还剩9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:
吉林省长春市第二实验中学学年高一上学期期中2022-2023考试英语试题学校:姓名班级考号
一、短对话
1.What willthe womando probablyA.See adoctor.B.Go swimming.C.Do somerunning.
2.What causedthe markon the womans armC.An insect.
3.Where didthe manleave hisbagA.At school.B.On thebus.C.At hisfriend^.
4.How manybooks didthe manborrowA.Two.B.Three.C.Four.
5..Why doesntthe womanwant torunA.She isbusy.B.She issleepy.C.She isinjured.A.A dog.B.A baby.
二、长对话听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题A.A chicken.B.A rabbit.C.A fox.
6.What arethe speakerswaiting forA.Father anddaughter.B.Husband andwife.C.Brother andsister.
7.What isthe relationshipbetween the speakers听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题
8..Why does the manhave aheadacheA.He needsnew glasses.B,He hasnot drunkenough water.C.He hasstared at the screenfor toolong.A.Tea.B.Coffee.C.Water.
9.What doesthe manprefer
七、用单词的适当形式完成短文阅读下面短文,在空白处填入个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式1()()The ChinaInternational Searchand RescueTeam CISAR56form in2001and isnowmade up57several hundredrescue workersand about20sniffer dogs.The teambrings helpand()hope tothose58life arechanged bya storm,flood,or anyother59nature disaster.After longand carefultraining,the teamwent onits firstinternational rescuemissions in
2003.The teamsaved lots of people.It wasthe firsttime that a Chineseteam hadworked outsideChina,()60the teamwon highpraise for their braveryand skill.Since then,the CISAR61complete many()missions.The listto whomhelp has been givenis long.They spendseveral months62give aid()to over25,000victims of the2010floods inPakistan.Rescue workersare trained63find people,()treat injuries,and handout food,water,and other64supply,Rescue workersget to save lives,but theymust alsobury65dead.That meansthey haveto bestrong inboth bodyand mind.It takesa lot oflove andcourage torisk onesown lifetosavesomeone elses.
八、根据汉语意思填写单词(突然想到,侵袭).(根据汉语提示单词拼写)
66.It methat Iforgot totake myhomework(努力)(根据汉语提示
67.We aremaking everynot to become thebottom threein theclass.单词拼写)(与…比较)(根据汉语提示单词拼写)
68.with otherathletes,he ismuch moregraceful.
69.The secretto hissuccess islearning frommany ofhis(失败).(根据汉语提示单词拼写)(极其地)(根据汉语提示单词拼写)
70.The weatheris becomingcold nowadays.(负责的)(根据汉语提示单
71.As asenior highschool student,ril haveto befor alot more.词拼写)(申请)(根据汉语提示单
72.You shouldfirst for a visabefore yougo abroad.词拼写)(对入迷)(根据汉
73.It isquite commonfor teenagersto beto computergames.语提示单词拼写)(改进,改善)(根据汉语提示单词拼写)
74.What isthe bestway toyour readingskills.(好奇的)(根据汉语提示单词拼写)
75.She isan activeperson whois abouteverything.
九、开放性作文假定你是李华,你们学校正在进行有关理想教育的征文活动,请以为
76.My DreamCareer题写一篇短文参赛.你的选择;1给出理由
2.注意.词数左右;
180.可适当增加细节,以使行文连贯.2听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题
10.What isthe womanA.A writer.B.A lawyer.C.A policeofficer.
11.When didthe womanbegin towrite fulltimeA.A monthago.B.Seven years ago.C.Ten yearsago.
12.What didthewomando togetherwith the local officersA.Take themfor freerides.B・Observe theireveryday life.C.Ask themto namecharacters inher book.听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题
13.How muchwill Mr.Taylor be paidA.£
20.B.£40C.£
80.
14.Which oneis probablyMr.Taylors favoriteA.Pies.B.Noodles.C.Biscuits.
15.Which typeof noodleswould Mr.Taylor buyA.Beef noodles.B.Chicken noodles.C.Tomato noodles.
16.What doesMr.Taylor thinkabout thebiscuitsA.He won^buy them.B.He reallylikes them,tea.C.He prefersthem with
三、短文听下面一段独白,回答以下小题
17.Who isthe speakerprobably talkingtoC.His son.A.His friend.B.His student.
18.Where wasthe speakers first stopon thetripC.India.A.Australia.B.America.
19.How didthespeakerearn moneyin AustraliaC.By gettingan officejob.A.By paintinghouses.B.By workingataschool.
