还剩11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:
绝密★启用前2017年普通高等学校招生全国统一考试英语本试卷共分,共页考试结束后,将本试卷和答题卡一并交回15014注意事项.答题前,考生先将自己的姓名、准考证号码填写清楚,将条形码准确粘贴在条形码区域内
1.选择题必须使用铅笔填涂;非选择题必须使用毫米黑色字迹的签字笔书写,字体工整、笔迹清22B
0.5楚.请按照题号顺序在答题卡各题目的答题区域内作答,超出答题区域书写的答案无效;在草稿纸、试题卷3上答题无效.作图可先用铅笔画出,确定后必须用黑色字迹的签字笔描黑
4.保持卡面清洁,不要折叠、不要弄破、弄皱,不准使用涂改液、修正带、刮纸刀5第一部分听力(共两节,满分30分)做题时,先将答案标在试卷上,录音结束后,你将有两分钟的时间将试卷上的答案转涂到答题卡上第一节(共小题,每小题分,满分分)
51.
57.5听下面段对话每段对话后有一个小题,从题中所给的、、三个选项中选出最佳选项听完每段5A BC对话后,你都有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10例How muchis theshirt答案是C
1.What will the womando this afternoonA.Do someexercise.B.Go shopping.C.Wash herclothes.
2.Why doesthe womancall the manA.To cancela flight.B.To makean apology.C.To putoff ameeting.
3.How muchmore doesDavid needfor thecarA.$5,
000.B.$20,
000.C.$25,
000.
4.What isJane doingA.Planning atour.B.Calling herfather C.Asking forleave.
5.How doesthemanfeelA.Tired.B.Dizzy.C.Thirsty.
54.A.wait B.sleep C.study D.live
55.A.paid B.charged C.lent D.owed
56.A.observing B.preparing C.designing D.conducting
57.A.regretted B.avoided C.excused D.ignored
58.A.opened B.packed C.gave D.held
59.A.picture B.bill C.note D.diary
60.A.chose B.took C.expected D.borrowed新课标卷2第二节共小题;每小题分,满分分
101.515In1863the firstunderground passengerrailway in the worldopened inLondon.It ranfor justunder sevenkilometersand allowedpeople toavoid terrible61crowd on the roadsabove as they travelledto and62work.It tookthree yearstocomplete and was builtusing aninteresting method.This includeddigging upthe road,63_lay thetrack and thenbuilding astrong roofover64top.When allthose hadbeen done,the roadsurface wasreplaced.Steam engines65use topull thecarriages and it musthave been66fairunpleasant for the passengers,with allthesmoke andnoise.However,the railwayquickly provedto bea greatsuccess andwithin sixmonths,more than25,000people wereusing67every day.隧道,Later,engineers68manage toconstruct railwaysin asystem ofdeep tunnelswhich becameknown astheTube.This developmentwas onlypossible with the69introduce ofelectric-powered enginesand lifts.The CentralLondonRailway was one of the most70success of these newlines,andwasopened in
1900.It hadwhite-painted tunnels第一节短文改错共小题;每小题分,and brightred carriages,and provedextremely popularwiththepublic.101满分分10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处语言错误,10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并在其下面写出该加的词A,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的词注意.每处错误及其修改均仅限一词;
1.只允许修改处,多者(从第处起)不计分21011Mr.and Mrs.Zhang allwork in our school.They livefar from the school,andittakes themabout ahour anda halftogo towork everyday.In theirspare time,they areinteresting inplanting vegetablesin theirgarden,that isontherooftop oftheirhouse.They oftenget upearlier andwater thevegetables together.They have also boughtfor somegardening tools.Beside,they oftenget someuseful informationsfrom theInternet.When summercame,they willinvite theirstudents pick第二节书面表达满分分the freshvegetables!25假定你是李华,想邀请外教一起参观中国剪纸艺术展请给他写封邮件,内容包括Henry paper-cutting.展览时间、地点;
1.展览内容注意
2.词数左右;
1100.可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯2第二节(共小题;每小题分,满分分)
151.
522.5听下面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、、三个选项中选出最佳选5A BC项听每段对话或独白前,你将有时间阅读各个小题,每小题秒钟;听完后,各小题将给出秒钟的作答时55间每段对话或独白读两遍听第段材料,回答第、题667A.Watch TV.B.Play outside.C.Go to the zoo.
6.What doesJack want to doA.At home.B.In acinema.C.In asupermarket.
7.Where doesthe conversationprobably takeplace听第段材料,回答第至题7810A.Hes a newsman.B.Hes amanager.C.Hes aresearcher.
8.What does Richard doA.Birmingham.B.Mexico City.C.Shanghai.
9.Where isRichard goingnext weekA.Eat outtogether.B.Visit auniversity.C.See ProfessorHayes.
