高考真题|(新高考二卷)2026年普通高等学校招生全国统一考试英语试卷 (文字版带答案及听力音频)

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高考真题|(新高考二卷)2026年普通高等学校招生全国统一考试英语试卷 (文字版带答案及听力音频)

2026年普通高等学校招生全国统一考试(新高考二卷)

英语试卷

第一部分听力(共两节,满分30)

第一节(5小题;每小题1.5分,满分7.5)

听下面5段录音。每段录音后有一个小题,从题中所给的ABC三个选项中选出最佳选项。听完每段录音后,你都有10秒钟的时间来回答有关小题和阅读下一小题。每段录音播放两遍。

1Why is Rose going downtown?

ATo host a party.BTo pick up Kevin.CTo buy a gift.

2What is Larry unhappy about regarding the swimming class?

AThe slow progress.BThe cold water.CThe poor facilities.

3What will the speakers have for dinner?

ACarrots.BBeans.CPotatoes.

4What does the woman suggest the man do?

ATidy up his office.BWork from home.CGet some relaxation.

5What do we know about Judy?

AShe is quiet.BShe is polite.CShe is humorous.

第二节(15小题;每小题1.5分,满分22.5)

听下面5段录音。每段录音后有几个小题,从题中所给的ABC三个选项中选出最佳选项。听每段录音前,你将有时间阅读各个小题,每小题5秒钟;听完后,每小题都有5秒钟的作答时间。每段录音播放两遍。

听下面一段对话,回答以下小题。

6What does the man want to do?

ABook a ticket.BConfirm a seat.CReschedule a flight.

7When will the man leave for Swansea?

AOn June 15th.BOn June 17th.COn June 18th.

听下面一段对话,回答以下小题。

8Who is the woman probably?

AA sports journalist.BA private doctor.CA fitness trainer.

9How did Alex feel before climbing?

ADeeply regretful.BQuite embarrassed.CFairly nervous.

10What will Alex do this afternoon?

ATake a good rest.BDo strength training.CGo climbing again.

听下面一段对话,回答以下小题。

11What are the speakers mainly talking about?

ABob’s career plan.BA job opening.CStudent loans.

12What advice does the woman give Bob?

AAim high.BBe creative.CThink twice.

13What is Bob’s final decision?

ATo set up his own business.

BTo pursue further education.

CTo accept the job offer.

听下面一段对话,回答以下小题。

14Who broke the toy house?

ASophia.BHenry.CSally.

15Why do the speakers worry about rebuilding the toy house?

AThey are short of time.

BSome parts are missing.

CThe directions are confusing.

16What will the speakers probably do?

AFix the windows and doors.

BOrder a new toy house.

CAsk someone for help.

听下面一段独白,回答以下小题。

17What was the group’s first stop in Melbourne?

ATown Hall.BEureka Tower.CChinatown.

18Where did the group meet a famous writer?

AAt the State Library.BIn the Botanical Gardens.COn Swanton Street.

19How long does the group’s trip last?

ATwo days.BThree days.CFour days.

20What is the group going to do next?

AGo for lunch.BReturn to school.CWrite a review.

第二部分阅读(共两节,满分50)

第一节(15小题;每小题2.5分,满分37.5)

阅读下列短文,从每题所给的ABCD四个选项中选出最佳选项。

A

The Best Chinese Restaurants Around D.C.

The D.C. area is home to many outstanding Chinese restaurants, but diners willing to travel outside the city limits will also be rewarded.Panda Gourmet

This not-so-hidden-anymore fine restaurant for Sichuan cuisine is inside the Days Inn off New York Avenue. Dandan noodles and mapo tofu are sure bets. Panda Gourmet offers online ordering for takeout, and delivery is now an option. Open from 11:00 am to 9:45 pm. Closed on Tuesday.

2700 New York Ave NE, Washington, DC 20002Shanghai Taste

Shanghai Taste offers arguably the best soup dumplings in the area. It also serves a variety of chef’s specials, beef with rice cakes, and more. The restaurant is open from 11:00 am to 9:00 pm Tuesday through Sunday, offering call-in orders and pickups.

1121 Nelson St, Rockville, MD 20850Gourmet Inspirations

The spacious dining room is regularly filled with customers enjoying dumplings and a variety of noodle and rice dishes. Customers can also place pickup orders online for lunch or dinner until 8:00 pm six days a week. Closed on Tuesday.

