江苏省南京市中华2020-2021学年高二下学期5月月考英语试题 Word版含答案(无听力试题)

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名称 江苏省南京市中华2020-2021学年高二下学期5月月考英语试题 Word版含答案(无听力试题)
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2020-2021学年
中华中学高二下学期
5月份月考试题
全卷卷满分120分
考试时间90分钟
听力:略
阅读理解(共两小节,满分50分)
第一节
(共15小题;每小题2.5分,满分37.5分)
阅读下列短文,从每题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项。
A
You
are
about
to
hear
a
strange
but
true
story.
Legend
has
it
that,
Harry
Houdini,
the
master
magician,
once
claimed
that
he
could
break
out
of
any
jail
cell
in
the
world.
All
he
had
to
do
was
walk
into
that
jail
cell
with
his
streets
clothes
on.
“I
will
be
out
of
there
in
one
hour.
No
problem!”
He
said.
A
very
old
jail
down
South
hear
about
Houdini’s
claims
and
they
accepted
the
challenge.
On
the
day
of
the
event,
many
people
gathered
outside.
Very
confidently,
Houdini
walked
into
the
jail
and
into
the
cell
and
they
shut
the
metal
door
behind
him.
The
first
thing
Houdini
did
was
to
take
off
his
coat.
Then,
very
strangely,
he
took
off
his
belt.
Secretly
hidden
in
Houdini’s
belt,
was
a
ten-inch
piece
of
steel;
very
tough
and
very
flexible
and
Houdini
started
working.
In
about
30
minutes,
that
confident
expression
Houdini
had
when
he
walked
in
disappeared.
In
one
hour,
he
was
bathed
in
sweat.
And
at
the
end
of
two
hours,
Houdini
in
defeat,
collapsed
against
the
door,
which
then
opened.
It
opened
because
you
you
see,
that
door
had
never
been
locked.
But
that’s
not
entirely
true
is
it?
That
door
was
locked.
It
was
firmly
and
thoroughly
locked
in
Houdini’s
mind,
which
meant
it
was
locked
as
if
the
best
locksmith
in
the
world
had
put
his
lock
on
it.
The
mind
is
powerful.
How
many
doors
in
your
life
do
you
think
are
locked
but
aren’t?
How
many
times
have
you
been
stuck
in
the
mental
prison
of
over
thinking
something
that
really
had
a
simple
solution.
There
is
an
ancient
African
proverb
that
says
when
there
is
no
enemy
within,
the
enemy
outside
can
do
us
no
harm.
Your
mind
is
the
most
powerful
force
you
will
ever
face.
It
will
tell
you
lies.
It
will
tell
you
can’t
do
that.
You’re
not
meant
for
that.
You’re
not
good
enough
for
that.
You
can’t
go
on
anymore.
You
don’t
have
the
energy.
You
must
thank
it
for
its
opinion
and
carry
on.
Because
as
Houdini
showed
us
the
only
locked
doors
that
exist
are
in
your
own
mind.
The
doors
in
reality
are
open
and
all
you
have
to
do
is
walk
through.
Why
couldn’t
Harry
Houdini
open
the
door
within
two
hours?
Because
he
didn’t
open
the
door
with
his
mind.
Because
the
door
was
locked
by
the
best
locksmith.
Because
he
had
thought
the
door
was
locked.
Because
he
overestimated
his
own
ability
to
open
the
door.
Which
of
the
following
story
shows
the
“locked
door”
in
our
mind?
Bring
the
painted
dragon
to
life
by
putting
in
the
pupils
of
its
eyes.
One
tends
to
stand
still
and
refuse
to
make
progress.
The
donkey
has
exhausted
its
skill
against
the
tiger.
Lock
the
stable
door
after
the
horsed
has
been
stolen.
We
can
conclude
from
the
passage
EXCEPT
______________________
The
biggest
enemy
in
your
life
is
in
fact
the
enemy
in
your
mind.
If
you
walk
through
the
door
in
mind,
your
potential
will
be
unlimited.
