2019-2020 学年第二学期高一期末英语模拟卷
(总分:150 分,时间:120 分钟)
第 I 卷(共 100 分)
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。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. Where did the man put the woman’s bike?
A. Under a street lamp. B. In a garage. C. In a backyard.
2. Which floor is the Committee Room on?
A. The second floor. B. The third floor. C. The fourth floor.
3. How does the man feel about the article in the end?
A. Satisfied. B. Annoyed. C. Bored.
4. Where does the conversation probably take place?
A. In a library. B. In a bookstore. C. In a teaching building.
5. Why does the man call the woman?
A. To ask for a sick leave.
B. To ask about English classes.
C. To discuss tomorrow’s schedule.
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。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. How will the woman send the package?
A. By air. B. By sea. C. By express mail.
7. How much should the woman pay?
A. £20. B. £23. C. £26.
听第 7 段材料,回答第 8、9 题。
8. What problem does the woman have?
A. She’s lost. B. Her shoes are broken. C. Her feet are uncomfortable.
9. Why did the speakers come to the city?
A. To attend a meeting. B. To buy some shoes. C. To make a tour.
听第 8 段材料,回答第 10 至 12 题。
10. Why does the man want to get a summer job?
A. To save money for a course.
B. To pay his brother back.
C. To save for a trip.
11. How will the woman get money?A. By borrowing from her brother.
B. By doing a part-time job.
C. By asking her parents.
12. What does the man decide to do in the end?
A. Study in Spain.
B. Get a job in Portugal.
C. Go to Latin America with the woman.
听第 9 段材料,回答第 13 至 16 题。
13. What are the speakers discussing?
A. How to form clouds.
B. How to present their research.
C. How to explain different types of clouds.
14. Why does the man suggest having small cards?
A. To make the presentation more interesting.
B. To remind him of what to say.
C. To organize all the research.
15. What will the man do?
A. Prepare the cards.
B. Make the presentation slides.
C. Look for pictures of clouds online.
16. What part will the woman do?
A. The low-level clouds part.
B. The medium-level clouds part.
C. The high-level clouds part.
听第 10 段材料,回答第 17 至 20 题。
17. What problem will the motorway bring to the village?
A. Children will find it hard to go to the Streeve Beach.
B. The well-known beauty spot will be destroyed.
C. Fewer villagers will live there.
18. What will be built on farmland?
A. A swimming pool. B. A steel factory. C. Houses.
19. Where will the high-tech park be built?
A. In the north of the village.
B. In the south of the village.
C. In the west of the village.
20. What is most villagers’ attitude towards the government plans?
A. Fully satisfied. B. Rather worried. C. Quite unexpected.
第二部分:完形填空(共 20 小题,每小题 1.5 分,满分 30 分)
Everyone in business has been told that success is all about attracting and retaining (留住)
customers. It sounds 21 and achievable. But, 22 , words of wisdom are soon forgotten. Once companies have attracted customers they often 23 the second half of the story. In the
excitement of beating off the competition, negotiating prices, securing orders, and delivering the
product, managers tend to become 24 . They forget what they regard as the boring side of
business— 25 that the customer remains a customer.
26 to concentrate on retaining as well as attracting customers costs business huge
amounts of money annually. It has been estimated that the average company loses between 10 and 30
percent of its customers every year. In constantly changing 27 , this is not surprising. What is
surprising is the fact that few companies have any 28 how many customers they have lost.
Only now are organizations beginning to wake up to those lost opportunities and calculate the
29 implications. Cutting down the number of customers a company loses can make a big 30
in its performance. Research in the US found that a five percent decrease in the number of defecting
(流失的) customers led to 31 increases of between 25 and 85 percent.
In the US, Domino’s Pizza estimates that a 32 customer is worth more than $5,000 over
ten years. A customer who receives a poor quality product or service on their first visit and 33
never returns, is losing the company thousands of dollars in 34 profits (more if you consider
how many people they are likely to tell about their bad experience).
