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山东省济南市2018届高三考前高考针对性练习(二模)英语

济南市2018届高三5月针对性练习(二模)英语试题第一部分听力(共两节,满分30分)做题时,可先将答案标在试卷上。

录音内容结束后,你将有两分钟的时间将试卷上的答案转涂到答题卡上。

第一节(共5小题;每小题1.5分,合计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秒钟的时间回答有关小题和阅读下一小题。

每段对话仅读一遍。

例:How much is the shirt?A. £19.15B. £9.18.C. £9.15.答案是C.1. How many inds of fruits are the speaers buying?A. Three.B. Four.C. Five.2. Where does the conversation probably tae place?A. In a supermaret.B. At the woman’s house.C. In a fast food restaurant.3. What are the speaers mainly taling about?A. A poet.B. A boo.C. A history class.4. What does the man suggest the woman do?A. Rest for a little while.B. Try an easier problem.C. Find a different major.5. Where is the man probably going net?A. To a party.B. To a baery.C. To a maret.第二节(共15小题;每小题1.5分,合计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. How much does the por cost?A. $ 6 per pound.B. $ 4 per pound.C. $ 3 per pound.7. How will the man probably pay?A. In cash.B. By credit card.C. With a chec.听第7段材料,回答第8、9题。

8. What did the man teach Madeleine to do yesterday?A. Mae different colors.B. Avoid artistic accidents.C. Use bright colors.9. What maes painting fun according to the man?A. Taing fewer riss.B. Challenging yourself.C. Trying new things.听第8段材料,回答第10至12题。

10. What happened to the man’s mother?A. She missed her flight.B. Her flight got changed.C. She was stuc in traffic.11. What is the man’s sister doing?A. Getting food for the family.B. Playing a basetball game.C. Finishing her schoolwor.12. Who is the man probably taling with?A. His aunt.B. His cousin,C. His friend.听第9段材料,回答第13至16题。

13. When did the man notice his foot was hurting?A. After he woe up at night.B. When he cut it by accident.C. Before taing a long wal.14. How does the man describe the pain?A. Dull.B. Warm.C. Sharp.15. Where does the conversation probably tae place?A. On the first floor.B. On the second floor.C. On the third floor.16. What is the man going to do first?A. Go to the bathroom.B. Have his blood tested.C. Write down the instructions.听第10段材料,回答第17至20题。

17. When was the Santa Cru Beach Boardwal set up?A. In 1960.B. In 1924.C. In 1907.18. What is the Giant Dipper?A. A water game.B. A wooden ride.C. A big castle.19. What does the video game area loo lie?A. A palace in the clouds.B. A mini golf course.C. A popular restaurant.20. What is free for all visitors to the boardwal?A. Rides in the par.B. Admission to the par.C. Paring net to the par.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和D四个选项中,选出最佳选项。