Unless
you
defeat
the
enemy
outside,
you
will
not
defeat
your
enemy
inside.
Life
is
really
simple,
but
we
insist
on
making
it
rigid
and
complicated.
B
People
are
more
willing
to
change
their
mind
about
people
they
initially
hold.
Common
wisdom
holds
that
negative
first
impressions
are
hard
to
shake—and
some
research
backs
this
up.
But
such
studies
often
unfairly
compare
impressions
based
on
immoral
deeds
that
are
extreme
and
relatively
rare
with
impressions
based
on
kindnesses
that
are
more
common.
A
new
set
of
studies
involving
precisely
balanced
behaviors
finds
that
people
are
more
willing
to
change
their
mind
about
individuals
who
initially
come
off
as
selfish
than
about
those
they
think
selfless.
In
three
of
the
experiments,
336
laboratory
and
online
participants
read
about
two
people
who
each
made
a
series
of
50
decisions
regarding
how
many
electric
shocks
to
give
someone
in
exchange
for
money.
One
fictional
subject
required
more
money
per
shock
than
the
average
person
did
to
inflict
(施加)
pain
on
others.
The
other’s
price-per-shock
threshold
(界限)
was
comparably
lower
than
the
average
person’s.
Study
participants
read
about
each
subject’s
decisions
one
at
a
time.
Before
seeing
each
decision,
they
predicted
what
it
would
be.
After
every
three
decisions
the
fictional
subject
made,
participants
rated
the
individual
on
a
scale
from
“nasty”
to
“nice,”
and
then
specified
their
confidence
in
the
rating.
As
expected,
participants
rated
the
person
who
gave
shocks
for
a
lower
price
as
nastier
than
the
higher-price
shocker.
But
they
expressed
less
confidence
in
the
“nasty”
ratings,
and
their
predictions
of
how
many
shocks
that
person
would
give
fluctuated
(波动)
more.
In
other
words,
their
beliefs
about
the
“bad”
subject
were
more
changeable.
“A
well-designed
brain
system
would
not
write
someone
off
completely
at
the
first
sign
of
trouble,”
says
Molly
Crockett,
a
psychologist
at
Yale
University.
The
test
scenarios
(情况)
are
a
far
cry
from
real-world
interactions.
Still,
the
experiment
offers
“a
really
elegant
pattern
that
drills
down
on
a
question
that’s
so
central
to
our
everyday
human
life,”
says
Peter
Mende-Siedlecki,
a
psychologist
at
the
University
of
Delaware.
24.
According
to
the
passage,
what
does
the
new
set
of
studies
find?
A.
Bad
first
impressions
may
be
lasting.
B.
Bad
first
impressions
are
not
set
in
stone.
C.
People
often
judge
others
by
first
impressions.
D.
People
are
reluctant
to
change
first
impressions.
25.
What
are
the
researchers’
findings
based
on?
A.
The
number
of
electric
shocks
someone
was
given.
B.
Some
specific
laboratory
and
online
questionnaires.
C.
Comparisons
between
decisions
made
by
two
subjects.
D.
An
analysis
of
information
collected
from
participants.
26.
The
underlined
phrase
in
Paragraph
4
means
“______”.
A.
very
secure
B.
much
different
C.
completely
hidden
D.
almost
withdrawn
C
For
many,
scientific
innovations
tend
to
be
welcome
advancements
that
improve
our
lives.
For
some,
however,
new
technologies
bring
risk
of
uselessness,
in
turn
leading
to
great
resistance.
With
the
climate
crisis
unfolding
before
our
eyes,
the
race
is
on
to
find
alternatives
that
will
help
humanity
leave
a
smaller
footprint
on
our
planet.
Because
of
animal
agriculture's
leading
role
as
a
greenhouse
gas
emitter,
the
search
for
more
sustainable
protein
sources
could
be
one
such
alternative.
As
food
tech
companies
use
science
to
unlock
the
potential
of
plant
proteins,
they're
producing
increasingly
better
plant-based
meats
and
milks
that
look
and
taste
like
the
real
thing,
but
with
a
much
lower
carbon
footprint.
