高考英語(yǔ)卷3(附答案)

上傳人:豆*** 文檔編號(hào):203341068 上傳時(shí)間:2023-04-24 格式:DOCX 頁(yè)數(shù):14 大小:26.57KB
收藏 版權(quán)申訴 舉報(bào) 下載
高考英語(yǔ)卷3(附答案)_第1頁(yè)
第1頁(yè) / 共14頁(yè)
高考英語(yǔ)卷3(附答案)_第2頁(yè)
第2頁(yè) / 共14頁(yè)
高考英語(yǔ)卷3(附答案)_第3頁(yè)
第3頁(yè) / 共14頁(yè)

下載文檔到電腦,查找使用更方便

10 積分

下載資源

還剩頁(yè)未讀,繼續(xù)閱讀

資源描述:

《高考英語(yǔ)卷3(附答案)》由會(huì)員分享,可在線閱讀,更多相關(guān)《高考英語(yǔ)卷3(附答案)(14頁(yè)珍藏版)》請(qǐng)?jiān)谘b配圖網(wǎng)上搜索。

1、A Welcome to Holker Hall & Gardens Visitor Information How to get to Holker By Car Follow brown signs on A590 from J36, M6. Approximat(yī)e travel times: Windernere-20 minutes, Kendal-25 minutes, Lancaster-45 minutes, Manchester-1 hour 30?。恚閚utes. By Rail: The nearest station is Cark-in-Cartmel wit

2、h trains to Carnforth, Lancaster and Preston for connections to major cities &airports. Opening Times Sunday-Friday(closed on Saturday) 11:00am-4:00pm, 30th march-2nd November. Admission?。胔arges           Hall&Gardens     Gardens Adults:            £12.

3、00              £8.00 Groups:        £9.00                  £5.50 Special Events Producers’ Market     13th April Join us to taste a variety of fresh?。靜cal food and drinks. Meet the producers and get some excellent recipe ideas. Holker Garden Festiva

4、l 30th May The event celebrat(yī)es its 22nd anniversary with a great show of the very best of gardening, making it one of the most popular events in gardening. Nat(yī)ional Garden Day 28th August Holker once again opens its gardens in aid of the disadvantaged. For just a small donation you can

5、 take a tour with our garden guide. Winter Market 8th November This is an event for all the family. Wander among a variety of shops selling gifts while?。錸joying?。?live music show and nice street entertainment. 21. How long does it probably take a tourist to drive to Holker from Manchester? A.

6、 20 minutes     B. 25 minutes C. 45 minutes     D. 90 minutes 22. How much should a member of a tour group pay to visit Hall & Gardens? A. £12.00     B. £9.00      C. £8.00   D. £5.50 23. Which event will you go to if you want to see a live music show? A. Producers’ Market

7、                    ?。? Holker Garden Festival C. National Garden Day       D.?。譱nter Market B Cities usually have a good reason for being where they are, like a nearby port or river. People settle in these places because they are easy to get to and naturally suited to comm

8、unications and trade. New York City, for example, is near a large harbour at the mouth of the Hudson River. Over 300 years its population grew gradually from 800 people to?。?million. But not all cities develop slowly over a long period of time. Boom?。鬿wns grow from nothing almost overnight. In 1896,

9、 Dawson, Canada, was unmapped wilderness(荒野). But gold was discovered there in 1897, and two years?。欤幔鬳r, it was one?。飂 the?。靉rgest cities in the West, with a population of 30000. Dawson did not have any of the natural conveniences of cities like London or Paris. People went there for gold. They tr

10、avelled over snow-covered mountains and sailed hundreds of miles up icy rivers. The path to Dawson was covered with thirty feet of wet snow that could fall without warning. An avalanche(雪崩) once closed the pat(yī)h, killing 63 people. For?。韆ny who made it to Dawson, however,?。鬶e rewards were worth the d

11、ifficult trip. Of the first 0 people who dug for gold, 4000 got rich. About 100 of these stayed rich men for?。簦鑕 rest of their lives. But no matter how rich they were, Dawson was never comfortable. Necessities like food and wood were?。鰁ry expensive. But soon, the gold that Dawson depended on had al

