江苏省南菁高级中学2019-2020学年高二下学期周末检测英语试题(二)(2020年5月)

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江苏省南菁高级中学2019-2020学年高二下学期周末检测英语试题(二)(2020年5月)

江苏省南菁高级中学2019—2020学年度第二学期 高二年级周末限时训练二 5.9‎ 本试卷满分150分考试时间120分钟 第一部分 听力(共两节,满分20分)‎ 第一节 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. How is the weather today?‎ A. ‎ Sunny B. Cloudy C. Rainy ‎2. What is the man looking for?‎ A. A good hotel. B.A guidebook. C.A friend.‎ ‎3. What does the woman want to drink first?‎ A. A cup of coffee. B. Orange juice. C. Lemonade.‎ ‎4. What will the speakers do tonight?‎ A. Go to the cinema. B. Go to a restaurant. C. Go to a concert.‎ ‎5. Where is the woman now?‎ A. In a bank. B. On a bus. C. At a train station.‎ 第二节 ‎ 听下面5段对话或独白。每段对话或独白后有几个小题,从每题所给的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。‎ 请听第6段材料,回答第6至7题。‎ 6. What does the woman need now?‎ A. Some food. B. Some water. C. A good rest.‎ 7. Why are the speakers hiking?‎ A. To reduce weight. B. To see animals. C. To enjoy the scenery.‎ 请听第7段材料,回答第8至9题。‎ 8. Which train will the man take?‎ A. The 10:30 one. B. The 12:20 one. C. The 15:10 one.‎ 9. How much will the man pay for his seat?‎ A. ‎ $15 B. $8. C. $6.‎ 请听第8段材料,回答第10至12题。‎ 10. What’s the problem with the woman's room?‎ A. The room is too small. B. There is no air conditioner. C. There is no hot water.‎ 11. What does the woman want to do?‎ A. Check out. B. Change the room. C. Ask for a discount.‎ 12. When will the woman’s requirement be satisfied?‎ A. Tonight. B. Tomorrow morning. C. Tomorrow night.‎ 请听第9段材料,回答第13至16题。‎ 13. Why did the woman go to New York?‎ A. To teach in the US. B. To attend a summer camp. C. To attend a summer course.‎ 6. How long did the woman stay in New York?‎ A. About 5 days. B. About 15 days. C. About 50 days.‎ 7. In what way are American classes different from the speakers’?‎ A. The teaching style. B. The teaching material. C. The teaching facility.‎ 8. What’s the probable relationship between the speakers?‎ A. Classmates. B. Father and daughter. C. Teacher and student.‎ 请听第10段材料,回答第17至20题。‎ 9. Where did the speaker’s sister go?‎ A. To the barber’s. B. To the tailor’s. C. To the doctor’s.‎ 10. How did the speaker get the video?‎ A. He bought it. B. He rented it. C. He borrowed it.‎ 11. How old is the speaker probably?‎ A. ‎9 years old. B. 20 years old. C. 29 years old.‎ 12. What do we know about the film?‎ A. It has a happy ending.‎ B. The dogs in it live on the street.‎ C. Everybody who sees it will cry.‎ 第二部分 单项选择(共15小题;每小题 1分,满分15分)‎ ‎21. ---The Captain is definitely a touching movie, ______ adapted from a true story.‎ ‎---Exactly. Captain Liu puts the safety of passengers in the first place.‎ A. one that B. which C. the one D. one ‎22. China has been given considerable _____ for fighting against COVID-19 with its careful organization and strict regulation.‎ A. reputation B. credit C. impression D. influence ‎23. ---David, your sweeping robot ordered online will arrive this afternoon.‎ ‎---That's great. I can't wait to see how it _____ the floor.‎ A. is mopping B. has been mopping C. will be mopping D. will have mopped ‎24. On the first day when all students returned for the spring term, leaflets were ______ to parents about the prevention of viruses.‎ A. held out B. put out C. laid out D. given out ‎25. --Hi, guy! Do you still remember we worked in the same office ten years ago?‎ ‎---Of course, a lot of happy memories. We ______ often have coffee together.‎ A. could B. would C. might D. should ‎26. Our president delivered the 2020 New Year speech on Dec.31, _____ he encouraged us to seize the day and live it to the full.‎ A. when B. which C. that D. where ‎27. China is considered as one of the highly ______ economies, with its GDP ranking second in the world.‎ A. sensitive B. apparent C. dynamic D. consistent ‎28. ---What makes you so excited, dear?‎ ‎--- ______Gaokao has been delayed and I will have more time to prepare.‎ A. That B. How C. Why D. Whether ‎29. Many people tend to ______education with exam success, which is a block to the overall ‎ development of students.‎ A. conclude B. reward C. equate D. induce ‎30. The illegal hunting of wild animals will be hard to stop _____there is a demand for their organs.