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1、2004年天津高考英语真题及答案第一部分:听力(共两节,满分30分)略第二部分:英语知识运用(共两节,满分45分)第一节:单项填空(共15小题,每小题1分,满分15分)21. How often do you eat out ? , but usually once a week. A. Have no ideaB. It dependsC. As usualD. Generally speaking22. Stand over there youll be able to see it better. A. or B. while C. but D. and23. Helen was muc
2、h kinder to her youngest son than to the others, , of course, made the others envy him. A. who B. that C. what D. which24. When he left college, he got a job as reporter in a newspaper office. A. 不填;a B. 不填;the C. a ; the D. the ; the25. Happy birthday, Alice ! So you have twenty-one already!A. beco
3、me B. turned C. grown D. passed26. I keep medicines on the top shelf, out of the childrens .A. reach B. hand C. hold D. place27. Mr. Smith used to smoke but he has given it up. A. seriously B. heavily C. badly D. hardly28. What were you doing when Tony phoned you ? I had just finished my work and to
4、 take a shower. A. had started B. started C. have started D. was starting29. I got the story from Tom and people who had worked with him. A. every other B. many others C. some other D. other than30. It is easy to do the repair, you need is a hammer and some nails. A. Something B. All C. Both D. Ever
5、ything31. Who is the girl standing over there ? Well, if you know, her name is Mabel. A. may B. can C. must D. shall32. It was evening we reached the little town of Winchester. A. that B. until C. since D. before33. It was not a serious illness, and she soon it. A. got over B. got on with C. got aro
6、und D. got out of34. Dont leave the water while you brush your teeth.A. run B. running C. being run D. to run35. A modern city has been set up in was a wasteland ten years ago. A. what B. which C. that D. where第二节:完形填空(共20小题,每小题1.5分,满分30分)阅读下面短文,掌握其大意,然后从3655各题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。It w
7、as the district sports meet. My foot still hadnt healed(痊愈)from a(n) 36 injury. I had 37 whether or not I should attend the meet. But there I was, 38 for the 3,000-meter run. “Ready set ” The gun popped and we were off. The other girls rushed 39 me. I felt 40 as I fell farther and farther behind. “H
8、ooray!” shouted the crowd. It was the loudest 41 I had ever heard at a meet. The first-place runner was two laps(圈)ahead of me when she crossed the finish line. “Maybe I should 42,” I thought as I moved on. 43 , I decided to keep going. During the last two laps, I ran 44 and decided not to 45 in tra
9、ck next year. It wouldnt be worth it, 46 my foot did heal. When I finished, I heard a cheer 47 than the one Id heard earlier. I turned around and 48 , the boys were preparing for their race. “They must be cheering for the boys.” I was leaving 49 several girls came up to me. “Wow, youve got courage!”
10、 one of them told me. “Courage? I just 50 a race!” I thought. “I would have given up on the first lap,” said another girl. “We were cheering for you. Did you hear us”Suddenly I regained 51 . I decided to 52 track next year. I realized strength and courage arent always 53 in medals and victories, but
11、 in the 54 we overcome(战胜). The strongest people are not always the people who win, 55 the people who dont give up when they lose. 36. A. slighterB. worseC. earlierD. heavier37. A. expectedB. supposedC. imaginedD. doubted38. A. lateB. eagerC. readyD. thirsty39. A. from behindB. ahead ofC. next toD.
