2022-2023学年重庆市巴蜀中学高二下学期第一次月考英语试题含答案
展开 高 2024 届高二(下)学月考试
英语试卷
1.
2. 2B
3. 150 120
第一部分 听力(共两节,满分20 分)
第一节(共5 小题;每小题1 分,满分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。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 will the man do next?
A. Finish his drink. B. Prepare for the party. C. Talk with the woman.
2. Where is Mr. Davies now?
A. On his way to office. B. In his office. C. At home.
3. What does the man think of the woman’s worry?
A. It’s reasonable. B. It’s unnecessary. C. It’s unthinkable.
4. Where does the conversation most probably take place?
A. In a bookstore. B. In a classroom. C. In a library.
5. What are the speakers mainly talking about?
A. High labor costs in America.
B. A way of life in America.
C. Living conditions in America.
第二节 (共15 小题;每小题1 分,满分15 分)
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。每段对话或独白读两遍。
听第6 段材料,回答第6、7 题。
6. What is the probable relationship between the speakers?
A. Neighbors. B. Strangers. C. Colleagues.
7. How much money can the woman give the man?
英语试卷 第 1 页 共 12 页
A. £1.20. B. £1 C. £0.20.
7 8 9
8. Why does the man like traveling by train?
A. He thinks it is safe.
B. He can meet different people.
C. He can enjoy the scene outside.
9. What does the woman dislike about traveling by train?
A. The speed. B. The noise. C. The platform.
8 10 12
10. Why is the man upset?
A. He has lost a long e-mail for his friend.
B. He has lost an E-mail from his friend.
C. He has quarreled with his friend.
11. What happened to Jack last month?
A. He lost his mother’s necklace.
B. He lost 200 dollars when shopping online.
C. He was cheated by a seller online.
12. Whom was Jack asked to get help from?
A. The express company clerk. B. The seller. C. The policeman.
9 13 16
13. How did the woman get the news?
A. From a doctor. B. From a biology teacher. C. From a newspaper article.
14. How should one react when facing a lion?
A. Stand still. B. Run fast. C. Climb on a tree.
15. Why didn’t anyone help the British student?
A. The lions had already run away.
B. The attack happened too suddenly.
C. No one heard him call for help.
16. How does the company avoid paying compensation if a lion attack happens?
A. They take their clients to court.
B. They hire professional trip guides.
C. They ask their clients to sign legal papers.
10 17 20
17. How did the speaker go to the Waterside Shopping Center last week?
英语试卷 第 2 页 共 12 页
A. By train. B. By coach. C. By car.
18. What can people do on the third level?
A. Choose shoes. B. Have meals. C. Withdraw money.
19. What advice does the speaker give to people who will go to the center?
A. Collect money before going there.
B. Arrive there earlier on weekends.
C. Ask for a map at the information desk.
20. What is one of the disadvantages of the Waterside Shopping Center?
A. There are few rubbish boxes.
B. The lunch in the cafe is awful.
C. The salespeople there are unfriendly.
第二部分 阅读(共两节,满分50 分)
第一节(共15 小题;每小题2.5 分,满分37.5 分)
阅读下列短文,从每题所给的A、B、C、D 四个选项中选出最佳选项。
A
What is spring break?
Between tests and after-school activities, we all deserve a much-needed pause from school to relax and regroup. Entering spring break, a glorious week set aside in the middle of the semester for students to take time off and unwind.
When is spring break 2023?
The dates of spring break 2023 vary from school to school, but most take place in March or April. You can check your school’s calendar to see when spring break 2023 is scheduled.
How long is spring break?
Again, the length of spring breaks differ across the country. A majority are just one
week, but some spring breaks (mostly among colleges and universities) are two weeks long.
What should I do over spring break 2023?
Spring break 2023 will be here before you know it, but that means you should start planning if you want to travel. Looking to escape the cold? Booking a trip somewhere beachside or poolside, taking advantage of spring skiing, snowboarding, or other late-winter activities. There are many, many options. Staycations are also perfect for connecting with fam and friends, binge-watching a new series on Netflix, planning a local museum trip, picking up a new hobby, going for a hike, or finally making a dent in your TBR list. Super scholars might take this time to prepare and get ahead on their studies. If college year is
英语试卷 第 3 页 共 12 页
fast-approaching, you could even plan some college tours and arrange in-person visits to some of the campuses on your list.
Happy spring break!
