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黄金卷01-备战2023年高考英语模拟卷(新高考I卷)(原卷版).docx

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【赢在高考·黄金8卷】备战2023年高考英语模拟卷(新高考专用) 黄金卷01 (考试时间:120分钟 试卷满分:150分) 注意事项: 1.答卷前,考生务必将自己的姓名、考生号等填写在答题卡和试卷指定位置上。 2.回答选择题时,选出每小题答案后,用铅笔把答题卡对应题目的答案标号涂黑。如需改动,用橡皮擦干净后,再选涂其他答案标号。回答非选择题时,将答案写在答题卡上。写在本试卷上无效。 3.考试结束后,将本试卷和答题卡一并交回。 第一部分 听力(共两节,满分 30 分) 做题时,请先将答案标在试卷上。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1.5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。 1. What will the man do tonight? A. Repair a car. B. Attend a party. C. Pick up his wife 2. What are the speakers mainly talking about? A. A garden. B. The weather. C. An experience. 3. Where are probably the speakers? A. At the school. B. On the beach. C. In a shop. 4. How does the man feel now? A. Regretful. B. Nervous. C. Confident. 5. Why was the woman’s credit card canceled? A. She had a poor income. B. She got into heavy debt. C. She made late payments. 第二节(共15小题;每小题1.5分,满分22.5分) 请听下面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。 听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题。 6. Why does Jone make the phone call? A. To ask for help. B. To report her accident. C. To make an appointment. 7. When will Jone and Bob meet? A. At 7: 05. B. At 7: 20. C. At 7: 25. 听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题。 8. What is the possible relationship between the speakers? A. A couple. B. Colleagues. C. Classmates. 9. How did the kids learn English from Jane? A. By singing songs. B. By repeating after her. C. By translating her sentences. 10. What will the speakers do next? A. Share their experience. B. Take part in a party. C. Get their paper ready. 听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题。 11. What does the man think of classical music? A. Relaxing. B. Complicated. C. Life-changing. 12. What is the man? A. A student. B. A dancer. C. A musician. 13. What does the man advise the woman to do? A. Buy some CDs. B. Try dance music. C. Listen to music online. 听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题。 14. What is the man doing? A. Watching a game. B. Repairing the fridge C. Preparing some food. 15. How does the woman feel about the man’s plan? A. Doubtful. B. Satisfied. C. Interested. 16. How many years has it probably been since the man played basketball? A. About 15. B. About 25. C. About 40. 17. What will the man probably do next? A. Lose weight. B. Find a trainer. C. Have a check-up. 听下面一段独白,回答以下小题。 18. What does Coldplay plan to do by holding their latest tour? A. Reward their fans. B. Help the environment. C. Promote a new record. 19. What do the fans need to do during the performances? A. Dance on special floors. B. Sing together in the show. C. Take part in competitions. 20. How does Shawn Mendes try to reduce emissions? A. By reducing clothing waste. B. By recycling single-use plastics C. By staying in eco-friendly hotels. 第二部分 阅读理解(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 Four of the Coolest Plant Shops in the State of California Plants have given us comfort during the coronavirus pandemic, so it should come as no surprise that garden stores are more popular than ever. Here is a look at a few of our favorites. All Time Plants Location: 1322 Coronado Ave. Ste B, Long Beach, California 90804 All Time Plants is inside the coffee and bottle house. The storefront is now a hybrid coffee house-plant store-home store where visitors can shop for plants and home goods while enjoying a cup of coffee or a glass of wine or beer. EnCactusar Location: 3577 N. Figueroa St., Highland Park, California 90065 The COVID-19 pandemic gave artists Jackie and Julio the opportunity to turn their hobby into their own garden center, a small business at their Boyle Heights home. It is a kind of place where staff members will carry your plants out to your car for you while offering care tips. Open Saturdays and Sundays only. Flyplant Location: 1801 E 7th St, Los Angeles, California 90021 Flyplant was founded at the height of the pandemic, by Filipina with a passion for helping plant growing. Their shop offers customers plant and pot pairings, plant-themed costumes and gardening tools. Recently, they have added hands-on workshops, where guests can learn how to plant and care for their houseplants. Folia Collective Location: 5052 Eagle Rock Blvd., Eagle Rock, California 90041 Every plant at Folia Collective, from roses to ferns (蕨类植物), comes with a care card written by owner Danae Horst, a famous author in the field of home growing. Staff will ask you questions to help you pick the perfect plant and offer tips. Horst has houseplant gifts and, before the pandemic, hosted book signings and occasional cutting exchanges. 21. What can you do in All Time Plants? A. Host book signings. B. Drink some coffee or beer. C. Attend classes to look after plants. D. Borrow gardening tools. 22. Which plant shop provides plant-themed clothing? A. All Time Plants. B. EnCactusar. C. Flyplant. D. Folia Collective. 