黑龙江省牡丹江市第一高级中学2023-2024学年高二上学期期末考试 英语 含答案

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2022 级高二学年上学期期末考试
英 语 试 题
考试时间: 120 分钟 分值: 150
命题人: 徐健 审题人: 韩冰
第一部分 听力(共两节,满分 30 )
第一节(5小题;每小题 1.5 分,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,并
标在试卷的相应位置。听完每段对话后,你都有 10 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 did the woman get her shoes?
A. From her aunt. B. From her sister. C. From a store.
2. Who keeps a pet snake?
A. Kevin. B. Mr. White. C. Uncle James.
3. What is the man trying to raise money for?
A. A basketball team. B. A children's charity. C. A local car wash.
4. What are the speakers mainly talking about?
A. A play. B. A movie. C. A book.
5. Why are Jane's grades falling?
A. The tests are getting harder. B. Her classmates talk to her in class.
C. There're some problems in her family.
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
最佳项。听每段对话或独白前,你将有时间阅读各个小题, 每小 5秒钟;听完后,各小题给
5秒钟的作答时间。每段对话或独白读两遍。
听第 6段材料,回答第 67题。
6. What's the woman's favorite color?
A. Orange. B. Red C. Green.
7. Why did the man start painting?
A. He learned art in school. B. He was taught by his parents.
C. He was inspired by some ancient paintings.
听第 7段材料,回答第 89题。
8. What is the conversation mainly about?
A. Which city to live in. B. What to write in a paper. C. How to choose a university
9. What does Glen know most about?
A. Sports. B. Music. C. Art.
听第 8段材料,回答第 10 12 题。
10. What kind of panda sleeps the most?
A. Adult pandas. B. Sub-adult pandas C. Baby pandas.
11. How can the birth program help endangered animals?
A. By providing a more natural environment.
B. By finding mates for them.
C. By training their survival skills.
12. What is the main topic of the conversation?
A. Animal protection. B. Pandas' living habits. C. Different wild animals.
听第 9段材料,回答第 13 16 .
13. What does John think of Amy's poetry?
A. It is very classic. B. It is very romantic. C. It is very unique.
14. What day is the conversation probably taking place?
A. On Monday. B. On Tuesday. C. On Thursday.
15. What topic of poetry will the speakers read about this Thursday?
A. Love. B. Nature. C. Friendship.
16. Whose works will the speakers read this week?
A. Edgar Allen Poe’s. B. Emily Dickinson's. C. Maya Angelou's.
听第 10 段材料,回答第 17 20 题。
17·What is the talk mainly about?
A. Old people's lives. B. Services designed for the elderly. C. A supermarket chain.
18. What happened to Robert Smith's mother?
A. She was cheated out of her money. B. She dialed the wrong number. C. She lost her health care service.
19. Which company has trained their staff to provide safer and friendlier service?
A. TrueCall. B. Safeway. C. Red & Yellow Care
20. Who might benefit from Safeway according to Martin Bateman?
A. Businessmen. B. Older customers. C. Sick people
第二部分 阅读理解(共两节,满分 50 )
第一节(15 小题; 每小题 2.5 ,满分 37.5 )
阅读下列短文,从每题所给的 ABCD四个选项中选出最佳选项。
A
Frances Stevens Reese Wooldland Trail Guide
The Woodland Trail was opened to the public on October 21,1997. Boscobel’s Board of
Directors adopted a formal decision of naming the Woodland Trail in honor of former Boscobel board
member, Fances Stevens Reese (1917-2003), one year after his death.
The trail is approximately 10 miles in length, leading down to Constitution Forest. When the West Point
Glass Factory was operating during the Civil War, trees for miles around were cleared to provide firewood.
Walking out of the forest, you will find a large mass of native hard rock about three billion years old.
Throughout this country path, you will find picture boards identifying birds and plants local to
this region. You will also find signs with historic and environmental information written by area specialists.
When you take a walk through this“undiscovered”forest land, please be a considerate guest.
Before walking the trail, please purchase a pass in the Carriage House. Plan ahead, so you will be back
by closing time.
Follow the trail markers and remain on the trail. Besides protecting the fragile forest ecosystem, you
will reduce the risk of poison plants and snakes.
Leave rocks, plants, animals and art works where you see them so that the person behind you can have
the same experience.
