考研英语冲刺试卷

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考研英语全真冲刺模拟试题(1)范文

考研英语全真冲刺模拟试题(1)范文

考研英语全真冲刺模拟试题(1)全国硕士研究生入学统一考试英语(一)全真冲刺试卷ⅠSimulated National Entrance Test of English for MA/MS Candidates(2011)考生注意事项1. 考生必须严格遵守各项考场规则。

2. 答题前,考生应按准考证上的有关内容填写答题卡上的“考生姓名”、“报考单位”、“考生编号”等信息。

3. 答案必须按要求填涂或写在指定的答题卡上。

(1) 英语知识运用、阅读理解A节、B节的答案填涂在答题卡1上。

填涂部分应该按照答题卡上的要求用2B铅笔完成。

如要改动,必须用橡皮擦干净。

(2) 阅读理解部分C节的答案和作文必须用(蓝)黑色字迹钢笔、圆珠笔或签字笔在答题卡2上作答。

字迹要清楚。

4. 考试结束,将答题卡1、答题卡2及试题一并装入试题袋中交回。

考试时间满分180分钟100分得分Section ⅠUse of EnglishDirections:Read the following text. Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark A, B, C or D on ANSWER SHEET 1. (10 points)Many foreigners who have not visited Britain call all the inhabitants English, for they are used to thinking of the British Isles as England. 1, the British Isles contain a variety of peoples, and only the /kcnet1480/ people of England call themselves English. The others 2 to themselves as Welsh, Scottish, or Irish, 3 the case may be; they are often slightly annoyed 4 being classified as “English”.Even in England there are many 5 in regional character and speech. The chief 6 is between southern England and northern England. South of a 7 going from Bristol to London, people speak the type of English usually learnt by foreign students, 8 there are local variations.Further north regional speech is usually “9”than that of southern Britain. Northerners are 10 to claim that they work harder than Southerners, and are more11.They are open-hearted and hospitable; foreigners often find that they make friends with them 12. Northerners generally have hearty 13: the visitor to Lancashire or Yorkshire, for instance, may look forward to receiving generous 14 at meal times.In accent and character the people of the Midlands 15 a gradual change from the southern to the northern type of Englishman.In Scotland the sound 16 by the letter “R” is generally a strong sound, and “R”is often pronounced in words in which it would be 17 in southern English. The Scots are said to be a serious, cautious, thrifty people, 18 inventive and somewhat mystical. All the Celtic peoples of Britain (the Welsh, the Irish, the Scots) are frequently 19 as being more “fiery” than the English. They are 20 a race that is quite distinct from the English. (289 words)Notes: fiery暴躁的,易怒的。

考研《英语(一)》冲刺试卷(三)

考研《英语(一)》冲刺试卷(三)

考研《英语(一)》冲刺试卷(三)一、完形填空(Read the following text.Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and markA,B,C or D on the ANSWER SHEET. (10 points))1【共享题干题】The majority of people,about nine out of ten,are right-handed. 1______ until recently,people who were left-handed were considered 2______,and once children showed this tendency they were forced to use their right hands.Today left-handedness is generally 3______,but it is still a disadvantage in a world 4______ most people are right-handed.For example,most tools and implements are still 5______ for right-handed people. In sports by contrast,doing things with the left hand or foot,is often a( n)6______.Throwing,kicking,punching or batting from the “7______” side may result in throwing off many opponents who are more 8______ to dealing with 9______ of players who are right-handed.This is why,in many 10______ at a professional level,a 11______ proportion of players are left-handed than in the population as a whole.The word “right” in many languages means “correct” or is 12______ with lawfulness whereas the words 13______ with “left”,such as “sinister”,generally have 14______ associations.Moreover,among a number of primitive peoples,there is a close association 15______ death and the left hand.In the past,in 16______ Western societies,children were often forced to use their right hands,especially to write with.In some cases the left hand was 17______ behind the child’s back so that it could not be used.If,in the future,they are 18______ to choose,there will certainly be more left-handers,and probably 19______ people with minor psychological disturbances as a result of being forced to use their 20______ hand.1.1【单选题】1______ until recentlyA.DownB.NeverC.UpD.Not参考答案:C参考解析:此题属于语法题。

