江苏省2020高考英语名师原创冲刺复习卷及答案(1)

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高中英语:2020高考英语江苏专用版增分冲刺卷(一)+Word版含解析【KS5U+高考】

高中英语:2020高考英语江苏专用版增分冲刺卷(一)+Word版含解析【KS5U+高考】

高考冲刺卷(一)第一部分听力(略)第二部分英语知识运用(共两节,满分35分)第一节单项填空(共15小题;每小题1分,满分15分)请认真阅读下面各题,从题中所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项。

21.The boy finally realized that lack of willpower was the of his poor academic performance.A.symptomB.resultC.reflectionD.source答案D解析句意为:那个男孩最终意识到缺乏意志力是他学习成绩不好的根源。

source根源,原因,符合语境。

symptom症状;result结果;reflection反映。

22.Due to the pressure from the public,the police decided to conduct a thorough and review of the case.prehensiveplicatedC.consciousD.constructive答案A解析句意为:由于公众的压力,警方决定对这起案件进行一次彻底、全面的审查。

comprehensive 详尽的,全面的,符合语境。

complicated复杂的;conscious有意识的;constructive建设性的。

23.A shared-use path for cycling and walking along the Yangtze River opened to the public on Dec.9, 2018,attracting hundreds of cyclists and walkers winter cold.A.in case ofB.in defense ofC.in spite ofD.in view of答案C解析句意为:长江沿岸的骑行和散步共用道路于2018年12月9日向公众开放,尽管冬天天气寒冷,仍吸引了数百名骑自行车的人和步行者。

