2024屆高三英語二輪復(fù)習(xí)周測卷:11(含解析)(河北衡水)

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        2024屆高三英語二輪復(fù)習(xí)周測卷:11(含解析)(河北衡水)

          2024衡水萬卷周測十一

          考試時間:120分鐘

          姓名:__________班級:__________考號:__________

          、聽力題(共兩節(jié),滿分30分)

          第一節(jié)(共5小題;每小題1.5分,滿分7.5分)

          聽下面5段對話.每段對話后有一個小題,從題中所給的A、B、C三個選項中選出最佳選項,并標(biāo)在試卷的相應(yīng)位置。聽完每段對話后,你都有10秒鐘的時間來回答有關(guān)小題和閱讀下一小題.每段對話僅讀一遍。

          與mp3

          141對應(yīng)

          .Where are the two speakers probably?

          A.At home.

          B. In a restaurant.

          C.In the office.

          What time is Jack supposed to arrive?

          A. At 7:50.

          B. At 8:00.

          C.By 8:15.

          What does the woman suggest the man doing?

          A.Going to bed earlier.

          B. Turning the alarm off.

          C.Moving his alarm clock.

          What is the relationship between the speakers?

          A. Hotel manager and tourist.

          B.Professor and student.

          C.Salesman and customer.

          Which of the following sentences about Tom is true?

          A. He is working in Canada now.

          B.He has come back from Canada.

          C.He went to Canada a few years ago.

          第二節(jié)(共15小題;每小題1.5,滿分22.5分)

          聽下面5段對話或獨白,每段對話或獨白后有幾個小題,從題中所給的A、B、C三個選項中選出最佳選項,并標(biāo)在試卷的相應(yīng)位置。聽每段對話或獨白前,你將有時間閱讀各個小題,每小題5秒鐘;聽完后,各小題將給出5秒鐘的作答時間.每段對話或獨白讀兩遍。

          聽第6段材料,回答第6至8題。

          How long is the dinner time at the restaurant?

          A. Five hours.

          B. Six hours.

          C.Seven hours.

          Where is the conversation mostly taking place?

          A. In the restaurant.

          B.On the telephone.

          C.In a business company.

          What can we learn from the conversation?

          A.The man is a businessman.

          B.

          Mr Stone will invite his friends to dinner.

          C.The woman is the manager of the restaurant.

          聽第7段材料,回答第9至11題。

          Where did the boy go that afternoon?

          A.To the schoo1.

          B. To a shop.

          C.To the cinema.

          Who bought the hat for Tom?

          A.His mother.

          B.His friend Bill.

          C.He himself.

          Why does the boy want to keep the hat?

          A.Because he likes it.

          B.Because his mother asks him to.

          C.Because his mother doesn’t like it.

          聽第8段材料,回答第12至14題。

          Why does the woman call Mr. Johnson?

          A.To introduce a job.

          B.To set up a laboratory.

          C.To go to a college.

          How did the Job Center get to know Johnson?

          A. Johnson phoned them.

          B.Johnson e-mailed them.

          C.Johnson telegrammed them.

          What would Mr. Johnson probably do after receiving this phone call?

          A. Talk it over with his wife.

          B.Call back at the same day.

          C.Accept the job.

          聽第9段材料,回答第15至17題。

          What is the relation between them?

          A. Husband and wife.

          B. Father and daughter.

          C.Customer and salesman.

          How many times did the business in the man’s company increase in China last year?

          A. Ten times.

          B.Double.

          C.The man didn’t say.

          What did the woman want to do?

          A. Hoping to buy more.

          B. Just greeting.

          C.Congratulating the man.

          聽第10段材料,回答第18至20題。

          Where can you find the passage?

          A. In a book

          B. In a shopping guide.

          C.In a textbook.

          On which page of the catalogue can you find men’s suits?

          A. Page 7.

          B. Page 15.

          C.Page 13.

          What is the purpose of writing the passage?

          A.Telling the people where to buy what they want.

          B.

          Attracting more people to come here for shopping.

          C.Trying to persuade more people to travel here.

