1
江苏省扬州中学 2019 年第一学期月考考试
高 一 早 培 英 语 试 卷 2019.12
第 I 卷 选择题 (共 100 分)
第一部分 听力(共两节,满分 30 分)
第一节
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 does the woman suggest the man do?
A. Get some food. B. Book a table. C. Find a job.
2. Where most probably are the speakers talking?
A. At home. B. On a tennis court. C. At a restaurant.
3. Why didn’t the woman come to the party?
A. She was tired. B. She was studying. C. She was burned.
4. How does the man feel about the exhibition?
A. It is boring. B. It is common. C. It is good.
5. What are the speakers mainly talking about?
A. Shopping for a coat. B. Camping experience.C. Cold weather.
第二节
听下面 5 段对活或独白。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 should the speakers do next?
A. Walk their dogs. B. Make a fire. C. Buy some hot dogs.
7. Which of the following is dangerous here according to the man?
A. Flying Frisbee. B. Building sand castles. C. Playing hide-and-seek.
听第 7 段材料,回答第 8、9 题。
8. Where will the man go next month?
A. To Rome. B. To Paris. C. To Greece.
9. What can we learn about the woman?
A. She is on holiday now. B. She loves historic cities.
C. She has no holidays.
听第 8 段材料,回答第 10 至 12 题。
10. Why was the man late this time according to himself?2
A. He saw a show. B. He had an accident. C. He woke up late.
11. What is the nationality of the man’s boss?
A. Australian. B. Chinese. C. Japanese.
12. What does the man think of his boss?
A. Optimistic. B. Unkind. C. Sensitive.
听第 9 段材料,回答第 13 至 16 题。
13. Why did the man want to see Mr. Williams?
A. To hand in his paper. B. To get a sick note.
C. To get more time for a paper.
14. When is the deadline of the man’s paper if he is not ill?
A. In two days. B. In four days. C. In six days.
15. Why does the man fail to hand in his paper on time?
A. He has no permission. B. He has been ill. C. He has many exams.
16. Which is not in the procedure for postponing the due day of the paper?
A. The doctor signs his name. B. The man fills out a form.
C. Mr. Williams signs his name.
听第 10 段材料,回答第 17 至 20 题。
17. Who is Kate Ferguson?
A. A skilled potter. B. A pottery student. C. A magazine editor.
18. What will take place at the end of the workshop?
A. A skills show. B. A picnic. C. An art sale.
19. How much does the workshop cost?
A. $ 275. B. $ 600. C. $ 875.
20. Why does the speaker mention the Van Howe Chemical Company?
A. It is a sponsor of the workshop. B. Ferguson works for it.
C. The class is held there.
第二部分:阅读理解(共两节,40 分)
第一节(共 12 小题;每小题 2.5 分,共 30 分)
阅读下列短文,从每题所给的 A、B、C、D 四个选项中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将
该项涂黑。
A
Tiny microbes(微生物)are at the heart of a new agricultural technique to manage harmful
greenhouse gas. Scientists have discovered how microbes can be used to turn carbon dioxide into
soil-enriching limestone(石灰石), with the help of a type of tree that grows in tropical areas, such
as West Africa.
Researchers have found that when the Iroko tree is grown in dry, acidic soil and treated with a
combination of natural fungi(霉菌)and other bacteria, not only does the tree grow well, it also
produces the mineral limestone in the soil around its root.3
The Iroko tree makes a mineral by combining Ca from the earth with CO2 from the
atmosphere. The bacteria then create the conditions under which this mineral turns into limestone.
The discovery offers a new way to lock carbon into the soil, keeping it out of the atmosphere. In
addition to storing carbon in the trees leaves and in the form of limestone, the mineral in the soil
makes it more suitable for agriculture.
The discovery could lead to reforestation(重新造林) projects in tropical countries, and help
reduce carbon dioxide in the atmosphere in the developing world. It has already been used in West
Africa and is being tested in Bolivia, Haiti and India.
The findings were made in a three-year project involving researchers from the Universities of
Edinburgh, Granada, Lausanne and Delft University of Technology. The project examined several
microbiological methods of locking CO2 as limestone, and the Iroko-bacteria way showed best
results. Work was funded by the European Commission under the Future&Emerging
Technologies(FET)scheme.
