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四川省成都七中2021届高三零诊模拟考试英语试卷+Word版含答案

成都七中2019—2020 学年度下期高2021 届零诊模拟考试英语试卷考试时间:120 分钟满分:150 分第Ⅰ卷注意事项:1.答第I 卷前,考生务必将自己的姓名、准考证号填写在答题卡上。

2.选出每小题答案后,用2B 铅笔把答题卡上所对应题目的答案标号框涂黑。

如需改动,用橡皮擦干净后,再选涂其他答案标号框。

不能答在本试卷上,否则无效。

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 is the man probably concerned a bout?A.Getting stuck in the traffic.B.How to get to the stadium.C.Getting to their seats on time.2.What happened when the man parked on the street?A.His car was stolen.B.He got a ticket.C.Someone crashed into his car.3.Why did the woman sleep in so late?A.She fell sick last night.B.She had to finish her homework.C.She was watching TV very late.4.What will the man do tomorrow a fternoon?A.Play a basketball game.B.Watch a basketball g ame.C.Go to the dentist.5.What will the man do on Saturday?A.Stay at h ome.B.Go somewhere with Mary.C.Take the woman’s place at work.第二节(共15 小题;每题 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 think of the girl's question?A.It isn't important.B.It needn't to be answered.C.It's difficult to answer.7.What does the man say about the ocean and the sky?A.They are related.B.They look exactly the same.C.They have nothing to do with each other.听第7 段材料,回答第8 至10 题。

8.In how many different ways did the man contact the woman?A. Two.B. Three.C. Four.9.What happened five minutes ago?A.The woman turned on her phone.B.The man left a message for the woman.C.The woman got back from lunch.10.What does the woman imply about her interview?A. It was the fast one.B. It went pretty w ell.听第8 段材料,回答第11 至13 题。

11.How many grapes were in the bunch?A. 20.B. 30.C. She didn't get the job.C. 50.12.According to the woman, why do Japanese people like perfect f ruit?A.They like to eat it for breakfast.B.They turn it into drinks.C.They like to give it as a g 讥13.What does the woman think of the g rapes?A.It is not wise to buy them.B.They are worth buying.C.She'd go on a trip to Japan for them.听第9 段材料,回答第14 至17 题。

14.Where will the f i lm be made?A.In the speakers' neighborhood.B.In another part of the city.C.In a nearby city.15.What does the man want to do?A.Call the movie director.B.Write a letter to the mayor.C.Watch the movie being made.16.What happened last time a movie was made?B.The man’s guests couldn’t find hotel rooms.C.The man had to reschedule his meeting.17.How does the woman feel about the film shooting?A.It will cost the city a lot of money.B.It will take a long time to make.C.It will be good for the local economy.听第10 段材料,回答第18 至20 题。

18.What is this talk mainly about?A.The way the pyramids were built.B.The history of the pyramids.C.Ways to protect the pyramids.19.How were the workers paid?A. In gold.B. With jewels and food.C. With food, clothes, and h ousing.20.Why did guards need to live near the p yramids?A.To prevent tourists from damaging them.B.To make sure the builders were busy.C.To stop people from stealing things inside.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,共30 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。

