六级英语每日一练(31)
英语六级翻译每日一练 西安

英语六级翻译每日一练西安西安翻译原文:西安,古称长安,是著名的古都,也是中华文明的发祥地。
它断断续续作为13个王朝的首都达1200多年之久。
西安是中国古代第一个对外开放的城市。
汉唐时期,它是中国政治、经济、文化和对外交流的中心。
西安有很多珍贵的文物和遗址、秦始皇兵马俑,被誉为“世界第八大奇迹”。
西安古城墙是世界上规模最大、保存最完整的古城墙遗址。
灿烂的文化、悠久的历史以及丰富的文物和遗址,使得西安享有“自然史博物馆”的美称。
参考译文:Xi’an, called Chang’an in ancient times, was an ancient capital and the birthplace of Chinese civilization. It served intermittently as the capital of 13 dynasties over 1,200 years. Xi’an was the first city to open its doors to the world in ancient China.In the Han and Tang Dynasties, it was the center of China’s politics, economy, culture and international exchange.There are a large number of treasured cultural relics and sites in Xi’an. TheTerra-cotta Warriors and Horses are honored as“The Eighth Wonder of the World”. The Ancient City Wall of Xi’an is the largest, best preserved ruin of ancient city wall in the world. Owing to its brilliant culture, long history, as well as abundant relics and sites, Xi’an enjoys the laudatory title of “Natural History Museum”.重点词汇:古都:ancient capital发祥地:birthplace/cradle断断续续:intermittently对外交流:international exchange珍贵的文物:treasured cultural relics兵马俑:the Terra-cotta Warriors and Horses 被誉为:be honored as保存最完整:best preserved / best kept古城墙:ancient city wall遗址:ruin美称:laudatory title。
2019年6月英语六级翻译每日一练:黄鹤楼

2019年6月英语六级翻译每日一练:黄鹤楼请将下面这段话翻译成英文:黄鹤楼(Yellow Crane Tower)位于湖北省武汉市蛇山(Snake Hill),享有“天下江山第一楼”之称。
它是江南最的塔楼之一。
因为地理位置优越,孙权将黄鹤楼建成军队瞭望塔(watchtower)。
数百年来,其军事用途逐渐被遗忘,而主要被当做风景如画的景点欣赏。
唐代有很多脍炙人口的诗篇赞美黄鹤楼。
正是这些诗,黄鹤楼才能如此,吸引人们前来参观。
不同朝代,黄鹤楼有不同的建筑特色。
不过,今天的黄鹤楼是基于淸朝塔楼建造的。
参考翻译:Located on Snake Hill in Wuhan, Hubei Province,Yellow Crane Tower is enjoying the fame of "The FirstScenery under Heaven". It is one of the most famoustowers at the south ofthe Yangtze River. Due to theideal location, it was built by Sun Quan, Emperor ofWu, as a watchtower for his army. After hundreds of years,its military function wasgraduallyforgotten and the tower served mainly as apicturesque spot. During the Tang Dynasty, manypopular poems were written in praise of the Yellow Crane Tower. It wasthese poems thatmade the tower so renowned and attractive for people to visit. The tower had differentarchitecturalfeatures in different dynasties. However, the tower which stands today is based onthe one designed during the Qing Dynasty.1.位于湖北省武汉市蛇山:可译为Located on Snake Hillin Wuhan,在句中作状语,表明黄鹤搂的位置。
大学英语六级考试单词词汇默写汉译英每日练习表 (50)

n.住处寓所
vt.染vi.染色n.染料染色
adj.垂死的临终的n.死死亡
adj.有活力的动态的(有)动力的(有)力的n.动力力学
pron.各各自adj.每个每每一adv.每个int.每个个人个自
adj.渴望的热切的
n.鹰vt.(高尔夫)鹰击
n.耳朵听力听觉倾听麦穗vi.长出麦穗
大学英语六级考试单词词汇默写汉译英每日练习
练习日期:
所用时间:
正确率:
序号 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28
释义
n.药药物药材毒品vt.下药使...服麻醉药vi.吸毒 n.鼓鼓声鼓状物圆桶冰丘vi.击鼓作鼓声引起兴趣vt.召集入伍逐出(经过 努力)推动...连续击打 adj.醉的陶醉的vbl.喝喝酒 adj.干的干燥的干旱的不行于色的枯燥无味的无酒的口渴的vt.把...弄干 vi.(使)变干 a. 双重的,双的 n. 双数
vt.倾卸倾倒倾销丢弃抛售导出vi.骤降扔垃圾n.垃圾场堆放处
n.复制品 vt.复制
adj.耐久的耐用的n.(复)耐用品
n.持续持久持续时间期间
prep.在...期间
n.薄暮黄昏幽暗vi.(天)变黑变暗vt.把…变黑变暗adj.颜色暗沉的昏暗的 n.尘土灰尘无价值之物屈辱状态vt.拂去灰尘撒上粉状物体大胜vi.擦拭 灰尘 n.职责责任义务税adj.值班的作为一种义务的
a. 可疑的,不确定的 n.鸭雌鸭鸭肉板球零分vt.把…按入水中低头弯身(以免被打中或看见)躲 避vi.迅速行进飞快行走(以免被看见)推委责任 adj.预期的应给的到期的应有的预定的n.应得物
2021年12月英语六级翻译每日一练:长城

2021年12月英语六级翻译每日一练:长城长城被称为中国的奇迹,拥有两千多年的历史。
从空中俯瞰,它像一条长龙,从西向东蜿蜒前行,总长约6700公里。
从春秋战国时期(the Spring and Autumn Period andWarring States Period)起,各诸侯国开始修建城墙以保护边境。
秦朝建立以后,秦始皇把这些城墙连接起来,成为长城。
然而,当时的长城大都已经在战争中损毁,而现存的长城主要是明朝时修建的。
长城最初是为了抵抗来自北方的侵略,如今已成为旅游胜地,吸引了来自世界各地的游客。
有句谚语:“不到长城非好汉”,足以见证长城的雄伟壮观(grandeur)。
参考翻译:The Great Wall,with a history of more than 2,000years,was regarded as a wonder of China.From abird's-eye view,it is just like a dragon winding itselffrom west to east,stretching for approximately6,700 kilometers.Since the Spring and AutumnPeriod and the Warring States Period,the walls had been put up to defend the borders by thekingdoms.After the founding of Qin Dynasty,Qin Shi Huang had all the walls joined together tomake "The Great Wall".While most of the walls were ruined in wars,the majority of the GreatWall we see today was mainly built during Ming Dynasty.The Great Wall,originally built to resistthe invasion from the North,now has become a well-known place ofinterest,attracting touristsfrom all over the world.As a saying goes,"He who has never been to the Great Wall is not a trueman",which is evidence of its grandeur.1.第二句中的“从西向东蜿蜓前行,总长约6700公里”,描述的主语都是“它”—长城,故用现在分词短语winding...stretching...作状语,对长城做进一步说明;“总长”可在stretch for后面直接用数字表示。
2020年英语六级考试试题:每日一练(9月28日)

2020年英语六级考试试题:每日一练(9月28日)单项选择题1、Passage OneQuestionsare based on the following passage.Texting has long been bemoaned (哀叹) as the downfall of the written word, "penmanship for illiterates," as one critic called it. To which the proper response is LOL. Texting properly isn't writing at all. It's a "spoken" language that is getting richer and more complex by the year.First, some historical perspective. Writing was only invented 5,500 years ago, whereas language probably traces back at least 80,000 years. Thus talking came first; writing is just a craft that came along later. As such, the first writing was based on the way people talk, with short sentences. However, while talking is largely subconscious and rapid, writing is deliberate and slow. Over time, writers took advantage of this and started crafting long-winded sentences such as this one: "The whole engagement lasted above 12 hours, till the gradual retreat of the Persians was changed into a disorderly flight, of which the shameful example was given by the principal leaders and,.."No one talks like that casually---or should. But it is natural to desire to do so for special occasions. In the old days, we didn't much write like talking because there was no mechanism to reproduce the speed of conversation. But texting and instant messaging do---and a revolution has begun. It involves the crude mechanics of writing, but in its economy,spontaneity and even vulgarity, texting is actually a newkind of talking, with its own kind of grammar and conventions.Take LOL. It doesn't actually mean "laughing out loud" in a literal sense anymore. LOL has evolvedinto something much subtler and sophisticated and is used even when nothing is remotely amusing. Jocelyn texts "Where have you been?" and Annabelle texts back "LOL at the library studying for two hours." LOL signals basic empathy (同感) between texters, easing tension and creating a sense of equality. Instead of having a literal meaning, it does something--conveying an attitude-just like the -ed ending conveys past tense rather than "meaning" anything. LOL, ofall things, is grammar.Of course no One thinks