山东省泰安市2024届高三第一轮复习质量检测(一模)英语试卷
高三第一轮复习质量检测
英语试题
2024.3
本试卷分第I卷(选择题)和第II卷(非选择题)两部分。第I卷1至10页。第II卷11至12页。考试结束后,将本试卷和答案卡一并交回。
第I卷(共100分)
注意事项:
1.答第I卷前,考生务必将自己的姓名、准考证号、考试科目涂写在答题卡上。
2.每小题选出答案后,用铅笔把答题卡上对应题目的答案标号涂黑。如需改动,用橡皮擦干净后,再选涂其他答案标号。不能答在试卷上。
第一部分
听力(共两节,满分30分)
做题时,先将答案标在试卷上。录音内容结束后,你将有两分钟的时间将试卷上的答案转涂到答题卡上。
第一节(共5小题,每小题1.5分,满分7.5分)
听下面5段对话。每段对话后有一个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项,并标在试卷的相应位置。听完每段对话后,你都有10秒钟的时间来回答有关小题和阅读下一小题。每段对话仅读一遍。
1.Where probably are the speakers?
A.At a harvest festival.
B.At a country hotel.
C.At a wine factory.
2.Who volunteered to give help?
A.Kate.
B.Alex.
C.The woman.
3.What is Maggie’s greatest talent?
A.Solving problems.
B.Hiring good staff
C.Discovering new talent.
4.What does the woman want to know about the typewriter?
A.The brand.
B.The price.
C.The condition.
5.What does the man probably want to do?
A.Make a phone call.
B.Have a meal.
C.Book a room.
第二节(共15小题;每小题1.5分,满分22.5分)
听下面5段对话或独白。每段对话或独白后有几个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项,并标在试卷的相应位置。听每段对话或独白前,你将有时间阅读各个小题,每小题5秒钟;听完后,各小题将给出5秒钟的作答时间。每段对话或独白读两遍。
听下面一段对话,回答第6和第7两个小题。
6.What do we know about the woman’s professor?
A.He wants to change the world.
B.He works very hard.
C.He teaches biology.
7.What is the professor’s attitude towards genetic engineering?
A.Concerned.
B.Optimistic.
C.Excited.
听下面一段对话,回答第8和第9两个小题。
8.Why does the man make the call?
A.To apologize.
B.To make complaints.
C.To teach the woman a lesson.
9.Why did the man shout at the woman?
A.She embarrassed him.
B.She tore up his jacket.
C.She dirtied his clothes.
听下面一段对话,回答第10至第12三个小题。
10.What does the man do most of the night?
A.Have dreams.
B.Observe stars.
C.Do research.
11.Why is the man so tired?
A.He had trouble going to sleep.
B.He took too many classes.
C.He didn’t get enough sleep.
12.What does the woman advise the man to do?
A.Sleep early.
B.Have a treatment.
C.Take a walk before sleep.
听下面一段对话,回答第13至第16四个小题。
13.What is the grand prize for the winner?
A.Some cash and a free trip.
B.A set of books.
C.A set of DVDs.
14.How many muscles does a cat have in each ear?
A.32.
B.33.
C.34.
15.Which is the largest animal on the earth?
A.A shark.
B.An elephant.
C.A blue whale.
16.What will the woman do?
A.Buy a wallet. B.Have a trip.
C.Show off her bags.
听下面一段独白,回答第17至第20四个小题。
17.How soon will people depart from Sydney Airport?
A.10 minutes later.
B.12 minutes later.
C.30 minutes later.
18.How much does a taxi trip to the city cost?
A.$2.50.
B.$6.
C.$12.
19.Where can passengers get hotel booking service?
A.At the Travelers Information Service.
B.Just outside the terminal building.
C.At the Customs Hall.
20.What must passengers pay if they leave on the next international flight?
A.Hotel fees.
B.A departure tax.
C.Information service fee.
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、D)中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。
A
Aquarium Event
Sea of Light
As a child in Laguna Beach,Richard Salas often wished he could swim through the tide pools and the underwater world.
A photography class in high school gave his life new purpose,and further studies at the Brooks Institute of Photography inspired Salas to take his love for the ocean in a new direction.
Join the Santa Barbara photographer as he records the undersea beauty of California’s Channel Islands.For the last five years Salas has braved the cold waters and unpredictable currents to create a collection of portraits and seascapes.Not content to simply record the well-known life forms,Salas uses dramatic lighting to uncover a world of never-ending color and texture(纹理)that is inhabited by personalities ranging from the funny to file evil.
Copies of Richard Salas’s book Sea of Light will be for sale at Pacific Collections and there will be a book signing after the lecture.
21.According to the text,Salas________.
A.developed a love for oceans at college
B.had a gift for photography in his childhood
C.couldn’t find the direction of his life
D.recorded the undersea beauty through hard work
22.What can we know about Aquarium Event?
A.You can go there in the morning.
B.It will be free for everyone.
C.The tickets can be bought online.
D.Nobody can get Salas’s signature.
23.What is the advertisement about?
A.A course of the tide pools.
B.A photographer’s lecture and book on seas.
C.A photography class in a high schoo1.
D.A journey to California’s Channel Islands.
B
At 65,most people are thinking about getting a senior citizen bus pass.But for Montana woman Ethel MacDonald,who’s now a great-grandmother,that’s when she took up tour cycling.
“I like what I like to do without having to wait for someone else to be ready,”explains the 78-year-old-great-grandmother.The appeal of biking alone on the open road,she says,is“just feeling like I’m my own boss.”
