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1、安徽省淮北市樹(shù)人高級(jí)中學(xué)2020_2021學(xué)年高二英語(yǔ)下學(xué)期開(kāi)學(xué)考試試題安徽省淮北市樹(shù)人高級(jí)中學(xué)2020_2021學(xué)年高二英語(yǔ)下學(xué)期開(kāi)學(xué)考試試題PAGE PAGE - 24 -安徽省淮北市樹(shù)人高級(jí)中學(xué)2020_2021學(xué)年高二英語(yǔ)下學(xué)期開(kāi)學(xué)考試試題安徽省淮北市樹(shù)人高級(jí)中學(xué)20202021學(xué)年高二英語(yǔ)下學(xué)期開(kāi)學(xué)考試試題第一部分 聽(tīng)力(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(tīng)下面5段對(duì)話,每段對(duì)話后有一個(gè)小題。從題中所給的A、B、C三個(gè)選項(xiàng)中選出最佳選項(xiàng),并標(biāo)在試卷的相應(yīng)位置。聽(tīng)完每段對(duì)話后,你都有10秒鐘的時(shí)間來(lái)回答有關(guān)小題和閱讀下一小題.每段對(duì)話僅讀一遍。1。 W

2、hat are they doing?A。 Taking a trip。 B。 Working on a farm。 C。 Feeding the cow.2. When will the man go to Mongolia?A。 In June。 B. In July。 C。 In August.3。 Where does the conversation take place?A。 In a laboratory。 B。 In a library. C。 In a caf.4。 Why does the man fail to rent this apartment?A. He want

3、s to rent a smaller one。B。 He thinks it is too expensive。 C。 He intends to share a flat。5。 What does the woman mean?A. Johns hairstyle is great.B. Johns hairstyle doesnt fit him.C. Johns hairstyle is different from his friends。第二節(jié)(共15小題,每小題1.5分,滿分22。5分)聽(tīng)下面5段對(duì)話或獨(dú)白.每段對(duì)話或獨(dú)白后有幾個(gè)小題,從題中所給的A、B、C三個(gè)選項(xiàng)中選出最佳選項(xiàng)

4、。聽(tīng)每段對(duì)話或獨(dú)白前,你將有時(shí)間閱讀各個(gè)小題,每小題5秒鐘;聽(tīng)完后,各小題將給出5秒鐘的作答時(shí)間。每段對(duì)話或獨(dú)白讀兩遍。聽(tīng)第6段材料,回答第6、7題。6。 Who is the man?A。 A car seller。 B. The womans friend。 C。 The womans husband.7. Why does the woman want to buy a car?A。 To drive to work。 B. To drive her kids to school。 C。 To drive on holidays。聽(tīng)第7段材料,回答第8、9題。8。 What can we

5、 know from the man?A. Its too cold to run outside.B. Its healthy to run in cold weather.C。 Its good for lungs to run outside。9。 What does the woman want to do right now?A. Sleep in bed. B。 Get her gym clothes. C。 Do make-up。聽(tīng)第8段材料,回答第10至12題。10。 Why will the woman have a dinner party?A. To chat with

6、the doctor。 B。 To celebrate her paper. C. To welcome the chairman。11。 When will the man come?A. At around 6:30 on Saturday。B。 At around 7:00 on Saturday. C。 At around 7:00 on Sunday。12。 What does the man think of the girl?A。 She is pretty。 B. She is friendly。 C. She is hard-working.聽(tīng)第9段材料,回答第13至16題。

7、13。 What are the girls old shoes like?A。 They are lovely. B. They are casual。 C. They are old。14. Whats wrong with the first pair of shoes the girl tries on?A. They dont match the dress。 B. They are out of style. C。 They feel uncomfortable。15。 How much does the girl have to pay?A. 130 dollars. B. 23

8、0 dollars. C. 260 dollars。16. What do we know about the girl?A。 She is wearing a red dress。B。 She bought a pair of yellow shoes。C. She will wear the red shoes home。聽(tīng)第10段材料,回答第17至20題。17。 What do colors mean to drivers?A. Life-saving information. B。 Means of transportation. C。 Traffic police.18。 Which

9、 of the following is NOT mentioned?A. Colors can change peoples mood。B。 Colors can make people beautiful.C. Colors can increase peoples appetite。19. What is more important in a sports competition?A。 Luck and ability. B。 Luck and psychology. C. Ability and psychology。20. What does the speaker think o

