洛阳一高
2020—2021
学年下学期高一第一次月考
英语试卷
姓名:
班级:
第一部分
听力(共两节,满分
30
分)
第一节(共
5
小题;每小题
1.5
分,满分
7.5
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。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。
(
)1.
How
much
did
the
woman
pay
for
the
skirt?
A.
$30.
B.
$40.
C.
$50.
(
)2.
What
are
the
speakers
probably
talking
about?
A.
A
footballer.
B.
An
interview.
C.
A
sport.
(
)3.
Where
did
the
man
go
on
holiday?
A.
On
the
beach.
B.
In
the
woods.
C.
In
the
mountains.
(
)4.
What
does
the
woman
want
to
buy
for
her
brother?
A.
A
shirt.
B.
A
tie.
C.
A
jacket.
(
)5.
Why
will
the
woman
call
Linda?
A.
To
bake
a
cake.
B.
To
get
some
decorations.
C.
To
borrow
some
CDs.
第二节(共15小题;每小题1.5
分,满分22.5
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。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。
(
)6.Why
will
the
woman
request
a
vacation?
A.
To
take
a
trip
abroad.
B.
To
attend
a
festival.
C.
To
relax
after
the
training.
(
)7.
How
long
will
the
man
stay
in
Paris?
A.
For
a
week.
B.
For
a
month.
C.
For
a
year.
听第7
段材料,回答第8
至10
题。
(
)8.
What
does
the
man
think
Brian
can
help
do?
A.
Move
the
furniture.
B.
Paint
country
flags.
C.
Make
a
website.
(
)9.
Who
is
good
at
public
speaking?
A.
Mary.
B.
Dick.
C.
Steve.
(
)10.
What
can
we
know
about
Jane?
A.
She
is
good
at
singing.
B.
She
is
a
great
painter.
C.
She
does
well
in
computers.
听第8段材料,回答第11至13
题。
(
)11.
What
is
Arrow
Agency?
A.
An
electronics
company.
B.
An
advertising
company.
C.
An
IT
company.
(
)12.
What
is
the
woman’s
job?
A.
Selling
products.
B.
Designing
webs.
C.
Writing
ads.
(
)13.
What’s
the
probable
relationship
between
the
speakers?
A.
Friends.
B.
Workmates.
C.
Strangers.
(
8
)
听第9
段材料,回答第14至16题。
(
)14.
How
did
the
woman
know
the
result
of
the
competition?
A.
By
letter.
B.
By
phone.
C.
By
email.
(
)15.
When
did
the
woman
begin
to
broadcast
the
weather?
A.
At
3:00.
B.
At
4:00.
C.
At
5:00.
(
)16.
What
does
the
woman
want
to
be
in
the
future?
A.
A
TV
presenter.
B.
A
journalist.
C.
A
teacher.
听第10段材料,回答第17至20题。
(
)17.
What
did
the
speaker
learn
at
university?
A.
Photography.
B.
History.
C.
Geography.
(
)18.
What
topic
did
the
speaker
choose
on
his
final-year
degree
course?
A.
Street
markets.
B.
Public
transport.
C.
Green
areas.
(
)19.
Who
did
the
speaker
work
for
in
the
USA?
A.
A
bookstore.
B.
A
newspaper.
C.
A
magazine.
(
)20.
How
did
the
speaker
explore
his
own
country?
A.
By
car.
B.
By
motorbike.
C.
By
train.
第二部分
阅读理解(共两节,满分40分)
第一节(共15小题;每小题2分,满分30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
Thompson
Strawberry
Farm
The
Thompson
family
has
been
growing
strawberries
in
Kenosha
County
for
over
70
years.
We
have
been
primarily
a
“Pick-Your-Own”
farm
for
50
years.
Scott
Thompson
is
the
4th
generation
of
Thompson
to
grow
strawberries.
During
the
peak
of
the
“Pick-Your-Own”,
our
family
grew
150
acres
of
strawberries.
Our
farm
is
located
just
east
of
The
Club
at
Strawberry
Creek
Golf
Course.
We
currently
farm
about
100
acres
and
will
be
picking
20
acres
of
strawberries
this
year.
Although
we
have
downsized,
we
still
have
plenty
of
strawberries
to
meet
the
demand.
The
season
usually
starts
about
mid-June
and
usually
we
pick
at
least
through
July
4th.
