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吉林省长春市 2025届高三质量监测 (一)英语试题
本试卷共 12页。考试结束后,将本试卷和答题卡一并交回。
注意事项:1.答题前,考生先将自己的姓名、准考证号码填写清楚,将条形码准确粘贴在考生信息
条形码粘贴区。
2024.11
2
.选择题必须使用 2B 铅笔填涂; 非选择题必须使用 0.5毫米黑色字迹的签字笔书写,
字体工整、笔迹清楚。
3
.请按照题号顺序在答题卡各题目的答题区域内作答,超出答题区域书写的答案无效;
在草稿纸、试卷上答题无效。
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.作图可先使用铅笔画出,确定后必须用黑色字迹的签字笔描黑。
.保持卡面清洁,不要折叠,不要弄破、弄皱,不准使用涂改液、修正带、刮纸刀。
第一部分 听力 (1~20小题) 在笔试结束后进行。
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和 D四个选项中,选出最佳选项。
A
The U. S. News Honor Roll of Best Medicare Advantage Plans is based on the Centers fo Medicare and
Medicaid Services (CMS) 2024 star ratings for Medicare Advantage plans Individuals choosing a Medicare
Advantage plan should consider criteria including the size or the provider network, monthly costs, and coverage for
services such as physical rehabilitatior(康复), ambulance use, dental care and vision services. Here is a look at the
best CMS rated Medicare Advantage insurance companies.
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024 Best Company for Member Experience: Humana
Average Health Plan Member Experience star rating:3.9 out of 5
Service area: Available in 49 states plus Washington,D. C., and Puerto Rico
How is member experience rated?
CMS rates Medicare Advantage plans on various aspects of the member experience, such as how easy it is to
get needed care and see a specialist, how soon members can get an appointment, members’ subjective ratings of
the health plan, and efficiency of care coordination by medical providers. Humana wins this honour once again and
improves its rating for 2024, increasing from 3.8 to 3.9 stars. Its member experience star rating also exceeds
英语试题 第 1页 (共 12页)
the national average member experience rating of 3.5 out of 5.
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024 Best Medicare Advantage Company for Drug Plan Ratings: United Healthcare
Average Prescription Drug Plan star rating:4 out of 5
Service area: Available in 48 states and Washington, D. C.
Highlighted Features:
For 2024, United Healthcare received a rating of 4 out of 5 stars for its prescription drug plans. This is better
than the national average of 3.8 stars. CMS also rated United Healthcare 4 out of 5 stars overall, making it the
second-highest rated insurance company. There's no copay for tier 1 and tier 2 prescriptions when you use United
Healthcare's Optum Home Delivery. And for most plans, insulin (胰岛素) costs as little as $35 monthly, accordin
g to United Healthcare.
Click here to view the individual plans.
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1.' What should be considered when choosing a Medicare Advantage plan?
A. Star rating.
B. Service range.
C. Payment method.
D. Nursing care efficiency.
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2. What do two insurance companies have in common?
A. Having the same star rating.
B. Winning the honour for the second time.
C. Requiring self-payment for tier l prescriptions.
D. Being accessible to residents of Washington, D. C..
3. Where can you find the text?
A. In a magazine. B. On a website. C. In a newspaper.
D. In a brochure.
B
People who visit Yao Huifen's workshop often mistake her embroidery(刺绣) for paintings or photographs. It
is easy to see why. Yao's works look so realistic, like oil paintings, Chinese ink wash paintings or photographs.
Many of her works have been bought by domestic and foreign museums.
The inheritor of embroidery in Suzhou, Jiangsu province, was born into a family with a long history in the
art. Her grandparents and parents worked in the industry. She started to learn from her grandmother and mother
when she was little. Influenced by her father, she always loved to read books about art and aesthetics(美学). She
attended lectures on philosophy and art innovation when she was growing up. “You might not use the knowledge
in the beginning, but what you read and what you experienced will eventually reflect in your works,” says Yao.
For more than 10 years, she learned embroidery from masters of Suzhou embroidery and
(长春一模) 英语试题 第 2页 (共 12页)
gradually became famous for her own skill. Elected as a promoter and ambassador of Suzhou embroidery, she ha
s been to many countries for cultural communication, including the United States, France and Italy.
Like many cultural heritage items, Suzhou embroidery faces the problem of finding young people to pass the
craft on to. The huge input of time and energy required to learn embroidery, Yao admits, has scared away many
young people. However, she takes it as her responsibility to attract and train enough inheritors. She cooperated
with colleges in Suzhou to open an embroidery course and teach the students for free. Yao has been teaching
embroidery
lovers at her workshop for many years. Some of her students have set up their own workshops and started to tea
ch others themselves.
