关于举行广州市英语高考模拟试题命题比赛的通 知 各区县教研室、高中英语科(教研)组: 为促进各校高三备课组更深入地研究高考,加强高三英语备考工作的针对性和实效性,提高我市英语高考成绩,经研究决定在全市高三年级英语教师中举行“英语高考模拟试题命题评比活动”。现将各项要求通知如下: 一、 参评对象:全市各高中学校(含民办学校)高三英语教师或高三年级英语备课组。 二、 评比要求: 1、高三教师个人及备课组需进一步认真研究新课程标准、高考考试说明(广东卷)和07、08年广东英语高考试题,领会其精神和要求,明确广东英语高考的命题原则、思路和方向。 2、按照各自对广东英语高考的命题方向和命题角度的理解,以07、08年广东英语高考试题为样本,精心选取材料,编制一题、或几题、或一套高考模拟试题。 3、注意试题的原创性。选材时不得采用省内各地调研试题、模拟试题或月考试题的原题和文章,可以适度采用省外各地模拟试题中的文章作为素材,但不能直接使用原题。 4、非广东高考题型的题目不能参加评比。 三、评比办法: 各校教师及备课组可不断地进行高考试题研究,不时地命制试题,不定期地上交参与评选。市教研室中英科将在全年分阶段组织滚动式评比。参选试题不进行公布,但优秀获奖试题可以通过纸质文件提供给全市老师们交流或学习。要大力强调尊重原创作者,如果有未得到作者同意就将试题用作谋取经济利益的行为,一旦发现,全市公开批评。 四、 奖励:每次评比将设一、二、三等奖。奖励人数不限。 五、页面设定格式和有关打字操作说明 1、页面设置用A4纸(宽21厘米、高29.7厘米) 2、字体 1)小标题:英语文字::Times New Roman、五号、加粗 中文文字:宋体、五号、加粗 2)正文:英语文字::Times New Roman、五号 3、各题号(不论大小题号)请手动打,不要使用Word自动编号的格式。例1:语法填空:语法填空题文章部分的小题号用下划线的方法划线。 What were the 1 for Jules Verme’s extreme accuracy in describing an even 100 years or more 2 it actually occurred? He 3 his writings on the laws of physics and astronomy. …. 具体打法范例:在单词“the”后空三各再打“1”,然后再空三格,在“the”后的第二格开始选定拉黑,直到“1”后的第二格,然后单击“下划线”图标。设定第一个数字后,其余的先把这个数字连同其前后的空格复制、粘贴后修改数字就可以了。例2:完形填空:完形填空题文章部分的小题号用下划线的方法划线。 What were the 1 for Jules Verme’s extreme accuracy in describing an even 100 years or more 2 it actually occurred? He 3 his writings on the laws of physics and astronomy. …. 选择项打法范例: 1. A. like B. as C. with D. for 2. A. we B. us C. them D. their 题号1. 后空两格才打“A”, 打完“like”后使用“tap”键,击两/三下定位。使各行的ABCD选项垂直对齐。 六、交稿方式:将稿件的电子版以附件形式发送到 seniorone2007@126.com 。无需交纸质版。 附件名和发送邮件时的主题都用“学校、教师姓名、题目名称”(中间不留空格或符号),例如,广雅李建军老师命制的完形填空,发送时附件名和邮件主题都用“广雅中学李建军完形填空”,又如:执信林佩华老师命制的一整套题,发送时附件名和邮件主题都用“执信中学林佩华套题”。 广州市中学英语教研会 广州市高三英语中心组 2008年8月8日 高 考 英 语 模 拟 试 题
224300江苏射阳中学 陈文荪 蔡建香 顾乃前
一、听力(30%)略
二、单项选择(15%)
21. You can’t afford to let the situation get worse. You must take _____to put it right.
A. decisions B. directions C. sides D. steps
22. Before the first non-stop flight made in 1949, it _____ necessary for all planes to land for refueling.
A. would be B. has been C. had been D. would have been
23. She’ll ______her nervousness once she’s on stage.
A. get off B. get away C. get over D. get down
24. I think that this meal was well worth _____was charged for it.
A. that B. what C. which D. how many
25. The car ran down the hill, and the driver ______, according to the newspaper, to have been killed.
A. said B. was saying C. was said D. had been said
26. Slowly she opened the letter, _______.
A. her hands slightly trembling B. trembling her hands slightly
C. her hands trembled slightly D. slightly her hands were trembled
27. ----Shall I go this way or that way?