We
are
more
than
just
strawberries
though.
We
also
have
raspberries,
pumpkins
and
other
vegetables!
Always
check
“Today
on
the
Farm”
the
day
you
come
to
the
farm.
Weather
and
crowds
can
change
the
quantity
of
berries
we
have
very
quickly.
Come
out
and
pick
your
own
strawberries!
When
you
arrive
at
the
farm,
you
will
follow
the
signs
to
the
pre-picked
strawberry
stand.
An
employee
will
direct
you,
from
the
stand
to
the
strawberry
field,
where
you
can
park.
The
field
will
always
have
employees
available
to
answer
questions,
and
they
are
located
by
the
large
trailer(
拖
车).We
supply
the
baskets
for
you
to
pick
the
berries
and
take
them
home
in.
When
you
are
done
picking,
you
will
move
to
the
checkout
stand
to
pay
for
the
baskets
that
you
have
picked.
Dates&
hours
of
operation:
Mid-June--Early
July
Monday--Friday
8:
00
am-6:
00
pm
Saturday--Sunday
8:
00
am-4:
00
pm
Prices:
$14
per
basket
Pick
6
baskets
and
only
pay
for
5
Get
one
dollar
off
when
you
reuse
our
baskets
21.
What
do
we
know
about
Scott
Thompson's
farm?
A.
There
are
a
variety
of
supplies
on
the
farm.
B.
There
are
150
acres
of
strawberries
this
year.
C.
It
is
open
to
the
public
for
two
whole
months.
D.
It
became
“Pick-Your-Own”
farm
70
years
ago.
22.
Where
are
you
supposed
to
park
your
vehicle?
A.
The
pre-picked
strawberry
stand.
B.
The
entrance
of
the
farm.
C.
The
strawberry
field
D.
The
checkout
stand.
23.
How
much
should
you
pay
for
6
baskets
of
strawberries
with
your
reused
baskets?
A.$69.
B.$70.
C.$64.
D.$65.
B
Growing
up
in
rural
Alabama,
Lisa
Jones
often
helped
her
parents
with
repairs
around
their
house.
Though
her
memories
of
days
spent
repairing
walls
and
replacing
handrails(扶手)
are
special,
they
don't
end
up
with
picture-perfect
makeove(r
翻新).“My
dad
was
the
ultimate
handyman,
but
he
was
60
when
I
was
born,
already
a
senior,”says
Lisa,
“
and
some
projects
were
too
hard
for
him
and
my
mom
while
others
were
just
too
costly.”Then
the
repairs
went
undone.
“I
know
what
it
feels
like
to
live
in
such
a
house.”
Today
Lisa
lives
in
Atlanta,
where
an
increasing
number
of
elderly
homeowners
are
in
the
same
situation.
As
executive
director
of
the
nonprofit
HouseProud
Atlanta,
she's
now
fully
equipped
to
help
them
solve
it.
Billions
of
dollars
in
building
development
have
caused
property
values
in
some
areas,
and
tax
bills,to
skyrocket.
“Folks
who
have
lived
in
their
homes
for
decades
can'
t
save
enough
money
to
maintain
them,”
Lisa,
43,
explains.
“It's
a
scary
time
for
those
who
want
to
stay
in
the
place
they
love.”
HouseProud
Atlanta
makes
that
possible.
“We
help
them
be
a
part
of
the
changes
in
their
neighborhood,
not
pushed
out
by
them.”
Since
2004,
HouseProud
Atlanta
has
served
more
than
1,000
clients.
It's
no
surprise
that
many
of
them
have
become
extended
family
to
the
mom
of
three
boys
----her
middle
son,
Khalil,
7,
is
even
named
after
a
beloved
client's
favorite
poet.
“Lisa's
like
a
daughter
to
me,”
says
Tinnie
Baugh,
a
63-year-old
woman
whose
hot
water
had
been
out
for
months
when
she
heard
about
HouseProud
Atlanta.
“Lisa
sent
people
to
take
care
of
the
pipes,
and
they've
painted
my
house
and
still
help
me
out
when
I
need
it.”
It's
a
role
that
Lisa
has
been
comfortable
with
from
the
time
she
was
playing
apprentice(学徒)to
her
dad.
“These
seniors
just
need
someone
to
show
them
that
everything
can
be
better
if
they
have
support,”
she
says.
