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1、豐臺(tái)區(qū)2019年高三年級(jí)第二學(xué)期綜合練習(xí)(一)高 三 英 語 2019. 03本試卷滿分共120分 考試時(shí)間100分鐘注意事項(xiàng): 1. 答題前,考生務(wù)必先將答題卡上的學(xué)校、年級(jí)、班級(jí)、姓名、準(zhǔn)考證號(hào)用黑色字跡簽字筆填寫清楚,并認(rèn)真核對(duì)條形碼上的準(zhǔn)考證號(hào)、姓名,在答題卡的“條形碼粘貼區(qū)”貼好條形碼。 2. 本次考試所有答題均在答題卡上完成。選擇題必須使用2B鉛筆以正確填涂方式將各小題對(duì)應(yīng)選項(xiàng)涂黑,如需改動(dòng),用橡皮擦除干凈后再選涂其它選項(xiàng)。非選擇題必須使用標(biāo)準(zhǔn)黑色字跡簽字筆書寫,要求字體工整、字跡清楚。 3. 請(qǐng)嚴(yán)格按照答題卡上題號(hào)在相應(yīng)答題區(qū)內(nèi)作答,超出答題區(qū)域書寫的答案無效,在試卷、草稿紙上答
2、題無效。 4. 請(qǐng)保持答題卡卡面清潔,不要裝訂、不要折疊、不要破損。筆試(共三部分 120分)第一部分 知識(shí)運(yùn)用(共兩節(jié) 45分)第一節(jié) 語法填空(共10小題;每小題1.5分,共15分)閱讀下列短文,根據(jù)短文內(nèi)容填空。在未給提示詞的空白處僅填寫 1個(gè)適當(dāng)?shù)膯卧~,在給出提示詞的空白處用括號(hào)內(nèi)所給詞的正確形式填空。AThe new sixth-grade teacher, Sava, is like most teachers in schools. This morning, she is calling the attendance list and asking the students i
3、n the back of the room to be quiet. Sava 1 (smile) at the students and looks happy. Sava doesnt really look different from other teachers, 2 she is. Sava is a robot. She is remote controlled 3 a person through a camera inside the robot. Although Sava is not ready to be a real teacher, the children e
4、njoy her visits.BWilbur and Orille Wright are brothers famous for inventing the first aeroplane. Their interest in flight 4 (start) on the day when their father brought home a toy helicopter for them. It was made of paper and wood. The boys played with it until it broke, and then made their own 5 (r
5、eplace) it. When they were older, they owned a bicycle shop where they started producing and selling their own bikes. This provided them with the money to pay for their experiments in flight. Eventually, they built their 6 (fly) machine. CBecause deaf people cant hear, they have special ways of comm
6、unicating. For example, they can learn to understand 7 someone is saying by looking at the mouth of the speaker. This 8 (call) lipreading. Also, speaking is very difficult for the deaf, because they cant hear 9 (they) own voices. However, it is possible with special training. According to many deaf
7、people all around the world, the most 10 (practice) and popular way of communicating is with sign language.第二節(jié) 完形填空(共20小題;每小題1.5分,共30分)閱讀下面短文,掌握其大意,從每題所給的A、B、C、D四個(gè)選項(xiàng)中,選出最佳選項(xiàng),并在答題卡上將該項(xiàng)涂黑?!癈ome on, Cindy!” Darcy sounded so impatient, “Well be late for class.”“Darcy, I cant find my 11 .” I dropped my b
8、ook bag to dig through my coat pockets. “My money was in it.”“Someone took it.” Darcy said. As usual, she was quick to point away from the 12 side of things. “Oh. Im sure I just misplaced it.” I hoped. Even though we were best friends, Darcy and I were just so 13 . We rushed into class. Darcy 14 the
9、 news about the theft. By last period in gym class, I was 15 of having to say over and over again, “Im sure I just left it at home.”After gym, we went into the locker room. I was changing 16 I heard a gasp from Darcy. I looked at her and found her face was white with 17 . There, at her feet, was my
10、wallet.“It fell out of her locker!” Darcy pointed at Juanita, a “new girl” in our class. “She 18 it.”Everyone began to 19 Juanita at once.“Darcy caught her red-handed.”“Report her!”I looked over at Juanita. She picked up the wallet and held it out to me. Her hands were 20 . “I found it in the parkin
11、g lot. I was going to give it to you.”Darcy spit the words “Im so sure!” at her.“Really, its true.” Juanitas eyes began to fill with tears.I 21 for my wallet. I didnt know what to think, 22 when I looked over at Darcy, her attitude made me sick inside. I looked at Juanita. She was scared but looked
12、23 . I knew I held her 24 in my hands.“I am so glad you found it,” I smiled. “Thanks, Juanita.”The 25 around us broke.“Good thing she found it,” everyone but Darcy 26 .“If there is any money left in your wallet.”“Not now. Darcy!”“You are so naive!”It wasnt until others left there that I opened my wa
13、llet.“Its all here.” I couldnt help but feel 27 . A folded piece of paper fluttered from my wallet. I opened it to see what it was. “She just didnt have time to 28 it yet.” “Darcy, maybe you spend too much time 29 people.” Darcy grabbed the note, read it and threw it back at me. “Whatever!” she said
