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1、【精品文档】如有侵权,请联系网站删除,仅供学习与交流江西省宜春市2017届上学期高三年级四校联考英语试卷.精品文档.江西省宜春市2017届上学期高三年级四校联考英语试卷(考试时间:120分钟 满分:150分)第卷第一部分 听力(共两节,满分30分)第一节(共5小题,每小题1.5分)1. What will the man do on Saturday evening?A. Attend a party. B. Do the cooking. C. Go cycling.2. Where are the speakers?A. In a clothes shop. B. In a tailors
2、. C. In a laundry.3. How does the man go to work every day?A. By car. B. By bus. C. On foot.4. What does the man think of his present job?A. Challenging. B. Boring. C. Well-paid.5. What are the speakers mainly talking about?A. A photo. B. A play. C. A dress.第二节(共15小题,每小题1.5分)听第6段材料,回答第6、7题。6. Why is
3、 the man at the airport?A. To board a plane. B. To pick up some passengers. C. To meet the woman.7. Which flight has been delayed?A. The French flight. B. The Spanish flight. C. The Italian flight.听第7段材料,回答第8、9题。8. Where can the man put his bag?A. Behind the door. B. In the locker. C. On the desk.9.
4、 What should the man do after getting into the exam hall?A. Find his examination number. B. Turn off his mobile phone. C. Show his student ID card.听第8段材料,回答第10至12题。10. What will the speakers do during the summer break?A. Earn some money. B. Enjoy some arts. C. Do some shopping.11. What can the speak
5、ers do in Rosemount?A. Have some nice meals. B. Find a good variety of local artworks.C. Buy some paintings and handmade jewellery.12. Where will the speakers sleep during the summer break?A. In their house. B. In a hotel. C. In a tent.听第9段材料,回答第13至16题。13. What kind of club does the woman want to ta
6、ke?A. The one that has a big number of members. B. The one that offers many different activities.C. The one that has a low entry fee.14. What does the man say about the cross-country cycling club?A. It has many members. B. It looks quite interesting. C. It is too expensive.15. How much does the film
7、 club cost?A. $15. B. $30. C. $50.16. Which club will the woman probably join?A. The street dance club. B. The table tennis club. C. The film club.听第l0段材料,回答第17至20题。17. How long does it take the buses to get to the camping area?A. About 8 hours. B. About 6 hours. C. About 2 hours.18. What will the l
8、isteners do first when they arrive at the camping area?A. Go shopping. B. Check the e-mails. C. Set up the tents.19. What does the speaker advise the listeners to do?A. Stay in the camp in stormy weather. B. Listen to the weather report.C. Prepare clothes for wet weather.20. What are the listeners p
9、robably unable to do in the hills?A. Ask Mrs. Sanderson questions. B. Go down to the town. C. Use their phones.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)ATo most people, noise pollution is a jet flying over their head. For one Spanish woman, it is a neighbor playing the piano. The woman has taken he
10、r neighbor to court. Now she wants to send her neighbor to prison for over seven years on the charges of psychological damage and noise pollution.In a country known for its noisiness, the case has raised eyebrows. Neighbors often complain about street noise in Spain, but people seeking prison time f
11、or someone practicing the piano is unheard of. At the trial, sonia Bosom says she has been suffering noise pollution up to now due to the practice sessions of Laia Martin, who lives below her. Martin, 27, didnt admit that she played at home that often, saying she took regular classes in other towns
12、and mostly practiced at home on the weekends.On the first day of the trial, the newspaper reported that Bosom told the court she now hated pianos so much that she couldnt even stand seeing them in a film.Bosom says years of hearing constant playing has caused her psychological injury. Medical report
13、s show she has suffered from a variety of problems, including insomnia (失眠), anxiety, and panic attacks.She says tests by local authorities have found that the sound levels made by the piano are up to 10 decibels (分贝) higher than the limit. City authorities have asked the family several times to eit
14、her stop the piano playing or soundproof (隔音) the room. The family told the court they carried out soundproofing work twice but the complaints continued.The court hasnt made a final decision. A spokeswoman says the trial will end before May.21. Bosom wants to send Martin to prison because .A. Martin
15、s playing the piano damaged her health B. Bosom suffered from heart attackC. Martin refused to take regular classes in other towns D. Martin flew a jet over her head22. How did Laia Martin respond to the complaints?A. She stopped playing the piano. B. She soundproofed the room.C. She didnt admit she
16、 played at home. D. She took her neighbor to court.23. Which of the following may probably be the best title for the passage?A. A 7-year Sentence Caused by the Piano B. Pianist Charged with Noise PollutionC. Health Problems of a Spanish Woman D. Actions Against Noise by Local AuthorityBWinters are l
