江苏省常州市第一高级中学2020-2021学年高一下学期期末考试英语试题(Word版含答案,无听力部分)

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名称 江苏省常州市第一高级中学2020-2021学年高一下学期期末考试英语试题(Word版含答案,无听力部分)
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2020-2021学年江苏省常州市第一高级中学高一下学期期末英语试卷
2021.6
第一部分
听力(共两节,满分30分)

第二部分
阅读理解(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和D四个选项中,选出最佳选项。
A

#ChefsChallenge!
Love
cooking?
Join
famous
chefs
with
this
online
challenge

cook,
have
fun
and
share
your
best
healthy
recipes!
When
it
comes
to
food,
it’s
difficult
to
match
East
Asia
&
Pacific
in
terms
of
variety
and
tastiness.
From
wontons
to
dumplings,
from
spicy
fish
to
noodle
soups,
East
Asia
&
Pacific’s
amazing
food
culture
is
a
central
part
of
life
for
millions
of
people
and
indeed
tourists
from
across
the
world.
However,
changes
in
diet
and
lifestyle
in
recent
years
have
sadly
destroyed
traditional
food
cultures,
and
the
health
of
millions
of
people.
Cheap
“fast
food”
and
unhealthy
snacks
that
are
high
in
sugar,
salt
and
fat
are
now
all
too
common
but
offer
little
nutrition.

A
new
challenge
Today,
there
are
more
than
25
million
of
malnourished
children
living
in
the
region,
but
the
picture
is
changing.
While
the
number
of
stunted(发育不良)
children
is
slowly
falling
in
many
countries,
overweight
and
obesity
are
growing,
and
at
a
much
faster
rate.
In
many
countries,
three
forms
of
malnutrition

undernutrition,
hidden
hunger
and
overweight

co-exist.
A
family
may
have
an
overweight
mother
and
a
stunted
child.
Or
a
child
may
be
both
stunted
or
too
short
and
overweight.
Unhealthy
diets
are
a
major
cause
of
all
forms
of
malnutrition.

Join
us!
One
way
to
slow
this
tide
is
to
reconnect
families
and
young
people
with
food.
That’s
why
chefs
from
across
the
region
are
taking
part
in
the
#ChefsChallenge,
asking
you
to
show
off
your
cooking
skills.
Get
involved
today
by
sharing
your
recipes
with
videos,
photos
or
any
other
creative
ways
on
social
media
using
#ChefsChallenge
and
tagging
UNICEF
East
Asia
Pacific
on
Instagram,
Twitter
or
Facebook.
1.
What
has
badly
affected
the
traditional
food
culture
in
East
Asia
&
Pacific?
A.
Western
cooks’
arriving.
B.
People’s
turning
to
unhealthy
food.
C.
Tourists’
bringing
new
recipes.
D.
Overweight
children’s
growing
in
number.
2.
What
can
we
infer
about
“a
malnourished
child”?
A.
He
is
in
a
poor
state
of
health.
B.
He
is
shorter
than
other
kids.
C.
He
has
an
overweight
parent.
D.
He
prefers
eating
at
home.
3.
What
is
the
purpose
of
“#ChefsChallenge”?
A.
To
introduce
excellent
Asian
cooks
online.
B.
To
help
ordinary
people
challenge
professional
cooks.
C.
To
encourage
family
and
friends
to
get
together
online.
D.
To
reconnect
people
with
tasty
and
nutritious
food.
B
Ever
since
she
received
a
little
toy
airliner
as
a
birthday
gift,
Kate
Koralevskaya
has
been
attracted
by
flight.From
flying
remote-controlled
airplanes
to
building
her
own
model
ones,
Kate
has
always
considered
flying
a
plane
one
of
her
passions,
but
only
until
recently
has
she
been
able
to
take
that
to
new
heights.
When
Kate
heard
about
the
Upwind
Scholarship
from
her
school
counselor,
she
knew
it
was
in
extraordinary
opportunity
to
realize
her
dream.The
program's
mission
is
to
provide
all
the
training
necessary
to
obtain
a
private
pilot's
license
(PPL)
for
students
in
between
their
junior
and
senior
year
of
high
school
free
of
charge.
