哈尔滨市重点中学2022-2023学年高二上学期8月开学考试
英语试卷
(满分 150 分 时间 120 分钟)
第I 卷
第一部分:听力(共两节,满分 20 分)
第一节 (共 5 小题,每小题 1 分,满分 5 分)
听下面 5 段对话。每段对话后有一个小题,从题中所给的 A、B、C 三个选项中选出最佳选项, 并标在试卷的相应位置。听完每段对话后,你都有 10 秒钟的时间来回答有关小题和阅读下一小题, 每段对话仅读一遍。
What does the man want
A. Some books. B. Some envelopes. C. Some pencils.
What is the man’s hobby
A. Playing computer games. B. Climbing mountains. C. Collecting coins.
Where does the conversation take place
A. In a museum. B. On a bus. C. At a bookstore.
What does the man mean
The room doesn’t need painting.
The woman is not working hard.
The painting work should be finished this weekend.
What are the speakers mainly discussing
A. A scientist. B. A book. C. A writer.
第二节 (共 15 小题,每小题 1 分,满分 15 分)
听下面 5 段对话或独白。每段对话或独白后有几个小题,从题中所给的 A、B、C 三个选项中选出最佳选项,并标在试卷的相应位置。听每段对话或独白前,你将有时间阅读各个小题,每小题 5
秒钟;听完后,各小题将给出 5 秒钟的作答时间。每段对话或独白读两遍。听第 6 段材料,回答第 6、7 题。
What are the speakers doing
A. Making a shopping list. B. Doing some shopping. C. Cooking dinner.
What have the speakers got at home
A. Fish. B. Bread. C. Vegetables.
听第 7 段材料,回答第 8、9 题。
How does the man feel about his holiday
A. Excited. B. Satisfied. C. Disappointed.
When does the conversation take place
A. On Tuesday. B. On Wednesday. C. On Thursday.
听第 8 段材料,回答第 10 至 12 题。
Who did the man mostly invite to the party
A. His family. B. His co-workers. C. His schoolmates.
At what time is the party going to begin
A. Around 8:00p.m. B. Around 7:00p.m. C. Around 6:00p.m.
What does the man suggest the woman take
A. Beer. B. Juice. C. Music.
听第 9 段材料,回答第 13 至 16 题。
What does the man ask the woman to do
A. Show him around the school. B. Treat him to lunch. C. Look after a student.
When will Rosie Todd come to visit the school
A. Next Monday. B. Next Tuesday. C. Next Wednesday.
Where can the woman find Rosie Todd at ten
A. In the hall. B. In the lab. C. In the office.
What will the woman and Rosie Todd do together first
A. Have a Spanish class. B. Practice English. C. Have lunch.
听第 10 段材料,回答第 17 至 20 题。
What does the speaker mainly talk about
A. A college. B. A course. C. A teacher.
What do we know about Helen Parkers
She prepares the prize for the class.
She’s won many prizes for arts.
She is an experienced teacher.
What should students take to the courses
A. Brushes. B. Paints. C. A notebook.
How often will the lessons take place a week
A. Three times. B. Six times. C. Eight times.
第二部分:阅读理解(共两节,满分 60 分)
第一节 (共 20 小题;每小题 2 分,满分 40 分)
阅读下列短文,从每题所给的四个选项(A、B、C 和 D)中,选出最佳选项。
A
American Express Gold: Best “non-travel” travel card
Why it’s great in one sentence: The American Express Gold card earns tons of valuable Amex travel points on practically all the food-related purchases you’re making even when you are not traveling, and the credits available on the card nearly offset (抵消) its annual fee.
This card is right for: People who can use all of the card’s various credits and who spend significant
money at restaurants, on food delivery services or at U.S. supermarkets while they are not on the road.
Highlights:
First, with the Amex Gold, you’ll earn 4 points for every dollar you spend on restaurants worldwide, and on up to $25,000 in annual purchases at U.S. supermarkets (1 point per dollar afterwards). Most food delivery services count as “restaurants” on this card, so that means the vast majority of your food purchases will earn 4 points, regardless of how you’re eating.
You’ll also earn 3 points per dollar when you book airfare directly with an airline, so if you’re looking to jump on any sales for flights later in the year, you can pay for them with the Amex Gold and earn extra points on those as well.