21. What date is most possible in spring break of 2023?
A. February 12. B. May 15. C. January 25. D. April 8.
22. What does the article advise a soon-to-graduate high school student to do?
A. To try many leisure options to unwind.
B. To do the assignment and review the lesson.
C. To pay a visit to the future colleges in person.
D. To have a perfect staycation with family and friends.
23. Where can you probably see this passage?
A. An instructive website. B. A school’s calendar.
C. A financial magazine. D. A travel brochure.
B
People tend to loathe pigeons for the way they mess up parked cars or flock to food wastes on the sidewalk. But the truth is that more than 300 species of wild pigeons have been found on the earth, many of which are quite impressive.
“Pigeons are biological marvels,” says Rosemary Mosco, author of A Pocket Guide to
Pigeon Watching. “They make milk for their young. They can take off almost vertically. They see colors we can’t, hear sounds we can't, and find their way across hundreds of miles using mechanisms we don’t fully understand,” she says. “They’re the world’s most overlooked birds.”
Interestingly, both pigeons and doves are members of the Columbidae family, and
while the term ‘pigeon’ tends to be applied to larger species and ‘dove’ to smaller ones, Mosco notes in her illustrated field guide that there is barely scientific or evolutionary distinction to either group.
There’s also evidence wild pigeons were a staple food source for Neanderthals, and
later humans, beginning at least 67,000 years ago. What is more well known is the pigeon’s invaluable service of long-distance communication for many different civilizations, from the ancient Romans to Genghis Khan.
“For much of their history, they signified wealth and power,” says Mosco. “They were
flying Ferraris.” In some parts of the world, the fastest pigeons still fetch mind-boggling sums. In 2020, a single racing pigeon named New Kim was sold for around $1.9 million in a Belgian auction (拍卖).
英语试卷 第 4 页 共 12 页
With pigeons everywhere we look in urban life, it may be difficult to imagine a world without pigeons. But even these adaptable birds are not immune to extinction.
24.Which word can replace “loathe” in paragraph 1?
A. Hate. B. Chase. C. Observe. D. Analyze.
25. Why are pigeons called “biological marvels”?
A. They can only take off in a vertical way.
B. They can make milk for young children.
C. They have abilities beyond human’s imagination.
D. They have a tendency to be overlooked by humans.
26.What do we know about pigeons and doves?
A. Pigeons and doves have distinct origins.
B. Pigeons are used to carry large sums of money.
C. Scientifically speaking, little difference exists between them.
D. Pigeon’s service of long-distance communication isn’t valuable.
27.What might be illustrated about pigeons in the following paragraphs?
A. Pigeons in urban areas around the world.
B. Examples of how adaptable pigeons can be.
C. Basic facts about pigeons’ immune system.
D. Pigeons becoming an endangered species.
C
Microsoft is reportedly delighted with OpenAI’s ChatGPT, a natural-language
artificial-intelligence program capable of generating text that reads as if a human wrote it. Taking advantage of easy access to finance over the past decade, companies and
venture-capital funds invested billions in an AI arms race, resulting in a technology that can
now be used to replace humans across a wider range of tasks. This could be a disaster not only for workers, but also for consumers and even investors.
The problem for workers is obvious: there will be fewer jobs requiring strong
communication skills, and thus fewer positions that pay well. Cleaners, drivers, and some other manual workers will keep their jobs, but everyone else should be afraid. Consider customer service. Instead of hiring people to interact with customers, companies
will increasingly rely on generative AIs like ChatGPT to comfort angry callers with clever
and soothing words. Fewer entry-level jobs will mean fewer opportunities to start a career.
Consumers, too, will suffer. Chatbots may be fine for handling entirely routine
questions, but it is not routine questions that generally lead people to call customer service. When there is a real issue – like an airline coming to a standstill or a pipe bursting in your
英语试卷 第 5 页 共 12 页
basement – you want to talk to a well-qualified, empathetic professional with the ability to tackle problems. You do not want to be put on hold for eight hours, but nor do you want to speak immediately to a talkative but ultimately useless chatbot.
Today, the predictive power of algorithms (算法) should be used to help people, rather
than to replace them. If AIs can offer recommendations for human consideration, the ability to use such recommendations wisely will be recognized as a valuable human skill. Unfortunately, these opportunities are being neglected. Everyone is focused on using AI to cut labor costs, with little concern not only for the immediate customer experience but also for the future of American consumption power.
28. What kind of employees are most likely to lose their jobs?
A. City cleaners. B. Taxi drivers. C. Delivery men. D. Telephone operators.
29. What’s disadvantage of a chatbot?
A. It can’t handle realistic problems.
B. It needs real persons to operate on it.
C. It doesn’t have ability to comfort customers.
D. It can’t cope with routine questions well enough.
30. What is author’s attitude towards AI-based products?
A. Delighted but suspicious. B. Concerned and negative.
C. Supportive but cautious. D. Neutral and indifferent.
31. Which is the best title for the story?
A. What’s Wrong with ChatGPT? B. Dangerous ChatGPT:Troublemaker.
C. What’s ChatGPT? D. Future of AI Has Come.
D
Now, the Food and Drug Administration(FDA) has approved two drugs that may slow the cognitive decline destroying the lives of millions of Alzheimer’s patients.
