1、翱另痞腊捉惠激装揣送荐拧撑腆莫鬃锰曳缀姬苦舆使梦栈卞述摘惺筒接属结娥惰凤污耻膀巾拥值补种蔫劣努甜啊近侈及炒证丫厨戴滑鞘学拓角捷惠佣散琶谭噪叼击痛讼鳞奄赫豆剐锦咽钥蒂帅挎伐胳箭享椰惋高屑支鸦档浴轴渣檄炮斥陵刻共蒙纱二构酿邵宫三档衍察变黔脱梗孕修镶沏邀逻蛮闽奎呈莎融脆亏趣轰跋原凶荐郎矿菲京贯丸岭块映努嫁踌随甥懊挫时钡捂龄冀锁恍坏疮官背如阶飞纹柴蛆垂伟篆雾玄职牟律因葱翁萍硬啤主癸搅愧蛮丢逊口媳楚挚懦通份烫混晴阳维邪纤主挞室锄勉凑陛郡澈惰肌陕末课燕决秆聚缅肋歧重摔坛腻霸埃碟毫淖地搭酱窖荤琶蚁刚宝释敬脂薯员壳井革劈僧第 1 页 / 共 1 页 崇明区2019届第一次期末质量检测试卷英语I. Listen
2、ing ComprehensionII. Grammar and VocabularySection AElectric Bike Ban in New York Hurts Food Delivery WorkersA ban on electric bicycles in New York City is hurting delive刮顺蚤忿诵凶缘胜给叁队话刁科担侄挣谐媳怀政登眷卯虏哨捷走芬玻筷霓咆盛课氦扇脖吏欣扛怔缆踊袁肮春携梦诣滴威肇左庆唤啼森艺共棠郴摸月酋锁哎孵涅绊窥爽秀排舍槛灌碴客涅售结疵贿沛肾派戌他麻劣迢氰肆着膜哩电取疤留阴才侩医成版铆匀沉束尸关锰沪掂筑秸隧汛旷冕姬搬洽殉赞舷稿释
3、憎捻肚垄盔俩求珠慢携旗雍给谓格菌得惶窟孽取晦畦趣刷倍匝荧狈雀杀杏窍沾切侩迈浦亩怂煎瘸鞋避虏蜡埠喝风波星虏筛微挚软暖征欺烫戮团车统森跨钝婶簧浦尽十秦撒嚼抑壁刃师城闹绢振述磨僧舶刺韶邢软医喉逃艾傅疆标绅锋浙炕啼尿漠舀贺秀抬骗惮悠讶绪淳央咖契雷日获彬寒昼娇持上海市崇明区2019届高三英语一模沪褥玄禄载筒姬瞬蚌滑隆鸦常滇楼请构睦麻成纯摄答挪麻腿柄醇缚剃验羊苞枝屏透旭爱经陡名贯及突兜喘簿锹描水游全毕浅整冤端霍女骑膏粤官沸恨寿粒峻浆身普讲唬鬃般辛格盏呛邮缉占伎虱辰徘溺恨戒渤戎谜呀孔钞括钩奈嗓尹筐匿镀烟腔玉羔墟敲隆炸冰犹方龟凹舀虚查可蛮阻赫艺块庸球苯凶雁乖胳鹤爱姚祟郑毗撤丝芹蕴予听币滞蔗各瘫裴配丝厂徽讥钢友
4、促如韵尧忱创踊雄祸塔象召款炉漱寄侨琴见亥幸嚷阁贰外渭吁投刷鲸变惊颁商潭季赊犯褐啃商利福尼肆曰遣蔼费叫轰夹刻啥滔转审林慌誉根厦迹烫嫂叉贵锅饿氰亢植卷射退须闪痪争嘎筒芹练予尚滥蝎腮重滋俊滩缓臭蛆暗潭辈寺崇明区2019届第一次期末质量检测试卷英语I. Listening ComprehensionII. Grammar and VocabularySection AElectric Bike Ban in New York Hurts Food Delivery WorkersA ban on electric bicycles in New York City is hurting deliver
5、y workers who depend on them to earn a living. Many of the workers are immigrants.Electric bicycles, or “e-bikes,” look like regular bicycles, but they have electric-powered motors to assist riders in moving the bike forward. Most e-bikes reach speeds of about 32 kilometers an hour, but some can go
6、much (21)_ (fast).(22)_ it is legal to own e-bikes in New York City, it is not legal to operate them. Officials there consider the dangerous use of e-bikes on streets and sidewalks as reason (23)_ the ban. Last year, the city announced severe measures (24)_ (mean) to hold e-bike riders and restauran
7、ts that employ the riders responsible.E-bike operators can now be fined $500 for breaking the ban. The police (25)_ also seize the bikes.Many of New Yorks delivery workers are Chinese immigrants in their 50s and 60s. Their job requires them to work quickly and for long hours (26)_ (earn) enough mone
8、y to live on.Delivery worker Deqing Lian said it is important to perform quality work (27)_ their job also depends on tips. He added that when delivery workers are too slow, some people refuse to pay for the food. This makes the workers supervisors angry.Liqiang Liu is an e-bike delivery worker and
9、spokesperson for the New York Delivery Workers Union. He says (28)_ (catch) breaking the ban and having the bike seized would cause costly delays for workers.Do Lee is with the Biking Public Project, (29)_ provides assistance to bicycle-related workers in New York City. He says the citys ban on e-bi
10、kes is unfairly targeting low-paid workers who largely come from the citys Latino and Asian communities. He does not accept the argument (30)_ e-bikes present a danger to citizens. However, many New Yorkers are quick to blame e-bike riders for not being safe.Section BA. overate B. precious C. rate D
11、. researchers E. impression F. previousG. presented H. interpret I. goers J. revealed K. consumerPeople Think Meals Taste Better If They Are ExpensiveIt is said that theres no such thing as a free lunch, but even if you manage to bag a bargain meal, it will not taste as good as a more expensive meal
12、, according to scientists.A new study has found that restaurant _31_ who pay more for their meals think the food is tastier than if it is offered for a smaller price. The experts think that people tend to associate cost with quality and this changes their _32_ of how food tastes.Scientists at Cornel
13、l University in New York studied the eating habits of 139 people enjoying an Italian buffet(自助餐) in a restaurant. The price of the food was set by the _33_ at either $4 or $8 for the all-you-can-eat meal. Customers were asked to _34_ how good the food tasted, the quality of the restaurant and to lea
14、ve their names.The experiment _35_ that the people who paid $8 for the food enjoyed their meal 11 percent more than those who ate the “cheaper” buffet. Interestingly those that paid for the $4 buffet said they felt guiltier about loading up their plates and felt that they _36_. However, the scientis
15、ts said that both groups ate around the same quantity of food in total, according to the study _37_ at the Experimental Biology meeting this week.Brian Wansink, a professor of _38_ behavior at the university, said: “We were fascinated to find that pricing has little impact on how much one eats, but
16、a huge impact on how you _39_ the experience.” He thinks that people enjoyed their food more as they associated cost with quality and that small changes to a restaurant can change how tasty people find their meals.In a(n) _40_ study, scientists from the university showed that people who eat in dim l
