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1、2022-2023學(xué)年高考英語模擬試卷注意事項(xiàng):1答題前,考生先將自己的姓名、準(zhǔn)考證號(hào)碼填寫清楚,將條形碼準(zhǔn)確粘貼在條形碼區(qū)域內(nèi)。2答題時(shí)請(qǐng)按要求用筆。3請(qǐng)按照題號(hào)順序在答題卡各題目的答題區(qū)域內(nèi)作答,超出答題區(qū)域書寫的答案無效;在草稿紙、試卷上答題無效。4作圖可先使用鉛筆畫出,確定后必須用黑色字跡的簽字筆描黑。5保持卡面清潔,不要折暴、不要弄破、弄皺,不準(zhǔn)使用涂改液、修正帶、刮紙刀。第一部分 (共20小題,每小題1.5分,滿分30分)1- I cant think why he_ so angry. I meant no offence.-Its typical of him to be se
2、nsitive.Ashould have beenBmust have beenCmight have beenDcan have been2Which do you prefer, tea or coffee? _. I really dont mind.ABothBNoneCNeitherDEither3The fellow we spoke _ no comment at first.Ato makeBto madeCmadeDto making4 How could they misunderstand me like that?Just keep silent! Its the be
3、st way to let them know they you wrong.AdoBdidCare doingDhad done5He asked _ for the computer.Adid I pay how muchBI paid how muchChow much did I payDhow much I paid6Mum, do you mind if I invite some friends to my birthday party?_. It will be more interesting.ABy no meansBYes, of courseCDont worryDNo
4、 doubt.7What about asking these new graduates to take on the task?I m afraid notWhile they are energetic and ambitious, _ of them seems to be suitable for this demanding jobAno oneBeveryoneCnoneDfew8When _ questions in class, one should answer them as clearly as possible.AaskingBto askCto be askedDa
5、sked9_ with all sorts of affairs, the manager had little time to have a good sleep.AOccupyingBBeing occupiedCOccupiedDHaving occupied10To fetch water before breakfast seemed to me a rule _.Ato never breakBnever to have brokenCnever to be brokenDnever to be breaking11It is believed that many more pop
6、ular terms _ on the Internet this year.Awill be createdBhave createdCare createdDare creating12Many universities throughout the world provide scholarships for students _ financial aid.Ain favour ofBin need ofCin face ofDin honour of13The farmers are in bad need of rain,but a (an) large amount of rai
7、nfall will cause Floods.AEventuallyBconstantlyCgraduallyDextremely14Its that time of year again, when Alipay _ us just how much weve been spending, and on whatAremindsBremindedChas remindedDis reminding15I wonder _ the equipment will be available in ten days.AthatBwhenCwhetherDwhere16She doesnt spea
8、k our language, _ she seems to understand what we sayAforBandCyetDor17It is really cold and the ground is wet; it _ have rained last night.AmightBmustCcanDshould18- _ I remind you of is to return the book to our English teacher. -I will give it to him _ I see him.AThat; immediately BWhat; the moment
9、CWhat; while DWhether; once19The writer was so _ in her work that she didnt notice him enter the room.AabandonedBfocusedCabsorbedDcentered20_ to her own work,she spent little time with her familyADevoting BTo be devotedCDevoted DHaving devoted第二部分 閱讀理解(滿分40分)閱讀下列短文,從每題所給的A、B、C、D四個(gè)選項(xiàng)中,選出最佳選項(xiàng)。21(6分)Ev
10、ery country may have to consider what, if anything, to do about “global warming”. We should understand that the oft-repeated claim that nearly all scientists demand that something dramatic be done to stop global warming is not true.Perhaps the most inconvenient fact is the lack of global warming for
11、 well over 10 years now. This is known to the warming establishment, as one can see from the 2009 “Climategate” email of climate scientist Kevin Trenberth: “The fact is that we cant account for the lack of warming at the moment and it is an irony that we cant.” But the warming is only missing if one
12、 believes computer models where so-called feedback involving water vapor and clouds greatly amplifies the small effect of CO2. The fact is that CO2 is not a pollutant and it is a key component of the biosphere ( 生物圈)s life cycle. Plants get better growth with more of it and part of the increase of a
13、gricultural yields in the past century certainly came from additional CO2 in the atmosphere.Although the number of the scientists who are publicly opposed to the claim is growing, many young scientists secretly say that while they also have serious doubts about the global-warming message, they are a
14、fraid to speak up for fear of not being promoted or worse.Why is there so much passion about global warming? There are several reasons, but a good place to start is the old question “Cui bono?”, or the modern update, “Follow the money”. Alarmism (危言聳聽) over climate is of great benefit to many, provi
15、ding government funding for academic research, and thus those people who benefit from this fiercely defended their dogma (信條) and the privileges it brought them.Every country should support rational ( 合理 的) measures to protect and improve our environment, but it makes no sense at all to back expensi
16、ve programs that turn away resources from real needs and are based on alarming but shaky claims of “incontrovertible” evidence.1、What can we infer about the authors opinion on global warming?AGlobal warming hasnt happened in the latest 10 years.BGlobal warming has become an urgent problem these year
