内容正文:
2025-2026学年度四川省彭州中学高2025级高一上期中考试
英语学科试题
考试时间:90分钟 试卷满分:150分
考试注意事项:
1. 开考前,请先将自己的姓名、准考证号、座位号涂写在试卷和答题卡的相应位置上。
2. 考试结束后,将试卷,答题卡,草稿纸全部交回。
3. 本试卷不按照高考英语规格设计,而是以初高衔接的视角来进行试卷设计。
一.听力部分。(30分)
第一节 (共5小题;每小题1.5分,满分7.5分)
听下面5段对话。每段对话后有一个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项。听完每段对话后,你都有10秒钟的时间来回答有关小题和阅读下一小题。
1. What does the man want to drink?
A. Coffee.
B. Tea.
C. Juice.
2. How will the woman go to the station?
A. By bus.
B. By taxi.
C. On foot.
3. What is the weather like now?
A. Rainy.
B. Sunny.
C. Cloudy.
4. Where does the conversation probably take place?
A. In a library.
B. In a restaurant.
C. In a classroom.
5. What time does the movie start?
A. At 7:00.
B. At 7:30.
C. At 8:00.
第二节 (共15小题;每小题1.5分,满分22.5分)
听下面5段对话或独白。每段对话或独白后有几个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项。听每段对话或独白前,你将有时间阅读各个小题,每小题5秒钟;听完后,各小题将给出5秒钟的作答时间。
听第6段材料,回答第6、7题。
6. What is the man doing?
A. He is asking for directions.
B. He is buying a ticket.
C. He is ordering food.
7. Which floor is the hospital on?
A. The 2nd floor.
B. The 3rd floor.
C. The 4th floor.
听第7段材料,回答第8、9题。
8. What does the woman want to buy?
A. A dress.
B. A shirt.
C. A pair of shoes.
9. What color does the woman like best?
A. Red.
B. Blue.
C. Green.
听第8段材料,回答第10至12题。
10. Who is calling?
A. Tom.
B. Mary.
C. Jack.
11. Why does the man call?
A. To invite the woman to a party.
B. To ask about homework.
C. To borrow a book.
12. When will they meet?
A. On Monday.
B. On Tuesday.
C. On Wednesday.
听第9段材料,回答第13至16题。
13. What are they mainly talking about?
A. A school trip.
B. A sports game.
C. A music concert.
14. Where are they going?
A. To the zoo.
B. To the museum.
C. To the beach.
15. How will they go there?
A. By train.
B. By school bus.
C. By bike.
16. What should the students bring?
A. Some food.
B. A camera.
C. A notebook.
听第10段材料,回答第17至20题。
17. What is the speaker’s job?
A. A teacher.
B. A guide.
C. A driver.
18. How many people are there in the group?
A. 10.
B. 15.
C. 20.
19. What is the first thing they will visit?
A. A park.
B. A tower.
C. A shop.
20. When will they come back to the hotel?
A. At 4:00 pm.
B. At 5:00 pm.
C. At 6:00 pm.
二.阅读试题。(共两大题,第一大题30分,第二大题40分,每一个大题有很多小题,请按照要求完成)
A
A Sudden Change Online
Zhang Xuefeng was a well-known education expert in China. He helped many students and parents with college and university choices. He had over 40 million followers online. His advice was very popular, especially during the college application season.
In March 2026, Zhang Xuefeng passed away suddenly at the age of 41. He died of a heart problem while working out on a treadmill at his company. At that time, many people felt sad and expressed their respect online. They thanked him for his honest advice to ordinary families.
However, only two months later, something unexpected happened. The online mood changed completely. Some people started to make funny pictures and videos of Zhang Xuefeng. They made jokes about his daily habits. For example, he loved eating a kind of ice cream called "Qiaolezi." He once said he could only eat it after running 100 kilometers. He also liked drinking Sprite. Some netizens even gave him a funny nickname, "Lao Feng".
