2024年3月28日发(作者:喻永福)
河北省沧州市三县联考2023-2024学年高三上学期11月月考
英语试题
学校
:___________
姓名:
___________
班级:
___________
考号:
___________
一、短对话
1
.
When will Jim return?
A
.
On Friday. B
.
On Saturday.
2
.
Which is included in the rent?
A
.
Electricity. B
.
The Internet.
3
.
Where is George now?
A
.
On the plane. B
.
In a car.
4
.
What will the speakers do next?
A
.
Book a table. B
.
Cook a meal.
5
.
How does the man sound?
A
.
Excited. B
.
Doubtful.
二、长对话
听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题。
6
.
What is May learning to do?
A
.
Write Chinese characters.
C
.
Paint nature scenes.
7
.
What does May say about her teacher?
A
.
He is smart. B
.
He is strict.
听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题。
8
.
Where does this conversation take place?
A
.
In an office. B
.
On the phone.
9
.
What does the woman want to do?
A
.
Deliver some goods. B
.
Get her money back.
听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题。
10
.
What kind of clothes did Molly sell online at first?
试卷第1页,共12页
C
.
On Sunday.
C
.
Parking.
C
.
At home.
C
.
Order takeout food.
C
.
Anxious.
B
.
Collect art works.
C
.
He is patient.
C
.
At a bank.
C
.
Buy an office chair.
A
.
Women’s clothes. B
.
Children’s clothes.
11
.
When did Molly start her business?
A
.
When she was at university.
training. C
.
When she was at work.
12
.
Why is Molly unwilling to open a physical store?
A
.
To protect her design features.
B
.
To cut the cost of the operation.
C
.
To keep her business growing.
听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题。
13
.
How did Carl feel about the result yesterday?
A
.
Disappointed. B
.
Unconcerned.
14
.
What do we know about Carl’s first test?
A
.
He forgot it. B
.
He failed it.
15
.
What is Carl going to do?
A
.
Call his instructor. B
.
Have a second try.
16
.
What are the speakers mainly talking about?
A
.
Their new sessions. B
.
The man’s driving test.
三、短文
听下面一段独白,回答以下小题。
17
.
Who is the speaker probably talking to?
A
.
New staff. B
.
Tour guides.
18
.
How often is the safety meeting held?
A
.
Every month. B
.
Every two weeks.
19
.
What are the listeners allowed to wear in the lab?
A
.
Jackets. B
.
Loose belts.
20
.
Why does the speaker give the talk?
A
.
To come up with new ideas.
B
.
To introduce rules in the lab.
C
.
To invite some suggestions.
试卷第2页,共12页
C
.
Men’s clothes.
B
.
When she was in
C
.
Relieved.
C
.
He enjoyed it.
C
.
Take the road test.
C
.
The woman’s exam.
C
.
Tourists.
C
.
Every week.
C
.
Sports shoes.
四、阅读理解
Famous People Who Begin With Difficulties
Oprah Winfrey
Probably having one of the most famous success stories, Oprah was born into a poor
family in Mississippi, raised by a single mother living on welfare. She was physically, and
mentally abused during her childhood. Despite her initial struggles as a young girl, she turned
herself into one of the most successful talk show hosts of our time.
Jim Carrey
Jim Carrey has been the star of some of the most successful movies of all time. But
Carrey grew up extremely poor in Canada. When he was a teenager, his family took security
jobs in a factory to help pay the bills. And during his first stand-up comedy performance, he
was booed off
(喝倒彩)
the stage. Not shortly after, he made it big on In Living Color and
then went on to star in Dumb & Dumber, The Mask, and Ace Ventura in the same year!
James Dyson
If you thought Thomas Edison’s failures were bad, let me introduce you to James Dyson,
the famous inventor of the Dyson vacuums
(真空吸尘器)
you see all over the television.
Dyson developed over 5,000 failed prototypes
(原型)
before finding the bagless vacuum
brand. Not only that, he put his entire savings account into his prototypes over fifteen years!
Luckily, the bagless vacuum worked.
Stephen King
Before Stephen King became known as a great living writer—having written over 60
novels, many of which have been adapted for film and television—King was rejected over
and over again. In his memoir, On Writing, King describes how he used to post his rejection
letters on the wall for inspiration. His first novel, Carrie, was rejected 30 times.
21
.
What do Oprah and Jim have in common?
A
.
They were abused by parents.
C
.
They were hired as comedians.
