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> 96年 - 2007年上海高考真题(英语)#13327
96年 - 2007年上海高考真题(英语)#13327
科目:
高考◆英语◆上海市 |
年份:
96年 |
選擇題數:
60 |
申論題數:
0
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所屬科目:
高考◆英语◆上海市
選擇題 (60)
25.Ⅱ. Grammar and Vocabulary (D)irections: (B)eneath each of the following sentences there are four choices marked (A), (B), (C) and (D). (C)hoose the one answer that best completes the sentence. Leaves are found on all kinds of trees, but they differ greatly ________ size and shape. (A). on (B). form (C). by (D). in
26. The mayor has offered a reward of $ 5000 to ______ who can capture the tiger alive or dead. (A). both (B). others (C). anyone (D). another
27. (A)lan is a careful driver, but he drives ______ of my friends. (A). more carefully (B). the most carefully (C). less carefully (D). the least carefully
28. --- (D)id you tidy your room? --- No, I was going to tidy my room but I ______ visitors. (A). had (B). have (C). have had (D). will have
29. --- Guess what! I have got (A) for my term paper. --- Great! You ______ read widely and put a lot of work into it. (A). must (B). should (C). must have (D). should have
30. With the help of high technology, more and more new substances ______ in the past years. (A). discovered (B). have discovered (C). had been discovered (D). have been discovered
31. --- How was the televised debate last night? --- Super! Rarely ______ so much media attention. (A). a debate attracted (B). did a debate attract (C). a debate did attract (D). attracted a debate
32. The little boy came riding full speed down the motorway on his bicycle. ______ it was! (A). What a dangerous scene (B). What dangerous a scene (C). How a dangerous scene (D). How dangerous the scene
33. Pop music is such an important part of society ______ it has even influenced our language. (A). as (B). that (C). which (D). where
34. (A)fter a knock at the door, the child heard his mother’s voice ______ him. (A). calling (B). called (C). being called (D). to call
35. There is nothing more I can try ______ you to stay, so I wish you good luck. (A). being persuaded persuading (C). to be persuaded (D). to persuade
36. The Town Hall ______ in the 1800’s was the most distinguished building at that time. (A). to be completed (B). having been completed (C). completed (D). being completed
37. His movie won several awards at the film festival, ______ was beyond his wildest dream. (A). which (B). that (C). where (D). it
38. Small sailboats can easily turn over in the water ______ they are not managed carefully. (A). though (B). before (C). until (D). if
39. ______ he referred to in his article was unknown to the general reader. (A). That (B). What (C). Whether (D). Where
40. The traditional view is ______ we sleep because our brain is “programmed” to make us do so. (A). when (B). why (C). whether (D). that
41. (A)t minus 130℃, a living cell can be ______ for a thousand years. (A). spared (B). protected (C). preserved (D). developed
42. Since Tom ______ downloaded a virus into his computer, he can not open the file now. (A). readily (B). horribly (C). accidentally (D). irregularly
43. My morning ______ includes jogging in the park and reading newspapers over breakfast. (A). drill (B). action (C). regulation (D). routine
44. John was dismissed last week because of his ______ attitude towards his job. (A). informal (B). casual (C). determined (D). earnest
45.(A). tired (B). asleep (C). conscious (D). busy
46. (A). So far (B). (A)fter all (C). However (D). Therefore
47. (A). long (B). fast (C). dangerous (D). direct
48. (A). fuel (B). entertainment (C). adjustment (D). health
49. (A). shut up (B). held up (C). brought up (D). picked up
50. (A). pleasing (B). annoying (C). common (D). valuable
51. (A). noisy (B). alone (C). personal (D). sociable
52. (A). emphasis (B). conflict (C). power (D). pressure
53. (A). handle (B). create (C). affect (D). investigate
54. (A). becoming (B). choosing (C). ordering (D). promoting
55. (A). (D)ue to (B). In addition to (C). Instead of (D). In spite of
56. (A). errors (B). situations (C). systems (D). methods
57. (A). vocabulary (B). culture (C). grammar (D). literature
58. (A). wide (B). similar (C). separate (D). unique
59. (A). kept out (B). turned down (C). held back (D). left behind
60. (A). surprisingly (B). individually (C). equally (D). hardly
61. (A). extra (B). traditional (C). basic (D). regular
62. (A). (A)lthough (B). (B)ecause (C). Until (D). Unless
63. (A). restored (B). absorbed (C). prohibited (D). withdrawn
64. (A). wasting (B). focusing (C). exploiting (D). sharing
65.What is John Harrison’s job? (A). (A)n official. (B). (A)n ice-cream taster. (C). (A) chemist. (D). (A)n ice-cream manufacturer.
66. (A)ccording to John Harrison, to be qualified in the “cool field”, it is helpful to ______. (A). keep a diary of work (B). have a degree in related subjects (C). have new ideas every day (D). find out new flavors each day
67. What does Harrison do first when testing ice cream? (A). He stirs the ice cream. (B). He examines the color of the ice cream. (C). He tastes the flavor of the ice cream. (D). He lets the ice cream warm up.