This change surprised many people. Some said the jokes were just for fun and helped them express their feelings about today's stressful life. But others thought it was wrong to make jokes about someone who had passed away. They said there should be a line between humor and disrespect
请按照文本内容完成下面问答题,除题目要求以外,其他题目没有词数限制,你只需要回答清楚即可。
21. What was Zhang Xuefeng’s job?(3 marks)
22. How many followers did Zhang Xuefeng have online? (3 marks)
23. What was the cause of his death?(3 marks)
24. Why did some peopole think the jokes about Zhang xuefeng were NOT acceptable?(3 marks)
25. What is your personal opinion about making jokes about famous people who have passed away? Do you think it is a way of expressing feelings or a form of disrespect? Give at least two reasons to support your answer.(8 marks)
26. Summarize this passage within 30 words.(10 marks)
B:The "Goose Leg Auntie" Scandal: A Trust Collapse
In late 2023, a 54-year-old street vendor named Chen Xiufeng became an internet sensation. Students at Peking University and Tsinghua University affectionately called her "Goose Leg Auntie" (E Tui A Yi). They waited in long lines in freezing weather to buy her roasted "goose legs" for 16 yuan each. She was praised as a model of honest hard work and even invited to give a speech at Peking University.
However, in June 2026, the truth came out. In a group chat, the Auntie admitted that she had been selling duck legs, not goose legs, for over ten years. She claimed goose legs had been out of stock for 15 years, so she used duck legs instead, but kept the name "Goose Leg Auntie" because it sounded better.
The news shocked her customers. Many students felt betrayed. One student said, "I feel cold all over when I think that the 'goose legs' I loved were actually duck legs." Some also reported that the meat sometimes turned green, but the Auntie explained it was from vegetable juice.
The scandal grew bigger. People discovered that the Auntie had registered "Goose Leg Auntie" as a trademark and that her business had grown to over 20 WeChat groups, reaching more than 100,000 customers. The price gap also caused anger: a duck leg costs about 2.5 yuan wholesale, while a real goose leg costs over 14 yuan — over five times more.
Lawyers said this might be consumer fraud. Authorities have started investigating. Peking University even deleted its former article praising her.
The case has raised a big question: In the internet age, when ordinary people become famous overnight, should we trust the sweet stories they tell — or should we always check the facts behind them?
27. What did students affectionately call Chen Xiufeng?(2 marks)
28. How much did the Auntie sell her "goose legs" for each? (2 marks)
29. In which year did the truth about the goose legs come out? (2 marks)
30. What reason did the Auntie give for using duck legs instead of goose legs?(2 marks)
31. What was one problem that some students reported about the meat?(2 marks)
32. What did the Auntie do with her business that showed it had grown very large? Give at least two pieces of evidence from the passage. (5 marks)
33. What did Peking University do after the scandal broke out? (5 marks)
34. Why did students feel "betrayed" when they learned the truth? Explain using information from the passage.(5marks)
35. Based on the prices mentioned in the passage, how much more expensive is a real goose leg than a duck leg? Show your calculation. What does this price gap suggest about the Auntie's business? (5marks)
36. The author ends the passage with a question: "should we trust the sweet stories they tell — or should we always check the facts behind them?" Based on the passage, which side do you think the author leans toward? Support your answer with at least ONE piece of evidence from the text. (10 marks)
3. 对话补充。根据上下文补充合适的对话,共10空,一空1分,共10分。
(没有标准答案,只要合理即可,但是语法准确是必须的)
Li Ming: Excuse me, are you Wang Wei? I'm Li Ming. I'm a freshman. I heard you're good at studying.
Wang Wei: (37) ________________________. Nice to meet you too. What can I do for you?
Li Ming: To be honest, I feel really confused these days. (38) ________________________.
Wang Wei: That's totally normal. Many freshmen feel the same way in the first few months.
Li Ming: Really? I thought I was the only one. The subjects are so much harder than before. (39) ________________________.
Wang Wei: I know what you mean. The biggest change is that you need to study more on your own. Teachers won't push you as much as in middle school.
Li Ming: (40) ________________________. I always waited for my teachers to tell me what to do. Now I don't even know where to start.
Wang Wei: Here's my advice. First, make a weekly plan. Don't try to do everything at once.
Li Ming: (41) ________________________. But I'm not sure how to make a good plan.
Wang Wei: Start small. Set one or two goals each day. For example, review today's math lesson for 30 minutes.
Li Ming: (42) ________________________. I always end up spending hours on one subject.
Wang Wei: Then you can use a timer. When it rings, move to the next subject.
Li Ming: That sounds practical. (43) ________________________?
Wang Wei: Yes, I have some notes I can share with you. They might help you get started.
Li Ming: (44) ________________________! I really appreciate your help.
Wang Wei: You're welcome. (45) ________________________.
Li Ming: But I still feel worried about my grades. What if I fail?
