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1、(新高考)2021届高三第二次模拟考试卷 此卷只装订不密封班级 姓名 准考证号 考场号 座位号 此卷只装订不密封班级 姓名 准考证号 考场号 座位号 英 语 (四)注意事项:1.答题前,先将自己的姓名、准考证号填写在试题卷和答题卡上,并将准考证号条形码粘贴在答题卡上的指定位置。2.选择题的作答:每小题选出答案后,用2B铅笔把答题卡上对应题目的答案标号涂黑,写在试题卷、草稿纸和答题卡上的非答题区域均无效。3.非选择题的作答:用签字笔直接答在答题卡上对应的答题区域内。写在试题卷、草稿纸和答题卡上的非答题区域均无效。4.考试结束后,请将本试题卷和答题卡一并上交。第卷(选择题)第一部分 听力(共两节,
2、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,并标在试卷的相应位置。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。例:How much is the shirt?A. £19. 15.B. £9. 18.C. £9. 15. 答案是C。1. When does the man want to meet Mr. Clark?A. On Wednesday. B. On Thursday.C. On Friday.2. What wi
3、ll the woman do tomorrow?A. Go to the bank. B. Take a trip to California. C. Lend some money to the man.3. What does the boy think of his parents?A. Open-minded. B. Generous. C. Strict.4. What are the speakers mainly talking about?A. Which dress to buy. B. How to choose a dress.C. What to wear to th
4、e party.5. Where does the conversation take place?A. At a restaurant. B. At a supermarket. C. At the womans house.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 岀最佳选项。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,各小题将给岀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. What is the woman going to do?A. S
5、ee a film. B. Visit a park. C. Go shopping.7. Which bus will the woman take?A. Bus number 112. B. Bus number 113. C. Bus number 153.听第7段材料,回答第8至9小题。8. What worries the man at first?A. He cant enjoy his trip with painful feet.B. He has no time to travel with his family.C. He doesnt want to visit Pari
6、s this summer.9. What does the woman advise the man to do?A. Visit another city. B. Take a boat trip. C. Go on a walk tour.听第8段材料,回答第10至12小题。10. For whom does the man want to rent a flat?A. Himself. B. His family. C. He and his friends.11. What is the mans job?A. He is a college student.B. He works
7、in a car factory.C. He works in the central bank.12. How many bedrooms does the man prefer to have?A. Two. B. Three. C. Four.听第9段材料,回答第13至16小题。13. Where are the speakers?A. In a theater. B. In a studio. C. In a cinema.14. What does Peter think of classical plays?A. They are boring. B. They are chall
8、enging. C. They are wonderful.15. What helps Peter remember the words in a play? A. The talent he was born with.B. The training he got at university.C. The experience he gained on stage.16. How does Peter feel about watching his performances on TV?A. Satisfied. B. Embarrassed. C. Disappointed.听第10段材
9、料,回答第17至20小题。17. Who did the speaker go on a cookery course with?A. Her cousin. B. Her sister. C. Her mother.18. Which course did the speaker choose?A. The one-day course. B. The three-day course.C. The one-week course.19. What surprised the speaker when she started her course?A. The course was popu
10、lar.B. There were many teenagers. C. Many teachers were there to help.20. Which place did the speaker visit?A. A restaurant. B. A market. C. A supermarket.第二部分 阅读理解(共两节,满分50分)第一节(共15小题;每小题2.2分,满分37.5分)阅读下列短文,从每题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。AGiraffe Manor(Kenya)Giraffe Manor is an extraordinar
11、y hotel built in the early 1930s and lies in Nairobi, Kenya. The hotel is most well-known for its Rothschild giraffes. Every morning and evening, giraffes will enter the dining hall and eat with the guests. Giraffe Manor is the only place in the world where people can get this up close and personal
12、with a giraffe.The Ice Hotel (Sweden)The hotel, lying in a remote village in Sweden, is the first ice hotel in existence. It was started in the 1980s by a Swedish artist who wanted to create a large sculpture to celebrate the natural resources around it. The hotel is rebuilt every year, opening in w
13、inter and closing in spring.Free Spirit Spheres (British Columbia)The goal of Free Spirit Spheres is to provide a place for people to enjoy exceptional experiences while living in a natural forest environment. It is open year-round on Vancouver Island. It is the only known eco-friendly tree house ho
14、tel in the world. It is so popular that you may have to book it three months to a year in advance.The Manta Resort (Tanzania)The underwater hotel is part of the unique Manta Resort on Pemba Island in Tanzania. It is 273 yards offshore(在近海)in the Manta house reef(礁). The reef is famous for its abunda
15、nt oceanic wildlife and guests come to experience the peace and quietness that the remote island offers. The room is surrounded on all sides with large windows so that guests can be part of the wildlife activity around the reef.21What attracts guests most in Giraffe Manor?AThe sculpture.BThe reef.CT
16、he tree.DThe giraffe.22Which hotel do you need to reserve ahead of time?AGiraffe Manor.BFree Spirit Spheres.CThe Ice Hotel.DThe Manta Resort.23What do these hotels have in common?AThey lie in remote villages.BThey offer amazing experiences.CThey are open all year round.DThey cost an amount of money.
