文档内容
!"★#$% ?l6Bmn,\&l6、7"。
6.Whatwillthewomandotoday?
()* 2025—2026+,-%.+//012 A.Playchess. B.Goonatrip. C.Gotoaconcert.
7.Whenwillthemangotothebirthdayparty?
A.NextFriday. B.NextSaturday. C.NextSunday.
& ’ ( ) * + ?l7Bmn,\&l8o10"。
8.Whyisthetrafficjamexpected?
A.Therewillbeaparade.
23’8&,6745,671507。12891207:。
B.Itwillbetherushhour.
,-./: C.Anaccidenthasoccurred.
1.1;<=:>?%.@~ABC>?%.@ Unit4。 9.Wherearethespeakers?
2.D3E,1FG>HIJKLM、N1OPQRSTD5UVWXYZ。 A.Intheoffice. B.Inthestreet. C.Attheairport.
3.[DAB59,A\]45D^_,8‘abD5UZcd5eKD^fPgh。ijk 10.Whattimewillthespeakerssetoff?
l,8mnopq_,rAgstD^fP。[DuAB59,HD^STD5UZ。STv23 A.At5pm. B.At6pm. C.At7pm.
Zwx。 ?l8Bmn,\&l11o13"。
4.1F>yz{D5UK|}。12~(cid:127)_,(cid:128)HD5U(cid:129)[。 11.WhatcanweknowaboutLondonspublictransportation?
A.Itischeap. B.Itisconvenient. C.Itiscrowded.
0123 45(678,93 303) 12.WhatisthemansadviceonvisitingLondon?
!"#,$%&’()*+,,-./0123,4%56789#:%*+,9&’;<= A.Planninginadvance. B.Carryingmuchcash. C.Goingtomuseums.
&">,。 13.WhatareLondonerslikeinthemansview?
018 (65:;;<:;1.53,937.53) A.Careful. B.Warmhearted. C.Happy.
?@A5BCD。EBCD35FGH",I"JKL9 A、B、CMGNOJNPQRNO,S ?l9Bmn,\&l14o17"。
()*+9TUVW。?XEBCD3,4Y510Z89#:[\&5]H"^_‘@FH"。E 14.Whatistheprobablerelationshipbetweenthespeakers?
BCDa‘Fb。 A.Wifeandhusband. B.Motherandson. C.Ticketsellerandcustomer.
c:Howmuchistheshirt? 15.WhowillbeinterestedinTheMysteryofMuldoon?
A.£19.15. B.£9.18. C.£9.15. A.Adults. B.Elderly. C.Children.
&’d C。 16.HowwillkidsfindFireandFlood?
1.Whatbookdoesthewomanwanttoborrow? A.Frightening. B.Humorous. C.Touching.
A.History. B.Math. C.Science. 17.WhatcanbelearnedaboutSillySailor?
2.Whatarethespeakersmainlytalkingabout? A.Itismainlyaboutafestival.
A.Planninganactivity. B.Predictingtheweather. C.Arrangingaworkmeeting. B.Itissuitableforalmosteveryone.
3.Howdidthewomangetthedata? C.Itwonanawardmanyyearsago.
A.Bycollectingmusic. ?l10Bmn,\&l18o20"。
B.Bytelephoningmusicians. 18.WhatmightGregbe?
C.Byhavingfacetofaceinterviews. A.Acollector. B.Apainter. C.Aguide.
4.Whatisthemandoing? 19.Whatisthefeatureofthemuseum?
A.Checkingthebooking. B.Takingaseat. C.Reservingatable. A.Itattractsthemostvisitors.
5.Howmanypeopleareneededforthegroupproject? B.Itwasbuilttheearliestinhistory.
A.Two. B.Three. C.Five. C.Ithasthelargestnumberofpaintings.
0’8 (615:;;<:;1.53,9322.53) 20.Whyarethe19thcenturypaintingsspecial?
?@A5BCDefg,EBCDefg35hGH",I"JKL9 A、B、CMGNOJN A.Theyhavethelongesthistory.
PQRNO,S()*+9TUVW。?EBCDefgi,4%5#:_‘jGH",EH" B.Theyareplacedclosertothespeaker.
5Z8;?X3,jH"%LP5Z89k:。EBCDefg‘6b。 C.Theyhelpedtogetthemuseumstarted.
