1、吉林省重点中学届高三英语月考试题吉林省重点中学2020届高三英语12月月考试题 第一部分 听力(共两节,满分30分)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。 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. How does the man probably feel?A. C. Happy.Regretful. B. Nervous.2. Where does the conversation probably take place?A. C. In a re
2、staurant.At home. B. In a hospital.3. How much do two shirts cost?A. C. $60.$40. B. $50.4. Why does the woman want to sell her car?A. To pay her school fees.B. To protect the environment,C. To practice riding a bike well.5. What can we know about Jennifer?A. C. She is honest.She likes talking. B. Sh
3、e lives hard.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。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、7题。6. What does the woman advise the man to do?A. Go skiing with her.B. Visit Zhangjiakou together.C. Celebrate the Spring Festival.7. Wha
4、t are the speakers mainly talking about?A. C. A festival.A working schedule. B. A trip.听第7段材料,回答第8、9题。8. When does the woman find her suitcase lost?A. When she got out of the toiletB. Before she went to the cafe.C After she read newspapers.9. What is the woman asked to do at last?A. Fill in the form
5、. B. Leave her ID card.听第8段材料,回答第10至12题。10. What does the man say about the topics?A. They were disturbing. B. They were difficult. IL What made attendants dissatisfied?A. The restaurant they ate in.B. The people they worked with.C. The organization of the conference.12. What will the man do next?A.
6、 Find an restaurant. B. Make coffee. 听第9段材料,回答第13至16题。13. What was the mans problem?A. He failed the exam.B. He missed his old friends.C. He had no pocket money.14. What does the man think of the club?A. It helped him a lotB. It took up much of his time.C. It earned him lots of money.15. Why does th
7、e man suggest a letter box outside the club?A. To attract more people to visit the club.B. To keep in touch with the woman.C. To make the club more popular.16. What is the probable relationship between the speakers?A. Mother and son. B. Close friends.听第10段材料,回答第17至20题。17. When will the Beijing 2022
8、Winter Olympic Games end?A. On February 12. B. On February 20.18. Where was the 1980 Winter Olympic Games held?A, In America. B. In France.19. Who won the first gold medal in Winter Games?A. Ye Qiaobo. B. Yang Yang.20. C Hand in her name tag.C They were interesting.C. Drink tea.C. Teacher and studen
9、t.C On February 24.C. In Russia.C Zhou Yang.How many silver medals did China win at the 2020 Winter Olympic Games?A. Four. B. Three. C. Two.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A、B、C和D四个选项中,选出最佳选项。AFour Citizen-science ProjectsClimate change is difficult to handle, but this doesnt
10、mean people are just sitting on the sidelines waiting for the unavoidable. Everyone can join in fighting climate change. Scistarter and Zooniverse are two websites that list citizen-science proj ects in which you can take part. Here are some of them: MeadoWatchThis project, out of the University of
11、Washington, is looking at how climate change is affecting wildflowers on Mount Rainier. Volunteers collect data along hiking tracks about when wildflowers bud, flower? fruit and produce seeds. The project is also collecting photos of wildflowers from across Mount Rainier National Park. Great Backyar
12、d Bird CountFor four days every February, volunteers around the world count birds in 15 minutes. These observations can be made anywhere, including your own backyard. The counts provide scientists snapshots of data on where birds are found and how many there are. Since the count has been going on fo
13、r over 20 years 9 researchers can now answer questions about how these patterns may be changing with time. Water Monitoring in MinnesotaResidents(居民)of Minnesota can sign up to be a volunteer water monitor for the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency. Volunteers are arranged to a lake or stream. Twice
14、 a month during the summer, they take measurements of water clarity. Those data let the government see whether water clarity has been changing over time as well as assess the health of those waterways. RedmapGretta Peel is a marine (海的)ecologist in Australia at the University of Tasmania in Hobart.
