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    2022太原高三上学期期中英语试题

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    这是一份2022太原高三上学期期中英语试题,共11页。试卷主要包含了5分,满分7等内容,欢迎下载使用。
    20212022学年第学期高三年级期中质量监测英语试卷考试时间上午10:00—12:00说明本试卷为闭卷笔答答题时间120分钟满分150不含听力。请将第一卷试题答案填在第二卷卷首的相应位置。第一部分  听力共两节满分30做题时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写到答题卡上。第一节5小题每小题1.5满分7.5听下面5段对话。每段对话后有一个小题从题中所给的ABC三个选项中选出最佳选项。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。答案写在答题卡上。How much is the shirt?A. £19.15. B. £9.18. C. £9.15.答案是C1. Where is the man probably?A. In his school. B. In his house. C. In a restaurant.2. What does the woman want to do?A. Meet John. B. Practise basketball. C. Return John’s dictionary.3. When will the shoes be repaired?A. On Friday morning. B. On Friday afternoon. C. On Saturday afternoon.4. How much will the woman probably lend to the man?A.$ 20. B. $30. C. $ 50.5. Why did the man call the police station?A. To ask for help. B. To ask for direction. C. To report an accident.第二节15小题每小题1.5满分22.5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ABC三个选项中选出最佳选项。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。答案写在答题卡上。听第6段材料回答第67题。6. Which bus will the woman take?A. T3. B. Z4. C. T6.7. What is the man doing?A. Asking for permission.B. Making an appointment.C. Directing the woman to the zoo.听第7段材料回答第810题。8. What is the woman going to do?A. Hold a party. B. Attend a meeting. C. Give a test.9. How can students take advanced drawing course?A. By taking an examination.B. By handing in drawing works.C. By asking for the headmaster’s permission.10. What does the man give the woman?A. Some drawings. B. Some flowers. C. A textbook.听第8段材料回答第1114题。11. Who stayed in bed for two days?A. Cathy. B. Peter. C. Ann.12. Why is the woman wearing a sweater?A. Because of the cold winterB. Because of the strong wind.C. Because of the rainy weather.13. How did the woman get her sweater?A. She made it herself.B. She bought it in a shop.C. She got it from her mother.14. What does the man think of the woman’s sweater?A. It is very cheap. B. It fits her perfectly. C. It is out of fashion.听第9段材料回答第1517题。15. What is the relationship between the two speakers?A. They are classmates. B. They are teachers. C. Student and teacher.16. What can they do in the club?A. Copy photos. B. Take photos. C. Watch films.17. When did the conversation take place?A. On Tuesday. B. On Wednesday. C. On Thursday.听第10段材料回答第1820题。18. What did the farmer want to do after taking off his hat?A. To wait for the people.B. To sleep for a while.C. To make some money for a living.19. Why did the man become a beggar?A. He slept well on the sidewalk.B. He could go anywhere he wanted.C. He found it easier to beg for money.20. What does the author advise people like the farmer to do?A. To collect beggars’ information.B. To make contributions to others.C. To find work in some organizations.第二部分  阅读理解共两节满分60第一节15小题每小题3分,满分45阅读下列短文从每题所给的ABCD四个选项中选出最佳选项。答案写在答题卡上。AThe Philipsburg Opera House Theatre is excited to once again open live theatre to the public. The local talent is directed by the experienced Cassandra Hopkins as they perform a number of comedies ranging from the 1870s to the present. Come, laugh and smile with us as we celebrate the re-opening of civilization. Visit Philipsburg for a few days and see multiple shows in the historic opera house built in the 1800s, and explore the town for a memorable weekend!One EI of a Town: Written by locals Tom Mullen and Steve Immenschuh about their dear town, Philipsburg, this comedy displays both the hardship of life and the love of a growing community through the decades. Features live music written by Cassandra Hopkins. Runs every Monday and Wednesday from November 8th to November 24th, 2021.See How They Run: A classic mix-up British comedy full of confusion for the characters and funny delight for the audience. Be sure to come and ready to laugh! Runs every Friday from November 5th to November 12th, 2021.Pirates of Penzance: As a Gilbert and Sullivan original, and starring trained professional singers, this excellent performance includes well-loved favorites from Poor Wandering One to Modern Major General, and many more! Runs every Saturday and Thursday from November 20th to December 16th, 2021.The Adventures of Tom Sawyer: The children of Philipsburg are excited to open to the public The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, based on the classic book by Mark Twain. Don’t miss the dramatic tricks of Tom and Huck and the mystery they are led into. Runs on December 4th and 19th, 2021.Seats are on a “first come first served” basis. Come early!21. Who writes live music for One EI of a Town?A. Tom Mullen. B. Steve Immenschuh. C. Cassandra Hopkins. D. Mark Twain.22. When can you watch Pirates of Penzance?A. On Thursday, November 18th. B. On Friday, December 17th.C. On Wednesday, December 8th. D. On Saturday, November 27th.23. What do the listed operas have in common?A. They are all comedies.B. They are based on classic books.C. They are directed by Gilbert and Sullivan.D. They are performed in a modern opera house.BImagine your smartphone’s