2010上海高考英语真题及答案
2010年高考英语试题 上海卷
第I 卷(105分)
I. II.
Listening Comprehension Section A
B.A dentist.
C An electrician.
D. A bank clerk. D A basketball team
1. A.A shop assistant 2 .A. The exam score.
B The world news C A soccer match
3. A. At a post office B At a flower shop C At a department store. D At a bus station 4. A 5 hours.
B 7 hours.
C 9 hours
D 10 hours
5. A Tim’s not seriously injured B Tim will get to the hospital quickly.
C The woman’s heard all about Tim’s illness. D The woman doesn’t know how Tim is now 6. A She isn’t in the mood to travel.
B France is too far for family holiday. D She has had too many holidays this year. B The cost was unbelievably high. D. She will stay overnight.
D. Passion
C Family holiday no longer interests her. 7 A The cost was reasonable. C She likes the hotel . 8 A Disappointment
B. Disapproval. C. Sympathy.
9 A. The man is too forgetful C The man has too many keys
B The man shouldn’t get annoyed D. The man should attend more lessons B He thinks his signature is unnecessary D. He doesn’t always say what he means
10.A .He wants to live in apartments C. He has already signed a contract Section B
Questions 11 through 13 are based on the following introduction 11A. White masters
B African slaves C Native dancers.
D Spot trainers
12A Having kung fu experience, C Wearing a green belt
B Being able to sing and play music D Being strong and able to balance well B. He loses contact with his opponent D He is pushed out of the circle
13.A He uses his hands to keep the balance. C He is kecked by his opponent
Questions 14 through 16 are based on the following passage 14A. Greet guests and talk to hotel staff. B. Have breakfast and examine room service C. Prepare for the meeting and write new reports
II. Grammar and Vocabulary Section A
25. Sean has formed the habit of jogging ________ the tree-lined avenue for two ho urs every day.
A. between
B. along
C. below
D. with
26. It took us quite a long time to get to the amusement park. It was ________ jour ney.
A. three hour
B. a three-hours C. a three-hour D. three hours
27. If our parents do everything for us children, we won’t learn to depend on _____A. themselves
B. them
C. us
D. ourselves
28. Every few years, the coal workers ________ their lungs X-rayed to ensure their health.
A. are having
B. have
C. have had
D. had had
29. —Sorry, Professor Smith . I didn’t finish the assignment yesterday. —Oh, you ________ have done it as yesterday was the deadline. A. must
B. mustn’t
C. should
D. shouldn’t
30. In ancient times, people rarely travelled long distances and most farmers only tra velled ________ the local market.
A. longer than
B. more than
C. as much as
D. as far as
31. The church tower which ________ will be open to tourists soon. The work is al most finished.
A. has restored
B. has been restored C. is restoring
D. is being restored
32. I had great difficulty ________ the suitable food on the menu in that restaurant. A. find
B. found
C. to find
D. finding
33. Lucy has a great sense of humor and always keeps her colleagues ________ with her stories.
A. amused
B. amusing
C. to amuse
D. to be amused
34. ________ you may have, you should gather your courage to face the challenge. A. However a serious problem C. However serious a problem
B. What a serious problem D. What serious a problem
35. ________ the city center, we saw a stone statue of about 10 meters in height. A. Approaching
B. Approached
C. To approach
D. To be approached
36. One reason for her preference for city life is ________ she can have easy access to places like shops and restaurants.
A. that
B. how
C. what
D. why
37. When changing lanes, a driver should use his turning signal to let other drivers k now ________.
A. he is entering which lane C. is he entering which lane
B. which lane he is entering D. which lane is he entering
38. Wind power is an ancient source of energy ________ we may return in the near future.
A. on which
B. by which
C. to which
D. from which
39. ________our manage objects to Tom’s joining the club, we shall accept him as a member.
