1
2020 年 3 月
绵阳南山中学 2020 年 3 月网络统考
英语试题
命题人:邓秋兰 审题人 王强 胡山
答题说明
1. 本试卷满分 150 分,考试时间 120 分钟 ;
2. 本套试题听力 、阅读 、七选五 、完形 、语法填空均在问卷星答题并提交答案 。
其中 ,听力录音由监考员 (家长 )自行播放 ,答案提交在问卷星 。问卷星答题
时一定要注意前面的答题说明 (比如为防止作弊 ,我们对设备和 IP 使用都有次
数限制 ,对于切换页面有严格要求 ), 准时提交 ;
3. 短文改错和书面表达在纸质答题卡 (二卷部分 )上作答 ,在考试结束 5 分钟内
拍照上传到科任老师布置的钉钉家校本或 QQ 作业本里 。拍照要求 :1)手机竖
立拍 3 张答题卡照片 ,1 张是答题卡全貌 ;1 张是短文改错题 ;1 张是书面表达 ;
2)照片务必保证字迹清晰 ;
4. 二卷答题卡最好打印 。如果实在无法打印 ,也可以用一张 A4 纸按格式手抄
改错题 (注意留空 ), 画好书面表达横线 ,再规范作答 。格式不正确将被扣分 。
第第第第第第(共共共,满第30 第)
做题做,先先答先先先先先先 录录录录录录录,你先你共第你你做你先先先先。
你答先的的的答题的先。
第第共(共5 小题;每小题1.5 第,满第7.5 第)
第听听5 段段段 每段段段录你第每小题,从题从从从你。 A、B、C 三每三三从
三选选选三三 第听每段段段录,你你你。 10 秒你你做你秒秒答你秒小题秒秒秒
听第小题 每段段段每秒第每。 。
1. How many kilos does the man weigh now?
A. 62. B. 54. C. 50.
2. What does the man need to do?
A. Look up a word.
B. Borrow a dictionary.
C. Deal with his email.
3. Why does the woman need new sheets?
A. The old ones were worn.
B. The old ones were ugly.
C. The old ones were too small.
4. What are the speakers mainly talking about? 2
A. Their futures.
B. Their family.
C. Their travel plans.
5. What is the man mostly worried about?
A. The noisy passengers.
B. The safety of the airplane.
C. The service of the flight attendant.
第第共(共15 小题;每小题1.5 第,满第22..5 第)
