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学年度秋学期十二月阶段性检测试卷2024-2025高一英语第一部分听力(共两节,满分分)30做题时,先将答案标在试卷上录音内容结后,你将有两分钟的时间将试卷上的答案转涂到答题卡上第一节(共小题;每小题分,满分分)
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57.5听下面段对话每段对话后有一个小题,从题中所给的、三个选项中选出最5AB C佳选项听完每段对话后,你都有秒钟的时间来回答有关小题和阅读下一小题10每段对话仅读一遍
1.Which roomhas the man finisheddecoratingA.The livingroom.B.The bathroom.C.The kitchen.
2.Why wasthe womanstopped bythe policeofficerA.She wasspeeding.B.Her carlight wasbroken.C.She didntwear aseat belt.
3.What doesthe manwant todo nowA.Go to the cinema.B.Do someshopping.C.Get somethingto eat.
4.Where doesthe conversationprobably takeplaceA.In alibrary.B.In aclassroom.C.In abookstore.
5.What arethe speakersmainly talkingaboutA.An actor.B.A game.C.A TVseries.第二节(共小题;每题分,满分分)
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522.5听下面段对话或独伯每段对话或独白后有几个小题,从题中所给的、、三个5A B C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,每小题秒5钟;听完后,各小题将给出秒钟的作答时间每段对话或独白读两遍5听第段材料,回答第、题.
6676.How doesthe womanfeel atfirstA.Hungry.B.Tired.C.Nervous.
7.What doesthemanoffer todoA.Fix thecomputer.B.Make ameal.C.Check thekids homework.第段材料,回答第至题
78108.What is the purposeof thetennis matchA.To promotetennis.B.To improvefitness.C.To raisemoney.
9.How will the womanprobably gettothetennis courtsA.By car.B.On foot.C.By subway.
10.When willthe speakersmeetA.At8:30am.B.At9:30am.C.At10:30am.第段材料,回答第至题
8111311.How longwillthe woman stayin GermanyA.For onemonth.B.For oneyear.C.For twoyears.
12.What willthe womando beforeleaving forGermanyA.Learn someGerman.B.Take acourse onculture.C.Apply foranother programme.
13.What is the probablerelationship betweenthe speakersA.Classmates.B.Teacher andstudent.C.Father anddaughter.听第段材料,回答第至题
9141714.What isthe mansproblemA.He hasno ideahow tostart hispaper.B.He doesnot knowwhich bookto readfirst.C.He istoo busyto finishhis assignmentin time.
15.What doesthe womanthink of the manstopicA.It isinteresting.B.It ischallenging.C.It istoo broad.
16.Which topicistheman reallyinterested inA.Beauty.B.Nature.C.Philosophy.
17.What doesthewomansuggest theman doA.Change histopic.B.Prepare somequestions.C.Gather information about Hume.听第段材料,回答第至题
10182018.How manybooks hasSparks soldin allA.Nearly65million.B.About75million.C.Over97million.
19.What doesthe NicholasSparks FoundationdoA.It helpspoor kidsget aneducation.B.It providesbooks forrural communities.C.It createsscholarships forgifted children.
20.What canwe learnabout SparksA.He livesa successfulbut lonelylife.B.He thinkseducation haschanged hislife.C.All hisbooks havebeen madeinto movies.第二部分阅读(共两节,满分分)50第一节(共小题;每小题分,满分分)阅读下列短文,从每题所给的、
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537.5A、、四个选项中选出最佳选项BCDAWant toknow all the ins-and-outs regardingthe Paris2024Olympics Thenyouvecome tothe rightplace!Below youwill find alltheinformationaboutthe newOlympicsports.Olympic skateboardingWhowill followin thefootsteps ofMomijiNishiya,the firstOlympic skateboardingchampion,who wascrowned at the lastGames at the ageof13The answerwill berevealedin Paristhis summer.Speed,technique,mastery of the boardwill berequired tosuccessfullyperform themost beautifultricks.Olympic sports climbingWith itssecond timeentering the Olympics,sports climbinghas threebranches:Speed,(抱石攀岩)Bouldering and Lead.Speed isall aboutthe speedof climbing.Bouldering isall aboutclimbing aboulder ona wallandLeadrequires athletesto-climb adifficultroute20metershigh.Olympic surfingTheOlympics will be held in Paris,but what about Olympic surfing Thereis onevenue(场士也)that isliterally on the otherside ofthe world.The locationTeahupoo,on the islandof Tahiti,is whereOlympic surfingwill takeplace.This islandis partof FrenchPolynesia,between Australiaand SouthAmerica.Olympic breakdancingBreakdancingisthenew.Olympic sportthat willmake itsfirst appearancein Paris
2024.How toestablish agrading systemwithout takingaway theartistic freedomatthesame timeThepoints should be basedon creativityand musicality,a grayarea thatdepends alot onfeelingand thushas alot ofsubjectivity toitLooking fora handylist ofall sportsClick here!Throughout Paristhere areall kindsof(竞技场)stadiums andarenas wheresporting eventsare held.Not onlyParis itself,but alsothesurrounding suburbsofthecapital ofFrance setthe stagefor theOlympic Games!