2646 University Blvd W, Silver Spring, MD 20902Queen’s English

This nice Cantonese restaurant in Columbia Heights quickly became a destination for chef Henji Cheung’s Hong Kong-style cooking and co-owner Sarah Thompson’s natural wine list that earned her a Michelin nod. Reserve a spot indoors, at its chef’s counter, or covered dog-friendly patio (露台), with creative wine tastings in the mix. Dinner hours: Tuesday through Thursday 5:30 pm-9:00 pm (last seating); Friday and Saturday 5:00 pm-9:30 pm (last seating). Closed on Sunday and Monday.

3410 11th St NW, Washington, DC 20010

21What service is available only at Panda Gourmet?

ACall-in orders.BFree packing.

CTakeout delivery.DOnline pickup orders.

22Which restaurant can you go to for beef with rice cakes?

APanda Gourmet.BShanghai Taste.

CGourmet Inspirations.DQueen’s English.

23What do we know about the Cantonese restaurant in Columbia Heights?

AIt is open only on weekdays.BIt adopts a no-pet policy.

CIt takes no reservations.DIt serves only dinner.

B

Roland Reisley turned 101 years old in May and is in remarkable health. But that’s not the thing he prides himself on. “I am the last original client of Frank Lloyd Wright, still living in the home he designed for me,” Reisley said, sitting in the bright open living room of the home designed by the famous architect.

The house where Reisley has lived for 73 years is located in the woods of Westchester County, New York, just 30 miles north of Manhattan. It’s one of 47 that make up the peaceful mid-20th-century modern village of Usonia.

Back in 1951, Reisley was just 26, newly married and ready to put down roots. He and his wife began looking for a place in Manhattan. But what they liked, they couldn’t afford on his sound engineer’s salary and what they could, they didn’t like. Then they heard about Usonia. On their first trip out, they were greeted with such enthusiasm from the 10 families who’d already established homes there that they decided to join.

The house has signature Wright features. It is made with local materials, has a flat roof, wood paneling, concrete floors and custom-made furniture. Over the decades, Reisley has opened his doors to visitors. The house is now listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Reisley said he’s tried his best to be a good steward (管家) not just of the Wright creation he lives in, but all others as well. He co-founded the Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy, an organization engaged in the preservation of all of Wright’s remaining buildings. Reisley believes that his devotion to the home and the community are what have kept him in such good health all of these years.

24How does Reisley feel about having Wright as his house designer?

AHonored.BAmused.CStressed.DInspired.

25What made Reisley finally decide to settle down in Usonia?

AIts natural environment.BIts large-sized houses.

CThe convenience of its location.DThe warmth of its residents.

26What can we learn about Reisley’s house?

AIt is older than its owner.BIt uses local materials.

CIt has a pointed roof.DIt is put up for sale.

27What can be inferred about Reisley from the last paragraph?

AHe is very attached to Wright buildings.

BHe is devoted to health education.

CHe is an expert in home decoration.

DHe is passionate about tourism.

C

The peak of Mount Qomolangma, 8,849 meters above sea level. Chimborazo, 6,263 m; Mont Blanc, 4,806 m; Pradidali hut, at the foot of the Pala group in the Dolomites, 2,278 m. It is common practice to provide the elevation (高度) of a place. Simple readings are now readily available on our phones and wearables. But elevation is necessarily relative: only the choice of a reference point allows us to express numerically the height of an object or a location.

The idea of sea level as a reference point for elevations has by now been around for so long as to go essentially unnoticed-we mention it without even considering what it means. That the concept has a history is easily ignored. We tend to forget that sea level is a product of technically and culturally determined assumptions. In this book, I tell a story of these assumptions.

Appropriately, the book took shape during a summer spent between sea and mountains. A month after visiting the French Riviera and enjoying the sandy beaches of Nice and Menton, I went hiking with friends in the Pala group. Resting on a pass near the Pradidali hut, we began discussing the readings offered by our altimeters (测高仪). Why did they vary ever so slightly from one instrument to the next? This sense of uncertainty led me to think about the meaning of zero. This is how I began my search for the conceptual history of sea level.

In this book I examine three crucial stages in the history of mean sea level. These stages mirror the development of human conceptions of the sea. Since I began thinking about this project in August 2011, the issue of sea-level rise and the need to place ithistorically have only become more urgent: between then and the end of 2022 the global sea rose by almost 5 centimeters, about half of the overall rise recorded by satellites since 1993.

28What does the author point out at the beginning of the text?

ASome mountains are getting higher.BData on wearables are misleading.

CThe concept of elevation is relative.DThe reference point is hard to locate.

29What is paragraph 3 mainly about?

AHow the altimeter was invented.BWhat initiated the author’s research.

CWhy the digital readings varied.DWhere the author spent his holiday.

30What does the underlined word “it” refer to in the last paragraph?

