2017-2018学年度交大附中高一下摸底考
河海大学文天学院-小学三年级作文中秋节
上海交通大学附属中学2017-2018学年度
第二学期高一英语摸底考试卷
II. Grammar and Vocabulary
Section A: Multiple Choices 19150
1. It
was for her rare charm and inner beauty ______
British movie star Audrey Hepburn was
named
the most naturally beautiful woman of all time.
A. what B. which C. that D. why
2. This newly released film, Vincent Van Gogh,
which is made of over twenty thousand ______
oil painting, is the first one of the type.
A. handcrafted B. being handcrafted C. to
be handcrafted D. having
handcrafted
3.
When ______ the French and German versions of the
Mozart musical, students concluded
that the
French one is more colorfully displayed and goes
on more light-spiritedly.
A. compare B. to
compare C. compared D. comparing
4. No
sooner ______ than the wedding ceremony was
announced to begin.
A. had the limousine
carrying the best actress arrived.
B. had the
limousine carried the best actress arrived
C.
had arrived the limousine carried the best actress
D. had arrived the limousine carrying the
best actress
5. The visiting minister of
culture expressed his satisfaction with the
treatment he received,
______ that he had
enjoyed his stay here and promised to bring more
quality cultural exchange
programs to China in
the coming year of Dog.
A. adding B. added
C. having added D. to add
6. When stopped by
the police at the roadside, the drunken movie star
confessed that he
remembered ______ at the
party; but not ______.
A. to arrive, leaving
B. to arrive, to leave C. arriving, leaving D.
arriving, to
leave
7. The recent strike in
the field of education ______ for a week, without
any signs indicating the
possible compromise
between Russell universities and their professors.
A. went on B. had gone on C. has gone on
D. has been going
on
8. Such an
informative lecture ______ many of the students
wanted to tape it.
A. that it was B. was it
that C. it was that D. that was it
9.
--Mom, my toy car has been crushed down.
--You ______ on it. I’ve told you so and it’s
dangerous too!
A. mustn’t have ridden B.
shouldn’t have ridden
C. needn’t have ridden
D. couldn’t have ridden
10. If you are tired
of books on happiness and success, you ______ need
a book about laissez
faire, an idea or state
involving no purposeful interference.
A. must
B. dare C. may D. should
11. A good
story unnecessarily ______ have a happy ending,
but the reader must not be left
unsatisfied.
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A. should B. can
C. must D. has to
12. --Do you know if Tony
went to an opera this weekend at the Grand
Theatre?
--Tony? Impossible! He ______ all
the musicals and operas.
A. hates B. has
hated C. will hate D. hated
13. I thought
BAO would at least bring us some candies about his
happy big event, but he
______ it.
A.
doesn’t mention B. hadn’t mentioned C. didn’t
mention D. hasn’t
mentioned
14. During
last month’s domestic unrest in Maldives, warnings
to stop any travelling ______ to
all Chinese
citizens from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
A. had been issued B. were issued C. have
been issued D. issued
15. Opera is an art
form in which singers and musicians ______ an
artistic work combining text
and musical
score, usually in a theatrical setting.
A.
perform B. display C. exhibit D. conduct
16. In class, whether students are attentive
or not can be easily told by checking their
focused or
______ eyes.
A. wandered B.
wondered C. pointed D. lifted
17.
Harvard’s sizable university fund has enabled her
to hold to her humanity tradition in ______
with her pursuit of frontier science and
engineering.
A. approval B. parallel C.
application D. identity
18. Classic Greek
drama, typical of classic literature, was written
in verse, usually in a(n) ______
and formal
style.
A. accelerated B. elevated C.
stimulated D. ascended
19. I have great
confidence that our economy will ______ this
difficult period, because I have
great
confidence in the boundless, innovative spirit of
our people.
A. pull off B. pull out C.
pull through D. pull up
Section B: Blank
filling(Grammar) 6150
There is a tendency to
think of each of the arts as a separate area of
activity. Many artists,
however, would prove
that there has always been a warm relationship
between the distinct areas of
human activity.
For example, in the late nineteenth century the
connections between music and
painting were
especially close. Artists __40__ (invite) to
design clothes and settings for operas and
ballets, but sometimes it was the musicians
who were inspired by the work of contemporary
painters. __41__ the musical compositions that
were considered as responses to the visual arts,
perhaps the most famous is Mussorgsky’s
Pictures at an Exhibition.
Mussorgsky
composed the piece in 1874 after the death, at the
age of 39, of the artist Victor
Hartmann.
__42__ their friendship had not been a
particularly long-lasting one, Mussorgsky was
shocked by
Hartmann’s unexpected death. The
following year the critic, Vladimir Stasuv, who
decided to hold
an exhibition of Hartmann’s
work, suggested that Mussorgsky __43__ (try) to
relieve his grief by
writing something in
memory of Hartmann.
The exhibition served as
Mussorgsky’s inspiration. The ten pieces that made
up Pictures at an
Exhibition are intended
__44__ symbols rather than representations of the
paintings in the
exhibition. Between each is a
promenade(舞曲中的行进), with the composer __45__ (walk)
from
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one painting to
another. The music is sometimes witty and playful,
sometimes almost alarming
and frightening.
Through a range of surprising contrasts,
Mussorgsky manages to convey the spirit
of the
artist and his work.
Section C: Blank
filling (Vocabulary) 10150
46. The little girl
felt sorry about her ______ (perform) in the play
and cried when she left the
stage.
47. I
am going to watch a famous ______ (piano) play at
the Shanghai Grand Concert Hall
tonight.
48. Dance music is music composed, played, or
both, specifically to ______ (company) social
dancing.
49. Folk music is music by and of
the people. It arises, and best survives, in
societies not yet
affected by mass ______
(communicate) and the commercialization of
culture.
50. Heavy metal is a form of music
characterized by aggressive, driving rhythms and
highly
amplified distorted guitars, with its
peak ______ (popular) in the 1980s.
51. The
term rhythm and blues (R&B) was used in the U.S.
in the 1940s to designate upbeat
popular music
performed by African American ______ (art) that
combine jazz and blues.
52. Opera refers to a
______ (drama) art form, originating in Europe, in
which the emotional
content is conveyed to the
audience as much through music.
53. A symphony
is an extended piece of music usually for
orchestra and comprised of several
______
(move).
54. ______ (compete) spirits can help
athletes to fight against their opponents, but it
is not the
case with orchestra or chorus.