21.Which sportis enteringtheOlympicsfor thefirst timein Paris2024A.Olympic skateboarding.B.Olympic sportsclimbing.C.Olympicsurfing.D.Olympic breakdancing.
22.Which ofthe followingstatements iscorrectA.Olympic skateboardingrequires ahigh levelof physicalstrength.B.Three branchesof Olympicsportsclimbingevaluate varioussides ofskills.C.All theabove fourOlympic eventswillbeheldinParis.D.The scoringof Olympicbreakdancing ishighly objective:
23.Where isthe textprobably takenfromA.A sportswebsite.B.A healthmagazine.C.A travelbrochure.D.An Olympicnews report.Living life to itsfullestOn thenight ofAugust24,2001,everything changedwhen myfriends carhit awallwith meinside.I lostmost of my rightleg,and I was leftbleeding withseveral brokenbones.At thehospital,although my body wasweak,my mindwas stillvery clear.I justkept tellingmyselfto holdon.A weeklater,I madea dealwith thedoctors thatonce I could rollonto myside,I couldleave.Two weekslater,I was allowed togo home.Although Ileft thehospital,the fightwas farfrom over.My leftknee wasbadly injured,which resultedin differentoperations overthe nextfew years.And soon,more ofmy rightleg hadto beremoved.This madeit harderto wearmy falseleg,so Idonated itto anurse whocouldnt affordone forherself.The joyof beingable toprovidethis giftfor someoneelse wasgreater thanthe happinessI felton anyday I was abletowear itmyself.People oftentell methey*re proudof mefor stayingstrong.But in my mind,stayingstrong hasalways beenmy onlychoice.So,ontheday Ileft thehospital,I madea promisetomyself toalways livelife tothe fullest.Now,I maynot be able todo things the wayeverybody else doesthem,but still,I alwaysfindaway todo them.I soonsettled intoeverydaylife again,until one day Irealized Iwasn*t livingmy lifeas fullyas I wanted to.After13years ofthinking thatIwasconfident,I hadan unfamiliarfeeling sweepoverme.For thefirst timeinmylife,Iwasnot onlyconfident butIwantedto helpthose aroundme.In2014,1even startedmodeling.My dreamis that onedaya littlegirl willsee mein amagazineand say,“Wow,shes beautiful,and sheonly hasone leg.Icoulddo thattoosomeday,even thoughI havea disability79My dreamis simple:to inspireevery man,woman,and child into knowingand believingthat they are beautifuljust theway theyare.
24.Howdid the author feelafter thecar accidentA.She complainedthat lifewas unfairto her.B,She wasunable toaccept theloss ofher leg.C.She kepta positiveattitude towardlife.D.She feltlucky thatshe wasstill alive.
25.Why didthe authorfeel happyin Paragraph3A.She wasable tooffer helpto others.B・She couldwear herfalse legagain.C.She hadlived herlifetothe fullest.D.She coulddo everydaythingsthesame aseverybodyelse.
26.Why didtheauthorbegin modelingin2014A.She wantedto bea famousmagazine star.B・She wantedto encourageothers tobe confidentabout themselves.C.She wantedto challengeherself tobeaspeaker.D.She wantedto provethat disabled people couldalso succeed.
