招生考试网
学历类| 阳光高考 美术高考 研究生 自考 成人高考 专升本 中考会考 外语类| 四 六 级 职称英语 商务英语 公共英语 日语能力
资格类| 公 务 员 报 关 员 银行从业 司法考试 导 游 证 教师资格 财会类| 会 计 证 经 济 师 会计职称 注册会计 税 务 师
工程类| 一级建造 二级建造 造 价 师 造 价 员 咨 询 师 监 理 师 医学类| 卫生资格 执业医师 执业药师 执业护士 国际护士
计算机| 等级考试 软件水平 应用能力 其它类| 论文 驾照考试 书法等级 少儿英语 报检员 单证员 教案 专题 考试资讯 文档
 3773考试网 - 高考 - 高考模拟题 - 高考英语 - 正文
2013高考 福建高考 福建省质检 各省高考 历年资料 高考志愿 录取分数线 招生计划 高校招生 录取查询 招生章程 成绩查询 招生简章 高校专业 高考试题答案
高考满分作文 高考作文 高考政策 高考模拟题 招生专业 高考大纲 心理减压 高考状元 自主招生 保送生 公安警察院校招生 美术高考 高校频道 高校分数线 各省分数线
全国高考 北京 上海 广东 山东 江苏 浙江 湖北 四川 天津 陕西 湖南 福建 重庆 安徽 辽宁 江西 海南 宁夏 吉林 山西 广西 云南 新疆 黑龙江 青海 甘肃 西藏 河北 贵州 河南 内蒙古 香港 澳门 上海春季高考 天津春季高考 山东春季高考 福建高职单招 重庆高职单招 浙江高职单招 吉林高职单招 单独招生 港澳台联招

2013重庆三峡名校联考英语试题及答案

来源:37 73高考网 2013-4-25 21:18:54

三峡名校联盟高2013级3月联考
英语试题

英语试题卷共12页。满分150分。考试时间120分钟。
注意事项:
1.答题前,务必将自己的姓名、准考证号填写在答题卡规定的位置上。
2.答选择题时,必须使用2B铅笔将答题卡上对应题目的答案标号涂黑,如需改动,用橡皮擦擦干净后,再选涂其他答案标号。
3.答非选择题时,必须使用0.5毫米黑色签字笔,将答案书写在答题卡规定的位置上。
4.所有题目必须在答题卡上作答,在试题卷上答题无效。

一、听力(共三节,满分30分)
第一节(共5小题;每小题1.5分,满分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秒钟的时间来回答有关小题和阅读下一小题。每段对话仅读一遍。
1. Where are the two speakers probably?
  A. On the first floor.  B. On the fourth flood.  C. On the fifth floor.
2. What can we learn from the conversation?
  A. One likes the football, but the others don’t.
  B. Neither of them likes the football match.
  C. Both of them like the football match.
3. What are the speakers mainly talking about?
  A. A job opportunity.  B. A general manager.  C. A big travel agency.
4. How is the man feeling?
  A. disappointed.   B. encouraged.    C. Delighted.
5. What can we learn about City Angels?
   It’s a TV play.   B. It’s a love story.   C. It’s about war.

