第一部分 (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选项,并标在试题卷的相应位置。听完每段对话后,你都有10秒钟的时间来回答有关小题和下一小题。每段对话仅读一遍。
1. How many students are good at basketball?
A. About 15. B. About 20. C. About 40.
2. What does the woman’s answer mean?
A. She doesn’t know about the restaurant.
B. There is no restaurant here.
C. The restaurant is too far away.
3. Who is Sam Johnson probably?
A. Tom’s boss. B. Tom’s doctor. C. Mary’s doctor.
4. How can the man get to the supermarket?
A. Go eastward and turn right. B. Go eastward and turn left. C. Go westward and turn left.
5. What can we know from the conversation?
A. The woman asks the man for a lift?
B. The woman won’t take the man’s car to the bank.
C. The bank and the man’s office are in the same direction.
第二节(共15小题;每小题1分,满分15分)
请听下面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,并标在试题卷的相应位置。听每段对话或独白前,你将有时间各个小题,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。
听下面一段对话,回答第6和第7题。
6. What does the man speaker suggest?
A. Having her hair done by anther skilled hairdresser.
B. Coming at 3:30 that afternoon.
C. Coming the next day.
7. How does the woman feel in the end?
A. She is unhappy. B. She is pleased. C. She is worried.
听下面一段对话,回答第8和第9题。
8. Where will Mary be on Thursday evening?
A. At the Global Theatre. B. At her flat. C. At a little restaurant.
9. What will Mary probably do together with John?
A. They will hand in their compositions.
B. They will clean her flat.
C. They will go and listen to the concert.
听下面一段对话,回答第10至12题。
10. Where does the conversation take place?
A. Airport. B. Street. C. Bank.
11. Which city did the woman not go to in the trip?
A. Beijing. B. Guangzhou. C. Shanghai.
12. What can we learn about conversation?
A. The woman is very tired and pleased.
B. The woman is very tired.
C. The woman doesn’t think China is interesting.
听下面一段对话,回答第13至第16题。
13. What’s the possible relationship between the two speakers?
A. Boss and employee. B. Husband and wife. C. Secretary and customer.
14. What thing does the man want to do?
A. He wants the woman’s boss to receive the phone.
B. He wants to go to the woman’s office.
C. He wants to have a lunch with the woman’s boss.
15. Where is Ms. Jenkins?
A. She is going home. B. She is having her lunch. C. She is in other’s office.
16. What’s the man’s office phone number?
A. 6658799. B. 6358799. C. 6358789.
听下面一段对话,回答第17至第20题
17. Why did Mrs. Smith think the notes in the old lady’s handbag were hers?
A. The notes in the old lady’s handbag were like one her husband gave her.
B. The notes were picked up by the old lady.
C. The notes in the old lady’s handbag were her husband gave her.
18. Why didn’t Mrs. Smith call the police?
A. She was afraid that the police would catch her.
B. She disliked getting people into trouble.
C. She disliked getting the police into trouble.
19. Which of the following statements is TRUE?
A. Mrs. Smith told the old lady what she has thought.
B. Mrs. Smith took the old lady’s notes and put them in her own bag.
C. Mrs. Smith went home without anything.
20. Where were Mrs. Smith’s notes?
A. They were lost. B. They were on the table. C. They were stolen by the old lady.
第二部分:英语知识运用(共两节, 满分35分)
第一节:单项(共15小题,每小题1分,满分15分)
从A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出可填入空白处的最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。
21. The film 2014 has filled some people with ________ fear that ________ man will meet terminal disasters in 2014.
A. a;/ B. a;the C. /;the D. the;/
22. I have reached a point in my life ________ I am supposed to make decisions of my own.
A. which B. where C. how D. why
23. My English teacher’s humor was ________ make every student burst into laughter.
A. so as to B. such as to C. such that D. so that
24. No matter how frequently ________, the works of Beethoven still attract people all over the world.
A. performed B. performing C. to be performed D. being performed
25. The lawyer rarely wears anything other than jeans and T-shirt ________ the reason.
A. whatever B. wherever C. whenever D. however
26. She is a vegetarian. She will __________ if you mention eating meat in front of her.
A. fall over the moon B. be down in the dumps
C. get hot under the collar D. laugh her head off
27. The setting sun was reflected on the river, ________ everything along the banks ________ all the more beautiful.
A. to make; look B. making; looking C. making; to look D. making; look
28. The ability ________ an idea is as important as the idea itself.
A. expressing B. expressed C. to express D. to be expressed
29. Running a company is not _______ a matter of hiring people ? they also need to be trained.
A. simply B. partly C. seriously D. equally
30. He had his camera ready ________ he saw something that would make a good picture.
A. even if B. soon after C. in case D. so that
31. The good thing about children is that they ________ very easily to new environments.
A. adapt B. appeal C. adopt D. apply
32. ? Did you remember to give Mary the money you owed her?