20.What isthe speakerssuggestionA.To trydifferent things.B.To have a similarexperience.C.To travelto asmany placesas possible.
四、阅读理解游轮New ZealandCruise amp;Australian OpenTennisIncludes tickets to theWomens andMens Finalsat theAustralian OpenNumberof days:16days Leaving:31January2020This holidayserves upthe perfectexperience forany tennisfan withticketstothe AustralianOpen,hotel staysin Melbourneand Sydneyand acruise aroundNew Zealandscoastline.日程安排Discover youritineraryDayl-4Melbourne Hotelstay amp;Australian OpenMelbourneis famousfor itsmarkets,where youllfind everythingfrom localproduce to artsand fashion.During yourstay,experience allthe excitementof theAustralian Open,one of the大>黄贯.worlds mostexciting sportstournaments and2020sfirstGrand SlamWith ticketstothe Mensand WomensFinals,youll see the besttennis starsin theworld competefor gloryingame likeno other.Day5-8Sydney HotelstaySydney isfar morethan theOpera House,Harbor Bridgeand invitingbeaches.Walk alongthecoastal paths,with rockpools,where youcan watchsurfers ridethe waves.Day9-12At seaDay13Milford SoundScenic cruisingYoulltravel throughamazing naturalbeauty inSouth WestNew Zealand,where mountaintopsare shownin mirror-smooth waters.In thisimportant wildlifehabitat,you couldsee aLittle企鹅Blue penguinor two,as youtravel pastthe breathtakingsight.Day14DunedinDont missthe gardensat LarnachCastle,including theSerpentine Walk,the AliceLawn andanative plantpath;a truedream forplant lovers.Day15TaurangaAs yousail intoTauranga^scenic harbor,youll passMount Maunganui,a deadvolcanocrossed withwalking pathsand dottedwith hotsaltwater pools.Day16AucklandPlease clickthe websiteto registerand signup assoon aspossible!
21.In whichcity canyou buysome AustralianpaintingsA.Melbourne.B.Sydney.C.Dunedin.D.Tauranga.
22.When willyou beable toseethedead volcanoA.On Day
8.B.OnDay
13.C.On Day
14.D.On Day
15.
23.The articleis mostprobably from.A.a textbook B.the InternetC.a sciencereport D.a newspaperMyfamily livesin Texas.I wasborn andbrought upin Texasand Iam agraduate oftheUniversity ofTexas.However,around mysecond yearin lawschool,I wantedto make a greatchange,which wasalmost unheardof forTexans:I wantedto leave!(实习期).I realizedthis aftercompleting myfirst-year internshipI knewI wantedsomething(橄榄球超级大赛)different andmy chancecame duringthe2011Super Bowlin Dallas.Asnowstorm blanketed the entire city insnow andthousands ofpeople weregathered.I overheard6禺然听至)lj thatStubHub,a bigcompany froma greatcity,San Francisco,was throwinga partynextdoor tomy hotel.I thoughtif I could getan internship,Icouldleave forthe summerand atleastsee whatit waslike.Yes,it wasa hugeleap.I toldmyself Iwas ready.There wasjust oneproblem:I wasntinvited tothe StubHubparty.But youknow Imthe typeofperson whogoes forsomething shewants.Needless tosay,I crashedthe partyand foundmy waytothe president.I kindlyintroduced myselfand thenasked ifthey hada legalinternship program.Guess whatThey acceptedmy requestto bea legalintern,even thoughthere wasno suchprogram.The legaldepartment didnthavealong-lasting positionfor me.However,I gotmany otherchancesto bea legalintern inother companies.That experiencehas shapedmy life.Working foragreat companyin SanFrancisco,Im extremelyhappy fbrmaking mydecision to leave Texas.By leavingTexas,I learnedthat itis somuch morerewarding totry theunfamiliar thanto stayin the comfort zone.Exploring theunfamiliar ishow youllunderstand whatfits yourlife.I say,divein head-first.
24.How didthe writerknow aboutStubHubs partyin DallasA.The companyinvited her.B.Her friendstold herabout it.C.She heardit bychance.D.She readit in the localnewspaper.
25..The authorwas able toleaveTexas because.A.she droppedout ofthe Universityof TexasB.she watchedthe2011Super Bowlin DallasC.a snowstormblanketedtheentirecityin snowD.she introducedherself tothe presidentof StubHub
26.Which ofthe followingwords bestdescribe the authorA.Patient andhonest.B.Smart andhumorous.C.Determined andpositive.D.helpful andenergetic.
