當前位置

首頁 > 英語學習 > 高考英語 > 北京英語高考真題2017

北京英語高考真題2017

推薦人: 來源: 閱讀: 1.91W 次

理科生要重文,文科生要重理。文要天天看,理要天天練。祝高考成功!下面是本站小編爲大家推薦的北京英語高考真題2017,僅供大家參考!

北京英語高考真題2017
  北京英語高考真題2017

I. Listening Comprehension

Section A

Directions: In Section A, you will hear ten short conversations between two speakers. At the end of each conversation, a question will be asked about what was said. The conversations and the questions will be spoken only once. After you hear a conversation and the question about it, read the four possible answers on your paper, and decide which one is the best answer to the question you have heard.

1. A. A postwoman. B. A teacher. C. A journalist. D. A librarian.

2. A. On a plane. B. On a train. C. At a restaurant. D. At a travel agency.

3. A. 5 minutes. B. 10 minutes. C. 15 minutes. D. 20 minutes.

4. A. He spends too much money. B. He should watch more TV.

C. He actually likes watching TV. D. He bought an expensive watch.

5. A. The woman should get a new watch. B. The woman needs to buy another battery.

C. He knows what is wrong with the watch. D. The store can probably fix the woman’s watch.

6. A. He should work in the summer school. B. He shouldn't go to New York in the summer.

may not want to do so. D. He may have difficulty in doing so.

7. A. Spend more time on the course. B. Turn to the graduate assistant for help.

C. Drop the course as soon as possible. D. Help the graduate assistant with the course.

8. A. They should buy a lot of coffee. B . The supermarket isn’t going to be closed.

C. Coffee is out of stock in the supermarket. D. They should wait for a better deal on coffee.

9. A. The final exam. B. A law school. C. A reference letter. D. The department policy.

10. A. He wasn't able to find a seat there. B. He had to wait a long time for a seat there.

C. The seats there are uncomfortable. D. It provides reading materials for customers.

Section B

Directions: In Section B, you will hear several longer conversation(s) and short passage(s), and you will be asked several questions on each of the conversation(s) and the passage(s). The conversation(s) and the passage(s) will be read twice, but the questions will be spoken only once. When you hear a question, read the four possible answers on your paper and decide which one is the best answer to the question you have heard.

Questions 11 through 13 are based on the following news.

11. A. 2. B. 18. C. About 125. D. Over 1,300.

12. A. Helping good universities to enroll more students.

B. Getting more financial support from foreign students.

C. Encouraging more foreign students to travel around the UK.

D. Attracting more excellent foreign students to work in Britain.

13. A. He voted for Donald Trump. B. He did not vote in the presidential election.

C. He made a political speech in the concert. D. He sang for only 40 minutes in the concert.

Questions 14 through 16 are based on the following passage.

14. A. They can play many kinds of games with snow.

B. They can see the beautiful scenery of falling snow.

C. They can have several days off from school if it snows.

D. They can enjoy steaming hot chocolate on a snowy day.

15. The building of snowmen for children. B. The removal of snow off their driveway.

C. The spread of salt mixed with sand. D. The low temperature that snow brings.

16. A. Rare and exciting. B. Dangerous and challenging.

C. Unusual but disappointing. D. Troublesome but interesting.

Questions 17 through 20 are based on the following conversation.

17. A. It encourages wise consumption. B. It is impossible to be stolen.

C. It makes it easier to pay off debt. D. It can be used in an emergency.

18. A. It makes people feel safer. B. It prevents people from overspending.

C. It enables people to get things cheaper. D. It helps people know more about money.

19. A. Doing some shopping. B. Doing some reading.

C. Opening an account. D. Taking a lesson.

20. A. Shop owners prefer cash to credit cards.

B. The woman pays part of his bill each month.

C. Most people don’t choose to use credit cards.

D. The man wasn’t persuaded by the woman at last.

II. Grammar and Vocabulary

Section A

Directions: After reading the passage below, fill in the blanks to make the passage coherent and grammatically correct. For the blanks with a given word, fill in each blank with the proper form of the given word; for the other blanks, use one word that best fits each blank.

