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1、120192019 学年度第二学期期末联考学年度第二学期期末联考高中二年英语科试卷高中二年英语科试卷完卷时间:完卷时间:120120 分钟分钟 满分:满分:l50l50 分分第一部分听力(共两节,满分第一部分听力(共两节,满分 3030 分)分)第一节(共(共 5 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小题。每段对话仅读一遍。1. Where did the man get
2、 the book? A. From his brother.B. From the library.C. From a bookstore.2. How does Mike usually go to school now? A. By car.B. By bus.C. By bike.3. What is the weather like now? A. Cold but sunny.B. Windy and cold.C. Sunny and warm.4. What time does the woman want to meet the man? A. At 1:00 p.m.B.
3、At 1:30 p.m.C. At 2:00 p.m.5. What are the speakers mainly talking about? A. What to have for dinner.B. How to make Chinese food.C. Where to find an Indian restaurant.第二节(共第二节(共 1515 小题;每小题小题;每小题 1.51.5 分,满分分,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
4、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. How often does the man go to the gym? A. Twice a week.B. Five times a week.C. Every morning.7. What does the woman want to go to the gym for? A. Dancing.B. Running.C. Swimming.听第 7 段材料,回答第 8、9 题。8. How many people are going hik
5、ing? A. Two.B. Three.C. Four.29. When will the speakers go hiking? A. On Wednesday.B. On Thursday.C. On Friday.听第 8 段材料,回答第 10 至 12 题。10. What does Aron say about his mother? A. She just changed jobs.B. She just moved to London.C. She just opened a law firm.11. What will Aron be doing in Paris? A. L
6、ooking for a job.B. Going to school.C. Taking a holiday.12. What is the probable relationship between the speakers? A. Co-workers.B. Friends at school.C. Brother and sister.听第 9 段材料,回答第 13 至 16 题。13. How long will the exhibition in Italy last? A. Two weeks.B. Four weeks.C. Eight weeks.14. Where is t
7、he second stop of the exhibition tour? A. Spain.B. Greece. C. Portugal.15. Why wont the speakers go to the exhibition on Saturday? A. The woman has to go to classes.B. The man has to work on his paper.C. The museum will be crowded that day.16. Where will the woman probably be on Friday morning? A. I
8、n the library.B. At the gallery.C. In the classroom.听第 10 段材料,回答第 17 至 20 题。17. How many languages does Start Today teach at the moment? A. 11.B. 22.C. 57.18. Why do most people learn new languages according to the speaker? A. To become language experts.B. To get better opportunities.C. To travel ar
9、ound the world.19. What is the goal of Start Today? A. To make education free through technology.B. To develop more courses through technology.C. To create private experiences through technology.20. What is the learning process like at Start Today? A. Very fun.B. Very boring.C. Very difficult.3第二部分:
10、阅读理解(共两节,满分第二部分:阅读理解(共两节,满分 4040 分)分)第一节第一节 ( (共共 1515 小题;每小题小题;每小题 2 2 分,满分分,满分 3030 分分) )A AI felt like I had clicked my heels three times and come to a country away from home every morning as I walked through the doors at the Embassy of Australia in Washington. Musical Aussie accents, and Aborigi
11、nal art exhibits made me wonder if I had entered without a visa. In fact I was a temporary employee, a public affairs unpaid intern(实习) for three months during the summer in order to engage myself in the culture of the country where I planned to study the next spring.During the summer I read the Aus
12、tralian news every day. Working at the embassy allowed me to escape the U.S. for six hours per day and learn about what was going on across the planet. After reading the daily Australian and U.S. news I usually helped prepare a PowerPoint presentation for school kids who visited the embassy as part
13、of a school activity. Depending on whether an embassy event was going on, I would attend weekly meetings to listen in on planning and see what I could do to help. Usually there were smaller tasks to be done such as creating visitors guides.The most fantastic event in which I participated was the vis
14、it of the Australian prime minister. As the only American among countless Australian media and staff, I felt comfortable and was kept busy taking pictures and recording door-stop interviews at famous sites such as the Capitol. But as an intern, you will not be inside, exposed to top-secret informati
15、on, when it comes to special events.Government work is a useful addition to ones experience. As an embassy employee you will gain invaluable knowledge while spending your summer in a culturally diverse workplace.21. What is the author talking about?A. Her foreign culture experience. B. Her trouble i
16、n finding a job.C. Her embassy internship. D. Her preparation for future employment.23. What was the author forbidden to do when the Australian prime minister visited America?A. Record door-stop interviews. B. Know top-secret information.C. Take pictures of special events. D. Stand among the Austral
17、ian staff.24. What can we infer about her daily routine at the Embassy?A. It is tiring. B. It is disgusting.C. It is relaxing. D. It is exciting. B BThree years ago Jenny Salgado, a Dominican shop assistant, moved to Highland town, a neighborhood of Baltimore. When she arrived the shop she works in
