2015高考模拟题(十).doc

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1、2018高考模拟题(十) 一、单项填空(共15小题,每小题1分,满分15分) 1. In 2018s, XiJinping was made chairman of China. A. the; theB. the; a C. /; theD. the; / 2. Its Toms own fault if he feels at the partyhe never tries to be friendly to people. A. cut outB. left out C. made outD. stood out 3. How did you keep in touch with the

2、 agent, Mary? I surfed the Internet and called whose telephone number is provided. A. oneB. those C. the oneD. that 4. in the queue for two hours, the girl suddenly realized she had left her card in the car. A. WaitingB. To wait C. Having waitedD. To have waited 5. So difficult it to make such great

3、 progress without the help of his desk mate that he was close to giving up. A. he have feltB. have he felt C. he did feelD. did he feel 6. Since I decided to take my English teachers advice, I have reading aloud in the morning every day. A. catered toB. taken to C. applied toD. submitted to 7. We sh

4、ould definitely start exercising and avoid illnesses it is too late. A. whenB. before C. untilD. after 8. Who is it up decide when we will go abroad for further study? A. to toB. to for C. for toD. to in 9. In my opinion, life in the twentyfirst century is much easier than . A. that used to beB. it

5、is used to C. it was used toD. it used to be 10. There are a lot of ways to your messages when you are putting together an ad campaign. A. get acrossB. get away C. get backD. get through 11. What surprises us greatly is that he spares no effort the new product in order to get soon. A. to promote; pr

6、omoted B. promoting; promoted C. promoting; promoting D. to promote; promoting 12. What made him so worried? the new campus life there. A. His son not used to B. His son not using to C. His son not being used to D. His son being not used to 13. What a terrible experience! You cant imagine the hard t

7、ime we had camping last Sunday. A. goneB. to go C. goingD. to going 14. for the people fond of fashion, the magazine enjoyed great success. Yes. can compare with it so far. A. Designing; NothingB. Designed; Nothing C. Designed; NoneD. Designing; Nothing 15. It doesnt make any what we call generosity

8、; its still makes him a good friend. A. sense; thatB. difference; that C. difference; whatD. sense; what 二、完形填空(共20小题;每小题1分,满分20分) Today I did something that said more about me than it did about my computer. I could not get a page 16 after many tries, so I hit the computer 17. It didnt help, of cour

9、se, but the act was something 18 a long time ago, when all you had to do to get something to work again was given it a good hit. Consider our familys old television. Every so often the pictures would 19. There was thin knob on the back of the TV and we could use the knob to 20 the images. If that di

10、dnt work, we could do what my father always didhit the top of the TV with the 21 of his hand. More often than not, it did the 22. Beyond televisions, a lot of machines like radios and washers required “23 love”. And more often than not a good hit was all they needed to restart their 24. However, I f

11、inally called our technician and 25 my computers problem. He laughed on the phone, “Did you try 26 the device?” “No,” I responded, “but I gave it a hit.” He laughed more loudly, “Not a good thing to do.” Of course he was right. But today we completely 27 people who know things we dont. And I have se

12、rious 28 whether they want to share their technical knowledge, as happened when I reported my computers problem to another technician. The response I got from him sounded something like 29. How I miss the days when there was 30 a good hit couldnt 31 right. Later this day, I was coming out of a local

13、 store when I saw a man at a 32 how to start his car. I offered to help but nothing worked. Then I remembered the old trick. “Do you have a hammer?” I asked. Finding out the starter, I gave it a good 33 and the engine 34 to life. I accepted the drivers thankfulness. And I was also grateful because t

14、here are still devices that 35 the help of a firm hand. 16. A. loadingB. load C. loadedD. have loaded 17. A. loudly B. proudly C. carefullyD. impatiently 18. A. dating fromB. arising from C. coming fromD. learning from 19. A. shakeB. flow C. pauseD. fade 20. A. clearB. stead C. cleanD. function 21.