After
completing
a
lengthy
application
and
her
subsequent
acceptance
into
the
program,
Kate
began
her
training
last
spring.Normally,
recipients
of
the
scholarship
would
attend
ground
school
in
person
where
they
learn
the
fundamentals
of
flying.
Due
to
the
pandemic
(大流行病),
however,
Kate
spent
hours
each
weekend
studying
online
lessons
in
her
room
whenever
she
got
a
break
from
homework.
Once
summer
came
around,
Kate
and
three
peers
put
in
two
straight
weeks
of
ground
school,
reviewing
fight
training
from
nine
to
five
every
day."It
was
the
toughest
part
of
the
program,"
Kate
said.
After
completing
that
portion
of
ground
school,
Kate
was
finally
able
to
begin
flying
at
the
San
Carlos
Airport
with
the
other
scholarship
recipients
from
around
the
Bay
Area.Flying.especially
for
first-timers
like
Kate,
is
a
hands-on
process
involving
lots
of
checklists
to
make
sure
the
important
tasks
are
being
taken
care
of.
Now,
having
finished
the
program
and
earned
her
PPL,
Kate
plans
on
training
as
a
fight
instructor
and
hopes
to
become
an
airline
pilot
in
her
future.
She
credits
the
Upwind
Scholarship
for
all
she's
been
able
to
accomplish
so
far
and
hopes
that
anyone
who
shares
her
passion
will
look
into
it.“It
is
a
very
hard
scholarship
to
get
into,
and
you
have
to
be
truly
interested
in
flight,”Kate
said.“It
can't
be
something
like
‘Oh,
why
don't
I
try
flying
this
summer?’You
have
to
be
ready
to
do
a
lot
of
work
and
put
in
effort
in
order
to
succeed
in
the
program.”
1.What
does
the
underlined
word“that”in
Paragraph
1
refer
to?
A.
Her
childhood
dream
of
becoming
a
pilot.
B.
Her
wish
to
take
fights
around
the
world.
C.
Her
skill
of
building
model
airplanes.
D.
Her
desire
to
fly
remoter-controlled
airplanes.
2.What
is
the
goal
of
the
Upwind
Scholarship?
A.
To
help
students
in
need
to
achieve
their
dreams.
B.
To
provide
necessary
training
for
private
pilots
for
free.
C.
To
prepare
high
school
students
to
become
a
private
pilot.
D.
To
give
students
expert
advice
on
earning
a
scholarship.
3.What
did
Kate
do
in
ground
school?
A.
She
took
online
lessons
on
flying.
B.
She
went
over
the
fundamentals
of
flying.
C.
She
did
some
research
into
the
pandemic.
D.
She
finished
applying
for
the
program.
4.Which
of
the
following
best
describes
Kate?
A.
Confident
and
aggressive.
B.
Strong
willed
and
patient.
C.
Ambitious
and
hard-working.
D.
Demanding
and
courageous.
C
“A
CAREER
BOOK
about
Asians?Aren't
they
doing
fine…?”
So
begins
Breaking
the
Bamboo
Ceiling,a
very
large
scholarly
book
by
Jane
Hyun
published
in
2005.
Because
Asian-Americans
had
higher
incomes
and
education
levels
and
committed
fewer
crimes
than
their
average
countrymen,
they
were
seen
as
a
model
minority.
Despite
this,
they
rarely
rose
to
the
top
of
companies.
A
mix
of
individual,
cultural
and
organizational
barriers
-
the
“bamboo
ceiling”
of
the
book’s
title
-
seemed
to
prohibit
them
from
rising.
Fifteen
years
later
Asians
are
still
under-represented.
In
the
technology
sectors,
Asians
make
up
over
30%
of
the
workers
but
less
than
15%
of
bosses.
In
2017
Asians
made
up
roughly
6%
of
the
country’s
population
but
only
3%
of
the
bosses
of
S&P
500
(标准普尔500指数)
firms.
Some
prominent
Asians
run
big
companies.
