高三英语
第一部分 听力(共两节,满分 30 分)
第一节(共 5 小题:每小题 1.5 分,满分 7.5 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。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一小题。每段对话仅读一遍。
What will the speakers do today
Draw a picture. B.Visit Kara’s cousin. C.Attend an art show.
Where are the speakers probably
In the city. B.At the seaside. C.In the countryside.
Why does the man intend to buy a new bike
To be environment-friendly.
To save money on fuel costs.
To stay in fashion.
What does the woman mean A.Success is not for the lazy. B.Experience is the best teacher.
C.A man is known by his friends.
How did Grace get out of the forest A.With the help of a search party.
B.Under nature’s guidance.
C.Along a hidden path.
第二节(共 15 小题:每小题 1.5 分,满分 22.5 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选项。听每段对话或独白前,你将有时间阅读各个小题,每小题 5 秒钟;听完后,各小题将给出 5 秒钟的作答时间。每段对话或独白读两遍。
听第 6 段材料,回答第 6、7 题。
Where does the man probably come from A.America. B.The UK. C.Japan.
Why does the woman talk about Japanese house preference A.To give an example of building skills.
B.To show the variety of architecture.
C.To express her taste in houses.
听第 7 段材料,回答第 8-10 题。
What is the relationship between the speakers
Teacher and student. B.Fellow students. C.Fellow teachers.
What advantage of the app is the most important for the woman
Its feature of chatting. B.Its number of exercises. C.Its convenience for learning. 10.How is the app compared to traditional classes
It costs less. B.It has less variety. C.It lacks speaking exercises.
听第 8 段材料,回答第 11 至 13 题。
How can Sarah be best described A.Youthful. B.Careful. C.Changeable.
What has enough sleep brought to Sarah
Less stress. B.More inspiration. C.Better concentration.
What does Sarah suggest Jack do
Adjust his lifestyle. B.Set realistic goals. C.Find a good example.
听第 9 段材料,回答第 14 至 16 题。
What is the topic of the conversation
Partnership types. B.Ecological matters. C.Business strategies.
Why does the woman compare nature to a business partner
To lead to a nature project.
To explain the economic value of nature.
To show nature protection is good for humans.
What does the man think of the woman’s logic
It’s original. B.It’s confusing. C.It’s complicated.
听第 10 段材料,回答第 17 至 20 题。
What do we know about the speaker’s father
He wears long hair.
He’s devoted to his child.
He is a professional basketball player.
What difficulty did the speaker’s father face in raising her
Instructing her in her studies.
Training her to be a soccer player.
Taking the responsibility of a mother.
What is the purpose of the speaker’s talk
To apply for university.
To recommend herself for a role.
To enter her father for a TV program. 20.How old is the speaker
A.20. B.22. C.24.
第二部分 阅读(共两节,满分 50 分)
第一节(共 15 小题;每小题 2.5 分,满分 37.5 分)
阅读下列短文,从每题所给的 A、B、C、D 四个选项中选出最佳选项。
A
We bring stories of adventure, world cultures and wild places to life in exhibitions and experiences that are designed to be shared with audiences of all ages.
Bring National Geographic (NG) to your venue
We offer high-quality traveling exhibitions to meet the needs of venues both small and large. Working with photographers, explorers, and other cooperators, we create exhibitions covering a wide range of topics to appeal to multiple audiences. To start the process, select your region to find exhibits available for booking.
For venues in the continental United States, a printed and packed exhibition will be shipped to your location, ready to hang. For venues located outside of the United States, NG offers digitally delivered content packages. This option avoids international shipping fees by providing partners with a secure link to download their exhibition files and production guidelines
for printing and mounting the exhibition.
How to Host or Book
Fill out the hosting form on any exhibition page. Or email us at exhibitions@ngs.org. A member of our traveling exhibitions team will respond within five business days.
An NG representative will:
·Discuss your venue’s interest, outline fees and logistics (物流).
·Walk you through the process of selecting the right exhibition to meet your programmatic goals and space.
·Review the schedule to find out what is available during your desired time.
·Answer any additional questions you may have.
Displayed here are the exhibitions available internationally. You can also find them in the downloadable international catalogue (目录).
How can venues beyond the United States receive the exhibits
By asking the NG staff to print out the copies.
