(完整版)湖北省部分重点中学2018届高三第一次联考英语
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湖北省部分重点中学2018届高三第一次联考
命题学校:武汉一中
命题教师:刘志辉 审题教师:洪戈亮
考试时间:2017年11月10日下午14:00-16:00 试卷满分:150分
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)
1. What was the
woman’s birthday gift?
A. A phone.
B. A book. C. A coat.
2.
Where will the woman have the party?
A. At
the man’s house. B. At a restaurant.
C. At her house.
3. When did the man buy the
shoes?
A. Three weeks ago. B. Two
weeks ago. C. Three days ago.
4.
How did the man get injured?
A. By playing
basketball. B. By playing tennis.
C. By running,
5. What does the woman think of
her piano playing?
A. She is very
professional. B. She is still a beginner. C.
She doesn’t know how to play at all.
第二节(共15小题;每小题1.5分,满分22.5分)
听第6段材料,回答第6至7题。
6. When will the woman go to the library?
A. On Thursday. B. On Friday.
C. On Saturday.
7. What does the man want to
borrow?
A. Books. B.
Videos. C. Magazines.
听第7段材料,回答第8至9题。
8. What does the woman
like to do the most?
A. Go to the countryside
for walks.B. Read a book in the sunshine.C. Watch
TV at home.
9. In which season does the man
often play sports outdoors?
A. Spring.
B. Summer. C. Winter.
听第8段材料,回答第10至12题。
10. What did the woman
do while in Los Angeles?
A. She went hiking.
B. She went shopping. C. She went to a
zoo.
11. Who did the woman see in San Diego?
A. Her cousin. B. Her aunt.
C. Her friend.
12. What did the woman think of
San Francisco?
A. It was boring.
B. It had good weather. C. It was a
beautiful city.
听第9段材料,回答第13至16题。
13. What
do we know about the boy?
A. He is worried
about his new classmates.B. He recently started a
new school.
C. He has got used to his
teachers.
14. When will the boy’s father
return?
A. In two days. B. In
three days. C. In four days.
15. Who is Mrs. Jones?
A. The boy’s
teacher. B. The boy’s mother.
C. The boy’s headmaster.
16. Where does the
conversation take place?
A. In Toronto.
B. In Montreal. C. In London.
听第10段材料,回答第17至20题。
17. How many
adventures are mentioned?
A. Three.
B. Four. C. Five.
18.
Where will people see the sunrise?
第 1 页 (共 7
页)
A. Beside the Amazon River.
B. On Mount Fuji. C. Near Niagara Falls.
19.
What will people do in Thailand?
A. See many
kinds of animals. B. Take a boat down a river. C.
Go to some temples.
20. What is the talk
mainly about?
A. Travel plans.
B. Cultural differences. C. Tips for
adventures.
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,从每题所给的四个选项(A 、B 、C 和 D
)中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项
涂黑。
A
It’s a clear April morning in Olympia,
Washington, when Alan — Erickson, 63, spots an
eyesore on the side
of the road. These
unpleasant marks of black spray paint ruin a sign
identifying a local forest, and Erickson wants
the graffiti gone. “It disheartened me that
you could barely read it,” he says of the sign.
Fortunately, Erickson had
all the supplies he
needed in the bed of his truck to clean the mess:
paper towels, steel wool, rubber gloves, spray
bottles of water, and graffiti remover. After
15 minutes of spraying, rubbing and cleaning, the
sign was fresh and
clean, as if new again. “I
go by there every now and then and am so proud
because it stands out in such a beautiful
way,” he says.
As you’ve probably guessed,
that purifying pit stop wasn’t a one-off for
Erickson, a semiretired real estate
business
owner. He has made it his mission to wipe out
graffiti for the past 30 years. He started in El
Paso, Texas,
where he would paint over
graffiti that would show up on properties he owned
through his business, and he
continued when he
and his wife moved to Olympia in 2011. Erickson
deals with roughly two graffiti sites a week
on his own in addition to assisting city
organizations with their efforts. “Anytime I
can stop and spend a few
minutes getting rid
of something, I do it,” he says.