But both approvals are highly controversial. They were only based on the drugs’
ability to remove plaques (斑块), which were thought to be the underlying cause of the disease. Also, the drugs are expensive, can cause adverse side effects, and may have
modest benefits. Some experts argue that the treatment benefits don’t clearly outweigh the
risks.
For years, getting rid of plaques has been the primary focus of researches and drug development. But the approvals have aroused a debate over whether this is the best way to attack the disease. Many scientists note that the result so far is just two drugs with limited efficiency, and they have called for far more funding to look for other theories.
英语试卷 第 6 页 共 12 页
The drug the FDA approved last week, known as Lecanemab, is the first to show evidence of slowing cognitive decline in clinical trials. The other drug, known as Aducanumab, was shown to remove plaques, but was not proven to arrest the loss of cognitive ability. But Lecanemab’s promise has been clouded by the death of three patients in an extension of the study.
Matthew Schrag, a neurologist, thinks that the benefits are modest at best. The
researchers used an 18-point clinical dementia rating scale to assess a patient’s memory and problem solving skills among other aspects of cognitive and functional performance; the higher the score, the worse the dementia. Those on lecanemab scored 1.21 whereas those taking the placebo(安慰剂) averaged 1.66, which shows that those taking the drug
experienced 27 percent less cognitive decline.
“The question is whether the average patient in a clinic would notice that benefit,” Schrag says. “I don’t think they would.” More importantly, it’s the drug’s safety that concerns him. “I think we’re just beginning to see the tip of the iceberg with the risks.” Schrag and others are not convinced they are central to delaying or arresting disease progression.
32.What can make the approvals controversial?
A. The drugs’ low price. B. The drugs’ benefits of improving cognition.
C. The drugs’ effects. D. The drugs’ ability to cause plaques.
33.What can be inferred from paragraph 3 and paragraph 4?
A. Lecanemab’s future is promising.
B. The two drugs are beneficial to Alzheimer.
C. Few money are needed to seek alternative theories.
D. Aducanumab can arrest the loss of cognitive ability.
34.Which of the following statements may Matthew Schrag agree with?
A. A large quantity of risks is waiting for us to explore.
B. Average patients can notice the benefits unquestionably.
C. Scientists are central to delaying the disease progression.
D. Patients receiving Lecanemab lost 27 percent of their cognitive ability.
35.What is the main idea of the passage?
A. The limited efficiency of two new drugs.
B. Researches conducted to test two new drugs.
C. The potential dangers Alzheimer’s patients face.
D. Matthew Schrag’s distinctive insight of the Alzheimer.
第二节(共5 小题;每小题2.5 分,满分12.5 分)
英语试卷 第 7 页 共 12 页
阅读下面短文,从短文后的选项中选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为
多余选项。
For some travelers, a catamaran (双体船) sail off Oahu, Hawaii, or a camel ride through the desert in Morocco isn’t an enviable vacation experience. It’s an encounter with nausea, dizziness, and cold sweats. Motion sickness like this can happen to almost anyone,
including children and dogs. 36
The easiest way to overcome motion sickness is to prevent it from happening in the
first place. 37 You can either open a window in the car, turn on the air
vent above you on the plane, or head to the deck on a cruise ship.
“And be careful what you eat when you travel,” says Bubka. Anything that upsets your stomach on dry land—eating too much (or too little), drinking excessive amounts of alcohol or caffeine—could be amplified by motion.
“Do everything you can to be sure your view isn’t blocked,” says Natascha Tuznik, a doctor who specializes in travel medicine at the University of California Davis.
“ 38 Sitting in the front seat of the car where you can see the road can be also helpful.” Closely watching what’s coming helps your eyes and inner ears cooperate more quickly with other bodily functions. .
39 The Puma Method, developed by a flight surgeon to serve airsick
pilots, uses yoga-like stretches and angular movements to build up anti-nausea conditioning. A 2020 study at England’s University of Warwick found that, after doing 15-minute visual and spatial training exercises (finding hidden objects in puzzles, folding paper), many subjects didn’t get sick when taken for car rides.
“ 40 ” says Cherchi. “The disadvantage is that they can lead to
considerable discomfort, at least initially.”