“
Traditional handicrafts need to conform (顺应) to the current aesthetics and cannot linger on the standards
of old times. Embroidery techniques should also be improved continuously.” Yao suggests that embroiderers
should open up new horizons instead of working in workshops all day long. She visits art exhibitions and
museums at every opportunity when she goes to big cities.
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4. What is the author's purpose in writing the first paragraph?
A. To compare embroidery with photos.
B. To list some mistaken views of embroidery.
C. To highlight Yao Huifen's extraordinary skill.
D. To clarify the differences between embroidery and paintings.
5. According to Yao, why are young people unwilling to learn embroidery?
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A. They find it effort-consuming.
C. They consider it less profitable.
B. They lack interest in it.
D. They have a different taste for beauty.
6. Which of the following words can best describe Yao Huifen?
A. Persistent and modest.
C. Determined and ambitious.
7. What can we infer from the text?
B. Devoted and disciplined.
D. Responsible and selfless.
A. Yao Huifen prefers working in big cities.
B. Embroidery is gradually regaining its fame.
C. Yao Huifen has a talent in teaching embroidery.
D. Yao Huifen is struggling to inherit Suzhou embroidery.
C
“
Turn off, tune out and drop in.” That's the message to customers at a Dutch digital detox(戒瘾) cafe who are
paying for the privilege of leaving their phones at the door. The Offline Club, which began life in Amsterdam,
offers an oasis(乐土) of calm and pause from the constant digital busyness of life lived through the black glass of
a smartphone. It creates
英语试题 第 3页(共 12页)
moments of quiet reflection, and encourages conversations with strangers instead of endless keyboard arguments
hammered out 280 characters at a time.
With board games, a piano and books on hand, the idea is to swap recharging your device for refilling your
soul, even for just a few hours. Aided by word spreading on social media, the club has already branched out to mul
tiple cities across the Netherlands, and is now ready for an international launch.
“
People love it: they tell us this is exactly what they' ve been waiting for; they can't believe it didn't exist alrea
dy, "says co-founder Ilya Kneppelhout. “A girl called Belinda who struggled with stress and anxiety told us she
hadn't felt so at peace with herself in a year and a half.”
Customers switch between time to themselves and time to connect. “People don't just pay to get rid of their ph
ones — they’ re also paying to meet others,” says Kneppelhout. “We live in quite an isolated world where we' re
more connected online, but in the physical world, it's hard to meet people.”
He's already had a group of digital downtime followers in the UK, where Georgina Sturmer, who has worked
with clients experiencing over-dependence on phones, points out another benefit of a switched-off society. “We are
constantly at risk of having every word or image captured and shared,” she says. “This sense of being endlessly
photographed is something that has come with these devices being in our lives so much. Wouldn't it be great to feel
safe knowing it doesn't matter if we' re having a bad hair day, or don't really like our outfit?”
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8. What can we know about the Dutch digital detox cafe?
A. It is the first cafe in Amsterdam.
B. Interaction among people is advocated.
C. Only black smartphones are allowed there.
D. Customers have to type 280 characters nonstop.
9. How did the cafe become more and more popular?
A. By media's advertising.
B. By netizens' commenting online.
C. By employees' handing out leaflets.
D. By customers' word-of-mouth promoting.
0. Why is Belinda mentioned in the third paragraph?
A. To show the effect of the cafe.
B. To explain the cause of her anxiety.
C. To stress the seriousness of her situation.
D. To introduce the problem of modern people.
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1. What is Georgina Sturmer's attitude towards the cafe?
A. Ambiguous. B. Concerned. C. Supportive.
D. Doubtful.
(长春一模) 英语试题第 4页(共 12页)
Do you ever find yourself repeating a specific word in your head over and over until the word suddenly make
s no sense to you and you wonder why it's a word at all? This is just one of the many odd things our brains do to
us, and it's a pretty funny experience when it happens.
This phenomenon is known as semantic satiation(语义饱和) and it causes us to perceive a real word as meani
ngless sounds. Sometimes that loss of meaning can be a pain, sometimes it can be useful, and sometimes, it can ev
en be unforgettably beautiful.
