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    上海市交大附中2021-2022学年高三上学期摸底英语试题

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    这是一份上海市交大附中2021-2022学年高三上学期摸底英语试题,文件包含上海市交大附中2021-2022学年高三上学期摸底英语试题解析版1docx、上海市交大附中2020-2021学年高三上学期摸底英语试题原卷版1docx等2份试卷配套教学资源,其中试卷共39页, 欢迎下载使用。
    2020-2021学年交大附中高三英语第一学期摸底考试卷I. Listening Comprehension()II. Grammar and Vocabulary (20)Section A(A)Directions: After reading the passage below, fill in the blanks to make the passage coherent and grammatically correct. For the blanks with a given word, fill in each blank with the proper form of the given word; for the other blanks, use one word that best fits each blank.Space is a dangerous place, not only because of meteors (流星) but also because of rays from the sun and other stars. The atmosphere again acts ___1___ our protective blanket on earth. Light gets through, and this is essential for plants ___2___(make) the food which we eat. Heat, too, makes our environment endurable. Various kinds of rays come through the air from outer space, but enormous quantities of radiation from the sun ___3___ (screen) off. As soon as men leave the atmosphere, they are exposed to this radiation but their spacesuit or the walls of their spacecraft,___4___ they are inside, do prevent a lot of radiation damage.Radiation is ___5___(great) known danger to explorers in space. The unit of radiation is called "rem". Scientists have reason to think that a man can put up with far more than 0.1 rem without ___6___(damage); the figure of 60 rems has been agreed on. The trouble is ____7____ it is extremely difficult to be sure about radiation damage - a person may feel perfectly well, but the cells of his or her sex organs may be damaged, and this will not be discovered ___8___ the birth of deformed children or even grandchildren. Missions of the Apollo flights have had to cross belts of high radiation and, during the outward and return journeys, the Apollo crew accumulated (积累) a large amount of rems. So far, no dangerous amounts of radiation have been reported, but the Apollo missions have been quite short. We simply don't know yet ___9___ men are going to get on when they spent weeks and months outside the protection of the atmosphere, working in a space laboratory. Drugs might help to decrease the damage ___10___(do) by radiation, but no really effective ones have been found so far.(B)Directions: After reading the passage below, fill in the blanks to make the passage coherent and grammatically correct. For the blanks with a given word, fill in each blank with the proper form of the given word; for the other blanks, use one word that best fits each blank.Living JewelsBefore I went to the British Koi Keepers Annual Show, I didn’t understand ____11____ people could take fish so seriously. However, the more I learned about koi, the more interested became. As one expert told me, "Collecting koi is far more addictive than you might think. They’re as beautiful as butterflies and very calming to watch." Freddie Mercury, the lead singer of Queen, would have agreed the pool in his specially-built Japanese garden was home to 89 koi,___12___ cost up to $10,000 each.At the show I met koi enthusiast Jean Kelly. “Koi are getting more and more expensive,” she told me. “One recently sold for $250,000.” I was shocked that's almost as much as I paid for my house. Well, that was a record,___13___(admit) Jean. The normal price is nowhere near as high as that.Nevertheless, serious collectors can pay up to $15,000 for a fully ___14___(grow) koi, which is nearly as expensive as a new luxurious car, and the bigger they are, the more they cost. The cheapest I ___15___ find was $75 each, but they were only about twice as big as my goldfish.Jean wasn’t impressed by one of the koi on sale either. “Actually, these koi aren’t any nicer than ___16___,” she commented. “___17___ they are slightly bigger than the ones I’ve got, I paid considerable less than this.”I wasn’t quite as enthusiastic as Jean, but I did consider___18___(buy) one. Then I remembered that all but 5 of Freddie Mercury's koi died when someone accidentally turned off the electricity supply to their pool. Jean assured me that with all the new equipment available the survival rate was getting better and better, and that looking ___19___koi was no harder than taking care of any other pet. However, in the end I decided to stick with my goldfish. They’re not nearly as beautiful as koi ——but they’re a great deal cheaper ___20___(replace) !Section B (10)Directions: Complete the passage with the words in the box. Each word can only be used once. Note that there is one word more than you need.The Beatles sang that money can't buy you love. But what about happiness? Research ___21___ shows that the more money people have, the more likely they are to report being satisfied with their lives.And that makes sense: money buys you things that make life easier and more satisfying; the easier your life, the happier you tend to be. That relationship isn't entirely linear, since there's a(n) ___22___ to how much wealth can please you; the happiness benefit of an increasing income is especially powerful among people who don't have much money to start with, and ___23___ as wealth increases. But studies also reveal that as ___24___ income levels have risen over time — in the U.S. and European nations, for example — residents of those countries have not reported being any happier than people were 30 or 