◎ 2012届湖北省武汉市高三英语适应性训练的第一部分试题
  •      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. How will the woman travel to London?
    A. By car.    
    B. By bus.      
    C. By train.
    2.What do we know about the man?
    A. He wants to eat at a restaurant.
    B. He has already had lunch.
    C. He prefers sandwiches.
    3.Who is Robert angry with?
    A. Mary.      
    B. Himself.        
    C. His sister.
    4.Why is the man going to buy some clothes?
    A. Summer is coming.
    B. He wants to have a change in dress style.
    C. He’s going to travel somewhere.
    5.What does the man want?
    A. A rest.          
    B. A coffee.        
    C. A breakfast.
  • 听下面一段材料,回答第1-2题。
    1. For what reason does Professor Johnson talk to Sophie?
    A. She has wasted her money.
    B. She has decided to drop out.
    C. She has been absent recently.
    2.What was Sophie mistaken about?
    A. The time for Monday’s class.
    B. The date of the exam.
    C. Professor Johnson’s suggestion.
  • 听下面一段材料,回答第1-2题。
    1. What does the girl want to do?
    A. See a movie.      
    B. Meet her mother.  
    C. Attend a meeting.
    2. Where will they probably have a walk?
    A. In the park.      
    B. Along the beach.    
    C. On the square.
  • 听下面一段材料,回答第1-3题。
    1. What does the male speaker do?
    A. He is a policeman.
    B. He is a salesman.  
    C. He is a newsman.
    2.What did the younger man look like?
    A. Tall and very thin.  
    B. Tall and dark-colored.
    C. Thin and medium height.
    3.What did the older man wear?
    A. A blue jacket.      
    B. A brown shirt.    
    C. A black hat.
  • 听下面一段材料,回答第1-4题。
    1.Where does the woman work?
    A. In a restaurant.      
    B. In a supermarket.  
    C. In a food company.
    2.What will the man probably order?
    A. Roast beef.          
    B. Green salad.      
    C. Chicken soup.
    3.What will the speakers do the next day?
    A. Confirm the reservation.
    B. Prepare lots of dishes.  
    C. Improve the service.
    4.What is the get-together for?
    A. Promoting environmental awareness.
    B. Tasting the special food in the restaurant.
    C. Celebrating the birthday of the company.
  • 听下面一段材料,回答第1-4题。
    1.What is the purpose of practicing a speech loudly?
    A. To focus on the material.
    B. To memorize the speech.
    C. To give the speech smoothly.
    2. What if a speaker makes mistakes at the beginning?
    A. It is unlikely for him to finish the speech in time.
    B. He might not be able to continue easily.
    C. The audience may lose confidence in him.
    3. How should a speaker make eye contact with the audience?
    A. By looking at a different section from time to time.
    B. By looking at a particular person at one time.
    C. By looking at the audience all the time.
    4. What should a speaker avoid while giving a speech?
    A. Having more attention on the audience than on the material.
    B. Reading the speech to the audience.
    C. Raising the voice and using facial expressions.
  • As the quality of the city's air continues to give rise to ________, the residents are encouraged to
    set off fewer fireworks.  
    [     ]
    A. concerns    
    B. compromise  
    C. descriptions    
    D. emergency
  • The ________ in Chinese exports in recent years has resulted in a flood of inexpensive goods for
    American consumers.  
    [     ]
    A. immigration  
    B. introduction  
    C. explosion  
    D. investment
◎ 2012届湖北省武汉市高三英语适应性训练的第二部分试题
  • One reason why the housing prices in big cities are going up all the time is that people are ________ into
    overcrowded cities in great numbers.
    [     ]
    A. breaking        
    B. pouring        
    C. filling        
    D. squeezing
  • Do not fear them,  for there is nothing covered that will not be ________, and nothing hidden that
    will not be made known.  