!"#$ %1&(’8&) !"#$ %2&(’8&)
书书书0’23 =>(678,93 503) “Westartoutjustlikethat,manyofuscannotansweranyofthequestions,”Kennedysaidwitha
018 (615:;;<:;2.53,9337.53) laugh.“Weallhaveagoodtimegoingaround,”headded.“Youknow,wealltrytomakeitfun.”
_‘@pqr,IE"KL9 A、B、C^ DsGNOJ,NPQRNO。 ThismemorycafeinPennsylvaniaisoneof600acrossthecountry.Thesegatheringsforpeople
A withcognitiveimpairment({|}~)andtheircaregiversarerelativelycheapandeasytorun—often
WhereArtMeetsNature:WanderinginTheseScenicNJSculpture(tu)Gardens theonlyexpenseisasmallrentalfeeforthespace.
LaurelwoodArboretumsSculptureTrail Thememorycafeshappentwiceamonth.Theyhavegivenhimpurpose,Kennedysaid,andhelp
This30acrewalkingtrailshows15sculptures.DesignedbyScottA.Broadfoot,thesculpturesare himcopewithnegativeemotionsaroundhisdiagnosis.
availableforbuying,withsomeoftheprofitsdonatedtothegarden.Guidedtoursareavailable. “IcameinandIwasmiserable,”Kennedysaid.“Icomeinnowanditslikeafamily,an
Daily,8amuntildusk.Entranceisfree;donationsareaccepted. extendedfamily.Igettomeetthem.Igettomeettheirpartners.Igettomeettheirchildren.So,its
SculptureforLeonia reallynice.”
SculptureforLeoniaisanallvolunteernonprofit.Establishedin2006,thisprojecthasplacedmore MorethansixmillionpeopleintheU.S.havebeendiagnosedwithsomeformofdementia((cid:127)(cid:128)).
than50sculptures.Theartworksareplacedacrossthetown,andthemainlocationistheErikaand Thediagnosiscanbeburdensomeonrelationships,particularlywithfamilymemberswhoarethe
DavidBoydSculptureGarden,whichhonorsthenamesake(vw)artists.Leoniawashometosome primarycaregivers.
renownedAmericanpainters. Theinclusionofcaregiversiswhatdistinguishesmemorycafesfrom otherprogramsthatserve
Entranceisfree.Daily,6am-9pm. peoplewithcognitiveimpairment,likeadultdaycare.Memorycafesdontofferformaltreatmentor
HaddonfieldOutdoorSculptureTrust(HOST) support.Atamemorycafe,havingfuntogetherandbeingsocialisthesupportforbothpatientsand
In2012,residentStuartHartingfoundedHOST.Theartisamixof40permanentsculpturesand theircaregivers.
temporarypieces.Thecollectionincludesagracefuldancer,abravepostman,andamonumentalred 24.Whatistheatmosphereinthememorycafelike?
heart.Clickhereforamapofaselfguidedtour. A.Academic. B.Religious.
Entranceisfree. C.Relaxing. D.Mysterious.
CliftonArtsCenterandSculpturePark 25.Whatcanwelearnaboutthememorycafe?
ThestoryoftheCliftonArtsCenterandSculptureParkbeganin1994withthevisionanddevotion A.Itisaffordable. B.Itoccupieslargespace.
offormermayorGloriaKolodziej.Kolodziej,alongwithateamofsupporters,changed26acresofland C.Itisequippedwithdoctors. D.Itexistsineverycommunity.
intoanoutdoorgallerypark.Theparkhaslaidthegroundworkforanindoorartscenter.Italsohas 26.WhydidKennedycometothememorycafe?
nearly30sculptures. A.Togetemotionalcomfort. B.Toregainhislostmemory.
1pmto4pm,Wednesday-Saturday.Suggestedadmissionisx3;donationsarewelcome. C.Toreducehisphysicalpain. D.Toreceiveprofessionaltreatment.
21.WhatcanweknowaboutLaurelwoodArboretumsSculptureTrail? 27.Whatmakesmemorycafesdifferentfromadultdaycare?
A.Youcanvisititat6amonFriday. B.Thesculpturesthereareforsale. A.Theyoffereasysocialenvironment. B.Caregiverscanattendthegatherings.
