1、届安徽省六安市第一中学高三上学期第五次月考 英语WORD版含答案2018届安徽省六安市第一中学高三上学期第五次月考 英语时间:120分钟 总分:150分第I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. What does the man suggest doing?A. Buying a road map. B. Driving to the beach.C.
2、Going back home.2. What day is it today?A. Tuesday. B. Thursday. C. Friday.3. What is the weather probably like today?A. Hot B. Cold. C. Cool.4. Where does conversation probably take place?A. At home. B. In a restaurant C. In a furniture shop.5. How will the woman mainly deal with the money?A. Save
3、most of it. B. Buy a lot of clothes. C. Give it to her parents.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分钟;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。听下面一段对话,回答第6和第7两个小题。6. What does the woman plan to do this weekend?A. Work overtime. B. Atten
4、d a festival. C. His cousin.7. Whom will the man probably ask for help?A. His aunt B. His sister C. His cousin听下面一段对话,回答第8至第9三个小题。8. How did the man and his son get to the zoo?A. By bus. B. By taxi C. By subway.9. What animal scared the man?A. An elephant. B. A panda. C. A monkey.听下面一段对话,回答第10至第12三个
5、小题。10. What happened to the old ladys ring?A. She dropped it in the ice cream.B. Her grandson took it.C. Her dog swallowed it.11. When did the story of the mans friend happen?A. Last week. B. Last year. C. Three years ago.12. What was the mans friends decision?A. To perform surgery on his dog.B. To
6、make his dog vomit(吐出).C. To give up the ring.听下面一段对话,回答第13至第16三个小题。13. Whats the most probably relationship between the two speakers?A. Business partners. B. Customer and assistant. C. Aunt and nephew.14. What kind of business does the man want to do?A. Open an online shop. B. Make apps. C. Sell ph
7、ones.15. What may worry the man most?A. The operational costs. B. The after-sale service. C. The profit.16. Where will the man get help in writing a business plan?A. From online resources. B. From some libraries. C. From the bookstore.听下面一段对话,回答第17至第20三个小题。17. When did Ms. Bwalya come to China to st
8、udy?A. In 2012. B. In 2013. C. In 2014.18. What was the biggest problem Ms. Bwalya faced?A. The weather. B. The language.C. The accommodation.19. What did Mr. Salum study in China.A. Medicine B. Economics. C. Political science.20. How many Aficans were studying in China by the end of 2013?A. More th
9、an 27000. B. More than 35000. C. More than 53000.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. D四个选项中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。AA very beautiful town Bravuogn in Switzerland has banned(禁止)tourists from taking photos in order to get holiday makers to take a break from social media(媒体).The tou
10、rist office of Bravuogn announced the news on Facebook on Tuesday. “It is proven that beautiful vacation photos on social media make the viewers unhappy, because they themselves cannot be there,” the tourist office said. Tourists will be punished with 5 Swiss Francs if they are caught taking picture
11、s under the new rule. Many people considered the move was stupid and strange with some joking that they were going to call off their trips to Bravuogn. However, others gave the photo ban a thumbs-up. “Exactly right!” one person shouted.The announcement comes after a study found how technology is mar
12、ring our travel experiences. In a survey of 1,037 American adults done by Wyndham Vacation Rentals, almost half of them said social media negatively influenced their trips as they felt stressed to pose all the time.A message on the Bravuogn tourism Facebook page states that the main reason for the b
13、an on taking photos is to encourage a happier holidaying environment. In the summer, Bravuogn is a popular place for hiking while in the winter its a top place for skiing. The tourist office said it had known that the new law would not make everyone happy but it wanted a “special way” to draw people
14、s attention to the village and the beauty of Switzerland.Facing some peoples suggestions, the villages director of tourism Marc-Andrea Barandun said that, in part, the ban is a marketing strategy(营销策略). He told Thelocal.ch, “We hope everyone talks about Bravuogns beauty. So we made the law and also
15、theres some marketing purpose behind it.”21. What can we learn from paragraph 2?A. Not all people support the new law.B. Vacation photos bring unhappiness to people.C. People think a fine of 5 Swiss Francs is too much.D. The new law makes many people give up their trips.22. What does the underlined
16、word “marring” in paragraph 3 mean?A. Destroying. B. Improving. C. Recording. D. Sharing.23. Which of the following can best describe the new law?A. Facts are facts. B. Better late than never.C. All roads lead to Rome. D. Kill two birds with one stone.BImagine youre playing a computer game that asks
17、 you to design a poster for the school fair. Youre playing with letters, changing background colors and deciding what activity to feature.Then, animal charactersmaybe a pandaoffer feedbacks on you design. You can choose whether to hear a praise or a complaint: “The words are overlapping(重叠)too much,
18、” or, “I like that you put in the dates.” You can use their critiques(批评)as guides to help you revise your poster. Finally, you get to see how many tickets your poster sold.This little Web-based game isnt just a game. Its a test, too. Most kids likes video gamesa lot more than they like taking test.
