分享
2019年上海市春季高考英语试题(原卷版).doc
下载文档

ID:2835281

大小:109.50KB

页数:11页

格式:DOC

时间:2024-01-05

收藏 分享赚钱
温馨提示:
1. 部分包含数学公式或PPT动画的文件,查看预览时可能会显示错乱或异常,文件下载后无此问题,请放心下载。
2. 本文档由用户上传,版权归属用户,汇文网负责整理代发布。如果您对本文档版权有争议请及时联系客服。
3. 下载前请仔细阅读文档内容,确认文档内容符合您的需求后进行下载,若出现内容与标题不符可向本站投诉处理。
4. 下载文档时可能由于网络波动等原因无法下载或下载错误,付费完成后未能成功下载的用户请联系客服处理。
网站客服:3074922707
2019 上海市 春季 高考 英语试题 原卷版
绝密★启用前 2019年1月上海普通高等招生统一考试 英语试卷 (满分150分,考试时间120分钟) 考生注意: 答题前,务必在答题纸上填写准考证号和姓名,并将核对后的条形码贴在指定位置上,在答题纸反而清楚地填写姓名。 I. Listening Comprehension Section A Directions: In Section A, you will hear ten short conversations between two speakers. At the end of each conversation, a question will be asked about what was said. The conversations and the questions will be spoken only once. After you hear a conversation and the question about it, read the four possible answers on your paper, and decide which one is the best answer to the question you have heard. 1. A. In a church. B. In the man’s home. C. In a restaurant. D. In a furniture store 2. A. She was excited. B. She was very nervous. C. She was very confident. D. There was something wrong with her heart. 3. A. She is full. B. She doesn’t like that snack bar C. She is ill. D. She is going to see the doctor. 4. A. 150 pounds. B. 110 pounds. C. 50 pounds. D. 100 pound. 5. A. He couldn’t spell the words. B. He did well in spelling. C. He reckoned that it was hard to say. D. He didn’t do well in contest. 6. A. Concerned. B. Satisfied. C. Relaxed. D. Depressed 7. A. They are talking about a fitness coach. B. They are discussing about the former firm. C. They are talking about their former colleague. D. They are talking about their friends’ school. 8. A. Young people weren’t satisfied with the lecture. B. The lecture was very successful. C. Drinking water was banned in the lecture. D. The lecture made people feel thirsty. 9. A. The boss. B. Tom. C. The woman. D. The man. 10. A. He already has one calculator. B. He doesn’t like the solar-powered calculator. C. He is good at calculating. D. He would like to have a different present. Section B Directions: In Section B, you will hear two passages and one longer conversation. After each passage or conversation, you will be asked several questions. The passages and the conversation will be read twice, but the questions will be spoken only once. When you hear a question, read the four possible answers on your paper and decide which one is the best answer to the question you have heard. Question 11 through 13 are based on the following passage. 11. A. 1938. B. 1939. C. 1942. D. 1948. 12. A. Because most Australians couldn’t afford it. B. Because the war broke out. C. Because the flying boats were out of dated. D. Because land-based aircraft had developed rapidly. 13. A. The price of flying boats. B. The development of Rose Bay. C. The surprising history of flying boats. D. The advancement of flying boats. Question 14 through 16 are based on the following passage. 14. A. They have various skills. B. They are well organized. C. They can solve difficult problems. D. They have creative ideas. 15. A. Disorderliness might result in creativity. B. Creativity might lead to messiness. C. Smarter people believe that cleanliness is not important. D. Messiness helps cultivate creativity. 16. A. The qualities of intelligent people. B. The misunderstanding of creativity. C. The relationship between creativity and messiness. D. The components of creativity. Question 17 through 20 are based on the following conversation. 17. A. A new research into the human brain. B. The advantages of men and women. C. The different connections in brain in men and women. D. The study on two sides of the brain. 18. A. In men’s brains, there are stronger connections in two sides of the brain. B. In men’s brains, there are stronger connections in each half of the brain. C. The connections in men’s brain are not so strong as those in women’s brain. D. There is nothing different between male and female brain. 19. A. Multitask. B. Map reading. C. Cycling. D. Performing a single task. 20. A. The different-connection theory is not convincing. B. He holds a neutral attitude to the research findings. C. The connections inside the brain will not change immediately. D. He disagrees with the new findings and thinks the connection inside the brain is complex and changeable. Ⅱ. Grammar Vocabulary Section A Directions: After reading the passage below, fill in the blanks to make the passage coherent and grammatically correct. For the blanks with a given word, fill in each blank with the proper form of the given word; for the other blanks, use one word that best fits each blank. Start with the end and work backwards When Jason Hoelscher was an undergraduate of fine art studies, there weren’t any professional development classes. So ambition and the timely realization (21)________ he would have to determine “what’s next” on his own urged Jason to engage his future self to