1、福建省晨曦冷曦正曦岐滨四校届高三第一次联考英语试题 Word版含答案绝密启用前福建省晨曦中学2016届高三第一次月考英 语 试 题 第 I 卷第一部分: 听力(共两节,满分30分)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 probably do? A. A shop assistant. B. A policeman. C
2、. A postman.2. How old is the mans daughter? A. Six months old. B. One year old. C. Two years old.3. When did the woman plan to go to Spain? A. In spring. B. In summer. C. In autumn.4. Where will the speakers go first? A. A restaurant. B. A cinema. C. A hospital.5. What does the man think of the lec
3、ture?A. It was interesting. B. It was far beyond his understanding.C. It was long but easy to understand.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. What does the man usually do at
4、home? A. Do the washing-up. B. Wash clothes. C. Clean the car.7. What does the man promise to do at last? A. Do all the housework from next weekend. B. Clean the kitchen after cooking. C. Prepare meals every day.听第7段材料,回答第8、9题。8. How long will the man most probably rent the bike? A. From 7:00 am to
5、5:00 pm. B. From 9:00 am to 7:00 pm. C. From 9:00 am to 5:00 pm.9. What will happen if the man brings the bike back after 7:00 pm? A. He has to pay for the helmet. B. He cant get the 50 dollars back. C. He has to pay 50 dollars extra money.听第8段材料,回答第10至12题。10. Why is the woman a bit nervous? A. She
6、is afraid of getting up late. B. She is a newcomer to the school. C. She isnt ready for the coming exam.11. What must the students do before morning reading? A. Hand in homework. B. Do morning exercises. C. Go to the teachers office.12. What can the students do if they feel hungry? A. Ask the teache
7、r for some food. B. Have something to eat in class. C. Eat something during the break.听第9段材料,回答第13至16题。13. Where is the woman going first?A. Bergners. B. Pennys. C. Lisas.14. When should the woman have called Helen?A.At 3:45. B.At 4:15. C.At 4:45.15. Whats the mans telephone number?A.61199621. B.612
8、99621. C.61299622.16. Whats the relationship between the man and the woman?A. Husband and wife. B. Boss and employee. C. Friends.听第10段材料,回答第17至20题。17. What kind of English lessons does the speaker recommend? A. Examination skills. B. Reading and writing. C. Listening and speaking.18. How can a learn
9、er take the lessons when he is not online? A. By using the downloaded sound files. B. By making conversations with others. C. By reviewing words, phrases and idioms. 19. What is mentioned as an advantage of the speakers online course? A. It helps learners to make friends. B. It offers learners bette
10、r study methods. C. It improves learners listening and speaking skills quickly.20. What is the speakers idea about learning English? A. Being confident in learning. B. Learning English little by little. C. Having clear learning goals. 第二部分: 阅读理解(共20小题;每小题2分,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
11、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。ADo successful businessmen need an office? Increasingly the answer seems to be no. Chris Ward, author of the book Out of Office explains how President Barack Obamas first inauguration (就职) speech was written by 27-year-old Jon Favreau sitting in Starbucks (星巴克); how
12、Richard Tait, creator of Cranium, started the board game in a coffee shop; how Michael Acton Smith invented the childrens virtual world Moshi Monsters in his local Caff Nero; and how JK Rowling, the novelist behind Harry Potter, believes a caf is the best place to write. It is a convincing view, and
13、 for basic start-ups it makes much more sense to work from home and public spaces such as cafs than renting an expensive office. Offices are hard to find, costly to decorate and involve much tiring administration. Moreover, by staying independent you avoid the misery(痛苦) of a daily commute(往返上下班), w
14、hich for many is the worst part of a job. Thanks to mobile communications, WiFi and cloud storage, together with the increasing heavy-duty equipment such as photocopiers, fax machines and desktop PCs, the traditional office is becoming redundant(多余的) for many sorts of organizations and workers. Of c
15、ourse, factory managers, surgeons, chefs and industrial chemists are still tied to special locations. But many of us from software engineers and copywriters to architects and fashion designers can operate almost anywhere. That freedom, and a willingness to adapt, can make ones career more enjoyable
16、and, sometimes, more efficient. 21. The second paragraph mainly wants to tell us_. A. Obama didnt write his inauguration speech by himselfB. People dont have to work in an officeC. A caf is the best place to writeD. Many writers like to write in a coffee shop22. Which of the following careers is tie
17、d to special locations? A. Software engineers. B. Copywriters. C. Surgeons. D. Fashion designers.23. The traditional office is becoming redundant due to the following EXCEPT_. A. mobile communicationsB. WiFi and cloud storageC. heavy-duty equipmentD. the misery of a daily commute24. What can we infe