江苏省2020年高考冲刺英语学科试题选编(一)含答案【精】.doc

江苏省2020年高考冲刺英语学科试题选编(一)含答案【精】.doc

2020年高考冲刺英语学科试题选编(一)一、单项填空1. Lots of artists tend to believe that nature is not only all that is ________ to the eye but it also includes the inner pictures of the soul.A. relevantB. visibleC. similarD. close2. It is writers’ traditional role to absorb different popular social ________ and reflect them bac into their boos.A. customsB. controversiesC. constitutionsD. currents3. McDonald’s USA announced that it ________ to serve fresh beef or por, prepared when ordered, in all burgers across the majority of its restaurants by mid-2018.A. had decidedB. will decideC. would decideD. has decided4. Now a recent Canadian study suggests that a young baby ________ from interactive music classes has better communication sills than one who taes a less-active class.A. benefitedB. benefitC. benefitingD. to benefit5. ________ you obviously would not eat Spaghetti with your fingers, using a spoon to twist it into a basetball mound of noodles is incorrect.A. WhenB. AsC. SinceD. While6. —It loos you are feeling down. Any trouble?—All my hopes were ________ when my application was denied.A. crushedB. hammeredC. sunD. faded7. To have faith is to believe that the path we are traveling along is longer than ________ we can anticipate.A. thatB. whatC. howD. as8. —What about the new baery at the street corner near our school?—You ________ not want to eat its cheese caes, for they are very calorific.A. dareB. mustC. mightD. need9. —With the booing housing price, more investors tend to spend all they have buying one. —That’s really risy. Never should we ________.A. boil an eggB. have egg on our face1C. wal on eggshellsD. put all your eggs in one baset10. Alasa, of ________ most part is lightly populated, is nown for its diverse landscapes, with abundant wildlife and many small towns.A. whatB. thatC. whichD. whose二、完形填空athrine Switer, now 70, repeated the 26.2-mile j ourney in this year’s Boston Marathon. When Switer became the first woman to enter the Boston Marathon with a 11 , in 1967, she new she’d be chasing history. She didn’t epect to be driven off the 12 .At the time, women weren’t allowed 13 entry into the race. To be accepted, Switer 14 with her initials as “. V. Switer.” On race day, though, she 15 her femininity proudly. In lipstic and earrings, she too her place at the starting line.Switer was at mile two 16 r ace manager John “Joc” Semple, angered by a woman 17 into the male-only marathon, ran up and tried to 18 her off the course, yelling, “Get the hell out of my race!” However, 19 her boyfriend nocing Semple bac, she fended off the official and finished in four hours and twenty minutes.To 20 the 50th anniversary of her barrier-breaing run, Switer repeated the journey, wearing the number 261, the same one the official tried 21 it from her 50 years ago. In her honor, the Boston Marathon will 22 the number in future races.Switer has 39 marathons under her 23 , including coming in first in New Yor in 1974 and running in the Olympics in 1984. The last time she finished one in Boston was in 1976, two years after successfully 24 to let women publicly enter it.Her bib number might not 25 in the Boston Marathon again, but Switer’s movement goes 26 letting women enter that race. Founding a nonprofit international women’s running club, Swite r chose the name 261 Fearless, appealing 27 for female participation in the sport.“My goal is to 28 women in places right now where they’re not allowed to leave the house alone, drive a car or get a 29 ,” Switer told CBS Boston. “If running can give them a sense of strength, where they are no longer 30 and vulnerable, that’s what I hope it can do.” Of her legacy, Switer said it came as no surprise that women continued to embrace the “sense of empowerment” that came from running. “But we have a long way to2go.” she said.11. A. identity B. fame C. number D. privilege12. A. event B. course C. application D. trac13. A. official B. professional C. personal D. national14. A. signed B. registered C. attended D. equipped15. A. provided B. discovered C. ehibited D. concealed16. A. since B. after C. before D. when17. A. hiding B. sneaing C. marching D. rising18. A. tae B. drop C. brea D. chase19. A. with B. for C. since D. as20. A. label B. mar C. observe D. congratulate21. A. tearing B. handing C. grasping D. possessing22. A. run out B. give out C. chec out D. leave out23. A. belt B. name C. control D. credit24. A. urging B. persuading C. campaigning D. bothering25. A. come up B. hang up C. bring up D. turn up26. A. o ff B. beyond C. alongside D. without27. A. passively B. inclusively C. etensively D. decisively28. A. reach B. convince C. wae D. prepare29. A. inspiration B. permit C. diploma D. grant30. A. housewives B. breadwinners C. servants D. victims三、阅读理解AThe Mütter Museum in Philadelphia houses one ehibit near the entrance that inspires unmatchable awe. Loo closely at the display, and you can see mars left by museumgoers pressing their foreheads against the glass.The object that fascinates them is a small wooden bo containing 46 microscope slides, each displaying a slice of Albert Einstein’s brain. A magnifying glass positioned over one of the s lides reveals a piece of tissue about the sie of a stamp. Einstein’s brain represents potential, the ability of one eceptional mind, one genius, to catapult ahead of everyone else.3Throughout history rare individuals have stood out for their meteoric contributions to a field. Lady Murasai for her literary creation. Michelangelo for his masterful touch. Marie Curie for her scientific acuity. “The genius,” wrote German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer, “lights on his age lie a comet into the paths of the plan ets.” Consider Einstein’s impact on physics. With no tools available other than the force of his own thoughts, he predicted in his general theory of relativity that massive accelerating objects—lie blac holes orbiting each other—would create ripples (波纹) in the fabric of space-time. It too one hundred years, enormous computational power, and massively sophisticated technology to definitively prove him right, with the physical detection of such gravitational waves less than two years ago.Einstein revolutionied our understanding of the very laws of the universe. But our understanding of how a mind lie his wors remains stubbornly stagnant. What set his brainpower, his thought processes, apart from those of his merely brilliant peers? What maes a genius?Philosophers have long been puling over the origins of genius. Early Gree thiners believed an overabundance of blac bile—one of proposed by Hippocrates—endowed poets, philosophers, and other famous souls with “etraordinary powers,” says historian Darrin McMahon, author of Divine Fury A History of Genius. Phrenologists (骨相学家) attempted to find genius in bumps on the head; they collected sulls—including philosopher Immanuel ant’s—which they eamined, measured, and weighed.None of them discovered a single source of genius, and such a thing is unliely to be found. Genius is too abstract, too subjective, too wedded to the verdict of history to be easily identified. And it requires the ultimate epression of too many features to be simplified into the highest