A. Until
B. Unless
C. If
D. After
40. Thai is the only way we can imagine ________ the overuse of water in students’ bathrooms.
A. reducing
Section B
B. to reduce C. reduced D. reduce
A. additional E. identified I. carried
B. producing F. atmosphere J. increase
C. regular D. predicted
G. matched H. reducing
Forests in the northern half of the globe could be growing faster now than they were 200 years ago as a result of climate change, according to a study of trees in eastern A merica. The trees appear to have faster growth rates due to longer growing seasons and h igher concentrations (浓度) of carbon dioxide in the ___41___.
Geoffrey Parker, a scientist at the Smithsonian Environmental Research Centre in Edg ewater. Maryland, said that the increase ha the rate of growth was unexpected and might be ___42___ to the higher temperatures and longer growing seasons documented in the re gion. The growth may also be influenced by the significant ___43___ in atmospheric CO 2, he said.
“We made a list of reasons these forests could be growing faster and then excluded half of them, ” Dr. Parker said. Their study suggests that northern forests may become in creasingly important in ___44___ the influence of man-made CO 2 on the climate.
Dr. Parker and his colleagues have ___45___ out a detailed record of the trees on a (n) ___46___ basis since 1987. They calculated that due to the global warming the forest is producing ___47___ tons of wood each year.
The scientists ___48___ the land with trees at different stages of growth and found t hat both young and old trees were showing increased growth rate. More than 90 per cent
of the tree groups had grown by between two and four times faster than the scientists h ad ___49___ from estimates of the long-term rates of growth.
III. Reading Comprehension Section A
The first attempt of even the most talented artists, musicians, and writers is seldom a masterpiece, If you consider your drafts as dress rehearsals (彩排), or tryouts, revising w ill seem a natural part of the writing ___50___.
What is the purpose of the dress rehearsals and the out-of-town previews that many Broadway shows go through? The answer is adding, deleting, replacing, reordering, ___51___ revising. Andrew Lloyd Webber’s musical Phantom of the Opera under went such a pro cess.
When Lloyd Webber began writing in 1984, he had in mind a funny, exciting produc tion. However, when Phantom opened in London in 1986, the audience saw a moving psy chological love story set to music. The musical had. ___52___ several revisions due, in p art, to problems with costuming and makeup (戏服和化妆). For instance, Lloyd Webber ___53___ some of the music because the Phantom’s makeup prevented the actor from singi ng certain sounds.
When you revise, you change aspects of your work in ___54___ to your evolving pu rpose, or to include ___55___ ideas or newly discovered information.
Revision is not just an afterthought that gets only as much time as you have at the end of an assignment. ___56___, it is a major stage of the writing process, and writers re vise every step of the way. Even your decision to ___57___. topics while prewriting is a type of revising. However. don’t make the mistake of skipping the revision stage that foll ows ___58___. Always make time to become your own ___59___and view your dress reh earsal, so to speak. Reviewing your work in this way can give you ___60___ new ideas.
Revising involves ___61___ the effectiveness and appropriateness of all aspects of yo ur writing, making your purpose more clearly, and refocusing or developing the facts and ideas you present. When you revise, ask yourself the following questions, keeping in mind the audience for whom you are writing: Is my main idea or purpose ___62___ througho ut my draft? Do I ever lose sight of my purpose? Have I given my readers all of the __
_63___ that is, facts, opinions, inferences —that they need in order to understand my main idea? Finally, have I included too many ___64___ details that may confuse readers?
50. A. technique
B. style
C. process C. for example C. rejected C. recorded C. opposition C. familiar C. Instead C. exhaust C. performing C. audience C. basic C. maintaining C. unique C. information C. concrete
D. career
D. in other words D. replaced D. reserved D. contrast D. fresh D. Therefore D. cover D. training D. visitor D. delicate D. assessing D. clear D. hints D. final
51. A. in particular B. as a result 52. A. undergone 53. A. rewrote 54. A. addition 55. A. fixed 56. A. However 57. A. discuss 58. A. drafting 59. A. director 60. A. personal 61. A. mixing 62. A. amazing 63. A. angles
B. skipped B. released B. response B. ambitious B. Moreover B. switch B. rearranging B. master B. valuable B. weakening B. bright B. evidence
64. A. unnecessary B. uninteresting Section B
(A)
The elephant was lying heavily on its side, fast asleep. A few dogs started barking at it. The elephant woke up in a terrible anger: it chased the dogs into the village where t hey ran for safety.
