高三英語二模試卷(附答案)【與】高二英語下學(xué)期期中試卷(有答案)【與】高一英語下學(xué)期期中聯(lián)考試卷(帶答案)《合集》
高三英語一模試卷(帶答案)【與】高三英語二模試卷(附答案)【與】高二英語下學(xué)期期中試卷(有答案)【與】高一英語下學(xué)期期中聯(lián)考試卷(帶答案)合集高三英語一模試卷(帶答案)高三年級(jí)第一次模擬考試英 語第一部分 聽力(共兩節(jié), 滿分 20 分)第一節(jié)(共 5 小題;每小題 1 分,滿分 5 分)聽下面 5 段對(duì)話。每段對(duì)話后有一個(gè)小題,從題中所給的A、B、C 三個(gè)選項(xiàng)中選出最佳選項(xiàng),并標(biāo)在試卷的相應(yīng)位置。聽完每段對(duì)話后,你都有 10 秒鐘的時(shí)間來回答有關(guān)小題和閱讀下一小題。每段對(duì)話僅讀一遍。( ) 1. What will the woman do?A. Make a call. B. Go to the park. C. Go out for dinner.( ) 2. Where are the speakers probably?A. At home. B. In a store. C. In a restaurant.( ) 3. What does John think of Dr Smith's speech?A. Moving. B. Interesting. C. Disappointing.( ) 4. Why did Tony move to a new apartment?A. He didn't like his neighbor. B. He didn't like holding parties.C. He didn't like his old apartment.( ) 5. What's the man going to do?A. Read a book. B. Write a novel. C. Borrow a book.第二節(jié)(共 15 小題;每小題 1 分,滿分 15 分)聽下面 5 段對(duì)話或獨(dú)白。每段對(duì)話或獨(dú)白后有幾個(gè)小題,從題中所給的 A、B、C 三個(gè)選項(xiàng)中選出最佳選項(xiàng),并標(biāo)在試卷的相應(yīng)位置。聽每段對(duì)話或獨(dú)白前,你將有時(shí)間閱讀各個(gè)小題,每小題 5 秒鐘;聽完后,各小題將給出 5 秒鐘的作答時(shí)間。每段對(duì)話或獨(dú)白讀兩遍。聽第 6 段材料,回答第 6、7 題。( ) 6. How often does the man go to the evening classes?A. Twice a week. B. Three times a week. C. Four times a week.( ) 7. Why does the man take the evening classes?A. To go abroad. B. To make friends. C. To change his job.聽第 7 段材料,回答第 8、9 題。( ) 8. What's the man?A. A designer. B. A customer. C. A salesman.( ) 9. How much is the necklace?A. 200 dollars. B. 300 dollars. C. 400 dollars.聽第 8 段材料,回答第 10 至 12 題。( )10. How is Ted's homework this time?A. Very poor. B. Well done. C. Soso.( )11. Where is Ted going now?A. The gym. B. The library. C. The bookstore.( )12. What is the relationship between the speakers?A. Mother and son. B. Boss and secretary. C. Teacher and student.聽第 9 段材料,回答第 13 至 16 題。( )13. What's wrong with the man?A. He is out of work. B. He can't find a job. C. He lacks support at work.( )14. What is the man's wife's attitude toward his problem?A. Optimistic. B. Worried. C. Careless.( )15. Who is ill in hospital?A. The man's wife. B. The man's father. C. The man's fatherinlaw.( )16. What does the woman promise to do?A. Offer a job to the man. B. Lend the man some money.C. Ask her friends to help the man.聽第 10 段材料,回答第 17 至 20 題。( )17. What is the monologue mainly about?A. The history of the school. B. The courses for the term. C. The plan for the day.( )18. Where can the visitors learn about the subjects for new students?A. In the school hall. B. In the science lab. C. In the classroom.( )19. What can students do in the practical areas?A. Take science courses. B. Enjoy excellent meals. C. Enjoy music.( )20. When are the visitors expected to ask questions?A. During the lunch time. B. Before the welcome speech.C. Before the tour of the labs.第二部分 英語知識(shí)運(yùn)用(共兩節(jié),滿分 35 分)第一節(jié) 單項(xiàng)填空(共 15 小題;每小題 1 分,滿分 15 分)請(qǐng)認(rèn)真閱讀下面各題,從題中所給的 A、B、C、D 四個(gè)選項(xiàng)中,選出最佳選項(xiàng)。( )21. It was nearly a week _ the rescue team located the crashed plane.A. since B. before C. until D. after( )22. _ her before, he didn't know she was his daughter.A. Not having seen B. Having not seen C. Not seeing D. Not to see( )23. All children should get access to a highquality education _ their race or family income.A. due to B. regardless of C. apart from D. depending on( )24. Never _ a greater, or more beautiful, or a calmer or nobler thing than you before.A. did I see B. have I seen C. I saw D. I have seen( )25. You had better stay in China for further education. Some top American universities are accused of _ AsianAmerican applicants using race as a factor.A. welcoming B. employing C. denying D. restoring( )26. The spokesman's remarks help clarify an _ statement issued earlier this week.A. ambiguous B. ambitious C. arbitrary D. authentic( )27. Students should involve themselves in community activities _ they can gain experience for growth.A. who B. when C. which D. where( )28. Are you going to Tom's birthday party?