1、高考模拟河南省郑州市届高三下学期第三次模拟考试 英语word版有答案河南省郑州市2018届高三下学期第三次模拟考试英语试题第一部分 听力(共两节,满分30分)做题时,先将答案标在试卷上。录音内容结束后,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,并标在试卷的相应位罝。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. Why does the man need a map?A. To tour Manchester.B.
2、To find a restaurant.C. To learn about Chinatown.2. What does the woman want to do for the vacation?A. Go to the beach. B. Travel to Colorado. C. Learn to snowboard.3. What will the man probably do?A. Take the job. B. Refuse the offer. C. Change the working hours.4. What does the woman say about Joh
3、n?A. He wont wait for her.B. He wont come home today.C. He wont be on time for dinner.5. What will the speakers probably do next?A. Order some boxes. B. Go home and rest. C. Continue working.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,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
4、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 does Lisa usually go to work?A. By car. B. By bus. C. By train.7. What do the speakers agree on when talking about taking the train?A. It is safer. B. It is faster. C. It is cheaper.听第7段材料,回答第8至10题。8. What does the man suggest the woman do?A.
5、 Save up for the car.B. Go to another car dealer.C. Ask someone to check the car.9. What will the salesman do?A. Give a discount. B. Stick to a high price. C. Ask for cash payment.10. How will the man help the woman?A. Lend money to her. B. Drive her car home. C. Take care of her car.听第8段材料,回答第11至13
6、题。11. What does the woman think of the living expenses in the city?A. Fairly low. B. Just Okay. C. Very high.12. What does the woman spend most on?A. Meals. B. Trains. C. Clothes.13. What does the woman do in her free time?A. See films. B. Travel around. C. Go for a drink.听第9段材料,回答第14至16题。14. What w
7、ill Rebecca do on June 12?A. Go on a business trip.B. Organize a trade exhibition.C. Meet the people from Head Office.15. What is John preparing for the meeting?A. A report. B. A timetable. C. A speech.16. When do the speakers decide to have the meeting?A. On June 3. B. On June 10. C. On June 17.听第1
8、0段材料,回答第17至20题。 17. Which is the quickest way to get around London?A. The bus. B. The taxi. C. The tube.18. How are different lines marked on the tube map?A. By shape. B. By colour. C. By number.19. What should you do if you find yourself going in the wrong direction?A. Get off at the next station.B
9、. Get out of the tube at once.C. Ask the train driver for help.20. What might the speaker be?A. A tourist guide. B. A radio host. C. A tube staff member.第二部分 阅读理解(共两节,满分40分)第一节(共15小题;每小题2分,满分30分)阅读下列短文,从每题所给的A、B、C和D四个选项中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。ACome to the AG Societys expedition (探险) program and you wil
10、l surely get unique experiences! SWIM WITH THE HUMPBACKS OF TONGADairen Jew and his team are your hosts for an unforgettable AG Society adventure, filled with in-water meetings with humpback whales (座头鲸) in the Kingdom of Tongas group of islands.WHO: Darren Jews Whales UnderwaterDATES: 26 September-
11、4 October 2018COST: $ 5,450 per personBOOKINGS: Call 0756679413, email reservations or visit 11-DAY KIMBERLEY COAST CRUISEThe AG Society is partnering with APT to present an exciting voyage along the Kimberley coastline from Broome to Darwin. Expedition cruising offers the easiest way to explore the
12、 Kimberley. Guests on this 11 -day voyage will go ashore, explore natural wonders, meet traditional owners, see rock art and spot wildlife.WHO: APTDATES: 6-16 September 2018 COST: $ 13,395 per person BOOKINGS: Visit .auLIGHTNING RIDGE FOSSIL DIGThe AG Society offers you a chance to hunt for fossils
13、(化石). Guided by experts, youll go to special locations, seeking new fossils for the collections of the Australian Opal Centre. Your discoveries will further establish these museum collections as a world- class scientific and cultural resource. There are also a series of lectures on mining history, f
14、ossils, dinosaur hunting and new dinosaurs. WHO: Australian Opal Centre DATES: 20-25 August 2018 COST: $ 2,200 per person, including all activities and lunches and dinnersBOOKINGS: Call 0427904587, email dig or visit australian opalcentre. comAG DKVIL ARK FXPEDITIONCome and join Tim Faulkner for a u
15、nique hands-on experience with this Tasmanian devil (袋獾) feeding program in the beautiful Barrington Tops of NSW. Youll get to see devils up close as you assist with feeding individuals. In addition to working with the animals, therell he opportunities to explore the areas natural treasures and spot
16、 local wildlife. Dont miss your chance to get involved in this important conservation effort. WHO: Devil Ark DATES: 24-26 November 2018 COST: $ 1,750 per person BOOKINGS: Call 0243408610, email info devilark.org. au or visit devilark.org. au21. If you join in LIGHTNING RIDGE FOSSIL DIG, you can .A.
