2020年高考名师押题猜想压轴卷 英语试题Word版含答案06.docx
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1、 2020 年高考名师押题猜想压轴卷 英英 语语 注意事项:注意事项: 1.答题前,考生务必将自己的姓名、准考证号填写在答题卡上。 2.考试结束后,请将本试题卷和答题卡一并上交。 第第卷卷 第一部分第一部分 听力听力 本次训练无听力 第二部分第二部分 阅读理解阅读理解( (共两节共两节,满分满分 40 分分) ) 第一节(共 15 小题;每小题 2 分,满分 30 分) 阅读下列短文,从每题所给的四个选项(A、B、C 和 D)中,选出最佳选项。 A LEG CRAMPS(痉挛)AT NIGHT? If muscle pain , cramping and stiffness(酸痛) in yo
2、ur legs ,back , feet or bottom are interrupting your sleep, you should know relief is available. Muscle Cramp Pain Reliever that contains eight active materials and has no known side effects can help prevent and relieve cramps and pains that are worse at night. It is sold at Aid, and CVS. Receive a
3、free bottle when you order three(Limit 3 per order). Satisfaction guaranteed. Order now at www. LegCrampsRelief. com. STRONG FOOT PAIN? Do you suffer from burning or sudden and strong pain in your feet? You should know help is available. Pain Relieving Foot Cream contains Eucalyptus Oil and Beeswax,
4、 known to relieve sharp, burning, and strong pain while also restoring skin that is severely dry, sensitive, or gets itchy(发痒的) or harmed. No known side effects. It is sold at Walgreens CVS, Rite Aid, Target and Walmart. Get a free jar when you order above two (Limit 3 per order). Get more details o
5、r order now at www.MDFootC BACK OR LEG PAIN? Are pains down the back of your legs, or pain in your bottom or lower back making it uncomfortable to sit, walk or sleep? Leg she looks tired.” Led by the younger lady, Miss Miller, through passage after passage, we came, at last, to a long, wide room fil
6、led with the hum of many voices. There were many tables, and seated all round on benches were a large number of girls aged from nine to twenty. Seen in the dim light of the candles, their number appeared above eighty. Each was dressed in a brown old-fashioned dress of cheap material. It was their ho
7、ur of study. Miss Miller signed to me to sit on a bench near the door, then walking up to the top of the long room she cried out “Monitors, collect the lesson-books and put them away!” Four tall girls arose and went round, gathered the books and removed them. Miss Miller again ordered, “Monitors, fe
8、tch the supper-trays!” The tall girls went out and returned presently, each bearing a tray. Some food and water was in the middle of each tray. The food was handed round and everyone drank from the same mug. When it came to my turn, I drank too, for I was thirsty, but I did not touch the food. From
9、there I was taken to my hard bed where I thankfully fell asleep immediately. 24. Where can you conclude the little girl Jane Eyre arrived at last? A. At a library. B. In a gymnasium. C. In a boarding school. D. In a royal theatre. 25. What transportation conveyed Jane Eyre to her destination in the
10、article? A. She went there on a bus. B. She got there by ship. C. She was transported there in a car. D. A coach carried her to the destination. 26. How did Jane Eyre feel when she was admitted by the servant at a door? A. She must be very excited about the unfamiliar place. B. She should be extreme
11、ly nervous. C. She should be worn out after the long journey. D. She could be suspected by others. 27. Jane Eyre _ . A. slept very long before she was led by the young lady, Miss Miller. B. had nothing for supper after she arrived that night. C. heard the hum of many voices instantly she arrived. D.
12、 was lifted out by a tall lady with dark hair and dark eyes. C If you go to any college in the United States, you will find most students carrying the same items: books, laptops, cell phones and their official school identification cards, or IDs. These small plastic cards do more than showing the na
13、mes and pictures of students. In recent years, IDs in some colleges can also buy things. The schools enter into agreements with banks so students can link their cards to private financial accounts. This way, students can use their cards to pay for things like food on campus and school supplies. In o
14、ther words, their IDs become debit cards(借记卡). However, new research suggests that the way these card programs operate can harm students. The U.S. Public Interest Research Group(U.S. PIRG) aims to use research to support and protect peoples financial interests. The organization has been looking into
15、 agreements between colleges and banks for several years.This April, Kaitlyn Vitez, higher education campaign director for U.S. PIRG, released their latest findings.”Students with campus debit cards paid over $ 24 million in fees during the last contract year. For example, students may be charged fe
16、es if they use another bank to withdraw money. Or, they may be charged fees if they spend more money than they have in their bank accounts, “she said. “Any large fee can create unexpected problems for students, however, banks do not make possible fees clear enough to students.” U.S.PIRG noted that s
17、ome banks pay colleges for permission to advertise their debit card programs on campus. The advertising can appear to be part of official school programmes and students may feel pushed towards opening accounts.U.S.PIRG also found a connection between colleges with paid agreements and student fees. S
18、tudents at colleges that received money from banks ended up paying up to 2.3 times more than students at colleges with unpaid agreements. U.S. PIRG contacted several of the colleges in their latest research, yet they seem not to give satisfying comments. 28. What is the second paragraph mainly about
19、? A. Potential harm of IDs. B. Additional use of IDs. C. Students consuming habits. D. Students financial condition. 29. What does the PIRG study find? A. All banks pay for their bank card ads on campus. B. Campus debit cards present high fees for students. C. Many students like to use debit cards a
20、t college. D. Colleges have signed illegal agreements with banks. 30. What do Kaitlyn Vitezs words imply? A. Colleges benefit a lot from working with banks. B. Most students fall into heavy debts at college. C. Banks give away students financial privacy somehow. D. Students lack enough information o
21、n their campus debit cards. 31. What will the author probably talk about in the following paragraph ? A. Solutions to the phenomenon. B. Future of school IDs. C. Details of debit card programs. D. Response of some schools. D Did you know that Albert Einstein could not speak until he was four years o
22、ld, and did not read until he was seven? His parents and teachers worried about his mental ability. Beethovens music teacher said about him, “As a composer(作曲家) he is hopeless.” What if this young boy believed it? When Thomas Edison was a young boy, his teachers said he was so stupid that he could n
23、ever learn anything. He once said, “I remember I used to never be able to get along at school. I was always at the foot of my class. My father thought I was stupid, and I almost decided that I was a stupid person.”What if young Thomas believed what may said about him? When the sculptor(雕刻家) Auguste
24、Rodin was young, he had difficulty learning to read and write. Today, we may say he had a learning disability. His father said of him, “I have an idiot(白痴) for a son.” His uncle agreed. “Hes uneducable,” he said. What if Rodin had doubted his ability? Walt Disney was once fired by a newspaper editor
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