Suspended Coffee

How about buying a cup of coffee for someone you’ll never meet?

The idea, begun in Naples, Italy, and called “Suspended Coffee”一 i.e., a customer pays for a coffee and “banks”it for someone (21) (fortunate) —has become an international internet sensation(轟動) with coffee shops in Europe and North America (22) (participate) in the movement. The Facebook page alone has more than 28,000 “likes”.

The tradition of “suspended coffee” is a long-standing tradition in Italy (23) increased in popularity after the Second World War. Recently the practice was starting to take hold in other European countries (24) (hit) hard economically.

Homegrown Hamilton, a coffee chain of Canada, has decided to join the effort. “It’s a fantastic initiative (25) we decided to help out. We had been doing it pretty much anyway, just not under a banner. During the winter, we were giving away coffee or soup to the homeless,” said manager Mike Pattison, “Staff members are always close to the coffeehouse’ front door, and (26) they see someone walking by who looks like they want, a coffee but can’t afford it, they approach that person. If the offer (27) (accept), they provide the coffee.”

However, not everyone supports the idea.

In a posting on the website, Consumerist, columnist Laura Northrup raises (28) number of objections, including that coffee isn’t nutritious food for people who are hungry and (29) the action could result in “greedy people” aking advantage of others’ kindness. He says people (30) consider other ways to help.

Section B

Directions: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can only be used once. Note that there is one word more than you need.

A. available B. psychological C. timely D. estimates E. distract

F. express G. inaccurate H. trend I. therapist J. address K. recall

Smart Phone Application Tracks Mental Health

Military service is obviously rough on a service member’s mental health. According to some 31____, 30 percent of service members develop some type of mental health issue within four months

of returning home after leaving the army.

The military is spending more money than ever to 32____mental health issues within the ranks, and their latest attempt is a smart phone application called the T2 MoodTracker application, which helps service members keep track of their mental health after leaving the army. The app works like a high-tech diary, allowing users to 33____ emotions and behaviors that result from therapy, medication, daily experiences or changes happening at work or in the home. The smart phone app isn’t supposed to be a pocket 34 ____, though. It serves more as an extremely accurate and 35 ____record of a service member’s mental health.

Perry Bosmajian is a psychologist with the National Center for TeleHealth and Technology, where this smart phone app was created. He says this smart phone app will produce much more accurate results on the36 ____conditions of service members who have returned home. “Therapists and physicians often have to rely on patient 37____ when trying to gather information about symptoms over the previous weeks or months,” Bosmajian said. “Research has shown that information collected after the fact, especially about mood, tends to be 38____. The best record of an experience is when it’s recorded at the time and place it happens.”

The app specifically tracks anxiety, depression, general well-being, life stress, post-traumatic (受傷後的)stress and brain injury. The daily expressions add up over time to produce a(n) 39____ that can be observed by physicians and therapists.

The app has been downloaded more than 5,000 times since it became 40____ on the Android Market a year ago. Users of iPhones can also have access to the app some time next year.

III. Reading Comprehension Section A

Directions: For each blank in the following passage there are four words or phrases marked A, B, C and D. Fill in each blank with the word or phrase that best fits the context.

Directions Matter

Jer lag(時差感)may be the worst part of travelling, and it hits many people harder travelling east than west. Why they feel this way is 41________, but scientists recently developed a new model that provides an explanation for the mystery and insights on recovering from jet lag.

The model imitates the way neuronal oscillator cells (神經振子細胞)42________ crossing time

zones. These cells in our brains 43 ________our biological docks. However,the cells don’t quite operate on a perfect 24-hour schedule. Instead, their activity follows a 44________ that lasts slightly longer than that, about 24.5 hours. According to Michelle Girvan, an associate professor of physics at the University of Maryland and a co-author of the study, that means it’s 45________ for us to extend the length of a day—for example, by flying west across time zones—than to shorten the day, by flying east.

The scientists found that for 46________ travel, a person who crossed three time zones would fully 47________in a little less than four days. For six time zones, recovery would take about six days. For nine time zones, the recovery would take just less than eight days.