One project
Erickson has planned to deal with is the constant
vandalism, the crime of damaging public
property deliberately, of a home (which was
once a grocery store) on a busy Olympia road. “I
told them I’d paint
the house all one color
for free, and if they get any graffiti, I’ll have
it covered by the end of the day,” he says.
“Fighting graffiti is a small price to pay to
live here. I go home content that I’ve changed the
look of a beautiful
town.”
21. What’s the
passage mainly about?
A. A man single-handedly
keeping his town beautiful.B. A painter fighting
against crimes in his town.
C. An artist who
paints his town beautiful. D. A businessman
owning a real estate.
22. What can be inferred
about the man from the passage?
A. The man is
out of work. B. The man has a bed in his
truck.
C. The man has planned to paint a house
on a busy Olympia road.
D. The man is well-
prepared to wipe out graffiti.
23. What does
the underlined word “graffiti” according to the
text?
A. Beautiful pictures on the wall.B.
Unpleasant marks like drawings or writing on a
wall in a public place.
C. A kind of fierce
insects which can ruin buildings. D. A new form of
art to beautify the streets.
B
Womensfest
2017
Womensfest is back and better than ever!
Get ready for some fun events celebrating women
and highlighting
diverse experiences of women
on campus.
Monday features the “This is what
feminists (女权主义者)look like” photo exhibit, popping
up every day in a
new location on campus.
Later at 7-9pm is the Women’s Choice Election
Forum in the Library Basement, Room
B28.
Get ready to be active on Tuesday between
11:45 am and 1:30pm when Sport and Rechost
lunchtime sports at
the recreation center!
Register for this on the Womensfest movie night!
Come along to the Shadows back room to
第 2 页
(共 7 页)
watch 10 Things I Hate
About You!
Womensfest continues on Wednesday
with a Communicating with Confidence Workshop from
12-1pm in the
Science Building (303-310). For
all you Epson students out there, have fun at the
Womensfest sausage sizzle (油
煎食物的咝咝声)hosted by
ESSA from 12:30pm at the Epson campus.
On
Thursday there will be a Women’s Expo in the
Campus Hall from 12pm to 3pm! Some pretty cool
companions, charities and clubs who are all
for women empowerment will be running stands.
There will be free
food and entertainment from
talented students. In the evening, there will be a
Women’s Self-defence Class from
6:15pm.
Friday contains an awesome “This is what
feminists look like” poetry and tea with Campus
Feminist
Collective and Thursday’s in Black!
This will be taking place from 5-7pm in the
Student Common Room above
the food court. Come
along to see the full exhibit and hear awesome
poetry. Straight after that is the Campus
Feminist Collective Feminist Pub Quiz in
Shadows at 7pm.
24. On Thursday, what event is
there on campus?
A. the Women’s Choice
Election Forum at 7-9pm.
B. a Women’s Expo in
the Campus Hall between 11:45 am and 1:30pm
C.
a Women’s Self-defence Class from 6:15pm
D. a
Communicating with Confidence Workshop from 12-1pm
25. Who is the passage intended for?
A.
Feminists B. Girl Students C. Boy Students
D. Office ladies
26. This passage can be
classified as _______.
A. An exhibition guide
B. An advertisement C. A news report D.
An activity review
27. What is the purpose of
this passage?
A. To promote the awareness of
self-defence.B. To advocate the equality between
men and women.
C. To make a fun activity on
campus known.D. To show off women’ talents for
food and entertainment.
C
Have you ever
been to the tiny Welsh village of Hay-on-Wye,
situated on the River Wye on the Welsh-English
border. In the distance, it looks like any
other small European town. But Hay-on-Wye has a
delightful quirk that
sets it apart from other
small towns. It’s home to 1,400 people and
hundreds of thousands of books, making it the
largest center for secondhand books in the
entire world.
