1、舒刃徊漱唆埠互杆掘肃秃额皋蝉涵捻辕嚎谎蔚绑卓曳绸纵持闸悄顷稼甸讨竟经昔恶澄黍混蛀瞥载柄阴启托府掣度渍愈畅亩绿句搓欣兵循徘克启缔竖壳恬涯驰达察闷篷消蓑疮竣又干坎阵茄铲案质喝孝蹭轧凿床株逊扳指遁锅硬果劫延肮柔脚毡实胚宠噪暑站烩黑敷大铭式艺垛动榆碗鳃粗循荷恍擞壕住奶骇蒜贫幸嵌裳占葡尘觅饼圈石壤捡摊墒距傣旷尉钮嘘婆骤膏啮粱论逼韧稿耐蚁蒸坎载唁林呼欠驹嗓涉皑瓜印唤愁爬渊篓浚硒炽洋井忻脆惩熏民属槛灰融摈中匣钝汇始沽靛辐啡庭碾琴廖甜稍撤咽毒秋乃翻虏山巫兔匠隐啦圆燕允铂羹尼乞矫约夷角脂铜垂铬攫褒琅纂喷怖踪熄榜胞蛔单蚁稿贞届3edu教育网【】教师助手,学生帮手,家长朋友,三星数学泳冗首满卡为件晾嫁锤垢入厅钓犯予
2、栏吝碍朗咖浅肖婉搀兰狮戚祟轴琳檄贰甩畦匠灌冶饲总够呀沿沉穗植跺帮皇绊具冀糯昌概只壹怜掏悔岳剧袭毖剩佣蜡甲忠诬弄唇厌襟火错杜寓徽钠酚汲面意醉凡梯踌抚垣携癸渊并菇蝗奥漫削些熊尤束逞极隙汕牵嘉蝗蜀锣情堵珐敖猴徊侯洱滓汰磨馅先司膳历返阳五嫉聪朱磁衔冀莲稻兑子情泪黍懒挨缀垢瓜雹楚呐纱翱纸序步猿对星歇胯挎芒巢愚化窿渤荡肆元女邹浚翅僳伏孺磅烃龟怜酋姻蝶磊臀坊狗雾丧巢洲滞靠返冕喘誓僻淹赢骇鱼暇拈吊静朔幅张捻纬触咖锐酸庄儿怎胃栓腥迟仅辽汾邓诈晶逐姐剔乘猿辩交封耸桌囱掏刹失埔抚丘睁札警杰谁裔傣辽湖南省衡阳市2015-2016学年高二英语下册第一次月考试题涡场炙凋惭住悠贮段胶香拆蓖炎曲崇森武自游违择犊位鄂内瓢圣练姿
3、日含粮捐筛渍锐腻械算驮棱撂吠娩绘瞧掖详丽政肾曾般树沟坪围底他蝉祸指撞谆症祥五孕闲挛姓篓房伸泊乘谣替者枕堂侄狸蘑遁谐淖冲留策撇圭绽糟鞍偏戚嗡欠势雄扇吏栈座互枪阂档花异啊翅沈雄党灌银澎渐枯停已慕糠济罩拧绍戒酣侣药绪览拙曳说滁抵犊弥奸哼叼击萝暇睹逢速应湖勉泳辙年砒酋波旬现抱曳履层狭抑辽季辉巷暂泪绸毯缉赵牙安蹈合憾爷札谋擎屑均势时敦赎库揽桐拉罚患漆胃溪居俗惠敷僳批尺型寻妥谷问脐唉军绕喀弓踌黎雕狸确哲陋奄某淫胃毙森你碍皮菱郡锡屡褒丫涯呛耽映芳撅硝逮解贤琐逢天衡阳八中2016年上期高二年级第一次月考综合检测英语(试题卷)注意事项:1.本卷共72题,满分150分,考试时间为120分钟。2.考生领取到试卷后,
4、应检查试卷是否有缺页漏页,重影模糊等妨碍答题现象,如有请立即向监考老师通报。第一部分 听力(每题1.5分,共30分)1. When can the man see the headmaster?A. At 9:30. B. At 11:45. C. At 12:40.2. Why does the man want to keep the window shut?A. He is ill. B. He wants to open it himself. C. The air inside is fresh enough.3. What is Mike?A. A teacher. B. A st
5、udent. C. A writer.4. What has made working at home possible?A. Personal computers. B. Communication industry. C. Living far from companies.5. Where is the woman?A. In a soap factory. B. In her house. C. At an information desk.听第6段材料,回答6-7题。6. Where, does the conversation most probably take place?A.
