中职高考英语模拟试题参考答案
十年磨剑谱人生华章;百日冲刺展学子英姿。祝高考成功!面是学习啦小编为大家推荐的中职高考英语模拟试题,仅供大家参考!
中职高考英语模拟试题
第Ⅰ卷
第一部分 听力理解(共两节,满分 30 分)
第一节 (共 5 小题;每小题 1. 5 分,共 7. 5 分)
请听下面 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。
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. Where does the woman think her father is now?
A. At home. B. At his office. C. At the club.
2. What is the woman probably going to do this weekend?
A. Go boating with her classmates. B. Go camping with the man. C. Prepare for a competition.
3. How long does the woman usually sleep every night?
A. About eight hours. B. About seven hours. C. About six hours.
4. What do we know about Tim?
A. He became severely ill. B. He may have a car accident.
C. He didn’t take driving lessons.
5. What does the man suggest?
A. Calling the service centre. B. Pressing the emergency button.
C. Doing nothing for a short while
第二节 (共 15 小题;每题 1. 5 分,共 22. 5 分)
请听下面 5 段对话或独白。每段对话或独白后有几道小题,从题中所给的 A,B,C 三个选项中选出最佳选项。听每段对话或独白前,你将有 5 秒钟的时间阅读每小题。听完后,每小题将给出 5 秒钟的作答时间。每段对话或独白读两遍。
请听第 6 段材料,回答第 6、7 题。
6. How old is the magazine that the man is looking for?
A. One year old. B. Two year old. C. Two and a half years old.
7. Where will the two speakers probably go next?
A. The second floor. B. The right side of the first floor.
C. The left side of the first floor.
请听第 7 段材料,回答第 8、9 题。
8. When will the two speakers probably go to Epcot?
A. Right now. B. After lunch. C. At night.
9. What are the two speakers going to do first?
A. Get checked in. B. Find a parking lot. C. Ride the roller coaster.
请听第 8 段材料,回答第 10 至 12 题。
10. Where was the man last week?
A. In Rome. B. In Milan. C. In Ferrara.
11. What did the man probably visit first?
A. The castle. B. The cathedral. C. The Renaissance buildings.
12. How many times has the man traveled abroad this year?
A. Twice. B. Three times. C. Four times.
请听第 9 段材料,回答第 13 至 16 题。
13. What festival are the two speakers talking about?
A. Mother’s Day. B. Easter. C. Halloween.
14. When does the woman usually visit her grandparents?
A. On Friday morning. B. On Saturday morning. C. On Saturday afternoon.
15. What is the favorite part of the festival to the woman?
A. Receiving presents. B. Going to church. C. Hunting for eggs.
16. What will the man probably do during the holiday?
A. Hang out with other international students.
B. Join the woman’s family for the festival.
C. Stay in the dorm reading a huge book.
请听第 10 段材料,回答第 17 至 20 题。
17. When did the speaker arrive in Antarctica?
A. In December. B. In September. C. In March.
18. What difficulty does the speaker have at the moment?
A. There is a lot of hard work to do.
B. The ship won’t return for months.
C. He is working with a small number of people.
19. What has improved in Antarctica in the last ten years?
A. Food. B. Communication. C. Living conditions.
20. What is the speaker trying to do?
A. Remind scientists of danger in Antarctica.
B. Describe his own experience in Antarctica.
C. Suggest ways of improving life in Antarctica.
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,从每题所给的四个选项(A、B、C 和 D)中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。
A
You would like to take good photographs of real-life situations but you have few ideas for pictures. I suggest you look around you. The everyday world is full of scenes being played by an ever-changing group of actors. You probably passed a dozen picture situations without noticing on your way to work this morning.
The realistic approach to photograph has been perfected in the past by such masters as Henri Cartier-Bresson and Bill Brandt. But while you can learn a great deal from looking at the work of others, any success you can hope to achieve in this field has to come from developing an individual approach.
The main requirement for any photographer has little to do with technical matters. You must develop an awareness of the world around you and the people who live in it, and you should learn to notice when a situation may develop to a point where you will be able to take a good picture. Those who have reached this happy state will be prepared when that moment comes, and will simply raise their cameras quickly and shoot. Others who are not so aware will be struggling with camera cases(盒) and lens caps(镜头盖).Not every shot is going to be a winner. If you look at the work of even the best photographers, you’ll notice dozens of pictures have had to be taken only because they lead up to the successful shot of a situation that the photographer has obviously been observing through the lens. You may find that you have taken one or two pictures after the right moment has passed as well. There is seldom more than one shot which stands out. There is just one point where it all comes together, and you often have to waste
film to catch that precious moment.
21. What does paragraph 1 mainly tell us?
A. It’s difficult to take good pictures.
B. Few photographers have ideas for pictures.
C. Daily life provides rich sources for pictures.
D. People often don’t know what’s happening around.
22. How can one become a good photographer according to the text?
A. Acquire basic skills. B. Take enough pictures.
C. Develop ways of his own. D. Learn from famous photographers.
23. What is the most important for a photographer according to the author?
A. Discovering unusual situations.
B. Being highly skilled in camera techniques.
C. Having a camera which is easy and quick to use.
D. Being able to tell when a good situation might come.
24. According to paragraph 4, to catch the right moment, a photographer usually has to .
A. take series of similar pictures B. take great care to set up the situation
C. take one picture just at the right moment D. take pictures without too much preparation
B
Every year on my birthday, from the time I turned 12, a white gardenia(栀子) was delivered to my house. No card came with it. Calls to the flower-shop were not helpful at all. After a while I stopped trying to discover the sender’s name and just delighted in the beautiful white flower in soft pink paper.But I never stopped imagining who the giver might be. Some of my happiest moments were spent daydreaming about the sender. My mother encouraged these imaginings. She’d ask me if there was someone for whom I had done special kindness. Perhaps it was the old man across the street whose mail I’d delivered during the winter. As a girl, though, I had more fun imagining that it might be a boy I had run into.