point on one human scale. Instead we can try to understand it by cracing the comple and mied qualities—intelligence, creativity, perseverance, and simple good fortune, to name a few—that combine to create a person capable of changing the world.31. Why does th e author tal about the “mars” in paragraph ONE?A. He is unsatisfied with the untidy environment of the museum.B. He is angry about the disrespect to the ehibitC. He is about to eplain the ehibit’s popularity.D. He is amaed at the huge population visiting the museum.432. The underlined phrase “catapult ahead of” in the second paragraph is closest in meaning to ________.A. ecel atB. tower overC. differentiate betweenD. shine in33. What can be inferred from Paragraph 3?A. It too Einstein years to prove the eistence of gravitational waves.B. Arthur Schopenhauer was widely acnowledged as a genius in history.C. Einstein made incredible prediction despite lac of sources.D. Geniuses have limited influences just as comets do.34. What is the author most liely to tal about after this passage?A. Eamples of geniuses who possess such qualities.B. Importance of such qualities in becoming a genius.C. Ways to combine qualities with good fortune.D. Means to mae a genius.BYou may be reading this while on a conference call, pushing your child on a swing—or both. But is multitasing really a good idea, or does it mae us do everything more slowly and less well than if we were concentrating on one tas at a time?Psychologists cite convincing research that paying more attention to a tas improves performance. Humans, they argue, are good at doing rapidly sequential tass, rather than simultaneous ones. My teenagers insist it is fine to revise while teting and watching YouTube—but they are wrong. In 2009, a research team from Stanford, led by Clifford Nass, compared heavy versus light media multitasers in a series of tests. Nass thought the heavier multitasers would be better at organiing and storing information and have superior memories, but it turned out that the opposite was true. When the groups were shown layout of colored shapes and ased to remember their positions and ignore others, the multitasers couldn’t do it. They were constantly distracted and their ability to switch between tass, disregard irrelevant information and remember what they had seen was worse than the lighter multitasers.A team led by David Strayer at the University of Utah looed at people who drive while 5using the phone and found that they were more than twice as liely to miss stop signs. In a later study, Strayer found that people who are most liely to multitas are those who thin they are great at it. Seventy per cent of the 310 students in his study thought they were above average at multitasing. People who multitased the most had high levels of impulsive behaviour and were generally the most ill-suited to attempt more than one job at a time.Using a mobile, even hands-free, while driving delays the amount of time needed to brae in an emergency and halves the information that drivers are aware of. But Strayer found that people consistently overestimated how good they were at driving while on the phone.Nass’s research led him to suggest that we should spend 20 minutes on one tas and then switch to another, rather than flitting any faster between the two. Tests that measure the ability to remember shapes are less compelling than real-life multitasing research, but the evidence suggests that we cheat ourselves if we thin we can do more than one thing well at the same time. Limited research suggests that women may be a tiny bit better at it, but few of us are naturals. Strayer’s research suggests that around 3% of the population are “supertasers” who do better the more they do. The rest of us, however, should stic to one thing at a time.35. Which of the following behavior may the author show approval to?A. Revising while teting and watching Youtube.B. Reading while pushing your id on a swing.C. Switching between TV and homewor.D. Handling sequential items on the agenda.36. What could be concluded from Nass eperiment?A. Heavy multitasers were inadequate for such an eperiment.B. The result of the eperiment contradicted their previous assumption.C. Irrelevant information made the multitasers fail to remember the positions of colored shapes.D. Multitasing was totally impossible in daily life.37. According to Stayer, people who multitased most generally ________.A. tended to be aggressiveB. yielded more outcomesC. had a false image of themselvesD. overweighed those light multitasers638. What does the underlined “it” refer to in the last paragraph?A. Remembering shapesB. Cheating themselvesC. MultitasingD. Doing rapidly sequential tass四、任务型阅读We all need to feel understood, recognied and affirmed (证实) by our friends, family and romantic partners. We all need to find our tribe.Research has shown that among the benefits that come with being in a relationship or group, feeling accepted is regarded as the most important driver of meaning. When other people thin you matter and treat you as if you matter, you believe you matter, too.Though we all share a need to belong, in the first decades of the 20th century, many influential psychologists and physicians did not acnowledge this fundamental aspect of human nature. The idea that children needed parental love and care to live a full and meaningful life was not only considered medically dangerous, it was dismissed as immoral and disgusting.As behavioral psychology came into fashion and academic psychologists turned their attention to child-raising, this view shifted and they began to eamine and affirm the vital importance of attachment in early life. They discovered that people, whatever their age, needed more than food and shelter to live full and healthy lives.But, sadly, many of us lac close ties. At a time when we are more connected digitally than ever before, rates of social isolation (孤立) are rising. The results of an Age U poll published recently suggest that half a million people over the age of 60 usually spend each day alone, and it’s not unusual for another half a million people to go five or si days without seeing or speaing to someone.All these figures reveal more than a rise in loneliness—they reveal a lac of meaning in people’s lives. In surveys, we list our close relationships as our most important sources of meaning. Research shows that people who are lonely and isolated feel their lives are less meaningful.While close relationships are critical for living a meaningful life, they are not the only important social bonds we need to cultivate (培养). Psychologists have also discovered the value of small moments of intimacy (亲昵行为). “High-quality connections,” as one researcher calls them, are positive, short-term interactions between two people when a couple holds hands 7on a wal or when two strangers have an empathetic (移情作用的) conversation on a plane. High-quality connections have the potential to unloc meaning in our interactions with acquaintances, colleagues and strangers.We can’t control whether someone will mae a high-quality connection with us, but we can all choose to start one. We can say hello to a stranger on the street rather than loo away. We can五、书面表达请阅读下面短文,并按照要求用英语写一篇150词左右的文章。