40 years ago. It's a paradox that while income and happiness may be ___25___ within a population at any given moment, overall economic growth does not appear to correspond to a boost in national satisfaction over time. (See a gallery of things money can buy.)To understand why, researchers at the University of Warwick and Cardiff University decided to break down how individual people evaluate their income. What does wealth mean to people? Previous work has suggested that people tend to value their own wealth more — and are happier — when it compares ___26___ to everyone else's. The so-called reference-income hypothesis holds that it's not simply how much money you make that ___27___ to satisfaction, but how much more money you make than, say, the national average. The higher your salary than the norm, the happier you tend to be. That could explain in part why populations as a whole do not experience sunnier dispositions with economic growth, since a majority of individuals may not fall above the national income average.But the reference-income hypothesis is rather ___28___. The researchers wondered whether there was a more nuanced way to capture how people valued their income. They ___29___ that people tend to make specific comparisons of personal wealth, not only with the average income of the larger population, but with the individual incomes of their neighbors, colleagues at work or friends from college. And the higher their rank, the greater their sense of happiness and self-worth would ___30___ be. "For example, people might care about whether they are the second most highly paid person, or the eighth most highly paid person, in their comparison set," write the authors, Chris Boyce, a psychologist at the University of Warwick, and Simon Moore, a psychologist at Cardiff University.III. Reading Comprehension (45 分)Section ADirections: For each blank in the following passage there are four words or phrases marked A, B, C and D. Fill in each blank with the word of phrase that best fits the context.The beauty, majesty, and timelessness of a primary rainforest are indescribable. It is impossible to ___31___ on film, to describe in words, or to explain to those who have never had the awe-inspiring experience of standing in the heart of a primary rainforest.Rainforests have ___32___ over millions of years to turn into the incredibly complex environments they are today. Rainforests represent a store of living and ___33___ renewable natural resources that for eons, by virtue of their richness in both animal and plant species, have ___34___ a wealth of resources for the survival and well-being of humankind. These resources have included basic food supplies, clothing, shelter, fuel, spices, industrial raw materials, and medicine for all those who have lived in the majesty of the forest. ___35___, the inner dynamics of a tropical rainforest is an intricate and fragile system. Everything is so ___36___ that upsetting one part can lead to unknown damage or even destruction of the whole. Sadly, it has taken only a century of human intervention to destroy what nature designed to ___37___ forever.The scale of human ___38___ on ecosystems everywhere has increased enormously in the last few decades. Since 1980 the global economy has tripled in size and the world population has increased by 30 percent. Consumption of everything on the planet has risen——at a cost to our ___39___. In 2001, The World Resources Institute estimated that the demand for rice, wheat, and corn is expected to grow by 40% by 2020, increasing irrigation water demands by 50% or more. They further reported that the demand for wood could double by the year 2050; ___40___, it is still the tropical forests of the world that supply the bulk of the world's demand for wood.In 1950, about 15 percent of the Earth's land surface was covered by rainforest. Today, more than half has already gone up in ___41___. In fewer than fifty years, more than half of the world's tropical rainforests have fallen ___42___ to fire and the chain saw, and the rate of destruction is still accelerating. Unbelievably, more than 200,000 acres of rainforest are burned every day. That is more than 150 acres lost every minute of every day, and 78 million acres lost every year! More than 20 percent of the Amazon rainforest is already gone, and much more is severely threatened as the destruction continues. It is estimated that the Amazon alone is vanishing at a rate of 20,000 square miles a year. If nothing is done to curb this ___43___, the entire Amazon could well be gone within fifty years.Massive ___44___ brings with it many ugly consequences-air and water pollution, soil erosion, malaria epidemics, the release of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere and the ___45___ of biodiversity through extinction of plants and animals. Fewer rainforests mean less rain, less oxygen for us to breathe, and an increased threat from global warming.31. A. present B. capture C. claim D. prove32. A. changed B. evolved C. expanded D. existed33. A. energizing B. healing C. isolating D. breathing34. A. contributed B. stored C. reduced D. affected35 A. However B. Furthermore C. Therefore D. Otherwise36. A. active B. sensitive C. interdependent D. delicate37. A. restore B. support C. revive D. last38. A. pressure B. power C. concern D. strength39. A. existence B. ecosystem C. planet D. survival40. A. unfortunately B. consequently C. naturally D. similarly41. A. store B. food C. smoke D. wealth42. A. subject B. down C. apart D. victim43. A. trend B. practice C. decrease D. attitude44. A. destruction B. industrialization C. modernization D. deforestation45. A. appearance B. explosion C. loss D. increaseSection BDirections: Read the following three passages. Each passage is followed by several questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that fits best according to the information given in the passage you have just read.