2023年考研外语考前冲刺试卷6

2023年考研外语考前冲刺试卷6

考研外语考前冲刺试卷6一、Use of English1、 Fears of "mad cow" disease spread (1)_____ the globe last week (2)_____ South Africa, New Zealand and Singapore joining most of Britain's European Union partners in (3)_____ imports of British beef. In London, steak restaurants were empty following the March 20 announcement by scientists that they had found a (4)_____ link between mad cow disease from British beef and its human (5)_____, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease(CJD). Efforts to reassure consumers and governments proved (6)_____. France, Germany, Italy, Finland and Greece were among countries which announced bans (7)_____ British beef shipments.A committee of EU veterinary experts, meeting in Brussels,(8)_____ new protective measures but said transmission of the disease from cattle to humans was unproven and did not (9)_____ a general ban on British beef exports. Britain's own main consumer group advised people to (10)_____ beef if they wanted to be absolutely sure of not (11)_____ CJD which destroys the brain and is always (12)_____."Could it be worse than AIDS?"The stark headline in Friday's Daily mail newspaper encapsulated the fear and uncertainty (13)_____ Britain. CJD (14)_____ humans in the same way that BSE makes cows mad—by eating away nerve cells in the brain (15)_____ it looks like a spongy Swiss cheese.The disease is incurable. Victims show (16)_____ of dementia and memory loss and usually die (17)_____ six months.Little is known (18)_____ sure about the group of diseases known collectively as spongiform. encephalopathies, which explains(19)_____ some eminent scientists are not prepared to (20)_____a human epidemic of AIDS-like proportions.A.inB.onC.overD.around2、(2)A.fromB.withC.uponD.to3、(3)A.acceptingB.banningC.cancellingD.allowing4、(4)A.likelyB.likingC.alikeD.like5、(5)A.sameB.equivalentC.counterpartD.likeness6、(6)A.fruitB.fruitfulC.failureD.fruitless7、(7)A.onB.inC.over8、(8)A.have recommendedB.has recommendedC.recommendedD.recommending9、(9)A.call onB.call forC.call inD.call forth10、(10)A.stop to eatB.stop eatingC.stop to be eatingD.stop not to eat11、(11)A.to contractB.being contractedC.contractingD.contract12、(12)B.deadlyC.lethalD.mortal13、(13)A.which is grippingB.to gripC.grippedD.gripping14、(14)A.affectedB.affectsC.effectD.affecting15、(15)A.afterB.beforeC.untilD.when16、(16)A.marksB.traceC.symbolsD.signs17、(17)A.afterB.untilC.inD.within18、(18)A.inB.ofC.forD.to19、(19)A.howB.whyC.whatD.when20、(20)A.rule offB.rule outC.rule overD.rule of二、Reading Comprehension1、Part ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points) Sharks have gained an unfair reputation for being fierce predators of large sea animals. Humanity's unfounded fear and hatred of these ancient creatures is leading to a worldwide slaughter that may result in the extinction of many larger, coastal shark species. The shark is the victim of a warped attitude of wildlife protection: we strive only to protect the beautiful, nonthreatening parts of our environment. And, in our efforts to restore only nonthreatening parts of our earth, we ignore other important parts.A perfect illustration of this attitude is the contrasting attitude towards another large sea animal, the dolphin. During the 1980s, environmentalists in the U.S.A. protested the use of driftnets for tuna fishing in the Pacific Ocean since these nets also caught dolphins. The environmentalists generated enough political and economic pressure to prevent tuna companies from buying tuna that had been caught in driftnets. In contrast to this effort, the populations of sharks in the Pacific Ocean have decreased to the point of extinction andthere has been very little effort by the same environmentalists to save this important species, of marine wildlife. Sharks are among the oldest creatures on earth, having survived in the seas for more than 350 million years. They are extremely efficient animals, feeding on wounded or dying animals, thus performing an important role in nature of weeding out the weaker animals in a species. Just the fact that species such as the Great White Shark have managed to live in the oceans for so many millions of years is enough proof of their efficiency and adaptability to changing environments. It is time for humans, who may not survive another 1000 years at the rate they are damaging the planet, to east away their fears and begin considering the protection of sharks as creatures that may provide us insight into our own survival.The main focus of this passage is ______.A.why sharks have such a bad reputationB.how sharks become some of the oldest creatures on earthC.how sharks illustrate a problem in wildlife protectionD.why the campaign to save dolphins was not extended to save sharks2、About how long have sharks lived on the planet?A.25 million years.B.150 million years.C.350 million years.D.500 million years.3、Which of the following best describes the organization of this passage?A.Specific to general.B.Cause and effect.C.Statement and example.D.Chronological order.4、How did environmentalists manage to protect dolphins?A.They prevented fishermen from selling them for meat.B.They pressured fishermen into protecting dolphins by law.C.They brought political pressure against tuna companies.D.They created sanctuaries where dolphin fishing was not allowed.5、What is the author's attitude in this passage?A.Explanatory.B.Persuasive.C.Humorous.D.Narrative.6、In ancient Greece athletic festivals were very important and had strong religious association. The Olympian athletic festival held every four years in honour of Zeus, king of the Olympian Gods, eventually lost its local character, became first a national event and then, after the rules against foreign competitors had been abolished, international. No one knows exactly how far back the Olympic Games go, but some official records date from 776 B.C.The games took place in August on the plain by Mount Olympus. Many thousands of spectators gathered from all parts of Greece, but no married woman was admitted even as a spectator. Slaves, women and dishonoured persons were not allowed to compete. The exact sequence of events is uncertain, but events included boy's gymnastics, boxing, wrestling, horse racing and field events, though there were fewer sports involved than in the modern Olympic Games.On the last day of the Games, all the winners were honoured by having a ring of holy olive leaves placed on their heads. So great was the honour that the winner of the foot race gave his name to the year of his victory. Although Olympic winnersreceived no prize money, they were, in fact, richly rewarded by their state authorities. How their results compared with modern standards, we unfortunately have no means of telling. After an uninterrupted history of almost 1200 years, the Games were suspended by the Romans in 394 A.D. They continued for such a long time because people believed in the philosophy behind the Olympics: the idea that a healthy body produced a healthy mind, and that the spirit of competition in sports and games was preferable to the competition that caused wars. It was over 1500 years before another such international athletic gathering took place in Athens in 1896.Nowadays, the Games are held in different countries in turn. The host country provides vast facilities, including a stadium, swimming pools and living accommodation, but competing countries pay their own athletes' expenses.The Olympics start with the arrival in the stadium of a torch, lighted on Mount Olympus by the sun's rays. It is carried by a succession of runners to the stadium. The torch symbolized the continuation of the ancient Greek athletic ideals, and it burns throughout the Games until the closing ceremony. The well-known Olympic flag, however, is a modern conception: the five interlocking rings symbolize the uniting of all fivecontinents participating in the Games.In ancient Greece, the Olympic Games ______.A.were merely national athletic festivalsB.were in the nature of a national event with a strong religious colourC.had rules which put foreign participants in s disadvantageous positionD.were primarily national events with few foreign participants7、In the early days of ancient Olympic Games ______.A.only male Greek athletes were allowed to participate in the GamesB.all Greeks, irrespective in of sex, religion or social status, were allowed to take partC.all Greeks, with the exception of women, were allowed to compete in the GamesD.all male Greeks were qualified to compete in the Games8、The order of athletic events at the ancient Olympics ______. A.has not definitely been establishedB.varied according to the number of foreign competitorsC.was decided by Zeus, in whose honour the Games were held D.was considered unimportant9、Modern athletes' results cannot be compared with those of ancient runners because ______.A.the Greeks had no means of recording the resultsB.they are much betterC.details such as the time were not recorded in the past D.they are much worse10、Nowadays, the athletes' expenses are paid for ______.A.out of the prize money of the winnersB.out of the funds raised by the competing nationsC.by the athletes themselvesD.by contributions11、Let us ask what were the preparation and training Abraham Lincoln had for oratory, whether political or forensic. Born in rude and abject poverty, he never had any education, except what he gave himself, till he was approaching manhood. Not even books wherewith to inform. and train his mind were within his reach. No school, no university, no legal faculty had any part in training his powers. When he became a lawyerand a politician, the years most favourable to continuous study had already passed, and the opportunities he found for reading were very scanty. He knew but few authors in general literature, though he knew those few thoroughly. He taught himself a little mathematics, but he could read no language save his own, and can have had only the faintest acquaintance with European history or with any branch of philosophy.The want of regular education was not made up for by the persons among whom his lot was cast. Till he was a grown man, he never moved in any society from which he could learn those things with which the mind of an orator to be stored. Even after he had gained some legal practice, there was for many years no one for him to mix with except the petty practitioners of a petty town, men nearly all of whom knew little more than he did himself. Schools gave him nothing, and society gave him nothing. But he had a powerful intellect and a resolute will. Isolation fostered not only self-reliance but the habit of reflection, and indeed, of prolonged and intense reflection. He made all that he knew a part of himself. His convictions were his own—clear and coherent. He was not positive or opinionated and he did not deny that at certain moments he pondered and hesitated long before he decided on his course. But though hecould keep a policy in suspense, waiting for events to guide him, he did not waver. He paused and reconsidered, but it was never his way to go back on a decision once more or to waste time in vain regrets that all he had expected had not been attained. He took advice readily and left many things to his ministers; but he did not lean on his advisers. Without vanity or ostentation, he was always independent, self-contained, prepared to take full responsibility for his acts.It is said in the second paragraph that Abraham Lincoln ______.A.was illiterateB.was never educatedC.was educated very lateD.behaved rudely when he was young12、We are also told that Abraham Lincoln______A.never cared much for readingB.did much reading when he was youngC.never had much chance to readD.became an enthusiastic reader when he was grown up13、It is said in the third paragraph that Abraham Lincoln______ A.was anti-socialB.learned little from his friendsC.had few friendsD.knew very few doctors14、The habit of reflection helped Lincoln______A.to develop independenceB.to become more opinionatedC.to attain clear convictionsD.to become a hesitant person15、We may say, taking the passage as a whole, that Lincoln was ______.A.a failure because of his ignoranceB.a man who triumphed over his disadvantagesC.an exceptionally successful and well-educated personD.an illiterate man, but with some natural talents16、The idea that, if your house is built in the right position, this may affect your success in life seems strange to many people. However, to believers in Feng-Shui, or the art of geomancy, not only the position but also the choice of decorations and even the color of your home can mean the difference between good fortune and disaster. This art has beenpracticed for centuries in China and is still used all over South East Asia. Even the huge Hong Kong banks call in a geomant if they are planning to build new offices. They have such faith in his knowledge that if he advises them to move, they will alter their plans for even their biggest buildings.Like many Oriental beliefs the geomant's skill depends on the idea of harmony in nature. If there is no imbalance between the opposing forces of Yin and Yang, the building will bring luck to its inhabitants. This means that the house must be built on the right spot as well as facing the right direction, and also be painted an auspicious color. For instance, if there are mountains to the north, this will protest them from evil influences. If the house is painted red, this will bring happiness to the occupants while green symbolizes youth and will bring long life. Other factors, such as the owner's time and date of birth, are taken into account, too. The geomant believes that unless all these are considered when choosing a site for construction, the fortune of the people using it will be at risk.Indeed, to ignore the geomant's advice can have fatal results. The death of the internationally famous Kung-Fu