55. It was his good memory, energy, strict
attitude, and ______ (loyal) to the composer’s
intention that made him outstanding.
Section D 10150
A. only B. gaining
C. spectacularly D. remarkable E. works
F. speechless G. carries H.
unfolding I. evolves J. basically K.
shifts
The film was inspired by the
evacuation of nearly 600 Chinese citizens in
Yemens port of
Aden during Yemen’s civil war
in 2015.
The Chinese Navy’s Jiaolong Assault
Team is sent on a mission to rescue hostages(人质)
that
eventually takes them on a quest to stop
terrorists __1__ possession of nuclear materials.
Similar to the Chris NolansDimir, this film
Operation Red Sea sacrifices plot and character
development for action, and fortunately it
__2__. The film editing, sound editing sound
mixing,
visual effects, action, original score
and production design are just __3__.
Having
borrowed ideas from several Hollywood
blockbusters, Operation Red Sea is __4__
every
great, good and decent war movie rolled into one
amazing spectacle. It’s hard to think of a
more ambitious and versatile action war movie
that does it anywhere close to this level.
What’s most amazing about the film is how
quickly it can shift gears(排挡,齿轮). It kicks off
with a Navy Seals like rescue mission before
turning to a Black Hawk Down city under
siege(围
攻) effort. The next scene __5__ into a
Tears of the Sun type protect the innocents
endeavor then
nerve damaging shootouts like
American Sniper. And just when you think you’ve
seen it all, the
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action __6__ towards a fury-style tank battle.
While __7__ over the top, Lam doesn’t treat
the soldiers as superheroes. Few emerge
completely unscratched while others suffer
some terrible deaths.
Lam shows the ugliness
of warfare without making it too unnecessary. The
sight of car bomb
and heavy gun attack victims
still twitching __8__ the desired effect and
doesn’t come off like an
excuse to show burnt
and separated bodies.
The mission was similar
in Wolf Warrior 2, but the real inspiration here
seems to be Black
Hawk Down. Lam’s sense of
scale and logistics are outstanding, with scenes
__9__ across a
war-destructed city cross-cut
with tense desert showdowns.
Individual stunts
are __10__. And despite some obvious effects. The
crashes and explosions
are far more ferocious
than Hollywood offerings.
III. Reading
Comprehension
Section A
Jane Austen was
born in the English countryside more than 200
years ago. She lived a simple
life. She __1__
travelled. She never married and she died from
illness when she was only 41.
However, people
all over the world remember her. Why?
It is
because Jane Austen is the __2__ of some of the
best-loved novels in the English
language.
These novels include Emma, Pride and Prejudice,
Sense and Sensibility and Persuasion.
Jane completed her __3__ novel Persuasion in
1816, but it was not published until after her
death. Persuasion is __4__ based on Jane’s
naval brother.
Anne, the daughter of Sir
Walter Elliot, falls in love with Captain
Wentworth, a person of a
__5__ social
position. But she breaks off the __6__ when
persuaded by her friend Lady Russell
that such
a match is __7__. The breakup produces in Anne a
deep and long-lasting __8__. Eight
years
later, Wentworth returns from sea a rich and
successful __9__. He finds Anne’s family on
the edge of financial ruin. Anne and the
captain rediscover their love and get married.
Jane Austen once compared her writing to
painting on a little bit of __10__, two inches
square. Readers of Persuasion will see that
neither her skill of __11__, ironic(讽刺的)
observations on social custom, love, and
marriage nor her ability to apply a sharp focus to
English
__12__ and morals has abandoned her in
her final finished work.
Persuasion has
produced three film __13__: a 1995 version
starring Amanda Root and
Ciaran Hinds, a 2007
TV miniseries with Sally Hawkins and Rupert Penry-
Jones, and a 1971
miniseries with Ann Firbank
and Bryan Marshall.
People who are interested
in Jane Austen can still visit many of the places
she visited and
lived. These places include
the village of Steventon, __14__ her family house
is now gone. Many
of the places Jane visited
in Bath are still there. You can visit Jane
Austen’s home in Chawton,
where she did her
best __15__, and Winchester, where she died.
1. A. frequently B. seldom C. never D.
remotely
2. A. artist B. composer C.
conductor D. author
3. A. first B. best
C. last D. bestselling
4. A. partly B.
purely C. distantly D. completely
5. A.
higher B. inferior C. lower D. superior
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6. A. appointment
7. A. useless
8. A. hatred
9. A.
businessman
10. A. desk
11. A. humorous
12. A. manners
13. A. adaptions
14.
A. because
15. A. singing
Section B
B. engagement
B. priceless
B. bravery
B. captain
B. floor
B. complicated
B. conversations
B. copies
B.
although
B. writing
C. runaway
C.
unworthy
C. regret
C. general
C.
peanut
C. impressive
C. sufferings
C. volumes
C. as if
C. creating
D. promise
D. pointless
D. memory
D. officer
D. ivory
D. delicate
D.
scenes
D. actions
D. whether
D.
shooting
(A)
A theatrical company was
once performing a well-known thriller on the
outskirts of London.
This company had been
assembled by a wealthy woman who had no experience
of the stage, but
whose fortune allowed her to
indulge herself. The final act of this play
included a small, but vital
part—that of the
detective. He was supposed to land by helicopter,
enter through the French
windows and question
everyone on the stage about the murder which had
taken place. When the
actor cast as the
detective failed to show up for rehearsals the
stage carpenter volunteered to take
his place.
He assured his wealthy patron that he had wide
experience of comedy and that this part
would
be easy for him. She believed him. The rest of the
company were not so sure. For some
reason the
carpenter only rehearsed the part once. Even so
the ‘manager’ felt totally confident
about
him.
On the opening night all went well until
the moment when the helicopter was supposed to
land. The terrible noise from the room above,
which should have set the chandelier swinging
wildly and at which one of the actors was
supposed to say, ‘What is that awful noise?’ never
happened. Since the next part of the play was
concerned with the noise, the actors had to do the
best they could and make up the lines. This
went on for several minutes, with the cast
becoming
increasingly desperate when,
suddenly, the chandelier began swinging violently,
but in total
silence. Finally the sound of the
approaching helicopter was heard and the cast
turned with relief
to greet the detective as
he entered through the French windows. The sight
that met their eyes left
them speechless.
