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1、黑龙江省哈尔滨市第三中学2020-2021学年高二英语下学期4月阶段性测试试题第一部分听力做题时,先将答案标在试卷上。录音内容结束后,你将有两分钟的时间将试卷上的答案转涂到答题 卡上。第一节:(共5小题;每小题1分,满分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.1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. How much does one child ticket cost?A. $2.B. $3. C. $6.2. What will the man and his
2、fami1y do on Saturday evening?A. Remain at home。.B. Pay a visit to his friend.C. Have supper at the woman* s.3. Why is the man* s cell phone currently not working?A. He hasn,t paid the bill.B. The battery is too low.C. Something goes wrong.4. What is the man going to do?A. Go to a bakery (面包房).B. Se
3、e the price of a house C. Buy something at a supermarket.5. What kind of movie does the woman find boring?A. Murder stories B. Detective stories. C. Romantic stories.第二节(共15题;每小题1分,共15分)听下面5段对话或独白。听每段对话或独白前,你将有时间阅读各个小题,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、8题。6. When does the conversation tak
4、e place?A. Before a Christmas party.B. During a Christmas party.C. After a Christmas party.7. What has the man brought with him to the party?A. Christmas presents.B. A Christmas tree.11 though69. There was a slight in Jamies voice, but he accepted the offeranyway.A. heir mon yB. format . C. fluency7
5、0. .Opportunities and success tend to be those who are ready.A. in terms ofB. in need ofC. in favour of D. in praiseof第三节:单句语法填空(共10个小题,每小题1分,满分10分)阅读下而句子,在空白处填入适当的内容或括号内单词的正确形式。71. . In the(absent) of air, we human beings couldn, t live on the earth.72. _The airline suggests booking tickets 21 days
6、 advance.73. Not until he failed a second time he begin to take my advice seriously.74. _He dropped into an arm chair, (exhaustion).75. I have a headache, for I(work) in of that computer for 8 hours.76. There is no point in(argue) with him as he is a stubborn man.77. Now a lot of new tech no logics
7、can(apply) to solving problems in industry.78. _With his attention(fix) on the job at hand, Aziz has no time to relax.79. _Some customers are quite difficult(handle).80. There was no occasion this bottle of champagne could be used.第四部分写作第一节:单句改错(共10小题,每小题1分,满分10分)下列每个句子中有一处语言错误。每处错误涉及一个单词的增加、删除或修改。增
8、加:在缺词处加 一个漏字符号(八),并在其下写出该加的词。删除:把多余的词用斜线()划掉。修改:在错的词下划一横线,并在该词下面写出修改后的词.注意:每处错误及其修改均仅限一词.81. Low educational achievement is strongly associated to poverty and disadvantage.82. I* 11 definite be glad when this course is over.83. Although lacked experience of speaking be fore large groups, Jessi is ex
9、tremely confident.84. I owe him apology, for I forgot to tell the cook to save some food for him.85. We never dreamed of that we wou1d get through to the next round.86. This is estimated that 75, 000 Texas families are educating their children at home.87. No matter what full your schedule is, you ca
10、n always fit more things into it.88. Press enter and follow the on-screen direction and you will complete the purchase .89.After four failures,Mike finally passed his driving test at the five attempt.90.Any applicant who possessthe required skills will be hired.高二英语4月月考答案BBBCA 1620 CBACA15 BBABC 610
11、 ACBAC 11 1521-23 DBA 24-27 CDDB 28-31 BDCA 32- 35 BAAC 36-40 GDEAF41-45 BDACD 46-50CACBC 51-55DABCC 56-60ACBDC61 -65 BCDBB61 -65 BCDBB66-70 BAADC71. absence72. absence73. in 73. did74. Exhausted75.have been work i ng76.arguing77. be applied78.fixed79. to handle80.when81. towith82. definite definite
12、ly83. lackedlackinglacking84.力II an86. This -一 It86. This -一 It87.whathow88. direction directions89. five -一 fifth90.possess - possessesA. She bought food and drink.B. She wrapped some presents.C. She sent out Christmas cards.听第7段材料,回答第9、10、11题。9. What is the probable relationship between the two sp
13、eakers?A. Neighbors.B. Workmates.C. Old friends.10. How many questions has the man asked?A. 2. B. 3.C. 4.11. What do we know about these two people?A. The woman will probably visit the man and answer his questions.B. The man will probably visit the woman and get the answers to his questions.C. She l
14、ost her temper for the man* s questions ,听第8段材料,回答第12、13、14题。12. What is the man going to do?A. Give a lecture.B. Attend a lecture.13.What do we know about the bus?A. It doesn* t go there directly.B. If you want to take the bus, you11 have to wait for a while.C. It will take you about six minutes to
15、 get there by bus.14. How is the man most probably going?A. By car.B. By bus. C. On foot.听第9段材料,回答第15、16、17题。15. What does the woman usually use the I me met to do?A. Check erna i 1.B. Find products. C. Do shopping.16. How long is the man online a day.A. For 4 hours.17. What does the man think of th
16、e Internet?A. Informative.听第10段材料,回答第18、19、20题。1 8. What is the speaker mainly introducing?A. A new tour.19. How long does the latest tour last?A. One week.B. For 6 hours.8. Fairly useful.8. Two tourists.B. Two weeks.20. What is the speaker going to taik about?A. Australia.B. New Zealand.C. The Sout