Dr Bryne Ngwenya of the University of Edinburgh’s School of GeoSciences, who led the
research, said:“By taking advantage of this natural limestone-producing process, we have a
low-tech, safe, readily employed and easily operating way to lock carbon out of the atmosphere,
while improving farming conditions in tropical countries.”
21.The passage is mainly introducing______.
A.some useful natural fungi and bacteria
B.a new way to deal with greenhouse gas
C.a newly-found tree in West Africa
D.the soil-enriching limestone created by scientists
22.Which of the following is True about tiny microbes?
A.Most tiny microbes like living in dry, acidic soil.
B.CO2 can be broken down by natural fungi and bacteria.
C.The more greenhouse gas is, the more active tiny microbes become.
D.Tiny microbes get along well with the Iroko tree in special soil.
23.What does the underlined word"it"in paragraph 3 probably refer to?
A.Soil. B.Carbon. C.Limestone. D.Atmosphere
24.According to the passage, what can we infer?
A.The action of the tiny microbes can increase the oxygen in the earth
B.Researchers have done the experiment on trees in Africa for three years
C.Researchers tend to use natural power to solve their problem
D.West Africa is one of the most polluted areas all over the world
B
Does your brain work like a dictionary? A mathematical analysis of the connections among
definitions of English words has uncovered hidden structures that man resembles the way words
and their meanings are represented in our minds.4
“We want to know how the mental vocabulary is represented in the brain,” says Stevan
Harnad of the University of Quebec in Montreal, Canada.
As every word in a dictionary is defined (下定义) in terms of others, the knowledge needed
to understand the entire vocabulary is there. Harnad’s team reasoned that finding this smallest set
of words and pinning down its structure might help research on how human brains put language
together.
The team converted each of four different English dictionaries into a mathematical structure
of linked nodes (节点) known as a graph. Each node in this graph represents a word, which is
linked to the other words used to define it — so “banana” might be connected to “long”, “bendy”,
“yellow”, and “fruit”.
But even this tiny set is not the smallest number of words you need to produce the whole
dictionary, as many of these words can in turn be fully defined by others in the kernel (核心).
What’s more, the kernel has a deeper structure.
So what, if anything, can this tell us about how our brains represent words and concepts? To
find out the answer, Harnad’s team looked at data on how children acquire words and found a
pattern: as you move in from the full dictionary towards the Kernel, words which have been
acquired at a younger age tend to be used more often, and refer to more concrete concepts.
But the connection does suggest that our brains may structure language somewhat similarly
to a dictionary.
Phil Blunsom, at University of Oxford isn’t convinced that word meanings can be reduced
to a chain of definitions. “It’s treating words in such a symbolic fashion that they are going to
lose a lot of the meaning.” But Mark Pagel of the University of Reading, UK, expects the
approach to new insights. “This will be most useful in giving us a sense of how our minds
structure meaning.” he says.
25. The first paragraph serves as in the passage.
A. a comparison between human brain and a dictionary
B. an introduction to whether your brain works like a dictionary
C. a conclusion that your brain is just like a dictionary
D. a contradiction that your brain is just like a dictionary
26. What does the underlined phrase “pinning down” in Paragraph 3 mean here?
A. determining exactly B. fixing firmly
C. explaining simply D. putting formally
27. Which of the following statements is true according to the passage?
A. Children acquire words and form patterns more easily than adults.
B. Many of the words can in turn be fully defined by using its similar words.
C. Harnad’s findings may explain how human brains put language together.
D. Our brains may structure language exactly similarly to a dictionary.5
C
Have you ever fallen for a novel and been amazed not to find it on lists of great books? Or
walked around a sculpture known as a classic, struggling to see why it is famous? If so, you’ve
probably thought about the question a psychologist, James Cutting, asked himself: How does a
work of art come to be considered great?
The direct answer is that some works of art are just great: of inner superior quality. The
paintings that win prime spots in galleries, get taught in classes are the ones that have proved their
artistic value over time. If you can't see they’re superior, that's your problem. But some social
scientists have been asking questions of it, raising the possibility that artistic canons(名作目录)are
little more than old historical accidents.
