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四川省兴文第二中学校2023-2024学年高三上学期10月月考英语试题
一、短对话A.Grateful.B.Nervous.C.Relieved.
2.What arethe speakersmainly discussingA.The womanspromotion.B.The mansperformance.C.Their co-worker.
3.Which horsewill the woman chooseA.The brownone.B.The whiteone.C.The blackone.
4.What is the mansopinionA.Most websitesare safe.B.Most websitessteal money.C.More andmore peopleshop online.
5.What isMary doingA.Watching TV.B.Listening to the radio.C.Reading books.
1.How doesthe womanfeel
二、长对话听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题A.Her naturalgift.B.Her teamscooperation.C.Her familyssupport.
6.What benefitsthe womanmost inher successA,Her mother.B.Her teammate.C.Her teacher.
7.Who willthe womantalk aboutnext听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题
8.What wasthe womandoing in the previoustwo weeksA.She wason vacation.B.She wasworking.C.She wasstudying.
9.When did the womanreach NewYorkA.In themorning.B.In theafternoon.C.Tn theevening.
53.A.rediscovered B.broken C,understood D.accepted
54.A.chatting B.playing C.working D.learning
55.A.ignore B・imagine C.miss D.enjoy
56.A.amused B.shocked C.touched D.puzzled
57.A.naturally B.quickly C.obviously D.normally
58.A.remained B,changed C・mattered D.happened
59.A.established B,spoiled C,betrayed D.improved
60.A.coincidence B.experience C.practice D.lesson
七、用单词的适当形式完成短文阅读下面短文,在空白处填入个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式1变身,When youhear theword shapeshifting”you maythink ofsci-fi movies,and notthe climate.But thafs61animals aredoing todeal withclimate change.A newstudy showsthat someanimals are62gradual growinglarger beaks,legs andears.In thisway they can loseheat moreeasily63cool themselvesdown asEarth getswarmer.A lotof thetimewhen wetalk aboutclimate change,we askCan humansovercome thisor Whattechnology cansolve thisBut weshouldknow that animals alsohave toadapt64these changes,said thestudys authorSara Ryding,from DeakinUniversity,Australia.If animalsfail tocontrol65they bodytemperature,theycanoverheat anddie.In oneexample,the beaksofsome Australianparrot species66grow4to10percent largersince
1871.The studysays itsclosely relatedto the67risesummer temperaturesover theyears.Similar examplesinclude woodmice.They havelonger tails,and batsin warmclimateshave bigger68wing.Although thechanges arestill small,Ryding saidthey couldbe69obvious asthe daysbecome hotter.Body partslikeears arepredicted to be bigger,70we mightend upwith alive-action Dumbobig-eared elephantfrom aDisneycartoon in the nearfuture,9,Ryding toldBBC.
八、短文改错假定英语课上老师要求同学们交换修改作文,请你修改你同桌写的以下作文文中共有处语言错误,每句
71.10中最多有两处错误涉及一个单词的增加、删除或修改增加在缺词处加一个漏字符号(A),并在其下面写上该加的词删除把多余的词用斜线(\)划掉修改在错的词下划一横线,并在该词下面写上修改后的词注意每处错误及其修改均仅限一词;
1.只允许修改处,多者(从第处起)不计分
2.1011Being ateacher is not easyjob.A teacherwho hasto playtoo manyroles asan educator,a guide,a conductor,adirector and sometimes aparent,either!We allhave at least onefavorite teachermore likea friendto usin ourlives,but wearealways sincerelygrateful to them forall thelove andguidance.The hardwork,time andpatience thatteachers devotewithstudents,without doubt,is beyondcompare.They aresimply strongpillars behindbuilding anynation.They worktirelesswithout anycomplaint toenrich thelives ofon-going generations.To acknowledgethe amazingvalue of theirefforts,we aresupposed tosend themspecial cardsor giftson theirgraduation day.In thisway,we would be able todeliver ourthanks tothose inspirationalteacher in a mostbeautiful manner.