The logic behind cultivating customer 35 is impossible to deny. “In practice most
companies’ marketing effort is focused on getting customers, with little attention paid to 36
them”, says Adrian Payne of Cornfield University’ School of Management. “Research suggests that
there is a 37 relationship between retaining customers and making profits. 38
customers tend to buy more, are predictable and usually cost less to service than new customers.
Furthermore, they tend to be less price
39 , and may provide free word-of-mouth advertising. Retaining customers also makes it
40 for competitors to enter a market or increase their share of a market.
21.A.simple B.difficult C.tough D.complicated
22.A.in particular B.in reality C.at least D.first of all
23.A.emphasize B.doubt C.overlook D.believe
24.A.carried away B.carried back C.carried on D.carried through
25.A.hesitating B.ensuring C.arguing D.proving
26.A.Moving B.Hoping C.Starting D.Failing
27.A.markets B.tastes C.prices D.expenses
28.A.thought B.idea C.opinion D.view
29.A.culture B.social C.financial D.economical
30.A.promise B.plan C.mistake D.difference
31.A.cost B.opportunity C.profit D.budget
32.A.usual B.ordinary C.common D.regular
33.A.as a result B.on the whole C.in conclusion D.on the contrary
34.A.huge B.potential C.extra D.reasonable
35.A.beliefs B.loyalty C.habits D.interest
36.A.altering B.understanding C.keeping D.attracting37.A.close B.distant C.deep D.shallow
38.A.Assumed B.Respected C.Established D.Unexpected
39.A.agreeable B.flexible C.friendly D.sensitive
40.A.unfair B.difficult C.essential D.convenient
第三部分:阅读理解(共 15 小题,每小题 2 分,满分 30 分)
A
The QUIK-FRYTM Electronic Wok
It is important that you read this carefully before first using the wok. Until you become familiar
with the product, we advise that you can keep this handy and refer to it when required.
IMPORTANT SAFEGUARDS:
◇ In order to prevent the risk of electric shock. DO Nor IMMERSE the cord or the probe in
water or any other liquid.
◇Whenever he wok is used near children, it is essential that close supervision takes place Never
leave the appliance unattended while in use. Before disassembling the wok for cleaning, SWITCH
OFF AND REMOVE THE PLUG from the power source.
◇ DO NOT USE THE Quick-Fry WOK OUTDOORS.
◇ Avoid touching hot surfaces; instead use the heat resistant handles on the wok or the
heal-resistant plastic knob on top of the glass hid. DO NOT OPERATE NEAR HOT SURFACES such
as electric hotplates, gas burners or in a heated oven.
◇DO NOT COVER the Quick-Fry wok with the lid while using it to deep fry foods. Failure to
comply will cause condensation to drip onto the oil and cause splattering.
◇DO NOT ATTEMPT REPAIR of the Quick Fry wok. If the cord becomes damaged, or if the
appliance is malfunctioning, do not operate. Return the appliance to the nearest authorized service
center for repair. DO NOT OPEN THE BASE OR TOUCH THE ELECTRICAL COMONENTS
INSIDE. Tampering with the base will void the warranty.
Manufactured for operation only from a standard domestic power source.
How to Use the Quick-Fry Electric Wok:
Be sure to season the wok before using it for the first time, Assemble the wok and heat to the
highest setting. Rub the non-stick inner surface of the wok with 1 tablespoon of oil. Use thick paper
toweling. and be very careful to avoid touching the hot surface.
Cooking Methods:
heat-resistant knob
non-stick finish
glass lid
tall sides make the
Quik-FryTM Wok perfect
for deep frying
heat-resustant
handles
detachable base
and probe for
easy cleaning
sturdy base for
added safety
QUIK-FRY41.This text is most probably from _______ .
A.an advertisement for the electric wok
B.a cooking book designed for customers
C.an instruction booklet for the wok
D.a customer review of the wok
42.One of the advantages of the wok is that _______.