15、A. hitB. help C. actD. flat 22. A. work B. help C. trickD. magic 23. A. trueB. rough C. freeD. human 24. A. modelsB. knobs C. functionsD. measures 25. A. reportedB. said C. toldD. called 26. A. hittingB. rebooting C. shakingD. slapping 27. A. rely onB. take on C. insist onD. spy on 28. A. questionsB

16、. thoughts C. problemsD. doubts 29. A. MathsB. English C. GreekD. Physics 30. A. everythingB. nothing C. anythingD. something 31. A. leaveB. make C. letD. put 32. A. messB. loss C. timeD. glance 33. A. hammerB. hit C. hugD. act 34. A. agreedB. applied C. turnedD. came 35. A. needB. thank C. apprecia

17、te D. perform 三、阅读理解(共15小题,每题2分,满分30分) A Nowadays more and more foreign enterprises and companies are no longer relying on interviews for recruitment. Years of studying interviewing has made it clear that it is not a very objective process. Personnel officers often hire the person they like best or

18、even the one they think most physically attractive. Looking good is no guarantee of doing the job well, however. Uglies or those who are aesthetically challenged, lose heart. To get a more objective view, many companies are also using psychological tests to hire both for relatively routine job and f

19、or positions at senior levels of management. It is impossible to say how many employers use tests, but estimates of test sales in the U.K. for 2018 were over one million. The basic reason employers use tests is clear tests claim to be scientific and objective. A large body of research has shown that

20、 interviews by themselves are not very reliable as a method of selection. Peoples judgments are often very subjective whether they like the look of someone counts for more than almost anything else. But reliable and valid tests can offer rapid and more objective information about would be employees.

21、 If a candidate talks well in an interview but his test results suggest that he is a careless person who cannot concentrate, and employer is likely to think twice about hiring him. Taking a serious test for a job is rather different from taking a game like test. You can spend just a little time answ

22、ering questions of that kind of test, and you can deny the answers and say they are not accurate. But you can not go to a serious test without enough preparation since you can not afford to be denied and eliminated again and again. 36. In the past, who would be sure to be employed after an interview

23、? A. The person who was physically attractive. B. The person who was well educated. C. The person who had great abilities. D. The person who was appreciated by the personnel officers. 37. The underlined part in the first paragraph refers to those who are . A. thought to be goodlooking B. most likely

24、 to do the job well C. not attractive for their appearances D. given the job of interviewing the candidate 38. From the last paragraph, we can conclude that while taking a serious test for a job, . A. you can deny the answers B. you can not treat it as a game C. you neednt make much preparation D. y

25、ou can say the answers are not accurate B Most children, Asher Svidensky says, are a little intimidated by golden eagles. Kazakh boys in western Mongolia start learning how to use the huge birds to hunt for foxes and hares at the age of 13, when the eagles sit heavily on their undeveloped arms. Svid

26、ensky, a photographer and travel writer, shot five boys learning the skill as well as the girl, AsholPan. “To see her with the eagle was amazing,” he recalls. “She was a lot more comfortable with it, a lot more powerful with it and a lot more at ease with it.” The Kazakhs of the Altai mountain range

27、 in western Mongolia are the only people that hunt with golden eagles, and today there are around 400 practising falconers. AsholPan, the daughter of a particularly celebrated hunter, may well be the countrys only apprentice huntress. They hunt in winter, when the temperatures can drop to -40C (-40F

28、). A hunt begins with days of trekking on horseback through snow to a mountain or ridge giving an excellent view of prey for miles around. Hunters generally work in teams. After a fox is spotted, riders charge towards it to flush it into the open, and an eagle is released. If the eagle fails to make

29、 a kill, another is released. The skill of hunting with eagles, Svidensky says, lies in harnessing an unpredictable force of nature. “You dont really control the eagle. You can try and make her hunt an animal and then its a matter of nature. What will the eagle do? Will she make it? How will you get

30、 her back afterwards?” The eagles are not bred in captivity, but taken from nests at a young age. Female eagles are chosen since they grow to a larger sizea large adult might be as heavy as seven kilos, with a wingspan of over 230cm. After years of service, on a spring morning, a hunter releases his

31、 mature eagle a final time, leaving a butchered sheep on the mountain as a farewell present. “Thats how the Kazakh eagle hunters make sure that the eagles go back to nature and have their own strong newborns, for the sake of future generations,” Svidensky says. Svidensky describes AsholPan as a smil