However, when a person travels eastward, the recovery time doesn’t match up as 48________. When a person crosses three time zones going east, it takes a little more than four days to recover. For six time zones, the recovery time 49________ to more than eight days. And for nine time zones, the recovery period is more than 12 days.

Girvan noted that not everyone has a biological clock of exactly 24.5 hours. 50________ , it varies from person to person. The other factor to consider is 51________ cues such as sunlight, Girvan added. How a person reacts to these cues can also 52________how quickly he or she will adjust to a new time zone.

The scientists hope that their new model can be used in the future to figure out the best ways to 53________ jet lag. For example, if you will be traveling six time zones eastward, start by setting your clock ahead an hour or two several days before you leave. And when you arrive in a new time zone, make sure that the outside cues you are exposed to 54 ________the new time zone. That means that if it’s daytime in the new time zone, expose yourself to sunlight. And if it’s nighttime, avoid artificial 55________, including those from smartphones and computers, to help your biological clock adjust.

41. A. incredible B. apparent C. surprising D. unclear

42. A. cope with B. account for C. respond to D. result in

43. A. kick B. watch C. stop D. regulate

44. A. cycle B. routine C. process D. pattern

45. A. safer B. easier C. more dangerous D. more difficult

46. A. eastward B. southward C. westward D. northward

47. A. adjust B. understand C. prepare ge

48. A. relatively B. nicely C. classically D. awkwardly

49. A. reduces B. jumps C. contributes D. leads

50. A. Moreover B. Otherwise C. However D. Rather

51. A. external B. verbal C. social D. chemical

52. A. promote B. emphasize C. impact D. orient

53. A. form B. endure C. shelter D. beat

54. A. specify B. match C. shift D. destroy

55. A. lights B. barriers C. flavours D. sounds

Section B

Directions: Read the following three passages. Each passage is followed by several questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that fits best according to the information given in the passage you have just read.

(A)

A woman standing over six feet tall and weighing about 200 pounds is bound to make an impression. But in Mary Fields’ case, these features were outmatched by a heart of gold that made her legendary(傳奇的).

Born into slavery in Tennessee in 1832 or 1833, Mary had nothing, not even a date of birth. However, in her early years, she found something of truly lasting value—a friend named Dolly. In addition to friendship, Dolly also may have taught Mary to read and write, an invaluable advantage for slaves. At the end of America’s Civil War, Mary finally received her freedom and made her own way out into the world.

Mary was employed on a steamboat as a maid when she received word from Dolly, now a nun (修女)in Ohio called Mother Amadeus. Mary arrived in Ohio in 1878 and worked at Amadeus’ girls’ school, managing the kitchen and garden. She became known as a gun-carrying, cigar-smoking woman, but also as an example of kindness and reliability. After a few years, though, Amadeus was sent to another school out West in Montana, becoming the first black woman to settle in central Montana.

When Mary was in her 50s, a sick Mother Amadeus called her West. So Mary made her way to the small town of Cascade, Montana, to nurse Amadeus to health. She did this and more, running supplies and visitors to St. Peter’s Mission where Amadeus lived. Once when her wagon(四輪馬車) overturned, she guarded the delivery from wolves through the night.

But Mary's rough edges caused the local bishop (主教) to prohibit her from working at the mission. Mother Amadeus then set her up as the first African-American female employee of the U.S. Postal Service. Though in her 60s, Mary was such a dependable mail carrier that she earned the name “tagecoach” Mary. She became a beloved figure in Cascade. She was the only woman allowed in the saloon (酒館), was the baseball team’s biggest fan and was given free meals in the town hotel.

Nearly 70, Mary quit delivering the mail but remained in Cascade. The town’s school closed to celebrate her unknown birthday twice a year. When she passed away in 1914, a simple cross was placed to mark her grave and her legend in the Wild West.

56. What about Mary Fields impressed people most?

A. Her tall and fat figure. B. Her reputation as an educated slave.

C. Her friendliness and responsibility. D. Her habit of carrying a gun and smoking.

57. Which of the following shows Mary’s life experience in the order of time?

①Mary began to deliver mail in Cascade.

②Mary worked in a school in Montana.

