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江西省南城县学年高二英语上学期月考试题及答案.docx

1、江西省南城县学年高二英语上学期月考试题及答案南城一中2017届高二上学期12月份月考英 语 试 题本试卷分第卷(选择题)和第卷(非选择题)两部分,满分150分,考试时用120分钟。第卷第一部分 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. Who is probably the owner of the book?A. Frank. B. Tony. C. Lucy. 2.

2、 Where is the bike now?A. At the gate. B. Under the stairs. C. In the garden. 3. What are the two speakers mainly talking about?A. About the work. B. About a film. C. About a match. 4. When does the conversation take place?A. In the morning. B. In the afternoon. C. In the evening. 5. What does the w

3、oman mean?A. She doesnt like a seat near the stage. B. There are not any tickets left. C. It is not an easy thing to get a ticket.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7题。6. Where ar

4、e they going?A. To the college. B. To the station. C. To the airport. 7. How will they get there?A. By taxi. B. By bike. C. By train.听第7段材料,回答第8至9题。8. What do we know about the man?A. He wants to have his phone fixed. B. He wants to buy a new cellphone. C. He wants to post letters in the post office

5、.9. Where can you most probably hear this talk?A. Next to the post office. B. Near the store. C. On the street. 听第8段材料,回答第10至12题。10. How does the man feel?A. Happy. B. Terrible. C. Excited.11. What happened to the man?A. He was knocked down by a car.B. He damaged a car round the corner. C. A car dro

6、ve into his car.12. Why did the accident happen?A. The driving mirror was broken. B. The roadside mirror was broken. C. The other driver drove too fast.听第9段材料,回答第13至16题。13. Why does the woman want to buy her father a present?A. He fathers birthday is coming. B. She wants to send him a present on Fat

7、hers Day. C. Her fathers handbag is worn.14. Which handbag will her husband probably get?A. The brown one. B. The yellow one. C. The black one.15. How much will the woman pay?A. $180. B. $300. C. $270.16. What does the woman think of the yellow handbag for her father?A. Too modern. B. Very suitable.

8、 C. Too cheap.听第10段材料,回答第17至20题。17. Where is the speaker from?A. The United States. B. Latin America. C. Spain.18. What do the Latinos spend most of their lunchtime doing?A. Waiting for their orders. B. Chatting with friends. C. Talking about their studies.19. What do the American students usually d

9、o when they finish their lunch?A. They leave in a hurry.B. They have some drinks.C. They stay a little longer.20. What do the Spanish speakers consider more important than others?A. Their studies and work. B. Their family and friends. C. Their soda and coffee.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

10、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。AThe fierce competitiveness of todays job market has driven one university president to look online. He Hua,39, the president of Kunming University, has set up a store on Taobao where employers can browse(浏览)and “buy” the young graduates. He, the youn

11、gest university president in China, hopes that his action will help students get on the career ladder.Mr. He announced the online store at a graduation ceremony attended by 4,500 students and teachers on July 2, 2015. The “Kunming University talent shop” shows the universitys top 65 graduates, who e

12、ach have an online profile(个人简介)showing off their talent. All of the graduates are wearing white T-shirts bearing the Kunming University logo.The students are divided into four categories: “along the way style,” “2025 style,” “Internet style” and “elite collection style”. Clicking on each persons ph

13、otograph will show more about their character and skills. Students have also listed their career ambitions and preferred salaries. If a company is interested in hiring any of the graduates they must pay the university 1,000 Yuan to “catch” or reserve the talent. The university will then check the co

14、mpanys credentials(证件)and arrange phone calls and conversations between the future employer and employee. Whether or not a job offer is made, the university will return the money to the company after a week.Mr. He says he wants to use Taobao, which gets millions of views a month, to build a bridge b

15、etween companies and students. His motto is “seek and you shall find”. He says that this is just one of many new ideas he has for the university.The university has also recently started its own online creative market for students to help themselves show their own products as well as has a financing

16、platform which provides students with outstanding entrepreneurial(创业者)credentials money to realize their ambitions.21. The information of the graduates below is showed in the shop EXCEPT ? A. their photographs. B. their talent. C. their career ambitions. D. their work experience.22. Which of the fol