The points earned on this card are American Express Membership Rewards points, which are extremely useful. You can redeem them directly for flights via Amex Travel at 1 cent each, but if you put in some extra effort and research, you can potentially get much more value from them by transferring them to any of Amex’s 21 airline and hotel partners, which include Delta Air Lines, JetBlue, Marriott and many more.
What can we know about the American Express Gold card
A. It requires no annual fee. B. It has a link with food purchases.
C. It is targeted at delivery services. D. It is right for restaurant managers.
If you spend $ 25,800 annually at U.S. supermarkets, how many points will you earn
A. 100,000. B. 100,800. C. 103,200. D. 400,000.
What can you do with these points on this card
Change them into money to buy food.
Transfer guests from airlines to hotels.
Purchase services in suggested airlines.
Make some extra effort and do research.
B
Medha Gupta sometimes felt worried making the 20-minute walk from the corner where the school bus dropped her off to her home in Herndon, Va.— especially during the colder months in winter.
Her mother, Divya Gupta had a suggestion: write an app. She was half-kidding, but Medha took the challenge seriously. So she went to work.
The result was Safe Travel, an app designed by Medha to help walkers feel more secure when travelling alone. Using the iPhone, a person can program it to send a warning to someone he or she trusts if he or she fails to arrive at a destination within a certain time.
It was the first iOS app that Medha had created. While she didn’t think much would come from the project, her effort caught the eye of judges for the annual Congressional App Challenge, who selected her as the winner for Virginia’s 10th District.
The App Challenge is designed to encourage students to consider careers in science, technology, engineering, and math by experimenting with coding and computer science. Winning students are invited to attend a reception on Capitol Hill in April and also received $250 in Amazon Web Service credits.
Medha said it took her about 40 hours to design, program and test the app. As for her next app Medha’s not certain. She temporarily has her app-development ambitions on hold because she’s busy teaching herself artificial intelligence to help deal with improper words on Facebook. Yes, she knows that there are teams of engineers probably doing the same thing. But she figures it can’t hurt her own part, too.
“If we see something wrong with the world, we should do something about it,” she said. “After all, the only one stopping us from doing something is ourselves.”
Why did Medha Gupta feel worried
It took a long time to walk home.
It was colder than ever in winter.
It was unsafe to walk home alone.
It was difficult to write an app.
What is Medha’s attitude to her mother’s suggestion
A. Curious. B. Sensitive. C. Uncertain. D. Optimistic.
What does the underlined phrase “on hold” in Paragraph 6 mean
A. Delayed. B. Developed. C. Suspected. D. Satisf ied.
What’s the main idea of the text
Medha registered for the App Challenge.
Medha designed Safe Travel successfully.
The App Challenge directs students to choose careers.
An app guides walkers home.
C
The problem of robocalls has gotten so bad that many people now refuse to pick up calls from numbers they don’t know. By next year, half of the calls we receive will be scams (欺诈). We are finally waking up to the severity of the problem by supporting and developing a group of tools, apps and approaches intended to prevent scammers from getting through. Unfortunately, it’s too little, too late. By the time these “solutions” become widely available, scammers will have moved onto cleverer means. In the near future, it’s not just going to be the number you see on your screen that will be in doubt. Soon you will also question whether the voice you’re hearing is actually real.
That’s because there are a number of powerful voice manipulation (处理) and automation technologies that are about to become widely available for anyone to use. At this year’s I/O Conference, a company showed a new voice technology able to produce such a convincing human-sounding voice that it was able to speak to a receptionist and book a reservation without detection.
These developments are likely to make our current problems with robocalls much worse. The reason that robocalls are a headache has less to do with amount than precision. A decade of data breaches (数据侵入) of personal information has led to a situation where scammers can easily learn your mother’s name, and far more. Armed with this knowledge, they’re able to carry out individually targeted campaigns to cheat
people. This means, for example, that a scammer could call you from what looks to be a familiar number and talk to you using a voice that sounds exactly like your bank teller’s, tricking you into “confirming” your address, mother’s name, and card number. Scammers follow money, so companies will be the worst hit. A lot of business is still done over the phone, and much of it is based on trust and existing relationships.
Voice manipulation technologies may weaken that gradually.