‎ A. until B. unless C. though D. since ‎31. The number of the infected is updated daily _____greater public awareness of the situation and better self-protection.‎ A. in anticipation of B. in appreciation of C. on the basis of D. on the point of ‎32. ----Did you enjoy your self-drive trip to the camping site?‎ ‎----You know, Mary has just got the driving license and we ______a tense ride.‎ A. have had B. had C. have D. had had ‎33. When told the news, Laura burst into tears, _____all her fragile emotions, and collapsed into the sofa.‎ A. releasing B. having released C. to release D. released ‎34. ---Tony looks tired and is under high pressure at work these days.‎ ‎---If only he ______too much by his employer.‎ A. were not expected B. had not been expected C. should not be expected D. were not to be expected ‎35. ---Danial, I think you are supposed to wash dishes today.‎ ‎---________I did it yesterday and it's Sara's turn.‎ A. So what? B. How come? C. What for? D. Why not?‎ 第三部分 完形填空(共20小题;每小题1.5分,满分30分)‎ 请认真阅读下面各题,从题中所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。‎ A Colorado pair brings new meaning to the word “determination”. When one couldn’t walk and the other couldn’t see, they___36___ up to share their love of the great outdoors.‎ Melanie Knecht has to use a wheelchair to get around due to born spina bifida (脊柱裂). Trevor Hahn only recently became blind after he___37___ an eye disease five years ago. Both living in Fort Collins‎, ‎Colorado, the two met at an adaptive boxing class — and they soon___38___ each other again at an adaptive rock-climbing class.‎ They immediately___39___ over Knecht’s lifelong hobby of camping and Hahn’s passion for outdoor sports. When she told him about her recent trip to Easter Island, where she got the _____40_____to be carried on another person’s back, an unusual idea___41___ to her.‎ ‎___42___his lost sight, he’d been able to scale a Himalayan peak, using poles and ___43___ directions from his companions.‎ They started small, but next month—with her vision and his___44___—they will trek to the top of a 14,000-foot mountain.‎ ‎“It just seemed like common sense. He’s the legs, I’m the eyes!___45___, we’re the dream team.” said Knecht.‎ At the start of each hike, a friend lifts Knecht ____46____ a carrier on Hahn’s back. From that point on, she gives him oral directions to___47___ the way.‎ Hahn said, “It made me so happy to help someone experience what I’ve been able to experience my whole life. The___48___ part is being able to make her smile—that gives me___49___.”‎ In addition to this sense of purpose, the two share an understanding of how___50___ it can be asking able-bodied or sighted people for assistance in everyday life. They get immeasurable___51___ from being able to do this on their own.‎ While the two accept that others___52___ what they’ve been able to do, they’re not looking for___53___—they just want others to encourage inclusive and adaptive___54___for their friends with disabilities. Don’t___55___ them because you think they won’t be able to do something.‎ ‎36. A. rose B. made C. teamed D. ended ‎37. A. contracted B. cured C. spread D. diagnosed ‎38. A. learned from B. ran into C. corresponded with D. separated from ‎39. A. handed B. argued C. got D. bonded ‎40. A. opportunity B. competence C. permission D. honour ‎41. A. happened B. stuck C. took D. occurred ‎42. A. On account of B. In spite of C. On top of D. In view of ‎43. A. spoken B. opposite C. confusing D. gesturing ‎44 A‎. optimism B. strength C. guidance D. wisdom ‎45. A. Hopefully B. Instead C. Together D. Similarly ‎46. A. over B. up C. off D. into ‎47. A. get B. make C. lead D. smooth ‎48. A. best B. mere C. initial D. last ‎49. A. relief B. courage C. reward D. purpose ‎50. A. convenient B. difficult C. ridiculous D. essential ‎51. A. suffering B. wealth C. satisfaction D. improvement ‎52. A. appreciate B. oppose C. dismiss D. advocate ‎53. A. criticism B. attention C. praise D. curiosity ‎54. A. adventures B. assessments C. behaviors D. solutions ‎55. A. convince B. exclude C. desert D. approach 第四部分 阅读理解(共两节,满分30分)‎ 第一节阅读理解(共3篇,10小题; 每小题2分,满分20分)‎ A Metropolitan North Georgia Water Planning District ‎2015 High School Video Contest Here’s the Scoop on Pet Waste!