2025年新高考全国卷英语适应性模拟测试卷4(含答案).docx
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1、2025年新高考全国卷英语适应性模拟测试卷4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 Influential Art Sheila Metzner: From Life Jan.20, 2024 Feb.25, 2024 This exhibition celebrates the artistic skill of the internationally respected American photographer Sheila Metzner. Her unique st
2、yle integrates aspects of pictorialism and modernism to create an aesthetic (美感), which not only stands out in the history of photography but also becomes very closely associated with the best of 1980 s fashion, beauty and decorative art trends. William Blake: Visionary Jan.17, 2024 Feb.24, 2024A re
3、markable printmaker, painter, and poet, William Blake ( 17571827 ) developed a very wildly unconventional world view. By combining his poetry and images on the page through unique drawing techniques, Blake created some of British arts most striking and lasting imagery. This major international loan
4、exhibition explores the artist-poets imaginative world through his most celebrated works. Alfredo Boulton: Looking at Venezuela, 19281978 Daily, through Jan.16, 2024 Alfredo Boulton was one of the most important intellectuals of the 20th century in Latin America and an influential photographer of th
5、e modern period. Through his large collection of works, Boulton generated a new cultural definition of Venezuela. This exhibition explores Boultons wonderful photography, his relationships with modern artists and his influence on the formalization of art history in his country.Eugne Atget: Highlight
6、s From the Mary & Dan Solomon Collection Daily, through Jan.25, 2024 Around the turn of the 20th century, photographerEugne Atget broke new artistic ground. Walking at dawn with his heavy camera, he photographed the soul of Paris and its surrounding areas by focusing on its old alleyways, shop front
7、s, architectural details, staircases and street sellers. This focused exhibition features highlights from the artists work, which continues to influence quite a few photographers today.21. What did Sheila Metzner and Alfredo Boulton have in common?A. They shaped artistic expression.B. They explored
8、cultural diversity.C. They photographed American life.D. They focused on modern photography.22. What is Eugne Atgets photography mainly about?A. French fashions. B. Natural landscapes.C. Architectural designs. D. Urban street scenes.23. Which exhibition is suitable for whoever studies words and imag
9、es?A. William Blake: Visionary.B. Sheila Metzner: From Life.C. Alfredo Boulton: Looking at Venezuela, 19281978.D. Eugne Atget: Highlights from the Mary & Dan Solomon Collection.B Thomas Hardy was born at Higher Bockhampton, Dorset, on June 2, 1840, where his father worked as a builder. From his fath
10、er he gained an appreciation of music, and from his mother an appetite for learning and the delights of the countryside about his rural home. Due to his poor health, Hardy did not start school until he was eight. At 16, Hardy helped his father with architectural drawings and then started to work for
11、 architects. Later he moved to London and began writing poems, but his works were rejected by publishers. In1870, he was sent to work in Cornwall. There he met his future wife Emma Gifford, who encouraged him in his writing. Hardy published his first novel Desperate Remedies in1871, to universal dis
12、interest. But the following year Under the Greenwood Tree brought Hardy popular praise for the first time. As with most of his fictional works, this novel incorporated real places around Dorset into the plot, including the village school that Hardy attended. After Under the Greenwood Tree came a ser
13、ialized novel A Pair of Blue Eyes. Once more Hardy drew upon real life, and the novel mirrors his romance with Emma. Hardy followed this with Far From the Madding Crowd, set in Puddletown, near his birthplace. This novel finally earned Hardy the success that enabled him to give up his architectural
14、practice and concentrate only on writing. The Hardys lived in London for a short time, then in Yeovil, then in Sturminster Newton, which Hardy described as“idyllic ( 田园诗般的)”. It was at Sturminster Newton that he penned The Return of the Native, one of his most enduring(持久的) works. In 1887, Hardy pub
15、lished The Woodlander, a story concerning an honest woodsman in a small village. Then in 1891 one of his best works, Tess of the d Urbervilles, came out, which was set primarily in the English countryside during the 19th century. Tess of the d Urbervilles excited interest, but his next work, Jude th
16、e Obscure (1895), threw Hardy intoa storm of controversy (争议), which made him turn away from fiction and focused on poetry for the rest of his life.24. What do we know about Hardy?A. He was into drawing as a young man.B. He got fame at first attempt at writing.C. His writing career started with poem
17、s.D. His wife Emma shared his interest.25. What does the underlined word“incorporated” in paragraph 3 mean?A. Integrated. B. Changed.C. Developed. D. Forced.26. After which novel was Hardy fully devoted to writing?A. A Pair of Blue Eyes.B. Far From the Madding Crowd.C. Tess of the d Urbervilles.D. J
18、ude the Obscure.27. What is the common element in most of Hardys novels?A. Campus life. B. Life in London.C. Marriage life. D. Life in the countryside.C Recently it has dawned on the government that closing more than 1,000 of Englands railway station ticket offices would not be very smart politics.
19、The transport secretary, Mark Harper, announced that train operators had been asked to withdraw the cost-cutting strategy, which the government itself had originally pushed on them. The writing was already on the wall in the summer, when public anger led to an extension of the consultation period on
20、 the proposed closures. By the time it ended, 750,000 responses had been recorded, 99% of them negative. The publics concerns were over future access to travel advice and information, assistance for disabled people, safety at understaffed stations, and consequences for the digitally excluded. But th
21、e passionate opposition also underlined a widespread sense that railway stations must be more than transit(交通) zones. Combined with a reformed ticketing system, that insight should now inform a positive approach to breathing life into Englands railways and attracting more people back onto trains. As
22、 a report published this autumn by the Campaign for Better Transport sets out, there is an urgent case for fairer ticketing reform across the network. For over a decade, the relative cost of taking the train rather than the car has skyrocketed, as fares have risen while fuel duty has been frozen. Ov
23、er a third of the public are confused by the numerous types of tickets available, and the complex regulations that apply to them. Why should an anytime return from Chelmsford to London cost32.60, while the same distance from Grays to London costs 13.40? The failed attempt to shut down ticket offices
24、 had its roots in a short-term ministerial response to falling revenues(收入). But as the country strives to achieve a challenging green transition, the government should work to establisha simpler, fairer ticketing system that offers imaginative rewards for taking the train; and to develop an ambitio
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