《2019届高三英语下学期第三次模拟考试试题.doc》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《2019届高三英语下学期第三次模拟考试试题.doc(12页珍藏版)》请在taowenge.com淘文阁网|工程机械CAD图纸|机械工程制图|CAD装配图下载|SolidWorks_CaTia_CAD_UG_PROE_设计图分享下载上搜索。
1、- 1 -20192019 学年下学期高三三模英语试卷学年下学期高三三模英语试卷 本试卷分第卷(选择题)和第卷(非选择题)两部分。满分 150 分。考试时间 120 分钟。第第卷卷 ( (选择题选择题 共共 100100 分分) ) 第一部分第一部分 听力(共两节,满分听力(共两节,满分 3030 分)分) 第一节(共第一节(共 5 小题;每小题小题;每小题 1.51.5 分,满分分,满分 7.57.5 分)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
2、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. What will the woman do in San Juan?A. Eat out. B. Learn to dance. C. Go to nightclubs. 2. What happened to the woman last night?A. Her car broke down. B. She couldnt fall asleep. C. She was woken up by a phone call. 3. Why will th
3、e man go to Japan?A. To teach in a school. B. To take a trip. C. To learn Japanese. 4. What does the man want the woman to do?A. Take care of his bird. B. Help him with his work. C. Go out of town with him. 5. What are the speakers mainly discussing?A. Where Joyce comes from.B. What Joyces hometown
4、is like.C. Why Joyces hometown is boring. 第二节第二节 (共共1515小题小题;每小题每小题1.51.5分分,满分满分22.522.5分分) 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,并标在试卷的相应位置。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. What is the man doing?A. Returning books. B. Buying books
5、. C. Borrowing books. 7. What does the man think of the novel The Sun Also Rises?A. Boring. B. Difficult. C. Interesting.听第 7 段材料,回答第 8、9 题。8. Why did the man go to San Francisco on vacation?A. To meet a friend. B. To visit his sister. C. To tour a university. 9. What did the woman do on her vacatio
6、n?A. She studied at college. B. She did some shopping. C. She stayed with a friend. 听第 8 段材料,回答第 10 至 12 题。- 2 -10. What is the relationship between the speakers?A. Teacher and student. B. Interviewer and interviewee. C. Colleagues.11. Where is the woman now?A. In Japan. B. In America. C. In Britain
7、.12. What is the woman weak in?A. Computers. B. Languages. C. Organizing activities.听第 9 段材料,回答第 13 至 16 题。13. Why did younger kids feel unhappy at first?A. They didnt get used to the new environment.B. They werent willing to attend the trip.C. They thought the trip would be boring.14. How did the c
8、hildren feel about the guide?A. Bored. B. Satisfied. C. Disappointed.15. What was the childrens favorite activity?A. Sailing. B. Horse-riding. C. Barbecuing.16. What is said about the children?A. They had known each other before.B. They wanted to get together again.C. They were all homesick at first
9、.听第 10 段材料,回答第 17 至 20 题。17. What is unavailable at weekdays?A. Breakfast. B. Lunch. C. Dinner.18. When is breakfast served at weekends?A. From 6:30 to 7:45. B. From 7:00 to 8:30. C. From 8:00 to 9:30.19. What should people do to get their food?A. Queue up for their turn. B. Ask the waiter to take t
10、heir orders.C. Wait for the kitchen staff at their tables.20. What does the speaker suggest people do?A. Take their plates off tables after meals.B. Go to the common room after 9:30.C. Have some coffee or tea before meals.第二部分第二部分 阅读理解(共两节,满分阅读理解(共两节,满分 4040 分)分) 第一节(共第一节(共 1515 小题;每小题小题;每小题 2 2 分,满
11、分分,满分 3030 分)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。A A EcoleEcole CollegeCollege ParkPark SchoolSchool FallFall WelcomeWelcome BackBack Tuesday,Tuesday, SeptemberSeptember 5th5th Dear Families: Our first (half) day of school for the 2017 / 2019 school year is Tuesday, September 5. This
12、is a very important day; we welcome students and parents back to another school year and confirm the students who will be attending Ecole - 3 -College Park School. Please note that students in Grade 1 8 should be prepared to stay for the entire morning. Kindergarten students will only stay for an ho
13、ur. TuesdayTuesday AttendanceAttendance Information:Information:Kindergarten students / parents go to their regular classroom (downstairs, on left) for one hour only. Parents please stay for the full hour.Grade 1 8 students will meet outside (weather permitting) or in the gym to find their grade sig
14、ns and then will move to classrooms. BusingBusing InfInformation:ormation:Changes to the 20172019 school year bus service will begin on September 5.Busing starts for Kindergarten students on September 11 and continues from September 11 onward.Please do not park in our school bus zone as parking tick
15、ets are issued. FeesFees toto BeBe PaidPaid inin OfficeOffice AreaArea FirstFirst WeekWeek ofof School:School:Ecole College Park School covers the $28 cost of all students fees. Additional request for money may be needed to support field trips of special projects.Grade 1 8 students pay a $6 Student
16、Planner fee.Band Fee is $25 and is paid to the band teacher.On Wednesday, September 6, students should be at school by 8:50 am and meet in the classroom they were in on Tuesday. This will be a full day of classes for students. 21. How long will a Grade 7 student stay at school on Tuesday, September