17、BI remember doing the household chores to help my mother when I was nine. I hated changing the vacuum cleaner (真空吸尘器) bag and picking up things the machine did not suck up. Twenty years later, in 1978, with this lifelong dislike of the way the machine worked, I decided to make a bagless one.Easier s
18、aid than done, of course. I didnt realize that I would spend the next five years perfecting my design, a process that resulted in 5,127 different prototypes (样机). By the time I made my 15th prototype, my third child was born. By 2,627, my wife and I were really counting our pennies. By 3,727, my wif
19、e was giving art lessons for some extra cash, and we were getting further and further into debt. These were tough times, but each failure brought me closer to solving the problem.In the early 1980s, I started trying to get licensing agreements for my technology. The reality was very different, howev
20、er. The major vacuum makers had built a business model based on the profits from bags and filters (滤网). No one would license my idea, not because it was a bad one, but because it was bad for business. But soon after, the companies that I had talked with started making machines like mine. I had to fi
21、ght legal battles on both sides of the Atlantic to protect the patents on my vacuum cleaner. I was still in financial difficulties until 1993, when my bank manager personally persuaded Lloyds Bank to lend me $1 million. Then I was able to go into production. Within two years, the Dyson vacuum cleane
22、r became a best-seller in Britain.Today, I still embrace risk and the potential for failure as part of the process. Nothing beats the excitement of invention,24What drove the author to make a bagless vacuum cleaner?AHis willingness to help mom.BHis curiosity about machines.CHis trouble in doing fami
23、ly chores.DHis discontent with existing cleaners.25What does paragraph 2 mainly tell us?AThe help from the authors wife.BThe financial problems of the family.CThe tough process of the new invention.DThe procedures of making a bagless cleaner.26Why did the companies refuse to license the authors tech
24、nology?AThey thought they might suffer loss.BThey considered it not good enough.CThey faced legal problems themselves.DThey had begun making such machines.27What lesson may the author learn from the experience?AThink twice before acting.BFailure is the mother of success.CActions speak louder than wo
25、rds.DA good beginning makes a good ending.CStudent loan (贷款) debt has become a worldwide problem. In America, the country's overall student debt reached a record of $1.6 trillion in 2019. The average person with student loan debt owed between $20,000 and $25,000. A recent Japanese government rep
26、ort says it has been lending over $9 billion yearly to students since 2010. Similar conditions exist in Africa and South America.Several factors account for high student loan debt. One is that employers everywhere have increased their demands for skilled workers, making higher education a requiremen
27、t for many jobs. The students, however, after graduation, often find that their country's economy is not strong enough to support their financial needs, so their ability to pay back the loan becomes a problem.To solve the problem, many countries are seeking their ways. Australia has developed a
28、system where students do not have to pay anything back until they are earning at least $40,000 a year. In America, several candidates running for president in the 2020 election have offered more extreme solutions that all or at least some of these loans will be forgiven.Some professors in several un
29、iversities recently studied what the effects of debt forgiveness might be. They found that, overall, sudden debt relief greatly improved the borrowers' lives. Not only did they have more money, but they were more likely to move to a new area and seek better paying work.Yet the professors' re
30、search doesn't include what might happen to financial institutions or the overall economy if debt were totally forgiven. It only looks at how debt forgiveness would help the borrowers. They warn of some other possible negative effects. If a borrower knew that if he ran into any trouble he would
31、be saved because he could get the debt relief, then he might actually become more reckless (轻率的) with his borrowing in the future.No matter what, the professors agree that if countries do decide to approve some student debt relief the neediest students should be helped first.28How does the author in
32、troduce the problem of student loan?ABy making a comparison.BBy making classifications.CBy presenting some statistics.DBy setting down general rules.29What can we learn about student loan debt relief?AIt will surely provide some benefits to borrowers.BIt has already been carried out in the United St