24.
What
can
be
learned
about
Lisa's
family?
A.
They
made
living
by
selling
houses.
B.
They
lived
in
a
self-built
house
in
Atlanta.
C.
They
used
to
repair
their
house
on
their
own.
D.
They
had
their
house
painted
from
time
to
time.
25.
What
does
the
underlined
word
"that"
in
paragraph
3
refer
to?
A.
Paying
tax
bills.
B.
Living
a
life
of
ease.
C.
Saving
enough
money.
D.
Getting
free
houses
to
live
in.
26.
What
is
expressed
in
Tinnie
Baugh's
words?
A.
Sympathy.
B.
Appreciation.
C.
Curiosity.
D.
Disappointment.
27.
What
can
we
learn
from
Lisa'
s
story?
A.
Love
makes
the
world
go
around.
B.
Learning
from
the
elderly
is
necessary.
C.
Helping
others
is
easier
said
than
done.
D.
A
winner
is
one
with
a
great
effort
of
will.
C
Katherine
Rooks
remembers
when
she
first
learned
that
a
punctuation
mark(
标点符号)
could
be
so
powerful.
The
Denver-based
writer
had
sent
her
high
school-aged
son
a
text
message—coming
home
from
school.
“I
could
tell
from
his
response
that
he
was
offended(冒犯)
all
of
sudden.
And
when
he
came
home,
he
walked
in
the
door,
came
over
and
said,‘
What
did
you
mean
by
this?'”Rooks
was
confused.
How
could
a
simple
text
message
send
confusion?
“And
so
we
looked
at
the
text
together
and
I
said.‘Well,
I
meant,
see
you
later,
or
something.
I
don’t
remember
exactly
what
it
said
.’And
he
said
,‘But
you
ended
with
a
period(
句号)!
I
thought
you
were
really
angry!’”Rooks
wasn't
angry,
and
she
explained
to
her
son
that
periods
are
how
you
end
a
sentence.
But
in
text
messaging
---
at
least
for
younger
adults
---periods
do
more
than
just
end
a
sentence:
they
also
can
set
tone.
Gretchen
McCulloch,
linguist(
语
言
学
家
)
said
that
when
it
comes
to
text
messaging,
the
period
has
lost
its
original
purpose
because
rather
than
needing
a
symbol
to
indicate
the
end
of
a
sentence,
you
can
simply
hit
send
at
the
end
of
your
message.
That
doesn't
mean
the
period
has
lost
all
purposes
in
text
messaging.
Now
it
can
be
used
to
indicate
the
gravity
of
a
situation
or
a
sense
of
finality(终结).
However,
caution
is
needed,
said
McCulloch,
noting
that
problems
can
start
to
arise
when
you
combine
a
period
with
a
positive
emotion,
such
as
“Sure.”or“Sounds
good.”“Now
you've
got
positive
words
and
serious
punctuation
and
the
clash
between
them
is
what
creates
that
sense
of
passive-aggression(消极对抗),”
said
McCulloch.
Our
language
has
developed,
and
“what
we
have
done
with
our
incredible
linguistic
genius
is
finding
ways
to
insert
some
kind
of
emotional,
interpersonal
information
into
texting,
”said
Celia
Klin,
a
psychology
professor
at
Binghamton
University.
“And
what
we
have
is
things
like
periods,
emoticons
and
other
kinds
of
punctuation.
So
people
have
repurposed
the
period
to
mean
something
else.”And
that
something
else
is
passive-aggression.
28.
What
left
Rooks
at
a
loss?
A.
Her
son's
untimely
coming
home
B.
Her
son's
heavy
reliance
on
text
messages.
C.
Her
son's
inability
to
adapt
to
high
school
life.
D.
Her
son's
unexpected
reaction
to
the
message
29.
What
did
the
son
think
of
the
period?
A.
It
aroused
his
anger.
B.
It
meant
seriousness
to
him.
C.
It
brought
embarrassment
to
him.
D.
It
appeared
in
an
improper
position.
30.
What
does
the
underlined
word“clash”
in
paragraph
mean?
A.
interval
B.
exchange
C.
mismatch
D.
association.
31.
Which
of
the
following
can
be
the
best
title
for
the
text?
A.
The
basic
rules
of
punctuation
B.
Passive-aggression
from
punctuation
C.
debate
about
language
development
D.