14、 and stomped off. I knew that something had 30 between us. I read the note again.Cindy,I found your wallet in the parking lot. Hope nothing is missing.JuanitaP.S. My phone number is 55-3218. Maybe you could call me sometime.And I did. 11. A. coat B. book C. pen D. wallet12. A. serious B. bright C. f
15、unny D. opposite13. A. close B. strange C. differentD. independent14. A. spread B. heardC. watched D. made15. A. afraid B. proud C. tired D. fond16. A. since B. afterC. before D. when 17. A. shame B. shockC. shyness D. sadness18. A. got B. lostC. stole D. brought 19. A. accuse B. comfort C. warn D.
16、help20. A. rising B. wavingC. clappingD. trembling 21. A. reached B. looked C. paid D. searched22. A. so B. but C. for D. or23. A. excited B. modestC. sincere D. pleased 24. A. reputation B. confidenceC. wealth D. regret25. A. trust B. peaceC. balanceD. tension 26. A. agreed B. promised C. hesitated
17、 D. admitted27. A. relaxed B. relievedC. disappointedD. disturbed28. A. return B. lend C. find D. empty29. A. persuading B. numberingC. understanding D. transforming30. A. left B. united C. broken D. recovered第二部分 閱讀理解(共兩節(jié) 40分)第一節(jié)(共15小題;每小題2分,共30分)閱讀下列短文,從每題所給的A、B、C、D四個(gè)選項(xiàng)中,選出最佳選項(xiàng),并在答題卡上將該項(xiàng)涂黑。A Slowl
18、y, so slowly that we never even noticed how it happened, our family stopped talking to each other. Our own worlds opened up to us through the computer or the cell phone or the CD player.Family Night was born when Mom called us for dinner. Jessica and I came and sat down. Dad loaded his plate and sta
19、rted to rise from the table.“Where are you going?” Mom questioned.“To the living room. I have some work,” Dad replied as he hurried away. Moms face got tight, but she said nothing. About two minutes later, my cell phone buzzed. Jessica kept her earphones on during most of the meal. Mom was clearly u
20、pset.Family Night started the next week. Mom established three rules: no phones, no music, and no leaving the table. Everyone would eat together and play a game together “l(fā)ike a real family.” All seemed to be going according to Moms plan until the first buzz of a cell phone. After dinner, we had bee
21、n playing the board game for only ten minutes when another cell phone let out a shrill scream. This time the phone belonged to my father.“Works calling. I have to answer,” he whispered as he hurried out of the room. Mom sighed, but she forced a smile and encouraged us to continue with the game. We k
22、ept playing through every interruption afterwards: the beeping of Jessicas phone, the buzz of another text message from Darnell, the soothing voice announcing the arrival of an e-mail on Dads computer. When the game was over, Mom released us to our rooms.That first Family Night was not a success, bu
23、t Mom soldiered on. Every Monday evening we silenced our electronics and gathered around the table; and each time, setting aside our technological toys became a little easier. The next two months my father would be taking business trips. We wouldnt be able to have Family Night every Monday.To my sur
24、prise I realized that I would miss those few hours each week when the house was filled with my familys laughter and conversation. I was also glad to know that when we really wanted to, we could silence the electronic buzz and just be a family again.31. What led to the start of Family Night?A. Electr
25、onics harmed the familys life. B. Heavy housework made Mom angry.C. Dad didnt get along well with others.D. The children were too lazy to help Mom.32. Family Night made the family _ than before.A. closer B. healthier C. more relaxed D. more confident 33. What words can best describe the first Family
26、 Night?A. Tiring but satisfying. B. Challenging but exciting.C. Busy but interesting. D. Unsuccessful but meaningful.34. It can be inferred that _.A. Dad seldom took business trips B. the author enjoyed Family Night C. Family Night would not continue D. the children threw away the cellphones BA blog
27、 posted Dec 7, 2018 at 12:17 PM by Alanna MallonAlanna Mallon is a Cambridge City Councilor.Each year in November, I receive a flurry of emails and texts from friends who want to volunteer with their families on Thanksgiving as a way to give back. I also field phone calls fr
28、om organizations who want to donate to local programs that provide Thanksgiving meals. However, as an official who still works in the nonprofit sector, I also feel deeply anxious because I know the other 51 weeks of the year, these critical programs that provide food access to residents in need are