17、5?A. An afternoon. B. An hour. C. Half a day. D. A full day. 22. How much does one need to pay to join the band?A. Six dollars. B. Twenty-five dollars. C. Twenty-eight dollars. D. Fifty-five dollars. 23. What will students do on Wednesday, September 6?A. Meet outside or in the gym. B. Move to a new
18、classroom for a day. C. Start to take the school bus to go to school. D. Begin to have lessons as normal. B B Matthew Layton was 20 minutes from home in Sevierville, Tennessee, on a cold November night in 2016 when he got a cell phone call from his mother. “The mountains on fire,” she screamed, “and
19、 Brians up there!” Laytons family owned a dozen rental cabins(小屋) on Shields Mountain, and Laytons friend and fellow rental-cabin owner, Brian McGee, age 56, was up there trying to put the fire out by himself. Layton, 32, hit the gas. He lived on the mountain too. Layton turned around and headed for
20、 a dirt road. He made it about halfway up the steep, winding path before his front-wheel-drive car gave up. He called McGee, who drove down in his pickup so they could fight the fire together. They headed first to Laytons rental cabins. “I wanted to make sure our - 4 -guests were gone. They were,” s
21、ays Layton. At that point, he had a choice: try to save his cabins or rescue people renting other cabins nearby. “On the moun- tain, you dont have many locals. Theyre mostly tourists who dont know their way around,” he says. Over the next two hours, the two friends drove through the smoky mountain,
22、knocking on doors and leading panicked people to safety. “I know that mountain so well,” Layton says, “I could drive and know exactly where I am just by time traveled.” Thanks to their brave and immediate action, the two helped 14 people out of the danger. Fourteen people died that night in Sevier C
23、ounty. But the fire didnt take away a single life on Shields Mountain. And though his home and business were destroyed, Layton remains calm. “I wasnt worried about my loss, not when I saw those families trapped on the mountain,” he says, “I knew I was gonna help them.” 24. Where was Layton when the
24、fire broke out?A. Visiting his mother. B. Away from his home.C. Heading for the cabins. D. Driving on a dirt road. 25. What can we learn from Para. 2 & 3?A. Laytons car broke down halfway. B. Brian was in charge of Laytons cabins.C. Layton picked up Brian on the path. D. Brian lived in the mountain
25、alone. 26. Why could the two friends rescue the people?A. They put out the fire before it spread. B. They turned to locals for help.C. Layton was familiar with the area. D. Brian gave up his own cabins. 27. What did Layton mean in the last paragraph?A. He blamed himself. B. He suffered a lot. C. He
26、felt sorry.D. He was relieved. C CThe first drawings on walls appeared in caves thousands of years ago. Later the Ancient Romans and Greeks wrote their names and protest poems on buildings. Modern graffiti seems to have appeared in Philadelphia in the early 1960s, and by the late sixties it had reac
27、hed New York. The new art form really took off in the 1970s, when people began writing their names, or “tags”, on buildings all over the city. In the mid-seventies it was sometimes hard to see out of a subway car window, because the trains were completely covered in spray paintings known as masterpi
28、eces. In the early days, the “taggers” were part of street crowds who were concerned with marking their territory(领地). They worked in groups called “crews” and called what they did “writing” the term “graffiti” was first used by The New York Times and the novelist Norman Mailer. Art galleries in New
29、 York began buying graffiti in the early seventies. But at the same time - 5 -that it began to be regarded as an art form, John Lindsay, the then mayor of New York, declared the first war on graffiti. By the 1980s it became much harder to write on subway trains without being caught, and instead many
30、 of the more established graffiti artists began using roofs of buildings. The debate over whether graffiti is art or deliberate damage is still going on. Peter Vallone, a New York city councilor, thinks that graffiti done with permission can be art, but if it is on someone elses property it becomes
31、a crime. “I have a message for the graffiti destroyers out there,” he said recently, “and your freedom of expression ends where my property begins.” On the other hand, Felix, a member of the Berlin-based group Reclaim Your City, says that artists are reclaiming cities for the public from advertisers
32、, and that graffiti represents freedom and makes cities livelier. For decades graffiti has been a springboard to international fame for a few. Jean-Michel Basquiat began spraying on the street in the 1970s before becoming a respected artist in the 80s. The Frenchman Blek le Rat and the British artis
