还剩10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:
安徽省天一大联考2023-2024学年高二上学期10月月考英语试题学校:姓名班级考号
一、短对话
1.What cantthe womando wellinA.Passing aball.B.Hitting aball.C.Catching aball.
2.Who willprobably pick up Helentomorrow morningA.Larry.B.Bob.C.Mary.
3..What will the speakersdo in the afternoonA.Attend ameeting.B.Swim ina lake.C.Go to the topof amountain.
4.When willthe speakersleave worktodayA.At5:00pm.B.At6:00pm.C.At7:00pm.
5..Where does the conversationtake placeA.In aplane.B.At apark.C.On atrain.
二、长对话听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题
6.Why doesthe womancome hereA,To visita patient.B.To seea doctor.C.To applyfor apassport.
7.What doesthe womanneed toprovideA.Her address.B.Her IDcard.C.Her evidenceof identity.听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题
8.What is the relationshipbetween thespeakersA.Fellow workers.B.Teacher andstudent.C.Classmates.
9.What dowe knowabout theman speakerA.He hasmuch workexperience.B.He is the sameage asthe woman.
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,并将答案填写在1答题卡上As Buddhismgot popularin Chinaduring theTang Dynasty,there was a strongneed tomake佛经,56large numberof Buddhist scriptures andcopying byhand couldnot meetthe57rise工匠demand.Therefore,ancient Chinesecraftsmen founda newway tomass produceprintedscriptures.Thus58come thewoodblock printingTraditionalwoodblock printingis dividedinto fourmajor steps:writing,carving,printing,and步骤,binding.59each stepincluding severalprocedures it takes roughly30steps60producea woodblockprint.Carving liesat thecenter ofwoodblock printingas thisdifficult stepcan eithermake thefinalprint61break it.Characters andimages arecarved tomake raisedareas thatwill62eventual applyinkto paper.It callsfor apair ofskillful hands.A five-meter scrollof theBuddhistscriptureDiamond Sutra,which63complete in868AD,istheearliest datedprinted bookin thewords of the BritishLibrary,64it isstored.It isjust one ofthe ancient65work ofart thatnot onlytell thewisdomof ourpredecessors,but witnessthe seekingof beautyby Chinesecraftsmen throughoutcenturies.
八、开放性作文.你校正在就是否允许在校园安装自动售货机征求同学们的意见请写66vending machine一篇短文给校英文报投稿,表明你的观点并列举理由注意写作词数应为个左右;L80请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答
2.Should VendingMachines BeAllowed in the School
九、读后续写.阅读下面材料,根据其内容和所给段落开头语续写两段,使之构成一篇完整的短文67At thefanciest restaurantin town,Emilys mostrecent date,Nathaniel,talked about his boats,(房地产)horses,and realestate collection.He wasexactly thekind ofman herparents wantedherto marry,but she was unimpressed.Suddenly,a quarrelat thedoor caughther attention.“Please,I justwant somefries!^an oldwoman incheap clothingbegged.Emily fixedher eyesonher barefeet andfrowned.Being barefootwas unacceptableat anyrestaurant.The waiterwasdispleased andtried todrive herout,but somethingin Emilysheart toldher tostand up.“Wait asecondJ shesaid tothe waiter.Shes with me.^^The waiterseyes widenedas Emilygestured forthe womanto joinher table.NathaniePs faceturnedred.“What areyou doing,Emily^^he demanded,whispering althoughthe oldwoman couldhearhim.Im invitingthis womanto sitwith us.Ts thata problem”she askedsweetly.The oldwomanintroduced herselfas Martha.“Yes,it is!”Nathaniel replied,throwing hiscloth napkinon thetable,standing upquickly andgoingout angrily.“Bye!”she wavedat himas shesat down.Her voicetermed sympatheticand kindas shelookedat Martha.Now,whafs goingon Canyou tell me whyyoure hereAnd whyare youbarefbot^^“Oh,madam.You didnthave toinvite meto yourtable/5Martha shookher bead.just wantedsomefries formy grandson.Hes justbeen sosick,and Icant gethim toeat anything.He told me heonlywants somefries.So Isold myshoes to a manwalking byand hegave meenough forsome.”“May Iask,why notgo toa fastfood place”Emily saidgently.“Well,this placewas closer.Its toohot outsidefor meto walkmuch fartherwithoutshoes,“Martha answered.The womancontinued tellingher story.She andher grandsonhad beenlivingon thestreets for a fewyears sinceher daughterdied,and theycouldnt affordrent becausenoone wouldhire her.注意续写词数应为左右;
1.150请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答
2.Emilys eyeswatered asshe tookoff hershoes.The otherguests puttheir shoesback on.