Arvind
Krishna
is
IBM's
new
boss.
Satya
Nadella
runs
Microsoft
and
Sundar
Pichai
leads
Alphabet.
But
few
other
Asians
have
joined
their
ranks
-
and,
revealingly,
these
stars
all
have
Indian
roots.
There
are
fewer
South
Asians
in
America
than
East
Asians,
but
they
still
made
up
13
of
all
16
Asian
S&P
500
CEOs.
Why
are
there
so
few
Asians
among
America's
business
elite(精英)?
And
if
a
bamboo
ceiling
is
to
blame,
why
do
South
Asians
break
through
more
easily?
These
questions
are
the
focus
of
a
study
by
Jackson
Lu
of
MIT
Sloan
School
of
Management
and
colleagues,
who
surveyed
hundreds
of
senior
executives
and
business-school
students.
They
found
that
while
discrimination
exists,
it
is
not
destiny
(命中注定).
South
Asians
endure
greater
racism
than
East
Asians
but
still
outperform
even
whites(if
success
is
weighed
against
share
of
population).
Their
research
also
rules
out
lack
of
ambition:
a
greater
share
of
Asians
than
whites
endeavor
for
high-status
jobs.
That
leaves
culture.
The
researchers
conclude
that
South
Asians
tend
to
be
more
determined
and
confident
than
East
Asians
in
how
they
communicate
at
work,
which
fits
Western
concepts
of
how
a
leader
should
behave.
The
same
tendency
for
confident
remarks
featured
in
“The
Argumentative
Indian”,
a
book
by
Amartya
Sen,
a
Nobel-prize
winning
economist.
The
researchers
owe
East
Asians’
silence
to
Confucian
values
of
modesty
and
respect
for
social
ranking.
Sometimes
bravery
and
bombast(夸大的言辞)are
needed
to
break
bamboo.
1.
What
does
“bamboo
ceiling”
refer
to?
A.
The
top
of
an
American
technology
company.
B.
A
roof
made
of
bamboo
typical
of
Asian
buildings.
C.
Promotion
obstacles
facing
Asian
employees
in
America.
D.
The
invisible
discrimination
against
Asians
in
the
USA.
2.
What
does
“under-represented”
in
Paragraph
2
mean?
A.
Lacking
representatives.
B.
Hard
to
show
their
talents.
C.
Being
underestimated.
D.
Unable
to
land
a
job.
3.
According
to
Jackson
Lu,
what
mainly
accounts
for
fewer
promotions
of
East
Asians
than
South
Asians?
A.
Small
population.
B.
Discrimination.
C.
Lack
of
ambition.
D.
Culture.
4.
Why
do
South
Asians
succeed
in
American
business
more
easily?
A.
Western
people
prefer
modesty
to
confidence
in
communication.
B.
The
confidence
they
demonstrate
consists
with
Western
leadership.
C.
They
endure
greater
racism
and
become
more
ambitious.
D.
Their
ambition
urges
them
to
endeavor
for
high-status
jobs.
D
Great
work
is
work
that
makes
a
difference
in
people’s
lives,
writes
David
Sturt,
Executive
Vice
President
of
the
O
C.
Tanner
Institute,
in
his
book
Great
Work:
How
to
Make
a
Difference
People
Love.
Sturt
insists,
however,
that
great
work
is
not
just
for
surgeons
or
special-needs
educators
or
the
founders
of
organizations
trying
to
eliminate
poverty
in
sub-Saharan
Africa.
The
central
theme
of
Great
Work,
according
to
Sturt,
is
that
anyone
can
make
a
difference
in
any
job.
It's
not
the
nature
of
the
job,
but
what
you
do
with
the
job
that
counts.
As
proof,
Sturt
tells
the
story
of
a
remarkable
hospital
cleaner
named
Moses.
In
a
building
filled
with
doctors
and
nurses
doing
great
life-saving
work,
Moses
the
cleaner
makes
a
difference.
Whenever
he
enters
a
room,
especially
a
room
with
a
sick
child,
he
engages
both
patients
and
parents
with
his
optimism
and
calm,
introducing
himself
to
the
child
and,
Sturt
writes,
speaking

little
comments
about
light
and
sunshine
and
making
things
clean.”