17、ong and unforgiving in North Dakota. The winter of 1996 was especially brutal. It was a difficult time in my own life too. A neck injury had kept me flat in bed for nearly a year. “Just in time for Easter,” my husband, Dick, said. But how could I feel the joy when the snow was four feet deep and I h
18、ad months of painful physical treatment ahead?I was doing the dishes one day, feeling hopeless when there was a tap against the glass. It was a branch of the troublesome cottonwood (棉白杨). Back in the fall of 1979, it was a new subdivision (细枝)then. The people whod briefly occupied the house before u
19、s had placed the pipe from the pump next to it. The earth was so wet that the poor thing had fallen down, most of its bare root system pointing skyward, blowing hopelessly back and forth in the cold wind. Dick decided to pull it out one day, but I protested.“Look at how hard its trying!” I said, poi
20、nting to the way it strongly kept hold of the earth. “It deserves a chance.”Dick borrowed some tools. We packed dry soil around the tree and put up some stakes (桩) into the ground, making it stand upright. That winter was still terrible. Surprisingly, in the spring my “rescue stick” put forth a few
21、leaves, then with lots of branches. By the 1990s that little stick was a giant, towering over the house.Now the tapping at the window continued, louder as the wind picked up, almost as though to tell me to look up. At last, I did. I caught my breath. In the window against the icy blue sky, thousands
22、 and thousands of fresh red buds were waving in the wind.The tree was bursting with life and I had a wonderful Easter.24. What is the meaning of the underlined word brutal in Paragraph 1 ?A. Busy. B. Hard. C. Long. D. Warm.25. How did Dick rescue the new subdivision?A. By supporting the stick firmly
23、. B. By watering the stick regularly.C. By distributing chemical fertilizer. D. By lighting the stick day and night.26. The author writes the last paragraph mainly to .A. inform us of the current condition of his cottonwoodB. imply that hed spent the hardest time and felt hopefulC. tell us that the
24、tree had survived from the awful winterD. suggest what he was going to do for the coming festival27. Which of the following can serve as the main idea of the passage?A. A friend in need is a friend indeed. B. There is no garden without its weeds.C. Success is the accumulation of sweat. D. While ther
25、e is life, there is hope.C Do you ever pull your phone out of your pocket, thinking it is vibrating (振动), only to find that it isnt? This phenomenon, which scientists call “phantom (幻觉的) phone vibration”, is very common. Around 80% of people surveyed say they have imagined their phones vibrating whe
26、n they were actually still. So, what leads to this universal behavior? According to the BBC, the explanation lies in your brains ability to discover signals from the outside world. When your phone is in your pocket, there are two possible states: it is either vibrating or not. Meanwhile, you also ha
27、ve two possible states of mind: the judgment that the phone is vibrating, or that it isnt. Ideally, you match the four states correctly. However, sometimes your brain decides that the consequences of missing a call are more serious than a “false alarm”. Therefore, you become more sensitive to vibrat
28、ions so that you dont miss anything. This is just like the fire alarm in your homeit can be annoying when it goes off in response to just a tiny bit of smoke. But thats a small price to pay compared to a fire really breaking out because the alarm fails to alert you. Now, you might still ask: why can
29、t our brains just make every judgment correctly without being too sensitive to false signals? The answer is that your brain bears a heavy burden every day. “You get a large amount of sensory information thats coming from your eyes, ears and skin, and you cant deal with all that information all the t
30、ime,” Michael Rothberg, a researcher at Baystate Medical Center in Springfield, US, told Live Science. For example, the rustling (沙沙声) of clothing or the growling (咕咕声) of your stomach may both lead your brain to believe that they come from the vibration of your phoneit is like trying to hear your n
31、ame being called in a noisy room. So, perhaps you should just check your phone whenever you think its vibrating. Its not too much trouble to do that, is it?28. According to this passage, phantom phone vibration .A. is common among people with mental problemsB. can measure peoples ability to collect
32、informationC. happens when our brains react sensitively to false signalsD. helps our brains to make very quick and accurate decisions29. Why is the fire alarm used as an example in this passage?A. To show us the fire alarm is as sensitive as the phone vibration.B. To help us understand the cause of
33、phantom phone vibration better.C. To tell us the phone vibration usually happens when a fire breaks out.D. To convince us its important to check our phones like checking a fire alarm.30. According to Michael Rothberg, which is mainly responsible for phantom phone vibration?A. A noisy background. B.