九、推荐信.假如你是李华,你的美国笔友对中国的美食很感兴趣,来信希望你能推荐中国的一种特色美食,请你72Mike给他回信,推荐火锅要点如下火锅的食用方式;
1..代表向往团圆的饮食文化;2营造出温馨和谐的氛围
3.注意词数左右;
1.100可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯
4.
10.What is the conversationmainly aboutA.A watch.B.A camera.C.A crime.
11.What is the relationshipbetween thespeakersA.Policewoman andcitizen.B.Neighbors.C.Friends.
12.What didthe mannoticeA,A loudnoise.B.A whitecar.C.A pieceof jewelry.听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题
13.Who isMr.TimmsA.The headof the company.B.The volunteerorganizer.C.A TrueBlue Neighborsrepresentative.
14.According to thewoman,which grouphas thebiggest needA.The soupkitchen.B・The elementaryschool.C.The shelter.
15.What willhappen ifthe employeesjoin thetutoring programA.They willbe paidfour hourseach week.B.They willreceive training.C.They willneed tosign up.
16.What willthe employeesprobably doafter theconversationA.Ask morequestions.B,Get somedinner together.C.Read somemore information.
三、短文听下面一段独白,回答以下小题
17.When didthe consultantsdo thesurveyA.Several monthsago.B.Several weeksago.C.Several daysago.
18.What wasthe companysscore forfriendliness asa wholeA.8out of
10.B.7out of
10.C.6out of
10.
19.How didthe consultantssuggest thecompany improvetheir friendlinessA.By usingclassic music.B・By answeringthe callscheerfully.C.By usingsome goodphrases on the phone.
20.What didthecompanystaff dowell inA.How quicklythey answeredthe calls.B.How efficientlythey dealtwith inquiries.C.How exactlythey rememberedthe callers9names.
四、阅读理解When itcomes tonew music,January was a bitslow.Still,there weregreat releasesthat hadus listeningon repeat.Heres someof the new musicyou mayhave missedin January.Jazmine Sullivan,66Heaux Tales59Sullivan rosetothetop of the Ramp;B chartsin
2008.Her newalbum,Heaux Tales”,was released on Jan.
8.Muchof thealbum wasrecorded inSullivans Philadelphiahome due totheCOVID-19lockdown.The Ramp;B staris setto getsomemajor exposureat thisyears SuperBowl onFeb.7,where shellsing thenational anthem.Olivia Newton-John,^Window in the Wall”Olivia Newton-John releasedthis songon Jan.22with herdaughter ChloeRose Lattanzi.played thesong andI startedcrying.It wasreally emotional;”the Australianartist said.It was just aknowingness thatI hadto dothis songbecause itsaboutrelationships,forgiveness,seeing otherpeoples pointof view,and stillwith love,understanding andkindness.Itsnot thefirst timethe mother-daughter duohas cooperatedon asong.In2015they sangYou Haveto Believe”.Selena Gomez,nDe UnaVez”Gomez,a Texasnative,sang inSpanish onher latestsingle,De UnaVez AtOnce,which droppedon Jan.
14.TVsthe firsttrack fromher upcomingalbum,Revelaci6n;Revelation whichis dueout onMay
12.Itll beGomezsfirst Spanish-language album.Justin Bieber,“Anyone”Bieber startedthe newyear witha freshnew song.Anyone”was officiallyreleasedonJan.
1.Fans hadbeen eagerly(首发)looking forwardto itsdebut.“Anyone”was oneof severalsongs Bieberperformed duringhis NewYearsEve broadcast.Biebets lastalbum,“Changes,dropped last year onValentines Day.A.Jazmine Sullivan.B.Olivia Newton-John.
21.Who releasedthenewmusic earliestC.Selena Gomez.D.Justin Bieber.