江苏省2020届高三高考考前名师原创冲刺卷英语试题 Word版含解析

江苏省2020届高三高考考前名师原创冲刺卷英语试题 Word版含解析

2020届江苏高考考前名师原创冲刺卷(1)英语试题第一部分:听力(共两节,满分20分)略第二部分英语知识运用(共两节,满分35分)第一节单项填空(共15小题;每小题1分,满分15分)请认真阅读下面各题,从题中所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项。

21.—Jim,can you work this Sunday?—______?I’ve been working for two weeks on end.A.Why meB.Why notC.What ifD.So what22.The number of smokers,______is reported,has dropped by 17 percent in just one year.A.itB.whichC.whatD.as23.Much time______sitting at a desk,office workers are generally troubled by health problems.A.being spentB.having spentC.spentD.spending24.More expressways______in Sichuan soon to promote the local economy.A.are being builtB.will be builtC.have been builtD.had been built25.Tom had to______the invitation to the party last weekend because he was too busy.A.turn inB.turn downC.turn overD.turn to26.September 30 is the day______which you must pay your bill.A.byB.forC.withD.in27.Good families are much to all their members,but______to none.A.somethingB.anythingC.everythingD.nothing28.It was sad to me that they,so poor themselves,______bring me food.A.mightB.wouldC.shouldD.could29.—What a mess!You are always so lazy!—I’m not to blame,mum.I am______you have made me.A.howB.whatC.thatD.who30.Lessons can be learned to face the future,______history cannot be changed.A.thoughB.asC.sinceD.unless31.—My Dad began to teach me English when I was eight.—Wow. You must have studied English for six years, ?A. haven’t youB. mustn’t youC. needn’t youD. don’t you32.—Shall we watch Personal Tailor directed by Feng Xiaogang this weekend?—. Isn’t it meaningful that we do some voluntary work in the nursing house?A. How comeB. Forget itC. Don’t mention itD. Couldn’t agree more33.Most workers have heard the news that their products, with excellent quality and delicate skill,are enjoying growing ___ among the customers abroad.A. favorB. dignityC. responseD. profit34.—Mom, today I received a message telling me to send money to the account.—Delete it. It’s a trick. Many a person ________ by such tricks.A. have been cheatedB. were cheatedC. has been cheatedD. was cheated35.The president of the World Bank says he has a passion for China, he remembers starting as early as his childhood.A. whereB. whichC. whatD. when第二节完形填空(共20小题;每小题1分,满分20分)请认真阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项。