There stood the carpenter, dressed in a
policeman’s uniform but wearing enough
make-up
for a circus clown. He had two bright red spots on
his cheeks and his lips were a vivid
pink. His
eyes were ringed with enormous bright blue
circles, with a blob of black mascara on the
end of each lash.
After delivering his
first line, he then completely forgot the rest of
his part. So, striding to the
center of the
stage, he took off his helmet, in which he had
hidden a dirty piece of paper on which
he had
written his lines. He started reading these like a
commentator giving the racing results.
When he
came to turn over the page, he lost his place,
fumbled hopelessly, and when he’d found it,
bowed to the audience, saying ‘Pardon me,’
before carrying on. He stuck to carpentry after
that.
1. The owner of the theatrical
company _____________.
A. was too rich to be
an actress B. had enough money to put on plays
C. was rich enough to be able to act D. put
all her money into the company
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2.
3.
Why did the wealthy
‘manager’ believe the carpenter could play the
part of the detective?
A. He said he’d had
wide experience in that kind of role.
B. He
assured her that he found all acting very easy.
C. She hadn’t enough experience to know any
better.
D. She was experienced enough to
recognize a good actor.
Why did the cast
‘become speechless’?
A. They couldn’t remember
their lines.
B. They were so amazed at the
carpenter’s appearance.
C. They were surprised
the carpenter was wearing a uniform.
D. They
had no breath left after making up lines.
(B)
The Puffing Billy Railway, located about
40km east of Mclbourne, was constructed in the
early 1900s
to open up remote areas. The
present line between Belgrave and Gembrook travels
through the forests
and farmlands of the
magnificent Dangenong Rangers. Today, this non-
profit Railway operates almost
daily thanks to
the tireless efforts of more than 900 dedicated
volunteers.
General Information:
People
with disabilities—can be accommodated on most
excursion trains, including a limited
number
of wheelchairs. Please phone to check
availability.
Easy access toilets are at
Belgrave, Lakeside and Gembrook.
Refreshments and souvenirs—are available at most
stations.
Railway Tracks—standing and
walking on the tracks is not permitted.
Prams(婴儿车)—only folding or narrow type prams can
be accommodated through the narrow
carriage
doors.
Smoking—is not permitted on the train
or under any roofed areas.
Assistance Dogs
certified by a registered authority—are the only
dogs allowed on the train and
must be kept on
lead at all times.
Alcohol—is not permitted
on trains (except as provided in dining cars).
Toilets—are located at each station.
Parenting rooms are located at Belgrave, Lakeside
&Gembrook.
Photographs and videos—for
personal use are permitted. Wedding photograph and
any use, re-use
第6页
or
reproduction for commercial purposes is prohibited
without prior written permission.
Conditions:
Concession fares(优惠票价) are available to
Australian bearers of Health Care, Student,
Seniors,
Companion or Pensioner cards.
(Exclude evening dining and events). Your
signature may be
required on day of travel for
verification purposes.
Children under 4
years, not occupying a seat, are carried FREE on
excursion trains only, excluding
special
events and dining trains.
Discounts are
available for pre-booked group travel (20 or more)
on a return journey, except on
Sundays, public
holidays and school holidays.
All trains are
steam-driven unless a diesel locomotive(柴油机车) is
required in exceptional
circumstances.
First Class Travel return journeys are on
appointed trains only.
1.
2.
3.
The above information is mainly intended for
_______.
A. international tourists in
Australia
B. potential travelers of the steam
trains
C. local residents in Dandenong Ranges
D. volunteers on the Puffing Billy Railway
People are not permitted to bring ______ onto
the excursion trains.
A. prams B. guide
dogs C. wheelchairs
What can be learned
from the above information?
A. Taking photos
is forbidden on most excursion trains.
B.
Toilets for the disabled are not available at all
stations.
C. Foreign visitors to Australia can
also get concession fares.
D. One can get
tickets at a lower price as long as he books in
advance.
D. alcohol
(C)
The American
screen has long been a smoky place, at least since
1942s Now, Voyager, in
which Bette Davis and
Paul Henreid showed how to make and seal a
romantic deal over a pair of
cigarettes that
were smoldering as much as the stars. Today
cigarettes are more common on screen
than at
any other time since mid-century: 75% of all
Hollywood films—including 36% of those
rated G
or PG—show tobacco use, according to a 2006 survey
by the University of California, San
Francisco.
Audiences, especially kids, are
taking notice. Two recent studies, published in
Lancet and
Pediatrics, have found that among
children as young as 10, those exposed to the most
screen
smoking are up to 2.7 times as likely
as others to pick up the habit. Worse, it’s the
ones from
nonsmoking homes who are hit the
hardest. Now the Harvard School of Public Health
(HSPH) the
folks behind the designated-driver
campaign—are pushing to get the smokes off the
screen.
“Some movies show kids up to 14
incidents of smoking per hour”, says Barry Bloom,
HSPH’s
dean. “We’re in the business of
preventing disease, and cigarettes are the No. 1
preventable
cause”.
Harvard long believed
that getting cigarettes out of movies could have
as powerful an effect,
but it wouldn’t be
easy. Cigarette makers had a history of striking
product-placement deals with
Hollywood, and
while the 1998 tobacco settlement prevents that,
nothing stops directors from
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incorporating smoking into scenes
on their own. In 1999 Harvard began holding one-
on-one
meetings with studio execs trying to
change that, and last year the Motion Picture
Association of
America flung the door open,
inviting Bloom to make a presentation in February
to all the studios.
Harvard’s advice was
direct: Get the butts entirely out, or at least
make smoking unappealing.
A few films provide
a glimpse of what a no-smoking or low-smoking
Hollywood would be
like. Producer Lindsay
Doran, who once helped persuade director John
Hughes to keep Ferris
Bueller smoke-free in
the 1980s hit, wanted to do the same for the leads
of her 2006 movie
Stranger Than Fiction. When
a writer convinced her that the character played
by Emma Thompson
had to smoke, Doran relented,
but from the way Thompson hacks her way through
the film and
snuffs out her cigarettes in a
palmful of spit, it’s clear the glamour’s gone.
And remember all the
smoking in The Devil
Wears Prada? No? That’s because the producers of
that film kept it out
entirely—even in a story
that travels from the US fashion world to Paris,
two of the most
tobacco-happy places on earth.
“No one smoked in that movie”, says Doran, “and no
one noticed”.
Such movies are hardly the rule,
but the pressure is growing. Like smokers, studios
may conclude
that quitting the habit is not
just a lot healthier but also a lot smarter.
