江苏省启东中学2021届高三上学期期初考试英语试题含答案

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江苏省启东中学2020-2021学年度第一学期期初考试高三英语本试卷共10页,包含第Ⅰ卷(选择题)和第Ⅱ卷(非选择题)两部分,满分为150分,考试时间为120分钟。

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.What will the speakers do tonight?A.Visit Mary.B.Go out of town.C.Host a dinner.2.How does the woman go to work this week?A.By car.B.By bike.C.On foot.3.What time does Dave’s meeting start?A.At8:30.B.At9:00.C.At10:00.4.What is Helen going to do?A.Buy some books.B.Study in the library.C.Attend a history class.5.What is the woman’s feeling now?A.Relief.B.Regret.C.Embarrassment.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,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、7题。

6.What is Tom busy doing?A.Raising money.B.Writing a lab report.C.Giving classes to children.7.Who might be able to help Tom this week?A.Mike.B.Cathy.C.Jane.听第7段材料,回答第8至10题。

8.Why is Jack leaving early?A.To avoid getting stuck in traffic.B.To enjoy the scenery on the way.C.To buy some gifts for his family.9.What does Judy often do at the railway station?A.Read books.B.Call some friends.C.Look around the shops.10.What are the speakers mainly talking about?A.What to do next year.B.Where to go for vacations.C.How to pass the waiting time.听第8段材料,回答第11至13题。

11.Why does Bill look troubled?A.He is short of money.B.He has made a big mistake.C.He is facing a tough choice.12.What is Bill now?A.A college student.B.An army officer.C.A computer engineer.13.What does the woman seem to suggest Bill do?A.Learn to repair cars.B.Decline the job offer.C.Ask his uncle for advice.听第9段材料,回答第14至16题。

14.What is the woman recommending to the man?A.A writer.B.A club.C.A course.15.What is the woman reading now?A.The Beautiful Mind.B.The Great Gatsby.C.The Kite Runner.16.How much time does the man have to read the book?A.Two weeks.B.Three weeks.C.Four weeks.听第10段材料,回答第17至20题。

17.What is the speaker doing?A.Reporting a study.B.Chairing a meeting.C.Teaching a class.18.What should you pay most attention to when taking notes?A.Listening.B.Reading.C.Writing.19.What is an advantage of using symbols in note-taking?A.It keeps information secret.B.It leaves space for future use.C.It makes key words noticeable.20.What will the speaker do next?A.Ask a few questions.B.Show some notes.C.Make a summary.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。

