2016届江苏某校高三第二次模拟考试英语试卷一、单项选择1. Different cultural features of ethnic groups are ________ one another and work out a melody.A in tune withB in parallel withC in contrast toD in response to2. ________ an increase in foreign legal conflicts,China is expected to see the number continue to rise.A To witnessB Being witnessedC WitnessedD Having witnessed3. At the end of the historic area,Wilmington displayed its ________ as a working port city:large warehouses and a few other dated office buildings.A achievementB reputationC characterD standard4. —Do you think I'm a good surfer?—Of course! I ________ you earlier.You made it look so easy,graceful even.A am watchingB was watchingC have watchedD had watched5. So far, only one man has ________ a theory that seems to fit all the facts.A come up withB put up withC lined up withD caught up with6. —Your car should be ready next Tuesday.—We were ________ hoping you'd be able to do it by this Friday.A stillB ratherC alwaysD even7. Many thought that after starring in the immensely popular drama,Nirvana in Fire,Hu Ge would ________ and actively seek new roles.A make a mountain out of a molehillB have too many irons in the fireC strike while the iron is hotD put the cart before the horse8. We work during the week,but weekends and evenings are usually ________.A vacantB casualC emptyD clear9. Passion is passion and it doesn't matter ________ it's directed.Exactly,it can be coins or sports or politics.A whyB howC whetherD where10. Different tastes among tourists from outside the mainland ________ the list of thecountry's attractions.A topB shapeC leadD show11. It wasn't easy having my friends talk about their freshman years ________ I wasn't a part of.A whomB whenC thatD what12. The desk that ________ clean so I could do homework was always surrounded with bowlsof bad milk,old magazines and so on.A may have beenB would have beenC must have beenD should have been13. He ________ whether to set aside the minor differences,then he did.A debatedB predictedC plottedD calculated14. How could I lie to her she lived for the truth,whether it was found in music or people?A unlessB whenC whileD though15. —Mum,look at my shoes.I need a new pair.—________.I bought them for you only a week ago!A You betB You said itC You don't sayD You name it二、完形填空16. Human growth is a process of experimentation, trial, and error eventually leading to wisdom. Each time you choose to trust yourself and take action, you can never quite be certain how the situation will ___.Sometimes you are victorious, and sometimes you become disappointed.The ___experiments, however, are no less valuable than the experiments that finally prove successful; in fact, you ___learn more from your “failures” than you do from your ___. If you have made what you think to be a mistake or failed to live up to your own ___, you will most likely put up a barrier between your essence and the part of your that is the alleged(声称的)wrong-doer.However, viewing past actions as ___implies guilt and blame, and it is not possible to learn anything meaningful while you are engaged in blaming. ___, forgiveness is required when you are severely judging yourself. Forgiveness is the act of erasing an ___debt. There are four kinds of forgiveness.The first is beginner forgiveness for yourself.The second of forgiveness is beginner forgiveness for another.The third kind of forgiveness is ___forgiveness of yourself. This is for serious misbehaviors, the ones you carry with deep ____. When you do something that violates your own values and principles, you create a gap between your standards and your actual ____.In such a case, you need to work very hard at ____yourself for these deeds so that you can close this gap. This does not ____that you should rush to forgive yourself or sh ouldn’t feel regret, ____taking pleasure in these feelings for a prolonged period of time is not healthy.The ____and perhaps most difficult one of the advanced forgiveness of another.At some time of our life, you may have been severely wronged or hurt by another person to such a degree that forgiveness seems ____.However, harboring anger and revenge fantasies only keeps you ____in victimhood. Under such a circumstance, you should force yourself to see the bigger picture. By so doing, you will be able to ____the focus away from the anger and resentment.It is only through forgiveness that you can erase wrongdoing and ____the memory. When you can ____release the situation, you may come to see it as a necessary part of your growth. (1)A turn outB turn upC break upD break out(2)A importantB engagedC failedD successful(3)A obviouslyB necessarilyC continuouslyD usually(4)A successB failureC faultD benefit(5)A abilityB expectationsC beliefD experiences(6)A mistakesB victoriesC experimentsD fantasies(7)A StillB ThereforeC InsteadD However(8)A absurdB originalC emotionalD unusual(9)A ordinaryB advancedC alternativeD certain(10)A wisdomB mercyC injuryD shame(11)A thoughtB approachC behaviorD purpose(12)A punishingB forgivingC blamingD praising(13)A meanB proveC reflectD represent(14)A andB orC butD so(15)A uncertainB premierC nextD last(16)A essentialB valuableC impossibleD unavoidable(17)A trappedB locatedC lostD occupied(18)A driveB dragC putD shift(19)A keepB