1. Why the author mentioned Now, Voyager?
A. Smoke on screen can make romance.
B. To
show American screen was full of cigarette smoke.
C. To explain why cigarettes are easier to get
than past.
D. The romantic Hollywood movie is
a typical example of smoky screen.
2. It’s
hard to get cigarettes out of Hollywood because
________.
A. Harvard believed that it is not
easy to get cigarettes out of movies
B.
directors are reluctant to do so
C. Hollywood
needs smoke incident to attract audiences
D.
the relation between cigarette makers and
Hollywood is complex
3. Which of the following
statements is true according to the author?
A. Mosbfilms provide a glimpse of a no-smoking or
low-smoking Hollywood
B. Feris Bueller didn’t
smoke in the 1980s hit.
C. Doran will let
Emma Thompson smoke continuously next films
D. No one noticed the tobacco in The Devil Wears
Prada
4. What’s the author’s attitude toward
getting cigarettes out of screen?
A.
supportive. B. Optimistic C. Indifferent D.
Skeptical
(D)
Many people seem
to think that science fiction is typified by the
cover of some of the old
pulp magazines: the
Bug-eyed Monster, embodying every trait and
feature that most people find
repulsive, is
about grab, and presumably ravish, a sweet,
blonde, curvaceous, scantily-clad Earth
girl.
This is unfortunate because it demeans and
degrades a worthwhile and even important literary
endeavor. In contrast to this unwarranted
stereotype, science fiction rarely emphasizes sex,
and
when it does, it is more discreet than
other contemporary fiction. Instead, the basic
interest of
science fiction lies in the
relation between man and his technology and
between man and the
universe. Science fiction
is a literature of change and a literature of the
future, and while it would
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be foolish to claim that science
fiction is a major literary genre at this time,
the aspects of human
life that it considers
make it well worth reading and studying for no
other literary form does quite
the same
things. The question is: what is science fiction?
And the answer must be, unfortunately,
that
there have been few attempts to consider this
question at any length or with much seriousness;
it may well be that science fiction will
resist any comprehensive definition of its
characteristics.
To say this, however, does
not mean that there are no ways of defining it nor
that various facets of
its totality cannot be
clarified.
To begin with, the following
definition should be helpful: science fiction is a
literary
sub-genre which postulates a change
(for human beings from conditions as we know them
and
follows the implications of these changes
to a conclusion. Although this definition will
necessarily
be modified and expanded, and
probably changed, in the course of this
exploration, it covers much
of the basic
groundwork and provides a point of departure. The
first point that science fiction is a
literary
sub-genre is a very important one, but one which
is often overlooked or ignored in most
discussions of science fiction. Specifically,
science fiction is either a short story or a
novel. There
are only a few dramas which could
be called science fiction, with Karel Capek’s
RUR(Rossum’s
Universal Robots) being the only
one that is well known; the body of poetry that
might be labeled
science fiction is only
slightly larger. To say that science fiction is a
sub-genre of prose fiction is to
say that it
has all the basic characteristics and serves the
same basic functions in much the same
way as
prose fiction in general, that is, it shares a
great deal with all other novels and short
stories.
Everything that can be said about
prose fiction, in general, applies to science
fiction. Every
piece of science fiction
whether short story or novel, must have a
narrator, a story, a plot, a setting
characters, language, and theme. And like any
prose, the themes of science fiction are concerned
with interpreting mans nature and experience
in relation to the world around him. Themes in
science fiction are constructed and presented
in exactly the same ways that themes are dealt
with
in any other kind of fiction. They are
the result of a particular combination of
narrator, story, plot,
character, setting, and
language. In short, the reasons for reading and
enjoying science fiction, and
the ways of
studying and analyzing it, are basically the same
as they would be for any other story
or novel.
1. The view of science fiction encouraged
by pulp magazines, while wrong, is nevertheless
_________.
A. popular B. Elegant C.
fashionable D. accurate
2. Science fiction
is called a literary sub-genre because _______.
A. it is not important enough to be a
literary genre
B. it can not be made into a
dramatic presentation
C. it has its limits
D. it shares characteristics with other types
of prose fiction
3. Which of the following
does NOT usually contribute to the theme in a
piece of science
fiction _____.
A.
character B. rhyme C. plot D. setting
4. The authors definition suggests that all
science fiction deals with _________.
A.
monsters
B. the same topics addressed by
novels and short stories
C. the unfamiliar or
unusual
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D. the
conflict between science and fiction
5. One
implication of the final sentence in the passage
is that __________.
A. those who can read and
analyze fiction can also do so with science
fiction
B. there is no reason for any reader
not to like science fiction
C. all fiction
consists of six basic elements
D. there are
reasons for enjoying science fiction
IV.
Translation 19150
1. 观众热烈的掌声盖过了演员的歌唱。 (drown)
2. 一看到学新装修好的图书馆,同学们立马爱上了在里面读书的感觉。(On)
3.
想要在英语戏剧比赛中获得好的成绩,认真研读剧本并加入有创意的改编十分重要。
(be of)
4. 直到第一个学期结束,我才意识到我应该要适应注重自主性的高中学习。 (Not
until)
5.
虽然高中十分紧张疲劳,但学校还是鼓励大家要调整自己,养成每天一个小时的体育锻
炼习惯。
(as)
参考答案
1. C 2. A 3. D
4. A 5. B 6. C 7. D 8. B
11. D
12. A
13. C 14. B 15. A 16. A 17. B 18. B 19. C
40.
were invited 41. of 42. Although 43. try 44. as
45. walking
46. performance 47. pianist’s 48.
accompany 49. communication
51. artists 52.
dramatic 53. movement 54. Competitive
1-10
BEFJI KCGHD
1-15 BDCAC BCCBD BAABB
(A)
BCB
(B) BDB
(C) BDBA
(D) ADBCA
1.
The cheerful applause has drown out the actor’s
singing.
第10页
9. B 10. C
50.
population
55. loyalty
2. On
seeing the newly-decorated library in the school,
students fell in love immediately with the
feeling of reading books inside.
3. If you
want to get a good mark in the English drama, it
is of importance to read up scripts and
add
creative adaptions.
4. Not until the first
semester ended, did I realize I should adapt to
the senior high school life
focusing on
independence.
5. Tense and tiring as the high
school life is, the school still encourages us to
adjust ourselves and
develop the daily habit
of keep physical exercise for an hour.