23. What do the four plant shops have in common? A. They are from the same state. B. They are open on weekends. C. They were founded during the pandemic. D. They carry plants to your car. B Anyone interested in easy ways to make a positive impact on their communities need look no further than 12-year-old Danykah Muck, a Michigan middle-schooler whose simple learning project is an inspiration to positive thinkers of any age. It all started with her way to school every school day. Every morning she would greet an old man in her neighborhood, who she still doesn’t know his name, smiling or even simply offering a friendly word “hello”. And he would always nod and smile back. “It seems to considerably change the emotional energy around me in the community,” She noticed this in both directions, “That simple act can both change our entire day with how they greet me.” Last spring, Muck brought an idea to her teachers. She provided them with a pile of sticky notes she had filled with brief—sometimes one-word—positive messages. She then asked the teachers to place the notes on students’ desks before they arrived at school the next day. She also gave pre-filled sticky notes to the lunch staff and to school administrators including the principal. The idea was to make it easy for teachers, staff and students to regularly encounter reminders that they matter and are valued. “You are enough just being you,” reads one favorite note. Muck’s idea could be just the thing in an office, assisted living facility or even at home for a small family. “Low-cost” positive interactions, like a friendly word offered to the postal worker or coffee shop servant, are shown by psychology researchers to build sympathy and abate loneliness. An anonymous note sent into someone’s inbox or stuck to their front door is perhaps the lowest-cost connection there is, with potential benefits beyond our imagination. Sometimes the smallest encouragements have the biggest impact. What would you say on a sticky note to share with someone in your community? 24. What message does paragraph 1 convey? A. Middle-schoolers are friendly to the elderly. B. A simple act of kindness makes a difference. C. A community can be easily shaped by interest. D. Learning projects can inspire positive thinkers. 25. How did Muck help people in her school? A. By writing thank-you letters. B. By means of sticking notices. C. By talking with school leaders. D. By writing encouraging words. 26. What does the underlined word “abate” probably mean? A. Measure. B. Monitor. C. Ease. D. Stand. 27. The best title for the text is probably ______. A. What a friendly word means to a stranger B. Never be bothered by negative thoughts C. Brighten the community with positivity D. How to build a harmonious community C Loneliness is significant mental health concern and can raise risk of death by 45% and contact with nature in cities significantly reduces feelings of loneliness, according to a team of scientists. The study is the first to assess how the environment can affect loneliness. It used real-time data, collected via a smartphone app, rather than relying on people’s memory of how they were feeling. The research found that feelings of overcrowding increased loneliness by an average of 30%. But when people were able to see trees or hear birds, feelings of loneliness fell by 28%. Feelings of social inclusion also cut loneliness by 21% and when these feelings coincided (巧合) with contact with nature, the beneficial effect was boosted by a further 18%. The findings pointed to interventions to reduce loneliness. The researchers said, “Specific measures that increase social inclusion and contact with nature should be taken, especially in thickly populated cities.” Time spent in nature is known to boost well-being, with woodland walks estimated to save the UK at least £185m a year in mental health costs, for example. The research collected data from urban citizens across the world using the Urban Mind research app. More than 750 people provided 16,600 of these assessments. The participants were self-selecting and so it did not provide a representative sample of the wider populations. But when the researchers took age, education, and occupation into account, the benefits of nature contact and feelings of social inclusion on loneliness remained strongly statistically significant. Johanna Gibbons, part of the research team, said, “Cities are probably the only habitat that is increasing at a high rate. So we should be creating urban habitats where people can thrive (兴旺).” 28. How was the research conducted? A. By relying on people’s memory. B. By surveying 750 urban participants. C. By collecting data through a smartphone app. D. By checking a worldwide representative sample. 29. What can we learn from Paragraph 4? A. Many big cities take the lead in the research. B. Time spent indoors improves people’s well-being. C. Woodland walks greatly reduce social contact with people. D. Interventions to reduce loneliness benefit the UK financially. 