refreshC weakenD clean(20)A naturallyB finallyC definitelyD initially三、阅读选择17.5 Secrets of Web Travel SitesBooking a trip on an online travel site is convenient, but comes with its own set of problems.1. They know who's on a Mac and who's on a PC and who's going to spend more.Last year, US travel research company Orbitz tracked people's online activities to test out whether Mac users spend more on travel than PC users. On average, Mac users lay outUS$20-30 more per night on hotels and go for more stars, according to the Wall Street Journal. As a result, online travel sites show these users more expensive travel options first. To avoid inadvertently paying more, sort results by price.2. Their software doesn't always hook up to the hotel's system.A guaranteed reservation is almost impossible to come by anywhere-but the risk of your flight or hotel being overbooked increases with third-party providers. The middle-man's software isn't immune to system errors, so always call the hotel or airline to make sure your booking was processed.3. Don't be fooled by packages: Often, they're low-end items grouped together.Ever notice how travel sites recommend a hotel, a rental car, and tour package all in one click? These deals usually feature travel that no one wants, like flights with multiple layovers. Check the fine print.4. You could miss out on loyalty points.Third-party providers can get between you and frequent flyer miles or points. Many hotel loyalty programmes don't recognize external sites, others award only minimum points and exclude special offers, like double points on hotel stays.5. Once your trip is purchased, you're on your own.An online travel agency can't provide assistance the same way an agent can if a flight is cancelled or a room is substandard. Basically, when you arrive at the airport or hotel, you're just another client who booked at the lowest rate.(1)Which of the following is TRUE?A Third-party providers can ensure your reservation. B Mac users are likely to spend more mone y than PC users. C An online travel agency functions the same as an agent. D Package s usually provide travelers with satisfactory programmes.(2)What's the purpose of the passage?A To encourage readers to book a trip on an online travelsite. B To make an advertisement about several travel sites online. C To convince rea ders not to book a trip on an online travel site. D To warnreaders of some problems with booking trips online.18.Want to add some hours to your day? Ok, you probably can't change the fabric of time. But a new study suggests that the way you feel about your goal can change your concept of time and that some simple strategies could make you feel less rushed.In a series of experiments, Jordan Etkin, a professor of marketing at Duke, and her co-authors, Loannis Evangelidis and Jennifer Aaker, looked at what happens when people see their goals as conflicting with one another. In one, they asked some participants to list two of their goals that they felt were in conflict, and others simply to list two of their goals. Those who were forced to think about conflicting aims felt more time pressure than those who weren't. In another experiment, the researchers gave participants a similar prompt regarding goal conflict, but this time measured their anxiety levels as well as their attitudes toward time. They found that participants who thought about conflicting goals had more anxiety than those who didn't, and that this, in turn, led to feelings of being short on time. "Stress and anxiety and time pressure are closely linked concepts, "Dr. Etkin explained." When we feel more stress and anxiety in relation to our personal goals, that manifests as a sense of having less time."Technological advances that allow people to do lots of things at once may increase the feeling of goal conflict, she said. "I think the easier it is for us to try to deal with a lot of these things at the same time," She said "the more opportunity there is for us to feel this conflict between our goals."She isn't the first to suggest that actual busyness isn't the only thing that can make us feel busy. At the Atlantic, Derek Thompson wrote that "as a country, we're working less than we did in the 1960s and 1980s." He offered a number of possible reasons some Americans still feel so overworked, including "the fluidness(不固定性)of work and leisure." As he put it: "The idea that work begins and ends at the office is wrong. On the one hand, flexibility is nice, On the other, mixing work and leisure together creates an always-on expectation that makes it hard for white-collar workers to escape the shadow of work responsibilities."And Brigid Schulte writes in her 2014 book Overwhelmed:How to Work, Love, and Play When No One Has the Time that some researchers believe "time has no sharp edges. What often matters more than the activity we're doing at a moment in time, they have found, is how we feel about it. Our concept of time is indeed, our reality."Fortunately, Dr. Etkin and her team did find ways of making us feel better about time-or, at least, of reducing the negative influence of goal conflict. When participants performed a breathing exercise that reduced their anxiety, the impact of such conflict on their perception of time