Some
in
the
meat
industry
are
supporting
the
new
and
investing
in
these
alt-protein
companies.
For
some
lawmakers,
however,
these
innovative
products
don't
deserve
support;
they
deserve
restriction.
Missouri
State,
for
example,
recently
passed
a
bill
making
it
a
crime
punishable
by
imprisonment
for
companies
to
call
their
products
''meat''
if
they
don’t
come
from
an
animal.
So
why
the
mania
(狂热)
over
meat
and
milk
all
of
a
sudden?
Was
there
a
consumer
who
brought
home
some
pies
labeled
''plant-based
meat''
only
to
realize
he
was
tricked?
Did
confused
milk-drinkers
file
complaints
with
the
Department
of
Agriculture
when
they
found
out
their
soymilk
didn't
contain
actual
milk?
There
really
are
some
consumers
who
are
truly
confused.
Surveys
show,
however,
that
number
is
remarkably
small.
If
anything,
consumers
are
choosing
these
plant-based
products
specifically
because
they
think
they're
better
for
them
than
the
original
products.
And
they
have
good
reason
to
believe
that
plant-based
milks
and
meats
usually
have
less
fat
and
more
fiber
than
comparable
animal-based
foods.
So,
consumers
aren't
confusing
''veggie
bacon''
for
real
bacon;
and
if
they
don't
think
chicken
nuggets
have
the
same
nutritional
value
as
''chicken-free
nuggets'',
then
why
do
some
meat
and
milk
groups
want
a
monopoly
(垄断)
over
the
M-words?
Could
it
have
to
do
with
the
fact
that
the
increasing
popularity
of
these
foods,
which
are
more
sustainable
and
better
for
you,
is
threatening
the
profits
of
their
constituents?
And
with
the
future
of
our
civilization
hanging
in
the
balance
as
climate
change
becomes
more
severe,
it's
time
for
policy
makers
to
stop
trying
to
prevent
innovation,
and
instead
to
celebrate
all
the
ways
science
can
save
us,
including
with
sustainable
proteins
that
can
and
do
produce
new
kinds
of
meat.
What
can
be
learned
about
the
M-word
applied
to
plant-based
substitutes?
They
are
environmentally
friendly.
They
are
innovative
and
widely
accepted.
They
have
been
restricted
across
America.
They
have
been
produced
in
large
quantities.
From
the
passage
we
can
learn
that
consumers
______.
have
sufficient
faith
in
new
science
and
technology
prefer
the
original
products
to
the
plant-based
products
buy
the
plant-based
products
for
their
great
benefit
to
health
often
get
confused
by
the
composition
of
the
new
kind
of
meat
According
to
the
author,
some
people
resist
the
new
kind
of
food
probably
because
_____.
it
contains
no
real
meat
B.
it
brings
risks
to
society
C.
it
plays
a
trick
on
customers
D.
it
poses
a
threat
to
their
profits
30.What's
the
author's
attitude
towards
the
plant-based
products?
A.
Supportive.
B.
Cautious.
C.
Ambiguous.
D.
Disapproving
D
OK,”
I
said
to
my
daughter
as
she
bent
over
her
afternoon
bowl
of
rice.
“What’s
going
on
with
you
and
your
friend
J.?”
J.is
the
leader
of
a
group
of
third-graders
at
her
camp----a
position
Lucy
herself
occupied
the
previous
summer.
Now
she’s
the
one
on
the
outs.
and
every
day
at
snack
time,
she
tells
me
all
about
it,
while
I
offer
the
unhelpful
advice
all
summer
long.
“She’s
fond
of
giving
orders,
”Lucy
complained.
“She’s
turning
everyone
against
me.
She’s
mean.
And
she’s
fat.

“Excuse
me,”
I
said,
struggling
for
calm.
“What
did
you
just
said?”
“She’s
fat.

Lucy
mumbled(含糊地说).