22.Which ofthe followinghas not been outA.”Heaux Tales】B.HYou Haveto Believe^.C.Revelacion.D.Changes”.
23.What canbe saidabout Windowin theWallA.It ranksNo.1on theRamp;B charts.B.It issung in the Spanishlanguage.C.It isa mother-daughter production.-D.It isabout someoneslong lostlove.Time flies.Youth fades.Treasure eachmoment ofyour accompaniedby guitarand drums,the Bandfor One,made upoffive people,sang thelyrics soulfullyduring aperformance inHangzhou,Zhejiang province,on November7,
2020.Behind theband,there wasa pictureof ayoung mannamed PhilipHancock shownonthescreen.And heisthe reasonwhy theywere allthere.Hancock wasa27-year-old Australianwho taughtEnglish inChongqing.When hedied in2018duetoa disease,his parentsfollowed hiswishes anddonated hisorgans.The fivepeople introducedthemselves onstage.They arethe oneswho receivedPhilips organs.Last November,theRed Crossofficials toldme Philipsparents mentionedduring anearlier memorialservice thathe lovedmusic anddreamedof havinghis ownband oneday,said ChenXianjun,a recipient.Chen wasinstantly onboard toform aband inmemory ofPhilip,and sowere theother fourrecipients.Since they had nomusic experience,theyhadto start from scratch.From learningthe guitar,to masteringthe maracasandtaking onthe drums,they tooktime outof theirbusy livesto practiceover thepast year.Peter Hancock,Philips father,said afterwatching thebands performance,his biggestwish isfor the five toenjoy theirlives more.Organ donationisnotonly thebest way to honora lovedone,but alsoa remarkablewayto save thelives ofothers.China facesa seriousshortage of organs,with about300,000people waitingfor organtransplant surgerieseach year.Butthe goodnews is,more andmore peoplehave beensigning upto beorgan donors,showing thespirit ofselflessness thatPhilipandso many othershave shown.
24.Why didthefivepeople formthe bandA.To competein asinging performance.B.To showtheir respectfor PeterHancock.C.To raisemoney forthe localRed Cross.D.To expresstheir appreciationto Philip.
25..How longdid ittake therecipients toprepare forthe performanceA.One year.B.Two years.C.Three years.D.Five years.
26.What dothe underlinedwords“startfromscratch,,in paragraph4meanA.lose interestin music.B.practice from the verybeginning.C.take partin trainingcourses.D.turn tosome musiciansfor help.
27.What canwe learnfrom thelast paragraphA.Citizens areencouraged to donate organs.B.Organ donationisthebest waytosavelives.C.The authorthinks highlyoforgandonations.D.Few peopleare willingtodonatetheir organs.A spacecraftcarrying NieHaisheng,Liu Bomingand TangHongbotouched downsafelyin theGobi Desertin InnerMongoliatoday Sept.17at1:34a.m.EDT1:34p.m.Beijing timetoday,bringing thehistoric Shenzhou12mission toanend.Shenzhou12launched onJune16and arrivedseven hours later atTianheHarmony ofthe Heavens^^,the coremoduleof Chinas Earth-orbiting spacestation.The Shenzhou12crew,commanded byNie,spent90days aboardTianhe,staying aloftabout threetimes longerthan anyprevious Chinesecrewed spaceflight.Shenzhou12s returnto Earthwasamultiday affair.The spacecraftdetached fromTianhe WednesdaySept.15at8:56p.m.EDT,according toa statementreleased bythe ChinaManned SpaceEngineering OfficeCMSEO.Shenzhou12then performeda rendezvoustest withTianhe,which wascomplete by1:38a.m.EDT ThursdaySept.16,CMSEOofficials saidin anotherupdate.During theirtime inorbit,the Shenzhou12astronauts snappedsome amazingphotos ofEarth andcarried outa varietyofscientific experiments.They alsoperformed twospacewalks designedto helpget the54-foot-long
16.6meters Tianhefullyup and running andready forfuture visits,which willbe frequentover thecoming months.For example,China isexpected tosend the robotic Tianzhou3cargo spacecrafttoward Tianhearound Sept.