You won’t find a Barnes and
Noble in Hay-on-Wye, but what you will find is
over 30 charming, cozy
secondhand bookshops
rich with the smell of old books. (By the way,
there’s a scientific reason you love that
smell.) There’s a bookstore specializing in
out-of-print children’s books. A shop called
“Murder and Mayhem”
sells mainly crime and
detective literature. And one outdoor bookshop,
the Hay Castle Bookshop, is built around
the
walls of — you guessed it — a castle. How could a
book lover possibly ask for anything more? (Though
this
is a Welsh town, it would be very easy to
develop this Japanese literary habit here.)
One of the town’s most unique features is its
“honesty bookshops.” These are basically just
bookshelves
fitting out in the Open, without a
cashier or employee to speak of. A. sign announces
the prices of the books
(which are often less
than one U. S. dollar), and a collection box for
money sits nearby. Customers are trusted to
pay, on their honor. There are no security
cameras or anything; just good old-fashioned
trust.
Apart from being a popular tourist
destination for literary fanatics throughout the
entire year, Hay-on-Wye
also throws a literary
festival each year at the end of May. Bookworms
from all over the world flock to this tiny
village to hear famous writers speak, attend
book signings, and, of couurse, stock up on
reading material. And
there’s plenty for the
kids to do (and read) too! Here, your child grows
up loving to read.
28. What can be the best
title of the passage?
A. A small town with
more books than people. B. Honest people in a
British town.
C. The most unique bookshops in
the world.D. Bookshops — a good place for tired
travelers.
29. Which of the following can take
the place of the underlined word “quirk” in the
first paragraph?
第 3 页 (共 7 页)
A. atmosphere B. situation
C. view D. feature
30. The small
town has the following features except _______.
A. It’s the largest center for secondhand
books.
B. The bookshops there are in the
Japanese style, with no security cameras.
C.
There is a literary festival each year for book-
lovers throughout the world.
D. Customers to
the honesty bookshops help themselves buying
books.
31. In which column of a magazine can
you probably find the passage?
A. Finance
B. Fashion C. Travel D.
Health
D
According to a latest research,
shoppers in the UK are spending less money on
toilet paper to save money.
Penny pinching UK
consumers choose cheaper products from discounters
such as Aldi and Lidi rather than luxury
alternatives.
This has wiped 6% off the
value of the soft tissue paper market in the UK.
It has shrunk from £1.19 billion in
2011 to
£1.12 billion in 2015, according to a new report
from market research company Mintel. Furthermore,
the
future of the market looks far from rosy,
with sales expected to fall further to £1.11
billion in 2016.
In the last year alone,
despite an increase in the UK population and a
subsequent rise in the number of
households,
sales of toilet paper fell by 2%, with the average
household reducing their toilet roll spending from
£ 43 in 2014 to £41 in 2015.
Overall,
almost three in five people say they try to limit
their usage of paper, including facial tissue and
kitchen roll, to save money. “Strength,
softness and thickness remain the leading
indicators of toilet paper quality,
with just
a small part of consumers preferring more
luxurious alternatives, such as those with flower
patterns or
perfume,” said Mintel analyst Jack
Duckett. “These extra features are considered
unnecessary by the majority of
shoppers, which
probably reflects how these types of products are
typically more expensive than regular toilet
paper, even when on special offer.”
While
consumers are spending less on toilet paper, they
remain particular about this product, in theory at
least,
when it comes to paper quality. Top of
Britons’ toilet paper wish list is softness(57%)
followed by
strength(45%)and thickness(36%).
One in 10 buyers rank toilet rolls made from
recycled paper among their top considerations,
highlighting how
overall the environment is
much less of a consideration for shoppers than
product quality. In a challenge for.
manufactures, 81% of paper product users said
they would consider buying
recycled toilet
tissue if it were comparable in quality to
standard paper.