12、close to40. A. ashamedB. astonishedC. excitedD. frightened41. A. cheerB. shoutC. cryD. noise42. A. slow downB. drop outC. go onD. speed up43. A. ThereforeB. OtherwiseC. BesidesD. However44. A. with delightB. with fearC. in painD. in advance45. A. playB. arriveC. raceD. attend46. A. even ifB. only if
13、C. unlessD. until47. A. weakerB. longerC. lowerD. louder48. A. well enoughB. sure enoughC. surprisingly enoughD. strangely enough49. A. whileB. whenC. asD. since50. A. finishedB. wonC. passedD. lost51. A. cheerB. hopeC. interestD. experience52. A. hold onB. turn toC. begin withD. stick with53. A. me
14、asuredB. praisedC. testedD. increased54. A. sadnessB. strugglesC. diseasesD. tiredness55. A. orB. norC. andD. but第三部分:阅读理解(共20小题,每小题2分,满分40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,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。AMonarch butterflies(黑脉金斑蝶)are a common summer sight in the northern United States and Canada. These large orange
15、and black insects brighten parks and gardens as they fly lightly among the flowers. What makes monarchs particularly interesting is that they migrate(迁飞)all the way to California or Mexico and back. They are thought to be the only insect that does this.Every year in the late summer monarchs begin th
16、eir journey to the south. Those heading for Mexico go first for the Louisiana-Mississippi area, then fly across the Gulf of Mexico into Texas. Once in Mexico, they settle themselves in one of about fifteen places in a mountain forest filled with fir trees. Each place provides a winter home for milli
17、ons of monarchs. The butterflies are so many that they often cover entire trees. When spring comes, they begin their long journey north. The question is often asked whether every butterfly makes the round-trip journey every year. And the answer is no. The average monarch lives about nine months. So
18、one flying north might lay eggs in Louisiana and then die. The eggs of that generation may be found in Kentucky; the eggs of the next generation may end up in Wisconsin or Michigan. The last generation of the season, about the fourth, will make their way back to Mexico and restart the journey. Scien
19、tists learn about monarchs migration by catching and making marks on the insects. By recatching a monarch with such a mark and noticing where it came from, the next scientist can get to know things like the butterflys age and its routing(路线).56. One of the places where monarchs spend the winter is .
20、A. the Gulf of Mexico B. an area in MississippiC. a forest in Mexico D. a plain in Texas57. The routing of monarchs migration can be learned .A. by examining the marks made on themB. by collecting their eggs in the mountains C. by comparing their different agesD. by counting the dead ones in the for
21、ests58. What is the subject discussed in the passage ?A. Migration of monarchs. B. Scientists interest in monarchs. C. Winter home of monarchs. D. Life and death of monarchs. BSYDNEY: As they sat sharing sweets beside a swimming pool in 1999, Shane Gould and Jessicah Schipper were simply getting alo
22、ng well, chatting about sport, life and “anything else that came up.”Yet in Sydney next month, they will meet again by the pool, and for a short time the friends will race against each other in the 50-meter butterfly(蝶泳)in the Australian championships at Homebush Bay. Gould, now a 47-year-old mother
23、 of four, has announced she will be making a return to elite competition(顶级赛事)to swim the one event, having set a qualifying(合格的)time of 30.32 seconds in winning gold at last years United States Masters championships. Her comeback comes 32 years after she won three golds at the Munich Olympics. Schi
24、pper, now a 17-year-old from Brisbane with a bright future of going to Athens for her first Olympics, yesterday recalled her time with Gould five years ago. “I was at a national youth came on the Gold Coast and Shane had come along to talk to us and watch us train,” Schipper explained. “It seemed as
25、 if we had long been good friends. I dont know why. We just started talking and it went from there.”“She had a lot to share with all of us at that camp. She told us stories about what it was like at big meets like the Olympics and what its like to be on an Australian team. It was really interesting.