‎ Submission Deadline March 27, 2015.‎ Eligibility Ninth, tenth, eleventh and twelfth grade students that attend schools located in Bartow, Cherokee, Clayton, Cobb, Coweta, DeKalb, Douglas, Fayette, Fulton, Forsyth, Gwinnett, Hall, Henry, Paulding and Rockdale counties are invited to participate in the video contest. Entries can be a team or individual effort.‎ Judging Submissions will be judged based on the following criteria:‎ ‎» incorporation of the “Here’s the Scoop on Pet Waste’’ message. Use the "Here's the Scoop on Pet Waste’’ messaging fact sheet for background information on the issue.‎ ‎» Composition (length, technical construction, audio quality).‎ ‎» Entertainment value.‎ Guidelines ‎» Each video must be uploaded to YouTube. The video’s YouTube link must be included in the entry/release form.‎ ‎» Team members must be from the same school.‎ ‎» The video must be between 30-60 seconds in length.‎ ‎» No professional assistance or use of copyright material is allowed, including background music.‎ ‎» Each student participating in the contest or appearing in the video must fill out a form. For teams, submit an entry/release form for each team member.‎ ‎» One video per team or individual.‎ ‎» All entry/release forms must be postmarked or received by Friday, March 27, 2015.‎ Email: kvaIlianos@atlantaregional.com OR Mail: 2015 Water Video Contest Metro Water District 40 Courtland Street, NE Atlanta, GA 30303‎ ‎» Accuracy of information.‎ ‎» Creativity.‎ Prizes ‎» ‎1st Place $1500‎ ‎» ‎2nd Place $1000‎ ‎»‎3rd Place $500‎ ‎50% of the prize money will go to the individual or team who submits the video and 50% to the high school they attend. Winners will be notified directly.‎ Page 1 of 3 www.northgeorgiawater.org ‎56. What does the underlined word “Eligibility” probably mean?‎ A. Age. B. Qualification. C. Location. D. Grade.‎ ‎57. When entering the contest, ________.‎ A. one must ask his or her teacher to sign the entry form B. winners can earn at least $750 as a prize C. one can invite friends from other schools to act in the video D. participants had better add some humor and fun to the video B For centuries, medical pioneers have refined a variety of methods and medicines to treat sickness, injury, and disability, enabling people to live longer and healthier lives.‎ ‎"A salamander (a small lizard-like animal) can grow back its leg. Why can't a human do the same? "asked Peruvian-born surgeon Dr. Anthony Atala in a recent interview. The question, a reference to work aiming to grow new limbs for wounded soldiers, captures the inventive spirit of regenerative medicine. This innovative field seeks to provide patients with replacement body parts. These parts are not made of steel; they are the real things---living cells, tissue, and even organs.‎ Regenerative medicine is still mostly experimental, with clinical applications limited to ‎ procedures such as growing sheets of skin on burns and wounds. One of its most significant advances took place in 1999, when a research group at North Carolina's Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine conducted a successful organ replacement with a laboratory-grown bladder. Since then, the team, led by Dr. Atala, has continued to generate a variety of other tissues and organs 一 from kidneys to ears.‎ The field of regenerative medicine builds on work conducted in the early twentieth century with the first successful transplants of donated human soft tissue and bone. However, donor organs are not always the best option. First of all, they are in short supply, and many people die while waiting for an available organ; in the United States alone, more than 100, 000people are waiting for organ transplants. Secondly, a patient's body may ultimately reject the transplanted donor organ. An advantage of regenerative medicine is that the tissues are grown from a patient's own cells and will not be rejected by the body's immune system.