18、was one of only a few Spanish businesses. Now there are many more. “Its good now if you speak Spanish,” she smiles.Baltimore has been losing people for 60 years. To address this, its former mayor, Stephanie Rawlings-Blake, wanted to make it the most immigrant-friendly city in the world. Its librarie
19、s provide Spanish-language exercise classes. To help those with no papers, the city is introducing micro-loans (小额贷款)which require no credit checks. City police 4would no longer routinely check the immigration status of citizens or enforce any federal immigration law unless required to. The then gov
20、ernor, Martin OMalley made it possible for illegal immigrants to get driving licenses. Such welcoming policies are spreading. Such cities as Cleveland, Dayton and Philadelphia all eagerly try to please immigrants. Rick Snyder, Governor of Michigan, has asked the federal government to offer 50,000 vi
21、sas to people who agree to live in Detroit. His administration has made it easier for skilled migrants to get professional licenses.When a citys population falls, both tax receipts and services fall. Half-deserted neighborhoods breed (滋生)crime, driving yet more people to leave.No city has escaped th
22、is without attracting new residents, says Steve Tobocman of Global Detroit. Several studies suggest that when immigrants arrive, crime goes down, schools improve and shops open up. In Detroit, immigrants living near the tiny separate city of Hamtramck have formed local watches to guard against thiev
23、es. Their neighborhoods are not just safer; they are also among the only places where it is as easy to buy fresh vegetables as drugs and alcohol.But attracting new immigrants to the cities which most need them is hard, argues Audrey Singer of the Brookings Institution. They care about the same thing
24、s as everyone else: safe streets, good schools and jobs. Cities which have lost population for decades struggle with all of these.24. What does the underlined word “address” mean?A. deal with B. remark onC. get through D. refer to25. Which can best describe the situation mentioned in Paragraph 3?A.
25、A constant matter B. A dilemmaC. A death circle D. A classic case26. What is the topic of the last but one paragraph?A. Problems caused by immigrants. B. The positive role immigrants play. C. The living conditions of immigrants. D. Difficulties immigrants face in Detroit.27. Which statement may Audr
26、ey Singer agree with?A. There is no need to encourage such immigrant-friendly policies.B. Immigrants have higher expectations of a city than its locals.C. Attracting immigrants helps prevent a city from losing population.D. Attracting immigrants to cities losing people is demanding.CI recommend a lo
27、t of non-fiction books, and every once in a while I review a novel. But I dont think Ive ever written about a book of poetry before. Thats almost what Maylis de Kerangals The Heart is, though. Its poetry disguised as a novel.Three French 20-year-olds go surfing in the middle of the night, and as the
28、yre driving back from the beach just before sunrise, they have a car accident. Two of them survive but one of them, Simon, dies, and his parents have to decide whether to donate his heart or not. They finally decide to do it, and doctors transplant(移植)the heart, and the book is over. Thats just its
29、story.5The car crash happens in the first 15 pages, so the rest of the book is a meditation(冥想)on life, death, and, as the title suggests, the heart. There arent even that many characters: you meet Simons father and mother, the doctor on duty at the hospital when Simon gets there, the nurse assistin
30、g him, the head of the organ donation organization, the woman who gets the heart in the end , and a few other people.But just describing the plot is like saying “during a heart transplant, doctors put one persons heart into another persons body” and leaving it at that. Its not the plot that makes Th
31、e Heart such a wonderful book. First of all, theres the language. It makes me think of Vladimir Nabokov more than anybody else. The sentences are rich and full, and they go on and on, which is the exact opposite of how I write.At times I found myself reading more slowly than usual, simply because th
32、e way she describes things is so beautiful: at one point she describes a characters words an “reddening rocks from a still-burning fire”. The choices of words are very specificI went to the dictionary a dozen times to look up the words I didnt know.28. What does the author think of the story of the
33、book?A. not complex.B. very touching.C. very interesting.D. very inspiring.29.From the 16th page, the book _.A. starts telling storiesB. shows some poemsC. becomes more excitingD. talks about something big30. What makes the book wonderful according to the author?A. Its theme.B. Its plotC. Its writin