find direction. It was 1996, and he was finishing his BFA (Bachelor of Fine Art) in Denver. He was faced with the choice of sitting back to wait for something (22)________ (happen), or pursuing a path into the unknown. He chose the latter. Jason set up a plan that in five years he (23)________ (show) his work in the top gallery in that area of the country. This five-year goal gave him a starting point (24)________ which to work backwards. By setting the goal, all of Jason’s efforts (25)________ (point) in the same direction. He showed up at different art show openings, and researched as best he could to make (26)________ familiar with the market environment. As a result of showing up, Jason took opportunities (27)________ got him closer to his goal. He sent work to a student show and was accepted by Robin Rule, the owner of Rule Gallery. (28)________ (inspire), Jason spent the next month making new work. In April of 1997, Jason went back to Rule Gallery with his new work. (29)________ scared to death, he looked confident at the gallery meeting. When he left, he left as the newest addition to the Rule Gallery roster (花名册). He had his first exhibition there one year later. Jason could have stopped with the show selection, but what he really wanted was gallery representation. He struck while the iron was hot, and in (30)________ (do) so, shortened his five-year plan into a year-and-a-half. Section B A. repetitive B. continually C. alerts D. pattern E. locate F. mental G. challenge H. network I. evolving J. reversely K. literacy Directions: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need. Bill Drayton believes we’re in the middle of a necessary but painful historical transition. For millenniums most people’s lives had a certain ___31___. You went to school to learn a trade or a skill-baking, farming or accounting. Then you could go into the workforce and make a good living repeating the same skill over the course of your career. But these days machines can do pretty much anything that’s ___32___. The new world requires a different sort of person. Drayton calls this new sort of personal changemaker. Changemakers are people who can see the patterns around them, identify the problems in any situation, figure out ways to solve the problems in any situation, figure out ways to solve the problem, organize fluid teams, lead collective action and then ___33___ adapt as situations change. For example, Ashoka fellow Andrés Gallardo is a Mexican who lived in a high crime neighborhood. He created an app, called Haus, that allows people to ___34___ with their neighbors. The app has a panic button that ___35___ everybody in the neighborhood when a crime is happening. It allows neighbors to organize, chat, share crime statistics and work together. To form and lead this community of communities, Gallardo had to possess what Drayton calls “cognitive empathy-based living for the good of all.” Congnitive empathy is the ability to perceive how people are feeling in ___36___ circumstances. “For the good of all” is the capacity to build teams. It doesn’t matter if you are working in the cafeteria or the inspection line of a plant, companies will now only hire people who can ___37___ problems and organize responses. Millions of people already live with the mind-set. But a lot of people still inhabit the world of following rules and repetitive skills. They hear society telling them: “We don’t need you. We don’t need your kids, either.” Of course, those people go into reactionary mode and strike back. The central ___38___ of our time, Drayton says, is to make everyone a changemaker. In an earlier era, he says, society realized it needed universal ___39___. Today, schools have to develop the curriculums and assessments to make the changemaking mentality universal. They have to understand this is their criteria for success. Ashoka has studied social movements to find out how this kind of ___40___ shift can be promoted. It turns out that successful movements take similar steps. Ⅲ. Reading Comprehension Section A Directions: For each blank in the following passages there are four words or phrases marked A, B, C and D. Fill in each blank with the work or phrase that best fits the context. More people are travelling than ever before, and lower barriers to entry and falling costs means they are doing so for ___41___ periods. The rise of “city breaks” 48-hour bursts of foreign cultures, easier on the pocket and annual leave balance has increased tourist numbers, but not their ___42___ spread. The same attractions have been used to market cities such as Paris, Barcelona and Venice for decades, and visitors use the same infrastructure as residents to reach them. “Too many people do the same thing at the exact same time,” says Font. “For ___43___, the city no longer belongs to them.” This starts with marketing, says Font, who notes that Amsterdam has started advising visitors