12、l bee(cuò)n found. The city was crowded with disappointed people with no interest in settling down, and when they heard there were new gold discoveries in Alaska, they left Dawson City as quickly as they had come. Today, people still come and go-to see(cuò) where the Canadian gold rush happened. Tourism is no

13、w the chief industry of Dawson City-its present population is 762. 24. What attracted the early settlers to New York City? A. its?。鈛siness culture      B. its small population  C. its geographical position   D. its favourable climat(yī)e 25. What do we know about those who first dug for gold

14、 in Dawson? A. two-thirds of them stayed there B. one out of five people got rich C. almost everyone gave up D. half of them died 26. What was the main reason for many?。餰ople to leave Dawson? A. they found the city too crowded B. they wanted to try their luck elsewhere C. they were

15、unable to stand?。鬶e winter D. they were short of food 27. What is the text mainly about? A. the rise and fall of a city B. the gold rush in Canada C. journeys into the wilderness D. tourism in Dawson C While famous foreign architects are invited to lead the designs of landmark building

16、s in China such the new?。肅TV tower and the?。蝍tional Center for the Performing Arts, many?。澹鉫llent Chinese architects are making great efforts to take the center?。髏age. Their efforts have bee(cuò)n proven fruitful. Wang Shu, a 49-year-old?。胔inese architect, won the Pritzker Architecture Prize-which is

17、often referred to as the Nobel Prize in architecture-on February 28. He is the first Chinese?。鉯tizen?。鬿 win this award. Wang serves as head of the Architecture Department at(yī) the China Academy of Art(CAA). His office is locat(yī)ed at the Xiangshan campus(校園) of the university in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Prov

18、ince. Many buildings?。铮?the campus are his original creations. The style of the campus is quite different from that of most Chinese universities. Many visitors were amazed by the complex architectural space and abundant building types. The curves(曲線) of the?。鈛ildings?。餰rfectly mat(yī)ch the rise and fa

19、ll of hills, forming a unique view. Wang collected more?。簦鑑n?。?million abandoned bricks of different ages. He asked the workers to use?。簦颍幔鋓tional techniques to make the bricks into walls, roofs and corridors. This creation attracted a lot of attention thanks to its?。韎xture of modern and traditiona

20、l Chinese elements(元素). Wang's works show a deep understanding of modern architecture and a good knowledge of traditons. through such a balance, he had created a new type of Chinese architecture, said Tadao Ando, the winner of the 1995 Pritzker Prize. Wang believes traditons?。骽ould?。睿飔 be sealed i

21、n glass boxes at museums. "That is only evidence that(yī) traditions once existed," he said. "Many Chinese people have a misunderstanding of traditions. They think tradition means old things from the?。餫st. In fact, tradition also refers to the things that have bee(cuò)n developing and that(yī) are still being c

22、reat(yī)ed," he said. "Today, many Chinese people are?。靍arning Western styles and theories rather than focusing on Chinese?。簦騛ditions. many people tend to talk about traditions without knowing what they really are," said Wang. The study of traditions should be combined?。鳎閠h practice. otherwise, the re

23、creat(yī)ion of traditions would be artificial and empty, he said. 28. Wang's winning of the prize means that Chinese architects are A. following the lastest world?。魊end B. getting international?。騟cognition C. working harder than ever before D. relying?。铮睢oreign architects 29. What impressed

24、visitors to?。鬶e CAA Xiangshan campus most? A. Its hilly environment        B. its large size C. Its unique style        D. its diverse functions 30. What made Wang’s?。醨chitectural design?。?success? A. The mixture of different shapes    B. the balance?。飂 east and west C

25、. The use of popular techniques         D. the harmony if old and new 31. What should we do about Chinese traditions according to Wang? A. Spread them to the world        B. preserve them at museums C. Teach them in?。鮪iversities     D. recreat(yī)e them in practice D Adul