10、f artists works?A. They are as colorful as a rainbow。B. They are more colorful than a rainbow.C. They are more beautiful than a rainbow。第二部分 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(gè)選項(xiàng)(A、B、C、和D)中,選出最佳選項(xiàng)。AIn July 2017, the American Space Agency(NASA)admitted to not having enough financialm

11、eans to send man on Mars for the purpose of exploring it. The news had the effect of a bomb after five years of communication and development for this space exploration project. And yet, a few months before this announcement, the two houses of the US Congress voted a law to guide future NASA tasks。

12、Among these tasks was an inhabited trip to Mars in 2033。In the meantime, NASA is focusing on the Mars 2020 mission by building its rover(漫游者), which will be equipped with a series of new scientific instruments。 This new machine will also look a lot like Curiosity which landed on the red planet in 20

13、12。 The mission Mars 2020 aims to assess the livability of the planet and possibly identify potential tracks of life yesterday and today.At a recent press conference, former US astronaut Tom Jones announced that NASAs current budget could not solve some technical problems for 25 years。 Thus, it post

14、pones the first inhabited mission of the agency to Mars in 2043。 The subject concerned mainly mentioned many damages that will affect the body of astronauts。Indeed, the trip to Mars could be completed in nine months by considering the current technologies and the moment when the planets are closer t

15、o each other。 However, periods of weightlessness that are too long may, in particular, cause a lack of calcium. In fact, it influences the bones of astronauts。 In addition, this can lead to significant damage of vision。A quarter of a century is needed to develop new technologies to solve these probl

16、ems。 Forexample, there is the question of developing nuclear propulsion(推進(jìn))systems。 Indeed, it could reduce travel times. Finally, there is also the idea of designing something to allow astronauts to hibernate (冬眠) during the trip!21。 What made NASA put off its inhabited mission?A. Objection of scie

17、ntists。 B. The living conditions。 C. The damage to health. D。 A shortage of funds。22。 Which is right about the Mars 2020 Mission?A。 It has been put off。B. It is to evaluate the possibility for our living. C. Its aim is to send man to Mars。D。Its purpose is for man to walk on Mars。a23。 Whats the main

18、idea of the last paragraph?A. The problems existing nowadays。B. The accuracy of travel times。 C。 The time to develop technologies。 D. The update of new devices。BWhen Noah ReadyCampbell was a young adult, he worked for his fathers construction company. Back then, he dreamed of a day when robots might

19、 take over the dirty, repetitive(重復(fù)的)parts of his job, such as earth moving. Years later, ReadyCampbell left his job as an engineer with Google to make that dream come true。ReadyCampbell formed a company called Built Robotics, which develops technology to produce self-driving heavy equipment. ReadyC

20、ampbell says the companys goal is to make construction safer, faster and less costly. The construction industry struggles to find skilled workers and faces a growing number of unfinished projects. But selfoperating machines are changing the nature of building。Workers at Berich Masonry in Englewood,

21、Colorado, recently spent several weeks learning how to operate a robot called SAM, or the Semi-Automated Mason。 SAM is a $400,000 machine from the company Construction Robotics, It can lay 3,000 bricks in eight hours. Thats several times more than a human bricklayer can do in the same period。 But hu

22、mans are still needed to load bricks into the SAM and make sure it works right. Bricklayer Michael Walsh says the SAM lessens the load on his body. But he doesnt think it will take his job.Brian Kennedy agrees, too。 His organization supports the rights of construction workers in the United States an

23、d Canada。 Kennedy says the union is not worried that machines will replace human workers any time soon.The rise of construction robots comes as the building industry faces a severe decrease in labor supply。 One recent study showed that 70 percent of construction businesses have a difficult time find

24、ing skilled workers。 Mike Moy heads a mining operation for the building materials supplier Lehigh Hanson. He says its difficult to find people who even know how to operate some of the necessary equipment. “Nobody wants to get their hands dirty any more. They want a nice, clean job in an office,” he

25、noted。28。 What does the first paragraph say about Noah Ready-Campbell?A. He enjoys doing repetitive work.B。 He is now an employee of Google.C. He used to work in construction field。D。 He joined Google to realize that dream。29. Which of the following is one of the aims of Built Robotics?A. Increasing

26、 construction speed。B。 Enlarging construction quantity.C。 Improving construction designs。D Changing construction steps.30. What can be inferred about SAM from the text?A. It can totally replace human bricklayers.B. It is complexly built but easy to operate.C。 It is unable to work completely automati