He
comments
on
any
progress
he
sees
day
by
day
(“
you're
sitting
up
today,
that’s
good.”)
Moses
is
no
doctor
and
doesn't
pretend
to
be,
but
he
has
witnessed
hundreds
of
sick
children
recovering
from
painful
surgery,
and
parents
take
comfort
from
his
encouraging
words.
For
Matt
and
Mindi,
whose
son
McKay
was
born
with
only
half
of
a
heart,
Moses
became
a
close
friend.
As
Sturt
explains,"
Moses
took
his
innate(与生俱来的)
talents(
(his
sensitivity)
and
his
practical
wisdom
(from
years
of
hospital
experience)
and
combined
them
into
a
powerful
form
of
patient
and
family
support
that
changed
the
critical-care
experience
for
Mindi,
Matt
and
little
McKay.”
How
do
people
like
Moses
do
great
work
when
so
many
people
just
work?
That
was
the
central
question
raised
by
Sturt
and
his
team
at
the
O
C.
Tanner
Institute,
a
consulting
company
specialized
in
employee
recognition
and
rewards
system.
O
C.
Tanner
launched
an
exhaustive
great
Work
study
that
included
surveys
to
200
senior
executives,
a
further
set
of
surveys
to
1,000
managers
and
employees
working
on
projects,
an
in-depth
qualitative
study
of
1.7
million
accounts
of
award-winning
work
(in
the
form
of
nominations(提名)
for
awards
from
corporations
around
the
world),
and
one-on-one
interviews
with
200
difference
makers.
The
results
of
the
study
revealed
that
those
who
do
great
work
refuse
to
be
defeated
by
the
constraints
of
their
jobs
and
are
especially
able
to
reframe
their
jobs:
they
don't
view
their
jobs
as
a
list
of
tasks
and
responsibilities
but
see
their
jobs
as
opportunities
to
make
a
difference.
No
matter,
as
Moses
so
ably
exemplifies(例证),
what
that
job
may
be.
1.
According
to
Sturt,
which
of
the
following
is
TRUE?
A.
It's
not
the
nature
of
the
job,
but
what
you
do
that
makes
a
difference.
B.
Anyone
in
the
world
is
responsible
to
delete
poverty
and
change
the
world.
C.
Anyone
can
make
a
difference
in
people's
lives
no
matter
what
kind
of
job
he
does.
D.
Surgeons,
special-needs
educators
and
founders
of
organizations
can
succeed
more
easily.
2.
According
to
this
passage,
how
does
Moses,
a
common
hospital
cleaner,
make
a
difference
in
people’s
lives?
A.
By
keeping
optimistic
and
calm
when
facing
patients
and
their
parents
at
hospital.
B.
By
showing
his
special
gift
and
working
experience
when
working
at
hospital.
C.
By
showing
his
sympathy
and
kindness
to
patients
when
entering
their
rooms.
D.
By
pretending
to
be
a
doctor
or
nurse
when
entering
a
room
with
a
sick
child.
3.
The
word

constraints”
in
the
last
paragraph
probably
refers
to
.
A.
demands
B.
advantages
C.
disadvantages
D.
limitations
4.
What
can
we
infer
from
the
passage?
A.
Great
work
is
work
that
makes
a
difference
in
people’s
lives
no
matter
what
you
do.
B.
If
a
boss
has
trouble
recognizing
his
employees,
he
can
ask
O.C.
Tanner
for
advice.
C.
Moses
makes
a
difference
through
his
sensitivity
and
his
practical
wisdom.
D.
Those
who
do
great
work
are
never
defeated
by
others
or
their
jobs
themselves.
第二节
七选五(共5小题,每小题2.5分,满分12.5分)
根据短文内容,从短文后的选项中选出能填入空白处的最佳选项,选项中有两项为多余项。
When
it
comes
to
getting
ahead,
is
IQ
or
EQ
more
important?
A
thought
experiment
conducted
featuring
butterflies
and
geniuses
settles
the
question
once
and
for
all.