22
.
What did James Dyson do?
A
.
He repaired the failed prototypes.
C
.
He put all efforts into marketing.
B
.
He developed over 5,000 brands.
D
.
He invented the bagless vacuum.
B
.
They grew up in poor families.
D
.
They found jobs in a factory.
试卷第3页,共12页
23
.
Who is a novelist?
A
.
Oprah Winfrey. B
.
Stephen King.
Though Marley has loved soccer for as long as she can remember, her involvement in
the game didn’t extend beyond kickabouts with her father and brothers. But that all changed
in 2014 when one day her son came home from school and handed her a flier (
传单
), saying
that his soccer coach had asked him to deliver it to her. “I’m like ‘Wait, Jamaica
has a women’s football team? Where did this come from?’” she said.
Six years earlier, in 2008, underfunding had led to the Jamaican Football Federation
(JFF) disbanding the women’s national team program. The flier Marley’s son brought home
was a fundraising request from the JFF to help restart the program. Marley got to work almost
immediately, calling the JFF the following morning to ask what it needed.
“The needs were many,” Marley said, repeating the sentence as if to stress how dire the
situation was. From travel and nutrition to accommodation and training camps, every area of
the national team’s setup was in need of funding.
A skilled musician and multiple Grammy award-winning artist, Marley put her
considerable musical talents to work. “My family came together with me. We recorded a song
Strike Hard to raise funds,” she said.
Her efforts—and the work of countless others who were equally as committed to the
cause—paid off as the women’s national team became the first Caribbean country to qualify
for the Women’s World Cup.
Marley’s work has helped not only improve standards and conditions for players, but
also shift the country’s attitude towards the women’s national team. “These girls have been
told for a long time that women in sports, especially football in Jamaica, really weren’t that
important,” Marley said. “Nobody wants to give us brand deals because it’s the female team.
It’s so good now to see how all of that has changed dramatically, not just for our women, but
around and that makes me excited.”
24
.
How did Marley probably feel while reading the flier?
A
.
Astonished. B
.
Disappointed. C
.
Grateful. D
.
Regretful.
C
.
James Dyson. D
.
Jim Carrey.
25
.
Why did the women’s national team of Jamaica stop operating in 2008?
A
.
Its coaches left the team.
C
.
It failed the football fans.
B
.
Its players were unskilled.
D
.
It lacked sufficient funds.
试卷第4页,共12页
26
.
What does the underlined word “dire” probably mean in paragraph 3?
A
.
Amazing. B
.
Terrible. C
.
Fresh. D
.
Stable.
27
.
Which can best describe the impact of Marley’s efforts?
A
.
Short-lived.
A sandstone slab (
石板
) and other stone tools unearthed in Vietnam give insight into
how curry (
咖喱
) was made and reveal that curry was eaten in the region at least 2,000 years
ago.
The sandstone slab, buried 2 meters below the surface, was dug up in 2018 at Oc Eo in
southern Vietnam. The site was once an overseas trading center of an ancient Southeast Asian
kingdom known as Funan, according to a new study.
“Preparing curry involves not only a diverse range of seasoning but also the use of
grinding (
研磨
) tools, considerable time, and human effort,” said study author Dr. Hsiao chun
Hung. “Remarkably, even individuals residing outside of India nearly 2,000 years ago
expressed a strong desire to enjoy the flavors of curry, as evidenced by their careful
preparations.”
Hung and a team of researchers analyzed microscopic remains known as starch
grains—tiny structures found within plant cells that can be preserved over long periods—that
they found on the grinding tools.
“Nowadays, preparing curry in Vietnam has become much simpler for most families due
to the widespread availability of bagged curry in supermarkets. However, it is interesting to
note that the curry recipe used today has not varied significantly from the ancient times,” said
study co-author Dr. Khanh Trung Kien Nguyen. Nguyen added that the team planned to
recreate the 2,000-year-old curry based on the microscopic remains found at the site.
People were likely enjoying curry in India about 4,000 years ago. Some of the
components recovered at Oc Eo are similar to those found in Indian curries, while other
components are more distinctively Southeast Asian. The new study concluded that curry
recipes arrived in Southeast Asia with South Asian traders as contact between the regions
increased during the early centuries of the first millennium.
28
.
What is the sandstone slab used to do according to the text?
A
.
Store grains. B
.
Carve tools. C
.
Make curry. D
.
Keep time.
B
.
Negative. C
.