27.What wasthe authorsmain purposein writingthe articleA.To stressthe importanceof havinga dream.B・To showhow difficultthe lifeis fordisabled people.C.To inspireothers bysharing herpast experiences.D.To giveadvice todisabledpeopleon howto makea living.CChildren areoften exposedto dietculture froma youngage and its negativeimpacts canbelong-lasting,according toVirginia Smith,author ofa newbook titledFat Talk,Parentingin theAge ofDiet Culture.“Kids,atavery youngage,start tobecome awareof bodyshaming JSmith said.“Themain factorsof childrens future eatingdisorder(饮食失调)are kids9being ashamedof theirweightand theirhistory ofdieting inchildhood.”In FatTalk,Smith arguesthatoneway parentscan fightback againstthis isto takea血fresh lookattheword“fat”.“We canunderstand asjust aneutral bodydescriptor,justlike sayingtall orshort orbrown hair,black hair...Smith said.If yourchildina biggerbodycomes toyou,and hesays JAm Ifat youshouldbe honest withhim andsay,‘Youre fat.And theresdefinitely nothingwrong withthat.We loveyour bodyjust theway itis.“Another suggestionfrom Smithis forparents tochange conversationswith andin frontofchildren athome.We cansay Imnot goingto shamemybodyin frontofmykids andImgoing tocelebrate bodiesin allshapes andsizes/9Smith recommended.David Anderson,aparenting expert,added,So ifyou havea childwhos ina biggerbody,talk abouttheirstrengths.David continued,Helping ourchildren concentrateon howour bodieswork,howthey allowus toachieve ourgoals...these arethings wecan remindour kidsabout everysingleday.”Often dietconversations aboutsize canbe unavoidablefor children,but Davidsaidparents canact asa shieldbetween childrenand someofthemost harmfulmessages behinddietculture.But aschildren growolder,David encouragesparents tobehonestwith kidsabouttheir ownstruggles andnot topretend theyknow everythingand thatkids knownothingabout dietculture.
28.What mightcontribute tochildrensfutureeating disorderA.Body shapeand peerpressure.B.Body imageand parentingstyle.C.Body changeand foodpreference.D.Body shameand dietingexperience.
29.What canbe learnedfrom paragraph3A.Kids shouldmake peacewith theirbody image.B.Kids shouldtake pridein beingoverweight.C.Parents shouldteach theirkids honesty.D.Parents shouldgive“fat”a positivedefinition.
30.What shouldkids focuson according to DavidAndersonA.Their bodyfunctions.B.Their individualcharacters.C.Their physicalappearance.D.Their careerachievements.
31.What doesthe underlinedword“shield inthe lastparagraph meanA.Editor.B.Supporter.C.Protector.D.Connector.DWhy dowe laughat movieslike OfficeSpace orshows likeThe OfficeWhafs sofunnyabout workStevefrom Californiashared.During ameeting,my bosspraised ourcolleague,sayinghow handsomehe is.The teamfelt awkwardlysurprised,until myboss corrected,No—itsgreat howhands-on heis!Everyone laughed,easing thetense atmospherefrom themeeting.Well,heishandsome,too!I defendedjokingly,and weal laughedagain!”Office mayseem likea seriousplace.But,accordingtoa study,introducing somelaughterinto work life cancontribute toour well-being andproductivity.In fact,findinghumor isone ofthe practiceswe teachstudents in our onlinecourse.The funnystories theysharedremind usthat alittle playfulnessgoes along waytoward a more enjoyableworklife.Laughter servesto createand strengthensocial bondsin humans-as wellas inour chimp(黑猩猩)ancestors.One evolutionarytheory claimsthat laughterfirst appearedin theseancestorsasaresponse tosignal thattheyaresafe atpresent anda reliefto othersaftersomething unexpectedoccurs.This alsohas implicationsin moderntimes,anditmay explainwhycolleagues wholaugh moretogether tendto enjoyamoresafe orcomfortableenvironment anda greatersense ofunity amongteams.Feeling comfortableinourwork environmentcan enableus tothink openlyand takerisks-a basisfor findingcreative solutionsat work,contributing toour productivity.According toone study,managers whouse humorat workare more likely toreach theirunitstarget goals.Whafs more,employees whosay thattheir manager“makes uslaugh atourselveswhen weare tooserious or“uses humorto takethe edgeoff duringstressfulperiods aremorelikelyto trusttheir manager,and feela senseof belongingat work.Of course,humor isntalways calledfbr-particularly ifits adistraction fromour。
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