北京市第二中学2025-2026学年高三上学期第一次月考英语试题(无答案)

资源下载
  1. 二一教育资源

北京市第二中学2025-2026学年高三上学期第一次月考英语试题(无答案)

资源简介

北京二中2025-2026学年第一学期第一次月考试题
高三英语
第一部分 听力 (共两节,满分30分)
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。
1. Where does the conversation take place
A. On a plane. B. In a store. C. At a restaurant.
2. What does the woman think of the scheduled fire drills
A. Unreasonable. B. Ineffective. C. Unnecessary.
3. What is the problem with the sample
A. The page numbers were wrong.
B. The releasing date got messed up.
C. Some content was printed incorrectly.
4. How much does the hotel normally charge now
A. 80. B. 90. C. 100.
5. Why did the man contact Professor Higgins
A. To design an invention.
B. To learn more about the invention.
C. To discuss departmental matters.
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。
听下面一段对话,回答第6、7题。
6. What does the woman do
A. A publisher. B. A director. C. A writer.
7. How does the woman feel about herself
A. Disappointed. B. Lucky. C. Proud.
听下面一段对话,回答第8至9题。
8. Why is the woman unable to board
A. She could not find a taxi.
B. She has forgotten her ticket.
C. She was stuck in a traffic jam.
9. What does the man offer to do
A. Provide a seat upgrade.
B. Direct the woman to a gate.
C. Book the woman on a later flight.
听下面一段对话,回答第10至12题。
10. Where does the man come from
A. India. B. Britain. C. Thailand.
11. How often does the man go swimming
A. Hardly. B. Occasionally. C. Frequently.
12. How does the man spend most of his holidays
A. By traveling around. B. By staying at home. C. By visiting relatives.
听下面一段对话,回答第13至16题。
13. What is the probable relationship between the speakers
A. Trainer and trainee. B. Interviewer and interviewee. C. Employer and employee.
14. What is the man most concerned about
A. Staff performance. B. Computer systems. C. Working hours.
15. What was Peter’s problem
A. His report was too short.
B. He did his report late.
C. He had no time for his report.
16. How does the woman suggest solving the problem
A. By training the staff.
B. By consulting an expert.
C. By giving timely warnings.
听下面一段独白,回答第17至20题。
17. What is the speaker doing
A. Reporting a sports event.
B. Giving awards to the winners.
C. Showing people around the sports field.
18. What role does Michael Thompson play in the 100-meter race
A. A new competitor. B. The title-holder. C. A sponsor.
19. What is expected from Emily Harris
A. Introduction of a new gymnastics’ routine.
B. A performance better than her last year’s.
C. Partnership with the Springfield University team.
20. What is the goal of the swimming team
A. To set a new record.
B. To defend their championship.
C. To encourage new team members.
第二部分 阅读理解 (共两节,满分50分)
第一节 (共15小题;每小题2.5分,满分37.5分)
阅读下列短文,从每题所给的A、B、C和D四个选项中,选出最佳答案。
A
In our library we encourage scholarly activities but prohibit behaviors that disturb others’ work in the library. Violations may lead to restricted access.
Cellphone Usage
Turn cell phones off or set to silent mode as you enter the library. Out of respect for others, if you must use a cell phone while in a library, move to one of the following general locations if your conversation will be more than a few seconds:
●Public space away from quiet study areas
●Study rooms
●Lobbies or entrances to libraries (that are not part of the main library)
Any person who does not follow this policy may be asked to leave the library.
Children in the Library
The resources of the libraries are primarily intended for use by Boston College students, staff and faculty. However, young children accompanied by an adult are welcome in the libraries.
Parents or adult guardians who bring young children to the library are responsible for their protection and safety and must never leave children unattended. Children cannot be monitored and supervised by the staff; therefore, the safety of unattended children cannot be guaranteed.
Food & Drink
Food is limited to small items which are generally consumed individually while seated at tables or study rooms. Drinks in covered containers and water bottles are allowed.
Not permitted:
●Meals or messy, strong-smelling foods (e.g. pizza, salads, sandwiches and soup)
●Group meals where food is shared by more than one person.
●Delivery of food to the library.
21. Where can a person take a call for a few minutes in the library
A. In a study room. B. At a quiet study desk.
C. In a lobby of the main library. D. Near the reading room.
22. Who should answer for the safety of young children in the library
A. Library staff members. B. The accompanying adult.
C. Campus security officers. D. The child’s school teacher.
23. Which of the following behaviors violates the library’s Food & Drink policy
A. Drinking from a covered coffee cup. B. Eating a chocolate bar at a study room.
C. Sharing a box of donuts with study partners. D. Keeping a sealed bottle of juice in the bag.
B
By fourth grade, I stood taller than my classmates—and even my teacher, Miss Liston. Unfortunately, my height far outpaced both my coordination(协调性) and academic skills. I became the class clown, struggling with math, spelling, and reading. The break time was worse: while peers raced through games and sports, I stumbled over my own feet—Clumsy was my middle name.