C.Volunteerscancreatesculpturesthere. D.Allofitsprofitstherewillgotocharity. C.Peopleinthesecafeshavemorefun. D.Theyfocusonformalmentalsupport.
22.Whichgardenhasthemostsculptures? C
A.SculptureforLeonia. WhenAlicefrom AliceinWonderlandconsumesamysteriousbottlelabeled“drinkme”,she
B.HaddonfieldOutdoorSculptureTrust. quicklyshrinks((cid:129)(cid:130))tothefloor.TheMagicSchoolBusoncegotattackedbywhitebloodcellswhen
C.CliftonArtsCenterandSculpturePark. itshrunkdowntoexploreasickpersonsbloodstream.AndAntManisfamousforusinghisshrinking
D.LaurelwoodArboretumsSculptureTrail. technologyinMarvelfilms.Butwillhumanseverbeabletobecomesmallerlikethisinreallife?
23.WhatisspecialaboutCliftonArtsCenterandSculpturePark? Unfortunately,physicistssaythattechnologywiththepowertomakesomeonebitesizedwould
A.Itsartists. B.Itsguidedtour. breakthelawsofphysics.Still,scientistshavefunthinkingoverhowanimaginaryshrinkingmachine
C.Itsadmissionfee. D.Itspopularity. mightwork.“Itdrivesyoutothinkabout:Whatdeterminesthesizeofthings?”saysphysicistJames
B Kakalios.Findingtheanswercaninvolvelookingintotheheartsofatoms((cid:131)(cid:132)).
RobKennedywaswithotherpeopleinacommunityspace.Theroomwasdecoratedwithanunder Atomsarethebuildingblocksofalmostallmatterintheuniverse.Onetheoreticalwaytoshrink
theseatheme. somethingwouldbetoreducethesizeofitsatoms.Butanatomssizedependsonseveralfundamental
Kennedycomestothismemorycafetwiceamonthsincebeingdiagnosed(yz)withAlzheimers constants((cid:133)(cid:134)).Thoseconstantsdontchange.
disease.Everyoneherehasadegreeofmemorylossorisacaregiverforsomeonewithmemoryloss. Ifshrinkingatomswouldntwork,whataboutshorteningthespacebetweenthem?Atomscome
Attendeescoloredonworksheetswithanunderwatertheme.Theydrankcoffeeandhaddesserts. togethertobuildallkindsofmolecules(7(cid:132)).Atomsandmoleculesinthehumanbody,though,are
Andaquickroundofquestionsandanswersgetseveryonesmindsworking. alreadypackedcloselytogether.Tryingtogetthemevencloserwouldbechallenging.
!"#$ %3&(’8&) !"#$ %4&(’8&)Youcouldtrytoforcetheatomstogether.ButKakaliossaysthatevenatinyreductioninsize airconditioner,washingmachine,andrefrigerator.Almostnineintenhadapersonalcomputer.Hsee
wouldrequireenormousamountsofpressure.Thatwouldbebadnewsforanypersonwhotriediton seeshisfriends,somenowabletoaffordexpensivecars,stuckonthehedonictreadmillastheyseekto
themselves.Kakaliossays,“Itwouldjustflattenyou,andyoudontwanttodothat.” getmorewellbeing.Theproblemisthatittakesmoreandmorethingstomakepeoplehappy.
EvenifAliceorAntManweresomehowabletobypassthelawsofphysicstosurviveshrinkage, 32.Whatisthemeaningofhedonomics?
theywouldfaceotherproblems.Forexample,astheireyesshrunk,theirabilitytoprocessvisible A.Followingyourideas. B.Producingmoreresources.
wavelengthsoflightmightbecomeworse. C.Pursuingwhatyouwant. D.Treasuringwhatyouhave.
Kakaliosalsonotesthatthescienceofmakingthingssmallerisnotentirelyimaginary.Although 33.Whatdoestheunderlinedpart“windingdown”inparagraph4mean?
technologymaynotbeabletoshrinkpeople,humansareremarkablygoodatshrinkingourtechnology. A.Watchingclosely. B.Reducinggradually.
28.Howdoestheauthorbringinthetopic? C.Observingcarefully. D.Checkingregularly.