20.Andthe nextcrewed missiontothemodule,the six-month-long Shenzhou13,is apparentlyscheduled tolaunch inmid-October.Exact targetdates arehard tocome bywith Chinesemissions,because thenation tendsnot toannounce manydetails ofitsspaceflight plansin advance.
28.The underlinedpart toucheddown“in thefirst paragraphprobably means.A.landed successfullyB.launched ontimeC.took offon scheduleD.updated aroundthe clock
29.According tothe passagewe knowEDT is.A.12hours aheadof BeijingtimeB.8hours aheadof GreenwichMean TimeC.12hours laterthan BeijingtimeD.8hourslaterthan GreenwichMean Time
30.What isthe mainpurpose ofthe missionto TianheA.To repairthe partsthat wentwrong.B.To carryout twospace walks.C.To sendtheroboticTianzhou3cargo spacecraft.D.To getChinasEarth-orbiting spacestation readyandrunning.
31.In whichsection canwe mostpossibly readthis texton awebsiteA.Geography.B.News.C.Health.D.Environment.More plantsare growingand expandingaround Mount Everest localname MountQomolangma asthe areacontinuesto experiencethe consequencesof global warming,researchers havefound.Scientists fromthe Universityof Exeterin theUnited Kingdomused satellitedata toestablish increasesin subnivalvegetation-plants thatgrow betweenthe treeline and the snowline.Using NASALandsat satellitedata from1993to2018,scientists measuredsmall butsignificantn increasesinvegetation coverbetween4,150and6,000meters abovesea level.“There arenow moreareas thatare coveredin plantsthan therewere in1993J saidKaren Anderson,a remote sensingscientist wholed theresearch.“We dontknow what the impactis.It maybe that plants trapsnow andmight causeit to melt moreslowly.It mightbethat theplants causethe snowtomeltmore quickly,“she added.
1.4billion peopledepend onwater collectedin theregion,and changesto water cycles andsupplies couldhave farreachingimpacts,their research,published inthe GlobalChange Biologyjournal,said.“We knowthatplantsand thewater cycleare coupled,“Anderson explained.Wherever youhave plantsgrowing,itchanges theway thewatercyclebehaves inthose areas.”“This isparticularly importantinthe Himalayas becauseglaciers arereceding,and weknow fromlots ofscientificwork thatthis is already affectingwater suppliesin thisregion Jshe added.Climate changeisalreadyhaving animpact onHimalayan communities.A2019study fromColumbia Universityfound that Himalayan glaciers have been losingalmost halfa meterof iceeach yearsince thestart ofthis century.This isalreadyresulting inflooding forlocal communities,and couldultimately resultin drought.Last year,an assessmentfromtheInternational Centrefor IntegratedMountain Developmentfoundthatat leasta thirdofthe iceintheregion couldmelt bythe endofthecentury.
32.What didKaren Andersonsay about their findingA.The increasein Himalayanvegetation ishuge.B・The plantsprevent snowfrom melting.C.Water supplieshavebeenaffected intheHimalayas.D.Loss ofHimalayanglaciersis continuingeach year.
33.What doesthe underlinedword“coupled“in Paragraph7probably meanA.Contradicted.B.Balanced.C.Opposed.D.Linked.
34.What canbe inferredabouttheresearch ofthe AndersonteamA.It hasnot beenpublished.B.It isbased onremotesensingtechnology.C.It involvesa greatdeal offield study.D.It isjointly conductedwith ColumbiaUniversity.
35..What isthe textmainly aboutA.Climate changeis makingMount Everestlower.B・Plant lifeis expandingaround MountEverest.C.Why thisyear has been sodangerous forMountEverest.D.Urgent researchis neededto understandthe increasein vegetation.
