1、山东省潍坊市高三英语月考试题山东省潍坊市2016届高三英语12月月考试题注意事项:1本试卷分第卷和第卷两部分。第卷为选择题,共100分;第卷为非选择题,共650分,满分150分,考试时间为120分钟。2 试卷卷面分5分,如不规范,分等级(5、3、1分)扣除。 第一部分 听力(共两节,每小题1.5分, 满分30分)第一节: 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. How much longer will the woman wai
2、t for the bus at most from now on? A. 45 minutes B. 30 minutes. C. 15 minutes.2. What will they do first? A. Search for a pen B. Fix the bookshelf. C. Paint the bookshelf.3. What do we know from the conversation? A. The man lost his keys. B. The man didnt want to enter the room. C. The man couldnt o
3、pen the door.4. What is the man doing? A. Waiting for a man. B. Calling a taxi. C. Driving a taxi.5. What does the woman suggest the man take? A. A sweater and boots B. A sweater and medicines. C. A raincoat and a sweater.第二节 听下面5段对话或独白。每段对话和独白后有几个小题,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。听每段对话和独白前,你将有时间
4、阅读各个小题,每小题5秒钟;听完后,每小题将给出 5秒钟的作答时间。每段对话和独白读两遍。6. Why has the woman been exercising recently? A. To keep fit B. To train for a race. C. To lose weight.7. How does the woman feel after running? A. Tired B. Energetic C. Sick.听第7段材料,回答第8至10题。8. Which of the speakers things is gone? A. The television B. T
5、he mans coat. C. The radio.9. Where do they lose the things? A. In the taxi B. At home. C. In the company.10. What is the relationship between the speakers? A. Husband and wife. B. Waiter and customer. C. Boss and clerk.听第8段材料,回答第11至13题。11. Where are the speakers talking to each other?A. On the Inte
6、rnet B. In a computer store. C. Somewhere in front of a computer.12. How much will the man pay for the player? A. $1,500 B. $1,100 C. $40013. What can we learn from this conversation? A. Most people prefer shopping in the stores because of the low prices. B. People can only use credit cards while sh
7、opping on the Internet. C. Shopping on the Internet is easier than that in the stores.听第9段材料,回答第l4至l6题。14. What is the woman? A. A college student. B. A laid-off worker. C. A computer lover.15. What is she worrying about? A. Her exam results. B. How to find a job. C. How to send emails.16. What does
8、 the man advise her to do? A. Go to the companies in person. B. Try on the Internet. C. Send out more applications.听第10段材料,回答17至20题。17. What is the speaker probably? A. An air hostess. B. A woman clerk. C. A flight engineer.18. What is the flight number? A. 6157. B. 7156. C. 7517.19. What should we
9、do in case of emergency according to the speaker? A. Fasten the seat belt. B. Turn off mobile phones. C. Use oxygen masks.20. When does the speaker give the talk? A. Before a flight. B. During a flight. C. After a flight.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) 阅读并选出最佳选项。 A Visitor Oyster cards ar
10、e electronic smartcards that come fully charged with credit. Whether youre making a one-off trip to London or youre a regular visitor, using an Oyster travel smartcard is the easiest way to travel around the citys public transport network. Simply touch the card on the yellow card reader at the doors
11、 when you start and end your journey. Advantages of a Visitor Oyster Card A Visitor Oyster card is one of the cheapest ways to pay for single journeys on the bus, Tube, DLR, tram, London Over-ground and most National Rail services in London: Save time-your card is ready to use as soon as you arrive
12、in London. Its more than 50% cheaper than buying a paper travel card or single tickets with cash. There is a daily price cap-once you have reached this limit, you wont pay any more. Enjoy special offers and promotions at leading London restaurants, shops and entertainment venues-plus discounts on th
13、e Emirates Air Line cable car and Thames Clippers river buses. Buy a Visitor Oyster card Buy a Visitor Oyster card before you visit London and get it delivered to your home address. A card costs 3 (non-refundable) plus postage. Order online and arrive with your Oyster in hand! You can also buy a Vis
14、itor Oyster card from Gatwick Express ticket offices at Gatwick Airport Station and on board Eurostar trains travelling to London. Add Credit to Your Visitor Oyster Card You can choose how much credit to add to your card. If you are visiting London for two days, you can start with 20 credit. If you
15、run out of credit, add credit at the following locations: Touch screen ticket machines in Tube, DLR, London Over-ground and some National Rail stations. Around 4,000 Oyster Ticket Stops found in newsagents and small shops across London. TFL Visitor and Travel Information Centers. Tube and London Ove
16、r-ground station ticket offices. Emirates Air Line terminals.21. When can you use your Visitor Oyster Card?A. After you become a regular visitor. B. Only when you end your journey.C. Once you arrive in London. D. Before you leave home.22. What can we learn about the Visitor Oyster card? A. It can re