star, Bruce Lee, has been used as an example. It is said that when Lee found outthat the house he was living in was an unlucky one, he followed a geomant's advice and installed an eight-sided mirror outside his front door to bring him luck. Unfortunately, a storm damaged the mirror and the house was left unprotected from harmful influences. Soon afterwards Lee died in mysterious circumstances.Not only is Feng-Shui still used in South East Asia, but it has also spread right across the world. Even in modern New York a successful commercial artist called Milton Glaser has found it useful. He was so desperate after his office was broken into six times that he consulted a geomant. He was told to install a fish tank with six black fish and fix a red clock to the ceiling. Since then he has not been burglarized once. It may seem an incredible story, but no other suitable explanation has been offered.From the passage we can infer that Feng-Shui is NOT used in ______.A.Hong KongB.the United StatesC.JapanD.Thailand17、Geomants believe that ______.A.houses must only be painted redB.houses must face mountainsC.nature and life should be in harmonyD.green is an unlucky color18、Geomants think that the reason for Bruce Lee's death is that ______.A.he didn't follow the geomants' adviceB.he installed an eight-sided mirrorC.he misunderstood the geomant's adviceD.a storm damaged the protection for his house19、The story of Milton Glaser shows that ______.A.colors are not important in geomancyB.geomancy is used by artistsC.geomancy is used in the WestD.the fight against crime is being won20、Which of the following best describes geomancy?A.It is a style. of Oriental decoration.B.It is a type of painting.C.It is an ancient Chinese belief called Feng-Shui.D.It is an architectural design.21、Part B (10 points)In the following text, some sentences have been removed. For Questions 41-45, choose the most suitable one from the list (A、B、C、D、E、F、G……) to fit into each of the numbered blank. There are several extra choices, which do not fit in any of the gaps. (10 points)(41)______. Nevertheless, some of these small changes are important. There are three basic processes that cause a change in oceanic salinity. One of these is the subtraction of water from the ocean by means of evaporation—conversion of liquid water to water vapor in this manner, the salinity is increased, since the salts stay behind. If this is carried to the extreme, of course, white crystals of salt would be left behind.The opposite of evaporation is precipitation, such as rain, by which water is added to the ocean. Here the ocean is being diluted so that the salinity is decreased. This may occur in areas of high rainfall or in coastal regions where rivers flow into the ocean. (42)______.Normally, in tropical regions where the sun is very strong, the ocean salinity is somewhat higher than it is in other parts ofthe world where there is not as much evaporation. (43)______.A third process by which salinity may be altered is associated with the formation and melting of sea ice. When seawater is frozen, the dissolved materials are left behind. In this manner, seawater directly beneath freshly formed sea ice has a higher salinity than it did before the ice appeared. (44)______.In the Weddell Sea, off Antarctic, the densest water in the oceans is formed as a result of this freezing process, which increases the salinity of cold water. (45)______.A. The water in the oceans only leaves by evaporating (and the freezing of polar ice), but the salt remains dissolved in the ocean—it does not evaporate.B. Thus salinity may be increased by the subtraction of water by evaporation, or decreased by the addition of fresh water by precipitation or runoff.C. If the salinity of ocean waters is analyzed, it is found to vary only slightly from place to place.D. Of course, when this ice melts, it will tend to decrease the salinity of the surrounding water.E. This heavy water sinks and is found in the deeper, portions of the oceans of the world.F. The salinity (salt content) of ocean water varies. One cubicfoot of average sea water contains 2.2 pounds of salt.G. Similarly, in coastal regions where rivers dilute the sea, salinity is somewhat lower than in other oceanic areas.22、(42)23、(43)24、(44)25、(45)26、Part CDirections: Read the following text carefully and then translate the underlined segments into Chinese. (10 points) Do animals have rights? This is how the question is usually put. It sounds like a useful, ground-clearing way to start.(46)Actually, it isn't because it assumes that there is an agreed account of human rights, which is something the world does not have.On one view of rights, to be sure, it necessarily follows that animals have none. (47)Some philosophers argue that rights exist only within a social contract, as part of an exchange of duties and entitlements. Therefore animals cannot have rights. The idea of punishing a tiger that kills somebody is absurd; for exactly the same reason, so is the idea that tigers have rights. However, this is only one account, and by no means anuncontested one. It denies rights not only to animals but also to some people—for instance, to infants, the mentally incapable and future generations. In addition, it is unclear what force a contract can have for people who never consented to it: how do you reply to somebody who says "I don't like this contract"?The point is this: without agreement on the rights of people, arguing about the rights of animals is fruitless. (48)It leads the discussion to extremes at the outset: it invites you to think that animals should be treated either with the consideration humans extend to other humans, or with no consideration at all. This is a false choice. Better to start with another, more fundamental, question: is the way we treat animals a moral issue at all?Many deny it. (49)Arguing from the view that humans are different from animals in every relevant respect, extremists of this kind think that animals lie outside the area of moral choice. Any regard for the suffering of animals is seem as a mistake—a sentimental displacement of feeling that should properly be directed to other humans.This view, which holds that torturing a monkey is morally equivalent to chopping wood, may seem bravely "logical". Infact it is simply shallow: the confused centre is right to reject it. The most elementary form. of moral reasoning—the ethical equivalent of learning to crawl—is to weigh others' interests against one's own. This in turn requires sympathy and imagination: without which there is no capacity for moral thought. To see an animal in pain is enough, for most, to engage sympathy. (50)When that happens, it is not a mistake: it is mankind's instinct for moral reasoning in action, an instinct that should be encouraged rather than laughed at.27、(47)28、(48)29、(49)30、(50)参考答案:【一、Use of English】1~5CABAB6~10DACBB11~20点击下载查看答案【二、Reading Comprehension】1~5CCCCB6~10BAACB11~30点击下载查看答案。