screen gets broken, or your favourite boots get a hole in them. What do you do? You could buy a replacement. Or you could join the worldwide trend of taking your broken stuff to a “repair café”.The Bower Reuse and Repair Centre has just launched Australia’s first repair café, in Sydney’s inner west. The crowd-funded project will hold weekly repair sessions focusing on bikes, furniture and electrical items.The first repair café was set up in Amsterdam in 2009, and the Repair Cafe Foundation says there are now more than 400 around the world. A repair café is a free face-to-face meeting of skilled volunteers and local residents who want things fixed. Visitors bring broken items from home and watch, learn or help as the repairs get done. Some things are fixed during the event, while for more challenging items people might be referred to local speciality repair shops.Last year, according to the ABS, Australians sent more than half a million tons of leather to landfillmore than ten times the amount that was reused or recycled. Mending represents an attempt to resist the throwaway culture. Repair cafés get people talking and give them the chance to network and learn about the local resources available. And, perhaps most surprisingly for anyone who considers mending to be some kind of drudgery, repair cafés can be fun and creative.“In a circular economy, repair cafés fit right in”, says the organiser Martine Postma. In rejecting buy-use-throw, the circular economy aims to keep resources moving around in the economy, rather than moving them through it to a dead end, where they cannot be put into valuable use.It might be quicker and easier to throw stuff in the bin, but it’s more expensive and less fun too.24. What can we know about the repair café in Sydney?A. It’s financed by the government. B. Its visitors are involved in the fixing.C. It’s the first repair café in the world. D. All items are fixed during the event.25. Why does the author discuss landfill in paragraph 4?A. To stress the difficulty of landfill. B. To indicate the urgency of reusing.C. To support the throwaway culture. D. To show the influence of repair cafés.26. What does the underlined word “drudgery” in paragraph 4 mean?A. Special network. B. Weekly meetings. C. Unpleasant work. D. Interesting games.27. Which of the following can be the best title for the text?A. Places to Meet Up and DrinkB. Repair and Share Every MonthC. Repair Cafes Continue the Art of MendingD. Repair Cafes Fix Things- Including the EconomyCThis year’s Olympic Games have been closed to most spectators (观众) because of COVID-19, but the eyes of the world are still on the athletes thanks to five extra camerasthe first step in a 3D tracking system that supplies spectators with instant insights into each step of a race.The tracking system being used in Tokyo, an Intel product called 3DAT, feeds live footage (影像) into the cloud. There, an artificial intelligence program uses deep learning to analyze an athlete’s movements and identifies key performance characteristics such as top speed and slowdown. The system shares that information with viewers by displaying the action of slow-motion, highlighting key moments. The whole process, from capturing the footage to broadcasting the analysis, takes less than 30 seconds.“It’s like having your own personal commentator point things out to you in the race,” says Jonathan Lee, director of the Olympic technology group.To train their Olympic AI via machine learning, Lee and his team had to capture as much footage of best athletes as they could. They needed recordings of human bodies performing specific moves, but the preexisting footage shows average people in motion, Lee says. “People aren’t usually seven feet in the air,” he notes, but world-class high jumpers reach such heights regularly.In the footage, a team at Intel record every part of the bodyeyes, nose, shoulders, and more. Once those key points were identified, the model began connecting them in three dimensions (维度) until it had a simplified performance of an athlete’s form. Lee thinks the AI could help everyone from Olympians to average gymgoers correct their form and track changes in their moves that may indicate upcoming injury. “Long-term, what this technology will do is help improve an athlete’s performance by giving them more information,” two-time Olympic champion Ashton Eaton said.28. What does the tracking system provide for the viewers?A. Information about 3DAT.B. Live footage from gymgoers.C. Analysis of the athletes’ personalities.D. Highlighted key moments in slow motion.29. Why did Lee and his team need footage of best athletes?A. To increase the accuracy of AI. B. To reach the world-class heights.C. To record moves of average people. D. To improve athletes’ specific moves.30. What can the system do for average sports enthusiasts?A. Lower the risk of injury. B. Train them to be Olympians.C. Simplify the training process. D. Track changes in their heights.31. What can we infer from Eaton’s words?A. He benefited a lot from the technology.B. He was positive about the future of AI.C. He thought AI was useless for