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2019屆高三第一次聯(lián)考含聽力英語試卷
一、短對話
Where does the conversation take place probably
A. In a concert.B. In a ball.C. In a CD store.
How does the man feel about his trip
A. Regretful.B. Meaningful.C. Happy.
What day is it today
A. Friday.B. Saturday.C. Sunday.
What is the man going to do after work
A. Go back home.B. Go to the dancing club.C. Go for a drink.
What is the man’s secret ingredient
A. The spice.B. The cheese.C. The red wine.
二、長對話
聽下面一段較長對話,回答以下小題。
1.Who got shot
A. The woman.B. The guard.C. The cashier,
2.What is the car’s license plate number
A. BD160SMG.B. BD60SMJ.C. BD16SMJ.
聽下面一段較長對話,回答以下小題。
1.Why does the woman refuse to eat the steak
A. She takes pity on animals.B. She is on a diet.C. She doesn’t like the taste.
2.What will the speakers do next
A. Go to the woman’s home.B. Watch a documentary.C. Look for another restaurant.
聽下面一段較長對話,回答以下小題。
1.What time is it now
A. 11:00.B. 11:10.C. 11:15.
2.What is the weather like
A. Rainy.B. Windy.C. Sunny.
3.What’s the probable relationship between the speakers
A. Seller and customer.B. Professor and student.C. Boss and employee.
聽下面一段較長對話,回答以下小題。
1.What sport did the woman like to play in the past
A. Yoga.B. Table tennis.C. Volleyball.
2.Which is NOT the reason for the woman choosing Tai Chi
A. It requires less intensity.
B. It’s very popular nowadays.
C. It’s related to Chinese culture.
3.What is the essential concept of Tai Chi
A. How to balance your life.
B. How to use the least to achieve the most.
C. How to defeat someone stronger than you.
4.What benefit docs Tai Chi bring to the woman
A. She feels easier to concentrate.
B. She becomes more energetic.
C. She gets a good appetite.
三、短文
聽下面一段獨(dú)白,回答以下小題。
1.What can we know from the previous tests
A. Chinese 15-year-olds have better math ability on average.
B. Math development is more advanced in China.
C. Chinese math teachers are better.
2.What will kids start practicing math exercise under the reform
A. 4 years old.B. 5 years old.C. 6 years old.
3.How many primary schools are there in Britain
A. About 4,000.B. About 8,000.C. About 16,000.
4.What does the “progressive” math-teaching style concentrate on
A. Blending math into daily life.B. Practice and repetition.C. Teaching the basics of math.
四、閱讀理解
The critics’ top four books of 20xx are based on Christmas selections in national newspapers, the London Evening Standard, The TLS, The Spectator and the New Statesman.
Normal People by Sally Rooney Faber £14.99
Sally Rooney’s debut novel, Conversations with Friends, was one of last year’s most talked-about books. The response to the Irish writer’s follow-up has, if anything, been even more ecstatic. The 27-year-old was praised for her ability to convey subtle modulations of emotion. The novel was long listed for the Man Booker Prize — but many felt that it should have done better.
Vietnam by Max Hastings William Collins £30
This long-awaited historical blockbuster follows the Vietnam War over three decades. from the French “dirty war” of 1946—54 to America’s capitulation to the Vietcong in 1975. Hastings, who reported from the battlefield in Vietnam as a young British journalist, was praised for his encyclopedic knowledge of the conflict.
The Silence of the Girls by Pat Barker Hamish Hamilton £18.99
Pat Barker’s novel is a retelling of The lliad — but with women at the heart of the action. The central character is Briseis, who appears only glancingly in Homers original. Best-known for her First World War Set Regeneration trilogy (1997). Barker, in her fifties, again focuses on the traumas of war. Reviewers praised the novel’s subversive energy even if it was judged conventional in places.
A Certain Idea of France by Julian Jackson Allen Lane £35
This door-stopping biography by British historian Julian Jackson — born in 1954 chronicles the life of Charles de Gaulle who is regarded as one of the greatest ever Frenchmen. While acknowledging that de Gaulle wasn’t very likeable, Jackson salutes his imagination and boldness- qualities that helped him steer France through its liberation from the Nazis and the war in Algeria. Critics suggested it would become the standard biography.
1.Which author of the four books is the youngest according to the text
A. Sally RooneyB. Max HastingsC. Pat BarkerD. Julian Jackson
2.Which book may people who are interested in a political leader’s life choose
A. Normal PeopleB. Vietnam
C. The Silence of the GirlsD. A Certain Idea of France
3.What is the author’s purpose in writing the text
A. To remember the four great novelists.
B. To introduce the yearly top four novels.
C. To encourage studies on the four novels
D. To promote the values of the four novelists
In Australia, the bilby (兔耳袋貍) project is seen as an important part in protecting the nation’s wildlife. Bilbies are known for their long ears and large back legs. They usually sleep during the day, and are awake at night. They look a lot like rabbits and grow to about 2.5 kilograms.
