2020届山西省临汾市高考考前适应性训练考试(二)英语试题.docx
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1、姓名准考证号秘密启用前临汾市2020年高考考前适应性训练考试(二)英 语注意事项:1.本试卷分第I卷(选择题)和第II卷(非选择题)两部分。第I卷1至11页,第n卷 11至12页。2.答题前,考生务必将自己的姓名、准考证号填写在本试卷和答题卡的相应位置。3.全部答案在答题卡上完成,答在本试卷上无效。4.第卷听力部分满分30分,不计入总分,考试成绩录取时提供给高校作参考。5.考试结束后,将本试卷和答题卡一并交回。第I卷第一部分 听力(共两节,满分30分,不计入总分)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1.5分,满分
2、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. 9.15. C. 9.18.答案 :ABC1. What is the woman going to do?A. Have a coffeeB. Clean her office.C. Attend a meeting.2. At what time will the speakers get to London?A.
3、About 12:15.B. About 12:30.C. About 12:45.3.What are the speakers probably doing?A. Preparing for camping. B. Buying sleeping bags.C. Cleaning up the car.4.What are the speakers mainly talking about?A. The coming rain.B. Their favorite games.C. The weather.5. How much will the woman pay?A. $ 12.B. $
4、 8.C. $ 6.第二节(共15题。每题1.5分,共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,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至7题。6.Why has the man never seen the woman lately?A. She had a traffic accident.B. She moved to another place .C. She is working unusua
5、l hours.7.Where does the conversation take place?A. In an office.B. At a bus stop.C. In an apartment.听第7段材料,回答第8至9题。8.What are the speakers mainly talking about?A. The color of a painting. B. The meaning of a painting. C. The style of a painting.9.How does the man know about painting?A. He took some
6、 courses.B. He worked for an artist.C. He learned it from his aunt.听第8段材料,回答第10至12题。10.What are the two speakers generally talking about?A. People in big shops.B. Shopping in different places.C. Goods in various qualities.11.What is the man?A. An employee of a department store.B. A manager of a supe
7、rmarket.C. A salesman in a small shop.12.What might the woman think of supermarket staff?A. They re very nice.B. They re unkind.C. They re well - paid.听第9段材料,回答第13至16题。13.Where is the woman going on a trip next summer?A. South America.B. Central Europe.C. Northern Europe.14.How many people is the wo
8、man traveling with?A. Seven.B. Six.C. Five.15.When is the woman probably leaving?A. Next July.B. Next August.C. Next October.16. What will the speakers do next?A. Have dinner.B. Pay their bill.C. Find another restaurant.听第10段材料,回答第17至20题。17.What did the speaker decide to do after lunch that day?A. S
9、tay to help her friend. B. Walk alone to her car. C. Wait for the rain to stop.18.What can we learn about the speaker then?A.She worked at a hotel. B. She had bought a new car. C. She was having a baby soon.19. Where did the speaker meet the taxi passenger?A. At a crossroads.B. In front of a hotel.C
10、. Beside a car park.20. What does the speaker talk about?A.An exciting lunch party. B. A well- known short story. C. An unforgettable experience.第二部分阅读理解(共两节,满分60分)第一节(共15小题;每小题3分,满分45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。ASupport tech education for street youth in LebanonAbout CodeBrave
11、We train former street youth in digital skills, coding and robotics, helping them to secure jobs that are not only well-paid but future-proof too. We run our programme in a shelter for homeless children.We have now been successfully carrying out the programme since June 2018. In this time, our child
12、ren have gone from barely knowing how to use a computer, to writing the code for basic websites totally from scratch. We want to carry on developing the programme in 2020 by continuing appropriate tech education of 2() children, and to engage a further 40 children.Former street youth are often force
13、d into exploitative work.Young people living in shelter often end up back on the street as soon as they leave state care. They become trapped in a cycle of poverty, as they dont have marketable skills to secure well-paid work. Often the only work opportunities available to them are hard manual labou
14、r.Why is the tech sector a window of opportunity?Tech education provides young people with marketable skills in a sector where there is a growing demand and shortage of supply in the Middle East. It also gives them access to an international online job market.Where Your Money Will Go Help us give fo
15、rmer street youth in Lebanon an alternative to exploitative work through tech education. Flexible funding this project will receive all donations made by 3rd April 2020 at 11:55pm25 or moreFunds I students coding & robotics education for a month.50 or moreFunds a new Arduino robotics starter kit for
