1、届上海市各区高三英语一模完形填空汇编宝山区More and more shoppers are buying things online these days, allowing them to avoid 51 salespeople and long lines at checkout counters. In spite of online convenience, 52 , there are some items like clothes that customers prefer to 53 before buying. In light of this, two companie
2、s are finding ways to modernize stores and 54 the gap between online and in-store retail (零售).A software company that also happens to sell designer jeans, Hointer has created a fast and painless shopping 55 for its customers. Shoppers walk into a Hointer store and select one of the many pairs of jea
3、ns 56 down from bars. Then they point their smartphones at the tag and 57 the Hointer app, after which they select the size and press “try on.” The app then directs them to a specific dressing room. German-made robots bring out the 58 jeans and deliver them through a chute (斜槽) to the dressing room
4、in about 30 seconds. Immediately after 59 pairs of jeans are dropped through another chute, the “outbox,” they disappear from the list in the app.Purchases at Hointer are made with a swipe (刷卡) of a credit card. And interacting with a salesperson is optional! This allows Hointer to hire fewer people
5、 and focus on their ultimate goal: developing 60 that supports a retail revolution.Mens clothing retailer Bonobos has 61 a more personalized shopping experience. Although it is in fact an online retailer, Bonobos has decided to open a handful of brick-and-mortar stores called Guideshops. Shoppers ma
6、ke a(n) 62 online before arriving at a Guideshop, where they receive one-on-one 63 from a fitting guide. Because these shops have limited inventories (存货), shoppers arent able to take home the outfits they select. But guides help shoppers make online purchases before they leave, after which the item
7、s will be 64 to customers in one or two days. While Hointer focuses on convenience, Bonobos Guideshops focus on customer service. But both efforts have one thing 65 : giving clothing retailers a new look for the 21st century.51. A. respectable B. considerate C. aggressive D. violent52. A. however B.
8、 therefore C. anyway D. moreover53. A. convince B. guarantee C. ensure D. examine54. A. break B. bridge C. shallow D. deepen55. A. experience B. mall C. direction D. principle56. A. hiding B. hanging C. storing D. labeling57. A. start B. upload C. save D. download58. A. desired B. well-designed C. p
9、romoted D. well-prepared59. A. qualified B. wanted C. chosen D. unwanted60. A. employment B. efficiency C. technology D. market61. A. come up with B. looked forward to C. looked up D. brought up62. A. decision B. appointment C. contribution D. impression63. A. contact B. instruction C. notice D. att
10、ention64. A. presented B. packaged C. delivered D. transferred65. A. in conclusion B. in common C. as usual D. in general崇明县Telemedicine is the name for when doctors give advice to patients by telephone or the Internet, or when health care providers in rural areas connect with specialists in big cit
11、ies.Telemedicine has 51 for a long time, but the rise of smartphones, tablet PCs and camera-equipped computers is 52 telemedicine to new levels. Some health care systems in the United States now 53 Virtual (虚拟的) Urgent Care. Patients see a doctor by video chat without having to leave home. Diana Rae
12、, a nurse educator in the Franciscan Health System recently 54 how Virtual Urgent Care works. She used an iPad tablet and skypethe video chat service.Doctor Green has the patient describe her 55 ; then the doctor performs a physical exam by demonstrating what he wants her to do. Doctor Green decides
13、 that the problem is a common 56 . For medicine, he prescribes (开药方) an antibiotic (抗生素). He says about 3 out of 4 patients have 57 problems that can be treated like thisthrough Virtual Urgent Care, which means a video chat could 58 a visit to the doctors office.“Patients safety is really important
14、to us. So if we feel it is not 59 for the patient to be treated in this manner, were going to suggest other 60 for them,” said Green.The Franciscan Health System is based in Tacoma, Washington. It 61 $35 for this kind of virtual house call, which is much pfzhizuo less than the cost of going to an em
15、ergency room, a doctors office or an urgent care clinic.After trying the video conference, Diana Rae says she would be 62 to pay the $35 when she was recently home with a bad cold. “I would have paid twice that for the 63 of getting taken care of without having to sit in a waiting room, wait, and ge
16、t 64 everyone elses germs,” Rae said.Franciscan operates hospitals and clinics and has a deal with a company called Carena to add effective urgent care by Skype or phone. Carena is one of several companies doing this kind of work around the country. But a company official says state rules have not k