AThe book.BThe project.CThe issue.DThe development.

31What can be the title of the book mentioned in the text?

AThe Altimeter: A Must-HaveBSea Level: A History

CMeaning of Zero: Nothing or EverythingDMountains to Seas: Ups and Downs

D

The Barcelona subway pulls into the station, the doors slide open and passengers pour out to go about their daily business. Little do they know that as they do so, a burst of energy is sent up to street level to help charge an electric car.

Barcelona has put together a package of clean energy technologies to help public transportation go greener, while also doing its part to tackle climate change and aid Europe’s difficult shift to the privately owned electric vehicle market.

Sixteen stations of Barcelona’s subway system are part of its new MetroCharge project, whereby the energy from the underground trains’ brakes (刹车) is used to power the trains and the stations themselves, while the remainder is sent snaking through cables (电缆) to the surface to power plug-in stations for privately owned vehicles.

Bernardo Espinoza, an engineer who takes the subway every day, owns an electric car. “I am pleasantly surprised, because I am always looking for where to plug it in,” Espinoza said before catching the subway in a working-class area of southern Barcelona. “And if it is from energy from the trains’ brakes, then even better.”

Regenerative brakes have been in trains for decades and are also used in some cars. They consist of an electric motor which collects energy used in the braking action that would be lost as heat by conventional brakes. That energy can be immediately used to accelerate (加速) the vehicle or, in the case of the Barcelona subway system, sent along cables to supply electricity for the station or for electric car chargers.

Alvaro Luna, a professor of electrical engineering, said that the system is innovative in so far as it allows for recycled energy to be redirected to specific local uses — in this case powering electric cars parked nearby. That, he said, boosts efficiency.

32Why does Barcelona launch the MetroCharge project?

ATo fuel the city’s economy.BTo enhance passengers’ experience.

CTo promote green transportation.DTo raise the quality of electric cars.

33What is Espinoza’s concern?

AHow to cut his travel expenses.BWhere to get a parking space.

CHow to avoid rush-hour traffic.DWhere to find a charging point.

34What aspect of regenerative brakes is discussed in paragraph 5?

ATheir operating conditions.BTheir conventional standard.

CTheir potential risks.DTheir working mechanism.

35What did Luna say about the system?

AIt uses reclaimed energy creatively.BIt improves workers’ efficiency.

CIt prioritizes the safety of trains.DIt generates jobs for the locals.

第二节(5小题;每小题2.5分,满分12.5)

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。

Ways to Teach Kids Work Ethic Early

Ever watched your child try to get out of doing housework by making excuses? If only the effort they put into avoiding responsibility could be redirected into, well, actual responsibility. In fact, building work ethic (道德) in kids doesn’t require military-style drills. Here are four simple and practical ways.

● Make housework part of the family routine.

Involve your child in the daily running of the house: tidying toys, feeding the dog, watering the plants. ____36____ When the tasks become as routine as brushing teeth, kids internalise that helping with housework is simply part of life.

● ____37____

You can’t expect your child to tackle their tasks with enthusiasm while you’re complaining about loading the dishwasher. If your child sees you enjoying your work and taking pride in a job well done, they’re far more likely to do the same.

● Build determination through goals.

____38____ Sometimes you have to help them find their “thing.” Set small, achievable goals together with them and celebrate progress, not perfection. The trick is to let them struggle a bit — resist the urge to help fix things the moment they experience a setback.

● Treat mistakes as opportunities.

Few things strike fear into a child’s heart like the prospect of failing. The best way is to normalise mistakes as a natural part of learning. When kids mess up, don’t jump in with a rescue mission. ____39____

Teaching kids work ethic is to gently and consistently push them toward responsibility, determination, and pride in their efforts. ____40____ No worry. Those habits you’re building now are setting your child up for a lifetime of resilience (韧性) and satisfaction.

AThe key is consistency.

BHelp kids develop analytical skills.

CModel the work ethic you want to see.

DInstead, encourage them to do differently next time.

ESometimes, a cleaner living room is the best reward.

FProgress can be slow, and you’ll wonder if it’s all sinking in.

GNot every child is born with the willpower of a marathon runner.

第三部分语言运用(共两节,满分30)

第一节(15小题;每小题1分,满分15)

阅读下面短文,从每题所给的ABCD四个选项中选出最佳选项。

I never thought I could be a writer. I didn’t come from a family connected to the ________ world, which I perceived as a major ________. After my undergraduate degree, convinced that writing wasn’t for me, I ________ to study teaching.

