1、2023届安徽省皖豫名校联盟高三第三次大联考英语试题学校:_姓名:_班级:_考号:_一、短对话1When will the game end?AAt 2:40 p.m.BAt 3:00 p.m.CAt 3:10 p.m.2What would the man like to do?AOrder roast beef.BWork at the beach.CTake something cold.3Where are the speakers most probably?AIn a bookstore.BIn a bank.CIn a hotel.4What does the woman thi
2、nk of the activity?AIt can be interesting.BIt may be demanding.CIt must be rewarding.5What kind of book is the man reading?AA detective story.BAn adventure novel.CScience fiction.二、长对话听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题。6Whats the woman like?AOutgoing.BShy.CSerious.7Whats the probable relationship between the speakers
3、?AFriends.BRelatives.CNeighbors.听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题。8Why does the man often go to the concert?ATo improve his singing.BTo enjoy some pop music.CTo learn from others.9What does the woman speaker like doing best in her spare time?APlaying the guitar.BLearning the theory of music.CPractising the violin.10
4、Where do the speakers agree to go?AA concert on classical music.BThe mans aunts home.CA famous arts center.听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题。11What did the study say about Fitbit?AIt is of no use.BIt is not accurate.CIt is not suitable for exercise.12What does the man advise the woman to do?ATry a cheaper one.BBuy o
5、ne for herself.CWear Fit bit only when running.13What does the man think of Fitbit?AIt is worth it.BIts valueless.CIts uncomfortable to wear.听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题。14What can we learn about the man?AHe is a teacher.BHe is a salesman.CHe is a presenter.15Where will the woman usually go to buy cheaper goods
6、?ASupermarkets.BOutdoor markets.CDepartment stores.16What does the woman highly recommend?AReplacing old things with the new ones.BDealing with broken things by ourselves.CEmploying someone to help with the repairs.17What are the speakers mainly talking about?AHow to save money.BHow to open a saving
7、s account.CHow to share housework.三、短文听下面一段独白,回答以下小题。18What can the robot do for delivery?AIt can deliver items to the door alone.BIt can sort out goods more efficiently.CIt can recognize the owner of the house.19What does the speaker think of delivery men?AThey might be replaced.BThey need update t
8、heir skills.CThey should learn to control the robot.20What is the main purpose of the speech?ATo introduce a delivery app.BTo provide job information.CTo present a new trend.四、阅读理解Top Exhibitions to See in London in 2023Architectural: Vanishing PointsWhile we like to think of architecture existing p
9、urely in the real world, emerging designers and architects are using platforms like Instagram to create structures in the virtual world. This collection of works, which range from the practical to the fantastical, are all by architects who have gathered significant social media followings.In the Dig
10、ital Universe at ROCA London. 8 February31 July, free.Flowery: OrchidsThis annual festival is back in bloom (开花), this time inspired by the beauty and biodiversity of Cameroon. Just like previous years, the orchids are spread throughout the various zones of the Princess of Wales conservatory and acc
11、ompanied by sculptures that are just as colourful as the flowers on display.At Kew Gardens. 4 February 5 March, &16.50entrance to the gardens included.Female Abstraction: Action, Gesture, PaintArt history has often shone a light on the men of Abstract Expressionism, such as Jackson Pollock and M
12、ark Rothko. Well, nows the time to let the most important women of the movement take the limelight in an exhibition that includes works by American artists such as Lee Krasner and Helen Frankenthaler, but spreads the net wider to include the female abstract artists from Europe, Asia and the wider wo
13、rld, with whom most of us will be unfamiliar.At Whitechapel Gallery. 9 February7 May, 16.50concessions available.Powerful Portraits (肖像): Alice NeelThe largest UK exhibition to date of American painter Alice Neels work will bring together her figurative pieces from across her 60-year career. Neel we
14、nt against the popular grain by painting figures when abstract works were most popular, and she painted subjects that other artists ignored pregnant women, labour leaders, black children, civil rights activists and strange performers. Its high time we had a major show of her work in London, and the
15、Barbican has duly provided.At Barbican Art Gallery. 16 February21 May, & 18.21Which of the following exhibitions is held once a year?AFlowery: Orchids.BPowerful Portraits: Alice Neel.CArchitectural: Vanishing Points.DFemale Abstraction: Action, Gesture, Paint.22When can visitors appreciate Lee K