34、A lack of much attention.C. A heavy burden every day. D. An overflow of sensory information.31. What does the author suggest we do about phantom phone vibration?A. We should always fully believe our own sense of listening.B. We should just check our phones whenever we think theyre vibrating.C. We sh
35、ould ignore the vibration bothering when our phones are actually still.D. We should think of the vibration carefully before we make correct judgments.D So many of us hold on to little complaints that may have come from an argument, a misunderstanding, the way we were raised, or some other painful ev
36、ent. Stubbornly, we wait for someone else to reach out to usbelieving this is the only way we can forgive or rekindle a friendship or family relationship. A friend of mine, recently told me that she hadnt spoken to her son in almost three years. She said that she and her son had had a disagreement a
37、bout his wife and that she wouldnt speak to him again unless he called first. When I suggested that she be the one to reach out, she said, I cant do that. Hes the one who should apologize. After a little gentle encouragement, however, she did decide to be the first one to reach out. To her amazement
38、, her son was grateful for her willingness to call and offered an apology of his own. As is usually the case when someone takes the chance and reaches out, everyone wins. Whenever we hold on to our anger, we turn “small stuff (问题)” into really big stuff in our minds. We start to believe that our pos
39、itions are more important than our happiness. They are not. If you want to be a more peaceful person you must understand that being right is almost never more important than allowing yourself to be happy. The way to be happy is to let go, and reach out. Let other people be right. This doesnt mean th
40、at youre wrong. Everything will be fine. Youll experience the peace of letting go, as well as the joy of letting others be right. Youll also notice that, as you reach out and let others be “right”, they will become less defensive and more loving toward you. They might even reach back. But, if for so
41、me reason they dont, thats okay too. Youll have the inner satisfaction of knowing that you have done your part to create a more loving world, and certainly youll be more peaceful yourself.32. The underlined word “rekindle” in Paragraph 1 probably means “ “. A. recover B. develop C. accept D. replace
42、33. In the authors opinion, we hold on to our anger often because we think . A. we can turn small issues into big ones B. our happiness is more important C. our own opinions matter most D. others will be less defensive34. The best thing to do after a quarrel is to . A. let go of our own fights B. re
43、alize that you are wrong C. expect others to give in D. apologize to others first35. What would be the best tide for the passage?A. Be Peaceful B. Reach Out and Give C. Small and Big Stuff D. Enjoy Your Friendship第二节 (共5小题;每小题2分,满分10分)The benefits of keeping a journal (日志) If you want to grow, one i
44、mportant thing you should do is keeping a journal. It may seem simple, but it can make a big difference in your life. I have been keeping journals for years. Writing all the lessons I learn and all the ideas I get has become a habit for me. 36 Here are some benefits you will get by keeping a journal
45、. It prevents you from losing an idea. Have you ever gotten an idea only to lose it later because you didnt write it down? 37 But then I developed the habit of writing down every idea that came into my mind as soon as possible. If Im away from my computer, I usually write it down on a piece of paper
46、 that I bring wherever I go. I will then transfer the idea to the journal in my computer. It helps you review all the lessons youve learned. By reviewing your journal, you can quickly see the lessons youve learned and the ideas youve gotten. 38 You can use the ideas to propel (鞭策) yourself forward. 39 After keeping a journal for years, you can look back at it and see how far youve gone. Things that were big problems in the past might seem sma