高二英语上学期第一次月考试题16

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2016-2017学年度涿鹿中学第一次调研考试高二英语试卷班级类型:实验班;考试时间:120分钟;总分 150分注意事项:1.答题前在答题卡、答案纸上填写好自己的姓名、班级、考号等信息2.请将第I卷(选择题)答案用2B铅笔正确填写在答题卡上;请将第II卷(非选择题)答案黑色中性笔正确填写在答案纸上。

第I卷第一部分听力(每题1.5分,共30分)第一节:请听下面5段对话,选出最佳答案。

1.How does the man think the woman can go to the cinema?A. By taxi.B. By bus.C. On foot.2. Where does the woman want to eat tonight?A. At home.B. At Brown’s.C. At Danny’s.3. Why did Mr. Green run into the girl with his car?A. He was drunk.B. He was driving fast.C. H e didn’t see the girl.4. What are the two speakers discussing?A. What they’ll do this weekend.B. Where the man borrowed the book.C. When the woman can get her book back.5. What does the woman want the man to do?A. Hold the door open for her.B. Carry the box for her.C. Open the box for her. 第二节:请听下面5段对话或独白,选出最佳答案。

请听第六段材料,回答第6、7题。

6. When did the man probably get up?A. At 6:30 am.B. At 7:00 am.C. At 7:30 am.7. What does the woman think the man should do next?A. Complain to the manager.B. Call room service again.C. Change a hotel.请听第七段材料,回答第8、9题。

8. How does the man feel about his job interview?A. He is excited.B. He is surprised.C. He is disappointed.9. What will the woman do for the man?A. Try to help him get a job.B. Arrange for an interview.C. Give him a job.请听第八段材料,回答第10-12题。

10. How did the woman get her smartphone?A. She bought it online.B. She bought it downtown.C. She received it as a gift.11. What is the function of Feedly?A. To help users organize life.B. To help users read news.C. To help users study.12. What will the man do next?A. Recommend more apps.B. Talk about smartphones.C. Show how to find the apps.请听第九段材料,回答第13-16题。

13. What does the man know about Norwalk?A. It is located on Route 18.B. It is a beautiful little town.C. It has an interesting museum.14. How far is Amitsville from here?A. About 18 miles southeast.B. About 35 miles northeast.C. About 55 miles southwest.15. Where won’t the man go this time?A. Norwalk.B. Amitsville.C. Newton.16.What do we know about Westfield and Great Town?A. They are in opposite directions.B. They have lots of old houses.C. They have many rare plants.请听第十段材料,回答第17-20题。

17. When was the museum’s construction started?A. In 1958.B. In 1962.C. In 1973.18. How much area do the exhibition halls in the museum cover?A.6000 square meters.B.30000 square meters.C.60000 square meters.19. Where are the large-sized art works displayed?A. In the west hall.B. In the east hall.C. In the round hall.20. When is the museum usually closed?A. On Sunday.B. On Tuesday.C. On Monday.第二部分:阅读理解(共2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,从每题所给的四个选项(A、B、C、D)中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。