③Mary was taught to read and write.

④Mary took care of sick Amadeus.

⑤Mary worked on a steamed boat.

A.⑤①③②④ B•⑤④②①③ C.②④⑤③① D.③⑤②④①

58. Mary became a mail carrier because . ,

A. people in Cascade loved her B. she once worked at St. Peter’s Mission

C. Mother Amadeus recommended her D. the US Postal Service needed a female employee

59. In the last paragraph, t4her legend" most probably refers to .

A. her high social status B. her unusual life as a pioneer

C. her friendship with Amadeus. D. her role in the liberation of slaves

(B)

JENISON PUBLIC SCHOOLS

Part Time Enrollment

(Home School Elective Courses)

Grades 1-12

Jenison International Academy is excited to offer online, nonessential courses to international students. Kindly view the online elective options, as well as the enrollment process, below. The application window for part time enrollments will close on Friday, December 30, 2016.

Online Courses Offered Grades 1-12

Elective Opportunities

Please click to view our Elective Course Offerings.

Part Time Enrollment at JIA

Students participating in the program are allowed to enroll in up to 4 elective courses each semester, and have the option to take 100% of their courses online or create a schedule combination of online and on-campus courses at Jenison Public Schools, which may also include Tech Center, Co-op, and other qualified programs.

Student Application Process

STEP 1: Online Preparation

Please review the following Interactive Online Readiness Criteria. Please keep this form for your own records. Online Readiness Criteria

STEP 2: Submit Forms & Documentation

By completing the Part Time Enrollment Application, applicants are fulfilling the Virtual Learning and District-Required Documentation.

Printed Application

Parents or guardians can download, print, and complete the JIA Enrollment paperwork & JPS District Application. Mail, scan or fax all completed paperwork using the contact information provided on the first page. Printed Application

Additional Required Documentation can be found within the enrollment packet .

An email will be sent to the parent or guardian email account when a completed application has been received. Upon review and approval, a welcome message and course selection email will be issued to the same address.

60. The courses are designed for .

A. high-level students who are studying in Jenison Public Schools

B. international students whose parents work in Jenison Public Schools

C. foreign students who can’t study full time in Jenison International Academy

D. graduate students who want a part-time job in Jenison International Academy

61. To get enrolled, one should .

A. prepare both online and offline

B. print the Online Readiness Criteria

C. contact JIA in person beforehand

D. email the J1A Enrollment paperwork

62. What can be learned from the webpage?

A. The enrollment should be applied on December 30, 2016.

B. The parent or guardian needs to have an email account.

C. The students need to study at least 8 courses each year.

D. The courses can only be learned online.

(C)

Two heads are better than one, according to the old saying. So why are groups with lots of “heads” known for making bad decisions? Why does “groupthink” immediately mean ineffectiveness and mistakes?

These questions are answered in a fascinating new book called Wiser: Getting Beyond Groupthink to Make Groups Smarter, written by Cass R. Sunstein, a former White House official, and Reid Hastie, an academic specialized in the psychology of decision making. Building on their combined experiences and research, Sunstein and Hastie analyze what goes wrong in group decision-making, and then offer clear-out solutions to overcome these problems.

Group decision-making involves discussions among members of a group, each with their own skills, experience, ideas and information. Unfortunately, as the authors explain, there are two types of influence on group members—informational signals and social pressures—which skew (扭曲)the discussions. Informational signals cause people to keep information to themselves when it disagrees with information from others, especially leaders. Social pressures cause people to keep information to themselves to avoid punishment from leaders who are denied.

These influences lead to four problems, the authors write: Instead of correcting the errors of their members, groups actually expand those errors; cascade effects (聯級效應)take over when the group follows whomever spoke first or loudest; groups become more extreme in their ideas, as the internal discussions strengthen their predisposed(預先有傾向的)thoughts; and groups focus on shared information instead of unshared information.

Having laid out the core problems, the authors offer solutions. They begin with a list of methods aimed at handling the four core problems, such as:

Leaders have to keep quiet and convince group members that they sincerely want to hear all ideas.

