2004 年江苏高考英语真题及答案
本试卷分第一卷(选择题)和第二卷(非选择题)两部分。共 150 分。考试时间 120 分钟。
第二部分:英语知识运用(共两节,满分 45 分)
第一卷(选择题共 115 分)
第一节:单项填空(共 15 小题;每小题 1 分,满分 15 分)
从四个选项中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。
例: It is generally considered unwise to give a child_________ he or she wants.
A. however
B. whatever
C. whichever
D. whenever
21. I will never know what was on his mind at the time, nor will_b_______.
A. anyone
B. anyone else
C. no one
D. no one else
22. --- I don't mind telling you what I know.
--- You
d
A. mustn't
. I'm not asking you for it.
B. may not
C. can't
D. needn’t
23.
a
I accept that he is not perfect, I do actually like the person.
A. While
B. Since
C. Before
D. Unless
24. He got to the station early,_______c_____ missing his train.
A. in case of
B. instead of
C. for fear of
D. in search of
25. The man insisted____c____ a taxi for me even though I told him I lived nearby.
A. find
B. to find
C. on finding
D. in finding
26. More patients _____d______ in hospital this year than last year.
A. treated
B. have treated
C. had been treated
D. have been treated
27. Tom owns ___b____larger collection of _______ books than any other student in our class.
A. the; 不填
B. a; 不填
C. a; the
D. 不填; the
28. -- You haven't lost the ticket, have you?
-- ____a_____. I know it's not easy to get another one at the moment.
A. I hope not
B. Yes, I have
C. I hope so
D. Yes, I’m afraid so
29. It's ten years since the scientist b______on his life's work of discovering the valuable
chemical.
A. made for
B. set out
C. took off
D. turned up
30. A man is being questioned in relation to the __a__C____ murder last night.
A. advised
B. attended
C. attempted
D. admitted
31. The old man, ___d_________abroad for twenty years, is on the way back to his motherland.
A. to work
B. working
C. to have worked
D. having worked
32. The_____a_______house smells as if it hasn't been lived in for years.
A. little white wooden
C. white wooden little
B. little wooden white
D. wooden white little
33.
____d____ is often the case, we have worked out the production plan.
A. Which
C. What
B. When
D. As
34. Sales of CDs have greatly increased since the early 1990s, when people__b___to enjoy the
advantages of this new technology.
A. begin
B. began
C. have begun
D. had begun
35. ----How long are you staying?
----I don't know._____d_C_____.
A. That's OK
B. Never mind
C. It depends
D.It doesn't matter
第二节 完形填空(共 20 小题;每小题 1.5 分,满分 30 分)
阅读下面短文,掌握其大意,然后从 36—55 各题所给的四个选项(A、B、C 和 D)中,选出最佳选
项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。
We may look at the world around us, but somehow we manage not to see it until whatever we've
Cto see
b36 , for example, the neatly-dressed woman I 37a
become used to suddenly disappears.
-- or look at -- on my way to work each morning.
39 d
For three years, no matter
38a the weather was like, she was always waiting at die bus stop
days, she wore heavy clothes and a pair of woolen gloves. Summertime
around 8:O0 am. On
a , she
40 d B out neat, belted cotton dresses and a hat pulled low over her sunglasses. 41
all this only after she was seen no more. It
was an ordinary working woman. Of course, I
her.
was then that I realized how
Now that
“Did she have an accident? Something
d life probably
she was gone, I felt I had
includes such chance meetings with familiar 49b : the milkman you see at dawn, the woman who
50a
walks her dog along the street every morning, the twin brothers you see at the library. Such people
are
43 d I expected to see her each morning. You might say I
markers in our byes. They add weight to our 52d
47 bC her. I began to realize that part of our
45b ?” I thought to myself about her
of place and belonging.
46 a .
51a C
42c
44b
48
54 d Ca certain
55 a , person?