That didn’t stop the elephant. It destroyed a dozen houses and injured several people. The villagers were scared and angry. Then someone suggested calling Parbati, the elepha nt princess.
Parbati Barua’s father was a hunter of tigers and an elephant tamer. He taught Parbat i to ride an elephant before she could even walk. He also taught her the dangerous art of the elephant round-up —how to catch wild elephants.
Parbati hasn’t always lived in the jungle. After a happy childhood hunting with her f ather, she was sent to boarding school in the city. But Parbati never got used to being th ere and many years later she went back to her old fife. "Life in the city is too dull. Cat
ching elephants is an adventure and the excitement lasts for days after the chase, " she sa ys.
But Parbati doesn’t catch elephants just for fun. “My work, ” she says, “is to resc ue man from the elephants, and to keep the elephants safe from man. ” And this is exactly what Parbati has been doing for many years. Increasingly, the Indian elephant is angry: f or many years, illegal hunters have attacked it and its home in the jungle has been reduc ed to small pieces of land. It is now fighting back. Whenever wild elephants enter a tea garden or a village, Parbati is called to guide the animals back to the jungle before they can kill.
The work of an elephant tamer also involves love and devotion. A good elephant ta mer will spend hours a day singing love songs to a newly captured elephant. “Eventually they grow to love their tamers and never forget them. They are also more loyal than hum ans, ” she said, as she climbed up one of her elephan ts and sat on the giant, happy anim al. An elephant princess indeed!
65. For Parbati, catching elephants is mainly to ________. A. get long lasting excitement C. send them back to the jungle
B. keep both man and elephants safe D. make the angry elephants tame
66. Before Parbati studied in a boarding school, ________. A. she spent her time hunting with her father B. she learned how to sing love songs
C. she had already been called an elephant princess D. she was taught how to hunt tigers
67. Indian elephants are getting increasingly angry and they revenge because _______ A. they are caught and sent for heavy work
B. illegal hunters capture them and kill them C. they are attacked and their land gets limited D. dogs often bark at them and chase them
68. The passage starts with an elephant story in order to explain that in India _____ A. people easily fall victim to elephants’ attacks
B. the man-elephant relationship is getting worse C. elephant tamers are in short supply
D. dogs are as powerful as elephants
(B)
Trevor,C.O., Lansford, B. and Black, J. W., 2004, “Employee turnover (人事变更) and job performance: monitoring the influences of salary growth and promotion”, Journal of Armchair Psychology, vol. 113, no. 1, pp. 56-64.
In this article Trevor et al. review the influences of pay and job opportunities in resp ect of job performance, turnover rates and employees' job attitude. The authors use data g ained through organizational surveys of blue-chip companies in Vancouver, Canada to try t o identify the main cause of employee turnover and whether it is linked to salary growth. Their research focuses on assessing a range of pay structures such as pay for performanc e and organizational reward plans. The article is useful as Trevor et al. suggest that there are numerous reasons for employee turnover and a variety of differences in employees' j ob attitude and performance. The main limitation of the article is that the survey sample was restricted to mid-level management, thus the authors indicate that further, more extens ive research needs to be undertaken to develop a more in-depth understanding of employe e turnover and job performance. As this article was published in a professional journal, th e findings can be considered reliable. It will be useful additional information for the resea rch on pay structures.
The following card includes a brief summary and a short assessment of a research pa per. It can provide a guide for further reading on the topic.
69. The research paper published is primarily concerned with A. the way of preventing employee turnover B. methods of improving employee performance C. factors affecting employee turnover and performance D. pay structures based on employee performance
70. As is mentioned in the card, the limitation of the research paper mainly lies in t hat.
A. the data analysis is hardly reliable B. the research sample is not wide enough C. the findings are of no practical value D. the research method is out-of-date
71. Who might be most interested in this piece of information? A. Job hunters.
B. Employees in blue-chip companies. C. Mid-level managers.
D. Researchers on employee turnover.
(C)
The 2012 London Olympics had enough problems to worry about. But one more has just been added —a communications blackout caused by solar storms.