          、閱讀理解(共兩節(jié),滿分40分)

          第一節(jié)(共15小題,每小題2分,滿分30分)

          閱讀下列短文,從每題所給的四個選項(A、B、C和D)中,選出最佳選項

          A

          Travis is the manager of G&G where he is responsible for forty employees (雇員)and profits (利潤) of over $2 million per year. He's never late to work. He does not get upset on the job. When one of his employees started crying after a customer screamed at her, Travis took her away. "Your working uniform is your shelter," he told her. "Nothing anyone says will ever hurt you. You will always be as strong as you want to be."

          Travis picked up that lecture in one of his G&G training courses, an education program that began on his first day and continues throughout an employee's occupation. The training has, Travis says, changed his life. G&G has taught him how to live, how to focus, how to get to work on time, and how to master his emotions (情緒). Most importantly, it taught him willpower.

          At the center of that education is an extreme focus on an all-important habit: willpower. Dozens of cases show that willpower is the single most important habit for a person's success.

          And the best way to strengthen willpower is to make it into a habit. "Sometimes it looks like people with great self-control aren't working hard—but that's because they've made it automatic," Angela Duckworth, one of the University of Pennsylvania researchers said. "Their willpower occurs without them having to think about it."

          The company spent millions of dollars developing programs of study to train employees on self-control. Managers wrote workbooks that serve as guides to how to make willpower a habit in workers' lives. Those courses are, in part, why G&G has grown from a sleepy company into a large one with more than seventeen thousand stores and profits of more than $10 billion a year.

          We learn from Paragraph 2 that employees in G&G must

          .

          A. learn to give lectures

          B. attend education programs

          C. design a working uniform

          D. develop a common hobby

          Willpower will become a habit when employees can

          .

          A. focus on the profits

          B. benefit from the job

          C. protect themselves well

          D. control their feelings well

          What can we infer from the passage?

          A. G&G has grown into a large company.

          B. G&G will spend half its profits training employees.

          C. G&G may become more successful in the future.

          D. G&G has to produce more workbooks for managers.

          B

          Most damagingly, anger weakens a person’s ability to think clearly and keep control over his behaviour. The angry person loses objectivity in evaluating the emotional significance of the person or situation that arouses his anger.

          Not everyone experiences anger in the same way; what angers one person may amuse another. The specific expression of anger also differs from person to person based on biological and cultural forces. In contemporary culture, physical expressions of anger are generally considered too socially harmful to be tolerated. We no longer regard duels (決斗) as an appropriate expression of anger resulting from one person’s awareness of insulting behaviour on the part of another.

          Anger can be identified in the brain, where the electrical activity changes. Under most conditions EEG (腦電圖) measures of electrical activity show balanced activity between the right and left prefrontal (額葉前部) areas. Behaviourally this corresponds to the general even-handed disposition (意向) that most of us possess most of the time. But when we are angry the EEG of the right and left prefrontal areas aren’t balanced and, as a result of this, we’re likely to react. And our behavioural response to anger is different from our response to other emotions, whether positive or negative.

          Most positive emotions are associated with approach behaviour: we move closer to people we like. Most negative emotions, in contrast, are associated with avoidance behaviour: we move away from people and things that we dislike or that make us anxious. But anger is an exception to this pattern. The angrier we are, the more likely we are to move towards the object of our anger. This corresponds to what psychologists refer to as of fensive anger: the angry person moves closer in order to influence and control the person or situation causing his anger. This approach-and-confront behaviour is accompanied by a leftward prefrontal asymmetry (不對稱) of EEG activity. Interestingly, this asymmetry lessens if the angry person can experience empathy (同感) towards the individual who is bringing forth the angry response. In defensive anger, in contrast, the EEG asymmetry is directed to the right and the angry person feels helpless in the face of the anger-inspiring situation.

          The “duels” example in Paragraph 2 proves that the expression of anger ________.

          A. usually has a biological basis

          B. varies among people

          C. is socially and culturally shaped

          D. influences one’s thinking and evaluation

          What changes can be found in an angry brain?