? Yes, I gave it to her ________ I saw her.
A. constantly B. directly C. suddenly D. supposedly
33. So much of interest ________ that most visitors run out of time before seeing it all.[来源:金太阳新课标资源网]
A. offers Beijing B. Beijing offers C. does Beijing offer D. Beijing does offer
34. The country has already sent up three unmanned spacecraft, the most recent ________ at the end of last March.
A. has been launched B. having been launched
C. being launched D. to be launched
35. ? According to my grandma, it is a good idea to eat chicken soup when you have a cold.
? ________, scientists agree with her.
A. Sooner or later B. Once in a while C. To be exact D. Believe it or not
第二节 完形(共20小题;每小题1分,满分20分)
阅读下面短文,掌握其大意,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,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。
When I was a teenager, my dad did everything he could do to advise me against becoming a brewer (造酒人). He’d 36 his life brewing beer for local breweries only to make a living, 37 had his father and grandfather before him. He didn’t want me 38 near a vat (酿酒用的桶) of beer. So I did as he asked. I got good 39 , went to Harvard and in 1971 was accepted into a graduate program there that 40 me to study law and business at the same time.
In my second year of graduate school, I began to realize that I’d 41 done anything but go to school. So, at 24 I decided to drop out. 42 , my parents didn’t think this was a great idea. But I felt strongly that you can’t 43 till you’re 65 to do what you want in life.
I packed my stuff into a bus and headed for Colorado to become an instructor at Outward Bound. Three years later, I was ready to go back to 44 . I finished Harvard and got a highly-paid job at the Boston Consulting Group Still, after working there five years, I 45 , “Is this what I want to be doing when I’m 50?” At that time, Americans spent good money on beer in 46 quality. Why not make good beer for 47 ? I thought.
I decided to give up my job to become 48 . When I told Dad, he was 49 , but in the end he 50 me. I called my beer Samuel Adams, 51 the brewer and patriot (爱国者) who helped to start the Boston Tea Party. 52 I sold the beer direct to beer drinkers to get the 53 out. Six weeks later, at the Great American Beer Festival, Sam Adams Boston Lager (淡啤酒) won the top prize for American beer. In the end I was destined (注定) to be a brewer. My 54 to the young is simple: Life is very 55 , so don’t rush to make decisions. Life doesn’t let you plan.
36. A. costB. spentC. takenD. paid
37. A. likeB. as ifC. soD. nor
38. A. anywhereB. anywayC. anyhowD. somewhere
39. A. habitsB. teachersC. gradesD. work
40. A. promisedB. convincedC. advisedD. allowed
41. A. neverB. everC. alwaysD. hardly
42. A. FortunatelyB. ObviouslyC. PossiblyD. Surprisingly
43. A. assureB. declineC. denyD. wait
44. A. schoolB. ColoradoC. my homeD. my decision
45. A. thrilledB. stressedC. wonderedD. sneezed
46. A. cheapB. expensiveC. lowD. high
47. A. EnglishmenB. EuropeansC. the worldD. Americans
48. A. a lawyerB. a brewerC. an instructorD. an engineer
49. A. astonishedB. satisfiedC. interestedD. anxious
50. A. hatedB. supportedC. raisedD. left
51. A. forB. atC. inD. after
52. A. ThereforeB. OtherwiseC. AlsoD. Yet
53. A. priceB. nameC. companyD. party
54. A. adviceB. lifeC. jobD. experience
55. A. hardB. busyC. shortD. long
第三部分:阅读理解(共15小题,每题2分,满分30分)
阅读下列短文,从每题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。
A
Some say everyday miracles (奇迹) are predestined (注定的)----the right time for the appointed meeting. And it can happen anywhere.
In 2001, 11-year-old Kevin Stephan was a bat boy for his younger brother's Little League team in Lancaster, New York. It was an early evening in late July. Kevin was standing on the grass away from the plate, where another youngster was warming up for the next game. Swinging his bat back and forth, giving it all the power an elementary school kid could give. The boy brought the bat back hard and hit Kevin in the chest. His heart stopped.