(A)The definition of the standard kilogram is fundamentally imperfect. Getting the definition right is a challenge that has tried the patience and intelligence of scientists for decades.Scientists use just seven basic units to define all the other quantities we use --- quantities such as speed density, or electric power. All of those basic units except the kilogram are themselves defined in terms of natural properties that are beyond human control.For example, the standard second (time) is defined as a specific number of vibration of a type of radiation released by atoms of a special metal. The standard meter (length), in turn, is defined as the length of the path light travels in a vacuum during a specific fraction of a second.Not so the kilogram. This orphan of the basic unit family is simply the mass of a small platinum-iridium alloy cylinder (-铱合金筒) locked away by the international Bureau of Weighs & Measures in France.Embarrassingly, the last time the copies were brought for a checkup in the 1980s, officials found that some copies had gained about 20 parts per billion in weight compared to the master cylinder since the previous checkup in the 1940s. This implies that the master cylinder itself may be an inconstant standard.No one knows what causes the weight changes. But the uncertainty cant be tolerated when precision(精密度) in research and some manufacturing now demands accuracy to a few parts per billion.Several efforts in several different countries are under way to redefine the kilogram in terms of basic physical quantities such as counting the actual number of atoms of a specific substance in a kilogram or the electromagnetic force that balances a kilogram mass against gravity.A project of the latter type at the NIST laboratories in Gaithersburg hopes eventually to define mass in terms of electrical units. So far, none of these redefinition projects has borne fruit. They require precision of measurement and control of experimental conditions. The slightest pollution, tiny vibrations, or other influences --- even changes in weather --- can ruin results. You’ve got to hand it to scientists who are willing to devote many years to such painstaking but fundamentally important research.46. Which of the following best paraphrases the sentence “Not so the kilogram.” in paragraph 4?A. The kilogram is not as accurate as the standard second.B. The kilogram is not universally accepted in the world.C. The kilogram is not defined in terms of natural properties.D. The kilogram is not well defined as time and length.47. Which of the following can NOT be concluded from the passage?A. Experiments are being carried out to redefine the kilogram.B. The uncertainty in the standard kilogram can seriously affect some research.C. The redefinition of the standard kilogram is quite complicated.D. Scientists will achieve success in redefining the kilogram in the near future.48. According to the passage, to define the weight of mass in terms of electrical units _______.A. is one of the best methods to redefine the kilogramB. has been accepted as the only possible redefinition projectC. is not as simple as what people can understandD. has been considered by some scientists as a better approach49. We can know from the passage that the redefinition of the kilogram is _________.A. more important in keeping market honestyB. worth years of scientists’ painstaking researchC. the urgent requirement of business and manufacturing.D. bring about important and fruitful results(B)Stewart Island Ferry ServicesWhile most visitors spend at least one night on Stewart Island, it is also readily accessible by ferry as a day excursion from Invercargill and Bluff.Experience Foveaux Strait in comfort and style on board our express catamarans. During the one-hour crossing between Bluff and Stewart Island keep a lookout for wildlife, especially seabirds. Watching mollymawks (albatross) soaring behind the ferry is a fantastic sight.Interesting landmarks commonly seen include Dog Island Lighthouse, Ruapuke Island, Titi Islands and Mt Anglem - Stewart Island’s highest point.         Free tea and coffee on board         Interpretation handouts are available (English only).         Wheelchair access available         Personal baggage is carried free on the ferries - max. two bags per person (one stowed and one small carry-on). Additional baggage is by prior arrangement.         Vehicle parking available at Bluff (extra cost - reservations recommended)FERRY TO STEWART ISLAND
    Depart Bluff
    All year 9:30am
    Sep-May 5:00pm
    Oct –Apr 11:00am
    Jun –Aug 4:30pm
    Late Dec –mid Jan8:00am
     FERRY TO BLUFF
    Depart Stewart Island
    All year 8:00am
    Sep –May 3:30pm
    Oct –Mar 6:00pm
    Apr 5:00pm
    Jun-Aug 3:00pm
    Late Dec –mid Jan 9:30am
     Other departures as locally advertised
    Duration 1hr
    Check-in 30 minutes prior to the scheduled departure time. (Check-in and boarding gates are closed 10 minutes prior to times stated above.)