17、go to seek new fossils individuallyB. learn something about mining historyC. collect the world-class scientific fossilsD. become an expert and go to special locations22. What can you do if you take part in AG DEVIL ARK EXPEDITION?A. Help protect wildlife.B. Learn about dinosaurs.C. Watch humpback wh
18、ales.D. Enjoy an exciting voyage.23. Which program will you choose if you want to enjoy rock art?A. AG DEVIL ARK EXPEDITION.B. LIGHTNING RIDGE FOSSIL DIG.C. 11-DAY KIMBERLEY COAST CRUISE.D. SWIM WITH THE HUMPBACKS OF TONGA. BUS student Vanessa Tahay stands out from the other teenagers in her school.
19、 Her skin is dark, her accent is thick, and if you ask her, she will tell you these are the things she is proudest of. Tahay is a poet, and at 18 she was considered among the best in Los Angeles.When she is on the stage, audiences often go silent. They also laugh, shout and cry. But this doesnt come
20、 easily for someone who comes from a village that sits at the base of a huge mountain range in Central America. When she first appeared at school, she was teased by others for being short and different. She never spoke, so they called her “mouse”.“How do I defend myself?” Tahay thought. “I dont know
21、 how.”“Keep going,” her mother would tell her. “At some point, youll learn.”She spent hours after school and on weekends watching the same DVDs: English without Barriers.Tahays elder brother, Elmer, persuaded her to go to the after-school poetry club. In the last six years, her English teacher Lauri
22、e Kurnick has turned Cleveland Charter High Schools poetry program into one of the most respected in the city. Her team draws from the likes of D.H. Laurence, Pat Mora and Kendrick Lamar to create poems about their own lives. The poems focus on many things some funny, some painful.The first time Tah
23、ay read the groups poems, chills went up her spine (脊柱). “I wish I could write like that,” she thought. “I want to say something.”She wrote her first poem about her first year in America. She called it Invisible. The day her turn came to recite in front of the team, she broke down crying. She cried
24、for 15 minutes. “I had so much held in,” Tahay said. “I couldnt even finish it.” But she kept at it despite her less-than-perfect grammar, spelling and diction (措辞). Still, she wouldnt tell her friends about her poetry because she worried they would make fun of her.But with time, her poems changed h
25、er. “They gave me pride,” Tahay said. “They told me that Im worth something.”“She had this innocence,” Kurnick said. “This willingness to be genuine and show you things you dont ever see.” 24. What did Tahays mother suggest she do when she was teased by others?A. Fight with them bravely. B. Report t
26、hem to her teachers.C. Ignore them and keep going.D. Try hard to make friends with them.25. What are the themes of Tahay and her teams poems?A. Their admiration for the great poets.B. Their appreciation of natural beauty.C. Their expectations of a better future.D. Funny and painful stories about the
27、ir lives.26. How did Tahay probably feel when she first read the groups poems?A. She was cold. B. She was excited.C. She was nervous. D. She was frightened.27. How did Tahay benefit from writing poems?A. She felt more confident about herself.B. She won many national poetry competitions.C. She became
28、 the first student poet in the city.D. She improved her grammar and spelling greatly.C“Years ago when I was at the Grand Canyon, I remembered someone coming up to the canyons edge, taking a shot with a camera and then walking away, like got it done, barely even glancing at the magnificent scene in f
29、ront of him,” Linda Henkel, a scientist at Fairfield University, US told Live Science.Henkel was surprised by how obsessed (痴迷的) people are with taking pictures these days - before dinner, during friends birthday parties, on museum tours and so on.They keep taking pictures because they think that it
30、 helps record the moment, but as Henkels latest study has just found out, this obsession may prevent their brains remembering what actually happened, reported The Guardian.In her study, Henkel led a group of college students around a museum and asked them to simply observe 15 objects and photograph
31、15 others. The next day the students memory of the tour was tested, and the results showed that they were less accurate in recognizing the objects and they remembered fewer details about them if they photographed them.When people rely on technology to remember them 一 counting on the camera to record the event and thus not needing to attend to it fully themselves, it can have a negative impact on how well they remember their ex
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