34、g styleD. Its characters31. This passage can be classified as_.A. an advertisement B. a book review C. a feature story D. A news report DWhen a laptop or smart phone battery starts losing its power, the only options are to buy an expensive replacement, or just keep it plugged in (接通电源的) all the time
35、. But one woman may have found the answer to this problem.Mya Le Thai is a scientist studying at the University of California. She recently discovered a process that may lead to batteries that last forever.Thai said she had been frustrated that the batteries for her wireless devices degraded(退化) ove
36、r time, until they failed to charge fully. Thai did not like having to keep her laptop connected to an electrical outlet (电源插座) to keep it powered on. So, she decided to do something about that problem. At first, she and her team at UC Irvine thought about inventing a new battery. But as they experi
37、mented, Thai discovered something that might permit lithium-ion (锂离子) batteries to last forever.Lithium-ion batteries power most wireless devices. Over time, the batteries lose the ability to hold a charge. Most of these batteries have a life span of about 7,000 charging cycles before they die. One
38、of the reasons lithium-ion batteries degrade is their use of nanowires to carry electricity. Nanowires are extremely thin. A human hair is thousands of times thicker, for example. Nanowires are extremely efficient carriers of electricity, which makes them useful in batteries. But Thai said their thi
39、nness also makes them weak. 6“Nanowires break and fracture over time,” she said. “Thats why they lose capacity.”But, Thai had a theory the nanowires might last longer if covered with a gel (凝胶). She and her team tested this theory. “It was a long process and a lot of work,” Thai said. The team tried
40、 many coverings for the wires. PMMA, a type of plastic, was one of them. The nanowires were coated with PMMA and cycled through charges 200,000 times. The PMMA-coated nanowires showed no evidence of damage. The results suggest that batteries could last forever, without losing charging ability. Thai
41、said 200,000 cycles amount to about three months on just one device.Thai hopes to continue her research to understand why this gel works so well and to see if any other gel could create better results. Mya Le Thai said she is enjoying the publicity about her discovery. She said she never expected he
42、r research to get media coverage. “Its kind of cool,” she said. “Im really glad people are showing interest in my work and not just in the work itself, but also in technology and energy.”32. What caused Thai to work on lithium-ion batteries?A. She disliked the batteries for her laptop.B. She thought
43、 batteries were too expensive.C. She found that batteries gradually wear out.D. She and her team were assigned to invent a new battery.33. Which of the following sentences is TRUE about nanowires?A. They last only 7,000 charging cycles. B. They are too weak to carry electricity.C. They are not suita
44、ble to use in batteries.D. They are the main cause of battery degrading.34. The breakthrough may most probably lie in _.A. a new kind of batteryB. coating nanowires in gelC. new materials for batteriesD. a new way of charging batteries35. What may be the best title for the passage?A. Why batteries a
45、re degradingB. Nanowires trying on new coatingC. Nanowires discovered by scientistD. Scientist invents life-long battery第二节七选五(共第二节七选五(共 5 5 小题;每小题小题;每小题 2 2 分,满分分,满分 1010 分)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)Why do you go to the library? For books, yesyou like books because they tell storie
46、s. _36_ At one type of library, you can just do that even though there is not a single book.At the Human Library, instead of books, you can “borrow” people. _37_ For a certain amount of time, you can ask them questions and listen to their stories, which are as fascinating as anything you can find in
47、 a book. You can speak with a refugee (难民),a homeless person of a woman living with HIV._38_ In other words, the Human Library encourages people to challenge their own prejudice(偏见)-to truly get to know and learn from someone they might otherwise make an unfair judgment about.7_39_ Ronni Abergel, hi
48、s brother Dray and some colleagues hosted a four-day event during a major Northern European festival, hoping to raise awareness about violence among youth. After the success of this event, Abergel set up the Human Library Organization, which has been growing ever since.The stories thesebookstell ran
49、ge from fascinating to heartbreaking and everything in between. And that is the very point of the organizationto prove that no person can be summed up in just one word. _40_A. Their life stories are on various topics.B. People with unique life stories volunteer to be the “books”.C. Here, difficult questions are expected, appreciated and a