高考英语试题广东卷(2)深圳卷.doc
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After each conversation or monologue, you will hear several questions. After you hear a question, read the four possible answers and choose the best one. Then blacken the letter corresponding to your answer on the ANSWER SHEET. You have 10 seconds for each question. The conversations, monologues and questions will be read only ONCE. Questions 1 to 3 are based on the following conversation. 1. A. 12 B. 28 C. 40 D. 52 2. A. Britain B. China C. France D. Germany 3. A. About £ 10,000 B. About £ 12,000. C. About £ 1££ 4. A. July 1st B. July 6th C. July 10th D. July 27th 5. A. Because he had a terrible trip there. B. Because Spain is close to Portugal. C. Because it is not hot there in July. D. Because the hotels there were expensive. 6. A. Germany. B. Greece. C. Portugal. D. Italy. Questions 7 to 9 are based on the following monologue. 7. A. At 7:30 a.m B. At 10:00 a.m. C. Before 8:15 a.m. D. Before 10:00 a.m 8. A. Rose Garden. B. White Room C. Green Room D. Blue Room 9. A. After 4:00 p.m B. After 1:00 p.m C. Before 10:00 a.m D. Before 12:00 noon Questions 10 to 12 are based on the following conversation. 10. A. Playing games. B. Surfing the Internet. C. Reading magazines D. Watching TV programs. 11. A. Watching TV commercials. B. Seeing soap operas. C. Going in for sports. D. Reading news. 12. A. Seeing opera. B. Internet surfing C. Watching news on TV. D. Watching TV commercials. Part B Listening for information ( 10 items, 2 points for each item ) Directions : In this part of the test, you will hear one conversation. The conversation will be read TWICE. After you hear the conversation, you are required to fill in the numbered blanks with the information you have heard . Write your answer on the ANSWER SHEET. Blanks 13 through 22 are based on the following conversation Who What to do Where When (13) arrives studio 7:55 the program starts studio (14) Terry (15) studio 8:01 Jason arrives studio (16) (17) meets Jason (18) 8:02 guest (19) (20) during the show Pauline look after (21) ……………….. during the show Pauline (22)on the monitor …………………. during the show Part c Dictation (3 items, 16 points ) Directions : in this part of the test, you are required to write out the missing parts the passage. You’ll hear the passage read three times. The first reading is for you to understand the meaning. In the second reading , there will be a pause before the sentence to be dictated. One minute is given for you to write down each sentence. The third reading is for you to check your work. Write your answer on the ANSWER SHEET. Sometimes visitors actually get into trouble because of not understanding customs in the country they’re visiting. (23) ______________________________________________________. It’s necessary to understand too that it’s quite normal for women to go places like pubs, alone or in groups. A mistake some men visitors have made is to think that women in such places must be looking for men . sometimes this has caused serious trouble. In a strange country it’s also possible to get into trouble through no fault of your own, but if you avoid certain places at certain times you shouldn’t have anything to worry about. (24)__________ ______________________________________________________. In particular , don’t go to such places after dark, even in a group. As you probably know, British football fans sometimes cause trouble at matches, on the streets and on public transport. (25)______________________ _____________________________________________. At pub closing time, and perhaps afterwards, areas where there are lots of pubs may be dangerous or unpleasant. SECTION II READING (40POINTS) Part A Reading Comprehension (15items, 2points for each item ) Directions: In this part, you will read three passages. For each passage there are five 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 passage you’ve just read. Blacken the letter corresponding to your answer on the ANSWER SHEET. TEXT A Throughout the world, clothing has many uses. It is used to provide protection from the elements. It also is worn to prevent others from seeing specific parts of one’s body. However, the parts of the body that must be covered vary widely throughout the world. Some clothing is worn to provide supernatural protection. Wearing a lucky shirt to take an exam is calling for supernatural assistance. People in all cultures use clothing and other forms of bodily decoration to communicate status, Intentions, and other messages. In North America, we dress differently for business and various leisure activities. North American women usually ae much more knowledgeable of and concerned with little difference in messages communicated by clothes than are men. At times, this leads to silly mistakes of interpetation of female intentions on the part of men. Of course, clothing styles also are intended to communicate messages to members of the same gender(性别) Long before we are near enough to talk to someone, their appearance tells their gender, age, economic class, and often even intentions. We begin to recognize the important cultural clues at an early age. The vocabulary of dress that we learn includes not only items of clothing but also hairstyles, jewelry , and other body decoration. In most cultures, however, the same style of dress communicates different messages depending o the age, gender, and physical appearance of the individual wearing it. Putting on certain types of clothing can change your behavior and the behavior of others towards you. This can be the case with a doctor’s white lab coat, or an army uniform. Most uniforms are clearly symbolic so that they can rapidly and unmistakably communicate status. For instance, the strange hairstyle and clothing of the English “punkers”are essential aspects of their uniforms. There are many forms of body decoration other than clothed that are used around the world to send messages. These include body and hair paint, and even body deformation. When doctors put braces on teeth , they are actually doing the same thing—deforming or reforming a part of the body to make it more attractive. 