swahili language. The course is taught in Swahili and focuses on acquiring beginner-level skills to perform basic communication functions in the culture of Swahili speakers.Open to current first year undergraduates, sophomores (大学二年级学生)and juniors.Dates: 25 June一20 AugustIntermedi
3、ate ChineseThis course is a four-week summer intensive language course, conducted in person at Princeton Theological Seminary. Students work on developing a strong foundation for modern spoken and written Chinese, with emphasis on the reading of contemporary Chinese dialogue.Enrollment by applicatio
4、n or interview.Dates: 10 July-6 AugustStudies in Spanish Language and StyleThis is an intensive, full immersion (沉浸)course in Spanish language and Argentine history, culture and art. Students develop advanced language skills while studying language in context, through the exploration of the city of
5、Buenos Aires, its architecture, museums, and cultural and political life.Open to students who have completed the Spanish language requirement.Dates: 18 July-20 AugustAccelerated Summer StudyTaught at the Scuola Normale Superiore of Pisa, Italy, the course will be team-taught by a resident Princeton
6、faculty and an SNS faculty member. The course is designed to increase students5 writing and speaking language proficiency levels and enable students to understand Italian culture, history and literature while exploring the foreign city.supportive atmosphere.The next day, I was getting ready for my e
7、vents. The long jump was scheduled for the early afternoon, followed by the 8x50m relay later in the afternoon. I thought I was a pretty good jumper, but as the competition began, I realized I was vastly outclassed. We finished our jumps, and I came in fourth place, just missing out on a medal.That
8、was disappointing, but I reminded myself that we still had a chance in the 8x50m relay, for which I was assigned to run the fifth leg. The race date arrived. We filed into our assigned spots and prepared for the race. After a tense minute or so, I heard the starters gun go off. When the first runner
9、s took off, I watched nervously and excitedly as my team runners kept up with the others. As they got closer, I realized we were at least in second place. 注意:1 .续写词数应为150左右;2 .请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答。My turn arrived and I took the baton (接力棒)cleanly and began my run.As a result, I left the meet empty-hand
10、ed.Not open to Seniors.Dates: 24 July-24 August1. Which course begins earliest?A.Intermediate Chinese.B.Accelerated Summer Study.C.Intensive Beginning Swahili.D.Studies in Spanish Language and Style.2. What can the students taking Intermediate Chinese do?A.Attend online lectures.B.Practice spoken Ch
11、inese.C.Develop people skills.D.Learn classical Chinese.3. What do the last two courses have in common?A. They follow the idea of learning by doing. B. They are taught in the same target language.C. They last for the whole month of July. D. They are open to any college student.I am thinking today ab
12、out my new favorite thing. Its an app that my husband told me a few years ago that helps me bypass all the obstacles (障碍)in my way: potholes, heavy traffic, and even speed cameras.To be honest, when my husband first told me about it, I didnt pay much attention. I was only going to places I already k
13、new how to get to. Plus, I learned to drive from my father-who never turned to a map. I think I mistakenly absorbed the message that real drivers didnt need a map; you somehow just magically knew where to go. It was only later that I realized that just getting a drivers license didnt mean you knew h
14、ow to get to places一that was lesson one. Lesson two came when my kids started playing on two different travel teams. The drivers in our household suddenly had the need to head in different directions on the same day.Suddenly my app became very meaningful to me. How did I ever manage to get to strang
15、e playing fields hidden somewhere without it? But the crazy thing I have also noticed is how often I just don9t listen to it. Why might that be? Do I just prefer the old routes, even if they are actually worse? I see an analogy (类比)to the present moment. There is evidence that some old ideas and som
16、e long familiar ideas will send us into a boring unchanging lifestyle. But for some reason we like them better than an unfamiliar new route that might take us into areas weve never heard of, let alone visited.It can be hard to admit we dont know everything. As a person who still drives an8-year-old
17、stick shift and who has never stood in line for anything new, I certainly understand that. But I also try to remember the times I let go of my ego (自负),or my fear, and learned that life could be better. Not perfectbut better. I am glad I finally listened to my husband about that app. He was right.4.
18、 What did the author think of the app at the very beginning?A.It was magical.B.It was practically valueless.C.It was powerful.D.It was not as good as a map.5. What would probably make the author ignore the apps instructions?A.Her desire to explore alone.B.Her doubt about the new device.C.Her prefere
19、nce for the new routes.D.Her refusal to experience changes.6. What can be inferred about the author from the last paragraph?A.She is willing to challenge herself.B.She cares little about others comments.C.She recognizes her problems easily.D.She is too inflexible to make any change.7. Which of the f
20、ollowing can be the best title for the text?A.Real Drivers Know Their WayB.It Pays to Take a New RouteC.New Apps Make Life PerfectD.It Matters to Listen to Inner VoiceResearchers set up an experiment in which 5-year-olds were tested with their fellows under different circumstances of transparency (透
21、明)and different audiences. They set up a sticker machine that in some settings was transparent, and other settings in which only the giver of stickers knew how many stickers he could give. They had children give out stickers in both settings. The results were striking: children were consistently gen
22、erous only when the receiver and audience of the stickers were fully aware of the donation options. Children were notably ungenerous when the receiver of stickers couldnt see the options.The researchers said, Children only showed consistently pro-social behavior in our study in the condition when th
23、ey could see the receiver and their allocations (分配物)were fully visible; in all other conditions, children were statistically ungenerous, giving the receiver the smaller amount of stickers.They made the conclusions that at a very early age, children are learning how to position themselves socially.
24、Well before they apprehend the sociology of their networks and what social reputation really means, they think strategically about giving as a function of how they can gain a reputation with a peer as a generous citizen or pro-social agent when the receiverobserves them.Children change their behavio
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