AInnovative Designs for AccessibilityDeadline:2020-04-30Award:$7,500CADOpen to:University studentsThe Innovative(创新的)Designs for Accessibility student competition challenges students across Canada to use their creativity to develop innovative,cost-effective and practical solutions to accessibility barriers for people with disabilities.(Read more)Clean Tech CompetitionDeadline:2020-04-13Award:$28,000Open to:Students13-15years oldThe Clean Tech Competition is a unique,worldwide research and design challenge forpre-college youth.The competition is designed to build a deeper understanding of STEM(science, technology,engineering,and math)related concepts,recognize outstanding talent,and prepare the next generation of globally competitive innovators.(Read more)Agile Robotics CompetitionDeadline:2020-04-10Award:$17,500Open to:AdultsAgile Robotics Competition is a simulation-based(仿真)competition designed to promote agility(灵活)in industrial robot systems by employing the latest advances in artificial intelligence and robot planning.The competition will be held virtually(虚拟的),so there is no need to travel to compete.The competition will use the Gazebo simulation tool.(Read more)Wearable Robotics Innovation ChallengeDeadline:2020-04-24Award:$5,000Open to:EveryoneThe Wearable Robotics Association is inviting entries that represent the most innovative new ideas in wearable robotic technology.The review committee will select as many as ten finalists.The one considered to be the most innovative will be announced at the conference and will receive $5,000to accelerate the new technology.(Read more)21.Which competition favors competitors with a creative mind in helping the disabled?A.Innovative Designs for Accessibility.B.Clean Tech Competition.C.Agile Robotics Competition.D.Wearable Robotics Innovation Challenge.22.What’s the aim of Clean Tech Competition?A.To make a research about STEM.B.To encourage university students to be innovators.C.To help students prepare for the university.D.To find talented teenagers and develop their ability to innovate.23.What can we know about the four competitions?A.They are open to everyone.B.Every competitor can get an award.C.They are held in April.D.They are held virtually.BGeorge Nakashima always insisted that he was a simple woodworker,not an artist.Even though major museums exhibited his works and the director of the American Craft Museum called him a national treasure,Mr Nakashima rejected the label of artist.For almost fifty years he simplywent on shaping wood into beautiful chairs,tables,and cabinets.Nakashima had a clear goal.He intended each piece of furniture he made to be as perfect as possible.Even making a box was an act of creation,because it produced an object that had never existed before.Initially Nakashima used local wood,sometimes from his own ter,he traveled to seek out English oak,Persian walnut,African zebra wood and Indian teak.He especially liked to find giant roots that had been dug out of the ground after a tree was taken down. Nakashima felt that making this wood into furniture was a way of allowing the tree to live again.Most furniture makers prefer perfect boards,but Nakashima took pleasure in using wood with interesting knots(节疤)and cracks.These irregularities gave the wood personality and showed that the tree had lived a happy life.He never failed to create an object that was both useful and beautiful.One early piece Nakashima designed was a three-legged chair for his small daughter Mira,to use when she sat at the table for meals.The Mira chair became so popular that Nakashima later made both low and high versions.Another famous piece,the Conoid chair,has two legs supported by bladelike feet. Always,Nakashima’s designs were precise and graceful,marked by a simplicity that revealed his love for the wood.As the years passed,Nakashima's reputation grew and his work received many awards.His children Mira and Kevin,now adults,joined the team of crafts-people in their father’s studio. Nakashima’s dream of integrating work and family had come true.24.Which of the following best describes Nakashima?A.Generous and outgoing.B.Honest and simple.C.Capable and friendly.D.Creative and modest.25.Why was Nakashima called a national treasure?A.His art work made trees live again.B.He used precious wood materials.C.His chairs were beautifully designed.D.He was devoted to making furniture.26.What can we learn about Nakashima from the last two paragraphs?A.He loved his work and family.B.He made chairs of the same style.C.He sought for a simple life and art.D.He was lost in researching the wood.27.What can be inferred about Mira and Kevin?A.They had an art studio of their own.B.They still lacked the ability to create art works.C.They had a common interest with their father.D.They enjoyed the same reputation with their father.CBefore the end of the year,employees at Ubiquitous Energy,a company in Redwood City,Calif, will gather in a window-lined conference room to stare toward the future.That’s because their new glass windows will offer more than an amazing view of the North California landscape.They will also be able to power the company’s lights,computers and air conditioners.Several years in the making,Ubiquitous’energy-producing glass is a remarkable technological achievement.Its power lies in the layers of organic polymers(聚合物)between sheets of glass.As light enters the window,the flow of electrons between the polymer layers creates an electric current,which is then collected by tiny wires in the glass.“It’s sort of like a transparent computer display run in reverse(反过来),”says Veeral Hardev, director of business development at Ubiquitous Energy.“Instead of electricity being shuttled to different points in a display to light them up,light is producing electricity to be shuttled out of different points in the window.”Right now the windows produce about a third as much electricity from a given amount of sunlight as the typical solar cells used in roof panels(板).These windows,about half as transparent as ordinary glass,don’t work as well as transparent ones.Hardev says the company is likely to improve the transparency significantly.As for the lower output of electricity,he notes that windows can cover a much greater surface area than a roof,so numerous windows will produce a surprisingly larger amount of electricity than the production from a rooftop full of higher-efficiency solar panels.“You could do both.”says Hardev.“But you’ll get more from the windows.The biggest challenge,he adds,is increasing the windows from less than two square feet currently to about50 square feet.”28.What makes the new glass windows special?A.They can offer an amazing view.B.They are controlled by computers.C.They can power the conference room.D.They can help stare toward the future.29.What is Hardev trying to explain in Paragraph3?A.The source of light.B.The significance of different points.C.The similarity of computer and glass.D.The working principle of energy-producing glass.30.What can affect power production according to the passage?A.The transparency of the glass.B.The quality of the rooftop.C.The height of the solar panels.D.The thickness of the glass.31.Which of the following is the best title for the passage?A.Windows:A New Challenge of TechnologyB.Windows:No Longer Just for Letting in the LightC.Power:A Pressing Problem in the Near FutureD.Power:Not Enough from Rooftop Solar PanelsDTell a child they need to experience another painful medical procedure,and you’ll probably have a kid filled with fear and anxiety.Tell that same child they’ll have a chance to strike flying cheeseburgers in outer space while their doctor works on them,and they might feel a little different.That night-and-day difference in how kids respond to the treatment of their doctors is the reason for Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford’s innovative use of virtual reality technology. Packard Children’s lets kids participate in experiences that can significantly reduce their anxiety—and even their pain.This isn’t the first time Packard Children’s has introduced those innovative methods.In2015, Thomas Caruso,M.D.,the founder of Packard Children’s Childhood Anxiety Reduction through Innovation and Technology(CHARIOT)program,introduced the Bedside Entertainment and Relaxation Theater(BERT).The system projects videos on a large screen attached to patients’gurneys(装有轮子的床)so they can watch movies and music videos all the way to the operating room.And in early2017,CHARIOT launched an interactive video game called Sevo the Dragon, which projects on the BERT screen,so the tiniest patients have something fun to do while breathing medicine through a mask.“Children shouldn’t grow up being afraid to go to the doctor to have a shot,but certain experiences can cause strong unreasonable fear that last into adulthood.Needle phobia(晕针)is acommon example of that,and it is the primary reason adults avoid important immunizations(免疫) like flu shots.”Caruso told Stanford Medicine News Center.VR distraction therapy is being used for kids at Packard Children’s as young as age6in specific areas like the emergency department,and the tool will be widely used in all of the Children’s Health’s surgery clinics by the end of2020.32.What is paragraph1mainly about?A.Doctors’favor of eating cheeseburgers.B.Kids’fear and anxiety towards doctors.C.Doctors’working on saving the children.D.Kids’different reactions to medical treatment.33.What is the purpose of the CHARIOT program?A.To ease the patients’worries.B.To introduce a new technology.C.To help children to breathe medicine.D.To show advertisements to the patients.34.What does the underlined word“it”refer to in paragraph4?A.A kind of flu.B.The fear of needle for no reason.C.The immune system.D.A kind of medicine for children.35.The VR therapy offers__________experiences to the patients.A.disappointingB.conventionalC.relaxingD.unreasonable第二节(共5小题;每小题2.5分,满分12.5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。