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2015年上海高考英语真题及答案

2015年上海高考英语真题及答案
2015年上海高考英语真题及答案

2015年普通高等学校招生全国统一考试

上海英语试卷

考生注意:

1. 考试时间120分钟,试卷满分150分。

2. 本考试设试卷和答题纸两部分。试卷分为第I卷(第1-12页)和第II卷(第13页),全

卷共13页。所有答题必须涂(选择题)或写(非选择题)在答题纸上,做在试卷上一律不得分。

3. 答题前,务必在答题纸上填写准考证号和姓名,并将核对后的条形码贴在指定位置上,

在答题纸反面清楚地填写姓名。

第I卷(共103分)

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. Impatient. B. Confused. C. Pleased. D. Regretful.

2. A. At a bus stop. B. At a laundry. C. At the dentist’s. D. At the chemist’s.

3. A. An actor. B. A salesman. C. A translator. D. A writer.

4. A. He lost his classmate’s homework. B. He can’t help the woman with her math.

C. He broke the woman’s calculator.

D. He doesn’t know where the “on” button is.

5. A. The woman should go to another counter.

B. The woman gives the man so many choices.

C. The man dislikes the sandwiches offered there.

D. The man is having trouble deciding what to eat.

6. A. Sh e has no idea where to find the man’s exam result.

B. She isn’t allowed to tell students their grades.

C. Dr. White hasn’t finished grading the papers.

D. Dr. White doesn’t want to be contacted while he’s away.

7. A. Move to a neat dormitory. B. Find a person to share their apartment.

C. Clean the room with the roommate.

D. Write an article about their roommate.

8. A. Bob won’t take her advice.

B. Bob doesn’t want to go abroad.

C. She doesn’t think Bob should study overseas.

D. She hasn’t talked to Bob since he went abroad.

9. A. The snack bar isn’t usually so empty. B. Dessert is served in the snack bar.

C. The snack bar is near the library.

D. Snacks aren’t allowed in the library.

10. A. Take her bicycle to the repair shop. B. Leave her bicycle outside.

C. Clean the garage after the rain stops.

D. Check if the garage is dry.

Section B

Directions: In Section B, you will hear two short passages, and you will be asked three questions on each of the passages. The passages 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 would be the best answer to the question you have heard.

Questions 11 through 13 are based on the following passage.

11. A. It helps care for customers’ dogs. B. You have to buy food for dogs.

C. None of the dogs are caged.

D. There is a dog named Princess.

12. A. She likes the food there. B. She enjoys the fun with a pet.

C. She can have free coffee.

D. She doesn’t like to be alone.

13. A. A new kind of café. B. A new brand of coffee.

C. A new home for pets.

D. A new way to raise pets.

Questions 14 through 16 are based on the following passage.

14. A. A trend that high achievers are given a lower salary.

B. A view that life quality is more important than pay.

C. A dream of the young for fast-paced jobs.

D. A new term created by high achievers.

15. A. 10% B. 12% C. 6% D. 7%

16. A. People are less satisfied with their lives. B. The financial investment may increase.

C. Well-paid jobs are not easy to find.

D. Unexpected problems may arise.

Section C

Directions:In Section C, you will hear two longer conversations. The conversations will be read twice. After you hear each conversation, you are required to fill in the numbered blanks with the information you have heard. Write your answers on your answer sheet.

Blanks 17 through 20 are based on the following conversation.

Blanks 21 through 24 are based on the following conversation.

II. Grammar and vocabulary

Section A

Directions: After reading the passages below, fill in the blanks to make the passages 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.

(A)

Gift from a stranger

My local supermarket is always bus y. The first parking space I found was convenient, but I’d noticed a woman in a blue car circling for a while. (25) _____ I was in a good mood, I let her have it. On the edge of the car park I backed into the next available spot—it was a tight fit.

Pretty soon I’d made my way through the supermarket and was back in the fresh air. Feeling good, I (26) _____ (empty) my purse change into the hands of a homeless man and helped a struggling woman reverse park.

Just as I approached my car, I saw the woman I’d let have my car spot earlier. She was giving me (27) _____ odd look—half puzzled, half intent (热切的). I smiled and wished her a pleasant day. As I squeezed back into my car, I saw the same lady (28) _____ (look) in at me. “Hello,” she said, hesitantly. “This (29) _____ sound crazy but I was on my way to drop some of my mother’s things off at the charity bins. You are just so much (30) _____ her. You helped those people, I noticed, and you seemed so happy.” She looked at me meaningfully and passed a box in throu gh the window. “I think she would like you to have it.” (31) _____ (shock), I took it from her automatically. She smiled and walked away.

After a pause, I opened the box. Inside was a beautiful gold necklace with a large grey pearl. It was (32) _____ (nice) gift I’d ever received, and it was from a complete stranger. The necklace was around my neck, a warm reminder of human kindness.