“We’re
going
upstairs,”
I
said,
my
voice
cold.
“We’re
going
to
discuss
this.

And
up
we
went.
I’d
spent
the
nine
years
since
her
birth
getting
ready
for
this
day,
the
day
we’d
have
the
conversation
about
this
horrible
word.
I
knew
exactly
what
to
say
to
the
girl
on
the
receiving
end
of
the
teasing,
but
in
all
of
my
imaginings,
it
never
once
occurred
to
me
that
my
daughter
would
be
the
one
who
used
the
F
word-Fat.
My
daughter
sat
on
her
bed,
and
I
sat
beside
her.
“How
would
you
feel
if
someone
made
fun
of
you
for
something
that
wasn’t
your
fault?”
I
began.
“She
could
stop
eating
so
much,”
Lucy
mumbled,
mouthing
the
simple
advice
a
thousand
doctors
have
given
overweight
women
for
years.
“It’s
not
always
that
easy,”
I
said.
“Everyone’s
different
in
terms
of
how
they
treat
food.”
Lucy
looked
at
me,
waiting
for
me
to
go
on.
I
opened
my
mouth,
then
closed
it.
Should
I
tell
her
that,
in
teasing
a
woman’s
weight,
she’s
joined
the
long
tradition
of
critics?
Should
I
tell
her
I
didn’t
cry
when
someone
posted
my
picture
and
commented,
“I’m
sorry,
but
aren’t
authors
who
write
books
marketed
to
young
women
supposed
to
be
pretty?”
Does
she
need
to
know,
now,
that
life
isn’t
fair?
I
feel
her
eyes
on
me,
waiting
for
an
answer
I
don’t
have.
Words
are
my
tools.
Stories
are
my
job.
It’s
possible
she’ll
remember
what
I
say
forever,
and
I
have
no
idea
what
to
say.
So
I
tell
her
the
only
thing
I
can
come
up
with
that
is
absolutely
true.
I
say
to
my
daughter,
“I
love
you,
and
there
is
nothing
you
could
ever
do
to
make
me
not
love
you.
But
I’m
disappointed
in
you
right
now.
There
are
plenty
of
reasons
for
not
liking
someone.
What
she
looks
like
isn’t
one
of
them.

Lucy
nods,
tears
on
her
cheeks.
“I
won’t
say
that
again,”
she
tells
me,
and
I
pull
her
close,
pressing
my
nose
against
her
hair.
As
we
sit
there
together,
I
pray
for
her
to
be
smart
and
strong.
I
pray
for
her
to
find
friends,
work
she
loves,
a
partner
who
loves
her.
And
still,
always,
I
pray
that
she
will
never
struggle
as
I’ve
struggled,
that
weight
will
never
be
her
cross
to
bear.
She
may
not
be
able
to
use
the
word
in
our
home,
but
I
can
use
in
my
head.
I
pray
that
she
will
never
get
fat.
The
underlined
sentence
in
Paragraph
1
indicates
that
Lucy
______.
A.
often
makes
fun
of
her
friend
J.
B.
has
begun
to
compete
with
her
friend
J.
C.
gets
along
well
with
her
friend
J.
D.
has
turned
against
her
friend
J.
32.
Why
does
the
author
want
to
discuss
with
Lucy?
A.
Because
she
wants
to
offer
some
other
helpful
advice.
B.
Because
she
is
really
shocked
at
Lucy’s
rudeness.
C.
Because
she
has
prepared
the
conversation
for
nine
years.
D.
Because
she
decides
to
tell
Lucy
a
similar
story
of
her
own.
33.
It
can
be
inferred
from
the
passage
that_________.
A.
the
author
is
a
fat
but
good-looking
woman.
B.
the
author
earns
a
living
by
writing
stories.
C.
the
author
will
stop
loving
her
daughter
for
what
she
said.
D.
the
author’s
daughter
agreed
with
her
from
the
very
beginning.
34.
We
can
learn
from
the
last
paragraph
that_________.