10.What isthe headmasterlikeA.Strict.B.Impatient..Easy-going.听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题
11.What isthe firstbook aboutA.Honeybees.B.Different colors..Woodland animals.
12.What isJorey HurleyA.A writer.B.A painter.,A bookseller.
13.How muchwillthespeakers payA.$
7.B.$
20..$
38.C.He graduatedfrom collegethis summer.听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题
14.Why didGreyson startthe organizationA.To reducefood waste.B.To supporthis family.・To helppeople inneed.
15..What wasGreysons parentsattitude towardshis decisionA.Supportive.B.Worried.,Uncaring.
16.What isGreysons dreamA.To starta largeractivity.,To becomea NavySEALC.To workas afirefighter.
17.What isthe conversationmainly aboutA,A firefight.B.A goodfamily.,A charityorganization.
三、短文听下面一段独白,回答以下小题
18.What didChloe Kimrealize afterher firstsnowboardingA.She foundit boring.B.She wasinterested init.C.She wasafraid ofcompeting.
19.Why didChloe Kimchoose to begin homeschoolingA.To avoidthe tiringschool life.B.To havemore timefor training.C.To enjoyher father^company.A.
14.B.
16.C.
18.
20.How oldwas ChloeKim whenshe wona goldmedal at the2015X Games
四、阅读理解Edinburgh summerfestivals2023The Edinburgh Festival FringeSetup in1947,the EdinburghFestival Fringeisthe worlds largest performance arts festival.(场馆)Only theOlympic Games and theWorld Cupsell moretickets andit takesover venuesallover the city for most ofAugust.The EdinburghFestival FringeSociety publishesa free一programme everyyear containingmost ofthe performanceswhich can be pickedup invenuesacross Edinburghbefore andduring theevent.The EdinburghInternational FestivalFirstheld in1947,the EdinburghInternational Festivalhas takenplace everyyear since.Ttsees famousfigures fromthe fieldsof musicand theperforming artsinvited toperform in thecity.Traditionally themajority ofevents areclassical musicconcerts,opera,theatre productions,anddance performances.The EdinburghInternational FilmFestivalEstablished in1947,the EdinburghInternational FilmFestival isthe worldsoldest(不间断地)uninterruptedly runningfilm festival.Threatened byfinancial problemslast year,including theclosing of its EdinburghFilmhouse home,it iscoming in2023asadownsized eventshowinga selectionof filmsfrom aroundthe world.The EdinburghInternational BookFestivalFirst takingplace ina singletent in1983,the EdinburghInternational BookFestival wasoriginallyheld everytwo yearsbut becamea yearlyliterary celebrationin
1997.It inviteshundredsof authors,journalists,politicians andfamous facesfrom aroundtheworldto cometothecity tospeakabout boththeir books and thoseof others.
21.How longdoesthe EdinburghFestival Fringe lastC.More than40days.D.Around halfa year.A.About aweek.B.Almost amonth.
22.What isspecial about theEdinburghInternational FilmFestivalA.It kickedoff inan oldtent halfa centuryago.B.It isthe worldslargestperformanceartsfestival.C.It isthe thirdlargest eventin termsof ticketsales.D.It hasbeen continuallyheld sinceit started.