A.you don't need to pay close attention to it when cooking
B.you may remove its base when cleaning the wok
C.you can repair the wok by yourself when it is not working properly
D.you can touch the wok because it is totally free from heat
B
I came home one day recently and, for reasons I don’t quite understand, my living room smelled
like my grandmother’s house. Suddenly I felt as if I were 12 years old, happy and relaxed, sitting in
her kitchen. I can remember what her house looked like, though it was sold 20 years ago – her
three-level plant stand, the plates lining the walls, the window over her sink – but these visual
memories don’t have the power that smell does. The funny thing is, I can’t even begin to describe the
odor(气味) that was so distinctively hers. The best I can do is this: “It smelled like my
grandmother’s house.”
It’s a common experience, and a common linguistic( 语言学的) problem. In cultures
worldwide, people have powerful olfactory memories. This odor-memory link is also called “the
Proust phenomenon,” after Marcel Proust’s famous description of the feelings aroused by a cake
dipped in tea in “Remembrance of Things Past.”
Olfactory memories seem to be more closely bound up with emotions than are visual or auditory
ones.
Not all these memories are pleasant, of course, and smells can also trigger feelings of pain.
It is surprisingly hard for English-speakers to describe the odors that occasion such strong
emotions, however. English possesses almost no abstract smell words that pick out links or themes
among unrelated aromas(芳香).
We have plenty of these in the visual field. “Yellow,” for example, identifies a characteristic that bananas, lemons, some cars, some flowers, old book pages, and the sun all share.
But for odors, we don’t have many more than the vague “musty” (smells old and stale) and
“musky” (smells perfumey). We usually have no choice but to say that one thing smells like another
– like a banana, like garlic, like diesel fuel.
A few languages, though, do have a rich odor vocabulary. Linguist Asifa Majid has found that
the Jahai, the Semaq Beri, and the Maniq, hunter-gatherer groups in Malaysia and Thailand, employ
a wide range of abstract smell words and can identify aromas as easily as we can colors. The Jahai
have a word, for example, that describes “the seemingly dissimilar smell of petrol, smoke, bat poop,
root of wild ginger and wood of wild mango.”
Last year my cat got sprayed by a skunk(臭鼬), and the vet told me to wash its face with coffee
to cover the bad smell. Until then, I had never realized that coffee, which I find delicious, smells
remarkably like skunk spray, which I do not.
Science has identified the chemicals that both share. They are called mercaptans (硫醇). But in
oral English, we have no word for the underlying note that connects these two odors. If the Jahai
drank coffee and encountered skunks, I bet they would.
43.The opening paragraph is mainly intended to .
A.express the writer’s affection for his grandmother
B.direct the readers’ attention to a linguistic problem
C.tell us the odor of the grandmother’s house stayed the same
D.prove smell has a greater power than visual memories
44.Which of the following is related to olfactory memories?
A.Forming an image in mind after seeing the word “injury”.
B.Feeling sympathetic when seeing a sick cat.
C.Dancing to the music upon hearing it played.
D.Missing fried eggs with garlic cooked by mum.
45.The example of the Jahai suggests that .
A.the Jahai don’t have many words in the visual field
B.English possesses many vague words like “musty” and “musky”
C.the Jahai has more abstract smell words than English
D.skunk and coffee have the same smell, but different functions
46.What can we learn from the passage?
A.The author feels pity about the limitation of his language.
B.English has a wide range of visual and odor vocabulary.
C.Olfactory memories can bring nothing but pleasant feelings.
D.Cultures worldwide always collide with each other.
C
The Jewish(犹太人)family-had-just finished supper and the woman had placed the dishes in
the sink.The kitchen was quite damp and even gloomier than in the main room.It was their third
apartment since the start of the war,they had abandoned the other two in a hurry.The woman came
back into the room and sat down again at the table.The 3-year-old boy sat with his back straight,his eyes fixed on his father,but it was obvious that he was so sleepy that he could barely sit up.
The man was smoking a cigarette.His eyes were blood-shot and he kept blinking in a funny
way.This blinking had begun soon after they fled the second apartment.
It was late,past ten o'clock and they could have gone to sleep,but first they had to play the game
that they had been playing every day for two weeks.Even though the man tried his best and he moved
very quickly,the fault was his and not the child's.The boy was.marvelous.Seeing his father put out his
cigarette,he opened his blue eyes even wider.The woman,who didn't actually take part in the game,
stroked the boy's hair.
