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内蒙古杭锦后旗奋斗中学2020届高三英语上学期第一次月考试题第卷第一部分 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. What does the woman think of the mans computer?A. Quite small. B. Very cheap. C. Too old.2. What did the man do yesterday?A. He saw a film. B. He visited a friend. C. He did some sports.3. Who is most probably Tom?A. The womans nephew. B. The womans cousin. C. The mans son.4. Which goods are reduced in price in the store now?A. TVS. B. Electric kettles. C. Frying pans.5. What are the speakers mainly talking about?A. A festival. B. An actor. C. A class.第二节(共15小题,每小题1.5分,满分22.5分)请听第6段材料,回答第6、7题。6. How many people went to watch the match with the man?A. One. B. Two. C. Three.7. What is the womans duty in the Scottish family?A. To look after the kids. B. To do the housework. C. To teach kids English. 请听第7段材料,回答第8、9题。8. What does the woman say about the suit?A. It has 10 LED lights. B. It is white and black. C. It has different patterns.9. How much do two suits cost?A. $30. B. $50. C. $60.请听第8段材料,回答第10至12题。10. What can visitors do in the Experience Gallery?A. Play various instruments. B. Enjoy different handicrafts. C. Meet some singers.11. Which place is suitable for a four-year-old kid?A. The Musical Adventures. B. The Artist Gallery. C. The Mini Music Makers.12. Whats the possible relationship between the speakers?A. Brother and sister. B. Husband and wife. C. Mother and son.请听第9段材料,回答第13至16题。13. How will the speakers collect information?A. By questionnaire. B. By Internet polling. C. By face-to-face interview.14. What will the speakers have to do to finish in time?A. Leave the office late. B. Take some work home. C. Come in early. 15. What does the woman think is a requirement for the final report?A. Reference book titles. B. A list of websites. C. A supplementary booklet.16. What does the woman suggest doing after finishing the project?A. Holding an office party. B. Sending out nice presents.C. Having a restaurant dinner.请听第10段材料,回答第17至20题。17. Why does the speaker strongly recommend Oaks Park?A. It has special rides. B. It is extremely large. C. It has a long history.18. Who built Oaks Park?A. The government. B. A company. C. A private family.19. When did Edward H. Bollinger buy the parks 44-acres of land?A. In 1925. B. In 1928. C. In 1943.20. What did Robert E. Bollinger do with the park in 1985?A. He transferred its ownership to his son.B. He donated it to an organization.C. He ran it at a profit.第二部分阅读理解 (共两节,40分) 第一节 (共15小题;每小题2分,共30分)阅读下列短文,从每题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。AWelcome to one of the largest collections of footwear (鞋类) in the world that will make you green with envy. Here at the Footwear Museum, you can see exhibits (展品) from all over the world.You can find out about shoes worn by everyone from the Ancient Egyptians to pop stars.Room 1The celebrity (名人) footwear section is probably the most popular in the entire museum. Started in the 1950s there is a wide variety of shoes and boots belonging to everyone from queens and presidents to pop stars and actors! Most visitors find the celebrities choice of footwear extremely interesting.Room 2Most of our visitors are amazed and shocked by the collection of “special purpose” shoes on exhibition here at the Museum of Footwear. For example, there are Chinese shoes made of silk that were worn by women to tie their feet firmly to prevent them from growing too much !Room 3As well as shoes and boots the museum also exhibits shoe-shaped objects. The variety is unbelievable. For example, there is a metal lamp that resembles a pair of shoes, and Greek wine bottles that look like legs !The Footwear LibraryPeople come from all over the world to study in our excellent footwear library. Designers and researchers come here to look up information on anything and everything related to the subject of footwear.21. Where would you find a famous singers shoes ?A. Room 1B. Room 2C. Room 3D. The Footwear Library.22. What do all exhibits in each room have in common?A. All exhibits in each room have the same shape.B. All exhibits in each room share the same theme.C. All exhibits in each room belong to the same social class.D. All exhibits in each room are made of the same material.23. Which of the following is true according to the text ?A. Room 2 is the most visited place in the museum.B. Researchers come to the Footwear Library for data.C. The oldest exhibits in Room 1 were made in the 1950s.D. Room 3 has a richer variety of exhibits than the other two.BI remember watching TV and seeing other children suffer in other parts of the world when I was a very little child. I would talk to myself, “When I grow up, when I can become rich, Ill save kids all over the world.”At the age of 17, I began my career here in America, and by 18, I started my first charity organization. I went on to team up with other organizations in the following years, and met, helped, and even lost some of the most beautiful souls, from six-year-old Jasmina Anema who passed away in 2010 from leukemia(白血病)-her story inspired thousands to volunteer as donors, to 2012 when my grandmother lost her battle with cancer, which is the very reason and the driving force behind the Clara Lionel Foundation (CLF). Were all human. And we all just want a chance: a chance at life, a chance in education, a chance at a future, really. And at CLF, our mission is to impact as many lives as possible, but it starts with just one.People make it seem too hard to do charity work. The truth is, you dont have to be rich to help