23.Which eventused to take placeevery secondyearA.The EdinburghFestivalFringe.B.The EdinburghInternational Festival.C.The EdinburghInternational FilmFestival.D.The EdinburghInternational BookFestival.Because mystories keepmy heartpounding atnight with the possibilityofitall,when Icantget wordson paper,I wantto scream.All myenergy poolsat thebottom of my heart,where itcontinuesto yellat meall daylong,uWrite!Write!Write!,91have toquiet thevoice likea hiddenpet,(发嘘声)shushing itover andover until1get thechance toleave,laptop inhand,stories pouringout ofmymind.What poor,unfortunate liveswe artistslive!Were torturedby ourwords,whether theyrecircling around inour mindsat3am orwritten onpaper,looking sadand regretfulthat weveputthem there.Our wordslaugh atus beforeand afterthey leaveour bodies.(导师)I messageda writingmentor whenI foundmyself runningin circles.With onlya smallwindowof timeto myselfeach afternoon,I foundit hardto write.If onlyI hadmore time,I couldfinishmy book.If onlypeople wouldleave mealone,I couldbecome anaccomplished writer.Itwas everyoneelses fault.Small-my mentortoldmeto startsmall butkeep going.“Do whatyou can,when youcan.Letthat beenough duringthe busyseasons.In hereyes,she wasonce me.She wasonce crazywith tasksthatkept herhands pushing,pulling,grabbing andmoving endlessly.She recognizedherself in theway Italked withstarry eyesabout mydreamy writinggoals andplans.Essays,articles andshortstories floweredin myrich mind.In afew wisewords,she gaveme thefreedom towrite insmall periodsof timeshe called“thecracks ofthe day”.She arguedthat Ishould runafter publishingwith the same desireas ever.But inherpatient voice,I hearda gentlereminder ofstopping runningso hardand insteadslowing toasustainable pace.So Iwrite.I submit.I live,and Idream.
24.What canwe inferabout the author fromthe firstparagraphA.She hasa strongdesire towrite.B.She hasserious heartproblems.C.She is forced towrite constantly.D.She isunable tofocus onwriting.
25.What doesthe underlinedword“tortured inparagraph2probably meanA.Threatened.B.Troubled.C.Inspired.D.Impressed.
26.What problemdid theauthor havein writingA.She sufferedfrom aserious lackof time.B.Her writingwas farfrom satisfying.C.She hadno ideawhat towrite.D.She hasno oneto relyon.
27.Which ofthe followingcan sumup thewriting mentorssuggestion tothe authorA.All roadslead toRome.B.Strike whilethe ironis hot.C.No pains,no gains.D.Constant dropswear awaya stone.Long linesat securitycheckpoints,tiny plasticcups ofdrink,small bagsof biscuit,planes fullofpassengers,fees attachedto everyservice-all reflectthe realitiesof21st centurycommercial air(怀旧)travel.Ifs nowonder thatmany travelershave becomenostalgic forthe so-called goldenage“of airtravel inthe UnitedStates.During the1950s,airlines promotedcommercial airtravel;airline hostessesserved fullmealson realchina,airline seatswere largeand frequentlyempty withenough legroom,and passengerswerealways dressedwell.After jetswere introducedinthelate1950s,passengers couldtravel toeven themost distantlocationsat speedsunimaginable adecade before.An airlinetrip fromNew Yorkto Londonthatcould takeup to15hours inthe early1950s couldbe madein lessthan sevenhours bythe early1960s.But thegood memoryof airlinein thattime canbe tricky,and“golden ages“are seldomasbeautiful asthey seem.Until theintroduction ofjets in1958,most ofthe nationscommercial planes(螺旋桨马区动)were propeller-driven aircraft.Most ofthese planeswere unpressurized,and with(巡航)a maximumcruising altitudeof10,000to12,000feet,they wereunable to fly overbad(气流)weather.Delays werefrequent,turbulence wascommon,and airsickness bagswere oftenneeded.For muchof thisperiod,the oldsaying Timeto spare,go byair“still rangtrue.Through the1930sandinto the1940s,almost everyoneflew firstclass.Airlines didencouragemore peopletoflyinthe1950sand1960s byintroducing coachor touristfares,but thesavings wererelative:less expensivethan firstclass,but stillpricey.Although theinvention ofjets didresult inlowerfares,the costwas stillout ofreach ofmost Americans.