was less pronounced. Reframing anxiety as excitement(by reading the phrase "I am excited!" aloud several times)had a similar effect.Breathing and reframing may not solve everyone's time problems—Ms. Schulte writes that some Americans are indeed working more than they used to. She cites the work of the sociologists Michael Hout and Caroline Hanley, who have "found that working parents combined put in 13 more hours a week on the job in 2000 than they did in 1970. That's 676 hours of additionally paid work a year for a family. And that's on top of all the unpaid hours spent caring for children and keeping the house together." Sometimes, we may feel short on time because we actually are. However, Dr. Etkin believes her findings suggest we may "have the ability to influence our experience of time more than we think we do.""We're all going to have times in our lives when our goals seem to be in more conflict than others," she said. But with techniques like the ones her team tested, "we really can help ourselves feel like we have more time."(1)What makes people feel rushed today?A Goal conflict.B High pressure.C Too much expectation.D Lack of exercise.(2)Which of the following statements is TRUE according to the passage?A Most people are having less work to do nowadays.B People under a lot of stress have a better sense of time.C Technological advances allow people to feel less stressed.D The flexibility of work increases white-collar workers'pressure.(3)The underlined sentence "Our concept of time is, indeed, our reality." means ______A we should make full use of time.B we value time more than the way we live.C we can feel better about time if we want to.D we don't have the time to enjoy life in reality.19."Over the years the unthinkable has become thinkable and today we sense we are close to being able to alter human heredity(遗传)." These were the words of David Baltimore of the California Institute of Technology, on December 1st, when he opened a three-day meeting in Washington to discuss the morality and use of human gene editing. Dr Baltimore is an old hand at these sorts of discussions, for he was also a participant in the Asilomar conference, in 1975, which brought scientists together to discuss a safe way of using the then-new technology of recombinant DNA, and whose recommendations influenced a generation of biotechnology researchers.Four decades on, the need for a similar sort of chin-wag has arisen. The International Summit on Human Gene Editing has been held by the national scientific academies of three countries-America, Britain and China. They are particularly concerned about whether gene editing should be used to make heritable changes to the human germ line, something Dr Baltimore described as a deep and troubling question. Like those of Asilomar, the conclusions of this meeting will not be binding. But the hope is that, again like Asilomar, a mixture of common sense and peer pressure will create a world in which scientists are trusted to regulate themselves, rather than having politicians and civil servants do it for them. The meeting is being held against a backdrop of rapid scientific advance, Since 2012 research into a new, easy-to-use editing tool called CRISPR-Cas9 has blossomed. This technique involves a piece of RNA(a chemical messenger, which can be used to recognise a target section of DNA)and an enzyme(酶)called a nuclease that can snip unwanted genes out and paste new ones in.Public interest was aroused in April, when Chinese scientists announced they had edited genes in non-viable(无活力的)human embryos, and again in November when British researchers said they had successfully treated a one-year-old girl who had leukaemia(白血病), using gene-edited T-cells. T-cells are part of the immune system that attack, among other things, tumour cells. The researchers altered T-cells from a healthy donor to encourage them to recognise and kill the patient's cancer, to make them immune to her leukaemia drug, and to ensure they did not attack her healthy cells.In another recent development, a firm called Edit as Medicine, which is based in Cambridge, Massachusetts, has said it hopes, in 2017, to start human clinical trials of CRISPR-Cas9 as a treatment for a rare genetic form of blindness known as Leber congenital amaurosis(伯氏先天性黑蒙). Though other companies are already testing gene-editing therapies, these employ older, clunkier forms of the technology that seem likely to have less commercial potential. Moreover, researchers at the Broad Institute, also in Cambridge, said this week that they had made changes to CRISPR-Cas9 which greatly reduce the rate of editing errors-one of the main obstacles to the technique's medical use.On the subject of germ-line editing, Eric Lander, the Broad's head, told the meeting it would be useful only in rare cases and said it might be a good idea to "exercise caution"? before making permanent changes to the gene pool. The need for caution is advice that might also be heeded by those pursuing work in animals other than people, and in plants-subjects not being covered by the summit.(1)Which of the following is TRUE about CRISPR-Cas9?A It has fewer side effects.B It can modify humangene. C It can protect immune system. D It has less commercial potential.