53d B
B. Take
C. Give
D. snowy
D. turned
C. Luckily
D. Have
D. tried
D. when
Think about it.
C. used
C. which
C. cloudy
C. carried
B. wanted
B. how
B. rainy
B. brought
, while walking to work, we mark where we are by
building, why should we not mark where we are when we pass a familiar, though
36. A. Make
37. A. happened
38. A. what
39. A. sunny
40. A. took
41. A. Clearly
42. A. believed
43. A. long
44. A. respected
45. A. better
46. A. disappearance
47. A. forgotten
48. A. happy
49. A. friends
50. A. regularly
51. A. common
52. A. choice
53. A. Because
54. A. keeping
55. A. unnamed
第三部分:阅读理解(共 20 小题;每小题 2 分,满分 40 分)
B. Particularly
B. expressed
B. often
B. missed
B. worse
B. appearance
B. lost
B. enjoyable
B. strangers
B. actually
C. tourists
C. hardly
C. important
C. decision
C. Although
C. passing
C. unbelievable
C. remembered
C. soon
C. praised
C. more
C. misfortune
C. known
C. frequent
B. knowledge
B. If
B. changing
D. admired
D. less
D. faithful
D. sense
D. hurt
D. daily
B.unforgettable
D. wondered
B. pleasant
D. However
D. much
D. Especially
D. fortune
D. guests
D. probably
D. mentioning
D. unreal
阅读下列短文,从每题所给的四个选项(A、B、C 和 D)中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。
A
He was the baby with no name. Found and taken from the north Atlantic 6 days after the sinking
of the Titanic in 1912' his tiny body so moved the salvage (救援) workers that they called him
“our baby.” In their home port of Halifax, Nova Scotia, people collected money for a headstone
in front of the baby's grave (墓), carved with the words: “To the memory of an unknown child.”
He has rested there ever since.
But history has a way of uncovering its secrets. On Nov. 5, this year, three members of
a family from Finland arrived at Halifax and laid fresh flowers at the grave. “This is our baby,”
says Magda Schleifer, 68, a banker. She grew up hearing stories about a great-aunt named Maria
Panula,42, who had sailed on the Titanic for America to be reunited with her husband. According
to the information Mrs. Schleifer had gathered, Panula gave up her seat on a lifeboat to search
for her five children -- including a 13-month-old boy named Eino from whom she had become separated
during the final minutes of the crossing. "We thought they were all lost in the sea," says Schleifer.
Now, using teeth and bone pieces taken from the baby's grave, scientists have compared the
DNA from the Unknown Child with those collected from members of five families who lost relatives
on the Titanic and never recovered the bodies. The result of the test points only to one possible
person: young Eino. Now, the family sees: no need for a new grave. "He belongs to the people of
Halifax," says Schleifer. "They've taken care of him for 90 years."
Adapted from People, November 25, 2002
56. The baby travelled on the Titanic with his___a________.
A. mother
B. parents
C. aunt
D. relatives
57. What is probably the boy's last name?bD
A. Schleiferi
B. Eino.
C. Magda.
D. Panula.
58. Some members of the family went to Halifax and put flowers at the child's grave on Nov. 5__c.
A.
59. This text is mainly about" how________c______.
B. 1954
1912
C. 2002
D. 2004
A. the unknown baby's body was taken from the north Atlantic
B. the unknown baby was buried in Halifax, Nova Scotia
C. people found out who the unknown baby was
D. people took care of the unknown baby for 90 years
B
Deserts are found where there is little rainfall or where rain for a whole year falls in
only a few weeks' time. Ten inches of rain may be enough for many plants to survive (存活)if the
rain is
spread throughout the year, If it falls, within one or two months and the rest of the year is
dry, those plants may die and a desert may form.
Sand begins as tiny pieces of rock that get smaller and smaller as wind and weather wear
them down. Sand dunes (沙丘) are formed as winds move the sand across the desert. Bit by bit,
the
dunes grow over the years, always moving with the winds and changing the shape. Most of them are
only a few feet tall, but they can grow to be several hundred feet high.