五、七选五A studycarried outintheUnited Statesat theField Museumin Chicagohas foundthat52ofthemost commonand(缩小)well-known speciesof birdsin thatcountry haveshrunk in size over a38-year period.36This shrinking insizefollows arule calledBergmans rulewhich statesthatanimalsin coolerareas tend tobelargerthan thosein warmerareas.37That isthereasonwhy animalsin coldareas arelarger.As globalwarming affectsthe planet,animals nowhave todeal withrising temperatures.38This cameto lightwhenscientists studiedover70,000birds collectedovera38-year periodat theField Museum.Studies showedother animalslikedeer,insects andfish alsohave respondedinasimilar way.(周期)What doesthis meanto thesespecies Ofcourse,our planethasbeenthrough cyclesof heatingand coolingbefore,and manyanimals havechanged to keep upwith changes in theirliving placein orderto survive.The differenceinthe presentcycle ofglobalwarmingis thatit ishappening fasterthan everbefore.39When speciesshrink,other thingsget affected,too.When ananimaPs bodyshrinks,it maynot beable togive birthtoas manyyoung asbefore.40It ispossible thatscientists haventyet fullyunderstood howchangesinsize mayaffect theability ofanimals tosurvive.This showsthe biggerproblem withclimate change-we arentalways ableto tellin advancewhat willhappen whentheEarths temperatureskeep rising.And thatisthereal danger.A.However,the shrinkingwill goon foratleastanother tenyears.B.However,animals maynotbeabletochange fastenough.C.Some animalsprefer acooler climate.D.Larger animalsare abletokeepwarmer.E.This mayaffect thesize ofa speciespopulation.F.Some of them haveresponded byshrinkinginsize.G.Scientists whodidthestudy creditthat toclimate change.
六、完形填空Mary usesa walkingstick.Benjamin recentlylearned howto walk.Mary is
99.Benjamin is
2.The neighborsmay(疫情),seem like41friends,but during the pandemicthey formeda unique42atthefence betweentheir housesinMinneapolis.Benjamin justturned2years old.Weve been43with Marylong beforehe wasborn,“Benjamins mom,Sarah Olsonsaid.They didntsee Marymuch,44lastyearwhen theCOVID-19pandemic45andthefamily hadto stayhome,Mary wassomeonethey could46-outside.During thepandemic,the Olsons47played intheir yard,and Marywouldbein hers.Benjamin would48Mary whenhesaw herintheyard andthey wouldplay games.Theres a97-year49gap,but Benjamindoesnt seeit.“Shes justMary,or MimiJSarah said.“Were insideand hellgo,Mimi Mimiand wellgo outsideand50Mary.Then Marywill callout,6Hey Benjamin!9How5j ascene itis!”For Mary,who wascompletely52duringthepandemic,a friendwasjustwhat sheneeded.It seemsMary has53achildlike spiritwith Benjamin,playing withbubbles andeven waterguns.More thana yearafter theyfirst started54together,Benjamin andMary still55eachothers company.Benjamin andMarys friendshiphas56somanybecause peoplelike toseerelationships formso57for youngpeople andelderly people.C6We didnthave towork onit atall;it丁just58Sarah said.Friendship canbe59in somany differentways.Im reallyhappy theyvedeveloped thisfriendship,she said.It issuch arewarding_60____fbr bothofthem.”
41.A.unfaithful B.unlikely C.close D.special
42.A.bond B.habit C.belief D.impression
43.A.strangers B.friends C.neighbors D.relatives
44.A.but B.so C.because D.or
45.A.continued B.ended C.hit D.faded
46.A.visit B.see C.recognize D.invite
47.A.seldom B.often C.once D.never
48.A.talk aboutB.make roomfor C.tendtoD.run overto
49.A.age B.culture C.generation D.knowledge
50.A.look intoB.look throughC・look afterD.look for
51.A.strange B.familiar C.sweet D.awkward
52.A.different B.forgotten C.independent D.alone。
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