32、ing, sweet and shy girl. His photographs of her engaging in what has been a male activity for around 2,000 years say something about Mongolia in the 21st Century. “The generation that will decide what will happen with every tradition that Mongolia contains is this generation,” says Svidensky, who sh

33、owed AsholPans family the photographs on his laptop. “Everything there is going to change and is going to be redefined and the possibilities are amazing.” 39. What makes Asher Svidensky surprised? A. The colourful and powerful eagles. B. The special way of hunting by the Kazakhs. C. The young age of

34、 Kazakh eagle hunters. D. The wonderful performance of AsholPan. 40. What does the underlined word “prey” in the third paragraph mean? A. The scenery to be enjoyed. B. The creature to be caught. C. The opinion to be argued. D. The future to be expected. 41. What can we infer from the fourth paragrap

35、h? A. Man can control nature. B. All efforts will pay off one day. C. Making use of existing resources is important. D. Never think about controlling others. 42. Which could be the best title for the passage? A. A photographer and travel writers travelling experience. B. A 13yearold eagle huntress i

36、n Mongolia. C. The true life of the eagle hunters in Mongolia. D. The future of the traditional way of eagle hunting. C I grew up one of ten children on a farm in Wyoming. After my dads service in World War II, he was called again to fight during the Korean War, and when he returned home, he couldnt

37、 drink enough to numb his terrible memories. He struggled to provide for his growing family. Until I learned to read, I didnt realize that all children did not live as I did. On our occasional trips to town, I would borrow some books from the library. When I opened a book, I could enter an unknown p

38、lacewhere children werent hungry and were in need of little. I often dreamed that I lived in a quaint cottage with a white picket fence and that my life mirrored my favorite characters, the Bobbsey Twins or Nancy Drew. When I wasnt daydreaming, my reality was the life I shared with my brothers and s

39、isters. At night I hid under the covers attempting to silence the sounds of life in an alcoholic home. My classmates asked why we didnt have electricity or a telephone. I suppose my explanations were nothing more than lies, but the stories I told improved with every book I read. Starting at a very y

40、oung age, my siblings and I sometimes got jobs to earn moneysometimes so we could wear new, rather than handmedown clothes, but more often to put more food on the family table. While other children were busy with dance and piano lessons, we were busy with doing housework for our neighbors. Mom grew

41、vegetables, raised chickens, and baked bread, so we seldom went hungry, even when supper was only a pot of beans. But my real hunger wasnt for foodit was a hunger for a better life. It was a hunger for knowledge about the world beyond our simple existence. It was a hunger to prove Dad wrong when he

42、told us we would never amount to anything. Hunger motivated my brothers and sisters to achieve much more than our parents expected of us. We devoured the offerings of the public schools because we realized that education would be our steppingstone into a brighter future. Now Im proud of the accompli

43、shments of my siblings an art professor; a wellknown veterinarian;, plus business owners, all with artistic talents. And me, Im the keeper of a restaurant and the boss of a company. Ill never know if we would have so many accumulated successes if we had not known hunger as children, or whether we wo

44、uld be blessed with so much artistic talent if our lives had been busy with afterschool lessons and storebought toys. 43. When the author was a child, . A. she often suffered hunger B. she couldnt go to school because of poverty C. she did nothing but daydream about a better life D. she lived a poor

45、 but meaningful life 44. Which of the following is not the motivation for the author to achieve success? A. Her classmates laughing at her. B. Her fathers low expectation. C. Her favorite characters in the books. D. Her hard life in reality. 45. When asked why there was no electricity or telephone a

46、t her home, the author . A. gave an honest reply B. made up stories C. cries sadly D. ignored the question 46. From the last paragraph, we can know that the author thinks . A. she should have lived a better life in her childhood B. she had to have extra lessons after school C. the life and hunger of

47、 her childhood made her successful D. the life of her childhood made her learn a lot more than other children D The Spring Festival holiday last month offered many people working in big cities the rare chance to go back to their countryside hometowns and have a look at the withering villages. Several doctorate candidates have noted the sense of loss they got from their visits to their dilapidated hometowns, which have been hollowed out by the process of China

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