第二节(共12小题;每小题1.5分,满分18分)
听下面4段对话,每段对话或独白后有几个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项选出最佳选项,并标在试卷的相应位置。听每段对话前,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,每段对话读两遍。
请听第6段材料,回答第6至8题。
6. When will the man go to town?
A. Tomorrow morning.   B. This afternoon.  C. Tomorrow afternoon.
7. What does Linda want the man to do?
A. Have a film developed.
B. Go shopping.   
C. Go to the movie.   
8. What will the man probably do next?
  A. Write a letter.    B. Make a list.   C. Take some pictures.
请听第7段材料,回答第9至11题。
9. What will Johnny do on Tuesday?
  A. See a film.
B. Have a dinner outside.
C. Go swimming.
10. What do we learn about the pool in Park Road?
  A. It’s more crowded than the one in town.
B. It’s much bigger than the one in town.
  C. It’s more expensive than the one in town.
11. Who will Johnny have a dinner with on Tuesday?
  A. His sister.    B. Anna.      C. The woman.
请听第8段材料,回答第12至14题。
12. What do we know about the restaurant?
  A. It’s expensive.   B. It’s self-helpful.   C. It’s not various.
13. How much will the two speakers pay for the meal?
  A. $50.     B. $150.      C. $100. 
14. What do they think about the food?
A. It’s unworthy.
B. It’s worthy. 
C. It’s different to different people.
请听第9段材料,回答第15至17题。
15. What can we learn from the conversation?
  A. The man is fresh to the woman.
  B. The woman has changed her office.
C. Mr. Graber is waiting.
16. Why does the man come to the woman?
  A. To attend a meeting.  
B. To meet Mr. Graber.  
C. To visit her new office.
17. What do we know about the man?
  A. He is always busy at work.
B. He always travels a lot.
  C. It has taken him a short time to get there.
第三节(共3小题;每小题1.5分,满分4.5分)
听下面一段独白,用所听到的独白中的词或数填空,每空限填一个词或一个数。听本段独白前,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。本段独白读两遍。
听第10段材料,回答第18至20题。
Hong Kong Film Festival
Films Time Theatres Tickets
Peter Pan 7:30 pm
on    18    City Entertainment $60 for adults
$35 for children and students
Alice in Wonderland 7:30 pm on Saturday City    19   Theatre $50 for adults
$   20   for children and students

二、单项选择(共15小题,每小题1分,满分15分)
请从A. B. C. D 四个选项中选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项, 并在答题卡上将该选项的标号涂黑。
21. Awarded ______ 2012 Nobel Prize in Literature, Mo Yan, ______ productive contemporary Chinese writer, has published dozens of short stories related to the countryside.
A. a; a   B. the; a    C. 不填; a    D. a; the
22. His first lecture is of great use to our development. But his latest one is ______ worth attending.
A. better         B. more          C. very            D. much  
23. After a pause for a drink, I took up my story just _______ I had left off.
  A. what          B. that           C. which          D. where
24. He insisted the person referred ______ put into prison at once.
  A. is    B. be    C. to be     D. should be
25. You have to take some necessities such as ropes, a flash, boots, ______ you may get lost in the mountain if going hiking.
A. so that        B. in order that      C. now that        D. in case
26. —Want to have the bungee jumping with me?
—It’s out of the question! I ______ a try even if you paid me a million dollars!
  A. would have              B. wouldn’t have
C. would have had         D. wouldn’t have had
27. –The Modern Art Exhibition in the City Museum has been canceled.
   –Oh, no! ______
  A. It’s a pity.       B. It doesn’t matter. 
C. I knew it already.     D. It’s not interesting at all.
28. Yao Ming, now a student of Shanghai Jiaotong University majoring in financial management, _______basketball in NBA for nine years.
A. has played    B. was playing      C. has been playing      D. played
29. ______, as long as I’m with nature, I don’t care.
A. However tough is the journey      B. Whatever tough is the journey
C. However tough the journey is      D. Whatever tough the journey is
30. We are seeking a prime minister, ______ who will devote himself to the interest of the country.
   A. he           B. him           C. that              D. one
31. How long do you think _______ the conflict between Japan and China comes to an end? 
A. will it be until             B. will it be when
C. it will be before           D. it will be that
32. The traffic administration indicates that airline passengers are only allowed to carry their luggage _______ less than 5 kilograms with them.
A. weighed   B. being weighed C. weighing       D. to weigh
33. —Mr. Smith, why are you always asking me to do the difficult work?
   —Because you _______ do such a thing and nobody else is fit for it.
A. would         B. should          C. can              D. may
34. —________ two months enough for the project to be finished?
—I am afraid not. The professor is ill and only after he recovers ______ go on with it.
A. Is; he can      B. Are; he can      C. Are; can he       D. Is; can he
35. ______ is surprising to us is that Tom, for _______ English was once boring, can speak English fluently as though he were a native speaker.
  A. As; whom     B. What; whose  C. It; whose    D. What; whom