26. Which of the following is the best title for this passage? A. Clothing and Culture B. Communication Through Clothing C. Clothing and Social Behavior D. Ways of Sending Messages 27. Some people wear lucky shirts to take an exam because they believe_________ A. clothes have extraordinary power B. clothes can hide their fear for the exam C. shirts can make them more comfortable D. shirts provide protection against bad weather 28. In North America, men sometimes misunderstand women’s intention because________ A. men are more careless than women B. women spend more time on their clothes C. men and women have different views on clothing styles D. men are less about the different messages communicated by clothes 29. From the passage, it can be inferred that__________ A. messages communicated by clothed are the same in different cultures B. words of dress are not enough to communicate different messages C. dress is better than language in communicating messages D. clothing plays an important role in social activities 30. According to the passage, the behavior of others towards you can be changed by your_______ A. age B. dress C. status D. behavior TEXT B This fishing village of 1,480 people is a bleak and lonely place, even in a country located at the top of the world. Set on the southwestern edge of Iceland , the volcanic landscape is whipped by the cold North Atlantic winds. There is no movie theater, and many residents never venture to the capital, a 50-minute drive away. But Sandgerdi might be perfect place to raise girls who have mathematical talent. Government researchers two year ago tested almost every 15-year-old in Iceland for it and found that boys trail far behind girls. That fact was unique among the 41 countries that took part in the standardized test for that age group designed by the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development. But while in their significant lead in the math, their national advantage of 15 points was small compared with the one they had over boys in fishing villages like Sandgerdi where it was close to 30. The teachers of Sandgerdi’s 254 students were not much surprised. They say the gender gap is a story not of talent but motivation. Boys think of school as purgatory on the way to a future of finding riches at sea; for girls, it’s their ticket out of town. Margret Ingporsdottir and Hanna Maria Heidarsdottir, both 15, have no doubt that they are headed for university. “ I think I will be a doctor” , says Heidarsdottir. Meanwhile , by the harbor, Gisli Tor Hauksson, 14, already has big plans that don’t require spending his afternoons working hard at mathematics. “ I’ll be a fisherman”, he says , just like most of his ancestors. As for school, he says, “ it hurts the brain.” But the story of female achievement in Iceland doesn’t necessarily have a happy ending. While 61% of university students are women, they make up only one-third of Iceland’s science students. By the time they enter the labor market , many are overtaken by men , who become doctors, engineers and computer technicians. Educators say they watch many bright girls suddenly recoil in the face of head-to-head competition with boys. Solrun Gensdottir, the director of education at Ministry of Education, Science and Culture say: “ we have to find a way to stop girls from dropping out sciences.” Teachers across the country have begun to experiment with ways to raise schoolboys to the level of girls. Last year Sandgerdi’s teachers segregated the 10th-grade mathematics classes after deciding that boys needs intensive instruction. The high school in Kevavic tried the same experiment in 2002 and 2003 , separating 16-to-20-year-olds by gender for two years. The boys fell even further behind. “The boys said the girls were better anyway,” says Krisjan Arsmundsson, who taught the 25 boys . “ They didn’t even try.” 31. Which of the following words can best describe the life at the fishing village? A. dull B. modern C. interesting D. meaningless 32. According to the passage, the girls’ better achievement over the boys’ in math learning at Sandgerdi is most probably because _________ A. boys are lazier B. girls are more clever C. boys spend more time on their part time jobs D. girls are more anxious about their future career 33. From the passage, we can see that in the field of science in Iceland_______ A. women have advantages over men in competition B. women are better in terms of achievement C. men are playing the major part D. men are one third less than women in number 34. At an international match test, the girls’ advantage over boys at Sandgerdi is about _________ A. 15 B. 30 C. 40 D. 45 35. Which of the following is the best title for this passage? A. A Village in Iceland B. Science Students in Sandgerdi C. A Boys Cleverer Than Girls? D. A Land Where Girls Rule in Math TEXT C Our eagerness for recycling is growing fast, but Britain’s 17 percent of household wasted recycled still trails behind rates of around 50 percent in the Netherlands, Austria and Germany. “ The key to good recycling rates is kerbside collection ,” says Georgina Bloomfield, from Friends of the Earth. “In the top European countries a wide range of waste is collected every weeek-glass , paper, cans, plastics and more.” Although two-thirds of Britain’s households now have kerbside collection of some sort, local government vary widely in the service they offer. Top-performing Livhfield and Daventry recycle more than 40 percent and make regular doorstep collections of waste, but bottom-of-the-league Isles of Scilly has no recycling collecting at all and Liverpool City Council Recycles just four percent. What’s the British Government doing about it ? it says a 25 percent recycling rate is “achievable” by 2006, and yet local governments are required by law only to provide every household with a collection of two materials by 2010. Environment Elliot Morley said, “It’s up to authorities to increase recycling and this may involve solutions other than kerbside collection. But should they continue to make no commitment to improvement, the last measure could involve the secretary of state taking over the duty of the authority. We could recycle more than 60 percent of our waste in the UK if we implemented best practices seen across Europe , such as wide-ranging kerbside collection. In Sweden, where 95 percent of metal cans are recycled, customers receive money back on returned cans. In Germany some 70 percent of soft drinks are sold in returnable bottles. In Iceland, a 10 percent tax on plastic carrier bags lead to a 90 percent reduction in use in just six month. One of Britain’s biggest challenges is packaging waste –roughly half of our rubbish comes from supermarkets. In November the Government provided an £8 million fund to “stimulate new packaging design”, and invited individuals and companies to offer ideas . sounds good , doesn’t it? But other countries have a展开阅读全文
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高考英语试题广东卷(2)深圳卷.doc



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