    [     ]
    A. criticized    
    B. defined    
    C. estimated  
    D. revealed
  • If the world becomes less unfair and people have better education, much of the poverty can be ____.
    [     ]
    A. taken out      
    B. left out        
    C. wiped out      
    D. put out    
  • Fierce as they are faced with pressure, the students remain ________ and try hard to achieve their goals.  
    [     ]
    A. conscious    
    B. optimistic    
    C. nfluential  
    D. competitive
  • I don't trust this dishonest woman; I think her certificates are ________.
    [     ]
    A. mistaken    
    B. wrong       
    C. false     
    D. incorrect
  • Firms that provide ________ high wages and good working conditions do not seem to have problems
    attracting employees.  
    [     ]
    A. regularly    
    B. naturally    
    C. eventually  
    D. relatively
  • Take a vocabulary notebook with you all the time.Collect any good words, sentences or
    articles, ________ wisdoms and wise sayings.  
    [     ]
    A. specially    
    B. particularly    
    C. absolutely  
    D. consequently
  • After the break, the lecturer went on to talk ______ about the new academic concept.
    [     ]
    A. at length      
    B. in all        
    C. in turn    
    D. at most
◎ 2012届湖北省武汉市高三英语适应性训练的第三部分试题
  • 完形填空。
         Cindy Green had a serious telephone problem. The brand-new $100 million Ribrock Plaza Hotel
    opened nearby and had  1    almost the same telephone number as Cindy's. From the moment the hotel
    opened, Cindy was   2   by calls not for her. Since she had the same phone number for years, she felt
    that she should   3    the hotel management to change its number.  4  , the management refused. The
    phone company was not  5  , either. It argued that a number was a number, and the fact that a customer
    was getting someone else's  6  twenty-four hours a day didn't make it   7  .
         After her request fell on deaf ears, Cindy decided to take 8   into her own hands. At 9 o'clock the
    phone rang. Someone from Memphis was calling the hotel and  9  a room for the following Tuesday.
    Cindy said, "No 10  . How many nights?"
         A few hours later a secretary called and said that she wanted a suite (套房) 11  two bedrooms for a
    week. Cindy replied that the Presidential Suite was  12    for $600 a night. The secretary said that she
    would  13   it.
         The next day was a   14    one for Cindy. In the morning, she booked a car producer's conference
    for Memorial Day weekend. Her biggest 15  came in the afternoon-a mother called to book the ballroom
    for her daughter's wedding in June. Cindy hesitated for a while, but still   16   the woman that it would be
    no problem.
         Within a few months, the Ribrock Plaza Hotel was a disaster area. People kept  17    for weddings,
    reunions (聚会) and parties, and were all   18  that there were no such events.
    Soon after, she read in a  19    that the hotel might go bankrupt (破产).Her phone rang, and a manager
    from Marriott said, "We're prepared to   20    you $2 million for the hotel." Cindy replied, "We'll take it,
    but only if you change the telephone number."