三、完形填空 (共20小题;每小题1.5分,满分 30分)
阅读下面两篇短文,掌握大意,然后从36—55各题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该选项的标号涂黑。
A
Fred and his wife Edna went to the state fair every year. Every year Fred would say, "Edna, I'd like to   36   in that airplane." And every year Edna would say, "I know Fred, but that airplane ride   37   ten dollars, and ten dollars is ten dollars."
    One year Fred and Edna went to the fair again and Fred said, "Edna, I'm 71 years old. If I don't ride that airplane this year I may never get another   38  ." Edna replied, "Fred, the airplane ride needs ten dollars, and ten dollars is ten dollars."
    The   39   overheard them and said, "Folks, I'll make you a   40  . I'll take you both up for a ride. If you can stay   41   for the entire ride and not say one word, I won't    42   you, but if you say one word, it's ten dollars."
    Fred and Edna agreed and   43   they went. The pilot did all kinds of twists and turns, rolls and dives, but not a word was heard. He did all his   44   over again, but still not a word.
    They   45   and the pilot turned to Fred, "By golly, I did everything I could think of to get you to yell out, but you   46  ."
    Fred replied, "Well, I was going to say something when Edna   47   out of the plane, but you know ten dollars is ten dollars."
36. A. sit    B. ride    C. sleep    D. hide
37. A. loses    B. pays    C. costs    D. benefits
38. A. job    B. unit    C. family   D. chance
39. A. pilot    B. policeman  C. stranger   D. friend
40. A. promise   B. plan    C. request   D. deal
41. A. safe    B. quiet    C. kind    D. strong
42. A. charge   B. punish   C. carry    D. want
43. A. up    B. down    C. in    D. out
44. A. deeds    B. tricks    C. flights   D. attractions
45. A. climbed   B. flew    C. landed   D. stopped
46. A. failed    B. didn’t   C. forgot   D. moved
47. A. walked   B. ran    C. fell    D. looked
B
In our life, we will have a lot of time to feel low. If there’s one thing that ruins us, which   48   us from doing what we’re   49   capable of and prevents us from achieving our dreams, it is fear of   50  .
Many of us go through our lives never knowing what we could have done and what has often been heard is that if only we hadn’t given up our   51  .
What if you had given up on   52   to talk, walk, read, ride a bike, or any other achievements before you were even five years old? How   53   would your life have turned out if you’d given up instead of    54   with them?
Now, how different has your life been because of the goals you gave up? Because you were afraid that you would fail, how many experiences and opportunities have you   55   out on because you couldn’t get past that invisible barrier of fear!?
48. A. increases    B. stops    C. inspires   D. helps
49. A. truly    B. hardly   C. honestly   D. easily
50. A. death    B. trouble   C. sorrow    D. failure
51. A. plans    B. jobs    C. dreams   D. lives
52. A. trying    B. learning   C. practicing   D. studying
53. A. strange   B. poor    C. successful   D. different 
54. A. playing   B. covering   C. sticking   D. moving
55. A. missed   B. picked   C. taken    D. looked

