1、安徽省六安市第一中学届高三上学期第三次月考英语第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 the woman do?A. Close her eyes to relax for a while.B. Make an appointment at once.C. Get a calendar soon.2.
2、 What is Tim doing?A. Locking the door. B. Walking a dog. C. Knocking at the door.3. Whats the mans favorite subject?A. English. B. Math. C. Both English and math.4. What has the woman been doing?A. Doing the garden. B. Working at her office. C. Taking a long shower.5. Where did the woman finally pu
3、t her desk?A. Behind the door. B. Under the big window.C. Under the little window opposite the door.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。听下面一段对话,回答第6和第7两个小题。6 What does the woman want to do?A.
4、 Borrow a map. B. Find the restaurant. C. Visit the campus.7 Why did the woman get lost?A. She went in the wrong direction. B. She didnt have a map.C. She couldnt read road signs.听下面一段对话,回答第8至第10三个小题。8. How did the woman sound on the phone?A. Rude. B. Happy. C. Peaceful.9. What is the woman waiting
5、for?A. Her coffee. B. A call from her friend. C. The result of an interview.10. What will the woman do next?A. Wait patiently. B. Callback. C. Make a decision.听下面一段对话,回答第11至第13三个小题。11. According to the woman, what are summers in Norway like recently? A. Warm. B. Cold. C. Very hot.12. What do most pe
6、ople in Norway do in the summers? A. Stay at home. B. Travel abroad. C. Go to the coast.13. What does the man think of Norway?A. Interesting. B. Surprising. C. Unpleasant.听下面一段对话,回答第14至第17四个小题。14. Where will the woman go next week? A. The Great Britain. B. The United States. C. Australia.15. What do
7、es the woman like most about her job?A. Meeting different people.B. Travelling around the world.C. Experiencing the big news event.16. Who can the woman see in Sydney?A. Her sister. B. Her boyfriend. C. Her classmate.17. How does the woman relax?A. Cook for herself. B. Go for a sail. C. Go fishing.听
8、下面一段独白,回答第18至第20三个小题。18. What happened to the speaker?A. She transferred to another city.B. She just found a well-paid job.C. Her hard work paid off.19. What contribution did the speaker make for the company?A. Increasing the sales. B. Building a branch company. C. Making new products. 20. What do w
9、e know about the speaker?A. Her co-workers approve her abilities.B. Her pay rose to $15,000 per year.C. She is in the HR department.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。AUniversity Room RegulationsApproved and Prohibited ItemsThe following items are
10、 approved for use in residential (住宿的) rooms: electric blankets, hair dryers, personal computers, radios, televisions and DVD players. Items that are not allowed in student rooms include: candles, ceiling fans, fireworks, waterbeds, sun lamps and wireless routers. Please note that any prohibited ite
11、ms will be taken away by the Office of Residence Life.Access to Residential RoomsStudents are provided with a combination (组合密码) for their room door locks upon check-in. Do not share your room door lock combination with anyone. The Office of Residence Life may change the door lock combination at any
12、 time at the expense of the resident if it is found that the student has shared the combination with others. The fee is $ 25 to change a room combination.Cooking PolicyStudents living in buildings that have kitchens are only permitted to cook in the kitchen. Students must clean up after cooking. Thi
13、s is not the responsibility of housekeeping staff. Kitchens that are not kept clean may be closed for use. With the exception of using a small microwave oven to heat food, students are not permitted to cook in their rooms.Pet PolicyNo pets except fish are permitted in student rooms. Students who are
14、 found with pets, whether visiting or owned by the student, are subject to an initial fine of $ 100 and a continuing fine of $ 50 a day per pet. Students receive written notice when the fine goes into effect. If, one week from the date of written notice, the pet is not removed, the student is brough
15、t to the Student Court.Quiet HoursResidential buildings must maintain an atmosphere that supports the academic mission of the University. Minimum quiet hours in all campus residences are 11:00 pm to 8:00 am Sunday through Thursday. Quiet hours on Friday and Saturday nights are 1:00 am to 8:00 am. St
16、udents who violate quiet hours are subject to a fine of $ 25.21. What if a student is found to have told his combination to others?A. The combination should be changed.B. The Office should be charged.C. He should replace the door lock.D. He should check out of the room.22. What do we know about the
17、cooking policy?A. A microwave oven can be used.B. Cooking in student rooms is permitted.C. A housekeeper is to clean up the kitchen.D. Students are to close kitchen doors after cooking.23. When can students enjoy a party in residences?A. 7:00 am, Sunday. B. 7:30 am, Thursday.C. 11:30 pm, Monday. D.