A.
the
author
hopes
her
daughter
will
never
have
weight
trouble.
B.
a
mother’s
prayer
will
shape
her
daughter’s
attitude
towards
life.
C.
the
author
allows
her
daughter
to
use
the
F
word
in
her
head.
D.
Lucy
was
deeply
moved
by
her
mother’s
prayer.
35.
The
author’s
attitude
towards
her
daughter
can
be
best
described
as
_________.
A.
indifferent
but
patient
B.
loving
but
strict
C.
satisfied
and
friendly
D.
unsatisfied
and
angry
(共5小题;每小题2.5分,满分12.5分)
根据短文内容,从短文后的选项中选出能填入空白处的最佳选项。期中有两项为多于选项。
Run!
Lunch-Delivery
Men!
It’s
lunch
time,
and
Guo
Ziyang
is
on
a
mission:
deliver
seven
hot
meal
orders
in
an
hour.
He
dashes
into
a
downtown
high-rise,
carrying
a
plastic
container
of
hot
beef
noodles.
There
is
no
time
to
wait
for
the
right
elevator.
He
hops
into
the
first
one
that
opens,
jumps
out
at
the
last
stop
and
begins
running
up
the
stairs.
After
a
quick
handoff
to
the
customer,
he
races
down
20
flights.?___36___.?Across
China’s
biggest
cities,
the
scene
has
become
as
familiar
as
crowded
subways.?___37___.?Meals
appear
with
just
a
few
taps
on
a
smartphone.
With
the
major
delivery
services
offering
similar
pricing
strategies
and
food
choices,
the
burden
of
competition
has
fallen
largely
on
the
speed
of
the
delivery
people,
popularly
known
as
Waimai
Xiaoge,
or
“Brother
Takeaway”.
Guo
said
he
wolfs
down
four
or
five
steamed
buns
before
starting
work
every
morning.
“You’ll
need
the
energy
for
various
delivery
missions,”
he
said.
“Sometimes,
the
buildings
you
deliver
to
don’t
have
elevators.
___38___.?Then,
you
have
to
climb
ten
flights
of
stairs.”
Guo
works
around
Shanghai’s
central
business
district.
He
joined?Ele.me?only
last
year.?___39___.?With
a
foodwarmer
box
tied
to
his
scooter,
Guo
tears
through
traffic,
rushes
past
pedestrians
and
avoid
bumps
that
might
spill
soup
dishes.
In
less
than
two
hours,
he
has
made
stops
at
a
hospital,
a
hair
salon,
a
hotel
room
and
several
high-rises.
Six
orders
an
hour
is
the
norm
for
the
lunchtime
rush,
but
Guo
said
he
is
sometimes
called
upon
to
deliver
ten
meals.
“___40___?You
just
have
to
apologize.”
he
said.
Nevertheless,
Guo
said
he
thrives
on
deadline
pressure.
“I’m
the
kind
of
person
who
likes
challenging
work,”
he
added.
Sometimes,
people
ask
them
to
pick
up
cigarettes,
alcohol
and
other
items,
which
they
aren’t
supposed
to
do.
One
order
down,
six
to
go.
The
tradition
of
going
out
for
a
meal
has
been
under
pressure
from
the
fast
pace
of
urban
life.
Sometimes,
the
elevators
are
crowded
and
take
a
long
time.
That’s
really
difficult,
and
if
you
arrive
late,
customers
get
angry.
The
arrival
of
fooddelivery
apps
has
transformed
the
country’s
lunchtime
culture.
But
he
has
memorized
the
layouts
of
all
the
buildings
in
his
area.
第三部分
语言知识应用(共两小节,满分30分)
第一节
完形填空(共15小题,每小题1分,满分15分)
As
a
music
teacher,
I
will
be
retiring
at
the
end
of
the
current
school
year.
When
that
checklist
from
the
HR
department
about
my
__41__
plans
for
the
next
school
year
arrived,
I
was
feeling
__42__.
My
music
room
was
in
the
basement.
