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2015年高考英语真题试卷(江苏卷)

更新时间:2017-12-25 浏览次数:457 类型:高考真卷
一、<b >单项选择</b>
二、<b >完形填空</b>
  • 16. 阅读下面短文,掌握其大意,然后从1—20各题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出最佳选项。

    I was required to read one of Bernie Siegel's books in college and was hooked on his positivity from that moment on. The stories of his unconventional1and the exceptional patients he wrote about were so2to me and had such a big3on how I saw life from then on. Who knew that so many years later I would look to Dr. Bernie and his CDs again to4my own Cancer experience ?

    I'm an ambitious5, and when I started going through chemo( 化疗 ),even though I'm a very6person, I lost my drive to write. I was just too tired and not in the7One day, while waiting to go in for8, I had one of Dr. Bernie's books in hand. Another patient9what I was reading and struck up a conversation with me10he had one of his books with me as well. It11that among other things, he was an eighty-year-old writer. He was12a published author, and he was currently13on a new book.

    We would see each other at various times and14friends. Sometimes he wore a duck hat, and I would tell myself, he was definitely a ( n )15of Dr. Berline. He really put a16on my face. He unfortunately17last year due to his cancer,18he left a deep impression on me and gave me the19to pick up my pen again. I20to myself, “If he can do it, then so can I. ”

    (1)
    A . tastes B . ideas C . notes D . memories
    (2)
    A . amazing B . shocking C . amusing D . strange
    (3)
    A . strike B . push C . challenge D . impact
    (4)
    A . learn from B . go over C . get through D . refer to
    (5)
    A . reader B . writer C . editor D . doctor
    (6)
    A . positive B . agreeable C . humorous D . honest
    (7)
    A . mood B . position C . state D . way
    (8)
    A . advice B . reference C . protection D . treatment
    (9)
    A . viewed B . knew C . noticed D . wondered
    (10)
    A . while B . because C . although D . providing
    (11)
    A . came out B . worked out C . proved out D . turned out
    (12)
    A . naturally B . merely C . hopefully D . actually
    (13)
    A . deciding B . investing C . working D . relying
    (14)
    A . became B . helped C . missed D . visited
    (15)
    A . patient B . operator C . fan D . publisher
    (16)
    A . sign B . smile C . mark D . mask
    (17)
    A . showed up B . set off C . fell down D . passed away
    (18)
    A . since B . but C . so D . for
    (19)
    A . guidance B . trust C . opportunity D . inspiration
    (20)
    A . promised B . swore C . thought D . replied
三、<b >阅读理解</b>
  • 17. 阅读理解

    1. (1) According to the Code, visitors should act _______ .
      A . with care and respect B . with relief and pleasure C . with caution and calmness D . with attention and observation
    2. (2) What are you encouraged to do when travelling in New Zealand?
      A . Take your own camping facilities. B . Bury glass far away from rivers. C . Follow the track for the sake of plants. D . Observe signs to approach nesting birds.
  • 18. 阅读理解

        Suppose you become a leader in an organization. It's very likely that you'll want to have volunteers to help with the organization's activities. To do so, it should help to understand why people undertake volunteer work and what keeps their interest in the work.

        S Let's begin with the question of why people volunteer. Researchers have identified several factors that motivate people to get involved. For example, people volunteer to express personal values related to unselfishness, to expand their range of experiences, and to strengthen social relationships. If volunteer positions do not meet these needs, people may not wish to participate. To select volunteers, you may need to understand the motivations of the people you wish to attract.

        S People also volunteer because they are required to do so. To increase levels of community service, some schools have launched compulsory volunteer programs. Unfortunately, these programs can shift people's wish of participation from an internal factor (e.g. “I volunteer because it's important to me”) to an external factor (e.g. “I volunteer because I'm required to do so”). When that happens, people become less likely to volunteer in the future. People must be sensitive to this possibility when they make volunteer activities a must.

        S Once people begin to volunteer, what leads them to remain in their positions over time? To answer this question, researchers have conducted follow-up studies in which they track volunteers over time. For instance, one study followed 238 volunteers in Florida over a year. One of the most important factors that influenced their satisfaction as volunteers was the amount of suffering they experienced in their volunteer positions. Although this result may not surprise you, it leads to important practical advice. The researchers note that attention should be given to “training methods that would prepare volunteers for troublesome situations or provide them with strategies for coping with the problem they do experience”.

