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全国100所名校单元测试示范卷高三英语 第十七套 英语7 Units 35.docx

1、全国100所名校单元测试示范卷高三英语 第十七套 英语7 Units 35全国100所名校单元测试示范卷高三英语卷(十七)第十七套英语7Units 35(120分钟150分)第卷第一部分: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,并标在试卷的相应位置。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.How long does it take the woman to travel to work? A.45 minutes. B.30 mi

2、nutes. C.15 minutes.2.What are the speakers talking about?A.A radio. B.The sun. C.The weather. 3.How long does it take Bus 3 to get to Los Angeles?A.One hour. B.Four hours. C.Five hours. 4.Where did the man lose his money?A.In the bank. B.On the bus. C.At a shop. 5.What job does the woman want to ge

3、t?A.A job in a restaurant. B.A job as a housekeeper. C.A job as Mr Smith􀆳s assistant. 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.When does the conversation probably take pla

4、ce?A.In the morning. B.At noon. C.In the evening.7.Where is the school bag?A.Under the bed. B.Under the blanket. C.Under the desk.听第7段材料,回答第8、9题。8.Why doesn􀆳t Uncle Tom fly?A.He is afraid to fly. B.He likes the train better. C.Flying is much more expensive. 9.What will the man do before Unc

5、le Tom comes?A.Read a magazine. B.Buy a newspaper. C.Have his breakfast. 听第8段材料,回答第10至12题。10.What is the woman?A.A teacher. B.A student. C.A tourist. 11.Where was the woman born?A.In America. B.In China. C.In Spain. 12.How long has the woman been in China?A.A quarter of a year. B.Half a year. C.A ye

6、ar. 听第9段材料,回答第13至16题。13.Where does the conversation take place?A.At a hotel. B.At a store. C.At a restaurant. 14.What􀆳s wrong with the woman􀆳s coat?A.It􀆳s lost. B.It􀆳s on fire. C.It drops into water. 15.What holiday is it today?A.Valentine􀆳s Day. B.Christ

7、mas Day. C.Thanksgiving Day. 16.Why is the woman sneezing?A.She has a cold. B.It is cold here. C.She is allergic to roses. 听第10段材料,回答第17至20题。17.How many sports will the children have in the camp?A.12. B.13. C.20.18.What are the afternoon activities?A.Indoor sports only. B.Outdoor sports only. C.A fr

8、ee choice.19.How long will the lunch last?A.Half an hour. B.One and a half hours. C.Two hours.20.What can they buy at the shopping center?A.Snacks and drinks. B.Clothes and food. C.Shoes and drinks.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,从每题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出最佳选项。 AShe may have lacked a h

9、ome, but now this teen has top honors.A 17-year-old student who spent much of high school living around homeless shelters and sometimes sleeping in her cartoday graduated and spoke on behalf of her class at Charles Drew High School in Clayton County, Ga., just outside of Atlanta.Chelsea Fearce, who

10、held a 4.466 GPA and scored 1,900 on her SATs despite having to use her cellphone to study after the shelter lights were turned off at night.“I know I have been made stronger. I was homeless. My family slept on cushions on the floor and we were lucky if we got more than one full meal a day. Getting

11、a shower, food and clean clothes was an everyday struggle,” Fearce said in a speech she gave at her graduation ceremony. Fearce overcame her day-to-day struggles by focusing on a better day. “I just told myself to keep working, because the future will not be like this anymore,” she told WSBTV.Fearce

12、, one of five children, grew up in a family that sometimes had an apartment to live in, but at other times had to live in homeless shelters or even out of their car, if they had one. “You􀆳re worried about your home life and then worried at school. Worry about being a little hungry sometimes

13、 and go hungry sometimes. You just have to deal with it. You eat what you can, when you can,” she broke into tears uncontrolably. To our surprise, Fearce overcame the difficulties and even tested high enough to be admitted into college halfway through her high school career. She starts college next

14、year at Spelman College as a junior where she is planning to study biology, pre-med (医学预科), “Don􀆳t give up. Do what you have to do right now so that you can have the future that you want,” Fearce said in the end, with a bright smile on her face.21.How did Fearce go on with her study without

15、 access to lights?A.By the car light. B.By her cellphone.C.By lights out of shelters. D.By moonlight.22.When Fearce starts college at Spelman College, she will .A.have graduated earlier from high school than normalB.be a 17-year-old student from a poor familyC.have a home without sleeping in her car

