复旦大学附属中学2020学年第一学期
高二年级英语期末考试试卷
(考试时间:120分钟
满分:150分)
I.
Listening
Comprehension
Section
A
Directions:
In
Section
A,
you
will
hear
ten
short
conversations
between
two
speakers.
At
the
end
of
each
conversation,
a
question
will
be
asked
about
what
was
said.
The
conversations
and
the
questions
will
be
spoken
only
once.
After
you
hear
a
conversation
and
the
question
about
it,
read
the
four
possible
answers
on
your
paper,
and
decide
which
one
is
the
best
answer
to
the
question
you
have
heard.
1.
A.
6:15.
B.
7:15.
C.
7:50.
D.
6:50.
2.
A.
To
leave
it
alone.
B.
To
learn
it
by
heart.
C.
To
read
it
once
more.
D.
To
talk
about
it.
3.
A.
He
missed
it.
B.
He
watched
it.
C.
He
disliked
it.
D.
He
would
see
it
again.
4.
A.
She
bought
the
wrong
book.
B.
She
asked
for
a
new
textbook.
C.
She
lost
her
money.
D.
She
bought
the
last
edition
of
the
book.
5.
A.
Cousins.
B.
Classmates.
C.
Colleagues.
D.
Twins.
6.
A.
A
holiday.
B.
Luck.
C.
Work.
D.
Health
condition.
A.
In
a
flower
shop.
B.
In
a
supermarket.
C.
In
a
restaurant
.
D.
In
a
post
office.
A.
Manager.
B.
Doctor.
C.
Waiter.
D.
Teacher.
A.
The
woman
isn’t
satisfied
with
her
body
shape.
B.
The
woman
is
pregnant.
C.
A
new
family
member
will
move
in
to
live
with
the
couple.
D.
The
woman
is
trying
to
lose
weight.
10.
A.
The
woman
enjoyed
the
movie
very
much.
B.
The
woman
didn’t
sleep
well
last
night
because
of
the
movie.
C.
The
man
asked
the
woman
to
be
careful
at
night.
D.
The
man
invited
the
woman
to
go
to
the
theatre
together.
Section
B
Directions:
In
Section
B,
you
will
hear
two
short
passages,
and
you
will
be
asked
three
questions
on
each
of
the
passages.
The
passages
will
be
read
twice,
but
the
questions
will
be
spoken
only
once.
When
you
hear
a
question,
read
the
four
possible
answers
on
your
paper
and
decide
which
one
would
be
the
best
answer
to
the
question
you
have
heard.
Questions
11
through
13
are
based
on
the
following
passage.
A.
Because
Japanese
people
are
over
stressed
from
work.
B.
Because
Japan
has
the
most
crowded
roads
in
the
world.
C.
Because
Japanese
automakers
possess
highly
advanced
technology.
D.
Because
Japan
has
first-class
showrooms
in
the
world.
A.
It
can
see
the
road
through
a
tiny
camera
on
the
windshield.
B.
A
Computer
can
pick
out
lines
on
the
highway
surface.
C.
The
system
can
help
to
steer
the
car
throughout
the
whole
trip.
D.
A
computer
directs
the
car
to
drive
in
the
right
direction.
A.
The
harm
of
tiredness
in
driving.
B.
The
leading
cause
of
road
accidents.
C.
The
use
of
laser
radar
in
a
safer
ride.
D.
The
design
of
intelligent
cars
in
Japan.
Questions
14
through
16
are
based
on
the
following
news.
A.
They
result
in
more
sports
events.
B.
They
get
more
viewers
to
play
sports.
C.
They
make
more
people
interested
in
television.
D.
They
bring
more
money
to
the
television
networks.
A.
Because
their
advertisers
are
car
makers.
B.
Because
their
viewers
are
attracted
by
sports.
C.
Because
their
advertisers
target
rich
people.
D.
Because
their
viewers
can
afford
expensive
cars.
A.
Television
ratings
are
determined
by
male
viewers.
B.
Rich
viewers
contribute
most
to
television
companies.
C.
Sports
are
gaining
importance
in
advertising
on
television.
D.
Commercial
advertisers
are
the
major
sponsors
of
sports
events.
Section
C
Directions:
In
Section
C,
you
will
hear
two
longer
conversations.
The
conversations
will
be
read
twice.
After
you
hear
each
conversation,
read
the
four
possible
answers
on
your
paper
and
decide
which
one
would
be
the
best
answer
to
the
question
you
have
heard.
Questions
17
and
18
are
based
on
the
following
conversation.
A.
Because
the
bill
price
was
too
high.
B.
Because
the
rates
have
gone
up.
C.
Because
he
forgot
where
he
had
called
last
month.
D.
Because
they
gave
him
the
wrong
country
code.
A.
The
man.
B.
The
man’s
wife.
C.
The
man’s
cousin.
D.
The
wife’s
cousin.
Questions
19
and
20
are
based
on
the
following
conversation.
A.
The
woman
was
out
shopping
and
couldn’t
stop
the
fire
in
time.
B.
A
firecracker
flew
into
the
yard.
C.
The
firecracker
set
the
supermarket
on
fire.
D.
The
firecracker
set
the
grass
on
fire.
A.
She
went
on
vacation
as
scheduled.
B.
She
changed
her
flight.
C.
She
canceled
her
journey.
D.
She
argued
with
the
insurance
company
about
compensation
for
the
loss.
II.
