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1、江西省重点中学协作体2020届高三英语第一次联考试题2020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,满分7.5分)听下面5段对话。每段对话后有一个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项。听完每段对话后,你都有10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。1. What does the woman do?A. An operator. B. A typist. C. A secretary.2. How are the speakers travelling?A. By car. B. By bus. C. By subway.3. W
2、hat did the woman think of the movie?A. Funny. B. Boring. C. Scary.4. Which part of the boys body got hurt?A. His leg. B. His head. C. His band5. What are the speakers talking about?A. A painting. B. A museum. C. A restaurant.第二节(共15小题,每小题1.5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。
3、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. Who is the man most likely to be?A. A waiter. B. A post office clerk. C. A hotel receptionist.7. What does the woman ask about?A. A package. B. The room service. C. Her room number.听第7段材料,回答第8、9题。8. What relation is the wom
4、an to Doctor Jensen?A. His patient. B. His assistant. C. His boss.9. When will the man see Doctor Jensen?A. At 10 a.m. next Monday. B. At 3 p.m. next Monday. C. At 3 p. m. next Wednesday.听第8段材料,回答第10 至12题。10. What did the woman make an effort to look for?A. A shirt B. A jacket. C. A dress.11. Why di
5、d the woman buy the orange sweater?A. She wants to replace her old red one.B. She can wear it with any color.C. It is on sale now.12. What color shoes did the woman buy?A. Black. B. Dark blue. C. Dark brown.听第9段材料,回答第13至16题。13. Why does the woman come to the man?A. To buy his apartment. B. To rent h
6、is apartment. C. To furnish his apartment.14. What does the woman want to do?A. Rearrange the furniture. B. Divide the living room. C. Buy anew coffee table.15. What do we know about the apartment?A. The furniture is in good condition.B. It has a big storage room.C. The kitchen is empty.16. When wil
7、l the speakers meet again?A. In two days. B. In four days. C. In five days.听第10段材料,回答第17至20题.17. What do Plan A and Plan B have in common?A. Both are expensive.B. Both include two meals.C. Both provide dinners six days a week.18. Which of the following is closed on Sunday?A. The Bengal Grill. B. The
8、 dormitory cafeteria. C. The Tigers Lair19. In what way is the Tigers Lair different from the dormitory cafeterias?A. It doesnt take meal tickets. B. It permits taking friends. C. It charges lower prices.20. How have the dormitory cafeterias changed in recent years?A. They are open longer.B. They se
9、rve more students.C. They offer a wider variety of foods.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。AVacation Deals OnlineSunbridge vacationsBooking with Sunbridge gives you the Sunbridge Advantage. This means one simple price covers everything. Unlike other websites
10、, we dont fool you with a low price for airfare, then sneak(偷偷地做)in charges for hotel, rental cars, and food until youre paying more than you wanted. Our price is all inclusive and cant be beat!The Sunbridge Advantage also includes our Sunbridge Resort Ambassadors. Two of our friendly, helpful staff
11、 members will meet you at the airport and take you to your hotel.Punta Senca ResortPunta Senca Resort features one of the finest Caribbean beaches. The facilities(设施)include garden areas with quiet relaxation space and over two miles of paths for walking and jogging. The beauty of the garden space i
12、s improved by thousands of tropical flowers, native sculptures, and three spectacular fountains.Punta Senca is one of our most family-friendly attractions. One option any family should consider is our Family Package, in which up to two children under ten years old stay and eat free. We know you love
13、 your family, but we also know that sometimes different family members prefer different activities. While Mom and Dad are cared for in our spa and Wellness Center, our friendly staff can help the kids explore the island through a variety of activities including horseback riding, sailing lessons, and
14、 bike trips.Punta Senca also features a variety of restaurants offering exciting dining experiences. We have a steakhouse, a bakery and coffee shop, a home-style Italian restaurant, a seafood restaurant serving fresh-caught fish from local fishermen, and a casual bar and grill for dining on the beac
15、h.Guest reviewSara P. 09/23/2019My family and I went to Punta Senca for a week and it was fine. But just that-fine. I really was expecting something a little more special. For example, I was shocked to find the different restaurant options werent all open every night of the week. Most nights, only t
16、wo or three of the restaurants were open. And I really was unimpressed by the food.21. What is the main benefit of the Sunbridge Advantage?A. A relatively low total price. B. A small hotel charge.C. A discount on food. D. A low airfare.22. How does the resort help families have fun?A. It provides sp
