听力:
ABBBC
BBACB
BACCA
ACCAA
阅读:
CDA
BABC
CBDA
CDAB
FDABG
完型
BADAC
BDACD
ADBCB
主观题:
语法填空
are awarded
when
an
eventually
who
to
choosing
impressive
to select
curiosity
应用文:
Ladies and Gentlemen,
I’m greatly honored to deliver a speech on “How to Behave well”. In order to build a civilized city, we should try our best to behave well from ourselves.
To begin with, as senior high students, we should develop a habit of keeping our classroom and desk clean, not throwing litter on the ground. Besides, we are supposed to obey traffic rules , which is of importance to our life. What’s more, it is good manners to say “thank you” and “please”, which is essential part of being polite.
If everyone behaves well, our city will be more beautiful and more attractive. Thank for your attention。
读后续写:
Unexpectedly, Jackie chose Mozart’s Concerto 21 in C Major. Jackie pulled out the piano bench and began his performance. In fact, I was not fully prepared for what I heard next. His fingers were dancing on keys, which made me extremely shocked. Never had I heard Mozart played so well by people of his age. After six and a half minutes, he ended up very well. Everyone at present was wild with great excitement and was on their feet, breaking into loud applause. After the performance, he stepped off the stage.
Paragraph 2:
I held Jackie firmly in great joy, asking “How did you do it ” “Well…remember I told you my mom was sick ” He explained, with tears rolling in her eyes, “In the past few months, she has always accompanied and encouraged me .Actually she had cancer, with little chance to survive. Today, I didn’t let her down” After hearing his word, tears were welling up in my eyes. And at that moment, I realized it was he that taught me the true meaning of perseverance and love.第一节(共15小题;每小题2.5分,满分37.5分)
A
Interesting Exhibitions Held in Four Different Museums
Name: The British Museum
Phone: 020-7323-8000
Opening hours: daily 10 a.m.—5:30 p.m.
Price: Free
This exhibition aims to show the mysteries of mummification(干尸化).From a king’s daughter to a temple doorkeeper, the displays explore the identities(身份) of eight people, using their bodies to discover clues about how they lived. By using new methods, such as CT scanning and 3D visualization, the British Museum has been able to build up a picture of life in the Nile valley over 4,000 years.
Name: The Fashion and Textile (纺织) Museum
Phone:020-7407-8664
Opening hours: daily 11 a.m.—5:30p.m.
Price:£8.80 adults,£5.50 students
The Fashion and Textile Museum is housing the first-ever exhibition on classic Mexican shawl(披肩),which became famous in the 20th century. Mexican artists, photographers and fashion and textile designers will be exhibiting their colorful works there.
Name: The Victoria and Albert Museum
Phone:020-7907-7073
Opening hours: Monday, Thursday, Saturday, Sunday,10a.m.—5:30p.m.;
Friday,10a.m.—10 p.m.
Price: Free
The Victoria and Albert Museum has dug out some of their most charming wedding dresses to record their history during the past two centuries. White wedding dresses were made popular by Queen Victoria in the nineteenth century. See beautiful wedding dresses made by famous designers.
Name: The Science Museum
Phone:0870-870-4868
Opening hours: daily 10 a.m.—6 p.m.
Price: Free
This four-day festival displays the latest exciting gadgets(小机械) and introduces their inventors. Visitors can explore electronics, build robots, get hands-on with new technologies and have a go at 3D printing. There will be displays taking place throughout the festival, which is suitable for anyone aged ten and over.
21. Which number would you call if you’re interested in exploring history with advanced technology
A. 020-7907-7073. B. 020-7407-8664.
C. 020-7323-8000. D. 0870-870-4868.
22. Which museum can you visit if you are free at 8 p.m on Friday
A. The Fashion and Textile Museum.
B. The British Museum.
C. The Science Museum.
D. The Victoria and Albert Museum.
23. What can we learn about the Science Museum
A. Visitors themselves can try new technologies.
B. It can be consulted by calling 020-7907-7073.
C. The exhibition will last a week.
D. It shows CT scanning technology.
B
Alice Moore is a teenager entrepreneur(创业者), who in May 2015 set up her business AilieCandy. By the time she was 13, her company was worth millions of dollars with the invention of a super-sweet treat that could save kids’ teeth, instead of destroying them.