AThe Guggenheim Museum attempts to help educators connect students with art. It offers programs for educators, including free arts curricula, professional development courses and worshops, as well as professional meet and greets that pair artists with public school teachers throughout New Yor City.•Visiting with your studentsThe museum offers a variety of ways for educators and their students to visit, from self-guided tours to a guided eperience.• Arts curriculum onlineThe Guggenheim produces free curriculum materials on ehibitions for educators to use both during school visits and in the classroom. While the material focuses on recent ehibitions, a comprehensive range of lessons cover many wors and artists in the museum’s collection.•Learning through artLearning Through Art sends eperienced teaching artists into New Yor City public schools t where they wor with classroom teachers to develop and facilitate art projects into the school curriculum.•Education facilitiesHou sed in the Sacler Center for Arts Education, the Guggenheim’s education facilities include studio art and multimedia labs, a theater, an ehibition gallery, and a conference room.21. Who are the museum’s programs intended for?A. Students.B. Parents.C. Educators.D. Artists.22. Which tour can be designed based on your own interest?A. Custom Tour.B. Lecturer’s Badge.C. Special Ehibition.D. Guggenheim Museum Highlights.23. How do teaching artists help to mae art projects into the school curriculum?A. By giving lessons online.B. By woring with teachers.C. By providing free materials.D. By designing projects alone.24. What can we do in the Sacler Center?A. Appreciate art wors.B. Dine with your friends.C. Perform science eperiments.D. Collect your favorite ehibits.Lions are the top tourist attraction to enya and also considered critically endangered. One of the main causes of their death is tha t people ill them in return for lions attacing their cows. “We put our cows in a small cow shelter at night,” locals said, “and that’s when the trouble would start. Lions would jump in the shelter and ill the cows”.There have been a lot of efforts to try to protect the lions, but it’s a crisis and everyone is looing for a solution. One idea was land leases (租用), another was lion-proof fences. However, no one even new that Richard Turere, a 13-year-old Maasai from enya, had already come up with something that wored.One night Richard was waling around with a flashlight and discovered the lions were scared of a moving light. An idea was born. Three wees and much repairing later, Richard invented a system of lights that flash around the cow shelter, mimicing a human waling around with a flashlight. His system is made from broen flashlight parts and an indicator bo from a motorcycle. “The only thing I bought was a solar panel (电池板), which charges a battery that supplies power to the lights at night. ” Richard sa ys. He calls the system Lion Lights.His simple solution was so successful; his neighbors heard about it and wanted Lion Lights, too. He put in the lights for them. From there, the lights spread and are now being used all around enya. Someone in India is trying them out for tigers. In ambia and Tanania they’re being used as well.25. Why do local people ill lions?A. To attract tourists.B. To protect their cows.C. To sell them for money.D. To scare away large animals.26. What maes Richard’s idea successful?A. That the lights will cost nothing.B. That the system can protect lions.C. That the lions are afraid of light.D. That the cows are lawfully illed.27. What may be the best title of the tet?A. Lion LightsB. Protecting LionsC. Endangered CowsD. Lion-proof FencesIn 1869, the Smiley family purchased an area of land about 100 miles north of New Yor City. Over time, some of their property and much of the surrounding landscape became the Mohon Preserve, which has since grown to 8, 000 acres and attracts visitors and roc climbers.But the Mohon Preserve also has a long scientific legacy. In the 1930s, Dan Smiley, a descendent of the original owners, began eeping trac of the plants and animals that lived in the area.Megan Napoli is a research ecologist with the Mohon Preserve in New Yor. She thins Smiley’s efforts produced a rare long-term data set of observations, which is useful for studying the impacts of climate change. For instance, other research has shown that songbirds are migrating north earlier and earlier in the spring.It’s important for the birds to arrive at the proper time in the spring, because they need to time their arrival with the insect emergence. So they need to be here to establish their nesting sites, lay their eggs. Once the eggs hatch, they have their baby birds, so they need to time it when the insects are most abundant.Napoli has begun analying about 76,000 observations of songbird migration dates collected by Smiley and his team to see if they, too, show that climate change has altered the timing of migrations. Her results suggest that they do.Napoli found that short-distance migrants that spend their winters in the southern U. S. now arrive an average of eleven days earlier than they did in the 1930s. Long-distance migrants that overwinter in the tropics arrive roughly a wee earlier. Napoli presented her results at a recent Ecological Society of America meeting in Portland, Oregon.Meanwhile, who nows how many other long-term, personal data collections lie Smiley s are out there, waiting to be discovered and to help improve official attempts to trac the planet’s changes.28. What do we now about Dan Smiley?A. He lived in New Yor City.B. He was a scientific researcher.C. He owned the Mohon Preserve.D. He ept a record of wildlife.29. What does the underlined word “it” in Paragraph 4 refer to?A. The birds’ birth.B. The birds’ arrival.C. The nest building.D. The insect appearance.30. What does Megan Napoli thin of Smil ey’s long-term record?A. It has affected the birds’ migration.B. It challenges the previous research.C. It has changed official attitudes.D. It is of great value to her research.31. What can we learn from Napoli’s research?A. It is totally based on S miley’s long-term notes.B. Scientists have to rely on more personal data.C. Climate change affects birds’ migration time.D. It contributes greatly to other personal research.DMany people traveled to Las Vegas, Nevada last wee for the 50th Consumer Electronics Show, or CES. The show is said to have the largest collection of new electronic devices in the world.The show had many eamples of “smart home” devices. “Smart home” technology is designed to mae life easier for people by letting computers control many things inside our homes. One such device actually begins woring outside the home, when someone arrives and rings the doorbell.“When someone comes to your front door and rings the doorbell, the light can turn on immediately. I get a notification when I’m halfway around the world that someone came, and I can start taling to the person who’s at my front door, and I can say, ‘Oh, here let me let you in.’ I can unloc the door for them very easily.” said Vivint, a smart home service provider.One electronics maer launched a device that lets people see and interact with their animals when they are away. The device, from Petcube, lets you remotely watch and tal to your pet through a personal device, according to a company official. It can even give the pet a treat—if you approve and order it.For heating or cooling, there is a smart thermostat. This device can also send you a message if a big storm causes leas or flooding. “We’re trying to catch it with just a few drips before it becomes a real big problem,” s aid Mie Sale of iDevices.A concern for many homeowners is the possibility that someone else might find a way to attac these smart home devices. An official from Vivint said his company is sure that only owners of the home can gain use of information on the devices. Warren at from iDevices said his company employs engineers from the defense industry to help prevent hacing.32. What can be learned about the show?A. It created much attraction to consumers.B. It has been held in Las Vegas many times.C. It only ehibited smart home devices.D. It is the largest show ever held.33. What’s the purpose of Paragraph 3?A. To eplain how to answer the door.B. To illustrate a smart home device.C. To tell a story about nice devices.D. To introduce a home service provider.34. What may happen in the future according to the given eamples?A. Computers may replace human worers one day.B. A stranger can come into your house even if you’re out.C. The house can repair for itself if a storm causes damage.D. You can ta e good care of your animals while you’re away.35. What can be inferred about the smart home device from the last paragraph?A. Information on the devices is easy to get.B. Many of the devices are not available now.C. Homeowners are concerned about its operation.D. Its safety can be guaranteed at present.第二节(共5小题;每小题2分,满分10分)根据短文内容,从短文后的选种选出能填入空白处的最佳选项。

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