17、ecial food for children. B. It has different recreation options.C. It has playground equipment. D. It offers group transportation.23. How would Sara P. likely summarize her experience?A. Delightful B. Unpleasant C. Rewarding D. OrdinaryBWhen Sally Millsopp, 53, with her 17-year-old daughter, Eleanor
18、, participated in Race for Life in 2019. She had no idea if she would get to see her mother Jennifer Earnshaw again, who was desperately ill with a form of lung cancer, but she encouraged the pair to take part in the event as she knew the fundraising would help others.They managed to make it back to
19、 her bedside just in time to show her the photographs. Jennifer, who was a former bead teacher, passed away the following day, aged 76.Ms Millsopp and her daughter are once again participating in the Race for Life on May 13 this year to the memory of Jennifer, and will be speaking on stage to inspir
20、e others.Mum was a selfless person. I knew she really wanted us to do Race for Life but it was hard not knowing if I would be there with her at the end. When we reached the finish line, Eleanor and I both felt elated that wed done something so positive at such a sad time. We had a big hug and knew i
21、t was something Mum would be proud of, said Ms Millsopp.One in two people in the UK will be diagnosed with cancer, but the good news is more people are surviving the disease now than ever before. Cancer Research UKs Race for Life, in partnership with Tesco, is an inspiring women-only series of 5k, 1
22、0k, Pretty Muddy and 1-liking events which raise millions of pounds every year to help beat cancer sooner by funding vital research.Gemma Turpin, Cancer Research UKs Norwich event manager, said, We are very grateful to Sally and Eleanor for their story that highlights how special Race for Life is to
23、 people. By following them women in Norfolk can make a real difference in the tight against cancer. Money raised through Race for Life is helping beat over200 different types of cancer-thats why every step, every person and every penny raised counts.24. What do we know about Jennifer Earnshaw?A. She
24、 used to take part in Race for Life.B. She had a sense of social responsibility.C. She died without seeing Sally and Eleanor.D. She worried about her cancers influence on Sally.25. What does the underlined word elated in Paragraph 4 mean?A. Really interested. B. Desperately tiredC. Extremely excited
25、. D. Deeply embarrassed.26. What is the purpose of Paragraph 5?A. To add some background information. B. To summarize the previous paragraphs.C. To report news about cancer treatment. D. To introduce a new topic for discussion.27. Whats the best title for the text?A. Running in memory of mother. B.
26、Living life with a selfless heart.C. Joining the race to keep healthy. D. Struggling to survive from cancer.CIn 2019. more than 125,000 organs, mostly kidneys, were transplanted(移植)from one human being to another in the United States. But a lack of suitable donors means the supply of organs is limit
27、ed. That has led researchers to study the question of how to build organs from the very beginning.One promising approach is to print them. Bio-printing originated in the early 2000s, when it was discovered that living cells could be sprayed through the nozzles(喷嘴)of printers without being damaged.Si
28、chuan Revotek, a biotechnology company based in Chengdu, China, has successfully transplanted a printed section of artery(动脉)into a monkey. This is the first step in trials of a technique intended for use in humans. Similarly, Organovo, a firm in San Diego, California, announced that it had transpla
29、nted printed human-liver tissue into mice and that this tissue had survived and worked.Bio-printing can help with the development of other treatments. Organovo already offers its printed kidney and liver tissue for use in testing new drugs for effectiveness and safety. That should please animal righ
30、ts activists, as such tests cut down on the number of animal trials. It should please drug companies, too-because the tissue being tested is human, the results obtained should be more reliable than those from tests on other species. With similar purpose in mind, LOreal, a French cosmetics firm, toge
31、ther with its team, is working on printing human skin. They intend to use it to test their products for side effects. Compared with older and slower technology, bio-printing will permit LOreal to grow much more, and also allow different skin types to be printed.The real prize of all this effort woul
32、d be to print entire organs. For kidneys, Roots Analysis, a medical-technology consulting company, thinks that should be possible in about six years. Livers, which have a natural tendency to grow again, should also arrive a little bit soon. Hearts, with their complex inner shape, will take longer.28