about that consciously. But then most of communication operates without being noticed. Over time, the meaning of a word or an expression drifts--meat used to mean any kind of food, silly used to mean, believe it or not, blessed.Civilization, then, is fine---people banging away ontheir smartphones are fluently using a code separate from the one they use in actual writing, and there is no evidence that texting is ruining composition skills. Worldwide people speak differently from the way they write,and texting-quick,casual and only intended to be read once-is actually a way of talking with your fingers.What do critics say about texting?A.It is mainly confined to youngsters.B.It competes with traditional writing.C.It will ruin the written language.D.It is often hard to understand.2、听录音回答题A. Ways of getting extra credits.B. All requirements of an M.A. degree.C. The credit hours required for a degree.D. Taking more optional courses.3、Questions are based on the passage you have just heard.第16题答案为A.To explain a new requirement for graduation.B.To interest students in a community service project.C.To discuss the problems of elementary school students.D.To recruit elementary school teachers for a special program.4、Questions are based on the conversation you have just heard.A.Her apartment is too far from the campus.B.Her apartment needs a lot of repair work.C.She's having trouble with the owner of the apartment.D.Her roommate won't share expenses.简答题5、重阳节重阳节,又称登高节,为农历九月初九。
英语四六级阅读的每日一练

英语四六级阅读的每日一练英语四六级阅读的每日一练Sophy Brent came to visit me nearly every day. She made me feel uneasy most of the time. She smoked 11 and never used an ashtray. She followed me into the kitchen while I made tea or coffee or supper and 12 herself to the childrens orange juice. She made a great hit with my two-year-old daughter Flora, who would 13 about her for hours and refer to her lovingly as sofa , and she was always talking about my husband and asking me where he was.I could not decide why she chose my 14 , although I realized that nobody else paid her very much attention. Her situation was very difficult in that she was 15 out of drama school and only nineteen, but being 16 to play a leading part in a company of fairly 17 and experienced actors. They would not have liked her much even if she had been good, and as, from all accounts, she was not good so they took every 18 to run her down. I think she thought that I was the only person around who was both unconnected with the theatre and tolerably 19 . To associate with me was not, at any rate, to step down the scale. And for my part, although I felt troubled by her I did not dislike her. There was something genuinely outstanding in her personality, and she had such physical 20 that with me she could get away with anything. She was nice to have around, like flowers or a bowl of fruit.A. helpedB. smart B. constantly D. treatedE. requiredF. supremeG. hangH. charm。
英语四、六级10组高频同义词(10-4)

英语四、六级每日10组高频同义词详解高频同义词10-4 (31) 必修课 compulsory course compulsory [kəmˈpʌlsəri] adj.(法律或= requirement 规则而)必须做的,强制的,强迫的;义务的选修课 elective courses n.(花样滑冰、体操比赛等中的)规定动作= optional(32) 学费/教育花费 tuition course [kɔːs] n.课程;讲座;过程,进程,= educational expenses 经过;航向;所经之路,道路,航线;河道; (33) 学士学位 bachelor,s degree 方针,总方向;行动方式,处理方式;一道菜; 硕士学位 master,s degree 比赛场地;高尔夫球场;江河流向;疗程;博士学位 doctoral degree 系列,连续;(砖、石等墙的)层;月经,月经(34) 研究生院 graduate school 期;追踪狩猎;(大)横帆研究生 postgraduate v.奔流,快速地流动;涌动;沿特定路线行进;(35) 毕业论文 thesis = dissertation (用猎犬)追猎(兔子);迅速越过(或穿过);(36) 导师/负责人 supervisor (使)追;砌(砖)成层,铺(石子、木条)成层 = tutor = in charge n course of sth 在…的过程中(37) 系主任 dean = faculty director in/over the course of…(38) 课程 curriculum = course 在…期间;在…的时候= program in the course of time(39) 哲学 philosophy 总有一天;最后;终于心理学 psychology stay the course 坚持到底(40) 社会学(学科)sociology be par for the course= social discipline 不出所料;果不其然horses for courses 知人善任requirement [rɪˈkwaɪəmənt] n.要求;所需的in due course(或所要的)东西;必要条件;必备的条件 在适当的时候;到一定的时候legal requirement 法律要求run/take its course 任其发展;听其自然meet a requirement 符合要求of course 当然course of something …的航线(进程/疗程) elective [ɪˈlektɪv] n.选修课程;选修科目course of action 行为方式;行动过程adj.选修的;选举的;由选举产生的;选任的;course on something 关于…的课程有选举权的;可选择的;非急需的golf course 高尔夫球场full-time course 全日制课程expense [ɪkˈspens] n.费用;价钱;花钱的东main course 主菜;主要课程;大横巾;主帆西;开销;开支;花费;v.向…收取费用;把…作为开支勾销optional [ˈɒpʃənl] adj.随意的,任选的,additional expense 额外的开支 可选择的,非强制的;选修的extra expense 额外的开支medical expense 医疗费tuition [tjuˈɪʃn] n.(尤指大专院校的)学费; business expense 业务支出 (尤指对个人或小组的)教学,讲授,指导at sb's expense 1.由某人负担费用2.以某人为代价;跟某人开玩笑educational [ˌedʒuˈkeɪʃənl] adj.教育的;at the expense of sb/sth 有关教育的;有教育意义的在牺牲(或损害)…的情况下expense, money, etc. is no object bachelor [ˈbætʃələ(r)]费用不在话下;钱不成问题 n.单身汉;学士;未婚男子master [ˈmɑːstə(r)] n.(男)主人,雇主;degree[dɪˈɡriː] n.度;程度;度数(角或温度); 主宰;有控制力的人;擅长…者;男教师;硕士 (大学)学位;学位课程;严重程度(级别) 学位;船长;著名画家,校长,院长;大师,师傅degree of difficulty 困难程度vt.精通;掌握;控制(动物或人)45/90 degree angle 45/90度角adj.熟练的,灵巧的,有技能的;最大的/重要的bachelor's/master's degree 学士/硕士学位lord and master 夫君college degree 大学学位master and slave 主人和奴隶honorary degree 荣誉学位master chef 顶级厨师by degrees 逐渐地;渐渐地master craftsman 工艺大师to the nth degreemaster of disguise 伪装大师 极端地,非常地,极大程度上master a skill 掌握技能master drawings 样图doctoral [ˈdɒktərəl]master spy 谍报高手 adj.博士的;博士学位的be your own master/mistress 独立自主serve two masters doctor [ˈdɒktə(r)] n.医生;大夫;诊所;徘徊于两种对立原则之间 博士;(作头衔或称呼)牙医vt.篡改;伪造;将有害物掺入(食物/饮料)中bless [bles] vt.祝福;求上帝降福;赞美上帝just what the doctor orderedint.哎呀,太好啦,太谢谢了 正是所需之物be blessed with sth/sb赋有(能力等);享有(幸福等)mistress [ˈmɪstrəs] n.女主人;(尤指私立God bless 愿上帝保佑,祝一路平安 学校的)女教师;主妇;有权势的女子thesis[ˈθiːsɪs] n.论文;毕业论文;学位disguise[dɪsˈɡaɪz] n.伪装物;化装用具;论文;命题;论题 假扮;装扮;伪装vt.假扮;装扮;伪装;掩蔽;掩饰dissertation [ˌdɪsəˈteɪʃn] a blessing in disguise 因祸得福;祸中有福 n.论文;学位论文;专题论文graduate[ˈɡrædʒuət]tutor [ˈtjuːtə(r)] n.家庭教师;私人教师; adj.得学士称号的;刻度的导师;指导教师;(大专院校的)助教;课本 n.毕业生;大学毕业生;学士学位获得者v.教;任课;指导;进行单独(或小组)辅导; v.毕业(中学);获得学位(学士);大学毕业;任…的私人教师;当家庭教师;任大学导师 授予(某人)学位(或毕业文凭等);逐渐发展fee [fiː] n.费用;专业服务费;咨询费;报酬;postgraduate[ˌpəʊstˈɡrædʒuət] n.研究生(加入组织或做某事付的)费 adj.大学毕业后的;大学研究院的vt.付给报酬;给小费;〈英〉雇用;聘请supervisor [ˈsuːpəvaɪzə(r)]deny [dɪˈnaɪ] v.否认;否定;拒绝承认;拒绝 n.监督人;指导者;主管人接受;拒绝;拒绝给予;节制,克制,戒绝supervise [ˈsuːpəvaɪz]confirm or deny 确认或否认 v.监督;管理;指导;主管deny access 拒绝访问deny entry 不许进入charge [tʃɑːdʒ] n.要价,收费;指控;控告; deny a request 拒绝要求;拒绝请求 指责,谴责;主管;被照管的人;充电量,电荷;突然猛冲;炸药量;感染力;任务electric [ɪˈlektrɪk] n.供电 v.收(费);(向…)要价;把…记在账上;;控告; adj.电的;用电的;电动的;发电的;充满刺 起诉;指责;猛攻;向…方向冲去;赋予…职责; 激的;令人激动的 给…充电;使充满(…情绪);注满(玻璃杯)为(枪)装弹药press [pres] v.按;(被)压;推;施加压力;紧charge a fee 收费握;将…塞进;(向…)拥挤,推搡移动;催促;charge a battery 给电池充电坚持;把…压平;熨平;把…榨汁;把…压成deny a charge 否认指控n.