After a period of calm within the Sun, scientists have detected the signs of a flesh c ycle of sunspots that could peak in 2012, just in time for the arrival of the Olympic torc h in London.
Now scientists believe that this peak could result in vast solar explosions that could t hrow billions of tons of charged matter towards the Earth, causing strong solar storms tha t could jam the telecommunications satellites and interact links sending five Olympic broa dcast from London.
“The Sun’s activity has a strong influence on the Earth. The Olympics could be in t he middle of the next solar maximum which could affect the functions of communications satellites, ” said Professor Richard Harrison, head of space physics at the Rutherford App leton Laboratory in Oxfordshire.
At the peak of the cycle, violent outbursts called coronal mass ejections (日冕物质抛射) occur in the Sun’s atmosphere, throwing out great quantities of electrically -charged ma tter. “A coronal mass ejection can carry a billion tons of solar material into space at over a million kilometres per hour. Such events can expose astronauts to a deadly amount, can disable satellites, cause power failures on Earth and disturb communications, ” Profes sor Harrison added. The risk is greatest during a solar maximum when there is the greate st number of sunspots.
Next week in America, NASA is scheduled to launch a satellite for monitoring solar activity called the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO), which will take images of the Sun that are 10 times clearer than the most advanced televisions available.
The Rutherford Appleton Laboratory helped to make the high-tech cameras that will c apture images of the solar flares (太阳耀斑) and explosions as they occur.
Professor Richard Hold away, the lab’s director, said that the SDO should be able to provide early warning of a solar flare or explosion big enough to affect satellite commun ications on Earth “If we have advance warning, we’ll be able to reduce the damage. Wha t you don’t want is things switching off for a week with no idea of what’s caused the pr oblem,” he said.(www.nmet168.com)
72. The phrase “communications blackout” in paragraph 1 most probably refers to ________ during the 2012 Olympics.
A. the extinguishing of the Olympic torch B. the collapse of broadcasting systems C. the transportation breakdown in London D. the destruction of weather satellites
73. What can be inferred about the solar activity described in the passage? A. The most fatal matter from the corona falls onto Earth. B. The solar storm peak occurs in the middle of each cycle. C. It takes several seconds for the charged matter to reach Earth. D. The number of sunspots declines after coronal mass ejections. 74. according to the passage, NASA will launch a satellite to ________. A. take images of the solar system C. keep track of solar activities
B. provide early warning of thunderstorms D. improve the communications on Earth
75. Which of the following might be the best title of the passage? A. Solar Storms: An Invisible Killer
B. Solar Storms: Earth Environment in Danger C. Solar Storms: Threatening the Human Race D. Solar Storms: Human Activities to Be Troubled Section C
A. Drug overuse and its consequence B. The problem of drug overuse in America C. Benefits of medicine and its wise use
D. Female drug overuse with reference to that of males E. Misuse of medicine among the young generation F. Improper use of medicine among senior citizens
76. ________
Nowadays, millions of people misuse and even overuse pain medications and other dr ugs. Research by the American National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA, 1999) shows tha t around 2% of the population over age 12 were using drugs non-medically.
77. ________
NIDA views medications as a powerful force for good in the contemporary world. Th ey reduce and remove pain for millions of people suffering from illness and disease. They make it possible for doctors to perform complicated surgery to save lives. Many people afflicted by serious medical conditions are able to control their symptoms and become acti ve, contributing citizens. NIDA points out that most individuals who take these drags use them in a responsible.
78. ________
Nevertheless, overuse of drugs such as opium, central nervous system (CNS) depressa nts and stimulants does lead to harmful reliance in some people and is therefore becoming a serious public health concern. Although this abuse affects many people worldwide, parti cular trends of concern to the medical profession in the US appear among older adults, te enagers arid women.
79. ________
Though it may be a surprise to many, the misuse of medications may be the most c ommon form of drug abuse among the elderly. Dr Kenneth Schrader of Duke University, North Carolina states that although the elderly represent about 13% of the US population, those aged 65 and over account for the consumption of one third of all drugs. People in this age group use medications roughly three times more than the general population and have poorer compliance with instruction for use. In another study of elderly patients adm itted to treatment programs, 70% were women who had overused medicines.