It all began when Moore visited a bank with her dad. On the outing, she was offered a candy bar. However, her dad reminded her that sugary treats were bad for her teeth. But Moore was sick of missing out on candies. So she desired to get round the warning, “Why can’t I make a healthy candy that’s good for my teeth so that my parents can’t say no to it ” With that in mind, Moore asked her dad if she could start her own candy company. He recommended that she do some research and talk to dentists about what a healthier candy would contain.
With her dad’s permission, she spent the next two years researching online and conducting experiments to get a recipe that was both tasty and tooth-friendly. She also approached dentists to learn more about teeth cleaning. Consequently, she succeeded in making a kind of candy only using natural sweeteners, which can reduce oral bacteria.
Moore then used her savings to get her business off the ground. Afterwards, she and her father secured their first business meeting with a supermarket owner, who finally agreed to sell Moore’s product—CanCandy.
As CanCandy’s success grows, so does Moore’s credibility as a young entrepreneur. Moore is enthusiastic about the candy she created, and she’s also positive about what the future might bring. She hopes that every kid can have a clean mouth and a broad smile.
Meanwhile, with her parents’ help, Moore is generally able to live a normal teenage life. Although she founded her company early on in life, she wasn’t driven primarily by profit. Moore wants to use her unique talent to help others find their smiles. She donates 10% of AilicCandy’s profits to Big Smiles. With her talent and determination, it appears that the sky could be the limit for Alice Moore.
24. How did Moore react to her dad’s warning
A. She argued with him. B. She tried to find a solution out.
C. She paid no attention. D. She chose to consult dentists.
25. What is special about CanCandy
A. It is beneficial to dental health. B. It doesn’t contain sweeteners.
C. It is sweeter than other candies. D. It is produced to a dentists’ recipe.
26. What does Moore expect from her business
A. To earn more money. B. To help others find smiles.
C. To make herself succeed. D. To beat other candy companies.
27. What can we learn from Alice Moore’s story
A. Fame is a great eagerness of the young.
B. A youth is to be regarded with respect.
C. Positive thinking and action result in success.
D. Success means getting personal desires satisfied
C
The COVID-19 has led to a great demand for bikes and biking. Bikes stores are struggling hard to keep up with the demand. In the United States, bike sales have seen their jump since the 1970s. Sales of adult bikes in April of 2020 were three times as high as last year. The situation is similar in Asia and Europe. Around 90% of the bikes sold in the US are made in China. But because of the COVID-19, even the normal supply of bicycles wasn’t being created. That demand began to go up in mid-March, as people began looking for ways of getting around that didn’t involve crowded public transportation. Because biking happens in the open air, and the chance of catching the disease while riding is very low.
Biking has also grown more popular because it is one of the few forms of exercise allowed in many lockdowns. With gyms and fitness shut down, biking fills a need for many active people. Families appreciate biking, too. With school closed and kids unable to hang out with their friends, biking is a welcome activity. Bikes are also practical. Many cities are seeing this as an opportunity to make their streets safer and greener. Cities around the world are adding mils and miles of bike lanes (车道) to their streets to encourage biking, New York says it will close off up to 160 kilometers of roads so they can be used by bikers and walkers. Paris has set up over 650 kilometers of new bike lanes. The United Kingdom plans to double its number of bike lanes. In Milan, Italy, 35 kilometers of roads have been metamorphosed.
Though many of these bike lane additions are temporary, and some people assume these additions seem to destroy the overall beauty of cities, if changes in biking habits become permanent because of additions, they could seriously cut down car traffic and help make cities a lot greener.
28. What can we conclude about the present bike situation
A. It is more expensive B. It is safer than a car
C. It is in short supply D. It is all made in China
29. What does the underlined word “metamorphosed” in Paragraph 2 mean
A. repaired B. changed C. protected D. designed
30. What is the author’s attitude toward the bike lane additions
A. negative B. doubtful C. indifferent D. positive
31. What is the best title for the text
A. Increasing Interest in Biking B. Ride Bikes, Clean the Earth
C. More Bikes, Fewer Traffic Jam D. A Great drop for Bike Exercise
D
Fruit farmers in Okayama, Japan, have managed to make peeling (去皮) a banana optional by developing a special variety with eatable skin. The peel of their “Mongee bananas” isn’t particularly tasty, but it’s much thinner and far less bitter than that of regular bananas, making it 100% eatable.