Heating
pipes
hung
from
the
ceiling
and
large
__43__
columns
ran
floor-to-ceiling,
making
__44__
challenging.
I
had
seen
kids
come
to
school
with
bruises
(擦伤)
or
cigarette
burns
on
their
arms.
I
had
had
my
purse
stolen.
I
had
been
pushed
up
against
a
wall
and
__45__
breathless
by
an
angry
eighth-
grade
girl.
When
this
year
started,
things
were
going
much
__46__.
Kids
were
coming
before
school
and
during
break
to
learn
__47__
to
play,
and
by
Christmas,
we
had
a
concert
band
of
100
kids.
Good
behavior
and
fascinated
attention
led
to
__48__
rehearsals(排练).
As
the
students'
playing
improved,
I
could
see
their
pride
and
sense
of
__49__
grow.
I
hadn't
even
thought
about
the
checklist.
Then
one
afternoon,
there
it
was.
I
picked
it
up,
planning
to
go
back
to
my
office
to
sign
it
__50__.
But
holding
it
in
my
hand,
I
was
__51__
by
thoughts
and
emotions
I
hadn't
anticipated.
I
felt
like
a
mother
__52__
her
children.
I
have
loved
unexpected
comments
of
kids.
__53__,
I
have
enjoyed
the
challenges
of
motivating
the
unmotivated
as
well
as
the
30-second
conversations
with
teachers,
making
me
embrace
the
__54__
learning
and
growing.
The
checklist
suddenly
made
me
feel
__55__,
old
and
sad.
I
stood
where
I
was,
checked
the
box
and
sent
it
to
the
HR.
Then
I
walked
the
long
hallway
back
toward
the
music
room...
(
)1
A.
treatment
B.
family
C.
employment
D.
travel
(
)2
A.
thrilled
B.
embarrassed
C.
relieved
D.
discouraged
(
)3
A.
plain-looking
B.
weight-bearing
C.
environment-friendly
D.
energy-consuming
(
)4
A.
breath
B.
advance
C.
growth
D.
movement
(
)5
A.
choked
B.
transferred
C.
attached
D.
surrounded
(
)6
A.
worse
B.
better
C.
further
D.
harder
(
)7
A.
how
B.
what
C.
where
D.
when
(
)8
A.
booming
B.
winding
C.
fulfilling
D.
varying
(
)9
A.
security
B.
taste
C.
belonging
D.
accomplishment
(
)10
A.
in
sight
B.
in
private
C.
in
place
D.
in
brief
(
)11
A.
overwhelmed
B.
sustained
C.
swung
D.
regulated
(
)12
A.
rejecting
B.
denying
C.
abandoning
D.
removing
(
)13
A.
Contrarily
B.
Meanwhile
C.
Accordingly
D.
Otherwise
(
)14
A.
fundamental
B.
independent
C.
voluntary
D.
constant
(
)15
A.
helpless
B.
speechless
C.
priceless
D.
useless
第二节
语法填空(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1个适当的单词或用括号内单词的正确形式填空。
There
are
many
elective
courses
for
students
to
choose
56_______________
at
my
university,
57_______________(range)
from
art
to
zoology.
For
instance,
I
took
a
course
on
the
harmonica
this
semester.
I
think
the
elective
courses
give
me
a
feeling
that
I
can’t
get
from
compulsory
courses.
For
example,
when
I
am
bored
with
learning
English,
I
take
out
the
harmonica
and
play
for
a
while,
and
immediately
all
my
58_______________(bore)
will
go
away.
One
of
my
roommates
chose
to
take
Japanese
as
an
elective,
59_______________
she
believes
60_______________(prove)
useful
to
her
career.
After
all,
61_______________
second
language
can
make
her
resume
more
attractive.
She
is
more
practical
than
I
am,
but
I’d
say
that
the
62_______________(major)
of
students
choose
their
electives
out
of
personal
interests.
There
is
no
63_______________(deny)
the
fact
that
elective
courses
can
64_______________(broad)
our
horizon.