80. ________
Unfortunately, this trend among women does not only affect those aged over 60. In g eneral, among women and men who are using either an anti-anxiety drug or a sedative, w omen are twice as likely to become addicted. In addition, statistics compiled for 12-17 ye ar olds show that teenage girls are more likely than teenage boys to begin overusing psyc hotherapeutic medication such as painkillers, tranquillizers, stimulants and sedatives.
Section D
Phys ed (physical education) is making a comeback as a part of the school core curri culum(核心课程), but with a difference. While group sports are still part of the curriculu m, the new way is to teach skills that are useful beyond gym class. Instead of learning h ow to climb a rope, children are taught to lift weights, balance their diets and build physi cal endurance. In this way, kids are given the tools and skills and experiences so they ca n lead a physically active life the rest of their life.
Considering that 15 percent of American children 6 to 18 are overweight, supporters say more money and thought must be put into phys ed curriculum. In many cases, that m ay mean not just replacing the old gym-class model with fitness programs but also startin g up phys ed programs because school boards often “put P. E. on the chopping block, cu tting it entirel y or decreasing its teachers or the days it is offered, ” says Alicia Moag -St ahlberg, the executive director of Action for Health Kids. The difference in phys ed progr ams is partly due to the lack of a national standard. “Physical education needs to be par t of the core curriculum, ” she added.
The wisdom of the new approach has some scientific support. Researchers at the Uni versity of Wisconsin have demonstrated how effective the fit-for-life model of gym class c an be. They observed how 50 overweight children lost more weight when they cycled and skied cross-country than when they played sports. The researchers also found that teachin g sports like football resulted in less overall movement, partly because reluctant students were able to sit on the bench.
Another problem with simply teaching group sports in gym class is that only a tiny percentage of students continue playing them after graduating from high school. The new method teaches sells that translate to adulthood.(www.nmet168.com)
(Note: Answer the questions or complete the statements in NO MORE THAN TEN W ORDS. )
81. In the new P. E. program, children learn to lift weights, balance their diets and build physical endurance rather than ________.
82. As for P. E., some school boards either ________.
83. What are the two problems with simply teaching group sports?
84. What is the long-term benefit of the new P. E program?
第Ⅱ卷(共45分)
I. Translation
1. 这本杂志花了我20多元。(cost)
2. 雨天我总是比平时起得晚。(than)
3. 看到奶奶有些睡意,他拉上窗帘并把电视的音量调低了。(turn)
4. 乍一看,这块手表没有什么特别之处,但实际上它是一部手机。(there be)
5. 我们一致同意一旦得出调查结论,就尽早让公众知晓。(once)
II. Guided Writing
下图是小学新生的课堂一脚,对照你当时的上课情况,作出比较并谈谈你的感受。你的作文必须包括:
● 描述图片里学生上课的场景●比较你同时期的上课情况●简单谈谈你的感受
1-10 ACCBD CBBAD 11-16 BDCDBA 17 Gerald 18 flu 19 Normal 20 mixture 21 recommend a book 22 Science fiction(stories) 23 the perfect society 24 huge spiders
25-29 BCDBC 30-34 DDDAC 35-39 AABCB 40-44 BFGJH 45-49 ICAED 50-54 CDAAB 55-59 DCBAC 60-64 BDDCA 65-69 BACBC 70-74 BDBDC 75-79 DBCAF 80 D 81 (learn how to) climb a rope
82 cut it (PE) entirely or decrease the teachers or the days
83 Less overall movement and fewer students playing sports after graduation 84 The skills learned can translate to adulthood
第II 卷共20分
1.This magazine cost/costs me more than 20 yuan.
2. I always gets up later than usual on rainy days.
3. Seeing Grandma a little sleepy, he drew the curtains and turned the TV down.
4. At first night, there is nothing special about the watch, but in fact it is a
mobile phone.
5. We all agree that once the conclusion of the investigation is drawn, it will be made known to the public as soon as possible.