19、Schwartz is among a new group of researchers who are working on a series of video games. Theyre designed to evaluate students on factors that traditional test cant assess. He wants to measure how students learn, how they make decisions and how they respond to feedback.Scholars like James Paul Gee be
20、lieve video games actually come much closer to capturing the learning process in action than traditional tests. In fact, in a video game, “youre always being testedyou cant get out of a level until you finish it.”And, the researchers point out, at the same time youre playing a game, the game can rec
21、ord your actions. When its over, the software can create a report: not just a record of right and wrong answers, but all the steps you took to get there.Schwartzs theory of assessment focuses on choice. He argues that the final goal of education is to create independent thinkers who make good decisi
22、ons. And so we need assessments that test how students think, not what they happen to know at a given moment.For example, the real point of the school-fair game is not test how good students are at graphic design. Instead, the bottom of the game comes when students choose to hear comments on their w
23、ork. “So theyre not just measures of what the student already knows, but attempts to measure whether they are prepared to continue learning when theyre no longer told exactly what to do.”24. While designing a poster, you are advised to _.A. make your own decisions in designingB. play with animal cha
24、racter for funC. change background colors constantlyD. seek negative feedbacks to improve your design.25. The school-fair game is designed to judge _.A. if students are skilled at graphic design.B. what students know about a poster already.C. whether students are addicted to playing games.D. how ind
25、ependently students think in making decisions.26. According to Gee, making tests more like games is to _.A. make taking tests more acceptable. B. come close to the learning process.C. get kids to adapt to tests easily. D. have kids challenge themselves.27. The main idea of the passage is about _.A.
26、tests that get feedbacks from game players.B. tests that are designed for playing games.C. tests that have different levels like games.D. tests that look like video games.CWatching the Northern Lights(北极光)shining on the skys natural canvas may be on your list already, but be prepared to up the money
27、.A developer is creating a floating, snowflaked - shaped(雪花形状的)glass hotel from which guests can stare in fear at the Northern Lights from their beds. The project is called Krystall. Eighty six luxury rooms will be covered within a glass structure alongside conference rooms and a spa, all of which i
28、s only accessible by boat.The stationery hotel will be built near in northern Norway reportedly between bays. It will be constructed, in pieces, in dry docks(码头), before being fit together on location.Explaining the physics and design of the hotel, Koen Olthuis, Dutch architect and founder of Waters
29、tudio, a specialist in floating structures, said: “The floating base is very big and because of that also very stable. You will not notice any movement. Different to any vessel this hotel is a floating building and will not move. The shape provides most of the stability but cables(缆绳)are used to tak
30、e away any speed.”“Same look and feel as a land based hotel but then on the most beautiful spot on the water. The hotel is not connected to land so all the things will be provided by boats.”According to Mr Olthuis, who wouldnt tell the actual cost of the project, the budget is 15 percent more than i
31、t would have been if it were built on land. He said that an important ting to the hotels construction was for its creation to be “scarless” on the perfect environment surrounding it.“We call it a scarless development. If you take it away after a hundred years or so it will not leave any physical footprint. That is the only way to bring developments to such a valuable and beautiful marine environment in Norway.”It is hoped that the hotel will be “self-supporting and sustainable” using top of the range technology, hekping to support the “growing eco-tourism market.”“Dutch Docklands ha
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