“We'll play the key game just one more time only today.Isn't that right?"she asked her husband.
He didn't answer because he was not sure.They were still two or three minutes off. He arose and
walked towards the bathroom door.Then the woman called out softly,“Ding-dong."At the sound of the
bell ringing so musically from his mother's lips,the boy jumped up from his chair and ran to the front
door,which was separated from the main room by a narrow corridor.
“Who's there?"he asked.
The woman,remaining in her chair,shut her eyes tight as if feeling a sudden, sharp pain.
“I'l1 open up in a minute,I'm just looking for the keys,"the child called out. Then he ran back to
the main room,making a lot of noise with his feet.He ran in circles around the table,pulled out one of
the sideboard drawers,and slammed it shut.
“Just a minute,I can't find them,I don't know where Mama put them,"he yelled,then dragged the
chair across the room,climbed onto it,and reached up to the top of the shelf.
“I found them!”he shouted triumphantly.Then he got down from the chair, pushed it back to the
table,and calmly walked to the door and opened it.
“Shut the door,darling,"the woman said softly."You were perfect.”
The child didn't hear what she said.He stood in the middle of the room,staring at the closed
bathroom door.
“Shut the door, the woman repeated in a tired flat voice.Every evening she repeated the same
words,and every evening he stared at the closed bathroom door.
At last it opened.The man was pale and his clothes were streaked with lime and dust.He stood
there,eyes blinking in that funny way.
“Well?How did it go?"asked the woman.
“I still need more time.He has to look for them longer.I slip in sideways all right,but then...It's so
tight in there that when I turn...And he's got to make more noise-he should stamp his feet louder."
The child didn't take his eyes off him.
“Say something to him,"the woman whispered.
"You did a good job,little one,"he said mechanically.
“That's right,”the woman said,“you're really doing a wonderful job,darling. You act just like a
grown-up.And you do know that if someone should really ring the doorbell when Mama is at
work,everything will depend on you?And what will you say when they ask you about your parents?”
“Mama's at work.”
“And Papa?"He was silent.“And Papa?"the man screamed in terror.The child turned pale.
“And Papa?”the man repeated more calmly.
“He's dead,”"the child answered and threw himself at his father,who was standing right beside
him,but already long dead to the people who would really ring the bell.
47.What does the underlined sentence in Para.5 mean?
A.The family needed to practise the game for another 2 or 3 minutes.
B.There was still 2 or 3 minutes left before someone knocked at the door.
C.They would become too sleepy to play the game 2 or 3 minutes later.
D.The father needed 2 or 3 more minutes before the kid opened the door.
48.Why did the boy make a lot of noise when he was looking for the key?
A.Because he needed to drown out the noise caused by his father.
B.Because he was too little and just couldn't control his footsteps.
C.Because he was too anxious to find the key to open the door with.
D.Because he met many barriers on his way to where the key was.
49.In Para.12,why did the mother repeat“shut the door”in a tired,flat voice, instead of the previous
soft one?
A.She was angry because her son didn't close the door as he had been told to.
B.She felt anxious because she knew her husband would be annoyed at the boy again.
C.She was disappointed because the boy's movement betrayed again where her husband was.
D.She was impatient because she was asked to repeat these words again and again every evening.
50.What is the best title of the passage?
A.A Scary Night B.The Key Game
C.My Father Is Dead D.An Innocent Boy
D
Light and bright, cheap and cheerful: IKEA’s 400-plus
outlets (专营店) in 49 countries all run on the same central
principle. Customers do as much of the work as possible, in
the belief they are having fun and saving money. You drive to
a distant warehouse built on cheap out-of-town land. Inside,
you enter a maze (迷宫) — no shortcuts allowed — where
every twist reveals new furniture.
