-
2020
年高考英语试卷-(卷Ⅲ)
第一部分
听力(共两节,满分
30
分)
做题时,先将答案标在试卷上。
录音内容结束后,
你将有两分钟的时间将试卷上的答案转
涂到答题卡上。
<
/p>
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。
例:
How much is the shirt?
A. ?
19.15.
答案是
C
。
1. Where does the conversation probably
take place?
A. In a supermarket.
2. What did Carl do?
A. He designed a medal.
3. What does the man do?
A.
He’s a tailo
r.
B. He’s a
waiter.
C. He’s
a shop assistant.
B. He fixed a TV set.
C. He
took a test.
B.
In the post office.
C. In
the street.
B. ?
9.18.
C. ?
9.15.
4. When
will the flight arrive?
A. At 18:20.
B. At 18:35.
C. At 18:50.
5. How can the
man improve his article?
A. By deleting
unnecessary words.
B. By adding a
couple of points.
C. By correcting
grammar mistakes.
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。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。每段对话或独
白读两遍。
听第
6
< br>段材料,回答第
6
、
7
题。
6. What does Bill
often do on Friday night?
A. Visit his parents.
B. Go to the movies.
C. Walk along Broadway.
7. Who watches musical plays most
often?
A. Bill.
B. Aarah.
C. Bill’s parents.
听第
7
段材料,回答第
8
、
9
题。
8. Why does David want to speak to
Mike?
A.
To invite him to a party.
B. To discuss a schedule.
C. To call off a meeting.
9. What do we know about the speakers?
A.
They are colleagues.
B. They are close friends.
C. They’ve never met before.
听第
8
段材
料,回答第
10
至
12
题。
10. What kind of
camera does the man want?
A.
A TV camera.
B. A video camera.
C. A movie camera.
11. Which function is the
man most interested in?
A.
Underwater filming.
B. A large memory.
C. Auto-focus.
12. How much would the man pay for the
second camera?
A. 950 euros.
B.
650 euros.
C. 470 euros.
<
/p>
听第
9
段材料,回答第
< br>13
至
16
题。
13. Who is Clifford?
A.
A little girl.
B. The man’s pet.
C. A fictional
character.
14. Who suggested that
Norman paint for children’s books?
A. His wife.
B. Elizabeth.
C. A publisher.
15. What is Norman’s story based
on?
A. A book.
B.
A painting.
C. A young woman.
16. What
is it that shocked Norman?
A. His
unexpected success.
B. His
efforts made in vain.
C. His editor’s
disagreement.
听第
1
0
段材料,回答第
17
至
20
题。
17. Who
would like to make small talk according to the
speaker?
A. Relatives.
B.
Strangers.
C. Visitors.
18. Why do
people have small talk?
A. To express opinions.
B. To avoid arguments.
C. To show friendliness.
19. Which of the following is a
frequent topic in small talk?
A.
Politics.
B. Movies.
C.
Salaries.
20. What does the speaker
recommend at the end of his lecture?
A.
Asking open-ended questions.
B. Feeling
free to change topics.
C. Making small
talk interesting.
第二部分
阅读理解(共两节,满分
40
分)
第一节
(共
15
小题;每小题
2
分,
满分
30
分)
阅读下列短文,从每题所给的
A
、
B
、
C
和
D
p>
四个选项中,选出最佳选项。
A
Journey Back in Time with Scholars
Classical
Provence
(
13
days
)
Journey
through the beautiful countryside of Provence
,
France
,
wit
h Prof. Ori Z. Soltes
.
We
will
visit some of the best-preserved
Roman monuments in the world. Our tour also
includes a chance to
walk in the
footsteps of Van Gogh and Gauguin. Fields of
flowers, tile-
roofed
(瓦屋顶)
villages and
tasty meals enrich this wonderful
experience.
Southern
Spain
(
15
days
)
Spain has
lovely white towns and the
scent
(芳香)
of oranges, but it
is also a treasury of ancient
remains
including the cities left by the Greeks, Romans
and Arabs. As we travel south from Madrid
with
Prof.
Ronald
Messier
to
historic
Toledo,
Roman
Merida
and
into
Andalucia,
we
explore
historical monuments and architecture.
China
’
s Sacred
Landscapes
(
21
days
)
Discover
the
China
of
“
past
ages,
”
its
walled
cities,
temples
and
mountain
scenery
with
Prof.
Robert
Thorp.
Highlights
(精彩之处)
include
China
’
s
most
sacred
peaks
at
Mount
Tai
and
Hangzbou
’
s
rolling hills, waterways and peaceful temples. We
will wander in traditional small towns
and end our tour with an exceptional
museum in Shanghai.