She began tour cycling in 2003,beginning with France’s Atlantic coast.Aside from trips round her native United States,she’s wheeled her way through the Netherlands,Germany,Belgium,Scandinavia and beyond.
Her companion on her Ireland trip is a pink Brompton folding bike,which she’s used on five trips around the us south.She keeps another bike with a friend for her tours of mainland Europe.This seasoned biker reckons she’s traveled at least 10,000 miles.“Usually my trips are close to 1,000 miles in three to four weeks.”MacDonald says.
She uses online travel communities Warm Showers and Couchsurfing to find a place to stay,and hosts guests herself at her home in Missoula,Montana.Warm Showers is exclusively(专门地)for touring cyclists while Couchsurfing is for any travelers wanting to meet new people or open their homes to others.By August 2024,MacDonald estimated that she’d stayed with 165 hosts and hosted around 200 guests of her own.“It saves a pile of money,”she admits.“But far beyond that,the real value is the people you meet,the inspiration you get from each other,the memories,the connections.”
She keeps a scrapbook(剪贴簿)filled with photos and notes from all the people she’s met at home and abroad,and keeps in touch with her friends worldwide through Facebook and email.When traveling,she particularly loves the“big cultural exchange”that comes with spending each night with a new host with a different perspective on the world.
For anyone who wants to follow in her footsteps.her advice is simple.“Just do it.”
24.What does the second paragraph mainly tell us?
A.The history of her tour cycling.
B.The reason for her taking up tour cycling.
C.The range of her tour cycling.
D.The equipment for her tour cycling.
25.What nationality is Ethel MacDonald?
A.Belgium.
B.France.
C.America.
D.Germany.
26.Which of the following can replace the underlined word“seasoned”in Paragraph 4?
A.Healthy.
B.Wealthy.
C.Retired.
D.Experienced.
27.How does Ethel MacDonald find a place to stay?
A.Through online travel communities.
B.By keeping a scrapbook.
C.Through Facebook and email.
D.By writing a letter.
C
A few years ago,Douglas Long was helping to identify some fish caught off the Pacific coast of Central America in 2010.Among the images were those of a mysterious pitch black shark.Interested,he asked the researcher to lend him the preserved specimens(样本)so that his team could study the fish in detail.
When the shark specimens arrived,the researchers immediately suspected that they had came across a new species.To prove,they turned to shark expert Victoria Vasquez for help.On December 21,2024,the team was finally able to prove that their initial guess had been correct.
According to Vasquez,the black sharks belong to the lantern shark family.Though each species has its own unique features,they all share one feature—the ability to glow in the dark.
Though there are over 40 known species of lantern sharks swimming in our oceans,they manage to keep a low profile because of their small size and tendency to stay in deep waters. Vasquez says the new species features tiny photospheres(发光点)that glow throughout its body.The black sharks have other distinguishing 1antern shark features like spines on their fins as well as a different set of teeth on each jaw.
The researchers said that once it was proved that this was a new species they had come up with two names.They settled on a name as an honor to Peter Benchley,the now dead author of the classic book and movie“Jaws.”To come with a more fun common name,Vasquez decided to consult her four young cousins.After some thought,the group that ranged from 8 to 15 suggested the fish be called“Super Ninja Shark.”The researchers named it Ninja! It was the perfect name for the fish whose uniform black skin and fine photospheres make it nearly invisible in the deep dark oceans.
28.Who proved the black shark a new species?
A.Douglas Long.
B.The researchers.
C.Victoria Vasquez.
D.Peter Benchley.
29.According to the text,black sharks____________.
A.are of large size
B.can glow all over the body
C.tend to stay in shallow waters
D.have a similar set of teeth on each jaw
30.Why did the researchers name the new species Ninja?
A.To honor Peter Benchley.
B.To please the young people.
C.To protect the sea species.
D.To show its invisible feature perfectly.
31.What can be a suitable title for the text?
A.A new species of lantern sharks.
B.The unique ability of sharks.
C.Mysterious underwater sharks.
D.New names for a black shark.
D
According to a report by the United Nations,54 percent of the world’s population lives in urban areas and it predicts that by 2050,this figure will have increased to around 70 percent.But as more and more people migrate from the countryside to the city to get better opportunities,they can end up with nowhere to live.
This is true in places such as Rio de Janeiro,where migrants can’t rent or buy a home,and they end up building their own communities and houses on unoccupied land.These are called shanty towns—poor communities where the houses are built out of cheap materials—and often don’t have any electricity or water supply.
These are,of course,not the megacities(大城市)of the future we want to see.Some serious urban planning is needed to make our cities of the future good,safe and modern places to live in.This involves improving the infrastructure(基础设施),the housing conditions and also the opportunities for education and employment.
Something urban planners are looking at now is the creation of“smart cities”.According to John Rossant,founder and chairman of the non-profit organization New Cities Foundation,technology is the way forward.He thinks that it's generally accepted that“cloud computing,
ubiquitous internet,robust 5G networks etc,will transform our cities.”He says technology is
really“a game changer”,in urbanisation.It would collect large amounts of data about how a city is performing and may improve how a city functions.
This may sound like a utopian(乌托邦似的)view.For now,some big cities around the
world are trying out more low—tech schemes to try and make them desirable places to live
and work in.Building shared—ownership housing and improving public transport are some ways. And encouraging cycling and building bike lanes can keep the population healthy and cut down on smog.What would make your city a better place to live in?
32.What’s the text mainly about?
A.The city of the future.
B.The increase of the population.
C.Urban construction.
D.The function of smart cities.
33.Why does the author mention Rio de Janeiro in Paragraph 2?
A.To show the growth of the world population.