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2019年北京市东城区高考英语二模试卷
2019年北京市东城区高考英语二模试卷 第一部分:知识运用(共两节,45分)第一节 语法填空(每小题1.5分, 共15分) 1. A World Environment Day is a UN Environment﹣led global event, (1)________ takes place on June 5 every year and is celebrated by thousands of communities worldwide. Since it began in 1972, it has grown to become the(2)________(large) of all the celebrations of environment each year. China owns half the world's electric vehicles and 99% of the world's electric buses. By (3)________ (host) World Environment Day 2019, the Chinese government will be able to showcase its innovation and progress toward a cleaner environment. B Why do people want to go to university? For some, it is the desire to learn. At university, you(4)________ (teach) by lecturers and professors who may be leading experts (5)________ their fields. The opportunity to learn from them is what drives some people(6)________ (apply) to university. For others, going to university provides the all﹣important stepping﹣stone for their careers. However, for the majority of (7)________(west) people, university means freedom from home. C Billions of poor people around the world(8)________(depend) on the use of wood for cooking. And as they take more and more firewood from wild areas, they are destroying habitats around the world.Wood collection is one reason why many animals have become endangered. This is (9)________ Dr. Metcalf spends each summer in Africa. He wants to teach women and children in villages how to cook with the sun. He helped create Solar Cookers International. It's an organization that introduces solar cookers to developing countries(10)________ teaches people how to use them. 第二节 完形填空(每小题1.5分,共30分) Two birthdays, One mistake Zackary Johnson has a birthday coming up in a few days, so it wasn't surprising to have an envelope addressed to him last week. His mom, Glenda, (1)_______ immediately that it was spelled "Zachary" Johnson. She didn't find that unusual because many people spell Zackary's name (2)_______. But the sender's pre﹣printed label made her confused. That name didn't (3)_______ up to anyone of her friends or relatives. She asked her husband, "Do you(4)_______ this name? " "Nope, " Steve responded and became somewhat(5)_______. Still, they agreed to(6)_______ the envelope to their son to see what was in it. Zack opened it to(7)_______ $20 in a birthday card that said "Happy Birthday, Zachary!" He was (8)_______and was ready to go shopping!! However, the(9)_______increased for Glenda. The card was unsigned. She was wondering why a(10)_______would send money to her son and(11)_______he would know it was Zack's birthday. A variety of scenes can go(12)_______parents' minds, especially when they hear stories about Internet crimes. They knew they would have to make some inquiries not only to give them (13)_______, but also to protect their son. "I know who that fellow is! He is an old farmer that lives out on Hillberry Road." Glenda's dad said when he was informed of the(14)_______. So the couple quickly drove out into the country and found the house.(15)_______, no one was home. Steve decided to leave a brief but(16)_______message that the call should be returned as soon as possible. The next day the old farmer called. The farmer's great grandson, Zachary Johnson, had recently moved with his parents to Heavenly Drive. That's the street where Zackary Johnson(17)_______. The farmer was sure surprised by the(18)_______of events. He figured he'd have to send another card to his grandson. But Zackary Johnson, who is turning eleven years old in a few days, did the right thing. He and his parents(19)_______ their way down Heavenly Drive to the home of Zachary Johnson who is turning four years old in a few days. They(20)_______Zachary's great grandfather's card with the $20. Plus, Zackary Johnson wished Zachary Johnson a very Happy Birthday. (1) A.guessed B.expected C.noticed D.added (2) A.incorrectly B.hesitantly C.naturally D.quickly (3) A.back B.match C.build D.call (4) A.like B.sign C.recognize D.bear (5) A.discouraged B.embarrassed C.ashamed D.concerned (6) A.return