_ I've got a present for him.A. It depends. B. Don't bother! C. Are you kidding? D. Definitely!( )29. I will have two final exams tomorrow.Me too. So you _ any sympathy from me here.A. aren't getting B. didn't get C. hadn't got D. haven't got( )30. When you're done, throw it all away and _ your new assignment.A. break into B. turn into C. dive into D. fit into( )31. I am impressed with China's commitment to its climate goals, evidenced by the fact _ China has met its 2020 targets three years ahead of schedule.A. that B. which C. what D. where( )32. On November 11, Alibaba sold more than 210 billion yuan _ goods on its ecommerce platforms Taobao and TMall, making headlines all over the world.A. sum of B. value for C. worth of D. profit for( )33. If she _ make such a simple wish as not to be teased for disability last Christmas, Amy would still feel lonely now.A. had dared not B. hadn't dared to C. dared not D. didn't dare to( )34. Many of us have concerns about the challenges facing future generations as our global population _ and the earth's natural resources decrease.A. selects B. declines C. swells D. varies( )35. Raising a child can be _, but it is well worth it.A. over the moon B. a piece of cake C. on its last legs D. a Herculean task第二節(jié) 完形填空(共 20 小題;每小題 1 分,滿分 20 分)請(qǐng)認(rèn)真閱讀下面短文,從短文后各題所給的 A、B、C、D 四個(gè)選項(xiàng)中,選出最佳選項(xiàng)。I was holding her hand when the man in the white coat came in. _36_ both sets of Xrays high, he said seriously: Her lungs were filling up with fluid(液體). This meant that _37_ I would need to consult with specialists, and stop whatever was _38_ into my mother's lungs._39_, this doctor seemed to have another plan. He began speaking to me about “the quality of life”. He gave me a list of my mother's _40_ and then concluded that they added up to the _41_ of her life. I had heard their phrase “We can make her _42_” too many times. Now I calmed down, and I was more _43_ than hurt when doctors wanted to kill my mother.My mother couldn't walk, talk or swallow after her stroke, but nursing her was not _44_. Whenever I asked her if her diseases were too hard on her, she just _45_ her head. She was conveying to me her love and understanding beyond _46_. And not just to me.A young nurse stopped me just before the doctor appeared: “You know, I _47_ my new job to your mother: Her optimism _48_ me to learn to drive, so I would be not _49_ buses and I could come to the hospital to work.”So, I couldn't help questioning the doctor's _50_ of quality of life. How did he arrive at the _51_ that my mother should die? Was he making a(n) _52_ calculation, that to keep a bedridden(臥床不起的) person alive was costly? He certainly did not “calculate” her endless love, the way it _53_ everyone who came in contact with her. If human life is _54_ to costbenefit analyses, all forms of caring for any reason other than selfinterest will be _55_. Can we do better?( )36. A. Looking up B. Holding up C. Setting up D. Drawing up( )37. A. immediately B. occasionally C. eventually D. surprisingly( )38. A. stealing B. marching C. rushing D. storming( )39. A. Therefore B. Moreover C. However D. Otherwise( )40. A. vices B. strengths C. privileges D. disabilities( )41. A. whole B. peak C. future D. end( )42. A. unbearable B. moveable C. unconscious D. comfortable( )43. A. relieved B. excited C. disappointed D. ashamed( )44. A. tiring B. easy C. casual D. pleasant( )45. A. nodded B. hung C. shook D. lifted( )46. A. reach B. words C. belief D. hope( )47. A. relate B. owe C. lose D. submit( )48. A. forced B. encouraged C. intended D. ordered( )49. A. at the mercy of B. at a loss for C. in favor of D. in charge of( )50. A. framework B. instruction C. warning D. measure( )51. A. precise B. rough C. arithmetic D. economic( )52. A. conclusion B. agreement C. consensus D. answer( )53. A. transmitted B. transferred C. transformed D. transported( )54. A. admitted B. reduced C. sentenced D. committed( )55. A. included B. robbed C. excluded D. confirmed第三部分 閱讀理解(共 15 小題;每小題 2 分,滿分 30 分)請(qǐng)認(rèn)真閱讀下列短文,從短文后各題所給的 A、B、C、D 四個(gè)選項(xiàng)中,選出最佳選項(xiàng)。