For the first time in 20xx, bilbies are running wild in Southeastern Australia. The small animals were once widespread across much of Australia, but were last observed in the wild in New South Wales state in 1912. Every year bilby populations continue to decrease. Wildlife experts are afraid that the bilby, a small marsupial, could eventually disappear forever, either because of land clearing or fires. Another reason is a threat from cats and foxes, which hunt down and kill bilbies.
In northern New South Wales state, environmentalists are celebrating what they are calling a historic moment. Thirty bilbies from a captive breeding program have been released into a large predator-free enclosed area north of Sydney. Without the protection of a 32-kilometer fence, experts say the animals probably would not survive.
Tim Allard heads the Australian Wildlife Conservancy, which is involved in the project. He says the release of these beloved animals is a big deal. “There are some remaining wild bilby populations, but they get predated upon heavily by feral cats and foxes. Bilbies only really survive behind fenced areas.” Allard said the point of doing this project is to return the countryside to what it used to be before Europeans arrived. “So in the not-too-distant future, you will be able to go inside the fenced areas and it will be like stepping back before Europeans turned up,” he said.
1.What is the main idea of paragraph 1
A. The shape of the bilby.B. The habit of the bilby.
C. The weight of the bilby.D. The characteristics of the bilby.
2.The followings are the reasons for Bilbies’ disappearance EXCEPT ________
A. Trees’ clearing.B. Fires’ bursting.C. Cats’ hunting.D. Foxes’ killing.
3.What docs the underlined word “enclosed” in paragraph 3 probably mean
A. Involved.B. Protected.C. Hunted.D. Enlarged.
4.From Allard’s words, what do we know
A. The release of bilbies can make much money.
B. Cats and foxes cause the decrease of bilbies.
C. Nature reserves are needed to protect bilbies.
D. Europeans shouldn’t turn up in the countryside.
That the success of humans as a species depends to a large extent on our ability to cooperate in groups is widely believed. Much more so than any other animal, people are able to coordinate and join their forces and actions to produce mutual benefits.
New research involving Dr Molleman, an expert at the University of Nottingham, suggests that successful cooperation in groups depends on how people gather information about their peers, and how they base their cooperative decisions on it.
Biologists wonder how cooperation could have developed by natural selection: it is puzzling how cooperation can be beneficial when it is possible to behave selfishly and take advantage of the cooperative efforts of your group. Psychologists and economists try hard to understand why many people are willing to sacrifice their own welfare to benefit their social environment. They asked questions like “How do people make decisions when their actions can affect the welfare of others ” “How people determine their behavior when they have to cooperate in groups ”.
Dr Pieter Van Den Berg from the University of Groningen said, “From previous research we know that some people are ‘majority-oriented (以……為中心)’ and tend to look at the behavior of the majority in their group, whereas others are ‘success-oriented’ and try to find out what kind of behavior pays off best for themselves.”
Dr Molleman, from the center of the Decision Research and Experimental Economics, said, “It turns out that behavior in groups of success-oriented people was much more selfish than it in groups of majority-oriented people. As a consequence, the people in the majority-oriented groups tended to cam more money in the experiment since they cooperated more.”
1.Compared with other animals, human beings are capable of ________.
A. communicating well with othersB. working together with each other
C. surviving some natural disastersD. getting access to various information
2.What are the psychologists and economists most interested in
A. Whether people’s personal efforts will pay off eventually.
B. How cooperation has developed over a long lime naturally.
C. Why people offer to affect those around them unselfishly.
D. What benefit that good cooperation can bring immediately.
3.We can infer that the success-oriented people________.
A. are careful to select a group to join
B. are likely to be successful in the future
C. pay more attention to the result of their effort
D. have some skills in collecting useful information
4.What is the new finding of the research
A. Having good relationship gets us to live fullest life.
B. Focusing on individual success makes people selfish.
C. Being considerate can ensure our long-term benefit.
D. Mastering social skills help create harmonious society.
Stephen Hawking’s final fear was that DNA manipulation would lead to a master race of superhumans. The physicist, who died aged 76 in March, 20xx, thought the development could destroy the rest of human beings. His last prediction is revealed in a new book of his collected articles and essays called Brief Answers to Big Questions.