B.present C.drop D.address (7) A.find B.hold C.pay D.reach (8) A.relaxed B.relieved C.excited D.amused (9) A.anger B.unease C.sadness D.regret 第13页 共14页 ◎ 第14页 共14页 (10) A.friend B.relative C.farmer D.stranger (11) A.what B.who C.how D.when (12) A.beyond B.over C.against D.through (13) A.peace B.faith C.confidence D.satisfaction (14) A.crime B.secret C.situation D.conclusion (15) A.Unfortunately B.Amazingly C.Undoubtedly D.Interestingly (16) A.updated B.urgent C.flexible D.warning (17) A.travels B.walks C.moves D.lives (18) A.order B.turn C.trend D.error (19) A.made B.changed C.cleared D.pushed (20) A.showed B.held C.purchased D.delivered 第二部分:阅读理解(共两节,40分)第一节(共30分) Preschool girl lifts old man's spirits When Tara Wood brought her daughter to a grocery store to buy the four﹣year﹣old some cupcakes, she had no idea that would be a life﹣changing experience. As Tara pushed her daughter Norah around the store last month, she passed an old man who was by himself. The old man looked cold, until Norah shouted to him, "Hi! It's my birthday today!" The man stopped and his ________ changed from distant and serious to warm and friendly. "How old are you today? " the man asked. After some time talking together, Norah asked her mom to take a picture of her with her new friend "Mr Dan", Dan Peterson, 82. They hugged and after ten minutes went their separate ways. That could have been the end of the story. But it is actually the beginning of a special relationship. Tara posted the picture of her daughter and Mr. Dan on Facebook and someone who recognized him reached out to her with his contact information. It turned out that Mr. Dan's wife died in March and he had been suffering from depression and anxiety ever since. The person on Facebook told Tara that it was the first time they had seen Mr. Dan smile since the death of his wife. Knowing that, Tara contacted Mr. Dan, and ever since Norah and the 82﹣year﹣old have developed a friendship unlike any other. "She has shown me a depth of love, a depth that I didn't know existed, " Mr. Dan told the reporter. Mr. Dan told Tara that before meeting Norah, he hadn't had one night of uninterrupted sleep. Anxiety kept him up at all hours and made him restless. After meeting Norah, he said he now sleeps soundly. For Mr. Dan's 82nd birthday on October 20, the mother and the daughter brought balloons and presents﹣and, of course, cupcakes. Mr. Dan will also spend a day around Thanksgiving with Norah and her family. "If you don't take the time to notice people, you will never know how you can positively impact a life, " Tara Wood said. (1)Mr. Dan looked cold because________. A. he disliked little kids B. he felt lonely C. he knew little about Norah. D. nobody had hugged him (2)The underlined word "demeanor" in Paragraph 2 probably means________. A. body B. words C. attitude. D. thoughts (3)How did Tara know more about Mr. Dan?________ A. From a stranger. B. From a news reporter. C. From his neighbor.. D. From a shop assistant. (4)What can we learn from the story?________ A. It is important to respect each other. B. Giving makes a real difference. C. Good things will happen if one keeps trying. 第13页 共14页 ◎ 第14页 共14页 D. We should not judge a person at first sight. The STAR Eco Station is an environmental science museum, a wildlife rescue center, and a shelter for endangered and illegally﹣traded foreign animals confiscated(没收)by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. It carries out the mission "Preservation through Education" by educating visitors about the preservation of the environment and the inter﹣dependence of all living things. Field trips STAR Eco Station hosts field trips for schools and camps throughout Southern California. Each field trip lasts two hours, consisting of a one﹣hour gathering and a one﹣hour tour of the facility, with lessons associated with California State Science Standards. Throughout the field trip, students learn about the latest developments in environmental protection and the ways in which wildlife interacts with various ecosystems. The students also receive an up﹣close and hands﹣on experience with our rescued foreign wildlife. The tour includes different environmental exhibits that showcase the ways students can help protect animals in the wild. Field trips are offered on weekdays only, from 10 a.m.