2017年大學聯考模擬練習試題

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大學聯考之前大家都要做幾套試題來鍛鍊自己。為了幫助大家,小編分享了一些大學聯考練習試題,希望能對大家有所幫助!

2017年大學聯考模擬練習試題

第一部分 聽力

第一節聽下面5段對話。每段對話後有一個小題,從題中所給的A、B、C三個選項中選出最佳選項,並標在試卷的相應位置。聽完每段對話後,你都有10秒鐘的時間來回答有關小題和閱讀下一小題。每段對話僅讀一遍。

1. What will the girl use the computer to do?

A. Send an e-mail.B. Watch a movie. C. Check information.

2. What is the man doing now?

A. Preparing to pay the bill. B. Waiting for the dinner.

C. Ordering some food.

3. What does the boy think of Mr. Brooklyn’s speech?

A. Easy. B. Confusing. C. Great.

4. How did the woman get to the airport?

A. By car. B. By taxi. C. By bus.

5. What was the woman?

A. A cook. B. A waitress. C. A programmer.

第二節聽下面5段對話或獨白。每段對話或獨白後有幾個小題,從題中所給的A、B、C三個選項中選出最佳選項,並標在試卷的相應位置。聽每段對話或獨白前,你將有時間閱讀各個小題,每小題5秒鐘;聽完後,各小題將給出5秒鐘的作答時間。每段對話或獨白讀兩遍。

聽下面一段對話,回答第6和第7兩個小題。

6. What does Susan say about her job?

A. It is rather boring.B. It broadens her horizons. C. It needs rich experience.

7. What does Susan care most?

A. The income. B. The holiday. C. The colleagues.

聽下面一段對話,回答第8和第9兩個小題。

8. What will the man do?

A. Play in the snow.B. Go skiing outside. C. Clear the snow.

9. What month is it now?

A. December. B. January. C. February.

聽下面一段對話,回答第10至第12三個小題。

10. What do we know about Simon?

A. He is not used to living in Los Angeles.B. He doesn’t have any friends.

C. He likes his courses.

e is Zoe from?

A. The US. B. Canada. C. Australia.

does Lucy major in?

A. Law. B. Business. C. Hotel management.

聽下面一段對話,回答第13至第16四個小題。

13. Why are the speakers excited in the beginning?

A. They park near the shopping mall.

B. They are lucky to take the umbrella.

C. They find the shopping mall at last.

14. What would the girl like to have for lunch?

A. Burger and fries. B. Fries and sandwiches. C. Burger and sandwiches.

15. What will the speakers do right after lunch?

A. Buy a newspaper. B. Do some shopping. C. Go to the museum directly.

16. How will the speakers go to the museum probably?

A. By car. B. By bike. C. On foot.

聽下面一段獨白,回答第17至第20四個小題。

17. How many reasons are mentioned about shopping online?

A. One.B. Two. C. Three.

18. What is showrooming?

A. A new shopping mall. B. A new website for shopping. C. A new kind of shopping habit.

19. What can we learn about showrooming?

A. It’s chosen by 42% of people. B. People buy things at a lower price.

C. People choose it to follow the trend.

20. Why do people choose showrooming?

A. To have more choices. B. To satisfy their curiosity. C. To ensure the quality of goods.

第二部分 閱讀理解(共兩節,滿分40分)

第一節(共15小題:每小題2分,滿分30分)閱讀下列短文,從每題所給的四個選項(A、B、C和D)中,選出最佳選項,並在答題卡上將該項塗黑。

 Each year on February 2nd, there is a special festival called Groundhog Day (土撥鼠日 )' forecasting event in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania. When it comes, people from around the world, including 5,000 in the small town today, watch this tongue-twisting(發音饒舌的) small town for a sign from one groundhog that supposedly predicts when that years' spring will arrive.

If it's a cloudy day outside when the groundhog pops from its cave, then spring will arrive early that year. However, if it is sunny outside, the groundhog will supposedly be scared by its own shadow, hiding underground for six more weeks of cold weather.

Of course, Punxsutawney Phil's prediction is no more able to guarantee the extended forecast than your local weatherman. ABC News reports that an analysis by the National Climate Data Center found that Phil's predictions are more often wrong than right.

Philis is also found to have made some unpleasant predictions. Ever since 1887, he has predicted 99 extended winters and just 16 early springs of the years' predictions were unavailable, according to ABC.

The holiday began as a German tradition in 18th century and became even more of a cultural phenomenon after the 1993 film Groundhog Day starring Bill sutawney Phil has become a celebrity in his own right. Each year, the fatter animal with long teeth is watched by millions as he emerges from a cave in the town he is named after. Phil has become so beloved by the town that he actually lives in the local library with his “wife" Phyllis.

Taking inspiration from the hard state of Bill Murray’s character in the classic film, Yahoo contributor Owen Rust says Groundhog Day is a good time to reflect on one’s routines.

21. The underlined word “pops” means “ ________ ”.

A. escapes B. appears C. increases D. hides

22. The reason why Phil's predictions aren't pleasing is that_____________.

A. some of the predictions were unavailable B . Phil wants to do that for fun

C. Phil likes to make unpleasant predictions D. he has predicted more late springs

23. How does Punxsutawney Phil become a celebration?

A. By an accident. B. From people's life improving.

C. By his own attractive force D. From much money raised by the town.

24. Which does this passage mainly talk about?

A. The National Climate Data Center B. A German tradition

C. A tongue-twisting small town D. Groundhog Day weather forecasting

B

Mosquitoes have an extraordinary ability to target humans far away and fly straight to their unprotected skin. Regrettably,mosquitoes can do more than cause an itchy(發癢的)wound. Some mosquitoes spread several serious diseases,including Dengue,yellow fever and malaria.

