还剩8页未读,继续阅读
本资源只提供10页预览,全部文档请下载后查看!喜欢就下载吧,查找使用更方便
文本内容:
Section IIReading Comprehension、
21.D
2.D
3.C
4.A
5.C、
31.A
2.B
3.C
4.D、
41.D
2.B
3.A
4.B、
51.B
2.A
3.D
4.C、
61.whom
2.truly
3.safety
4.planning
5.themselves
6.has brought
7..largest
8.treasures
9.What
10.to、
71.concluded
2.to
3.Witnessing
4.creativity
5.is
6.a
7.equally
8.which
9.Drawn
10.theirSection IIITranslation、
81.C
2.E
3.A
4.F
5.G、
91.G
2.F
3.E
4.C
5.A
13、A.intelligence B.incident C,trouble D.determination、14A.chair B.baseball C,game D.design、15A.urged B.blamed C,greeted D.teased、16A.goals B.words C.baseballs D.ideas、17A.valuable B.reasonable C.impossible D.unbearable、18A.discovered B.equipped C,formed D.invented、19A.limitations B.advantages C.puzzles D.personalities20A.sense B.progress C.mistakes D.friendsSection IIReading ComprehensionPartADirections:Read the following fourtexts.Answer the questions beloweach textby choosingA,B,C orD.Mark youranswers on()the ANSWER SHEET.40pointsText1My summerhols wrCWOT,B4,WE USED2go2NY2C mybro.his GFthr3:・@KIDS FTF.1LNY,its gr
8.Can youunderstand thissentence Ifyou cant,dont feeltoo bad:neither couldthe middleschool teacherin Englandwho receivedthis as homework.This isNetspeak:the languageof computerizedcommunication foundon theInternet orcellphones.To newcomers,it canlook likea completelyforeign language.(破坏)School teachersand parentssay thisnew formof writingis harmingthe Englishlanguage.Increasing spellingand(面目全非的)grammatical mistakescan beseen instudents writing.They fearthe languagecould becomecorrupted.(语言学家).Everyone shouldjust relax,say linguistsThey believeNetspeak isin factmore of a goodthing.David Crystal,fromthe Universityof Wales,argues thatNetspeak andInternet createa newlanguage useand thealmost lostart ofdiary writinghas beenpickedup again.Geoffrey Nurnberg,from StanfordUniversity,agrees.People getbetter atwriting bywriting,he says.Kids whoarenow doingtext messaging,e-mail,and instantmessages willwrite atleast as well as,and possiblybetter than,their parents/9Linguist James Milroy says,for centuries,it isbelieved withoutexception that young people are harmingthe language.And whentodaysteenagers becometomorrows parents,they toowill thinkthis way.Milroy arguesthat languagesdo notand cannotbecome;corrupted theysimply changeto meetthe newneeds.However,Netspeakers doagree that it isimportant toteach youngpeople how to speakand writeStandard English.CynthiaMcVey says,I canunderstand Netspeakworries teachersand itsimportant that they telltheir pupilsthat textmessaging isfor fun,butthat learningto writeproper Englishisamust for their future.”1What isthe purpose of thefirst paragraphA.To givethe mainidea.B.To raisea question.C.To comparean example.D.To leadin thetopic.、2Who canunderstand theNetspeak inEnglandA.Middle schoolteachers.B.Parents.C.Linguistics.D.Teenagers.、3Who believesNetspeak userscan helpimprove writingA.Cynthia McVeyB.David CrystalC.Geoffrey NurnbergD.JamesMilroy、4Whats JamesMilroys attitude toward NetspeakA.Positive.B.Negative.C.Doubtful.D.Worried.、5What can be the best titlefor thepassageA.Netspeak:the Languageon theInternetB.Is NetspeakHelpful inLanguage LearningC.Is NetspeakHarming theEnglish LanguageD.Netspeak:Advantages andDisadvantagesText2Research findsout why some people are constantlyunder attackfrom thebloodsucking insectswhile otherswalk free.For thoseunfortunate enoughto featurehighly on the mosquitohit list,summer nightscanbesynonymous withmosquito bites.Yet othershardly everget bitten.So howdo thebloodthirsty insectsselect theirvictimsThe insectstastes mayseem arbitrary.However,research showsthat whenmosquitoes maketheir choicesbetween potential(气味).victims,it allcomes downto scentMosquitoes are attracted by carbon dioxide andheat,which everyonegives off.But mosquitoesare alsoattractedbycertainscents,“says Karl-Martin VagnJensen,the headof researchattheDepartment ofAgricultural Scienceat ArhusUniversity.According toJensen,it hasnot yetbeen confirmedexactly whatthe scentsin questionare.But researchdoes indicatethat somescentsare moreattractive tomosquitoes thanothers.(培养)“All thelab employeesrubbed petri dishes JULagainst theirstomachs.In thatway,their scentswere puton thedishes,which werethen putin acontainer fullof mosquitoesJ hesays.The mosquitoesrepeatedly landedon someof thepetri dishes,butdidnt goanywhere nearthe others.