68. Which of the following is probably the best title of the passage? (A). Tasting with (E)yes (B). Flavors of Ice (C)ream (C). John Harrison’s Life (D). One (C)ool Job
69.(B)) The Fresh Water series at 9 PM ________. (A). explores the lakes, rivers and the creatures in them (B). is devoted to the freshwater creatures in the world (C). explains the relationship among inhabitants on the earth (D). focuses on the deepest river on the planet
70. The phrase “stow away” most probably means “_________”. (A). hide secretly (B). talk excitedly (C). operate easily (D). guide successfully
71. (A) mystery story adapted from (A)gatha (C)hristie’s novel will be shown on ______. (A). (B)(B)(C)1 (B). (B)(B)(C)2 (C). ITV1 (D). (C)hannel 4
72. The main purpose of introducing a “forever stamp” is ______. (A). to reduce the cost of printing 2-or-3-cent stamps (B). to help save the consumers’ cost on first-class mailing (C). to respond to the complaints about rising postal rates (D). to compete with online bill paying
73. (B)y saying “It could be your great-grandchildren’s stamp”, Mr. Saunders means that forever stamps ________. (A). could be collected by one’s great-grandchildren (B). might be very precious in great-grandchildren’s hands (C). might have been inherited from one’s great-grandfathers (D). could be used by one’s great-grandchildren even decades later
74. Which of the following is true according to the passage? (A). The investment in forever stamps will bring adequate reward. (B). (A)merica will be the first country to issue forever stamps. (C). The design of the “forever stamp” remains to be revealed. (D). 2-or-3-cent stamps will no longer be printed in the future.
75. What can be concluded from the passage? (A). With forever stamps, there will be no need to worry about rate changes. (B). Postal workers will benefit most from the sales of forever stamps. (C). The inflation has become a threat to the sales of first-class stamps. (D). New interest will be aroused in collecting forever stamps.
76. “(E)co-friendly tents” in paragraph 1 refer to tents _______. (A). economically desirable (B). favorable to the environment (C). for holding music performances (D). designed for disaster relief
77. Mr. (D)unlop established his business ______. (A). independently with an interest-free loan from Mint (B). with the approval of the (C)ity’s administration (C). in partnership with a finance group (D). with the help of a Japanese architect
78. It is implied in the passage that _______. (A). the weather in the UK is changeable in summer (B). most performances at (B)ritish festivals are given in the open air (C). the cardboard tents produced by Mr. (D)unlop can be user-tailored (D). cardboard tents can be easily put up and removed by users.
79. The passage is mainly concerned with ______. (A). an attempt at developing recyclable tents (B). some efforts at making full use of cardboards (C). an unusual success of a graduation project (D). the effects of using cardboard tents on music festivals
80. (D)o established musicians have a responsibility to guide and assist young up-and–coming musicians? (B). (D)id anyone promote your musical education when you were growing up? (C). What kind of “world music” do you enjoy? (D). What’s wrong with the music on the radio? (E). (D)oes the contemporary music press give jazz the coverage it deserves? F. What’s your comment on pop music (A)n interview with Wynton Marsalis, a noted jazz musician There were the older jazz musicians who hung around our house when I was young. I saw how much they practiced, how serious they were about their art. I knew then I had to work just as hard if I wanted to succeed. Of course, my father inspired me a lot, and many teachers took the time to nurture my talent and the talents of other students in our school.
81. Yes. We’ve done such a poor job with music education because, as a society, we haven’t maintained the kind of education that a true artist and musician needs. Young people haven’t been able to equate romance and talent with music. For instance, most of the people who make it in the music industry today have to look good. How they sound is secondary. Sarah Vaughan, (B)essie Smith, (E)lla Fitzgerald — those big, romantic queens of jazz music wouldn’t make it in today’s music industry, and that’s a shame. We need to teach young people about the alternatives.
82. (A)round the world people make music that, if you listen carefully to it, sounds a little like the cadence of their language. I’d call it folk music. When I’m away from home, I make a point of listening to regional folk music, not what’s on the radio.
83 The same music is on the radio all over the world, and the (A)merican sound is overwhelming. (E)ven the pop music that’s produced and created in foreign countries has that (A)merican beat, that underscore of funk. (A)s a musician, I’m not interested in hearing recycled versions of the same genre over and over. (A)ny music that doesn’t have a development section just isn’t interesting to me.
84. The music press has so much to introduce these days, and jazz is just a small fraction of it. (B)ecause some people are intimidated by jazz, they don’t cover it unless it’s a big name. new jazz musicians don’t get much of break. (A) lot of editors don’t say anything about jazz these days unless it’s Marsalis. That’s a shame. What VH1 is doing with their Save the Music campaign is phenomenal. They’re getting all these instruments out to needy kids. It’s the kind of thing all networks should be doing.
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