----______, if you aren’t in a hurry.
A. Neither B. Either C. Both D. Every
28. I insisted that it ______ and he _____ a raincoat with him.
A. was going to rain; take B. was to rain; takes
C. should rain; must take D. must be raining; took
29. The great Titanic _______America with many excited passengers.
A. set out for B. set out to C. set off D. set up for
30. My mother asked me to repeat _______telephone number _____second time so that she could write it down.
A. the, a B. an , the C. a, a D. the , the
31. ----May I look at the menu for a little while?
----Of course. _______, Sir.
A. Don’t worry B. It doesn’t matter
C. Enjoy yourself D. Take your time
32. ----______.
----Oh, what a nice house!
----I’m glad you like it. Let me show you around it first.
A. Let’s drive to my house. B. Here we are.
C. Would you like to see my house? D. My house is behind the hill.
33. The new law will come into _______on the day it is passed.
A. effect B. use C. service D. existence
34. ____ we get on well with a number of people, we are usually friends with only a few.
A. when B. As C. while D. Since
35. There are many valuable services ____ which the Public are willing to pay but which ____not bring a return in money to the community.(社区)
A. ∕;does B. ∕;do C. for; does D. for, do
三、完形填空(30%)
Learning experiences happen to us throughout our lives. Not long ago, I had one that I would like to 36 .
I was going to Marblehead with my sailboat team. The team was racing down the highway at 85mph 37 we realized we were 38 . Luckily, we saw a rest area ahead. I had a brand new $ 20 bill. I was so 39 because I had never had that kind of cash before. But spending it on 40 seemed like throwing it away. We all rushed into the pizza line. 41 I got a pizza and a drink, and walked to my table. About halfway through the meal, I 42 I had not actually handed any money to the cashier. I had just 43 out, and nobody had noticed. I felt terrible.
My conscience(良心)opened its mouth and swallowed me in one big bite. I couldn’t 44 over it. I just couldn’t go back to the cashier and 45 for my stolen pizza. I was so upset that I 46 to give myself the pleasure of an ice cream for 47 that someone would say, “Hey. Jeff, why don’t you use the change 48 the pizza instead of that nice, new $20 bill?” I was not so 49 of my cash now.
For the next two years, whenever I was 50 of the “pizza incident”, I would say to myself, “Don’t think about it…”
I have learned two things form this 51 . Maybe I was a fool for 52 in to my conscience, and being too stupid to appreciate a 53 pizza. But the real lesson is that even if you get away from what you have done, you conscience will 54 up with you.
This reflects the saying, “A coward(懦夫)dies a thousand deaths, a hero dies one.” I was a coward and have felt terrible about that incident at least a thousand times. If I had been a “ 55 ”and gone back to pay for the pizza, I would have felt a little uncomfortable about it only once, or maybe twice.
36. A. say B. talk C. share D. explain
37. A. as B. while C. then D. when
38. A. lost B. tired C. hungry D. anxious
39. A. excited B. eager C. satisfied D. encouraged
40. A. rest B. food C. travel D. drink
41. A. Luckily B. Finally C. Immediately D. Actually
42. A. thought B. recognized C. noticed D. realized
43. A. walked B. left C. worked D. found
44. A look B. get C. turn D. think
45. A. ask B. pay C. apologize D. send
46. A. refused B. wanted C. hoped D. meant
47. A. hope B. surprise C. anger D. fear
48. A. into B. with C. for D. from
49. A. sure B. upset C. proud D. pleased
50. A. warned B. reminded C. thought D. told
51. A. experience B. experiment C. story D. mistake
52. A. turning B. taking C. handing D. giving
53. A. free B. cheap C. plain D. delicious
54. A. make B. wake C. catch D. put
55. A. coward B. fool C. loser D. hero
四、阅读理解:(40%)
A
As the policeman walked up to him, the man spoke up quickly.
“It’s all right, officer,” he said, reassuring. “I’m just waiting for a friend. It’s an appointment made twenty years ago. Sounds a little funny to you, doesn’t it? Well, I’ll explain if you’d like to make certain it’s all straight. About that long ago there used to be a restaurant where this store stands—‘Big Joe’s Bardy’s restaurant’.”
“Until five years ago,” said the policeman, “it was torn down then.”