10.What willthe speakersdo tomorrow听第段材料,回答第至题
8111311.What is the probablerelationship betweenthe speakersA.School friends.B.Teacher andstudent.C.Librarian andlibrary user.
12.Why doesJim suggestMary buythe bookA.Its soldat adiscount price.B.Ifs importantfor herstudy.C.Ifs writtenby ProfessorLee.
13.What willJim dofor MaryA.Share hisbook withher.B.Lend hersome money.C.Ask Henryfor help.听第段材料,回答第至题91416A.In Memphis.B.In Boston.C.In StLouis.
15.What wouldpeter and his familylike to do onBeale StreetA.Visit amuseum.B.Listen tomusic.C.Have dinner.
14.Where doesStella liveA.A bigone.B.A quietone.C.A modern one.
16.What kindof hoteldoes Peterprefer听第段材料,回答第至题101720A.One.B.Two.C.Three.
17.How manylab sessionswillthe students haveevery week
18.What arethe studentsallowed towear in the labA.Long scarves.B.Loose clothes.C.Tennis shoes.
19.Why shouldthestudentsavoid mixingliquid withpaperA.It maycause afire.B.It maycreate waste.C.It mayproduce pollution.
20.What doesthe speakermainly talk aboutA.Grades thestudents willreceive.B.Rules thestudents shouldfollow.C.Experiments thestudents willdo.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A、B、C和D四个选项中,选出最佳选项In thecoming months,we arebringing togetherartists fromall over the globe,to enjoyspeaking Shakespearesplays intheirown language,inourGlobe,within thearchitecture Shakespearewrote for.Please comeand joinus.National Theatre of ChinaBeijing|Chinese(盛会)This greatoccasion will be the National Theatreof Chinasfirst visitto theUK.The companysproductions showthenew faceof21st centuryChinese theatre.This production of ShakespearesRichard III will be directedby theNationals AssociateDirector,Wang Xiaoying.DateTime:Saturday28April,
2.30pmSunday29April,
1.30pm
6.30pmMarjanishvili TheatreTbilisi|GeorgianOne of the mostfamous theatresin Georgia,the Marjanishvili,founded in1928,appears regularlyat theatrefestivals all指导overtheworld.This newproductionofAs YouLike It is helmedby the company sArtistic DirectorLevanTsuladze.DateTime:Friday18May,
2.30pmSaturday19May,
7.30pmDeafinitely TheatreLondon|British SignLanguageBSLBy translatingthe richand humouroustext ofLoves Labour s Lostinto thephysical languageof BSL,Deafinitely Theatrecreatesa newinterpretation ofShakespeare^comedy andaims tobuild abridge betweendeaf andhearing worldsbyperforming toboth groupsasoneaudience.DateTime:Tuesday22May,
2.30pmWednesday23May,
7.30pmHabima NationalTheatre Tel Aviv|HebrewThe Habimaisthecentre ofHebrew-language theatreworldwide.Founded inMoscow afterthe1905revolution,thecompany eventuallysettled inTelAvivin thelate1920s.Since1958,they havebeen recognisedasthenational theatreofIsrael.This productionof ShakespearesThe Merchantof Venicemarks theirfirst visitto theUK.DateTime:Monday28May,
7.30pmTuesday29May,
7.30pm
21.Which playwillbeperformed bytheNationalTheatreofChinaA.RichardIII.B.Love sLaboursLost.C.As YouLike It.D.The Merchantof Venice.
22.What isspecial aboutDeafinitely TheatreA.It has two groupsof actors.B.Tt isthe leadingtheatre inLondon.C.It performsplays inBSL.D.It isgood atproducing comedies.
23.When canyou seea playin HebrewA.On Saturday28April.B.On Sunday29April.C.On Tuesday22May.D.On Tuesday29May.BI firstmet Paul Newman in1968,when GeorgeRoy Hill,the directorof ButchCassidy andthe SundanceKid.introduced usin New York City.When the studio didntwant mefor thefilm-it wantedsomebody aswell一known asPaul hestood upfor me.I dont know howmany peoplewould havedone that;they wouldhave listenedtotheir agentsorthestudio powers.The friendshipthat grewout ofthe experienceof makingthat filmand TheSting fouryears laterhad itsroot in the factthat although therewas anage difference,we bothcame froma traditionof theaterand liveTV.We wererespectful ofcraft(技艺)and focusedon digginginto thecharacters wewere goingto play.Both ofus hadthe qualitiesand virtuesthat are一typical ofAmerican actors:humorous,aggressive,and makingfun ofeach otherbut alwayswith anunderlying(核affection.Those werealso at the coreof ourrelationship offthe screen.一We sharedthe beliefthat if youre fortunateenough tohave success,you shouldput somethingback hewith hisNewmansOwn foodandhisHole in the Wallcamps fbrkids who are seriouslyill,and mewith Sundanceandtheinstituteand thefestival.Paul andI didntsee eachother allthat regularly,but sharingthat broughtus together.We supportedeachother financiallyand byshowing upat events.I lastsaw hima fewmonths ago.Hed beenin andout ofthe hospital.He andI bothknew whatthe dealwas,and wedidnttalkaboutit.Ours wasa relationshipthat didntneed alot ofwords.