33、ates.CIt aims to encourage more students to borrow money.DIt will prevent a person from landing a well-paying job.30What is the professors' attitude to debt forgiveness?AUncaring.BPositive.CDisapproving.DCautious.31What's the main idea of the text?AStudent loan debt is the most serious probl
34、em worldwide.BGrowing global student debt fuels search for solutions.CStudent loan debt tends to pull the needy out of trouble.DPeople hold different opinions on debt forgiveness.DOne of the most dangerous insects you need to watch out for during summer is mosquitoes. But no matter how you try to av
35、oid them, some people naturally attract mosquitoes more than others.One of the most important facts to remember is that mosquitoes track people down by smell and body odour(气味), according to Bart Knols, PhD, a biologist devoted to the study of mosquitoes. The carbon dioxide people breathe out, along
36、 with chemicals from the skin, creates an “odour plume” that mosquitoes can detect from up to almost 100 feet away. “Each person gives off more than 300 chemicals from the skin, more than 100 in breathing out,” Knols says.The specific mixtures on the skin that mosquitoes respond to vary by species.
37、The yellow fever mosquito and Asian tiger mosquito, for example, respond well to lactic acid from skin. African malaria mosquitoes respond to a mix of fatty acids, according to Knols. Your individual mixtures and smells determine how much of a mosquito attraction you are, depending on the mosquito s
38、pecies. The mix of chemicals you produce are only partly in your control. These chemicals depend on your genetic make-up, health condition, diet, skin pH, and so on. “Bacteria(细菌)on the skin break down the mixtures that we give off through our pores(毛孔), and these are the attractive smells,” Knols s
39、ays. “So it is not actually we that attract mosquitoes, but the bacteria on our skin.”Although this is a complex and partly understood phenomenon, Knols says that we do all have a unique smell. There are many folk stories about why some people are more or less attractive to mosquitoes. Some people f
40、alsely think the blood type is the cause, and others believe taking vitamin B or eating garlic makes people less attractive to mosquitoesbut Knols notes theres no scientific data backing these claims.32What do we learn from the second paragraph?AMosquitoes can detect people with smell.BNobody can av
41、oid mosquitoes anyway.CA person breathes out over 300 chemicals.DPeople naturally attract mosquitoes.33Why does the author take several kinds of mosquitoes for example?ATo persuade readers to protect the environment.BTo warn people against touching mosquitoes.CTo show different mosquitoes react to m
42、ixtures.DTo make people look out for poisonous mosquitoes.34What draws mosquitoes according to Bart Knols?AChemicals in the mouth.BMixtures people give off.CSmells from the pores.DBacteria on the skin.35What is the best title for the text?AThe Scientific Reason You Are a Mosquito AttractionBFolk Sto
43、ries about How Mosquitoes Attack PeopleCAttitudes toward Mosquitoes Different People HaveDWays to Make People More and More Attractive第二节(共5小题;每小题2.5分,满分12.5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。It's Alarming: What Wakes You Up Each Morning?How do you wake up in the morning? If you set an a
44、larm on your phone or clock that sounds like this: beep beep beep? 36 Sleep inertia is another term for grogginess(昏睡), which means a person has a heavy feeling when waking up, and has trouble getting moving again after sleeping, 37 A recent study says yes. The answer is music. Researchers say alarm
45、s that have a melodylike the beginning of this songcan help people feel fresher in the morning.The study, carried out by researchers in Australia, involved 50 people. The study subjects answered questions about the alarm sound they like to wake up to, how they feel about that sound and how they feel
46、 when they wake up. 38 However, it is early days and more work is needed to fully know the answer.So, what makes musical alarms better for waking up? The researchers think the music may be more successful in reducing grogginess because it has several tones, compared to the single tone of a "bee
47、ping" alarm. 39 And is there a kind of music that is best to wake up to? There may be 40 However, no matter how you wake up, experts say, the amount of sleep you get also matters a lot.ACan musical alarms work wonders?BSo, is there a better way to do the trick?CThis can help you fall asleep more quickly and easily.DAlar