Far-reaching. D
.
Unidentifiable.
29
.
What did Dr. Hsiao-chun Hung think of preparing curry in the past?
试卷第5页,共12页
A
.
It was a complex process.
C
.
It demanded little effort.
B
.
It differed from one another.
D
.
It was environment-friendly.
30
.
What can we infer about the ancient curry recipes?
A
.
They restricted regional trade.
C
.
They linked various cultures.
Asians.
31
.
What is the text mainly about?
A
.
The unknown stories of a historical site. B
.
The findings of unearthed stone tools.
C
.
An introduction to a cooking course.
Ocean temperature extremes are now normal, a new study reports. It has analyzed ocean
surface temperatures for the past 150 years. It reveals that by 2019, 57 percent of the ocean’s
surface was warming to temperatures rarely seen 100 years ago.
Ecologists wanted to learn how often modern extreme heat events occur. They also
wanted to see how long they last. Kisei Tanaka was one of those ecologists. He now works
for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in Honolulu, Hawaii.
Tanaka teamed up with Kyle Van Houtan, who works at the Loggerhead Marinelife Center.
The two analyzed monthly sea surface temperatures collected from 1870 through 2019. Then
they mapped where and when extreme heat events had shown up, decade by decade.
By looking at monthly extremes instead of annual averages, the two found that over time,
more and more patches (
区域
) of water were reaching extreme temperatures. Then, in 2014,
the entire ocean hit a point of no return, Van Houtan says.
Heat waves harm ocean ecosystems. They can lead seabirds And
animals—from fish and whales to turtles—may have to swim long distances in search of
comfortable temperatures.
In May 2020, NOAA announced that it was updating what climates it now considered
“normal”. These values are what the agency uses to put daily weather events in a historical
context. The average values from 1991 to 2020 are now higher than those from 1981 to 2010,
NOAA found.
Van Houtan says his new study shows extreme ocean warming is now the norm. Much
discussion on climate change, he notes, has been about future events, and whether or not they
might happen. But what the emerging data make clear, he says, is that extreme heat became
试卷第6页,共12页
D
.
An unforgettable family experience.
B
.
They were mainly consumed in Vietnam.
D
.
They were first favored by Southeast
2024年3月28日发(作者:喻永福)
河北省沧州市三县联考2023-2024学年高三上学期11月月考
英语试题
学校
:___________
姓名:
___________
班级:
___________
考号:
___________
一、短对话
1
.
When will Jim return?
A
.
On Friday. B
.
On Saturday.
2
.
Which is included in the rent?
A
.
Electricity. B
.
The Internet.
3
.
Where is George now?
A
.
On the plane. B
.
In a car.
4
.
What will the speakers do next?
A
.
Book a table. B
.
Cook a meal.
5
.
How does the man sound?
A
.
Excited. B
.
Doubtful.
二、长对话
听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题。
6
.
What is May learning to do?
A
.
Write Chinese characters.
C
.
Paint nature scenes.
7
.
What does May say about her teacher?
A
.
He is smart. B
.
He is strict.
听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题。
8
.
Where does this conversation take place?
A
.
In an office. B
.
On the phone.
9
.
What does the woman want to do?
A
.
Deliver some goods. B
.
Get her money back.
听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题。
10
.
What kind of clothes did Molly sell online at first?
试卷第1页,共12页
C
.
On Sunday.
C
.
Parking.
C
.
At home.
C
.
Order takeout food.
C
.
Anxious.
B
.
Collect art works.
C
.
He is patient.
C
.
At a bank.
C
.
Buy an office chair.
A
.
Women’s clothes. B
.
Children’s clothes.
11
.
When did Molly start her business?
A
.
When she was at university.
training. C
.
When she was at work.
12
.
Why is Molly unwilling to open a physical store?
A
.
To protect her design features.
B
.
To cut the cost of the operation.
C
.
To keep her business growing.
听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题。
13
.
How did Carl feel about the result yesterday?
A
.
Disappointed. B
.
Unconcerned.
14
.
What do we know about Carl’s first test?
A
.
He forgot it. B
.
He failed it.
15
.
What is Carl going to do?
A
.
Call his instructor. B
.
Have a second try.
16
.
What are the speakers mainly talking about?
A
.
Their new sessions. B
.
The man’s driving test.
三、短文
听下面一段独白,回答以下小题。
17
.
Who is the speaker probably talking to?
A
.