17、h Sea Islands.第二部分阅读理解第一节: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。ABeing a teenager is hard, which is why there are many amazing toon movies documenting (记 录)the experience. Some are so good that they will become classics in a few years. Here is a list for you.Mean Girls“You
18、go, Glen Coco!” Its not going to happen! * “On Wednesdays wo wear pink!” You can, t sit with us!” If you rank teen movies by how many lines of dialogues will live on forever, Mean Girls will certainly be on top. So many classic lines!Eighth GradeThis movie wi11 take you back to the eighth grade and
19、remind you of al 1 the good and bad times you had at that age. Kayla, a shy girl, feels the most connected to the world through social media. Its Kayla, s final week in the eighth grade and she promises to make it as great as possible before she moves on to high school.H Going on 30This classic foll
20、ows Jenna Rink, a girl whose wish on her 13th birthday is to grow up and escape from high school. The next day her wish comes true. Sho wakes up in her 30-year-old body only to find that shes an editor of a major magazine in America. Although she loves her new life at first, she quickly finds out th
21、at being grown-up isnt that much easier than being 13.Shazam!Shazam! is about a kid named Billy Batson, who sudden 1y gets magic powers from the WizardShazam. By ceilling Shazcims name, Billy can be changed into a hero with powers like strength, speed and flight. Like in all the other movies of this
22、 kind, in Shazam! Billy is tasked with defeating his enemy who warns to steal al 1 his powers.21. What is special cibout Mean Girls?B. It ranksD. It contains.C. Mean Girls. D.A. It is about girls adventures.first on the movie list.C. It is aimed at amusing the audience.lots of classic dialogues.22.
23、Which movie refers to anxiety for adulthood?A. Eighth Grade.B. 13 Going on 30Shazam!.23.What kind of movie is Shazam!?C. A tragedy. D. A love story.A. A superhero film. B. A documentary.BA decade ago, at the end of my first semester teaching at Captain, my student Jack stopped by for office hours .
24、He sat down and burst into tears . My mind started cycling thiough a list of events that could make a college junior cry: his girlfriend had broken up with him; he had been accused of cheating in exams; he forgot to turn in papers before the deadline. I just got my first A minus, “ he said.Year afte
25、r year, I watch in depression as students are crazy about getting straight As. Some sacrifice their health; a few have even tried to charge their school after falling short. They bel ieve top marks are a ticket to el ite (精英的)graduate schools and rewarding job opportunities. I was one of them. 1 sta
26、rted college with the goal of graduating with a GPA of 4. 0. It would be a reflection of my brainpower and willpower, showing that I had the right things to succeed. But I was wrong.The evidence is clear: Across industries, research shows that the association between grades and job performance is mo
27、dest in the first year after college and insignificant within a handful of years, . For example, at Microsoft, once employees are two or three years out of college, their grades have no bearing on their performance. (Of course, it must be said that if you got D* s, you probably wouldn* t end up at M
28、icrosoft.)Academic grades rarely assess qualities like creativity, leadership and teamwork skills, or social, emotional and political intel1igence. Yes, straight A students master large amounts of information and reproduce it in exams. But career success is rarely about finding the right solution to
29、 a problem - it* s more about finding the right problem to solve. This might explain why Steve Jobs finished high school with a GPA of 2.65, and Martin Luther King Jr. got only one A in his four years at Morehouse.24. Why did Jack feel sad?A. His girlfriend abandoned him.B. I le was caught cheating
30、in exams.C. He failed to get straight As.D. He didnt hand in his paper in time.25. What did the author once believe?A. It was wrong to care too much about marks.B. Fai ling short was schools fault.C. Marks didn* t reflect willpower and brainpower.D. Top marks meant well-paid job offers.26. Why are t
31、he employees at Microsoft mentioned?A. To indicate academic performance is important.B. To stress the company values employees with top marks.C. To introduce successful examples in the technology industry.D. To show academic excellence does not necessarily guarantee top career performance.27. What s
32、hould people focus more on to succeed?A. How to solve a problem.B. What problems to be solved.C. How to be a creative leaderD. What to do with detailed information.CYouve probably heard it suggested that you need to move more throughout the day, and as a general rule of thumb, that more is often def