to seek ___44___ outside of the city centre on its official website. “That takes some balls, really to do that. But only so many people will look at the website, and it means they can say to their residents they’re doing all they can [to ease congestion.]” But it also ___45___ a better way, it is called “detourism”: sustainable travel tips an ___46___ itineraries for exploring an authentic Venice, off the paths beaten by the 28 million visitors who flock there each year. A greater variety of ___47___ for prospective visitors ------ ideas for what to do in off-peak seasons, for example, or outside of the city center ------ can have the effect of diverting them from already saturated landmarks, or ___48___ short breaks away in the first place. Longer stays ___49___ the pressure, says Font. If you go to Paris for two days, you’re going to go to the Eiffel Tower. “If you go for two weeks, you’re not going to go to the Eiffel Tower 14 times.” Similarly, repeat visitors have a better sense of the _____50_____, “We should be asking how we get tourists to _____51_____, not how to get them to come for the first time. If they’re coming for the fifth time, it is much easier to integrate their behavior with ours.” Local governments can foster this sustainable activity by giving preference to responsible operator and even high-paying consumers. Font says cities could stand to be more selective about the tourists they try to attract when the current metric for marketing success is how many there are, and how far they’ve come. “You’re thinking, ‘yeah but at what cost...’.” He points to unpublished data from the Barcelona Tourist Board that prioritizes Japanese tourists for spending an average of 640 more per day than French tourist as a(n) _____52_____ that fails to take into account their bigger carbon footprint. _____53_____ tourists are also more likely to be repeat visitors that come at off-peak times, buy local produce, and _____54_____ to less crowded parts of the city ------ all productive steps towards more _____55_____ tourism, and more peaceful relations with residents. 41. A. longer B. shorter C. wider D. clearer 42. A. environmental B. national C. economic D. geographic 43. A. locals B. tourists C. visitors D. cleaners 44. A. transports B. accommodation C. restaurants D. service 45. A. addresses B. paves C. proposes D. receives 46. A. separate B. individual C. alternative D. objective 47. A. reform B. guidance C. invitation D. support 48. A. convincing B. discouraging C. preventing D. resisting 49. A. pace B. escape C. withstand D. ease 50. A. culture B. knowledge C. entertainment D. ability 51. A. take over B. bring up C. come back D. lay off 52. A. distinction B. harmony C. association D. comparison 53. A. French B. Italian C. Spanish D. German 54. A. carry out B. give into C. spread out D. impact on 55. A. slight B. complex C. temporary D. sustainable Section B Directions: Read the following three passages. Each passage is followed by several questions or unfinished statements For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that fits best according to the information given in the pas sage you have just read. (A) I believe that, as a doctor, I should always get a blanket for my patients who need one. Yes I know there are other people who can do this. I can ask a nurse or an orderly to do it, but I believe that I should do it. So several times a day, while working in our emergency department, I leave my patient’s bedside, get them a nice warm blanket and cover them up, before continuing on my day. This action goes along with what I believe to be the three rules of emergency medicine (and perhaps medicine in general). I repeat these often to the residents and medical students I supervise in our busy urban emergency department. I tell them: (1) we make people feel better; (2) we try to make sure nothing really bad is happening to them right now; and (3), we try to tell them what is causing their symptoms. I say that we can almost always achieve the first two rules but not always the third. No news is usually good news from an ER doctor. If I find a reason for, say, your abdominal pain it is rarely a good thing. Which brings me back to why I believe I should offer to bring my patients a blanket. To me it is the first step in communicating to the person that my priority is his or her comfort, both physical and emotional. It is a simple act that acknowledges my desire to meet their basic needs as a patient. It may be an overused expression but I want to treat my patients the way I would want my family members taken care of. This behavior was also modeled for me when I was a patient. Shortly after college I was involved in a serious accident while working in an ambulance as a volunteer. The short story is that I broke my femur(大腿骨), the large bone in my thigh, and my recovery required a total of four surger

此文档下载收益归作者所有

下载文档
你可能关注的文档
收起
展开