When Kevin fell to the ground, the mother of one of the players rushed out of the stands to his aid. Penny Brown hadn't planned to be there that day, but at the last minute, her shift (换班) at the hospital had been changed to see her son’s performance. She was given the night off. Penny bent over the senseless boy, his face already starting to turn blue, and giving CPR, breathing into his mouth and giving chest compressions. And he revived in the end.
After his recovery, he became a volunteer junior firefighter, learning some of the emergency first-aid techniques that had saved his life. He studied hard in school and was saving money for college by working as a dishwasher in a local restaurant in his spare time.
Kevin, now 18, was working in the kitchen when he heard people screaming, customers in confusion, employees rushing toward a table. He hurried into the main room and saw a woman there, her face turning blue, her hands at her throat. She was choking.
Quickly Kevin stepped behind her, wrapped his arms around her and clasped his hands. Then, using skills he'd first learned in Scouts. The food that was trapped in the woman's throat was freed. The color began to return to her face.
"The food was stuck. I couldn't breathe," she said. She thought she was dying. "I was very frightened."
Who was the woman?
Penny Brown.
56. The author wrote the passage to show us that __________.
A. miracles are predestined and they can happen anywhere
B. whoever helps you in trouble will get a reward one day
C. God will help those who give others a helping hand
D. miracles won’t come without any difficulty sometimes
57. Which of the following statements is True of Kevin Stephan?
A. He was hit on the face by a boy and almost lost his life
B. He was a volunteer junior firefighter, teaching the players first-aid skills
C. He worked part-time in a local restaurant to save money for college
D. He saved Penny Brown though he didn’t really know how to deal with food choke
58. The underlined word “revived” (paragraph3) most likely means __________.
A. came back to life B. became worse C. failed D. moved
59. Why did Penny Brown change her shift and was given the night off that night?
A. She was invited to give the players directions
B. She volunteered to give medical services
C. She was a little worried about his son’s safety
D. She came to watch her son’s game and cheered him
B
Competition between international universities is heating up, as China grows as one of the largest exporters of students aiming to study abroad. “Lots of universities are becoming more and more aggressive to attract Chinese students. Every day I receive contacts from universities in the US expressing the desire to come to China to recruit students,” said Frank Joseph, a commercial officer from embassy of the United States.
One key reason why more Chinese students are able to study abroad is the economy: With China’s boom within the past decade, more families have the financial wherewithal (资金) to send their children to international universities. There will be a total of 200,000 family-funded Chinese students studying overseas in 2014, up 20 percent from last year, said Wu Zaofeng, deputy secretary general of China Education Association for International Exchange.
International institutions, Joseph said, are also facing increasingly tough financial situation with a shortage of domestic students and a drop in government subsidies (补贴). Students, especially in the US are paying high tuition fees and living expenses. Chinese students with money to spend, according to experts, can fill up the gap. Students on average spend 150,000 yuan to 200,000 yuan every year studying in US, according to statistics from the US Institute of International Education. During 2009-2010, there were approximately 81,000 Chinese students studying in the US, up 19.8 percent from 2008.
Representatives from approximately 60 universities from the United States are planning to arrive in Beijing this weekend to attract more Chinese students at this year’s fair. Besides the US, many other countries are also vying (竞争) to enroll Chinese students.
Post-study work visa put out by British government allows all international students completing a UK degree qualification to apply for a visa to stay on and look for work in UK for up to 2 years. Being the third most popular destination for international students next to the US and the UK, France has set up two types of scholarships and has handed out an increase of 26 percent in scholarship funds to Chinese students in recent years.
60. The reason for heating up competition between international universities is __________.
A. that China has become one of the largest exporters of the students aiming to study abroad
B. China’s boom, the students’ desire and foreign universities’ commercial motive
C. that the students in China are becoming richer and richer
D. that the students in foreign countries do not want to go to universities
61. Why are more Chinese students able to study abroad?
A. Because their families have enough money to send them to international universities.
B. Because they can’t go to the best universities at home.
C. Because they want to win the scholarship of foreign universities
D. Because the Chinese students enjoy following others and they want to be independent.
62. Which of the following statements is TRUE?
A. In 2014 there will be 200,000 Chinese students studying in the US.
B. Chinese students are able to study abroad for their relatives overseas.
C. In 2014 there will be 200,000 state-funded Chinese students studying overseas.
D. There are fewer family-funded Chinese students studying abroad in 2010 than in 2014.
63. From the passage we can learn that __________.
A. the number of foreign students is becoming smaller and smaller
B. the international universities are short of money
C. there were approximately 81,000 foreign students studying in the US during 2009-2010
D. the Chinese students spend more money than the American students
C
Short Skirts Are Out!