四、阅读理解(共20小题;每小题2分,满分40分)
阅读下列短文,从各题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该选项的标号涂黑。
A
That summer I drank every day, everywhere I went. I had a bottle in my drawer next to me and a bottle next to my bed. I never did another drug, but I drank so much that my family finally asked a priest for help. My father gave me a bottle of medicine for alcoholism that produces unpleasant symptoms when users drink alcohol. I drank while taking it, which made me very sick. And I still drank.
When the priest came, he said, "Jimmy, doctors said that with your diseases and the amount of drinking you’re doing, you’d be lucky to live another six months. So your choice is either to stop drinking and live or to continue drinking and die within six months.”
I said, "I know I can't stop, so guess I'll have to die." The priest told my family what I said. My little brother–who is like my soul mate, looked at me with tears in his eyes and said, "But we don't want you to die." All I could think of was how desperately I had to get out of that room at that moment and have a drink.
But I finally stopped drinking. I was on the care team of my dentist Russell. A lot of people in New York knew him. At the time he was the most famous dentist in the city. He drank heavily and was also with AIDS, so I was selected to be on his care team. Everybody on the team was sober (清醒) but me. He went through dementia (痴呆) and died so quickly before my eyes. I stopped drinking and I’ve been with the disease for 35 years now.
56. Why did the author’s father give him the bottle of medicine?
  A. He wanted him to cure his illness.
  B. He was trying to keep him dying.
  C. He thought the medicine could make him sick.
  D. He believed it could prevent him drinking.
57. What did the priest mean by saying to the author “…you’d be lucky to live another six months” in the second paragraph?
  A. The author would die after six weeks.
  B. The author was too lucky to live for six months.
  C. The author could hardly live for six months.
  D. The author’s luck was only six months.
58. How did the author stop drinking?
  A. The dentist Russell helped him to stop it.
  B. He was persuaded by the dentist Russell’s death.
  C. His care team managed to inspire him.
  D. His little brother’s soul saved him.
59. What can we learn from the above story?
  A. Drinking heavily increases AIDS patients’ illness.
  B. Priests can cure many AIDS patients’ illnesses.
  C. Drug taking and heavily drinking can cure AIDS patients.
  D. Team work and patience can cure AIDS patients.
B
Aggie Bonfire (篝火) was a long-standing tradition at Texas A&M University as part of the college rivalry (竞争) with the University of Texas at Austin. For 90 years, Texas A&M students—known as Aggies—built and burned a bonfire on campus each autumn. Known to the Aggie community simply as "Bonfire", the annual autumn event symbolized Aggie students' "burning desires”. The bonfire was traditionally lit around Thanksgiving in connection with festivities surrounding the annual college football game.
Although early Bonfires were little more than piles of trash, as time passed, the annual event became more organized. Over the years the bonfire grew bigger, setting the world record in 1969. Bonfire remained a university tradition for decades until, in 1999, a collapse during construction killed twelve people—eleven students and one former student—and injured twenty-seven others.
The accident led Texas A&M to declare a pause on an official Bonfire. However, in 2002, a student-sponsored-and-off-campus "Student Bonfire" came up.
In 2003, the event became known as Student Bonfire. In a design approved by a professional engineer, Student Bonfire uses a wedding cake design, but, in a departure from tradition, every log in the stack (堆) touches the ground. For added support, four 24 feet poles are spaced evenly around the stack and then bolted to the 45 feet center pole with a steel pipe. Since the group does not receive funding, Student Bonfire charges a fee to each attendee to cover expenses. Attendance for Student Bonfire ranges from 8,000–15,000 people and the event is held in Brazos County or one of the surrounding counties.
60. When did Aggie Bonfire come into being?
  A. In 2003.    B. 1999.    C. 1909.    D. 2002.
61. Which of the following statements is true according to the above passage?
  A. Texas A&M University started Aggie Bonfire.
  B. The University of Texas at Austin started Students Bonfire.
  C. Texas A&M University and The University of Texas started Students Bonfire.
  D. Texas A&M University and The University of Texas started Aggie Bonfire.
62. Why did Aggie Bonfire once stop?
  A. Too many people wanted to join in it.
  B. Some serious accidents occurred during the activity.
  C. It ran out of fund and then stopped.
  D. There were no official supports.