Semantic satiation occurs when a word is repeated over and over again until the word begins to lose its meani
ng to the listener. The term was first coined in 1962, but research surrounding the phenomenon dates from the earl
y 20th century. There are multiple theories as to why semantic satiation occurs. One is that the repeated use of a ne
ural pathway associated with a word impacts response times, leading to the loss of meaning. Another theory is that
tiredness causes the connection between word and meaning to get disordered.
More recently, researchers have used neural networking simulations (模拟) to try to identify why the phenom
enon happens and another set of researchers have found that semantic satiation delays facial expression processing
.
In other words, there isn't an agreement as to why semantic satiation happens.
Studies looking at semantic satiation have typically involved the repetition of a word up to30 times, with
semantic satiation, in some cases, appearing after seven to nine repetitions. Some words used during these studies
have been as short as four letters, but others have been much longer.
Sometimes, losing the meaning of a word can actually be helpful. Judy Ravin of Accents International uses
semantic satiation to help English language learners focus more on how your muscles need to move in order to ma
ke the sounds required, rather than the meaning of a particular word. “A word in itself doesn't actually have meani
ng. A word is a symbol for something, so, when we can move away from the meaning and just think about sound
production, the physiology, it's helpful.”
3
2. What can we learn from semantic satiation?
A. It has its origin from money.
B. It is most likely to be painful.
C. It arises as a word is repeated enough times.
D. It's one of the few tricks our brain plays on us.
3. What does the word“coined” in paragraph 3 probably mean?
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A. Created.
B. Saved.
C. Earned.
D. Collected.
4. How does Judy Ravin help English learners?
A. By strengthening muscles physically.
B. By emphasizing learning words basically.
C. By combining the meaning and sound organically.
D. By concentrating on pronouncing words physiologically.
英语试题 第 5页(共 12页)
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5. What does the text mainly talk about?
A. Who are suffering from semantic satiation.
B. What kind of semantic satiation is beneficial.
C. Why semantic satiation makes a word meaningless.
D. How semantic satiation influences our facial expression.
第二节 (共 5小题; 每小题 2.5分, 满分 12.5分)
阅读下面短文,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。
Misinformation and other attempts at misleading the public are common on social media. 36
●Never share a post without fact checking.
This is especially true if it comes from a source you trust. If you want to spread truth, you need to assume
that other people aren't perfect and may make mistakes. 37
·
Look for the sources.
Mainstream news is as good as the sources it relies on. Anonymous (匿名的) sources, or stories coming from
only a single source are more suspect than stories with multiple sources of confirmation. 38 Many important
leaks and stories have come from single anonymous sources.
●Consider the story's agenda.
Stories are colored by the agendas of their writers. News organizations typically operate for money, and part
of their brand ( and thus their profits) lies in their accuracy. However, many news groups tailor their content to par
ticular sections of customers, and thus are more likely to cover stories with a particular perspective. 39 Conseq
uently, the stories are turned into preference with the preconceptions of their target audience.
●
40
Injustices are things that make any ethical person upset or angry. A story that promotes emotion is not automa
tically false just because it arouses strong feelings. Unfortunately, cheaters know the power of emotion and use tha
t tool in their work. Therefore, fact check before you share.
A. Don't view stories with caution.
B. This can weaken their accuracy.
C. It doesn't mean that they are false.
D. In this way you will be more cautious.
E. Don't discount stories that play to emotions.
F. The following tips may help you surf the Internet safely.
G. Here are some steps to take to separate yourself from misinformation.
(长春一模)英语试题 第 6页 (共 12页)
第三部分 语言运用(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,从每题所给的 A、B、C、D四个选项中选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。
I received a private message on Facebook. It began harmlessly enough:“Hey, girl. Wanted to invite you to
join my next challenge group - we' ll be focusing on fitting in 30 minutes of 41 and balanced nutrition.”
It was all becoming too much. Facebook was running my life, not me. But what killed Facebook for me
was when I 42 a photo, and five minutes later my son asked me how many“likes” it had got. His question was
a wake-up call.
“
Likes” are signs of acceptance and approval. I had forgotten that acceptance and approval need to come
from within and had 43 set him a bad example.
Before Facebook, surfing the Internet was a( an) 44 distraction and I spent a lot more time reading books
and magazines. I checked in with friends through 45 , emails and phone calls.
To 46 the simplicity (质朴) of those days and set a better example for my son, I deactivated my Facebook
account. I'd been in the 47 of checking Facebook many times a day, so I had to 48 something new. I 49 a
crossword puzzle book around with me. I rediscovered knitting(针织). My body is fine just the way it is. I have
friends who will help me out when I'm in trouble. I do my best to be a good mother, and our son is hap
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