17、s.CGlobal warming has worsened a little bit in the recent years.DGlobal warming has never happened since measures were taken.2、Which of the following statements about CO2 does the writer probably agree with?ACO2 greatly affects the global warming.BCO2 makes crops more productive.CCO2 involves water
18、vapor and clouds.DCO2 is the most important part of the biosphere.3、Why is there so much passion for global warming?ABecause t is a good chance for young scientists to be promoted.BBecause the scientists want to have an insight into the problem.CBecause the government values the problem and tries to
19、 solve it.DBecause some people can greatly benefit from the research about it.4、Whats the writers attitude toward the programs to protect and improve our environment?ATo support all the programs as long as they are beneficial.BTo support cheap programs instead of expensive ones.CTo support the progr
20、ams that are necessary and reliable.DTo support those programs that use less money and resources.22(8分) Over the years Lisa urged her sister Helen to prepare for her old age. Now they passed sixty. Lisa had a big house, Helen had the clothes on her back.Lisa had hated being a child and couldnt wait
21、to grow up and buy herself everything. What Helen wanted was to go outside and play.When anyone would hire her, Lisa put herself to work. She never touched a penny of her money though her young mouth watered for ice cream and candy. When the dimes (一角硬幣) added up to dollars, she lost her taste for s
22、weets. And her bankbook became her most precious possession.Helen had a boyfriend Harry whose only ambition was to play a horn. That Helen married Harry straight out of high school was not surprising. Two or three times Lisa was halfway persuaded, but to give up a job that paid well for a homemaking
23、 job that paid nothing was a risk she was unable to take.Helens married life was nothing for Lisa to envy. She and Harry played in second-rate bands. But Lisa had a big house because her boss offered her his first house at a price so low that it would be like losing money to refuse.Harry died abroad
24、, in a third-rate hotel, with Helen crying as hard as if he had left her a fortune. He had left her nothing but his horn. Lisa knew she would have to bring her home.At dinner, Helen began to tell stories. They were rich with places and people, most of them lowly, all of them magnificent. Her face sh
25、owed the joys and sorrows.Then Lisa knew why Helen didnt mention the shining room. Tonight Helen saw only what she had come seeking, a place in her sisters home and heart.She said, “Thats enough about me. How have the years used you?” “I didnt use them,” said Lisa regretfully. “I saved for them but
26、forgot to enjoy them. Now its too near the end to try. ”Helen said, “Dont count the years that are left to us. At our time of life its the days that count. Youve too much catching up to do to waste a minute of a waking hour feeling sorry for yourself.” Lisa smiled.1、In her life Lisa attached most va
27、lue to .Afurther education Ba job in handCice cream and candy Da chance to get married2、Why did Lisa lose her taste for sweets?ABecause she kept working and had no time to buy sweets.BBecause she worked hard to make dimes add up to dollars.CBecause she kept saving money and lost the basic desires.DB
28、ecause she had little money to afford sweets.3、In what way is the story mainly developed?AChanging locations. BGiving examples.CCreating conflicts. DComparing characters.4、What is probably the best title of the passage?ASingle or Married? BPreparations for Old AgeCRich or Poor? DA House and a Bank A
29、ccount23(8分)Shortly after my fourth birthday, my parents and I arrived from China in Sydney, Australia. It was 1991 and my mother had left behind everything she knew-family, friends and career.Yet within two years, my parents marriage had broken down. After one particularly unpleasant fight, my moth
30、er left my father, taking me with her. With no family or friends, and in a country where she couldnt even communicate, she took me to Chinatown, the only area of Sydney she was familiar with. That night she laid me on a bench in Dixon Street, packing suitcases around us for security. I will never fo
31、rget the despair in her face that night.At around 4 am, a group of four young Chinese men noisily exited a club nearby. I remember them falling silent as they saw us. They approached and asked my mother why she was sleeping on the streets with such a young child. My mum burst into tears as she told
32、them our story. Without hesitating, they bundled me up, took our suitcases, and drove us to their students housing.In the weeks that followed, the men looked after us with a youthful enthusiasm. Being poor students living on their own for the first time, they simply knew how to cook in a clumsy way.