Scientists at D&T Farm in the country’s Okayama Prefecture released the social media-ready news following months of experimenting with a freezing-and-thawing (解冻) method, which keeps the banana tree at extremely cold temperatures followed by a dramatic heat increase. The result is soft and thin skin that hasn’t fully developed. They froze young banana trees to -60 degrees Celsius, planting them again as they began to thaw. This apparently activated an ancient part of their DNA, which not only allows the plant to grow in Japan’s cool climate, but also speeds up its development. While tropical varieties of bananas require two years to grow large enough for consumption , the Mongee banana needs just four months.
The first bunch of Mongee bananas hit department stores’ shelves in the November of last year, but getting your hand on one of these incredible fruits remains a huge challenge. D&T Farm only produces 10 bananas per week, and they only deliver them to the Fruit Corner of Tenmanya Okayama, a local department store. But even if you happen to find one available, you’d probably be a bit put off by the price – 648 yen ($5.70) per fruit.
Banana peel is an excellent ingredient that can contain vitamin B6 and magnesium related to the production of serotonin (血清素). At the same time, it has a positive effect on both brain and sleep. Research results that ripe fruit peels have a good effect on treating prostatic hypertrophy (前列腺肥大) have also been published.
John Guterman, a botanist, says, “And what about shipping For most of the fruit’s history, the peel has provided protection, allowing it to travel long distances. A softer, more bruise-prone banana would be a step back from hardy banana varieties that travel thousands of miles. In this sense, the day we all stop peeling bananas and instead bite straight through their skin may still be a long way away.
32. Compared with regular bananas, Mongee bananas ________.
A. are far easier to peel B. have much sweeter flesh
C. are much more thin-skinned D. have a longer growth period
33. Why is it hard to buy a Mongee banana now
A. It isn’t affordable at all.
B. It hasn’t come into the market yet.
C. It is made for certain people.
D. Its production ability is still limited.
34. What does Paragraph 4 mainly talk about
A. The medical value of banana peel.
B. The nutrition of banana peel.
C. The way of making banana peel sweeter.
D. The studies about how to make banana peel eatable.
35. What does John think of the Mongee banana
A. It should not be widely grown.
B. It won’t be spread widely soon.
C. It indicates the future of fruits with skin.
D. It has no advantage over regular bananas.
第二节(共5小题;每小题2.5分,满分12.5分)
Just Go for a University
For any student, going to a university is one of the most important stages of their lives. It is a time when a young person will move out of their home to be independent. 36 Are you ready for such an exploration The following information may be helpful
Why should you go to university
Learning is a life-long process. University is the right place where you can learn both academically and socially. At university, you will be taught by leading lecturers in their fields of study. 37 Meanwhile, you will meet people with different backgrounds at university. This offers you the chance to learn to look after yourself, to develop your own values and to accept those who may be different.
38
39 Your interest, the major and the course to be taken are all the concerns. Many universities have open days or send tutors out to talk to the students on what they offer. This also gives you a chance to ask questions. Finding out what their predicted exam grades will also help students determine which university may be the most suitable.
What can you learn at university
In many universities, each student begins with a general knowledge base in the first year. Students can have more time to explore their interests before committing to a specific subject. Apart from the academic achievements, various societies, where freshmen can meet like-minded friends, offer you chances to develop the extra-curricular interests in many fields. 40
A. How can you choose a university
B. You have to first think of various aspects.
C. What should you prepare before going to university
D. You can thus equip yourself with enough academic knowledge.
E. Besides, it is a great honor to be admitted into such a university.
F. In one sense, the university can be a completely new world to explore.
G. University provides the all-important stepping-stone for your future life.
第三部分:语言运用(共两小节,满分30分)
第一节(共15小题;每小题1分,满分15分)
The first week is always a bit hard in my writing classes. I’m unfamiliar 41 the students, most of them trying to 42 themselves to their new environment. When Jennifer 43 me with a question on the second day, I was 44 for the chance to connect at least one name with a face.
Her writing wasn’t perfect, but her effort was. She worked hard and pushed herself to achieve. She was excited to learn, 45 made me enjoy teaching her. I didn’t realize then how much she would also teach me.
One Friday afternoon, Jennifer stopped by after class. She wasn’t asking a question about a paper I’d returned. 46 , she said quietly: “I didn’t attend classes yesterday. I was at the health center the whole day.” I gave her a sideways look, 47 . “It was just a virus (病毒). I’m fine now,” she 48 me. Then she was gone.
Two nights later, her father called to tell me that Jennifer would be missing a few classes. She had been in hospital with meningitis (脑膜炎). I heard from him again a few days later, and again after that. Her condition grew 49 . We made trips to the hospital room. I was 50 frightened when I saw the pale, thin and weak girl who, only ten days earlier, had displayed life and warmth in my classroom.