By picking them up at the NG partners’ offices.
By waiting for packages shipped from overseas.
By downloading digital files for local production.
What will an NG representative do after getting a hosting request
Travel abroad to mount the exhibition. B. Visit the venue and select an exhibition.
C. Recommend photographers for the event. D. Provide details about fees and availability.
Who are probably target readers of the text
Staff managing public venues. B. Teachers planning study tours.
C. Tourists interested in exhibitions. D. Students exploring world cultures.
B
In 2006, as a 10-year-old living in one of Delhi’s busiest markets, I would often run downstairs to buy milk, eggs or vegetables for my mother. The shopkeepers knew me by face and often guessed my order before I even spoke. These small market runs taught me more than I realised at the time — quick mental maths, conversations with strangers, and backup plans when a shop was shut. So much unintentional learning.
Over time, these routines became daily comfort. Whether it was me or my mother, we enjoyed the smiles, brief chats, and snacks along the way — small moments that quietly held our lives together.
Now, things are different. With Blinkit, Zepto, and Instamart, groceries arrive in 10 minutes. While I still enjoy shopping in the market after work, my mother begins her day by comparing prices on apps and ordering everything with a few taps (点击). The grocery trips that once lifted her mood, improved her health, and helped her stay connected with the neighbourhood have disappeared. The joy of being known, of interacting, is dying.
And it’s not just her. Many of us now rely more on apps and less on people. Our growing reliance on instant delivery is reducing those everyday moments of interaction. There’s the financial cost too. When you’re too tired or too busy to plan your groceries, you end up ordering in pieces — adding things you don’t need just to hit the free-delivery minimum.
Of course, these apps are a gift on tough days when we’re sick or short on time. But next time you feel like opening a grocery app, try walking to your local shop instead. You might come back with more than just groceries — a smile, a quick chat, and a sense of connection. Sometimes, the cost of convenience isn’t what you pay. It’s what you miss.
What does the author think of early market runs
A. Adventurous. B. Valuable. C. Tiring. D. Complex.
How did the author’s mother change her shopping habit later
She turned to online shopping. B. She visited groceries with neighbours.
C. She cared about discounts in stores. D. She ordered whatever lifted her mood.
What concerns the author about instant delivery
It takes away small social moments. B. It involves paying extra service fees.
C. It results in poor physical condition. D. It makes people addicted to shopping.
27 What is implied in the last paragraph
A. A shared gift doubles its joy. B. Convenience comes at a cost.
C. A smile is free but worth a lot. D. Rush breaks human connection.
C
The Enjoyment of Travel
Travel used to be a pleasure, but now it has become an industry. No doubt there are greater facilities for traveling today than a hundred years ago, and governments with their official travel bureau s have developed the tourist trade, resulting in modern man traveling much more than his grandfather. Nevertheless, travel seems to have become a lost art. To understand the art of travel, one should first be aware of the different types of false travel.
The first kind of false travel is travel to improve one’s mind, which has been overdone. I always doubt whether one’s mind can be so easily improved. If we are usually so serious as to be bent upon improving our minds, we should at least during a vacation empty the mind. This false idea of travel has given rise to tourist guides, the most intolerable chattering busybodies that I can imagine.
One cannot pass a square or a statue without his attention being called to the fact that So-and-so was born on April 23, 1792, and died on December 2, 1852. I have seen convent (修道院) sisters accompanying school children to a cemetery, reading to them the dates of the dead, the age at which he married, and other such learned nonsense, which I am sure spoiled the pleasure of the entire trip for the children.
The second kind of false travel is travel for conversation, in order that one may talk about it afterward. I have seen visitors at Hupao of Hangzhou, a place famous for its tea and spring water, having their picture taken while lifting tea cups to their lips. The danger is that one spends less thought on the actual taste of the tea than on the photograph itself. This sort of thing can become an obsession, especially with travelers provided with cameras. Tourists are so busy with their cameras that they have no time to look at the places themselves.
This foolish travel produces the third type of false travelers, who travel by schedule, knowing beforehand exactly how many
hours they will spend in each city. Bound by the clock and run by the calendar as he is at home, he is still bound by the clock and run by the calendar while abroad.