(2)The underlined word "chin-wag" in Paragraph 2 can be replaced by ______.A discussionB negotiationC argumentD comparison(3)What can be inferred from the passage?A Dr. Baltimore started his research on modifying gene in1975. B Scientists'opinions about the use of gene editing are consistent. C CRISPR-Cas9 has been applied to cure Leber congenital amaurosis. D More research should be m ade before the technology comes into wide use.(4)This passage is most probably a ______.A science fictionB scientific reportC conference summaryD commercial advert isement20.Before the law sits a gatekeeper. To this gatekeeper comes a man from the country who asks to gain entry into the law. But the gatekeeper says that he cannot grant him entry at the moment. The man thinks about it and then asks if he will be allowed to come in sometime later on. "It is poss ible," says the gatekeeper, "but not now." ①The gate to the law stands open, as always, and the gatekeeper walks to the side, so the man bends over in order to see through the gate into the inside. When the gatekeeper notices that, he laughs and says: "If it tempts you so much, try going inside in spite of my prohibition. But take note. I am powerful. And I am only the most lowly gatekeeper. But from room to room stand gatekeepers, each more powerful than the other. I cannot endure even one glimpse of the third."The man from the country has not expected such difficulties: the law should always be accessible for everyone, he thinks, but as he now looks more closely at the gatekeeper in his fur coat, at his large pointed nose and his long, thin, black Tartar's beard, he decides that it would be better to wait until he gets permission to go inside. The gatekeeper gives him astool and allows him to sit down at the side in front of the gate. There he sits for days and years. He makes many attempts to be let in, and he wears the gatekeeper out with his requests. The gatekeeper often interrogates him briefly, questioning him about his homeland and many other things, but they are indifferent questions, the kind great men put, and at the end he always tells him once more that he cannot let him inside yet. The man, who has equipped himself with many things for his journey, spends everything, no matter how valuable, to win over the gatekeeper. The latter takes it all but, as he does so, says, "I am taking this only so t hat you do not think you have failed to do anything."②During the many years the man observes the gatekeeper almost continuously. He forgets the other gatekeepers, and this first one seems to him the only barrier for entry into the law. He curses the unlucky circumstance, in the first years thoughtlessly and out loud; later, as he grows old, he only mumbles to himself. He becomes childish and, since in the long years studying the gatekeeper he has also come to know the fleas(跳蚤)in his fur collar, he even asks the fleas to help him persuade the gatekeeper. Finally his eyesight grows weak, and he does not know whether things are really darker around him or whether his eyes are merely deceiving him. But he recognizes now in the darkness a ray of light which breaks out of the gateway to the law. Now he no longer has much time to live.Before his death he gathers in his head all his experiences of the entire time up into one question which he has not yet put to the gatekeeper. He waves to him, since he can no longer lift up his stiffening body. The gatekeeper has to bend way down to him, for the great difference has changed things considerably to the disadvantage of the man. ③"You are insatiable(不知足的)." "Everyone strives after the law," says the man, "so how is it that in these many years no one except me has requested entry?" The gatekeeper sees that the man is already dying and, in order to reach his diminishing sense of hearing, he shouts at him, "Here no one else can gain entry, since this entrance was assigned only to you. I'm going now to close it."④(1)Which can best describe the man from the country?A Brave but innocent.B Loyal but ridiculous.C Tolerant but stubborn.D Trustw orthy but childish.(2)What is the implied meaning of the underlined sentences?A Anyone who breaks the law will get severe punishment.B It's next to impossible for p eople to gain entry into the law.C The gatekeepers are powerful enough to defend the la w.D All the gatekeepers take full responsibility for obeying the law.(3)The sentence "What do you still want to know now?" asks the gatekeeper can be put in ______.A ①B ②C ③D ④(4)Which of the following is TRUE?A The gatekeeper is actually the symbol of responsibility.B All efforts made by the man f rom the country are in vain.C The man from the country finally gains access into the law.D A close relationship is formed between the gatekeeper and the man.(5)Why is the man from the country eager to have access to the law continuously?A Because he is anxious to explore the nature of law.B Because no one can gain entry int o the law except him.C Because the gatekeeper promises him entry into the law.D B ecause he knows how to take advantage of the gatekeeper.(6)What may be the title of the novel?A Before the law.B Above the law.C A countryman's life.D A gatekeeper's duty.四、任务型阅读21.请认真阅读下面短文,并根据所读内容在文章后表格中的空格里填入一个最恰当的单词。