Then came an afternoon that ________ everything. I was teaching poetry, encouraging students to write about their ________. And then, at the end of the lesson, one child asked me a question: “Have you always wanted to be a ________, Miss?” I explained that when I was his age, I actually wanted to be a writer, but I didn’t think I quite had what it ________. The boy replied with a ________ look, “Well, you are telling us to live our dreams when you haven’t even done it yourself. Have you even ________?”

I was struck speechless — he was ________. Who was I to ________ them on bravery and risk when I had never taken myself nor my own ________ seriously?

On the basis of that ________, I applied to go back to university and study creative writing. There were times when I found myself wondering if I should pack it all in, but the boy’s words kept ringing in my ears: I knew I needed nothing else to succeed but a bit of ________ and hard work. I ________ to find a way out of my shame and into a pattern of work that I loved.

41AmedicalBartisticCscientificDliterary

42AsubjectBproblemCeventDbreakthrough

43Astepped asideBgot upCwent offDturned back

44AchangedBruinedCrevealedDinterrupted

45AhobbiesBfamiliesCdreamsDlessons

46AwriterBteacherCreporterDpublisher

47AkeptBleftCheldDtook

48AsatisfiedBguiltyCgratefulDdisapproving

49AtriedBnoticedCaskedDwaited

50ArudeBrightCshyDsilent

51AexamineBcongratulateClectureDconsult

52AvaluesBimaginationCinspirationDdesires

53AcooperationBconversationCadministrationDexplanation

54Aself-beliefBknow-howCbrainstormingDteamwork

55ArememberedBagreedCmanagedDhesitated

第二节(10小题;每小题1.5分,满分15)

阅读下面短文,在空白处填入1个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。

My first time doing tai chi

For the first 15 minutes of my tai chi (太极) class, we remain ____56____ (entire) in one spot to warm up. Angela, a tai chi ____57____ (instruct) with twenty-eight years of experience, says that a successful hour of tai chi is an hour with no negative thoughts. “Your mind ____58____ body go together. That’s all that matters.”

Although not a morning person, I begin my lesson with Angela and about twenty others at a Sydney community centre courtyard at 7 am. “Put your ____59____ (foot) parallel (平行), and use your dan tian to hold up your body,” she says.

In tai chi, the dan tian is your qi core and qi in Chinese means life force. Now, I ____60____ (suppose) to feel the weight on my legs and sink my dan tian.

We move on to tai chi positions, of ____61____ there are forty-two in the style that Angela teaches. Today, we will only be doing the first nine. The movements have ____62____ (describe) names like “holding the bowl” and “grabbing the bird’s tail.”

During most of the class, we follow Angela and concentrate on making tiny, isolated (单独) movements. Then, Angela gets us to try the nine movements on our own. I keep my eyes ____63____ a woman to my right and try to copy her movements, but unfortunately I soon lose focus.

At the end of the lesson, I feel wide awake, despite it still ____64____ (be) early at 8 am. It’s time for my dan tian____65____ (meet) another life force: coffee.

第四部分写作(共两节,满分40)

第一节(满分15)

66.假定你是李华,外教Kate计划将你们班的英语作文汇编成册。请给Kate写封邮件,内容包括:

(1)建议配图。

(2)自荐承担画图工作。

注意:

(1)写作词数应为80个左右。

(2)请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答。

Dear Kate,

It’s a great idea to make a collection of our English essays.

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Yours,

Li Hua

第二节(满分25)

67.阅读下面材料,根据其内容和所给段落开头语续写两段,使之构成一篇完整的短文。

As far as I can remember, I’ve always been a night owl. Even in middle school I would stay up very late. I would feel completely at ease doing my homework in bed, with light music on. I found comfort in keeping myself awake when everyone else had gone to bed, and I loved the silence of the night. My parents urged me to get out of this so-called unhealthy habit, but their repeated requests fell on deaf ears.

Fast forward to my first year of college. I still loved the night and would stay up until unruly hours for no apparent reason, chatting online and watching videos. When I finally started to study, I would race through the assigned work, often well past midnight. My roommates would tell me to go to bed and get up early the following morning to do it instead. Get up early to do my homework? No way! I would never do that.

Then, one day last term, I did exactly that. Bent over my laptop while sitting on the bed in the corner of my room, I suddenly felt a pounding headache, and had to lie down. Unable to keep my eyes open, I decided I had no choice but to finish my homework the next morning. I woke up at 6am. Hardly had I written half a page when I felt a sharp pain in my chest.

At the school clinic, a doctor, with a serious expression on his face, handed me a medical report. “You’re 20, but your heart is 40!” he said. A cold wave went through me. I realized that years of living as a late-night person had turned my heart into an overworked engine.