63. Which of the following might serve as the best title of the whole passage?
  A. From Aggie Bonfire to Student Bonfire.
  B. A brief history of American Bonfire.
  C. Why not join Bonfire?
  D. Bonfire in Texas of the United States.
C
The Danish (丹麦) architect of the iconic Sydney Opera House, Jorn Utzon, has died at the age of 90, after suffering a heart attack.
Mr. Utzon, an award-winning architect, put "Denmark on the world map with his great talent," said Danish Culture Minister Carina Christensen. Having won a competition in 1957 to design the building, he left the project before it opened in 1973. Mr. Utzon never visited the completed landmark, after disputes about costs. He had quarreled with the Australian client and the costs overran by 1,000%. Even decades later, he declined invitations to return to Australia, but did design, with his son, a new wing which opened in 2006. In 1998 he said, "It's part of education–I can't be bitter about anything in life."
Most of the interior(内部)of the opera house was not completed according to his plans after government-appointed architects took over the job.
The Sydney Opera House planned to dim the lights on the sail-shaped roof on Sunday to mark Mr. Utzon's death.
The chairman of Sydney Opera House Trust, Kim Williams, said, "Jorn Utzon was an architectural and creative genius who gave Australia and the world a great gift. Sydney Opera House is core to our national cultural identity and a source of great pride to all Australians. It has become the most globally recognized symbol of our country."
Mr. Utzon also designed the National Assembly of Kuwait and several prominent buildings in Denmark.
Danish Minister of Culture Carina Christensen paid tribute to him, saying, "Jorn Utzon will be remembered as one of the Danes who in the 20th century put Denmark on the world map with his great talent."
Mr. Utzon won several international awards, including the Alvar Aalto Medal for architecture and France's Legion of Honour.
In 2003 he won the prestigious Pritzker Architecture Prize for his design of the opera house.
64. Which of the following is true about Mr. Jorn Utzon?
  A. He was born in Demark and worked in Australia.
  B. He left Australia before his design was completed.
  C. He refused to go back to visit the Opera House all his life.
  D. He disagreed with the government client on the building materials.
65. From the above passage we may NOT know ______.
  A. what Mr. Utzon has contributed to the world
  B. the exact time of Mr. Utzon’s birth and death
  C. whether he had a family or not
  D. when Opera House was completed
66. What did the Opera House plan to do to mark its designer’s death?
  A. A memorial party would be held on Sunday.
  B. Another award would be given out to Mr. Utzon’s son.
  C. The lights on the roof of Opera House would become less bright.
  D. Another wing would be designed to remember Mr. Utzon.
67. The most proper title of the above passage might be ______.
A. Sydney Opera House architect dies
  B. Life of Mr. Utzon, a Great architect
  C. Designer and builder of Opera House
  D. Awards of the Opera House Architect
D
Earlier this year, the Environmental Protection Agency proposed a stricter nationwide health standard for smog-causing pollutants that would bring substantial benefits to millions of Americans. With a final rule expected by the end of this month, some opponents, mainly from industrial and oil-producing states, are pushing back. They say investments required to produce cleaner air are too expensive and not scientifically justified.
Lisa Jackson, the E.P.A. administrator, needs to stick to her guns. This is only the first of several political tests to come this fall, as she also seeks to tighten rules governing individual pollutants like mercury and global warming gases like carbon dioxide.
The health standard she is proposing covers ground-level ozone, commonly known as smog, which is formed when sunlight mixes with pollutants from factories, refineries, power plants and automobiles. Ozone is a major health threat, contributing to heart disease and various respiratory (呼吸道的) problems.
Ms. Jackson’s proposal—to reduce the permitted level of smog in the air from the current 75 parts per billion to between 60 parts per billion and 70 parts per billion—is sensible, no matter what industry’s defenders may claim. It had been recommended by the agency’s independent scientific panel but rejected by the Bush administration, which proposed a weaker standard.
Industry will have to make investments in cleaner power plants, and new technologies may be required. As it is, about half the counties that monitor ozone levels are not yet in compliance with current standards, let alone the proposed standard.


  • 上一个文章:
  • 网站版权与免责声明
    ①由于各方面情况的不断调整与变化,本网所提供的相关信息请以权威部门公布的正式信息为准.
    ②本网转载的文/图等稿件出于非商业性目的,如转载稿涉及版权等问题,请在两周内来电联系.
     


    | 关于我们 | 联系我们 | 版权申明 | 网站导航 |
    琼ICP备12003406号