27.What doestheauthorwant totell usthrough herexperienceA.You mustchoose acareer thatyou like.B,Jumping out of yourcomfortzoneis rewarding.C.Accepting whoyou aremakes yourealize yourstrengths.D.You shouldlisten toyour familyto learnabout yourstrengths.All theefforts youput intostudying atuniversity may not have been enough-because robotscould be comingfor yourjob.A newstudy findsthat asmany as800million workerscould bereplaced by robotsby
2030.The studyfrom theMcKinsey GlobalInstitute estimatesthat between400million and800(自动化)million individualscould be replaced byautomation orrobots andneed to find new jobsby2030around theworld.It estimatesthat30percent ofthe hourspeople spendon workinggloballycould have been automatedby thattime.Those mostaffected will be peoplewho workin predictableenvironments doingtasks such asoperating machinesand preparingfast food.Those whomakealiving bycollecting andprocessingdata alsoface ahigh riskof being replaced by robots.But peoplewho workin lesspredictableenvironments such as gardeners,plumbers,and childcarestaff facea smallerrisk,because theirrolesare technicallydifficult to be automatedand oftencommand relativelylower wages,which(商业提议)makes automationa lessattractive businesspropositionHowever,its notall doomforthefuture ofemployment.The Studynotes thatautomationsometimes allowsworkers toremain employedin adifferent position.Even whensome tasksareautomated,the employmentrate inthose occupationsmaynotdecline becauseworkers mayperformnew tasksJ McKinseyamp;Company wrotein arelease onits website.It notedthat Chinahas the largest numberof employeeswho wouldneed toswitch occupations,up to100million ifautomation wasadopted rapidly,or12percent ofthe2030workforce.Thenumbers arehigher inmore advancedeconomies,with upto one-third ofthe2030workforce inAmericaand Germanyneeding toswitch occupations,along withnearly halfofthe2030workforcein Japan.Countries whichfail toprepare workersfor transitionto newjobs willfeel theimpact ofarise inunemployment anddepressed wages,according tothe study.
28.Why willlotsofpeople needtofindnewjobsby2030around theworldA.They dontput effortsinto theirstudy atuniversity.B.The worldsworking populationis on the steadyrise.C.They will bepaidless withthe developmentof technology.D.Robots orautomation willtake theplace oftheir positions.
29.Which willbe theleast likelytobereplacedbyrobotsA.Machine operation.B.Fast foodcooking.C.Childcare inkindergarten.D.Data collection.
30.What isthe studysstatement aboutjobs9beingreplacedbyrobotsmainly basedonA.Estimated figures.B.Public opinions.C.Financial reports.D.Website contents.
31.Which partdoesthearticle belongtoA.Education.B.Business.C.Lifestyle.D.Technology.(雪豹)(红夕卜的)A snow leopard researchteam saidone ofits infrared cameras caughtsomesnow leopardsplaying in a nationalpark in the eastend ofthe Qilian Mountains,which theteamleader saidis ofgreat significance
95.There havebeen suspectedsightings of snow leopardsin eastQinghai before,but nonehas everbeenconfirmed.The snow leopard,often foundnear thealpine snowlineintheAsian heartland,hasbeencalledthe kingof snowmountains”.It isa Class-A protectedanimal inChina andis classifiedasvulnerable“by theInternational Unionfbr Conservationof Nature.“Based on these images,we canconclude that the areahas acertain numberofsnow leopards,but theexact populationis yettobecalculated/9said Ulgi,an officialatthereserve.In fact,inthesnow leopardproject,a numberof high-tech equipmenthavebeenincreasingly(无人机)used inmonitoring andprotecting thespecies,suchasinfrared cameras,drones andDNA(排泄物),research basedontheanimaPs excrementStill,more shouldbe doneto protectthe snowleopard,which isvulnerable tochallenges suchas climatechange,habitat lossand humanactivities,he said.A totalof60infraredcamerashavebeenscattered acrossthelargestState-owned forestin thecentraland easternTianshan Mountains,covering anarea ofaround550square kilometers,according tosources incharge ofthe projecton February
18.“We willkeep monitoringto learnmore aboutsnowleopardactivities inthe TianshanMountainsand assistthelocaladministration tocome upwith moretargeted protectionmeasures JsaidHe Bing,snowleopardproject manager.He saidthatthediscoveries ofsnow leopardsand otheranimals inChina wereevidence ofChinasincreased effortsin environmentalcontrol,suchasthe protectionof naturalforests.