33、t Banksy have achieved international fame by producing complex works with stencils(模板), often making political or humorous points. Works by Banksy have been sold for over 100,000. Graffiti is now sometimes big business. 28. Why was the seventies an important decade in the history of graffiti?A. That
34、 was when modern graffiti first became really popular.B. That was when modern graffiti first appeared.C. That was when graffiti first reached New York.D. That was when graffiti first appeared on subway car windows 29. What does the underlined word “taggers” in the second paragraph mean?A. Names of p
35、eople who graffitied. B. Building where paints were sprayed.C. People who marked surface with graffiti. D. People who were interested in graffiti. 30. What can we know from the third paragraph?A. New Yorkers think graffiti is art. B. Graffiti was accepted by officials completely.C. Buildings can be
36、covered with graffiti freely.D. There were once advertisements on city surface. 31. What is the authors final opinion about graffiti?A. Graffiti has now become mainstream and can benefit artists.B. Graffiti is not a good way to become a respected artist.C. Some popular graffiti artists end up being
37、ignored by the art world.D. Some graffiti caused inconvenience to the local environment. D D Chinas cancer researcher Zhu Chen, together with two French researchers Anne Dejean and Hugues de The, received Sjoberg Prize 2019 in Stockholm Concert Hall, Sweden on Friday. “We used wisdom from both Chine
38、se and Western medicine and offered a cure to one of the most deadly cancers, ” Chen told Xinhua, “I feel that Chinese - 6 -medicine has potential to contribute more to human health. There are no borders in medicine, because it struggles for benefiting all mankind. Its a language of peace, and of de
39、velopment and progress.” Chen recalled the cooperation with the two French researchers for over 30 years. This years Sjoberg winners have developed a new and targeted treatment for a specific form of blood cancer called acute promyelocytic leukaemia(急性早幼粒 白血病). It was once one of the deadliest forms
40、 of cancer, but it is now possible to cure nine out of ten patients who receive the new treatment. The winners have made this revolutionary development possible by methodically mapping the molecular mechanisms responsible for the disease. The prize is awarded by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
41、 and is funded(资助) by the Sjoberg Foundation. The foundation, with a donation of 2.5 billion US dollars, was founded in 2016, and serves to promote scientific research that focuses on cancer, health and the environment. The prize is an annual international prize in cancer research awarded to individ
42、ual researchers or research groups. The prize amounts to one million US dollars, of which 100,000 US dollars is the prize sum and 900,000 US dollars is funding for future research. 32. Zhu Chen was awarded Sjoberg Prize for the _.A. research into a language B. promotion of Chinese medicineC. treatme
43、nt for a once fatal cancer D. cooperation with French researchers 33. What can we know about the Sjoberg Foundation? A. It funds research in certain fields. B. It favors individual researchers.C. It donates 2.5 million US dollars. D. It awards the prize annually. 34. What can the text be classified
44、as? A. A biography. B. A news report. C. A science fiction. D. An advertisement. 35. What is the best title for the text? A. New cure for cancer B. No borders in medicineC. Great contributions to human health D. Chinese scientist receiving Sjoberg Prize第二节(共第二节(共 5 5 小题;每小题小题;每小题 2 2 分,满分分,满分 1010 分
45、)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 项。I I climbclimb forfor allall womenwomen Between raising two daughters and working as a dishwasher at Whole Foods, the native of Nepal Lhakpa Sherpa just doesnt have time for training to climb Qomolangma, known in the West as Mount Everest. 36 And she hopes
46、 to outdo herself this month again. Lhakpa is recognized by Guinness World Records and is well known in mountaineering circles. 37 But as a girl growing up in the Sherpa ethnic community, she wasnt allowed to attend school. Without a formal education, she - 7 -has taken a job as a dishwasher to give
47、 her daughters and now-grown son a chance at a better life in the United States.38 Sherpa girls were discouraged from climbing. Becoming a climber was harder, especially after the first Nepali woman to reach the summit, Pasang Lhamu Sherpa, died on her way down the mountain in 1993. Lhakpa joined an expedition of five women in 2000 who convinced the government to give them a permit. 39 Last month, her adopted home town of West Hartford claimed her to be “Queen of Mount Everest”. Despite being known as “Queen of Mount Everest