Carry out whatever you carry in because there are no rubbish containers on the trail. If you happen to
see a piece of litter, be a good guest and pick it up.
21. When was the trail named to honor Frances Stevens Reese?
A. In 1997. B. In 1917. C. In 2003. D. In 2004.
22. What can you see along the trail?
A. An old battle field. B. A glass factory. C. Information signs. D. Rock houses.
23. What should you do as a thoughtful visitor?
A. Leave the wildlife undisturbed. B. Throw the rubbish into the dustbins.
C. Make reservations in the Carriage House. D. Protect the markers of the Woodland Trail.
B
Getting out of my car one evening in late January, I met my neighbor Theresa, who had seen me drive
in.“Mrs Taylor is in the hospital again,”she said.“I thought you’d like to know.”I had last seen Mrs Taylor a
day or two before Christmas when I took her a little loaf of pumpkin bread, and she came from the
backroom in her wheelchair to talk with me. Mrs Taylor and I had been neighbors for 17 years. I remember
the dog she and her husband used to have. They called him Beau. He greeted everyone who walked by, and
Mr Taylor loved him.
Most of my conversations with Mrs Taylor had been incidental— visits by the mailbox, running into
one another at the gas station where she helped me pu t air in my tire, quiet talks at the funeral home where
we went to honor the memory of a mutual friend.
When my husband and I moved here with our four noisy, laughing kids, it must have seemed as if the
peaceful quiet of the neighborhood had been forever broken. But we showed our enthusiasm to
the neighbors sincerely although we had little in common with the mostly elderly folks on our street.
Over the years they helped us love our children, picking them up when a bicycle overturned and sending
the kids cards for their graduation. We have enjoyed the comfort of living beside people who help us if
our tree falls on the fence and feed the cat when we're away.
Mrs Taylor did not survive her latest set-back. Once again I walked into the funeral home to say good-
bye to a neighbor. I remembered the barking dog, the chats by the mailbox, the friendly wave across the
fence. I remembered, and I was sad, but I had no regrets. Now there is a new family moving into the Taylor
place. I see children's toys in the yard. It's time to take a walk.
24. What can we know according to the first paragraph?
A. Mrs Taylor has a big and happy family.
B. The author likes Mrs Taylor's dog very much.
C. The author would like to know Mrs Taylor is in the hospital.
D. Mrs Taylor had been in poor health before Theresa told the author.
25. What does the underlined word“incidental”refer to?
A. Helpful. B. Unprepared. C. Unpleasant. D. Delightful.
26. How did the author solve the difference with the neighbors?
A. She let her children be less noisy and naughty.
B. She tried to know more elderly folks in her street.
C. She treated everyone in the neighborhood warmly.
D. She enjoyed the comfort of living beside neighbors.
27. What is the best title for the text?
A. The True Neighbor B. Gratitude to my neighbor
C. Mrs Taylor —A Respectable Woman D. Expectation for New Neighbor
C
When I first began running in high school on the track team, it made sense to carefully clock every mile
and push myself to race for personal bests. But as I changed from running for sport to running
for amusement as an adult, I found that tracking my workouts often just ended with frustration. And it wasn't
until my watch battery died several years ago that I first experienced the sense of calm that came with
running for the pure joy of it. I never replaced the watch battery, and that might not be a bad thing for my
fitness goals.
This is the idea of unplugged( 不 插 电 的 ) running, which is gaining steam in the fitness
community. And recent research has shown that getting rid of your running watch, especially if it's a
smartwatch or fitness tracker, could actually improve your workout—or at least your enjoyment of running.
“People used to have an interest in their sport and get enjoyment out of the sport, but now
that'sswitching to the data,”said Eoin Whelan, a senior lecture r at the National University of Ireland
Galway. “They will compare themselves to people who are better than them, who are running faster or
runninglonger. And in the end we know that makes them feel bad.”
Whelan also noted that people who are very dependent on smart watches or fitness trackers are more
likely to skip their workouts if the batteries on their tracking devices are dead.
In addition, there is evidence that running watch-free is beneficial for more than just the casual jogger.
Some professionals also have had success with leaving their watches at home. Welsh runner Steve Jones
famously set a world record at the 1984 Chicago Marathon without wearing a watch. More recently,
黑龙江省牡丹江市第一高级中学2023-2024学年高二上学期期末考试 英语 含答案.docx

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