    (     )1. A. required       
    (     )2. A. bothered       
    (     )3. A. expect         
    (     )4. A. Interestingly  
    (     )5. A. blamed         
    (     )6. A. answers       
    (     )7. A. changeable      
    (     )8. A. matters       
    (     )9. A. sought for      
    (     )10. A. way            
    (     )11. A. plus          
    (     )12. A. comfortable    
    (     )13. A. order          
    (     )14. A. lucky        
    (     )15. A. challenge      
    (     )16. A. promised      
    (     )17. A. turning around
    (     )18. A. informed    
    (     )19. A. note          
    (     )30. A. lend          
    B. acquired    
    B. embarrassed
    B. force      
    B. Amazingly  
    B. patient  
    B. calls      
    B. guilty     
    B. deals      
    B. asked for  
    B. wonder      
    B. instead of  
    B. reasonable  
    B. reserve  
    B. new        
    B. adventure  
    B. reminded    
    B. turning up  
    B. impressed  
    B. brochure    
    B. present  
    C. confirmed  
    C. disappointed
    C. encourage  
    C. Naturally  
    C. involved  
    C. messages  
    C. responsible
    C. events    
    C. called for  
    C. problem    
    C. next to  
    C. available  
    C. purchase  
    C. difficult  
    C. fortune    
    C. convinced  
    C. turning over
    C. guaranteed  
    C. poster      
    C. offer      
    D. dialed        
    D. frightened    
    D. persuade      
    D. Curiously      
    D. helpful        
    D. numbers        
    D. shameful      
    D. requests      
    D. waited for    
    D. doubt          
    D. with          
    D. affordable    
    D. register      
    D. busy          
    D. business      
    D. comforted      
    D. turning back  
    D. discouraged    
    D. newspaper      
    D. award          
  • 阅读理解。
         Some of Britain's most favoured spring visitors are disappearing in their thousands. Scientists say
    birds such as the cuckoo (布谷鸟), whose song announces the arrival of warm weather in Britain, are
    dropping in numbers.
         A typical migrant bird (候鸟) from Africa, cuckoo may no longer make its annual appearance in the
    woodlands in Britain
    , says a scientist. Numbers of migrant birds from Africa have declined seriously in
    the UK since 1995.For cuckoos the figure is 44%.The call of the cuckoo could be silenced in the near
    future.
         The real problem is that there are so many different possible causes for the loss-which makes it
    difficult to find out the real reasons for their decline and to prepare plans to put things right.
         The loss could be the result of changes in farmland use in Britain which are affecting the way cuckoos
    breed (繁殖) when they arrive here in spring. On top of changes of land use, scientists suspect that many
    cuckoos are finding it increasingly difficult to feed themselves when they come to breed in Britain. The
    large insects they eat have dropped rapidly in number here.
         Climate change might be another important reason. Migrant cuckoos arrive and breed at times which
    are no longer the best periods when food, such as insects, is available. Climate changes also affect timings of breeding cycles.
         Or the loss could be due to the increase of human populations in Africa and the destruction of natural
    living environment where they make their homes in winter.
         Apart from these, the killing takes place in spring and autumn when cuckoos, flying from and to
    Africa, cross islands in the Mediterranean Sea. They are shot in their hundreds of thousands by hunters
    who just enjoy killing them for the "sport" .It is against the European Union law, but that doesn't stop it
    happening.
         Sheehan, a scientist, said, cuckoos "arrive in our countryside just as the first good weather arrives.
    We associate them with spring and warmth. That is why they appear so often in old English stories. They
    are part of our culture-which makes the decline in their number so worrying."
    1. What can be inferred from the underlined part in Paragraph 2?
    A. Cuckoos may arrive in warm weather.
    B. Cuckoos may rarely be seen in Britain.
    C. Cuckoos may appear every two years.
    D. Cuckoos may come back to the woodlands.
    2. Concerning the rapid decrease in the number of cuckoos, scientists _______.
    A. find it difficult to discover the real reasons
    B. know few possible causes for the loss
    C. have plans to put things right
    D. doubt if the data are accurate
    3. According to the passage, what happens in Britain that possibly causes the decline of cuckoos?
    A. Many hunters kill cuckoos for fun.
    B. Cuckoos' main food is getting less.
    C. Policies on land use have changed.
    D. Human population increases rapidly.
    4.Which could be the best title for the passage?
    A. Cuckoos, Who Take Away Your Food?
    B. Climate Change: A Danger to Cuckoos
    C. Spring May Lose Song of Cuckoos
    D. A Song for England's Cuckoos
  • 阅读理解。
         Just over a year ago, life as an orphan (孤儿) girl in Tilinanu, southern Malawi, was uncertain. Relying
    on the kindness of the poor villagers for a roof over their head, many had to sleep in a room that held as
    many as fifteen people, eating a diet mainly of porridge. Their classroom for daily lessons was an open
    space in the bush.