26、ts understand what(yī) it feels like to be flooded with objects. Why?。鋙 we often assume that more is more when it comes to kids and their belongings? The good news is that I can help my own kids learn earlier than I did how to live?。韔re with less. I found the pre-holidays a good time to encourage?。鵲ung

27、 children to donate less-used things, and it worked. Because of our efforts, our daughter Georgia did decide to donate a?。靉rge bag of toys?。鬿 a little girl whose mother was?。鮪able to pay for her holiday due to illness. She chose to sell a few larger objects that were less often used when we promised

28、 to put the money into her school fund(基金) (our kindergarten daughter is serious about becoming a doctor). For weeks, I’ve been thinking of bigger, dee(cuò)per questions: How do we make it a habit for them? And how do we train ourselves to help them live with, nee(cuò)d, and use less? Yesterday, I sat with m

29、y son, Shepherd, determined to test my own theory on this. I decided to play with him with only one toy for as long as it would keep?。鑙s interest. I expected that one toy would keep his attention for about five minutes, ten minutes, max. I chose a red rubber ball-simple, universally available.?。祝?pa

30、ssed it, he tried to put it in his mouth, he tried bouncing it, rolling it, sitting on?。閠, throwing it. It was totally, completely enough for him.?。耬fore I knew it?。幔?hour had passed and?。閠 was time to move on to lunch. We both became absorbed in the simplicity of playing together. He had my full a

31、ttention and I?。瑁醖 his. My little experiment to find joy in a single object?。鱫rked for both of us. 32. What do the words “more is more” in paragraph?。?probably mean? A. The more, the better      B.?。舗ough is enough   C. More money, more worries        D. Earn more and spend mor

32、e 33. What made Georgia?。醙ree to sell?。髈me of her objects? A. Saving up for her holiday.        B.Raising money for?。帷oor girl C.?。羋ding the money to her fund   D. Giving?。鬶e money to a sick mother 34. Why did the author play the ball with Shepherd? A. To try out an idea  

33、       B. To show a parent’s?。欤飗e C. To train his attention      D. To help him start a hobby 35. What(yī) can be a suitable title for the text? A. Take it or leave it     B. A lesson from kids C.Live more with?。靍ss        D. The pleasure of giving  七選五 Be

34、fore there was the written word, there was the language of dance.?。腶nce expresses love and hate, joy and sorrow, life and death, and everything else in between.       36      We dance from Florida to Alaska, from north to south and sea to sea. We dance ant weddings, birthdays, office parties an

35、d?。辏鮯t to fill the time. “I adore dancing,” says Lester Bridges, the owner of a dance studio in Iowa. “I can’t imagine doing anything else with my life,” Bridges runs dance classes for all ages. “Teaching dance?。閟 wonderful.     37 It’s great to watch them. For many of them, it’s a way of 

36、meeting people and having a social life.” 38 “I can tell you about one young couple,” says Bridges. “They’re learning to do traditional dances. They arrive at the class in low?。髉irits and they leave with a smile.    39   ” So, do we dance in order to make ourselves fee(cuò)l better, ca

37、lmer, healthier? Andrea Hillier says, “Dance, like the pattern of a beat(yī)ing heart, is life. Even after all these years, I want to get better and better.      40    I find it hard to stop! Dancing reminds me I’m alive.” A. So why do we dance? B. Dance in?。鬶e U.S. is everywhere. C. If you like da

38、ncing outdoors, come to America. D. My older students say it makes them fee(cuò)l young. E. I keep practicing even when?。伞痬 extremely tired. F. Dancing seems to change their feeling completely. G. They stayed?。鮬 all?。睿間ht?。靜ng singing and dancing. 完形填空 When most of?。酰?get a text messages on our cel

39、l phone from an unknown person, we usually say “sorry,    41   number!” and move on. But when Dennis Williams   42 a text that clearly wasn’t intended for him, he did something    43    . On March 19, Dennis got a group text   44 him that(yī) a couple he didn’t?。雗ow were at the hospital,