‎ Today, several labs are working to create bioartificial body parts. Scientists at Columbia and Yale‎ ‎Universities have grown a jawbone and a lung. At the University‎ of ‎Minnesota, Doris Taylor has created a beating bioartificial rat heart. Dr. Atala's medical team has reported long-term success with bioengineered bladders implanted into young patients with spina bifida (a birth defect that involves the incomplete development of the spinal cord). And at the University‎ of ‎Michigan, H. David Humes has created an artificial kidney.‎ So far, the kidney procedure has only been used successfully with sheep, but there is hope that one day similar kidney will be implantable in a human patient. The continuing research of scientists such as these may eventually make donor organs unnecessary and, as a result, significantly increase individuals'chances of survival.‎ 58. In the latest field of regenerative medicine,what are replacement parts made of?‎ A. Donated cells, tissues and organs.‎ B. Rejected cells, tissues and organs.‎ C. Cells, tissues and organs of one's own.‎ D. Cells, tissues and organs made of steel.‎ 59. What have scientists experimented successfully on for a bioartificial kidney?‎ A. PatientsB. RatsC. SheepD. Soldiers 60. Why is generative medicine considered innovative?‎ A. It will provide patients with replacement soft tissues.‎ B. It will strengthen the human body's immune system.‎ C. It will shorten the time patients waiting for a donated organ.‎ D. It will make patients live longer with bioartificial organs.‎ 61. What is the writer's attitude towards regenerative medicine?‎ A. Positive B. Negative C. Doubtful D. Reserved C A few weeks ago, a 71-year-old man pulled his car to the roadside in Northwest Portland and stopped. He rolled down the window, turned off the engine and stared at a house.‎ The place, distinguished by three gables, is partially hidden by hedges and trees. Most people who pass by would never notice it. And if they did give it a glance, they’d probably think it’s a nice house in a nice neighborhood. Nothing more.‎ The house, in the 2500 block of Northwest Westover Road, is known as the Bessie & Louis Tarpley House. Built in 1907, it’s listed on the National Register of Historic Places.‎ The current owner is Barbee Lyon, 79.‎ He and his first wife took possession in 1975. When they divorced, he bought out her share.‎ A retired lawyer, Lyon learned Louis Tarpley, the home’s first owner, had also been a Portland lawyer. Setbacks in Tarpley’s life led to the house auction(拍卖) in the late 1920s.‎ ‎“I’m only the fifth owner of the home,” Lyon said. A previous owner was Frank Masco.‎ He and his wife, Esther, and their nine children had lived across town in a tiny house needing constant repairs. In the mid-1950s, the elder Masco wanted to move to a bigger house and one closer to work. A docker (码头工人), he was on-call 24 hours a day and had to quickly get to the Willamette River docks.‎ He found a home on Westover Road. At the time, many people wanted to live in new construction in the suburbs. The Westover house was offered at a deep discount.‎ And later the family moved on several times, finally living in Vancouver.‎ One Sunday in July 2019, Charley Masco drove to Portland for an appointment at a computer store.‎ When it ended, he traveled the familiar route to Westover Road, pulled over and looked at that home.‎ He decided to do something bold. He got out of his car and walked up the steps and rang the doorbell. He waited. No response. Nervous, he thought it was a mistake to do this and considered turning around and walking back to his car.‎ Barbee Lyon opened the door and saw a stranger.‎ ‎“I’m not selling anything,” Masco said quickly. “I just want you to know I once lived here.” Lyon opened the door wide.‎ ‎“Come in.”‎ And for the first time since 1966, Masco stepped into his childhood home.‎ Every room looked as Masco had remembered it: The built-in china hutch in the dining room, the hanging lights above the table and, in the kitchen, a massive wood-burning stove where his mother used to cook family meals. It was as if he had walked into his own museum.