others. You dont need to be famous. You dont even have to be college-educated. But it starts with your neighbor, the person right next to you, the person sitting next to you in class, the kid down the block in your neighborhood. You just do whatever you can to help in any way that you can. And today, I want to challenge each of you to make a commitment to help one person, one organization, one situation that touches your heat. My grandmother always used to say, “If youve got a dollar, theres plenty to share.”24. What did the author want to do at a young age?A. Watch TVB. Help other childrenC. Become wealthyD. Grow up quickly25. Which of the following directly caused the author to create and develop the CLF?A. A six-year-old kids request.B.Many volunteers inspiration for itC. Her grandmothers death of cancer.D. Other organizations encouragement.26. What does the underlined word “onein Paragraph 2 refer to?A. A lifeB. A chanceC. A taskD. An organization27. What does the author suggest people do in the last paragraph?A. Do charity work when you are rich.B. Challenge their friends to offer help.C.Work very hard to get a college education.D. Do little things to help those around them. CMany Android and iPhone owners use Google services on their mobile tables. One of the most widely used location services is Google Maps. When someone uses Google Maps, information about time and locations is recorded and stored.Google also uses tracking tools with other services. Weather apps, for example, are designed to identify a users location to provide local weather information. Even some Google Internet searches can result in the collection of information about exactly where a person was when the search was made.Google says it collects the data to improve users localized experiences. But such practices have also raised privacy concerns. Privacy activists have called on Google and other major technology companies to make it easier for users to tum off location services if they do not want to be tracked. In some ways, Google is clear about asking permission to use location information. For instance, Google Maps will seek approval from a user to give the app access to locations. If a user agrees to let Google collect location information over time, Google Maps will show this history in a “timeline” that shows the persons daily movements.Google also has a “Location History” setting. The company says any user can turn off Location History at any time. And when Location History is turned off for a users account, it is turned off for all equipment linked to that Google account. But the AP ( Associated Press) found this does not appear to be true, finding that Google continued to save location history even if a user had turned off Location History.Google states users can stop the saving of all location markers by turning off another setting, however, which is not clearly identified as being connected to location tracking. The setting is called “Web and App Activity”. It stores different kinds of information from Google apps and websites to a users Google account.28.Why does the author mention Weather apps?A.To show many apps can track a users location.B.To prove Google collects users data illegally.C.To stress Google services are widely used. D.To advise people to stop using them.29.What is the voice from the privacy activists?A.Users should use the Internet less.B.Google should stop tracking users.C.Google should respect users privacy.D.Google should turn off location services.30.What does the author indicate in paragraph 4?A.The Location History setting is difficult to find.B.The AP asks Google to remove Location History.C.Turning off Location History can avoid being tracked.D.What Google announces is hardly consistent with the fact.31.Which can best summarize the passage?A.Using Google puts you into a dangerous state.B.Google services urgently need to get improved.C.Google still tracks you with Location History off.D.Web and App Activity has endangered peoples life.DIts at this time of the year that marathon recovery, not marathon training, starts to take center stage.Research indicates that the muscle damage from running a marathon can last up to two weeks. The research also indicates that muscle soreness(肌肉酸痛)is not a good indicator of muscular healing. In other words, just because you arent sore anymore doesnt mean that you are fully healed. This is the danger for marathon runners: post-marathon muscular soreness fades after a few days but minor damage within the muscle cells remains. If you return to full training too soon-running more and faster than the tissues are ready for-you risk delaying full recovery and the chance to get ready for your next goal.The solution, it appears, is to recognize (and accept) that the muscles will take a while to heal and to be prepared to take it easy for the first couple of weeks (even longer if youre particularly sore after your marathon).While the research isnt very promising when it comes to things to do to reduce soreness and aid healing, a couple of concepts appear to help. First, providing gentle blood flow to the area helps bring healing nutrients (营养) into the muscles and also helps to remove waste products and damaged tissue. Walking and gentle massage(按摩)can help, particularly in the first few days after a marathon. Once muscle soreness has significantly reduced (usually two to four days after the race), light jogging can commence. Just be mindful to run very slowly.No runner wants to get super fit and then lose that during the recovery