We need to deal with the insecure nature of our telecom networks. Phone carriers and consumers need to work together to find ways of determining and communicating what is real. That might mean either developing a uniform way to mark videos and images, showing when and who they were made by, or abandoning phone calls altogether and moving towards data-based communications—using apps like FaceTime or WhatsApp, which can be tied to your identity.
Credibility is hard to earn but easy to lose, and the problem is only going to get harder from here on
out.
How does the author feel about the solutions to problem of robocalls
A. Panicked. B. Confused. C. Embarrassed. D. Disappointed.
Taking advantage of the new technologies, scammers can .
A. aim at victims precisely B. damage databases easily
C. start campaigns rapidly D. spread information widely
What does the passage imply
A. Honesty is the best policy. B. Technologies can be double-edged.
C. There are more solutions than problems. D. Credibility holds the key to development.
Which of the following would be the best title for the passage
Where the Problem of Robocalls Is Rooted
Who Is to Blame for the Problem of Robocalls
Why Robocalls Are About to Get More Dangerous
How Robocalls Are Affecting the World of Technology
D
When we’re busy doing things we love, we don’t think about how old we are or the state of our knees. But then something pulls us up short, like a polite young man offering his seat, or accompanying you to cross the road, and suddenly we’re walking more slowly, feeling just a little worse about life in general.
The way these internalized (内在化的) attitudes about aging affect us physically is a focus within a
growing field in social psychology known as mind-body studies. In the next few months, the World Health Organization is expected to publish the results of a global investigation of ageism—discrimination toward the aged—that will address how to fight the prejudice. The report will also outline the various ways that ageist attitudes can affect the health and well-being of older people.
Psychologist Becca Levy is a contributor to the coming WHO report. She has spent her career linking negative aging attitudes to such measures as walking speed in older people, a greater likelihood of developing the brain changes of Alzheimer’s disease and even a reduction in life span. But it’s not all terrible. Levy, at the Yale School of Public Health, has also shown that something as simple as potential exposure to age-positive words can lead to physical improvements in older people of the sort. Those typically come about only after a program of regular exercise. If Levy and other scientists are correct, putting a more positive effect on our general view of aging might make a profound difference in the health of people over 65, the fastest-growing age group in America today. Some of the most surprising mind-body findings imply: A more positive attitude toward aging leads to improvements in older people’s memory, balance, speed and quality of life.
According to the passage, people will realize they’re at an advanced age when .
A. they are occupied with work B. their knees are easily hurt
C. someone helps them go across the street D. they offer seats to others
What can we know from the WHO report
There is little prejudice to the elderly.
Ageism may do physical and mental damage to the elderly.
People are supposed to fight against discrimination.
Ageism is a main research field in social psychology.
What does Levy suggest people do
Help the old to be more exposed to age-positive words.
Communicate with the old using more complex words.
Help the old to take exercise regularly.
Talk to the old more frequently.
What message is mainly conveyed in the passage
Aging is an urgent problem to be solved around the world.
The internalized attitudes are determined by the aging process.
The senior citizens should live independently to slow aging.
Positive attitudes toward aging may pay off in older people’s health.
E
Eddie McKay, a once forgotten pilot, is a subject of great interest to a group of history students in
Canada.
It all started when Graham Broad, a professor at the University of Western Ontario, found McKay’s name in a footnote in a book about university history. Mckay was included in a list of university alumni (校友 ) who had served during the First World War, but his name was unfamiliar to Broad, a specialist in military history. Out of curiosity, Broad spent hours at the local archives (档案馆) in a fruitless search for information on Mckay. Tired and discouraged, he finally gave up. On his way out, Broad’s glance happened to fall on an exhibiting case showing some old newspapers. His eye was drawn to an old picture of a young man in a rugby uniform. As he read the words beside the picture, he experienced a thrilling realization. “After looking for him all day, there he was, staring up at me out of the exhibiting case,” said Broad. Excited by the find, Broad asked his students to continue his search. They combed old newspapers and other materials for clues. Gradually, a picture came into view.
Captain Alfred Edwin McKay joined the British Royal Flying Corps in 1916. He downed ten enemy planes, outlived his entire squadron ( 中 队 ) as a WWI flyer, spent some time as a flying instructor in England, then returned to the front, where he was eventually shot down over Belgium and killed in December 1917. But there’s more to his story. “For a brief time in 1916 he was probably the most famous pilot in the world,” says Broad “He was credited with downing Oswald Boclcke, the most famous German pilot at the time.” Yet, in a letter home, McKay refused to take credit, saying that Boclcke had actually crashed into another German plane.
