[职业资格类试卷]2016年安徽省教师公开招聘考试(中学英语)真题试卷(无答案).doc

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1、2016 年安徽省教师公开招聘考试(中学英语)真题试卷(无答案)词汇与结构1 Sarah, would you please give me some more milk? I m sorry, but_is left.(A)no one(B) none(C) everything(D)it2 Tony, you ve got a fever. You_that cold shower last night.(A)might not have(B) could have had(C) hadnt have(D)shouldnt have had3 With lots of wounded pe

2、ople, the quake-stricken area is_ for medical assistance now.(A)crazy(B) opposite(C) desperate(D)reluctant4 Since hes been thrown out of Eton, where will he go to school and what will_ him in the future?(A)become of(B) stand by(C) turn on(D)refer to5 Chinese writer Cao Wenxuan was awarded the Christ

3、ian Anderson Award in 2016, making himself the first Chinese_such a prize.(A)won(B) has won(C) to win(D)winning6 _he tried to cover the truth, it came out at last.(A)No matter what(B) Whatever(C) No matter how(D)However hard7 How can you make such a tasty cake, Mrs. Cook? The_is to follow the direct

4、ions in the cookbook!(A)feature(B) plan(C) cost(D)trick8 Can I bring Aaron to your party tonight, Maggie? _He s my friend too.(A)By all means.(B) How come?(C) Let me see.(D)Youre welcome.9 Mr. Smith, who_as a teacher in our school for about 20 years, is now our mayor.(A)has worked(B) worked(C) works

5、(D)had worked10 Only with joint efforts_a better living environment.(A)we can have(B) can we have(C) we have(D)have we11 It is vital that every citizen in China_the core socialist values to practice.(A)apply(B) applies(C) is to apply(D)would apply12 _impressed us most was that he combined Chinese po

6、etry with his paintings.(A)It(B) What(C) That(D)Which13 Its_real relief for us to know Anna was saved from_fire last night.(A)the; a(B) the; the(C) /; a(D)a; the14 The method of forming new words, like disappointment, unintelligible or comfortably, is called_.(A)compounding(B) conversion(C) derivati

7、on(D)abbreviation15 _ , the “father of English Poetry“ and one of the greatest narrative poets of England, was born in London about 1340.(A)William Blake(B) Geoffrey Chaucer(C) Francis Bacon(D)John Dryden完形填空15 Admittedly, the best way of learning a foreign language is to stay for a long period of t

8、ime in the target language country.【C1】_few learners had or have an opportunity to do so. Most have to endure the【C2】_process of just studying it at home or in the classroom. The better our English is, the more we realize how first language accelerates or【C3】_our learning. The move from intermediate

9、 to higher levels of【C4 】_in English is closely associated with the ability to make【C5 】_regarding vocabulary and collocation. This is certainly not an issue in the early stages of study.【C6】_, advanced learners prefer to rely on first language to make these decisions.In the past, the mother tongue

10、was an【C7】_part of many local textbooks used at all levels, Translation【C8】_and to first language was popular in language teaching. However, this use of first language was later【C9】_, as it often slows foreign language learning. The obvious【C10】_is that more and more language teachers tend not to sp

11、eak their mother-tongue in the classroom. Thus, it seems that we【C11 】_the value of translation too much.In general there are currently two major trends toward it. The first suggests that using the target language exclusively in the classroom is the only way to【C12】_all the principles and requiremen

12、ts of language teaching. In fact, many teachers feel【C13】_about saying a word in their mother-tongue. They feel it is【C14】_and not in keeping with modern trends. The second is represented by those teachers who【C15】_use the mother-tongue in the classrooms for checking understanding, clarifying meanin

13、g, chatting and so on.16 【C1 】(A)Purposely(B) Unfortunately(C) Strangely(D)Morally17 【C2 】(A)gradual(B) easy(C) primitive(D)painful18 【C3 】(A)predicts(B) absorbs(C) hinders(D)interests19 【C4 】(A)competence(B) fluency(C) volume(D)accuracy20 【C5 】(A)mistakes(B) choices(C) preparations(D)suggestions21

14、【C6 】(A)Similarly(B) So(C) Yet(D)Besides22 【C7 】(A)academic(B) independent(C) alterative(D)essential23 【C8 】(A)from(B) in(C) by(D)against24 【C9 】(A)employed(B) favored(C) rejected(D)introduced25 【C10 】(A)phenomenon(B) effect(C) cause(D)excuse26 【C11 】(A)questioned(B) overlooked(C) mastered(D)stresse

15、d27 【C12 】(A)determine(B) fulfill(C) conclude(D)describe28 【C13 】(A)guilty(B) content(C) enthusiastic(D)comfortable29 【C14 】(A)fashionable(B) complete(C) outdated(D)valid30 【C15 】(A)up and down(B) back and forth(C) in and out(D)now and then阅读理解30 In 1922, Englishman Howard Carter found the tomb of a