Cutting, a professor at Cornell University, wondered if a psychological pattern known as
the“mere-exposure effect”played a role in deciding which paintings rise to the top of the cultural
league. Cutting designed an experiment to test his hunch(直觉). Over a lecture course he regularly
showed undergraduates works of impressionism for two seconds at a time. Some of the paintings
canonical, included in art-history books. Others were lesser known but of comparable quality were
exposed four times as often. Afterwards, the students preferred them to the canonical works, while
a control group liked the canonical ones best. Cutting’s students had grown to like those paintings
more simply because they had seen them more.
Cutting believes his experiment casts light on how canons are formed. He reproduced works
of impressionism today bought by five or six wealthy and influential collectors in the late 19th
century.Their preferences given to certain works made them more likely to be hung in galleries and
printed in collections. And the fame passed down the years. The more people were exposed to, the
more they liked it, and the more they liked it, the more it appeared in books, on posters and in big
exhibitions. Meanwhile, academics and critics added to their popularity. After all, it's not just the
masses who tend to rate what they see more often more highly. Critics' praise is deeply mixed with
publicity. “Scholars”, Cutting argues,“are no different from the public in the effects of mere
exposure.”
The process described by Cutting show a principle that the sociologist Duncan Watts
calls“cumulative advantage”:once a thing becomes popular, it will tend to become more popular
still.A few years ago, Watts had a similar experience to Cutting's in another Paris museum. After
queuing to see the"Mona Lisa "at the Louvre, he came away puzzled: why was it considered so
superior to the three other Leonardos, to which nobody seemed to be paying the slightest attention?
When Watts looked into the history of"the greatest painting of all time", he discovered that,
for most of its life, the"Mona Lisa"remained in relative obscurity. In the 1850s, Leonardo da Vinci
was considered no match for giants of Renaissance art like Titian and Raphael, whose works were
worth almost ten times as much as the"Mona Lisa" It was only in the 20th century that"Mona Lisa
rocketed to the number-one spot. What brought it there wasn’t a scholarly re-evaluation, but a theft.
In 1911 a worker at the Louvre walked out of the museum with the " Mona Lisa"hidden under his 6
coat. Parisians were shocked at the theft of a painting to which, until then, they had paid little
attention.When the museum reopened, people queued to see it. From then on, the"Mona Lisa
"came to represent Western culture itself.
The intrinsic (本质的) quality of a work of art is starting to seem like its least important
attribute. But perhaps it's more significant than our social scientists admit. Firstly, a work needs a
certain quality to reach the top of the pile. The"Mona Lisa"may not be a worthy world champion
but it was in the Louvre in the first place, and not by accident. Secondly, some objects are simply
better than others. Read“Hamlet”after reading even the greatest of Shakespeare's contemporaries,
and the difference may strike you as unarguable.
A study suggests that the exposure effect doesn’t work the same way on everything, and
points to a different conclusion about how canons are formed. Great art and mediocrity (平庸)can
get confused, even by experts. But that’s why we need to see, and read, as much as we can. The
more we were exposed to the good and the bad, the better we are at telling the difference.
28.What was the result of Cuttings experiment?
A.His subjects liked the famous paintings because of their comparable quality.
B.His subjects liked lesser known works because of more exposure to them.
C.His subjects showed no difference between the two types of works.
D.All the subjects preferred the famous works shown to them.
29.What caused the superiority of the Mona Lisa to Leonardo’s other works according to Watts?
A.The preference of wealthy and influential collectors.
B.The theft of the painting by a worker.
C.The fame of Leonardo Da Vinci.
D.The cumulative advantage.
30.What does the underline words “remained in relative obscurity”in Para 6 mean?
A.remained relatively unknown B.became publicly known
C.was widely recognized D.remained totally unchanged
31.“Hamlet”is mentioned in paragraph 7 mainly to illustrate that______.
A.“Hamlet”is the greatest work of Shakespeare.
B.the"Mona Lisa "is no comparable to"Hamlet"
C.the greatest of an art work lies in its inner value
D.The works of Shakespeare are worse than his contemporaries.
32.What can be a suitable title for the passage?
A.How exposure leads to fame B.Why we love the Mona Lisa best
C.The making of great works
D.The Mona Lisa, the greatest painting of all time
第二节(共 5 小题;每小题 2 分,共 10 分)
根据短文内容, 从短文后的七个选项中选出能填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为多余
选项。7
Some Myths You Strongly Keep Believing Are Untrue
There are varieties of false myths we spread from day to day. ____33_____. Otherwise,
people will continue to believe such ridiculous myths undoubtedly. You will realize some of the
most acceptable facts are completely untrue.