A.Bytellingreallifestories. B.Byimaginingourfuturelife. 34.Whatdopeopledowhentheyareonthehedonictreadmill?
C.Byintroducingthebackground. D.Bydescribingscenesfromsomeworks. A.Theytrytogetmore. B.Theyuseresourceswisely.
29.Whatmightscientiststhinkofthetechnologyofshrinkingaperson? C.Theytendtobemorepositive. D.Theylackmaterialenjoyment.
A.Illegal. B.Inhuman. C.Imperfect. D.Impractical. 35.Whatdoestheauthortrulywanttoconveyinthelastparagraph?
30.WhichstatementmightKakaliosagreewith? A.Peoplearecontentwiththeirincome. B.Chinaseconomyisdevelopingfast.
A.Theatomssizeischangeable. C.Onesdesirescanhardlybesatisfied. D.Itsimpossibletoachieverealhappiness.
B.Theatomsandthemoleculeslinktightly. 0’8 (65:;;<:;2.53,9312.53)
C.Narrowingthespacebetweenatomsiseasy. _‘@Aqr,Iqr39NOJNP(cid:146)(cid:147)(cid:148)(cid:149)g(cid:150)9QRNO。NOJ56O(cid:151)(cid:152)(cid:153)NO。
D.Thescienceofmakingobjectssmallerisimpossible. Likeus,plantsdrinkwatertostayhealthy—nottoolittle,butnottoomuch!Whenisthebesttime
31.Whatcanbethebesttitleforthetext? towateryourplants?Herearesometips.
A.WhatIsBehindtheTechnologyofShrinking? Ifyourplantsareintheground,thegeneralruleisthatplantsneed1inchofwaterperweek.
B.HowIstheShrinkingTechnologyBeingUsed? 36 Thatdoesntusuallydothejob.Plantsdobestwhenwatereddeeplyaboutthreetimesaweek,
C.ShouldWeDescribeShrinkingTechnologyinLiterature? factoringintherain.Iftheplantsarelittle,waterthemtwiceadayuntilestablished.
D.CouldWeEverDeveloptheTechnologytoShrinkOurselves? 37 Feelyoursoil!Whenthesoilsticksinyourhandandyoucanformitintoaball,itiswet
D enough.But,ifitrarelyholdstogetherinyourhand,orifthesurfacelookshard,orcracked,itis
ChicagoBoothsChristopherK.Hseeisabehavioralscientistfocusingonwhathecallshedonomics probablydry,anditstimetowater. 38 Ifso,thatsuggestsitneedswater.
((cid:135)(cid:136)(cid:137)(cid:138)(cid:139)).Ratherthanstudyinghowtoproducemore“stuff”,hedonomicsstudieshowtoextract Itsbesttowaterearlyinthedaywhilethedew((cid:154)(cid:155))isstillontheleavessotheleavesdryoffby
morehappinessfromtheexistingobjects. evening.However,ifyoucannotwaterinthemorning,wateringintheeveningisfine,too. 39
HseeandhisChicagoBoothcolleagueReidHastieredefinedtheterm in2008.Theirideaof Believeitornot,sometimesthebesttimetowaterisduringorimmediatelyafterarainfall,
hedonomicsisbasedontheideathatpeopledontneedmoreresourcestobehappier;theyneedtouse especiallyiftherainshoweramountsonlytoahalfinchorsoofwater.Thereasonisthatyouwantto
existingresourcesdifferently. addsufficientwateratthesametimetoensurepenetration((cid:156)(cid:157))downto5or6inches. 40 Light
Forexample,supposeachildenjoysplayingwithwoodenblocksatfirstbutgrowstiredofthem. rainshowersdonotbuildupareserveofwaterinthesoil.
Hedonomicssuggeststhechilddoesntneedmoreblockstobehappy;sheneedstochangehowshe A.Thatisthebesttimetowaterplants.
playswiththoseblocks. B.Butdontjustwaterwithoutthinking.
Thesameprincipleappliestoexperiences.InsteadofwatchingaTVshowwithoutcontrol,watch C.Afterall,waterisnecessarytoeveryplant.
twoepisodes((cid:140))perday.Orbetteryet,applyanothermethod:sayyouhavesixepisodestowatch. D.Seeifthesoilisdryaninchbelowthesurface.