16、n Egyptian king named Tutankhamen. Some reports say that above the entrance to the tomb, a curse was written: “Death shall come on swift wings to him who disturbs the peace of the king.“ Carter ignored the curse. He and his friend Lord Carvarvon broke into tomb. They found an amazing collection of t

17、reasure and three mummies.A few months later, Lord Carvarvon, aged 57, got sick and died. The doctor didnt know the exact cause of his death, but said perhaps it was from an infection started by an insect bite. It s said that when he died, there was a short power outage and all of the lights through

18、out Cairo went out. At his home back in England, his favorite dog howled and dropped dead.Even more strange, when the mummy of Tutankhamen was unwrapped in 1925, it was found to have a wound on the left cheek in exactly the same position as the insect bite on Carvarvon that led to his death.Reporter

19、s quickly developed the story. By 1935, they claimed that 21 deaths were due to the “Mummys Curse“. However, according to Herbert E. Winlock the director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, by 1934, only eight people directly connected to the tomb had died. Indeed, Howard Carter, the

20、 man who actually opened the tomb, lived to almost 65 before dying of natural causes.But perhaps some connection did exist. In 1999, a German scientist suggested that the deaths were possibly caused by moldextremely small, dangerous growths that can survive for thousands of years, even in a dark, dr

21、y tomb. For this reason, archeologists now wear special masks and gloves when unwrapping a mummy.31 The best title for the passage is probably_.(A)An Ancient Egyptian King(B) The Mummys Curse(C) Egyptian Mummies(D)Unwrapping a Mummy32 The underlined word “outage“ in Paragraph 2 is the closest in mea

22、ning to_ .(A)shock(B) failure(C) disaster(D)therapy33 Who contributed most to the spread of the curse?(A)Reporters.(B) Doctors.(C) Carvarvon.(D)Scientists.34 What can be inferred from the passage?(A)Howard Carter died soon after he opened the tomb.(B) Lord Carvarvons right cheek was actually bitten

23、by an insect.(C) A total number of 21 deaths were closely related to the curse.(D)Mold might be the scientific explanation for the strange deaths.34 Imagine the solitude felt by Marie Smith before she died earlier this year in her native Alaska, at 89. She was the last person who knew the language o

24、f the Eyak people as a mother-tongue. Or imagine Ned Mandrell, who died in 1974he was the last native speaker of Manx. In remote parts of the world, dozens more people are on the point of taking to their graves a system of communication that will never be recorded or reconstructed.Should anyone lose

25、 sleep over the fact that many tongues are in danger of suffering a similar fate? Compared with groups who advocate saving animals or trees, campaigners who advocate preserving languages are themselves a rare breed. But they are trying both to impede and publicize an alarming acceleration in the rat

26、e at which languages are vanishing. Of some 6, 900 tongues spoken in the world today, some 50% to 90% could be gone by the end of the century. In Africa, at least 300 languages are in near-term danger, and 200 more have died recently or are on the verge of death. Some 145 languages are threatened in

27、 East and South-east Asia.Some languages even face a threat in the shape of political power bent on imposing a majority tongue. A youngster in any part of France soon realized that whatever you spoke at home, mastering French was the key to success. Nor did English reach its present global status wi

28、thout ruthless tactics. In years past, Americans, Canadians and Australians took native children away from their families to be raised at boarding schools where English rules.The result is a growing list of tongues spoken only by white-haired elders. For instance, Njerep, one of 31 endangered langua

29、ges in Cameroon, reportedly has only four speakers left, all over 60. The valleys of the Cauncansus used to be a paradise for linguists in search of unusual syntax, but Ubykh, one of the regions mysterious tongues, officially expired in 1992.35 What led to Marie Smiths solitude?(A)The language she s

30、poke will never be recorded.(B) People around her could not understand her.(C) Shes a native of Alaska but lives far away from it.(D)She s the last person having Eyak as mother-tongue.36 What do campaigners in Paragraph 2 strive to do?(A)Take measures to take down spoken languages.(B) Record and rec

31、onstruct all the vanishing languages.(C) Slow down languages vanishing and make them known.(D)Speed up the rate of learning a certain foreign language.37 From Paragraph 3, we can know that_.(A)mastering French holds the key to ones career success(B) the vanishing languages are promoted by political

32、figures(C) some languages are threatened by certain political power(D)English stands out from languages due to its own advantages38 The last paragraph implies that in the future the number of languages will _.(A)stop falling(B) stop increasing(C) begin to climb(D)continue to decrease38 The American