After decades of skimpy skirts and sleeveless tops on game days, some schools in the US are saying cheerleader uniforms will have to meet stricter dress codes when they are worn in class.
In Lake County, Florida, cheerleaders with uniforms too skimpy for the code are being asked to wear long shorts or trousers under their skirts and a T-shirt under the sleeveless tops, according to a district memo. Principals at two of Lake’s eight high schools ? Leesburg and Lake Minneola ? are not allowing the outfits in school at all.
Michelle Thomas, a cheerleader at Leesburg High School, was disappointed when she learned she couldn’t wear her outfit to school on game days.
“It shows that we’re a team just like all the other sports,” she said.
But the school administrators did not agree. “During the educational portion of the day, they have to meet the dress code just like every other student,” said school board chairwoman Debbie Stivender, who ordered the staff to bring the outfits into line with the dress code.
Bare midriffs are banned across the state by the Florida High School Athletic Association, but no state rules mention cheerleader miniskirts. Sheila Noone, a spokeswoman for cheerleading uniform company Varsity Brands, says the outfits haven’t become more revealing over the last 10 years. She says that the short skirts are designed to help the girls jump and kick.
“Cheerleading is athletic,” Noone said. “There’s a lot of jumping, so you won’t want a knee-length skirt that might hamper a tie touch.”
Most cheerleaders were sad to hear the news, but say they’ll follow the rules. Even male cheerleaders, whose pants and tops meet dress codes, chose not to wear their outfits to show unity.
“I understanding, because they are kind of short,” said Holly Bishop, 14, a Lake Minneola High School cheerleader, about her miniskirt. “It would have been really, really cool to wear them to school.”
64. According to the new dress codes for cheerleaders in some American schools, __________.
A. bare midriffs are banned
B. cheerleading miniskirts are banned
C. cheerleader uniforms have switched from skirts to trousers
D. cheerleaders have to make their uniforms less revealing
65. Which of the following statement is TRUE according to the article?
A. School administrators believe cheerleader uniforms do not match school dress codes.
B. Most cheerleaders show understanding of the new dress codes.
C. Sheila Noone believes that cheerleading miniskirts are not revealing.
D. School administrators don’t take cheerleading seriously.
66. Some cheerleaders are not happy about the news because __________.
A. they hate the dress codes that other sports have
B. they consider their uniforms special and cool
C. they want to wear revealing clothes
D. they will have to buy new uniforms
D
The US government has started a website, Admongo, to help children think critically about the advertising aimed at them. It claims to provide visitors with an “aducation” through games and other entertainment.
A cartoon man dressed in old time pilot clothing greets visitors to Admongo. "Call me Haiz", he says upon arrival in a rocket ship that opens up with a crazy world inside it. Spacey dance music plays in the background as Haiz tells visitors that they need to learn about advertising.
Its inventors say eight to twelve years old is the age kids develop their critical thinking abilities. Kids that age are also a big market for advertisers.
The idea behind Admongo is to teach children three things: To identify the advertiser. To know what the advertiser is really saying. And to know what the advertisement is trying to get the child to do.
Children learn these things through a video game. They create their own game character. They can choose different skin colors, hair styles, eye and mouth shapes. Then they begin a trip through ad-land, where there are ads on buses and billboards. The players have to find all the marketing in the neighborhood before they can move on to the next level.
The Admongo game takes players inside a home, to the advertising studio and everywhere else ads can be found. It is a complete exploration of the world of marketing.
One such area is food marketing. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) says it is a big business. The FTC estimates that food, drink and fast-food restaurants spent more than one and a half billion dollars on advertising to young people in 2009.
The FTC says children are important for three reasons. They buy products. They influence parents and caregivers to buy. And they are the future adult buyers of the products.
A recent study says most advertising aimed at children is for foods of the lowest nutritional value. First Lady Michelle Obama has said she would like to see advertisers marketing healthy foods for children.
67.What is the best title of the text?