There is, however, much more to a desert than sand. In the deserts of the southwestern United
States, cliffs (悬崖) and deep valleys were formed from thick mud that once lay beneath a sea
more than millions of years ago. Over the centuries, the water dried up. Wind, sand , rain, heat
and cold all wore away at the remaining rocks. The faces of the desert mountains are always changing
–-very, very slowly ---as these forces of nature continue to work on the rock.
Most deserts have a surprising variety of life. There are plants, animals and insects
that :have adapted to life in the desert. During the heat of the day' a visitor may see very few
signs of living things, but as the air begins to cool in the evening, the desert comes to life.
As the sun begins to rise again in the sky, the desert once again becomes quiet and lonely.
60. Many plants may survive in deserts when________a__________.
A. the rain is spread out in a year
C. there is little rain in a year
61. Sand dunes are formed when______a_____________.
A. sand piles up gradually
C. the sea has dried up over the years
62. The underlined sentence in the third paragraph probably means that in a desert there
is_____d_______.
B. the rain falls only in a few weeks
D. it is dry all the year round
B. there is plenty of rain in a year
D. pieces of rock get smaller
A. too much sand
C. nothing except sand
B. more sand than before
D. something else besides sand
63 It can be learned from the text that in a desert_____b_______.
A. there is no rainfall throughout the year
C. all sand dunes are a few feet high
B. life exists in rough conditions
D. rocks are worn away only by wind and heat
C
THE BEST SHOPPING IN SYDNEY
Sydney is one of the world's biggest
cities
and has something for everyone when it
comes to shopping. You will find
excellent
Australian products alongside the
best that
the world has to offer. At the bottom
of
Sydney Tower, you can shop in 160 of
Sydney's favorite stores including
16"
jewellery stores and many gift and
fashion
It's
shops.
Centrepoint.
Tel: 9231 9300.
Westfield
all
at
comes
alive!
history
SOVEREIGN HILL
This: prize-winning living museum is
where
Australia's
Visit daily
or stay for the night and experience
life of
the Gold Rush days. A wonderful
nightly
sound and light show,
" Blood on the
Southern Cross" tells the story of the
famous
Enjoy
shopping
along
and
entertainment.
breakfast.
Tel: 5331 1944
with real
Uprising.
character
4-star
Eureka
life
hotel
and
ANCHORAGE RESTAURANT
Come and enjoy our delicious Cantonese
seafood right on the water's edge in
the
historic fishing port of Williamstown
with
views of the city centre across Port
Philip
Bay.
Open 7 days a week
Lunch: Sunday to Friday
11:00 am--2:00 pm
Dinner: Monday to Saturday
5:00pm.--10: 30pm.
Tel: 9397 6270 or 9397 7799
Cook,
James
Cook's
COOK'S COTTAGE
Built by James and Grace Cook, parents
of
Captain
Cottage
stands proud in the Fitzroy Gardens as
a
reminder of life in the eighteenth
century,
and as a Celebration and commemoration
of
the life and travels of Captain James
Cook.
Open 9:00 am 6:00 pm daily, and until
5,: 30 pm during the summer.
Information: 9419 4677.
64. Where can you spend the night in a tour?d
A. Cook's Cottage.
C. Sydney Tower:
B. Westfield Centrepoint.
D. Sovereign Hill.
65. What is the time that Cook's Cottage is open on Saturday in the summer?c
A. 11:00 am--2:00 pm.
C. 9:00 am--5:30 pm.
B. 5:00 pm--10:30 pm.
D. 9:00 am--5:00 pm.
66. The Anchorage Restaurant is_______b_A_______________.
A. in Williamstown
C. in Anchorage
67. If you want to buy the best products in Australia, you may call___b__________.
B. in the centre of the city
D. in a Cantonese fishing port
A. 9397 6270
B, 9231 9300
C.
5331 1944
D.