Grammar
and
Vocabulary
Section
A
Directions:
Beneath
each
of
the
following
sentences
there
are
four
choices
marked
A,
B,
C
and
D.
Choose
the
one
answer
that
best
completes
the
sentence.
Vingo
sat
in
front
of
them,
________
in
a
plain,
ill-fitting
suit,
never
moving,
his
dusty
face
________
his
age.
A.
dressing
...
masking
B.
dressing
...
masked
C.
dressed
...
masking
D.
dressed
...
masked
The
students
who
earned
the
highest
grades
weren’t
necessarily
the
ones
with
the
highest
IQs,
but
rather
those
who
kept
trying
despite
________
and
failures.
A.
setbacks
B.
breakthroughs
C.
takeovers
D.
runaways
I
was
nervous
on
my
first
day
at
college,
but
I
was
________
to
see
some
friendly
faces.
A.
ensured
B.
reassured
C.
requested
D.
restored
Beethoven,
along
with
other
classical
musicians,
transformed
the
state
of
music
with
his
________
centuries
ago
and
that
influence
remains
felt
even
today.
processions
B.
intentions
C.
compositions
D.
exclamations
Violence
will
never
be
a
solution
but
will
only
________
more
violence.
A.
scrape
B.
breed
C.
startle
D.
compose
Being
nice
to
someone
you
dislike
doesn’t
mean
you’re
hypocritical.
It
means
that
you’re
mature
enough
to
________
your
dislike
toward
them.
A.
tolerate
B.
stretch
C.
exhaust
D.
proceed
China’s
path
to
realizing
its
2060
carbon
neutrality
goal
will
not
be
an
easy
ride,
but
this
long-term
goal
is
an
indication
of
China’s
great
________
to
a
green
transition.
A.
contribution
B.
concern
C.
commitment
D.
comfort
The
hitchhiker
got
in
and
immediately
John
was
sorry
that
he
had
________
him
________.
A.
picked…up
B.
taken…over
C.
taken…back
D.
set…back
The
woman,
who
wore
a
faded
print
dress,
presented
a
marked
________
to
the
shiny
store
with
its
bright
lighting
and
neatly
arranged
shelves,
so
she
felt
________.
A.
contrast…out
of
place
B.
comparison…out
of
control
C.
comparison…out
of
date
D.
contrast…out
of
question
Fossil
fuels,
which
produce
large
amounts
of
carbon
dioxide,
still
________
85
percent
of
China’s
energy
consumption.
A.
make
up
B.
bring
up
C.
set
up
D.
put
up
I
________
a
great
deal
to
my
publishers,
who
helped
me
to
finish
writing
the
book.
A.
commit
B.
owe
C.
attribute
D.
apply
She
was
dropping
quite
a
few
________
about
what
she’d
like
for
her
birthday.
payments
B.
samples
C.
responses
D.
hints
Never
before
________
in
greater
need
of
modern
public
transport
than
it
is
today.
A.
has
this
city
been
B.
this
city
has
been
C.
was
this
city
D.
this
city
was
At
the
award
ceremony
of
Oscar,
winners
each
________
a
little
gold
man,
which
is
a
great
honor.
A.
are
presented
B.
is
presented
to
C.
are
presented
with
D.
is
presented
for
A
survey
of
the
opinions
of
experts
________
that
three
hours
of
outdoor
exercise
a
week
________
good
for
one’s
health.
A.
show…are
B.
shows…is
C.
show…
is
D.
shows…are
Until
those
environmental
problems
are
solved,
________
what
kind
of
disaster
will
strike.
A.
can
no
one
say
B.
can
say
no
one
C.
no
one
can
say
D.
says
no
one
Bad
language
is
a
stage
________
all
children
go
through,
and
it
dies
with
time
________
they
learn
they’re
not
attracting
attention
with
it.
A.
that…when
B.
when…when
C.
where…after
D.
which…that
People
in
these
parts
tend
to
be
way
behind
________
when
it
comes
to
issues
such
as
women’s
rights.
A.
the
times
B.
the
time
C.
a
time
D.
times
Paper
money
was
in
________
use
in
China
when
Marco
Polo
visited
the
country
in
________
thirteenth
century.
A.
the
…
/
B.the
…
the
C./
…
the
D./
…
/
________
warmth
of
________
sweater
will
of
course
be
determined
by
the
sort
of
_______
wool
used.
A.
/…the…the
B.
The…a
…/
C.
/…a…the
D.
The…a…the
________
three
of
us—Doris,
my
mother,
and
I—were
people
bred
to
hold
back
emotional
expression
of
________
love,
but
I
did
something
that
startled
both
my
mother
and
me.
/
…/
B.
The…/
C.
A…the
D.
The…the
Section
B
Directions:
After
reading
the
passage
below,
fill
in
each
blank
with
a
proper
word
given
in
the
box.
Each
word
can
only
be
used
once.
Note
that
there
is
one
word
more
than
you
need.
By
2010
the
gaming
industry
had
generated
about
$20
billion
in
revenue.
Today’s
estimates
put
the
value
of
the
global
games
market
at
over
seven
times
that.
Behind
the
dramatic
___42___
is
an
industry
that
has
shifted
away
from
a
console(游戏机)and
title-based
business
to
an
ecosystem
___43___
by
the
expansion
of
digitization
and
socialization
of
entertainment.
It’s
a
transition
that
has
not
only
changed
how
games
are
made
but
has
also
expanded
the
consumer
base
and
___44___
how
users
interact
with
games.