Youcouldwatchtwoaday,oryoucouldwatchoneonthefirstday,twoonthesecondday,andthree E.Justavoidthemiddleofthedaytoavoidwaterloss.
onthethirdday.Thatsanincreasingorder.Oryoucoulddotheopposite,inadecreasingorder,by F.However,thisdoesnotmeanwateringonetimeperweek.
watchingthreeatthestartandwindingdown. G.Ifyouwaitanotherdaytowater,youwillbeaddingonlysurfacewater.
Insteadofmakingfulluseoftheirresources,manypeopleinsteadseektoaddresources.Hsee, 0?23 )@A$(678,93 303)
whohasdevotedmuchofthepastdecadetoresearchinghedonomics,saysthatcanhavetheopposite 018 (615:;;<:;13,93153)
effectandleadtoaphenomenonknownasthe“hedonictreadmill((cid:141)(cid:142)(cid:143)(cid:144)(cid:145))”.Thisphraserefersto _‘@Aqr,Iqr3j"KL9A、B、C^DsGNOJ,NP(cid:158)(cid:159)(cid:147)(cid:148)(cid:149)g(cid:150)9QRNO。
thetendencyofpeopleenjoyinghappinesstemporarilyandkeepingonfindingnewpositivestimulation. Asanadult,makingnewfriendscanoftenfeelcomplicated((cid:160)¡9).ButTallulahshowsusthat
Hsee,whogrewupinChina,recallswhen“justhavingtheabilitytobuyacheapbicycle”inhis therearemoreopportunitiestodevelop 41 thanwethink.Youcanmakepositiveconnectionsinthe
citywasabigdeal.Butby2012inChina,nearlyeveryfamilyincitieshad,onaverage,acolorTV, most 42 ways!
!"#$ %5&(’8&) !"#$ %6&(’8&)Oneday8yearoldTallulahwroteathankyoucardtoJoseph,thedriverwho 43 parcelsto 0B23 CD(678,93 403)
herhouseeachweek,anddrewarainbowonit.Whensheandhermotherwenttogiveher 44 to 018 (93153)
theman,Tallulahlearnedthathewasdeaf.This 45 thegirltolearnsignlanguagesoshecouldtalk fifl4d(cid:176)–,4†‡·(cid:181)¤)¶•]‚“„[”»…‰”9(cid:190)r¿(cid:192),`4´Fˆqr˜¯。
totheman.Atfirst,they 46 throughhanddrawncards.Everymorningsincethen,thedelivery /0˘ƒ:
driverhas 47 displayedtherainbowdrawinginhisdeliverycar. 1.„[”»˙¨;
OnedayafteroneofJosephs 48 deliveriestoTallulahshome,she 49 himbyusingsign 2.(cid:201)˚¸v(cid:204)˝。
languagetosay,“Haveagoodday!”Hewasdeeplymovedbythe 50 girlswillingnesstolearn ˛ˇ:
signlanguageinordertotalkwithhim.HelatertaughtTallulahothercommon 51 ,suchas“Good 1.´k¥(cid:134)U(cid:151)80G—(cid:209);
morning!”and“Goodafternoon!” 2.`(cid:210)(cid:211)@(cid:212)«)&"(cid:213)9TUVWk&。
“Itslovelytobeabletocommunicatewithher,”Josephshareswithatranslator.“AndI 52
seeingherinmydailywork.”
Tallulahsmothermadeavideoofthewhole 53 andshareditonline.ThevideooftheTallulah
andJosephs 54 inspiredmanypeopletobeginlearningtheinclusiveuniversallanguageof 55 . 0’8 (93253)
41.A.friendships B.habits C.interests D.languages _‘@Amn,(cid:214)(cid:215)(cid:216)/0^KLB(cid:217)(cid:218)(cid:219)·(cid:220)´6B,(cid:221)(cid:222)(cid:223)(cid:224)FˆXÆ9qr。
42.A.common B.potential C.secure D.unexpected AfterHurricaneKatrinaleft,theresidentswerestillthere.Thestormtookawaytheirbelongingsas
43.A.throws B.delivers C.contributes D.attaches wellastheirhope.Itleftresidentsnumb((cid:226)ª),withoutenoughenergytotakecareofthemselves,let
44.A.photo B.writing C.video D.drawing alonehelpsomebodyelse.