17、ept 65 with developments in telemedicine.51. A. rested B. existed C. survived D. vanished52. A. keeping B. occupying C. striking D. raising53. A. offer B. advertise C. prohibit D. criticize54. A. predicted B. published C. demonstrated D. claimed55. A. symptoms B. emotions C. medicines D. coughs56. A
18、. mistake B. infection C. experience D. sense57. A. heart B. security C. drug D. health58. A. pay B. cancel C. replace D. include59. A. necessary B. smart C. hard D. safe60. A. hospitals B. doctors C. alternatives D. networks61. A. charges B. costs C. pays D. provides62. A. happy B. reluctant C. exc
19、ited D. surprised63. A. delight B. convenience C. significance D. embarrassment64. A. infected with B. exposed to C. shocked at D. fascinated by65. A. contact B. company C. progress D. communication奉贤区Prince Harry of Wales, Scottish actress Karen Gillan, Ron Weasley from the movie Harry Potter what
20、do they have 51 ? They all have ginger hair, or as people usually say, they are all “redheads”. Britain may be the most red-headed country in the world. About 1 to 2 percent of the worlds population has red hair, but in the UK the numbers are much 52 , with 13 percent of Scots, 10 percent of the Iri
21、sh, and 6 percent of people in England having red hair. Scientists have tried to explain why some people have red hair or some time and now they may have ound an answer: the dull 53 in Britain. “I think its to do with sunshine,” said Alistair Moat, the headmaster o St Andrews University, UK. The hum
22、an body needs vitamin D from 54 , but unortunately people living in Britain do not have enough of it because of its marine climate. 55 , Britain gets even more cloud than countries in the ar north of Europe. In Sweden, or example, the average daily hours o sunshine is 5.4. In Scotland it is only 3.1
23、 hours. To 56 this, the DNA o people living in these areas has changed 57 ; scientists call this a (变异). Originally, the 58 on our body is a mixture of two kinds of (黑色素) black melanin and red/yellow melanin, but with certain parts of DNA 59 , the production o black melanin is restricted while only
24、red/yellow melanin is made. The 60 is red hair, light skin color, (雀斑) and a greater 61 to sunlight. “We need 62 skin to get as much vitamin D from the sun as possible,” added Moat. 63 , whats more interesting is that the redhead DNA mutation is recessive, which means it is hidden and can often 64 g
25、enerations without showing. “At least 1.6 million Scots carry a red-head gene mutation, and most are 65 that they do,” Moat said. This is why a person who does not have red hair can still produce red-haired children if he or she is a carrier o this special DNA. 51. A. in private B. in common C. in p
26、articular D. in reality 52. A. higher B. deeper C. closer D. more 53. A. weather B. phenomenon C. environment D. inance 54. A. atmosphere B. vegetable C. sunshine D. nature 55. A. As usual B. In act C. In a word D. Vice versa 56. A. begin with B. hold back C. go through D. deal with 57. A. accidenta
27、lly B. agreeably C. occasionally D. slightly 58. A. coloring B. appearance C. instinct D. ingredient 59. A. transplanted B. assembled C. changed D. revealed 60. A. evidence B. miracle C. result D. inluence 61. A. tendency B. exposure C. acceptance D. sensitivity 62. A. light B. special C. smooth D.
28、delicate 63. A. Thereore B. However C. Still D. Thus 64. A. skip B. pass C. avoid D. bridge 65. A. unit B. unwilling C. unsettled D. unaware 虹口区The term home schooling means educating children at home or in places other than a normal setting such as a public or private school. These days, homeschool
29、ing in America is 51 .Teaching methods at homeschooling 52 . Some parents follow a strict timetable and 53 a traditional school environment. Other parents follow an extreme form of homeschooling in which they do not give grades or tests and allow their children to study wherever they want. More pare
30、nts, however, follow the middle 54 to provide a balance between freedom and discipline.Why do parents choose homeschooling? Some believe that children in public schools experience too much “peer pressure”, or social pressure from friends. They say it may have a 55 effect on the childs studies. Other
31、 parents are dissatisfied with the quality of education in the public school. About half the parents who teach at home are 56 motivated and use lessons by mail or Internet from church schools. Whatever the 57 may be, it is evident that more and more children are being taken out of normal schools every year. 58 , many questions have emerged, encouraging the debate over home schooling against public schoo