What is the main idea of the first paragraph
People today travel more than their ancestors did.
The pleasure of travel has remained unchanged over time.
The modern travel industry has overshadowed the art of travel.
Governments have greatly improved travel facilities in recent years.
The author mentions “convent sisters accompanying school children to a cemetery” to illustrate .
the importance of educating the young about history
the significance of visiting historical sites during travel
the indifference children present in learning about the past
the boredom of overly detailed information during travel
Match the type of false travel with its description:
①Travel to improve one’s mind ②Travel for conversation ③Travel by schedule
Focusing on selfies rather than the experience
Following a strict itinerary without flexibility
Being overly serious and not truly relaxing
A. ①-a/ ②-c/ ③-b B. ①-c/ ②-b/ ③-a
C. ①-c/ ②-a/ ③-b D. ①-a/ ②-b/ ③-c
What might most probably be talked about in the next paragraph of this excerpt(节选)
The true art of travel B. The benefits of guided tours
C. The history of travel industries D. The rise of modern travel tools
D
Foreign visitors to the UK might be disappointed when they learn that not everyone there speaks like Harry Potter and his friends. Usually, there’s an assumption by many non-Brits that everyone in Britain speaks with what’s known as a Received Pronunciation (RP,标准发音) accent,also called “the Queen’s English”. However, while many people do talk this way, most Britons speak in their own regional accents.
Scouse, Glaswegian and the Black Country — from Liverpool, Glasgow and the West Midlands — are just three of the countless non-RP accents that British people speak with. There are even differences in accents between towns or cities just 30 kilometers apart. What is even more disappointing is that not speaking in a RP accent may mean a British person is judged and even treated differently in their everyday life.
In a 2015 study by the University of New South Wales, videos of people reading a passage in three different UK accents were shown to a second group of people. The group then rated how intelligent they thought the readers sounded. The lowest-rated accent was the Brummie accent, native to people from Birmingham, a city whose accent is considered the working class.
However, there is no need to be disappointed though you are not speaking in a RP accent. In fact, doing the opposite may
even give you advantages.
Kong Seong-jae, 25, is an Internet celebrity from Seoul. After studying in the UK, he picked up several regional accents. He’s now famous for his online videos, where he shows off the various accents he’s learned. “British people usually get really excited when I use some of their local dialect words, and they become much friendlier. I think it makes a bit of bond between local people and foreigners to speak in their local accent,” he said.
So if you’re working on perfecting your British accent, try to speak like someone from Liverpool, Glasgow or Birmingham.
You may not sound like Harry Potter, but you are likely to make more friends.
What can we infer from Paragraph 1
Non-Brits usually hold that all Britons speak in a RP accent.
Only “the Queen’s English” is accepted in the UK.
Foreign visitors are disappointed at their own spoken English.
Any Received Pronunciation around the world is also called “the Queen’s English”.
What do people think of the Brummie accent
It is favored by foreign visitors to the UK.
It is closest to the RP accent.
It is smart and easy to understand.
It is spoken by people of the working class.
34 What does the underlined phrase “doing the opposite” in Paragraph 4 refer to
Speaking in a RP accent.
Speaking in regional accents.
Speaking the Brummie accent.
Speaking like Harry Potter.
What is the passage mainly about
A study about the most intelligent accent in Britain.
A comparison between different British accents.
How much British people value the RP accent.
The impact of regional accents on people’s lives.
第二节(共 5 小题;每小题 2.5 分,满分 12.5 分)
根据短文内容,从短文后的选项中选出能填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为多余选项。
Even though food itself is not the problem, developing a healthier relationship with it is essential to eating disorder recovery. Most people with eating disorders struggle with issues of control when it comes to food—often shaking between rigidity(严格) and chaos. 36
Let go of rigid eating rules. 37 Therefore, it's important to replace them with healthier ones. For example, if you have a rule forbidding all desserts, change it into a less rigid guideline such as "I won't eat dessert every day". You won't gain weight by enjoying an occasional ice cream or cookie.
Don't diet. The more you restrict food, the more likely it is that you'll become preoccupied ( 专注的) with it, and even addicted to it. So instead of focusing on what you "shouldn't" eat, focus on nutritious foods that will energize you and make your body strong. 38 Afterwards, you can eat when you're truly hungry, then stop when you're full.
