1、届江苏省连云港市海头高级中学高三下学期第二次模拟考试英语含听力海头高级中学2020届高三下学期第二次模拟考试英 语第一部分 听力第一节(共5小题,每小题1.5分)听下面5段对话。每段对话后有一个小题,从题中所给 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 woman mean?A. She is going out next week.B. She needs the car for her family.C. She invites the man to an outi
2、ng.2. How does Jack feel these days?A. Excited.B. Worried.C. Touched.3. What is the relationship between the speakers?A. Mother and son.B. Doctor and patient.C. Teacher and student.4. What will the speakers probably do this weekend?A. See a movie.B. Buy a refrigerator.C. Eat out in town.5. When will
3、 the next train for Chicago leave?A. At 08:30.B. At 10:30.C. At 11:30.第二节听下面5段对话或独白。每段对话或独白后有2至4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5秒钟的时间阅读各个小题;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题。6. Where are the speakers?A. At home.B. At school.C. At the zoo.7. What does the woman ask he
4、r son to do?A. Prepare breakfast.B. Wash the dishes.C. Tidy up his room.听下面一段对话,回答第8至第10题。8. Who is Molly?A. A patient.B. A nurse.C. A mother.9. What does Doctor Laver ask Molly to do?A. Comfort the baby.B. Wash the baby.C. Dress the baby.10. How is Doctor Laver towards Molly?A. Grateful. B. Generou
5、s. C. Encouraging.听下面一段对话,回答第11至第13题。11. Who is Janet?A. Dons neighbour.B. Dons assistant.C. Dons mother.12. What happens to Don?A. He is ill.B. He gets lost.C. He misses a call.13. What will Professor Webster do for Don?A. Give the students some homework.B. Return the exam papers to students.C. Fin
6、d someone else to teach the class.听下面一段对话,回答第14至第17题。14. Why does the woman need the job?A. To learn to start a business.B. To gain some work experience.C. To support herself through college.15. Where exactly will the woman work if she gets the job?A. At the cashiers desk.B. In the managers office.C
7、. Between the shop shelves.16. How is the womans performance at school?A. Poor. B. Average. C. Excellent.17. What will be the womans working hours if she gets the job?A. 8:30 am-6:10 pm.B. 9:00 am-6:00 pm.C. 8:30 am-10:00 pm.听下面一段独白,回答第18至20题。18. How many tube lines are there in London?A. 12. B. 25.
8、 C. 34.19. How are different lines marked on the tube map?A. By shape. B. By colour. C. By number.20. What should you do if you find yourself going in the wrong direction?A. Ask the train driver for help.B. Get out of the tube at once.C. Get off at the next station.第二部分单项填空21. Great opportunities to
9、 help others seldom come, but small ones _ us every day. A. offer B. remind C. surround D. trouble 22. The best things you can give children, _ good habits, are good memories. A. far from B. next to C. but for D. except for 23. One problem with gazing too frequently into the past is that we may turn
10、 around to find the future has _. A. run out B. faded out C. come out D. broken out 24. It is the eyes of other people that ruin us. If all but myself _ blind, I should want neither a fine house nor fine furniture. A. am B. are C. was D. were25. A habit is something you can do without thinking, _ is
11、 why most of us have so many of them. C. it B. this C. that D. which26. It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own _. A. ignorance B. knowledge C. wisdom D. inexperience27. We probably wouldnt worry about what people think of us _ we could know how seldom they do. A. unle
12、ss B. until C. if D. as28. CICC released a list of the 30 most beautiful counties in China for the year 2014, with Yangshuo _ the list. A. topped B. topping C. to top D. having topped29. Why was the suspect set free? For lack of _ evidence. A. solid B. apparent C. ambiguous D. concrete30. What you h
13、ave pointed out doesnt relate to what I want to stress today. _. OK. Ill start over again. A. Get out of here B. Its up to you C. Leave it alone D. Get to the point第三部分完形填空 A new computer program is being praised as a life-changer for blind people. The new program is known as the KNFB Reader app. It
14、 can help users listen to the sound of 31 material. Blind people say the KNFB Reader app will make life much 32 . They say it will help with everything 33 reading restaurant menus to studying papers in the classroom. The KNFB Reader makes use of new pattern recognition and image-processing technolog
15、y, and new hardware for smartphones. People using the app can 34 , or change the position of the camera and read materials out loud. Users say the app has given some people greater 35 . The Reuters news service says these users made the 36 on social media sites such as Twitter. One user, named Gordo
16、n Luke, reported that he was able to use the app to read his voting card for the recent referendum in Scotland. Ray Kurzweil told Reuters that the app will be 37 for Android mobile devices in the coming months. He said he may 38 build a version of the app for Google Glass. Google Glass is a small co