33、 However, they insisted that a child should have homemade meals. They quickly adjusted their lives around us, buying fresh food, cooking, teasing me to make me laugh, and advising my mum on how to sort out her life.Eventually, Mum reconciled (和解) with Dad and we moved back in with him, although they
34、 continued to split and make up several times.Gradually we lost touch with the men as we all moved on. But at every milestone of my life-graduations, entering university, getting a good job-I never forget that all of this was made possible because 22 years ago, a group of complete strangers took us
35、in and shared everything they had to save us from life on the street.1、Why did Mom and I stay in Dixon Street that night?AWe were waiting for the Chinese men.BMom knew nobody in Australia at all.CIt was safe to slay there for night.DWe had no other place to go.2、How did the students feel the moment
36、they saw us in the street?AAshamed. BShocked.CAmused. DNervous.3、What message is conveyed in the passage?AThere is no perfect husband or wife in marriage.BIts the timely help to someone in need that counts.CIts a great challenge for the Chinese to study abroad.DChildhood memory functions to guide pr
37、esent behavior.24(8分)Every day, we are inching closer to some kind of artificial intelligence. Advances in big data, machine learning and robotics are going to give us a world where computers are effectively intelligent in terms of how we deal with them. Should you be scared by this? Absolutely, but
38、 not in the usual “robot overlords” (機(jī)器人帝國) kind of way. Instead, the real fear should be about getting human beings wrong, not getting AI right.The key to the technology is the ability of computers to recognize human emotions based on the activation” of muscles in the face. A computer can identify
39、the positions of facial muscles and use them to infer the emotional state of its user. Then the machine responds in ways that take that emotional state into account.One potential application of it is to provide “emotional robots” for the elderly. Having a machine that could speak in a kind way would
40、 comfort a lonely older person. That is a good thing, right? But that wont also relieve us from questioning how we ended up in a society that takes care of the elderly because we dont know what else to do with them? Cant we have more humane solutions than robots?“Emotion data” arent the same thing a
41、s the real and vivid emotional experiences we human beings have. Our emotions are more than our faces or voices. How can they be pulled out like a thread, one by one, from the fabric of our being?Research programs can come with much philosophical concern, too. From the computers point of view, what
42、the computing technology captures are emotions, but at its root is a reduction of human experience whose outward expressions can be captured algorithmically (計(jì)算上). As the technology is used in the world, it can reframe the world in ways that can be hard to escape from.The technology will clearly hav
43、e useful applications, but once it treats emotions as data, we may find that it is the only aspect of emotion we come to recognize or value. Once billions of dollars floods into this field, we will find ourselves trapped in a technology that is reducing our lives. Even worse, our “emotion data” will
44、 be used against us to make money for someone else. And that is what scares me about AI.1、Why does the author feel scared of the development of artificial intelligence?AThe technology is developing much too slowly.BComputers cant recognize human emotions.CRobots would get control of human beings.DPe
45、ople may use artificial intelligence improperly.2、Why does the author dislike the idea of providing “emotional robots” for the elderly?AThe aged people will find it hard to live with them.BWhat elderly people need is much more than that.CIt cant relieve us of the pressure from modern society.DIts im
46、possible to use them to keep the elderly healthy.3、What does the author intend to conclude in Paragraphs 4 and 5?AEmotional data cant be equal to human emotions.BAI technology itself has fewer and fewer faults.CAI-built-in robots wont have the ability to understand human beings.DThe information comp