Over one million people worldwide die from these diseases each year. New research now shows how mosquitoes choose who to bite.

Mosquitoes need blood to survive. They are attracted to human skin and breath. They smell the carbon dioxide gas,which all mammals breathe out. This gas is the main way for mosquitoes to know that a warm-blooded creature is nearby.

But mosquitoes also use their eyes and sense of touch. Michael Dickinson is a professor at the California Institute of Technology. His research shows how these small insects,with even smaller brains,use three senses to find a blood meal.

Michael Dickinson’s team used plumes—a material that rises into the air of carbon dioxide gas into a wind tunnel. They then used cameras to record the mosquitoes. The insects followed the plume.

Then,the scientists placed dark objects on the lighter colored floor and walls of the tunnel. Mr. Dickinson said,at first,the mosquitoes showed no interest in the objects at all. “What was quite striking and quite surprising is that the mosquitoes fly back and forth for hours. These are hungry females and they completely ignore the objects on the floor and wall of the tunnel. But the moment they get a hit of CO2,they change their behavior quite obviously and now would become attracted to these little visual blobs (斑點).”

This suggested to the researchers that a mosquito’s sense of smell is more important in the search for food. Once mosquitoes catch a smell of a human or animal,they also follow visual signals.

do mosquitoes mainly use to find their targets?

e of smell. e of touch. e of sight. t brains.

first response of the mosquitoes to the objects in the experiment is .

fly to the dark catch and stick to them

take no notice of attach themselves to them

can we avoid being attacked by mosquitoes according to the text ?

’t let them see us. dark objects to stop them.

them fly back and forth for act them to objects full of carbon dioxide gas.

can be the best title for the text?

Do Mosquitoes Survive? Do Mosquitoes Need Blood?

Do Mosquitoes Choose to Bite You? Do Mosquitoes Attack the Human Being?

It may not be as easy as you think to build a foundation for your child of family values. Often we believe that our child will pick up on our values if they live in the same home. While they may pick up many of our values, parents need to remember they are not the only influence in their child’s life. These outside values often compete with family values for your child’s attention. If we do not make a conscious effort to instill our values into our children, they may not get instilled at all.

I wish I had learned that lesson a little earlier. I thought if I lived my values for my children they would pick them up and make their own. Sometimes this happened and sometimes it didn’t. I often see twenty-something “kids” who have no faith in many of the values of their family in favor of the values of their friends. Children will often pick up the negative you show quicker than the positive, so the positive things need extra focus to set them.

Some of the influences your children face every day include their church, their school, their friends, any clubs or sporting groups they are part of and more. Kids spend many hours a day at school and with their friends. Sometimes in the business of life, we suppose our children will obtain that foundation we want for them.

Instilling a foundation of family values to sustain(維持) your child requires more than living it in front of them. That is important, but building up your child with this important foundation must become intentional.

That means we plan times to gather as a family. We plan activities together that show the values we want to pass on. We talk about our values; we live our values; we discuss the values of others and how they differ from ours; we constantly look for opportunities and make our own opportunities to share these values in word or deed with our children.

Family values give our children a foundation to build upon. It helps them know they are loved and gives them a sense of belongings. Upon this sure foundation, they can spread their wings and grow to become parents who share these same values with their own children.

29. The underlined word “instill our values into” in the 1st paragraph probably means “______”.

A. get our ideas out of B. impress our ideas on

C. collect our ideas for D. force our ideas upon

30. We can learn from the passage that children ______.

A. sustain their family values easily B. will hold their family values with age

C. often discuss family values of others D. accept negative values more quickly

31. Family values can be passed on if ______.

A. we live with our children B. parents show positive things

C. parents foster them intentionally D. we plan times to gather with other families

32. The passage mainly tells us about ______.

A. the importance and the way to pick up family values

B. a lesson the writer learned in educating his(her) kids

C. the influences the children face while growing up

D. some negative and positive family values

D

There’s a “culture of walking and texting” on the Utah Valley University campus, according to conversations with students, but that’s not the main reason Matt Bambrough, the creative director at UVU, came up with an idea to paint a “texting lane” on a staircase leading up to the Wellness Center.

According to Bambrough, it’s first and foremost a design project—the texting lane was a tongue-in-cheek(戲謔)reference to the college-wide epidemic(流行)of kids walking around with their faces buried in their iPhones.

“You have 18–24-year-olds walking down the hall with smart phones. You’re almost bound to run into someone somewhere; it’s something we’re dealing with in this day and age,” Bambrough said. “But preventing collisions isn’t the reason we did it—we did it to arouse the students’ attention. It’s meant to be there for people to look at and enjoy.”

Still, when talking to Utah Valley students, it sounds like texting and walking can be quite the annoyance.

Robbie Poffenberger, an assistant news editor at the UVU Review, said that most collisions he witnesses aren’t human-on-human; rather, it’s generally human-on-inanimate-object. “They walk into barriers—chairs on the side of the hallway, or railings,” Poffenberger said, “I’m sure they’re fairly embarrassed.”

33. What do we learn about the “texting lane” from the text?

A. It is a special campus culture in Utah Valley University.

B. It is used to encourage the campus culture.

C. It is painted on a staircase leading to everywhere.

D. It is popular with students in universities.