17、mputer screen that can be 39 to eyeglasses. It is able to take photographs, record video and play sound. Ray Kurzweil 40 that “Google Glass makes sense because you 41 the camera with your head.” Mr. Kurzweil started working on what he called “reading machines” in the early 1970s. The idea came after
18、 speaking with a blind person who expressed 42 with the lack of technology to assist blind people. Mr. Kurzweils first reading machine was the 43 of a washing machine. It cost $50,000. The technology has continued to improve over the past 40 years. The new smartphone app can 44 and take printed mate
19、rial in one language and change it to another language. But it was not available on a mobile device until now. In the past, it cost more than $1,000 to use the software app with a camera and a mobile phone. The 45 of the KNFB Reader app comes at a time when the technology industry is facing 46 . Cri
20、tics say the industry is 47 concerned about making software programs for sharing photos and video games. Bryan Bashin leads the non-profit group Lighthouse for the Blind and Visually Impaired in San Francisco. He is also blind. He says the KNFB app shows the positive impact that 48 can have. He says
21、 there are times in his life when he wishes the KNFB app were available to him. He adds that the ability to gain information quickly with something that 49 in your pocket at a fast speed will be, what he 50 , “a game changer.”31. A. printed B. learning C. published D. teaching 32. A. longer B. short
22、er C. easier D. harder33. A. from B. for C. on D. off 34. A. set B. adjust C. reach D. adopt 35. A. confidence B. reliance C. independence D. influence 36. A. excuses B. arrangements C. changes D. comments37. A. probable B. available C. imaginative D. ideal 38. A. otherwise B. also C. never D. once
23、39. A. compared B. directed C. adapted D. connected 40. A. added B. clarified C. suggested D. confirmed 41. A. link B. hold C. direct D. follow 42. A. frustration B. excitement C. satisfaction D. encouragement 43. A. function B. shape C. weight D. size 44. A. overlook B. memorize C. describe D. reco
24、gnize45. A. reform B. release C. recovery D. reaction 46. A. breakdown B. praise C. reality D. criticism47. A. only B. seldom C. too D. not 48. A. nature B. technology C. society D. man 49. A. fits B. drops C. lands D. stays50. A. admits B. offers C. mentions D. calls第四部分阅读理解A You might think that g
25、ood-looking men have every advantage in life. But a new study suggests being handsome may not always work in a mans favour at least when it comes to his career. The research claims that attractive men are less likely to be given a job in a competitive workplace because they intimidate bosses. Its no
26、t always an advantage to be pretty, says Marko Pitesa, an assistant professor at the University of Maryland. It can backfire if you are perceived as a threat. Interestingly, in Pitesas study, it was male attractiveness in particular, rather than female beauty, that made the most difference. If the i
27、nterviewer expected to work with the candidate as part of a team, then he preferred good-looking men. However, if the interviewer saw the candidate as a potential competitor, the interviewer discriminated in favor of unattractive men. In the first experiment, 241 adults were asked to evaluate fictio
28、nal job candidates based on fake qualifications and experience, in an online setting. Men evaluated men and women evaluated women. Interviewers were primed to either think of the candidate as a future co-operator or competitor, and they were given a computer-generated headshot that was either attrac
29、tive or unattractive. A second experiment involved 92 people in a lab. They were asked to evaluate future competitors or partners in a quiz game, based on credentials that included sample quiz answers, and they saw similar headshots. The patterns of discrimination based on perceived self-interest we
30、re the same.Another test opened up to include men interviewing women and women interviewing men. There was still a preference to cooperate with the attractive man and compete against the unattractive man. A final experiment used photographs of actual European business school students, vetted for att
31、ractiveness, and found the same pattern. The results suggest that interviewers were not blinded by beauty, and instead calculated which candidate would further their own career. The dominant theoretical perspective in the social sciences for several decades has been that biases and discrimination are caused by irratio
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