27、cally。 D。 It is cheap but works much faster than humans.31. In Mike Moys opinion, what prevents many construction businesses from finding skilled workers?A。 Their low pay. B。 Their potential risks.C. Their heavy work loads.D。 Their poor working conditions.CIf you get your news from social media,you

28、are faced with a daily number of hoaxes(惡搞),rumors,and misleading news.When its all mixed in with reliable information from honest sources,the truth can be very hard to judge.In face,my research teams analysis of data from Columbia Universitys Emergent rumor tracker suggests this false information i

29、s just as likely as to spread crazily as reliable information。Our research shows that in view of the structure of our social networks and our limited attention, it is unavoidable that some popular unconfirmed information will spread quickly, regardless of their quality。 Even if individuals tend to s

30、hare information of higher quality, the networks as a whole is not effective at telling the difference between reliable and fake information. This helps explain all the hoaxes we observe in the wild. Besides, our attention is limited。 If we pay attention to a certain topic, more information on the t

31、opic will be produced. It s cheaper to fake information and pass it off as fact than it is to report actual truth.We can make our fight against false news more efficiently if we better understand how false information spreads. If, for example, robots are responsible for many pieces of the false news

32、, we can focus attention on detecting them.To that end, our lab is building a platform called Hoaxy to track and monitor the spread of unreliable information on social media. That will give us real-world data, with which we can inform our imitated social networks。 Then we can test possible approache

33、s to fight false news。 Hoaxy may also be able to show people how easy it is their opinion to be misrepresent by online information and how likely some of us are to share false news online。 Hoaxy will join a set of tools in our Observatory on Social Media, which allows anyone to see how false informa

34、tion spread on the Internet.。.It is necessary that we spend resources on the study of this phenomenon。 We need all hands on decks:Computer scientists, social scientists, economists, journalists and industry partners mustWork together to flight against the spread of false information。27。What does the

35、 author say about the news from social media?A。Its missed and hard to tell its truth. B。 Its neither true nor worth believing.C。Its all false and misleads us. D.Its reliable and worth believing。28。Some popular unconfirmed information will spread quickly because of_。A.its higher quality and spreading

36、 speed B。its structure of social networks and our limited attentionC。its lower cost of fabrication and passing it of D。the networks not being able to tell the truth effectively.30.Which of the following is NOT the functions of the platform called Hoaxy?A.tracking and monitoring the spread of unrelia

37、ble news on social media.B.testing possible approaches to flight false news。C。helping people to see how true information spread on the internet.D.showing people how easy it is their opinion controlled by online news.31.What is the authors purpose in writing the text?A。To call on people to study and

38、fight against false news together。B.To let all people buy a platform called Hoaxy.C.To warn people how seriously false news spread online.D.To tell people how to prevent false news from spreading。DWhy is it that big life decisionswhether to have kids, marry a specific person, choose one job over ano

39、thercan be so worrying? Obviously, it is because they really matter。 Yet, on closer inspection, that cannot be the whole story. Other decisions “really matter”, too: whether to seek medical help when you break your leg; whether to use a glove to handle an extremely hot dish。 But they are not worryin

40、g at all. They are so straightforward that it sounds strange even to think of them as decisions.Perhaps what makes decisions worrying is that they matter and there is too much uncertainty to know which option to choose. That sounds more reasonable. But as the US psychology professor Tania Lombrozo p

41、oints out, if no single option clearly stands out, then your decision does not much matter。 You could just flip (擲) a coin, or, as Lombrozo puts it: “Hard decisions should be easy.” This is Fredkins paradox(悖論), which can be explained as “The more equally attractive two alternatives seem, the harder

42、 it can be to choose between then。 But, to some degree, the choice can only matter less。Since you are unable to know how things will turn out, overthinking is useless. We worry much, as if hoping through great efforts to see into the future. In the worst case, we end up choosing none of the potentia

43、lly good options, but a very bad one, instead. That applies to the hungry and thirsty donkey (驢), positioned between grass and water, and stays rooted to the spot, thus starving to death。Merely knowing about Fredkins paradox probably will not reduce your tendency to overthinking. But it can provide

44、comfort when a decision turns out to have been bad. You can remind yourself that you truly could not have known. Alan Watts once observed that the process we call “deciding”moving gradually towards a decisionis frequently no such thing。 Rather, it is just a period of flipping back and forth between