全国硕士研究生入学考试英语冲刺试题(二) 下

全国硕士研究生入学考试英语冲刺试题(二) 下

XX年全国硕士研究生入学考试英语冲刺试题(二) 下【正确答案】 D [A] stress the settlement of bigger problems. [B] focus their attention on great issues. [C] overlook the remembrance of trivial things. [D]suffer memory decline related to age.32、Aording to new research,its distinct that(此题分值:2分)【正确答案】 A [A] our brain cells can be producible. [B] our memory may be renewable. [C] most mental illnesses are curable. [D] brain mending methods are available.33、The phrase “nuts and bolts” in Par.3 most probably means(此题分值:2分)【正确答案】 D [A] basic structures. [B] plex tasks. [C] practical aspects. [D] working parts.34、 As asserted by researchers,our inability to memorize words or names mainly(此题分值:2分)【正确答案】 A [A] results from the declining efficiency of brain cells. [B] results in the brains liability to radical interference. [C] consists of different mental disorders. [D] consists in various emotional problems. 35、Experts suggest that the best way to avoid memory failures is(此题分值:2分)【正确答案】 B [A] to take more dietary supplements. [B] to keep mental function alive. [C] to find an intellectual oupation. [D] to do more intellectual exercises. 二、阅读理解题(每题2分,共40分)阅读以下短文,理解意思后选择以下答案中正确的一个Non-indigenous (non-native) species of plants and animals arrive by way of two general types of pathways. First, species having origins outside the United States may enter the country and bee established either as free-living populations or under human cultivation-for example, in agriculture, horticulture, aquaculture, or as pets. Some cultivated species subsequently escape or are released and also bee established as free-living populations. Second, species of either U.S. or foreign origin and already within the United States may spread to new locales. Pathways of both types include intentional as well as unintentional species transfers. Rates of species movement driven by human transformations of natural environments as well as by human mobility-through merce, tourism, and travel-greatly exceed natural rates by parison. While geographic distributions of species naturally expand or contract over historical time intervals(tens to hundreds of years), species- ranges rarely expand thousands of miles or across physical barriers such as oceans or mountains.Habitat modification can create conditions favorable to the establishment of non-indigenous species. Soil disturbed in construction and agriculture is open for colonization by non-indigenous weeds, which in turn may provide habitatsfor the non-indigenous insects that evolved with them. Human-generated changes in fire frequency, grazing intensity, as well as soil stability and nutrient levels similarly facilitate the spread and establishment of non-indigenous plants. When human changes to natural environments span large geographical areas, theyeffectively create passages for species movement between previously isolated locales. The rapid spread of the Russian wheat aphid to fifteen states in just two years following its 1986 arrival has been attributed in part to the prevalence of alternative host plants that areavailable when wheat is not. Many of these are non-indigenous grasses remended for planting on the forty million or more acres enrolled in the U.S. Department of Agriculture Conservation Reserve Program.A number of factors perplex quantitative evaluation of the relative importance of various entry pathways. Time lags often our between establishment of non-indigenous species and their detection, and tracing the pathway for a long-established species is difficult. Experts estimate thatnon-indigenous weeds are usually detected only after havingbeen in the country for thirty years or having spread to at least ten thousand acres. In addition, federal port inspection, although a major source of information on non-indigenous species pathways, especially for agriculture pests, provides data only when such species enter via closely-examined routes. Finally, some parisons between pathways defy quantitative analysis-for example, which is more “important”: the entry path of one very harmful species or one by which many but less harmful species enter the country?36、Which of the following statements about species movement is best supported by the text?(此题分值:2分)【正确答案】 D [A] Human factors affect species movement rates more than its long-term amount. [B] Natural expansions of species aount for their slow natural contractions. [C] Natural environments created by human activities contribute much to species movement. [D] Long-range movement of species depends on the geographic extent of human mobility.37、Aording to the text, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (此题分值:2分)【正确答案】 A [A] contributed to the fast distribution of the Russian wheat aphid to broad areas. [B] failed to isolate the Russian wheat aphid in limited locales. [C]provides data about foreign species entering the country by regulated routes. [D] is responsible for introducing harmful plants onto federal lands.38、It can be inferred that all of the following affect the movement of species EXCEPT(此题分值:2分)【正确答案】 B [A] earth fertility. [B] import restrictions. [C] natural obstacles. [D] fire disasters.39、To determine the entry pathway for a non-native species is LEAST likely to depend on(此题分值:2分)【正确答案】 D [A] whether the species is considered tobe a pest. [B] whether the species enters by a closely-checked route. [C] the rate at which the species extends geographically. [D] the magnitude of the average numberof the species.40、Which of the following may best express the chief purpose of the last paragraph?(此题分值:2分)【正确答案】 C [A] To explain the difficulties in tracing the pathways for long-established species. [B] Todescribe the events usually leading to the detection of a non-indigenous species. [C] To identify the problems in assessing the weight of entry tracks for foreign species. [D] To discuss the role of time lags and geographicexpansion of species in species detection. 