1、- 1 -巴中 2018-2019 学年上学期高二期中复习试卷英 语 注 意 事 项 :1.答 题 前 , 先 将 自 己 的 姓 名 、 准 考 证 号 填 写 在 试 题 卷 和 答 题 卡 上 , 并 将 准 考 证 号 条形 码 粘 贴 在 答 题 卡 上 的 指 定 位 置 。 用 2B 铅 笔 将 答 题 卡 上 试 卷 类 型 A 后 的 方 框 涂 黑 。2.选 择 题 的 作 答 : 每 小 题 选 出 答 案 后 , 用 2B 铅 笔 把 答 题 卡 上 对 应 题 目 的 答 案 标 号涂 黑 , 写 在 试 题 卷 、 草 稿 纸 和 答 题 卡 上 的 非 答 题 区
2、 域 均 无 效 。3.非 选 择 题 的 作 答 : 用 签 字 笔 直 接 答 在 答 题 卡 上 对 应 的 答 题 区 域 内 。 写 在 试 题 卷 、草 稿 纸 和 答 题 卡 上 的 非 答 题 区 域 均 无 效 。4.考 试 结 束 后 , 请 将 本 试 题 卷 和 答 题 卡 一 并 上 交 。第 卷第 一 部 分 听 力 ( 共 两 节 , 满 分 30 分 ) (略 ) 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
3、 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 。AThe blooming of social media and interactive smartphone-based apps has proved that e-marketing is an unchangeable trend. In the case of China, the latest battlefield is beauty camera apps, which have become an overnight hit in the West
4、.1. MeituPicDeveloped by the Xiamen-based Meitu Inc, MeituPic is the companys flagship beauty camera app and was the first to become a big hit among Western users. The app has drawn some 456 million users, who use it to post more than 6 billion photos every month.In addition to MeituPic, Meitu Inc h
5、as developed a series of beauty camera apps such as Beauty Plus, Poster Labs and Meipai, each specializing in facial 此卷只装订不密封班级 姓名 准考证号 考场号 座位号 - 2 -feature improvement, video editing and many other features.2. PituTian Tian Pi Tu, is a beauty app developed by Chinas Internet giant Tencent. Similar
6、to other photo-editing apps, Pitu offers a number of beautifying filters, blemish(瑕疵) removing tools and virtual makeup choices for users to choose from.Launched in 2014, Pitu has accumulated 106 million monthly active users (MAUs). While the number is not as impressive as that of Meitu s apps, some
7、 argue that the user base of Tencent s gaming products and chat applications, such as QQ and WeChat, gives Pitu great potential for further growth. According to Chinese app watchers, Pitu s target audience is younger and more individualized than that of MeituPic. 80 percent of Pitu s users are young
8、er than 25, giving the app more room to try out more new features.3. FaceUIn contrast with most other beauty apps, FaceU, focuses more on the social feature, encouraging users to video chat with friends and even strangers while playing with its fun stickers (贴纸) and the strategy is undoubtedly worki
9、ng. Launched in 2016, the app, which mainly targets female users between 15 and 35, has twice made it onto the Apple store s Chart for top apps.21. Meitu Inc has developed a series of beauty camera apps except _.A. Meipai. B. MeituPic. C. Tian Tian Pi Tu. D. Beauty Plus.22. What gives Tian Tian Pi T
10、u more room to grow potentially?A. The amount of Meitu Appss potential users.B. Users of Tencents gaming products and chat apps.C. The various kinds of photo-editing functions.D. The room to try out more new features.23. According to the passage, what do the three Apps have in common?A. They mainly
11、target young users. B. They all launched in 2016.- 3 -C. They specialize in photo editing. D. They are popular and hot.BTencent announced yesterday that it will limit the daily time for youngsters to play its popular King of Glory game after parents and schools in Shanghai and other areas complained
12、 their children had become addicted to playing it.From tomorrow, children younger than 12 will only be allowed to play the game for a maximum(最大值) of one hour a day, and after 9 pm, they will be banned from logging into it, said Tencent. Those older than 12 will be able to play a maximum two hours a
13、 day.The game system will remind players the time they have been playing and young players will be forced to log out when the time is up.Tencent claimed these were the strictest measures in Chinas game industry to prevent addiction and the company expected they would ease parents anxiety.The company
14、 also said it had updated its system for parents to keep tabs on their children using its games.Since February, parents can receive messages when children log in and spend money on the game after they connect childrens game accounts with their mobile phone numbers.Now, parents can connect phones, ta
15、blets or computers that their children use to play games, so that they can keep an eye on the children even if they have several game accounts, Tencent said.Song Zhe, a father of a Shanghai high school student, welcomed the measures but was not sure if they would be sufficiently effective. “I like t
16、he system that could lock up the devices as children can register many accounts,” he said, “but children are so clever that they can always think out counter measures.”24. What can we infer from Paragraph 2?A. Kids under 11 could play the game for at most 7 hours in a week.B. Girls under 8 are able
17、to log in the game at 10 pm.C. Those older than 16 are able to play the game all the time.- 4 -D. Children over 13 can log in the game after playing 3 hours in a day.25. The underlined phrase “keep tabs on” is closest in meaning to “_”.A. be careful with B. be in control ofC. have an eye on D. keep