While
YouTube
had
already
tapped
into
consumer
demand
for
games-related
content
through
video
on
demand,
Twitch
provided
an
entire
platform
___45___
to
livestreaming,
particularly
games
livestreaming.
Then
the
interactivity
offered
by
Twitch
gave
way
to
the
arrival
of
superstar
content
creators
and
streamers.
They
effectively
served
as
another
means
for
content
distribution,
and
one
that
let
creators
directly
___46___
with
and
build
their
audience.
Now
many
publishers
are
willing
to
___47___
the
live-streamers,
content
creators
and
ultimately
the
online
distribution
of
games
in
a
way
that
other
entertainment
industries
have
not.
And
that
has
helped
grow
the
e-sports
industry,
which
is
contributing
to
the
longevity
of
games.
Meanwhile,
there
is
an
ever-deepening
___48___
between
gaming
and
popular
culture.
For
example,
Fortnite
stream,
the
most-watched
stream
on
record
in
2018,
was
a
turning
point
for
the
gaming
world
that
encouraged
it
to
merge
with
other
entertainment
industries.
The
truth
is
that
gaming
has
transformed
and
gone
beyond
its
initial
___49___.
Gaming
plays
a
role
of
an
intersection
between
tech,
entertainment,
media
and
now
sports.
All
of
these
factors,
along
with
technological
developments
behind
gaming—which
have
driven
the
exploration
into
___50___
computing,
augmented
reality
as
well
as
virtual
reality
and
brought
about
the
rise
of
mobile
games—mean
that
the
next
games
will
have
differing
success
criteria
that
are
often
___51___
as
the
space
rapidly
evolves.
But
one
thing
is
for
sure:
Gaming
is
bigger
than
ever,
and
it’s
just
at
the
point
of
something
greater.
III.
Reading
Comprehension
Section
A
Directions:
For
each
blank
in
the
following
passage
there
are
four
words
or
phrases
marked
A,
B,
C
and
D.
Fill
in
each
blank
with
the
word
or
phrase
that
best
fits
the
context.
The
notion
of
building
brand
personality
is
promoted
by
Starbucks
as
a
part
of
company
culture
to
embed
meaning
in
their
products
and
thus
attract
more
customers.
Starbucks
literally
changed
the
definition
of
“a
good
cup
of
coffee”.
For
Starbucks,
the
brand
had
three
elements:
coffee,
___52___
and
stores.
Strict
control
over
the
quality
and
processing
of
the
beans
___53___
that
the
coffee
would
be
of
the
highest
possible
quality.
Outstanding
store
personnel
were
recruited
and
trained
in
coffee
knowledge
and
___54___
service.
Store
design,
atmosphere
and
aroma
all
___55___
the“Starbucks
Experience.”
Almost
all
Starbucks
stores
were
corporately
owned
and
controlled.
Starbucks
prided
itself
on
the
“Starbucks
Experience”,
___56___
coffee
to
provide
a
unique
experience
for
its
customers.
___57___
those
traditional
coffee
houses
providing
you
with
the
grab-and-go
service,
Starbucks
provide
you
with
more
than
coffee.
You
get
great
people,
first-rate
music,
a
comfortable
and
upbeat
meeting
place,
and
___58___
advice
on
brewing
excellent
coffee
at
home.
At
home
you’re
part
of
a
family.
At
work
you’re
part
of
a
company.
And
somewhere
in
between
is
a
place
where
you
can
sit
back
and
be
yourself.
That’s
what
a
Starbucks
store
has
been
___59___
to
creating
for
its
customers—a
kind
of
“third
place”
where
they
can
___60___,
reflect,
read,
chat
or
listen.
The
green
Starbucks
logo
is
a
mermaid
that
looks
like
the
end
of
the
double
image
of
the
sea.
It
was
designed
by
Terry
Heckler,
who
got
the
___61___
from
the
wooden
statue
of
the
sea.
Mermaid
logo
also
___62___
original
and
modern
meanings:
her
face
is
very
simple,
but
with
modern
abstract
forms
of
packaging.
Starbucks
embodies
the
American
culture
by
combining
elements
of
the
___63___:
the
visual
warmth,
the
___64___
music,
the
aroma
of
coffee,
and
so
on.
Just
imagine,
through
the
huge
glass
windows,
watching
the
crowded
streets
and
___65___
sipping
a
coffee
flavor.
But
the
___66___
of
Starbucks
is
not
about
the
coffee,
although
it’s
great
coffee.
Coffee
is
only
a
carrier.
Coffee
consumption,
to
a
great
extent,
is
an
emotional
and
cultural
level
of
consumption.
52.
A.
customers
B.
managers
C.
people
D.
shareholders
53.
A.
insured
B.
projected
C.
inferred
D.
ensured
54.
A.
employment
B.
customer
C.
environment
D.
emergency
55.
A.
consisted
of
B.
contributed
to
C.
benefited
from
D.
owed
to
56.
A.
coming
across
B.
making
up
C.
going
beyond
D.
depending
on
57.
A.
With
regard
to
B.
In
addition
to
C.
Compared
with
D.
In
terms
of
58.
A.
general
B.
group
C.
legal
D.
sound
59.
A.
committed
B.
alerted
C.
subjected
D.
required
60.
A.
negotiate
B.
escape
C.
bargain
D.
emerge
61.
A.
imagination
B.
inspiration
C.
aspiration
D.
expectation
62.
A.
conveys
B.
creates
C.
credits
D.
cultivates
63.