‎ Lyon‎ told Masco he’d never done major structural remodeling, which meant Masco knew his way around the home.‎ It was as if he had never left.‎ There, on the top floor, was the window he and his siblings quietly opened to sneak out at night and return before their parents knew they were gone. The loft where friends daydreamed about the future. The living room – no TV ever allowed – where the family gathered to share music, play cards or just talk with each other.‎ Then they all walked to the basement In the far corner, Masco saw his father’s old wooden workbench. And above it, baby food jars.‎ Masco had forgotten about them.‎ He explained that his father had nailed lids from the jars to a rafter, filling the glass with different size screws, nuts and bolts, and then screwing the jars back into the lids to give him easy access while working.‎ Masco thought about his father, his mother and three of his siblings who have died. He thought about his father, tinkering in the basement, while his mother was in the kitchen preparing dinner.‎ He thought about the 71-year-old man he was and the boy he had once been.‎ Kruse, Lyon’s wife, reached up and unscrewed a jar. She handed it to Masco, believing it belonged to this stranger.‎ Masco thanked her.‎ He clutched the small bottle to his chest. “My dad,” he said quietly. “This is my dad.”‎ ‎62. Why did Charley Masco come to visit the Westover house?‎ A. He wanted to review his past and hold memories.‎ B. He attempted to buy back his childhood house.‎ C. His friend invited him to be a guest at his newly-bought house.‎ D. He came to the house where his father lived to seek roots.‎ ‎63. What made Frank Masco decide to buy the house?‎ A. The house’s owner had been a Portland lawyer.‎ B. The house was auctioned at a very low price.‎ C. He desired to improve his family’s living conditions.‎ D. The house was equipped with a basement.‎ ‎64. Why did Charley Masco feel nervous when he rang the doorbell?‎ A. He knew the house owner was a bad-tempered man.‎ B. He thought it was improper to pay an unexpected visit.‎ C. He might not hold back his feelings when he went in.‎ D. He feared the house owner would take him for a salesman.‎ ‎65. What can be a suitable title for the passage?‎ A. Collision of Two Hearts B. Experiences of Two Families C. An Unexpected Meeting D. The Harbour of the Heart 第二节 七选五阅读(共5小题;每小题2分,满分10分)‎ 根据短文内容,从短文后的七个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。‎ Much of the work in today’s world is accomplishedin teams. Most people believe the best way to build a great team is to gather a group of the most talented individuals. 66 Companies spend millions hiring top business people. Is their money well spent?‎ ‎ 67 They focused on football, basketball and baseball. The results are mixed. For football and basketball, adding talented players to a team proves a good method, but only up to the point where 70% of the players are top talent; above that level, the team’s performance begins to decline. Interestingly, this trend isn’t evident in baseball, where additional individual talent keeps improving the team’s performance.‎ To explain this phenomenon, the researchers explored the degree to which a good performance by a team requires its members to coordinate (协调) their actions. ‎68 In baseball, the performance of individual players is less dependent on teammates. They conclude that when task interdependence is high, team performance will suffer when there is too much talent, while individual talent will have positive effects on team performance when task interdependence is lower. If a basketball star is, for example, trying to gain a high personal point total, he may take a shot himself when it would be better to pass the ball to a teammate, affecting the team’s performance. Young children learning to play team sports are often told, “There is no I in TEAM.” 69 ‎ Another possibility is that when there is a lot of talent on a team, some players may make ‎ less effort. Just as in a game of tug-of-war (拔河比赛), whenever a person is added, everyone else pulls the rope with less force. ‎ ‎ 70 . An A-team may require a balance—not just A players, but a few generous B players as well.