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辽宁省朝阳市届高三第一次模拟考试 英语.docx

1、辽宁省朝阳市届高三第一次模拟考试 英语2018届辽宁省朝阳市普通高中高三第一次模拟考试英语试题第一部分 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秒钟的时间回答有关小题和阅读下一小题。每段对话仅读一遍。1. When are the two speaers going to the school?A. On Saturdays morning.B. On Sundays afternoon.C. On Saturdays afte

2、rnoon.2. Where does the man come from?A. America. B. England. C. Japan.3. What does the woman suggest the man do?A. Not smoe so heavily. B. Give up smoing. C. Tae more eercise.4. What is the woman looing for?A. A friends house. B. A restaurant. C. A single room for night.5. When does the Boeing 747

3、leave for New Yor?A. At 805. B. At 845. C. At 855.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至第7题。6. What will the two speaers do this weeend?A. See a science fiction film.B. Go dancing at

4、 the Friendship Hotel.C. Have a meal in a Sichuan restaurant.7. How much will the two speaers spend on the film?A. ¥9. B. ¥6. C. ¥3.听第7段材料,回答第8至第9题。8. Where is the mans new home?A. In a 38-story building near the subway station.B. In a 38-story building near the railway station.C. In a 37-story buil

5、ding near the railway station.9. What does the man usually do as a good eercise?A. Go up and down the building on foot.B. Climb mountains.C. Climb up and down half of the stairs without using the lift.听第8段材料,回答第10至第12题。10. What does the woman want to do?A. Tae a few days off. B. See a doctor. C. Vis

6、it her mother.11. Whats the woman?A. A journalist. B. A teacher. C. A student.12. How soon will the woman be bac?A. Net Thursday. B. Net Wednesday. C. Net Friday.听第9段材料,回答第13至第16题。13. When did the man meet the dentist?A. At 1030 a.m. B. At 1000 a.m. C. At 1040 a.m.14. Where did the man go after seei

7、ng the dentist?A. Go home. B. Go to class. C. Go to a department store.15. Where did the man probably lose the wallet?A. In the dentists B. On the counter. C. We dont now.16. What does the woman suggest the man do?A. Call the police.B. Return to the dentists.C. Put up a notice.听第10段材料,回答第17至第20题。17.

8、 What is popular according to the passage?A. Shows. B. Coctail. C. Gambling.18. What should you do if you want to see a show?A. Buy ticets in advance.B. Arrive the theatre early.C. As a friend to go with.19. Whens the best time to arrive at a coctail party?A. Twenty minutes late. B. On time. C. Ten

9、minutes late.20. What should you do when you tal to others at a coctail party?A. Loo into their eyes.B. Give each person at least a few minutes.C. Never tal about yourself.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,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。AYou probably now who Hillary Diane Ro

10、dham Clinton is, but you may not have heard of Margaret Munnerlyn Mitchell if you are not interested in foreign literature. Of the outstanding ladies listed below, who is your favorite?Jane Austen (16 December, 1775-18 July, 1817)Jane Austen, a famous English writer, was born at Steventon, Hampshire

11、. She began writing early in life, although the prejudices (偏见) of her times forced her to have her boos published anonymously (匿名).She wrote many boos of romantic fiction about the gentry (贵族). Her wors made her one of the great masters of the English novel. Only four of her novels were printed whi

12、le she was alive. They were Sense and Sensibility (1811), Pride and Prejudice (1813), Mansfield Par (1814) and (1816).Charlotte Bronte (21 April, 1816-31 March, 1855)She first published her wors, including Jane Eyre, under the false name of Currer Bell. Her first novel, The Professor, was rejected b

13、y many publishers. It was not printed until 1857. She is famous for her novel Jane Eyre (1847), which was very popular when it was printed. Jane Eyre was a strong story of a plain, brave, clever woman struggling with her passions, reasons, and social condition.Margaret Munnerlyn Mitchell (8 November

14、, 1900-16 August, 1949)She was an American author and journalist, a lifelong resident and native of Atlanta, Georgia. One novel by Mitchell was published during her lifetime, the American Civil-War-era novel, Gone with the wind, for which she won the National Boo Award for Most Distinguished Novel o

15、f 1936 and the Puliter Prie for Fiction in 1937. In more recent years, a collection of Mitchells girlhood writings and a novel she wrote as a teenager, Lost Laysen, have been published. A collection of articles written by Mitchell for The Atlanta Journal was republished in boo form.21. Why did Jane