One month before my graduation, my father died. I felt so sad that I became completely uninterested in my upcoming graduation prom, and I didn’t care if I had a new dress or not. But my mother, in her own sadness, would not let me miss any of those things. She wanted her children to feel loved and lovable. In truth, my mother wanted her children to see themselves much like the gardenia---lovely, strong and perfect with perhaps a bit of mystery.
My mother died ten days after I was married. I was 22. That was the year the gardenia stopped coming.
25. How many gardenias did the author get altogether?
A. 9. B. 11. C. 13. D. 15.
26. The mother wanted her daughter .
A. to take care of things by herself B. to find a boyfriend soon
C. to be happy and strong D. to be successful
27. Who was the sender of the flowers?
A. A boy the writer had run into. B. One of the writer’s neighbors.
C. One of the writer’s classmates. D. The writer’s mother.
C
Information for visitors to the Breenda Museum
Opening times:
The Breenda Museum is open Tuesday to Saturday from 10:00 am to 5:00 pm. Admission (门票) is free and the museum is open to all.
The Breenda Museum is closed for the Christmas holiday from 5:00 pm on Sunday Dcember23, 2012 until 10:00 am Sunday January6, 2013.
Location and local transport network
The Breenda Museum is located inside The Royal College of Surgeons, 35-43 Lincoln’s Inn Fields,London, WC2A 3PE.
The College is in Lincoln’s Inn Fields within easy walking distance of Tower underground station. It is a short taxi or underground journey from most major rail stations. There are two NCP car parks nearby.
Tel: 020 3333 4444
Group bookings
All groups must book in advance. An online booking form for groups is now available.
Admission is free. A donation(捐款) of $3 per person is encouraged.
To book a visit please contact the museum on 020 7788 8899, or email: museums@ crnsg.ac.uk.
Tours for groups
Tours of the museum can be booked for up to 30 people:
*An introductory tour lasts 30 minutes and is $100 plus VAT(增值税)。
*A specialized tour lasts 45 minutes and is $130 plus VAT.
*Tours for schools are free, but donations are encouraged ($3 per person)
*After hour tours (5:30-7:30 pm) are $130 per tour plus VAT. A tour will last 20-25 minutes.
To book a tour or a place for the free tour, please call 020 6789 5678.
28. When can you visit the Breenda Museum?
A. 4:00 pm Monday Jan.7, 2013.
B. 6:00 pm Thursday Jan. 10, 2013.
C. 10:00 am Sunday Dec. 30, 2012.
D. 11:00 am Thursday Dec. 20, 2012.
29. How should a tourist go to the museum if he is at the Tower underground station?
A. On foot. B. By train. C. By taxi. D. By bus.
30. One can book a visit for a group .
A. at any time B. on the Internet C. by donating $3 D. in the schools
31. What kind of tour lasts the shortest time?
A. Tours for schools. B. Tours for after hours.
C. The specialized tours. D. The introductory tours.
D
South African surgeons have carried out the word’s first organ transplant(移植) from one HIV-positive person to another, in a groundbreaking operation that opens the way to saving thousands of lives. The South African government previously hadn’t allowed HIV-positive people to receive transplants or to donate organs — a policy criticized by some people in the medical establishment of a country where one in five adults is HIV-positive.
But the policy was ended last year, opening the way for more operations and possibly giving HIV-positive patients a greater chance of receiving new kidneys(肾脏) than those not infected(感染) with the AIDS virus, because there are more potential donors.
“HIV patients are at a disadvantage when it comes to getting an organ. Even when we try to be fair, they are at a disadvantage competing with people with no such illness,” said Dr. June Fabian, a consultant nephrologist(肾病学家) at Johannesburg Hospital. “The transplant opens up an opportunity to help them, even gives them a slight advantage, because of the high number of HIV-positive donors.”
If the kidney transplants were successful in the long term it would open the way to the use of other organs such lives, which are particularly vulnerable because anti-AIDS drugs can easily damage them.
However, there are strong arguments about the transplants because they almost certainly mean that the receiver will become infected with the virus strain that infected the donor, which may be different from the one they carry and increase their resistance to anti-AIDS drugs.
There are also concerns that HIV-positive organs themselves could have been damaged by the disease, making them less lasting as transplants.
But news of the transplants has brought new hope to many. Dr. June Fabian said some of her HIV-positive patients stood to benefit from accepting HIV-positive organs.
32. Why does the author say the organ transplant is a groundbreaking operation?
A. It is not allowed in South Africa.
B. It is carried out between HIV-positive patients.
C. It is the first organ transplanting in the country.
D. It declares a beginning of the saving of thousands of lives.
33. What’s the advantage of HIV patients according to Dr. June Fabian?
A. They are potential donors.
B. They can find donors more easily.
C. They are free of being infected again.
D. They can get more help from the government.
34. The underlined word “vulnerable” in Paragraph 4 probably means to be easily .
A. protected B. lost C. hurt D. replaced
35. What’s one of the worries about transplants of HIV-positive organs?
A. The donors may suffer much.
B. The receiver may recover too slowly.
C. The organ itself may have problem.
D. The patients may refuse to take anti-AIDS drugs.