(1)_________
So
if
you
asked
people
whether
they'd
rather
be
a
butterfly
or
a
genius,
I'm
betting
most
people
wouldn’t
hesitate
before
choosing
genius.
But
butterflies
are
also
social
creatures,
often
gathering
in
groups.
The
experiment
points
out
just
how
big
an
advantage
friendliness
can
be.
Imagine
two
groups
of
people.
We'll
call
them
the
Geniuses
and
the
Butterflies
for
short.
(2)_________
They
come
up
with
one
ground-breaking
invention
every
10
human
lifetimes.
The
Butterflies
aren't
nearly
as
bright.
They
take
1,000
lifetimes
to
come
up
with
a
world-changing
invention.
But
what
the
Butterflies
lack
in
cognitive(认知的的)horsepower,
they
make
up
for
in
social
skills.
(3)____________
However,
the
egghead
Geniuses
are
a
little
awkward.
They
only
have
one
friend.
Now
imagine
everyone
goes
about
their
business
trying
to
learn
about
cool,
new
inventions,
either
by
figuring
them
out
for
themselves
or
learning
about
them
from
friends.
(4)___________
The
one
where
the
people
are
a
hundred
times
smarter(the
Geniuses)or
the
one
where
they're
10
times
more
social(the
Butterflies)?
Well,
communicating
ideas
within
a
group
might
not
feel
as
impressive
as
coming
up
with
brilliant
ideas
alone
in
a
corner.
Chatty
Cathy(滔滔不绝的人)clearly
have
less
cultural
mystery
than
Nobel
winners.
But
without
them,
new
ideas
don't
spread
fast
enough
to-make
big
impact.
(5)____________
This
fascinating
thought
experiment
is
good
news
for
the
communicators
and
connectors
of
the
world,but
it
also
a
valuable
lesson
for
anyone
putting-together
a
team.
A.
Which
society
does
better?
B.
Is
it
hard
for
the
experiment
to
draw
a
conclusion?
C.
The
Geniuses
are,
well,
geniuses.
D.
The
Butterflies
shouldn't
be
compared
with
the
Geniuses.
E.
Each
Butterfly
has
10
friends.
F.
In
terms
of
group
success,
EQ
matters
more
than
raw
IQ.
G.
Butterflies
are
pretty
but
lacking
in
strength.
第三部分
语言运用(共两节,满分25分)
第一节
完形填空(共15小题,每小题1分,满分15分)
阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的A、B、C和D四个选项中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。
Tristin
Stewart,
15,
of
Northern
Ireland,
has
no
right
knee
after
undergoing
an
operation.
Now,
his
right
leg
connects
directly
to
a
right
foot
backward,
which
fits
more
(1)
than
a
traditional
amputation
(截肢).
Tristin
said
he
began
experiencing
(2)
_
in
his
right
leg
in
2014,
but
it
was
not
until
last
year
that
doctors
diagnosed
it
as
a
cancer.
The
diagnosis
and
(3)
_
operation
made
Tristin’s
parents,
Mandy
and
Shane
so
worried.
“Tristin
was
scared
firstly
before
receiving
the
operation,”
Mandy
said.
“When
we
went
in
to
see
him
after
the
operation,
you
could
(4)
see
that
something
was
not
in
the
right
place
under
the
(5)
_
,
and
Shane
and
I
got
up
the
courage
to
uncover
it.
That
was
a
very
strange
sight,
but
my
boy’s
life
was
saved
so
that’s
all
that
(6)
__
.”
In
spite
of
a
(7)
__
disease,
the
first
in
Northern
Ireland,
the
soccer-loving
teen
is
already
back
on
his
(8)
just
months
after
the
operation.
“At
the
start
it
was
uncomfortable
and
I
wasn’t
used
to
it
because
of
the
weight
and
my
foot

you
know,
it
felt
(9)
__

but
now
I’
m
accustomed
to
it,”
Tristin
told
Caters
News.
“It
feels
close
to
normal.”
“I
can
(10)
with
it
and
I’ve
just
started
a
jog,”
Tristin
said.