6、 At home. B. On a bus. C. In the bank.7. Why do the two speakers want to buy a car?A. They have a lot of money. B. The man lives too far away from his office.C. The womans office is too far away from her home.听第7段材料,回答8-10题。8. Why wont Mr. Stone come to the clinic tomorrow?A. He cant spare the time.
7、 B. The clinic will be closed.D. Dr.! Milton wont come to work.9. When is the clinic open in a week?A. From Monday to Friday. B. On weekdays except Thursday. C. During the whole week.10. What time has finally been fixed for Mr. Stone to come?A. 5:30 p. m., Wednesday. B. 6:15 p. m., Wednesday. C. 6:1
8、5 p. m., Thursday.听第8段材料,回答11-13题。11. Whats the relationship between the two speakers?A. Neighbors. B. Doctor and patient. C. Friends.12. When did the woman cough most seriously?A. In the morning. B. In the afternoon. C. At night.13. What did the man do for the woman?A. He examined the woman careful
9、ly. B. He gave her some medicine and some advice as well.C. He just told her not to worry too much.听第9段材料,回答14-16题。14. Whats the possible relationship between the two speakers?A. Husband and wife. B. Friends. C. Strangers.15. Where does the conversation most probably take place?A. In a restaurant. B
10、. At the womans home. C. At the mans home.16. What does the woman ask the man to do?A. Have some soup. B. Have more rice. C. Bring his wife next time.听第10段材料,回答17-20题。17. What did Nicholas do at eighteen months?A. He began to learn French. B. He read the newspaper. C. He took telephone messages.18.
11、Why was Nicholas bored and unhappy at the two schools?A. He had too much homework. B. He almost couldnt learn anything special.C. His teachers often corrected his spelling.19. Who offered to help Nicholas finally?A. His classmates. B. His parents. C. A college.20. What is Nicholas life like now?A. B
12、usy without any social life. B. Full but boring. C. Busy at college and free at home.第二部分 阅读理解(每题2分,共40分)A In an ideal world,people would not test medicines on animals. Such experiments are stressful and sometimes painful for animals,and expensive and timeconsuming for people. Yet animalexperimentat
13、ion is still needed to help bridge vast gaps in medical knowledge. That is why there are some 50 to 100 million animals used in research around the world each year. Europe,on the whole,has the worlds most restrictive(严格的) laws on animal experiments. Even so,its scientists use some 12 million animals
14、 a year,most of them mice and rats,for medical research. Official statistics show that just 1.1 million animals are used in research in America each year. But that is misleading. The American authorities do not think mice and rats are worth counting and,as these are the most common laboratory animal
15、s,the true figure is much higher. Japan and China have even less comprehensive(全面的) data than America. Now Europe is reforming the rules governing animal experiments by restricting the number of animals used in labs. Alternatives to animal testing,such as using human tissue or computer models,are no
16、w strongly recommended. In addition,sharing all research results freely should help to reduce the number of animals for scientific use. At present,scientists often share only the results of successful experiments. If their findings do not fit the hypothesis(假设) being tested,the work never sees the l
17、ight of day. This practice means wasting time,money,and animals lives in endlessly repeating the failed experiments. Animal experimentation has taught humanity a great deal and saved countless lives. It needs to continue,even if that means animals sometimes suffer. Europes new measures should eventu
18、ally both reduce the number of animals used in experiments and improve the way in which scientific research is conducted.21. What is the main idea of this passage?A. The success of animal experiments should be ensured.B. A ban on the use of animals in the lab should be enforced.C. Greater efforts ne
19、ed to be taken to reduce the number of lab animals.D. Scientists should be required to share their research results with each other.22. Which of the following statements is true about animals used in the lab?A. America uses only about 1.1 million lab animals per year.B. Europe does not use mice and
20、rats as lab animals at all.C. Britain does not use as many lab animals as China does.D. Japan has limited data on the number of lab animals used each year.23. Which of the following is mentioned as an alternative to replace animal experiments?A. Statistical studies. B. Computer models.C. DNA planted
21、 in animals. D. Tissue from dead animals.24. What usually happens to unsuccessful animal experiments?A. They are not made known to the public. B. They are made into teaching materials.C. They are collected for future publication. D. They are not removed from the research topic list.B The Great Plagu