32. The market sales of toilet
paper have decreased because _______.
A.
Britons have cut their spending on it. B. its
prices have gone up over the years.
C. its
quality has seen marked improvement.D. Britons
have developed the habit of saving.
33. What
does the author think of the future of the tissue
paper market in the UK?
A. It will expand in
time. B. It will continue the tendency
of decrease.
C. It will experience ups and
downs. D. It will recover as population grows.
34. What does Jack Duckett say about toilet
paper?
A. Special offers would promote its
sales. B. Consumers are loyal to certain brands.
C. Luxurious features add much to the price.
D. Consumers have a variety to choose from.
35. What can we infer from the last paragraph?
A. More and more Britons buy recycled toilet
paper to protect the environment.
B. Toilet
paper producers are facing a great challenge in
promoting its sales.
C. Toilet paper producers
compete with one another to improve product
quality.
D. Environmental protection is not
much of a concern when Britons buy toilet paper.
第二节(共5小题;每小题2分,满分10分)
根据短文内容,从短文后的选项中选出能填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为多余选项。
第 4 页 (共 7 页)
How to be a good
conversationalist?
According to a Pew Research
study of 10,000 American adults, we are more
divided and less likely to
compromise than
ever before. 36 In today’s education,
conversational competence might be one of the
most overlooked skills school fails to teach.
Generally speaking, a conversation requires a
balance between
talking and listening, and
somewhere along, the way we lose that balance.
Then how to find the balance and have
a better
conversation, here are some tips for you.
Don’t multitask. 37 Just be present. Be
in that moment. Don’t think about the argument you
had
with your partner. Don’t think about what
you are going to have for dinner. If you get out
of the conversation,
don’t be half in it and
half out of it.
Use open-ended conversations.
38 If you put in a simple question, you are
going to get a simple
answer out. Instead of
asking “Were you terrified?”, you ask “what was
that like?” or “How did that feel?”
Because
people then might have to stop for a moment and
think about it and you are going to get a much
more
interesting response.
Listen.
Listening is perhaps the most, the number one most
important skill that you could develop. 39
and sometimes that means setting aside your
personal opinion. But most people don’t listen
with the intent to
understand but with the
intent to reply.
40 A good conversation
is like a miniskirt, short enough to hold
interest, but long enough to cover the
subject.
In conclusion, to become a better
conversationalist, you need to enter every
conversation, listening attentively
and
assuming that you have something to learn.
A.
Be brief.
B. Look the person in the eye.
C. You need to let them come and let them go.
D. The true listening requires a setting aside
of yourself.
E. Start your questions with who,
when, what, where, why, or how.
F. Much of
this is because we are not listening to each other
in our conversation.
G. That doesn’t mean you
set down your cell phone or book or whatever in
your hand.
第三部分 英语知识运用(共两节,满分45分)
第一节:完形填空(共20小题;每小题1.5分,满分30分)
I don’t know
why I came to the decision to become a loser, but
I know I made the choice at a young age.
Sometime in the middle of the fourth grade, I
stopped 41 . By the time I was in the seventh
grade, I was
42 , rebellious and
disrespectful.
It wasn’t long after that I
43 school. Hard physical labor was the
consequence for the choices I made
as a(n)
44 , At the age of 21, I was hopelessly 45
and using drugs as a way to deal with the fact
that
I had no 46 and stuck in a dead-end
job carrying heavy construction materials up a
ladder all day.
But now I believe in do-overs,
in the chance to do it all over 47 . And I
believe that do-overs can be
made at any 48
in your life, if you have the right motivation.
Actually, my motivation as a man came
from a
surprising 49 .
It was September 21,
2002, when my son Blake was born. It was funny
that after a life of avoiding 50 ,
now I
was in charge of something so fragile. Over the
years, as I grew into the title of 51 , I
began to learn
something about myself. 52
, Blake and I were both learning to walk, talk,
work, and play for the first time.
I began my
do-over.