26、”Next time, things will be more serious. “I will still be swimming in the 50m butterfly at the nationals, so there is a chance that I could actually be competing against Shane Gould,” said Schipper, who burst onto the scene at last years national championships with second places in the 100m and 200m
27、 butterfly. 59. What is the passage mainly about?A. Stories happening in swimming competitions. B. Two women swimmers winning Olympic golds. C. Lessons learned from international swimming championships. D. Friendship and competition between two swimmers. 60. Gould and Schipper are going to .A. talk
28、about sport and life B. go back to elite competitionC. set a qualifying time and win gold D. take part in the same sports event61. Gould won her three Olympic golds when she was .A. 15 B. 17 C. 22 D. 3062. The underlined word “it” in the fifth paragraph probably refers to .A. the Olympics B. the you
29、th camp C. the friendship D. the Australian team63. What Schipper said showed that she .A. was no longer Goulds friend B. had learned a lot from GouldC. was not interested in Goulds stories D. would not like to compete against GouldCWith a good shopping position and the right amount(数量)of money, any
30、 educated person ought to be able to make a living out of a bookshop. It is not a difficult trade to learn and the large chain-stores can never force the small bookseller out of existence as they have done to the corner shop. But the hours of work are very long. I was only doing a part-time job, but
31、 my boss put in a seventy-hour week, besides regular journeys out of shopping hours to buy books. The real reason why I should not like to be back in the book trade for life, however, is that while I was in it I lost my love of books. A bookseller cannot always tell the truth about his books, and th
32、at gives him a dislike for them. There was a time when I really did love booksloved the sight and smell and feel of themif they were fifty or more years old, that is. Nothing pleased me quite so much as to buy a bargain lot of them on sale for several pounds. There is a peculiar flavour(独特的味道)about
33、the unexpected books you pick up in that kind of collection: little-known eighteenth-century poets, or out-of-date geography books. For occasional reading in your bath, for example, or late at night when you are too tired to go to bedthere is nothing as good as a very old picture story-book. But as
34、soon as I went to work in the bookshop I stopped buying books. Seen in a mass of five or ten thousand at a time, books were dull and even a little tiresome. Nowadays I do buy one occasionally, but only if it is a book that I want to read and cant borrow, and I never buy rubbish. 64. According to the
35、 passage, is one of the necessary conditions to run a bookshop. A. an educated shop-owner B. a good position at a street corner C. a regular journey out of the shop D. the force of large chain-stores65. The author should not like to be back as a bookseller for life because .A. he hated his job of se
36、lling books B. selling books was only a part-time jobC. the books in the shop gave him a dislike D. he was unable to be honest about the books he sold66. The books preferred by the author should be those .A. stories making readers sleepless B. valuable ones bought on saleC. peculiar ones with great
37、expectation D. geography ones from the eighteenth century67. The author will only buy new books .A. if he feels dull and tired B. after he gives up his job as a booksellerC. which are interesting but hard to borrow D. when he throws away old onesDMillions of aircraft take off around the world every
38、year. The skies they fly in seem limitless miles of empty space. But, with the number of flights increasing each year, this emptiness no longer exists. Researchers in the world of aviation(航空)are worried about the increasing pressure on pilots and ground controllers. And increasing collisions, occur
39、ring at or near an airport, have called attention to the need for more aids(辅助设备)to aviation control. People who travel the skies are not certain about air safety. A great deal of money is spent on new and bigger aircraft and airports to deal with the vast increase in passengers travelling by air. O
40、nly a small percentage of this money is spent on navigation(导航)and other aids. Actually, suitable electronic equipment has long existed, and many companies market safety aids designed to make it safer for aircraft to take off, fly any distance, and land, whatever the weather. Yet, there are two prob
41、lems to be solved. The first is to get governments, airlines and airport officials to agree to basic levels of safety aids. The second problem is to find a way of meeting these basic requirements. But no matter how well the equipment works, operators of the equipment still play an important role. Co
42、mmunications between pilots and ground controllers are extremely important to air safety. It is worth pointing out that the mishearing or misunderstanding of instructions in English, and the use of another language, in an international conversation, have led to two recent aircraft accidents. A new t
43、ype of instrument(仪器)called FLIGHTWATCH would help pilots prevent airport collisions. It would be particularly helpful near airports. 68. The increasing number of flights leads to the fact that .A. flying is no longer limited in the skyB. there is no empty space for aids to aviation controlC. piloti
44、ng and controlling planes is getting more difficult D. the pressure on the ground becomes greater69. There is uncertainty about air safety because .A. planes become bigger for the increasing number of passengersB. money spent on electronic equipment is far from enoughC. suitable electronic equipment
45、 hasnt been invented yetD. it is dangerous for planes to take off or land70. The underlined word “collisions” probably means .A. accidents in which two planes hit each other B. misunderstandings between pilots and ground controllersC. quarrels among passengersD. breakdowns of new types of instrument71. It can be inferred from the passage that .A. governments and officials have paid great attention to air safetyB. there should be more companies to sell new safety aidsC. English should be used in an international conversationD. understanding between pilots and ground controllers shoul
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