29、starving for both volunteers and donations. Hunger is a year round problem, and each week volunteers are the necessary part to ensure that programs are able to serve the community.At Food For Free, we rely on about 100 volunteers per week, and each of those volunteers is extremely important to provi
30、ding fresh, healthy food to people in the Greater Boston area who need it. School children who take backpacks of food home on Fridays, community college students who rely on our Family Meals program to thrive in class, elderly and disabled residents who receive twice monthly deliveries of food to th
31、eir doors through our Home Delivery program, they all rely on us ensuring enough volunteers show up to do the work.These volunteers dont show up in your social media feeds, they dont win awards and no one writes about them in the local newspapers. But they are heroes. And you can be too. If everyone
32、 made a promise to volunteer once a month, or even once a quarter, I know that we could reduce some of the anxiety these organizations feel, as a more reliable volunteer network allows them to focus on helping people, not filling volunteer slots.Here is a list of a few organizations who are doing cr
33、itical work in Cambridge to address food insecurity. Offer your time to an organization, they will be deeply gratefuland I am going to bet that you will feel pretty good about yourself too.Food For Free: /volunteer.CEOC: /food-pantry.Harvard Squa
34、re Homeless Shelter: /volunteer.Community Cooks: /join-us.35. What can be learnt from the first two paragraphs?A. The food safety worries the author.B. Volunteers are needed all year round.C. Donations can be made through the Internet.D. People
35、 like getting together on Thanksgiving.36. Paragraph 3 is mainly about _.A. the need for fresh food B. the duty of Food For Free C. the value of voluntary work D. the difficult life of local people37. The passage is to _.A. call for action B. express thanks C. advertise programs D. introduce website
36、s C Many of us listen to music while we work, thinking that it will help us to concentrate on the task at hand. And in fact, recent research has found that music can have beneficial effects on creativity. When it comes to other areas of performance, however, the impact of background music is more co
37、mplicated.The idea that listening to music when working is beneficial to output probably has its roots in the so-called “Mozart effect”. Put simply, this is the finding that spatial rotation performance(空間旋轉(zhuǎn)能力) is increased immediately after listening to the music of Mozart, compared to no sound at
38、all. How sound affects performance has been the topic of research for over 40 years, and is observed through a phenomenon called the irrelevant sound effect. To study irrelevant sound effect, participants in the research are asked to complete a simple task which requires them to recall a series of n
39、umbers or letters in the exact order in which they saw them. The tricky thing is being able to do this while ignoring any background noise.Two key characteristics of the irrelevant sound effect are required for its observation. First, the task must require the person to use their rehearsal abilities
40、(復(fù)述能力), and second, the sound must contain acoustical variation(聲學(xué)變化). Where the sound does not vary much acoustically, the performance of the task is much closer to that observed in quiet conditions.The irrelevant sound effect itself comes from attempting to process two sources of ordered informati
41、on at the same timeone from the task and one from the sound. Unfortunately, only the former is required to successfully perform the recall task, and the effort in ensuring that irrelevant order information from the sound is not processed actually hinders(阻礙) this ability.A similar conflict is also s
42、een when reading while in the presence of lyrical music. In this situation, the two sources of wordsfrom the task and the soundare in conflict. The cost is poorer performance of the task in the presence of music with lyrics.What this all means is that whether having music playing in the background h
43、elps or hinders performance depends on the task and on the type of music, and only understanding this relationship will help people maximize their productivity levels. 38. “Mozart effect” is mentioned to _.A. explain how music can relax people B. show music can improve performanceC. advise people to