Compared with the prices of other outlets, IKEA’s are much lower. You load up your trolley (手
推车) with impulse buys-a clock, storage boxes, tools and more chairs than you will ever use. You
drag cardboard boxes, cupboards and tables into your car and reward yourself for your economy and
good taste. Then you drive home and put your prizes together. You are satisfied with the bargains.
IKEA is satisfied with your money.
The company’s name was a do-it-yourself job, too. IKEA stands for Ingvar Kamprad, from
Elmtaryd ― his family’s farm — in Agunnaryd. That village is in the Smaland region of southern
Sweden. Mr Kamprad founded IKEA aged 17. Well before that, he spotted a principle which would make him one of the richest men in the world that customers like buying goods at wholesale prices (批
发价). First he bought matches in large quantities and sold them by the box. Aged ten, he sold pens in
the similar way.
Setbacks inspired him. Facing a price war against his low-cost mail-order furniture business, he
defeated competitors by opening a showroom. Dealers tried to crush Mr Kamprad and banned him
from their trade fairs. He slipped in, hiding in a friend’s car. When they tried to threaten his suppliers,
he relied on his own workers, and secretly sold his production to communist Poland. Decades later,
east Europeans freed from the planned economy drove hundreds of miles to newly opened outlets in
Moscow and Warsaw.
His self-discipline was world-famous. As a child, he removed the “off” button from his alarm
clock to stop himself oversleeping. He rarely took a first-class seat. The wine didn’t get you there any
earlier, he sniffed; having lots of money was no reason to waste it. He bought his clothes in
second-hand markets, and for years drove an elderly Volvo until he had to sell it on safety grounds. He
had his hair cut in poor countries to save money. Visitors admired the views, but were surprised that
his house was so shabby. He worked well into his eighties.
His diligence and simple way of life set a good example to his 194,000 “co-workers”. But he was
not mean. The point of cutting costs was to make goods affordable, not to compromise quality. He
urged his staff to reflect constantly on ways of saving money, time and space. An improved design that
allows easier piling means shipping less air and more profit.
Culture was more important than strategy. He disliked “exaggerated (夸张的) planning”, along
with financial markets and banks. Better to make mistakes and learn from them. And use time wisely:
“You can do so much in ten minutes. But ten minutes once gone are gone for good.” This did not apply
to customers. The longer they stayed, the better.
Mr Kamprad’s impact on modern life can be compared with that of Henry Ford and the
mass-produced motor car. Furniture used to be expensive, dark and heavy. For many people,
decorating a home could cost many months’ salary. IKEA made furniture not just affordable and
functional, but fun. The mission was civilizational, he felt, changing how people lived and thought.
His approach drew some fire. The company values struck some as unpleasant. At IKEA’s
Corporate Culture Centre, lots of pictures of Mr Kamprad with his mottos can be seen everywhere.
What’s worse, some parts of the supply chain seemed to have serious problems to overcome.
51.What can we learn about IKEA in Paragraph 1?
A.IKEA prefers rural areas for its location.
B.IKEA has 400 outlets throughout the world.
C.IKEA likes to store new furniture in a maze.
D.IKEA provides a lot of work for its customers.
52.The underlined two sentences in Paragraph 2 imply that ________.
A.IKEA tricks you into spending more money
B.you may buy bargains with impulse in IKEA
C.both you and IKEA are pleased with the deal
D.both you and IKEA are happy with the bargain53.By mentioning Mr. Kamprad’s experiences before he founded IKEA, the author intends to tell us
that Mr Kamprad ________.
A.was likely to become a successful businessman
B.preferred selling matches and pens by low prices
C.had been a well-off merchant due to his principle
D.enjoyed doing something promising with discipline
54.What can be inferred from paragraph 5 and 6 about Mr. Kamprad?
A.He never overslept due to his alarm clock being set.
B.He was against drinking but for sniffing at the wine.
C.He sold the old Volvo with the purpose of saving money. -
D.He didn’t give up the quality of furniture for more profit.
55.Which of the following has nothing to do with Mr. Kamprad’s success in business?
A.The pictures and mottos of Mr. Kamprad.
B.The setbacks Mr. Kamprad experienced.
C.Mr. Kamprad’s principles of management.