A.
brand
B.
logo
C.
possession
D.
experience
64.
A.
depressing
B.
deafening
C.
imposing
D.
healing
65.
A.
arrogantly
B.
leisurely
C.
bitterly
D.
vigorously
66.
A.
mobility
B.
uniqueness
C.
severity
D.
resemblance
Section
B
Directions:
Read
the
following
three
passages.
Each
passage
is
followed
by
several
questions
or
unfinished
statements.
For
each
of
them
there
are
four
choices
marked
A,
B,
C
and
D.
Choose
the
one
that
fits
best
according
to
the
information
given
in
the
passage
you
have
just
read.
A
Sending
messages
into
deep
space
could
be
the
best
way
for
Earthlings
to
find
extraterrestrial
intelligence,
but
it
carries
a
risk:
alerting
unfriendly
aliens
to
our
presence.
Game
theory
may
provide
a
way
to
deal
with
this
situation.
So
far
the
search
for
extraterrestrial
intelligence
(SETI)
has
mostly
been
restricted
to
listening
for
signs
of
technology
elsewhere.
Only
a
few
attempts
have
been
made
to
broadcast
messages
towards
distant
stars.
Many
scientists
are
against
such
“active”
SETI
for
fear
of
revealing
our
presence.
If
all
aliens
feel
the
same
way
then
no
one
will
be
broadcasting,
and
the
chance
of
detecting
each
other
is
limited.
To
weigh
up
the
potential
losses
and
gains,
Harold
de
Vladar
of
the
Institute
of
Science
and
Technology
Austria
in
Klosterneuburg
turned
to
the
prisoner’s
dilemma,
a
game-theory
problem
in
which
two
prisoners
choose
between
admitting
their
shared
crime
and
keeping
quiet,
with
different
sentences
depending
on
what
they
say.
An
individual
prisoner
gets
off
scot-free
if
he
betrays
a
partner
who
remains
silent,
with
the
silent
partner
getting
a
maximum
sentence.
If
they
both
betray
each
other,
each
gets
a
medium
sentence.
By
contrast,
if
both
stay
silent,
both
get
minimum
sentences—the
best
overall
result.
De
Vladar
reasoned
that
the
SETI
dilemma
is
essentially
the
same,
but
reversed.
Mutual
betrayal
for
prisoners
is
equivalent
to
mutual
silence
for
aliens.
And
while
a
selfish
prisoner
stops
keeping
silent,
a
selfish
civilization
is
silent,
waiting
for
someone
else
to
take
the
risk
of
waving
“Over
here!”
at
the
rest
of
the
universe.
This
led
Vladar
to
apply
the
mathematics
of
the
prisoner’s
dilemma
to
SETI.
In
the
classic
version
of
the
prisoner’s
dilemma,
each
selfishly
betrays
the
other.
But
as
we
do
not
know
the
character
of
any
aliens
out
there,
and
as
it
is
difficult
to
put
a
value
on
the
benefits
to
science,
culture
and
technology
of
finding
an
advanced
civilization,
Vladar
varied
the
reward
of
finding
aliens
and
the
cost
of
unfriendly
aliens
finding
us.
The
result
was
a
range
of
best
broadcasting
strategies.
“It’s
not
about
whether
to
do
it
or
not,
but
how
often,”
says
Vladar.
One
interesting
idea
was
that
as
you
increase
the
rewards
placed
on
finding
aliens,
you
can
decrease
the
frequency
of
broadcasts,
while
keeping
the
expected
benefit
to
Earthlings
the
same.
Being
able
to
keep
broadcasts
to
a
minimum
is
good
news,
because
they
come
with
costs—equipping
our
planet
with
transmitters
won’t
come
cheap—and
risk
terrible
disasters,
such
as
interstellar
wars.
67.
According
to
the
passage,
which
of
the
following
can
be
classified
as
“passive”
SETI
A.
Concealing
our
presence
from
aliens.
B.
Listening
for
signs
of
technology
elsewhere.
C.
Broadcasting
to
distant
stars.
D.
Detecting
the
existence
of
aliens.
68.
According
to
Vladar,
______
in
the
SETI
is
equivalent
to
mutual
silence
for
prisoners.
A.
both
civilizations
sending
messages
B.
people
on
the
earth
sending
messages
C.
both
civilizations
keeping
silent
D.
people
on
the
earth
keeping
silent
69.
According
to
the
passage,
which
of
the
following
might
benefit
Earthlings
best
in
the
SETI
A.
Focusing
on
engineering
the
most
sophisticated
transmitters.
B.
Investing
in
arms
in
preparation
for
interstellar
wars.
C.
Sending
signals
to
space
at
wide
intervals.
D.
Decreasing
the
rewards
for
finding
aliens.
70.
Which
of
the
following
best
sums
up
the
passage
A.
Earthlings
are
likely
to
be
attacked
by
extraterrestrial
intelligence.
B.
Scientists
are
looking
for
better
approaches
to
finding
aliens.
C.
Earthlings
should
be
more
active
in
broadcasting
to
aliens.
D.
Decision
to
contact
aliens
is
a
game-theory
dilemma.
B
Progressives
often
support
diversity
mandates
as
a
path
to
equality
and
a
way
to
level
the
playing
field.
But
all
too
often
such
policies
are
an
insincere
form
of
virtue-signaling
that
benefits
only
the
most
privileged
and
does
little
to
help
average
people.
