四川省内江市市中区天立学校2019-2020学年高一下学期第三次月考英语试题

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四川省内江市市中区天立学校2019-2020学年高一下学期第三次月考英语试题

内江天立高中第二学期第三次月考考试 ‎ 高一年级 英语试卷 分值:150 分 考试时间:120 分钟 第Ⅰ卷 (选择题,共 100 分) ‎ ‎A. Peter s student. B. Peter s colleague. C. Peter's classmate.‎ ‎11. What does the woman advise Peter to do?‎ A. Buy himself an e-dictionary. B. Go to Roberts house C. Give Robert a call.‎ ‎12. When does the conversation probably take place?‎ A. In the evening. B. In the afternoon. C. In the morning.‎ 听第 9 段材料,回答第 13 至 16 题。‎ ‎13. Why is Julia upset?‎ 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,并标在试 卷的相应位置。听完每段对话后,你都有 10 秒钟的时间来回答有关小题和阅读下一小题。每段对话仅读一 遍。 ‎ ‎1. What is the woman doing?‎ A. Giving advice. B. Making an invitation. C. Asking for permission ‎2. What are the speakers talking about?‎ A. A writer. B. A scientist. C. A fiction.‎ ‎3. How old is Susan?‎ A. Eighteen years old. B. Seventeen years old. C. Twenty-one years old.‎ ‎4. Where does the conversation probably take place?‎ A. In a library. B. In a bookstore. C. At Customs.‎ ‎5. What did the man use to do for exercise?‎ A. Ride a bike B. Go swimming. C. Skip rope.‎ 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 2 至 4 个小题,从题中所给的 A、B、C 三个选项中选出最佳 选项,并标在试卷的相应位置。听每段对话或独白前,你将有 5 秒钟的时间阅读各个小题,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. What does the man ask the woman to do?‎ A. Go to sleep early. B. Bake some bread. C. Buy a flashlight.‎ ‎7. Where are the speakers now?‎ A. At home B. In the forest. C. In the pet store.‎ 听第 7 段材料,回答第 8、9 题。‎ ‎8. What does the man think of David's way of sleeping?‎ A. Efficient. B. Authentic. C. Strange.‎ ‎9. How many hours does the woman sleep a day?‎ A. At least four. B. At least six. C. At least seven.‎ 听第 8 段材料,回答第 10 至 12 题。‎ ‎10. Who is Robert?‎ ‎A. She got a C again on her report.‎ B. She failed to hand in her report on time.‎ C. She got an unsatisfactory result despite her effort.‎ ‎14. What reason does Professor Williams give Julia? A. Handing the report in late.‎ B. Spending little time on the report.‎ C. Getting the wrong idea about the report.‎ ‎15. What should Julia have mentioned in her report? A. The history of the Chinese space industry B. The future of the Chinese space industry. C. Shenzhou V and its astronaut.‎ ‎16. What can we learn from the conversation?‎ A. The speakers made a mistake on the due date. B. The man is knowledgeable but unkind.‎ C. Julia will write a new report.‎ 听第 10 段材料,回答第 17 至 20 题。‎ ‎17. Why were the supermarket studies carried out? A. To get customers to spend more.‎ B. To find out what customers like. C. To provide better service.‎ ‎18. Where is the expensive food usually put? A. On shelves at eye level B. On higher shelves C. On lower shelves ‎19. How much do people spend after they have been in a supermarket for 30 minutes? A. Forty cents for each extra minute.‎ B. Fifty cents for each extra minute. C. Five dollar for each extra minute.‎ ‎20. What is the speaker’s attitude toward what the supermarkets do?‎ A. Positive. B. Indifferent. C. Negative.‎ ‎ ‎ 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,从每题所给的四个选项(A、B、C 和 D)中,选出最佳选项。‎ A The booking notes of the play "the Age of Innocence": Price: $10‎ BOOKING:‎ There are four easy ways to book seats for performance:‎ ‎---in person The Box Office is open Monday to Saturday, 10 a.m.-8 p.m.‎ ‎---by telephone Ring 01324976 to reserve your tickets or to pay by credit card (Visa, MasterCard and Amex accepted)‎ ‎---by post Simply complete the booking form and return it to Global Theatre Box Office.‎ ‎---on line Complete the on-line booking form at Satan fiedtheatre.com.‎ DISCOUNTS:‎ ‎B. The tickets for Saver discount. C. The tickets for group booking. D. The standby tickets.‎ B Dr. Ellen Bronson of the Maryland Zoo in Baltimore always wanted to work with animals. Unlike many animal- loving little girls, though, her first idea was to be a naturalist. If a naturalist is someone who sits in the woods and observes animals and takes notes, then that’s exactly what she was doing at the time. Dr. Bronson grew up “in the middle of nowhere”, and her parents didn’t let her watch TV. “So I spent a lot of time hanging out in the woods because there was not a lot to do otherwise,” she says. “I had a funny notebook that my parents still have, where each page is about a certain animal.”‎ When she got a little older, being an animal doctor seemed like a better choice than working with animals in the forest, and the success in giving medical help to them satisfied her hugely, but she says that even the cases that don’t work out as well can be meaningful. “You also have the failures, which are hard at the time, but they help not just you but the whole zoo learn,” She says.‎ And, of course, another advantage of the job is getting to work with really cool animals. “I really like the animals that feed on meat — they’re very tough, and you can get them through hard times,” she says.