MOGHUL EXPRESS INDIAN TAKEAWAYEnjoy fine Indian food in the comfort of your homeOpen seven days a week including public holidaysGood parking facilitiesHome delivery service within a 4mile radius ofour takeawaysmall chargeTEL:NORWICH 420988/588980TOP UK TAKEAWAY AWARD then you run clinical trials in which you carefully test its safety and efficiency; and if they are successful, you ask for regulatory approval to make the drug generally available. Similarly, autonomous cars are currently at the clinicaltrial stage, without final approval as yet. It is not possible to prove that a new drug is entirely safe, but the risk is worth taking because of the benefits the drug provides. It will be the same for AVs, he suggests. After all, nowadays humandriven vehicles are hardly riskfree.( )58. In Chris Urmson's opinion, _.A. strict rules are necessary in the progress of AVsB. we must regulate AVs before problems occurC. governments should take approaches to preparing for AVsD. regulators had better cooperate with AV firms and issue guidelines( )59. How is the process of developing new safety standards of AVs explained in the last paragraph?A. By giving examples. B. By making comparisons.C. By analyzing cause and effects. D. By listing statistics.( )60. What is Marten Levenstam's attitude towards AVs?A. Positive. B. Negative. C. Neutral. D. Doubtful.CCooperation at work is generally seen as a good thing. The latest survey by the Financial Times of what employers want from MBA graduates found that the ability to work with a wide variety of people was what managers wanted most. But managers always have to balance the benefits of teamwork, which help ensure that everyone is working towards the same goal, with the dangers of “groupthink” when critics are reluctant to point out a plan's drawbacks for fear of being kept out of the group. The disastrous Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba in 1961 was a classic case of groupthink. Skeptics were reluctant to challenge John F. Kennedy, the newly elected American president.Modern communication methods mean that cooperation is more frequent. Workers are constantly in touch with each other via email messaging groups or mobile calls. But does that improve, or lower performance? A new study by three American academics, tried to answer this question. They set a logical problem(designing the shortest route for a travelling salesman visiting various cities). Three groups were involved: one where subjects acted independently; another where they saw the solutions posted by team members at every stage; and a third where they were kept informed of each other's views only intermittently.The survey found that members of the individualist group reached the premier solution more often than the constant cooperators but had a poorer average result. The intermittent_cooperators found the right result as often as the individualists, and got a better average solution. When it comes to ideal generation, giving people a bit of space to a solution seems to be a good idea. Occasional cooperation can be a big help: most people have benefited from a colleague's brainwave or(just as often) wise advice to avoid a particular course of action.Further clues come from a book, Superminds, by Thomas Malone of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He says that three factors determine the collective intelligence of cooperating groups: social intelligence(how good people were at rating the emotional states of others); the extent to which members took part equally in conversation(the more equal, the better); and the cooperation of women in the group(the higher, the better). Groups ranked highly in these areas cooperated far better than others.In short, cooperation may be a useful tool but it doesn't work in every situation.