‎ A. It’s not a simple matter to determine the nature of talent.‎ B. Sports team owners spend millions of dollars attracting top talent ‎ C. The group interaction and its effect drew the researchers’ attention.‎ D. Stars apparently do not follow this basic principle of sportsmanship.‎ E. Several recent studies examined the role of talent in the sports world.‎ F. Building up a dream team is more complex than simply hiring the best talent.‎ G. This task interdependence distinguishes baseball from football and basketball.‎ 第五部分单词拼写(共10小题;每题1分,满分10分)‎ 71. The book On the Origin of Species by Charles Darwin explains the e_________ of plant and animal life on earth.‎ 72. One obvious _________(症状) of the disease is progressive loss of memory.‎ 73. She still c__________ with American friends she met nine years ago.‎ 74. One of the side effects may be to change the geographical _________(分布) of parasitic diseases such as malaria.‎ 75. The USA is a country with people from d________ backgrounds.‎ 76. There are obvious d_________ between the two wine-making areas.‎ 77. Many people like red colour ________(传递) a sense of energy and strength.‎ 78. These crops are safe; they’re r_________ to drought and disease, and they hold the promise of producing more food for people.‎ 79. Cancer is a deadly disease and it brings a sense of fear, anxiety and _________(绝望).‎ 80. We c_________ the bomb attack against civilians in the southeast of Iran and express condolences to the bereaved families.‎ 第六部分 选词填空(用所给词的适当形式)(共10小题;每小题1分,满分10分)‎ 81. Looking for a job these days can be very __________.‎ 82. Microsoft has __________ its new operating system in the past three years.‎ 83. ‎_______as heroes in harm’s way, they are the doctors, nurses, emergency rescuers and other medical professionals who have come to Wuhan since the outbreak of COVID-19.‎ 84. The army met with fierce __________ in every town.‎ 85. We must promote originality, inspire creativity and encourage __________.‎ 86. Many firemen are making great efforts__________ the fire at the local chemical plant.‎ 87. He searched for a sign of __________ on her face, but there was none.‎ 88. The opening speech sounded more like a ___________ of war than an offering of peace.‎ 89. The remote desert area is __________ only by helicopter.‎ 90. Belinda was having difficulty __________ with the baby. ‎ 第七部分短文语法填空 (共10小题;每小题1分,满分10分)‎ US‎ writer Margaret Lee Runbeck once ___91___ (write), “Happiness is not a station you arrive at, but ___92___ manner of traveling.” But traveling is not always happy, at least for the buddies in the movie Green Book.‎ The movie ___93___ (adapt) from the true story of a road trip through the southern US in the early 1960s. In the film, the black pianist Don Shirley hires Italian-American Tony to drive him to performances, but they face problems because of Shirley’s skin color. These problems enable them ___94___ (form) a special friendship.‎ ‎“There’s something so deeply right about this movie, so true ___95___ the time, said US film critic LaSalle. The time La Salle is talking about was between 1876 and 1963, ___96___ African-Americans experienced a very different and difficult period. Many parts of the country had Jim Crow laws, which allowed ___97___(race) segregation (隔离). But in 1936, a blackmail carrier named Victor H. Green published a list of friendly ___98___ (business) as a small book with a green cover. The Green Book helped African-Americans travel more safely. Then in 1964, Jim Crow laws went away. The book went away, too.‎ Today many US people still remember the time of Jim Crow laws. But they ___99___ (probable) don’t know about The Green Book. It’s a ____100____ (forget) part of the story.‎ 第八部分写作(满分25分)‎ 阅读下面短文,根据所给情节进行续写,使之构成一个完整的故事。‎ The rain came down steady and hard. Jason Storie heard it but was not worried as he prepared for a day of caving with five friends in a remote spot 80 miles northwest of his home in Duncan, on Canada’s Vancouver Island.