18、contact with26. What can we learn about the game system according to the passage?A. Parents can monitor their children even if they try to register different game accounts.B. Parents need to connect their tablets or computers to the game accounts of their children.C. Parents can be reminded of the t
19、ime their children have been playing the games.D. Parents should pay attention to their phones all the time in case they miss any message.27. What did Song Zhes father think of the game system?A. The game system was absolutely welcomed by him.B. Children were too dull to break out of the system.C. H
20、e was uncertain about the effectiveness of the system.D. Children could register lots of accounts to unlock the devices.COn any given weekend, the Washington, D.C., public library system offers nearly a dozen classes. You can try Matt Mcentees class, where hell teach you how to fix anything from a c
21、lock to a broken heart in person.I decided to check out a small class early one morning. Its called Homebuying 101. Today, there are about 10 adults ranging in age from their mid-20s to early 50sfinding their seats.In the second row, Whenna Andrews, 28, already has her notebook out.I ask Andrews why
22、 she came to a class at the library, instead of learning how to buy a home online. “This is going to be my first time buying a home and I have a lot of questions,” Andrews answers. “I feel like if Im reading by - 5 -myself online I can get lost in the information.”Andrews decision to learn in a trad
23、itional classroom is still the preferred choice for adults, according to a new study by the Pew Research Center.Pew looked at nearly 3,000 people, aged 18 and older. Pew wanted to know how, and where, adults learn, after they leave their formal schooling.“Learning is still very much a place-based th
24、ing,” says Pew researcher John Horrigan. “The Internet plays a role, but its secondary in most respects.”For the 74 percent of adults who considered themselves to be personal learners, only a third turned to the Internet for most or all of their learning.The study also found differences when it come
25、s to education and income level. For those with a bachelors degree, technology is helping. But for those with just a high school diploma, its not playing as big a role. The study even found that many werent aware of online resources like lots of open online courses or learning tools like Khan Academ
26、y.Whenna Andrews knows about those things she even found the homebuyers class on Facebook. But she prefers learning in person.28. What can we learn about Matt Mcentee?A. He only teaches online classes.B. He is a science teacher.C. He knows how to break peoples heart.D. You can learn a lot in his cla
27、ss.29. For Andrews, the online information about homebuying seems .A. valuable B. incorrect C. confusing D. out-of-date30. What does Andrews think of the classes the library offers?A. She looks forward to them.B. She shows no interest in them.C. She thinks they should be improved.D. She thinks there
28、 is no market for them.- 6 -31. The text mainly discusses .A. the development of online coursesB. the important role technology playsC. the leading way of lifelong learning is traditionally basedD. the roles of the public library systemDWilliam Curry is a serious climate scientist, not an art critic
29、. But he has spent a lot of time on Emanuel Leutzes famous painting “George Washington Crossing the Delaware,” which describes a boatload of colonial American soldiers making their way to attack English the day after Christmas in 1776. “Most people think these other guys in the boat are rowing, but
30、they are actually pushing the ice away,” says Curry, tapping his finger on the painting. Sure enough, the lead sailor is breaking the frozen river with his boot. “I grew up in the Philadelphia. The place in this painting is 30 minutes away by car. I can tell you, this kind of thing just doesnt happe
31、n anymore.”But it may again soon. And ice-choked scenes may also return to Europe. The 16th-century painter Pieters works, including the 1565 masterpiece “Hunters in the Snow,” make the now-temperate European landscapes look more like Lapland. Such frigid settings were commonplace during a period da
32、ting roughly from 1300 to 1850 because much of North America and Europe was in the pain of a little ice age. And now there is increasing evidence that the cold could return. A growing number of scientists believe conditions are right for another lasted cooldown, or small ice age. While no one is pre
33、dicting an ice sheet like the one that covered the Northern Hemisphere with glaciers about 12,000 years ago, the next cooling trend could drop average temperatures 5 degrees over much of the United States and 10 degrees in the Northeast, northern Europe, and northern Asia.Political changes since the
