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    2020届云南省玉溪一中高三上学期期中考试英语试卷(含答案)

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    2020届云南省玉溪一中高三上学期期中考试英语试卷(含答案)

    1、玉溪一中2019-2020学年上学期高三年级期中考试(第三次月考)英 语 试 卷 命题人:范尧尧、杨志梅、白云艳审题人:2020届英语备课组本试卷分为第I卷(选择题)和第II卷(非选择题)两部分, 共150分。考试时间120分钟。第 I 卷注意事项:1. 答第I卷前, 考生务必将自己的姓名、考号填写在本试卷和答题卡相应位置上。2. 选出每小题答案后, 用铅笔把答题卡上对应题目的答案标号涂黑。如需改动, 用橡皮擦干净后, 再选涂其他答案标号。不能答在本试卷上, 否则无效。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,

    2、 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 are the speakers talking about? A. When to announce the news. B. Who will attend the meeting. C. What to discuss on Wednesday.2. What will the man do? A. Make tea for Christine. B. Have a cup of tea. C. Boil more

    3、water.3. Why is Sheila late? A. She argued with her boss. B. She had to finish work. C. She forgot the time.4. What is the weather normally like? A. Rainy.B. Warm. C. Cold.5. What does the man mean? A. He likes his professor. B. He wants a new task. C. He needs more time. 第二节(共15小题;每小题1.5分, 满分22.5分)

    4、听下面5段对话或独白。每段对话或独白后有几个小题, 从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项, 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。听第6段材料, 回答第6、7小题。6. What happened to the man? A. He lost his way. B. He broke his phone. C. His car broke down.7. Why did the man fail to call the woman? A. He had no coins. B.

    5、He had no time. C. He forgot the number.听第7段材料, 回答第8至10题。8. How many pieces of clothing need to be cleaned and ironed? A. Four. B. Five.C. Six.9. How much is the extra charge for the quick service? A. 5%. B. 15%.C. 50%.10. When can the man pick up his overcoat? A. Tomorrow afternoon. B. Nine oclock

    6、today. C. Sunday morning.听第8段材料, 回答第11至13题。11. What do we know about the womans old job? A. It offered better pay. B. It was farther from her home. C. It provided computer training.12. What do we learn about the training? A. It is paid by the woman. B. It is partly done on work time. C. It runs from

    7、 Wednesday to Friday.13. How does the woman feel about her new job? A. Satisfied. B. Confused.C. Anxious.听第9段材料, 回答第14至17题。14. What do we know about the man? A. He smokes less than ten cigarettes a day.B. He gave up smoking three years ago.C. He is probably a long time smoker.15. How often does the

    8、woman go to the doctor for a check-up? A. Once every year. B. Twice a year.C. Once every three years.16. How many test questions are discussed in the conversation? A. Four. B. Seven.C. Eight.17. What change will the test probably bring to the speakers? A. They will exercise more.B. They will work ha

    9、rder.C. They will rest more.听第10段材料,回答第18至20题。18. Why does the man always carry his iPod touch? A. To talk with his friends.B. To pass time enjoyably.C. To work while travelling.19. What do we know about life ten or fifteen years ago? A. People enjoyed life more.B. The Internet first came into use t

    10、hen.C. It was harder for people to get in touch online.20. Why does the man think the sun is very important for his life? A. It makes him more active.B. It allows him to think over.C. It gives him a feeling of comfort.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

    11、Qibao Ancient VillageQibao, located in the center of Minhang District, Shanghai, is a village with a history of one thousand years. In the village, wine and tea are served on old-fashioned square tables together with long benches, long-mouth copper pots and flat-end chopstick used. The most famous s

    12、nacks in old Shanghai are square pastry, rice wine and steamed salted pork in wine.Entrance Ticket: 45 yuan per all-in-one ticket (preferable price of 30 yuan is available now), covering almost all tourist attractions inside the village.Jinshan Village of Farmer PaintingVillagers skillfully make goo

    13、d use of folk arts such as printing and dyeing, embroidery (刺绣), wood carving. They take the various folk customs and the busy scenes of labor of villagers in the lower Changjiang valley as the theme of paintings and create farmer paintings in a simple style.Entrance Ticket: 30 yuan per personMerry

    14、Countryside Tour in Zhonghua VillageThe village provides tourists with accommodations, tours, chess, cards, fitness and entertainment through renting out separate farmhouse and sells tourist products and agricultural by-products related to the merry countryside tour.Entrance Ticket: Free Pudong Ling