Wang Wei: (46) ________________________. Grades are important, but they're not everything. The most important thing is to keep trying and not give up.
Li Ming: You're right. I feel much better now. Thank you, Wang Wei.
Wang Wei: Anytime. Good luck with your high school journey!
4. 写作。(40分)
47. 刚进入高中,你一定对高中学习充满好奇,高中学习充满了未知和探索,请你给三年后高中毕业的自己写一封信,内容不限,词数80-100,要求格式正确。(15分)
(在三年后,你们今天的信会以一种特殊的方式呈现回来给你们,敬请期待!)
48. 读后续写:(25分)
It was a rainy Tuesday afternoon. Li Ming, a freshman in senior high school, sat alone in the empty classroom, staring at the test paper on his desk. The red marks on it seemed to be laughing at him. 52 out of 150. It was his third math test in a month, and his third failure.
He thought about his middle school days, when he used to be one of the top students in his class. His teachers always praised him, and his parents often showed off his grades to their friends. But now, everything had changed. The math problems were much harder. The other students seemed to understand everything so quickly. He felt like he was falling behind more and more each day.
Li Ming put his head down on the desk and closed his eyes. He remembered how excited he had been on the first day of high school. He had promised his mother that he would study hard and get into a good university. But now, that promise felt like a joke. Maybe he was just not smart enough for high school. Maybe he should give up his dream of becoming an engineer.
Just then, the classroom door opened. It was Mr. Zhang, his math teacher. Mr. Zhang was a kind man in his fifties, with glasses and a warm smile. He walked over to Li Ming and sat down beside him.
"I saw your paper, Li Ming," Mr. Zhang said softly. "Do you want to tell me what's going on?"
Li Ming hesitated for a moment. Then, all his feelings came out like a flood. He told Mr. Zhang about his frustration, his fear of falling behind, and how he had lost all his confidence.
Mr. Zhang listened patiently. When Li Ming finished, Mr. Zhang said, "Let me tell you a secret. When I was your age, I failed my math test too. In fact, I failed three times in a row."
Li Ming looked up in surprise. "Really? But you are a math teacher now!"
注意:
续写词数应为 150 词左右(两段共计);
请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答。
Paragraph 1:
Mr. Zhang smiled and took out an old, yellow notebook from his bag.
Paragraph 2:
From that day on, Li Ming did something different every day after school.
2025-2026学年度四川省彭州中学高2025级高一上期中考试
英语学科试题答案
听力部分:
1-5 BACAB 6-10 CABBA 11-15 ABBCB 16-20 BBBCB
阅读部分:
21. What was Zhang Xuefeng’s job? (3 marks)
He was a well-known education expert in China.
22. How many followers did Zhang Xuefeng have online? (3 marks)
He had over 40 million followers online.
23. What was the cause of his death? (3 marks)
He died of a heart problem while working out on a treadmill at his company.
24. Why did some people think the jokes about Zhang Xuefeng were NOT acceptable? (3 marks)
They thought it was wrong to make jokes about someone who had passed away, and they said there should be a line between humor and disrespect.
25. What is your personal opinion about making jokes about famous people who have passed away? Do you think it is a way of expressing feelings or a form of disrespect? Give at least two reasons to support your answer. (8 marks)
In my opinion, making jokes about famous people who have passed away is generally a form of disrespect. First, death is a serious and permanent loss, and mocking someone who cannot defend themselves shows a lack of basic human empathy for the person and their grieving family. Second, while humor can be a coping mechanism, jokes that target a person’s habits or appearance shortly after their death cross the line from light-hearted expression into cruelty, especially when the person was respected for their positive contributions to society.
26. Summarize this passage within 30 words. (10 marks)
Education expert Zhang Xuefeng died suddenly at 41. Initially mourned, online sentiment shifted two months later to jokes about him, sparking debate over humor versus disrespect. (26 words)
27. What did students affectionately call Chen Xiufeng? (2 marks)
They called her "Goose Leg Auntie" (E Tui A Yi).
28. How much did the Auntie sell her "goose legs" for each? (2 marks)
She sold them for 16 yuan each.
29. In which year did the truth about the goose legs come out? (2 marks)
The truth came out in 2026 (specifically June 2026).
30. What reason did the Auntie give for using duck legs instead of goose legs? (2 marks)
She claimed that goose legs had been out of stock for 15 years, so she used duck legs instead but kept the name because it sounded better.
31. What was one problem that some students reported about the meat? (2 marks)
Some students reported that the meat sometimes turned green.