      ______50______on Return Ferry ServicesBuy 2 or more different excursions and SAVE 20% off all lower priced!Kids Go FREE on selected departures during NZ School Holidays!Kids Go FREE for travel 20 April - 5 May 2013.50. If leaving a car at Bluff, a traveler had better _____.A. refer to the handouts firstB. use wheelchair accessC. make a reservationD. park it 30 minutes before departure time51.John, who went to Stewart Island on Dec. 28th, got to the ferry dock at 7:55am. When did he most probably leave Bluff?A. At 8:00a.m.. B. At 9:30a.m.. C. At 11:00a.m.. D. At 3:00p.m..52. Which of the following is false about the ferry services?A. Tea and coffee are free for passengers.B. Children go free for travel for about 15 days.C. Travelers are sure to see some seabirds during the crossing.D. Passengers have to pay extra cost for extra pieces of luggage.CLike every dog, every disease now seems to have its day. World Tuberculosis (infections disease in which growths appear on the lungs) Day is on Saturday March 24th.Tuberculosis was once terribly fashionable. Dying of “consumption” seems to have been a favorite activity of garret-dwelling 19th-century artists, has, however, been neglected of late. Researchers in the field never tire of pointing out that TB kills a lot of people. According to figures released earlier this week by the World Health Organization, 1.6 million people died of the disease in 2005, compared with about 3m for AIDS and 1m for malaria. But it receives only a fraction of the research budget devoted to AIDS. America’s National Institutes of Health, for example, spends 20 times as much on AIDS as on TB. Nevertheless, everyone seems to getting in on the TB-day act this year.The Global Fund an international organization responsible fur fighting all three diseases but best known for its work on AIDS, has used the occasion to trumpet its tuberculosis projects. The fund claims that its anti-TB activities since it opened for business in 2002 have saved the lives of over 1m people. The World Health Organization has issued a report that contains some good news. Although the number of TB cases is still rising, the rate of illness seems to have stabilized; the caseload, in other words, is growing only because the population itself is going up.Even drug companies are involved. In the run-up to the day itself, Eli Lilly announced a $ 50m boost to its MDRTB Global Partnership. MDR stands for multi-drug resistance, and it is one of the reasons why TB is back in the limelight. Careless treatment has caused drug-resistant strains to evolve all over the world. The course of drugs needed to clear the disease completely takes six mouths, anti persuading people to stay that course once their symptoms have gone is hard. Unfortunately, those infected with MDR have to be treated with less effective, more poisonous and more costly drugs. Naturally, these provoke still more. non-compliance and thus still more evolution.The other reason TB is back is its relationship to AIDS. The (global Fund’s joint responsibility for the diseases is no coincidence. AIDS does not kill directly. Rather, HIV, the virus that causes it, weakens the body’s immune system and exposes the sufferer to secondary infections. Of these, TB is one of the most serious. It kills 200 000 AIDS patients a year. However, some anti-TB drugs interfere with the effect of some anti-HIV drugs. Conversely, in about 20% of cases where a patient has both diseases, anti-HIV drugs make the tuberculosis worse. The upshot is that 125 years after human beings worked out what caused TB, it is still a serious threat.53. The first sentence “Like every dog, every disease now seems to have its day.” means _______.A. every dog enjoys good luck or success sooner or laterB. human beings can deal with problems caused by diseaseC. Tuberculosis becomes a serious infection diseaseD. people attach importance to Tuberculosis recently54. By referring to AIDS in Paragraph 2, the author intends to show _______.A. the US government is reluctant to spend millions of dollars on TuberculosisB. the death rate of AIDS is higher than that of TuberculosisC. the officials didn’t pay much attention to the research of Tuberculosis in the pastD. compared with AIDS, Tuberculosis can be cured effectively55. Which of the following is best defines the word “upshot” (Para 5)?A. Outcome. B. Uphold.C. Achievement. D. Project.56. Which of the following proverbs is closest in meaning to the message the passage tries to convey?A. Forgive and forget.B. Forgotten, but not gone.C. When the wound is