athletes.D. He wasn’t interested in the development of AI.D“We need to shampoo the patient s hair,” said Kristen, a physician assistant. Operating room nurse Jess seconded the idea. With the two of them advocating, it needed to happen.Somehow for the last 23 years, as a man with short hair, I’d always considered a wash with water to be enough to clean a patient’s hair after surgery. We would wash it the day after. That’s just how we’d done things. But why not wash it in the operating room before the patient wakes up? The literature suggests no danger, so I went along with Kristen and Jess, and bought good shampoo.The first time we did it, it seemed a little time-wasting. If it was about surgical cleanliness, it wasn’t required. As we continued to wash the patient’s hair, I began to notice the effect it had on everyone else in the room. The shampoo transformed the room to a spa for just a few minutes. The patient was the subject of the cleansing, but we benefited too. It was a quiet, collective feeling, knowing that we were finishing our work well. The sweet smell of washing fixed that in our minds.Patients say they don’t care about hair, but they do. It can be a symbol of power or beauty, as with Samson or Rapunzel. A contemporary example, hair in Namwali Serpell’s novel The Old Drifts serves as a symbol of individual and personality. People definitely care about their hair.Washing the hair with nice shampoo symbolizes the beginning of some kind of recovery, a return to a new normal for the patient, cleansing away the misfortune that caused them to need me.We sent the patient out of the room with clean hair, knowing and showing that we’d cared for them well. The patient is more than a casethey’re a fellow human, after all. A postsurgical shampoo seems like a good talisman (护身符), and it’s not time-wasting.32. What can we learn about the first hair-washing experience in the operating room?A. The patient was a man with short hair.B. The idea was first put forward by JessC. The experience was a total waste of time.D. The author realized various benefits afterwards.33. What’s the author’ s purpose in writing paragraph 4?A. To explain the power of beauty.B. To show what hair means to people.C. To introduce a classic book about hair.D. To discuss the effect of hair on personality.34. What will the author probably do in the future?A. Wash patients’ hair before surgery.B. Stop wasting time on hair-washing.C. Continue to shampoo patients’ hair.D. Give patients talismans for good luck.35. Which of the following best describes the author as a doctor?A. Honest. B. Ambitious. C. Caring. D. Generous.第二节5小题每小题3满分15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。答案写在答题卡上。Whether you want to be a leader, coach or entrepreneurknowing how to give advice will help you. Here are the best ways to give advice.Tell a story.   36   . Storytelling is how you make your advice human, relatable and real. Every great speech or piece of advice comes with a story. The story is what people remember and that’s how they’ll remember your advice.Have a good structure.Just like a good speech, high-quality advice has a solid structure, which makes your advice easier to follow and more likely to be remembered. Be logical with your advice and structure it in a way that makes sense.    37   . Or you can think about the timeline in relation to your advice. What events happened first or what steps do you begin with?Use your own experience.Many people tell stories but rarely include their own experience. Your experience is the best advice you can give. No one has exactly the same story or experience as you, so that’s what makes your advice truly unique. All of us have experiences worth sharing.    38   .Inject emotion.The best advice contains your own emotion. Link your advice to emotion. It’s another practical strategy to get people to take action. We all remember when someone got emotional while giving a speech or when we felt the same emotion as the person giving us the advice.    39   . We’ve all felt sadness, laughter or else in our lives and put these into your advice if you want to influence your audience to make a real and rapid change.Giving advice is a privilege and it should never be taken for granted.    40   . Don’t forget that.A. One tip is to keep your story longB. Start with your most important pointC. We all have special equipment that can help othersD. Emotion is what can make your advice feel universalE. The sole purpose of giving advice is to help someoneF. Your personal experiences are more valuable than you thinkG. Dry information and statistics don’t inspire people to make a change or listen to you第三部分  语言知识运用共两节满分55第一节20小题每小题2满分40阅读下面短文从短文后各题所给的A BCD四个选项中选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。答案写在答题卡上。