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浙江省温州市六校2019届九年级英语3月联合模拟试题

作者UID:7189882
日期: 2024-11-26
中考模拟
单项选择(本题有10小题,每小题1分,共10分)
完形填空(本题有15小题,每小题1分,共15分)
阅读下面短文,掌握大意,然后从每题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中选出最佳选项。

In our family, we have a special way of telling our sons about Santa without lies. It involves both good acts and Christmas spirit.

When they are 6 or 7, I take 1"for milkshakes" at the local2. We get a table, order our drinks, and the following speech is made:

    "You sure have3a lot this year. Not only are you taller, but I can see that your4 has been stronger as well. In fact, I think you are ready to 5 a Santa Claus yourself."

    "You have probably found that most of the Santas that you see are people 6 like him. Well, now you are ready to do your first job7 a Santa."

    The children usually pick someone they know. They choose to find something that the person really needs, and 8 let them know where it comes from.

    My oldest son chose the old lady next door. He9that she came out every morning to get her paper in bare feet, 10 he realized she needed slippers. We went to the supermarket and a warm pair of slippers for her. He wrote on a card, "Merry Christmas from Santa", then put the 11 under her gate. The next morning, she was out getting her paper, wearing the slippers. You can imagine how 12he was at that moment.

Over the years, he chose a good number of neighbors and friends, always coming up with special presents just for them. One year, he polished up his bike and gave it to one of our friend's daughters. This family is too 13to get a new one for the girl. When she saw the bike in the yard with a big bow on it, the look on her face was almost as 14 as the one on my son's.

When the time came for my next son to join the "Santa club", my oldest came along to help with the speech. 15 of the club's members have ever felt that they had been lied to — because they were let in on the Secret of Being a Santa.

阅读理解(本题有15小题,共30分)
阅读理解

Smartphone ban

According to a survey made last year, 68.1 percent of Chinese primary and junior high school students have their own smartphones. Lei Yanqin, a deputy, suggested that smartphones should be banned at schools nationwide. She said that listening to music and playing games in class not only influence teachers, but also make it difficult for students to pay more attention to lessons. She added that students also like to show off their phones too much.

New uniform designs

Most junior high schools in China require students to wear a uniform. However, only three in ten students are satisfied with their uniforms. Some deputies suggested that the uniforms in schools could be redesigned. They said the new design could add more features of traditional Chinese culture. They required that better quality cloth should be used to make the uniforms so that they will be more comfortable to wear.

Video game rating system

Over 200 million teenagers across China play online games like King of Glory. With the computers, teenagers are able to play most online games produced in China and abroad. However, some games might not be suitable for young people. Many deputies suggested that all games would be divided into age groups according to their content. Players would have to provide their ID numbers before playing certain games.

    Beijing's two sessions are being widely discussed across China. During the sessions, many proposals and suggestions were put forward. Here are three proposals that were discussed during the sessions that might interest you.

阅读理解

You're chatting with friends on the phone, but you can't help looking through shopping websites in the meantime. You're having lunch alone in the dining hall, but it only feels right when you start playing a show on your phone —as if it's a necessary "side dish". 

    We're now living in a world that is filled with information. It seems unnatural to do only one thing at a time. It's as if we're all suffering from a recent article called "multitasking OCD".

    "With news reduced to 140 characters and communication increasingly by emojis, we have developed the ability to focus our attention on several activities and devices at once," Sabry Otmani, founder of Pulpix website, once wrote. "We need something exciting to keep us interested and to fight off boredom."

    But perhaps "fighting off boredom" is not the only reason.

My ownobsessionwith multitasking mainly comes from the fact that everyone around me seems to study all the time. Each minute I'm not taking in something new feels like a waste of time. So I always have my headphones on, whether I'm commuting, exercising or walking in the park. I'm forever listening to something—a course on classical music, or on new media management, and heaven knows what else—just so I can keep up with the world.

    People who can't stay away from social media are known by "FOMO" (fear of missing out): They have to be updated about what their friends are doing and saying. But I'd guess that "FOFO" better describes me – "fear of falling out".

    No matter what reason you're doing it for, "multitasking" is already a part of the modern lifestyle. Just make sure you make the most out of it.

阅读理解

    They say music is universal, and it seems to be true since wherever we go, we see people listening, playing or dancing to it. We tend to think that music is larger than our cultural differences and shows the deeper connections between us.

    But according to a recent study published in the Current Biology, music doesn't speak to everyone. There is a condition, the researchers argue, called "musical anhedonia". They say that those who have this condition may have few abilities to experience pleasure from music.

    For the study, 30 people listened to the same, mostly classical music pieces. They were then asked to complete a questionnaire on how they felt about the music. At the same time, the researchers measured their heart rate and skin reaction, which are considered physiological measures of feelings.

    According to the researchers, most of the people in the study got pleasure from the music. They had a quicker heartbeat and sweatedmore. However, a small number of them had very little and even no pleasant feeling while they were listening to the music. These people had none or very few of the physical signs which the others in the study experienced.

    The researchers say that this means people have different abilities to enjoy music and that "there are people who specifically can't enjoy music at all"

    To study the condition more deeply, another group of scientists, at Columbia University, US, researched brain activities. They found that the key is the blood flow to the reward system in the brain. People who got less pleasure from music had comparatively lower blood flow to areas involved in the reward system of the brain when they were listening to music.

    The lower blood flow makes it more likely that the brain's "reward system" will be inactive. And it will produce less of the "pleasure chemical" dopamine. As a result, people get less pleasure from music.

    If the research is correct, according to National Public Radio, there are simply people who just don't get music. They may get pleasure from many things, but a good tune isn't one of them.

阅读理解

    What are the kindest things that have ever been done for you? Once, years ago, I made a list, on a late night flight to my hometown.

    My sister had called to tell me that our mother was dying and that if I wanted to say goodbye, I needed to get there fast. So I made calls to cancel work and hurried to catch the last flight out.

    After takeoff, the lights went down and I felt empty and alone.

    What do you do when you get lonely and there's no one to hold you? How do you fill a hungry heart?

    I took out a notebook and listed all the kindnesses that I'd ever been given.

    Five hours later, when we landed, I closed the notebook and rushed to the hospital to say goodbye to my mother.

    Making that list of kindnesses that night helped me in the days ahead to do the things I needed to do and be the daughter I wanted to be.

    Kindness heals and fills an empty heart. It's a gift, once and for always.

    Last night it was cold and rainy, so I wrapped myself up in a blanket. Warm then, I recalled being 7 years old in Mrs Harrison's second grade class.

That morning, I'd worn my new shoes to school. I loved the shoes and all the way to school on the bus couldn't stop looking at them. But when I stepped off the bus, my right foot— and my new right shoe – went deep into a puddle of water.

    Mrs Harrison saw the water I was dripping into class. She said, "Give me those shoes and warm your feet by the fire."

    "Thank you, ma'am," I said.

    "No trouble! We all hit a puddle now and then!"

    I don't know if she remembered it. But I do. It warmed my feet for a few hours. But it has warmed my heart for a lifetime.

    Often, acts of kindness seem to be the simplest. But they become beautiful beyond all singing of it if they are remembered with thankfulness and passed on from one needy soul to another.

词汇运用(本题有15小题,每小题1分,共15分)
书面表达 (本题有1小题,共20分)
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