AMany countries follow special customs when a child’s baby teeth fall out. Many of these customs tell stories about animals taking the teeth.For example, Koreans have the custom of throwing the fallen tooth onto the roof of a house so that a magpie (喜鹊) can take the tooth away and bring a new tooth for the child. This custom is also followed by some other Asian countries, such as Japan and Vietnam.Other countries, though, have tooth customs about other animals. In Mexico and Spain, for example, it is thought that a mouse takes a fallen tooth away and leaves some money. But in Mongolia, it is dogs that take children’s teeth away. Dogs are highly respected in Mongolian culture. It is believed that the new tooth will grow strong if the baby tooth is fed to a dog, so parents in Mongolia will put their children’s fallen teeth in a piece of meat and feed it to a dog.In France and the USA, a child will put a fallen tooth under his or her pillow before going to bed. It is thought that in the early morning, when the child is still sleeping, the Tooth Fairy will take the tooth away and leave something else under the pillow. What she will leave is hard to know. It is said that in France the Tooth Fairy may leave some candies; however, in the United States, she may leave money.21.Koreans throw a tooth onto the roof of a house in order to __________.A. get moneyB. feed magpiesC. get candiesD. get a new tooth22.In Vietnam, if a child’s tooth falls out, he or she will __________.A. throw it onto the roof of a houseB. feed it to a mouseC. put it in a piece of meat and feed the meat to a dogD. leave it to the Tooth Fairy23.From the last paragraph, we can know that in France and the USA _________.A. a child will put his or her fallen tooth beside the pillowB. the Tooth Fairy takes the fallen teeth away at midnightC. the Tooth Fairy will leave some candies to the children after taking the fallen teeth awayD. no one knows for sure what the Tooth Fairy will leave to the children after taking the fallen teeth away24.The passage is mainly about ___________.A. customs about fallen teeth in western countriesB. customs about fallen teeth in different countriesC. stories about human teethD. stories about some animalsBA large number of women in Western European countries wish that they were born men. The number is said as high as 60% in West Germany.“Women often wish that they had the same chance as men have, and believe it is still men’s world,” said Dr James Holden, one of the sci entists who did the study.Anne Harper has a very good job for an international oil company. She also believes in “Women’ s Liberation(解放)”.“I don’t wish that I were a man,” she says, “and I don’t think many women do. But I do wish that people would stop looking down upon us women. At work, for example, we often do the work that men do but get paid less. There are still a lot of jobs that are usually the best ones and open only to men. If you’re a man, you have a much better chance of leading an exciting life. How many women pilots are there ... or engineers or scientists?”25.What can we learn from the first paragraph?A. 60% women in West Germany wish that they were born men.B. Most women in Western European countries wish that their babies were all boys.C. 60% Western European women wish that they were born men.D. 60% Western European women who wish that they were born men are from West Germany. 26.“It is still men’s world.” means “______.”A. There’re more men than women in the worldB. There’re more men scientists or engineers than women scientists or engineers in the worldC. Women have not been given the same chance as menD. Women cannot live without men27.Which is not true about Anne Harper?A. Anne Harper has a very good job for an international oil companyB. she is one of the scientists who did the study.C. She believes in “Women’ s Liberation.”D. She doesn’t want to be a man.CMost young people enjoy some form of physical activity. It may be walking, cycling, or swimming, or in winter, skating or skiing. It may be game of some kind football, hockey, golf, or tennis. It may be mountaineering.Those who have a passion for climbing high and difficult mountains are often looked upon with astonishment. Why are men and women willing to suffer cold and hardship, and to take risks on high mountains? This astonishment is caused probably by the difference between mountaineering and other forms of activity to which men give their relaxation.Mountaineering is a sport and not a game. There are no man-made rules, as there are for such games as golf and football. There are, of course, rules of a different kind which it would be dangerous to ignore (忽略), but it is this freedom from man-made rules that makes mountaineering attractive to many people. Those who climb mountains are free to use their own methods.If we compare mountaineering and other more familiar sports, we might think that one big dif ference is that mountaineering is not a “team game”. We should be mistaken in this. There are, it is true, no “matches” between “teams” of climbers, but when climbers areon a rock face linked by a rope on which their lives may depend, there is obviously teamwork.The mountain climber knows that he may have to fight forces that are stronger and more powerful than man. He has to fight the forces of nature. His sport requires high mental and physical qualities.A mountain climber continues to improve in skill year after year. A skier (滑雪者) is probably past his best by the age of thirty, and most international tennis champions are in their early twenties. But it is not unusual for man of fifty or sixty to climb the highest mountains in Alps. They may take more time than younger men, but they probably climb with more skill and less waste of effort, and they certainly experience equal enjoyment. 28. The main difference between a sport and a game lies in ______.A. activityB. uniformC. rulesD. skills29. Mountaineering can be called a team sport because ______.A. mountaineers depend on each other while climbingB. teams compete against each otherC. it is an Olympic eventD. there are five climbers on each team30. Mountaineers compete against ______.A. each otherB. natureC. other teamsD. international standards31. Which of the following might be the best title?A. How to Climb High MountainsB. Mountain ClimbersC. Challenging Sports ActivitiesD. MountaineeringDBrenda Bongos was a happy, artistic girl. She had one big dream—to play the drums in a band. But one big problem lay in her way. To be good enough to play in a band, Brenda had to practice a lot, but she lived next-door to a lot of old people. Many of them are sick. She knew that the sound of beating drums would really get on their nerves. So, she had tried playing in the strangest places: a basement, a kitchen, and even in a shower. But there was always someone it would annoy.One day, while watching a science documentary on TV, she heard that sound cannot travelin space, because there's no air. At that moment, Brenda Bongos decided to become a sort of musical astronaut.With the help of a lot of time, books and work, Brenda built a space bubble. This was a big glass ball connected to a machine which sucked out all the air inside. All that would be left inside was a drum kit(成套设备) and a chair. Brenda got into the space suit she had made, entered the bubble, turned on the machine, and played those drums like a wild child.It wasn't long before Brenda Bongos came very famous. Many people came to see her play in her space bubble. Shortly afterwards she came out of the bubble and started giving concerts. Her fame spread so much that the government suggested that she be part of a unique space journey. F inally, Brenda was a real musical astronaut, and had gone far beyond her first ambition of playing drums in a band.Years later, when asked how she had achieved all this, she thought for a moment, and said: ''If those old people next – door hadn't mattered so much to me, I wouldn't have found a solution, and none of this would have ever happened.''32.Why did Brenda try to play in the strangest places?A. Because she didn't want others to hear her playB. Because she didn't mean to disturb others.C. Because she didn't have her own roomD. Because she didn’t like her neighbors.33.Brenda started to give concerts _______.A. after she practiced in her space bubbleB. when she became part of the unique space journeyC. after she became a real musical astronautD. when people came to see her in the space bubble34.Brenda became famous because ______.A. she was good at music and scienceB. she became a real musical astronautC. she invented a special way of practiceD. she played well and had a talent35.It can be inferred from the text that: " _______".A. He laughs best who laughs lastB. It's never too old to learnC. Two heads are better than oneD. One good turn deserves another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。