32. What did the Auntie do with her business that showed it had grown very large? Give at least two pieces of evidence from the passage. (5 marks)
Two pieces of evidence that show her business grew very large are:
She had registered "Goose Leg Auntie" as a trademark.
Her business had grown to over 20 WeChat groups, reaching more than 100,000 customers.
33. What did Peking University do after the scandal broke out? (5 marks)
After the scandal broke out, Peking University deleted its former article that had praised her.
34. Why did students feel "betrayed" when they learned the truth? Explain using information from the passage. (5 marks)
Students felt betrayed because they had believed they were eating goose legs, which they loved and associated with the Auntie's honest, hardworking image. When they learned that she had actually been selling duck legs for over ten years, they realized they had been misled. As one student said, "I feel cold all over when I think that the 'goose legs' I loved were actually duck legs," showing their emotional disappointment and sense of deception.
35. Based on the prices mentioned in the passage, how much more expensive is a real goose leg than a duck leg? Show your calculation. What does this price gap suggest about the Auntie's business? (5 marks)
A duck leg costs about 2.5 yuan wholesale.
A real goose leg costs over 14 yuan wholesale.
Price difference: 14 - 2.5 = 11.5 yuan (or more than 11.5 yuan, since a goose leg costs "over 14 yuan").
This price gap suggests that the Auntie was making very large profits by selling cheap duck legs at a price (16 yuan) that customers thought was reasonable for goose legs. It implies she may have been dishonest for financial gain, as she charged goose-leg prices for a much cheaper product.
36. The author ends the passage with a question: "should we trust the sweet stories they tell — or should we always check the facts behind them?" Based on the passage, which side do you think the author leans toward? Support your answer with at least ONE piece of evidence from the text. (10 marks)
The author leans toward always checking the facts behind the stories.
Evidence: The author points out that the Auntie was praised as a "model of honest hard work" and even invited to speak at Peking University, but later it was discovered she had been lying for over ten years. By including details like the price gap (duck legs cost 2.5 yuan vs. goose legs over 14 yuan) and the fact that the meat sometimes turned green, the author shows that blind trust can be dangerous. The final question is rhetorical — it suggests that we should not accept sweet stories at face value, because the Auntie's story turned out to be false, and the consequences affected over 100,000 customers. The author likely believes that fact-checking is necessary, especially when someone gains fame and money from a public image.
37-46 以下题目没有标准答案,只要合理即可。
Li Ming: Excuse me, are you Wang Wei? I'm Li Ming. I'm a freshman. I heard you're good at studying.
Wang Wei: (37) Yes, that's me. Nice to meet you too. What can I do for you?
Li Ming: To be honest, I feel really confused these days. (38) I don't know how to adjust to high school life and studies.
Wang Wei: That's totally normal. Many freshmen feel the same way in the first few months.
Li Ming: Really? I thought I was the only one. The subjects are so much harder than before. (39) I can hardly keep up with the pace.
Wang Wei: I know what you mean. The biggest change is that you need to study more on your own. Teachers won't push you as much as in middle school.
Li Ming: (40) That's exactly my problem. I always waited for my teachers to tell me what to do. Now I don't even know where to start.
Wang Wei: Here's my advice. First, make a weekly plan. Don't try to do everything at once.
Li Ming: (41) That sounds like a good idea. But I'm not sure how to make a good plan.
Wang Wei: Start small. Set one or two goals each day. For example, review today's math lesson for 30 minutes.
Li Ming: (42) But how do I stop myself from getting distracted? I always end up spending hours on one subject.
Wang Wei: Then you can use a timer. When it rings, move to the next subject.
Li Ming: That sounds practical. (43) Do you have any study notes that I could borrow?
Wang Wei: Yes, I have some notes I can share with you. They might help you get started.
Li Ming: (44) That would be great! I really appreciate your help.
Wang Wei: You're welcome. (45) Don't worry too much — you'll get used to it soon.
Li Ming: But I still feel worried about my grades. What if I fail?
Wang Wei: (46) Try not to be so hard on yourself. Grades are important, but they're not everything. The most important thing is to keep trying and not give up.
Li Ming: You're right. I feel much better now. Thank you, Wang Wei.
Wang Wei: Anytime. Good luck with your high school journey!
写作部分略
说明:本次考试是高一年级学生在高一生涯的第一次大型考试,故不设置太多压力,让学生们平缓过渡。
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