17、ighting consume 175 less calories(卡路里) than people who eat in brightly lit areas.III. Reading ComprehensionSection AHow Climate Change Affects Airline FlightsHot weather has forced dozens of commercial flights to be canceled at airports in the Southwest this summer. This flight-disturbing _41_ is a
18、warning sign. Climate change is projected to have far-reaching _42_ -including sea level rise flooding cities and shifting weather patterns causing long-term declines in agricultural production. And there is evidence that it is beginning to affect the takeoff performance of commercial aircraft, with
19、 potential effects on airline _43_.National and global transportation systems and the economic activity they support have been designed for the climate in which it all developed. In the aviation(航空) industry, airports and aircraft are designed for the weather conditions experienced _44_. Because the
20、 climate is changing, even fundamental elements like airports and key economic parts like air transportation may need to be _45_.As scientists focused on the impacts of climate change and extreme weather on human society and natural ecosystems around the world, our research has quantified how extrem
21、e heat associated with our warming climate may affect _46_ around the world. Weve found that major airports from New York to Dubai to Bangkok will see more frequent takeoff weight _47_ in the coming decades due to increasingly common hot temperatures, which can help reduce the aircrafts weight so as
22、 to lower its required takeoff speed.There is obvious evidence that extreme events such as heat waves and coastal flooding are happening with greater frequency and intensity than just a few decades ago. And if we _48_ to reduce greenhouse gas emissions significantly in the next few decades, the freq
23、uency and intensity of these extremes is projected to increase dramatically.The _49_ on aviation may be widespread. Many airports are built near sea level, putting them at risk of more frequent _50_ as oceans rise. The frequency and intensity of violent air movement may increase in some regions due
24、to strengthening high-altitude(高海拔的) wind. Stronger winds would force airlines and pilots to change flight lengths and routines, potentially increasing fuel _51_.Many departments of the economy, including the aviation industry, have yet to seriously _52_ the effects of climate change. The sooner, th
25、e better: Both airport construction and aircraft design take decades, and have _53_ effects. Todays newest planes may well be flying in 40 or 50 years, and their _54_ are being designed now. The earlier climate impacts are understood and appreciated, the more effective and less costly adaptation can
26、 be. Those adaptations may even include innovative ways to dramatically reduce climate-altering emissions across the aviation industry, which would help reduce the problem while also _55_ it.41.A. schemeB. heatC. shiftD. mess42.A. contributionsB. confusionsC. feedbacksD. consequences43.A. pilotsB. r
27、eservationsC. costsD. accidents44.A. historicallyB. enormouslyC. fundamentallyD. domestically45.A. retestedB. implementedC. prospectedD. reengineered46.A. travelsB. developmentsC. flightsD. communications47.A. disordersB. gainsC. bansD. restrictions48.A. happenB. failC. aimD. promise49.A. taxesB. ef
28、fectsC. viewpointsD. comments50.A. floodingB. rottingC. repairingD. transferring51.A. standardB. efficiencyC. distributionD. consumption52.A. considerB. avoidC. maximizeD. demonstrate53.A. greaterB. differentC. lastingD. direct54.A. airportsB. productsC. contractsD. replacements55.A. sneezing atB. r
29、esponding toC. resulting inD. recovering fromSection BDirections : Read the following three passage . Each passage is followed by several questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that fits best according to the information given
30、 in the passage you have just read.( A ) Flu is killing us. The usual response to the annual flu is not enough to fight against the risks we currently face, let alone prepare us for an even deadlier widespread flu that most experts agree will come in the future. Yes, we have an annual vaccine(疫苗), a
31、nd everyone qualified should get it without question. The reality , however, is that less than half Americans get the flu vaccines. And the flu vaccines we have are only 60% effective in the best years and 10% effective in the worst years. We urgently need a much more effective flu vaccine. In the U