(驱虫剂)Perhaps takinginspiration frompopular fiction,there arealso thosewho considergarlic asan excellent repellentagainst thewinged bloodsuckers.According to the researcher,this strategymay notbe entirelyfruitless.As faras Iknow,there isnoscientific proofthat eatinggarlic works.But theremay besomething to the theorythat itspossible tomask scentwith garlicJ hesays.The onlyreliable methodof protectionagainst mosquitoesis to use repellentsthat aresold overthe counter.It containssome smellsthatcan confusethe mosquitoes.When themosquito comescloser,it usessmell,heat andcarbondioxideto decidewhether tobite.But ifitis confusedby arepellent,it willnever getthat far.、1Which of thefollowingcan bestreplace thephrase underlinedin Paragraph2A.Be equalto.B.Be accessibleto.C.Be harmfulto.D.Be beneficialto.、2What canwe inferabout thescents attractingmosquitoesA.Mosquitoes canbe attractedby variousscents.B.Some kindsof scentsappeal tomosquitoes inparticular.C.The labemployees usepetridishesto deposittheir scents.D.Mosquitoesarearbitrary whenit comesto differentscents.、3What isthe mainidea of the lastParagraphA.A newstrategy isused inresearching repellents.B.Garlic isconsidered tobe anexcellentrepellent.C.Using repellentsis aneffective wayagainst mosquitoes.D.The inspirationagainst mosquitoesis frompopular fiction.、4Where isthe textmost probablytaken fromA.Science fiction.B.A biography.C.A medicalreport.D.A researchpaper.Text3Ten yearsago,I setout toexamine luck.I wantedto knowwhysomepeople were always in the rightplace atthe righttime,while othersconsistently experiencedill fortune.I placedadvertisements innational newspapersasking forpeople whofelt consistentlyluckyor unlucky.Hundreds ofextraordinary menand womenvolunteered formy research.Over theyears Ihave interviewedthem,monitored theirlives andhad themtake partin variousexperiments.In one of theexperiments,I gaveboth luckyand unlucky peopleanewspaper,asking themto lookthrough itand tellme howmanyphotographs wereinside.I hadsecretly placeda largemessage halfwaythrough thenewspaper,saying,Tell theexperimenter youhaveseen thisand youwill win$
50.This messagetook uphalf of the pageand waswritten intype thatwas more than twoinches high.Itwas staringeveryone in the face,but the unlucky peopletended tomiss itand thelucky peopletended to spot it.Unlucky people are generallymore nervousthan luckypeople,and thisanxiety affectstheir ability to noticethe unexpected.As aresult,they miss opportunities becausethey aretoo focusedon looking for somethingelse.They goto gatheringsconcentrating onfindingtheir perfectpartners andmissopportunitiesto makegood friends.They lookthrough newspapersdetermined tofind certaintypes of jobadvertisements andmiss othertypesofjobs.Lucky people are morerelaxed andopen,and thereforesee whatis thererather thanjust whatthey arelooking for.My research(直eventually showedthat luckypeopleareskilled atnoticing opportunities,make luckydecisions bylistening totheir intuition觉),are opento newexperiences,and adopta never-say-die attitudethat transformsbad luckinto good luck.、1Whats thepurposeof the authorsresearchA.To discoverwhat luckmeans topeople.B.To findluckypeopleand unluckypeople.C.To distinguishbetween goodluck andbad luck.D.To figureout whypeoplearealways luckyor unlucky.、2Why didtheunluckypeople missthe messageintheexperimentA.There wastoo muchinformation tobe readin detail.B.They were too focusedon lookingfor photographs.C.It tooktoo muchtime togo throughnewspapers.D.The wordsweretoosmall tobe noticed.、3What leadsto luckypeoples good fortuneA.Their abilitytospotopportunities.B.Their abilityto becomerelaxed.C.Their abilityto communicate.D.Their abilityto makefriends.