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46.A.attended B.desired C.served D.constructed
47.A.abandoned B.killed C.injured D.dismissed
48.A.access B.entrance C.statue D.memorial
49.A.inspired B.confused C.touched.D.attacked
50.A.decorate B.build C.donate D.devote
51.A.quickly B.proudly C.angrily D.shyly
52.A.show B.introduce C.give D.move
53.A.looking B.glaring C.laughing D.pointing
54.A.wastes B.costs C.sells D.produces
55.A.additionally B.separately C.over D.below
56.A.explained B.responded C.plained D.turned
57.A.his B.their C.your D.our
58.A.apologizing B.escaping C.traveling D.reporting
59.A.name B.investment C.reputation D.donation
60.A.hero B.graduate C.volunteer D.son第口卷(非选择题,共50分)第三部分语言知识运用(共两节,满分45分)第二节(共10小题;每小题
1.5分,满分15分)阅读下面短文,在空白处填入1个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式Once upona time,there was an old man,nearly blindand deaf,_____61lived withhisonly son.When he was attable,he oftendropped somefood on the table.His sonanddaughterinlaw did not likethis.So theymade himsit in a cornerbehind thestove.There he62give an old bowlwith alittle foodin it.One dayhis handsshook somuch63he couldnot holdthe bowl.It fellto the ground andbroketo pieces.The daughterinlaw shoutedat him64angry,“What acareless oldman youare!”His eyeswere filledwith65tear,but hedidnotsay anything.Then they66buy acheap woodenbowl andgave alittle foodin it.One day,67oldmans littlegrandson wassitting on thegroundby him,trying tofit somepiecesof woodtogether.“What areyou makinga woodentrough凹槽forn askedthe oldman.“It isfor Dadand Mum68feed fromwhen Igrow up,“answered thelittle boy.His parentsjaws dropped.They feltvery sorryand69embarrass,and startedto cry.Thenthey beggedfor areal70forgive,saying to the oldman“We arewrong.Please forgiveus!”第四部分写作共两节,满分35分第一节短文改错共10小题;每小题1分,满分10分假定英语课上老师要求同桌之间交换修改作文,请你修改你同桌写的以下作文文中共有10处语言错误,每句中最多有两处每处错误仅涉及一个单词的增加、删除或修改增加在缺词处加一个漏字符号八,并在其下面写出该加的词删除把多余的词用斜线\划掉修改在错的词下划一横线,并在该词下面写出修改后的词注意
1.每处错误及其修改均仅限一词;
2.只允许修改10处,多者从第11处起不计分As astudent,I alwayshave tostay uplately tofinish allmy homework.I used to beingangryabout thepressure fromschool.One day,I said,“I wentto bedat12:00pm atlast night.Now Ijust wantsleep.And thenmy teacheranswered,“I wentto bedat1:00am everyday.After that,I didnt plain anymore,because Iknew myteachers workedhard thanme.I startedto appreciate themselves.I alsowrote acard tothem togive mythanks.When getthe card,theywere alltouched.Besides,I realizedwhat powerfulthe sentence“Thank youis.When wegiveour thanksto others,the worldis fullin love.第二节书面表达(满分25分)假定你是李华,每周你们班的英语课上课前都有一个十分钟的个人演讲活动,你打算在下周英语课上讨论如何养成良好的生活习惯请你用英语准备一篇演讲稿,要点包括
1.简述现象;
2.如何养成良好的生活习惯;
3.表达感受或期望注意
1.词数100左右;
2.可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯第二节(共15小题;每小题L5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几个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项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题
6.When didthe speakersmeet lasttimeA.A dayago.B.Five yearsago.C.Ten yearsago.is thepurpose of the mans visitA.To goon holiday.B.To seehis family.C.To beon business.听第7段材料,回答第8至10题
8.What is the probablerelationship betweenthe speakersA.Classmates.B.Sister andbrother.C.Doctor andpatient.A.When cuttingwood.B.When liftingweights.C.When usinga puter.
9.How didthe manhurt his armA.Keep hissecret.B.Take careof him.C.Tell thetruth.听第8段材料,回答第11至13题
11.In whichcentury was the housebuiltC.21st.A.19th.B.20th.
12.How manybedrooms does the househaveC.Four.A.Two.B.Three.
10.What doesthe womanpromise the man todoA.Its age.B.Its size.C.Its location.
13.What is the man,s mainconcern about the house听第9段材料,回答第14至16题A.At work.B.At university.C.At thewedding.
14.When didthe manfirst meetthe bridegroomA.Studying.B.Traveling.C.Working.