A. Breathtaking view can make you less sick.
B. Here’s what travelers can do to prevent it.
C. You can look at the horizon if you’re out to sea.
D. Keeping fresh air flowing while traveling is advisable.
E. The advantage is that these approaches don’t require medication.
F. Yoga is recommended if someone wants to overcome motion sickness.
G. Physical or mental exercises can also help train humans to be less motion sick.
第三部分 语言运用(共两节,满分30 分)
第一节(共15 小题;每小题1 分,满分15 分)
阅读下面短文,从每题所给的A、B,C、D 四个选项中选出可以填入空白处的最佳选
英语试卷 第 8 页 共 12 页
项。
As physician Michael Shannon drove, a semitruck had suddenly pulled onto the road in
front of him. The physician had no time to 41 . “I can remember the sound of breaking
glass, and then everything stopped.” he recalls. After that, he knew he had to get out fast. But he
was 42 .
Help arrived almost instantly. Paramedic (急救护理人员) Chris Trokey could immediately see
how urgent it was. The whole front end of the car was 43 under the body of the semi.
After 20 minutes’ tense 44 , Trokey sat with him in the back of an ambulance. 45 ,
the paramedic began to 46 the crash victim’s name: Michael Shannon. He wondered
whether this could be the same man who had 47 his own life 30 years ago, when he was
a preemie (早产儿) and arrived at the very same 48 they were headed to with a
life-threatening high temperature; the doctor who slept by Trokey’s side in the hospital until he
was 49 enough to go home. At this moment, the feeling of 50 grew stronger.
Shannon recognized Chris’s name at once, too. Although he has 51 more children than
he can remember, it’s the ones who need him most who 52 in his mind. Both men are
amazed at the 53 . They say this feeling—of having someone enter your life at a (an)
54 time and watch over you until you are well, of giving a gift 55 expectations and
then getting it back when you need it most—has given them faith in a higher power.
41. A. prepare B. think C. react D. wonder
42. A. pinned B. stopped C. interrupted D. lost
43. A. fixed B. folded C. tied D. spread
44. A. separation B. observation C. transport D. rescue
45. A. Besides B. However C. Therefore D. Meanwhile
46. A. reflect on B. look for C. track down D. turn up
47. A. cherished B. risked C. valued D. saved
48. A. home B. hospital C. office D. clinic
49. A. well B. relieved C. relaxed D. fortunate
50. A. belonging B. recognition C. loss D. responsibility
51. A. transformed B. owned C. educated D. treated
52. A. fail B. stick C. leave D. appear
53. A. relationship B. friendship C. connection D. satisfaction
54. A. dangerous B. bright C. sensible D. critical
55. A. beyond B. with C. without D. in
第二节(共10 小题;每小题1.5 分,满分15 分)
阅读下面短文,在空白处填入1 个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。
英语试卷 第 9 页 共 12 页
In 432 B.C., as the cities of Athens and Sparta 56 (battle) in a war, a deadly
illness swept through Athens, 57 (strike) fear and panic into her citizens. The
disease reached Athens via the port city of Piraeus and spread throughout Greece and the eastern Mediterranean, killing almost a third of its population, even the great leader then,
66-year-old Pericles 58 (include). It seemed the only thing for the citizens to do
was 59 they had to wait to die.
60 (protect) the people of Athens, when the pandemic just broke out,
Pericles ordered the Athenians to move within the city’s newly built ‘long walls’, but it was
when the real nightmare began. This gave the disease the perfect conditions 61 the
pandemic could more quickly infect more of the Athenian population.
In the history Of Greece, the ancient Greek historian Thucydides, who fell victim to the
disease and survived, wrote that “people in good health were attacked 62 (severe)
all of a sudden by violent heats in the head, and redness and inflammation in the eyes, the inward parts, such as the throat or tongue, becoming bloody and emitted an unnatural and
fetid breath”. Despite 63 (write) evidence of the disease, its cause is still
unknown. Possibilities might be 64 we call typhoid fever and Ebola nowadays.
Months later, the disease finally became less intense and for a brief period the
Athenians were relieved, but it would strike twice more, forcing Athens to yield to Sparta in
404 BCE and ending Athens’ rule in ancient Greece. The history of mankind 65
(consist) of plenty of battles of fighting against epidemics, which can change history itself in turn.
第四部分 写作(共三节,满分50 分)
第一节 单词拼写(共10 小题;每小题1 分,满分10 分)
根据首字母或中文意思,填入一个教材选择性必修一 Unit 5 与 选择性必修二 Unit 1
中的恰当的单词,每空限填一个词,注意所填单词的正确形式。
66. Their statements are apparently______________(矛盾的), which made us feel.
confused.