( )61. The author cites the example of The Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba in Paragraph 1 to _A. prove that team players are skilled at communicationB. show that teamwork cannot always be beneficialC. prove that critics are unwilling to challenge anybodyD. show the danger of groupthink is not very serious( )62. The underlined phrase “the intermittent cooperators” in Paragraph 3 refers to _A. those who do not cooperate with each otherB. those who are seldom informed of other's viewsC. those who cooperate with others occasionallyD. the constant cooperators with a poor average result( )63. Which of the following factors makes a team cooperate better according to the fourth paragraph?A. Group members cooperating all the time.B. Group members in a good emotional state.C. Equal distribution of men and women.D. Equal participation in the communication.( )64. Which can be the best title of the passage?A. When Teamwork Works B. What Teamwork Is AboutC. Why Teamwork Operates D. A Useful Tool: CooperationDAn introduction to this book is as superfluous as a candle in front of a powerful searchlight. But a convention of publishing seems to require that the candle should be there, and I am proud to be the one to hold it. About ten years ago I picked up from the pile of new books on my desk a copy of Sons and Lovers by a man of whom I had never heard, and I started to race through it with the immoral speed of the professional reviewer. But after a page or two I found myself reading, really reading. Here washere isa masterpiece in which every sentence counts, a book packed with significant thought and beautiful, arresting phrases, the work of a remarkable genius whose gifts are more richly various than those of any other young English novelist.To appreciate the rich variety of Mr Lawrence we must read his later novels and his volumes of poetry. But Sons and Lovers reveals the range of his typical power. Here are combined and blended(混合的) sort of “realism” and almost lyric(抒情的) imagery and rhythm. The speech of the people is that of daily life and the things that happen to them are normal adventures and accidents; they fall in love, marry, work, fail, succeed, and die. But of their deeper emotions and of the relations of these little human beings to the earth and to the stars, Mr Lawrence makes something near to poetry and prose(散文) without violating its proper “other harmony”Take the marvellous paragraph on next to the last page of Sons and Lovers(Mr Lawrence depends so little on plot in the ordinary sense of the word that it is perfectly fair to read the end of his book first):Where was he? One tiny upright speck of flesh, less than an ear of wheat lost in the field. He could not bear it. On every side the immense dark silence seemed pressing him, so tiny a spark, into extinction, and yet, almost nothing, he could not be extinct. Night, in which everything was lost, went reaching out, beyond stars and sun, stars and sun, a few bright grains, went spinning round for terror, and holding each other in embrace, there in the darkness that outpassed them all, and left them tiny and daunted(氣餒). So much, and himself, infinitesimal, at the core a nothingness, and yet not nothing.Such glorious writing lifts the book far above a novel which is merely a story. I beg the reader to attend to every line of it and not to miss a single one of the many sentences that await and surprise you. Some are enthusiastic and impressive, like the paragraph above; others are keen, “realistic” observations of things and people. In one of his books Mr Lawrence makes a character say, or think, that life is “mixed”. That indicates his philosophy and his method. He blends the accurately literal and trivial(瑣碎的) with the extremely poetic.To find a similar blending of tiny daily detail and wide imaginative vision, we must go back to two older novelists, Hardy and Meredith. I do not mean that Mr Lawrence derives(源于) directly from them or, indeed, that he is clearly the disciple(弟子) of any master. I do feel simply that he is of the elder stature(名望) of Hardy and Meredith, and I know of no other young novelist who is quite worthy of their company. When I first tried to express this comparison, this connection, I was contradicted by a fellowcritic, who pointed out that Meredith and Hardy are entirely unlike each other and that therefore Mr Lawrence cannot resemble both. To be sure, nothing is more hateful than forced comparisons, nothing more boring than to discover parallels between one work of art and another. An artist's mastery consists in his difference from other masters. But to refer a young man of genius to an older one, at the same time pronouncing his independence and originality, is a fair, if not very superior, method of praising him.