A week later, Jennifer herself called me to tell me she was on the road to 51 . “I’ll be back to school one day,” she said. “I have no 52 that you’ll be with us.” I told her, 53 tears. I remembered what her father had said in his first phone call: “school 54 everything to Jenny.”
Then five weeks later, I walked into my classroom to find Jenny in her seat, smiling. She 55 all of her missed homework, completed with thought and excellence. The strength of her will to overcome shone out of her pale, weak, eighteen-year-old face.
41. A. for B. with C. to D. among
42. A. adapt B. create C. devote D. concentrate
43. A. offered B. bothered C. challenged D. approached
44. A. grateful B. anxious C. disappointed D. embarrassed
45. A. it B. what C. which D. that
46. A. However B. Instead C. Therefore D. Besides
47. A. shy B. generous C. delighted D. astonished
48. A. comforted B. supported C. attracted D. impressed
49. A. better B. sicker C. worse D. heavier
50. A. hardly B. mainly C. frequently D. truly
51. A. recovery B. success C. school D. attitude
52. A. idea B. influence C. opinion D. doubt
53. A. going back B. holding back C. leaving back D.running back
54. A. shares B. creates C. means D. exchanges
55. A. gave up B. handed in C. left out D. put up
第二小节(共10小题;,每小题1.5分,满分15分)
Reading a book can open the door to a wonderful new world of magic and discovery, which is why people all around the world love to read. Every year many famous prizes 56 (award) to the creative individuals. One such prize goes to the best new work of children’s fiction.
Known as the Newbery Medal, the award got started back in 1921, 57 Frederic Melcher suggested the American Library Association set up 58 annual award for the best new children’s book. Everyone agreed, and they 59 (eventual) decided to name the award after John Newbery, an 18th-century English publisher, 60 had made great efforts to promote children’s literature. The winning book is selected by a committee that ranges from year 61 year, and the process of 62 (choose) a winner takes an entire year. Sometimes, the committee will designate (指定) honor books, which are books that might not have won the award, but are still considered to be very 63 (impress) .
So next time you are at the bookstore, take a look at the children’s section. You are likely 64 (select) one you are fond of. Reading a book makes you filled with 65 (curious) and creativity.
第四部分:写作(共两节,满分40分)
第一节:满分15分
假如你是李华,为配合我市开展“创建文明城市build a civilized city”活动,你校计划举办以“How to Behave well”为主题的英语演讲比赛,现根据提示写一篇英语演讲稿。主要内容: 1. 目的; 2. 文明建议(至少3条); 3. 美好祝福。
注意:1. 词数80左右;
2. 可适当增加细节,以使行文连贯;
3. 信得开头和结尾已给出,不计入总词数。
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Thank you for your attention.
第二节:读后续写(满分25分)
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。
When Jackie came to his first piano lesson in his mother’s car, he was already 11 years old. I preferred students begin at an earlier age, but owing to his insistence(坚持), I took him as a student. As much as Jackie tried, he lacked the sense of tone and basic rhythm (节奏). At the end of each lesson, he’d say, “My mom’s going to hear me play someday.” But it seemed hopeless. I only knew his mother from a distance as she waited in her aged car, but never stepped in.
Then one day Jackie stopped coming to our lessons. I thought about calling him but assumed, because of his lack of ability, that he had decided to quit. I also was glad that he stopped coming — he was a bad advertisement for my teaching!
Several weeks later I mailed to the students’ homes a letter on the upcoming concert. Surprisingly, Jackie received and asked me if he could be in the concert. I told him that the concert was not for dropouts, but for current pupils. He said that his mom had been sick and unable to take him to piano lessons but he was still practicing. I didn’t know what led me to agree eventually.
The night for the concert came. The high school gymnastics was packed with parents and friends. I put up Jackie last in the program. I thought that any damage he would do would come at the end of the program and the negative effect would reduce to the minimum (最小值).
The concert went off smoothly. Then Jackie came up on stage. His clothes were wrinkled (皱巴巴的) and his hair looked messy (凌乱的). “Why didn’t his mother at least make him comb his hair for this special night ” I thought.
注意:1. 续写词数应为150左右 2. 请按如下格式在相应位置作答
Unexpectedly, Jackie chose Mozart’s Concerto 21 in C Major.
I held Jackie firmly in great joy, asking “How did you do it ”
大连市第103中学 高一英语 第8页 共9页