16、rasners works?AOn February 8.BOn January 7.COn April 7.DOn May 8.23What can we learn about the artist Alice Neel?AShe is 60 years old now.BHer works didnt follow the trend.CShe often ignored some common subjects.DShe is the most popular American painter in the UK.Theres another universe not far from
17、 land. It lacks buildings, trees, cars, cellphones and the Internet. Seemingly limitless water extends uninterruptedly in all directions. Civilization goes away, along with any sign of humanity. And it is why Im really into sailing. I grew up around boats. My father liked sailing and built them. My
18、older sister and I were stuffed into a car nearly every summer weekend until my late teens to make the trip from northeast Indiana to the south shore of Lake Erie in Ohio, where Talisman built by my father waited patiently through the week.As a kid, I read the adventures of Robin Lee Graham, a trave
19、ller exploring the sea alone, in the pages of National Geographic and, later, in Grahams book, Dove. However, it wasnt until about 20 years ago, well into my adulthood, that I took up sailing in a serious way. Ive made voyages in fair stormy and weather, on my own boats and those of my friends, and
20、ranging from nearshore day sails to blue-water passages.Still, Ive made plenty of mistakes. While living in Asia, a sailing friend and I set off across the South China Sea and intended to get to Thailand, only to be pushed by a late-season typhoon that forced us to make landfall in Vietnam, glad to
21、be alive.Years later, my wife and I lived aboard our 37-foot ship, Symbiosis, while we saved enough to take a two-year leave from our jobs to journey down the U.S. Atlantic coast and through the Bahamas and the Caribbean. We visited many places that never see ships or airplanes and that are nearly i
22、mpossible to reach anyway other than at the helm(舵柄) of a small boat. But boats are expensive and time-consuming. After returning from the Caribbean a few years ago, we decided to sell Symbiosis, resolving instead to sail only “other peoples boats”. It didnt last, though. A few months ago, we found
23、a good deal on a smaller sailboateasier to maintain but still capable of some short offshore journeys. I think well name her Talisman.24What would the author do on summer weekends as a kid?AHe would help his father build Talisman.BHe would sail with his father and his sister.CHe would explore northe
24、ast Indiana in a car.DHe would bring human civilization to sailing.25What can we learn about the book Dove?AIt has something to do with exploring the sea.BIt was published in National Geographic.CIt is the most famous work by Graham.DIt was an inspiration for the authors writing.26Why did the author
25、 sell his ship Symbiosis?AIt didnt function well.BHe couldnt afford to maintain it.CHe found a better one to replace it.DIt was damaged seriously during a storm.27What is the authors main purpose in writing the text?ATo show his passion for sailing boats.BTo stress the influence of adventures on him
26、.CTo discuss the problems of sailing on the sea.DTo share his success in exploring the world.When it comes to home decoration, one of the first opportunities we get to express ourselves is by choosing which posters to tear out of magazines and stick on our teenage bedroom walls. So why was the humbl
27、e poster so popular? The simplest argument is that it allows children and teens to match their bedroom to their personality. Adolescence is a time when we long for independence and a voice, and posters allow that freedom. This is particularly important at a time when the bedroom is an important spac
28、e away from the pressures of school, annoying brothers or sisters and parents who seem to go out of their way to cause embarrassment.Another advantage of posters as a first attempt into decoration is their transience. Buying magazines with pin-ups of your favourite celebrities is a more affordable a
29、nd less time-consuming alternative to decorating a bedroom and, once a fashion passes, posters can easily be taken down.My own walls were covered with posters from a young age. At the risk of sounding strange, swapping my posters around was a hobby during my teenage years. Id commit hours to rearran
30、ging them on my wall, ensuring every inch was covered.Research conducted by George Home /Asda in 2017 showed just 7 percent of teens had posters on their walls compared to 78 percent in the 1990s, largely due to the“plain walls and fairy lights aesthetic (美学)” favoured by You Tubers and influencers.