15、She studies where marine species(物种)are moving in response to climate change. She set up a program called Redmap. It asks people to report uncommon marine species theyve seen in Australian waters. We wanted to have an early indication of what species were moving where they live, she explains.21. Whi
16、ch proj ect should be most appealing to people interested in wildflowers?A. Redmap. B. MeadoWatch.C. Great Backyard Bird Count D. Water Monitoring in Minnesota.22. What are you required to do if you take part in Water Monitoring in Minnesota?A. Educate local people on bird behavior.B. Explore causes
17、 of your local climate problems.C. Collect relevant data and even report them.D. Protect the local water from pollution.23. What is the similarity among the four projects?A. They are started by famous universities.B. They aim to raise environmental awareness.C. They are mainly open to environmentali
18、stsD. They focus on fighting climate change.BAs I was leaving the gym last week, I greeted a friend who was coming in. He responded without looking up from his phone. I stood there for a few awkward seconds 9 hoping for eye contact. He finally looked up briefly, apologetically, before returning to t
19、he screen. I walked on, feeling shaken.It turns out I was phubbed, which is a term for snubbing (冷落)someone in favor of a phone. And research has found that phubbing does have negative (消极的)impacts on personal relationships 9 reducing the quality of communication and level of satisfaction.Recently T
20、ve noticed that its impossible to go out with friends and have their attention for the whole time. Therere always phones on the table, and theyre constantly being checked. When the slightest pause in conversation arises, or if someone gets up from the table briefly? people seize their phones to chec
21、k in with the rest of the world to see what else is going on.It used to be that going out together was confidence-boosting solid reassurance (安慰) that another person enjoyed your company9 otherwise they wouldnt accept but not now. Now? youre constantly attracting attention, competing with a portable
22、 supercomputer. When someone is looking at their phone, youre never sure if they actually want to be with you.The modern-day equivalent of this is scrolling (滚屏)and texting. Although I didnt realize it at the time, I was trying for connection with the friend, who was attracted by it refusing to put
23、away his phone and made me feel awfuLI dont want to be that person. I dont want my actions to make anyone feel the way I did that day. So from now on Im going to make a point of not letting digital distractions damage the relationships I hold so dear. It s not worth it. Nothing on that screen is eve
24、r more important than the person standing right in front of me.24. Why does the author describe his greeting with a friend in the gym last week?A. To introduce what phubbing is. B. To show the misuse of phones.G To draw the readers attention. D. To voice his opinion about phubbing.25. What is the th
25、ird paragraph mainly about?A. Phones are bad for communication. B. Phones are used widely in the world.C. Phubbing is making people suffer. D. Phubbing is a common phenomenon.26. What will happen when youre snubbing someone according to the author?A. People will enjoy your company. B. You will lose
26、the trust of others.C. You will damage others confidence. D. People will feel truly connected.27. What does the word it underlined in paragraph 5 refer to?A. Being companied. B. Scrolling and texting.C. The table. D. The phone.Has the volume(音量)in a restaurant ever made you finish your meal early? I
27、f so, youre not alone. Restaurants handle diners in various ways to influence food choices and consumption 9 from lighting to menu to server presentation. Unfortunately for those headache prone restaurant goers? some places also choose to tum up the tunes and the background noise.Chef Mario Batali i
28、s often blamed for the phenomenon of ultra-loud or noisy restaurants in the 1990s, when he decided to flood the dining room with the same loud tunes he was playing in his kitchen. And other chefs followed suit. Some restaurateurs felt a livelier atmosphere encouraged more customers 9 but a side bene
29、fit was quicker table turnover, thus increasing the number of people who could dine in a specific evening.A 1985 study out of Fairfield University looked at how chewing speed varied according to the type of music being played. Although the volume level was kept the same for both musical situations 9
30、 its important to note that fast-tempo (节奏)music often gives the impression of being louder than slower music.A significant increase in the number of bites per minute was found, and the effect was largest for fast music, the researchers wrote in the study. So, the faster, louder music gets people to
31、 down their food more quickly, relieving the table for future customers.Therere opinions about whether or not this is a sound practice. A restaurant that places profit above dining experience often plays loud music with a fast tempo that puts diners under pressure to eat more quickly, even if that m
32、eans theyre less able to enjoy their meal, writes Dr. Neel Burton in Psychology Today, adding that loud, fast music reduces appetite.Whats more? some would-be repeat diners will shy away for fear of another ultra-loud meal. The non-profit group Action on Hearing Loss found in a 2020 survey of nearly 1,500 people that 91% of those who view a restaurant as too noisy would choose not to re