Men get beer bellies from beer.
We blame the beer for the belly. It is widely believed that men who constantly drink beer end
up with a beer belly. However, it is not the beer that’s to blame, but the abundance of unhealthy
snacks that often accompany the drink. Alcohol in beer irritates the stomach, therefore causing an
increased appetite. Dr. Michael Jensen, an obesity specialist in Minnesota USA says that drinking
beer makes liver burn alcohol instead of fat, leaving the latter to accumulate in the waist.
_____34___, while the one of women’s accumulates in the hips and bottoms, as a result of
different sexual characteristics.
____35__.
We are told that dogs see the world in black and white. But the truth is that they can
distinguish colors just not in the same way we do. Jay Needs from the University of Washington in
Seattle proves that our furry friends are able to receive a limited range of colors, which means they
can distinguish objects of the same shape. In general, a dog’s vision is very similar to that of a
person with red-green color blindness.
Carrots improve eyesight.
___36___. This myth came into existence during the Second World War. The British Army
claimed that fighter pilots had excellent night vision as a result of their consumption of large
quantities of carrots. Actually, they had radars on board which made it faster and easier to detect
the enemies. The myth about the amazing power of carrots was invented and spread by the media
so that enemies would not learn about the fact. ____37_______.
A.Dogs can distinguish colors
B.Men’s fat is stored in their bellies
C.Dogs see the world in black and white
D.Men’s fat is not mostly accumulated in these parts
E. Eventually, it spread all over the world and people are still convinced of it
F. We agree with the view that eating carrots plays an essential part in good vision
G. It is high time that scientists created a separate department dedicated to exposing the truth
第三部分:完形填空(共 20 小题;每小题 1.5 分,满分 30 分)
阅读下面短文,掌握其大意,从每题所给的 A、B、C、D 四个选项中,选出最佳选项,
并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。
A letter to ... My brother, whom I bullied when we were young
I was five when you were born. Looking at pictures from that time, I look so happy with
you. I am holding you, I am smiling, I look 38 . But I do not remember that feeling.
I was a daddy’s girl, but I was also the one to break in our parents. I used to call myself the 8
family’s guinea pig (豚鼠), 39 you were the happy one, the joker, the one who 40 the
rewards of all my battles won or lost. So I must have decided that we were enemies, competitors
for the love and attention of our parents, and this feeling is in the 41 of all my early
memories. All I remember is 42 you.
So, as long as I could, I made your life a 43 . I teased you, tricked you and 44
you. You tell me it’s not as bad as I remember, but I 45 a couple of times when you were
left in tears. Our little sister was born when I was 11, and very soon you two bonded 46
and pushed me aside. Did you bond with her because I was becoming a monster, or did I become
a monster because of your bond?
Thankfully, you quickly grew tall and strong, and soon you were able to overcome me
47 . From then on it was down to verbal abuse and psychological warfare. By the time I was at
university, you were a teenager and we competed for higher 48 : money, the family car,
parental pride.
It all came to a 49 stop when I moved abroad as an exchange student. Almost 20 years
have passed, and the hate 50 me some long time ago, while I wasn’t watching. And at the
same time, 51 must have crept in (悄悄地进入), sneaking somewhere through the back of
my mind.
Despite all the abuse during those years,you have turned into a happy, friendly, passionate,
generous human being. You are the most handsome and charming person that I know. And, with
your wife and best friend, you have just had your first child. Nobody 52 this happiness
more.
You have implied that you’ve forgiven me, or even that there is 53 to forgive. But I
54 to remember the hurt - I will always hurt in 55 when I look back. All those wasted
years in which I should have been your loving sister, standing by your side, defending instead of
56 you in your own home. I aim to be now what I always should have been.
I am so 57 of you, my heart wells up with love for you and your sister. I will be
forever glad that I have the chance to love you both.