三、完形填空(每题2分,共10分)选择以下答案中正确的一个If you fail to stoke a fire,its flames at some time will die.Yet the great fire of the Sun has burned nonstop for about 5000 million years with no apparent sign of going out.41).People in many cultures regarded the Sun as a miraculous gift from the gods,quite different from earthly fires and therefore not likely to fail them unless the gods were made angry.We now know that the Sun will eventually burn away.42).The Sun is posed of almost 75 per cent hydrogen and 25 per cent helium,plus much smaller amounts ofoxygen,carbon,neon,nitrogen,magnesium,iron and silicon.It is known as a main sequence star,one that shines by burning hydrogen.43). Thus, the Sun is both burning fuel and creating it. As the hydrogen store diminishes,its stock of helium grows.The light and heat ing now from the Sun were actually produced in its core many millions of years ago. When we burn fuel on a fire,we are converting matter-wood or coal-partly into energy.The more efficient the fire,the more heat it produces.44).This loss of hydrogen is slight when pared to the Sun s enormous bulk.Even though it is posed of light gas,the Sun weighs some 300,000 times as much as the Earth.And it loses about 4 million tones of matter every second.45).If that sounds depressing,take heart!If the Sun switchedoff its power tomorrow,it would be ten million years years before its surface cooled sufficiently for anybody on Earth to feel the chill.In 5000 million years time,humans may well have found an answer to impending doom.41、(此题分值:2分)【正确答案】 A [A] We,one earth,soak up a tiny fraction-perhaps one hundred millionth-of the Sun s vastenergy.The rest of its awesome output of heat and light vanishes beyond the plas and into space. [B] Scientists predict that the Sun has enough hydrogen to keep the fire going for another 5000 million years,about as long again as it has already burned. It will then gradually,like the heart of a dying fire,change color,turning in this case from white to yellow and red until,finally,as a black dwarf,it disappears from sight. [C] The Earth s atmosphere,which normally shields it from the intense heat of the Sun,would drift away. Then the Earth’s oceans wo uld boil and vanish in steam.Without the cooling effect of its atmosphere and oceans,Earth itself would turn into a massive ball of fire. [D]At the Sun’s heart,the hydrogen was once pressed with such force that it started a nuclear reaction.In this giant furnace,the hydrogen is converted by nuclear fusion into another bustiblegas,helium,in a reaction similar to that in an H bomb. [E] Before its great fire dies,the Sun will turn into a red giant,bloated(swollen)to about 100 times its current size.It will swallow up Mercury and then Venus,the nearest to it plas. [F] The Sun is an extremely efficient furnace,but even so the helium it generates to keep the great fire going is only 92.3 per cent of the hydrogen it burns.The other 7.7 per cent vanishes in several forms of energy,mainly heat,light and X rays. [G] Tests show that its temperature fluctuates.Since 1979,it seems to have cooled by one tenth of per cent,but that is not a signthat the great fire is going out.Space scientists believe that,because of the Sun’s volatile nature,this minor change may soon be reversed.42、(此题分值:2分)【正确答案】 G [A] We,one earth,soak up a tiny fraction-perhaps one hundred millionth-of the Sun s vast energy.The rest of its awesome output of heat and light vanishes beyond the plas and into space. [B] Scientists predict that the Sun has enough hydrogen to keep the fire going for another 5000 million years,about as long again as it has already burned. It will then gradually,like the heart of a dying fire,change color,turning in this case from white to yellow and red until,finally,as a blackdwarf,it disappears from sight. [C] The Earth s atmosphere,which normally shields it from the intense heat of the Sun,would drift away. Then the Earth’s oceans would boil and vanish in steam.Without the cooling effect of its atmosphere and oceans,Earth itself would turn into a massive ball of fire. [D]At the Sun’s heart,the hydrogen was once pressed with such force that it started a nuclear reaction.In this giant furnace,the hydrogen is converted by nuclear fusion into another bustiblegas,helium,in a reaction similar to that in an H bomb. [E] Before its great fire dies,the Sun will turn into a red giant,bloated(swollen)to about 100 times its current size.It will swallow up Mercury and then Venus,the nearest to it plas. [F] The Sun is an extremely efficient furnace,but even so the helium it generates to keep the great fire going is only 92.3 per cent of the hydrogen it burns.The other 7.7 per cent vanishes in several forms of energy,mainly heat,light and X rays. [G] Tests show that its temperature fluctuates.Since 1979,it seems to have cooled by one tenth of per cent,but that is not a signthat the great fire is going out.Space scientists believe that,because of the Sun’s volatile nature,this minor change may soon be reversed.43、(此题分值:2分)【正确答案】 D [A] We,one earth,soak up a tiny fraction-perhaps one hundred millionth-of the Sun s vast energy.The rest of its awesome output of heat and light vanishes beyond the plas and into space. [B] Scientists predict that the Sun has enough hydrogen to keep the fire going for another 5000 million years,about as long again as it has already burned. It will then gradually,like the heart of a dying fire,change color,turning in this case from white to yellow and red until,finally,as a black dwarf,it disappears from sight. [C] The Earth s atmosphere,which normally shields it from the intense heat of the Sun,would drift away. Then the Earth’s oceans would boil and vanish in steam.Without the cooling effect of its atmosphere and oceans,Earth itself would turn into a massive ball of fire. [D]At the Sun’s heart,the hydrogen was once pressed with such force that it started a nuclear reaction.In this giant furnace,the hydrogen is converted by nuclear fusion into another bustiblegas,helium,in a reaction similar to that in an H bomb. [E] Before its great fire dies,the Sun will turn into a red giant,bloated(swollen)to about 100 times its current size.It will swallow