47、uters get can reframe human emotions.4、How does the author think about emotion data” according to the last paragraph?AIt can arouse peoples sense of value.BIt can improve peoples human experience.CIt may be misused as a tool to make profits.DIt may push the AI technology forward.25(10分)Discovering T
48、asmaniaThe island of Tasmania is separated from mainland Australia by the Bass Strait. The island is a place of natural beauty and has more than 2,000 km of walking tracks and 18 national parks. If you go on a tour, youll discover a wild and beautiful place where the people are friendly and the food
49、 is delicious. If you dont like walking, there are other tours you can choose from including a river cruise and cycling. You can also combine your tour with fishing, sailing or sunbathing on the beach.One of the most incredible places to walk is along the Tarkine coast which is located in the north-
50、west of Tasmania. Its such a wild and remote area that you can easily complete your walk without seeing anyone apart from the members of your group and your two guides. The area contains the largest temperate rainforest in Australia which is home to more than 50 endangered species. It is also home t
51、o many Aboriginal Heritage Sites. Your guides will provide you with plenty of information about the area as you complete that part of your tour. During your tour, youll come across rivers, mountain ranges, spectacular waterfalls, wildlife and long wild beaches. It will be an experience you wont easi
52、ly forget.Tour Itinerary:Day 1: Youre picked up from your hotel in the town of Launceston and driven to the Tarkine. You then complete a three-hour walk through the forest before arriving at your camp at Mystery Creek. There you will enjoy a delicious meal cooked by your guides.Day 2:After breakfast
53、, you continue deeper into the rainforest, passing some of the tallest trees in the world as you go, and stopping for lunch and then camp in the evening.Day 3:The highlight of todays hike is the Tarkine Falls, a beautiful 15-metre waterfall.Day 4: Today you can stay at the camp and bathe in the Tark
54、ine Falls, or you can go for a day hike for more fantastic views of the forest.Day 5: After a last hike through the forest, you are picked up at about 4:00 p.m. and you arrive in Launceston at around 7:00 p.m.The tour includes two professional guides, transport to and from the rainforest, all food w
55、hile on the tours and all safety equipment. You should buy or hire recommended camping equipment including: backpacks, sleeping bags, sleep mats, head torches, rain coats and trousers.1、A tourist to the island can _.Acycle along the Tarkine coast and through the forestBbuy or hire as much camping eq
56、uipment as possibleCgo for a day trek for more fantastic views on Day 5Dchoose to make a sailing tour of the place for pleasure2、From the passage we know that _.Apeople will walk hours in all the five days during the tourBmany species in danger are protected in the national parksCit takes about thre
57、e hours to drive from Launceston to TarkineDthe tour provides guides, accommodation and safety equipment第三部分 語言知識(shí)運(yùn)用(共兩節(jié))第一節(jié)(每小題1.5分,滿分30分)閱讀下面短文,從短文后各題所給的A、B、C和D四個(gè)選項(xiàng)中,選出可以填入空白處的最佳選項(xiàng)26(30分) I was riding the train home from a downtown Chicago courtroom. I was sitting in my seat, in tears. looking out
58、of the window, hoping no one would 1 .My husband and I had just ended our marriage, and my heart was filled with 2 I had never felt so helpless and lonely. 3 ,a hand appeared-the tiny beautiful hand of a woman. She 4 me a small envelope, then smiled and disappeared before I could even look into her
59、eyes and express my 5 .On the outside of the envelope were a rainbow and a sun, drawn 6 in pen. Inside it were the 7 words I had ever read:I know you dont 8 me. but I was watching you there 9 and my heart goes out to you. 10 I am only a stranger to you, I feel your pain and I 11 . It may not seem th
60、at way, but the sun will 12 again and you will see the rainbowLove.Someone who caresI never saw the woman again. But 13 , this mysterious 14 has remained deep inside my heart. It always tells me that we are never 15 . In 16 to me in my hardship, this woman filled me with a 17 love. It makes me reali
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