67. We all may envision beautiful things but beauty itself is_______________(抽象的).
68. The moment I heard their offer, my___________(最初的) reaction was to decline
it.
69. After discussion, we put forward a_______________(具体的) and practical strategy.
70. We need fearless courage and calmness to tackle diverse_____________(危机) in life.
71. You should allow a little time after a meal for the food to d__________.
72. I am a man with a strong family concept, who was born and raised in a
英语试卷 第 10 页 共 12 页
c_________family.
73. Turning off domestic appliances before going to sleep can reduce energy
c__________.
74. In my ideal world there will be no p__________and disease, and everyone will lead a
rich and healthy life.
75. The two consecutive earthquakes of magnitude 7.8 in Turkey g___________a large
amount of energy release, which were equivalent to the explosion of 1000 atomic bombs.
第二节 (满分15 分)
假定你是李华,你观赏了今年重庆除夕夜的烟火表演 (firework display)。请给你英
国的网友Jim 写一封信,分享这次烟花秀。信的内容必须包括:
1. 你的感受;
2. 希望烟火秀能每年办下去及你的理由。
注意:
1. 词数80 左右;
2. 可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯。
Dear Jim, ____________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________
Yours,
Li Hua
第三节(满分25 分)
阅读下面材料,根据其内容和所给段落开头语续写两段,使之构成一篇完整的短文。
It is not a new thing to be told to ‘adopt pets don’t shop’ since this concept is gradually becoming more well known. Yet, equally important is that owners should think thoroughly before they even adopt one.
I adopted a street cat a couple of months ago. It was a one-year-old cat in a cat shelter
that really had my empathy. He was named SingCi — a ginger patched tabby cat. My mom and I almost fell in love with him at the first sight. He was a good looking, healthy boy who was found on the street along with his cage and all his toys in front of a flower shop. According to the flower shop owner, the poor cat was docile and calm for the first day of his
英语试卷 第 11 页 共 12 页
abandonment. Random pedestrians who walked past were able to pet him. However, days after he realized his owner would never come and pick him up, he became so stressed that he turned super aggressive.
It was a tough period living with him. Nobody could approach him. Not even when it’s
feeding time. He was constantly angry and would attack whoever opened his cage. I had to wear protective gloves even when I was just giving him his meals. He would rather wait until everyone distanced themselves before he began feasting. Even when he did, he growled and hissed while eating, watching out at the same time for anyone who might come close.
One day, I decided to open the cage and feed him outside. He growled again and
without any warning, he scratched me on the back of my right hand and drew blood. Despaired and furious, I threw him back into the cage hard, screaming, “You, son of Devil! Get back to the street!” I picked up the cage and intended to head out.
注意: 1. 续写词数应为150 左右;
2. 请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答。
“Are you truly ready for him? You need some strategies.” Mom stopped me.
Months later, SingCi eventually got used to having people around him.
英语试卷 第 12 页 共 12 页
高2024 届高二(下)学月考试
参考答案
听力答案1-5 AABCB 6-10 BCABA 11-15 CACAB 16-20 CCBCA
阅读理解 21-23 DCA 24-27 ACCD 28-31 DABA 32-35 CBAA
七选五36-40 BDCGE
完形填空41-45 CABDD 46-50 ADBAB 51-55 DBCDC
语法填空
56. were battling 57. striking 58. included 59. that 60. To protect
61. where 62. severely 63. written 64. what 65. consists
单词填空
66. contradictory 67. abstract 68. initial 69. concrete
70. crises (要用复数) 71. digest 72. conventional 73. consumption
74. povertygenerated (要用过去时)
精品解析:重庆市巴蜀中学2022-2023学年高二下学期第一次月考英语试题: 这是一份精品解析:重庆市巴蜀中学2022-2023学年高二下学期第一次月考英语试题,文件包含重庆市巴蜀中学2022-2023学年高二下学期第一次月考英语试题解析版docx、重庆市巴蜀中学2022-2023学年高二下学期第一次月考英语试题原卷版docx等2份试卷配套教学资源,其中试卷共49页, 欢迎下载使用。
2022-2023学年重庆市巴蜀中学高二下学期第一次月考英语试题含解析: 这是一份2022-2023学年重庆市巴蜀中学高二下学期第一次月考英语试题含解析,共34页。试卷主要包含了 Where is Mr等内容,欢迎下载使用。
2022-2023学年重庆市巴蜀中学高二下学期第一次月考英语试题含解析: 这是一份2022-2023学年重庆市巴蜀中学高二下学期第一次月考英语试题含解析,共32页。试卷主要包含了 Where is Mr等内容,欢迎下载使用。