31、 The experimental teenage bedrooms of Gen X and Millennials are gone, now bypassing the stage entirely and transforming straight into a more adult space.Its sad to think young people are missing something that played such a big part of youth culture, but times have moved on. And if the love of all t
32、hings old-fashioned continues to be influenced by shows such as Stranger Things, perhaps the poster will enjoy are birth in popularity, who knows? As someone who found so much joy in the posters that decorated their walls, I really do hope so.28Why do teenagers prefer posters according to the author
33、?AThey causeless embarrassment to teenagers.BThey are topics to share with others.CThey help reduce the pressures of school.DThey are symbols of freedom and personality.29Which can best replace the underlined word “transience” in paragraph 2?ABeing necessary.BBeing temporary.CBeing contradictory.DBe
34、ing voluntary.30What can be inferred from the research in 2017?AAesthetic is unpopular among adolescents.BSome social media is to blame for strange aesthetic.CThe love for posters has dropped dramatically recently.DThe experimental model in teenage bedrooms are unreliable.31What does the author hope
35、 for in the last paragraph?AThe poster will be popular again.BThe poster will be updated constantly.CThe poster will not decorate walls anymore.DThe poster will not be influenced by popular shows.Ask the new artificial intelligence (AI) tool ChatGPT to write an essay about the cause of the American
36、Civil War and you can watch it produce a persuasive term paper in a matter of seconds that has even be enable to pass school exams. Thats one reason why New York City school officials this week started blocking the impressive but controversial writing tool that can generate paragraphs of human-like
37、text. The free tool has been around for just five weeks but is already raising tough questions about the future of AI in education, the tech industry and a host of professions.ChatGPT was launched on Nov. 30 and is part of a new generation of AI systems that can chat, generate readable text on deman
38、d and even produce novel images and video based on what theyve learned from a vast database of digital books, online writings and other media. But unlike previous models of so-called “large language models”, such as Open AIs GPT-3, launched in 2020, the ChatGPT tool is available to anyone with an In
39、ternet connection for free and designed to be more user-friendly. It works like a written dialogue between the AI system and the person asking it questions.Millions of people have played with it over the past month, using it to write silly poems or songs, trying to trick it into making mistakes, or
40、for more practical purposes such as helping compose an email.As with similar systems, ChatGPT can generate convincing prose, but that doesnt mean what it says is factual or logical. Its launch came with little guidance on how to use it, other than a promise that ChatGPT will admit when its wrong. Ma
41、ny school districts are still struggling to figure out how to set policies on whether and how it can be used. “While the tool may be able to provide quick and easy answers to questions, it does not build critical-thinking and problem-solving skills, which are essential for academic and lifelong succ
42、ess,” said a schools spokesperson Jenna Lyle from NYC But theres no stopping a student from accessing ChatGPT from a personal phone or computer at home.32What can we learn about the term paper from paragraph 1?AIt is a result of the improvement of education.BIt can be rated as passing by schoolteach
43、ers.CIt has caught the attention of the public.DIt acts as a model for students to follow.33What makes Chat GPT different from GPT-3?AChatGPT can create text.BChatGPT can edit digital books.CChatGPT is free of charge to all.DChatGPT can ask its users questions.34What is Jennas attitude towards stude
44、nts use of Chat GPT?AFavourable.BTolerant.CUncaring.DDisapproving.35What is the best title for the text?AHow Are Schools Handling Chat GPT?BYou Can Check When ChatGPTs Telling the TruthCWhat Is ChatGPT and Why Are Schools Blocking It?DStudents Are Using ChatGPT to Do Their Homework五、七选五Protecting Yo
45、ur Eyes During Computer UseSit far enough away from the screen._36_.To make sure your computer is positioned right, try the high-five test: if you can properly high-five your computer screen with a full arm extension, youre sitting too close.Position reference materials properly. If theyre too low,
46、your eyes will have to refocus every time you glance at them, leading to eye tiredness. You can also strain (损伤) your neck by moving it to look down too often._37_Blink (眨眼) often. We naturally blink about 20 times every minute._38_.This means your eyes are at much greater risk of drying out when wo
47、rking on the computer. Since your body wont blink as much naturally, youll have to be conscious of this and force yourself to blink. Deliberately blink every five seconds or so._39_.Your screen should be brightened in relation to your environment. If youre working in a brightly lit room, you can increase your brightness settings; if the room is dim, lower the settings. While the screen should be the brightest object in the room, it shouldnt be on the brightest setting in a darkroom.Reduce glare from your screen. Surrounding lights can reflect off your