15.What isthe womandoing inIndiaA.England.B.India.C.Japan.听第10段材料,回答第17至20题
17.What didJohn probablybuyC.A washingmachine.A.A car.B.A television.
18.How canJohn gethis moneybackA.If theproduct wasnot used.B.If theproduct cannotbe repaired.C.If hedecides tobuy anotherproduct.
19.What discountcode willJohn getC.100%.
16.Where isthe womanfrom
20.What isthe main purpose of the noticeA.To keepJohn satisfied.B.To introducea familybusiness.C.To askspecialists forsuggestions.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,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑Most peopleagree thateating healthy food isimportant.But sometimesmaking goodfoodchoices can be difficult.Now,here areapps thatcan helppeople learnaboutthefood theyeatto improvetheir healthand theirdining outexperience.Open TableappOpen Tableapp helpspeople chooserestaurants whenthey want to goout toeat.It is a freeservicethat showsusers restaurantsavailable basedon whereand whenthey want to dine.Itgives userspoints whenthey makereservations,which canadd upto discountson restaurantvisits.Max McCalmansCheeseWine Pairing appWine andcheese canbe agreat bination.But whichwines gobest withwhich cheesesMaxMeCalmanJ sCheese WinePairingappcan help.It provides information abouthundreds ofdifferentcheeses andsuggests winesto pairwith each.Max McCalmansCheeseWine PairingappMMCWPappis free.Happy CowappVegetarians do not eatanimal meat.Vegans donot eatany animalproducts.The Happy Cowapp ismade forboth groups.Users cansearch forvegetarianvegan restaurantsand storesaroundthe world.Local Eats appRestaurant chains,like McDonalds,canbefound almostanywhere aperson mighttravel.Butsometimes travelerswant toeat likelocals.The Local Eatsappis designedfor that.It canhelpyou findlocal restaurantsin majorcities inthe USand inother countries.It costsabouta dollar.Where Chefs Eat appuWhere ChefsEat”is a975page book.Most peoplewould not wanttocarry thataround.Butthere is a muchlighter appversion of the samename forjust$
15.Six hundredchefs provideinformationon3,000restaurants around the worldon theWhere ChefsEat app.
21.Which appseems especiallyuseful forthose ona dietA.Open Table.B.MMCWP.C.HappyCow.D.LocalEats.
22.What isspecial aboutWhereChefsEat appA.It isfree.B.It isplex.C.It isdesigned bychefs.D.It isnamed aftera book.isthemainpurposeofthetextA.To introducesome applications.B.To sharedining experience.C.To advertiserestaurant chains.D.To remendhealthyfood.BYesterday,a salesman called meby phone,on behalfof atele pany,to sellhis phone plans.I wasat work and Iusually didnt liketelemarketing(专肖售),so Iexcused myselfthatI couldn,t talkyet andsaid he could callme backone hourlater,at6:00pm.That swhat hedid.So wetalked for15minutes.He explainedto mehis differentphoneplans,which hestated tobe betterthan mycurrent one.While listeningto him,sometimes Iwas lostinmy thoughtsand Igave severalhmm hmm“asasign ofagreement toconvince himthat Iwasstill there.Sometimes,I felta bitimpatient,especially ashe haddifficulty incorrectlytalking inFrench.But Istayed calmand politeuntil theend ofthe discussion.At theend ofthe conversation,he revealed(袒露)the followingto me:Thank you,Linda.You arethe firstperson ina longtime withwhom1had anenjoyable conversation.Usually,peopleshout atus,speak tous rudely,and treatus asthieves.Today,since10:00am,I hadnt hadaconversation withoutan offense.I knowyou hada longday atworkandyou could have relaxedinfront ofyour TV.Instead,you listenedcarefully tome.I sincerelythank you.I wantedtotell itto you.”I thankedhim for this revelation.I realizedhow muchhecould have beenthe subject of verbalviolence,all throughhis workingdays.Unfortunately,the telephoneenables thecustomers tohavesuch aggressivebehavior.Indeed,physical barriersdonotexist inthis situationand akindof dehumanization俳人性化)seems tohappen.I amalso consciousthat thosepeople gettingimpatientcouldhavebeen me.Yet,he wasonly doinghis joband heshouldn thave sufferedfrom the violence.
24.Why didthe authorlet the salesmancallback laterA.She meantto refusehim at once.B.She showedinterest inhis phoneplans.C.She hopedfor moreabout telemarketing.D.She wantedto usethe way to discouragehim.