9419 4677
D.
Whoever has made a voyage up the Hudson River must remember the Catskill Mountains. They
are a branch of the great Appalachian family, and can be seen to the west rising up to a noble
height and towering over the surrounding country, when the weather is fair and settled, they are
clothed in blue and purple, and print their beautiful shapes on the clear evening sky, but sometimes
when it is cloudless, gray steam gathers around the top of the mountains which, in the last rays
of the setting sun, will shine and light up like a crown of glory (华丽的皇冠).
At the foot of these mountains, a traveler may see light smoke going up from a village.
In that village, and in one of the houses (which, to tell the exact truth, was sadly time-worn
and weather-beaten), there lived many years ago, a simple, good-natured fellow by the name of
Rip Van Winkle.
Rip's great weakness was a natural dislike of all kinds of money-making labor. It could not
be from lack of diligence (勤劳), for he could sit all day on a wet rock and fish without saying
a word, even though he was not encouraged by a single bite. He would carry a gun on his shoulder
for hours, walking through woods and fields to shoot a few birds or squirrels. He would never
refuse to help a neighbor, even in the roughest work. The women of the village, too, used to employ
him to do such little jobs as their less helpful husbands would not do for them. In a word, Rip
was ready to attend to everybody's business but his own.
If left to himself, he would have whistled ( 吹口哨) life away in perfect satisfaction;
but his wife was always mad at him for his idleness 懒散). Morning, noon, and night, her tongue
was endlessly going, so that he was forced to escape to the outside of the house -- the only side
which, in truth, belongs to a henpecked husband.
68. Which of the following best describes the Catskill Mountains?b
A. They are on the west of the Hudson River.
B. They are very high and beautiful in this area.
C. They can be seen from the Appalachian family.
D. They gather beautiful clouds in blue and purple.
69. The hero of the story is probably____d_________.
A. hard-working and likes all kinds of work
B. idle and hates all kinds of jobs
C. simple, idle but very dutiful
D. gentle, helpful but a little idle
70. The underlined words "henpecked husband" in the last paragraph probabl_y means a man whod
A. likes hunting
C. loves his wife
B. is afraid of hens
D. is afraid of his wife
71. What would be the best title for the text?c
A. Catskill Mountains.
C. Rip Van Winkle.
B. A Mountain Village.
D. A Dutiful Husband.
E
Every year more people recognize that it is wrong to kill wildlife for “sport.” Progress
in this direction is slow because shooting is not a sport for watching, and only those few who
take part realize the cruelty and destruction.
The number of gunners, however, grows rapidly. Children too young to develop proper judgments
through independent thought are led along way away by their gunning parents. They are subjected
to advertisements of gun producers who describe shooting as good for their health and guncarrying
as a way of putting redder blood in the veins (血管). They are persuaded by gunner magazines with
stories honoring the chase and the kill. In school they view motion pictures which are supposedly
meant to teach them how to deal with arms safely but which are actually designed to stimulate
(刺激) a desire to own a gun. Wildlife is disappearing because of shooting and because of the
loss of wildland habitat (栖息地). Habitat loss will continue with our increasing population,
but can we slow the loss of wildlife caused by shooting? There doesn't seem to be any chance if
the serious condition of our birds is not improved.
Wildlife belongs to everyone and not to the gunners alone. Although most people do not shoot
they seem to forgive shooting for sport because they know little or nothing about it. The only
answer, then, is to bring the truth about sport shooting to the great majority of people.
Now, it is time to realize that animals have the same right to life as we do and that there
is nothing fair or right about a person with a gun shooting the harmless and beautiful creatures.
The gunners like to describe what they do as character-building, but we know that to wound an
animal and watch it go through the agony of dying can make nobody happy. If, as they would have
you believe, gun-carrying and killing improve human-character, then perhaps we should encourage
war.