第11页
上海交通大学附属中学2017-2018学年度
第二学期高一英语摸底考试卷
II. Grammar and Vocabulary
Section A:
Multiple Choices 19150
1. It was for her rare
charm and inner beauty ______ British movie star
Audrey Hepburn was
named the most naturally
beautiful woman of all time.
A. what B.
which C. that D. why
2. This newly
released film, Vincent Van Gogh, which is made of
over twenty thousand ______
oil painting, is
the first one of the type.
A. handcrafted
B. being handcrafted C. to be handcrafted D.
having
handcrafted
3. When ______ the
French and German versions of the Mozart musical,
students concluded
that the French one is more
colorfully displayed and goes on more light-
spiritedly.
A. compare B. to compare C.
compared D. comparing
4. No sooner ______
than the wedding ceremony was announced to begin.
A. had the limousine carrying the best
actress arrived.
B. had the limousine carried
the best actress arrived
C. had arrived the
limousine carried the best actress
D. had
arrived the limousine carrying the best actress
5. The visiting minister of culture expressed
his satisfaction with the treatment he received,
______ that he had enjoyed his stay here and
promised to bring more quality cultural exchange
programs to China in the coming year of Dog.
A. adding B. added C. having added D.
to add
6. When stopped by the police at the
roadside, the drunken movie star confessed that he
remembered ______ at the party; but not
______.
A. to arrive, leaving B. to arrive,
to leave C. arriving, leaving D. arriving, to
leave
7. The recent strike in the field of
education ______ for a week, without any signs
indicating the
possible compromise between
Russell universities and their professors.
A.
went on B. had gone on C. has gone on D. has
been going
on
8. Such an informative
lecture ______ many of the students wanted to tape
it.
A. that it was B. was it that C. it
was that D. that was it
9. --Mom, my toy car
has been crushed down.
--You ______ on it.
I’ve told you so and it’s dangerous too!
A.
mustn’t have ridden B. shouldn’t have ridden
C. needn’t have ridden D. couldn’t have
ridden
10. If you are tired of books on
happiness and success, you ______ need a book
about laissez
faire, an idea or state
involving no purposeful interference.
A. must
B. dare C. may D. should
11. A good
story unnecessarily ______ have a happy ending,
but the reader must not be left
unsatisfied.
第1页
A. should B. can
C. must D. has to
12. --Do you know if Tony
went to an opera this weekend at the Grand
Theatre?
--Tony? Impossible! He ______ all
the musicals and operas.
A. hates B. has
hated C. will hate D. hated
13. I thought
BAO would at least bring us some candies about his
happy big event, but he
______ it.
A.
doesn’t mention B. hadn’t mentioned C. didn’t
mention D. hasn’t
mentioned
14. During
last month’s domestic unrest in Maldives, warnings
to stop any travelling ______ to
all Chinese
citizens from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
A. had been issued B. were issued C. have
been issued D. issued
15. Opera is an art
form in which singers and musicians ______ an
artistic work combining text
and musical
score, usually in a theatrical setting.
A.
perform B. display C. exhibit D. conduct
16. In class, whether students are attentive
or not can be easily told by checking their
focused or
______ eyes.
A. wandered B.
wondered C. pointed D. lifted
17.
Harvard’s sizable university fund has enabled her
to hold to her humanity tradition in ______
with her pursuit of frontier science and
engineering.
A. approval B. parallel C.
application D. identity
18. Classic Greek
drama, typical of classic literature, was written
in verse, usually in a(n) ______
and formal
style.
A. accelerated B. elevated C.
stimulated D. ascended
19. I have great
confidence that our economy will ______ this
difficult period, because I have
great
confidence in the boundless, innovative spirit of
our people.
A. pull off B. pull out C.
pull through D. pull up
Section B: Blank
filling(Grammar) 6150
There is a tendency to
think of each of the arts as a separate area of
activity. Many artists,
however, would prove
that there has always been a warm relationship
between the distinct areas of
human activity.
For example, in the late nineteenth century the
connections between music and
painting were
especially close. Artists __40__ (invite) to
design clothes and settings for operas and
ballets, but sometimes it was the musicians
who were inspired by the work of contemporary
painters. __41__ the musical compositions that
were considered as responses to the visual arts,
perhaps the most famous is Mussorgsky’s
Pictures at an Exhibition.
Mussorgsky
composed the piece in 1874 after the death, at the
age of 39, of the artist Victor
Hartmann.
__42__ their friendship had not been a
particularly long-lasting one, Mussorgsky was
shocked by
Hartmann’s unexpected death. The
following year the critic, Vladimir Stasuv, who
decided to hold
an exhibition of Hartmann’s
work, suggested that Mussorgsky __43__ (try) to
relieve his grief by
writing something in
memory of Hartmann.
The exhibition served as
Mussorgsky’s inspiration. The ten pieces that made
up Pictures at an
Exhibition are intended
__44__ symbols rather than representations of the
paintings in the
exhibition. Between each is a
promenade(舞曲中的行进), with the composer __45__ (walk)
from
第2页
one painting to
another. The music is sometimes witty and playful,
sometimes almost alarming
and frightening.
Through a range of surprising contrasts,
Mussorgsky manages to convey the spirit
of the
artist and his work.
Section C: Blank
filling (Vocabulary) 10150
46. The little girl
felt sorry about her ______ (perform) in the play
and cried when she left the
stage.
47. I
am going to watch a famous ______ (piano) play at
the Shanghai Grand Concert Hall
tonight.
48. Dance music is music composed, played, or
both, specifically to ______ (company) social
dancing.
49. Folk music is music by and of
the people. It arises, and best survives, in
societies not yet
affected by mass ______
(communicate) and the commercialization of
culture.
50. Heavy metal is a form of music
characterized by aggressive, driving rhythms and
highly
amplified distorted guitars, with its
peak ______ (popular) in the 1980s.
51. The
term rhythm and blues (R&B) was used in the U.S.
in the 1940s to designate upbeat
popular music
performed by African American ______ (art) that
combine jazz and blues.
52. Opera refers to a
______ (drama) art form, originating in Europe, in
which the emotional
content is conveyed to the
audience as much through music.
53. A symphony
is an extended piece of music usually for
orchestra and comprised of several
______
(move).
54. ______ (compete) spirits can help
athletes to fight against their opponents, but it
is not the
case with orchestra or chorus.