江苏省2020届高三高考考前名师原创冲刺卷(一)英语参考答案

江苏省2020届高三高考考前名师原创冲刺卷(一)英语参考答案
The main reason for my choice is that being brought up in a culture emphasizing collectivism,I tend to sacrifice my own interest for the group benefit.Once we were left to decide whether to have a picnic in a park or go to a museum.I would love to go to a museum,but most of my classmates wanted to go for a picnic.Without hesitation,I decided to follow them and we did have lots of fun that day.Sometimes giving up a little can mean getting more.
77. different
78. enables/ allows/ causes
79. Avoid
80. promote
第五部分:书面表达(满分25分)
One possible version:
When I Have a Different Opinion
We may have different opinions in organizing class activities.When I have a different opinion,I may choose to give it up and respect the opinion of the majority.
36. B 37. A 38. A 39. C 40. D

2020届江苏省高考英语原创冲刺卷

2020届江苏省高考英语原创冲刺卷

江苏高考考前名师原创冲刺卷英语试题第一部分:听力(共两节,满分20分)略第二部分英语知识运用(共两节,满分35分)第一节单项填空(共15小题;每小题1分,满分15分)请认真阅读下面各题,从题中所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项。

21.Hiking by oneself can be fun and good for health. It may also be good for_______ building.A. respectB. friendshipC. reputationD. character22.The system has been designed to give students quick and easy_______to the digital resources of the library.A. accessB. passageC. wayD. approach23.The children loved their day trip, and they enjoyed the horse ride_______.A. mostB. moreC. lessD. little24.According to statistics, a man is more than twice as likely to die of skin cancer_______ a woman.A. thanB. suchC. soD. as25.Life is like a long race_______we compete with others to go beyond ourselves.A. whyB. whatC. thatD. where26.Gun control is a subject_______ Americans have argued for a long time.A. of whichB. with whichC. about whichD. into which27.Bill suggested_______a meeting on what to do for the Shanghai Expo during the vacation.A. having heldB. to holdC. holdingD. hold28.Every evening after dinner, if not_______from work, I will spend some time walking my dog.A. being tiredB. tiringC. tiredD. to be tired29.This printer is of good quality. If it_______break down within the first year, we would repair it at our expense.A. wouldB. shouldC. couldD. might30.But for the help of my English teacher, I_______the first prize in the English Writing Competition.A. would not winB. would not have wonC. would winD. would have won31.As a new diplomat, he often thinks of_______ he can react more appropriately on such occasions.A. whatB. whichC. thatD. how32.The fact has worried many scientists_______the earth is becoming warmer and warmer these years.A. whatB. whichC. thatD. though33.She had just finished her homework_______her mother asked her to practise playing the piano yesterday.A. whenB. whileC. afterD. since34.The little girl who got lost decided to remain_______she was and wait for her mother.A. whereB. whatC. howD. who35.—Ken,_______ ,but your TV is going too loud.—Oh, I'm sorry. I'll turn it down right now.A. I'd like to talk with youB. I'm really tired of thisC. I hate to say thisD. I need your help第二节完形填空(共20小题;每小题1分,满分20分)请认真阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项。

冲刺卷1-2023年高考仿真模拟 英语卷(试题版)(江苏)

冲刺卷1-2023年高考仿真模拟 英语卷(试题版)(江苏)

2023年高考英语考试冲刺卷01 (江苏)第一部分:听力(共两节,满分30 分)第一节听下面 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。

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。

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。

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. What are the speakers talking about?A. Making a birthday cake.B. Going to a birthday party.C. Repairing the broken clock.2. What does the man think of the art show?A. Fun.B. Just so so.C. Not good.3. What will the man do this weekend?A. Stay at home and pull the weeds.B. Go to the woman’s Lawn Care Party.C. Go to the woman’s Paint My Kitchen Party.4. What’s the man worried about?A. His health.B. Steve’s petting fired.C. His risk of losing the job.5. What is Josh’s attitude to his girlfriend’s rudeness?A. Unconcerned.B. Regretful.C. Embarrassed.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。