17、ach you before your journey to London. B. It requires you to pay as much as the daily price cap. C. It can provide you a 50% discount at a London shop. D. It can be delivered to your home address free of charge.23. Where can you add credit to your Visitor Oyster card?A. On the Internet. B. At a Tube
18、 station ticket office.C. On Eurostar trains. D. At Gatwick Express ticket offices. BFor Canadians, backpacking Europe is a special ceremony signifying a new life stage. Unlike package tours, backpacking is a struggle, full of discovery and chance connections. It is about focusing on something diffe
19、rent from our own lives and losing ourselves in a new world, if only for a moment. Well, thats what backpacking Europe is supposed to do. Thats what it used to do before modern communications, social media, and commercial hostelling (旅社). Older Canadians would not recognize the Europe that they back
20、packed in the 1960s, 1970s and even the 1980s. Far from a rough adventure into foreign cultures, the European experience has been shattered in part by todays technology.A few years ago, I took my then 60-year-old father on a backpacking trip across part of Europe and Turkey. As he is an experienced
21、traveler and someone who possesses a strong sense of adventure, I decided that wed travel on a budget, staying in hostel dorms. For him, backpacking through Europe in 1969 was about independence and struggle. But two things surprised him at the end of our journey. First was how technology-based back
22、packing had become: Young people were so directly connected to home that they were hardly away in any meaningful sense. Second, the lack of connections we made with locals. Instead of making us feel closer to a place, he found commercial hostelling actually made us more alienated (疏远的).But there was
23、 some room for hope. While technology takes our attention away from the beauty and history before us, there were also ways in which it helped us to connect with our surroundings. Websites like Airbnb have made it easier to stay with enthusiastic locals. Couch Surfing helps organize meet-ups between
24、locals and travelers. The online marketplace Dopios offers a chance to meet locals through enjoyable experiences like a personalized city tour.Backpacking can never be the way it was for our parents generation. But doing a little study of history and culture before leaving, and bravely getting rid o
25、f any electronic devices while traveling, will help give young travelers a taste of the glory days.24. The underlined word “shattered” in Paragraph 2 most probably means _.A. broadened B. relived C. ruined D. acquired25. After the recent backpacking trip in Europe, the authors father finds _.A. back
26、packers connect less with locals than before B. young people dislike getting in touch with their familyC. a hostel is a nice place for travelers to meet each otherD. backpacking in Europe becomes more difficult than before26 Whats the authors attitude towards technology?A. Negative. B. Objective. C.
27、 Uncertain. D. Uninterested.27. The text mainly discusses the relationship between _.A. adventures and cultures B. technology and traveling C. young people and their family D. Canadian travelers and Europeans CThink about the last time you felt afraid. Was it a fear of height? Did you oversleep on a
28、 weekday and fear youd get into trouble at the office? In any case, you know what it feels like to feel fear. But one woman doesnt The woman, code-named “UM”, gave her first-ever interview after years of being studied by a team of researchers. The woman is given a code name because the researchers w
29、ant to protect her from anyone who would take advantage of her inability to feel afraid. UM cant tell you what fear is because shes never experienced it. “I wonder what its like to actually be afraid of something,” she said. The formal name for the disease is Urbach-Wieth disease, which is character
30、ized by a hoarse(粗哑的)voice,small bumps around the eyes, and calcium deposits(钙沉积的)in the brain. In the case of UM,the disease has transformed the part of her brain that controls the human response to fear. In the interview, UM talks about an event in her life where she was held at knifepoint and gun
31、point, “I was walking to the store,and I saw a man on a park benchHe said. “Come here,please,” so I went over to him. He grabbed me by the shirt,put a knife to my throat and told me he was going to cut me. I told him, “Go ahead and cut me,” I wasnt afraid at all. And for some reason,he let me go.” D
32、octors who have been studying UMs condition for years have been trying different things that could strike fear into her. They finally figured something outincreasing UMs carbon dioxide levelsExtra carbon dioxide concentration in the blood is known to cause fear and panic in health individuals. Increasing UMs carb
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