下载高清试卷
【2020-2021学年广东省广州外国语学校八年级(下)期中英语试卷】-第1页 试卷格式:2020-2021学年广东省广州外国语学校八年级(下)期中英语试卷.PDF
试卷热词:最新试卷、2021年、广东试卷、广州市试卷、英语试卷、八年级下学期试卷、期中试卷、初中试卷
扫码查看解析
试卷题目
1.  Why do people wear clothes? "To make me warm and (1)       my body" will probably be the answer. That's why people wear clothes, but people also want to look attractive and appear (2)       to others.
  If clothes (3)       for warmth and to cover their bodies, most clothes will be simple and cheap. In many countries, however, clothes are sometimes very expensive. The main reason (4)       this is not the cost of the materials or the cost of making clothes. The clothes are expensive (5)       they are fashionable.
  Successful businessmen, for example, often wear very expensive suits, shirts and ties. So they pay (6)       dollars for a suit and several hundred dollars for a tie. It's still just a suit and (7)       tie, but they pay these prices because of the famous designers.
  Fashion (8)       constantly (持续不断地). It means that people (9)       want to be fashionable have to buy new clothes every few months, even if last month's clothes have only been worn once or twice. Some people have (10)       many clothes that some of these clothes have never been worn. These clothes are no longer in fashion though they are still new.
2.  High school does not encourage students to know about the new things in life, but college sets the stage for it. I myself went through this (1)       process (过程) and found something that has changed my experience at college for the better: I discovered ASL-American Sign Language.
  I never felt it necessary to learn any sign language before. All of my family members can hear, and so are all my friends. The (2)       language was enough. Little by little, I discovered my (3)       for ASL.
  The (4)       began during my first week at college. I watched it carefully when the ASL club performed their translation of a song. Both the hand movements and the idea of communicating without speaking attracted me. What I saw was completely different from anything I had experienced in the past. This new form of communication just made me want more.
  After that, feeling the need to (5)       further, I decided to join one of ASL clubs. I only learned how to (6)       my feelings with my hands about the letters that day. Although my process was (7)      , I wasn't disappointed about it. I then tried my best to take part in those clubs' meetings and learned all I could.
  The following term, I decided to be a member of an ASL class. The professor was deaf and any talking wasn't (8)      . I soon realized that silence was not unpleasant. (9)      , if there had been any talking, it would have caused to learn less. Now, I enjoy the silence and the (10)       way of communication.
3.  The policeman slowly walked along the street. It was barely ten o'clock at night. The wind and light rain had kept most people at home.
  Halfway down the street, the policeman saw a man leaning against a door, with an unlighted cigar in his mouth. As the policeman walked up to him, the man spoke quickly. "It's all right, officer," he said. "I'm just waiting here for an old friend. It's an appointment that was made twenty years ago. You think it funny to plan a meeting like this, don't you?"
  The man lit his cigar. The light showed a pale, square-jawed face with keen eyes. He was very well-dressed.
  "Twenty years ago tonight," the man went on, "I dined at a restaurant nearby with my friend Jimmy Wells. I was going to the West to try my luck, but Jimmy wanted to stay. We agreed to meet here again exactly twenty years form that date and time. That's why I'm here."
  "What happened to your friend?" asked the policeman.
  "I'm not sure," said the man. "We wrote to each other for a while and then stopped. But I'm sure if he is alive, he will keep his promise. We said we would meet at ten o'clock."
  "OK, I'll be on my way. Good night."
  The policeman continued on his way; Bob waited about twenty minutes. Then, a tall man went straight to the waiting man.
  "Is that you, Bob?" asked the newcomer.
  "Is that you, Jimmy?" cried the man in the door. "You've grown so tall. Let me have a good look at you. You don't look anything like Jimmy." "You're right," said the tall man. "I'm a police officer. You are wanted by the New York police. But, before we go to the police station, here's a note from your friend Jimmy Wells."
  Bob opened the small piece of paper. His hands shook as he read.
Bob,
  I was on my way to meet you as we had planned. However, when you lit your cigar, I saw it was the face of a man that is wanted by the police. Somehow, I couldn't do it myself. So I sent another police officer to do the job.
Jimmy
4.  Perhaps no one knows the power of imagination better than Chinese sci-fi writer Liu Cixin. Until four years ago, Liu worked full-time as a computer engineer at a power plant in Shanxi province. He only wrote science fiction in his spare time. But it was during this time that Liu's imagination took flight. He did what he might never have the chance to do in real life — wander in space, fight with aliens, and visit far away planets.
  But even with such a powerful imagination, Liu, 55, probably didn't expect that he would become the first Asian to win the Hugo Award, science fiction's highest prize, in 2015. Never did he think that former US president Barack Obama would read his novel The Three-Body Problem, and he would win the 2018 Arthur C. Clarke Award for Imagination in Service to Society. It's the first time that a Chinese writer has won the prize.
  In his speech, Liu said that his imagination came from Arthur C. Clarke, a famous UK sci-fi writer. He said that reading Clarke's classic novels had a great effect on him.
  But no matter how far away Liu's imagination takes him, somehow his novels always stay grounded (理性的).