72. According to the text, most people do not seem to be against hunting-because___a________.
A. they have little knowledge of it
C. it is too costly to stop killing wildlife
73. The underlined word "agony" in the last paragraph probably means__c____________.
D. they want to keep wildlife under control
B. it helps to build human character
A. form
B. Condition
C. pain
D. sadness
74. According to the text, the films children watch at school actually_____d_____.
A. teach them how to deal with guns safely
C. describe hunting as an exercise
B. praise hunting as character-building
D. encourage them to have guns of their own
75. It can be inferred from the text that the author seems to_______aB______.
A. blame the majority of people
C. be in favour of war
B. worry about the existence of wildlife
D. be in support of character-building
第二卷(非选择题 共 35 分)
第四部分:写作(共两节,满分 35 分)
第一节:短文改错(共 10 小题;每小题 1 分,满分 10 分)
此题要求改正所给短文中的错误。对标有题号的每一行作出判断:如无错误,在该行右边横线上画一
个勾(√);如有错误(每行只有一个错误),则按下列情况改正:
此行多一个词:把多余的词用斜线(\)划掉,在该行右边横线上写出该词,并也用斜线划掉。
此行缺一个词:在缺词处加一个漏字符号(∧),在该行右边横线上写出该加的词。
此行错一个词:在错的词下划一横线,在该行右边横线上写出改正后的词。
注意:原行没有错的不要改。
This is a story told by my father: “When I was a boy,
the most exciting thing was when to celebrate the Spring
Festival. My grandma was the best cook in the world
76.__a_________
77. ___to________
78. ________
79. ____
and could make the most delicious dishes. One time, I just
couldn’t wait for the Spring Festival dinner. As I was
about to take a piece from a cooked duck, I saw Grandma in
the kitchen looking at me. Shaking her head, she said, ‘ It
isn't a good time to do that, dear.’ At once I apologized
and controlled myself at my best till the dinner started. You
know, that was a dinner we had waited for several months.”
第二节:书面表达(满分 25 分)
假如你是李晓华,住在江城。你的加拿大笔友 Bob 来信谈到了他所居住的城市,并希望了解你家乡江城的
情况。请你用英语写一封回信。回信须包括下表中的内容。
82. ___________
83. ___________
84. ___________
80. ___________
81. ___________
85. ___________
自然情况
①位于长江边、风景优美、适合居住
②经济发展迅速
成 .就
存在问题
③新建了不少工厂、住房、道路等。
④水、空气污染
⑤交通拥挤
对江城发展的看法
⑥(内容由考生自己拟定)’
注意:1.回信中不能使用“江城”以外的地名。
2.词数 100 左右。信的开头与结尾已为你写好,不计入词数。
参考词汇:经济 economy n.
Dear Bob,
It's very kind of you to write me and let me know about your beautiful city.Now I’d like to
tell you something about my hometown Jiangcheng.
Yours,
Xiaohua
英语试题参考答案
32.A
3.B
13.C
4.A
14.A
5.C
15.C
2.A
12.B
23. A
24.C
7.B
17.A
6.A
16.C
33.D 34.B 35.C
25.C 26.D 27.B.28.A
37.C 38.A 39.D 40.B 41.A
47.C 48.D 49.B 50.A 51.C.52.D.
第一部分
1.B
11.C
第二部分
21.B 22.D
31.D
36.B
46.A
第三部分
56.A
66.A
第四部分
第一节:
This is a story told by my father: “When I was∧ boy,
the most exciting thing was when to celebrate the Spring
Festival. My grandma was the best cooker in the world
but could make the most delicious dishes. One time, I just
57.D 58.C
67.B68.B 69.D
61.A
71.C
42.C 43.D
44.B
62.D
72.A
63.B 64.D
74.D
73.C
59.C
60.A
70. D
8.B
18.C
29. B
9.C
10.A
19.B’ 20.B
30.C
45.B
53.B 54.C
55.A
65.C
75.B
76.____ a ______
77. ___ when ___
78. ___ cook ___
79. ___ and _____