Your sister
38. A. favoured B. frightened C. frustrated D. fascinated
39. A. while B. when C. though D. unless
40. A. appreciated B. reaped C. brought D. cheated
41. A. point B. cost C. centre D. end
42. A. adoring B. hating C. assisting D. envying
43. A. mystery B. misery C. mistake D. mixture
44. A. absorbed B. abandoned C. abolished D. abused
45. A. devote B. spend C. treasure D. recall
46. A. strongly B. anxiously C. happily D.unexpectedly
47. A. temporarily B. spiritually C. physically D.academically9
48. A. requirements B. resources C. positions D. purposes
49. A. forced B. surprised C. controlled D. intended
50. A. left B. accompanied C. affected D. bothered
51. A. hatred B. love C. guilty D. regret
52. A. rejects B. steals C. deserves D. ignores
53. A. nothing B. something C. anything D. everything
54. A. refuse B. plan C. learn D. prefer
55. A. shame B. sorrow C. disappointment D. confusion
56. A. attacking B. attending C. attracting D. avoiding
57. A. sure B. proud C. confident D. tired
第 II 卷 (共 50 分)
第四部分: 短文语法填空(共 10 小题;每小题 1.5 分,满分 15 分)
阅读下面短文,在空白处填入适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。
Many of us spend our lives in black, brown, navy, white, grey and so on. But by choosing safe
shades rather ___58__ a bright dress, we could be missing out on the health benefits from colour.
Jules Standish, author of How Not to Wear Black, is a style and colour consultant for women
afraid of standing out, and she believes____59_____(change)your shopping habits can boost
your well-being and self-respect.“Research shows that colours can have____60____
psychological effect,”she says.“Looking at warm, bright colours, such as red or pink, releases
dopamine(多巴胺)--___61_____(know)as the‘feel-good hormone’—which can improve our
mood and heighten the attention span.”
Here, Jules gives her suggestion on the colours_____62____ can’t be more suited.
“Red and green ___63____ never be seen”couldn’t be more wrong. Unexpectedly, they work
greatly well together. Our brains associate colours with temperature, so scarlet(深红色)is at
____64___(hot)end of colour spectrum(色谱). Scarlet and burgundy(紫红色)are both
universally attractive and suit almost every skin tone and hair colour. This combination ____65__
(think)unpleasantly bright, but here the green, or bright blue, helps to tone down the purple.
Research also suggests that men prefer women in pink, ___66____ it’s the closest colour to
skin. Pale pink is a feminine and youthful colour, but it is more wearable than its brighter
counterpart. Add touches of burgundy ___67____(make)it more elegant. Pale pink can be worn
well into your 60s, and works for those who don’t feel comfortable in attention-grabbing shades.
第五部分: 教材词汇检测(共 5 小题;每小题 1 分,满分 5 分。前 2 题为新概念,后 3 题
为教材 M6U1-U2。)
根据首字母提示及句意,在句中空白处填入适当的单词。
68. He managed to s__________ the conversation away from his academic performance at
school.
69. The incident served as a timely r_______ of just how dangerous mountain climbing can be.
70. The editor can give no g__________ that they will fulfill their obligation.10
71. This report a________ that all buildings be fitted with smoke detectors.
72. There is considerable u________ about the future of the company due to the reform.
第六部分:词汇和语法单项选择(共 5 小题;每小题 1 分,满分 5 分。)
73. One senior research fellow from CCG, said he is optimistic for the future of China-US ties
and that small are normal, but they won’t influence the bigger picture.
A. ambitions B. frictions C. competitions D. conversations
74. — Daniel didn’t say anything good at all about my composition. I felt pretty “criticized”.
— Your work is to be judged and analyzed by others in class. Don’t take it .
A. easily B. initially C. originally D. personally
75. With the three historic tasks , we Chinese should keep on working with great
determination.
A. accomplish B. accomplishing C. accomplished D. to accomplish
76. OK, wake up! Only when you stop seeking shortcuts to success being successful
means hard work.
A. you have realized B. have you realized
C. can you realize D. you can realize
77. On October 18, 2017, President Xi Jinping delivered a report to the 19th National Congress
____________ the 18th Central Committee of the Communist Party of China
A. in horror of B. on behalf of
C. in charge of D. on account of
第七部分: 书面表达(共两节,25 分)
第一节:概要写作(10 分)
阅读下列短文,根据其内容写一篇 60 词左右的内容概要。
What I think of boxing as a sport
Boxing is a popular sport that many people seem to be fascinated by. Newspapers, magazines
and sports programmes on TV frequently cover boxing matches. Professional boxers earn a lot of
money, and successful boxers are treated as big heroes.