A
pair
of
bills
sponsored
by
Massachusetts
State
Senator
Jason
Lewis
and
Speaker
pro
Tempore
of
the
House
Patricia
Haddad,
to
ensure
“gender
equality”
on
boards
and
commissions,
provide
a
case
in
point.
Haddad
and
Lewis
are
concerned
that
more
than
half
the
state-government
boards
are
less
than
40
percent
female.
In
order
to
ensure
that
elite
women
have
more
such
opportunities,
they
have
proposed
imposing
government
quotas.
If
the
bills
become
law,
state
boards
and
commissions
will
be
required
to
set
aside
50
percent
of
board
seats
for
women
by
2022.
The
bills
are
similar
to
a
measure
recently
adopted
in
California,
which
last
year
became
the
first
state
to
require
gender
quotas
for
private
companies.
In
signing
the
measure,
California
Governor
Jerry
Brown
admitted
that
the
law,
which
expressly
classifies
people
on
the
basis
of
sex,
is
probably
unconstitutional.
The
US
Supreme
Court
frown
on
sex-based
classifications
unless
they
are
designed
to
address
an
“important”
policy
interest.
Because
the
California
law
applies
to
all
boards,
even
where
there
is
no
history
of
prior
discrimination,
courts
are
likely
to
rule
that
the
law
violates
the
constitutional
guarantee
of
“equal
protection”.
But
are
such
government
requirements
even
necessary
Female
participation
on
corporate
boards
may
not
currently
mirror
the
percentage
of
women
in
the
general
population,
but
so
what
The
number
of
women
on
corporate
boards
has
been
steadily
increasing
without
government
interference.
According
to
a
study
by
Catalyst,
between
2010
and
2015
the
share
of
women
on
the
boards
of
global
corporations
increased
by
54
percent.
Requiring
companies
to
make
gender
the
primary
qualification
for
board
membership
will
inevitably
lead
to
less
experienced
private
sector
boards.
That
is
exactly
what
happened
when
Norway
adopted
a
nationwide
corporate
gender
quota.
Writing
in
The
New
Republic,
Alice
Lee
notes
that
increasing
the
number
of
opportunities
for
board
membership
without
increasing
the
pool
of
qualified
women
to
serve
on
such
boards
has
led
to
a
“golden
skirt”
phenomenon,
where
the
same
elite
women
scoop
up
multiple
seats
on
a
variety
of
boards.
Next
time
somebody
pushes
corporate
quotas
as
a
way
to
promote
gender
equity,
remember
that
such
policies
are
largely
self-serving
measures
that
make
their
sponsors
feel
good
but
do
little
to
help
average
women.
71.
The
author
believes
that
the
bills
sponsored
by
Lewis
and
Haddad
will
______.
A.
help
little
to
reduce
gender
bias
B.
pose
a
threat
to
the
state
government
C.
raise
women’s
position
in
politics
D.
greatly
broaden
career
options
72.
Which
of
the
following
is
TRUE
of
the
California
measure
A.
It
has
irritated
private
business
owners.
B.
It
is
welcomed
by
the
Supreme
Court.
C.
It
may
go
against
the
Constitution.
D.
It
will
settle
the
prior
controversies.
73.
Norway’s
adoption
of
a
nationwide
corporate
gender
quota
has
led
to
______.
A.
the
underestimation
of
elite
women’s
role
B.
the
objection
to
female
participation
on
boards
C.
the
entry
of
unqualified
candidates
into
the
board
D.
the
growing
tension
between
labor
and
management
74.
Which
of
the
following
can
be
inferred
from
the
text
A.
Women’s
need
in
employment
should
be
considered.
B.
Feasibility
should
be
a
prime
concern
in
policymaking.
C.
Everyone
should
try
hard
to
promote
social
justice.
D.
Major
social
issues
should
be
the
focus
of
legislation
Section
C
Directions:
Read
the
following
passage.
Fill
in
each
blank
with
a
proper
sentence
given
below.
Each
sentence
can
be
used
only
once.
Note
that
there
are
two
more
sentences
than
you
need.
A.
Uniform
has
to
be
seen
as
something
that
is
earned.
B.
School
uniform
is
also
a
great
tool
to
prevent
bullying.
C.
Some
students
complain
that
school
uniform
is
monotonous.
D.
In
my
experience,
uniform
helps
schools
maintain
authority.
E.
However,
a
school
should
not
rely
heavily
on
uniform
regulation.
F.
Learning
to
fit
in
is
one
of
the
things
being
at
school
teaches
our
children.
To
Wear
or
Not
to
Wear
After
a
strict
head
teacher
in
the
U.K.
sent
80
students
home
for
uniform
violations,
The
Guardian
held
a
discussion
about
whether
wearing
school
uniforms
makes
a
difference.
School
uniform
is
very
important.
It
does
improve
my
concentration,
because
it
reminds
me
that
I’m
at
school
to
learn.
But
I’m
not
sure
if
that’s
because
I’m
used
to
wearing
uniform
and
associate
my
own
clothes
with
free
time.
_____75_____
If
everyone
is
wearing
the
same
clothes,
it’s
impossible
to
make
fun
of
other
people’s
clothing.
I
don’t
think
this
ignores
a
child’s
need
to
express
themselves.
--David
Hershman,
a
student
at
Stafford
grammar
school
_____76_____
Students
should
start
school
with
no
uniform.
As
they
progress
through
the
school,
they
start
wearing
it.
I
always
think
children
need
to
be
proud
of
their
school,
and
uniform
is
important
for
that.