55. It was his good memory, energy, strict
attitude, and ______ (loyal) to the composer’s
intention that made him outstanding.
Section D 10150
A. only B. gaining
C. spectacularly D. remarkable E. works
F. speechless G. carries H.
unfolding I. evolves J. basically K.
shifts
The film was inspired by the
evacuation of nearly 600 Chinese citizens in
Yemens port of
Aden during Yemen’s civil war
in 2015.
The Chinese Navy’s Jiaolong Assault
Team is sent on a mission to rescue hostages(人质)
that
eventually takes them on a quest to stop
terrorists __1__ possession of nuclear materials.
Similar to the Chris NolansDimir, this film
Operation Red Sea sacrifices plot and character
development for action, and fortunately it
__2__. The film editing, sound editing sound
mixing,
visual effects, action, original score
and production design are just __3__.
Having
borrowed ideas from several Hollywood
blockbusters, Operation Red Sea is __4__
every
great, good and decent war movie rolled into one
amazing spectacle. It’s hard to think of a
more ambitious and versatile action war movie
that does it anywhere close to this level.
What’s most amazing about the film is how
quickly it can shift gears(排挡,齿轮). It kicks off
with a Navy Seals like rescue mission before
turning to a Black Hawk Down city under
siege(围
攻) effort. The next scene __5__ into a
Tears of the Sun type protect the innocents
endeavor then
nerve damaging shootouts like
American Sniper. And just when you think you’ve
seen it all, the
第3页
action __6__ towards a fury-style tank battle.
While __7__ over the top, Lam doesn’t treat
the soldiers as superheroes. Few emerge
completely unscratched while others suffer
some terrible deaths.
Lam shows the ugliness
of warfare without making it too unnecessary. The
sight of car bomb
and heavy gun attack victims
still twitching __8__ the desired effect and
doesn’t come off like an
excuse to show burnt
and separated bodies.
The mission was similar
in Wolf Warrior 2, but the real inspiration here
seems to be Black
Hawk Down. Lam’s sense of
scale and logistics are outstanding, with scenes
__9__ across a
war-destructed city cross-cut
with tense desert showdowns.
Individual stunts
are __10__. And despite some obvious effects. The
crashes and explosions
are far more ferocious
than Hollywood offerings.
III. Reading
Comprehension
Section A
Jane Austen was
born in the English countryside more than 200
years ago. She lived a simple
life. She __1__
travelled. She never married and she died from
illness when she was only 41.
However, people
all over the world remember her. Why?
It is
because Jane Austen is the __2__ of some of the
best-loved novels in the English
language.
These novels include Emma, Pride and Prejudice,
Sense and Sensibility and Persuasion.
Jane completed her __3__ novel Persuasion in
1816, but it was not published until after her
death. Persuasion is __4__ based on Jane’s
naval brother.
Anne, the daughter of Sir
Walter Elliot, falls in love with Captain
Wentworth, a person of a
__5__ social
position. But she breaks off the __6__ when
persuaded by her friend Lady Russell
that such
a match is __7__. The breakup produces in Anne a
deep and long-lasting __8__. Eight
years
later, Wentworth returns from sea a rich and
successful __9__. He finds Anne’s family on
the edge of financial ruin. Anne and the
captain rediscover their love and get married.
Jane Austen once compared her writing to
painting on a little bit of __10__, two inches
square. Readers of Persuasion will see that
neither her skill of __11__, ironic(讽刺的)
observations on social custom, love, and
marriage nor her ability to apply a sharp focus to
English
__12__ and morals has abandoned her in
her final finished work.
Persuasion has
produced three film __13__: a 1995 version
starring Amanda Root and
Ciaran Hinds, a 2007
TV miniseries with Sally Hawkins and Rupert Penry-
Jones, and a 1971
miniseries with Ann Firbank
and Bryan Marshall.
People who are interested
in Jane Austen can still visit many of the places
she visited and
lived. These places include
the village of Steventon, __14__ her family house
is now gone. Many
of the places Jane visited
in Bath are still there. You can visit Jane
Austen’s home in Chawton,
where she did her
best __15__, and Winchester, where she died.
1. A. frequently B. seldom C. never D.
remotely
2. A. artist B. composer C.
conductor D. author
3. A. first B. best
C. last D. bestselling
4. A. partly B.
purely C. distantly D. completely
5. A.
higher B. inferior C. lower D. superior
第4页
6. A. appointment
7. A. useless
8. A. hatred
9. A.
businessman
10. A. desk
11. A. humorous
12. A. manners
13. A. adaptions
14.
A. because
15. A. singing
Section B
B. engagement
B. priceless
B. bravery
B. captain
B. floor
B. complicated
B. conversations
B. copies
B.
although
B. writing
C. runaway
C.
unworthy
C. regret
C. general
C.
peanut
C. impressive
C. sufferings
C. volumes
C. as if
C. creating
D. promise
D. pointless
D. memory
D. officer
D. ivory
D. delicate
D.
scenes
D. actions
D. whether
D.
shooting
(A)
A theatrical company was
once performing a well-known thriller on the
outskirts of London.
This company had been
assembled by a wealthy woman who had no experience
of the stage, but
whose fortune allowed her to
indulge herself. The final act of this play
included a small, but vital
part—that of the
detective. He was supposed to land by helicopter,
enter through the French
windows and question
everyone on the stage about the murder which had
taken place. When the
actor cast as the
detective failed to show up for rehearsals the
stage carpenter volunteered to take
his place.
He assured his wealthy patron that he had wide
experience of comedy and that this part
would
be easy for him. She believed him. The rest of the
company were not so sure. For some
reason the
carpenter only rehearsed the part once. Even so
the ‘manager’ felt totally confident
about
him.
On the opening night all went well until
the moment when the helicopter was supposed to
land. The terrible noise from the room above,
which should have set the chandelier swinging
wildly and at which one of the actors was
supposed to say, ‘What is that awful noise?’ never
happened. Since the next part of the play was
concerned with the noise, the actors had to do the
best they could and make up the lines. This
went on for several minutes, with the cast
becoming
increasingly desperate when,
suddenly, the chandelier began swinging violently,
but in total
silence. Finally the sound of the
approaching helicopter was heard and the cast
turned with relief
to greet the detective as
he entered through the French windows. The sight
that met their eyes left
them speechless.