    15、kong Agric GardeningIt is one of Shanghai countryside tour scenic spots, which features art of teapots, crop plantation and export. The Geological Science Popularization Hall stores up tens of thousands of rare stones collected all over the world. Entrance Ticket: 50 yuan per person21. Which tour is

    16、 offering a discount on the entrance ticket now?A. Qibao Ancient Village.B. Jinshan Village of Farmer Painting.C. Merry Countryside Tour in Zhonghua Village.D. Pudong Lingkong Agric Gardening.22. Pudong Lingkong Agric Gardening may especially attract people who are interested in _.A. traditional sna

    17、cksB. folk arts C. farming D. rare stones23. Which column of a newspaper can we probably find the passage?A. Finance.B. Tourism.C. Education.D. Agriculture.BWhen Amanda Wanklin and Michael Biggs fell in love, they didnt realize the challenges they might face as a biracial couple. Amanda says, “At fi

    18、rst we only knew that we wanted together.” They settled down in Birmingham, England, eager to start a family. On July 3, 2006, the black and white couple got their “one in a million” miracle: Amanda gave birth to fraternal twin (异卵双胞胎) girls with completely different skin colors, and the greatly ama

    19、zed parents gave their daughters intertwined names: one would be Millie Marcia Madge Biggs, the other Marcia Millie Madge Biggs.From a young age the girls had similar features but very different color schemes. Marcia had light brown hair and fair skin like her English-born white mother, while Millie

    20、 had black hair and brown skin like her black father, who is of Jamaican descent. “We never worried about it; we just accepted it,” Michael says.“When they were first born,” Amanda recalls, “people would look at my one daughter and then look at my other daughter. Then Id get asked the question: Are

    21、they twins? ”“Yes.”“But ones white and ones black.”According to Amanda, people who commented on the girls werent openly discriminatory (歧视的) or judgmentaljust very curious, and then as time went on, people just saw the beauty in them.The twins know what racism is. “Racism is where somebody judges yo

    22、u by your color and not by your true self,” Millie says. Michael, the father, says hes faced inequality at times throughout his life because of the color of his skin. “But its a different time now,” he says. Neither he nor Amanda has ever witnessed racist behavior toward their twin girls.“When peopl

    23、e see us, they think that were just best friends,” Marcia says. “When they learn that were twins, theyre kind of shocked because ones black and ones white.” But when the twins are asked about their differences, they mention something else entirely. “Millie likes things that are girlie. She likes pin

    24、k and all of that,” Marcia says. “I dont like the color pink; Im a tomboy. People should know about us by our true selves, not by our colors. After all, people are made how they are.”24. What can we learn from the first paragraph? A. Amanda and Michael are of the same race. B. Amanda and Michael wer

    25、e not happy about the birth of their twins. C. The possibility of twins with different skin colors is small. D. It was easy for Amanda and Michael to start a family of their own.25. According to the passage which of the following is NOT true? A. Sometimes Michael is unequally treated because of his

    26、race. B. The twin girls see their skin colors as their major difference. C. People are curious but friendly to the twin girls. D. People who are racists judge a person by his appearance.26. How does Marcia react to the people who ask questions about their differences? A. She never answers them. B. S

    27、he is upset about their questions. C. She answers with their different characters. D. She tells them about colors.27. What is the authors attitude towards racism? A. Opposed.B. Supportive.C. Indifferent.D. Tolerant.CTen years ago, a typical patient at my plastic surgery clinic in McLean, Va., was 47

    28、 or 48. They generally wanted to look like a younger version of themselves. This might mean a face or neck lift, eyelid lifts, a skin-resurfacing procedure or Botox (肉毒杆菌) injections. “What do you recommend?” theyd ask. This is the kind of work I am expecting to do, and these are the consultations I

    29、 am expecting to give.Today, my average patient, according to my office records, is 38 or 39. Theyll come in with a specific “flaw” on their faces and often know exactly what procedure they want. They are pretty sure that their noses are too big, their chins are too large, or their eyebrows appear d

    30、ull. And these patients are much less realistic about what I can achieve. They will ask for Kim Kardashians nose, even if their facial structure looks nothing like hers.Theres a reason for this rapid and radical change: selfies. The self-taken photograph is greatly attacking the confidence of many y