up Mercury and then Venus,the nearest to it plas. [F] The Sun is an extremely efficient furnace,but even so the helium it generates to keep the great fire going is only 92.3 per cent of the hydrogen itburns.The other 7.7 per cent vanishes in several forms of energy,mainly heat,light and X rays. [G] Tests show that its temperature fluctuates.Since 1979,it seems to have cooled by one tenth of per cent,but that is not a signthat the great fire is going out.Space scientists believe that,because of the Sun’s volatile nature,this minor change may soon be reversed.44、(此题分值:2分)【正确答案】 F [A] We,one earth,soak up a tiny fraction-perhaps one hundred millionth-of the Sun s vast energy.The rest of its awesome output of heat and light vanishes beyond the plas and into space. [B] Scientists predict that the Sun has enough hydrogen to keep the fire going for another 5000 million years,about as long again as it has already burned. It will then gradually,like the heart of a dying fire,change color,turning in this case from white to yellow and red until,finally,as a black dwarf,it disappears from sight. [C] The Earth s atmosphere,which normally shields it from the intense heat of the Sun,would drift away. Then the Earth’s oceans would boil and vanish in steam.Without the cooling effect of its atmosphere and oceans,Earth itself would turn into a massive ball of fire. [D]At the Sun’s heart,the hydrogen was once pressed with such force that it started anuclear reaction.In this giant furnace,the hydrogen is converted by nuclear fusion into another bustiblegas,helium,in a reaction similar to that in an H bomb. [E] Before its great fire dies,the Sun will turn into a red giant,bloated(swollen)to about 100 times its current size.It will swallow up Mercury and then Venus,the nearest to it plas. [F] The Sun is an extremely efficient furnace,but even so the helium it generates to keep the great fire going is only 92.3 per cent of the hydrogen it burns.The other 7.7 per cent vanishes in several forms of energy,mainly heat,light and X rays. [G] Tests show that its temperature fluctuates.Since 1979,it seems to have cooled by one tenth of per cent,but that is not a signthat the great fire is going out.Space scientists believe that,because of the Sun’s volatile nature,this minor change may soon be reversed.45、(此题分值:2分)【正确答案】 B [A] We,one earth,soak up a tiny fraction-perhaps one hundred millionth-of the Sun s vast energy.The rest of its awesome output of heat and light vanishes beyond the plas and into space. [B] Scientists predict that the Sun has enough hydrogen to keep the fire going for another 5000 million years,about as long again as it has already burned. It will then gradually,like theheart of a dying fire,change color,turning in this case from white to yellow and red until,finally,as a black dwarf,it disappears from sight. [C] The Earth s atmosphere,which normally shields it from the intense heat of the Sun,would drift away. Then the Earth’s oceans would boil and vanish in steam.Without the cooling effect of its atmosphere and oceans,Earth itself would turn into a massive ball of fire. [D]At the Sun’s heart,the hydrogen was once pressed with such force that it started a nuclear reaction.In this giant furnace,the hydrogen is converted by nuclear fusion into another bustiblegas,helium,in a reaction similar to that in an H bomb. [E] Before its great fire dies,the Sun will turn into a red giant,bloated(swollen)to about 100 times its current size.It will swallow up Mercury and then Venus,the nearest to it plas. [F] The Sun is an extremely efficient furnace,but even so the helium it generates to keep the great fire going is only 92.3 per cent of the hydrogen it burns.The other 7.7 per cent vanishes in several forms of energy,mainly heat,light and X rays. [G] Tests show that its temperature fluctuates.Since 1979,it seems to have cooled by one tenth of per cent,but that is not a signthat the great fire is going out.Space scientists believe that,because of the Sun’svolatile nature,this minor changemay soon be reversed. 四、翻译题(每题2分,共10分)请将正确答案填入下面的输入框,修改无误后点“提交”No painter can produce a good canvas without a broad knowledge of what has been painted before him, 46) no architect can plan a meaningful building except as he has spent time in considering the architecture of the past, and no writer can produce good writing without a sure sense of what has been aomplished in the past within his form.Nor does one learn the past of his form only to adhere to it. Such an adherence, if overdone, would be a death in itself. I mean, rather, that it is impossible to venture meaningful innovation unless one knows what he is innovating from. 47) With no exception I am able to think of, the best innovators in our literature have been those who best knew their past tradition.I am saying simply that a writer must learn to read. He must read widely and thoughtfully, and he must learn to read not as an amateur spectator but as an engaged professional. 48) Just as the football coach sees more of the play than do the amateur spectators, so the writer must learn to see more of what is happening under the surface of the story than does the reader who simply yields to the story. William Dean Howells, then editor of The Atlantic, gave what he intended as a supreme admiration to one of Mark Twain s books when he reported that he had begun thebook and for the first time in many years had found himself reading as a reader rather than as an editor.49) A happy preference and a gracious pliment, but once the writer has allowed himself that much it bees his duty to reread the book with his glasses on-not only to enter into the story of the writing, but to identify the devices (i.e., the inventions) by which the story was created and made to work upon him. 50) And here, too, he must experience his essential deceit, for the best reading is exactly that reading in which the passion of the story and the awareness of its technical management arrive at the same time.46、(此题分值:2分)【正确答案】一位建筑师不下功夫研究过去的建筑,就不能设计出富有意义的建筑物,同样,一位作家不确实了解他所用的体裁方面过去已有哪些成就,便不能写出优秀的作品。