Mckay’s war records were destroyed during a World War II air bombing on London—an explanation for why he was all but forgotten.
But now, thanks to the efforts of Broad and his students, a marker in McKay’s memory was placed on the university grounds in November 2007. “I found my eyes filled with tears as I read the word ‘deceased ( 阵 亡 )’ next to his name,” said Corey Everett, a student who found a picture of Mckay in his uniform. “This was such a simple example of the fact that he had been a student just like us, but instead of finishing his time at Western, he chose to fight and die for his country.”
What made Professor Broad continue his search for more information on McKay
A. A uniform of McKay. B. A footnote about McKay.
C. A book on McKay. D. A picture of McKay.
What did the students find out about McKay
A. He trained pilots for some time. B. He lived longer than other pilots.
C. He died in the Second World War. D. He was downed by the pilot Boclcke.
McKay’s flying documents were destroyed in .
A. Belgium B. Germany C. Canada D. England
We can learn from the last paragraph that McKay .
A. preferred fight to his study B. went to war before graduation
C. left a picture for Corey Everett D. set an example for his fellow students
What is the text mainly about
A. The research into war history. B. The finding of a forgotten hero.
C. The pilots of the two world wars. D. The importance of military studies.
第二节(共 10 小题;每小题 2 分,满分 20 分)
根据短文内容,从短文后的选项中选出填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为多余选项。
A
Dining alone is becoming more common, and there’s absolutely nothing to be embarrassed about if you want to take yourself out for a nice meal! Eating a meal on your own simply shows that you’re comfortable with yourself and confident that you’ll enjoy your own company. 41 Hopefully, you’ll be pleasantly surprised by the experience.
Sit on the patio when the weather is nice to enjoy the fresh air. Being alone on the patio is also a way to feel less conspicuous if you’re a little nervous dining alone. Just think of how many times you’ve passed a café and seen a solo diner reading their book and enjoying a lunchtime break! 42
Eat slowly and relish the flavors of your meal. You might want to eat as quickly as possible so you can leave, especially if you’re feeling self-conscious about eating alone. 43 Chew each bite thoroughly and think about the flavor profiles. Put your utensils down from time to time and look around or enjoy a sip of your drink.
Take a deep breath if you start to feel self-conscious. 44 You might feel like other people are looking at you or judging you, but try to remember that chances are, they’re too busy thinking about themselves. When negative feelings start to rise, pause, take a breath, and focus on your meal.
45 Stepping away from phone calls, texts, emails, and social media might be just the thing you need to unwind from a busy day. Doing away with your phone will help you be more present, enjoy yourself, and appreciate your meal.
Put your cell phone away.
Taste it in an active way.
Give it a try and see how it feels.
It’s much more common than you think.
Try to slow down and focus on your food.
Eating all by yourself may mean loneliness.
G Eating alone can spark feelings of insecurity and anxiety.
B
When we were kids, summer activities were a great escape. My only goal each day was to figure out the bigger thrill: hide-and-seek with my cousins, a ball game with my brother, or rereading detective stories for hours on end. Fun was the only endgame (最后阶段).
46 That comes with its own benefits. We can stay up as late as we’d like, go sailing on the sea or gather a group and go exploring islands. 47 However long ago it was, your next awesome fun day or week is on the way. Joy is the name of the game this Summer!
The first step towards having more fun with summer activities is setting aside time for it. 48 For example, turn off work email on Friday afternoon and leave it aside until Monday morning; say no to time-wasting requests.
Then be a tourist in your own town. When you live somewhere long enough, it stops being an interesting destination and becomes just the surrounding area. 49 Is it known for its museums, rivers or food Take some time to tour some famous attractions.
Your interests have probably changed as you have got older, but that doesn’t mean what you did as a kid isn’t exciting. So invoke (唤起) your inner child. Head to the park and play a game of basketball with your cousins or take your dog to the park for a game of Frisbee. 50
Whatever you decide to do, make sure you enjoy yourself to the fullest because summer’s best days will be here and gone before you know it.
We are adults now or almost.
But that doesn’t mean it does no harm.
Treat your hometown like a new destination.
Carve out some quality time to do absolutely nothing.