         Now 34 of them have comfortable beds in a smart new home, with a community hall and medical
    centre next to it. Another 175 village children eat there daily, with the adults coming in to learn English; it's an amazing transformation. Even more amazing is that the person behind it is just 21.
         When Alice Pulford was waiting to get into university, she took a five-month teaching position in
    Malawi. She loved the place, and returned in the spring of 2009 to visit her friend Zulu in Tilinanu. His
    aunt Mercy owned land there and was doing her best to provide an education for the orphans, many of
    whom had lost parents to AIDS or malaria (疟疾).
         But after helping Mercy out for some time, Alice realised that what the girls in particular really needed was a safe and permanent place to live. There was a derelict (年久失修的) church on Mercy's land.
    "If you give me the church, I'll set up a home for these children," Alice told her.Mercy agreed.
         Alice phoned home and told her family about her plan. The family had already helped Alice raise £
    1,800 to assist the orphans. After they received Alice's call, they threw themselves into raising another £6,000, organising theatre trips and special parties and dinners.
         Alice found Malawian builders, selected materials and even helped with the brick-laying. In ten
    weeks, the church became a dormitory with toilets and a living area. In spring last year, Alice raised
    another £19,000 to build the medical centre and two new dormitories.
         The girls are happier-and so is Alice, who has been spending around four months in Malawi a year.
    "The orphans think they're gaining from me, but when I see their smile, it transforms me," she says.
    1. Over a year ago, the orphans didn't have _______.
    A. a classroom   
    B. a teacher    
    C. shelter    
    D. food
    2.What is known about the home Alice has built for the orphans?
    A. It looks like a community hall.
    B. It depends on the villagers' help.
    C. It provides a place for recreation.
    D. It benefits both the children and adults.
    3. The  Pulfords' family are _______.
    A. short of money                
    B. fond of entertainments
    C. supportive of each other        
    D. unaware of Alice's plan
    4.What has Alice learned from her experience? 
    A. Money-raising is a family business.
    B. Winning orphans' smile calls for skills.
    C. AIDS has made many children parentless.
    D. Helping others brings changes in a person.
  • 阅读理解。
         Margaret Cook is a professional, married woman with two young children. The elder, who is four, has
    just started at a local primary school. It is a school that she was eager for her daughter to attend because
    it has a mix of racial and social cultures. As a white from a middle-class family, she thought it important for her daughter to go to a local school that was representative of the cultural and social mix of the society in
    which we live. Having met, however, some of the other parents and children, she's becoming increasingly
    unsure about her choice. She is worried that along with the accent and vocabulary of her classmates, her
    daughter will also pick up what appears to be a very narrow-minded, uneducated attitude. She wants her
    daughter to be able to adapt and to fit in with her friends at school, but not necessarily to model her
    behaviour on theirs. She wants her to like them but not be like them.
         Is she worrying unnecessarily? Or should she abandon her principles and send her children to private
    school? A report, published by the Independent Schools Council, shows record numbers of parents want
    to send their children to private schools that stress "moral standards" and classroom discipline as they lose
    faith in state education, even many Labour voters would consider going private for the first time if they
    could afford the fees.
         But is it right without question to see private schools as heavens where moral standards are high,
    teachers are models of correctness and learning, children all come from open-minded families, and where
    our little ones will be protected from the ills of the world? The only difference is that those who can afford
    school fees are in the habit of making expensive mistakes. One of my colleagues who sends all his children to private schools tells stories of drug abuse, troublemakers, the decline of discipline and ever younger
    age of rebellion (叛逆).
         It's an excellent plan to send our children to a mixed school. Placed in an entirely new environment,
    they are at the risk of rejection, bullying (欺负) and maybe long-term alienation (疏离).But as soon as
    our children step out of the front door they are faced with a challenging world where boundary between
    the good and bad is so complex that young people have difficulty telling them apart. For this reason I
    believe that Cook is better advised to bring her children up in the real world.