39 You may be used to skipping meals or fasting(节食) for long stretches. But when you starve yourself, food
becomes all you think about. To avoid this preoccupation, make sure to eat every three hours. Plan ahead for meals and snacks, and don't skip!
Learn to listen to your body. If you have an eating disorder you've learned to ignore your body's hunger and fullness signals.
40 The goal is to get back in touch with these internal cues(提示).
Don't ignore your health.
The goal is to find a balance.
The best way is to lose weight.
Stick to a regular eating schedule.
You may not even recognize them anymore.
You should think of food as fuel for your body first.
Strict rules about food and eating fuel eating disorders.
第三部分 语言知识运用 (共两节,满分 30 分)
第一节(共 15 小题;每小题 1 分,满分 15 分)
阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的 A、B、C 和 D 四个选项中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。
I’ve never met Mrs. Poddar, the owner of the house where I am living in this foreign country. I finished my 41
through a property agent. Mrs. Poddar is a complete 42 for me.
Yet, a few months later, Mrs. Poddar instructed my agent to 43 my rent, and the new rent is only half of the
original! Feeling 44 , I asked my agent about the reason. He told me that Mrs. Poddar 45 I was from abroad studying here alone and was still 46 the new environment. She did this just to offer me some 47 .
Being away from my family to 48 my college degree, I have found the life here 49 in the past few months: no friends, no familiar food…. But the 50 Mrs. Poddar showed me opened a new world to me,
51 me not to indulge (沉湎) in negative feelings and to establish new relationships. So I decided to 52
with people in my local area by first lending a hand to others. On one occasion, I shopped for groceries for an old couple, who
53 me to a heavy meal they made. Actually, about half of my spare time is 54 with offering help to people in my neighborhood.
We are indeed from different 55 , but that doesn’t loosen the ties between us.
41. A. moving B. purchasing C. selling D. renting
42. A. newcomer B. stranger C. friend D. helper
43. A. lower B. cancel C. collect D. raise
44. A. motivated B. confused C. excited D. annoyed
45. A. anticipated B. suspected C. discovered D. argued
46. A. wondering at B. adjusting to C. looking into D. working on
47. A. convenience B. advice C. comfort D. freedom
48. A. pursue B. change C. polish D. support
49. A. boring B. adventurous C. tough D. eventful
50. A. trust B. wisdom C. respect D. kindness
51. A. forcing B. expecting C. encouraging D. commanding
52. A. negotiate B. live C. correspond D. connect
53. A. treated B. entitled C. guided D. welcomed
54. A. ready B. occupied C. stuck D. consistent
55. A. neighborhoods B. families C. generations D. backgrounds
第二节(共 10 小题;每小题 1.5 分,满分 15 分)
阅读下面短文,在空白处填入 1 个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。
As temperatures rise across China, a new trend is taking hold. Outdoor sports, 56 draw citizens out of gyms and into the wilderness, test people’s physical limits and reconnect them with nature.
One standout in this trend, the Spartan Race, has exploded in 57 (popular) in many Chinese cities. So far, the race, along with its 58 (mud) routes, high walls, and various obstacles, has gained significant attraction online as well. Last month, the Spartan China series 59 (land) in Changchun while on October 16-17, the Spartan Kids World Championship
will be held 60 the second time at Yunding Snow Park in Hebei Province.
Each event challenges participants to complete distances 61 (range) from 5 to 50 kilometers, with some
62 (intense) demanding obstacles depending on the race category. In practice, the race involves climbing, hanging, and carrying sandbags, 63 total return to nature from gyms.
Liu Mingyi chief expert at the China Youth Sports and Physical Education Center, said that the rise of outdoor running
competitions is far from accidental. “In the past, people stayed indoors, lifting weights in gyms. Now, there’s a growing desire
64 (break) free from concrete buildings.” Liu commented. “These mud-stained events offer not just wildness, 65 a kind of close dialogue with nature.”
第四部分 写作(共两节,满分 40 分)
第一节 (满分 15 分)
66. 你校正在开展“学校图书馆是否应该购买电子书刊”的讨论。请你写一篇发言稿,在英语课堂作课前分享。内容包括:
表达看法;
说明理由。注意:
写作词数应为 80 左右;
请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答。 Good morning, everyone!