18、r from the text? A. Many people hate commuting daily. B. The tradition office will no longer exist.C. Working in public places will reduce efficiency.D. Chefs can work anywhere. BThe ruins of Moore, Oklahoma, a town destructed for the fourth time in 14 years by a major tornado(龙卷风), are a reminder t
19、hat current building codes(规范) cant do much to prevent property destruction and loss of life, especially when a powerful tornado cuts through town. But the total death number can be reduced when people take shelter in underground storm bunkers(碉堡)and hardened safe rooms.The tornado that carved a pat
20、h of destruction through Moore took 24 lives. Its winds were clocked at 400 kilometers per hour. With only 15 minutes warning, residents fled town or took refuge(避难)in the firmest corners of their homes. The luckiest were able to climb into shelters or move to safe rooms. In Moore those rooms saved
21、lives. But at two schools destroyed by Mondays tornado, no such shelter was available. Leslie Chapman Henderson is CEO of a non-profit group called the Federal Alliance for Safe Homes. Shes an advocate for tornado safe rooms. “The safe room is an interior(内部)room of the home that has been reinforced
22、(加固)and tested to withstand high wind. In fact, weve already heard of stories of survival of people who were in safe rooms, either above or below ground,” she said. Better storm forecasts give people more time to react. But they need someplace safe to go. Buildings can be built to resist strong wind
23、s, but not like those in the F-5 tornado that touched down in Moore. Chapman Henderson says even the building codes that do exist are not widely adopted or enforced. As its residents prepare to rebuild, Moores mayor is pushing for an order to make safe rooms compulsory in all new construction. Simil
24、ar proposals were made following each of the previous tornado strikes, but none were adopted.25. According to Chapman Henderson, which of the following does she probably agree with? A. Building codes make a difference in preventing property destruction.B. If people take shelter in safe rooms, nobody
25、 will die.C. It is urgent to build tornado safe rooms.D. Safe rooms can be built only underground.26. What can we infer from the text? A. Moore has gone through tornado 4 times in total.B. Chapman Henderson is Moores mayor.C. Mondays tornado took 24 lives at two schools.D. The Moores proposal might
26、not be approved.27. The underlined word “withstand ” in paragraph 4 probably means_.A. oppose B. resist C. prevent D. defeat CBlind tasting is a very strange activity. Contrary to what many imagine, it has nothing to do with blindfolds. It involves tasting a wine without seeing the label and it can
27、deliver shocking surprises. I tasted seven champagnes(香槟) blind with a group of professionals recently. There was a shock when they discovered the wine most of them preferred carried a label they regarded as their least favorite. That sort of result is especially common with champagne, the most imag
28、e-driven rather than quality-driven wine of all. But it happens all the time when wine is tasted blind. Because Im interested in how wines really taste instead of how I think they should, I taste wine blind as often as I can, especially when assessing similar young wines. But blind tasting when you
29、know absolutely nothing about the wine in front of you is something completely different. The most difficult Master of Wine exams include three sessions during which you have a dozen glasses in front of you and nothing more helpful than a printed exam paper asking you to identify (鉴定) each wine as c
30、losely as possible, and assess its quality. Now that the MW is behind me, I taste wine completely blind only very rarely, and never in public. So my blind tastings these days are round the dinner table with good friends and once a year when I act as a judge, with Hugh Johnson, in the Oxford v Cambri
31、dge wine-tasting competition. This is the most extraordinary match, always held before the Boat Race but taken just as seriously nowadays. This years taste-off took place at the end of last month, as usual in the Oxford and Cambridge Club on Pall Mall in London. 28. Which of the following is true ab
32、out Blind tasting?A. Blind tasting is the professional way to identify a wine.B. Blind tasting usually has the right result.C. Blind tasting means tasting a wine with ones eyes covered.D. Blind tasting is tasting a wine without seeing the label.29. Why did the professionals get shocked at the result of their blind tasting? A. They got all the results correctly.B.
copyright@ 2008-2022 冰豆网网站版权所有
经营许可证编号:鄂ICP备2022015515号-1