( )65. The underlined word “superfluous” in Paragraph 1 is closest in meaning to _A. meaningful B. unnecessary C. fundamental D. fashionable( )66. What is typical of Lawrence's works?A. They equally reveal his genius power.B. They contain lots of great lyric poetry.C. They present some real living situations.D. They focus on relations between humans.( )67. What does the author want to illustrate by including one paragraph from Sons and Lovers?A. The plot of the novel has little to do with daily life.B. It is wise to read Lawrence's books from the end.C. Lawrence is not capable of telling good stories.D. The language in Lawrence's books is elegant.( )68. Who were Hardy and Meredith?A. They taught Lawrence literature when he was young.B. They were the realistic novelists of Lawrence's time.C. They were novelists who resemble each other in writing.D. They were novelists combining details with imagination.( )69. According to the author, what does an artist's mastery mean?A. He must have personal diversity. B. He must have the critical spirits.C. He must be happy to be compared. D. He must be a man of genius.( )70. What is the author's purpose in writing the passage?A. To introduce Lawrence's novel Sons and Lovers.B. To show his experiences of reading classics.C. To analyze Lawrence's writing characteristics.D. To compare the styles of different novelists.第四部分 任務(wù)型閱讀(共 10 小題;每小題 1 分,滿分 10 分)請(qǐng)認(rèn)真閱讀下列短文,并根據(jù)所讀內(nèi)容在文章后表格中的空格里填入一個(gè)最恰當(dāng)?shù)膯卧~。注意:每個(gè)空格只填 1 個(gè)單詞。The changes facing fastfood companiesFast food was once thought to be recessionproof. When consumers need to cut spending, cheap meals like Big Macs and Whoppers become even more attractive. As a result, fastfood chains have survived the recession better than their more expensive competitors. In 2009 sales at fullservice restaurants in America fell by more than 6%, but total sales remained about the same at fastfood chains. In some markets, such as Japan, France and Britain, total spending on fast food increased.But in this ongoing recession(蕭條), which is more severe, not all fastfood companies have been as fortunate. Many, such as Burger King, have seen sales fall. In the recession, while some people trade down to fast food, many others eat at home more frequently to save money. Smaller fastfood chains in America, such as Jack in the Box and Carl's Jr., have been hit particularly hard in this downturn because they cut back spending on advertising.In face of such challenges, some fastfood companies have sacrificed their own profits by trying to give customers better value. During the recession companies set prices low, hoping to tempt more customers through the door. But in many cases that strategy doesn't work. Some companies are rethinking their strategies. KFC has launched a chicken sandwich that costs around $5 to attract consumers away from $1 specials.Companies are also trying to get customers to buy new and more items, including drinks. McDonald's started selling better coffee as a challenge to Starbucks. Its “McCafe” line now accounts for an estimated 6% of sales in America. As fastfood companies shift from “super size” to “more buys”, they need to keep customer traffic high throughout the day. Many see breakfast as a big opportunity, and not just for fatty food. McDonald's has started selling porridge in America, because the profits can be high.But what about those growing waistlines? So far, fast-food firms have cleverly avoided government regulation. By prov