process. But since you must reduce your training load following your marathon, it can be difficult as to how much and how soon to insert running into your post-marathon training.32. When should marathon runners return to full training?A. About half a month after the competition.B. A few days after soreness disappears.C. Before the tissues recover completely.D. Before the next game draws closer.33. How can marathon runners reduce their muscle soreness?A. Through family care.B. By doing gentle exercise.C. Through medical treatment.D. By removing damaged tissue.34. Which of the following best explains “commence” underlined in Paragraph 3?A. Fit. B. Heal. C. Start. D. Mend.35. What can be a suitable title for the text?A. Reducing Training LoadB. Soreness with SportsC. Healing Muscle SorenessD. Recovery after Marathon第二节(共5小题;每小题2分,共10分)根据短文内容,从短文后的七个选项中选出能填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为多余选项。Music is often targeted at teenagers. Because teenagers go through big changes and start making life-affecting decisions in their teens, people naturally wonder what effects music has on teenagers. Does it lead to violence? Help test scores? Teach them valuable lessons? 36_ Music can help students improve academic performance. Studying music involves math and science, so students often improve in these areas. 37_ According to a report, students who took part in music performance scored 41 points higher in math than those who did not take part in music performance.Being a teenager can be rough emotionally. Music is an especially emotional art form covering every type of emotion. 38_ As music is a way to express emotions, many teenagers might try to make their own music, which can create healthy emotional expression. 39_ Thus, listening to music can teach teenagers a lot about their own culture and other cultures. They can learn musical traditions, musical instruments, history lessons and more. Plus, as listening to music is a fun activity, this can often be a more interesting way to learn about a culture, rather than simply reading a textbook.Music tastes and interests can often bring people together, especially teenagers. 40_ As well, music is often enjoyed at concerts and dance clubs where teenagers often hang out. Typically, the people attending these concerts and dance clubs already share a common interest, so a connection can be easily made.A. Music is often related with culture.B. This improvement can benefit them in tests.C. Music greatly improves teenagers,learning abilities.D. While there are negative effects, there are many positive effects, too.E. If they can find a song that matches their mood, they will feel comfortable.F. Rap music presents a new vocabulary teenagers wont learn in an English classG.Two teenagers who like the same style of music are easily to start up a friendship.第3部分 英语知识运用共两节,满分45分第一节 完形填空 (共20小题;每小题1.5分,共30分)阅读下面短文,掌握其大意,从每题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。When faced with difficult situations in their lives, many people find therm too 41 and give up, especially on their life dreams. But not for Gabriel Heredia.Gabriel is a 20-year-old Argentinian barber who was born without hands. _42 his physical disability, he was able to grow up happy and 43 . He also always had the support of friends and family, never feeling 44_ treated at all by his schoolmates. At the age of 14, he 45 working as a barber, and learned all the techniques to perfect haircuts. Although he first saw it as a hobby, Gabriel quickly 46 that this was the profession he wanted to work in.His family 47 him to open his first barbershop, which he worked at for one and a half years. There, he 48 the president of Argentina Corta, an organization for barbers to connect, do charity work in less fortunate _49_, and teach hairdressing to those who are 50 . Gabriel is now part of Argentina Corta, offering his services to people of all 51 so they can build up the 52 they need to get decent jobs.As a bright and caring young man, Gabriel 53 not only to be a barber, but also to make a 54 with the neighborhood: The thing that I like most of my 55 is that people feel comfortable and stylish with my cuts and that makes me 56 .Nowadays, Gabriel runs his own barber shop in Buenos Aires, where people 57 around the block for his services. Gabriels 58 shows that the barriers we face in life are never 59 to deal with successfully. Whatever problem you face, you can 60 tackle it by adopting the right mindset, and never giving up.41.A.dangerousB.cruelC.largeD.challenging42.A.ExceptB.BesidesC.DespiteD.Through43.A.independentB.honestC.wealthyD.careful44.A.equallyB.fairlyC.differentlyD.kindly45.A.startedB.continuedC.stoppedD.imagined46.A.promisedB.hopedC.determinedD.predicted47.A.advisedB.forcedC.inspiredD.helped48.A.introducedB.metC.foundD.influenced 49.A.neighborhoodsB.clubsC schoolsD.organizations50.A.luckyB.puzzledC.interestedD.intelligent51.A.levelsB.abilitiesC.typesD.ages52.A.imagesB.trustC.skills D.respect53.A.failsB.strugglesC.happensD.refuses54.A.connectionB.conversationC.debateD.bargain55.A.futureB.shopC.dreamD.job56.A.specialB.generousC.confidentD.happy57.A.turn upB.line upC.end up D.pack up58.A.storyB.lessonC.decisionD.choice59.A.hardB.impossibleC.likelyD.useless60.A.almostB.usuallyC.hardlyD.never第II卷第三部分 英语知识运用共两节,满分45分第二节 语法填空(共10小题,每小题1.5分,满分15分)While driving alone through the countryside, Linda saw an old woman by the side of the road, reaching out her hand. 61 was getting dark and raining. “I can t leave her ou

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