江苏省泰州中学2020-2021学年高二英语上学期期中模拟检测试题.doc
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1、江苏省泰州中学2020-2021学年高二英语上学期期中模拟检测试题(考试时间:120分钟;试卷满分:150分)本试卷由四个部分组成。其中,第一、二部分和第三部分的第一节为选择题。第三部分的第二节和第四部分为非选择题。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,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 does the man want to go?A. To a cinema. B. To
2、a candy shop. C. To a bookstore.2. What is probably the man?A. A milkman. B. A postman. C. A cleaner.3. What will probably happen next?A. The man will leave.B. The man will wash the dishes again.C. The woman will get a job at a store.4. How much will the woman pay?A. $147. B. $22. C. $35.5. Why did
3、the man lose the match?A. His coach didnt help him enough.B. He had no chance of winning.C. He didnt follow his coachs advice.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。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。6. What do we know about the mans wife?A.
4、 She likes reading very much.B. Shes counting the days.C. She will visit some old friends.7. Where did the woman probably go last summer?A. Hawaii. B. Europe. C. Egypt.听第7段材料,回答第8.9题。8. What will the man do on Tuesday?A. Go swimming with Anna.B. Go to the cinema with the woman.C. Go to have a dinner
5、 with the woman.9. What can we learn from the conversation?A. The woman went to Fire Palace last week.B. They will eat at Fire Palace.C. The man is not free on Thursday.听第8段材料,回答第10至12题。10. What do you think Discoveries is?A. It is the name of a book.B. It is the name of a newspaper.C. It is the nam
6、e of a magazine.11. Why did the man spend ten days in prison?A. Because he was caught stealing.B. Because he reported on prisons.C. Because he wrote adventure reports.12. Whats the result of the mans articles about the adventure in prison?A. People got excited and angry with prisons.B. He learnt a g
7、ood lesson.C. Prisoners are now better treated.听第9段材料,回答第13至16题。13. Where will the speakers probably stay in the Grand Canyon?A. In a tent. B. In a hotel. C. In a village house.14. What will the speakers do in Lake Yellowstone?A. Do some walking. B. Ride a horse. C. Go boating.15. What does the woma
8、n think of going to some remote parts of the Yellowstone National Park?A. Frightening. B. Exciting. C. Boring.16. What is the relationship between the speakers?A. Co-workers. B. Husband and wife. C. Classmates.听第10段材料,回答第17至20题。17. How long does it take to fly to New York?A.6 hours. B.7 hours. C.8 h
9、ours.18. What may some tourists do around 6:30 a. m. on the 2nd day?A. Take a bus. B. Have breakfast. C. Go jogging.19. What place will the tourists go to after breakfast on the 2nd day?A. Central Park. B. Liberty Island. C. The Empire State Building.20. What will the tourists have for supper on the
10、 2nd day?A. Italian food. . B. American food. C. Chinese food.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2.5分,满分37.5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。AShana, Robyn, and I stood on the high platform near the tops of the rainforest trees. We were wearing heavy helmets on our heads and had thick leather straps
11、around our waists, which made seats that hung from a thick wire overhead. The wire was hung between the platform we stood on and another platform far in the distance.This was the zip line, an adventure I had vowed I would not do on our family trip to Costa Rica. I was afraid of heights, afraid of fa
12、lling, and afraid of zipping through the air above the rainforest at 30 miles per hour. Yet here I was, fastened in and ready to go.“Who goes first?” our guide asked. My sisters exchanged a glanceneither of them stepped forward. Id been teased for being a “scary cat” ever since I was four when I tri
13、pped (绊倒) and fell on an escalator. Even my parents, while relieved by my cautious ways, were worried that ld miss out on enjoyable activities. No longer willing to let life pass me by, I stepped to the edge of the platform, sat back in the leather seat, and pushed off. Absolute terror filled me as
14、I screamed and zoomed through the trees with my eyes squeezed shut. Before I could totally process what was happening, I landed safely on the second platform.As my sisters flew in behind me, the guide attached me to the next wire, and I was off again. This time, fear was replaced with excitement, an
15、d I was able to look around me as I zipped. Therea toucan (犀鸟)! And was that a sloth (树懒) right at eye level?By the time we had finished all the zip line journeys, I was shouting not with terror but with joy. And to think how close Id come to missing it all!21. Why had the writer vowed not to go on
16、the zip lines?A. She thought she would not be able to see anything.B. She was afraid of the rainforest animals.C. She had a fear of heights.D. She hated wearing the helmet and straps. 22. What made the writer decide to go on the zip lines?A. The support of his parents. B. The tease of his sisters.C.
