广东省普宁市第二中学等七校联合体2019届高三冲刺模拟英语试题含答案
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2018-2019七校联考英语冲刺卷第二部分阅读理解(共两节,满分40分)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A、B、C和D四个选项中,选出最佳选项。
AFour Free Mobile Apps to Help You Learn English FasterHave you realized that you can put your smartphone to really good use for learning English? Here are 4 free mobile apps that will help you do just that.Hello EnglishIt covers all the aspects of language learning, including vocabulary, translation, grammar, spellings, spoken and reading skills. It uses interactive games to teach different English lessons and offers new audiobooks, latest news, and books. However, you should already understand basic English structures and alphabets, for the app can’t help you learn English from scratch(从零开始).DuolingoIf you want to learn English from scratch, then this is the app you are looking for. Duolingo uses interactive games to help you learn English. For beginners, the app focuses on helping you learn verbs, phrases and sentences.LingbeIf you are ready to practice your spoken skills in the real-wor ld, you’ll need Lingbe. It’s a community-based app where people help each other and share their native languages. It connects you with real people on call who are native English speakers.HelloTalkHelloTalk is similar to Lingbe as it connects you with native speakers to help improve your language skills. However, it adds a few extra functions that might interest you. You can view the information about users to find a match that interests you. Additionally, you can also send text and audio messages, and even do video calls with other people.If you are a beginner, start from Duolingo and then use Hello English to take full command over the language. For fluent spoken English learners, you can try out Lingbe or HelloTalk.21.What should you already understand to use Hello English?A.Good reading and writing skills.B.Basic listening and speaking tips.C.Different English lessons and books.D.English letters and basic structures.22.Which app is the best choice for an English beginner at first?A. Hello English.B. Duolingo.C.Lingbe.D. HelloTalk.23.What can you do on Lingbe?A.Read the latest news.B. Enjoy the interactive games.C.Practice your spoken English.D.Talk with native speakers in the fleshBA while back I caught a news report on something called ―cou ch surfing and the network of trusting souls who make this phenomenon possible. They offer to put up travelers free of charge and help them on their ways. At first, it sounded unbelievable. I mean, inviting strangers into one's home for one or two nights? Give me a break.However, I was intrigued. I decided to investigate. The only way to truly learn about this phenomenon was to dive in. So I planned a trip to Finland, a country I've always wanted to explore.I would couch surf at every stop there.If ever any anxiety existed when stepping into the unknown, it disappeared when my first host met me at the train station. Ari looked like my idea of a typical Finn: tall and blue-eyed. Finns were also supposed to be famously reserved (寡言少语的). Ari was anything but. He was a live wire, giving me an enthusiastic welcome and hiking with me to his apartment, where he showed me the sleeper sofa, served me tea, and engaged me in warm conversations. He also handed me a key to come and go as I pleased.If this was what couch surfing was all about - trust and friendship - then I had gotten off to a good start. As I boarded my next train to continue my journey, I began to think about this couch-surfing idea. What urged these people to open their homes to strangers? I concluded that there was a desire to lend a hand to like-minded folks who might enrich their own lives.Seven cities in 14 days. Seven hosts. Seven new friends. If couch surfing taught me anything, it's this: Most people are good and generous. Where will couch surfing take me next? Who knows?But I can’t wait to find out.24. Which of the following best explains ―intrigued underlined in the second paragraph?A interested. B. disgusted. C. relaxed. D. embarrassed.25. What can we know about Ari?A. He was reserved like most Finns.B. He treated the author as a friend.C. He talked less but he was friendly .D. He saw off the author at the train station.26.Why did people offer couch surfing to strangers?A. To make friends with strangers.B. To exchange houses for a short time.C. To enrich their own lives by helping others.D. To learn more about others’ family lives.27.What can be the suitable title for the text?A. A Plan for Couch SurfingB. A Free Travel in FinlandC. Experiences in Strangers’ Hous esD. Travel on Trust and CouchesCYou get anxious if there’s no wi-fi in the hotel or mobile phone signal up the mountain. You feel upset if your phone is getting low on power and you secretly worry things will go wrong at work if you’re not there. All these can be called “always on” stress caused by smart phone addiction.For some people, smart phones have liberated them from the nine-to-five work. Flexible working has given