1、成都市 2015 级高中毕业班第三次诊断性检测英 语第 I 卷(100 分)第一部分 听力(共两节,满分 30 分)做题时,先将答案标在试卷上。录音内容结束后,你将有两分钟的时间将试卷上的答案转涂到答题卡上。第一节(共 5 小题;每小题 1.5 分,满分 7.5 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,并标在试卷的相应位置。听完每段对话后,你都有 10 秒钟的时间来回答有关小题和阅读下一小题。每段对话仅读一遍。1.What does the boy want to eat?A. Salad. BPizza. C Beans.2. Wher
2、e does the conversation probably take place?A At a clinic. B. In a school. CIn a drug store.3. In what subject does Billy do best?AEnglish. B. Chemistry. C Maths.4.What did the man do last Saturday?AHe got marriedB. He attended a wedding.CHe went to New York.5.How much will the woman pay?A$2.5 B$4.5
3、 C. $5第二节(共 15 小题;每小题 1.5 分,满分 22.5 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,并标在试卷的相应位置。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 至 7 题。6. What day is today?A Wednesday. B.Friday. C.Saturday.7What is the man like?A Worried B.Serious. C.Easy-going.听第 7
4、 段材料,回答第 8 至 9 题。8. What is the probable relationship between the two speakers?AOld friends. BColleagues. CSchoolmates.9.How will the woman go to college probably?A. By car. B. By bicycle. C. On foot.听第 8 段材料,回答第 10 至 12 题。IO. What kind of books does the man like most?A. Detective stories. B. Histor
5、ical novels. C Autobiographies.11. Where does the man get most of his books?A From the local library. BFrom online bookstores. CFrom a street bookstore,12. What is the woman doing?A. Gathering information.B. Discussing reading habits.C. Selling books to passers-by.听第 9 段材料,回答第 13 至 16 题。13. What are
6、 the speakers mainly talking about?A. The Clunese culture. B.The people in China. C A travel experience.14. What impressed the woman most?AThe marketplaces. B.The language, C. Pleasant conversations.15. Why did some local people stare at the woman?A She spoke Chinese well.B. She had a different look
7、.C She came from a special place.16. What has the woman learned about cultures?AChinese are the friendliest people of all cultures.B. People from different cultures all value friendship.C Differences often outweigh similarities between cultures.听第 10 段材料,回答第 17 至 20 题。17. What was the old record bef
8、ore Jeanne Calment?A116. B 118. C120.18. Among Jeannes family members, who lived the longest?A. Her father. B.Her mother. C.Her elder brother.19. What did Jeanne think of chocolate?AIt wasnt healthy. B.he helped her live longer. CIt made her comfortable20. What contributes most to Jeannes long life?
9、A She loved her life. BShe did sports a lot. C.She married a rich man第二部分 阅读理解(共两节,满分 40 分)第一节(共 15 小题;每小题 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。AThere are dozens of movie recommendation engines on the Web. Theyre all different, but some are definitely better than others.Rott
10、en TomatoesInstead of telling Rotten Tomatoes which films you like, you can tell it what kind of films you enjoy, which actors you want to see, and other standards to help it find the best movie for you, There-s a lot of variability in the quality of Rotten Tomatoes recommendations but its also a ni
11、ce way to find the right film for any mood.NetflixNetflix asks you to rate(评级)movies to determine which films youll want to see next. And although it does make it easy to rate movies and it does return huge lists, the ideas it gives you arent all that strong. It-s easy to use, but its not the best w
12、ay to get movie recommendations.JinniWhether you want to search for films based on your mood, time available, or reviews, the site has it all. But Jinnis most amazing feature is its semantic search You can enter terms Iike, “movies that have gangsters“ or “films that show Chris Farley yelling“ and t
13、he site will return films that match your question. Go use Jinni. You won-t regret it! CritickerInstead of just allowing you to rank films, Criticker compares your ratings to those of other users and see how closely your tastes match those of other users. Once the service finds matches, you can view
14、 other users lists and see which movies they like. 21. What makes Criticker special?A. Comparing users ratings. B. Ranking your favourite films.C. Offering different standards, D. Finding films based on mood.22. Which one does the author recommend most?ANetflix. BJinnLC. Criticker. D. Rotten Tomatoe
15、s.23. What is the purpose of the text?A.To recommend the best movies online.B.To show how to use movie search engines.C.To introduce several movie search engines.D.To explain how to find the best movies online.B“A bird with a broken wing will never fly as high. ” Im sure T. J, Ware was made to feel
16、this way almost every day in school.By high school, T, J. was the most celebrated troublemaker in his town. Teachers literally cringed when they saw his name posted on their classroom lists.I met T. J. for the first time when all the students at school were attending ACE training. At first, he showe
17、d no interest in the discussion. But slowly, the interactive games drew him in. T. J. had some brilliant thoughts on those situations, which were welcomed by his group. By the end of the activity, the other students on the team were impressed with his concern and ideas and elected T. J. co-chairman
18、of the team.When T. J. showed up at school on Monday morning, a group of teachers were expressing their disagreements to the school principal about his being elected co-chairman. The principal reminded them that the purpose of the program was to uncover any positive feeling and strengthen its practi
19、ce until true change can take place. The teachers left the meeting, firmly convinced that failure was unavoidable.Two weeks later, T. J. and his friends led a group of 70 students to collect food They collected a school record: 2,854 cans of food in just two hours. The local newspaper covered the ev
20、ent with a full-page article the next day. That newspaper story was posted on the main bulletin board at school, where everyone could see it. T. J. ,s picture was up there for doing something great.T. J. started showing up at school every day and answered questions from teachers for the first time.