New staff. B
.
Tour guides.
18
.
How often is the safety meeting held?
A
.
Every month. B
.
Every two weeks.
19
.
What are the listeners allowed to wear in the lab?
A
.
Jackets. B
.
Loose belts.
20
.
Why does the speaker give the talk?
A
.
To come up with new ideas.
B
.
To introduce rules in the lab.
C
.
To invite some suggestions.
试卷第2页,共12页
C
.
Men’s clothes.
B
.
When she was in
C
.
Relieved.
C
.
He enjoyed it.
C
.
Take the road test.
C
.
The woman’s exam.
C
.
Tourists.
C
.
Every week.
C
.
Sports shoes.
四、阅读理解
Famous People Who Begin With Difficulties
Oprah Winfrey
Probably having one of the most famous success stories, Oprah was born into a poor
family in Mississippi, raised by a single mother living on welfare. She was physically, and
mentally abused during her childhood. Despite her initial struggles as a young girl, she turned
herself into one of the most successful talk show hosts of our time.
Jim Carrey
Jim Carrey has been the star of some of the most successful movies of all time. But
Carrey grew up extremely poor in Canada. When he was a teenager, his family took security
jobs in a factory to help pay the bills. And during his first stand-up comedy performance, he
was booed off
(喝倒彩)
the stage. Not shortly after, he made it big on In Living Color and
then went on to star in Dumb & Dumber, The Mask, and Ace Ventura in the same year!
James Dyson
If you thought Thomas Edison’s failures were bad, let me introduce you to James Dyson,
the famous inventor of the Dyson vacuums
(真空吸尘器)
you see all over the television.
Dyson developed over 5,000 failed prototypes
(原型)
before finding the bagless vacuum
brand. Not only that, he put his entire savings account into his prototypes over fifteen years!
Luckily, the bagless vacuum worked.
Stephen King
Before Stephen King became known as a great living writer—having written over 60
novels, many of which have been adapted for film and television—King was rejected over
and over again. In his memoir, On Writing, King describes how he used to post his rejection
letters on the wall for inspiration. His first novel, Carrie, was rejected 30 times.
21
.
What do Oprah and Jim have in common?
A
.
They were abused by parents.
C
.
They were hired as comedians.
22
.
What did James Dyson do?
A
.
He repaired the failed prototypes.
C
.
He put all efforts into marketing.
B
.
He developed over 5,000 brands.
D
.
He invented the bagless vacuum.
B
.
They grew up in poor families.
D
.
They found jobs in a factory.
试卷第3页,共12页
23
.
Who is a novelist?
A
.
Oprah Winfrey. B
.
Stephen King.
Though Marley has loved soccer for as long as she can remember, her involvement in
the game didn’t extend beyond kickabouts with her father and brothers. But that all changed
in 2014 when one day her son came home from school and handed her a flier (
传单
), saying
that his soccer coach had asked him to deliver it to her. “I’m like ‘Wait, Jamaica
has a women’s football team? Where did this come from?’” she said.
Six years earlier, in 2008, underfunding had led to the Jamaican Football Federation
(JFF) disbanding the women’s national team program. The flier Marley’s son brought home
was a fundraising request from the JFF to help restart the program. Marley got to work almost
immediately, calling the JFF the following morning to ask what it needed.
“The needs were many,” Marley said, repeating the sentence as if to stress how dire the
situation was. From travel and nutrition to accommodation and training camps, every area of
the national team’s setup was in need of funding.
A skilled musician and multiple Grammy award-winning artist, Marley put her
considerable musical talents to work. “My family came together with me. We recorded a song
Strike Hard to raise funds,” she said.
Her efforts—and the work of countless others who were equally as committed to the
cause—paid off as the women’s national team became the first Caribbean country to qualify
for the Women’s World Cup.
Marley’s work has helped not only improve standards and conditions for players, but
also shift the country’s attitude towards the women’s national team. “These girls have been
told for a long time that women in sports, especially football in Jamaica, really weren’t that
important,” Marley said. “Nobody wants to give us brand deals because it’s the female team.
It’s so good now to see how all of that has changed dramatically, not just for our women, but
around and that makes me excited.”
24
.
How did Marley probably feel while reading the flier?
A
.
Astonished. B
.
Disappointed. C
.
Grateful. D
.
Regretful.
C
.
James Dyson. D
.
Jim Carrey.
25
.
Why did the women’s national team of Jamaica stop operating in 2008?