45.A.inspired B.allowed C.trained D.advised Nightfell.Davidparkedhiscarbesideanapartmentbuilding.Thebuildingwasmadeofstone,one
46.A.sorted B.looked C.learned D.communicated ofthefewonthissideofNewOrleans.Heopenedhistrunk,draggedoutfourgrocerybagsoffoodand
47.A.typically B.occasionally C.proudly D.secretly closedthetrunkwithhiselbow.Henoticedthescratches((cid:228)(cid:229))onhiscar.Someonewouldscratchthe
48.A.remote B.regular C.effective D.emergent sideofhisdoorwithakeyorarockeverytimeheleftitforthehourhewasmakingvisits.“Itwasonly
49.A.encouraged B.taught C.amazed D.reminded acar,”heignoredthemandenteredthebuilding.
50.A.thoughtful B.independent C.generous D.reliable ItwasWednesday,thedayheregularlyarrivedafterwork.Theapartmentbuildingwashometo
51.A.theories B.rules C.phrases D.customs twooldladies.Theycouldntwalkoutandlivedweekbyweek,waitingforDavidsvisits.Theytold
52.A.lookforwardto B.takecontrolof C.takepridein D.putupwith himthatpeoplewereangryattheworldbecauseofthestorm.Theytoldhimhowmuchtheymissedthe
53.A.history B.event C.performance D.display soundandlaughterofchildrenplayinginthestreet.Theyhopedthatscenecamebacksomedaysoon.
54.A.approaches B.impact C.interactions D.announcement Cleaningupafterahurricanetooktime.Itwasmorethanpumpingoutthewaterandcleaningout
55.A.advertising B.designing C.painting D.signing themud.Itwasmorethanreplacingdirtycarpetsandfurniture.Itwasaboutbringingbackhope,faith
0’8 (610:;;<:;1.53,93153) andcareforeachother.Davidknewthissowellthathespenthislifehelpingpeoplesufferinginstorms.
_‘@Aqr,)(cid:149)g(cid:150)(cid:147)(cid:148)1G¢£9⁄¥eƒ§/⁄¥9¤'“«。 ThatwaswhyhedrovetotheapartmentbuildingeveryWednesdaytodeliverfood,asmileandhopeto
The2025WorldAIConference&HighlevelMeeting(WAIC),heldinShanghaifromJuly26 thoselonelypeople.
to28,mainlyconcentrated 56 artificialintelligence,scientificintelligence,smartdevicesandAIs ThisWednesday,whenDavidarrivedasusualandparkedhiscar,ayoungboywasstandingthere.
integrationwithfinance, 57 (demonstrate)thegreatadvanceintechnology. “Iwillwatchyourcar,”theboysaid.“Icanmakesurenobodycanscratchyourcar.”
Morethan1,200guestsfromover30countriesandregionsattendedthisyearsWAIC,including ˛ˇ:
12 58 (winner)ofinternationalawardssuchastheTuringAwardandtheNobelPrize. 1.(cid:220)´¥(cid:134)U(cid:151)150G—(cid:209);
The2025WAICsaw 59 (it)exhibitionareawith70,000squaremetersforthefirsttime.Half 2.`(cid:210)(cid:211)@(cid:212)«)&"(cid:213)9TUVWk&。
ofthe800companiesattendingthisyearsexhibition 60 (be)fromotherChinesecitiesorother Davidlookedattheboyandsmiled.
partsoftheworld.Morethan3,000productswereondisplay.Itshould 61 (note)thatover
100productsmadetheirChinaorworlddebut(‹›). Fromthenon,peopleoftenheardlaughterfromtheladiesapartment.
Overthepastseveneditions,WAIChasattracted 62 participationofover6,000industry
leadersandtheonlinediscussionofmorethan2.5billionpeople.Bytheendofthefirstquarter, 63
(incredible),thetotalindustrialvalueoftheShanghaibasedAIcompanieshadreached118billion
yuan.Theenormousprofit 64 (bring)bythesecompaniesincreased65percentyearly, 65
showedthatAIhadbecomeanewengineforShanghaiseconomicgrowth.
!"#$ %7&(’8&) !"#$ %8&(’8&)