        S Another study of 302 volunteers at hospitals in Chicago focused on individual differences in the degree to which people view “volunteer” as an important social role. It was assumed that those people for whom the role of volunteer was most part of their personal identity would also be most likely to continue volunteer work. Participants indicated the degree to which the social role mattered by responding to statements such as “Volunteering in Hospital is an important part of who I am.” Consistent with the researchers' expectations, they found a positive correlation(正相关) between the strength of role identity and the length of time people continued to volunteer. These results, once again, lead to concrete advice: “Once an individual begins volunteering, continued efforts might focus on developing a volunteer role identity....Items like T-shirts that allow volunteers to be recognized publicly for their contributions can help strengthen role identity”.

    1. (1) People volunteer mainly out of __________.
      A . academic requirements B . social expectations C . financial rewards D . internal needs
    2. (2) What can we learn from the Florida study?
      A . Follow-up studies should last for one year. B . Volunteers should get mentally prepared. C . Strategy training is a must in research. D . Volunteers are provided with concrete advice.
    3. (3) What is most likely to motivate volunteers to continue their work?
      A . Individual differences in role identity. B . Publicly identifiable volunteer T-shirts. C . Role identity as a volunteer. D . Practical advice from researchers.
    4. (4) What is the best title of the passage?
      A . How to Get People to Volunteer B . How to Study Volunteer Behaviors C . How to Keep Volunteers' Interest D . How to Organize Volunteer Activities
  • 19. 阅读理解

        Freedom and Responsibility

        Freedom's challenge in the Digital Age is a serious topic. We are facing today a strange new world and we are all wondering what we are going to do with it.

        Some 2,500 years ago Greece discovered freedom. Before that there was no freedom. There were great civilizations, splendid empires, but no freedom anywhere. Egypt and Babylon were both  tyrannies, one very powerful man ruling over helpless masses.

        In Greece, in Athens (雅典), a little city in a little country, there were no helpless masses. And Athenians willingly obeyed the written laws which they themselves passed, and the unwritten, which must be obeyed if free men live together. They must show each other kindness and pity and the many qualities without which life would be very painful unless one chose to live alone in the desert.The Athenians never thought that a man was free if he could do what he wanted. A man was free if he was self-controlled. To make yourself obey what you approved was freedom. They were saved from looking at their lives as their own private affair. Each one felt responsible for the welfare of Athens, not because it was forced on him from the outside, but because the city was his pride and his safety. The essential belief of the first free government in the world was liberty for all men who could control themselves and would take responsibility for the state.

        But discovering freedom is not like discovering computers. It cannot be discovered once for all. If people do not prize it, and work for it, it will go. Constant watch is its price. Athens changed. It was a change that took place without being noticed though it was of the extreme importance, a spiritual change which affected the whole state. It had been the Athenian' s pride and joy to give to their city. That they could get material benefits from her never entered their minds. There had to be a complete change of attitude before they could look at the city as an employer who paid her citizens for doing her work. Now instead of men giving to the state, the state was to give to them. What the people wanted was a government which would provide a comfortable life for them; and with this as the primary object, ideas of freedom and self-reliance and responsibility were neglected to the point of disappearing. Athens was more and more looked on as a cooperative business possessed of great wealth in which all citizens had a right to share.

        Athens reached the point when the freedom she really wanted was freedom from responsibility. There could be only one result. If men insisted on being free from the burden of self-dependence and responsibility for the common good, they would cease to be free. Responsibility is the price every man must pay for freedom. It is to be had on no other terms. Athens, the Athens of Ancient Greece, refused responsibility; she reached the end of freedom and was never to have it again.

        But, “the excellent becomes the permanent”, Aristotle said. Athens lost freedom forever, but freedom was not lost forever for the world. A great American, James Madison, referred to: “The capacity (能力) of mankind for self-government.” No doubt he had not an idea that he was speaking Greek. Athens was not in the farthest background of his mind, but once man has a great and good idea, it is never completely lost. The Digital Age cannot destroy it. Somehow in this or that man's thought such an idea lives though unconsidered by the world of action. One can never be sure that it is not on the point of breaking out into action only sure that it will do so sometime.