However,
as
the
saying
goes
“You
can’t
have
your
cake
and
eat
it,
too.”
We
shouldn’t
neglect
the
major
course
we
are
studying
while
immersing
ourselves
in
the
65_______________(please)
we
find
in
elective
courses.
第四部分
写作(共两小节,满分40分)
第一节
应用文写作(满分15分)
假如你是阳光中学的李津。下周你校将与英国友好校举办一场在线会议,探讨如何利用网络学英语,请你根据以下提示撰写一篇发言稿:
介绍你是如何利用网络学习英语的(至少写出两点);
简单谈谈你对利用网络学习英语的看法;
请友好校的学生分享他们的经验。
注意:
词数不少于100;
可适当加入细节,使内容充实,行文连贯;
开头和结尾已给出,不计入总词数。
Good
morning,
dear
friends.
My
name
is
Li
Jin.
I’d
like
to
take
this
opportunity
to
talk
about
how
I
learn
English
on
the
Internet.
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
第二节
读后续写
(满分25分)
阅读下列材料,根据其内容和所给段落开头语续写两段,使之构成一篇完整的短文。
续写的词数应在150左右。
I
lay
on
my
bed,
legs
leaning
against
the
wall,
desperately
wishing
my
mother
would
call.
But
I
remembered
the
last
time
I’d
seen
her,
right
before
the
train
for
Providence
pulled
out
of
the
station,
“You
know
how
expensive
it
is
to
call,”
she
said,
then
hugged
me
tight
and
said
goodbye.
This
was
my
first
birthday
away
from
home.
I
missed
my
mom,
missed
my
sister,
and
most
certainly
missed
the
special
pound
cake
my
mother
always
made
for
my
birthday.
Since
getting
to
college
that
year,
I
would
watch
jealously
as
the
other
freshmen
received
care
packages
from
their
parents
on
their
birthdays----
and
even
on
ordinary
days.
Big
boxes
containing
summer
slacks
and
blouses,
packages
or
M&M’s
and
Snickers,
things
they
needed
and
things
they
didn’t.
Instead
of
feeling
thrilled
about
upcoming
eighteenth
birthday,
I
felt
empty.
I
wished
my
mom
would
send
me
something,
too,
but
I
knew
that
she
couldn’t
afford
presents
or
the
postage.
She
had
done
her
best
with
my
sister
and
me----raising
us
by
herself.
The
simple
truth
was
there
just
was
never
enough
money.
But
that
didn’t
stop
her
from
filling
us
with
dreams.
“You
can
be
anything
you
want
to
be,”
she
would
tell
us.
“Politicians,
dancers,
writers
----
you
just
have
to
work
for
it;
you
have
to
get
an
education.”
Thanks
to
my
mom’s
sacrifices
and
big
dreams,
I’d
made
it
to
the
Ivy
League;
Brown
University
in
Providence,
Rhode
Island.
As
I
was
recalling
these
things,
my
roommate
joined
me
on
the
bed.
“Hey.
after
we
study,
Let’s
buy
ice
cream
and
cake.”
I
nodded,
closed
my
eyes,
and
imagined
the
came
Mom
would
have
made.
Mmm.
I
could
see
the
golden
yellow
of
each
of
twelve
eggs,
and
I
could
almost
smell
the
vanilla(香草)filling
the
house
while
the
cake
baked.
注意:1.
所续写短文的词数应为150左右;
续写部分分为两段,每段的开头语已为你写好;
Paragraph
1
As
I
daydreamed,
there
was
a
knock
on
the
door.
______________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
Paragraph
2
How
had
she
managed
to
afford
it?
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
答案
阅读
21~23
CBC
24~26
BDB
27~30
ACDA
31~35
DBBAB
二、七选五
36~40
BFDGE
三、完型
41~45
CDBDA
46~50
BACDB
51~55
ACBDC
四、语法填空
56.
from
57.
ranging
58.
boredom
59.
which
60.
will
prove
a
62.
majority
63.
denying
64.
broaden
65.
pleasure
作文:略
同课章节目录