‎ Finally, another advantage of her job is how often she gets to work with an animal over its life. “We’re there doing Saver: $2 off any seat booked any time in advance for performances from Monday to Thursday. Savers are available formedical examination when they’re born, we watch them grow up,” she says. “And we watch them as they age. We children up to 16 years old, over 60s and full-time students.‎ ‎help them age peacefully and help them be pain-free, and then we’re also there when they die. That is something very Supersaver: half-price seats are available for people with disabilities and one companion. It is advisable to book in advance.special.”‎ There is a maximum of eight wheelchair spaces available and one wheelchair space will be held until an hour before the show.‎ Standby: best available seats are on sale for $6 from one hour before the performance for people eligible (suitable) for Saver and Supersaver discounts and thirty minutes before for all other customers.‎ Group Bookings: there is a ten percent discount for parties of twelve or more.‎ School: school parties of ten or more can book $6 standby tickets in advance and will get every tenth ticket free.‎ ‎24. From the passage, we can learn that Dr. Ellen Bronson spent her childhood in_ .‎ A. a place without a name B. a very distant place C. the center of a city D. the middle of a certain place Please note: we are unable to exchange tickets or refund money unless a performance is cancelled due to unforeseen25. What can we learn from the second paragraph?‎ circumstances.‎ ‎21. According to the notes, who can get $2 off?‎ A. The people who book the tickets on Fridays. B. A 20-year-old full-time college student.‎ C. An 18-year-old teenager. D. A 55-year-old woman.‎ ‎22. Which of the following is NOT true according to the passage?‎ A. There are only 8 wheelchair spaces in the theatre.‎ B. A group of 12 persons can get 10 per cent discount.‎ C. The audience can’t refund money if the performance is on show.‎ D. A school party of 15 students should pay $90 for the standby tickets.‎ ‎23. What kind of tickets are the cheapest?‎ A. The standby tickets for school parties of ten or more.‎ ‎A. Giving animals medical help is always Ellen’s dream. B. Even failures can also mean something to Ellen.‎ C. Failures in work are hard for Ellen to accept.‎ D. Observing animals gives Ellen greater satisfaction.‎ ‎26. In her work with animals, she can _.‎ A. earn fame and respect from her work.‎ B. realize her dream of becoming a naturalist.‎ C. take care of many animals from birth to death.‎ D. keep all the animals in peace and free from pain.‎ ‎27. Which of the following best describes Dr. Bronson?‎ A. Generous. B. Well-educated. C. Grateful. D. Caring.‎ C You can remember the face, but can't put a name to it. Many of us have been caught in this embarrassing situation. But researchers say it is often easier to remember someone's name than what they look like.‎ Twenty-four volunteers were shown 40 pictures of strangers, paired with random(随机的) names. They were given time to memorize the faces and names before being tested on which they thought they had seen before.‎ The participants could remember up to 85 percent of the names but only 73 percent of the faces. When they were shown a different picture of the same person, the participants could recall only 64 percent of faces, according to the study, led by the University of York.‎ That may be because faces are only recognized visually(视觉地), while names can be both spoken and written down so they can appear in our visual and audio memory. When people were shown famous people, they also remembered their names more accurately than their photographs. Co-author Dr Rob Jenkins, from the university’s psychology department, said, ''Our study suggests that, while many people may be bad at remembering names, they are likely to be even worse at remembering faces. This will surprise many people as it is against our initial understanding. Our life experiences with names and faces have misled us about how our minds work. '' Remembering names gets harder with age, leading to many uncomfortable moments for middle-aged people when they run into people they know.‎ But to study whether names are harder to recall than faces, the researchers, whose findings are published in the Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, used a ''fair test'' where the participants were presented with strangers' names and faces.‎ ‎28.What can we know according to the research in Paragraph 3? A.It is certain that names are harder to recall than faces. B.Remembering names is more easily than remembering faces. C.Most participants can remember the face not the name to it. D.The participants can recall 73% faces of the same person.‎ ‎29.Which of the following will the author agree with? A.Age will weaken the ability to remember names. B.Unlike faces, names are only recognized visually. C.Faces can appear in our visual and audio memory.‎ D.Rob Jenkins has proved people can remember faces better.‎ ‎30.What does the underlined word ''initial'' in Paragraph 4 mean? A.Clear. B.first.‎ C.Unusual. D.Creative.