A. The guide of Admongo B. An aducation website for children
C. A popular online video game D. A website aimed at children
68. Why did the government start the website?
A. To attract the biggest market of buyers. B. To sell the products of its company.
C. To help children know about advertising. D. To advertise the video game for children.
69. What can players do in the website game?
A. Choose hair styles for their character. B. Travel to a supermarket.
C. Eat in a fast-food restaurant. D. Play video games during the trip.
70. Children are important for advertising because they are __________.
A. important for the society B. the most potential buyers
C. easily influenced by ads D. easily affected by poor products
第Ⅱ卷(非,共35分)
第一节 任务型阅读(共10小题;每小题1分,满分10分)
阅读下面短文,根据所读内容在表格中的空白处填入恰当的单词。注意:每个空格只填一个单词,并请将答案写在答题纸上。
The family sphere (范围) used to be defined by its isolation from the public realm. There was the public male realm (领域) of "rational accomplishment" and cruel competition, and the private female and child-rearing sphere of home, intuition (直觉) and emotion. The private realm was supposed to be isolated from the realities of adult life. For both better and worse, television and other electronic media tend to break down the difference between those two worlds. The membrane around the family sphere is much more permeable (可渗透的). TV takes public events and transforms them into dramas that are played out in the privacy of our living rooms, kitchens and bedrooms.
Parents used to be the channel through which children learned about the outside world. They could decide what to tell their children and when to tell it to them. Since children learn to read in stages, books provide a kind of natural screening process, where adults can decide what to tell and not tell children of different reading abilities. Television destroyed the system that separated adult from child knowledge and separated information into year-by-year slices for children of different ages. Instead, it presents the same information directly to children of all ages, without going through adult filters.
So television presents a real challenge to adults. While a parent can read a newspaper without sharing it with children in the same room, television is accessible to everyone in that space. And unlike books, television doesn't allow us to flip (翻转) through it and see what's coming up. We may think we're giving our children a lesson in science by having them watch the Challenger take off, and then suddenly they learn about death, disaster and adult mistakes.
Books allow adults to discuss privately what to tell or not tell children. This also allows parents to keep adult material secret from children and keep their secret keeping secret. Take that same material and put it on The Today Show and you have 800,000 children hearing the very things the adults are trying to keep from them. "Television takes our kids across the globe before parents give them permission to cross the street."
More importantly, children gradually learn that adults are worried and anxious about being parents. Actually, television has also places families under a lot of stress.
How Television Changes Childhood?
Main comparisonsContexts
Distance between 71 and the outside.Homes used to be isolated from the 72 realm.
Homes nowadays are 73 to the outside world.
Media through which children can obtain informationIn the past, children might learn 74 about the outside world with the help of parents and 75 .
More information is got directly through TV and other electronic media, which breaks down the 76 between adult world and the child world.
77 of the information children getTraditionally, kids could only knew what they should learn at their age, carefully 78 by their parents.
Everything can possibly be known by children, including many aspects of 79 life.
Effects on family education
Parental instructionFamilies are now under greater stress than before. Adults are anxious about being parents and faced with new 80 .
第二节:根据括号里的中文提示用单词的适当形式填空。(每空0.5分,共5分)
81. Animals become __________ (漠不关心的) to their young as soon as their young can look after themselves, but human beings find this difficult.
82. We should __________ (谴责) any attempts to break into company networks to obtain users’ information
83. The __________ (执行的) director of board assumes the responsibility of managing financial, productive and marketing affairs.
84. Our __________ (可持续的) levels of happiness are up to our life circumstances and our everyday activities.
85. Students from all over the world take a major step along their life's journey when they __________ (参与) in an advanced education.
86. Care must be taken that each task ends with a sensible state, because there is no __________ (保证) when the next step will be carried out.
87. In this book, Adam Smith's emphasis that the ________ (无形的) hand usually leads markets to allocate resources efficiently.
88. If you have a keen __________ (欣赏) for good art, you may have a strong interest in cultural activities or entertainment.
89. Getting the best out of digital __________ (广播电视) will probably mean replacing, or at least repositioning, the indoor or rooftop aerial.
90. The eruption of volcano __________ (伴随) by an earthquake caused great damage to the living things around.
第三节 书面表达(满分20分)
假定你是中学生梨花。在一位名叫Tiger Tom的学生家长的博客上,你看到如下内容。请你根据博客内容、写作要点和写作要求,给这位家长回复。
I’m the mother of a fourteen-year-old. I have a rule for my daughter: be among the top 5 students or get punished in one way or another. She has been doing very well in school, but some friends of mine keep telling me that I put too much pressure on her. Am I wrong?
写作要点:
1. 表明自己的看法;2. 陈述自己的理由(可以举例说明);3. 提出至少两条建议。
写作要求:
1. 短文次数不少于150(不含已经写好的部分);
2. 内容充实,结构完整,语意连贯;
3. 书写必须干净、清晰、工整。
Hi, Tiger Mom,
What puzzles you is actually a puzzle for many parents in China. My idea is _______
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