1、静安区学年高二英语教学质量检测静安区2016-2017学年高二英语教学质量检测考生注意:1考试时间105分钟,试卷满分100分。2本考试设试卷和答题纸两部分。试卷分为第I卷(第1-11页)和第II卷(第12页), 全卷共l2页。所有答题必须涂(选择题)或写(非选择题)在答题纸上,做在试卷上 一律不得分。 3答题前,务必在答题纸上填写准考证号和姓名。4答题纸涂号及答题与试卷题号一致。第I卷(共75分)I. Listening Comprehension(略)II. Grammar and VocabularySection ADirections: After reading the passa
2、ge below, fill in the blanks to make the passage coherent and grammatically correct. For the blanks with a given word, fill in each blank with the proper form of the given word; for the other blanks, use one word that best fits each blank. The days of elderly women cooking huge meals on holidays and
3、 knitting themselves slowly into senior life are gone. Enter the Red Hat Society - a group dedicated to the new concept (17)_old ladies should have fun. “My grandmothers did (18)_ but keep house and serve everybody. They were programmed to do that,” said Emily Cornette, founder of a chapter of the 7
4、-year-old Red Hat Society. The group has chapters in all 50 U.S. states and 25 countries. While men have long spent their retirement fishing, women always seem to become invisible as they (19)_(age). But the generation now turning 50 is the baby boomers, and the same people who rejected their parent
5、s way of being young are now making a new way of growing old. With a bit of disposable income and (20)_(good) health compared with the past generation for most elderly into the mix, the Red Hat Society starts to look almost inevitable. “This is something just for me,” Cornette said. She kept an eagl
6、e eye out for guests with empty cups or plates that needed (21)_(refill). There arent any rules, really. We are doing (22)_cant be imagined by old-time women. We are just looking for fun.” According to its founder Cooper, she (23)_(inspire) when she saw a poem by Jenny Joseph that begins: “When I am
7、 an old woman, I shall wear purple with a red hat which doesnt go.” Cooper gave her friend a copy of the poem, along with a red hat, (24) _ served as thesymbol of the organization. Soon other women wanted red hats, and they (25)_(attract)thousands of participants since then. “The point of this is th
8、at we women could have fun for ourselves instead of doing thingsjust for others,”Cooper said in a telephone interview. “We are forming a little society (26)_we can feel relaxed and delighted along with our peers.”Section BDirections: Complete the following passage by using the words in the box. Each
9、 word can onlybe used once. Note that there is one word more than you need.A. attached B. similar C. exposure D. improvement E. humble F. matches G. reflected H. unknown I. scene J. themes K. puzzled July 18, 2017 marks the 200th anniversary of the death of Jane Austen, one of thebest-known writers
10、in English literature. Her legacy of social acclaim and impressive wit haveensured her place in literary history, and even today, modem readers are still 27 by thehuge information and concepts her novels have delivered. But do you know that Janes work was sort of drawn from her own life? Many of the
11、 places and people in Janes work are 28 to those in her real life. Jane moved as part of society, and her writing 29 some impressive wit, cleverly teasing the upper class by which Jane was surrounded. Following her fathers death, Jane and her mother faced a financial difficulty much like that of the
12、 Dashwood women in Sense and Sensibility who have to live a 30 life. Jane spent a good deal of time in the town of Bath, which is the 31 ofboth Northanger Abbey and Persuasion -although Persuasion portrays the town in a morenegative light. She even used the names of family and friends in her writing
13、-her mother, Cassandra Leigh, was related to the Willoughbys and the Wentworths, both upper class families in Yorkshire.Cassandra Leigh was thought to have “married down”when she 32 herself to Janesfather, clergyman George Austen. Brothers Francis and Charles were both officers in the Royal Navy, an
14、d frequently wroteletters home. Jane used some of their stories to produce 33 in Persuasion and MansfieldPark. Brother Edward had been adopted by wealthy cousins, and later inherited their estates, soJane traveled frequently to visit his stately homes at ChawtonandGodmersham Park.Sometimes staying f
15、or months at a time, Jane was quite a social butterfly, and was able to usethis 34 to the upper class to produce the backdrops of her novels. Although Janes characters almost all have happy-ever-after love 35 in the end, Janeherself never married. In December 1802, at the age of 27, she was briefly
16、engaged -and bybriefly, were talking about for a single day. Jane and sister Cassandra were visiting long-timefriends at Manydown Park, and the friends brother, Harris Bigg-Wither, some five yearsyounger than Jane, and by all accounts “very plain in personality”, asked for Janes hand inmarriage. Har