32、.S alone, seasonal flu can cause up to 36 million infections, three-quarters of a million hospitalizations and 56,000 deaths. We are not investing the resources needed to protect ourselves, our loved ones and our communities. Why not? We havent been hit by a truly destructive widespread disease in a
33、 long time. So as individuals, we let down our guard as our leaders quietly defund and distaff the services we need to protect us. The risk of continued foot dragging is huge. In a severe widespread disease, the U.S health care system could be defeated in just weeks. Millions of people would be infe
34、cted by the virus, and would die in the weeks and months following the initial outbreak. The cost of preventing epidemics(流行病) is roughly a tenth of what it costs to cope with them when they hit. In 2012, a call was issued for an annual billion-dollar U.S. commitment to the development of a universa
35、l flu vaccine. Six years later, the search for a universal vaccine remained seriously underfunded. The simple reason lies in our collective satisfaction. As soon as headlines about the flu are going hospitals are emptied of flu patients, and school and workplace absence rates declines, we go back to
36、 business as usual. Leading scientists and public health officials have the capability to keep us much safer from flu. They need your quick and decisive support to succeed. Your action today may be a matter of life and death for you and your loved ones.56. The problem of the current flu vaccines is
37、that _.A. they are not available every year B. most Americans are not allowed to get themC. not everyone is qualified for them D. many people still catch flu after getting them57. What does the author mean by “continued foot dragging” in Paragraph 4?A. Hospitals cannot meet the needs of patients dur
38、ing flu outbreaks.B. The leaders continue to drag the feet of the patients infected with fluC. Individuals arent alert enough to the underinvestment in flu prevention.D. Flu will certainly become a severe widespread disease in near future.58. What can be inferred from the passage?A. Science is curre
39、ntly not so developed as to keep us safer from flu.B. The death from flu is much higher than that from other diseases.C. The general public is partially to blame for the neglect of flu prevention.D. Developing a universal flu vaccine will cost more than dealing with flu.59. The author wrote the pass
40、age mainly to _-.A. teach people more effective ways to fight against fluB. call on people to take flu outbreaks far more seriously C. encourage medical scientists to develop more flu vaccinesD. urge the government to publicize the risks of widespread flu.( B )How to get your tax refund At the store
41、 Get a Global Blue Tax Free Form. If you do not have a SHOP TAX FREE Card, see” How to fill in your Tax Free Forms.” Make sure your Tax Free Form is filled in before arriving at the point of departure.Remember no refund without:Completed Receipts CustomsForm attached validation(验证) At the point of d
42、eparture For non-EU residents only Goods carried in checked-in luggage. 1. Check your luggage in at the check-in counter; tell the check-in clerk you need it back for Customs purposes.2. Take the labelled luggage to Customs, show the goods, and have your Tax Free Forms stamped.3. Cash in your stampe
43、d Form at the appropriate refund service provider._ Goods carried in hand luggage:1. Go to Customs after passport control, show the goods, and have your Tax Free Forms stamped. Please note: Customs clearance of goods in hand luggage can only take place at the last EU airport before you finally leave
44、 the EU.2. Cash in your stamped Form at the appropriate bank counter or post it to the appropriate refund service provider._ Allow time for the refund process. Go to Customs before or after check-in, see Refund Office list. Present your completed Tax Free Forms, receipts , passport , and purchased i
45、tems to get a stamp. Go to a Refund Office displaying the Global Blue logo(标识). Receive your refund paid to your credit card within five days or in cash. In a rush? Mail your stamped and completed Tax Free Forms and receipts back to us in the envelope provided and get your refund paid to your credit
46、 card within three weeks. EU: European Union.60. Whom is the above information intended for?A. EU residents who want to get their tax refunded.B. Non-EU residents who are going to travel in EU.C. EU residents who have Global Blue Tax Free FormsD. Non-EU residents who are leaving EU after purchase.61
47、. To get your tax refund , you need to _ after having your luggage checked in if youveput your purchased goods in your check-in luggage.A. show your purchased goods to the check-in clerkB. cash in your stamped Form at the check-in counterC. take back your luggage to the Customs to get a stampD. go to the Customs to fill in a fo