healed, the pain is forgotten.D. Every dog is brave at his own door.Section CAdolescents refer to boys and girls at high-school level-more specifically the second, third and forth years of high schools. In dealing with students at this level, we must bear in mind that to some degree they are at the difficult stage, generally called adolescence.Students at this level are likely to be confused mentally. They usually find it hard to concentrate on what they intend to do and often have romantic dreams. ___57___ They lack frankness and are usually very easily affected by their own emotions but hate to admit it. They are driven either by greater ambition, probably beyond their capability, or by extreme laziness caused by the fear of not succeeding or achieving objectives. ___58___ They are willing to work, but they hate to work without obtaining the result they think they should obtain.Regarding school issues although they seldom say so, they really want to be consulted and given an opportunity to direct their own affairs, but they need a good amount of guidance. They seldom admit that they need this guidance and they frequently rebel against it. But if it its intelligently offered they accept it with enthusiasm. As to personal beliefs, most of adolescents are trying to form political ideals and they have a tendency to be sometimes extremely idealistic, and at other times conventional, blindly accepting what their fathers and grandfathers believed in. ___59___ On the one hand they are too modest and on the other hand unreasonably boastful. They tend to be influenced more by a strong character than by great intelligence.___60___ Having a better understanding of the characteristics and needs of young people at this age is a task that falls both on educators and other people involved. It may also help the young go through this difficult and critical stage of life in a more constructive manner. A. The critical abilities are beginning.B. Their view on life usually falls on two extremes.C. Of all periods of life, this is what may best be called the“plastic age”.D. They are basically timid or self-conscious.E. Despite that, it is also in this periods that strong ties between teachers and students develop.F Fundamentally they want to be kept busy but they refuse to admit it.IV. Summary Writing61.Directions: Read the following passage. Summarize the main idea and the main point(s) of the passage in no more than 60 words. Use your own words as far as possible.The Voice in the BoxWhen I was quite young, my family had one of the first telephones in our neighborhood. I remember well the polished the wooden case fastened to the wall on the lower stair landing. But my first personal experience with this genie-in-the-receiver came one day while my mother was visiting a neighbor. Amusing myself at the tool bench, I hurt my finger with a hammer. The pain was terrible, but there didn’t seem to be much use crying, because there was no one home to offer sympathy. I walked around the house, and finally arriving at the stairway. The telephone! Quickly I ran for the footstool and dragged it to the landing. Climbing up, I unhooked the receiver and held it to my ear. “Information Please,” I said into the mouthpiece just above my head.A click or two, and a small, clear voice spoke into my ear, “Information.”“I hurt my finger…” I cried into the phone. The tears came readily enough, now that I had an audience.“Isn’t your mother home?” came the question.“Nobody’s home but me.” I sobbed.“Are you bleeding?”“No,” I replied. “I hit my finger with the hammer and it hurts.”“Can you open your icebox?” she asked. I said I could. “Then break off a little piece of ice and hold it on your finger. That will stop the hurt. Be careful when you use the icepick(冰锥), she said, “And don’t cry. You’ll be all right.”After that, I called Information Please for everything. I asked her for help with my geography and she told me where Philadelphia was, and the Orinoco, the romantic river that I was going to explore when I grew up. She helped me with my arithmetic, and she told me that my pet chipmunk----I had caught him in the park just the day before----would eat fruit and nuts._____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________V. TranslationDirections: Translate the following sentences into English, using the words given in the brackets.62. 正是那位作家对他说的一番话鼓励了他投身于写作。(It63. 这个国家经常陷入战乱,这就是它极度贫困的原因。(account64. 一个刚从大学毕业的没有实践经验的年轻人是很难找到一个高薪职位的。(difficulty65. 这位年轻人非常激动,他都不知道如何表达对这些援救人员给予他无私帮助的感激之情。(So   

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