18、00:30 am, Saturday.BI was about 5 when I first heard the word “Greenland”, and my interest grew from there. Finally, after decades, I decided to go.When I finally arrived, the place, at first glance, was clearly misnamed: The east coast of Greenland was an expanse (宽阔的区域) of ice and snow, with no si
19、gn of human habitation.One of my purposes of going to Greenland was to make contact with some native Greenlanders. I didnt know I would achieve this, but success came in an unexpected way.When I arrived at the Illunnguujuk Hostel, where I had reserved a bed, a young couple and their baby were out fr
20、ont, enjoying the sun and unusual warmth. Greenlanders speak their own Inuit language and learn Danish in school, and many also speak English well. The young woman, however, was not one of these. Her English turned out to be anticlimactic.When I identified myself, her eyes widened. Another traveler
21、had arrived earlier and, mistaking him for me, they had given him my bed. There was no more space in the hostel. “But dont worry,” she said, as she threw herself into cleaning a tiny house the family owned. “This is for you,” she said. And as if that werent enough, she invited me to eat supper with
22、her family. That evening I sat down to a dinner of fresh fish with a loving, happy native family. When I first set foot in Greenland I found myself all but shocked by the emptiness, the vastness, and the silence. I had decided that I would probably never return. And then I was taken into this Greenl
23、andic home. I can now say that even cold, empty, and silent scenery is worth visiting, so long as one has a warm and welcoming place to go to.24. What did the author intend to do in Greenland?A. Get a part-time job.B. Live with a native family.C. Make some native contact.D. Do business with the nati
24、ves.25. What does the underlined word “anticlimactic” in Paragraph 4 mean?A. Simple. B. Modem. C. Outstanding. D. Disappointing.26. The author lost his bed in the hostel because of .A. the language barrier B. a misunderstandingC. a wrong address D. the high price27. What made the authors visiting Gr
25、eenland worthwhile?A. Tasting the local food. B. Helping a local family.C. Meeting friendly people. D. Enjoying the great scenery.CGeorge Aldrich, whose official title is chemical specialist, works at NASAs White Sands Test Facility in New Mexico. He uses his nose to protect astronauts from unpleasa
26、nt or harmful odors (气味). His near four-decade career has involved smelling objects from technical handbooks to astronauts personal things.Its crucial that all items taken aboard the International Space Station (ISS) are odorless. Since astronauts are allowed to bring personal items aboard, all thei
27、r objects must be smell-checked before leaving Earth. In a video provided by Science Channel, Aldrich relates one specific occasion when an astronaut wanted to build a ship in a bottle in space. Everything in the ship-building process had to be sniffedright down to the glue.Aldrich and his team are
28、responsible for making sure that objects are not only odorless but also harmless to astronauts. When the ISS heats up, a process called off-gassing occurs, which means chemicals flow out from certain substances (物质). Objects that would be safe on Earth could give off unpleasant odors or become dange
29、rous when exposed to high temperatures in the ISSs unique environment.Of course, humans arent the only testers or the first to be exposed to potentially dangerous objects. Before Aldrich sticks his nose into a substance, it has been examined by machines. Even though machines can detect unsafe substa
30、nces, computers cannot tell exactly how things smell to humans. While something could be technically fine, it could be smelly to an astronaut.Aldrichs nose is not alone there. He is the head of a hard-sniffing team of smell testers. Together they smell each object and rate it on a scale (等级) of 1 to
31、 4. According to NASA, 1 cannot be detected, and 4 is considered not bearable. After the scientists conclude their tests, the scores are averaged. If an item is rated more than 2.4 on the scale, it fails the test and is not allowed on the flight.28. Which can describe the smell check from Paragraph 2?A. Quite dangerous. B. Extremely strictC. Rather boring. D. Very complex.29. What is a threat to astronauts safety at the ISS?A. Negative emotions. B. Odor-related disease.C. The off-gassing process. D. Changes in tempe
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