Group success should be rewarded. Group members must understand that if the group is right, everyone benefits; this will encourage them to ensure that they find the right answer instead of pushing their own ideas.

Group members should be assigned specific roles, thus ensuring that everyone contributes.

Either individuals or assigned teams should be tasked with acting as devil’s advocates (唱反調的人).

Groups also fail, the author writes, because they don’t distinguish between the early rounds of discussions, in which all ideas must be allowed on the table, and the final rounds of discussions, in which groups must be tight and analytical as they seek the accurate solution. Successful groups will deliberately separate the two processes.

In another approach, the authors demonstrate that the wisdom of crowds will often lead to the right answer if a majority of crowd members know their material. Decision-makers often prefer to rely on one single expert, but “chasing the expert” significantly reduces the probability of getting the decision right.

Wiser is a quick, engaging and thoughtful read that convincingly argues that, with a few simple steps and open-minded leadership, group discussions can, indeed, lead to wiser decisions.

63. The passage is mainly written to .

A. make an advertisement for a new book B. introduce the main points of a new book

C. prove that two heads are better than one D. show how to make groupthink more effective

64. According to the passage, groups sometimes make bad decisions because some members .

A. are critical of others

B. are punished by the leader

C. disagree with the leader

D. do not share different ideas

65. Which of the following can help improve the effectiveness of groupthink?

A. An expert helps to make the final decision.

B. Team success is advocated with positive measures.

C. No one is allowed to put forward their disagreement.

D. Leaders don’t express their own opinions in the process.

66. What can be inferred from the passage?

A. Wiser may be welcomed by decision-makers.

B. Wiser can change decision-makers’ attitude towards work.

C. The more people in the group, the better decision will be made.

D. The final rounds of discussions are the most important in decision-making.

Section C

Directions: Read the following passage. Fill in each blank with a proper sentence given in the box. Each sentence can be used only once. Note that there are two more sentences than you need.

A. A special value is placed on education in Asia, where tutoring is viewed as an extension of the school day.

B. Children don't seem to mind that they have a tutor.

C. Diagnostic tests can help take into account the areas of study needing special review and emphasis.

D. Another reason for the growth in business is parental frustration and their packed schedules.

E. Children work cooperatively with their private tutors.

F. Nor is it aimed only at lower-achieving students.

Tutoring a New Normal

It’s not piano lessons or dance lessons. Nowadays, the biggest extra-curricular activity in the West is going to a tutor. “I spend about 800 Canadian dollars a month on tutors. It’s costly,” says Pet, a mother in Canada. However, she adds, “after finding out half my daughter’s class had tutors, I felt like my child was going to fall behind because everyone else seemed to be ahead.”

Shelley, a mother of three, also has tutors constantly coming in and out of her home. “When I used to sit down with my children, it was hard to get them focused. I was always shouting. When I got a tutor once a week, they became focused for one entire hour and could get most of their homework done.”

Tutoring isn’t simply a private school phenomenon. 67________ In Canada alone, seven percent of high school students reported using a tutor in 2010. That increased to 15 percent last year.

Overall, parents hire tutors because they are worried schools are not meeting their expectations, but there is also a cultural shift. 68 ________As a large number of Asians emigrated to the West over the recent years, their attitudes towards education have had an impact.

69________ “A lot of parents just don have time to help their children with homework,” says Julie Diamond, president of an American tutoring company. “Others couldn’t help their children after Grade 3.”

There has been a shift in the attitudes, too. “Children used to get bullied(欺侮)for having a tutor,” Diamond says. “Now it’s becoming the norm to have one.”

________One parent feels surprised that so many of her child’s classmates have tutors. “For the amount we pay in tuition, they should have as much extra help as they need,” she says. Still, she’s now thinking of getting a tutor. Why? Her daughter has actually asked for one.

IV. Summary Writing

Directions: Read the following passage. Summarize the main idea and the main point(s) of the passage in no more than 60 words. Use your own words as far as possible.

Gene Therapy

“We used to think that our fate was in our stars, but now we know that, in large measure, our fate is in our genes,” said James Watson. Watson is a molecular (分子的)biologist and co-discoverer of DNA structure. Why? Scientists are seeing that gene therapy is revolutionizing the treatment of disease.