‎ It was ‎6 a.m. on December 5, 2015. As a newcomer to the sport, Jason had gone caving only four times. This would be his toughest outing yet: a cave called Cascade. It was dangerous enough that the entrance was blocked by a locked metal door to keep the casual cavers out. About a mile long and 338 feet deep,Cascade was full of tums and barely passable tight squeezes.‎ Jason was new among the group, with the least experience and, at 43, older by a decade or more. It was his friend Andrew Munoz, 33, who introduced him to the sport. Unlike Jason,Andrew was an expert caver-a former caving guide, actually.‎ They hiked a bit before coming to the door, which sat in the ground—you’d miss it if you weren’t looking for it. It was ‎10 a.m. With their way lighted by headlamps, they walked down a narrow passage studded with sharp rocks. The silence was broken by a drip-drip-drip from above. Soon the drip turned into a light but steady flow, and they were wading in water up to their ankles, then to their shins.‎ Two hours later, they approached one of the features that made the cave unique: a narrow passage not big enough to stand up in that led into a short, tight downhill. This had a name: Bastard’s Crawl. Four streams met here, and indeed, the water was flowing more quickly. The sound of the water had turned into a roar. When they finally neared the top of the Crawl, there were barely four inches of air left between the water and the ceiling. not enough for them to keep their heads up to breathe. They came to terrifying realization that they were in danger!‎ 注意:1.所续写短文的词数应为150左右;‎ ‎2. 续写部分分为两段,每段的开头语已为你写好;‎ Paragraph 1: ‎ The water kept rising, and there was no hope of rescue._____________________________‎ ‎_______________________________________________________________________________‎ ‎______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________‎ ‎______________________________________________________________________________‎ ‎_______________________________________________________________________________‎ Paragraph 2: ‎ Slowly but steadily, the group made their way forward._____________________________‎ ‎_______________________________________________________________________________‎ ‎______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________‎ ‎______________________________________________________________________________‎ ‎_______________________________________________________________________________‎ 第一部分 听力 (共20小题;每题1分,满分20分)‎ ‎1-5:BABCB 6-10:BAACC 11-15:BBCCA 16-20:ACBCA 第二部分 单项选择(共15 小题;每小题 1分,满分 15 分)‎ ‎21-25:DBCDB 26-30:DCACD 31-35:ABAAB 第三部分 完形填空(共20 小题;每小题 1.5分,满分 30 分)‎ ‎36-40:CABDA 41-45:DBABC 46-50:DCADB 51-55:CACDB 第四部分阅读理解(共两节,满分30分)‎ ‎56-60:BDCCD 61-65:AACBD 66-70:BEGDF 第五部分 单词拼写(共10小题;每题1分,满分10分)‎ ‎71. evolution 72. symptom 73. corresponds 74. distribution 75. diverse 76. distinctions 77. conveying 78. resistant 79. desperation 80. condemn 第六部分 选词填空 (共10小题;每小题1分,满分10分)‎ ‎81. depressing 82. rolled out 83. Hailed 84. opposition 85. innovation 86. to contain 87. recognition 88. declaration 89. accessible 90. bonding 第七部分短文语法填空 (共10小题;每小题1分,满分10分)‎ ‎91. wrote 92. a 93. was adapted 94. to form 95. to 96. when ‎ ‎97. racial 98. businesses 99. probably 100. forgotten 第八部分写作(满分25分)‎ The water kept rising, and there was no hope of rescue. The hours passed. Jason and Andrew didn’t dare to move for fear of slipping. They dozed off and then jerked themselves awake. Every once in a while, one of them turned on his headlamp to check the water level. An hour later, the water level went down enough that they could try an escape. Stiff from keeping in one position for 12 hours, they slowly unfolded their bodies. Jason screamed in pain, but he was determined not to let it stop him.‎ Slowly but steadily, the group made their way forward. Still, each time Jason moved a leg, he cried out. Over the next 90 minutes, they made their way toward the entrance, at times inchest-high water. Now, in a passage that was high enough for them to walk upright, Jason saw something flicker in the distance. “Lights! I see lights!” Jason shouted out. For the first time since entering the cave, over 20 hours earlier, Jason’s emotions got the best of him and tears trickled down his cheeks.‎
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