So,
make
them
deserve
it!
If
they
let
the
school
down,
they
shouldn’t
be
allowed
to
wear
it.
Look
at
the
Marines
—
they
can’t
wait
to
get
that
beret.
--Tim
Francis,
a
former
teacher
I
have
had
experience
of
teaching
in
both
uniform
and
non-uniform
schools.
I
can
definitely
see
the
benefits
of
students
wearing
uniform.
Uniform
can
be
important
in
creating
a
sense
of
school
identity
and
community.
It
is
often
a
source
of
collective
pride
for
students.
_____77_____Teaching
students
how
to
express
themselves
with
confidence,
rather
than
the
length
of
their
tie,
should
be
the
priority.
--Enayah
Byramjee,
an
educational
development
director
In
a
perfect
world,
school
uniform
would
not
exist.
Children
would
express
their
personalities
through
their
clothes
at
school,
just
as
they
do
at
home.
Schools
wouldn’t
impress
on
pupils
the
need
to
wear
skirts
to
a
certain
length.
We
don’t
live
in
a
perfect
world,
however.
_____78_____
My
house
is
often
filled
with
uniform-wearing
girls.
The
best
thing
about
uniform,
for
me
as
a
parent,
is
the
simplicity.
--Joanna
Moorhead,
a
mother
of
four
IV.
Productive
Grammar
Directions:
After
reading
the
passage
below,
fill
in
the
blanks
to
make
the
passage
coherent
and
grammatically
correct.
For
the
blanks
with
a
given
word,
fill
in
each
blank
with
the
proper
form
of
the
given
word;
for
the
other
blanks,
use
one
word
that
best
fits
each
blank.
Every
Christmas
season
for
the
last
16
years,
Tom
Carmody
has
dressed
as
Santa
Claus
and
“ho,
ho,
ho-ed”
his
way
into
the
hearts
of countless
children at
malls
and
schools
across
the
country.
This
year,
however,
he
sits
behind
a
computer
screen
in
Westminster,
Colorado,
___79___
he
lives—in
his
glorious
red
and
white
outfit
and
sensational
beard—___80___
(wait)
for
his
next
“Meet
With
Santa”
Zoom
session
to
begin.
“It’s
maintaining
magic,”
Carmody
said.
“Santa
is
a
magical,
magical
character
and
he
is
built
around
magic.
It’s
up
to
us
as
Santas
___81___
(recreate)
that
magic
without
that
physical
touch.
So,
yes,
we’re
thinking
___82___
the
box
this
year.”
Unlike
previous
years,
when
they
welcomed
children
into
their
laps,
___83___
(listen)
to
them
rattle
off
their
wish
lists,
and
posed
for
photographs,
Santas
have
had
to
maintain
a
safe
distance
from
kids
to
prevent
the
spread
of
coronavirus.
It
hasn’t
been
easy.
“Is
meeting
them
on
Zoom
the
same
as
holding
a
child
on
your
lap ”
“No,”
Carmody
said.
“The
personal
touch
is
very
much
missed
by
the
children
and
Santa.
There’s
a
connection
when
you
have
that
touch,
but
you
can
create
it
virtually
if
you
think
about
it
from
a
child’s
perspective,”
he
added.
“And
it’s
necessary,
because
many
Santas
are
very
vulnerable
to
the
virus
and
they
want
to
live.
We
want
to
protect
ourselves,
but
we
also
want
to
protect
these
children
and
bring
them
that
special
connection.”
More
than 17
million
Americans have
contracted
the
coronavirus,
and
over
310,000
have
died
from
Covid-19.
Families
in
every
state
have
lost
their
loved
___84___,
and
nearly
everyone
has
been
impacted
by
stay-at-home
orders,
school
closures
or
business
shutdowns.
___85___
vaccines
are
being
developed
and
administered,
the
pandemic
is
still
a
long
way
from
being
controlled.
With
such
a
backdrop, traditional
Christmas
cheer is
understandably
muted
this
year.
But
Santas
___86___
(commit)
to
keeping
the
holiday
spirit
alive.
Across
the
country,
they’re
finding
innovative
ways
to
wish
children
and
adults
___87___
very
Merry
Christmas.
Socially
___88___
(distance)
Santa
is
the
best
thing
to
happen
to
Christmas.
V.
Translation
Directions:
Translate
the
following
sentences
into
English,
using
the
words
given
in
the
brackets.
89.
应该鼓励人们勿忘国耻,振兴中华。(revive)
90.
小王一到家就换上了拖鞋,情不自禁地开始做家务。(No
sooner)
91.
每个班级颇具创意的表演给运动会平添了一丝新鲜感。(add...to...)
92.
正是因为这些独特的品质才让你不会埋没于人群中,让你光芒四射。(It)
93.
网上买菜小程序服务周到,价格实惠,难怪广受好评。(wonder)
VI.
Guided
Writing
Directions:
Write
an
English
composition
in
approximately
200
words
according
to
the
instructions
given
below
in
Chinese.
今年“内卷”一词突然成了爆款流行语。网上对于它的定义是由于资源有限,竞争者必须通过低水平的重复来脱颖而出。当代社会内卷现象的确存在,甚至这种现象也蔓延到了校园。请基于你对内卷的认识,写一篇200字左右的文章。内容需包括:
1.
分析社会中内卷现象形成的原因。
2.
面对学业上的内卷我们出路何在?