In gene therapy, healthy genes are introduced into defective(有缺陷的)cells to prevent or cure disease. While much of the research is in the beginning stages, some successes point to the real benefit of the therapy. In Italy, doctors have recently treated one genetic disease with gene therapy. This disease most often begins to destroy the brain when children are between 1 and 2, stopping them from walking and talking. By inserting normal, healthy genetic material into a vims and then infecting the patients, scientists seem to be able to cure the disease. Although the children given the therapy still need follow-up treatments, they now lead a relatively normal life.

Gene therapy has also been used to help older patients. These people suffer from a disease that causes slow movement and uncontrollable shaking because part of the brain dies. Those treated with gene therapy showed a 23.1 percent improvement when tested six months later. from

Gene therapy appears to be a more positive alternative to surgery or medicine and is an exciting new approach that is just making the news. Researchers hope that in the coming years, every genetic disease will have gene therapy as its treatment. But more research is needed to assure its safety.

V. Translation

Directions: Translate the following sentences into English, using the words given in the brackets.

72. 你是否贊成爲貧困學生設立一項基金?(approve)

73. 不可否認的是上海迪斯尼樂園每天人滿爲患。(deny)

74. 那個專門研究家庭教育的教授將受邀給這些家長做講座。(expert)

75. 垃圾分類不僅有助於環境保護還有利於廢物循環利用,所以人人要行動起來。(Not only)

VI. Guided Writing

Directions: Write an English composition in 120-150 words according to the instructions given below in Chinese.

爲了更好地培養學生的英語語言運用能力,營造更好的英語學習環境,中華中學決定每學年 舉行一次“英語節”。最近,該校就“英語節”廣泛徵求學生意見。假設你是中華中學的學生陳 方,給負責此項目的王老師發一封電子郵件,提出你對一年一度“英語節”的建議。郵件內容應 包括:

1. 對“英語節”內容及形式的建議;

2. 提出這些建議的理由。

注:郵件中不得提及你的真實姓名或學校。

  北京英語高考真題2017參考答案

I. Listening Comprehension(共25分。第1至10小題,每題1分;第11至20小題,每題1.5分。)

1. C 2. A 3. B 4. C 5. D 6. D 7. B 8. A 9. C 10. B

11. D 12. D 13. C 14. A 15. B 16. A 17. D 18. B 19. A 20. D

II. Grammar and Vocabulary(共20分。每小題1分。)

21. less fortunate icipating 23. that/which 24. hit 25. So

26. if/when/as 27. is accepted 28. a 29. that 30. should

31. D 32. J 33. F 34. I 35. C 36. B 37. K 38. G 39. H 40. A

III. Reading Comprehension(共45分。第41至55小題,每題1分;第56至70小題,每題2分。)

41. D 42. C 43. D 44. A 45. B 46. C 47. A 48. B 49. B 50. D

51. A 52. C 53. D 54. B 55. A 56. C 57. D 58. C 59. B 60. C

61. A 62. B 63. B 64. D 65. B 66. A 67. F 68. A 69. D 70. B

IV. Summary Writing(共10分)

Gene therapy, which prevents or cures disease by inserting healthy genes into defective cells rather than by means of surgery or medicine, is changing the treatment of disease revolutionarily. Though in the initial phases, gene therapy has been successful in treating both children and older patients with genetic disease. However, more research is called for to ensure its security.V. Translation(共15分)

72. Do you approve of setting up a fund for poor students? (1+1+1)

73. There is no denying that Shanghai Disneyland Park is crowded with people every day. (1+2)

It can’t be denied that…

74. The professor who is (an) expert in/on/at family education will be invited to give a lecture to these parents. (2+1+1)

75. Not only does classifying/sorting rubbish help protect the environment, but also it helps recycle waste materials, so everyone should take action. (1+2+1+1)


猜你喜歡:

1.高考全國卷(新課標I)英語真題及答案解析

2.高考英語試卷答案

3.高考英語試題及答案

4.高考英語題型及答案

5.2017年高考英語真題百度文庫

6.高考英語模擬卷附答案