33、screen has long been a smoky place, at least since 1942s, Now, Voyager, in which Bette Davis and Paul Henreid showed how to make a romantic deal over a pair of cigarettes. Today cigarettes are the most common onscreen: 75% of Hollywood films show tobacco use, according to a recent survey by the Univ

34、ersity of California, San Francisco.Audiences, especially kids, are taking notice. Recent studies have found that among children as young as 10, those exposed to the most screen smoking are up to 2.7 times as likely as others to pick up the habit. Worse, it s the ones from nonsmoking homes who are h

35、it the hardest.Now the Harvard School of Public Health(HSPH)the folks behind the designated-driver campaignare pushing to get the smokes off the screen. “Were in the business of preventing disease, and cigarettes are the No. 1 preventable cause,“ says Barry Bloom, HSPHs dean. “A possible way to do i

36、t is to expose them to enough good examples.“ Thats why the designated-driver concept caught on in the 1980s, when Harvard and the ad agencies persuaded TV networks to slip the idea into their shows. “The idea appeared in 160 prime-time episodes over four years and drunk-driving fatalities fell 25%

37、over the next three years.“Harvard long believed that getting cigarettes out of movies could have as powerful an effect, but it wouldnt be easy. Cigarette makers had a history of striking product-placement deals with Hollywood, and while the 1998 tobacco settlement prevents that, nothing stops direc

38、tors from plugging smoking into scenes on their own.In 1999 Harvard began holding one-on-one meetings with studio executives trying to change that. Harvards advice was clear: Get the butts entirely out, or at least make smoking unappealing. A few films provide a glimpse of what a no-smokingor low-sm

39、okingHollywood would be like. Such movies are hardly the rule, but the pressure is growing. Like smokers, studios may conclude that quitting the habit is not just a lot healthier but also a lot smarter.39 The first paragraph mainly tells us that_.(A)smoking can make romance on screen(B) cigarette sm

40、oke floods American screen(C) cigarettes are now easier to get than in the past(D)Hollywood movies characterize American screen40 The second paragraph is written to_.(A)analyze the data related to on-air smoking(B) explain why smoke-based movies are popular(C) display how screen smoking affects chil

41、dren(D)show kids above 10 are the most likely to smoke41 It is hard to get cigarettes out of Hollywood mainly because_.(A)directors are reluctant to give up smoking scenes(B) cigarette makers are on good terms with Hollywood(C) there is still no relevant law to regulate the market(D)the designated-d

42、river campaign doesnt apply to Hollywood42 What is the author s attitude towards getting cigarettes out of screen?(A)Negative.(B) Positive.(C) Sympathetic.(D)Skeptical.英汉翻译42 【T1】Happiness can be described as a positive mood and a pleasant state of mind. Psychologists have been studying the factors

43、that contribute to happiness. 【T2】It s not predictable nor is a person in an apparently ideal situation necessarily happy. The ideal situation may have little to do with his actual feelings. 【T3】A good education and income are usually considered necessary for happiness. Though both may contribute, t

44、hey are only chief factors if the person is seriously under-educated or actually suffering from lack of physical needs. 【T4】People with college education are somewhat happier than those who didnt graduate from high school, and its believed that this is mainly because they have more opportunities to

45、control their lives.【T5】Yet people with a high income and a college education may be less happy than those with the same income and no college education.43 【T1】44 【T2】45 【T3】46 【T4】47 【T5】教学设计48 根据下面的语言素材,用英语完成以下的设计任务(设计意图可以用中文表达)。1确定这节课的知识和能力目标;2. 根据所设定的目标创设情境,设计 3 个教学活动,写出活动的主要内容及设计意图。Andy: What a

46、re you reading, Ken? Ken: The Old Man and the Sea by Hemingway. Andy: Wow, now I know why you re so good at writing stories. Ken: Yes, I want to be a writer. Andy: Really? How are you going to do that?Ken: Well, I m going to keep on writing stories, of course. What do you want to be? Andy: My parent

47、s want me to be a doctor, but I m not sure about that. Ken: Wall, don t worry. Not everyone knows what they want to be. Just make sure you try your best. Then you can be anything you want! Andy: Yes, you are right.49 下面是一篇八年级的阅读材料以及教学片段,请用中文从以下方面进行评析。1阅读教学模式:2读前活动:3教师角色。阅读材料:When people say “culture

48、“, we think of art and history. But one very famous symbol in American culture is a cartoon. We all know and love the black mouse with two large round earsMickey Mouse. Over 80 years ago, he first appeared in the cartoon Steamboat Willie. When this cartoon came out in New York on November 18, 1928,

49、it was the first cartoon with sound and music. The man behind Mickey was Walt Disney. He became very rich and successful. In the 1930s, he made 87 cartoons with Mickey.Some people might ask how this cartoon animal became so popular. One of the main reasons is that Mickey was like a common man, but he always tried to face any danger. In his early f

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