    1. (1) What does the underlined word “tyrannies” in Paragraph 2 refer to?
      A . Countries where their people need help. B . Powerful states with higher civilization. C . Splendid empires where people enjoy freedom. D . Governments ruled with absolute power.
    2. (2) People believing in freedom are those who________ .
      A . regard their life as their own business B . seek gains as their primary object C . behave within the laws and value systems D . treat others with kindness and pity
    3. (3) What change in attitude took place in Athens?
      A . The Athenians refused to take their responsibility. B . The Athenians no longer took pride in the city. C . The Athenians benefited spiritually from the government. D . The Athenians looked on the government as a business.
    4. (4) What does the sentence “There could be only one result.” in Paragraph 5 mean?
      A . Athens would continue to be free. B . Athens would cease to have freedom. C . Freedom would come from responsibility. D . Freedom would stop Athens from self-dependence.
    5. (5) Why does the author refer to Aristotle and Madison?
      A . The author is hopeful about freedom. B . The author is cautious about self-government. C . The author is skeptical of Greek civilization. D . The author is proud of man's capacity.
    6. (6) What is the author's understanding of freedom?
      A . Freedom can be more popular in the digital age. B . Freedom may come to an end in the digital age. C . Freedom should have priority over responsibility. D . Freedom needs to be guaranteed by responsibility.
四、<b >任务型阅读</b>
  • 20. 阅读理解请阅读下面短文,并根据所读内容在文章后表格中的空格里填入一个最恰当的单词。
        People select news in expectation of a reward. This reward may be either of two kinds. One is related to what Freud calls the Pleasure Principle, the other to what he calls the Reality Principle. For want of better names, we shall call these two classes immediate reward and delayed reward.
        In general, the kind of news which may be expected to give immediate reward are news of crime and corruption, accidents and disasters, sports, social events, and human interest. Delayed reward may be expected from news of public affairs, economic matters, social problems, science, education, and health.
        News of the first kind pays its rewards at once. A reader can enjoy an indirect experience without any of the dangers or stresses involved. He can tremble wildly at an axe-murder, shake his head sympathetically and safely at a hurricane, identify himself with the winning team, laugh understandingly at a warm little story of children or dogs.
        News of the second kind, however, pays its rewards later. It sometimes requires the reader to tolerate unpleasantness or annoyance — as, for example, when he reads of the threatening foreign situation, the mounting national debt, rising taxes, falling market, scarce housing, and cancer. It has a kind of “threat value.” It is read so that the reader may be informed and prepared. When a reader selects delayed reward news, he pulls himself into the world of surrounding reality to which he can adapt himself only by hard work. When he selects news of the other kind, he usually withdraws from the world of threatening reality toward the dream world.
        For any individual, of course, the boundaries of these two classes are not stable. For example, a sociologist may read news of crime as a social problem, rather than for its immediate reward. A coach may read a sports story for its threat value: he may have to play that team next week. A politician may read an account of his latest successful public meeting, not for its delayed reward, but very much as his wife reads an account of a party. In any given story of corruption or disaster, a thoughtful reader may receive not only the immediate reward of indirect experience, but also the delayed reward of information and preparedness. Therefore, while the division of categories holds in general, an individual's tendency may transfer any story from one kind of reading to another, or divide the experience between the two kinds of reward.
    What news stories do you read?
    Division of news stories● People expect to getfrom reading news.
    ● News stories are roughly divided into two classes.
    ● Some news will excite their readers instantly while others won't.
    ofthe two classes● News of immediate reward will seemingly take their readers to the very frightening scene without actual .
    ● Readers will associate themselves closely with what happens in the news stories andsimilar feelings with those involved.
    ●  News of delayed reward will make readers suffer, or present a to them.
    ●  News of delayed reward will induce the reader to for the reality while news of immediate reward will lead the reader to from the reality.
    Unstable boundaries of the two classes●  What readers expect from news stories are largely shaped by their.
    ●  Serious readers will both get excited over what happens in some news stories and themselves to the reality.
    ●  Thus, the division, on the whole,on the reader.
五、<b >书面表达</b>
  • 21. 阅读理解请阅读下面文字及图表,并按照要求用英语写一篇 150 词左右的文章.

     [写作内容]

    1)用约30个单词概述上述信息的主要内容;

    2)结合上述信息,简要分析导致交通问题的主要原因;

    3)根据你的分析,从社会规范(rules and regulations)和个人行为两方面谈谈你得到的启示(不少于两点)。

    [写作要求]

    1)写作过程中不能直接引用原文语句;

    2)作文中不能出现真实姓名和学校名称;

    3)不必写标题。

    [评分标准]内容完整,语言规范,语篇连贯,词数适当。

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