33、. Why do people start to consider printing organs?A. Because of poor quality of the organs. B. Because of shortage of donors.C. Because of lack of research. D. Because of limited technology.29. How does Revotek develop bio-printing technology?A. By testing bio-printed organs on patients. B. By devel
34、oping liver tissue into a monkey.C. By transplanting a section of artery into mice.D. By transplanting a bio-printed organ into an animal.30. What can be inferred from paragraph 4?A. Animal rights activists hate bio-printing.B. Entire printed organs will be available soon.C. Bio-printing could be we
35、ll received in society.D. LOreal prints human skin to improve the bio-technology.31. What does the passage want to tell us?A. Organ transplantation is difficult to achieveB. Medical progress improves peoples life quality.C. Bio-printing tech contributes to building organs.D. Many countries are coope
36、rating to develop bio-printing.DWorried about the loss of rainforests and the ozone layer(臭氧层)? Well, neither of those is doing any worse than a large majority of the 6,000 to 7,000 languages that remain in use on Earth. One half of the survivors will almost certainly be gone by 2050, while 40% more
37、 will probably be well on their way out. In their place, almost all humans will speak a small number of languages-Mandarin, English, Spanish.Linguists(语言学家)know what causes languages to disappear, but whats less often remarked is what happens on the way to disappearance: languages vocabularies, gram
38、mars and expressive potential all disappear. Say a community goes over from speaking a traditional Aboriginal(土著的)language to speaking a Creole, says Australian Nick Evans, a language experts, you leave behind a language where theres very fine vocabulary for the landscape. All that is gone in a Creo
39、le. As speakers become less able to express the wealth of knowledge that has filled ancestors lives with meaning over thousands of years, its no wonder that communities tend to become weakened.Due to the huge losses, some linguists struggle against the situation. In England, Peter Austin heads a pro
40、gramme that has trained many documentary linguists in England as well as in language-loss hotspots such as West Africa and South America.However, not all approaches to the preservation of languages will be particularly helpful. Some linguists are boasting(自夸), for example, of more and more complicat
41、ed means of recording languages: digital recording and storage, the Internet and mobile phone technologies. But these are encouraging the quick style of recording trip: fly in, switch on digital recorder, fly home, download to hard drive, and store gathered material for future research. Thats not qu
42、ite what some endangered-language experts have been seeking. Most vocal (直言不讳的)and untiring has been Michael Krauss from the University of Alaska. He has often complained that linguists are playing with technology research while most of their raw data is disappearing.Who is to blame? Linguists who g
43、o out into communities to study, document and describe languages, argue that theoretical linguists, like Noam Chomsky, who draw conclusions about how languages Work, have had so much influence that linguistics has largely ignored the continuing disappearance of languages.32. Why does the author ment
44、ion rainforests and the ozone layer in Paragraph 1?A. To explain they are of great importance.B. To prove they have connection with language loss.C. To show anxiety about environmental issues is unfounded.D. To stress the public should be equally concerned about languages.33. What does Nick Evans sa
45、y about Creole speakers?A. They cant express ideas which are part of their culture.B. Getting practical information causes problems for them.C. They have more potential to learn languages than most peopleD. Older and younger members of the community cant communicate.34. What has Michael Krauss point
46、ed out?A. Linguists popularity has decreased considerably.B. Linguists are failing to record languages before they die out.C. Linguists have made poor use of improvements in technology.D. Linguists quick style of recording trip should be encouraged.35. What can be concluded from the text?A. By 2050
47、different languages will be developing well.B. Local languages are preserved perfectly in West Africa.C. Theoretical linguists may be to blame for the loss of languages.D. Noam Chomsky is fond of working in communities to research.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。In addition to being an important driver of personal health, optimism has been thought as one of the most important qualities of an innovative(创新的)leader. 36 Leaders who are too optimistic can actually reduce their teams morale(斗志)and productivity. This is because too much optimism comes ac