第二节(满分 25 分)
47. 阅读下面材料,根据其内容和所给段落开头语续写两段,使之构成一篇完整的短文。
The old workshop door creaked open. Clara walked in quietly. Her shoes stepped on wood shavings (刨花) that sparkled in the sunlight. Through the dusty windows, the morning light shone on Grandfather’s rough hands. He was gluing a maple chair leg. The wall calendar still showed January. Its yellowed pages were curling, just like dry leaves. An open order book lay on the
desk. February’s page was empty. There had been no new orders since mid-January. Clara held her breath and recorded Grandfather with her phone. She focused on his quick hands as he measured angles with a metal ruler. “This might help him,” she
thought, eager to show how skilled he was.
However, when she posted the video online, negative comments flooded in. “Old ways for a dying business!” “No wonder the business is failing!” Saddened, Clara deleted the video quickly. A spider crawled over the empty order book. Its blank pages showed not many people wanted handmade things these days.
“Want to see my treasure ” Grandpa’ s voice broke the silence. He opened a leather album filled with pencil sketches (草图)
like library chairs from 1958 and park benches from 1962. A faded photo slipped out: a smiling boy missing two teeth was grinning at the camera, holding a curved (弯曲的) spoon proudly.
“Timmy, my former student,” Grandfather smiled, touching the curve of the spoon in the photo. “Now he designs furniture
for tall buildings. Last month’s newspaper had an article about his curved stairs. It was inspired by this very spoon.” He tapped the photo, adding, “Machines make things fast, but hands remember stories.”
Clara looked at the photo — the curved spoon, Timmy’s smile, and Grandpa’s young handwriting on the back: Timmy’s first repair, age 7. Beside her, fresh wood shavings were shining. “Stories must be told,” Clara murmured, taking out her phone again. This time, she aimed to share not just the work, but the story behind it.
注意:
续写词数应为 150 左右;
请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答。
Paragraph 1: The next morning, Clara uploaded a new video.
Paragraph 2: A week later, Timmy, now a famous furniture designer, walked in the workshop.
听力 ABCAB BCBCA CCBBA AAABC
21. D 22. D 23. A 24. B 25. A 26. A 27. B 28. C 29. D 30. C 31. A32. A 33. D 34. B
35. D 36. B 37. G 38. F 39. D 40. E
41. D 42. B 43. A 44. B 45. C 46. B 47. C 48. A 49. C 50. D 51. C 52. D 53. A
54. B 55. D
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60. for 61. ranging
62. intensely
63 a 64. to break
65. but
Dear classmates,
I firmly believe our school library should buy e-books. Here are my reasons.
First, e-books save space — one device holds hundreds of them, unlike physical books. Second, they’re accessible anytime: we can read them on campus or at home without borrowing. Also, many e-books have features like search tools, making study easier.
In short, e-books bring great convenience. Let’s support this idea!
The next morning, Clara uploaded a new video. This time, her camera swept across the leather album’s sketches of Timmy’s curved spoon and lingered on a yellowed newspaper clipping featuring his iconic stairs. As Grandfather narrated their story, she zoomed in on his hands — wrinkled yet steady — shaping a piece of wood into art. The video ended with his voice, “Hands remember stories machines forget.” By noon, comments exploded, “Hands of a legend!” “Need this magic in my home!” Shares of the video skyrocketed. Amid the flood of praise, Clara spotted a message, “I’m coming to see you soon, Master-back to where the magic began!” Her eyes widened at Timmy’s profile picture which just matched the same grin from that faded photo.
A week later, Timmy, now a famous furniture designer, walked in the workshop. He embraced Grandfather, tears glistening. “Your spoon taught me curves have souls,” he said, placing the curved spoon on the desk. Together, they designed a signature chair — Timmy sketching modern lines on his tablet while Grandfather penciling his classic curves. Clara captured the moment: their four hands shaping a maple chair leg together, mirroring the one Grandfather had glued a week before. When Timmy posted the video, orders poured in: new chairs with curved legs, and even wooden benches for the town park. Wood shavings danced in the sunlight as the workshop came back to life, the order book’s empty February page now filled with March’s growing demands.