    1. From this passage we know that the woman's daughter _______.
    A. is changing others' behavior          
    B. is mixing with trouble-makers
    C. is attending a mixed school          
    D. is applying for a private school
    2. The mother wants her daughter to be _______.
    A. popular and attractive              
    B. a fighter against social ills
    C. a model for her classmates          
    D. open-minded and well-educated
    3. What does the writer think of the private school?
    A. It's a heaven of pleasure.            
    B. It is going from bad to worse.
    C. It is experiencing moral decline.      
    D. It's a place of high moral standard.
    4. The writer suggests sending kids to a mixed school because he thinks _______.
    A. it is well managed                  
    B. it is close to the real world
    C. kids there are well protected            
    D. the competition there isn't fierce
  • 阅读理解。
          Solar electric systems pay off most quickly for consumers who use a lot of energy because extra
    charges are given for heavy use, but the solar system still makes sense for low-energy users such as
    myself.
         So much of Americans' carbon footprint results from buildings-about 43%, according to the U.S.
    Department of Energy. I'm in a household of 1.5 (mom and 7-year-old), and we use only about 4
    kilowatt hours of electricity per day, something we've managed through behavioral changes, such as
    turning off the lights in rooms after we've exited, and through in-home efficiencies (效率), such as
    swapping out all my light bulbs for energy-saving ones and using power boards that can turn off DVD
    players, coffee makers and other electrical equipment.
         Using less electricity means I can get by with a smaller, less expensive solar system that not only
    covers my use but also produces a credit on my power bill. Going solar also meant my house was
    upgraded with a time-of-use meter. This type of meter allows me to receive credit for the electricity I
    produce during peak hours when electricity costs the most, but pay the least for the electricity during
    off-peak hours, when I recharge my cell phone and laptop and perform other tasks requiring power.
         The downsides are that I am tied in to the grid (电网) and still affected by power failure, and I now
    have solar panels (太阳能电池板) that need to be cleaned. It's a subject of debate, but REC Solar said
    dirty panels decrease energy production by 6% to 8%.Many panel producers recommend cleaning
    panels at least once during the summer. I wash mine whenever they look dirty or dotted with bird
    droppings, which is about every other week.
         I think $6,000 is a small price to pay, not only for panels that should produce my next 20 years of
    electricity, but also for the greenhouse gases I'm not creating.
    1.What is mainly talked about in this article?
    A. The ways of cutting power bills.      
    B. The tips on reducing electricity use.
    C. The benefits of using solar systems.    
    D. The importance of protecting the environment.
    2.Why does the writer recharge her mobile phones during off-peak hours?
    A. To save credit.    
    B. To save time.  
    C. To save energy.
    D. To save money.
    3.The underlined word "downside" in Paragraph 4 is close in meaning to ______.
    A. discount          
    B. disadvantage    
    C. disapproval      
    D. disagreement
    4.The author cleaned her power panels ______.
    A. to make them work properly          
    B. to protect the environment
    C. to make them look better              
    D. to avoid power failure
  • 阅读理解。

         Does knowledge of a writer's private life help to explain his works? It's an age-old question, but it's
    also one in which interest is aroused (激起) again by Antonia Fraser's book about her life with Harold
    Pinter, Must You Go?. The book is obviously a personal account rather than a study of the plays. All the
    same, I'd argue it throws a good deal of light on Pinter the dramatist (剧作家).
         I start from the belief that all information about a writer is helpful. In fact, one of the pleasures of
    writing Pinter's biography was discovering that nearly all his plays were started by some strong personal
    memory. This got me into trouble with some scholars. I remember Martin Esslin, a great Pinter scholar,
    arguing that I had reduced the value of Pinter's Betrayal by linking it to the dramatist's seven-year-long
    love affair with Joan Bake well. But, as I saw it, that was simply the play's origin. All I had done, I hoped, was to remind people that Pinter was a writer who would make use of his own life experience.