  In The Three-Body Problem, Liu tells a tale of aliens invading the earth. But unlike other alien stories, Liu talks more about relationships between people, rules of survival, and the meanings of life. And in The Wandering earth, Liu looks ahead to the day when our solar system comes to an end and humans have to look for a new place to live in. However, all his imagination is based on reality. Liu's works aren't simply daydreams.
5.  To sum up history in one sentence, it would be "Life gets better — not for everyone all the time, but for most people most of the time. " And the reason is energy. Without access to energy, poor people are stuck in the dark and deny all of these benefits and opportunities that come with power. For thousands of years, people burned wood for fuel and their lives were hard. But when we started using coal in the 1800s, life started getting better a lot faster. Pretty soon we had lights, refrigerators, elevators, cars, planes, and all the other things that make up modern life. So if we really want to help the poor, we need to find a way to get them cheap and clean energy.
  Millions of the poorest families work as farmers. Changes in climate often mean that their crops won't grow because of too little rain or too much rain. That's particularly unfair because they're the least responsible for emitting (排放) CO2, which is causing the problem in the first place.
  Scientists say that to avoid these great long-term changes to the climate, the world must cut greenhouse gas emissions by up to 80 percent by 2050, and eliminate them completely by the end of the century. Many scientists agreed that wouldn't be enough. The problem is that CO2 lingers (残留) in the atmosphere for decades.
  In 2015, the world emitted 36 billion tons of CO2 to produce energy. Someone may tell you they know how to remove 100 million tons of CO2 per year. That sounds like a lot, but if you do the math 100 million divided by 36 billion you'll see that they're talking about 0. 3 percent of the problem.
P × S × E × C =CO2
(P — world's population; S — services used by each person; E — energy to provide service, C — carbon dioxide produced by energy)
  As you learned in math class, any number multiplied by zero will equal zero. So if we want to get to zero CO2, then we need to make at least one of the four factors zero. But the world's population(P) is currently 7 billion and expected to increase to 9 billion by 2050. In terms of services used by each person(S), there are a lot of things like food, living, transportation and so on, which means the need of much energy in providing them. Therefore, it is carbon dioxide produced by energy (C) that matters the most in cutting down CO2.
6.  Throughout the history of arts, the nature of creativity is important to artists. No matter what objects they select, artists are to bring forth new forces and forms that cause change — to find poetry where no one has ever seen or experienced it before.
  Landscape (风景) is another unchanging element of art. It can be found from ancient times through the 17th-century Dutch painters to the 19th-century romanticists and impressionists. In the 1970s Alfred Leslie, one of the new American realists (现实主义者), continued this practice. Leslie found the same place where Thomas Cole, a romanticist, had produced paintings of the same scene a century and a half before. Unlike Cole who insists on a feeling of loneliness and the idea of finding peace in nature, Leslie paints what he actually sees.
  In his paintings, there is no particular change in emotion, and he includes ordinary things like the highway in the background. He also takes advantage of the latest developments of color photography to help both the eye and the memory when he improves his painting back to his workroom.
  Besides, all art begs the age-old question: What is real? Each generation of artists has shown their understanding of reality in one form or another. The impressionists saw reality in brief emotional effects, the realists in everyday subjects and in forest scenes, and the Cro-Magnon cave people in their naturalistic drawings of the animals in the ancient forests. To sum up, understanding reality is a necessary struggle for artists of all periods.
  Over thousands of years the function of the arts has remained relatively constant. Past or present, Eastern or Western, the arts are a basic part of our immediate experience. Many and different are the faces of art, and together they express the basic need and hope of human beings.
7.  Li Ziqi, a short video blogger specializing in traditional Chinese cooking and handicrafts, has gained worldwide popularity.
  (1)      , plus 7 million followers on overseas social media networks. Many foreigners say they have got to know traditional Chinese food culture and traditional skills via her channel.
  It is the spirit of craftsmanship (技艺) behind her works that makes Li's video clips attractive. She strictly follows the authentic (正宗的) traditional steps and procedures in making traditional Chinese food and handicrafts, such as peach flower wine and silk, and goes to great lengths to ensure her videos are accurate (精准的). (2)      .
  Li has been inheriting (继承)traditional Chinese culture in a rather creative way. A closer look at her videos will show that they are never with any "analysis" that makes people feel bored. They just show audiences each and every detail of traditional Chinese culture so that the audiences know how Chinese live their beautiful and elegant lives. (3)      , many intangible cultural heritages that only existed in memories and written records now appear before our eyes. Via her short videos, (4)      .
  With the growth of the Chinese economy, people overseas are showing more interest in traditional Chinese culture. (5)      , namely showing the best parts of traditional Chinese culture with her heart.
  To effectively present the beauty of Chinese culture to the world, we need more Li Ziqi.