    31、ounger people. They come to my offices, show me their selfies and point to a defect on their faces, which is a totally normal shape to me. Often they will have already searched online till theyve found someone with a similar “issue” who fixed it with surgery. Once, a 20-year-old, having studied coun

    32、tless images of herself and searched hundreds of pictures of the ideal looks she wanted, said she needed a facelift. But to me, no 20-year-old needs a facelift.Selfies also mislead people about how they look. Smartphone cameras get better each year, but photos taken at arms length or closer often pr

    33、oduce a “fish eye” effect: whatevers at the center of the photo is bigger, and things on the edge are smaller. A study published in JAMA Facial Plastic Surgery last year found that selfies make noses look 30 percent larger than they are.A survey done by the American Society of Plastic Surgeons last

    34、year found that social media was driving more plastic surgery requests than any other social influence: more than TV, movies or magazines. People are spending more time looking at themselves, in an online environment where comparisons with others seem inevitable. Academic psychologist Brian Feinstei

    35、n, who studied a sample of 268 college-age adults, has found that the more people use social media, the more they reflect on their own supposed drawbacks, and therefore causes self-confidence to drop.28. Why did the authors typical patients want plastic surgery ten years ago? A. They were recommende

    36、d to do so. B. They were unsatisfied with the faces they were born with. C. Theyd like to look younger than they really were. D. The author expected them to do so.29. What can we know about Kim Kardashian? A. She is a patient of the authors.B. She is a model who has a beautiful nose.C. She is a doct

    37、or of plastic surgery.D. She is a fan of plastic surgery.30. What can we learn from Paragraph four? A. Smartphone cameras can help people take better selfies. B. Smartphone cameras make people look at their selfies through a fish eye. C. People usually take photos at arms length or closer. D. Smartp

    38、hone cameras make peoples faces in a selfie unreal.31. Which of the following would be the best title of the passage? A. Selfies Are Weakening Self-confidence.B. Young People Like to Take Selfies. C. More People Are Getting Plastic Surgery. D. People Like to Look Better in Selfies.DDyslexia (失读症) is

    39、 a readingandwriting disability characterized bydifficulties in reading and spelling, and for some readers to understand what they have read. Experts say dyslexia affects about five to ten percent of the population of the United States. Researchers have long known that people with dyslexia write or

    40、read words and letters backwards in the wrong order.But a new study shows that people with dyslexia may have trouble redirecting (重新传入) their attention between senses, from seeing something to hearing something. Vanessa Harrar of Britains University of Oxford led the study. She reported the findings

    41、 in the journal Current Biology. The study suggests that dyslexic people may have trouble moving quickly from what they read to what they hear. Doctor Harrar calls this a sluggish shifting of attention across the senses.“So, if you are trying to read something and then trying to listen to somebody w

    42、hos reading aloud and youre trying to follow along with what they are reading, they have to switch their attention from hearing what they are saying to looking at the piece of paper and back again.” said Harrar.She found that people with dyslexia were just as fast as the others when they saw only a

    43、picture or heard only a sound. But the dyslexics had a slower reaction time when they heard a sound and saw a picture at the same time.Doctor Harrar feels like playing action video games could help dyslexic people shift from seeing to hearing more quickly. She adds that images in video games force t

    44、he eyes to move and focus quickly.“Video game types of things pop out of here and there, they move your eyes around the screen quickly in response to things quite quickly, and the more you play a video game the faster you get that kind of thing. So the video game is really training the attention sys

    45、tem to move quickly,” said Harrar.The study also shows that dyslexic people have the most difficulty going between what they saw and what they heard, this may have an effect on how dyslexic children are taught how to read. When children learn the alphabet, they usually see the letter first and then

    46、hear the sound, or they see and hear the letter at the same time. The study shows that dyslexics might learn more quickly if they hear the sound of a letter or word first before seeing it.32. Dyslexic people have the following problems except _.A. writing or reading words and letters in the right or

    47、derB. redirecting their attention between senses, from seeing something to hearing somethingC. moving quickly from what they read to what they hearD. seeing a picture or hearing a sound33. What does the underlined word “sluggish” in paragraph 2 mean?A. Slow.B. Wrong.C. Specific.D. Accurate.34. Why can playing video games help dyslexic people learn more quickly?A. Because they will train their reading and hearing.B. Because they will have a good knowledge of the system.C. Because they can train the attention system to move quickly


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