44、 listen to Mozart music D. stress Mozart music gains wide attention 39. It can be inferred that participants in the research _.A. have improved their rehearsal ability B. perform better in the quiet conditionsC. ignore the background noise successfullyD. prefer the music with great sound variation40
45、. Paragraph 6 is written to _.A. support an idea B. make a contrastC. introduce a topic D. describe a fact41. What is the best title for the passage?A. Music shapes your lifeB. Music develops your creativityC. Choose quiet music for your workD. Does music make you concentrate?D According to official
46、 government figures, there are more than twice as many kangaroos as people in Australia, and many Australians consider them pests(有害動(dòng)物). Landholding farmers say that the countrys estimated 50 million kangaroos damage their crops and compete with livestock for scarce resources. Australias insurance i
47、ndustry says that kangaroos are involved in more than 80 percent of the 20,000-plus vehicle-animal collisions reported each year. In the countrys underpopulated region, the common belief is that kangaroo numbers have swollen to “plague proportions.” In the absence of traditional hunters, the thinkin
48、g goes, killing kangaroos is critical to balancing the ecology and boosting the rural economy. A government-sanctioned(政府認(rèn)可的) industry, based on the commercial harvest of kangaroo meat and hides, exported $29 million in products in 2017 and supports about 4,000 jobs. Today meat, hides, and leather f
49、rom kangaroos have been exported to 56 countries. Global brands such as Nike, Puma, and Adidas buy strong, supple “k-leather” to make athletic gear. And kangaroo meat is finding its way into more and more grocery stores. Advocates point out that low-fat, high-protein kangaroo meat comes from an anim
50、al more environmentally friendly than greenhouse gas-emitting sheep and cattle. John Kelly, former executive director of the Kangaroo Industry Association of Australia, says, “Harvesting our food and fibers from animals adapted to Australias fragile rangelands is extremely wise and sustainable. Many
51、 ecologists will tell you that there is no more humane way of producing red meat.” Opponents(反對(duì)者) of the industry call the killing inhumane, unsustainable, and unnecessary. Population estimates are highly debatable, they say, but “plague proportions” are biologically implausible. Little kangaroos gr
52、ow slowly, and many die, so kangaroo populations can expand by only 10 to 15 percent a year, and then only under the best of circumstances. Dwayne Bannon-Harrison, a member of the Yuin people of New South Wales, says the idea that kangaroos are destroying the country is laughable. “Theyve been walki
53、ng this land a lot longer than people have,” he says. “How could something thats been here for thousands of years be destroying the country? I dont understand the logic in that.” Can Australians conflicting attitudes toward kangaroos be reconciled(和解)? George Wilson says that if kangaroos were priva
54、tely owned, then graziers(放牧人)working independently or through wildlife conservancieswould protect the animals, treating them as possessions. They could feed them, lease them, breed them and charge hunter a fee for access. “If you want to conserve something,” Wilson says, “you have to give it a valu
55、e. Animals that are considered pests dont have value.” Privatization could also help reduce grazing pressures. If kangaroos were more valuable than cattle or sheep, farmers would keep less live-stock, which could be good for the environment. Under this scheme, landholders would work with the kangaro
56、o industry on branding, marketing and quality control. The governments role would be oversight and regulation.42. What can be learnt from the first three paragraphs?A. Kangaroo meat is healthier than other red meat. B. Global brands make small profits on kangaroos.C. Kangaroos are more friendly to the environment.D. Overpopulated kangaroos have become a financial burden.43. What does the underlined word “implausible” in Paragraph 4 probably mean?A. Unreasonable. B. Immeasurable. C. Unquestionable. D. Uncha
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