江苏省2020年高考冲刺英语学科试题选编(一)含答案【精校】.doc

2020年高考冲刺英语学科试题选编(一)一、单项填空1. Lots of artists tend to believe that nature is not only all that is ________ to the eye but it also includes the inner pictures of the soul.A. relevantB. visibleC. similarD. close2. It is writers’ traditional role to absorb different popular social ________ and reflect them bac into their boos.A. customsB. controversiesC. constitutionsD. currents3. McDonald’s USA announced that it ________ to serve fresh beef or por, prepared when ordered, in all burgers across the majority of its restaurants by mid-2018.A. had decidedB. will decideC. would decideD. has decided4. Now a recent Canadian study suggests that a young baby ________ from interactive music classes has better communication sills than one who taes a less-active class.A. benefitedB. benefitC. benefitingD. to benefit5. ________ you obviously would not eat Spaghetti with your fingers, using a spoon to twist it into a basetball mound of noodles is incorrect.A. WhenB. AsC. SinceD. While6. —It loos you are feeling down. Any trouble?—All my hopes were ________ when my application was denied.A. crushedB. hammeredC. sunD. faded7. To have faith is to believe that the path we are traveling along is longer than ________ we can anticipate.A. thatB. whatC. howD. as8. —What about the new baery at the street corner near our school?—You ________ not want to eat its cheese caes, for they are very calorific.A. dareB. mustC. mightD. need9. —With the booing housing price, more investors tend to spend all they have buying one. —That’s really risy. Never should we ________.A. boil an eggB. have egg on our faceC. wal on eggshellsD. put all your eggs in one baset10. Alasa, of ________ most part is lightly populated, is nown for its diverse landscapes, with abundant wildlife and many small towns.A. whatB. thatC. whichD. whose二、完形填空athrine Switer, now 70, repeated the 26.2-mile j ourney in this year’s Boston Marathon. When Switer became the first woman to enter the Boston Marathon with a 11 , in 1967, she new she’d be chasing history. She didn’t epect to be driven off the 12 .At the time, women weren’t allowed 13 entry into the race. To be accepted, Switer 14 with her initials as “. V. Switer.” On race day, though, she 15 her femininity proudly. In lipstic and earrings, she too her place at the starting line.Switer was at mile two 16 r ace manager John “Joc” Semple, angered by a woman 17 into the male-only marathon, ran up and tried to 18 her off the course, yelling, “Get the hell out of my race!” However, 19 her boyfriend nocing Semple bac, she fended off the official and finished in four hours and twenty minutes.To 20 the 50th anniversary of her barrier-breaing run, Switer repeated the journey, wearing the number 261, the same one the official tried 21 it from her 50 years ago. In her honor, the Boston Marathon will 22 the number in future races.Switer has 39 marathons under her 23 , including coming in first in New Yor in 1974 and running in the Olympics in 1984. The last time she finished one in Boston was in 1976, two years after successfully 24 to let women publicly enter it.Her bib number might not 25 in the Boston Marathon again, but Switer’s movement goes 26 letting women enter that race. Founding a nonprofit international women’s running club, Swite r chose the name 261 Fearless, appealing 27 for female participation in the sport.“My goal is to 28 women in places right now where they’re not allowed to leave the house alone, drive a car or get a 29 ,” Switer told CBS Boston. “If running can give them a sense of strength, where they are no longer 30 and vulnerable, that’s what I hope it can do.” Of her legacy, Switer said it came as no surprise that women continued to embrace the “sense of empowerment” that came from running. “But we have a long way to go.”she said.11. A. identity B. fame C. number D. privilege12. A. event B. course C. application D. trac13. A. official B. professional C. personal D. national14. A. signed B. registered C. attended D. equipped15. A. provided B. discovered C. ehibited D. concealed16. A. since B. after C. before D. when17. A. hiding B. sneaing C. marching D. rising18. A. tae B. drop C. brea D. chase19. A. with B. for C. since D. as20. A. label B. mar C. observe D. congratulate21. A. tearing B. handing C. grasping D. possessing22. A. run out B. give out C. chec out D. leave out23. A. belt B. name C. control D. credit24. A. urging B. persuading C. campaigning D. bothering25. A. come up B. hang up C. bring up D. turn up26. A. o ff B. beyond C. alongside D. without27. A. passively B. inclusively C. etensively D. decisively28. A. reach B. convince C. wae D. prepare29. A. inspiration B. permit C. diploma D. grant30. A. housewives B. breadwinners C. servants D. victims三、阅读理解AThe Mütter Museum in Philadelphia houses one ehibit near the entrance that inspires unmatchable awe. Loo closely at the display, and you can see mars left by museumgoers pressing their foreheads against the glass.The object that fascinates them is a small wooden bo containing 46 microscope slides, each displaying a slice of Albert Einstein’s brain. A magnifying glass positioned over one of the s lides reveals a piece of tissue about the sie of a stamp. Einstein’s brain represents potential, the abilityof one eceptional mind, one genius, to catapult ahead of everyone else.Throughout history rare individuals have stood out for their meteoric contributions to a field. Lady Murasai for her literary creation. Michelangelo for his masterful touch. Marie Curie for her scientific acuity. “The genius,” wrote German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer, “lights on his age lie a comet into the paths of the plan ets.” Consider Einstein’s impact on physics. With no tools available other than the force of his own thoughts, he predicted in his general theory of relativity that massive accelerating objects—lie blac holes orbiting each other—would create ripples (波纹) in the fabric of space-time. It too one hundred years, enormous computational power, and massively sophisticated technology to definitively prove him right, with the physical detection of such gravitational waves less than two years ago.Einstein revolutionied our understanding of the very laws of the universe. But our understanding of how a mind lie his wors remains stubbornly stagnant. What set his brainpower, his thought processes, apart from those of his merely brilliant peers? What maes a genius?Philosophers have long been puling over the origins of genius. Early Gree thiners believed an overabundance of blac bile—one of proposed by Hippocrates—endowed poets, philosophers, and other famous souls with “etraordinary powers,” says historian Darrin McMahon, author of Divine Fury A History of Genius. Phrenologists (骨相学家) attempted to find genius in bumps on the head; they collected sulls—including philosopher Immanuel ant’s—which they eamined, measured, and weighed.None of them discovered a single source of genius, and such a thing is unliely to be found. Genius is too abstract, too subjective, too wedded to the verdict of history to be easily identified. And it requires the ultimate epression of too many features to be simplified into the highest point on one human scale. Instead we can try to understand it by cracing the comple and mied qualities—intelligence, creativity, perseverance, and simple good fortune, to name a few—that combine to create a person capable of changing the world.31. Why does th e author tal about the “mars” in paragraph ONE?A. He is unsatisfied with the untidy environment of the museum.B. He is angry about the disrespect to the ehibitC. He is about to eplain the ehibit’s popularity.D. He is amaed at the huge population visiting the museum.32. The underlined phrase “catapult ahead of” in the second paragraph is closest in meaning to ________.A. ecel atB. tower overC. differentiate betweenD. shine in33. What can be inferred from Paragraph 3?A. It too Einstein years to prove the eistence of gravitational waves.B. Arthur Schopenhauer was widely acnowledged as a genius in history.C. Einstein made incredible prediction despite lac of sources.D. Geniuses have limited influences just as comets do.34. What is the author most liely to tal about after this passage?A. Eamples of geniuses who possess such qualities.B. Importance of such qualities in becoming a genius.C. Ways to combine qualities with good fortune.D. Means to mae a genius.BYou may be reading this while on a conference call, pushing your child on a swing—or both. But is multitasing really a good idea, or does it mae us do everything more slowly and less well than if we were concentrating on one tas at a time?Psychologists cite convincing research that paying more attention to a tas improves performance. Humans, they argue, are good at doing rapidly sequential tass, rather than simultaneous ones. My teenagers insist it is fine to revise while teting and watching YouTube—but they are wrong. In 2009, a research team from Stanford, led by Clifford Nass, compared heavy versus light media multitasers in a series of tests. Nass thought the heavier multitasers would be better at organiing and storing information and have superior memories, but it turned out that the opposite was true. When the groups were shown layout of colored shapes and ased to remember their positions and ignore others, the multitasers couldn’t do it. They were constantly distracted and their ability to switch between tass, disregard irrelevant information and remember what they had seen was worse than the lighter multitasers.A team led by David Strayer at the University of Utah looed at people who drive while using the phone and found that they were more than twice as liely to miss stop signs. In a later study, Strayer found that people who are most liely to multitas are those who thin they are great at it. Seventy per cent of the 310 students in his study thought they were above average at multitasing. People who multitased the most had high levels of impulsive behaviour and were generally the most ill-suited to attempt more than one job at a time.Using a mobile, even hands-free, while driving delays the amount of time needed to brae in an emergency and halves the information that drivers are aware of. But Strayer found that people consistently overestimated how good they were at driving while on the phone.Nass’s research led him to suggest that we should spend 20 minutes on one tas and then switch to another, rather than flitting any faster between the two. Tests that measure the ability to remember shapes are less compelling than real-life multitasing research, but the evidence suggests that we cheat ourselves if we thin we can do more than one thing well at the same time. Limited research suggests that women may be a tiny bit better at it, but few of us are naturals. Strayer’s research suggests that around 3% of the population are “supertasers” who do better the more they do. The rest of us, however, should stic to one thing at a time.35. Which of the following behavior may the author show approval to?A. Revising while teting and watching Youtube.B. Reading while pushing your id on a swing.C. Switching between TV and homewor.D. Handling sequential items on the agenda.36. What could be concluded from Nass eperiment?A. Heavy multitasers were inadequate for such an eperiment.B. The result of the eperiment contradicted their previous assumption.C. Irrelevant information made the multitasers fail to remember the positions of colored shapes.D. Multitasing was totally impossible in daily life.37. According to Stayer, people who multitased most generally ________.A. tended to be aggressiveB. yielded more outcomesC. had a false image of themselvesD. overweighed those light multitasers38. What does the underlined “it” refer to in the last paragraph?A. Remembering shapesB. Cheating themselvesC. MultitasingD. Doing rapidly sequential tass四、任务型阅读We all need to feel understood, recognied and affirmed (证实) by our friends, family and romantic partners. We all need to find our tribe.Research has shown that among the benefits that come with being in a relationship or group, feeling accepted is regarded as the most important driver of meaning. When other people thin you matter and treat you as if you matter, you believe you matter, too.Though we all share a need to belong, in the first decades of the 20th century, many influential psychologists and physicians did not acnowledge this fundamental aspect of human nature. The idea that children needed parental love and care to live a full and meaningful life was not only considered medically dangerous, it was dismissed as immoral and disgusting.As behavioral psychology came into fashion and academic psychologists turned their attention to child-raising, this view shifted and they began to eamine and affirm the vital importance of attachment in early life. They discovered that people, whatever their age, needed more than food and shelter to live full and healthy lives.But, sadly, many of us lac close ties. At a time when we are more connected digitally than ever before, rates of social isolation (孤立) are rising. The results of an Age U poll published recently suggest that half a million people over the age of 60 usually spend each day alone, and it’s not unusual for another half a million people to go five or si days without seeing or speaing to someone.All these figures reveal more than a rise in loneliness—they reveal a lac of meaning in people’s lives. In surveys, we list our close relationships as our most important sources of meaning. Research shows that people who are lonely and isolated feel their lives are less meaningful.While close relationships are critical for living a meaningful life, they are not the only important social bonds we need to cultivate (培养). Psychologists have also discovered the value of small moments of intimacy (亲昵行为). “High-quality connections,” as one researcher callsthem, are positive, short-term interactions between two people when a couple holds hands on a wal or when two strangers have an empathetic (移情作用的) conversation on a plane. High-quality connections have the potential to unloc meaning in our interactions with acquaintances, colleagues and strangers.We can’t control whether someone will mae a high-quality connection with us, but we can all choose to start one. We can say hello to a stranger on the street rather than loo away. We can五、书面表达请阅读下面短文,并按照要求用英语写一篇150词左右的文章。