The man in the doorway struck a match and lit his cigar. The light showed a pale, square-jawed face with eager eyes and a little white scar near his right eyebrow. His scarfpin(领带夹) was a large diamond strangely set.
“Twenty years ago tonight,” said the man, “I dined here at ‘Big Joe’s Bardy’s with Jimmy Wells , my best friend, and the finest man in the world. He and I were raised here in New York; just like two brothers, together. I was eighteen and Jimmy was twenty. The next morning I was to start for the West to make my fortune. You couldn’t have dragged Jimmy out of New York; he thought it was the only place on earth. Well, we agreed that night that we would meet here again exactly twenty years from the date and time. No matter what our conditions might be or from what distance we might have to come. We believe that in twenty years each of us ought to have our wish worked out and fortunes made. Whatever they were going to be.’”
“It sounds pretty interesting,” said the policeman. “Rather a long time between the meets, though, it seems to me, haven’t you heard from your friend since you left?”
“Well, yes, for a time we kept in touch,” said the other, “but after a year or two we lost track of each other. You see, the West is a pretty big place. But I know Jimmy will meet me here if he’s alive, for he always was the truest, dependable old friend in the world. He’ll never forget. I came a thousand miles to stand at this door tonight, and it’s worth it if my old partner turns up.”
The waiting man pulled out a handsome watch. The lid of it set with small diamonds.
“Three minutes to ten,” he announced, “It was exactly ten o’ clock when we parted here at the restaurant door.”
56. From the text, we can learn that the waiting man ______.
A. liked to live in his hometown
B. grew up in the West
C. seemed to have made some money
D. used to work for Big Joe’s Bardy’s restaurant
57. The reason why the man left New York was that he _______.
A. thought the West was a better place for his development
B. planned to meet his friend 29 years later
C. didn’t like to live in a big city
D. thought the West was a better place to travel
58. Which of the following shows the right order of what happened in the story?
a. The man was waiting for Jimmy at the old destroyed restaurant.
b. The man made an appointment with Jimmy and left New York.
c. The Big Joe’s Bardy’s restaurant was destroyed.
d. They kept in touch with each other for a time.
e. The man arrived in New York from the West.
A. e, a, b, d, c B. e, b, d, c, a C. b, d, c, e, a D. b, a, d, e, c
B
Very old people do raise moral(道德的) problems for almost everyone who comes into touch with them. Their values—this can not be repeated too often—aren’t necessarily our values. Physical comfort, cleanness and order are not necessarily the most important things. The social services from time find themselves faced with a room with rotten food covered by small worms, and an old person lying alone on bed , taking no notice of the worms. But is it interrupting personal freedom to insist that they go to live with some of their relatives so that they might be taken better care of? Some social workers, the ones who clear up the worms, think we’re in danger of carrying this idea of personal freedom to the point where serious risk (冒险)are being taken with the health and safety of the old.
Indeed, the old can be easily hurt or harmed. The old is like a car: it needs more mechanical repair as it gets older. You can carry this comparison right through to provision of spare parts. But never forget that such operations are painful experiences, however good the results are. And at what point should you stop to treat the old body? Is it morally right to try to push off death by continuing the development of medicine to excite the forgetful old mind and to make the old body active, knowing that it is designed to die? You cannot ask doctors or scientists to decide, because so long as they can see the technical chances, they will feel it necessary to give them a try, by the rule that while there’s life, there’s hope.
Talking to the old, however, you’re forced to the conclusion that whether age is happy or unpleasant depends less on money or health than it does on your ability to have fun.
59. After reading the paragraph, we can learn that_______.
A. very old people enjoy living with their relatives.
B. social services have nothing to do with very old people.
C. very old people are able to keep their living places very clean
D. old people enjoy living alone so as to have more personal freedom
60. Some social workers think that _______.
A. old people should keep their living places clean
B. one should not take risk dealing with old people
C. health and safety are more important than personal freedom
D. personal freedom is more important than health and safety
61. The underlined word “it” in the last paragraph refers to _______.
A. your talk to the old people B. one’s memory or health
C. the conclusion you’ve come to D. whether age is happy or unpleasant
62. The writer of this passage think that _______.
A. medical decisions for old people should be left to the doctors
B. old people can enjoy a happy life only if they are very rich
C. the opinion that we should try every means possible to save old people is uncertain
D. it is always morally right to treat old people and push off death
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