17、ris was only her betrothed for about 24 hours. The very next day, for reasons 36 to anyone else, Jane changed her mind, and she and Cassandra left Manydown, ratherthan stay in a house with a painful ex.III. Reading ComprehensionSection ADirections: For each blank in the following passage there are f
18、our words or phrases marked A,B, C and D. Fill in each blank with the word or phrase that best fits the context. The course of true love may run more smoothly in future -mobile phone services havebecome involved in the challenge of modem dating. On the same day that Britains biggest dating agency la
19、unched a remote-viewing service ofpotential mates from the 37 of ones own handset, another service promises to do yourdirty work and get rid of unwanted admirers. Technology appears to be 38 old-fashioned chemistry and conversation over dinner:loveless singletons can now pick up and let go of potent
20、ial partners without so much as a sorryheart or 39 silence. For todays hi-tech lovers, video clips will work as 40 for formal introductionsenabling single men and women to find potential lovers through filmed personal messages fromother lonely hearts, all recorded on and downloaded from their mobile
21、 telephones. Then, if things go wrong, there is no need to 41 the kindest way to let a lover downgently, because your mobile will deliver a guilt-free message for you, before 42 any morecalls from the caller you dont want to contact any more. New users of Datelines new mobile-matchmaking service wil
22、l be requested to do a videointerview, during which they will be questioned in order to produce a one-minute film for anonline 43 . “The system will ask who people are looking for and, most importantly, get people to 44 themselves. Users will be shown samples to get the idea and people can alwaysre-
23、record if they are not happy,”says Jim Weir, the managing director of Dateline. Any of the other users of the platform can then view different clips according to their personal 45 , in the hope that the extra visual information will lead to a higher rate of successful 46 . Then the other, altogether
24、 less romantic, service is at hand to allow either party the chanceto withdraw if things turn 47 . The package, called Securfone, will mean that you will never have to pick up a(n) 48 call again. Depending on who is calling, your mobile can now politely let someoneknow you are temporarily 49 , promi
25、se to call them back later or tell them you never wantto see them again. Users are given as many temporary phone numbers as they like which arerouted through to their phone until they are no longer 50 . In that way, the relationship is 51 ended.37. A. comfort B. origin C. pain D. result38. A. employ
26、ing B. generating C. replacing D. discovering39. A. awkward B. progressive C. stable D. occasional40. A. founder B. media C. basis D. suggestion41. A. put forward B. take over C. worry about D. carry out42. A. recording B. creating C. promoting D. rejecting43. A. database B. fund C. charity D. train
27、ing44. A. welcome B. publish C. describe D. stimulate45. A. tastes B. advantages C. benefits D. resources46. A. management B. pairing C. deals D. negotiation47. A. simple B. sour C. positive D. normal48. A. unwanted B. expected C. unique D. angry49. A. bad-tempered B. outgoing C. unavailable D. inac
28、ceptable50. A. punished B. accused C. called D. missed51. A. officially B. temporarily C. considerably D. particularlySection BDirections: Read the following three passages. Each passage is followed by several questions orunfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C
29、and D. Choosethe one that fits best according to the information given in the passage you have just read. (A) I have learned that sweets are one of the great unifiers in the human world. We might lookdifferent and speak different languages but most of us, especially the young ones, love sweets.I wou
30、ld always make sure I brought a bag of sweets to give to the beautiful children we wouldmeet. One day, we stopped at one of the 15,000 orphan-led households in Swaziland(斯威士兰).Inside the hut, we found a beautiful little girl with huge brown eyes. Her name was Tanzile. I gave her a sweet from my bag
31、and she said something back to me in Si-swati, the nativelanguage, which the nurse next to me translated,“She wants another one, doctor, to give to herlittle sister.” I agreed and gave her another. After we had tended to a man with tuberculosis a bit furtherdown the road, we passed by Tanziles house
32、 to say goodbye. To our surpise, she seemed to beholding on to that extra sweet I had given her. I jokingly said that Tanzile could have asked forthe whole bag of sweets and we would have innocently given it to her. We then spent some timetalking with her and that was when we discovered how deep her pain was. It had
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