AMaps Special Edition, £25This book was already popular in our children’s department and has been made even better with this special edition, which includes 16 new maps. The collection of 68 maps takes you through 58 countries and six continents. It is packed with illustrated information, which includes famous historical figures, local dishes, festivals, wild animals and landmarks. Each page is a work of art to revisit, because each time you look you will notice something new.Doodle World Map Pillowcase, £14.99This 100% cotton, machine-washable world map pillowcase features lots of wonderful illustrations, including animals, the seven wonders of the modern world and interesting facts, such as the first solo round the world hot air balloon, the route of the Trans-Siberian Railway and the world record migration of the humpback whale. It comes with wash-out pens so you can wash off the old design and colour it in all over again, and again. Perfect for sleepovers.Atlas of Dinosaur Adventures: Step Into a Prehistoric World, £20Palaeontology meets cartography in this atlas (地图册) that is perfect for any dinosaur-obsessed child. It is by the award-winning team behind Atlas of Animal Adventures and Lucy Leather land’s inky illustrations, which makes the book a joy to look at. It covers the Triassic, Jurassic and Cretaceous periods and includes maps on the shifting continents and fossil finds. On every page you meet a different creature and discover its behaviours, hunting techniques, defence tactics and migration patterns.Usborne Atlas and Jigsaw Europe, £9.99You get two gifts in one here. This 300-piece jigsaw of Europe comes with a 32-page picture atlas, so you can see and discover the continent in more detail with the maps and learn more about the countries as you are building the puzzle. Beautiful illustrations of animals, landmarks and attractions cover every centimetre of the jigsaw, making it challenging (but not too hard) to put together for children age 5+.21.All the four superbly illustrated atlases are perfect presents for ___ .A. geologistsB. childrenC. adultsD. parents22.If a kid is obsessed by the remote past, what may he be interested in?A. Maps S pecial EditionB. Doodle World Map PillowcaseC. Atlas of Dinosaur AdventuresD. Usborne Atlas and Jigsaw Europe23.Which of the following is TRUE about these atlases?A.All of them serve to explore the world.B.All of them contain widely acknowledged landmarks.C.They all have multiple purposes.D.They are all made of unique materials.BI became a magician by accident. When I was nine years old, I learned how to make a coin disappear. I’d read The Lord of the Rings and ventured into the adult section of the library to search for a book of spells—nine being that curious age at which you’re old enough to work through more than 1,200 pages of fantasy literature but young enough to still hold out hope that you might find a book of real, actual magic in the library. The book I found instead taught basic sleight-of-hand technique, and I dedicated the next months to practice.At first the magic wasn’t any good. At first it wasn’t even magic; it was just a trick—a bad trick. I spent hours each day in the bathroom running through the secret moves in front of the mirror. I dropped the coin over and over, a thousand times in a day, and after two weeks of this my mom got a carpet from the hardware store and placed it under the mirror to muffle the sound of the coin falling again and again.I had heard my dad work through passages of new music on the piano, so I knew how to practice—slowly, deliberately, going for precision rather than speed. One day I tried the illusion in the mirror and the coin vanished. It did not look like a magic trick. It looked like a m iracle.One of the lessons you learn very early on as a magician is that the most amazing part of a trick has nothing to do with the secret. The secret is simple and often dull: a hidden piece of tape, a small mirror, a duplicate playing card, diversion of the audience’s attention. In this case, the secret was a series of covert ( 暗中的 ) technique to hide the coin behind my hand in the act of opening it, a dance of the fingers that I learned so completely I didn’t even have to think. I would close my hand, then open it, and the coin would vanish not by skill but by real magic.24.What book did the author intend to find in the library when he was nine years old?A.A book teaching people how to make a coin disappear.B.The second book of The Lord of the Rings.C.A book on how to become a magician.D.A book of real magic.25.The underlined word “muffle” probably means____ _ .A. cleanB. punishC. lowerD. kill26.What did the author learn from his dad playing the piano?A. Without music, life is of no value.B. Practice makes perfect.C. Great liars are also great magicians.D. No pains, no gains.27.Which of the following is not mentioned as a magician trick?A.Carrying out skillful hand moves.ing real magic to create miracles.C.Hiding some stage tools inside the coat.D.Guiding the audience to focus on something unimportant.CDolphins are universally regarded as some of the cleverest creatures in the world. In captivity ( 圈养), they can be trained to complete complex tasks such as jumping through hoops and somersaulting through the air.But their intelligence doesn’t stop there. In a recent study of cetaceans (鲸目动物)--a group of animals that includes dolphins and whales--researchers created a list of intelligent behaviors observed in 90 different cetacean species, reported the Guardian. For example, the smartest cetaceans hunt in groups, share knowledge through mimicry (模仿) and even care for each other's children. Some even consider their behavior to be human-like.