‎ ‎31.What can we infer from the last paragraph? A.People can't remember strangers’ names and faces. B.Recalling names is more difficult than remembering faces. C.The researcher uses the same method to study another problem. D.Whether names are harder to recall than faces is further proved.‎ ‎D Scientist in Colombia have trained a team of rats to help remove landmines from the countryside. Landmines are small bombs hidden in the ground and designed to explode when someone steps on them.‎ When trained, the rats can smell special metals in the mines and then signal to their human team. Then why use rats for such an important job?‎ In the past, dogs have been used to find bombs. Rats have a good sense of smell and can respond to orders, just like dogs do. But rats are much lighter than dogs. They stand less of a chance of setting off the mines, which explode under a certain amount of weight. What’s more, the best rats are cheaper to keep than dogs. It costs about the same amount of money to take care of one dog as it does 70 rats.‎ The rats have already been used in Tanzania, an African country with many landmines. Luisa Fernanda Mendez and her team in Colombia are training the even lighter Wistar rats. These are the white rats with red eyes that scientists often use in laboratory experiments. ''They even train their babies to perform their jobs, which saves us a lot of time, '' Mendez said.‎ Colombia has the second-highest rate (比率) of deaths from landmine accidents in the world. Last year, land mines killed 695 people—56 of whom were children. A criminal(犯罪) group called the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, as well as other organizations, have placed the mines. FARC are strongly against Colombia's government. The group has placed mines all around its own bases and in many places in the countryside.‎ In the past, the Colombian government hired peasants and poor farmers to find mines. Many of them died trying to find the well-hidden bombs.‎ Colombian police official Erick Guzman hopes the team of rats can come to the rescue. ''These rats will be a great help, '' he said.‎ ‎32.How do rats help to find land mines?‎ A.By their excellent hearing. B.By their sense of smell. C.By their special sight. D.By their light weight.‎ ‎33.What is the advantage of rats over dogs in finding bombs? A.They are cleverer than dogs.‎ B.They run faster than dogs.‎ C.They don't make mines explode as easily. D.they have a better sense of smell.‎ ‎34.Which of the following is not true?‎ A.In the past, dogs have been used to find bombs. B.Rats are much lighter than dogs.‎ C.It costs less money to take care of a rat than a dog. D.Dogs have a better sense of smell than rats.‎ ‎35.What is the text mainly about?‎ A.A new way to clear land mines—specially-trained rats . B.People in Tanzania are suffering from land mines. C.Dogs are no longer used to find land mines.‎ D.Land mines have become a great danger to Colombians.‎ 第二节 七选五(共 5 小题;每小题 2 分,满分 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,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。选项中有两项 为多余选项。‎ Volunteering is a great way to support an organization and make a difference in your community. It can also be an opportunity to meet new people and learn new skills. 36 And what should we plan for? Here’s a guide for beginners.‎ Step 1: 37 ‎ Do you want to help the world, or your community? Do you want to build your own skills, make new friends, and learn? Do you love what you do? Do you want to share your gifts with others or give something back? Think about these kinds of questions. That can help you to choose the right direction for your volunteer work.‎ Step 2: Choose an organization that is meaningful to you.‎ If you feel strongly about literacy (读写), for instance, volunteer at your local library or find out if there is an organization of volunteer tutors in your area. There are organizations doing all sorts of work. 38 ‎ Step 3: Start small.‎ If you already have a busy school life, volunteer your time for an hour or two a week, or perhaps one day a month. 39 Then, if you find you enjoy the work and have more time to do it, take on more time by time.‎ Step 4: Get training.‎ If there is a training course, attend it. If not, talk to the group leaders and other volunteers about their experiences. 40‎ Step 5: Try not to give up.‎ Volunteer work sometimes involves unpleasant tasks, difficult fellow workers, busy days, or bad management. If you find your work difficult, however, try to work through it before you decide to quit.‎ A. Do you love to work with people?‎ B. But how do we go about volunteering? C. Get to know others in the organization.‎ D. It is important that you choose something that you like. E. Think about why you want to volunteer.‎ F. You’ll pick up some good tips to make your work there more productive.‎ G. You might be surprised by how much you can do in even a little bit of time.‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎第三部分 英语知识运用(共两节,满分 45 分) ‎ 第一节 完形填空(共 20 小题;每题 1.5 分,满分 30 分)‎ Stephen Glenn is a famous American research scientist. He has made several very important medical 41 . When a newspaper journalist asked him why he was able to be so much more _42 than the average person, he responded that it all came from a(n) 43 with his mother that occurred when he was a child.‎ Stephen had been trying to 44_ a bottle of milk from the refrigerator when he _45_ his grip on the slippery bottle and it fell,spilling(泼出) its contents all over the kitchen floor-a real sea of milk! When his mother came into the kitchen,instead of 46 at him,giving him a lecture or chastising him,she said, “what a great and wonderful 47 you have made! I have rarely seen such a huge pond of milk. Well,the 48 has already been done. Would you like to get down and play in the milk for a few minutes 49 we clean it up?"‎ Indeed,he did. After a few minutes,his mother said," Stephen,whenever you make a mess like this, 50 ‎ you have to clean it up and restore everything to its proper 51 .”And together they cleaned up the spilled milk. His mother then said,"You know,what we have here is a _52_ experiment in how to effectively carry a big milk bottle with two tiny hands. Let's go out in the back yard and 53 the bottle with water and see if you can discover a way to carry it without _54_ it “The little boy learned that if he grasped the bottle at the top near the lip with both hands,he could 55 it without dropping it. What a good 56 to him!‎ This famous scientist then remarked that it was at that moment that he knew he didn't need to be afraid to make ‎ 57 .Instead,he learned that mistakes were just 58 for learning something new,which is,after all,what scientific 59 are all about. Even if the experiment doesn't work, we usually learn something ‎ 60 from it.‎ ‎41. A. impressions B. breakthroughs C. promises D. intentions ‎42. A. outgoing B. responsible C. warm-hearted D. creative ‎43. A. experience B. word C. argument D. adventure ‎44. A. recycle B. purchase C. remove D. freeze ‎45. A. lost B. tightened C. adjusted D. caught ‎46. A. looking B. yelling C. smiling D. staring ‎47. A. discovery B. mess C. change D. joke ‎48. A. injury B. research C. assignment D. damage ‎49. A. when B. as C. after D. before ‎50. A. gradually B. firstly C. eventually D. constantly ‎51. A. order B. situation C. form D. use ‎52. A. successful B. failed C. completed D. useless ‎53. A. fill B. wash C. polish D. cover ‎54. A. shaking B. dropping C. lifting D. touching ‎55. A. make up B. apology C. project D. lesson ‎57. A. efforts B. plans C. mistakes D. decisions ‎58. A. requirements B. routines C. chances D. goals ‎59. A. achievements B. approaches C. conference D. experiments ‎60. A. valuable B. tough C. familiar D. abstract 第三部分 英语知识运用 ‎ ‎第Ⅱ卷(共 50 分)‎ ‎第二节:书面表达(满分 25 分)‎ 假定你是李华,你的外国朋友 Martin 所在国家新冠病毒严重爆发,他给你发来电子邮件,请你帮忙购 第二节 阅读填空(共 10 小题; 每小题 1.5 分,满分 15 分) ‎ 阅读下面材料,在空白处填入适当的内容(1 个单词)或括号内单词的正确形式。将答案填在答题卡上 的相应位置。‎ Nowadays ,more and more post-90s generation will enter the workforce .They place more emphasis 61 looking for a job that they enjoy more than other factors.Many of them hope to establish a 62 (relax) relationship among workers.More than half of them prefer the easy-going and good-tempered employers.63 ‎ ‎(surprise)10 percent of the,wish to be friends with 64 (they) bosses.‎ Experts say that they are the generation of the Internet era.They have a strong 65 (aware) of ‎"self" and how they relate to the outside world.Guo Yun,22,is a digital media major from Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications.She says that she will not mind 66_ (work) long hours,but prefer her boss to explain why she 67 (have)to, such as the urgency of the task."I feel greatly motivated in this way,"she ‎‎ 买一些口罩.请你给他写封回信,内容包括: ‎ ‎1. 告知已买到口罩,明天寄出; ‎ ‎2. 给他一些防疫建议(至少两条); ‎ ‎3. 表达祝愿。 ‎ 注意: 1. 词数 120 左右;2. 可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯。 ‎ 参考词汇:口罩:mask; 病毒:virus; 新冠病毒:nCoV Dear Martin,‎ explains. They tend 68_ (care) a great deal about the team or the management culture.They are also more ‎ outspoken about their needs , and they are likely to openly communicate with their employers. As ‎69 consequence, they are admitted into most big companies more easily. I think it is their frankness and enthusiasm70 leaves a deep impression on their employers.‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ 第四部分 写作(共 2 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) ‎ Dear Mr. Wang,‎ It is very kind of you to listen our views and ideas.‎ Through our discussion, we agree that the key to improve our English is not how much we are taught and how much we understand. So please slow down and give us enough time to master that we have learned. As for those points which make us confusing, we hope you can give us more time to practice. Meanwhile, your instruction are important to us, which they make us study more efficiently. Besides, when we felt down, it would be appreciated if you could give us encouragement. We need confident.‎ Such is the main suggestions from our class.‎ Yours, Li Hua ‎‎ Yours, Li Hua
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