25.How canwe describe the authorduring the15minute talkA.Patient.B.Careful.C.Kind ofabsentminded.D.Obviously impolite.
26.What didthesalesmanintend toexpress in Paragraph3A.His deepapology.B.His trueappreciation.C.His angerat misunderstanding.D.His sufferingsin telemarketing.A.Unkind spokenwords.B.Physical barriers.
27.What doesthe underlinedpart“verbal violenceinParagraph4refer toC.Salesmen,s impatience.D.Customers Humanization.Facing a pandemic(流彳亍病)lock downcan makepeople feelworried.But nothinghasrepresented thispanicky behaviormore thanhoarding(囤积),specifically toilet paper.Seemingly beyondborders andcultures,people havebeen clearingsupermarket shelvesprimarilyforthisnecessity.But whatsthereason forthis suddentoilet paperfixation StevenTaylortold theIndependentthatour toilet paper hoardingisaproduct ofour strongdislike.During apandemic,people ssensitivity todislike increases.Dislike islike analarmmechanism...and whatbetter toolfor gettingrid ofdisliking materialthan toilet paper.I thinkthis ishow itbecame aconditioned symbolof safety.he said.Niki Edwardsof TheQueensland Universityof Technologysaid,“When peoplehear aboutthevirus,they areafraid oflosing control.And toilet paper feelslike awaytomaintain controlovercleanliness.”Another reasonbehind thistoilet papertrend,according tothe BBC,isthesnowball effect.Due toits coverage,both inthe newsand socialmedia,people naturallyask,“Will therebe enoughtoilet paperfor myfamily andme”This alwaysleads tomore peoplefollowingthe crowdand buyingtoiletpaperbecause oftheir fearof missingout.“Fear isvery catching.So whenthose sortsof thingsgo aboutlike viruses,when youseepeople aroundyou buyingthings ina panickyway,it sgoing tomake youfeel moreanxious.wrote Americanpsychologist BaruchFischhoff forCNBC.While thereare,of course,selfish peoplewho collecta largesupply oftoiletpaperjustbecause theycan,it sworth judgingthe importanceof thingscorrectly.Remember,just ascountriesare cooperatingto finda vaccine(疫苗),we mustcooperate toensure thateveryonehas theirshare ofnecessities.
28.Why dopeople buytoiletpapercrazily duringapandemiclockdownA.They areinapanic.B.They areunhappy.C.They areshort oftoiletpaper.D.They aretired ofcleanliness.
29.What effectdoesthemedia haveonthetrend accordingtotheBBCA.Warning.B.Pushing.C.Unknown.D.Slight.
30.What doesthe authorwanttosay inthe lastparagraphA.We arelack ofthe basicnecessities oflife.B.We shouldbe unitedagainst thepandemic.C.People areselfish tocollect toiletpaper.D.Countries shouldshare vaccines all thetime.
31.What canbethebest titlefor thetextA.Hoarding underthe PandemicB.Being Afraidof MissingoutC.Cleaning SupermarketShelves D.Strange BehaviorWorldwideDTree plantingusedtobe regardedas aneffective meansof controllingclimate change.Perhapsit stime forus torethink thispractice.Trees pullcarbon dioxide or CO2from theair.Thiseffectively removesCO2from the atmosphere,making treesan importantpart ofthe fightagainstclimate change.But treesonly holdonto carbondioxide aslong asthey realive.Once theydie,trees decay(腐烂)and releasethat CO2back intothe atmosphere.Recent studieshave foundthat treesaroundtheworld aregrowing faster than ever.Risingatmospheric COzisprobably drivingthat rapidgrowth,said RoelBrienen.High levelsof thisgasare boostingtemperatures,which inturn speedstree growthin thoseareas,he added.Thefaster treesgrow,the fasterthey storecarbon.It seemslike goodnews.However,it isknownthat fastgrowingtree species,in general,live shorterlives thantheir slowgrowingrelatives.In orderto seewhether thisisauniversal phenomenon,Brienen andhis colleaguesanalyzedover210,000individual treering recordsof110tree speciesfrom morethan70,000sitesworldwide.By measuringtree ringswidths onecan tellhow fasttrees grew,while countingringsprovidesinformationon treeages and allows makinginferences abouttrees maximumlifespan(寿命)・Brienen explained.The teamalso createda puterprogram thatmodeled aforest.Early on,it showedthat“theforest couldhold morecarbon asthe treesgrew faster”,Brienen reported.But after20years,these treesstarted dyingand losingthis extra carbon again.We mustunderstand that the onlysolutionto bringdown CO2levels isto stopemitting(排放)it intotheatmosphere,“saidBrienen.