﹣12 p.m. or 12 p.m.﹣2 p.m. The rate is $6 per visitor, both child and adult, with a $120 minimum. We offer one free adult per 10 children for groups of 40 or more. Maximum capacity is 120 people per field trip. Public tours Guided tours of the STAR Eco Station introduce visitors to over two hundred rescued foreign wildlife. Each tour is led by an Eco Station staff member, and features fun animal facts, hands﹣on animal encounters, surprising rescue stories, environmental exhibits, and original approaches to going green. Visitors may only see the animals on a guided tour, for both your safety and the safety of our animals. The guided tour lasts approximately 45﹣60 minutes. Visitors are served on a first﹣come, first﹣served basis. No reservations are required. However, tours may sell out. We suggest larger groups schedule a private tour. Note: Our regular public tours times are subject to change without notice. Please call in advance for the most up﹣to﹣date information. Eco Station is not open to the public on weekdays. You can book a private tour or field trip by calling (310)842 8066. HOURS Saturday and Sunday: 10 a.m. ﹣ 4 p.m. (last tour begins at 3 p.m.) Our guided public tours start every hour on the hour. (1)The STAR Eco Station aims to________. A. collect money for animal shelters B. help research wildlife abroad C. provide a knowledge of unusual animals. D. raise awareness of wildlife protection (2)What can students do during a field trip?________ A. Take part in foreign wildlife rescue. B. Make a speech on the environment. C. Learn how living things affect each other.. D. Get to know why species get endangered. (3)For a guided tour, visitors should know that________. A. it is available on weekdays B. large groups are served first C. booking is needed. D. its time could change Love the way you walk Listen carefully to the footsteps in the family home, and you can probably work out who is walking about. The features most commonly used to identify people are faces, voices and fingerprints. But the way they walk is also a giveaway. Researchers have used video cameras and computers to analyze people's gaits, and are now quite good at it. But translating such knowledge into a practical identification system can be tricky. Cameras are often visible, are difficult to set up, require good lighting and may have their view blocked by other people. A team led by Dr. Ozanyan and Dr. Scully have been looking for a better way to recognize gait. Their answer: pressure﹣sensitive mats. Such mats are nothing new. They have been part of security systems. But Ozanyan and Scully use a complicated version that can record the amount of pressure applied in different places as someone walks across it. These measurements form a pattern unique to the walker. The researchers turned to an artificial﹣intelligence system to recognize such patterns, and it seemed to work. In a study in 2018, they tested the system on a database of footsteps of 127 people. They found its error rate in identifying who was who was a mere 0.7%. And Scully says even without a database of footsteps to work with, the system can determine someone's sex and, with reasonable accuracy, a subject's age. One application of the mat﹣based gait﹣recognition system might be in health care, particularly for the elderly. A mat placed in a nursing home or an old person's own residence could monitor changes in an individual's gait that indicates certain illnesses. That would provide early warning of someone being at greater risk of falling over. Gait analysis might also be used as a security measure in the workplace, monitoring access to restricted areas, such as parts of military bases, server farms or laboratories dealing with dangerous materials. Perhaps the most interesting use of the mats, though, would be in public places, such as airports. For that to work, the footsteps of those to be recognized would need to have been stored in a database, which would be harder to arrange than the collection of photographs and fingerprints that existing airport security systems rely on. Many aircrew or preregistered frequent flyers would welcome anything that speeded up one of the most tiresome parts of modern travel. (1)What is mainly talked about in Paragraph 2?