江西省重点中学九校协作体2021届高三下学期第一次联考试题(2月) 英语1试卷

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江西省重点中学协作体 2021 届高三第一次联考英语试卷 1 共 8 页 江西省重点中学协作体 2021 届高三第一次联考英语试卷 2 共 8 页
江西省重点中学协作体 2021 届高三第一次联考
英语试卷 2021.2
命题人:抚州一中:冯竹园 宫 正 临川一中:邹丽萍 曹 娟
满分 150 分 考试时间:120 分钟
第一部分 听力(共两节,满分 30 分)
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涂到答题卡上.
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。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. What is the man going to do now?
A. Go to the museum. B. Talk to his friend Matt. C. Attend a meeting.
2. What did the man think of the movie?
A. It was thrilling. B. It was funny. C. It was horrible.
3. What will the woman do?
A. Look in the closet. B. Check her room. C. Buy new gloves.
4. Who might the woman be?
A. A teacher of a class. B. A parent of a student. C. A headmaster of a school.
5. What is the man’s cat like?
A. Friendly. B. Lazy. C. Scared.
第二节(15 小题;每小题 1.5 分,总分 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,并标在试卷的相应位置。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,各小题给出 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67题。
6. When does the woman want to go to the office?
A. At noon. B. In the afternoon. C. In the morning.
7. How does the woman feel about going to the office before the pool?
A. She is planning to do that. B. She wouldnt mind either way. C. She would prefer not to.
听第 7段材料,回答89题。
8. What is the man going to do?
A. Sign up softball team himself.
B. Get more people to play softball.
C. Talk to Karen about softball.
9. What day is it today?
A. Monday. B. Wednesday. C. Friday.
听第 8段材料,回答10 12 题。
10. What does the man say about the woman’s car?
A. It needs a new engine.
B. The wheels need to be replaced.
C. Something is wrong with brakes.
11. Why can’t the man get the car back to the woman this afternoon?
A. He wants to see a show.
B. He has to work on other cars first.
C. He doesn’t have the parts he needs.
12. What does the man suggest the woman do?
A. Take the bus. B. Drive her car carefully. C. Bring her car back in the morning.
听第 9段材料,回答13 16 题。
13. Who is probably selling a car?
A. Jim’s friend. B. The woman. C. The woman’s brother.
14. What kind of car is probably for sale?
A. A Honda. B. A Ford. C. A BMW.
15. What does the man think about buying red cars?
A. He isnt really interested. B. He thinks they are attractive. C. He doesn’t care about the color.
16. What can we learn from the conversation?
A. The man will look for a different car. B. The woman has a car.
C. The red car cost a lot.
听第 10 段材料,回答17 20 题。
17. What is well developed in Costa Rica?
A. Tourism. B. Economy. C. Public gardens.
18. According to the talk, what might children especially enjoy?
A. Seeing monkeys. B. Looking at tropical fish. C. playing on white sand beaches.
19. Why does the speaker mention Disneyland?
A. To show its popularity. B. To get more visitors. C. To show the low prices in Costa Rica.
20. What can be found at the ocean-side hotels?
A. Water slides. B. Many hiking trails nearby. C. Staff available 24 hours a day.
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 ABCD四个选项中选出最佳选项。
A
Your driving record is something that follows you from the day you get your license until the day you
hang up your keys. And it’s something that can have an impact on different aspects of your life.
It’s a good idea to aim to have a clean driving record. It signals to car insurance companies that you’re a
responsible and safe driver. This pays off for you since it leads to getting better car insurance rates.
But what’s considered a clean driving record? If you get any kind of ticket, do you automatically not have
a clean driving record anymore?
Here’s what you need to know about having a clean driving record:
Your driving record is a public record of your driving history. Remember, from the moment you get your
license, you have a driving record.
On your driving record you can find things like:
Driving license status
License classifications
License points
江西省重点中学协作体 2021 届高三第一次联考英语试卷 3 共 8 页 江西省重点中学协作体 2021 届高三第一次联考英语试卷 4 共 8 页
Traffic accidents
Moving violations(违反) and fines
Defensive driving classes taken
So you have a driving record. But what’s the distinction between that and a clean driving record?
A clean driving record means your driving history is free of any accidents, moving violations, or points.
But don’t let this definition scare you off. All insurance companies have different rules and definitions of a
clean driving record. Some insurance companies overlook minor moving violations. So if you have a single
speeding ticket or some other relatively minor offense that usually doesn’t prevent you from having a clean
driving record.