32.Howwere thesnow leopardsexactly discoveredA.Caught oncamera.B.Seen bylocal people.C.Followed by the team.D.Watched fromthe drone.
33.What doesthe underlinedword“vulnerable“in paragraph5probably meanA.Hardly available.B.Easily hurt.C.Changeable.D.Valuable.
34.What canwe expectofthesnowleopardprotection inthe futureA.The infraredcameras willbereplacedby handycameras.B.The projectwill soonbe successfullyfinished.C.More high-tech equipmentwillbemade useof.D.Monitoring placeswillbetransferred toother areas.
35..Which ofthe followingcan bethe besttitle forthe textA.Countries Uniteto ProtectSnow LeopardsB.The Kingof SnowMountains IsWorthy ofthe NameC.The InfraredCameras Playan ImportantRole inAnimal ProtectionD.Snow LeopardsAre Spottedin ChinasQilianMountains
五、七选五Five ways to upyour studygameDo youever findyourself studyingreally hardforatest butultimately notdoing sowell36,When Iwas younger,I didthe old-fashioned methodof staring at mynotesfor twohours andhoping thecontent wouldmagically stickwith me.If you,re anythinglikeyounger me,please stopstaringatyour notes.Start studyinginamore engagingway.
37.Try explainingthe conceptsor theoriesthat yourestudying tofamily membersor friends.Ifyou canexplain itto themtoapoint wherethey canunderstand it,then thatmeans youunderstand it.
38.If youreabletostay focused,studying with a groupmight bemore funandmotivating thanstudying alone.Its alsogreat tohear otherpeopled thoughtsonthecourse materialincase theresanything youmissed ormisinterpreted.The lastoption isto usea studywebsite.39・A lotof thesesites offerpremiumversions,so beaware ofwhich featuresare freeand anyfree trial“due dates.Try usingsome ofthese methodswhen youstudy foryour nexttest.Studying canbe boring,but findingwaystomake itmore funcan reallyhelp youdo wellon yourtests.
40.A.Study withfriends.B.I personallyuse Quizletand StudyBlue.C.Below area coupleof activestudying methodsthat Ifound workedbest forme.D.Stay focused.E.Its notthat yourenot smart——its justthat yourestudying thewrong way.F.So dontlose motivation—youve gotthis!G.It ishard toput itinto practice.
六、完形填空Mary hasbeen livingalone sinceher husbandpassed away37yearsago.In May2021,thelockdown wasparticularly41for her.The99-year-old spenther dayswatching televisiongameshows.Also42at home,Benjamin,a thentwo-year-old wholived nextdoor wasunable to43withkids ofhis age.The44friendship developedgradually.At first,Mary would45at Benjaminfrom herwindowwhenever shesaw theyoung boyintheyard.Then,she riskedgoing outsideto46him inperson.(惯例)The routineeventually expandedto daily47bythefence thatseparated thetwo homes.Theunlikely paireven48a sociallydistanced gamethat Marycalls caneball”.“I cameout ofthe houseone morning,and hethrew hisball towardthe49J shesaid.I gotmy(手杖),cane andI50over thefence andhit theball towardhim,and hedthrow itback.Thats howitstarted.”This spring,Mary51Benjamin witha colorfultoy truckcollection thathad oncebelonged to一her son.The youngboy returnedthe52withagift ofhis owna pileof dirtthat he53carried inhissmall handand droppedat herdoor.Friendship reallyknows no54J Benjaminsmother said.Certainly,you wouldntguess thata99-year-old anda2-year-old wouldbe55,but theycouldbe.And theyboth gotalotoutofit.”
41.A.natural B・simple C.hard D.important
42.A.left B.relaxed C,amazed D.stuck
43.A.compete B.fight C.argue D.play
44.A.unusual B.untrue C.unknown D.unequal
45.A.stare B.wave C.point D.laugh
46.A.greet B.help C.call D.ask
47.A.discussions B.challenges C.gatherings D.shows
48.A.recorded B・watched C.improved D.invented
49.A.wall B.fence C,tree D.house
50.A.reached B,climbed C.jumped D・got
51.A.equipped B,rewarded C・presented D.helped
52.A.emotion B.praise C・favor D.pleasure
53.A.bravely B・carefully C・secretly D.nervously
54.A.limits B.results C,awards D.grades
55.A.neighbors B,competitors C,gamers D.friends。