45、options, followed by a sudden and semirandom choice. We might as well admit that.32。 The author introduces the topic of the text by _.A。 offering suggestions on how to face dilemmasB。 explaining the reason for peoples worries in lifeC. comparing big life decisions with other decisionsD. throwing dou

46、bt on a theory about decision making33. Which of the following is in line with Fredkins paradox?A。 Sometimes it is not that important what you decide.B. Whatever option you choose is the best one ever。C。 There is not so much certainty about your options。D。 It is easy 1o decide when your options are

47、similar.34。 What is the authors advice when it comes to making big decisions?A。 We should learn from past choices。B. We should stop thinking too much.C. We should carefully weigh each option.D。 We should see into the future through efforts.35。 What would be the best title for the text?A。 What is the

48、 secret of making good decisions?B. It is necessary to know about Fredkins paradoxC。 Remind yourself the random choice really mattersD。 Why do we find it so difficult to make big decisions?.第二節(jié)(共5小題;每小題2分,滿分10分)根據(jù)短文內(nèi)容,從短文后的選項(xiàng)中選出能填入空白處的最佳答案,選項(xiàng)中有兩項(xiàng)為多余選項(xiàng).Leonardo da Vinci and Nature In the modern world

49、, art and science are two very separate activities, but in Leonardos time they were closely connected。 Science meant mathematics and medical studies. 16 Mathematics included practical work like surveying land for making maps as well as measuring the movements of the stars in the sky。 An artist might

50、 need to measure the different parts of the body。 He could also use mathematics to place things in relationship to each other in a drawing or painting so the scene looked correct. 17 Mathematics was also connected to music because musical sounds have a fixed relationship with each other that can be

51、described in numbers. 18 More than this, though, Leonardo believed that numbers were a part of all things in the world, including music, and he said that without them nothing can be done.” ”Nature has kindly given us things everywhere to copy, wrote Leonardo. In all his activities, Leonardo was tryi

52、ng to discover the rules that control nature。 In his search for those rules, he looked very carefully at a lot of examples and details。 Actual experience was more important to him than opinion, and he worked from facts to ideas。 19 His purpose was to examine the world so he could copy it in beautifu

53、l paintings and sculptures. He also wanted to learn from the clever solutions of nature。 20 His quick little sketches, often done while wandering outside, helped him to catch a movement or a shape。 More careful drawings would be done at a desk with a pen and ruler。 In July 2001,a small drawing by Le

54、onardo was sold for 12 million. It was the most expensive drawing in the world. ALeonardo was always drawing. BHow could these be connected with art?CLeonardos ideas were vastly ahead of his time. DMathematicians and doctors worked to discover the unknown. EAbove all, Leonardo wanted to understand h

55、ow and why things worked. FYou will see a good example of such positioning in the painting of The Last Supper。 GLeonardo himself was a very good musician and liked to play an instrument and sing。第三部分 語(yǔ)言知識(shí)運(yùn)用(共兩節(jié),滿分45分)第一節(jié) 完形填空(共20小題;每小題1.5分,滿分30分)閱讀下面短文,從短文后各題所給的A、B、C和D四個(gè)選項(xiàng)中,選出可以填入空白處的最佳選項(xiàng)。Mark Twain

56、 was a famous American writer。 He wrote many stories and many of them were 41 stories。 These stories are still read by many people all over the world. 42 writing, he also liked hunting and fishing very much, so one year he went to 43 for a holiday and spent three very pleasant weeks in the 44 there。

57、When he had to go back home, he drove to the station with his 45 . There he asked a porter to put it into the train. Then he got into the smoking car and 46 in one of the comfortable seats there. The car was 47 when he got in, but a few minutes later, 48 man got in and sat down on the seat opposite

58、his. Mark Twain looked at the man and thought that this man looked quite 49 . However, it would be 50 to say nothing in that situation, 51 he said good morning to the man, and they began to talk。First they talked about the 52 and then they talked about Maine. The stranger said, ”We have some beautif

59、ul woods in Maine。 It would be a 53 to come to Maine without spending some time there。 I suppose you have been in our woods, havent you?” “Yes, I have?!?answered Mark Twain. Ive just 54 three weeks there and I had a very good time, too. And let me tell you something. 55 fishing isnt allowed in Maine

60、 in this season, Ive got two hundred pounds of beautiful fish with my baggage in this train。 I like to eat fish, so I packed it in ice to 56 it home with me。 May I ask who you are, sir?The stranger looked at Mark Twain for several 57 and then answered, ”Im a 58 . My job is to catch people who hunt a

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