17、lowing orders is right according to the passage? a. check the companys credentials. b. charge 1,000 Yuan c. provide students information on Taobao d. return the moneye. arrange phone calls and conversations A. cdeba B. acbde C. cbaed D. bcaed23. In order to help the students realize their ambitions,

18、 the university .A. starts its own online market B. establishes its own companies C. encourages its students to start businessesD. sets up more stores on TaobaoBI started dancing when I was 11 years old. It was all I wanted for my 11th birthday and I promised my parents I would never ask for an MP3

19、player or iPhone or even a car ever again if I could start ballet(芭蕾)classes. If they couldnt put me in classes because it was too expensive, I asked for ballet in a box, a video and books to follow. My parents decided that maybe they should make real ballet classes happen.I was the tallest in my le

20、vel 1 class most of the other students were 7 and 8 years old. I stuck out like a strange and foolish thumb(拇指). Nine months later, I mastered pointe(芭蕾舞中足尖站立的姿势)and a year after that, I was invited to join my studios Company Two and I really started to get serious about ballet. A secret hope began

21、to grow. My instructors and my parents kept telling me that I had talent. I was tall for my age and had all long arms and legs; ballet just felt right in my body. When dancing, I felt so free that I was oblivious of my technique. Being able to move in such a different way made me free and easy.I don

22、t still like to look in the mirror, honestly. Seeing myself made me uncomfortable; I thought I wasnt pretty and I didnt look as graceful(优雅的)as I felt but the studio mirror is one of the main tools a dancer has to use and eventually I had to face myself. It wasnt easy.When I was 5, I went through a

23、very painful experience that changed me. I became terrified of just everything in life as a result of the harm I experienced from a teenage boy of our neighbor. To this day, even with lots of comfort, I still struggle with that fear and shame. But when I dance, I feel free.What I didnt know at first

24、 was that ballet would also be healing. It has been five years since I started ballet, during which I have learnt how not to live in fear and shame. I will never stop dancing.24. What do you know about the author from Para.2? .A. Her progress inspired her to go on dancing. B. She made the least prog

25、ress in the dance class.C. She realized she could do ballet professionally. D. She could have given up without others encouragement.25. What does the underlined word “oblivious” mean?A. Afraid. B. Forgetful. C. Nervous. D. Sure.26. Why didnt the author want to look in the mirror?A. She thought she w

26、asnt good enough. B. She felt upset when others looked at her.C. It made her look less pretty.D. It made her recall bad memories.27. We can learn from the passage that the author .A. has left the old place with her family B. is still suffering from the bad memoriesC. is stepping out from the shadow

27、of her lifeD. feels so shameful as to refuse to see a doctorCPeople enjoy spouting off(滔滔不绝地讲)on social media, including their jobs. The surprising thing is that they express their adoration for their jobs more often than they express hate. Thats according to a new survey of over a million online po

28、sts performed by an employment website Monster.The report shows that during the 12 months ending in March 2015, people were 4.7 times more likely to talk about loving their jobs than hating them.“We can learn a lot about how people are feeling about the job market and their careers through social me

29、dia,” said Joanie Courtney, senior vice president for Monster.The expectation of yet another work week makes Sunday the least likely day to express love for jobs and 20 percent of job searches happen on Monday. People tend to express love for their jobs most often when theyre about to be away from t

30、he office for the weekend.The people who like to express hate for their jobs tend to be from low-wage jobs like retail(零售) and food service, according to the data. Retail workers made up 37 percent of all dissatisfied posts about their jobs, almost twice the positive ones. “Retail workers tend to be

31、 younger,” Courtney said, “those positions also tend to be customer-oriented(以顾客为中心的),which is evidently a difficult issue.”Tech workers were the least likely among the broad industry categories studied to express any emotion for their jobs. Only two percent of job-hating posts were from tech, suggesting tech workers have a sense of negative consequences that can come with publicly expressing ones job frustrations.“We live in kind of a fishbowl today,” Courtney said. “You can see in and see out and as an employee you really have to be careful about what y

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