16、 or sheltersD.have raised enough money to go to college23.From the passage, we can learn that .A.SAT is easy for the students of high schoolsB.Fearce􀆳s parents have six children to supportC.Fearce often had to struggle with starvationD.Fearce gave a speech at a ceremony of Spelman College24

17、.What can we learn from Fearce􀆳s experience?A.Knowledge can change your fate.B.Don􀆳t give up, and tomorrow will be better.C.Whatever is worth doing is worth doing well.D.He that will not work shall not eat.BStay-at-home kids are named “generation ni-ni” in Spain. They are adults wh

18、o still live at home and are neither working nor studying. But the phenomenon is by no means limited to Spain. It is a worldwide problem.In Italy they are known as “bamboccioni” or big babies. There nearly 60 percent of 18-34-year-old adults still live in their parents􀆳 home, up from almost

19、 50 percent since 1983. Once kept there by a love for mama􀆳s home-cooked food, the economic crisis has seen a rise in adults left unable to hold down a steady job or afford a home of their own. Last year a government minister, who admitted his mother washed his clothes and made his bed for

20、him until he was 30, demanded a law forcing young Italians to leave the parental nest at 18 to stop them becoming hopelessly dependent on their parents. In the UK, the government has created the term NEETS (Not currently engaged in Employment, Education or Training) for these children. In England al

21、one the percentage of NEETS aged 1924 jumped to 18.8 percent of the age group, in the last quarter of 2012, up 1.4 percent on the same period a year before. The percentage of British men in their 20s living with their parents has risen from 59 percent to 80 percent in the past 15 years, while the nu

22、mber of women has risen from 41 percent to 50 percent. The age of the average first-time house buyer is now 38.In the US the problem is known as “full nest syndrome (综合征)”. Parents there are left struggling to support adult children who stay at home with student debts and facing few job opportunitie

23、s in a weak economy. A recent study showed almost a third of American adults aged 34 and under are living with their parents.25.“Big babies” mentioned in Paragraph 2 refer to those adults who . A.are poorly educated B.are mentally disabled C.rely on their parents for a living D.work too hard to look

24、 after themselves 26.The Italian government minister thinks that . A.young people should live on their own after 18B.parents should make their children feel hopeful C.it􀆳s OK for adults children to live with their parents D.Parents should never make the bed for their children27.What can be

25、the best title for the text? A.Stay-at-home kids are under great pressure B.Stay-at-home kids are a worldwide problem C.Children worldwide enjoy staying with parentsD.Parents worldwide love their children too muchCLook closely at your handsare they clean? It doesn􀆳t matter how many times yo

26、u wash your hands, they􀆳re still crowded with microbes, which are also called “germs” or “bacteria”. Microbes are everywhere. But don􀆳t worrymost microbes don􀆳t harm you, and many actually help you stay alive. Now, scientists say the microbes that live on our hands could b

27、e useful in a surprising way: fighting crime.When police visit the scene of a crime, they often look for fingerprints to try to identify the criminal. But according to a recent study, investigators could even use microbes to help break a criminal case. Every person has his or her own set of microbes

28、 that live on their hands, according to scientists at the University of Colorado. That means the mix of different kinds of microbes on everybody􀆳s hand is uniquemuch like one􀆳s fingerprint. The scientists wanted to know whether this microbe mix could be used as a new kind of finger

29、printespecially in a crime scene where fingerprints might be hard to find. And policemen use forensics such as studying fingerprints to identify the criminal.“Microbe fingerprints are harder to hide,” said Noah Fierer, one of the scientists. “You can􀆳t sterilize (杀菌) a surface just by wipin

30、g it off.”His team compared the bacteria on the hands of 273 people to the bacteria found on each person􀆳s computer keyboard. For the study, the keyboards had been used only by the people who were being tested. The study showed that the mix of microbes from each person􀆳s hands matc

31、hed the mix of microbes on that person􀆳s keyboard. The scientists were easily able to tell the 273 people apartjust by looking at their keyboards.But there are a lot more than 273 criminals. Other scientists wonder whether the microbe fingerprint can really be that useful. Fierer agrees tha

32、t scientists have a lot more work to do before the microbe fingerprint will be a useful tool.28.The underlined word “forensics” in Paragraph 2 probably refers to .A.a new kind of fingerprint B.the scientific test used by policeC.a kind of newly invented keyboard D.a kind of bacteria on people􀆳s hands29.What did Fierer􀆳s team find through the study?A.They could tell who had used which computer.B.They found the criminal among the 237 people.C.Computer keyboards couldn􀆳t keep people􀆳s microbe fing

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