34、 last ice age could make survival far more difficult for the worlds poor. During previous cooling periods, these people simply picked up and moved south, but that doesnt work in the modem world, of closed borders. “To the extent the climate change may cause rapid and extensive - 7 -changes of fortun
35、e for those who live off the land, the inability to migrate may remove one of the major safety homelands for pitiful people,” says the report.32. The writer uses paintings in the first paragraph to say A. impossible future climate change.B. climate change of the last two centuries.C. the river doesn
36、t freeze in winter anymore.D. how George Washington led his troops across the river.33. Which of the following do scientists believe to be possible?A. The temperature may drop over much of the Northern Hemisphere.B. It will be colder than 12,000 years ago.C. The entire Northern Hemisphere will be co
37、vered in ice.D. Europe will look more like Lapland.34. Why is it difficult for the poor to survive the next age?A. People dont live in tribes anymore.B. Politics are changing too fast today.C. Climate change causes people live off the land.D. Migration has become impossible because of closed borders
38、.35. What is the best title of the passage?A. A New Ice Age.B. The Effect of Ice Age.C. Prediction about the Ice Age.D. Political and Climate Change.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 。 Everyone can benefit a lot fr
39、om reading books. The following is about the various benefits of reading books._36_ Whenever you read something, you learn information that you - 8 -otherwise wouldnt have known. It can be a fact about history or a theory you didnt know existed. If you want to learn new words, reading books is a gre
40、at way to enlarge your vocabulary.Reading keeps your mind in good condition. Similar to solving puzzles, reading books allows your mind to practice its processing skills._37_.One of the primary benefits of reading books is its ability to develop your critical thinking skill. _38_ Wherever you are fa
41、ced with a similar problem in real life, your mind is able to put its mystery-solving skills to a test.One of the real benefits of reading books is that the information in it can be accessed over and over again. For example, reading a cookbook allows you the luxury of reviewing the procedures whenev
42、er you need to._39_ Dont even think about writing the information down because you may lose the paper you wrote down on sooner or later.These are just some of the wonderful benefits of reading books. _40_ If you cant even go outside, you can download free e-books on line and read them on your comput
43、er. That way, you can set how advantageous reading can be for yourself.A. Reading books keeps your mind absent.B. You can improve your memory by reading.C. Reading books provides you with new knowledge.D. Following a recipe from a cooking show will be difficult. E. Reading mystery novels, for exampl
44、e, sharpens your mind.F. Going without books for too long will turn your mind into a whirl (混乱).G. Why dont you drop by the bookstore or library and pick a book up?第 三 部 分 英 语 知 识 运 用 ( 共 两 节 , 满 分 45) 第 一 节 完 形 填 空 ( 共 20 小 题 ; 每 小 题 1.5 分 , 满 分 30 分 ) - 9 -阅 读 下 面 短 文 , 从 短 文 后 各 题 所 给 的 四 个 选 项 (
45、 A、 B、 C 和 D) 中 , 选 出 可 以 填入 空 白 处 的 最 佳 选 项 , 并 在 答 题 卡 上 将 该 项 涂 黑 。 The young seal couldnt have been more than two days old, and yet he was all alone. Sometimes he would swim _41_, but he always came back. At first we thought it was _42_ that he kept swimming back to us, until we noticed that he
46、obviously had been _43_, and had nowhere else to go. We call him “Curious George”.Without his mothers milk, George appeared very _44_ with his eyes closed. I jumped into the water and swam up to him,_45_ we were less than two feet away. My heart went out to George and I just hope that he had the _46
47、_ to interact with me. Suddenly, he _47_ his eyes and immediately he jumped up between my arms, putting his head against my chest. It was a(n)_48_ moment. But I knew that George wouldnt _49_ without some help.We _50_ the local conservation volunteers. They were _51_ that in the absence of his mother
48、, he had developed a _52_ relationship with us. They promised they would bring him to an area with _53_ people living there and keep an eye on him. Even though it hurt to see him _54_, we knew that he was in better hands.The next day we _55_ the conservation volunteers and asked how George was doing
49、._56_ the volunteers informed us that he was too close to humans, we realized that was probably our _57_! They decided to bring him to a small island wildlife preserve with a lot of seals in the area, where they could better _58_ him.A week later, we called again, and were informed that George was _59_ in the water swimming with other seals. George was _60_. And he will always swim in my h
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