、4Whafs thekey messageof thelast paragraphA.What luckypeoplearelookingfor.B.How luckypeople generategoodluck.C.What luckypeople cando withopportunities.D.How luckypeople transformbad luckinto goodluck.Text4Tablets arereally usefuldevices,but theirbig screensalways makethem asa burdento carryaround withouta bag.Wouldnt itbe greatif therewereaphone withthe powersof a tablet thatcould befolded upand fitneatly into the handNowsomething likeatablet-shaped butfoldable phoneis aboutto becomeavailable.In February,South Koreanelectronicscompany Samsungand ChinasHuawei bothlaunched foldablephones,the GalaxyFold andHuawei Mate X respectively.Mobilephone usehas enteredthe foldablefuture,The Vergenoted.The technologycould changeour livesin significantways.These devices,due totheir bendablescreens,give usthe largerscreenswe want.Meanwhile,they stillfit easilyintothepocket.As USAToday noted,they9re“the combinationof asmall tabletandsmartphone,all ina singledevice”.The technologycould changeother devices,too.For example,we couldmake TVsthat stickto wallslike posters,or foldup easilytohide awayin drawers.In crowdedmodem cities,they willhelp usto maximizeavailable space.In akeynote address,Samsungs seniorvice presidentof mobileproduct marketing,Justin Denison,called the foldable screen“the画布foundation for the smartphoneof tomorrow”.“Its ablank canvasfor usto dosomething beautifultogether.”he said.So isthere nothingto standintheway of the foldablefuture Accordingto technews websiteAndroid Authority,the necessary二极管displays weredifficult toproduce.In2012,nine outof every10OLED screensproduced wereimperfect.Today,that10percent ratehas beenimproved tobetween50and90percent.However,at presentthese foldabledevices areexpensive.For example,the priceof HuaweiMateXis17,500RMB.Thafs aprice thatfew peoplewill be able toafford.But ifthefoldabledevice isntgoing tochange theworld overnight,there isno doubtthatitis coming.Patrick Moorhead,anindustry analysttold TheVerge,Few aredebating iffoldable orrollable mobiledisplays arethe futureof smartphones;the only、question iswhen andby whom.”1What canbe the best titleforthetextA.Screen deviceson themarket.B.Foldable ageis arriving.C.Possible powersofatablet.D.Foldable screensare imperfect.、2What canwe learnfrom JustinDenisons wordsA.The foldablescreen hasgreat potential.B.The GalaxyFold stillhas manyproblems.C.The productionof foldablephones willsoon increase.D.Companies needto worktogether todevelop foldablephone.、3What isthe problemwith foldablephones atthe momentA.They areeasy to break.B.They areinconvenient tocarry.C.They arenot asuseful asexpected.D.They areunaffordable formost families.、4What isthe authorsattitudetowardthe futureofthefoldable screenA.Worried.B.Cautious.C.Positive.D.Unconcerned.Part BDirections:Read thefollowing textand answerthe questionsby choosingthe mostsuitable subheadingfrom thelist A-G foreachnumbered paragraph41—
45.There aretwo extrasubheadings whichyou donot needto use.Mark youranswerson the ANSWERSHEET.10pointsFor thefirst timein94years,the Palace Museum hasextended itsopening hours,allowing thepublic tocelebrate theLanternFestival atnight inthe ancientpalaceAbout3,000lucky visitorsreceived freetickets fromthe government,among1-was ZhangZhifu,a77-year-old publicsecurity」volunteer Its a markof gratitudefor hervolunteer work“It is2true anhonor tobe grantedthis specialprivilege JZhang saidToguarantee the
3.safe ofthe palace,festival organizers
4.plan this years LanternFestival eventused LEDlights ratherthantraditional paperlanterns andred candlesItsafascinating eventfor visitorsto absorb
5.they inthe festiveatmosphere inthe museumDiscussionofthePalace Museumsnew looklit upsocial mediafollowing Tuesdaysdisplay」建Since hebecame directorofthePalaceMuseum,Shan Jixiang
6.bring manychanges tothe worlds7large royalcomplex筑群Once ina speechthe64-year-old directorshared hisidea abouthow tomake traditional
8.treasure comealive again9-mattersto amuseum is not howmany visitorsthey have,but howclose theyare10-peoples dailylives,“he said蜗牛To breedsnails well,you needto spraywater tothe containerevery morningand evening,change soilevery twoweeks,」and feedthem withcabbages andsweet fruits—this iswhat SunYouxiang,a fourth-grade primaryschool studentin Hangzhou,1conclude afterbreeding snailsfor oneyearFrom threesmall whitesnails atthe verybeginning2_morethan60snails offour generationsnow,he hasdone agreat jobin hisJassignmentfor hisscience class,
3.witness thereproduction ofanimals isa preciousexperience forkids Their
4.create,patience,激发and respectfor lifewill bestimulated as they learnto takecare ofanimals ontheir ownSunsteacher saidthe assignmentserved asa goodexample of life educationPractice