There stood the carpenter, dressed in a
policeman’s uniform but wearing enough
make-up
for a circus clown. He had two bright red spots on
his cheeks and his lips were a vivid
pink. His
eyes were ringed with enormous bright blue
circles, with a blob of black mascara on the
end of each lash.
After delivering his
first line, he then completely forgot the rest of
his part. So, striding to the
center of the
stage, he took off his helmet, in which he had
hidden a dirty piece of paper on which
he had
written his lines. He started reading these like a
commentator giving the racing results.
When he
came to turn over the page, he lost his place,
fumbled hopelessly, and when he’d found it,
bowed to the audience, saying ‘Pardon me,’
before carrying on. He stuck to carpentry after
that.
1. The owner of the theatrical
company _____________.
A. was too rich to be
an actress B. had enough money to put on plays
C. was rich enough to be able to act D. put
all her money into the company
第5页
2.
3.
Why did the wealthy
‘manager’ believe the carpenter could play the
part of the detective?
A. He said he’d had
wide experience in that kind of role.
B. He
assured her that he found all acting very easy.
C. She hadn’t enough experience to know any
better.
D. She was experienced enough to
recognize a good actor.
Why did the cast
‘become speechless’?
A. They couldn’t remember
their lines.
B. They were so amazed at the
carpenter’s appearance.
C. They were surprised
the carpenter was wearing a uniform.
D. They
had no breath left after making up lines.
(B)
The Puffing Billy Railway, located about
40km east of Mclbourne, was constructed in the
early 1900s
to open up remote areas. The
present line between Belgrave and Gembrook travels
through the forests
and farmlands of the
magnificent Dangenong Rangers. Today, this non-
profit Railway operates almost
daily thanks to
the tireless efforts of more than 900 dedicated
volunteers.
General Information:
People
with disabilities—can be accommodated on most
excursion trains, including a limited
number
of wheelchairs. Please phone to check
availability.
Easy access toilets are at
Belgrave, Lakeside and Gembrook.
Refreshments and souvenirs—are available at most
stations.
Railway Tracks—standing and
walking on the tracks is not permitted.
Prams(婴儿车)—only folding or narrow type prams can
be accommodated through the narrow
carriage
doors.
Smoking—is not permitted on the train
or under any roofed areas.
Assistance Dogs
certified by a registered authority—are the only
dogs allowed on the train and
must be kept on
lead at all times.
Alcohol—is not permitted
on trains (except as provided in dining cars).
Toilets—are located at each station.
Parenting rooms are located at Belgrave, Lakeside
&Gembrook.
Photographs and videos—for
personal use are permitted. Wedding photograph and
any use, re-use
第6页
or
reproduction for commercial purposes is prohibited
without prior written permission.
Conditions:
Concession fares(优惠票价) are available to
Australian bearers of Health Care, Student,
Seniors,
Companion or Pensioner cards.
(Exclude evening dining and events). Your
signature may be
required on day of travel for
verification purposes.
Children under 4
years, not occupying a seat, are carried FREE on
excursion trains only, excluding
special
events and dining trains.
Discounts are
available for pre-booked group travel (20 or more)
on a return journey, except on
Sundays, public
holidays and school holidays.
All trains are
steam-driven unless a diesel locomotive(柴油机车) is
required in exceptional
circumstances.
First Class Travel return journeys are on
appointed trains only.
1.
2.
3.
The above information is mainly intended for
_______.
A. international tourists in
Australia
B. potential travelers of the steam
trains
C. local residents in Dandenong Ranges
D. volunteers on the Puffing Billy Railway
People are not permitted to bring ______ onto
the excursion trains.
A. prams B. guide
dogs C. wheelchairs
What can be learned
from the above information?
A. Taking photos
is forbidden on most excursion trains.
B.
Toilets for the disabled are not available at all
stations.
C. Foreign visitors to Australia can
also get concession fares.
D. One can get
tickets at a lower price as long as he books in
advance.
D. alcohol
(C)
The American
screen has long been a smoky place, at least since
1942s Now, Voyager, in
which Bette Davis and
Paul Henreid showed how to make and seal a
romantic deal over a pair of
cigarettes that
were smoldering as much as the stars. Today
cigarettes are more common on screen
than at
any other time since mid-century: 75% of all
Hollywood films—including 36% of those
rated G
or PG—show tobacco use, according to a 2006 survey
by the University of California, San
Francisco.
Audiences, especially kids, are
taking notice. Two recent studies, published in
Lancet and
Pediatrics, have found that among
children as young as 10, those exposed to the most
screen
smoking are up to 2.7 times as likely
as others to pick up the habit. Worse, it’s the
ones from
nonsmoking homes who are hit the
hardest. Now the Harvard School of Public Health
(HSPH) the
folks behind the designated-driver
campaign—are pushing to get the smokes off the
screen.
“Some movies show kids up to 14
incidents of smoking per hour”, says Barry Bloom,
HSPH’s
dean. “We’re in the business of
preventing disease, and cigarettes are the No. 1
preventable
cause”.
Harvard long believed
that getting cigarettes out of movies could have
as powerful an effect,
but it wouldn’t be
easy. Cigarette makers had a history of striking
product-placement deals with
Hollywood, and
while the 1998 tobacco settlement prevents that,
nothing stops directors from
第7页
incorporating smoking into scenes
on their own. In 1999 Harvard began holding one-
on-one
meetings with studio execs trying to
change that, and last year the Motion Picture
Association of
America flung the door open,
inviting Bloom to make a presentation in February
to all the studios.
Harvard’s advice was
direct: Get the butts entirely out, or at least
make smoking unappealing.
A few films provide
a glimpse of what a no-smoking or low-smoking
Hollywood would be
like. Producer Lindsay
Doran, who once helped persuade director John
Hughes to keep Ferris
Bueller smoke-free in
the 1980s hit, wanted to do the same for the leads
of her 2006 movie
Stranger Than Fiction. When
a writer convinced her that the character played
by Emma Thompson
had to smoke, Doran relented,
but from the way Thompson hacks her way through
the film and
snuffs out her cigarettes in a
palmful of spit, it’s clear the glamour’s gone.
And remember all the
smoking in The Devil
Wears Prada? No? That’s because the producers of
that film kept it out
entirely—even in a story
that travels from the US fashion world to Paris,
two of the most
tobacco-happy places on earth.
“No one smoked in that movie”, says Doran, “and no
one noticed”.
Such movies are hardly the rule,
but the pressure is growing. Like smokers, studios
may conclude
that quitting the habit is not
just a lot healthier but also a lot smarter.