In one of our parenting disagreements, my husband stated that our kids should address adults as Mr. or Ms./ Mrs. and that our kids’ friends should call us Mr. and Mrs. Badzin. While I agreed with my husband in theory, I found the practice surprisingly    41    to follow. I didn’t want to send mixed messages to our children about how to speak to    42   , nor did I want to    43    our friends who prefer to be addressed by their first    44   . Rather than agreeing on the issue, for many years we came to terms: we were Nina and Mr. Badzin.When other adults necessarily asked if we preferred their kids to    45    us as Mr. and Mrs. Badzin, I often said, “He’s Mr. Badzin,    46    call me Nina.”Maybe, like many moms I know, I was the one who didn’t want to feel old. In those early years, it seemed that being called Nina was the best way to handle the    47    situation of everyone else in our    48    circle preferring first names.The first time my opinion    49    was the day that my son had a new friend over who walked up to me and    50    said, “Mrs. Badzin, may we please have a snack?” “Call me Nina” was on the tip of my    51   , but I suddenly realized that this little boy    52    me Mrs. Badzin wasn’t about me. It’s about his parents’    53    for their child to demonstrate    54   , and there’s no question his parents had    55   . I felt envious of his parents who    56    less about what people thought than I did. I    57    them for going against the modern trend. That day    58    the Mrs. Badzin seed. As our kids started having more playdates, I was struck by the fact that compared to a child, I was    59   , and I ought to be respected for my    60   .Now I want to be Mrs. Badzin more than Nina.41. A. outdated B. vivid C. difficult D. significant42. A. relatives B. adults C. salesmen D. teachers43. A. look at B. play with C. laugh at D. argue with44. A. names B. travels C. houses D. memories45. A. recognise B. address C. consider D. employ46. A. but B. so C. or D. if47. A. acceptable B. precious C. uncomfortable D. ridiculous48. A. social B. artistic C. economic D. international49. A. ran B. shifted C. helped D. existed50. A. anxiously B. coldly C. simply D. politely51.A. nose B. ear C. finger D. tongue52. A. appointing B. giving C. calling D. offering53. A. advantage B. wish C. courage D. potential54. A. talent B. ambition C. respect D. honesty55. A. explained B. disagreed C. recovered D. succeeded56. A. cared B. knew C. debated D. inquired57. A. admired B. blamed C. chose D. awarded58. A. bought B. threw C. planted D. destroyed59. A. eager B. old C. gentle D. shallow60. A. wealth B. strictness C. patience D. experience题号第一部分第二部分第三部分第四部分总分得分     答题卡题号1234567891011121314151617181920选项                    题号2122232425262728293031323334353637383940选项                    题号4142434445464748495051525354555657585960选项                    61. ____________ 62. ____________ 63. ____________ 64. ____________ 65. ____________66. ____________ 67. ____________ 68. ____________ 69. ____________ 70. ____________第二节10小题每小题1.5满分15阅读下面短文在空白处填入1个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式答案写在答题卡上。According to a new report by IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change), the deadly heat waves, floods    61    droughts are disturbing the    62    (life) of thousands of people from the American West to southern Europe and central China. And they will be likely only to get    63    (bad) as global temperatures continue to rise. “So far, all regions of the world    64    (affect) by some extremes,” says Sonia Seneviratne, an environmental    65    (science). “We can link extreme weather to climate change in    66    same way we can link cancer to smoking,” says Friederike Otto, one of the report’s authors. And, like smoking, the damage is hard    67    (disappear), Otto says. The most important thing, experts say, is to make sure these events don’t grow even more common and intense    68    they are now. “I feel    69    (strong) that the public needs to know that dangerous climate change is here and now,” says Michael Wehner, an extreme weather researcher. To limit global warming to just 2, Wehner says, “It’s my feeling that we would have to do something rather extreme.” Something extreme, he adds, means completely    70    (get) rid of consumption of coal, oil, and natural gas.第四部分  写作(共两节,满分35分)第一节  短文改错(共10小题;每小题1分,满分10分)假定英语课上老师要求同桌之间交换修改作文,请你修改你同桌写的以下作文。文中共有10处语言错误,每句中最多有两处。每处错误仅涉及一个单词的增加、删除或修改。增加:在缺词处加一个漏字符号(),并在其下面写出该加的词。删除:把多余的词用斜线(\)划掉。修改:在错的词下划一横线,并在该词下面写出修改后的词。注意:1. 每处错误及其修改均仅限一词;2. 只允许修改10处,多者(从第11处起)不计分。My life has changed since I become a senior three student. I mean that you live in the school dormitory rather than at home. Honest speaking, my life in the dormitory is colorful and interested. In our spare time, my roommates and I take in turns to do the cleaning regularly. We clean the floor or take out the garbage twice a day and clean the windows once a week. Sometimes all of us sweep ground around our dormitory together. I do think doing the cleaning are quite meaningful, because what I get is not only tidy but friendship and a deep sense of responsibility. I enjoy do the labour in the school dormitory.第二节  书面表达满分25你校将举办英语演讲比赛。请你以To travel is to learn为题写篇发言稿参赛内容包括1. 举例说明        2. 提出倡议。注意1. 词数100左右        2.题目和开头已为你写好。To travel is to learnDear teachers and fellows,_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 
     

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