Make weekends meaningful by setting good boundaries.
Borrow some baseball gloves and play catch with friends.
But when was the last time you actually did any of those things
第三部分 英语知识运用 (共三节,满分 70 分)
第一节 完形填空 (共 30 小题;每小题 1 分,满分 30 分)
阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的四个选项(A、B、C 和 D)中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。
A
Last summer, I was suffering from too much stress, I’d just graduated from a challenging doctoral program and was 51 from the years of research, study and writing. I took a vacation to celebrate, but the academic intensity had become a 52 . Sitting on the beautiful lawn of the hotel on Mackinac Island, I just felt like I should be studying or working as usual.
53 , seeing natural beauty would have relaxed me, but I couldn’t 54 . I couldn’t help looking at my cell phone repeatedly in case I missed something important. “Enough,” I murmured. I needed to 55 , but why couldn’t I
A dragonfly buzzed around me. With each 56 , this creature’s wings changed color— blue one
moment, green the next. Dragonflies usually fascinated me with their quick movements that 57 me of acrobats (杂技演员) in the wind, but I wasn’t in the 58 that day. What I needed then was 59 , not movement. As if on cue, the dragonfly came to rest on a blade of grass in front of me.
I watched that dragonfly carefully for many minutes. So did the dragonfly. “It’s not a matter of relaxing,” it seemed to say. “It’s a matter of 60 the now, the here. Life is so short. Be here in the moment and let the 61 take care of itself.” Suddenly, I 62 this beautiful creature, who only had months to live, was “instructing” me about the 63 of life and felt much relaxed. The dragonfly seemed 64 that its message had been delivered. It sprang from the grass and flew away. I didn’t see it again. But I would never forget what it taught me: Be here and 65 yourself.
51. A. distracted B. withdrawn C. exhausted D. separated
52. A. tradition B. strength C. burden D. habit
53. A. Generally B. Eventually C. Particularly D. Exactly
54. A. settle down B. break down C. slow down D. get down
55. A. concentrate B. unwind C. continue D. pause
56. A. movement B. change C. advance D. performance
57. A. convinced B. informed C. reminded D. warned
58. A. way B. mood C. state D. position
59. A. progress B. admiration C. consideration D. stillness
60. A. remembering B. understanding C. appreciating D. recognizing
61. A. life B. history C. moment D. future
62. A. guessed B. realized C. agreed D. admitted
63. A. value B. content C. reality D. principle
A. concerned B. doubtful C. satisfied D. regretful
A. enjoy B. collet C. suit D. conduct
B
Our oldest daughter, Christy, told us she was running away. In disbelief, my wife, Cathy, and I stared at each other, at a loss for words. When she started 66 her suitcase, we knew she was serious. Her action left us 67 —after all, Christy was only six. We didn’t know whether to laugh or cry.
Our daughter 68 she was moving to Julia’s house across the street. My wife gave Julia’s mother
a 69 , telling her what was happening. Then, with mixed feelings, we watched Christy cross the street. Julia’s mother waited outside the door to 70 her. A few hours later, Julia’s mom 71 Christy it was Monday night and that our family always drove to the Golden Spoon for frozen yogurt. It was a tradition 72 by my threes girls—including our little Christy. To our 73 , she called and asked if she could go. A joyous 74 .
The yogurt run was part of our family identity. Even the neighbours knew our 75 visit to the Golden Spoon. Our three daughters are now grown-up, but we 76 visit the Golden Spoon as always. Its yogurt is still delicious. Our family 77 are kept strong by one of those simple activities.
At some point, 78 will come to every family. But when you build a strong family identity 79 , there will be no doubt that your family can 80 whatever winds and rains coming your way. Not surprisingly, a strong family identity will give your kids solid foundations to count on during those difficult times.