(B)

Ask Helpful Hannah

Dear Helpful Hannah,

I’ve got a problem with my husband, Sam. He bought a smartphone a couple of month s ago, and he took it on our recent ski vacation to Colorado. It was a great trip except for one problem. He has a constant urge (33) _____ (check) for text messages; he checks his phone every five minutes! He’s so addicted to it that he just can’t stand t he idea (34) _____ there may be an important text. He can’t help checking even at inappropriate times like when we are eating in a restaurant and I am talking to him! He behaves (35) _____ _____ any small amount of boredom can make him feel the need to ch eck his phone even when he knows he shouldn’t. The temptation to see (36) _____ is contacting him is just too great. When I ask him to please put down the phone and stop (37) _____ (ignore) me, he says, “In a minute,” but still checks to see if (38) _____ has posted something new on the Internet. Our life (39) _____ (interrupt). If we go somewhere and I ask him to leave the phone at home, he suffers from withdrawal symptoms. Maybe this dependency on his smartphone has become more than an everyday problem.

I recently read an article about “nomophobia,” (40) _____ is a real illness people can suffer from: the fear of being without your phone! I am worried that Sam may be suffering from this illness because he feels anxious if he doesn’t have his phone with him, even for a short time.

Who would have thought that little devices like these could have brought so much trouble!

Sick and Tired Sadie Section B

Directions: Complete the following passage by using the words in the box. Each word can

only be used once. Note that there is one word more than you need.

Considering how much time people spend in offices, it is important that work spaces be well designed. Well-designed office spaces help create a corporation’s image. They motivate workers, and they make an impression on people who visit and might be potential, or 41 , customers. They make businesses work better, and they are a part of the corporate culture we live in.

As we move away from an industrial-based economy to a knowledge-based one, office designers have come up with 42 to the traditional work environments of the past. The d esign industry has moved away from a fixed office setup and created more flexible “strategic management environment.” These 43 solutions are meant to support better organizational performance.

As employee hierarchies(等级制度)have flattened, or decreased, office designers’ response to this change has been to move open-plan areas to more desirable locations within the office and create fewer formal private offices. The need for increased flexibility has also been 44 by changes in workstation design. Offices and work spaces often are not 45 to a given person on a permanent basis. Because of changes to methods of working, new designs allow for expansion or movement of desks, storage, and equipment within the workstation. Another important design goal is communication, which designers have improved by lowering the walls that 46 workstations. Designers have also created informal gathering places, and upgraded employees’47 to heavily trafficked areas such as copy and coffee rooms.

Corporate and institutional office designers often struggle to resolve a number of competing and often 48 demands, including budgetary limits, employee hierarchies, and technological innovation(especially in relation to computerization). These demands must also be balanced with the need to create interiors(内饰)that in some way enhance, establish, or promote a company’s image and will enable employees to 49 at their best.

All these 50 of office design are related. The most successful office designs are like a good marriage --- the well-designed office and the employees that occupy it are seemingly made for each other.

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.

If you studied pictures that ancient people left on rock walls and you tried to determine their meaning, you would not detect a deep interest in romance among the artists. 51 , you would see plenty of animals with people running after them. Life for ancient people seemed to center on hunting and gathering wild foods for meals.

In modern times, when food is available in grocery stores, finding love is more 52 to people’s lives. The53 is all around us. It is easy to prepare a list of modern stories having to do with love. An endless number of books and movies qualify as love stories in popular culture.

Researchers are studying whether love, a highly valued emotional state, can be 54 . They ask, what is love? Toothpaste companies want us to think attraction is all about clean teeth, but clean teeth go only so far. Scientists wonder how much the brain gets involved. You have probably heard that opposites attract but that 55 attract, too. One thing is certain: The truth about love is not yet set in stone.

First Impression

To help determine the 56 of attraction, researchers paired 164 college classmates and had them talk for 3, 6 or 10 minutes so they could get a sense of ea ch other’s individuality. Then students were asked to 57 what kind of relationship they were likely to build with their partners. After nine weeks, they reported what happened.

As it turned out, their 58 judgments often held true. Students seemed to 59 at an early stage who would best fit into their lives.

The 60 Knows

Scientists have also turned to nonhumans to increase understanding of attraction. Many animals give off pheromones — natural chemicals that can be detected by, and then can produce a response in, other animals of the same species. Pheromones can signal that an animal is either ready to fight or is feeling 61 to partnerships. In contrast, humans do not seem to be as 62 as other animals at detecting such chemicals. Smell, however, does seem to play a part in human attraction. Although we may not be aware of chemicals like pheromones consciously, we give and receive loads of information through smell in every interaction with other people.

Face Value

Being fond of someone seems to have a number of factors, including seeing something we find attractive. Researchers had people judge faces for 63 . The participants had 0.013 seconds to view each face, yet somehow they generally considered the images the same as people who had more time to study the same faces. The way we 64 attractiveness seems to be somewhat automatic.

When shown an attractive face and then words with good or bad associations, people responded to 65 words faster after viewing an attractive face. Seeing something attractive seems to cause happy thinking.

51. A. Instead B. Therefore C. Moreover D. Otherwise

52. A. romantic B. stressful C. central D. beneficial

53. A. priority B. proof C. possibility D. principle

54. A. tested B. imposed C. changed D. created

55. A. appearances B. virtues C. similarities D. passions

56. A. illustrations B. implications C. ingredients D. intentions

57. A. predict B. investigate C. diagnose D. recall

58. A. critical B. initial C. random D. mature

59. A. memorize B. distinguish C. negotiate D. question

60. A. Nose B. Eye C. Heart D. Hand

61. A. open B. alert C. resistant D. superior

62. A. disappointed B. amazed C. confused D. gifted

63. A. emotions B. attractiveness C. individuality D. signals

64. A. enhance B. possess C. maintain D. asses

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