16、Austen publish her boos with a false name?A. She laced confidence. B. She was not well educated.C. Women were discriminated. D. Women were well protected.22. Which novel was set in the bacground of war?A. Sense and Sensibility. B. Gone with the Wind.C. Lost Laysen. D. The Professor.23. Who won the m

17、ost pries for her wors?A. Margaret Munnerlyn Mitchell. B. Charlotte Bronte.C. Hillary Diane Rodham Clinton. D. Jane Austen.24. What can we infer about the women mentioned in the tet?A. They were all fond of poetry. B. They all died in their forties.C. Their wors were once rejected. D. They are famou

18、s for their great wors.BA year after graduation, I was offered a position teaching a writing class. Teaching was a profession I had never seriously considered, though several of ray stories had been published. I accepted the job without hesitation, as it would allow me to wear a tie and go by the na

19、me of Mr. Davis. My father went by the same name, and I lied to imaging people getting the two of us confused. “Wait a minute,” someone might say, “are you taling about Mr. Davis the retired man, or Mr. Davis the respectable scholar?”The position was offered at the last minute, and I was given two w

20、ees to prepare, a period I spent searching for briefcase and standing before my full-length mirror, repeating the words, “Hello, class. Im Mr. Davis.” Sometimes I would give myself an aggressive voice. Sometimes I would sound eperienced. But when the day eventually came, my nerves iced in and the tr

21、ue Mr. Davis was there. I sounded not lie a thoughtful professor, but rather a 12-year-old boy.I arrived in the classroom with paper cards designed in the shape of maple leaves. I had cut them myself out of orange construction paper. I saw nine students along a long table. I handed out the cards, an

22、d the students wrote down their names and fastened them to their breast pocets as I required.“All right then, I said. “Oay, here we go.” Then I opened my briefcase and realied that I had never thought beyond this moment. I had been thining that the students would be the first to tal, offering their

23、thoughts and opinions on the events of the day. I had imagined that I would sit at the edge of the des, overlooing a forest of hands. Every student would shout. “Calm down, youll all get your turn. One at a time, one at a time!”A terrible silence ruled the room, and seeing no other opinions, I ased

24、the students to pull out their noteboos and write a brief essay related to the theme of deep disappointment.25. The author too the job to teach writing because .A. he wanted to be respected B. he had written some stonesC. he wanted to please his father D. he had dreamed of being a teacher26. What ca

25、n we learn about the author from Paragraph 2?A. He would be aggressive in his first class.B. He was well-prepared for his first class.C. He waited long for the arrival of his first class.D. He got nervous when he arrived at the classroom on the first day of the job.12. Before he started his class, t

26、he author ased the students to .A. cut some cards out of the construction paperB. write down their names on the paper cardsC. cut maple leaves out of the construction paperD. write down their suggestions on the paper cards28. What did the students do when the author started his class?A. They began t

27、o tal. B. They raised their hands.C. They ept silent. D. They shouted to be heard.CYou now the feeling-you have left your phone at home and feel anious, as if you have lost your connection to the world. “Nomophobia” (无手机恐惧症) affects teenagers and adults alie. You can even do an online test to see if

28、 you have it. Last wee, researchers from Hong ong warned that nomophobia is infecting everyone. Their study found that people who use their phones to store, share and access personal memories suffer most. When users were ased to describe how they felt about their phones, words such as “hurt” (nec pa

29、in was often reported) and “alone” predicted higher levels of nomophobia.“The findings of our study suggest that users regard smartphones as their etended selves and get attached to the devices,” said Dr. im i Joon. “People eperience feelings of aniety and unpleasantness when separated from their ph

30、ones.” Meanwhil, an American study shows that smartphone separation can lead to an increase in heart rate and blood pressure.So can being without your phone really give you separation aniety? Professor Mar Griffiths, psychologist and director of the International Gaming Research Unit at Nottingham T

31、rent University, says it is what is on the phone that counts-the social networing that creates Fomo (fear of missing out).“We are taling about an internet-connected device that allows people to deal with lots of aspects of their lives,” says Griffiths. “You would have to surgically remove a phone from a teenager because their whole life is rooted in this device.”Griffiths thins attachment theory, where we develop emotional dependency on the phone because it holds details of our lives, is a small part of nomophobia. For “screenagers”, it is Fomo that create

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