         That point can also be seen from Antonia's book. There's an interesting account of a dinner with Tom
    Stoppard where Pinter says that he doesn't plan his characters' lives and then asks his fellow dramatist:
    "Don't you find they take you over sometimes?", to which Stoppard firmly replies: "No." That says a lot.
    One reason why The Homecoming is a great play is that Pinter allows his characters, almost unconsciously, to take over. Despite Stoppard's many strengths, he tends to keep his characters under a much tighter
    control.
         Again, there's an eye-opening passage in Antonia's book where she recalls a moment in 1983 when
     Pinter refers back to his relationship with his former wife, Vivien: "While she was alive, if you think about
    it, so much of my work was about unhappy frozen married relationships."
         In short-as Stoppard once wrote-information, in itself, about anything, is light. And modern biography, particularly in the hands of masters, has been helpful to literature by opening writers' lives to public eyes.
    For that reason, among many others, I welcome Antonia Fraser's book.

    1. What is TRUE about Antonia Fraser's book?
    A. It is well received by the public.            
    B. It carries Antonia's views about biography.
    C. It is helpful to the study of Pinter's works.  
    D. It includes serious studies of Pinter's works.
    2.What do the author of this article and Martin Esslin disagree on?
    A. The literary value of Pinter's Betrayal.
    B. The literary value of the accounts of Pinter's life.
    C. The truthfulness of the contents of Antonia's book.
    D. The truthfulness of Pinter's love affair with Joan Bakewell.
    3.What can we infer about Pinter and Stoppard?
    A. They treat their characters in different ways.
    B. Stoppard has more strengths than Pinter.
    C. They often have dinners together.          
    D. They often argue with each other.
    4. This article is probably ______.
    A .a feature story      
    B. a book review      
    C. a news report    
    D. a biography
  • 完成句子。
         阅读下列各小题,根据括号内的汉语提示,用句末括号内的英语单词完成句子。
    1. It hurts most to love someone but not ________ in return.(love)
        爱上某人却未被爱最让人痛苦.
    2. ________ so many great works of art are housed in the same museum.(amaze)
       令人惊奇的是,在同一家博物馆里竟能容纳下如此众多的名家巨作.
    3.The adventurer awoke to ________ up to the tree with long ropes.(find)
       这位冒险者醒来,发现自己被长绳捆在树上.
    4. ________ all night reading the documents, I was very tired the next day.(spend)
       看了一整夜的文件,第二天我倦极了.
    5. I believed then, and I believe now, that the agreement ________.(work)
       我当时相信,至今仍然相信,这个协定本来是可行的.
    6. He'll push on with his project ________.(whatever)
       不管有什么困难,他都要继续推行他的计划.
    7. I have been ________ my study that I haven't had time for social work.(occupy)
        我一直忙于学习,以至于我没有时间去参与社会活动.
    8. Sometimes I wonder how relevant chemistry is to these students, ________ be going
         back to their villages after Year 8.(most)
        有时候我真想知道,化学对这些孩子究竟有多大用处,他们中的大多数学完八
        年级后就要回到他们的村庄去了.
    9. By the time he retired, George ________ enough money to buy a holiday home.(save)
        到乔治退休时,他已攒够了买度假屋的钱.
    10. I used to be a girl full of romantic ideas. Now I know that ________ dreams into action
          that we can live a real life.(put)
         我曾是一个充满浪漫幻想的女孩子,现在我知道只有把梦想付诸行动才能过上真实的生活.
  • 书面表达。
         请根据以下提示,用英语写一篇短文。
         Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, but today is a gift. That is why it is called the present.
         注意:
         ①无须写标题,不得照抄英语提示语;
         ②除诗歌外,文体不限;
         ③文中不得透露个人姓名和学校名称;
         ④词数为120左右。
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