28.Why dopassengers treasurethememory ofthe goldenage“of airtravelA.Passengers behavedbetter inthose days.B・People traveledby planemore frequentlyat thattime.C.Commercial airtravel haskept airplanesin shortsupply.D.The airtravel experienceis muchworse thanit usedto be.
29.How doestheauthordevelop thefirst twoparagraphsA.By givingfigures.B.By followingtime order.C.By makingcomparisons.D.By explainingprinciples.
30.What canbe learntabouttheflights beforethe jetage fromthe textA.The flightswere oftendelayed.B.The flightsdidnt offermeals topassengersC.The flightscould flyover20,000feet.D.The flightswere affordableformostpeople.
31.What isthe textmainly aboutA.The convenienceofthemodem airplanes.B.The advantagesof airtravel inAmerica.C.The realitybehind airtravePs goldenage.D.The oldsaying Timeto spare,go byair”.Learning anew languageis likeyoure going through thejungle witha knifeand creatingapath.When youlearn twolanguages atonce,youre cuttingyour waythrough thejungle tocreate(自律),two paths,which requirestwice thediscipline time and motivation.But itis possible.A2020study publishedintheInternational Journalof Multilingualismfoundthat Chinesestudents learningEnglish andRussian atthe sametime achievedsimilar masteryinEnglish comparedtoacontrol groupthat juststudied English.This islikely becausethey have(双语者)already madeenormous efforts.A2017study suggeststhat bilingualscan learnnewlanguages fasterthan single-language learners.The biggestchallenge of learning twolanguages atthesametime isfinding enoughtime andopportunitiesto studythem.But toknow justhow manyefforts andresources toput intoit,youllneed todecide whatyou wantto achievewiththe languages youreplanning toadopt.Becomingprofessor-level fluentin Polishis goingtotakea reallylong time,but if you wanttobeable tohaveconversations whileyoure traveling,that wonttake asmuch time.(分酉己)To helpyou distributeyour timeand energymore effectively,and geta betterideaof whatyour studyplan willlook like,ifs importantto understandhow difficulta particularlanguageisfora native English speaker.While itcan takeup to2,200hours to learn languageslikeArabic andMandarin,ifyougrew upspeaking English,itll beeasier foryou topickupCzech andGerman,for example.The easiestlanguages for nativeEnglish speakers to learn includeSpanishFrench,and Portuguese,which requirebetween600and750hours ofclass toachieve professionalmastery.If itfeels toodiscouraging togo fullspeed aheadon bothlanguages rightaway,it mightbeeasier tounderstand basicgrammar andvocabulary forone languagebefore addinganother onetothe mix.
32.Why canbilingual learnersdo aswell assingle-language learnersA.Bilingual learnersare cleverer.B.Bilingual learnerswork harder.C.Bilingual learnersare moreinterested inlanguages.D.Bilingual learnershave abetter learningenvironment.
33.What determinesthe timeittakestolearnforeign languagesA.The occasionsof usingthe languages.B.The stepstolearnthe languages.C.The professorsteaching thelanguages.D.The purposeoflearningthelanguages.