16、 our students. 100 or moreFunds 1 student through an internship(实习期)(for bus and lunch money).300 or more Funds 1 students coding & robotics education for 1 year.21. What can we learn about CodeBrave?A. Its a shelter for the young.B.Its a free project in digital skills.C. Its a program for the homel
17、ess.D.Its a profitable training organization.22. What made CodeBrave choose tech education?A. The importance of marketable skills.B.Thedesire to get rid of poverty.C. The request from the state care.D.Thedemand of the employment market.23 . Where are most of the donations spent?A. Equipment.B. Teach
18、er Training.C. Operational Costs.D. Teaching Costs.BGoing to college was not optional. In my family, it was just another step toward the American dream. As soon as I graduated, I enrolled (入学)in the English Department of Colorado State University. I went on to earn two scholarships, and membership i
19、n the National Honor Society. I truly believed the hard work was worth it.It wasnt until a few months ago that I realized how clueless I was. I had been combing through the classifieds when my eyes fell upon my dream job. t( National College Magazine looking for writers .”Thrilled, I spent the weeke
20、nd composing a resume . Needless to say, I was stunned when the interviewer barely took one glance before throwing it aside.No experience, he said flatly.I felt like screaming, What do you mean, no experience? Look at these gradesI was left to absorb the shock of rejection, thinking that nobody ever
21、 told me that a 4. 0 student would be turned down for a job.Didnt all of my hard work count for anything?I see plenty of demands for two years of experience at a print publication, but none requiring extensive knowledge of how to write academic papers. Yet 95% of my energy in school went toward the
22、latter, leaving me little time to devote to anything else. If career preparation is supposed to be the point of college, then why isnt it the focus?Has a college degree just become another societal status symbol like fancy cars or designer clothes?Given my experience, I feel that a college degree wo
23、uld be a lot more valuable if students were required to get some outside experience to supplement their in class knowledge. Instead of requiring four science classes, why not three science classes and an internship? In my college career, I took one class that taught me how to write and submit essays
24、 for publication. This ever so brief taste of the real world was like holding an ice cream sundae in front of a child and only giving her a small bite.24. Why did the author study so hard at college?A.To maintain a family tradition.B. To land an ideal job.C.To fulfill parents expectations.D. To win
25、scholarships for the tution25 . What accounted for the authors failure in job hunting?A. His dull resume.B. His misjudgment in high scores.C. His lack of experience.D. His poor performance in the interview.26. What does the underlined sentence in the last paragraph imply?A.Academic writing is a smal
26、l part of college life.B.College education always covers unimportant things.C.Competition in college is not as fierce as that in the real world.D. The author feels held back by his lack of real world experience.27. What does the author want to tell us by writing this article?A.Get a college degree a
27、nd you will go far.B.College students should make the best of their time.C.Career preparation is a necessity for college education.D. Landing a successful career is better than a college degree.CThey asked Katherine Johnson for the moon, and she gave it to them. With little more than a pencil, a sli
28、de rule and one of the finest mathematical minds in the country, Mrs. Johnson, who died at 101 on Monday, calculated the precise trajectories (轨道)that would let Apollo 11 land on the moon in 1969 and, after Neil Armstrongs historymaking moonwalk, let it return to Earth.Yet throughout Mrs. Johnsons 3
29、3 years in NASA and for decades afterward, almost no one knew her name.Mrs. Johnson was one of several hundred strictly educated, supremely capable yet largely unrecognized women who, well before the modem feminist movement, worked as NASA mathematicians. But it was not only her sex that kept her lo