5.be anessential stepin leaning,which willbenefitthe kidsfor6_life timeLife educationallows kidsto knowhowtolive withnature andcreatures ina friendlywayJStarting fromthisyear,Science will become an
7.equal importantsubject asChinese andMath inprimary schools,
8.aims toimprovestudents5knowledge aboutthe surroundings
9.draw bycuriosity,more kidswillbewilling toobserve andthink throughpracticing,which willadd to
10.they recognitionoftheworld inthe longrunSection IIITranslationDirections:Translate thefollowing textinto Chinese.Write yourtranslation ontheANSWERSHEET.15points“A questionbrought metothepoint ofending my life whenI wasfifty yearsold.My questionwas thesimplest onethat lies、in everyperson.It isthequestionwithout whichlife isimpossible:Why doI live1Is thereanything inmylifethat willnot bedestroyedby mydeathMThese arethe wordsofthefamous Russianwriter Leo Tolstoy.Many peopleask thesedifficult questions.And theystruggle tofindmeaning intheir life.Tolstoy spenthis wholelife tryingto answerdifficult questionslike these.2In the1850s,LeoTolstoywrote hisfirst stories.He wroteabout hisexperiences inthe military.He alsotold storiesabout whenhewas achild.3He wasfinally successful.He earnedrespect frommany wealthyand intelligentmen,who talkeda lotabout faithand themeaning oflife.But soonhe foundthey wereproud and they madevery badmoral choices.、4He openeda schoolforthechildren ofpeople whoworked on his land.They werevery poor.He wantedto helpthem becausehethought theywere morehonest thanthe wealthypeople heknew.、Tolstoy learnedmany thingsfrom hisworkers.He respectedhow theyworked hardto providefor their families.5So in1862,LeoTolstoy marrieda youngwoman namedSonya Behrs.The next15years werethebestyears ofTolstoyfs life.It wasduring thistime thathewrote hismost famousbooks-War andPeace andAnna Karenina.They communicatewhat hethought wasthe answerto allhisquestions—humans weresupposed tolive asimple lifeand takecare oftheirfamilies.A.These workswere publishedand Tolstoybecame awell-known writer.B.How canI realizemy dreamif Ihave oneC.Why doI wishfor anything,or doanythingD.He gaineda lotof inspirationswhich hadgreat influenceonhisfollowing actions.E.His searchfor answersinfluenced hiswriting.F.So inthe1860s,Tolstoy trieda differentway tofind themeaningoflife.G.He beganto believethat marriageand familywould givehis lifemeaning.(,舌力)A strongmemory dependsonthehealth andvitality ofyour brain.They saythatyou cant teachan olddog new、,tricks,but whenit comestothe brain,scientists havediscovered thatthis oldsaying simplyisnt true.1Give your brain aworkout.Memory,like muscularstrength,requires youtouseit orlose it”.The moreyou workout your brain,the betteryou911beableto processand rememberinformation.
2、Dont skipthe physicalexercise.While mentalexercise isimportant forbrain health,that doesntmean younever needtobreakasweat.Physical exercisehelps yourbrain staysharp.It increasesoxygen toyourbrainand reducesthe riskfor disordersthat leadtomemory loss.Get enoughsleep.There isa bigdifference betweenthe amountof sleepyoucanget byon andthe amountyou needto functionat、,your best.3Keep stressin check.Stress isoneofthe brain5s worstenemies.Over time,stress destroysbrain cells.Studies havealso linkedstressto memoryloss.Have alaugh.4^That holdstrue forthe brainandthememory,aswellasthe body.Unlike emotionalresponses,which arelimitedto specificareas ofthe brain,laughter engagesmultiple regionsacross thewhole brain.、5Just asthebodyneeds fuel,so doesthebrain.You probablyalready knowthat a diet basedon fruits,vegetables,whole grains,healthy“fats andlean proteinwill providelots ofhealth benefits,but suchadietcan alsoimprove memory.For brainhealth,though,its notjust what you eat——its alsowhatyoudont eat.A.Eat abrain-boosting diet.B.Play gameswith memory.C.Laughter isthebestmedicine.D.But oversleepingisnotgoodforyourbrain.E.Even skippinga fewhours makesa difference!F.You haveto shakethings upfrom timeto time!G.The humanbrain hasan astonishingabilitytoadapt andchange.参考答案Section IUse ofEnglish、
11.C
2.B
3.A
4.D
5.B
6.C
7.A
8.C
9.B
10.B
11.A
12.D
13.B
14.B
15.A
16.B
17.C
18.D
19.A
20.B。