Hawking feared rich people would soon be able to edit their children’s DNA to improve attributes like memory and disease immunity. And he said that would pose a crisis for the rest of the world even if politicians tried to illegalize the practice. In an extract (摘錄) published by The Sunday Times, he wrote: “I am sure that during this century people will discover how to modify both intelligence and instincts such as aggression. “Laws will probably be passed against genetic engineering with humans. But some people won’t be able to resist the temptation to improve human characteristics, such as memory, resistance to disease and length of life.” And he said that would cause huge problems for humans who have not undergone the same process, leaving them unable to compete. The professor even warned it could lead to the extinction of humanity as we know it. He said of normal humans: “Presumably they will die out, or become unimportant. Instead, there will be a race of self-designing beings who are improving at an ever-increasing rate.” The Brief History of Time author also refers to techniques like Crispr, which enables scientists to modify harmful genes and add in others. And although such procedures could be a boost for medical science, some critics are worried that they could cause a eugenics-style (優(yōu)生方式) movement, where the weak are weeded out of society.
The new book, published by Hodder & Stoughton on Tuesday, also collects his writings on what he thought were the big questions facing science and wider society. In it, he examines whether aliens exist, colonize space and whether humans will ever go beyond our Solar System.
1.Stephen Hawking’s views don’t include _________.
A. DNA manipulation could lead to the extinction of human beings.
B. There exist techniques to modify harmful genes and add in good genes.
C. People cannot resist the temptation to improve human characteristics.
D. Humans who haven’t undergone genetic engineering may die out.
2.Which one is the hook published by Hodder & Stoughton
A. Brief Answers to Questions.B. The Sunday Times.
C. The Brief History of Time.D. Solar System.
3.What’s Stephen Hawking’s attitude towards human genetic engineering
A. Supportive.B. Impartial.C. Favorable.D. Concerned.
4.What does the text mainly want to tell us
A. Crispr can enable scientists to get harmful genes changed.
B. DNA manipulation will create a master race of superhumans.
C. Humans will colonize space and go beyond our Solar System.
D. DNA manipulation may lead to the extinction of human beings.
五、七選五
5 ways to focus your mind
1. Focus with a purpose
The mistake most people make is lacking a clear purpose -they want to be more focused, but don’t know what for. Avoidance is the mother of distraction. If you don’t have a concrete reason to stay focused, your mind will jump from one thing to another. Training your mind to pay attention requires something to focus on. 1.. When you don’t have a purpose, it’s easier to get distracted. Conversely, having a clear ‘why’ will help you stay focused.
2. Solve a real problem
Most of the times, we are doing meaningless work. We jump from one task to another without accomplishing anything. We end solving the wrong problem and lose our focus. You have to decide what your priorities are—focus on what will advance your daily, weekly or monthly goals. Leam to say no to the rest. 2.. Those who lack focus are busy fighting urgent, but irrelevant fires.
3. Eliminate(消除) other options
3., it’s harder to get distracted, Create rules where you can’t start a new activity until you finished another one first. For example, in a good day, Pink leaves his office at 10-10:30. On a bad day, he might stay ‘disconnected’ until 2 or 3 PM. When you climinate all options, it’s easier to focus on the only thing that’s left.
4. 4..
When your work and your mental state are not aligned (使結(jié)盟), they create an emotional dissonance. Focusing is hard, Dealing with this stressful feeling becomes an additional distraction. Adapting your work to your mental state increases your focus. Leam to understand the types of work you do and align them with your mental states.
5. Set deadlines
Deadlines are more than bringing your goals to life. Yes, committing to a specific date increases your chances to achieve an objective. However, the power of deadlines lies in creating a constraint. Limitations benefit both creativity and productivity—by challenging ourselves, we increase our focus. 5..
A. When you don’t have choices
B. When you create some rules
C. Take advantage of your mental state
D. Combine your action with your mental state
E. Focus on important things and suppress urgency
F. Focusing requires having an intention for your attention
G. Using deadlines smartly can motivate you with less pressure
六、完形填空
I did my first wing-walk two years ago, on my 86 birthday. Then last June, aged 88, I did it again and ______ my own record as the world’s oldest ______ wing-walker.
There was something about being strapped (捆扎) to the ______ of a bright-yellow 1944 Boeing-Stearman that ______ my imagination. It’s very exciting. The first experience was nothing but tame. This year, I said to the ______, “Can you make it a bit more adventuresome ” He said, “I could do a loop-the loop (翻筋斗) if you like ”
This time, he ______ doing half a loop which was very effective. You go down a bit, then straight up. All I felt was a bit ______, because it was windy. But you are ______ strapped. The pilot makes sure everything is ______. I had gloves on, earplugs and lots of layers, which protected me.
Both times, we ______ from Gloucestershire Airport and were in the air for 15 minutes. You don’t sit on the wing—you sit on ______ looks like a chair. I wasn’t nervous. But when you look at the propellers (螺旋槳), you do feel a little strange. You’re ______ at the beginning that it’s a ______ dangerous activity and things could go wrong. However, I said: “Well, at 88 what does it ______ You ve got to go sometime and you might as well go in a flame of ______.”