them more autonomy in their working lives and enabled them to spend more time with their friends and families. For many others though, smart phones have become cruel masters in their pockets, never allowing them to turn them off and relax.Pittsburgh-based developer Kevin Holesh was worried about how much he was ignoring his family and friends in favor of his iPhone. So he developed an app —Moment —to monitor his usage. The app enables users to see how much time they’re spending on the device and set up warnings if the usage limits are broken. “Moment’s goal is to promote balance in your life,” his website explains. “Some time on your phone, some time off it enjoying your loving family and friends around you.”Dr. Christine Grant, an occupational psychologist at Coventry University, said, “The effects of this ‘always on’ culture are that your mind is never resting, and you’re not giving your body time to recover, so you’re always stressed. And the more tired and stressed we get, the more mistakes we make. Physical and mental health can suffer.”And as the number of connected smart phones is increasing, so is the amount of data. This is leading to a sort of decision paralysis (瘫痪) and is creating more stress in the workplace because people have to receive a broader range of data and communications which are often difficult to manage. “It actually makes it more difficult to make decisions and many do less because they’re controlled by it all and feel they can never escape the office,” said Dr. Christine Grant.28.What’s the first paragraph mainly about?A.The popularity of smart phones.B.The progress of modern technology.C.The signs of “always on” stress.D.The cause of smart phone addiction.29.Kevin Holesh developed Moment to __________.A.research how people use their mobile phonesB.help people control their use of mobile phonesC.make people better use mobile phonesD.increase the fun of using mobile phones30.What’s Dr. Christine Grant’s attitude towards “always on” culture?A.confused.B.positive.C.doubtful.D.critical.31.According to the last paragraph, a greater amount of data means __________.A.we will become less productiveB.we can make a decision more quicklyC.we will be equipped with more knowledgeD.we can work more effectivelyDPlants are boring. They just sit there photosynthesizing (光合作用) while animals have all thefun. Right? Not so much. A new study has found that there is a long history of interactions betweenants and plants. The ant and plant co-evolution (协同进化) started with ants feeding on plants andplants evolving ant-friendly features.Plants make a number of different structures that are specific for ant use. Some plants have evolvedfeatures that persuade ants into defending them from attack from other insects and even mammals.These include hollow thorns that ants will live inside, or extra nectar (琼浆) on leaves or stemsfor the ants to eat. Some ants will just cheat and take the nectar and run, but some will stick aroundand attack anything that tries to hurt the plant. Other plants get ants to help them move their seeds around, by providing them with rich food packets attached to the seeds. The ant will pick up theseed and carry it away, eat the food packet, and leave the seed – often in a nutrient-rich areawhere it'll grow better, and since it's farther away from its parent, they won't have to competefor resources.But scientists weren't sure how the evolutionary relationship between ants and plants got started.If evolution is an arms race between species developing ways to make use of their neighbors, then scientists wanted to know whether plants or ants fired the first shot. It was a chicken-and-egg question, whether things started with ants developing behaviors to take advantage of plants, or plantsevolving structures to take advantage of ants.The history of ants and plants evolving together goes back to the time of the dinosaurs, and it'snot easy to tell from fossils who fired the first shot. However, it is a question of little significance. Scientists say their study matters because it provides a look at how these widespread and complex interactions evolved.32. Some plants attach food packets to their seeds in order to ______.A. reward the antsB. make a fool of antsC. provide nutrition for the seedsD. get the seeds moved around33. What does Paragraph 2 mainly tell us?A. How plants and ants interact.B. What ants do to protect plants.C. How plants and ants survive attacks.D. Why plants and ants need co-evolution.34. Which is true about the evolutionary relationship between ants and plants?A. Ants depended more upon plants.B. It caused a race for better evolution.C. How it got started was uncertain.D. It was of little value for future studies.35. What's the author's purpose of writing the passage?A. To introduce a science research method.B. To inform readers of a latest research finding.C. To arouse readers' interest in science research.D. To criticize people's traditional views about plants.第二节(共5小题; 每小题2分,满分10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。