66. A. carrying B. removing C. packing D. employing
67. A. careless B. restless C. speechless D. hopeless
68. A. declared B. acknowledged C. whispered D. requested
69. A. bow B. response C. tip D. bell
70. A. hug B. treat C. assist D. greet
71. A. persuaded B. reminded C. answered D. promised
72. A. expected B. approved C. promoted D. shared
73. A. admiration B. regret C. satisfaction D. relief
74. A. recovery B. success C. reunion D. communication
75. A. daily B. monthly C. weekly D. yearly
76. A. occasionally B. automatically C. rarely D. regularly
77. A. origins B. traditions C. bonds D. honors
78. A. sufferings B. storms C. failures D. barriers
79. A. in return B. in particular C. in reality D. in advance
80. A. survive B. ignore C. avoid D. predict
第II 卷
第二节 语法填空(共 20 小题;每小题 1 分,满分 20 分)
阅读下面短文,在空白处填入 1 个词(冠词,介词,代词或连词),或在空白处填入单词的正确形式。
A
No matter where you usually hear today’s top hits—the radio, Spotify, a mixtape on your Sony Walkman—you’ve probably noticed that they tend 81 (be) around three minutes long.
As VOX—a classic record company—explains, the custom 82 (date) back to the early 20th century, when shellac records (虫胶唱片) first appeared in the market. The rates at 83 these records spun ( 旋转) varied, but 78RPM ( 每分钟转数) quickly became the norm. Two record sizes contributed to its 84 (popular): 10 inches—which could hold about three minutes of music per side
— and 12 inches, which held 85 (rough) four to five minutes per side. To get radio stations to
broadcast their music and get people to buy it, 86 (musician) pretty much had to accommodate those time limits.
The late 1940s 87 (see) the birth of the 45 RPM record: a smaller, cheaper disc that couldn’t manage much more 88 three minutes of music per side. Long-playing records (LPs) 89
(introduce) around the same time, but it was much easier for radio stations to play single tracks from 45 RPM record—which crowds of listeners then went out and bought. While 10-inch 78 RPM record had originated the three-minute trend, 45 RPM record really helped make 90 a necessity for radio singles throughout the mid-20th century.
B
A teahouse is a special house which primarily serves tea and other light refreshments. Its function varies widely 91 (depend) on the culture. In China, a teahouse is a place 92 people gather to enjoy tea, chat and socialize. It 93 (consider) as a symbol of Chinese tea culture and people’s leisure life.
Chinese teahouses enjoy a long-standing history. They developed from tea stands in the Western Jin Dynasty, 94 (take) shape in the Tang Dynasty, developed gradually in the Song, Yuan, Ming and Qing dynasties and became booming in modern times.
In the Song Dynasty, teahouses existed all over cities and villages, at a rate comparable with
95 of restaurants. The owners preferred to decorate their teahouses 96 paintings of celebrities and rare and precious plants 97 (attract) customers. In the Ming and Qing dynasties, 98
number of teahouses went beyond that of restaurants, gaining more popularity and becoming more famous. Later, the acculturation ( 文化传入) of Western culture forces traditional Chinese teahouses to take on a new look. After reform and opening up, with the rapid development of the economy and 98
(evidence) improvement of people’s living 100 (standard), teahouses flowered in China.
第三节 单句语法填空(共 20 小题;每小题 1 分,满分 10 分)
you are coming to Beijing is the best news I have heard for a long time.
Not (persuade) my parents, I failed to go to a drama school, where my interest lay.
We tried to get our point , but he just wouldn’t listen.
The plane has been kept in service for longer than (original) intended.
(judge) from the appearance, it is very peaceful, but in fact, a war will break out soon.
He was apparently much surprised at the news that the amateur athlete beat the
(profession) one who ranked top ten.
All he has to do now is (talk) with his teacher face to face.
By far, there are many problems (remain) to be solved.
After being told her son was lost, a (concern) look appeared on her face.
We are not permitted (make) noises in the library, nor can we take books out with permission.
It was several days before the floodwater (sink) and life returned to normal.
The sound of the door closing deceived me thinking they had gone out.
The new secretary will relieve us some of the paperwork.
He treated them with (generous) and thoughtfulness.
Already this year, 115 measles cases (report) in the USA, compared with 189 for all of last year.
How to make museums and their lifeless collections more attractive is a tough question worth
(attach) importance to.
The church tower which (restore) will be open to tourists soon. The work is almost finished.
I can work pressure and get along well with colleagues.
I wasn’t sure whether he (lend) me his book the next morning.
What seems to be (lack) is enough money for the project.