At my age, a lot of people are ______ in their ways. I don’t think any of my ______ from my retirement home wants to ______ me. I imagine most of them think I’m ______ as a woman. But I do think people of my age should be doing more ______ things. You shouldn’t sit back and feel sorry for yourself.
1.A. keptB. brokeC. savedD. protected
2.A. doctorB. repairC. maleD. female
3.A. wingB. headC. tailD. bottom
4.A. practisedB. displayedC. inspiredD. broadened
5.A. driverB. pilotC. guideD. director
6.A. turned upB. gave upC. took upD. end up
7.A. shakyB. dizzyC. shinyD. clumsy
8.A. tightlyB. largelyC. safelyD. correctly
9.A. specialB. secureC. cautiousD. accessible
10.A. let outB. got throughC. broke upD. took off
11.A. whatB. howC. whereD. that
12.A. chargedB. allowedC. warnedD. cheated
13.A. actuallyB. potentiallyC. doubtfullyD. certainly
14.A. meanB. liveC. dreamD. matter
15.A. gloryB. silenceC. memoryD. ash
16.A. criticizedB. beatenC. stuckD. washed
17.A. leadersB. friendsC. opponentsD. relatives
18.A. persuadeB. praiseC. joinD. steady
19.A. crazyB. difficultC. adventurousD. ridiculous
20.A. academicB. difficultC. adventurousD. ridiculous
七、語法填空
閱讀下面材料,在空白處填入適當(dāng)?shù)膬?nèi)容(不多于1個(gè)單詞)或括號內(nèi)單詞的正確形式。
There is a small but growing movement in America of many 1. ( family) that want to reduce waste to zero. 2. (they) goal of producing no trash is probably impossible to reach. Some come close, reducing a year’s worth of trash to only a few things 3. can fit into a small container. All other things, they say, can be recycled or composted.
Zero Wasters, as they are called, help each other by sharing advice on blogs and social media. A lot of people have given 4. (value) advice on the subject recently. Some of the advice includes where to buy things 5. (avoid) unwanted packaging and how to recycle things that most people throw away.
Bea Johnson, a housewife, says that reducing shopping means her family has more money for fun vacations 6. ever before. She, who is 7. (satisfy) with the fact, says all their clothing comes from used clothing stores. She says that has reduced her household spending 8. 40 percent.
Zero Wasters advocate 9. (talk) about five “r’s” that describe want they do: Refuse, Reduce, Reuse, Recycle and Rot. They request that things like remaining food not 10. (throw) away randomly and refuse containers at restaurants.
八、短文改錯(cuò)
假定英語課上老師要求同桌之間交換修改作文,請你修改你同桌寫的以下作文。文中共有10處語言錯(cuò)誤,每句中最多有兩處。每處錯(cuò)誤僅涉及一個(gè)單詞的增加、刪除或修改。
增加:在缺詞處加一個(gè)漏字符號(∧),并在其下面寫出該加的詞。
刪除:把多余的詞用斜線劃掉。
修改:在錯(cuò)的詞下劃一橫線,并在該詞下面寫出修改后的詞。
注意:1. 每處錯(cuò)誤及其修改均僅限一詞;
2. 只允許修改10處,多者(從第11處起)不計(jì)分。
Mobile payment is serving for people widely in China. The cashless trend had never been more popular. With the widespread use of mobile payment, Wechat and Alipay are two of the most convenient and safe ways to pay. People rarely need to carry a wallet and cash at all. They are used to paying by scan QR codes (二維碼). When consuming. As result, people will never worry about the consequence which they may get fake notes. Besides, people can often get discounts if we make mobile payments. Mobile payment is winning over plenty of consumer with its convenience. So far mobile payment has great changed peopled life in China.
九、開放性作文
假定你是李華,你的美國朋友Bill在春節(jié)期間給你發(fā)了一封節(jié)日問候郵件,并在信中問及紅色在中國春節(jié)中的使用,請你給他回封郵件介紹下紅色在春節(jié)中的使用情況。內(nèi)容包括以下幾點(diǎn):
1. 紅色在中國的象征;
2. 春節(jié)期間紅色的使用(至少列出兩個(gè)要點(diǎn))。
注意:1. 詞數(shù)100左右;
2. 可以適當(dāng)增加細(xì)節(jié),以使行文連貫;
3. 信的開頭語和結(jié)尾已為你寫好。
參考詞匯:貼對聯(lián) paste/post red couplets 鞭炮 firecracker
Dear Bill,
I’m glad to receive your letter.
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Yours sincerely,
Li Hua
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