Parents'
trouble
with
passive-aggression
D
It’s
3
o’clock
and
you’ve
been
hard
at
work.
As
you
sit
at
your
desk,
a
strong
desire
for
chocolate
overcomes
you.
You
try
to
busy
yourself
to
make
it
go
away.
But
it
doesn’t.
Here
is
another
situation.
Perhaps
you
are
not
feeling
well.
The
only
thing
you
want
to
eat
is
a
big
bowl
of
chicken
soup,
like
your
mum
used
to
make
when
you
were
sick
as
a
child.
Food
cravings(渴望)are
a
strong
desire
for
a
specific
type
of
food.
And
they
are
normal.
Scientists
at
the
website
How
Stuff
Works
compare
hunger
and
cravings
this
way.
Hunger
is
a
fairly
simple
connection
between
the
stomach
and
the
brain.
They
even
call
it
simply
“stomach
hunger”.
When
our
stomachs
burn
up
all
of
the
food
we
have
eaten,
a
hormone
(
激
素
)
sends
a
message
to
one
part
of
the
brain
for
more
food,
which
regulates
our
most
basic
body
functions
such
as
thirst,
hunger
and
sleep.
The
brain
then
produces
a
chemical
to
start
the
appetite
and
you
eat.
Hunger
is
a
function
of
survival.
A
craving
is
more
complex.
It
activates
brain
areas
related
to
emotion,memory
and
reward.
These
are
the
same
areas
of
the
brain
activated
during
drug-craving
studies.
Because
of
this,
some
scientists
call
food
cravings
“mind
hunger”.
People
often
crave
foods
that
are
high
in
fat
and
sugar.
Foods
that
are
high
in
fat
or
high
in
sugar
produce
chemicals
in
the
brain.
These
chemicals
give
us
feelings
of
pleasure.
In
a
2007
study,
researchers
at
Cambridge
University
found
that
dieting
or
restricted
eating
generally
increases
the
possibility
of
food
cravings.
So,
the
more
you
deny
yourself
a
food
that
you
want,
the
more
you
may
crave
it.
However,
fasting
(禁食)
is
a
bit
different.
They
found
that
eating
no
food
at
all
for
a
short
period
of
time
lessened
food
cravings.
So,
the
next
time
you
crave
something
very
specific,
know
that
your
brain
may
be
more
to
blame
than
your
stomach.
32.
What
is
the
function
of
the
first
paragraph?
A.
To
deepen
the
understanding
of
hunger.
B.
To
lead
to
the
topic
of
the
whole
passage.
C.
To
report
the
discovery
of
craving
study.
D.
To
remind
readers
of
their
own
special
food.
33.
What
do
we
learn
about
food
cravings?
A.
It
means
the
stomach
functions
B.
It
ensures
a
person
survives
hunger.
C.
It
shows
food
is
linked
to
feelings.
D.
It
proves
the
brain
decides
your
appetite.
34.
What’s
the
likely
result
of
dieting?
A.
The
increase
of
food
desire.
B.
The
decrease
of
chemicals.
C.
The
refusal
of
fat
and
sugar.
D.
The
disappearance
of
appetite.
35.
What
does
the
passage
mainly
discuss?
A.
The
findings
of
food
cravings.
B.
What
hunger
is
all
about.
C.
The
functions
of
brain
areas.
D.
What
dieting
may
bring
us.
第二节(共
5
小题,每小题
2
分,共
10
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
选项。
The
Lake
on
Top
of
a
Mountain
Imagine
a
lake
as
blue
as
the
summer
sky,
surrounded
by
thousands
of
pine
trees
and
towering
mountains.
36
,but
Lake
Tahoe
is
a
real
place
in
the
Sierra
Nevada
Mountains,
along
the
border
of
California
and
Nevada.
People
come
during
every
season
to
enjoy
Lake
Tahoe.
It
is
the
perfect
spot
for
camping,
boating,
fishing,
biking,
and
hiking.
37
.Most
of
the
small
towns
surrounding
Lake
Tahoe
have
lodge(集会处)
where
families
can
go
to
ski
or
snowboard.
These
holiday
destinations
are
much
more
fun
to
stay
at
than
the
ones
in
other
parts
of
the
country.
38,
but
the
area
was
popular
long
before
California
and
Nevada
were
even
states.