“Without
it,
I’d
be
in
a
(11)
_
.
I
wouldn’t
be
able
to
do
anything.”
Unexpectedly,
many
people
are
now
(12)
__
money
to
buy
Stewart
professional
aid
equipment
so
he
can
(13)
in
sports
and
more
physical
activities.
“Friends
have
been
just
as
(14)
__
,
and
they
haven’t
treated
me
differently,”
Tristin
added.
“And
I
believe
no
matter
how
(15)
the
mountain,
there
will
always
be
a
climb
for
the
people
who
do
not
fear
the
difficult.”
1.A.comfortably
B.differently
C.dangerously
D.commonly
2.A.sorrow
B.pain
C.surprise
D.strength
3.A.expecting
B.leading
C.following
D.increasing
4.A.gradually
B.sorely
C.obviously
D.fortunately
5.A.beds
B.covers
C.clothes
D.knives
6.A.damages
B.matters
C.keeps
D.memorizes
7.A.successful
B.deadly
C.frustrating
D.rare
8.A.feet
B.way
C.behalf
D.side
9.A.great
B.ugly
C.amazing
D.strange
10.A.study
B.walk
C.swim
D.run
11.A.bed
B.car
C.wheelchair
D.field
12.A.raising
B.making
C.stealing
D.printing
13.A.take
B.give
C.break
D.participate
14.A.healthy
B.smart
C.hard
D.usual
15.A.smooth
B.magnificent
C.steep
D.difficult
第二节
语法填空(共10小题,每小题1分,满分10分)
阅读下面材料,在空白处填入适当的内容(1个单词)或括号内单词的正确形式。
The
English
word
“dinner”
used
to
refer
to
breakfast.
It
comes
from
the
Old
French
word
“disnar”,?(1)________?in
fact
means
“breakfast”.
So?(2)________?did
this
word
come
to
have
a
different
meaning??(3)________?(tradition),
dinner
(what
we
now
refer
to
as
breakfast)
was
the
first
meal
of
the
day,
eaten
around
noon.
It
also
happened
to
be
the?(4)________(big)
meal
of
the
day,
with
a
lighter
meal
coming
later?(5)________?(know)
as
supper.
Today
many
people
find?(6)________?strange
that
the
biggest
meal
of
the
day
once
centered
around
noon,?(7)________?it
made
great
sense
at
that
time.
Artificial
lighting
such
as
oil
lamps
and
candles
were
expensive,
and
provided
weak
light
at
best.
So
people
went
to
sleep
at
sundown,
because
it’s
difficult?(8)________?(work)
and
eat
in
the
dark.
The
last
meal
of
the
day
was
a
rushed
affair,
a
quick
snack
before
the
lights
went
out.
Eventually,
more
meals?(9)________?(add)
to
the
day.
This
meant
that
people
were
eating
smaller
meals
before
the
bigger
meal.
So
the
word
that
once?(10)________?(refer)
to
our
first
meal,
now
refers
to
our
last.
However,
it
is
true
that
in
many
Western
cultures
dinner
still
remains
the
biggest
meal
of
the
day.
第四部分
基础知识检测(共三节,满分25分)
第一节
单词拼写(共10小题,每小题1分,满分10分)请使用X1U1-U3部分的单词
1.
It
________(突然想到)
me
that
we
might
have
made
the
wrong
decision.
2.
We've
already
bought
the
house
but
we
won'
take
_______(拥有)
of
it
until
May.
3.
The
book
is
expected
to
________(占有优势)
the
best-seller
lists.
4.
Out
of
my_________(预料),
I
made
great
achievements
soon.
5.
A
____________(结合)
of
talent,
hard
work
and
good
looks
have
taken
her
to
the
top.
6.
The
winners
were
given
an
_____________(热情的)
welcome
when
they
arrived
home.
7.
Do
you
think
the
film
___________(改编本)
was
faithful
to
the
book?
8.
Adequate
___________(刺激)
and
nutrition
are
essential
for
development
during
the
first
three
years
of
life.
9.
Bike
sharing
has
___________(席卷)
across
China,
with
an
increasing
number
of
people
choosing
bike
riding
instead
of
driving.