40、 waiting for the   45     of a baby. “Congratulations! But I think someone was mistaken,” Dennis  46    . The baby was born and updat(yī)e texts were    47     ?。瘢酰閏kly from the overjoyed grandmother, Teresa. In her   48   , she didn’t see(cuò)m to realize that she was  49    the baby’s p

41、hotos with a complete stranger. “Well, I don’t  50  you all but I will get there to take pictures with the baby,” replied Dennis before asking which room the new    51 were in. Much to the family’s surprise, Dennis stuck to his   52   ! He turned up at the hospital     53   gif

42、ts for the new mother Lindsey and her baby boy.?。蹋椋睿鋝ey’s husband was totally 54   by the unexpected visit. “I don’t think we would have randomly invited him over but we 55   it and the gifts.” Teresa     56   a photo of the chance meeting on a social networking website 57   

43、by the touching?。鱫rds: “What a 58   this young man was?。鬿 our family! He?。鱝s so    59   and kind to?。洌?this.” The post has since gained the    60    of social media users all?。飗er the world, receiving more than 184000 shares and 61500 likes in just three days. 41. A.unlucky         

44、 B.secret       C.new           D.wrong 42. A.received     B.translated       C.copied      D.printed 43. A.reasonable   ?。拢。髉ecial    C. necessary     D. practical 44. A. convincing B. reminding     C. informing      D. wa

45、rning 45. A. wake-up      B. recovery     C. growth             D. arrival 46. A. responded     B. interrupted       C. predicted   D. repeated 47. A. coming in     B. setting out    C. passing down   D. moving around 48. A. opinion      

46、   B. anxiety             C. excitement       D. effort  49. A. comparing      B. exchanging C. discussing   D. sharing 50. A. accept           B. know    C. believe           D. bother 51. A. parents   B.?。鋙ctors          

47、C. patients      D. visitiors 52. A. dream          B. promise            C. agenda    D. principle 53. A.?。鈋aring       B. collecting      ?。茫?opening    D.making 54. A. discouraged   B.?。騟laxed       ?。? astonished     D. def

48、eated 55. A. admit     B. need           C. appreciate         D. expect 56. A. found    B. selected     C. developed     D. posted 57. A. confirmed    B. simplified    C. clarified           D. accompanied

49、 58. A. pity      B. blessing      C. relief     D. problem 59. A. smart       B. calm        C. sweet       D. fair 60. A.?。髖mpathy         B. attention        C. control   D. trust 語(yǔ)法填空 I’

50、m not sure  61            is more frightened, me or the female gorilla(大猩猩) that(yī) suddenly appears out of?。頾where. I’m walking on a path in the?。鎜rest in the Central African Republic. Unexpectedly, I’m face- to-face with the gorilla, who begins screaming at  62        top of her lungs

51、. That makes her baby scream, and then a?。?0-pound male appear. He screams the  63     (loud) of all. The noise shakes the trees as the male beats his chest and charges toward me. I quickly lower?。韞self, ducking my head to avoid 64   (look) directly into his eyes so he d

52、oesn’t fee(cuò)l 65           (challenge). My name is Mireya Mayor. I’m a 66            (science) who studies animals such apes and monkeys. I was searching 67       these three western lowland gorillas I’d been observing. No one had seen them for hours, and my colleagues and

53、I were worried. When the gorillas and I frightened each other, I was just glad to find  68            (they) alive. True to a gorilla’s unaggressive nat(yī)ure, the huge animal 69         (mean) me no real harm. He was just saying: “I’m king of this forest,?。幔睿?here is your reminder!”?。?/p>

54、nce his message was delivered, he?。醠lowed?。恚? 70          (stay) and watch. 短文改錯(cuò) It was Monday morning, and the writing class had just begin. Everyone was silent, wait to see who would be called upon to read his and?。鑕r paragraph aloud. Some of us were confident and eager take part in the 

55、class activity; others were nervous and anxious.?。伞ad done myself homework, but I was shy. I was afraid that to speak in front of a larger group of people. At that moment, I remembered?。鬶at my father once said “The classroom is a place for learning and that include learning from textbooks, and mist