21、The event he started now yields 9,000 cans of food in one day, taking care of 70 percent of the need for food for one year.T, J. reminds us that a bird with a broken wing only needs mending. But once it has healed, it can fly higher than the rest. T. J. got a job. He became productive. He is flying
22、quite nicely these days.24, What do we know about T.J. before he attended the training?A. He was talkative in class.B. He didnt have a good fame.C. His ideas were quite impressive.D. He showed up at school every day.25. Why did the team members elect T.J. co-chairman?A He promised them a bright futu
23、re.B. They wanted to offer him a chance.C. They thought the job was quite easy.D. He was considered qualified for the job.26. What do we know about peoples attitude towards T. J. s being elected?A. Uncaring. B. Favorable. C. Controversial. D. Doubtful.27. What does the author try to convey with this
24、 story?A. No pain, no gain.B. Rome wasnt built in a day.C. Dont judge a book by its cover.D. Treat others as you want to be treated.CThe philosopher Robert Nozick used the idea of an “experience machine“ to refute the view that good experiences are all we want from life. He thought that most of us w
25、ould not choose the machine and prefer reality. “But why?“ he encouraged us to askThere was no such thing as virtual(虚拟的) reality(VR) when he was writing. But now we can give ourselves computer generated experiences that are like the real thing. The question raised by Nozick has become a real issue.
26、 Why should you prefer the trouble and expense of actually visiting Angkor Wat or Niagara Falls when you can get all the experiences of being there by putting on goggles and a body suit?One answer is that the emotions you feel when you have a virtual experience are not as valuable. When you actually
27、 see Niagara Falls, you feel awe and even fear in the face of an overpowering force of nature. Being in the presence of something that causes you these feelings is part of the pleasure.Visiting a virtual Niagara Falls may also cause you feelings of awe and fear but they are cheapened by your knowled
28、ge that the danger is not real and that your mind is being tricked into thinking that it is.Reality also holds a potential for making discoveries that virtual reality lacks. Those who visit Angkor Wat hope to see more than they expected from tourist information, perhaps even discover what have been
29、missed. Computer simulations(模拟) , however good, contain only what have been put into them.There is a further reason for preferring a real experience. Real experiences connect us to the deeds of past people and place us in contexts where history was made. Viewing an actual painting by Rembrandt is a
30、 more valuable experience than viewing a copy, however good. The genuine painting was the work of the man himself. We see his brush strokes on the canvas. We are in the presence of genius.Virtual reality can take us to places we can never go. It can be exciting, amusing and a good way of spending le
31、isure time. But it will never be a substitute for connections with the real thing.28. What does the underlined word “refute“ in Paragraph l mean?A Contradict. B. Express.C. Prove. D. Correct,29. What does the author think of virtual reality?A. It can benefit people in certain aspects.B. It will be s
32、mart enough to satisfy our needs.C. It cannot cause feelings of fear or happiness.D. It cannot help us understand what has happened30. How many reasons are mentioned to support the preference for reality?A. Two. B.Three. C. Four. D. Five.31. Which of the following is the best title for the text?A. W
33、hat VR Cannot OfferB. How VR Changes Our lifeC. How VR Is Different from RealityD. Why VR Cannot Match the Real ThingDFeathers are not just for flight. They keep birds warm and attract mates. And for one Australian bird, feathers even help produce an important sound-an alarm.“People had long noticed
34、 these birds produced these loud sounds. ” Trevor Murray, a researcher at the Australian National University said. “My supervisor Rob Magrath and May Hingee thought they were used as an alarm. So they did some playbacks and they could show quite strongly that if you play back these sounds to other b
