最新2019学年高二英语下学期期末考试试题(实验班)新人教版.doc
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1、120192019 学年下学期期末考试学年下学期期末考试高二(实验班)英语试卷高二(实验班)英语试卷时间:120分钟满分:150分第第卷卷 ( (共共 7979 分分) )第一部分:听力第一部分:听力(共 20 题;每小题 1 分, 满分 20 分)第一节听下面 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 is the man holding?A. A tool. B. A ladder. C. A new light.2. Wh
2、at does the man suggest the woman do?A. Leave soon.B. Pay her gas bill. C. Get some tests done.3. What is the woman doing?A. Attending a class. B. Doing her homework. C. Helping the man with math.4. What can we learn from the conversation?A. The car is in perfect condition.B. The car can be fixed on
3、 time.C. The man cant fix the car.5. What should the man do to find the glasses store?A. Look in the parking lot.B. Turn right at the fountain.C. Walk through the pet shop.第二节听下面 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
4、。2听第 6 段材料,回答第 6、7 题。6. What happened to the man?A. He lost his job.B. He failed a test.C. He taught a class in college.7. Who is the man talking with?A. His boss. B. His teacher. C. His classmate.听第 7 段材料,回答第 8、9 题。8. Which city are the speakers in?A. San Francisco. B. San Diego. C. Los Angeles.9.
5、What is the woman waiting for?A. A train. B. Her jacket. C. A report.听第 8 段材料,回答第 10 至 12 题。10. Why is the woman upset?A. The man didnt call. B. The man didnt turn up. C. The man didnt apologize. 11. Who is the man probably speaking to?A. A waitress. B. A professor. C. A doctor.12. When will the spe
6、akers meet?A. This afternoon. B. On Thursday. C. On Tuesday. 听第 9 段材料,回答第 13 至 16 题。13. What kind of meat does the man usually put in his sandwich?A. Turkey. B. Beef. C. Ham.14. What did the woman do this morning? A. She baked a cake. B. She ate some chocolate. C. She made cheeseburgers. 15. Why is
7、the woman being very nice today?A. She had extra time.B. She was in the mood to cook.3C. She wants the man to take her to the movies.16. How does the man feel about romance movies? A. Boring. B. Funny. C. Wonderful听第 10 段材料,回答第 17 至 20 题。17. What is the speakers favorite Will Smith movie?A. Bad Boys
8、. B. Men in Black.C. The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. 18. How did the speaker first learn about Will Smith?A. As a producer.B. As a TV star.C. As a movie star.19. When did Parents Just Dont Understand come out?A. In the mid-1990s. B. In the early 1990s. C. In the late 1980s.20. What award has Will Smith
9、 won four times?A. The Golden Globes.B. Grammys.C. Oscars.第二部分第二部分 阅读理解阅读理解(共两节, 满分 29 分) 第一节第一节 (共 12 小题;每小题 2 分, 满分 24 分)A AScience is finally beginning to hug animals who were, for a long time, considered second-class citizens.As Annie Potts of Canterbury University has noted, chickens distinguis
10、h among one hundred chicken faces and recognize familiar individuals even after months of separation. When given problems to solve, they reason: hens trained to pick colored buttons sometimes choose to give up an immediate food reward for a slightly later (and better) one. Healthy hens may aid frien
11、ds, and mourn when those friend die.Pigs respond meaningfully to human symbols. When a research team led by Candace Croney at Penn State University carried wooden blocks marked with X and O symbols around pigs, only the O carriers offered food to the animals. The pigs soon ignored the X carriers in
12、favor of the Os. Then the team switched 4from real-life objects to T-shirts printed with X or O symbols. Still, the pigs walked only toward the O-shirted people: they had transferred their knowledge to a two-dimensional format, a not inconsiderable skill of reasoning.Ive been guilty of prejudiced op
13、inions, myself. At the start of my career almost four decades ago, I was firmly convinced that monkeys and apes out-think and out-feel other animals. Theyre other primates(灵长目动物), after all, animals from our own mammal class. Fairly soon, I came to see that along with our closest living relatives, w
14、hales too are masters of cultural learning, and elephants express profound joy and mourning with their social companions. Long-term studies in the wild on these mammals helped to fuel a viewpoint shift in our society: the public no longer so easily accepts monkeys made to go through painful procedur
15、e in laboratories, elephants forced to perform in circuses, and dolphins kept in small tanks at theme parks.Over time, though, as I began to broaden out even further and explore the inner lives of fish, chickens, pigs, goats, and cows, I started to wonder: Will the new science of “food animals“ brin
16、g an ethical (伦理的) revolution in terms of who we eat? In other words, will our ethics start to catch up with the development of our science?Animal activists are already there, of course, committed to not eating these animals. But what about the rest of us? Can paying attention to the thinking and fe
17、eling of these animals lead us to make changes in who we eat?1. According to Annie Potts, hens have the ability of_.A. interaction B. analysis C. creation D. abstraction2. The research into pigs shows that pigs_.A. learn letters quickly B. have a good eyesightC. can build up a good relationship D. c
18、an apply knowledge to new situations3. Paragraph 4 is mainly about_.A. the similarities between mammals and humans B. the necessity of long-term studies on mammals5C. a change in peoples attitudes towards animals D. a discovery of how animals express themselves4. What might be the best title for the
19、 passage?A. The Inner Lives of Food Animals. B. The Lifestyles of Food Animals.C. Science Reports on Food Animals. D. A Revolution in Food Animals.B BSome of the best research on daily experience is rooted in rates of positive and negative interactions, which has proved that being blindly positive o
20、r negative can cause others to be frustrated or annoyed or even to tune out.Over the last two decades, scientists have made remarkable predictions simply by watching people interact with one another and then scoring the conversations based on the rate of positive and negative interactions. Researche
21、rs have used the findings to predict everything from the likelihood that a couple will divorce to the chances of a work team with high customer satisfaction and productivity levels.More recent research helps explain why these brief exchanges matter so much. When you experience negative emotions as a
22、 result of criticism or rejection, for example, your body produces higher levels of the stress hormone, which shuts down much of your thinking and activates conflict and defense mechanisms (机制). You suppose that situations are worse than they actually are.When you experience a positive interaction,
23、it activates a very different response. Positive exchanges increase your bodys production of oxytocin(后叶催产素), a feel-good that increases your ability to communicate with, cooperate with and trust others. But the effects of a positive occurrence are less dramatic and lasting than they are for a negat
24、ive one.We need at least three to five positive interactions to outweigh every one negative exchange. Bad moments simply outweigh good ones. Whether youre 6having a conversation, keep this simple short cut in mind: At least 80 percent of your conversations should be focused on whats going right.Work
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