1. Why the author mentioned Now, Voyager?
A. Smoke on screen can make romance.
B. To
show American screen was full of cigarette smoke.
C. To explain why cigarettes are easier to get
than past.
D. The romantic Hollywood movie is
a typical example of smoky screen.
2. It’s
hard to get cigarettes out of Hollywood because
________.
A. Harvard believed that it is not
easy to get cigarettes out of movies
B.
directors are reluctant to do so
C. Hollywood
needs smoke incident to attract audiences
D.
the relation between cigarette makers and
Hollywood is complex
3. Which of the following
statements is true according to the author?
A. Mosbfilms provide a glimpse of a no-smoking or
low-smoking Hollywood
B. Feris Bueller didn’t
smoke in the 1980s hit.
C. Doran will let
Emma Thompson smoke continuously next films
D. No one noticed the tobacco in The Devil Wears
Prada
4. What’s the author’s attitude toward
getting cigarettes out of screen?
A.
supportive. B. Optimistic C. Indifferent D.
Skeptical
(D)
Many people seem
to think that science fiction is typified by the
cover of some of the old
pulp magazines: the
Bug-eyed Monster, embodying every trait and
feature that most people find
repulsive, is
about grab, and presumably ravish, a sweet,
blonde, curvaceous, scantily-clad Earth
girl.
This is unfortunate because it demeans and
degrades a worthwhile and even important literary
endeavor. In contrast to this unwarranted
stereotype, science fiction rarely emphasizes sex,
and
when it does, it is more discreet than
other contemporary fiction. Instead, the basic
interest of
science fiction lies in the
relation between man and his technology and
between man and the
universe. Science fiction
is a literature of change and a literature of the
future, and while it would
第8页
be foolish to claim that science
fiction is a major literary genre at this time,
the aspects of human
life that it considers
make it well worth reading and studying for no
other literary form does quite
the same
things. The question is: what is science fiction?
And the answer must be, unfortunately,
that
there have been few attempts to consider this
question at any length or with much seriousness;
it may well be that science fiction will
resist any comprehensive definition of its
characteristics.
To say this, however, does
not mean that there are no ways of defining it nor
that various facets of
its totality cannot be
clarified.
To begin with, the following
definition should be helpful: science fiction is a
literary
sub-genre which postulates a change
(for human beings from conditions as we know them
and
follows the implications of these changes
to a conclusion. Although this definition will
necessarily
be modified and expanded, and
probably changed, in the course of this
exploration, it covers much
of the basic
groundwork and provides a point of departure. The
first point that science fiction is a
literary
sub-genre is a very important one, but one which
is often overlooked or ignored in most
discussions of science fiction. Specifically,
science fiction is either a short story or a
novel. There
are only a few dramas which could
be called science fiction, with Karel Capek’s
RUR(Rossum’s
Universal Robots) being the only
one that is well known; the body of poetry that
might be labeled
science fiction is only
slightly larger. To say that science fiction is a
sub-genre of prose fiction is to
say that it
has all the basic characteristics and serves the
same basic functions in much the same
way as
prose fiction in general, that is, it shares a
great deal with all other novels and short
stories.
Everything that can be said about
prose fiction, in general, applies to science
fiction. Every
piece of science fiction
whether short story or novel, must have a
narrator, a story, a plot, a setting
characters, language, and theme. And like any
prose, the themes of science fiction are concerned
with interpreting mans nature and experience
in relation to the world around him. Themes in
science fiction are constructed and presented
in exactly the same ways that themes are dealt
with
in any other kind of fiction. They are
the result of a particular combination of
narrator, story, plot,
character, setting, and
language. In short, the reasons for reading and
enjoying science fiction, and
the ways of
studying and analyzing it, are basically the same
as they would be for any other story
or novel.
1. The view of science fiction encouraged
by pulp magazines, while wrong, is nevertheless
_________.
A. popular B. Elegant C.
fashionable D. accurate
2. Science fiction
is called a literary sub-genre because _______.
A. it is not important enough to be a
literary genre
B. it can not be made into a
dramatic presentation
C. it has its limits
D. it shares characteristics with other types
of prose fiction
3. Which of the following
does NOT usually contribute to the theme in a
piece of science
fiction _____.
A.
character B. rhyme C. plot D. setting
4. The authors definition suggests that all
science fiction deals with _________.
A.
monsters
B. the same topics addressed by
novels and short stories
C. the unfamiliar or
unusual
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D. the
conflict between science and fiction
5. One
implication of the final sentence in the passage
is that __________.
A. those who can read and
analyze fiction can also do so with science
fiction
B. there is no reason for any reader
not to like science fiction
C. all fiction
consists of six basic elements
D. there are
reasons for enjoying science fiction
IV.
Translation 19150
1. 观众热烈的掌声盖过了演员的歌唱。 (drown)
2. 一看到学新装修好的图书馆,同学们立马爱上了在里面读书的感觉。(On)
3.
想要在英语戏剧比赛中获得好的成绩,认真研读剧本并加入有创意的改编十分重要。
(be of)
4. 直到第一个学期结束,我才意识到我应该要适应注重自主性的高中学习。 (Not
until)
5.
虽然高中十分紧张疲劳,但学校还是鼓励大家要调整自己,养成每天一个小时的体育锻
炼习惯。
(as)
参考答案
1. C 2. A 3. D
4. A 5. B 6. C 7. D 8. B
11. D
12. A
13. C 14. B 15. A 16. A 17. B 18. B 19. C
40.
were invited 41. of 42. Although 43. try 44. as
45. walking
46. performance 47. pianist’s 48.
accompany 49. communication
51. artists 52.
dramatic 53. movement 54. Competitive
1-10
BEFJI KCGHD
1-15 BDCAC BCCBD BAABB
(A)
BCB
(B) BDB
(C) BDBA
(D) ADBCA
1.
The cheerful applause has drown out the actor’s
singing.
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9. B 10. C
50.
population
55. loyalty
2. On
seeing the newly-decorated library in the school,
students fell in love immediately with the
feeling of reading books inside.
3. If you
want to get a good mark in the English drama, it
is of importance to read up scripts and
add
creative adaptions.
4. Not until the first
semester ended, did I realize I should adapt to
the senior high school life
focusing on
independence.
5. Tense and tiring as the high
school life is, the school still encourages us to
adjust ourselves and
develop the daily habit
of keep physical exercise for an hour.
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