最新2020届江苏高考考前名师原创冲刺卷英语试题

2020届江苏高考考前名师原创冲刺卷英语试题第一部分:听力(共两节,满分20分)略第二部分英语知识运用(共两节,满分35分)第一节单项填空(共15小题;每小题1分,满分15分)请认真阅读下面各题,从题中所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项。

21.—Sorry,I forgot to lock the door.—______.Mike can do it later.A.No wayB.Take your timeC.Nothing seriousD.You’re welcome22.If______for the job,you’ll be informed soon.A.to acceptB.acceptC.acceptingD.accepted23.There is only one more day to go______your favorite music group play live.A.sinceB.untilC.whenD.before24.If you swim in a river or lake,be sure to investigate______is below the water surface.Often there are rocks or branches hidden in the water.A.whatB.whoC.thatD.whoever25.Some experts think reading is the fundamental skill upon ______ school education depends.A.itB.thatC.whoseD.which26.As the smallest child of his family,Alex is always longing for the time______he should be able to be independent.A.whichB.whereC.whomD.when27.Without his wartime experiences,Hemingway______his famous novel A Farewell to Arms.A.didn’t writeB.hadn’t writtenC.wouldn’t writeD.wouldn’t have written28.I wish I______at my sister’s wedding last Tuesday,but I was on a business trip in New York then.A.will beB.would beC.have beenD.had been29.Back from his two-year medical service in Africa,Dr.Lee was very happy to see hismother______good care of at home.A.takingB.takenC.takeD.be taken30.______more about Chinese culture,Jack has decided to take Chinese folk music as an elective course.A.LearnB.LearnedC.To learnD.To be learning31.The little pupil took his grandma______the arm and walked her across the street.A.onB.byC.inD.at32.Andy is content with the toy.It is______he has ever got.A.a betterB.the betterC.a bestD.the best33.I can’t tell you______way to the Wilsons’ because we don’t have______Wilson here in the village.A.the;aB.a;/C.a;theD.the;/34.Don’t use your mobile phone while charging, ______ you may be shocked by electricity.A. orB. andC. butD. yet35. He sold of the magazine this afternoon.A. three dozen copyB. three dozens copyC. three dozen copiesD. three dozens copies第二节完形填空(共20小题;每小题1分,满分20分)请认真阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项。

2020年高考英语江苏省名师押题密卷及解析一

江苏省2020年高考英语名师押题密卷(1)第一部分:听力(共两节,满分20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分,满分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。

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 go downtown?A. By bus.B. By taxi.C. By car.2. What can we know about the man?A. He is fond of chocolate.B. He doesn’t want any chocolate cake.C. He has already tried some chocolate cake.3. Where does this conversation probably take place?A. In a library.B. In a bookstore.C. In the post office.4. What are the speakers going to eat?A. Chinese food.B. French food.C. Italian food.5. What can we learn about the woman?A. She will go to the airport by taxi.B. She is asking the man for advice.C. Her car has broken down.第二节(共15小題;每小题1分,满分15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。

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。

江苏省2019-2020年高考英语冲刺卷(一)(Word版,含答案)

高考英语冲刺卷(一)考试时间:120分钟;第I卷第一部分听力 (共两节,满分20分)第一节(共5小题,每小题1分,满分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15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 get to Barcelona?A. By ship.B. By train.C. By plane.2. When did the train leave?A. At 11:05B. At 11:15C. At 11:25.3. What does the man mean?A. Mary will leave for Beijing soon.B. Peter will leave Beijing soon.C. Mary will leave for America soon.4. Where does the conversation probably take place?A. At a restaurant.B. At an airport.C. In an hotel.5. What does the woman mean?A. She doesn’t want to eat anything.B. She wants to eat something.C. She is getting better now.第二节(共15小题;每小题1分,满分15分)听下面5段对话或独白。