第听听5 段段段段段段 每段段段段段段录你每每小题,从题从从从你。 A、B、
C 三每三三从三选选选三三 第每段段段段段段听,你先你做你秒秒你。 每小
题,每小题5 秒你;第听录,你小题先从选5 秒你你秒答做你 每段段段段段段。
秒共每。
第第6 段段段,秒答第6、7 题。
6. How many dogs do the speakers have?
A. One. B. Two. C. Three.
7. Why does the woman change her mind about the cat?
A. She doesn’t want it to die.
B. She wants more animals.
C. She has enough money and room for it.
第第7 段段段,秒答第8、9 题。
8. Who will Jenny marry?
A. Tim. B. Nick. C. Mike.
9. What does the woman say about the wedding?
A. It will be held abroad.
B. It will be in a big hotel.
C. It will be decorated with red roses.
第第8 段段段,秒答第10 至12 题。
10. What kind of food does the man want to eat?
A. Beef. B. Chicken. C. Ham sandwich.
11. When will the man’s son receive his food?
A. In about ten minutes.
B. In about two minutes.
C. In about one minute.
12. Where does the conversation most likely take place?
A. In a restaurant.
B. In a movie theater. 3
C. On a plane.
第第9 段段段,秒答第13 至16 题。
13. What is the most important to the woman about her dream house?
A. The decoration. B. The space. C. The view.
14. How many bathrooms does the woman want?
A. Two. B. Three. C. Four.
15. What would the woman plan to do for her dream house?
A. Have vases in every room.
B. Keep only a few things in drawers.
C. Put some pictures on the walls.
16. Where will the woman put the TV?
A. In the kitchen. B. In the bedroom. C. In the living room.
第第10 段段段,秒答第17 至20 题。
17. What does Robert do?
A. A golfer. B. A club organizer. C. A coach.
18. Why did the woman congratulate Robert?
A. She was a friend of his.
B. She admired him.
C. She wanted to get money from him.
19. What did Robert do after hearing the woman’s story?
A. He paid all hospital bills for her.
B. He gave his own prize to the woman.
C. He sent the woman’s son to the hospital.
20. How did Robert feel after knowing the truth?
A. Happy. B. Angry. C. Sad.
第第第第 秒秒阅阅(共共共 满第。 40 第)
第第共(共15 小题,每小题2 第,满第30 第)
秒秒听阅阅阅,从每题从从你ABCD 四每三三从三选选选三三。
A
One Story is a non-profit literary organization, devoted to celebrating the art form
of the short stories and supporting the writers who write them. If you're skilled at
short stories and want to join us, pay attention to the following.
Submission Periods: Jan. 15 th —May 31st / Sept. 1 st —Nov. 14 th .
What Kinds of Stories Is One Story Looking for?
One Story is seeking literary fiction. Because of our format, we can only accept
stories between 3 ,000 and 8 ,000 words. They can be in any style and on any subject
as long as they are good. More importantly, we are looking for stories that leave 4
readers feeling satisfied.
Does One Story Accept Published Material?
No. One Story is looking for previously unpublished material. However, if a story
has been published in print outside of North America, it will be considered. Stories
previously published online on blogs, personal websites, or online literary magazines
will not be accepted.
Does One Story Consider Translations?
Yes. Please include the name of the original author and language, as well as the
name of the translator on the first page of your submission.
How Do I Submit to One Story?
We have an automated system for you to send us your work. It will securely send
our editors your story and email you a confirmation that it has been received. To use
the automated system, you need to have a One Story account. You already have one if
you have subscribed to One Story or One Teen Story, joined our mailing list, or
submitted a story to either magazine. When you are ready to submit, please visit our
Submission Manager.
21. One Story judges whether a work is good mainly based on______
A. Its name. B. its originality.
C. editors’ comments. D. readers’ response.
22. What should you do when handing in your work?
A. Include your creative inspiration.
B. Register an account beforehand.
C. Write a short recommendation for it.
D. Attach your private information to it.
23. What type of writing is this text?
A. A story review. B. A magazine advertisement.
C. A submission guide. D. A magazine introduction.
B
Think you have already reached your peak in life? You might want to think again.
According to a new research, we're happiest at two periods in our lives--not just one.
Researchers at the London School of Economics and Political Science asked 23,000
German volunteers aged 17 to 85 to rate their life satisfaction. Participants predicted
how happy they would feel in five years, and then, after five years' time, reported
back on how they actually felt.
Their results? Anything but unpleasant! The study found that happiness tends to
follow a U-shaped curve over an individual's lifetime, with satisfaction reaching
higher levels during the extremes of the study’s age range and swinging down in
middle age. Plus, the researchers noted the two most important years when happiness 5
peaks: ages 23 and 69.
As is shown in our daily life, it makes a lot of sense. In our early 20s, we're
energetic and excited about the changes that come along with young age: new jobs,
new places to travel, and new people to meet. By the time we reach our 60s and 70s,
though, we have likely retired and can now find the time—not to mention the
money—to book a flight to Hawaii at a moment's notice. After all, your 40+ years are
a busy time filled with raising families, climbing the corporate ladder, and you know,
it's the life in general.
Of course, that's all the more reason to find easy ways to be happier without
really trying, regardless of your age! Experts recommend prioritizing (优先优优) small
yet rewarding tasks like taking a walk or spending time with family. Just remember,
now you have one more reason to look forward to getting older: an increase in
happiness!