记者;报刊;报章杂志;印刷媒体;新闻工作lead a charge 率领冲锋者;新闻界;报道;评论;印刷机;出版社;压平guilty of a charge 指控成立机;挤压;拥挤的人群;大壁橱,衣/书/碗柜electrical charge 电荷press a button 按下按钮charge up 给(电池)充电press accounts/coverage/reports 新闻报道bring/press/prefer charges against sbat the press of a button 一按按钮 起诉;控告press ahead / press on get a charge out of sth坚定地继续;继续前进 从…中得到快感(或快乐、乐趣)press sth home 坚持不懈;争辩到底criminal charge 刑事指控press sb/sth into service姑且使用;临时凑合prefer [prɪˈfɜː(r)]v.更喜欢;较喜欢;喜欢…多于…entry[ˈentri] n.进入(权利);参与,加入;参赛作品;参赛;参赛人数;条目;登记;大门confirm [kənˈfɜːm] v.证实,证明;使感觉更强烈;使确信;批准(职位、协议);确认;认可curriculum [kəˈrɪkjələm]n. 课程;(学校等的)全部课程con [kɒn] n.诡计;骗局;欺骗vt.欺骗,哄骗,诈骗 adj.欺诈的course [kɔːs] n.课程;讲座;过程,进程, v.蒙;指挥(操舵);指挥(船的)航路;精读经过;航向;所经之路,道路,航线;河道;方针, adv.反对;从反面 prep.反对;用总方向;行动方式,处理方式;一道菜;比赛场the pros and cons地;跑马场 高尔夫球场,江河流向;疗程;系列, 事物的利与弊;支持与反对连续;层;追踪狩猎;(大)横帆v.奔流,快速地流动;(感情、思想)涌动;pro [prəʊ] adv.站在赞成方面;正面地沿特定路线行进;追猎;迅速越过(或穿过); n.从事某职业的人;职业运动员;老手(使)追;砌(砖)成层,铺(石子、木条)成层 adj.职业的;专业的 prep,赞成;支持course of something …的航线(进程/疗程)in course of sth 在…的过程中dean [diːn] n.院长;座堂主任牧师;(大学)in/over the course of… 学院院长;系主任;学监在…期间;在…的时候in the course of time 总有一天;最后;终于faculty [ˈfæklti] n.官能;能力;天赋;才能; in the ordinary, normal, etc. course (高等院校的)系,院;全体教师of events, things, etc.按通常情况;在一般情况下;通常director [dəˈrektə(r)] n.经理;董事;理事;(某一活动的)负责人;(公司部门的)主任; social [ˈsəʊʃl] n.联谊会;联欢会 (学院的)院长;(电影、戏剧等的)导演adj.社会的;社会上的;社会地位的;社交的;交际的;联谊的;群居的philosophy [fəˈlɒsəfi] n.哲学;哲学体系;思想体系;人生哲学;生活的信条(或态度) event [ɪˈvent] n.事件;发生的事情;重要事情,大事;公开活动;社交场合;比赛项目psychology [saɪˈkɒlədʒi] n.心理学;心理; after the event 事情发生后;事后 心理特征;心理影响in any event / at all events不管怎样;无论如何sociology [ˌsəʊsiˈɒlədʒi] n.社会学in the event 结果;到头来in the event of sth discipline [ˈdɪsəplɪn] n.训练;训导;纪律; in the event that sth happens 风纪;训练方法;行为准则;符合准则的行为; 如果…发生;万一;倘若 自制力;遵守纪律;知识领域be wise after the event 事后聪明;马后炮 vt.惩罚;处罚;训练;训导;管教;自我控制;严格要求(自己)citizen [ˈsɪtɪzn] n.公民;居民;市民ordinary [ˈɔːdnri] adj.普通的;平常的;folk [fəʊk] n.人们;各位;大伙儿;亲属; 一般的;平凡的;平庸的;平淡无奇的家属;(尤指)爹妈;普通百姓;民间音乐 n.法官;普通股;宗教法官;普通事adj.传统民间的;民俗的;流传民间的;百姓的ordinary circumstances 一般情况ordinary citizens 普通公民similar[ˈsɪmələ(r)]ordinary day 寻常日子n.类似物;相像的人;相似物ordinary folk 普通人adj.相像的;相仿的;类似的out of the ordinary与众不同,不寻常的,非凡的,特殊的,超凡脱俗pomp [pɒmp] n.排场;气派;盛况in the ordinary way 一般地;通常地certain[ˈsɜːtn] pron.(不提及人名称)某些circumstance[ˈsɜːkəmstəns] n.条件;环境;adj.肯定;确定;确实;确信;无疑;(不提及细 状况;境况;境遇;经济状况;命运;客观环境节时用)某事,某人,某种;某某,某位,一位 v.使处于某种特定的情况之下叫…的;轻微的in/under the circumstancesfor certain 肯定;确定;无疑 在这种情况下;在那种情况下;情况既然如此make certain(that…) 弄确实,弄清楚,弄明白certain circumstances 某种境况make certain of sth/of doing sth different/similar circumstances确保(做某事) 不同/相似的情况of a certain age 不算年轻的;中年的exceptional circumstances 特殊情况in/under no circumstances决不;无论如何不pomp and circumstance 隆重的仪式。
大学英语六级测试题(有答案)

大学英语六级测试题Part Ⅰ Writing1、Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write an essay on why students should be encouraged to develop effective communication skills. You should write at least 150 words but no more than 200 words.Part Ⅱ Listening ComprehensionSection ADirections: In this section, you will hear two long conversations. At the end of each conversation, you will hear four questions. Both the conversation and the questions will be spoken only once. After you hear a question, you must choose the best answer from the four choices marked A, B, C and D. Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 1 with a single line through the centre.2、A. She has not received any letter from the man.B. Her claim has been completely disregarded.C. She has failed to reach the manager again.D. Her house has not been repaired in time.3、A. Their caravan was washed away by the flood.B. The ground floor of their cottage was flooded.C. Their entire house was destroyed by the flood.D. The roof of their cottage collapsed in the flood.4、A. The woman's failure to pay her house insurance in time.B. The woman's inaccurate description of the whole incident.C. The woman's ignorance of the insurance company's policy.D. The woman's misreading of the insurance company's letter.5、A. Revise the terms and conditions of the contract.B. Consult her lawyer about the insurance policy.C. Talk to the manager of Safe House Insurance.D. File a lawsuit against the insurance company.6、A. They are both worried about the negative impact of technology.B. They differ greatly in their knowledge of modem technology.C. They disagree about the future of AI technology.D. They work in different fields of AI technology.7、A. Stimulating and motivating.B. Simply writing AI software.C. More demanding and requiring special training.D. Less time-consuming and focusing on creation.8、A. Old people would be taken care of solely by unfeeling robots.B. Humans would be tired of communicating with one another.C. Digital life could replace human civilization.D. There could be jobs nobody wants to do.9、A. It will be smarter than human beings.B. Chips will be inserted in human brains.C. It will take away humans' jobs altogether.D. Life will become like a science fiction film.Section BDirections: In this section, you will hear two passages. At the end of each passage, you will hear three or four questions. Both the passage and the questions will be spoken only once. After you hear a question, you must choose the best answer from the four choices marked A, B, C and D.Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 1 with a single line through the centre.10、A. Try to earn as much money as possible.B. Invest shrewdly in lucrative business.C. Save one-fifth of their net monthly income.D. Restrain themselves from high-risk investments.11、A. Cut 20% of their daily spending.B. Ask a close friend for advice.C. Try to stick to their initial plan.D. Start by doing something small.12、A. A proper mindset.B. An ambitious plan.C. An optimistic attitude.D. A keen interest.13、A. She found her outfit inappropriate.B. She was uninterested in advertising.C. She often checked herself in a mirror.D. She was unhappy with fashion trends.14、A. To save the expenses on clothing.B. To keep up with the current trends.C. To meet the expectations of fashion-conscious clients.D. To save the trouble of choosing a unique outfit every day.15、A. It boosts one's confidence when looking for employment.B. It matters a lot in jobs involving interaction with others.C. It helps people succeed in whatever they are doing.D. It enhances people's ability to work independently.16、A. Design their own uniform to appear unique.B. Fight the ever-changing trends in fashion.C. Do whatever is possible to look smart.D. Wear classic pieces to impress their clients.Section CDirections: In this section, you will hear three recordings of lectures or talks followed by three or four questions. The recordings will be played only once. After you hear a question, you must choose the best answer from the four choices marked A, B, C and D. Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 1 with a single line through the centre.17、A. Their failure to accumulate wealth.B. Their obsession with consumption.C. The deterioration of the environment.D. The ever-increasing costs of housing.18、A. Things that we cherish most.B. Things that boost efficiency.C. Things that cost less money.D. Things that are rare to find.19、A. They are mostly durable.B. They are easily disposable.C. They serve multiple purposes.D. They benefit the environment.20、A. All respondents were afraid of making a high expense claim.B. A number of respondents gave an average answer of 400 miles.C. Most of the respondents got compensated for driving 384 miles.D. Over 10% of the respondents lied about the distance they drove.21、A. They endeavored to actually be honest.B. They wanted to protect their reputation.C. They cared about other people's claims.D. They responded to colleagues' suspicion.22、A. They seem positive.B. They are illustrative.C. They seem intuitive.D. They are conclusive.23、A. Older people's aversion to new music.B. Older people's changing musical tastes.C. Insights into the features of good music.D. Deterioration in the quality of new music.24、A. They seldom listen to songs released in their teens.B. They can make subtle distinctions about music.C. They find all music sounds the same.D. They no longer listen to new music.25、A. The more you experience something, the better you'll appreciate it.B. The more you experience something, the longer you'll remember it.C. The more you are exposed to something, the deeper you'll understand it.D. The more you are exposed to something, the more familiar it'll be to you.26、A. Teenagers are much more sensitive.B. Teenagers are much more sentimental.C. Teenagers' memories are more lasting.D. Teenagers' emotions are more intense.Part Ⅲ Reading ComprehensionSection ADirections: In this section, there is a passage with ten blanks. You are required to select one word for each blank from a list of choices given in a word bank following the passage. Read the passage through carefully before making your choices. Each choice in the bank is identified by a letter Please mark the corresponding letter for each item on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre. You may not use any of the words in the bank more than once.The idea of taxing things that are bad for society has a powerful allure. It offers the possibility of a double benefit— 27 harmful activities, while also providing the government with revenue.Take sin taxes. Taxes on alcohol make it more expensive to get drunk, which reduces excessive drinking and 28 driving. At the same time, they provide state and local governments with billions of dollars of revenue. Tobacco taxes, which generate more than twice as much, have proven 29 in the decline of smoking, which has saved millions of lives.Taxes can also be an important tool for environmental protection, and many economists say taxing carbon would be the best way to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Economic theory says that unlike income or sales taxes, carbon taxes can actually increase economic efficiency; because companies that 30 carbon dioxide into the sky don't pay the costs of the climate change they cause, carbon taxes would restore the proper 31 to the market.In reality, carbon taxes alone won't be enough to halt global warming, but they would be a useful part of any climate plan. What's more, the revenue from this tax, which would 32 be hundreds of billions of dollars per year, could be handed out to citizens as a 33 or used to fund green infrastructure projects.Similarly, a wealth tax has been put forward as a way to reduce inequality while raising revenue. The revenue from this tax, which some experts 34 will be over $4 trillion per decade, would be designated for housing, child care, health care and other government benefits. If you believe, as many do, that wealth inequality is 35 bad, then these taxes improve society whilealso 36 government coffers (金库).A. discouragingB. dividendC. emotionalD. fragmentsE. impairedF. imprisonedG. incentivesH. inherentlyI. initiallyJ. instrumentalK. mergingL. predictM. probablyN. pumpO. swellingSection BDirections: In this section, you are going to read a passage with ten statements attached to it. Each statement contains information given in one of the paragraphs. Identify the paragraph from which the information is derived. You may choose a paragraph more than once. Each paragraph is marked with a letter Answer the questions by marking the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2. The Challenges for Artificial Intelligence in AgricultureA. A group of corn farmers stands huddled around an agronomist (学家) and his computer on the side of an irrigation machine in central South Africa. The agronomist has just flown over the field with a hybrid unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) that takes off and lands using propellers yet maintains distance and speed for scanning vast hectares of land through the use of its fixed wings.B. The UAV is fitted with a four spectral band precision sensor that conducts on board processing immediately after the flight, allowing farmers and field staff to address, almost immediately, any crop abnormalities that the sensor may have recorded, making the data collection truly real-time.C. In this instance, the farmers and agronomist are looking to specialized software to give them an accurate plant population count. It's been 10 days since the corn emerged and the farmer wants to determine if there are any parts of the field that require replanting due to a lack of emergence or wind damage, which can be severe in the early stages of the summer rainy season.D. At this growth stage of the plant's development, the farmer has another 10 days to conduct any replanting before the majority of his fertilizer and chemical applications need to occur. Once these have been applied, it becomes economically unviable to take corrective action, making any further collected data historical and useful only to inform future practices for the season to come.E. The software completes its processing in under 15 minutes producing a plant population count