复旦大学附属中学2020学年第一学期
高二年级英语期末考试答案
I.
Listening
Comprehension(25分)
1—5
B
C
B
A
D
6—10
A
B
B
B
B
11—13
B
C
D
14—16
D
C
C
17—20
A
B
C
B
II.
Grammar
and
Vocabulary(31分)
Section
A
21—25
C
A
B
C
B
26—30
A
C
A
A
A
31—35
B
D
A
C
B
36—41
C
A
A
C
B
B
Section
B
42—51
H
E
I
C
G
F
B
D
A
K
III.
Reading
Comprehension(39分)
Section
A
52—66
C
D
B
B
C
C
D
A
B
B
A
D
D
B
B
Section
B
67—78
B
A
C
D
A
C
C
B
B
A
E
F
IV.
Productive
Grammar(10分)
79.
where
80.
waiting
81.
to
recreate
82.
outside
83.
listened
84.
ones
85.
While/Though/Although
86.
are
committed
87.
a
88.
distanced
V.
Translation(3+4+4+4+5=20分,错一点扣1分)
89.
应该鼓励人们勿忘国耻,振兴中华。(revive)
People
should
be
encouraged
to
remember
the
national
shame
and
revive
China.
90.
小王一到家就换上了拖鞋,情不自禁地开始做家务。(No
sooner)
No
sooner
had
Xiao
Wang
come
home
than
he
changed
into/put
on
his
slippers
and
couldn't
help
but
do
house
chores/housework.
91.
每个班级颇具创意的表演给运动会平添了一丝新鲜感。(add...to...)
The
creative
performance
by/of
every
class
has
added
(a
sense
of)
freshness
to
the
sports
meet/meeting.
92.
正是因为这些独特的品质才让你不会埋没于人群中,让你光芒四射。(It)
It is these unique qualities/traits/characteristics that make you stand out in a
crowd and shine brightly.
93.
网上买菜小程序服务周到,价格实惠,难怪广受好评。(wonder)
Online
grocery
apps/applications
boast/feature/have/are
characterized
by
thoughtful/considerate
services,
reasonable/low
prices.
No
wonder
many
people
speak
highly
of
them/they
have
received
many
good
comments.
VI.
Guided
Writing(25分)
略
Transcript
Listening
Comprehension
Section
A
1.
M:
Excuse
me,
do
you
know
when
the
train
will
arrive
It
is
already
6:15.
W:
I
am
sorry.
It
is
behind
schedule.
I
am
afraid
you
have
to
wait
for
another
hour.
Q:
When
will
the
train
probably
arrive
2:
M:
I
think
we
should
go
over
this
letter
together
one
more
time.
W:
Another
time
I
can
recite
it
already.
Q:
What
does
the
man
want
to
do
with
the
letter
3.
W:
Did
you
watch
the
Super
Bowl
yesterday
M:
I
wouldn’t
miss
it
for
anything.
Q:
What
does
the
man
mean
4.
W:
Mr.
White,
here
is
the
text
book
you
asked
us
to
buy,
right
M:
I
am
afraid
you
have
wasted
your
money.
This
is
not
the
latest
edition.
Q:
What
did
the
girl
do
5.
W:
I
often
mistake
Peterson
for
Jack.
How
can
you
tell
them
apart
M:
They
are
so
alike
that
even
their
mother
sometimes
felt
confused
when
they
were
young.
Q:
What
is
the
possible
relationship
between
Peterson
and
Jack
6.
W:
What
a
shame
about
your
accident!
What
a
way
to
end
your
holiday!
M:
Yes.
It
was
bad
luck.
I
should
have
been
more
careful.
Q:
What
are
they
talking
about
7.
M:
Have
you
got
everything
needed
W:
I
am
still
looking
for
some
flour.
It
is
required
in
the
recipe.
Q:
Where
are
the
couple
8.
W:
I’ve
been
having
a
pain
in
my
stomach.
It
has
been
so
bad
that
I
have
been
off
work
for
two
weeks.
M:
I
see.
Let
me
check
it
first.
Q:
What
is
the
man
9.
W:
Oh
dear,
none
of
my
clothes
fit
me
well
now.
M:
Take
it
easy.
Nothing
is
better
than
expecting
a
new
family
member.
Q:
What
can
we
learn
from
the
conversation
10.
W:
I
still
can’t
get
over
the
horrible
scene
in
the
movie.
It
is
always
haunting
me
in
the
dream.
M:
So
next
time
you
walk
into
a
theatre,
make
sure
you
know
what
you
are
going
to
see
beforehand.
Q:
What
can
we
learn
from
the
conversation
Section
B
Question
11
through
13
are
based
on
the
following
passage.
Inspired
by
statistics
blaming
human
error
for
most
accidents,
Japanese
car
makers
are
designing
“intelligent”
cars
that
can
almost
drive
themselves
on
the
high
way.
The
systems
are
designed
to
reduce
human
tiredness
and
the
mistakes
that
often
result.
This
kind
of
support
is
what
drivers
need
most
in
a
country
with
some
of
the
most
crowded
roads
in
the
world.
That
is
why
it
should
not
be
surprising
that
Japan
is
leading
the
race
to
make
cars
smarter.
To
provide
a
safer
ride,
Japanese
automakers
are
turning
to
technologies
like
laser
radar
and
machine
vision
to
replace
tired
eyes
and
wandering
minds.
The
system
tracks
the
car
ahead,
and
slows
down
or
speeds
up
the
car
automatically
to
keep
a
safer
distance
in
highway
traffic.