24. What does the author think of the research results?
A. They are predictable. B. They are annoying.
C. They are satisfactory. D. They are surprising.
25. What does the underlined word "it" refer to in Paragraph 3?
A. The outcome of the research. B. The second peak in life.
C. The study's age range. D. The first peak in life.
26. When does people’s satisfaction reach the lowest in a lifetime?
A. In one’s teens. B. In one's forties.
C. In one's twenties. D. In one's sixties.
27. Which of the following might be the best title for the text?
A. The shape of happiness. B. The older, the happier.
C. How to be happy. D. The happiest ages in life.
C
Large gatherings such as weddings and conferences can be socially
overwhelming. Pressure to learn people's names only adds to the stress. A new
facial-recognition app could come to the rescue, but privacy experts recommend
proceeding with caution.
The app, called Social Recall, connects names with faces via smartphone cameras
and facial recognition, potentially avoiding the need for formal introductions. “It
breaks down these social barriers we all have when meeting somebody," says Barry
Sandrew, whose start-up, also called Social Recall, created the app and tested it at an
event attended by about 1 ,000 people.
After receiving an invitation to download Social Recall from an event organizer,
the user is asked to take two selfies and sign in via social media. At the event, the app
is active within a previously defined geographical area. When a user points his or her
phone camera at an attendee's face, the app identifies the individual, displays the 6
person's name, and links to his or her social media profile. To protect privacy, it
recognizes only those who have agreed to participate. And the app's creators say it
automatically deletes users’ data after an event.
Ann Cavoukian, a privacy expert who runs the Privacy by Design Center of
Excellence praises the app's creators for these protective measures. She cautions,
however, that when people choose to share their personal information with the app,
they should know that “there may be unintended consequences down the road with
that information being used in another context that might come back to bite you”.
The start-up has also developed a version of the app for individuals who suffer
from prosopagnosia, or “face blindness”, a condition that prevents people from
recognizing individuals they have met. To use this app, a person first acquires an
image of someone's face, from either the smartphone’s camera or a photograph, and
then tags it with a name. When the camera spots that same face in real life, the
previously entered information is displayed. The collected data are stored only on a
user's phone, according to the team behind the app.
28. Social Recall is used to_____
A. identify people. B. take photos. C. organize events. D. make friends.
29. Paragraph 3 is mainly about________
A. what people can do with the app.
B how the app was created.
C. what makes the app popular.
D how the app works.
30. Social Recall helps people with prosopagnosia by________
A. giving names to the photos kept in their smartphone.
B. showing the person's information when it spots a stored face.
C. providing the information of a person when they first meet.
D collecting information previously entered in the phone.
31. What can we learn about Social Recall from the passage?
A. It can cure people’s “face blindness”.
B. It has caused unintended consequences.
C. It may put people's privacy at risk.
D. It is praised by users for its protective measures.
D
Running late after several wrong turns, I made a final desperate attempt to locate
Elliott's home. Down a dirt path, past a group of geese, there it was: the two-acre
property, on which Elliott grows nearly all the food she feeds her family. The Elliotts'
three-bedroom house was among a chicken cage, a pigpen, a rabbit hutch, and three
gardens, the sum total of which Elliott refers to as her "homestead (家家)”—a nod to 7
the back-to-basics movement that inspired her lifestyle.
Elliott "homesteads" because modern technology "has rid people of their
purpose". In hopes of "drawing on and learning things of the past”, she has for eight
years rejected an increasing number of modern conveniences. She lives a life like the
19th-century homesteaders. Unlike the pioneers, however, she enthusiastically
broadcasts her life to an audience of Instagram followers, book buyers, and 100, 000
monthly readers of her blog. Elliott belongs to a growing network of bloggers who
have fueled the growing homesteading movement, which encourages self-reliance
through the employment of traditional skills. Broadcasting on the net while trying to
escape technology's uncontrolled pace may seem incongruous , but Elliott insists that
social media provide advice and moral support, which are lacking in the remote areas
where many homesteaders settle.
Elliott's day passes in a series of chores: weeding, cleaning up after the chickens,
feeding the pigs, weeding again. She rejects the idea that success should involve
anything more than maintaining a home. "We live in a culture where everything needs
to be epic( 宏宏) and awesome.. Living a very average life? That's seen as you not
living up to your potential, And I really fight against that. I think the everyday is the
point of our life, " she said. "It's okay to be in the kitchen working with a baby on
your back. That isn't a step backward; it is an intentional thing.”