map. It's difficult to grasp just how impressive this is, without understanding that just over a year ago it would have taken three to five days to process the exact same data set, illustrating the advancements that have been achieved in precision agriculture and remote sensing in recent years. With the software having been developed in the United States on the same variety of crops in seemingly similar conditions, the agronomist feels confident that the software will produce a near accurate result.F. As the map appears on the screen, the agronomist's face begins to drop. Having walked through the planted rows before the flight to gain a physical understanding of the situation on the ground, he knows the instant he sees the data on his screen that the plant count is not correct, and so do the farmers, even with their limited understanding of how to read remote sensing maps.G. Hypothetically, it is possible for machines to learn to solve any problem on earth relating to the physical interaction of all things within a defined or contained environment by using artificial intelligence and machine learning.H. Remote sensors enable algorithms (算法) to interpret a field's environment as statistical data that can be understood and useful to farmers for decision-making. Algorithms process the data, adapting and learning based on the data received. The more inputs and statistical information collected, the better the algorithm will be at predicting a range of outcomes. And the aim is that farmers can use this artificial intelligence to achieve their goal of a better harvest through making better decisions in the field.I. In 2011, IBM, through its R&D Headquarters in Haifa, Israel, launched an agriculturalcloud-computing project. The project, in collaboration with a number of specialized IT andagricultural partners, had one goal in mind—to take a variety of academic and physical data sources from an agricultural environment and turn these into automatic predictive solutions for farmers that would assist them in making real-time decisions in the field.J. Interviews with some of the IBM project team members at the time revealed that the team believed it was entirely possible to "algorithm" agriculture, meaning that algorithms could solve any problem in the world. Earlier that year, IBM's cognitive learning system, Watson, competed in the game Jeopardy against former winners Brad Rutter and Ken Jennings with astonishing results. Several years later, Watson went on to produce ground-breaking achievements in the field of medicine.K. So why did the project have such success in medicine but not agriculture? Because it is one of the most difficult fields to contain for the purpose of statistical quantification. Even within a single field, conditions are always changing from one section to the next. There's unpredictable weather, changes in soil quality, and the ever-present possibility that pests and disease may pay a visit. Growers may feel their prospects are good for an upcoming harvest, but until that day arrives, the outcome will always be uncertain.L. By comparison, our bodies are a contained environment. Agriculture takes place in nature, among ecosystems of interacting organisms and activity, and crop production takes place within that ecosystem environment. But these ecosystems are not contained. They are subject to climatic occurrences such as weather systems, which impact upon hemispheres as a whole, and from continent to continent. Therefore, understanding how to manage an agricultural environment means taking literally many hundreds if not thousands of factors into account.M. What may occur with the same seed and fertilizer program in the United States' Midwest region is almost certainly unrelated to what may occur with the same seed and fertilizer program in Australia or South Africa. A few factors that could impact on variation would typically include the measurement of rain per unit of a crop planted, soil type, patterns of soil degradation, daylight hours, temperature and so forth.N. So the problem with deploying machine learning and artificial intelligence in agriculture is not that scientists lack the capacity to develop programs and protocols to begin to address the biggest of growers' concerns; the problem is that in most cases, no two environments will be exactly alike, which makes the testing, validation and successful rollout of such technologies much more laborious than in most other industries.O. Practically, to say that AI and Machine Learning can be developed to solve all problems related to our physical environment is to basically say that we have a complete understanding of all aspects of the interaction of physical or material activity on the planet. After all, it is only through our understanding of 'the nature of things' that protocols and processes are designed for the rational capabilities of cognitive systems to take place. And, although AI and Machine Learning are teaching us many things about how to understand our environment, we are still far from being able to predict critical outcomes in fields like agriculture purely through the cognitive ability of machines.P. Backed by the venture capital community, which is now investing billions of dollars into the sector, most agricultural technology startups today are pushed to complete development as quickly as possible and then encouraged to flood the market as quickly as possible with their products.Q. This usually results in a failure of a product, which leads to skepticism from the market and delivers a blow to the integrity of Machine Learning technology. In most cases, the problem is not that the technology does not work, the problem is that industry has not taken the time to respect that agriculture is one of the most uncontained environments to manage. For technology to truly make an impact on agriculture, more effort, skills, and funding is needed to test these technologies in farmers' fields.R. There is huge potential for artificial intelligence and machine learning to revolutionize agriculture by integrating these technologies into critical markets on a global scale. Only then can it make a difference to the grower, where it really counts.37、Farmers will not profit from replanting once they have applied most of the fertilizer and other chemicals to their fields.38、Agriculture differs from the medical science of the human body in that its environment is not a contained one.39、The agronomist is sure that he will obtain a near accurate count of plant population with hissoftware.40、The application of artificial intelligence to agriculture is much more challenging than to most other industries.41、Even the farmers know the data provided by the UAV is not correct.42、The pressure for quick results leads to product failure, which, in turn, arouses doubts about the applicability, of AI technology to agriculture.43、Remote sensors are aimed to help farmers improve decision-making to increase yields.44、The farmer expects the software to tell him whether he will have to replant any parts of his farm fields.45、Agriculture proves very difficult to quantify because of the constantly changing conditions involved.46、The same seed and fertilizer program may yield completely different outcomes in different places.Section CDirections: There are 2 passages in this section. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. You should decide on the best choice and mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre.Passage OneWhat is the place of art in a culture of inattention'? Recent visitors to the Louvre report that tourists can now spend only a minute in front of the Mona Lisa before being asked to move on. Much of that time, for some of them, is spent taking photographs not even of the painting but of themselves with the painting in the background.One view is that we have democratised tourism and gallery-going so much that we have made it effectively impossible to appreciate what we've travelled to see. In this oversubscribed society, experience becomes a commodity like any other. There are queues to climb Mt. Jolmo Lungma as well as to see famous paintings. Leisure, thus conceived, is hard labour, and returning to work becomes a well-earned break from the ordeal.What gets lost in this industrialised haste is the quality of looking. Consider an extreme example, the late philosopher Richard Wollheim. When he visited the Louvre he could spent as much as four hours sitting before a painting. The first hour, he claimed, was necessary for misperceptions to be eliminated. It was only then that the picture would begin to disclose itself. This seems unthinkable today, but it is still possible to organise. Even in the busiest museums there are many rooms and many pictures worth hours of contemplation which the crowds largely ignore. Sometimes the largest crowds are partly the products of bad management; the Mona Lisa is such a hurried experience today partly because the museum is being reorganised. The Uffizi in Florence, another site of cultural pilgrimage, has cut its entry queues down to seven minutes by clever management. And there are some forms of art, those designed to be spectacles as well as objects of contemplation, which can work perfectly well in the face of huge crowds.Olafur Eliasson's current Tate Modern show, for instance, might seem nothing more than an entertainment, overrun as it is with kids romping (喧闹地玩耍) in fog rooms and spray mist installations. But it's more than that: where Eliasson is at his most entertaining, he is at his most serious too, and his disorienting installations bring home the reality of the destructive effects we are having on the planet—not least what we are doing to the glaciers of Eliasson's beloved Iceland.Marcel Proust, another lover of the Louvre, wrote: "It is only through art that we can escape from ourselves and know how another person sees the universe, whose landscapes would otherwise have remained as unknown as any on the moon." If any art remains worth seeing, it must lead us to such escapes. But a minute in front of a painting in a hurried crowd won't do that.47、What does the scene at the Louvre demonstrate according to the author? ______A. The enormous appeal of a great piece of artistic work to tourists.B. The near impossibility of appreciating art in an age of mass tourism.C. The ever-growing commercial value of long-cherished artistic works.D. The real difficulty in getting a glimpse at a masterpiece amid a crowd.48、Why did the late philosopher Richard Wollheim spend four hours before a picture? ______A. It takes time to appreciate a piece of art fully.B. It is quite common to misinterpret artistic works.C. The longer people contemplate a picture, the more likely they will enjoy it.D. The more time one spends before a painting, the more valuable one finds it.49、What does the case of the Uffizi in Florence show? ______A. Art works in museums should be better taken care of.B. Sites of cultural pilgrimage are always flooded with visitors.C. Good management is key to handling large crowds of visitors.D. Large crowds of visitors cause management problems for museums.50、What do we learn from Olafur Eliasson's current Tate Modern show? ______A. Children learn to appreciate art works most effectively while they are playing.B. It is possible to combine entertainment with appreciation of serious art.C. Art works about the environment appeal most to young children.D. Some forms of art can accommodate huge crowds of visitors.51、What can art do according to Marcel Proust? ______A. Enable us to live a much fuller life.B. Allow us to escape the harsh reality.C. Help us to see the world from a different perspective.D. Urge us to explore the unknown domain of the universe.Passage TwoEvery five years, the government tries to tell Americans what to put in their bellies. Eat more vegetables. Dial back the fats. It's all based on the best available science for leading a healthy life. But the best available science also has a lot to say about what those food choices do to the environment, and some researchers are annoyed that new dietary recommendations of the USDA (United States Department of Agriculture) released yesterday seem to utterly ignore that fact.Broadly, the 2016-2020 dietary recommendations aim for balance: More vegetables, leaner meats and far less sugar.But Americans consume more calories per capita than almost any other country in the world. So the things Americans eat have a huge impact on climate change. Soil tilling releases carbon dioxide, and delivery vehicles emit exhaust. The government's dietary guidelines could have done a lot to lower that climate cost. Not just because of their position of authority: The guidelines drive billions of dollars of food production through federal programs like school lunches and nutrition assistance for the needy.On its own, plant and animal agriculture contributes 9 percent of all the country's greenhouse gas emissions. That's not counting the fuel burned in