32.What isthe firstparagraph mainlyaboutA.Where carbondioxideorCO2is.B.Whether treeswill beplanted ornot.C.Why theatmosphere canremove carbondioxide.D.Why treesagainst climatechange shouldbe rethought.
33.Why aretrees growingfasterthanever accordingto recentstudiesA.They giveoff andstore lotsof C
0.B.They belongto fastgrowing2species.C.Rising atmosphericC02may helpthem.D.The surroundingtrees mayaffectthem.
34.According totree ringswidths,we canknow atree,s.A.Age.B.Height.C.Growth speed.D.Toplifespan.
35.What mightbe talkedabout inthe followingparagraphA.Why theteam foundedthe puterprogram.B.Why thefaster treesgrow,the longerthey live.C.How tomake theold treeslive alittle longer.D.How todeal withdying treesemitting theirextracarbon.第二节(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选项中有两项为多余选项During thecool monthsfrom Octoberto March,camel caravans(骆马它车队)arrive inthedesert cityof Timbuktu(廷巴克图)every fewdays.Led byTuareg andArab traders,the caravanshavetraveled fromthe saltminesof Taoudenniin Mali.36Long agopeople inthe desertsof Africacouldnot getit easily.Salt wasso valuablethat1ounce of salt wasworth1ounce ofgold.Nowadays,each saltcaravan hasfrom60to300Camels.Each Camelcarries fourto sixbarsof salt.The journeyfromthe mines toTimbuktu takes15days.37At Taoudenni,salt ismined fromancient lakebedsthat driedup millionsof yearsago.Themines liedeep belowthe Earths surfaceand arereached bytunnels.Large blocksofsaltaredug outand thencut intosmall blocksabove ground.38The localpeople ofthe Bellaand Haratingroupsdo thework.However,their wagesare solow thatthey aretreated littlebetter thanslaves.39Here thesalt issold andcarried downriverto otherparts ofWest Africa.So Timbuktuisan importantmeeting placefor thedesert travelers.It wasalso oncea centerof education,with schoolsandauniversity thatdrew scholarsfrom alloftheworld.Trucks aretaking theplace ofcamels carryingsalt.One truck can carryhundreds ofbarsof salt.And atruckcanmake the900mile roundtripin abouta week.40A.Mining saltisavery hardjob.B.Traders arefamiliar withtheminesthere.C.Something badhappens tothe camelsontheway.D.The daysofthecamel caravansare ingto anend.E.It isa tradethat hasnot changedin thousandsof years.F.To avoidthe hotsun,the caravanstravel onlyat night.G.Timbuktu isnear ariver atthe crossroadof threetrade routes.第三部分语言知识运用(共两节,满分45分)第一节(共20小题;每小题
1.5分,满分30分)A womaninafaded(褪色的)dress andher husband,dressed inanoldsuit,walked intothepresident soffice.The secretarycould tellatoncethat suchcountry peoplecouldhaveno41at Harvard University.We wantto seethe president,“themansaid
42.He sbusy,“thesecretary answered.We1143,“the womanreplied.The secretaryfinally decidedto44thepresident.The presidentwas45but agreedto seethem.The womantold thepresident,“We hada sonwho46HarvardUniversityfor a year.He lovedthe university.But aboutayearago,he wasaccidentally47,My husband and Iwould liketo builda/an48to him,somewhere oncampus.”The presidentwasn t49…hewasshocked.Madam,“he said,“We cant50a statue(塑像)to everyperson whoattended HarvardUniversity anddied.”“Oh,no,“the womanexplained51We dontwantto putup astatue.We thought we wouldliketo52a buildingto HarvardUniversity.”The presidentrolled hiseyes,53attheold dressand suit.Then heexclaimed(惊叹),“A building!Do youknow howmuch abuilding54The costof HarvardUniversity sbuildingsaltogether is
557.5million dollars.vThe womanfell silent.Then she56to herhusbandandsaid quietly,“If thatsallit coststostart auniversity,why dontwejust start红own”Her husbandnodded.Mr.and Mrs.LelandStanford gotup andwalked away,58to PaloAlto,California wherethey establishedthe universitythatbears their59-Stanford University,a memorialtoa60that HarvardUniversity nolongercared about.
41.A.business B.interest C.experience D.advantageB.wait C.return
45.A.
42.A.curiously B.softly C.strangely anxiousD.rudely B.help C.disturbD.leave
43.A.delayB.pleased C.excited
44.A.urge D.replaceD.annoyed。