30、ng unsung. For some years at midcentury, the black women were subjected to a double segregation (隔离):They were kept separate from the much large group of white women who in turn were segregated from the agencys male mathematicians and engineers.Mrs. Johnson broke barriers at NASA In old age, Mrs. Jo
31、hnson became the most celebrated of black women who served as mathematicians for the space agency. Their story was told in the 2016 Hollywood film Hidden Figures, which was nominated for three Oscars, including best picture.In 2017, NASA dedicated a building in her honor. That year, The Washington P
32、ost described her as the most high - profile of the computers computers ” being the term originally used to describe Mrs. Johnson and her colleagues, much as “typewriters” were used in the 19th century to represent professional typists.She helped our nation enlarge the frontiers of space, NASAs admi
33、nistrator, Jim Bridenstine, said in a statement on Monday, even as she made huge steps that also opened doors for women and people of color in the universal human quest to explore space.As Mrs. Johnson herself was fond of saying, her tenure (任期)at Langley from 1953 until her retirement in 1986 was “
34、a time when computers wore skirts.28.What is the function of the first paragraph?A. To present the Apollo moon mission.B. To stress Mrs. Johnsons contributionsC. To honour Neil Armstrongs moonwalk.D To mourn a great womanMrs. Johnson.29.What does the underlined word barriers” in Paragraph 4 refer to
35、 ?A.Gender inequality and color line.B.Mrs. Johnsons unrecognized talents.C.The agencys male mathematicians and engineers.D. The hardships before the modem feminist movement.30.Why were Mrs. Johnson and her colleagues described as computers?A. Because they used computers to keep their work secret.B.
36、 Because they were the agencys human calculatorsC. Because computer systems engaged them deeply.D.Because they opened a door to outer space.31.What can we learn from Mrs. Johnsons experience?A.Try things that may not work.B.The world awaits our discovery.C Use knowledge to wipe out ignorance D. Neve
37、r be limited by the labels attached by others.DAlthough it has been indicated in recent years that plants are capable of seeing, hearing and smelling, they are still usually thought of as silent. But now, for the first time, Itzhak Khait and his colleagues at Tel Aviv University in Israel found that
38、 tomato and tobacco plants made ultrasonic (超声的)sounds at frequencies humans cant hear when stressed by a lack of water or when their stem is cut.Microphones placed 10 centimeters from the plants picked up sounds in the ultrasonic range of 20 to 100 kilohertz. Human hearing usually ranges from 20 he
39、rtz to 20 kilohertz. These findings can alter the way we think about the plant kingdom , they wrote in their study, which has not yet been published.On average, drought - stressed tomato plants made 35 sounds an hour, while tobacco plants made 11. When plant stems were cut, tomato plants made an ave
40、rage of 25 sounds in the following hour, and tobacco plants 15. Unstressed plants produced fewer than one sound per hour. It is even possible to distinguish between the sounds to know what the stress is. The researchers trained a machine learning model to separate the plants,sounds from those of the
41、 wind, rain and other noises of the greenhouse, correctly identifying in most cases whether the stress was caused by dryness or a cut, based on the sounds intensity and frequency. Water hungry tobacco appeared to make louder sounds than cut tobacco, for example. Although Khait and his colleagues onl
42、y looked at tomato and tobacco plants, they believe other plants may make sounds when stressed.Enabling farmers to listen for water stressed plants could open a new direction in the field of precision((精准)agriculture, the researchers suggest. They add that such an ability will be increasingly import
43、ant as climate change exposes more areas to drought.Khaits study also suggests that insects and some mammals can hear and respond to from as far as 5 metres away. A moth may decide against laying eggs on a plant that sounds water - stressed. Edward Farmer at the University of Lausanne, Switzerland t
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2019届人教A版数学必修二同步课后篇巩固探究:2-1-1 平面 WORD版含解析.docx