30. What can be inferred about the research? A. It offers a wide range of samples globally. B. Many factors are considered except education. C. The carefully selected participants are reliable. D. The findings are statistically remarkable. 31. What’s the text mainly about? A. The mental problems of living in big cities. B. Developing urban habitats at a high speed. C. Research on how to get rid of loneliness in nature. D. Reducing loneliness in cities via contact with nature. D Whether you consume it in ice cream, coffee, cupcakes, pudding, or protein shakes, the vanilla you eat in the future might taste just a little bit sweeter thanks to a surprising new ingredient: used plastic. Admittedly, it doesn’t sound very appetizing. To scientists Joanna Sadler and Stephen Wallace at Scotland’s University of Edinburgh, however, what’s even less delicious is plastic waste, which currently enters the ocean at a rate of 8 million tons per year—enough plastic waste to outweigh all of the ocean’s fish by the year 2050. To help stop the plastic pollution on land and at sea, they’ve designed a novel way to turn it into vanillin, a chemical substance in vanilla extract that gives it its distinct vanilla smell and flavor. Although it can be found in natural vanilla bean extract, vanillin also can be made synthetically using chemicals coming from petrol. To create it from plastic, instead, researchers genetically modified a strain of E. coli bacteria so that it can make vanillin from a raw material used in the production of plastic bottles. According to their research paper, around 85% of the world’s vanillin is synthesized from chemicals that are obtained from fossil fuels. That’s because demand for vanillin—which is used widely not only in food, but also in beauty products, cleaning products, and herbicides—is far greater than supply. In Madagascar, which grows 80% of the world’s natural vanilla, pollinating, harvesting, and curing vanilla beans is a long and painstaking process that couldn’t possibly yield enough vanillin for modern appetites. And even if it could, the only way to naturally increase vanillin supply would be to plant more vanilla plantations, which would drive deforestation. Being able to create vanillin with plastic instead of petroleum means increasing vanillin supply while decreasing plastic waste, reducing industrial reliance on fossil fuels, and preserving forests. “Using microorganisms to turn waste plastics, which are harmful to the environment, into an important product is a beautiful demonstration of green chemistry,” said Ellis Crawford, publishing editor at the United Kingdom’s Royal Society of Chemistry. 32. How do scientists produce vanilla? A. Extracting it from plastic bottles. B. Forming it without bacteria. C. Changing the formula of protein shakes. D. Taking it from ocean life. 33. Which of the following words has the closest meaning to the underlined word “synthetically” in paragraph 3? A. Naturally. B. Artificially. C. Biologically. D. Industrially. 34. What can be learned from the passage? A. Madagascar is the biggest vanilla import country in the world. B. Making natural vanilla is an easy process. C. Enlarging vanilla plantations is environmentally-friendly. D. Producing vanilla from plastic is a win-win solution. 35. Where will you possibly read this passage? A. In a science magazine. B. In a travel booklet. C. In an economic textbook. D. In an advertisement. 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可以填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为多余选项。 Eating together as a family is a rare thing these days. ___36___Once I start my own family, I’ll definitely do anything possible to establish a tradition of eating together as a family. Here’s why. ___37___ Children who usually have their breakfasts and dinners with Mom only tend to think that a mother is a more important parent than a father, because she always finds time to eat with them while a dad is busy all the time. In turn, when you eat together as a family each day, your children learn to respect both parents.They know you two are busy,but still find time to share meals with them. Learn good table manners. When you have small kids, eating together as a family is an easy way to show and teach them good table manners. ___38___ Your children will learn how to be on time so that other family members don’t starveand how to behave at the table. You want to be proud of your grown-up kids, don’t you? Create wonderful memories. ___39___ They will know how important it is to eat together as a family, and will definitely teach their kids to do the same. Your family tradition of sharing meals together as a family will pass down from generation to generation. There are many benefits of eating together as a family that many of us don’t even think about. We all want to change the world and make it less cruel. ___40___ A. Respect both Mom and Dad. B. Of course, if yours are good. C. Start with your family.
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