Native
Americans
from
the
Washoe
tribe(部落)
traveled
through
the
mountains
and
spent
their
summers
at
Lake
Tahoe.
In
fact,
the
name
Tahoe
comes
from
a
Washoe
and
meaning
“big
water”.
The
Washoe
were
expert
hunters
who
used
the
land
and
water
for
their
food
supply.
39
.The
best
one
is
about
very
large
birdlike
monster(怪物)
that
lived
in
the
middle
of
the
lake
and
ate
people!
While
people
now
use
Lake
Tahoe
mostly
for
fun
rather
than
survival,
it
is
still
important
to
keep
the
water
and
land
clean.
California
and
Nevada
work
together
to
make
sure
these
natural
resources
are
used
wisely.
40
.There
would
be
no
place
as
beautiful
or
fun
for
a
vacation
as
Lake
Tahoe.
A.
Few
people
know
this
place
B.
It
sounds
like
something
from
a
storybook
C.
They
even
created
many
tales
about
the
lake
D.
Thousands
of
people
visit
Lake
Tahoe
each
year
E.
However,
Lake
Tahoe
is
best
known
for
its
snow
sports
F.
They
have
excellent
hunting
skills
and
never
farm
the
land
G.
It
would
be
terrible
if
the
lake
and
mountains
became
severely
polluted
第三部分
语言知识运用(共两节,满分
45
分)
第一节(共
20
小题,每小题
1.5
分,满分
30
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。
For
many
people,
barbecues
are
a
chance
to
enjoy
a
meal
with
family
and
friends.
For
Stan
Hays,
barbecuing
is
a
passion(酷爱的事物)
that
he
puts
to
the
_41
at
weekend
competitions.
42
,
when
disaster
strikes,
Hays
uses
his
skills
to
43
people
in
need.
Since
2011,
his
nonprofit
Operation
BBQ
Relief
has
prepared
more
than
1.75
million
meals
for
44.
.
How
amazing
it
is!
The
45
effort
began
in
May
2011,
when
a
terrible
tornado
hit
Joplin,
Missouri,
about
two-and-a-half
hours
from
Hays
home.
His
wife
urged
him
to
46
.
So,
he
put
out
the
47
to
his
barbecue
buddies
(伙计)
and
headed
down
with
his
portable(便携的)
smoker.
“We
48
we'd
be
there
three
to
four
days,
serving
maybe
5,000
meals,”
Hays
said.
“But
the
need
was
there,
and
the
49
kept
coming
in.”
Hays
believes
that
the
food
they
prepare
keeps
disaster
survivors
50
both
physically
and
mentally.
“Barbecue
is
51
food,”Hays
said.
“If
you
just
52
your
house
or
a
loved
one
just
left
you,
and
you
get
a
53
meal
that
reminds
you
of
the
warmth
you
felt
in
your
family
backyard
BBQs
and
makes
you
54
the
bad
things
in
your
life,
it
is
55
for
me.
We
not
only
are
giving
them
something
nutritious,
but
we
are
giving
them
a
state
of
being
56
.”
“For
me,
the
57
thing
is
people
coming
together.
Seeing
the
people
working
and
58
the
effect
the
meals
are
producing---it
can't
help
but
bring
a
smile
to
your
face,
maybe
a
59
to
your
eye.
At
the
end
of
the
day,
you've
done
something
that's
made
a
60
41.A.action
B.
end
C.
test
D.
work
,”said
Hays.
42.A.Therefore
B.
However
C.
Otherwise
D.
Usually
43.A.feed
B.
persuade
C.
save
D.
teach
44.A.volunteers
B.
friends
C.
survivors
D.
neighbors
45.A.
unique
B.
extra
C.
confident
D.
brave
46.A.change
B.
help
C.
imagine
D.
improve
47.A.
goal
B.
word
C.
comment
D.
advertisement
48.