          A. Balanced electrical activity can be spotted.

          B. Unbalanced patterns are found in prefrontal areas.

          C. Electrical activity corresponds to one’s behaviour.

          D. Electrical activity agrees with one’s disposition.

          Which of the following is typical of offensive anger?

          A. Approaching the source of anger.

          B. Trying to control what is disliked.

          C. Moving away from what is disliked.

          D. Feeling helpless in the face of anger.

          What is the key message of the last paragraph?

          A. How anger differs from other emotions.

          B. How anger relates to other emotions.

          C. Behavioural responses to anger.

          D. Behavioural patterns of anger.

          C

          College graduation brings both the satisfaction of academic achievement and the expectation of a wellpaid job.

          But for 6,000 graduates at San Jose State this year, there’s uncertainty as they enter one of the worst job markets in decades. Ryan Stewart has a freshly received degree in religious studies, but no job prospects(前景).

          “You look at everybody’s parents and neighbors, and they’re getting laid off and don’t have jobs,” said Stewart.“Then you look at the young people just coming into the workforce... it’s just scary.”

          When the class of 2003 entered college the future never looked brighter. But in the four years they’ve been here, the world outside has changed dramatically(巨大地).

          “Those were the exciting times, lots of opportunities, exploding offers, students getting top dollar with lots of benefits,” said Chery AllmenVinnidge, of the San Jose State Career Center.“Times have changed now. It’s a new market.”

          Chery AllmenVinnidge ought to know. She runs the San Jose State Career Center, a sort of a crossroads between college and the real world. AllmenVinnidge says students who do find jobs after college have done their homework.

          “The typical graduate who does have a job offer started working on it two years ago. They’ve prepared themselves well during the summer. They’ve had several internships(實習(xí)),” she said.

          And they’ve majored in one of the few fields that are still hot—like chemical engineering, accounting, or nursing—where average starting salaries have actually increased over last year. Other popular fields (like information systems management, computer science, and political science) have seen big declines in starting salaries.

          Ryan Stewart (he had hoped to become a teacher) may just end up going back to school.

          “I’d like to teach college some day and that requires more schooling, which would be great in a bad economy,” he said.

          To some students’ degree may not be ticket to instant wealth. For now, they can only hope its value will increase over time.

          The main idea of this story is that.

          ARyan Stewart has not been able to find a job

          Ba college career center is a crossroads between college and the real world

          Cthe class of 2003 are facing a bad job market

          Din some fields, salaries have increased in the past year

          What do we know about Ryan Stewart?

          AHe majored in religious studies.

          BHe was once a laidoff worker.

          CHe was once a dropout and will go back to school.

          DHe began to look for a job two years before he graduated.

          Which of the following things did NOT happen in the four years when the class of 2003 was in college?

          ASome college students make more preparations for jobs.

          BThe number of teaching jobs increased.

          CStarting salaries in chemical engineering increased.

          DThe number of jobs with benefits decreased.

          According to the passage, which of the following majors has the best job prospects?

          AInformation systems management.

          BComputer science.

          CTeaching.

          DAccounting.

          D

          Do you want to get home from work knowing you have made a real difference in someone’s life?

          If yes, don’t care about sex or age! Come and join us, then you’ll make it!

          Position: Volunteer Social Care Assistant

          (No Pay with Free Meals)

          Place: Manchester

          Hours: Part Time

          We are now looking for volunteers to support people with learning disabilities to live active lives! Only 4 days left. Don’t miss the chance of lending your warm hands to help others!

          Role:

          You will provide people with learning disabilities with all aspects of their daily lives. You will help them to develop new skills. You will help them to protect their rights and their safety. But your primary concern is to let them know they are valued.

          Skills and Experience Required:

          You will have the right values and great listening skills. You will be honest and patient. You will have the ability to drive a car and to communicate in fluent both written and spoken English since you’ll have to help those people with different learning disabilities. Previous care-related experience will be a great advantage for you.

          The text is meant to ________

          A. leave a note

          B. send an invitation

          C. present a document

          D. carry an advertisement

          What does the underlined part mean?

          A. You’ll make others’ lives more meaningful with this job.

          B. You’ll arrive home just in time from this job.

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