D.Mr. Kamprad’s self-discipline and diligence.
第四部分:七选五(共 5 小题,每小题 2 分,满分 10 分)
The factors that cause youth unemployment often differ among regions and labor systems. 56
Since firing full-time workers is so complicated and expensive, employers are unwilling to take on
new staff, while people who are already employed, mainly older workers, often keep their jobs for life.
In developing countries with high birthrates and very young populations, like the Philippines, growth
isn’t strong enough to absorb the wave of youngsters entering the workforce each year.
57. Young people entering the workforce are often the most vulnerable(易受伤害的)
in economic downturns — new employees are often the first to get sacked, while college graduates
find few employers willing to hire.
58. In Spain, Italy and Japan, for instance, companies looking to gain flexibility in
regulated labor markets often offer new, young staffers only short-term contracts. These contracts,
which sometimes last for only a few days, usually come with low salaries and few benefits. Since such
staff is temporary, employers have little intention to invest in training.
Facing such obstacles, young people everywhere are finding that traditional route to success —
education — isn’t paying off as much as in the past. 59. They will often be offered
low-skilled jobs from waiters to supermarket clerks. A March report form the UK’s Office for
National Statistics showed that the share of recent college graduates in Britain working in
lower-skilled jobs rose to nearly 35% in 2011 form less than 27% a decade earlier. 60. Typical
is Cairo’s Ahmed Said. He graduated from college with a business degree, and after performing the
obligatory(义务的)year of military service, he applied for jobs in accounting and data entry. But
Said, 24, had no luck, and today he works as a waiter at a cafe near Tahrir Square. “This was my last
choice,” he says, “and this is the job that I got.”
A.Young graduates often find themselves competing with more-experienced workers.
B.More and more college graduates are forced to take jobs below their skill level.C.They started applying for any positions they could find in other countries.
D.In some parts of the world, such jobs are all that is available to college graduates.
E.Yet youth unemployment also has common roots throughout the world.
F.Those young workers who do find employment are often trapped in awful contracts.
G.In much of Western Europe overemphasized labor protection makes it more difficult for youths to
land good jobs.
第 II 卷(共 50 分)
I、课外语法填空:阅读下面短文,在空白处填入适当的词,或以提示词的正确形式填空。(共
10 小题,每小题 1 分,满分 10 分)
This was Buck in the fall of 1897,when the discovery of gold in the Klondike brought men from
everywhere to the frozen north.But Buck did not read the newspapers,and he
did not know that Manuel,one of the gardener's helpers,was 61. a
good man.Manuel gambled(赌博)and wasted the little money he had.And
one time when the Judge was 62. business,and his sons were busy
with a sports club,Manuel did 63. terrible.No one saw him and
Buck go off on what Buck imagined was a walk.No one saw them arrive at
the railway station, 64. Manuel sold Buck to a man who was waiting
for him.
Manuel put a rope around Buck's neck,under the collar.Buck accepted
this 65. he knew Manuel,but when the rope was placed in the
66. (strange)hands,he barked dangerously. And when the rope 67. (fix)around
his neck,he started to choke and jumped at the man in anger.The man fought him off and forced Buck
68. (lie)on his back,and fixed the rope even more.Buck had not been treated so
69. (bad)in his life,and never had been so angry.Then his strength gave out and he soon
became senseless.He was 70. senseless when the train arrived and the two men threw him
into the baggage car.
II . 根据所给首字母或中文提示填空,每空一词。(共 10 小题,每题 1 分,满分 10 分)
71.This TV series is ________ (针对) specially at teenagers aged 13 to 18.
72.The manager got promoted as he completed the project well within ________ (预算).
73.Large audiences were ________ (吸引) to the film “The Wandering Earth”, which turned out to
be a box-office hit.
74.It was a close game in which the Kangaroos ________ (打平) with the Eagles in the first half
final.
75.What time would it be ________ (方便的) for me to come over to pick you up for the meeting?
76.Do some exercises as a preparation before you swim. O________ you might hurt yourself.77.The sound of gunfire p________ the crowd, who fed in all directions with fear.