A.
suggested
B.
realized
C.
expected
D.
thought
49.A.demands
B
.questions
C.
supplies
D.
orders
50.A.patient
B.
proud
C.
quiet
D.
well
51.A.famous
B.
diet
C.
safe
D.
comfort
52.A.lost
B.
built
C.
moved
D.
decorated
53.A.hot
B.
heavy
C.
simple
D.
traditional
54.A.talk
about
B.
forget
about
C.
worry
about
D.
learn
about
55.A.
suitable
B.
creative
C.
convenient
D.
worthwhile
56.A.
normal
B.
silent
C.
humorous
D.
pitiful
57.A.
difficult
B.
strangest
C.
greatest
D.
lucky
58.A.ignoring
B.
knowing
C.
measuring
D.
predicting
59.A.pain
B.
burn
C.
curiosity
D.
tear
60.A.promise
B.
rule
C.
difference
D.
decision
第二节(共
10
小题,每小题
1.5
分,满分
15
分)
阅读下面短文,在空白处填入一个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。
Movie-going
remains
strong
in
China
but
the
American
industry
is
feeling
the
effects
of
delayed
releases.
China
has
surpassed(
超过)
the
US
for
movie
ticket
sales
61.
the
first
time,
making
62.
the
world
's
biggest
film
market.
So
far
sales
63.
(reach)
$1.9bn
for
2020,
surpassing
the
US
total
of
$
1.9bn,
according
to
Asian
film
industry
consultancy
Artisan
Gateway.
Analysts
expect
the
gap
to
widen
considerably
by
the
end
of
the
year.
North
America
has
64.
(traditional)led
the
way
in
65.
(control)
box
office
sales,
but
the
COVID--19
pandemic(大流行病)
appears
to
have
sped
up
the
shift
towards
China.
Its
week-long
National
Day
holiday
also
helped
improve
ticket
sales.
Between
October
1-8,
the
country's
cinemas
sold
$568m
of
tickets.
The
local
hit
film
My
People,
My
Homeland,
meanwhile,
made
$19.1m
this
past
weekend,
with
the
66.
(inspire)stories
raising
its
earnings
to
$360m
after
almost
three
weeks.
China
has
also
produced
another
Second
World
War
drama:
The
Eight
Hundred,
67.
has
brought
in
$460m.
Hollywood's
Marvel's
Black
Widow
68.
the
latest
James
Bond
film
69.
(release)next
year.
Many
70.
(direct)
pushed
their
films
back
a
second
time
to
2021
in
order
to
be
seen
by
a
worldwide
theatrical
audience.
第四部分
写作(共两节,满分
35
分)
第一节:短文改错(共
10
小题;每小题
1
分,满分
10
分)
假定英语课上老师要求同桌之间交换修改作文,请你修改你同桌写的以下作文。文中共
有
10
处语言错误,每句中最多有两处。每处错误仅涉及一个单词的增加、删除或修改。
增加:在缺词处加一个漏字符号(∧),在其下面写出该加的词。
删除:把多余的词用斜线(╲)划掉。
修改:在错的词下划一横线,并在该词下面写出修改后的词。
注意:1.每处错误及其修改均仅限一词;
2.只允许修改
10
处,多者(从第
11
处起)不计分。
My
friend
Miguel
and
I
were
going
to
pay
a
visit
on
John,
a
nice
boy
we
worked
with
whom
on
a
volunteer
project
last
summer
vacation.
Because
he
had
just
lose
his
smartphone,
he
emailed
us
his
address
and
told
him
to
just
show
up.
As
we
wanted
to
come
back
home
in
the
afternoon,
we
set
off
early
in
the
morning.
Apparently
the
address
John
had
given
us
were
hard
to
understand.
When
we
rode
along
the
way,
our
taxi
driver
had
to
ask
directions.
Eventually,
with
the
help
of
a
policeman
or
then
a
little
boy,
we
were
leading
to
John's
house
down
a
winding
road.
How
excited
it
was
to
see
him!
We
finally
had
a
wonderful
lunch
altogether.
第二节:书面表达(满分
25
分)
受某英文报委托,你最近对你所在学校学生业余兴趣爱好做了调查。下面的饼状图(pie
chart)显示了调查结果。请你根据图表信息写一篇短文,报告你的调查结果,并对此结果发
表你的看法或建议。
注意:词数
100
左右;洛阳一高高一3月月考英语试题答案
听力答案:(每题1.5分,满分30分)
1-5
BAACB
6-10
BBACA
11-15
BACBC
16-20
ACACB
阅读答案:(每题2分,满分40分)
21-25ACACB
26-30BADBC
31-35
BBCAA
36-40
BEDCG
完形填空:(每题1.5分,满分30分)
41-45CBACA
46-50BBDCD
51-55DAABD
56-60ACBDC
语法填空:(每题1.5分,满分15分)
61.for
62.it
63.have
reached
64.traditionally
65.controlling
66.inspiring
67.which
68.and
69.will
be
released
70.
directors
改错答案:(每题1分,满分10分)
71.on-->to
72.whom
去掉
73.lose-->lost
74.him-->us
75.were-->was
76.ask后加for
77.or-->and
78.leading-->led
79.excited-->exciting
80.altogether-->together
作文:(25分)
A
recent
study
shows
what
the
students
of
our
school
like
to
do
in
their
spare
time.