17、 The encouragement of his own. D. The order of his guide.23. How did the writer find the zip line journey in the end?A. Risky but rewarding.B. Nothing but frightening.C. Tiresome and unhappy. D. Joyful but fruitless.BThis is the biggest education provider youve never heard of. Until now.The Alison p
18、roject Advanced Learning Interactive Systems Online has already signed up more than two million students to more than 500 online courses. Its adding another 200,000 each month and founder Mike Feerick is confident this expansion could grow even more rapidly and reach a billion students towards the e
19、nd of the decade.So how has it stayed below the radar? While the new wave of online courses so-called Moocs, such as Coursera and edX, have become darlings of the digital media, why has Alison not had the same attention?Mr. Feerick says the big difference is who they are trying to reach. Its the aca
20、demic versus vocational (职业的) divide being played out in the digital market.“The people were helping do not have a huge voice,” says Mr. Feerick. While the Moocs are associated with high-status universities, Alisons focus is on the great numbers of people around the world needing to improve their vo
21、cational skills and training.There are courses in subjects such as computer skills, learning English, basic accountancy, building a website, food safety, introductions to legal studies. Within the coming months, India is expected to become the biggest source of learners, overtaking the UK and US. Ni
22、geria and the Philippines are rapidly growing markets.Mr. Feerick wants to use online technology to offer free lessons in the most important basic skills that people need. As he puts it, 99% of the people are learning the same 1% of information, again and again.His other challenge to the established
23、 order is to question the necessity of exam certificates. If people are studying for a specific skill, such as learning to touchtype or a language, he argues the key question is whether they can put the lessons into practice.24.What does the underlined phrase “below the radar” in Paragraph3 probably
24、 mean?A. Trying to catch up. B. Failing to attract notice.C. Failing to meet demands. D. Trying to become successful.25.The Alison project is different from Coursera and edX in that_.A. it has more subjectsB. it offers free coursesC. it doesnt make moneyD. it focuses on basic skills26.What do we lea
25、rn about the Alison project?A. It aims to improve the learners academic scores.B. It is mainly supported by high-status universities.C. It will attract many learners in developing countries.D. Most of its learners are from Asia at the present time.27.Which word can best describe Mike Feerick accordi
26、ng to the last paragraph?A. Practical.B. Creative. C. Diligent. D. Generous.CThe argument over a Philadelphia school district accused of secretly spying on pupils through laptop cameras became fiercer today after it acknowledged obtaining more than 56,000 images of its students, many of them in thei
27、r homes. When the scandal(丑闻)first broke, it was believed that only a few pictures had been taken of one pupil, Blake Robbins. But court papers released this week showed that thousands of images were taken of Robbins and other students. Robbins and his parents have filed an action against the school
28、 district. Court papers from the Robbinss lawyers said that at first it was thought that the laptops technology had produced a few images but they found more than 400 of Robbins, including images “showing him partially undressed and sleeping”. Robbins said he did not know why the spying device was a
29、ctivated as his laptop had not been reported stolen or missing. Other students whose pictures were taken said their laptops had not been reported stolen or missing either.An administrator at the school, one of the few with authority to track the laptops, remained silent, refusing to answer questions
30、.The Philadelphia Inquirer reported that 38,500 of the images came from six laptops that had been reported missing from the Harriton gym in September 2008. These apparently helped the police catch a suspect. Another set of images were from cameras in laptops which employees responsible for tracking
31、failed or forgot to turn off.The court papers, filed by Robbins lawyers, said that the technology was activated between 20 October and 4 November last year, with most of the 400 shots of him while he was in his home, and included his family. “There were additional webcam pictures and screen shots ta
32、ken of Blake Robbins which, up to now, have not been recovered because the evidence was deleted by the IT department,” the court papers say.One of Robbins lawyers is trying to obtain access to the administrators home computer to confirm whether she downloaded any of the pictures. The court papers in
33、dicate she may be a voyeur (窥隐私者) though it has not been proved. 28. We can learn from the passage that _.A. Robbins parents remained calm over the scandal B. Robbins had his laptop stolen before the scandalC. the laptops technology produced some imagesD. the private rights of the students were offe
34、nded29. What did The Philadelphia Inquirer say about the case? A. The police had found some evidence. B. Most of the laptops in Harriton gym were missing. C. Employees in charge of tracking deliberately left the laptops on. D. There was obviously more than one suspect related to the case. 30. Accord
35、ing to the court papers, the administrator _.A. may have spied her students on purposeB. may have broken into Robbins houseC. has downloaded many students pictures D. has removed evidence from computers31. What does the passage mainly talk about?A. Modern technology has negative effects on our lives
36、. B. Students in Philadelphia are accustomed to being spied on secretly.C. A Philadelphia school is charged with spying students through laptop cameras.D. The American government should take measures to improve teachers qualities.DThis is my world now; its all I have left. You see, Im old. And, Im n
37、ot as healthy as I used to be. Im not necessarily happy with it, but I accept it. Occasionally, a member of my family will stop in to see me. He or she will bring me some flowers or a little present, maybe a set of slippersIve got eight pairs. And then they will return to the outside world and Ill b
38、e alone again. Oh, there are other people here in the nursing home. Residents, were called. The majority are about my age. Im 84. Many are in wheelchairs. The lucky ones are passing througha broken hip, a diseased heart, something has brought them here for rehabilitation(康复). When theyre well theyll
39、 be going home.The help here is basically pretty good, although theres a large turnover of staff. Just when I get comfortable with someone he or she moves on to another job. I understand that. This is not the best job to have. I dont much like some of the physical things that happen to us. I dont ca
40、re much for a diaper(尿布). I seem to have lost the control acquired so diligently as a child. The difference is that Im aware and embarrassed, but I cant do anything about it. Ive had three children, and I know it isnt pleasant to clean anothers diaper. My husband used to wear a gas mask when he chan
41、ged the kids. I wish I had one now.Why do you think the staff insists on talking baby talk when speaking to me? I understand English. I have a degree in music and am a certified teacher. Now I hear a lot of words that end in “y”. There is little need for anyone to position their face directly in fro
42、nt of mine and raise their voice with those “y” words. Sometimes it takes longer for a meaning to sink in; sometimes my mind wanders when I am bored. But theres no need to shout. Id love to go out for a meal or travel again. Id love to go to my own church, sing with my own choir. Id love to visit my
43、 friends. Most of them are gone now or else they are in different “homes” of their childrens choosing. Id love to play a good game of bridge, but no one here seems to concentrate very well. My children put me here for my own good. They said they would be able to visit me frequently. But they have th
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