32. What do we know about Elliott's "homestead"?
A. Noisy. B. Difficult to find. C. Dirty. D. Hard to maintain.
33. What influence does modern technology have on homesteading?
A. It reduces problems of homesteaders.
B. It connects homesteading farms.
C. It disturbs homesteaders' life.
D. It helps promote homesteading.
34. What does the underlined word "incongruous" in Paragraph 2 probably mean?
A. Impossible. B. Ambitious. C. Natural. D. Strange.
35. What will Elliott probably agree with?
A. Keep off the outside world.
B. Stay with your family.
C. Lead your own life.
D. Wish for something epic.
第第共(共5 小题,每小题2 第,满第10 第)
根根阅阅录录,从阅阅录你三三从三选从从从从段从你选选三三 三三从你共。8
三项项项三三。
Did you move your way into work this morning with your head down? Obviously,
you did. It's Wednesday and, if you are in New York, it’s a rainy, annoying day.
___36____ Walk like a happy person and you’ll actually feel happier.
In the study, people walked on treadmills( 跑跑跑) for 15 minutes. Around them
were cameras with sensors that picked up their movements, and in front of them was a
screen displaying a gauge ( 计计计) that moved to the left if they walked like they were
depressed, and to the right if they walked like they were happy.__37__
Before the task, they were shown a list of words, some positive (pretty) and some
negative (afraid, anxious). __38__The people who walked like a depressed person
ended up recalling more negative words and(slightly) fewer positive words than the
people who'd merrily bounced along on their treadmills. This means that the people
who'd walked as if they were sad did, in fact, end up feeling sadder.
__39__Harvard social psychologist Amy Cuddy found that if you stand like a
powerful person, you'll feel more powerful. My high school swim coach used to tell
us to fake( 假假) it till you feel it; science as of late seems to be suggesting that she had
a point. __40__Have a try and walk.
A. So now are you still sad?
B. They just remember the positive words.
C. Their arms swing at their sides as they go along.
D But there's new evidence that you can walk yourself right out of it.
E. But the people in the study didn't know what the gauge was measuring.
F. That's to say, you can change your mood simply by changing your movement.
G. After they stopped, they were asked to write down as many words as they
could.
第三第第第第第第第第(共共共,满第45 第)
第第共(共20 小题;每小题1.5 第,满第30 第)
秒秒听听阅阅,从阅阅录你题从从你A、B、C 秒D 四每三三从,三选选选从从
从段秒从你选选三三。
Sometimes a seemingly unimportant option can mean the difference between life
and death. For Dan Magennis this 41 was deciding to call Comcast before starting
his yard work. 9
The elder from Walker, Michigan knows if he hadn't 42 that call, he might not
be here today. All he 43 was to fix an issue with his cable. What he got 44 was
his own savior( 救命救人)—from 800 miles away.
Dan called the company, hoping to get it over with quickly. But 45 had he just
connected Kimberly Williams, a customer service 46 when he found he couldn't
speak after 47 his name. Then his right leg went numb(麻麻你). He began 48
and dropped the phone. “I would try to say something, and I just couldn't," Dan said.
“Soon I 49 maybe it was a stroke(从中), but I wasn't able to tell the representative
that. ” But Kimberly already knew something was 50 . Slurred( 口口口口你) speech
was something she'd become 51 as a teenager. when she 52 her grandmother
suffering a stroke. She also knew every second 53 .
She immediately opened Google to 54 for first responders in Dan's area.
Several calls later, she got in touch with the Walker Fire Department and stayed on the
55 with Dan for five minutes before the rescuers arrived.
Not even an hour after the call was placed, Dan was 56 with surgery at
Spectrum Health Butterworth Hospital. Two days later, he walked out of the hospital
with almost no lingering( 迟迟口迟你) 57 . Dr Justin Singer, director at Spectrum
Health, says things would have 58 very different were it not for Kimberly's quick
59 .