22、e(瘟疫) of London in 1665 was the last in a long senies of plague that first began in London in June 1499.1t killed between 75,000 and 100,000. First suspected in late 1664,it began to spread eastwards in April 1665 from the poor suburb of St. Giles to the crowded and dirty communities on its way to t
23、he walled City of London.The Great Plague at Its Peak By September 1665 ,the death rate had reached 8,000 per week. Helpless city authorities began to abandon quarantine(隔离) measures. Houses containing the dead and dying were no longer locked. Londons mournful silence was broken by the noise of cart
24、s carrying the dead for burial in churches or public plague pits. Well-off residents soon fled to the countryside,leaving the poor behind in poor old commun/ties.Thousands of dogs and cats were killed to remove a feared source of contagion (传染) ,and piles of rotting garbage were burned. Doctors cut
25、swellings and bled black spots in attempts to cure plague victims. Plague Orders prohibited churches from keeping dead bodies in their buildings during public assemblies or services,and camers of the dead had to identify themselves and could not mix with the public. Samuel Pepys: Eyewitness Accounts
26、 In his famous diary,Samuel Pepys,a member of Parliament,conveyed the sad image of desperate people wandering the streets in search of relief from the ruins of the plague. His notes during 1665 indicated the severity of Londons Great Plague. In July,he mourned the sad news of the death of so manv in
27、 the community,forty last night,the bell always going either for deaths or burials. A month lat.er,when Londons death rate rose sharply, Pepys noted that surviors are forced to carry the dead to be buried by daylight,the nights not enough to do itThe Plague Declines and the Government Reacts By Febr
28、uary 1666,the Great Plague had nearly run its course.lt died out during the Great Fire that same year and never returned. Central parts of London were rebuilt with wider streets to relieve crowding and better waste water svstems to improve public cleanliness. New Plague Orders were issued in May 166
29、6,which banned the burial of future plague victims in churches and small churchyards, enforced the use of quicklime (生石灰) at chosen burial sites, and strictly prohibited opening graves less than one year after burial as a safeguard against the spread of infection.24.1n the course of the Great PJague
30、,it was a common practice to .A. keep dead bodies in the church buildingsB. burn piles of rotting garbage in the streetsC. carry the dead for church burials in the daytimeD. unlock the houses containing the dead and dying26.lt can be inferred from the passage that .A. dogs and cats were certain to s
31、pread the piagueB. doctors treatment of plague victims was effectiveC. city authorities allowed rich residents to go to the countrysideD. quarantine measures were powerless in preventing the plague27. How did Samuel Pepys feel when the bell was going all the night during the Great Plague?A. Frighten
32、ed. B. Relieved. C. Sorrowful. D. Moody.28. Whats the main purpose of this writing?A. To blame poor public cleanliness for plague.B. To inform readers of what happened in the Great Plague.C. To show that plague was closely related to church activities.D. To prove that plague could be controlled by h
33、umans.C A new study suggests that the more teenagers watch television, the more likely they are to develop depression(情绪低落) as young adults. The researchers used a national long-term survey of adolescent(青少年的)health to survey the relationship between media use and depression. They based their findin
34、gs on more than 4,000 adolescents who were not depressed when the survey began in the year 2000. As part of the survey, the young people were asked how many hours of television or videos they watched daily. They were also asked how often they played computer games and listened to the radio. Media us
35、e totaled an average of five and one-half hours a day. More than two hours of that was spent watching TV. Seven years later, in 2007, more than seven percent of the young people had signs of depression. The average age at that time was twenty-one. The researchers say they did not find any such relat
36、ionship with the use of other media such as movies, video games or radio, etc. But the study did find that every extra hour of television meant an eight percent increase in the chances of developing signs of depression. Young men were more likely than young women to develop depression given the same
37、 amount of media use. The study didnt explore if watching TV causes depression. But one possibility is that it was taking time away from activities that could help prevent depression. Last December, the journal Social Indicators Research published a study of activities that help lead to happy lives.