35、irds, they lee straightaway. So I was really interested in how they produce the sound, whether it is actually a signal, and whether its a reliable signal. “The team focused their experiment on specific feathers in the pigeons wing. “We were able to target(目标) the eighth primary feather, which is unu
36、sually narrow. And then we also removed, on different sets of birds, those neighboring feathers, the ninth primary feather and the seventh primary feather. And we were able to see when the eighth primary feather was missing, the high note had completely disappeared. So the eighth primary feather pro
37、duced that high note and the ninth primary feather actually produced the low note. “And if the birds are fleeing from danger, they produce a louder and higher sound than they do during a normal takeoff. The study is in the journal Current Biology.Murray and his colleagues did another experiment wher
38、e they used the recordings they made to observe the reactions of other pigeons. “We were able to see the unusual eighth primary feather was important for signaling alarm. When that eighth primary feather was missing, they very rarely responded. They almost never fled. Whereas when that ninth primary
39、 produces the sound, they fled just as much as to normal alarms. This shows us this unusual primary feather is important for signaling alarm. “That makes birds of a feather flee together.32. What does the underlined word 64they“ in Paragraph 2 refer to?A. The birds. B. Rob and May.C. The feathers. D
40、. The loud sounds.33. What did Rob Magrath and May Hingee find out about the birds?A. They fly away as a group.B. They produce different notes.C. They send alarms with feathers.D. They attract mates with feathers.34. Why did the team remove different feathers?A. To record the notes they produce.B. T
41、o keep the pigeons stay in cages.C. To compare their width and length.D. To observe other pigeons reactions.35. According to Murray and his colleagues, why does the unusual feather matter most?A. It keeps the pigeons warm. B. It responds to alarms.C. It helps birds fly more quickly. D. It sounds ala
42、rms of danger.第二节(共 5 小题;每小题 2 分,满分 10 分)根据短文内容,从短文后的选项中选出能填入空白处的最佳选项,选项中有两项为多余选项。Do you spend too much on coffee? Clothing? Eating out? Adding your spending craziness to ado-not-buy list can keep money in your wallet, according to a writer Sarah Winfrey.A do-not-buy list is a list of items youre no
43、t going to buy for a certain period of time, according to Winfrey. 36 . She has a few tips on how to create your own do-not-buy list.37 Do you always have to have a coffee on your way to work? Are you always the first in line to buy the newest fashion? Understanding your needs will help you figure o
44、ut which items should be on the top of your list.Track your spending. If you spend$6 a day on coffee, you probably already know what needs to go on your list. But if youre not sure, you may need to go through your bank statements to figure it out. 38 .Don-t cut yourself off completely._39 ,but only
45、if its absolutely necessary. For example, if clothing is on your list but you need a new suit for a job interview, you should probably make an exception.40 When youve saved enough and youre ready to start shopping again, establish spending rules that will control impulse(冲动的)buying. For example, if
46、you love coffee, make a rule that you can only buy one each day.AKnow your desireBHave some guidelinesC. Keep track of your emotional stateD. The aim of it is to help you save moneyE If the answer is yes, you need to stop doing soF. Its OK to purchase something on your do-not-buy listG. Doing so wil
47、l give you insight into habits you might not be aware of第三部分 语言知识运用(共两节,满分 45 分)第一节完形填空(共 20 小题;每小题 1.5 分,满分 30 分)阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的四个选项(A 、B、C 和 D)中选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。I asked my grandpa what it feels like to grow old. He took a sip .of tea and _ 41 ,“Have you ever been in a hot 42 when the wa
48、ter ran 43 ?“ I told him I had.“Thats what 44 feels like,“ he said. “In the beginning of life, its like youre taking a hot shower. _ 45 , the water is too warm. but you get used to the 46 and begin enjoying it. When youre young, you think its going to be this way forever. But life goes on like this 47 . “You begin to _48 it somewhere between your 40s and 50s. The water temperature drops just the slightest bit.