________ 第13页 共14页 ◎ 第14页 共14页 A. Research findings. B. Research equipment. C. Research background.. D. Research assumption. (2)According to Paragraph 3, the mat is used to________. A. ensure safety B. collect data C. analyse pressure. D. determine age (3)The gait﹣recognition system might be applied to________. A. detect potential health problems B. monitor security work progress C. warn passengers of possible dangers. D. keep track of travelling frequency (4)The main purpose of the passage is to________. A. examine and assess B. compare and educate C. explain and inform. D. discuss and persuade Overtourism: A growing global problem The summer holidays are in full swing﹣and protests against overtourism have begun in a number of popular European cities. Barcelona, in particular, is at the centre of these mounting concerns about the rapid growth of tourism in cities, especially during peak holiday periods. In fact, there were 30 million overnight visitors in 2017, compared to a resident population of 1, 625, 137 in Barcelona. While many tourists want to "live like a local" during their visits, the residents of many tourism﹣dependent destinations are seeing the unique sense of place that characterised their home towns vanish beneath a wave of souvenir shops, crowds, tour buses and noisy bars. Overtourism is harming the landscape, damaging beaches, and pricing residents out of the housing market. It is a hugely complex issue that is often oversimplified. It can have an impact in multiple ways. The international cruise(游轮) industry, for example, delivers thousands of passengers daily to destination ports. While comparatively little is returned to communities, cruise activity creates physical and visual pollution. City residents also bear the cost of tourism growth. As cities transform to offer service to tourists, the global travel supply chain advances. This goes with increasing property speculation(房产投机) and rising costs of living for local communities. Airbnb, for example, has been accused of reducing housing affordability and displacing residents. In addition, overcrowding and the establishment of typical tourism﹣focused businesses, such as clubs, bars and souvenir shops, overpower local businesses﹣and noisy and unmanageable tourist behaviour is common. This weakens the uniqueness of destinations and leads to crowd and waste management pressures. Clearly, tourism brings jobs, investment and economic benefits to destinations. But overtourism occurs when tourism expansion fails to acknowledge that there are limits. Local government and planning authorities have so far been powerless to deal with the irresistible influence of the global tourism supply chain. This has led to widespread "tourist﹣phobia"﹣first described by Manuel Delgado more than a decade ago as a mixture of rejection, mistrust and disrespect for tourists. Dealing with overtourism must now be a priority. Managing the flow of tourists seems an improbable and unwelcome task. But some cities have taken extreme measures to limit the effects of overtourism, including the introduction of new or revised taxation arrangements, fines linked to new local laws, and "demarketing", whereby destinations focus on attracting fewer, high﹣spending and low impact tourists, rather than large groups. Overtourism is a shared responsibility. City administrators and destination managers must acknowledge that there are definite limits to growth. Putting the wellbeing of local residents above the needs of the global tourism supply chain is vital. Primary consideration must be given to ensuring that the level of visitation fits within a destination's capacity. We need to urgently rethink the way cities are evolving to uphold the rights of their residents. (1)Why is Barcelona mentioned in Paragraph 1?