“There is the saying that ‘it takes a village to raise a child’ seems to be true for both whales and humans,”Michael Muthukrishna of the London School of Economics, co-author of the study, told the Guardian.However, cetaceans don’t just use their brain power for survival. The study suggests that dolphins might even gossip. That's because some species greet each other with specific whistles, just as humans greet each other by name, the Guardian reported. Sometimes, a group of dolphins whistles the “name” of a dolphin that isn't there. Could they be speaking about their “friend” behind its back?For the researchers, dolphin small talk is a big deal. As they found that the most social cetaceans also have the largest brains, they argue that cetacean intelligence developed to meet the demands of complex social groups.Known as the “cultural brain hypothesis (假设),” it had only been used to explain the intelligence of humans and other primates (灵长目动物). The new study aimed to find a common pathway for the evolution of intelligence among biologically different species.“It is interesting to think that whale and human brains are different in their structure but have brought us to the same patterns in behavior, ” Luke Rendell, a biologist at the University of St Andrews, told the Guardian.Indeed, we still have a lot to learn about our intelligent ocean-dwelling neighbors. “We don’ t have to look at other planets to look for aliens,” Muthukrishna told the Guardian, “because we know that underwater there are these amazing species with so many parallels to us in their complex b ehaviors.”28.The recent study was intended to ____ .A.learn more about intelligent creatures of the seaB.explain the intelligence of humans and cetaceansC.create a list of intelligent behaviors of different cetacean speciesD.see whether the intelligence of different species evolved in the same way29.The implied meaning of the underlined part in Paragraph 3 i s that ____ _ .A.villagers have the responsibility to raise any child in the villageB.like human beings, whales even help raise each o ther’s babiesC.cetaceans have social behaviors very similar to human beingsD.it is not easy for one villager to take care of his or her own child30.It can be inferred from the passage that ____ .A.it is unnecessary to look for aliens and do research into themB.some cetaceans have the same intelligence as human beingsC.both dolphins and whales greet each other with specific w histlesD.both dolphins and whales have a lot in common with humans in behaviors31.What is the best title for this passage?A. Aliens living underwaterB. A study of intelligent dolphinsC. Intelligent creatures of the seaD. Reasons for the intelligence of sea c reaturesDOne of a doctors’ most valuable tools is his nose. Since ancient times, medics have relied on their sense of smell to help them work out what is wrong with their patients. Fruity odors (气味) on the breath, for example, let them monitor the condition of diabetics (糖尿病病人).But doctors can, as it were, smell only what they can smell—and many compounds characteristic of disease are odorless. To deal with this limitation, Hossam Haick, a chemical engineer at the Technion Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa, has developed a device which, he claims, can do work that the human nose cannot.The idea behind Dr. Haick’s invention is not new. Many diagnostic “breathalysers” already exist, and sniffer dogs, too, can be trained to detect illnesses such as cancer. Most of these approaches, though, are disease-specific. Dr. Haick wanted to generalize the p rocess.As he describes in ACS Nano, he and his colleagues created a series of electrodes made of carbon nanotubes (纳米碳管). Each of these had one of 20 organic films laid over it. Each film was sensitive to one of a score of compounds known to be found on the breath of patients suffering from a range of 17 illnesses, including Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis, and bladder cancer. When a film reacted, its electrical resistance changed in a predictable manner. The combined changes produced an electrical fingerprint that would be diagnostic of the disease a patient was suffering from.To test their invention, Dr. Haick and his colleagues collected 2,808 breath samples from 1,404 patients who were suffering from at least one of the diseases. Its success varied. It could distinguish between samples from patients suffering from gastric cancer and bladder cancer only 64% of the time. At distinguishing lung cancer from head and neck cancer it was, though, 100% successful. Overall, it got things right 86% of the time. Not perfect, but a useful aid to a doctor planning to conduct further investigations. And this is only the first model. Slightly adjusted, its success rate would be expected to improve.32.How useful is nose to doctors?A.They can smell what o ther people can’t.B.They could tell which diseases are odorless.C.They diagnose illness through their sense of smell.D.They will apply new device to helping with diagnosing illness.33.What is the most special aspect of the new invention?A.It can help detect more than one disease.B.It is made of a series of electrodes.C.It works through analyzing patients’ electrical f ingerprints.D.It can be used to help diagnose cancers.34.What can we i nfer about the device?A.It’s the first invention by using principle of sense of smell.B.It will be a useful tool in diagnosing lung cancer.C.Its success rate differs from patient to patient.D.It can successfully tell Bladder cancer from other cancers.35.What is the best title for this passage?A. High Tech in d iagnosing illnessB. A new way in diagnosing illnessC. Diagnosing illness can be easyD. Diagnosing illness by smell第二节(共5 小题;每小题2 分,满分10 分)根据短文内容,从短文后的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。

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