From
the
pie
chart,
we
can
see
53%
of
the
students
like
sports,
so
doing
sports
is
the
most
popular
activity
in
our
school.
The
second
popular
activity
for
students
is
listening
to
music
and
36%
of
the
students
have
interest
in
it.
Only
a
few
students,
about
8
percent
of
them,
take
reading
as
a
hobby.
And
even
fewer
are
fond
of
surfing
the
Internet.
In
my
point
of
view,
our
school
should
have
more
sports
facilities
built
to
satisfy
the
need
of
the
students.
Guidance
should
be
given
to
students
on
surfing
the
Internet
and
ways
must
be
found
to
arouse
students'
interests
in
reading
.
听力材料
(Text
1)
M:
So
what
did
you
buy?
W:
A
skirt.
My
friend
got
one
exactly
like
that.
She
paid
50
dollars
for
it.
But
I
paid
10
dollars
less
for
mine.
(Text
2)
W:
I
wish
that
footballer
would
keep
his
views
to
himself.
He
has
always
got
too
much
to
say
about
the
other
players.
M:
Yes,
especially
in
interviews.
It’s
fine
to
have
opinions,
but
he
goes
too
far,
doesn’t
he?
(Text
3)
W:
Where
did
you
go
on
holiday
over
the
summer?
M:
We
were
going
to
the
woods
but
we
changed
our
minds.
We
went
camping
on
the
beach.
W:
Really?
We
went
camping,
too,
but
we
ended
up
in
the
mountains.
(Text
4)
W:
John,
your
shirt
and
tie
look
great
together!
Was
the
shirt
expensive?
M:
Not
really.
It
was
on
sale
at
the
mall.
W:
It
looks
really
nice.
Were
there
any
jackets
on
sale
too?
I’ll
buy
one
for
my
brother
as
a
birthday
gift.
(Text
5)
M:
Would
you
like
to
help
me
organize
a
surprise
birthday
party
for
Mary?
W:
Sure,
why
not?
What
do
we
need
to
do?
M:
We
need
to
find
people
to
help
bake
a
cake,
get
some
decorations
and
bring
some
good
music.
W:
I
know
that
Ron’s
a
really
good
cook
and
Linda
has
an
art
store.
Also,
I
think
Tony
has
an
excellent
CD
collection.
Let’s
give
them
a
call.
(Text
6)
W:
The
Tan
Film
Festival
is
coming
to
Bellville
next
week.
I
can’t
believe
it!
M:
Does
that
mean
that
all
the
big
stars
will
make
their
appearance
here?
W:
That’s
exactly
what
it
means.
I’m
so
excited.
I’m
going
to
put
in
my
request
for
a
holiday
during
that
period
of
time
and
see
every
movie
they’re
going
to
show.
Would
you
like
to
join
me?
M:
I
wish
I
could,
but
I
won’t
be
here
next
week.
The
company
is
sending
me
to
our
head
office
in
Paris
for
the
yearly
training
for
a
month.
(Text
7)
W:
Thanks
for
helping
me
organize
the
International
Festival,
Rob.
M:
No
problem,
Liz.
Is
that
your
list
of
tasks?
W:
Sure.
We
need
people
to
do
a
lot
of
things.
They’re
moving
the
furniture,
painting
national
flags,
singing
national
anthems,
making
a
website
and
giving
presentations.
Do
you
have
any
ideas
about
who
could
help?
M:
I
know
Brian’s
very
strong.
W:
Yes,
he’s
really
strong.
And
I
think
Mary’s
good
at
painting.
M:
Oh,
yeah.
She’s
a
terrific
painter.
W:
What
about
other
things?
M:
Well,
Dick
is
good
with
computers,
so
he
could
probably
help.