21. Why is a clean driving record important?
A. Because it follows you all the time.
B. Because it is a public recording of your driving history.
C. Because it helps you cut down on the cost of car insurance.
D. Because it signals to others that you are responsible and reliable.
22. What can be found on a driving record according to this passage?
A. Driving habits. B. Driving pattern.
C. License test. D. License type.
23. What kind of behavior may some insurance companies accept?
A. Always running red lights. B. Often speeding on highways.
C. Parking illegally once. D. Driving after drinking.
B
In March 2019, When Sara Cook first got a letter in the mail telling her that someone had paid off part of
her medical debt, she thought it was fake. “It seemed like you have a long-lost uncle and you just inherited two
million dollars,” Cook says.
A remarkable nonprofit called RIP Medical Debt had indeed paid $5,000 toward her bills. The former
nurse was deeply moved by the gesture. Craig Antico and Jerry Ashton do have good hearts, who have seen
how health-related debt has destroyed lives. Since 2014, the men estimate they’ve spent about $20 million to
pay off personal debts. Antico and Ashton get their money from individuals and charities that support RIP’s
mission.
Don’t bother contacting RIP for help, however. Antico says they used to let people reach out to them, but
it was a disheartening experience because they weren’t able to help everyone who applied. Instead, RIP
researches potential recipients based on three rules. First, they look for people who make not more than two
and a half times the amount established as the federal poverty level. Then they screen for those whose medical
debt is equal to 5 percent or more of their income. Third, they look to see whether a person is insolvent (
).
For the people who do qualify, RIP s help is life changing. “After their letter, I realized that my life
really doesn’t stink(糟糕),” says Cook, “I may never be able to work as a nurse again, but I can sit at the school
library and help kids read or serve up food in the soup kitchen. When people do something out of the kindness
of their hearts, sometimes they may wonder whether it really makes a difference. I want people to know that
this had a positive impact.”
24.What was Sara Cook’s first feeling about the letter?
A. Grateful. B.Unbelievable. C. Confused. D. Lucky.
25. What do we know from the passage?
A. All Cook’s medical debt has been paid. B. Antico and Ashton have paid Cook’s bill.
C. Individuals and charities support RIP. D. The debt has destroyed Cook’s life.
26. Who is most likely to get help from RIP?
A. One who is due to pay huge medical fees.
B. One who submits application to RIP in advance.
C. One whose company is profitless during a long period.
D. One whose earnings are around the federal poverty.
27. Why does Sara Cook want to serve in other fields?
A. Because she wants to pay back the money.
B. Because she wants to show her life is not bad.
C. Because she wants to prove kindness makes a difference.
D. Because she can’t work as a nurse any more.
C
For much of human history and in many places, girls were considered property, or required to obey their
fathers until the day they had to start obeying their husbands. In most of the world that vision of girlhood now
seems not merely old-fashioned but unimaginably remote. In field after field girls have caught up with boys.
Globally, young women now outnumber ( 数量超过) young men at university. Girl babies are more wanted
than ever before. Even in places, such as China, where the sex-selective abortion of girls has been common, it
is becoming less so. Girls are also less likely to be married off in childhood. In 1995 almost six in ten girls in
South Asia were married before reaching 18; that has fallen by half.
When societies handle girlhood well, the knock-on effects are astonishing. A girl who finishes secondary
school is less likely to become a child bride or a teenage mother. Education boosts earning power and widens
choices, so she is less likely to be poor or to suffer domestic abuse. She will have fewer children, and invest
more in them. They will be less likely to die in babyhood, or to grow up stunted physically or mentally. She
will read to them more and help them with their homework. All this means they will learn more, and earn more
as adults. A recent study estimated that, if 100% of their girls completing secondary school is ensured, it could
lead to a lasting boost to GDP.
Despite the benefits of nurturing girls, some countries have still failed to grasp them. Only one girl in
three south of the Sahara finishes her secondary education. The COVID-19 pandemic could disturb progress
for girls in poor countries, or even reverse it. When Ebola forced west African schools to close in 2014, many
girls dropped out, never went back and ended up pregnant or as child laborers. UNICEF warns that something
similar could happen with COVID-19but on a larger scale.
28. What’s the main idea of the first paragraph?
A. Girls suffer a lot in human history.
江西省重点中学九校协作体2021届高三下学期第一次联考试题(2月) 英语1试卷.pdf

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