56、ake as well.” Immediate, I raised my hand. 作文 假定你是李華,你的英國(guó)朋友Peter來(lái)信詢問(wèn)你校學(xué)生體育運(yùn)動(dòng)狀況,請(qǐng)給她回信,內(nèi)容涉及: 1. 學(xué)校的體育場(chǎng)館 2. 重要的運(yùn)動(dòng)項(xiàng)目 3. 你喜歡的項(xiàng)目 注意:1.詞數(shù)100左右; 2. 可以合適增長(zhǎng)細(xì)節(jié),以使行文連貫 參照答案: 21-25 ?。腂DCB  26-30 BABCD 31-35 DACAC    36-40 BDAFE  41-45 DABCD   46-50 AACDB   51-55 ABACC

57、56-60 DDBCB 61. who   62. the 63.loudest       64.looking  65.challenged 66.scientist  67.for 68.them   69.meant   70.to stay 71.begin→begun 72.wait →waiting 73.and→or 74.eager ∧to 75. myself→my/the 76.去掉that 77.larger→large 78.include→including 79.mistake→mistakes 80.immediate→immediately

展開(kāi)閱讀全文
溫馨提示:
1: 本站所有資源如無(wú)特殊說(shuō)明,都需要本地電腦安裝OFFICE2007和PDF閱讀器。圖紙軟件為CAD,CAXA,PROE,UG,SolidWorks等.壓縮文件請(qǐng)下載最新的WinRAR軟件解壓。
2: 本站的文檔不包含任何第三方提供的附件圖紙等,如果需要附件,請(qǐng)聯(lián)系上傳者。文件的所有權(quán)益歸上傳用戶所有。
3.本站RAR壓縮包中若帶圖紙,網(wǎng)頁(yè)內(nèi)容里面會(huì)有圖紙預(yù)覽,若沒(méi)有圖紙預(yù)覽就沒(méi)有圖紙。
4. 未經(jīng)權(quán)益所有人同意不得將文件中的內(nèi)容挪作商業(yè)或盈利用途。
5. 裝配圖網(wǎng)僅提供信息存儲(chǔ)空間,僅對(duì)用戶上傳內(nèi)容的表現(xiàn)方式做保護(hù)處理,對(duì)用戶上傳分享的文檔內(nèi)容本身不做任何修改或編輯,并不能對(duì)任何下載內(nèi)容負(fù)責(zé)。
6. 下載文件中如有侵權(quán)或不適當(dāng)內(nèi)容,請(qǐng)與我們聯(lián)系,我們立即糾正。
7. 本站不保證下載資源的準(zhǔn)確性、安全性和完整性, 同時(shí)也不承擔(dān)用戶因使用這些下載資源對(duì)自己和他人造成任何形式的傷害或損失。

相關(guān)資源

更多
正為您匹配相似的精品文檔

相關(guān)搜索

關(guān)于我們 - 網(wǎng)站聲明 - 網(wǎng)站地圖 - 資源地圖 - 友情鏈接 - 網(wǎng)站客服 - 聯(lián)系我們

copyright@ 2023-2025  zhuangpeitu.com 裝配圖網(wǎng)版權(quán)所有   聯(lián)系電話:18123376007

備案號(hào):ICP2024067431號(hào)-1 川公網(wǎng)安備51140202000466號(hào)


本站為文檔C2C交易模式,即用戶上傳的文檔直接被用戶下載,本站只是中間服務(wù)平臺(tái),本站所有文檔下載所得的收益歸上傳人(含作者)所有。裝配圖網(wǎng)僅提供信息存儲(chǔ)空間,僅對(duì)用戶上傳內(nèi)容的表現(xiàn)方式做保護(hù)處理,對(duì)上載內(nèi)容本身不做任何修改或編輯。若文檔所含內(nèi)容侵犯了您的版權(quán)或隱私,請(qǐng)立即通知裝配圖網(wǎng),我們立即給予刪除!

五月丁香婷婷狠狠色,亚洲日韩欧美精品久久久不卡,欧美日韩国产黄片三级,手机在线观看成人国产亚洲