A. Thanks to Li's efforts
B. Li presents the image of a beautiful and friendly China
C. Sometimes she spends several months producing one of her videos
D. Li has shown how to satisfy that interest in a good way
E. Li has about 20 million followers on Sina Weibo
8.  Eye contact is the key to successful c(1)            . Eyes are the windows of our soul, and eye contact is a very important part of body l(2)            . It can show feelings such as friendliness, interest and also can h(3)             you understand other people's real meaning.
  However, there are some differences of eye contact b(4)             Eastern and Western countries. For example, it is polite to look down when talking with elder people in Eastern countries. While in Western countries, looking down while talking with others means that you are b(5)             about what he or she says.
  Therefore, you should be careful with your eye contact. Not using eye contact can cause problems, but using too much is not polite either.
9.你给老师们留下了很好的印象。
You                                      on the teachers.
10.她想提醒我明天是她的奶奶的生日。
She wanted                                      that tomorrow is her grandmother's birthday.
11.多交点朋友对你有好处。
                                     is good for you.
12.为了筹集足够的钱给那些无家可归的人,少年们工作了一整天。
                   collect enough money for the homeless, the teenagers have worked all day.
13.必须制定一些规则来阻止人们污染环境。
Some rules                    to stop people from polluting the environment.
14.三个青少年提出了参与学校假期期间的义务性工作。
      
15.然后,鱼被大明取出并投进一个大篮子里。
      
16.检查完毕后,漫画就可以播放给大家欣赏了。
      
17.当他开始吹一支曲子时,我们才第一次看到那条蛇。
      
18.这两个人吓了一跳,扔下提包逃跑了。
      
19.有一批外国交换生要来中国进行参观学习,他们对我国的传统工艺品非常感兴趣并打算买一些回国送给朋友。请你根据以下提示写一篇文章向他们介绍4种我国的传统手工艺品(handicrafts)。
面人 Dough toy
颜色丰富通常是出名的人物或动物
 
皮影 Shadow paper
主要有5种颜色, 主要绿、黑艺人表演时可移动它的手和脚 
糖画 Sugar painting
通常是黄色的既漂亮又好吃
 
剪纸 Paper cutting
(请你至少补充两点)
 

1. 参考词汇:unique 独特的;
2. 100词左右(文章开头已给出,不计入词数);
3. 不得透露学校、姓名等任何个人信息。
   China is a big country with all kinds of handicrafts. I would like to introduce some of them. _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
查看全部题目