24.Why wasthestudiounwilling togive therole to the authorat firstA.PaulNewmanwanted it.B.The studiopowers didntlike hisagent.C.He wasntfamous enough.D.The directorrecommended someoneelse.
25.Why didPaul andthe authorhave alasting friendshipA.They wereofthesame age.B.They workedinthesame theater.C.They wereboth goodactors.D.They hadsimilar characteristics.
26.What doesthe underlinedword“that”in paragraph3refer toA.Their belief.B.Their carefor children.C.Their success.D.Their supportfor eachother.
27.What isthe authorspurpose inwriting the textA.To showhis loveof films.B.To remembera friend.C.To introduceanewmovie.D.To sharehis actingexperience.CTerrafugia Inc.said Mondaythat itsnew flying car hascompleted itsfirst flight,bringing thecompany closerto itsgoalof sellingthe flyingcar withinthe nextyear.The vehicle——named the Transition——hastwoseats,four wheelsandwings thatfold upso itcan bedriven likea car.The Transition,which flewat1,400feet foreight minuteslast month,can reacharound70miles perhour onthe roadand115intheair.It fliesusing a23-gallon tankof gasand burns5gallonsper hourintheair.On theground,it gets35miles pergallon.Around100people have already putdown a$10,000deposit to get aTransition when they goon sale,and thosenumberswill likelyrise afterTerrafugia introducesthe Transitionto thepublic laterthis weekattheNewYorkAuto Show.But dontexpect itto show up in too manydriveways.Its expectedto cost$279,
000.And itwont helpifyourestuck intraffic.The carneeds arunway.Inventors havebeen tryingto makeflying carssince the1930s,according toRobert Mann,an airlineindustry expert.But Mannthinks Terrafugiahas comecloser thananyone tomaking the flyingcara reality.The governmenthas alreadypermittedthecompanyto usespecial materialsto makeit easierfor thevehicle tofly.The Transitionis nowgoing throughcrashtests tomake sureit meetsfederal safetystandards.Mann saidTerrafugia washelped bythe FederalAviation Administrationsdecision fiveyears agoto createa separatesetof standardsfor lightsport aircraft,which arelower thanthose forpilots oflarger planes.Terrafugia saysan ownerwouldneed topass atest andcomplete20hours of flying timeto beable tofly the Transition,a requirementpilots wouldfindrelatively easyto meet.
28.What isthe firstparagraph mainlyaboutA.The basicdata oftheTransition.B.The advantagesofflying cars.C.The potentialmarket forflyingcars.D.The designersoftheTransition.
29.Why istheTransitionunlikely toshowupintoomany drivewaysA.It causestraffic jams.B.It isdifficult tooperate.C.Itisvery expensive.D.It burnstoo muchfuel.
30.What isthe government,s attitudeto thedevelopment oftheflyingcarA.Cautious.B.Favorable.C.Ambiguous.D.Disapproving.
31.What isthe besttitle forthetextA.Flying Carat AutoShow B.The TransitionsFirst FlightC.Pilots DreamComing TrueD.Flying CarCloser toRealityDWhen aleafy plantis underattack,it doesntsit quietly.Back in1983,two scientists,Jack Schultzand IanBaldwin,reported that young mapletrees gettingbitten byinsects sendout aparticular smellthat neighboringplants can get.Thesechemicals comefrom theinjured partsoftheplant andseem tobe analarm.What theplants pumpthrough theair isamixture ofchemicals knownas volatileorganic compounds,VOCs forshort.Scientists havefound thatall kindsof plantsgive outVOCs whenbeing attacked.Its a plants wayof cryingout.Butis anyonelistening Apparently.Because wecan watchthe neighborsreact.Some plantspump outsmelly chemicalsto keepinsects away.But othersdo doubleduty.They pumpout perfumesdesignedto attractdifferent insectswhoarenatural enemiestotheattackers.Once theyarrive,the tablesare turned.Theattacker whowas lunchingnow becomeslunch.In studyafter study,it appearsthat thesechemical conversationshelp theneighbors.The damageis usuallymoreserious onthe first plant,but theneighbors,relatively speaking,stay saferbecause theyheard thealarm andknew whattodo.Does thismean thatplants talk to eachother Scientistsdontknow.Maybe thefirstplantjust madea cryof painorwas sendinga messageto itsown branches,and so,in effect,was talkingto itself.Perhaps theneighbors justhappened tooverhearthe cry.So informationwas exchanged,but itwasnt atrue,intentional backand forth.(亲密的)Charles Darwin,over150years ago,imagined aworld farbusier,noisier andmore intimatethan theworldwe cansee andhear.Our sensesare weak.There9sawhole lotgoing on.