A
.
Its coaches left the team.
C
.
It failed the football fans.
B
.
Its players were unskilled.
D
.
It lacked sufficient funds.
试卷第4页,共12页
26
.
What does the underlined word “dire” probably mean in paragraph 3?
A
.
Amazing. B
.
Terrible. C
.
Fresh. D
.
Stable.
27
.
Which can best describe the impact of Marley’s efforts?
A
.
Short-lived.
A sandstone slab (
石板
) and other stone tools unearthed in Vietnam give insight into
how curry (
咖喱
) was made and reveal that curry was eaten in the region at least 2,000 years
ago.
The sandstone slab, buried 2 meters below the surface, was dug up in 2018 at Oc Eo in
southern Vietnam. The site was once an overseas trading center of an ancient Southeast Asian
kingdom known as Funan, according to a new study.
“Preparing curry involves not only a diverse range of seasoning but also the use of
grinding (
研磨
) tools, considerable time, and human effort,” said study author Dr. Hsiao chun
Hung. “Remarkably, even individuals residing outside of India nearly 2,000 years ago
expressed a strong desire to enjoy the flavors of curry, as evidenced by their careful
preparations.”
Hung and a team of researchers analyzed microscopic remains known as starch
grains—tiny structures found within plant cells that can be preserved over long periods—that
they found on the grinding tools.
“Nowadays, preparing curry in Vietnam has become much simpler for most families due
to the widespread availability of bagged curry in supermarkets. However, it is interesting to
note that the curry recipe used today has not varied significantly from the ancient times,” said
study co-author Dr. Khanh Trung Kien Nguyen. Nguyen added that the team planned to
recreate the 2,000-year-old curry based on the microscopic remains found at the site.
People were likely enjoying curry in India about 4,000 years ago. Some of the
components recovered at Oc Eo are similar to those found in Indian curries, while other
components are more distinctively Southeast Asian. The new study concluded that curry
recipes arrived in Southeast Asia with South Asian traders as contact between the regions
increased during the early centuries of the first millennium.
28
.
What is the sandstone slab used to do according to the text?
A
.
Store grains. B
.
Carve tools. C
.
Make curry. D
.
Keep time.
B
.
Negative. C
.
Far-reaching. D
.
Unidentifiable.
29
.
What did Dr. Hsiao-chun Hung think of preparing curry in the past?
试卷第5页,共12页
A
.
It was a complex process.
C
.
It demanded little effort.
B
.
It differed from one another.
D
.
It was environment-friendly.
30
.
What can we infer about the ancient curry recipes?
A
.
They restricted regional trade.
C
.
They linked various cultures.
Asians.
31
.
What is the text mainly about?
A
.
The unknown stories of a historical site. B
.
The findings of unearthed stone tools.
C
.
An introduction to a cooking course.
Ocean temperature extremes are now normal, a new study reports. It has analyzed ocean
surface temperatures for the past 150 years. It reveals that by 2019, 57 percent of the ocean’s
surface was warming to temperatures rarely seen 100 years ago.
Ecologists wanted to learn how often modern extreme heat events occur. They also
wanted to see how long they last. Kisei Tanaka was one of those ecologists. He now works
for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in Honolulu, Hawaii.
Tanaka teamed up with Kyle Van Houtan, who works at the Loggerhead Marinelife Center.
The two analyzed monthly sea surface temperatures collected from 1870 through 2019. Then
they mapped where and when extreme heat events had shown up, decade by decade.
By looking at monthly extremes instead of annual averages, the two found that over time,
more and more patches (
区域
) of water were reaching extreme temperatures. Then, in 2014,
the entire ocean hit a point of no return, Van Houtan says.
Heat waves harm ocean ecosystems. They can lead seabirds And
animals—from fish and whales to turtles—may have to swim long distances in search of
comfortable temperatures.
In May 2020, NOAA announced that it was updating what climates it now considered
“normal”. These values are what the agency uses to put daily weather events in a historical
context. The average values from 1991 to 2020 are now higher than those from 1981 to 2010,
NOAA found.
Van Houtan says his new study shows extreme ocean warming is now the norm. Much
discussion on climate change, he notes, has been about future events, and whether or not they
might happen. But what the emerging data make clear, he says, is that extreme heat became
试卷第6页,共12页
D
.
An unforgettable family experience.
B
.
They were mainly consumed in Vietnam.
D
.
They were first favored by Southeast