Dan says he'll be 60 forever that Kimberly, whom he's never met, didn't hang
up. It is thanks to her that he's still walking, speaking, and living independently.
41. A. order B. choice C. lesson D. motto
42. A. placed B. answered C. repaired D. bought
43. A. faced B. wanted C. concluded D. supplied
44. A. just B. even C. still D. instead
45. A. instantly B. simply C. hardly D. quickly
46. A. manager B. agent C. representative D. secretary
47. A. writing B. stating C. hearing D. forgetting
48. A. panicking B. comforting C. relaxing D. calming
49. A. admitted B. agreed C. suggested D. realized
50. A. important B. strange C. possible D. wrong
51. A. worried about B. interested in C. familiar with D. sick with
52. A. witnessed B. changed C. imagined D. attended
53. A. stopped B. counted C. struggled D. raced 10
54. A. leave B. wait C. care D. search
55. A. line B. research C. spot D. list
56. A. associated B. treated C. concerned D. satisfied
57. A. process B. patterns C. effects D. recovery
58. A. picked up B. worked out C. turned out D. took off
59. A. response B. comfort C. examination D. trust
60. A. regretful B. worried C. curious D. grateful
第第共(共10 小题,每小题1.5 第,满第15 第)
秒秒听听阅阅,先从段胡从从1 每个个你个段个个录个个你个个个个。
Music is universal—it is produced by all cultures. Some scientists believe that
music came before speech and 61 ( arise) as a development of mating calls. In
fact, there is one theory that the 62 (early) languages in the world were sung
rather than spoken. Indeed, in some countries, music is a form that people use 63
(record) their history. The Aboriginal Australians, for example, use music as a means
to pass on stories of the land and spirits ______(64) the next generation.
65 new evidence suggests is that music does not just satisfy the feel-good
factor but it is also good for the brain. A study of 66 (intellectual) disabled
children showed that they could recall more information after it was given to them in
a song 67 after it was read to them as a story.
Researchers also report that people score better on standard intelligence 68
( test) after listening to Mozart. The so-called "Mozart effect" has also been supported
by findings that rats 69 (bring) up on Mozart run faster through complex network
of paths or passages, known as a maze( 迷迷). Generally, it seems that in most cases
people 70 (suffer) from any form of mental illness benefit from listening to
music.
第四第第第秒(共共共,满第35 第)
第第共阅阅第第(共10 小题;每小题1 第,满第10 第)
假假假第假先假假假假假假假你假假假第秒阅,请你假第你假假第你选听秒阅 阅从共你。
10 从第第第处,每每从选项你共从 每从第处每每每第每个个你每每 删删段假第。 、 。
每每:先在个从每第每在在在个(∧), 并先并听听第选并每你个。
删删:把项项你个第把把(\)划划。 11
假第:先第你个听划第在把,并先并个听听第选假第录你个。
注注:1. 每从第处每并假第每每每第个;
2. 只只只假第10 从,项多(从第11 从处)口计第。
Recently, the number of foreign visitors to China have been on the increase.
During their stay, they all show a strongly interest in our traditional culture. So, to
better promote our culture, I had some ideas. As we all know, English is playing more
and more important role in promoting cultural exchanges. So they must learn to speak
fluent English. We should also enrich our knowledge of traditional culture. Besides,
English channels should be opened, from that foreign visitors can get more
informations about our culture. On conclusion, the promotion of our culture need
combined efforts. Only in this way can foreign visitors to have a better understanding
of our country.
第第共第听第第(满第25 第)
假假你假假假,你你你你你你 Jack 从你秒给说给给给给给请给项 2020 年年年(Tokyo)
奥第奥奥奥多你给奥 请你根根选听假请从给第第请秒给,劝给口假给给,继继继每继继。
活活。
第秒假请:
1. 给个他做奥奥多你你他他他
2. 做奥奥多你做从
3. 第第奥表
注注:1. 个词100 左左;
2. 选选个个每每可共,选以以阅以以。
Dear Jack,
I am glad to hear from you._____________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
I'm looking forward to your early reply.
Yours,
Li Hua