Each afternoon, Miss Liston concluded the day by reading to the class for fifteen minutes. I’d sigh with relief at the end of another embarrassing day, losing myself in her voice and the story, usually a chapter from a novel. If I could read with ease, I could find my way to happier places and times. Miss Liston apparently noticed my absorbed attention. I don’t remember how she took me under her wing but by the time I moved on to fifth grade I was reading at an eighth-grade level. My self-image, self-esteem, and life path were changed forever.
In my junior year of college, I dropped out. I took a job as a newspaper reporter, only to discover that while I had desire to be a journalist, I lacked both the education and talent to succeed. Five years of struggling to craft a single good sentence were enough—I quit writing. But I couldn’t survive on hunger or good looks, so I trained as a registered nurse.
One evening, an ambulance delivered an elderly woman who’d suffered a stroke. As I approached, the medical assistant reported: “Seventy-eight-year-old Agnes Liston, found at home by neighbors...” I recognized Miss Liston’s slackened face. I smiled softly, “Hello, Miss Liston. It’s Tommy Schwarz. Do you remember me ” She stared, her facial muscles twitching faintly.
I learned that, having outlived all her family and friends, she didn’t have a single visitor during her hospitalization. For three days, I sat by her bedside, reading aloud. She couldn’t communicate, but her calm behavior suggested comfort. I felt privileged to give back in a direct and personal way to someone who had loved and helped me so much.
24. What can be inferred about the author in fourth grade
A. He had a sense of being out of place. B. He didn’t get along well with others.
C. He preferred to act as a funny clown. D. He was proud of his physical advantage.
25. How did Miss Liston influence the author’s life
A. She inspired his career in nursing. B. She taught him to embrace his uniqueness.
C. She unlocked his potential for reading. D. She helped him resolve family conflicts.
26. Why did the author abandon his career as a journalist
A. He lost interest in current events. B. He was offered a better-paying job.
C. He couldn’t handle the work pressure. D. He failed to develop essential writing skills.
27. What made reading to Miss Liston a meaningful experience for the author
A. It reminded him of the joy of reading. B. It gave him a chance to repay the kindness.
C. It allowed him to showcase his nursing skills. D. It helped him reconnect with his childhood.
C
What’s your best friend’s phone number Don’t feel bad if you couldn’t answer off the top of your head. You have no reason to commit phone numbers to memory: it’s just there in your phone. Or perhaps you once had a phone book to store them. In either case, an object does the remembering for you.
Prosthetic memory (人工记忆) is nothing new. Writing itself has been a means of storing information. Yet the information revolution has generated more data than ever before. We’re flooded with information. We’re creating more of it, and keeping more of it. The storage capacity of the human brain has since been eclipsed. No wonder, then, that we are increasingly dependent on external prostheses (外部辅助设备), from libraries to smartphones.
Not everyone thinks this trend in external memory is good. Historically, memory prostheses were expensive. As technologies such as printing and photography become more affordable, sharing experiences with others is easier than ever. So, every breakfast, every sunset, every encounter with a cat finds its way on to social media. And here comes the worry. When we devote ourselves to capturing and sharing the world in this way, something immensely valuable is lost; when recording so much of our lives, we’re forgetting to actually live them. We put something between ourselves and the world—a camera—instead of just being in the moment, and so disconnect ourselves from experience.
But is our social media-driven transformation wholly bad If we’re still creating and sharing memories like this, perhaps this is because we’ve not had sufficient time to learn how to do these things without thinking about what we’re doing. It is easy to ignore that the mass social media era is less than a decade old. That’s just a short moment in human history, yet it has totally changed how we live. I suspect we’re not far off from being directly faced with experience yet with the ability to share experience in ways less limited by geography and time. After all, technology can do what our fragile body can’t: protect all the moments of a life that would otherwise be lost.
28.What can be inferred from paragraph 1
A. Technology weakens our brains. B. We are burdened with phone numbers.
C. We rely more on tools to memorize. D. Technology distances us from our friends.
29.What does the underlined word “eclipsed” in paragraph 2 mean
A. Improved. B. Restricted. C. Undervalued. D. Outperformed.
30.What negative effect does online sharing bring about
A. An overflow of posts. B. High cost of digital devices.
C. Addiction to the virtual world. D. Neglect for authentic experience.