34.A.French.B.German.C.Mandarin.D.Portuguese.Which languageis hardestfornativeEnglishspeakersaccording tothe text
35.What isthe besttitle forthe textA.Learning TwoLanguages atOnce B.Ways ofLeaning aNew LanguageC.Language Talentof ChineseStudents D.Difficulty inLearning Language
五、七选五If hearingthe importanceof goodsocial relationshipsmakes youthink that you mightnot haveenough,you arentalone,said AdamSmiley Poswolsky,workplace belongingexpert andauthor ofFriendshipintheAge ofLoneliness,,.36However,the hopeof developingnew friendships-or strengtheningexisting ones-canbe disappointing.Its frighteningto thinkabout friendshipin adulthood,and thesense ofdefeatkeeps usfrom eventrying,Poswolsky said.His suggestion37Text afriend that you haventtalked toforalong time,commit tomeetingone newperson amonth,host adinner party,or joina class.If youdo just one thing,make alist offivepeople inyour lifethatyoucare about,and giveoneofthem aphone call.The mostremarkablefriendships oftenbegin withtiniest momentsof connection.Remember thatyou likelywont forma strongconnection overnight.Research showsthat weneed90hours oftime togetherto considersomeone afriend andmore than200hours toconsiderthem aclose friendthatyouhave anemotional connectionwith.Poswolsky suggestedthat inourbusy world,we shouldput ourfriendship onthe calendar.38But studiesalso showthat itisn9t justabout havingrelationships.39Poswolsky considersthatthere mightnot bejustonedefinition ofa goodfriendship,but moststrong relationshipsshare some(区分优先次序)similar qualities.They tendto prioritizelaughter,joy,excitement,courage,weakness anda lackof judgment.40They becomebetter versionsof themselves,especially whentheir friendis strugglingorgoing throughsomething hard.You knowsomeone isa truefriend whenthey haveyour backwhenyoure sick,when youlose yourjob,when youmake amistake,when youregoingthroughabreak-up,when yourestressed,when you7re sad.A.Start small.B.The qualityalso matters.C.Listen andask realquestions.D.Many peoplemay feellonely andwant closerconnections.E.And goodfriendships areoften twopeople helpingeach other.F.In otherwords,we shouldcommit tobolding activitiesregularly.G.But havingrelationships betweengood andbad oftencanbeunhelpful.
六、完形填空I arguedwith mysixteen-year-old sonAnthony again.I rushedoutofthe housewith
41.Shaking myhead indisappointment andseeking42,I walkedtoward Clara,my elderlyneighbor.I toldher it was for his43this time.We werealways44abouthisclothes,hismessy room,orhisloud music.Clara45and said,Its onlya smallthing.Then thesmile disappearedfrom herface,and shebecame
46.During herhard life,she had47to say,“Butifs only...“Its onlysomething,and tomorrowwill be
48.Everybody hasenoughheartaches and49in theirlives,so weshouldnt wastetimeandenergy onthe itsonly9things thatcometheir way,“she continued.I walkedback withClaras wordscirclingaroundin myhead and50in myheart.I preparedapiece ofcake,Anthonys favorite
51.He staredattheplate eagerly,but therewas stilla hitof52in hiseyes.He lookedat meand53asked whyI hadno oneword abouthishair.I saiditwasonly hair.He54a smileas hetook thecake andsaid thatwas whathe hadbeentrying totellme.Now Irealize thathe actuallydidnt wantto fightwithmebut justwanted metohear the55hewasmaking.
41.A.fear B,anger C.joy D.satisfaction
42.A.respect B,courage C,comfort D.trust
43.A.haircut B.clothes C,room D.study
44.A.complaining B.arguing C.thinking D.joking
45.A.agreed B.hesitated C.smiled D.approached
46.A.nervous B,patient C-proud D.serious
47.A.regretted B,planned C・refused D.learned
48.A,harder B,familiar C,better D.similar
49.A.power B.trouble C-peace D.danger
50.A.taking rootB.breaking upC,turning overD.clearing away
51.A,memory B,collection C,decoration D.treat
52.A.relief B.doubt C.interest D.excitement
53.A.curiously B.officially C・confidently D.wisely
54.A.hid B,exchanged C.managed D.won
55.A.wish B.promise C.deal D.point。