哈尔滨市重点中学2022-2023学年高二上学期8月开学考试
英语试卷参考答案
听力
1-5 BABCC 6-10 BACAB 11-15 ABCBC 16-20 ABCCA
阅读理解 A: 21-23 BBC B: 24-27 CDAB C: 28-31 DABC D: 32-35 CBAD
E: 36-40 DADBB
七选五:
A: 41-45 CDEGA
B: 46-50 AGECF
完形填空
A:
51-55 CDACB 56-60 ACBDC 61-65 DBACA B:
66-70 CCADD 71-75 BADCC 76-80 DCBDA
语法填空
A:
81. to be 82. dates 83. which 84. popularity 85. roughly
86. musicians 87. saw 88. than 89. were introduced 90. it B:
91. depending 92. where 93. is considered 94. took 95. that
96. with 97. to attract 98. The 99. evident 100. standards
单句语法填空
That
having persuaded
across
originally
Judging
professional
(to) talk
remaining
concerned
to make
sank
into
of
generosity
have been reported
attaching
is being restored
under
would lend
lacking
听力原文
W: I’m going to the bookstore for some pencils. Want anything
M: See if you can pick up some envelopes for me.
M: What are your hobbies
W: Oh, I collect coins and I like climbing mountains. What about you M: I just like playing computer games.
M: Could you please tell me at which stop I should get off for the museum
W: Of course. You get off at the bookstore, and walk one block. I’ll tell you when we get there.
W: I honestly don’t want to continue painting the room at the weekends, Joe.
M: Neither do I. But I think we should get the work finished this weekend.
W: Do you know anything about H.G. Wells
M: Sure. He wrote many science-fiction books.
M: So what’s for dinner tonight, Mum Look, fish is cheap this week.
W: Oh, it’s vegetables we need, really. We’ve got plenty of fish in the refrigerator.
M: Well, how about these fresh peas and potatoes, then Look, I’ll put them in our basket. And we could have
some bread to go with them.
W: Oh, I can easily make the bread myself, Tom. Let’s just buy what you’ve put in the basket. We’ll have everything for dinner then.
W: Hello Jack, are you having a good holiday
M: Hi Mum. Don’t mention it. It has been raining every day since I got here. W: That’s a pity. It’s been nice and sunny here. When will you be home
M: I was going to be back tomorrow, but the flights are fully booked. The next available flight leaves on Thursday,
so I have to be back the day after tomorrow. I just hope it won’t snow before then.
M: Amy, my housemate and I are having a house-warming party on Friday night. Would you like to come
W: Sure. Will there be a lot of people there M: Yeah. We’ve each invited about 10 people. W: Who are they
M: My housemate invited his family and a few friends from school, and I invited people in our office mostly. You
won’t be sitting there by yourself.
W: What time is it going to start
M: Most people get off work at 6:00 p.m., so it’s going to start about two hours later. W: Should I bring anything
M: We’ll have beer, but if you bring some juice, that’d be great.
W: I could also bring some music if you want. I’ve got lots of songs on my new iPod. M: That’ll be great. Wait for me after work then! I will come on time.
M: Alice, can you help me look after a new student who’s coming to visit our school Her name is Rosie Todd.
W: Yes, of course, Mr. Brent. When is she coming
M: Let me see—next Monday—no, sorry, the day after, I mean Tuesday. W: That’s OK. What time will she be here
M: She’s coming at nine thirty, but I’ll look after her then. Can you come and meet her at ten W: Sure. Where shall I find her
M: She’ll be in the hall. Oh, no she won’t. She’ll be in the office at that time after visiting the lab. W: OK. So where do I take her
M: Take her to your Spanish class. After that, she’s coming to my English lesson. Then can you take her to lunch
W: All right. And is she starting here next term, in January
M: Sooner than that, Alice! She’s joining us next month, in October. You’ll have a new member soon.
One more
thing. If you have any questions, just phone me. The number for the teachers’ room is 0566291.
W: OK, Mr. Brent.
W: Since last week, hundreds of listeners have called the show to say they’re interested in the art classes we talked about. Well, I have some good news for them! There will be more classes at the London College of Art this spring and summer. You can do a course in May, July or August. Each course lasts three weeks and the teacher will be Helen Parkes.
Helen has taught art for many years in schools and colleges and is a famous artist herself. You don’t need to bring brushes or paints but you must have a notebook with you to take notes.
Lessons will take place three times a week, from six to eight in the evening. At the end of each course, there will be a prize for the best student. He or she will win a set of oil paints and brushes. So if you’re interested, call the college today! You might be a great painter and not know it.