每段对话或独白后有几个小题,从每题所给的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。

听第6段材料,回答第6—7题。

6. What is the relationship between the two speakers?A. Reporter and interviewee.B. Former classmates.C. Husband and wife.7. What does the woman like to do on the weekends?A. Design things.B. Work on computers.C. Paint.听第7段材料,回答第8至9题。

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江苏省2020高考英语名师原创冲刺复习卷及答案(1)第一部分:听力(共两节,满分20分)略第二部分英语知识运用(共两节,满分35分)第一节单项填空(共15小题;每小题1分,满分15分)请认真阅读下面各题,从题中所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项。

21.—Jim,can you work this Sunday?—______?I’ve been working for two weeks on end.A.Why meB.Why notC.What ifD.So what22.The number of smokers,______is reported,has dropped by17percent in just one year.A.itB.whichC.whatD.as23.Much time______sitting at a desk,office workers are generally troubled by health problems.A.being spentB.having spentC.spentD.spending24.More expressways______in Sichuan soon to promote the local economy.A.are being builtB.will be builtC.have been builtD.had been built25.Tom had to______the invitation to the party last weekend because he was too busy.A.turn inB.turn downC.turn overD.turn to26.September30is the day______which you must pay your bill.A.byB.forC.withD.in27.Good families are much to all their members,but______to none.A.somethingB.anythingC.everythingD.nothing28.It was sad to me that they,so poor themselves,______bring me food.A.mightB.wouldC.shouldD.could29.—What a mess!You are always so lazy!—I’m not to blame,mum.I am______you have made me.A.howB.whatC.thatD.who30.Lessons can be learned to face the future,______history cannot be changed.A.thoughB.asC.sinceD.unless31.—My Dad began to teach me English when I was eight.—Wow.You must have studied English for six years,?A.haven’t youB.mustn’t youC.needn’t youD.don’t you32.—Shall we watch Personal Tailor directed by Feng Xiaogang this weekend?—.Isn’t it meaningful that we do some voluntary work in the nursing house?A.How comeB.Forget itC.Don’t mention itD.Couldn’t agree more33.Most workers have heard the news that their products,with excellent quality and delicate skill,are enjoying growing___among the customers abroad.A.favorB.dignityC.responseD.profit34.—Mom,today I received a message telling me to send money to the account.—Delete it.It’s a trick.Many a person________by such tricks.A.have been cheatedB.were cheatedC.has been cheatedD.was cheated35.The president of the World Bank says he has a passion for China,he remembers starting as early as his childhood.A.whereB.whichC.whatD.when第二节完形填空(共20小题;每小题1分,满分20分)请认真阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项。

Even though Danish students have equal access to education,their choice of studies is still influenced by social class.Young people from working class backgrounds are36by studies with a clear job profile and highincome,37prestige and studies with a strong identity interest young people of parents with university degrees when choosing which studies to38.This is what researchers from the University of Copenhagen39in a new study. Students who have chosen to study medicine,architecture,economy and sociology often come from homes where the parents have40higher education,whereas business studies and pharmacy often41young people with a working class background.This is42by a research team from the University of Copenhagen and Aalborg University in a new study.“There is a43between the studies chosen by young Danes andtheir44background.Even for the young people who have very good grades in their A-level exams,and who could successfully45admission to a large variety of studies,the parents’46of education and social class play an important role in their choice,”says Education Sociologist Jens Peter Thomsen,who is one of the researchers behind the study.The study“The Educational Strategies of Danish University Students from Professional and Working-Class Backgrounds”is4760interviews with Danish students from six different university level study programmes:Medicine, architecture,sociology,economy,pharmacy and business studies.The young people bring with them the48they get from their families.If you grow up in a home with parents who are doctors or architects with a strong professional49,it is an obvious choice to follow the50path as your parents when you grow up.“For young people whose parents are university educated,51such as fame and mastery of expert knowledge are important.They are52by an educationalculture in which you are a diligent student,and where leisure activitiesare53to the identity that lies within your studies.These young people have also grown up with54discussions around the dinner table which also prepare them for their lives as students,”says Jens Peter Thomsen.He also added,“Young people who come from a working class background,and have good grades have to55the full range of opportunities they have.But the effort to reach this goal must start early”.36.A.monitored B.motivated C.motioned D.multiplied37.A.while B.although C.when D.if38.A.pursue B.engage C.involve D.conduct39.A.calculate B.suspect C.conclude D.achieve40.A.required B.confirmed C.refused pleted41.A.subscribes to B.caters to C.sticks to D.appeals to42.A.inquired B.proved C.extended D.acquired43.A.connection parison C.difference D.contradictioncational B.political C.social D.professional45.A.balance B.develop C.identify D.seek46.A.situation B.judgment C.level D.preference47.A.connected with B.based on mitted to bined with48.A.resources B.experiences C.finance D.memory49.A.degree B.identity C.success D.responsibility50.A.perfect ual mon D.same51.A.changes B.problems C.factors D.characters52.A.disturbed B.moved C.puzzled D.attracted53.A.tied B.accustomed C.transferred D.copied54.A.practical B.topical C.physical D.medical55.A.take charge of B.take control of C.take advantage of D.take care of第三部分阅读理解(共15小题;每小题2分,满分30分)请认真阅读下列短文,从短文后各题所给的A、B、C四个选项中,选出最佳选项。

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