________ A. To warn people away from popular cities. B. To describe how unique the city is. C. To compare the number of visitors to that of locals.. D. To show how crowded a destination can be. (2)What is the problem of overtourism?________ A. It has led to higher living expenses. B. It has destroyed local businesses. C. It has caused mistrust among local communities.. D. It has increased the unemployment rate. (3)The reason for overtourism is that________. A. tourists lack a sense of responsibility B. destinations misjudge their capacity C. tourists' travelling preference is oversimplified. D. governments fail to support the supply chain (4)According to the writer, what should the local governments do?________ A. Guarantee local people's welfare. B. Take full advantage of tourism. C. Control tourism﹣related businesses.. D. Advocate a ban on global tourism. 第13页 共14页 ◎ 第14页 共14页 第二节(共10分) A cultural view on personal space It's a well﹣known fact that the British prefer a large "bubble" of personal space around them. (1)_______And in South America, a friend may grab you by the arm during conversation to make their point. Now, a study published in the Journal of Cross﹣Cultural Psychology has looked into why different cultures have such different approaches to personal space. (2)_______They developed an earlier study that divided individuals into "contact" and "non﹣contact" cultures. Contact cultures﹣southern European, Latin American and Arabian﹣engaged in more touching and stood closer during conversation than non﹣contact cultures in northern Europe, North America and parts of Asia. To a degree, this proved correct. Argentina becomes known as the most touchy﹣feely nation; people here keep the same distance from a stranger as a British person would an acquaintance and a Canadian individual a close friend or partner.(3)_______They come out with the widest distance you should stand from a stranger﹣more than 1.3m﹣but one of the narrowest gaps for close friends, just 40cm, compared to nearly 60cm for a British person. So the theory of warm versus cold is not as straightforward as it sounds. (4)_______The higher a country's average temperature, the closer people will stand to a stranger. But older people in warm climates keep a bigger distance from close friends and stand closer to strangers; women generally keep a greater distance from someone they don't know. The academics leading this study admit that there is a lot more to do. But what we do know is to keep your distance in Canada; prepare for a hug in Argentina.(5)_______They like to stand closer than anybody. To keep warm, perhaps. A. It's important to get the distance right, though. B. Romanians clearly take longer to establish trust. C. How close we stand to other people varies widely between countries. D. And if you end up on good terms with a Norwegian, don't draw back. E. However, in India people will pack into trains and buses without a second thought. F. One theory the researchers wanted to test was whether climate affects personal space. G. The study certainly found that climate, age and gender have an effect on personal distance across cultures. 第三部分:书面表达(共两节,35分)第一节(15分) 假设你是红星中学学生李华.你的美国朋友Jim在给你的邮件中询问你的高三生活情况.请你给他回复邮件,内容包括: 1.近况; 2.感受; 3.愿望. 注意:1.词数不少于50; 2.开头和结尾已给出,不计入总词数. Dear Jim, Yours, Li Hua 第二节(20分) 假设你是红星中学学生李华.请根据以下四幅图的先后顺序,给某英文报刊投稿,记录你参加的绿化社区活动. 注意:词数不少于60. 提示词:花苗 flower seedling 第13页 共14页 ◎ 第14页 共14页 参考答案与试题解析 2019年北京市东城区高考英语二模试卷 第一部分:知识运用(共两节,45分)第一节 语法填空(每小题1.5分, 共15分) 1. 【答案】 此题暂无答案 【考点】 说明都资法填空 阅读射面综合 完常综陆 【解析】 此题暂无解析 【解答】 此题暂无解答 第二节 完形填空(每小题1.5分,共30分) 【答案】 此题暂无答案 【考点】 阅读射面综合 完常综陆 说明都资法填空 【解析】 此题暂无解析 【解答】 此题暂无解答 第二部分:阅读理解(共两节,40分)第一节(共30分) 【答案】 此题暂无答案 【考点】 阅读射面综合 完常综陆 推正移断 【解析】 此题暂无解析 【解答】 此题暂无解答 【答案】 此题暂无答案 【考点】 阅读射面综合 广告常告够阅读 完常综陆 【解析】 此题暂无解析 【解答】 此题暂无解答 【答案】 此题暂无答案 【考点】 阅读射面综合 完常综陆 科正知阅读 【解析】 此题暂无解析 【解答】 此题暂无解答 【答案】 此题暂无答案 【考点】 阅读射面综合 广告常告够阅读 完常综陆 【解析】 此题暂无解析 【解答】 此题暂无解答 第二节(共10分) 【答案】 此题暂无答案 【考点】 阅读射面综合 完常综陆 七体五板读 【解析】 此题暂无解析 【解答】 此题暂无解答 第三部分:书面表达(共两节,35分)第一节(15分) 【答案】 此题暂无答案 第13页 共14页 ◎ 第14页 共14页 【考点】 提纲类 应表文木作 阅读射面综合 【解析】 此题暂无解析 【解答】 此题暂无解答 第二节(20分) 【答案】 此题暂无答案 【考点】 提纲类 应表文木作 阅读射面综合 【解析】 此题暂无解析 【解答】 此题暂无解答 第13页 共14页 ◎ 第14页 共14页查看更多