And
I
think
Steve’s
very
good
at
public
speaking.
W:
Steve,
of
course!
He
was
great
in
the
speech
contest
last
year.
Anybody
else?
M:
Well,
I
heard
Jane’s
a
fantastic
singer.
W:
Really?
That’s
great.
M:
I
think
we
have
a
good
start.
Shall
we
give
them
a
call
and
see
if
they
are
available?
W:
Absolutely.
(Text
8)
W:
Good
morning!
Please
allow
me
to
introduce
myself.
I’m
Paola
Iannucci.
M:
How
do
you
do?
My
name’s
Colin
Burke.
W:
Pleased
to
meet
you,
Colin.
I
see
you
work
for
an
advertising
agency.
M:
Yes,
I’m
the
art
director
at
Arrow
Agency.
I
mostly
work
on
web
adverts.
W:
Do
you?
That
sounds
interesting.
M:
It
is.
We’re
developing
some
new
ways
of
advertising.
Do
you
use
the
Internet
much
in
your
work?
W:
I
do,
actually,
Colin.
I’m
in
sales.
M:
Oh,
are
you?
W:
Yes,
I
work
for
an
electronics
company.
We’re
starting
to
sell
online.
M:
Really?
Well,
Paola,
why
don’t
I
give
you
my
business
card?
Here
you
are.
W:
Thanks.
It’s
been
good
talking
to
you.
Let’s
stay
in
touch.
(Text
9)
M:
Lucy,
first
of
all,
tell
us,
what
did
you
have
to
do
to
enter
the
competition?
W:
Um,
I
had
to
write
a
short
letter
saying
why
I
wanted
to
read
the
weather
on
TV,
and
then
I
had
to
make
a
short
video
of
me
reading
a
news
story.
Then
I
just
sent
it
in
the
email
and
about
two
months
later
I
got
a
phone
call
saying
I
had
won,
and
they
wanted
me
to
go
to
the
studio
the
next
Friday.
M:
So
what
happened
that
day?
W:
Well,
I
got
there
at
about
three
o’clock.
Then
I
practiced
reading
the
weather
a
few
times,
for
quite
a
while.
And
then
suddenly
it
was
time
to
go
live
on
air.
M:
At
four
o’clock?
W:
No,
at
five.
M:
And
did
you
get
a
good
forecast
to
do?
W:
Yes.
It
had
everything:
sun,
rain,
clouds,
strong
winds.
The
only
thing
it
didn’t
have
was
snow.
M:
But
you
wouldn’t
believe
it
if
you
look
out
of
the
window
now.
W:
No!
Wow
...
M:
Do
you
want
to
be
a
weather
reporter
now?
W:
I’ve
always
wanted
to
be
a
teacher
since
I
was
a
little
girl,
but
that’s
changed
now.
I’m
not
sure
if
I
want
to
be
a
weather
forecaster,
but
I
would
like
to
be
some
kind
of
TV
presenter.
M:
I
think
there’s
every
chance
of
that.
(Text
10)
I’m
a
photographer.
I’m
here
to
tell
you
a
bit
about
myself.
At
university,
I
wanted
to
learn
photography,
but
my
parents
wouldn’t
let
me
do.
I
loved
history
but
my
marks
weren’t
very
good,
and
I
was
fond
of
geography
too,
so
that
was
what
I
did
in
the
end.
I
actually
think
it
made
me
a
better
photographer.
On
my
degree
course,
in
my
final
year,
we
could
do
what
we
wanted
and
the
topics
people
chose
were
really
interesting.
I
chose
street
markets
for
mine
but
my
friends
did
theirs
on
the
growth
of
public
transport
networks
or
the
city’s
green
areas.
After
graduation,
I
went
to
the
USA.
I
wanted
to
work
as
a
photographer,
so
I
sent
pictures
to
news
organizations.
In
fact,
it
was
a
magazine
that
noticed
my
pictures,
and
I
worked
for
it
for
a
year.
Anyway,
I
came
back
to
Britain
and
published
my
photos
in
a
small
book.
I
felt
it
was
time
I
explored
my
own
country.
I’d
done
a
lot
of
driving
in
the
USA
and
I
wanted
a
change
from
the
car,
so
I
went
by
motorbike
instead.
I
love
train
travel,
but
a
motorbike
enabled
me
to
get
to
more
remote
areas.