transportation, processing, refrigeration, and other waypoints between farm and belly. Red meats are among the biggest and most notorious emitters, but trucking a salad from California to Minnesota in January also carries a significant burden. And greenhouse gas emissions aren't the whole story. Food production is the largest user of fresh water, largest contributor to the loss of biodiversity, and a major contributor to using up natural resources.All of these points and more showed up in the Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee's scientific report, released last February. Miriam Nelson chaired the subcommittee in charge of sustainability for the report, and is disappointed that eating less meat and buying local food aren't in the final product. "Especially if you consider that eating less meat, especially red and processed, has health benefits," she says.So what happened? The official response is that sustainability falls too far outside the guidelines' official scope, which is to provide "nutritional and dietary information."Possibly the agencies in charge of drafting the decisions are too close to the industries they are supposed to regulate. On one hand, the USDA is compiling dietary advice. On the other, their clients are US agriculture companies.The line about keeping the guidelines' scope to nutrition and diet doesn't ring quite right with researchers. David Wallinga, for example, says, "In previous guidelines, they've always beenconcerned with things like food security—which is presumably the mission of the USDA. You absolutely need to be worried about climate impacts and future sustainability if you want secure food in the future."52、Why are some researchers irritated at the USDA's 2016-2020 Dietary Guidelines? ______A. It ignores the harmful effect of red meat and processed food on health.B. Too much emphasis is given to eating less meat and buying local food.C. The dietary recommendations are not based on medical science.D. It takes no notice of the potential impact on the environment.53、Why does the author say the USDA could have contributed a lot to lowering the climate cost through its dietary guidelines? ______A. It has the capacity and the financial resources to do so.B. Its researchers have already submitted relevant proposals.C. Its agencies in charge of drafting the guidelines have the expertise.D. It can raise students' environmental awareness through its programs.54、What do we learn from the Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee's scientific report? ______A. Food is easily contaminated from farm to belly.B. Greenhouse effect is an issue still under debate.C. Modem agriculture has increased food diversity.D. Fanning consumes most of our natural resources.55、What may account for the neglect of sustainability in the USDA's Dietary Guidelines according to the author? ______A. Its exclusive concern with Americans' food safety.B. Its sole responsibility for providing dietary advice.C. Its close ties with the agriculture companies.D. Its alleged failure to regulate the industries.56、What should the USDA do to achieve food security according to David Wallinga? ______A. Give top priority to things like nutrition and food security.B. Endeavor to ensure the sustainable development of agriculture.C. Fulfill its mission by closely cooperating with the industries.D. Study the long-term impact of climate change on food production.Part Ⅳ TranslationDirections: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to translate a passage from Chinese into English. You should write your answer on Answer Sheet 2.57、北京大兴国际机场位于天安门广场以南46公里处,于2019年9月30日投入使用。
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2007年12月大学英语六级考试阅读真题PartⅡReading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning)Directions: In this part, you will have 15 minutes to go over the passage quickly and answer the questions on Answer Sheet 1.For questions 1-7, choose the best answer from the four choices marked A), B), C) and D). For questions 8-10, complete the sentences with the information given in the passage.Seven Ways to Save the WorldForget the old idea that conserving energy is a form of self-denial—riding bicycles, dimming the lights, and taking fewer showers. These days conservation is all about efficiency: getting the same—or better—results from just a fraction of the energy. When a slump in business travel forced Ulrich Romer to cut costs at his family-owned hotel in Germany, he replaced hundreds of the hotel’s wasteful light bulbs, getting the same light for 80 percent less power. He bought a new water boiler with a digitally controlled pump, and wrapped insulation around the pipes. Spending about 100 000 on these and other improvements, he slashed his 90 000 fuel and power bill by 60 000. As a bonus, the hotel’s lower energy needs have reduced its annual carbon emissions by more than 200 metric tons. “For us, saving energy has been very, very profitable,” he says. “And most importantly, we’re not giving up a single comfort for our guests.”Efficiency is also a great way to lower carbon emissions and help slow global warming. But the best argument for efficiency is its cost—or, more precisely, its profitability. That’s because quickly growing energy demand requires immense investment in new supply, not to mention the drain of rising energy prices.No wonder efficiency has moved to the top of the political agenda. On Jan. 10, the European Union unveiled a plan to cut energy use across the continent by 20 percent by 2020. Last March, China imposed a 20 percent increase in energy efficiency by 2020. Even George W. Bush, the Texas oilman, is expected to talk about energy conservation in his State of the Union speech this week.The good news is that the world is full of proven, cheap ways to save energy. Here are the seven that could have the biggest impact:InsulateSpace heating and cooling eats up 36 percent of all the world’s energy. There’s virtually no limit to how much of that can be saved, as prototype“zero-energy homes”in Switzerland and Germany have shown. There’s been a surge in new ways of keeping heat in and cold out (or vice versa). The most advanced insulation follows the law of increasing returns: if you add enough, you can scale down or even eliminate heating and air-conditioning equipment, lowering costs even before you start saving on utility bills. Studies have shown that green workplaces (ones that don’t constantly need to have the heat or air-conditioner running) have higher worker productivity