33、ined as around 10, 000 steps. With manyAmericans tracking their steps via new fitness-tracking wearables, or even just by carrying their phone, more and more people use the 10, 000-step rule as their marker for healthy living. Dr. Dreg Hager, professor of computer science at Johns Hopkins, decided t
34、o take a closer look at that 10, 000-step rule, and he found that using it as a standard may be doing more harm than good for many.“It turns out that in 1960 in Japan they figured out that the average Japanese man, when he walked 10, 000 steps a day burned something like 3, 000 calories and that is
35、what they thought the average person should consume so they picked 10,000 steps as a number/, Hager said.Accoiding to Hager, asking everyone to shoot for 10, 000 steps each day could be harmful to the elderly or those with medical conditions, making it unwise for them to jump into that level of exer
36、cise, even if its walking. The bottom line is that 10, 000 steps may be too many for some and too few for others. He also noted that those with shorter legs have an easier time hitting the 10, 000-step goal because they have to take more steps than peop1e with longer legs to cover the distance. It s
37、eems that 10, 000 steps may be suitable for the latter.A more recent study focused on older women and how many steps can help maintain good health and promote longevity (长寿).The study included nearly 17, 000 women with an average ago of 72. Researchers found that women who took 4, 400 steps per day
38、were about 40% less likely to die during a follow-up period of just over four years: Interestingly, women in the study who walked more than 7,500 steps each day got no extra boost in longevity.28. What does the underlined word it/ in Paragraph 1 refer to?A. The phone recording.B.The 10,000-step rule
39、.C. The healthy living.D. The fitness-tracking method.29. What does Paragraph 2 mainly talk about?A. How many steps a Japanese walks.B. How we calculate the number of steps.C. If burning 3,000 calories daily is scientific.D. Where 10,000 steps a day came from.A. Senior citizens.30. Who will probably
40、 benefit from 10,000 steps each day according to Hager?B. Young short-legged people.C. Healthy long-legged people ,D. Weak individuals.31. How many steps may the researchers suggest senior citizens take each day?A. 4,400 steps. B. 10,000 steps.C. 2,700 steps.D. 7,500 steps.DSelf-driving cars have be
41、en backed by the hope that they will save lives by getting involved in fewer crashes with fewer injuries and deaths than human-driven cars. But so far, most comparisons between human drivers and automated vehicles have been unfair.Crash statistics (数据)for human-driven cars are gathered from all sort
42、s of driving situations, and on all types of roads. However, most of the data on self-driving cars* safety have been recorded in good weather and on highways, where the most important tasks are staying in the cars own lane and not getting too close to the vehicle ahead. Automated cars are good at th
43、ose tasks, but so are humans.It is true that self-driving cars don, t get tired, angry, frustrated or drunk. But neither can they yet react to uncertain situations with the same skill or anticipation of an attentive human driver. Nor do they possess the foresight to avoid potential peri 1s. They lar
44、gely drive from moment to moment, rather than think ahead to possible events down the road.To a self-riving car, a bus full ofpeople mightappear quitesimilar to anuninhabitedcornfield. Indeed, deciding what actionto take in anemergency isdifficult forhumans, butdrivers have sacrificed themselves for
45、 the greater good of others. An automated system, s 1 imi ted understanding of the world means it willalmost never evaluate a situation the sameway a humanwould. And machines cant be programmedin advance tohandle everyimaginable setof events.Some people may argue that the promise of simply reducing
46、the number of injuries and deaths is enough to support driverless cars. But experience from aviation (航空)shows that as new automated systems are introduced, there is often an increase in the rate of disasters.Therefore comparisons between humans and automated vehicles have to bo performed carefully.
47、 To fairly evaluate driverless cars on how well they fulfill their piomise of improved safety, it, s important to ensure the data being presented actually provide a true comparison. After all, choosing to replace humans with automation has more effects than simply a one - for - one exchange.32. What
48、 makes the comparison between self-driving cars and human-driven cars unfair?A. Self-driving cars never get tired.B. Statistics are collected differently.C. Machines can make decisions faster. D. Self-driving cars know the world better.33. What does the underlined word “perils” in Paragraph 3 most probeibly mean?A. Dangers.B. Self-driving cars C. Pedestrians . D. Human-driven ca