78.Parents should set good examples for children, as children always learn by o________ adults.
79.The judge concluded from the evidence that Jack was i ________ of the murder and should be
set free.
80.Hackers gained complete a________ to Tom’s mobile phones, stealing all the money on WeChat.
III. 根据句意和所给中文提示填写恰当的词组,每空一词(共 10 小题,每题 1 分,满分 10
分)
81.My teachers and classmates are kind and helpful and they always
(帮助我)when I am in trouble.
82.The plans that you (提出)at the meeting deserve serious
consideration.
83.The New York Times has named Sri Lanka its top (旅游景点)for
2010.
84.A medical team (由……组成)3 doctors and 6 nurses has been
sent to the accident spot in time.
85.He also wants to (执行,实行)political reforms such as changing
Japan’s constitution which enshrines pacifism.
86.Her students’ laughter only ________ (增加)her embarrassment when she missed
a step on the stage.
87.I am pushing ahead on my way and I don’t want to be interrupted by anything that ________
(挡路,妨碍).
88.This way you only need to change the Seettings (在一个
案例中)you want to adept something later.
89.Allow children the space to voice their opinions, ________ (即使)they are different
from yours.
90.HUAWEI is one of the world’s largest technology companies that ________
(领先)in network service for years.
IV . 用情态动词或时态填空(共 10 小题,每题 1 分,满分 10 分)
91..I didn’t arrive on time, otherwise I missed the first bus.
92.—Did you say that there were only ten tickets? There ________be twelve.
—I said it was twelve.
93. If I plan to do anything I wanted to, I’d like to go to Tibet and travel through as
much of it as possible.
94.—What does the sign over there read?—“No person smoke or carry a lighted cigarette, cigar or pipe in this area.”
95.No one thought that he could fly over the Antarctic, but Byrd do it by making
his plane light.
96.The ground is wet. It have rained last night.
97.Tom ought not to (tell)me your secret, but he meant no harm.
98.He might (give)you more help,even though he was very busy.
99.The old man have a smoke under a big tree every afternoon after he finished his
farm work.
100.He daren’t speak English before such a crowd, he?
V. 根据括号内的提示完成以下句子翻译(共 5 小题,每题 2 分,满分 10 分)
101.很多人被活埋了,城市也被掩埋。(so)
102.世界人口比 1800 年增长了六倍。(what)
103.虽然学生们觉得士兵的想法有趣,但这一方法太难不实用。(be of+名词)
104.谈及广告,我们都必须运用自己的智慧,不要做广告的奴隶!(come to)
105.Hannah 一定是在承诺不告诉他人之后将我的成绩告诉了我的同学们。(must)
参考答案
1-20 ACABA CBCAC ACBBC BACBB
21.A
22.B
23.C
24.A
25.B
26.D
27.A
28.B
29.C30.D
31.C
32.D
33.A
34.B
35.B
36.C
37.A
38.C
39.D
40.B
41.C
42.B
43.B
44.D
45.C
46.A
47.D
48.A
49.C
50.B
51.A
52.C
53.A
54.D
55.A56.G
57.E
58.F
59.B
60.D
61.not
62.on
63.something
64.where
65.because
66.stranger's
67.was fixed
68.to lie
69.badly
70.still
71.targeted/ aimed
72.budget
73.attracted
74.tied
75.convenient
76.Otherwise
77.panicked
78.observing
79.innocent
80.access
81.come to my aid82.put forward
83.tourist destination
84.consisting of
85.carry out
86.added to
87.stands in my path
88.in once case
89.even though
90.have been leading the way / have led the way
91.could not have
92.should
93.could
94.shall
95.was able to
96.must
97.have told
98.have giving
99.would
100.dare
101.Many people were buried alive,and so was the city.
102.The world's population has grown by six times what it was in 1800.
103.While the students found the soldier's idea interesting,the system was too difficult to be of
practical use.
104.When it comes to advertisements,we must all use our intelligence and not be a slave to them!
105.Hannah must have told my classmates about my grade after promising not to.