and lower sick rates.Change BulbsLighting eats up 20 percent of the world’s electricity, or the equivalent of roughly 600 000 tons of coal a day. Forty percent of that powers old-fashioned incandescent light bulbs—a 19th-century technology that wastes most of the power it consumes on unwanted heat.Compact fluorescent lamps, or CFLs, not only use 75 to 80 percent less electricity thanincandescent bulbs to generate the same amount of light, but they also last 10 times longer. Phasing old bulbs out by 2030 would save the output of 650 power plants and avoid the release of 700 million tons of carbon into the atmosphere each year.Comfort ZoneWater boilers, space heaters and air conditioners have been notoriously inefficient. The heat pump has altered that equation. It removes heat from the air outside or the ground below and uses it to supply heat to a building or its water supply. In the summer, the system can be reversed to cool buildings as well.Most new residential buildings in Sweden are already heated with ground-source heat pumps. Such systems consume almost no conventional fuel at all. Several countries have used subsidies to jump-start the market, including Japan, where almost 1 million heat pumps have been installed in the past two years to heat water for showers and hot tubs.Remake FactoriesFrom steel mills to paper factories, industry eats up about a third of the world’s energy. The opportunities to save are vast. In Ludwigshafen, German chemicals giant BASF runs an interconnected complex of more than 200 chemical factories, where heat produced by one chemical process is used to power the next. At the Ludwigshafen site alone, such recycling of heat and energy saves the company 200 million a year and almost half its CO2 emissions. Now BASF is doing the same for new plants in China. “Optimizing(优化) energy efficiency is a decisive competitive advantage,”says BASF CEO Jürgen Hambrecht.Green DrivingA quarter of the world’s energy—including two thirds of the annual production of oil—is used for transportation. Some savings come free of charge: you can boost fuel efficiency by 6 percent simply by keeping your car’s tires properly inflated(充气). Gasoline-electric hybrid(混合型的) models like the Toyota Prius improve mileage by a further 20 percent over conventional models.A Better FridgeMore than half of all residential power goes into running household appliances, producing a fifth of the world’s carbon emissions. And that’s true even though manufacturers have already hiked the efficiency of refrigerators and other white goods by as much as 70 percent since the 1980s. According to an International Energy Agency study, if consumers chose those models that would save them the most money over the life of the appliance, they’d cut global residential power consumption (and their utility bills) by 43 percent.Flexible PaymentWho says you have to pay for all your conservation investments?“Energy service contractors”will pay for retrofitting(翻新改造) in return for a share of the client’s annual utility-bill savings. In Beijing, Shenwu Thermal Energy Technology Co. specializes in retrofitting China’s steel furnaces. Shenwu puts up the initial investment to install a heat exchanger that preheats the air going into the furnace, slashing the client’s fuel costs. Shenwu pockets a cut of those savings, so both Shenwu and the client profit.If saving energy is so easy and profitable, why isn’t everyone doing it? It has to do with psychology and a lack of information. Most of us tend to look at today’s price tag more than tomorrow’s potential savings. That holds double for the landlord or developer, who won’t actuallysee a penny of the savings his investment in better insulation or a better heating system might generate. In many people’s minds, conservation is still associated with self-denial. Many environmentalists still push that view.Smart governments can help push the market in the right direction. The EU’s 1994 law on labeling was such a success that it extended the same idea to entire buildings last year. To boost the market value of efficiency, all new buildings are r equired to have an “energy pass” detailing power and heating consumption. Countries like Japan and Germany have successively tightened building codes, requiring an increase in insulation levels but leaving it up to builders to decide how to meet them.The most powerful incentives, of course, will come from the market itself. Over the past year, sky-high fuel prices have focused minds on efficiency like never before. Ever-increasing pressure to cut costs has finally forced more companies to do some math on their energy use.Will it be enough? With global demand and emissions rising so fast, we may not have any choice but to try. Efficient technology is here now, proven and cheap. Compared with all other options, it’s the biggest, easiest and most profitable bang for the buck.1. What is said to be the best way to conserve energy nowadays?A) Raising efficiency.B) Cutting unnecessary costs.C) Finding alternative resources.D) Sacrificing some personal comforts.2. What does the European Union plan to do?A) Diversify energy supply.B) Cut energy consumption.C) Reduce carbon emissions.D) Raise production efficiency.3. If you add enough insulation to your house, you may be able to.A) improve your work environmentB) cut your utility bills by halfC) get rid of air-conditioners D) enjoy much better health4. How much of the power consumed by incandescent bulbs is converted into light?A) A small portion.B) Some 40 percent.C) Almost half.D) 75 to 80 percent.5. Some countries have tried to jump-start the market of heat pumps by______.A) upgrading the equipmentB) encouraging investmentsC) implementing high-tech D) providing subsidies6. German chemicals giant BASF saves 200 million a year by______.A) recycling heat and energy B) setting up factories in ChinaC) using the newest technologyD) reducing the CO2 emissions of its plants7. Global residential power consumption can be cut by 43 percent if______.A) we increase the insulation of walls and water pipesB) we choose simpler models of electrical appliancesC) we cut down on the use of refrigerators and other white goodsD) we choose the most efficient models of refrigerators and other white goods8. Energy service contractors profit by taking a part of clients’__________.9. Many environmentalists maintain the view that conservation has much to do with__________.10. The strongest incentives for energy conservation will derive from__________.。