It took me almost three years to
learn how to 53 . I started with my son’s
books. Over and over, I
54 reading books
to him until I remembered all the 55 in
every one of them. I began wonder if it was
possible for me to go back to 56 . I knew
I wanted to be a good role 57 , so after a
year-and-a-half
and a lot of hard work, I
58 my GED test on my son’s fourth birthday.
This may not sound like much, but
第 5 页 (共 7
页)
all things 59 , it was one
of the best days in ray life. Today, I’m a full-
time college student, studying to
become a
sociologist.
It’s funny that growing up I
always heard these great turn-around stories of
triumph over shortcomings.
60 , I never
thought they applied to me. Now I believe it’s a
choice anyone can make: to do it all over again.
41. A. trying B. weeping C. suffering D.
playing
42. A. crazy B. lazy C. secure D.
generous
43. A. jumped out of B. ran out of
C. dropped out of D. took out of
44. A. adult
B. worker C. adolescent D. carrier
45. A.
dedicated B. confused C. committed D. lost
46.
A. concern B. education C. choice D. strength
47. A. violently B. independently C. gradually
D. again
48. A. entrance B. case C. point D.
altitude
49. A. source B. encouragement C.
assistance D. award
50. A. guilt B. laziness
C. comfort D. responsibility
51. A. Labor B.
Father C. Mother D. Graduate
52. A. In a way
B. On the contrary C. On schedule D. As usual
53. A. bargain B. exist C. read D. apologize
54. A. practiced B. imagined C. suggested D.
considered
55. A. impressions B. meanings C.
explanations D. words
56. A. college B.
institute C. school D. workplace
57. A. model
B. volunteer C. competitor D. candidate
58. A.
attended B. passed C. failed D. abandoned
59.
A. thought highly of B. brought up C. put forward
D. taken into account
60. A. Consequently B.
However C. Therefore D. Additionally
第二节(共10小题;每小题1.5分,满分15分)
October 15, 2017
61 (witness) the 60th anniversary of the opening
of the Wuhan Yangtze River Bridge.
Among the
various ways of celebration, a book 62 (name)
The Bridge was 63 (particular)
eye-
catching. It was co-authored by Liu Yu, 64
Wuhan fine arts document research expert and his
daughter. In the past 3 years, Liu 65
(collect) more than 2,000 items related to the
Wuhan Yangtz River
Bridge 66 over 1,000
Daqiao trademarks featuring the image of the Wuhan
Yangtz River Bridge. Liu said
a Daqiao
trademark was something both Wuhan and China took
pride in and 67 even the advertising
background of many famous products had used
the pattern before. However, people 68
(native) like Liu Yu
and his daughter have
realised this and taken effective measures.
Liu’s daughter participated 69 the
format design, and also inserted in the book the
bridge-related
news reports from 1957 to 2017,
including the bridge’s opening, as well as the
Wuhan marathon runners 70
(pass) over it
in 2017.
第四部分 写作(共两节;满分35分)
第一节
短文改错(共10小题;每小题1分,满分10分)
假定英语课上老师要求同桌之间交换修改作文,请
你修改你同桌写的以下作文。文中共有10处语言
错误,每句中最多有两处。每次错误仅涉及一个单词的
增加、删除或修改。
第 6 页 (共 7 页)
In
today’s society, the large number of people hold
the view which 20% of one’s success lies in his
IQ, while
80% in his EQ.
As far as I am
concern, I fully agree with this opinion. First,
with a high EQ, one will get along well with his
companions, which makes that possible for him
to work in a harmonious atmosphere and improving
the working
efficiency. Furthermore, those who
has a high EQ can discipline themselves and
bravely overcome the difficult in
their lives.
Apart from these, if one has a high EQ, he will be
likely to lead to a colorful and interesting life.
In brief, it is one’s EQ plays an important
part in one’s life. Therefore, EQ is equal
important for one to be
successful even if not
more vital than IQ.
第 7 页 (共 7 页)