10.
He
said
by
the
end
of
the
year,
there
was
a
6%
drop
in
the
________(消费)
of
such
drinks.
第二节
单句语法填空(共10小题,每小题1分,满分10分)
1.
If
_________(teach)
properly,
anyone
can
learn
how
to
operate
the
machine.
2.
His
proposal
given
to
me
in
the
e-mail
was
worthy
__________(consider).
3.
_________(expose)
to
very
loud
music
makes
it
possible
for
young
people
to
risk
going
deaf.
4.
All
the
books
donated
by
the
students
from
urban
schools
are
said
_________(send)
to
the
students
in
rural
areas
the
other
day.
5.
Nancy
let
me
repeat
her
instruction
to
make
sure
that
I
understood
what
was_________(do)after
she
was
away
on
business.
6.
__________(dress)
in
her
favorite
skirt,
she
seemed
to
be
more
confident.
7.
A
simple
30-minute
operation
___________(develop)
by
scientists
now
is
hoped
to
cure
blindness
in
six
years.
8.
---What
made
you
worried?
---Our
___________(not
know)
how
to
help
the
people
in
the
snowstorm
in
the
South.
9.
His
heart
racing,
and
tears
________(fill)
his
eyes,
Jack
carefully
unlocked
the
box.
10.
In
recent
years,
a
lot
of
trees
have
been
cut
down,
which
contributes
to
soil
________(wash)away.
第三节
完成句子(共5小题,每小题1分,满分5分)
1.
我渴得要命,那杯冰水正好解渴。
I
was
dying
of
the
thirst,
and
that
cup
of
ice
tea
_________
_________
__________.
2.
委员会仍在审阅所有申请表。
The
board
are
still
_________
_________
_________
through
the
application
forms.
3.
他在好奇心的驱使下打开了盒子。
_________
_________
_________,
he
opened
the
box.
4.
这首乐曲将技术上棘手的部分处理的轻松自如,显示出他作为作曲家的天赋。
The
music
moves
through
technology
difficult
sections
_________
_________,
showing
his
genius
as
a
composer.
5.
现在学生可以表达自己的观点,而不只是听老师讲。
Now
students
can
express
their
own
ideas,
_________
_________
_________
just
listening
to
the
teacher.
第五部分
应用文写作(满分15分)
假定你是李华,你校国际部要举行一场校园音乐会,并请你在开幕式上致辞。
内容包括:1.活动目的
2.活动组织
3.活动预期
注意:
1.写作词数应为80左右:
2.可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯。
注:选拔赛
qualification
trial
Ladies
and
gentlemen,
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
一、阅读
A【答案】BAD
B【答案】ACBC
C【答案】CADB
D【答案】
CADB
二、七选五【答案】GCEAF
四、单词拼写
【答案】1.
struck
2.possession
3.
dominate
4.
expectation
5.
combination
enthusiastic
7.
adaptation
8.
stimulation
9.
swept
10.
consumption
单句语法填空
【答案】1.
taught
2.
to
be
considered
3.
Being
exposed
4.
to
have
been
sent
5.
to
be
done
6.
Dressed
7.
being
developed
8.
not
knowing
9.
filling
10.
being
washed
完成句子
【答案】
1.
hit
the
spot
2.
working
their
way
3.
Overcome
with
curiosity
4.
with
ease
5.
as
opposed
to
应用文写作
【答案】
Ladies
and
gentlemen,
Firstly,
please
permit
me
to
show
best
welcome
to
all
of
you
present
today.I
feel
greatly
honored
to
make
this
speech
on
behalf
of
the
organizing
committee.
This
concert
is
organized
to
raise
students’
interest
in
music
and
to.provide
a
platform
for
those
with
music
talent
to
show
themselves.
Lots
of
students
signed
up
for
the
show,
so
we
arranged
a
qualification
trial
to
choose
the
best.ones.
I
hope
more
students
will
take
interest
in
music
after
the
activity
and
everyone
here
will
have
a
wonderful
time
today.
Thank
you
for
your
attention.
同课章节目录