An
even
smarter
system
is
coming
from
Honda.
Called
Honda
Intelligent
Driver
Support,
it
“sees”
the
road
through
a
tiny
camera
on
the
windshield
and
helps
steer
the
car
down
the
middle
of
a
lane.
A
computer
picks
out
lines
on
the
highway
surface
and
touches
the
car’s
steering
wheel
in
the
right
direction.
Honda
got
approval
in
March
to
start
testing
the
system
on
the
highway
and
says
it
will
arrive
in
showrooms
in
the
near
future.
Questions:
11.
Why
is
Japan
taking
the
lead
in
making
cars
smarter
12.
Which
is
not
the
feature
of
the
smarter
system
developed
by
Honda
13.
What
is
the
main
idea
of
the
passage
Question
14
through
16
are
based
on
the
following
passage.
Sports
account
for
a
growing
amount
of
income
made
on
the
sales
of
commercial
time
by
television
companies.
Many
television
companies
have
used
sports
to
attract
viewers
from
particular
sections
of
the
general
public,
and
then
they
have
sold
audiences
to
advertisers.
An
attraction
of
sport
programs
for
the
major
U.S.
media
companies
is
that
events
are
often
held
on
Saturday
and
Sunday
afternoons.
These
are
the
slowest
time
periods
of
the
week
for
general
television
viewing.
Sport
events
are
the
most
popular
weekend
programs,
especially
among
male
viewers
who
may
not
watch
much
television
at
other
times
during
the
week.
This
means
the
television
networks
are
able
to
sell
advertising
time
at
relatively
high
prices
during
what
normally
would
be
dead
time
for
programming.
The
people
in
the
advertising
departments
of
major
corporations
realize
that
sports
attract
male
viewers.
They
also
realize
that
most
business
travelers
are
men
and
that
many
men
make
family
decisions
on
the
purchases
of
computers,
cars
and
life
insurance.
Golf
and
tennis
are
special
cases
for
television
programming.
These
sports
attract
few
viewers,
and
the
ratings
are
unusually
low.
However,
the
audience
for
these
sports
is
attractive
to
certain
advertisers.
It
is
made
up
of
people
from
the
highest
income
groups
in
the
United
States,
including
many
lawyers
and
business
managers.
This
is
why
television
reporting
of
golf
and
tennis
is
sponsored
by
companies
selling
high-priced
cars,
business
and
personal
computer,
and
holiday
trips.
With
such
viewers,
these
programs
don’t
need
high
ratings
to
stay
on
the
air.
Questions:
14.
Which
of
the
following
statements
about
weekend
sport
programs
is
true
15.
Why
are
the
ratings
not
important
for
golf
and
tennis
programs
16.
What
is
the
passage
mainly
about
Section
C
Questions
17
and
18
are
based
on
the
following
conversation.
W:
Hello,
this
is
T&N
Telephone
Company.
What
can
I
do
for
you
M:
Is
this
the
complaint
department
W:
Yes.
Go
ahead
please.
M:
Good,
I
want
to
complain
about
the
bill
last
month.
I
couldn’t
believe
my
eyes
when
I
received
the
bill.
The
figures
on
the
bill
were
beyond
imagination.
Have
the
rates
gone
up
I
think
there
might
be
a
mistake.
W:
Wait
a
minute,
please.
Could
you
tell
me
your
phone
number
please
So
that
I
can
check
it
for
you.
M:
It
is
66-704-032.
W:
Hold
on,
please.
[A
short
pause]
Well,
it
seems
that
the
billing
is
right.
You
seemed
to
have
made
a
phone
call
to
a
foreign
country
last
month.
M:
What
is
the
exact
number
then
I
don’t
think
I
have
made
a
long-distance
call.
W:
The
country
code
is
00351.
I
think
that
is
Portugal.
M:
Oh,
then
it
must
have
been
my
wife
who
called
her
cousin
there.
Thank
you
for
your
help.
I’ll
check
it
out
myself.
Thank
you
very
much
and
I
am
sorry
for
bothering
you.
W:
It
is
OK.
Thank
you
for
calling.
Questions:
17.
Why
did
the
man
make
the
complaint
18.
Who
made
the
call
to
a
foreign
country
last
month
Questions
19
and
20
are
based
on
the
following
conversation.
M:
Hi,
Margret.
I
am
surprised
to
see
you
here.
I
thought
you
were
away
in
Africa
on
holiday.
W:
Yes,
I
planned
to.
But
unfortunately,
my
house
caught
fire
last
weekend.
So
I
had
to
stay
here.
M:
I
am
sorry
to
hear
that.
Did
you
buy
property
insurance
W:
Luckily,
I
did.
But
I
still
have
to
contact
the
insurance
company
and
fill
in
a
lot
of
forms.
M:
How
did
the
accident
happen
Did
you
find
out
the
cause
of
it
W:
A
firecracker
flew
into
my
yard
and
set
the
grass
on
fire.
I
was
out
in
the
supermarket
doing
some
shopping,
otherwise
I
might
have
stopped
this
tragedy.
M:
What
about
your
holiday
W:
Oh,
I
called
the
airline
company
and
had
my
flight
rescheduled.
I
will
start
my
journey
next
month.
M:
I
hope
everything
will
be
settled
then.
Questions:
19.
Which
of
the
following
is
not
the
cause
of
the
accident
20.
What
did
the
woman
do
after
the
tragedy
happened
10