注意:

(1)续写词数应为150个左右。

(2)请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答。

Struck by the doctor’s warning, I knew I had to make a change.

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Slowly but surely, my efforts to adjust to the new routine paid off.

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

1C

【详解】M: We’re going to the park for a picnic. Would you like to come, Rose?

W: I’d love to, but I have to go downtown to get Kevin a birthday present. He invited me to his party.

2A

【详解】W: Larry, how is your swimming class going?

M: Well, believe it or not, we haven’t touched the water so far. It’s just the same body-building exercises every day.

W: No hurry, it’ll be fine.

3B

【详解】M: What’s for dinner tonight?

W: Baked beans.

M: Not beans again. I remember we’ve got some carrots and potatoes left.

W: We ate them up yesterday.

4C

【详解】W: You are always working in the office and at home. You should go to parks or theatres.

M: I have no time for parks or theatres, honey.

5A

【详解】M: Do you know Helen and Judy in the IT department?

W: Sure, we studied in the same university. Helen is lively and talkative, while Judy is just the opposite.

6C7B

【详解】W: Good morning, sir. Can I help you?

M: Yes, I’ve booked a ticket for June 22nd to Swansea. I’d like to see if there’s an earlier flight available.

W: What date do you have in mind?

M: I’d prefer the 18th, if possible.

W: I’m sorry. There are no departures for the 18th. We have a flight leaving on the 15th and the 17th. Will either of these days work for you?

M: The 17th would work better for me. Thank you.

8A9C10B

【详解】W: Congratulations, Alex. You’ve just set a record in rock climbing. How do you feel now?

M: Honestly, I feel great. It’s exactly what I’d hoped for.

W: Tell us about your state of mind before you started.

M: Well, my heart was racing for a few moments. I mean, it’s a huge wall above you with a glass-smooth surface and no hand-holds.

W: Are you going to climb more today?

M: Probably not, but I’ll do some strength training this afternoon. There will be more challenges ahead.

11A12C13A

【详解】W: How was your interview, Bob?

M: It was bad. I didn’t get the job.

W: Oh no, I’m sorry to hear that.

M: You know what, I think I’ve changed my mind. I want to try something different. Maybe I don’t have to work for someone else. I might start my own business.

W: Oh? What kind of business?

M: What about opening a small restaurant?

W: Well, but are you prepared both mentally and financially?

M: I can start from what I have, and I think I’m ready to do it.

W: It’s easier said than done, Bob. You should give it more thought.

M: Understood. I’ll choose a good location for my restaurant, and I’ll do some careful research to get off to a solid start.

14B15A16C

【详解】M: Sally, are you busy now? I need some help.

W: Sure, Henry. What can I do?

M: I broke Sophia’s toy house yesterday. I need to rebuild it for her.

W: Does she know?

M: Yeah… she was really upset. I told her I’d finish rebuilding it before she gets back from school. I’m not sure I can get it done in just two hours.

W: Don’t worry, honey. Just putting together some wood pieces shouldn’t be that difficult.

M: It’s more complicated than that. We need to put in all those windows and doors too.

W: Why don’t we just build a simpler one without those small parts?

M: No, we can’t. I’ve promised Sophia a toy house just like the old one.

W: Well, you’re right, but it will take us forever to build it. Maybe we should find Sophia’s grandpa to help us.

M: Good idea.

17B18A19B20B

【详解】Okay, now let’s briefly review what we have done in the past few days. We set off on Monday morning and arrived in Melbourne after a two-hour bus ride, we started with a guided tour of Eureka Tower. After lunch, we walked along Collins Street, taking in the view of Town Hall. We then took a walk through Chinatown to the State Library. Unexpectedly, we also met Markus Zusak, the author of The Book Thief, at the library on Tuesday morning. We enjoyed the beauty of the botanical gardens, followed by a tour of the Victoria Parliament House in the afternoon. Today is Wednesday. We spent most of the morning on Swanston Street studying the historic architecture. Now we’ve finished lunch. It’s time to head back to school, and you can enjoy the views through the bus windows on the way. A big thank you to my fellow teachers and parent volunteers for your wonderful help. The students had a great time and learned a lot.

21C22B23D

【解析】略

24A25D26B27A

【解析】略

28C29B30C31B

【解析】略

32C33D34D35A

【解析】略

36A37C38G39D40F

【解析】略

41D42B43C44A45C46A47D48D49A50B51C52D53B54A55C

【解析】略

56entirely57instructor58and59feet60am supposed61which62descriptive63on64being65to meet

【解析】略

66

【解析】略

67

【解析】略

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