Tunisia
(
17
days
)
Join Prof.
Pedar Foss on our in-depth Tunisian tour. Tour
highlights include the Roman city of
Dougga,
the
underground
Numidian
capital
at
Bulla
Regia,
Roman
Sbeitla
and
the
remote
areas
around
Tataouine
and
Matmata,
uique
for
underground
cities.
Our
journey
takes
us
to
picturesque
Berber villages and lovely beaches.
21. What can visitors see
in both Classical Provence and Southern Spain?
A. Historical monuments.
C. Van
Gogh
’
s paintings.
B. Fields of flowers.
D. Greek buildings.
22. Which country is Prof. Thorp most
knowledgeable about?
A. France.
B.
Spain.
C. China.
D. Tunisia.
23. Which of the following highlights
the Tunisian tour?
A. White towns.
B. Underground
cities.
C. Tile-roofed
villages.
D. Rolling hills.
B
When
of
the
Planet
of
the
Apes
was
first
shown
to
the
public
last
month,
a
group
of
excited animal activists
gathered on Hollywood Boulevard. But they
weren
’t ther
e to throw red
paint
on fur-coat-wearing film stars.
Instead, one activist, dressed in a full-body
monkey suit, had arrived
with a sign
praising the filmmakers:
猿
)!
The
creative
team
behind
used
motion-capture
(
动作捕捉
)
technology
to
create
digitalized
animals,
spending
tens
of
millions
of
dollars
on
technology
that
recor
ds
an
actor’s
performance and
later processes it with computer graphics to
create a final image (
图像
).
In this case,
one of a realistic-
looking ape.
Yet
more exception
than the rule.
In
fact,
Hollywood has been
hot on live animals
lately.
One nonprofit organization, which monitors the
treatment or animals in filmed entertainment,
is
keeping
tabs
on
more
than
2,000
productions
this
year.
Already,
a
number
of
films,
including
Ⅱ
who
say the creatures acting in them
haven
’
t been treated
properly.
In some cases,
it
’s not so much the treatment of the
animals o
n set in the studio that has
activists
worried;
it
’s
the
off-set
training
and
living
conditions
that
are
raising
concerns.
And
there
are
questions about the films made outside
the States, which sometimes are not monitored as
closely as
productions filmed in the
Sates.
24. Why did the animal activists
gather on Hollywood Boulevard?
A. To
see famous film stars.
B.
To oppose wearing fur coats.
D. To express thanks to some
filmmakers.
C. To raise money for
animal protection.
25. What does paragraph 2 mainly talk
about?
A. The cost of making
C. The publicity about
“Apes.
B. The creation of
digitalized apes.
D. The performance of
real apes.
26. What does the underlined
phrase
A. Listing completely.
B.
Directing professionally.
D. Watching
carefully.
C. Promoting successfully.
27. What can we infer from the last
paragraph about animal actors?
A. They
may be badly treated.
B. They should take further training.
D. They would lose popularity.
C
With
the
young
unable
to
afford
to
leave
home
and
the
old
at
risk
of
isolation(
孤独
),
more
families are choosing
to live together.
The doorway to peace
and quiet, for Nick Bright at least, leads
straight to his mother-in-law, she
lives on the ground floor, while he
lives upstairs with his wife and their two
daughters.
Four
years
ago
they
all
moved
into
a
three-storey
Victorian
house
in
Bristol
—
one
of
a
growing
number of multigenerational families in the UK
living together under the same roof. They
share
a
front
door
and
a
washing
machine,
but
Rita
Whitehead
has
her
own
kitchen,
bathroom,
bedroom and living
room on the ground floor.
“
We floated the idea to
my mum of sharing
a
house,
”
says
Kathryn Whitehead. Rita
cuts
in:
“
We spoke
more with Nick because I think
it
’
s a big thing for Nick to
live with his mother-in-
law.
”
And
what
does
Nick
think?
“
From
my
standpoint,
it
all
seems
to
work
very
well.
Would
I
recommend
it? Yes, I think I would.
”
It
’
s
hard
to
tell
exactly
how
many
people
agree
with
him,
but
research
indicates
that
the
numbers have been rising
for some time. Official reports suggest that the
number of households with
three
generations living together had risen from 325,000
in 2001 to 419,000 in 2013.
Other
varieties
of
multigenerational
family
are
more
common.
Some
people
live
with
their
elderly parents; many more adult
children are returning to the family home, if they
ever left. It is said
that
about
20%
of
25-34-year-olds
live
with
their
parents,
compared
with
16%
in
total
number of
all multigenerational households in Britain is
thought to be about 1.8 million.
Stories like that are more common in
parts of the world where multigenerational living
is more
C. They could be
traded illegally.