It seems to me that some people, especially men, find it appealing because it is an aggressive
sport. When they watch a boxing match, they can identify with the winning boxer, and this gives
them the feeling of being a winner themselves. Sometimes fans are rooting for a particular boxer,
moreover because the boxer comes from their own country, and if“their”boxer loses, they often
feel as if they have lost a fight themselves. It is a fact that many people have feeling of aggression
from time to time, but they cannot show their aggression in their everyday lives. Watching a
boxing match gives them an outlet for this aggression.
However , there is a negative side to boxing. It can be a very dangerous sport. Although
boxers wear gloves during the fights, and amateur boxing even have to wear helmets, there have
frequently been accident in both professional and amateur boxing, sometimes with dramatic
consequences. Boxers have suffered from head injuries, and occasionally, fighters have even been 11
killed as a result of being knocked out in the ring. For example, studies have shown that there are
often long-term effects of boxing, in the form of serious brain damage, even if a boxer has never
been knocked out.
To conclude, I am personally not at all in favour of aggressive sports like boxing. I think it would
be better if less time was given to aggressive sports on TV, and we celebrated more men and
women from non-aggressive sports as our heroes and heroines in our society. I believe that the
world is aggressive enough already! Of course, people like competitive sports , and so do I, but I
think that hitting other people in an aggressive way is not something that should be regarded as a
sport.
注意:1. 词数 60 词左右。
2. 尽量使用自己的语言。
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第二节:应用文写作(15 分)
假如你是高一学生李华,最近收到你的美国朋友 Jenny 的来信。她在信中说,由于刚
进入高中,还不能适应高中生活,因此情绪低落。请你根据提示给她写一封回信,提出一
些学习和生活上的建议。
内容要点如下:1. 制定时间表,合理安排学习,锻炼和休息的时间;
2. 搞好与老师和同学之间的关系;
3. 积极参加课外活动。
注意:1. 词数 100 左右。
2. 可适当增加细节,以使行文连贯。
3. 开头和结尾已为你写好,不计入总词数。
Dear Jenny,
I’m sorry to hear that you are in a bad mood and almost lose heart because you are not able to
adapt to life in senior high.
______________________________________________________________________________12
______________________________________________________________________________
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Best wishes,
Li Hua
江苏省扬州中学 2019 年第一学期月考考试答案
高 一 早 培 英 语 试 卷 2019.12
听力(满分 30 分)
1 – 5 CABCA 6 – 10 BCABC 11 – 15 ABCAB 16 – 20 CABCA
阅读(共 12 小题;每小题 2.5 分,共 30 分)
21-24:BDAC 25-27:BAC 28-32:BDACC
七选五(共 5 小题;每小题 2 分,共 10 分)
33-37 GBCFE
完形填空(共 20 小题;每小题 1.5 分,共 30 分)
38-42 DABCB 43-47 BDDAC 48-52 BAABC 53-57 ADAAB
语法填空(共 10 小题;每小题 1.5 分,共 15 分)
58. than 59. changing 60. a 61.known 62.which/that
63.should 64.the hottest 65.is thought 66.because/since/for 67.to make
单词拼写(共 5 小题;每小题 1 分,共 5 分)
68. steer 69. reminder 70. guarantee 71. advocated 72.uncertainty
单项选择(共 5 小题;每小题 1 分,共 5 分)
73-77: BDDCB
概要写作(10 分)
Boxing is a popular sport that many people seem to be fascinated by.(要点一) Some people,
especially men, find it appealing because of its aggression . (要点二) However ,the negative side of
boxing is its potential danger , (要点三) I am personally not at all in favour of aggressive sports
like boxing. (要点四)
应用文写作(15 分)13
Dear Jenny,
I’m sorry to hear that you are in a bad mood and almost lose heart because you are not able to
adapt to life in senior high. Don’t worry. The following are my suggestions.
As a senior high school student, you will live a very busy life. So first of all, you’d better make
a timetable so that you will know when to study, exercise and rest. Only in this way can you make
good use of every minute. Besides, while in school, it is wise to develop a pleasant relationship
with teachers and classmates. When you need help, they will offer it to you. Last but not least, I
advise you to take an active part in after-school activities at school, which will give you good
chances to make friends and challenge yourself.
I firmly hope I can be of some help to you and I believe you can make progress step by step.
Best wishes!