31.What does the author advise us to do in the last paragraph
A. Have faith in human brains. B. Quicken the pace of development.
C. Take time to adapt to digital age. D. Make efforts to enhance memory.
D
Microplastics have been detected in human brains at far higher concentrations than in other bodily organs—and levels are increasing, having risen 50 percent in eight years.
This is the conclusion of a team of researchers from the University of New Mexico (UNM), who said the findings should raise alarm. “This really changes the landscape. It makes it so much more personal,” UNM professor Matthew Campen said in a statement. “I have not encountered a single human being who says, ‘There’s a bunch of plastic in my brain and I’m totally cool with that’.”
Microplastic (smaller than 5 millimeters in size) and nanoplastic (under 0.001 millimeters) pollution have become common in the environment and can get into the food we eat. These plastic bits have been found in various bodily organs—including the kidney, liver—although not at such concentrations as now seen in the brain, the team said.
The researchers identified 12 different types of plastic within samples collected from the so-called frontal cortex (前额叶)—the brain region found above and behind the eyes that had been linked to various capabilities from abstract thinking through to motor function. “We start thinking that maybe these plastics block blood flow in small blood tube,” Campen said. “There’s the potential that these nanomaterials interfere with the connections between axons (轴突) in the brain. They could also be a seed for grouping of proteins involved in dementia (痴呆). We just don’t know.”
Campen said most of the microplastics that end up in our bodies arrive there via food—meat in particular, as commercial meat production concentrates plastics across the food chain. “The way we irrigate fields with water containing plastic, we assume that the plastic builds up there,” he said. “We feed those crops to our farm animals. We take the animal waste and put it back on the field.”
Microplastic and nanoplastic pollution in the environment is certain to grow, the researchers warn—for even if we were to stop plastic production tomorrow, existing plastic would still be around to break down into tiny and then super tiny pieces.
32. Why does the author cite Professor Matthew Campen’s words in paragraph 2
A. To emphasize the plastics impacts on individuals.
B. To explain the source of plastics in human organs.
C. To cause a quick response from different researchers.
D. To advocate for reduction measures in plastic production.
33. What might nanoplastics in the brain lead to
A. Continuous brain aging. B. Disturbed neural bonds.
C. Immediate memory loss. D. Complete blood tube blockage.
34. What can be inferred about commercial meat production
A. It relies on polluted irrigation. B. It removes plastics completely.
C. It reduces the waste of crops. D. It accumulates plastics in food chain.
35. What does the last paragraph’s warning imply
A. Nanoplastics is less harmful. B. Anti-pollution efforts are effective.
C. Existing plastics still pose a threat. D. Stopping production solves pollution.
第二节(共5小题;每小题2.5分,满分12.5分)
阅读下面短文,从短文后的选项中选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为多余选项。
If you don’t know what emotional decluttering (清理) is, fasten your seat belts and join us for a way to let go of it all finally. 36 Instead, emotional decluttering is about parting with things we don’t “need” anymore.
37 Well, it’s not as simple as you might think. There’s so much more to it than simply emptying drawers and choosing a few things to throw away. In this article, we will focus on several things that might be difficult to part with and how you can finally let go of them.
Old schoolwork, notebooks, and random paper items
I used to save all my old schoolwork and notes until a basement flood washed them away. At first, shock kicked in, then sadness. 38 I never opened them after graduation. Lesson learned. I didn’t need them but was attached to them instead. This was a great lesson in emotional decluttering. 39 It’s best to store them on your phone or computer to free yourself of the clutter.
Your book collection
Nowadays, we all tend to purchase digital books that are far easier to store. But if you were like me and had several bookshelves filled with books, you can declutter them. Sort them into two piles, keep and donate. Of course, keep anything that has meaning to you and donate your books to your neighborhood HOA or local library. 40
Plus, creating your new digital library is fun and exciting. It will also allow you to choose from some audiobooks if you never tried them.
A. But that flood did me a favor.
B. That flood caused great damage to the community.
C. Unfortunately, most people think decluttering is easy.
D. At the same time, remember to buy only classic books.
E. So, if you have such things, you can scan or take pictures of them.
F. Of course, that doesn’t mean getting rid of everything in your home.
G. Either way, you can develop a sense of freedom by unloading your book collection.
第三部分 语言知识运用 (共两节,满分30分)
第一节 (共15小题;每小题1分,满分15分)
阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的A、B、C和D四个选项中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。
“He’s on his way by ambulance to Ascension St. Thomas,” trembled the 41 of a gym employee.
I was in the kitchen trussing (捆) a chicken when getting the 42 . Paul, my husband, had a heart attack at the gym. It was three 43 after we moved here from New Jersey.
I thanked her, hung up and stood 44 with the raw chicken still in hand. All felt like a 45 . I knocked at my new neighbor’s door, handed her the chicken, told her my husband was probably 46 , and ran off to call a taxi.
I sat in the back of my 47 ride, speed-dialing favorites on my phone, telling what had happened to the first human who 48 . I arrived at the emergency room to find Paul 49 drugged (麻醉中), but alive. He was ready for the operation.
Forty-eight hours later, he emerged from 50 — and I emerged into a tornado of Jersey 51 . Someone, somehow, had filled our fridge. Some food 52 it to me in the ICU. Day after day, calls and texts 53 . Night after night, hot meals appeared at home and at the hospital, ordered by our Jersey friends or new neighbors.
Once Paul was 54 , the neighbors who we met only 72 hours ago came to our home to help us every day. Without them, I couldn’t imagine how we would 55 those days.
41. A. hands B. lips C. voice D. body
42. A. warning B. call C. bill D. letter
43. A. days B. weeks C. months D. years
44. A. frozen B. confused C. close D. ready
45. A. danger B. child C. failure D. joke
46. A. injured B. available C. dead D. missing
47. A. last B. formal C. legal D. paid
48. A. came in B. picked up C. signed up D. moved on
49. A. eventually B. fortunately C. frequently D. heavily
50. A. attack B. regret C. surgery D. excitement
51. A. complaint B. attention C. support D. invitation
52. A. made B. left C. displayed D. relayed
53. A. added up B. caught on C. went on D. checked in
54. A. discharged B. accepted C. employed D. examined
55. A. record B. spend C. forget D. share
第二节 (共10小题;每小题1.5分,满分15分)
阅读下面短文,在空白处填入1个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。
The Dafo Temple is well-known for housing Asia’s largest reclining (侧卧) Buddha statue. 56 (measure) some 35 meters long, the statue is made 57 clay on a wooden frame. Also on show in the hall displaying the statue are murals dating from the Qing Dynasty which tell 58 (story) of the Silk Road.
Recognized as one of the 59 (exist) largest and best-preserved Buddhist sites in history, Dafo Temple, 60 buildings, sculptures and murals, due to 61 (they) advanced age, have suffered varying degrees of damage, is also home to over 10,000 valuable cultural relics. At present, a project involving digitizing (数字化) the temple’s immovable cultural relics 62 (plan). Actually, it’s mainly about 63 (precise) scanning and recording the details of the temple and then the details 64 (record) about the temple’s architecture can be used to build a 65 (digit) exhibition space, which will be open to the public next October at the latest.
第四部分 写作 (共两节,满分40分)
第一节 (满分15分)
假定你是李华,目前正在英国学习。你从网站上了解到某在线教育机构拟招聘一名中文老师,其职责是向英国学生讲授中国传统文化。你想应聘这个职位。请你用英语写一封申请信,内容包括:
1.介绍个人情况:
2.表达期望。
注意:1.写作词数应为80左右;2.可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯。
Dear Sir,
Yours,
Li Hua
第二节 (满分25分)
阅读下面材料,根据其内容和所给段落开头语续写两段,使之构成一篇完整的短文。
This past summer, my mom came home with an armful of books and a very serious look on her face. She said it was time I started reading “real books”, and I immediately complained. I'd been through this talk before: the one where she told me that I’d “thank her later” for making me a reader, and that books would make me “smarter” and give me “imagination”. I already had my phone, and group chats with friends. What did I need books for
Still, when I saw the titles, I paused. These weren't the classics she normally tried to push on me. These were books with bright covers, funny titles, and characters who looked like they could be real people. “Just give it a try,” Mom said, “You might even like them.”
Hesitantly, I picked up Out of My Mind by Sharon Draper. But reading seemed like such a boring task compared to the instant entertainment on my phone. I thought about my friends chatting in our group and the endless videos within easy reach. Books felt old- fashioned and slow, and demanded too much focus. Besides, what was the point of reading about made-up people when I had real friends and real stories all around me With a sigh, I threw the book onto my desk, half- expecting it to sit there, untouched, all summer.
Then, one night, there was a power failure. Unfortunately, my phone was dead, my laptop wasn't charged, and there was nothing to do but lie there in bed, waiting for the power to come back on. When I looked around, I noticed the book Out of My Mind, sitting there in the dark. With nothing better to do, I grabbed it, and opened the first page with a flashlight. I wasn't expecting to read more than one paragraph. But after a few pages, I was actually curious.
注意:1.续写词数应为150个左右;
2.请按如下格式在答题卷的相应位置作答。
By the time I finished the first chapter, the power was back on.
The next day, I shared the book with my friends excitedly.

展开更多......

收起↑

资源预览