32.What doesaplantdo whenit isunder attackA.It makesnoises.B.It getshelp fromother plants.C.It standsquietly.D.It sendsout certainchemicals.
33.What doesthe authormean bynthe tablesare turnedin paragraph3A.The attackersget attacked.B.The insectsgather underthe table.C.The plantsget readyto fightback.D.The perfumesattract naturalenemies.
34.Scientists findfrom theirstudies thatplants canA.predict naturaldisasters B.protect themselvesagainst insectsC.talk toone anotherintentionallyD.help theirneighbors whennecessary
35.What canwe inferfromthelast paragraphA.The worldis changingfaster thanever.B.People havestronger sensesthan before.C.The worldis morecomplex thanit seems.D.People inDarwins timewere moreimaginative.第二节(共小题;每小题分,满分分)5210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Interruptions areone ofthe worstthings todeal withwhile you re tryingto getwork done.36,there areseveral waystohandle things.Let stake alook atthem now.
37.Tell the person youre sorryand explainthat youhaveamillion thingstodoand thenask ifthetwo ofyou cantalk ata differenttime.When peopletry tointerrupt you,have sethours plannedand let them knowto comeback duringthat timeor thatyou11find themthen.38・It canhelp toeliminate(肖除)future interruptions.When youneed to talktosomeone,don tdo itin yourown office.39,it smuch easierto excuseyourselfto getback toyour workthan ifyou trytogetsomeone outof yourspace evenafter explaininghow busyyou are.If youhaveadoor toyour office,make gooduse ofit.
40.If someoneknocks andit snot an(暗示)important matter,excuse yourselfand letthepersonknow youre busyso theycangetthe hintthat whenthe doorisclosed,yourenot tobe disturbed.A.If yourebusy,dont feelbad aboutsaying noB.When youwanttoavoid interruptionsat workC.Set boundariesfor yourselfas faras yourtime goesD.If youreintheother personsoffice orin apublic areaE.Its importantthatyouletthemknow whenyoull beavailableF.It mightseem unkindto cutpeople shortwhentheyinterrupt youG.Leave itopen whenyoure availabletotalkand closeit whenyoure not第三部分语言知识运用(共两节,满分分)45第一节(共小题每小题分,满分分)
201.530阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的、、和四个选项中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项A BC DIn1973,I wasteaching elementaryschool.Each day,27kids41The ThinkingLaboratory.That wasthe42studentsvoted forafter decidingthat Room104was too
43.(同情),Freddy wasan average44,but notan averageperson.He hadthe rarebalance offun andcompassion Hewould45the loudestover funand bethe saddestover anyones
46.Before theschool year47,I gavethe kidsa special48,T-shirts withthe wordsnVerbs AreYour49nonthem.I had(动词)advised thekids thatwhile verbsmay seemdull,most ofthe50things theydo throughouttheir liveswillbeverbs.Through theyears,Id runinto formerstudents whowould provide51on oldclassmates.I learnedthat Freddydidseveral jobsafter his52from highschool andremained thesame53person Imet fortyyears before.Once,while workingovernightatastore,he leta homelessman54in histruck.Another time,he55a friendmoney tobuy ahouse.Just lastyear,I was56a workshopwhen someoneknocked atthe classroomdoor.A woman57the interruptionandhanded mean envelope.I stoppedteaching and58it up.Inside werethe Verbs”shirt anda59from Freddysmother.Freddy passedaway onThanksgiving.He wantedyou tohave this.*1I toldthe storytotheclass.As sadas itwas,I couldnthelp smiling.Although Freddywas takenfrom us,we all60something fromFreddy.
41.A.built B.entered C.decorated D.ran
42.A.name B.rule C.brand D.plan
43.A.small B.dark C.strange D.dull
44.A.scholar B.student C.citizen D.worker
45.A.speak B.sing C.question D.laugh
46.A.misfortune B.disbelief C.dishonesty D.mistake
47.A.changed B.approached C.returned D.ended
48.A.lesson B.gift C.report D.message
49.A.Friends B.Awards C.Masters D.Tasks
50.A.simple B.unique C.fun D.clever
51.A.assessments B.comments C.instructions D.updates
52.A.graduation B.retirement C.separation D.resignation
53.A.daring B.modest C.caring D.smart。