38、 Sociologists from the University of Maryland found that people who describe themselves as happy spend less time watching television than unhappy people. The study found that happy people are more likely to be socially active, to read, to attend religious services and to vote.29. We can learn from t
39、he survey that of all the media use _.A. computer games are teenagerss favoriteB. most teenagers prefer to listen to the radioC. teenagers enjoy watching TV very muchD. newspaper is not included in the survey30. According to the passage, what kind of activity may help prevent depression?A. Playing c
40、omputer games. B. Taking part in sports.C. Listening to the radio. D. Watching movies.31. We can conclude that a teenager should _.A. play more video games instead of watching TVB. be active in taking part in outdoor activitiesC. be more active in reading and studyingD. attend religious services and
41、 care for politicsDMrs. Packletide intended to shoot a tiger. Not that the desire to kill had suddenly come to her, or that she felt she would leave India safer with one wild beast less. It was because Loona Bimberton had recently taken a plane to the forest and killed a tiger, and the newspapers sh
42、owed photographs of Loona Bimberton with a tiger-skin on. In a world supposed to be moved by hunger and by love, Mrs. Packletides movements were largely governed by dislike of Loona Bimberton.Circumstances proved favorable. Mrs. Packletide had offered a thousand rupees (印度卢比) for the opportunity of
43、shooting a tiger without risk or effort, and it happened that an old tiger was frequently coming to a neighboring village at night. He was so old that he couldnt kill animals in the wild and just satisfied his appetite to the smaller household animals. The villagers were eager to earn the thousand r
44、upees; children were posted night and day in the jungle to watch the tiger, and the cheap goats were left about to keep him from going elsewhere. The one great fear was that he should die of old age before the day of Mrs. Packletides shoot.The great night arrived. A platform had been built in a tree
45、, on which sat Mrs. Packletide and her paid companion, Miss Mebbin. A goat with a loud bleat (咩咩叫) was tied down at the correct distance. With an accurate gun, they waited for the coming of the tiger.“I suppose we are in some danger?” said Miss Mebbin.She was not actually nervous about the wild beas
46、t, but she was unwilling to perform a bit more service than she had been paid for. “Its a very old tiger. It couldnt spring up here even if it wanted to.” said Mrs. Packletide.Their conversation was cut short by the appearance of the old tiger. He saw the goat, and lay on the earth for a short rest
47、before attacking.The gun fired very loudly, and the great yellow beast jumped to one side and then rolled over in the stillness of death. In a moment a crowd of excited villagers appeared on the scene, and their shouting carried the glad news to the village.It was Miss Mebbin who found that the goat was dying from a bullet-wound, while no wound could be found on the tiger. Evidently the wrong animal had been hit, and the tiger had died of heart-failure, caused by the sudden loud noise of the gun. Mrs. Packletide was annoyed at the discovery; but anywa