考研英语全真模拟冲刺试题及其答案详解

考研英语全真模拟冲刺试题及其答案详解

Section ⅠUse of EnglishDirections:Read the following text. Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark A, B, C or D on ANSWER SHEET 1. (10 points)Driving through snowstorm on icy roads for long distances is a most nerve-racking experience. It is a paradox that the snow, coming __1__ gently, blowing gleefully in a high wind, all the while __2__ down a treacherous carpet, freezes the windows,__3__ the view. The might of automated man is__4__ . The horses, the powerful electrical systems, the deep-tread tires, all go __5__ nothing. One minute the road feels __6__, and the next the driver is sliding over it, light as a__7__, in a panic, wondering what the heavy trailer trucks coming up__8__the rear are going to do. The trucks are like __9__ when you have to pass them, not at sixty or seventy __10__ you do when the road is dry, but at twenty-five and thirty. __11__ their engines sound unnaturally loud. Snow, slush and__12__ of ice spray from beneath the wheels, obscure the windshield, and rattle __13__your car. Beneath the wheels there is plenty of __14__ for you to slide and get mashed to a pulp. Inch __15__ inch you move up, past the rear wheels, the center wheels, the cab, the front wheels, all__16__too slowly by. Straight ahead you continue,__17__ to cut over sharply would send you into a slip,__18__in front of the vehicle. At last, there is__19__enough, and you creep back over, in front of the truck now, but__20__the sound of its engine still thundering in your ears.1. [A] up [B] off [C] down [D] on2. [A] lies [B] lays [C] settles [D] sends3. [A] blocks [B] strikes [C] puffs [D] cancels4. [A] muted [B] discovered [C] doubled [D] undervalued5. [A] for [B] with [C] into [D] from6. [A] comfortable [B] weak [C] risky [D] firm7. [A] loaf [B] feather [C] leaf [D] fog8. [A] beneath [B] from [C] under [D] beyond9. [A] dwarfs [B] giants [C] patients [D] princesses10. [A] what [B] since [C] as [D] that11. [A] So [B] But [C] Or [D] Then12. [A] flakes [B] flocks [C] chips [D] cakes13. [A] onto [B] against [C] off [D] along14. [A] snow [B] earth [C] room [D] ice15. [A] by [B] after [C] for [D] with16. [A] climbing [B] crawling [C] winding [D] sliding17. [A] meanwhile [B] unless [C] whereas [D] for18. [A] sheer [B] mostly [C] rarely [D] right19. [A] might [B] distance [C] air [D] power20. [A] with [B] like [C] inside [D] upon答案1.C2.B3.A4.A5.A6.D7.B8.C9.B 10.C11.D 12.C 13.C 14.C 15.A 16.D 17.D 18.D 19.B 20.A总体分析本文描述了在冰雪覆盖的路面上开车的经历。

考研英语冲刺试卷

考研英语冲刺试卷

考研英语冲刺试卷(总9页)考研英语冲刺试卷考试时间:180分钟满分:100分Section I Use of EnglishDirections:Read the following text. Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark [A], [B], [C] or [D] on the ANSWER SHEET.(10 points)You probably have a long mental list of moments and facts you wish you could remember---but actually you cannot. The good news, 1 , is that while such memories may be currently 2 , they are not entirely gone, and could theoretically be 3 ,according to a new brain research.In the study, biologist Jeffrey Johnson 4 16 college participants through an FMRI machine (which 5 nervous activity via blood flow) to compare brain patterns 6 memory formation and recall. First, he showed the students various common words and had them 7 a few tasks: say the word backwards in your head, 8 its uses, and picture how an artist would 9 it. Then, 20 minutes later, after the students re-entered the FMRI machine, Johuson showed them the list of words and asked them to recall 10 they could from before. Finally, he compared brain activity from both 11 and what he found will surprise you.Using 12 is called “pattern analysis”, it’s possible to 13 a unique pattern of brain activity to every individual thing we do. This means that when a participant says the word “apple” backwords the 14 pattern of brain activity is different than when he pictures the fruit. 15 interestingly, there is close similarity between the pattern that emerges when we 16 an activity and when we later recall it. The stronger our memory, the 17 the pattern, but as Johnson found, even at a moment 18 we cannot remember anything, our nerve cells still fire in a way that 19 the activity of when we formed the memory. This 20 that sometime in the fu ture we may be able to retrieve the memories we thought we’d lost forever.1. [A]although [B]rather [C]though [D]therefore2. [A]forgetful [B]absent [C]faultless [D]unavailable3. [A]retrieved [B]recognized [C]claimed [D]accumulated4. [A]let [B]put [C]ran [D]got5. [A]measures [B]calculates [C]assesses [D]evaluates6. [A]between [B]during [C]across [D]throughout7. [A]assign [B]display [C]perform [D]overtake8. [A]bring forward [B]think of [C]check out [D]catch on9. [A]predict [B]manifest [C]depict [D]specify10. [A]however [B]whenever [C]whatever [D]whichever11. [A]procedures [B]sessions [C]progresses [D]sections12. [A]which [B]that [C]as [D]what13. [A]attach [B]subject [C]submit [D]stick14. [A]controversial [B]relevant [C]particular [D]associated15. [A]Even [B]But [C]So [D]As16. [A]set about [B]sit for [C]engage in [D]go through17. [A]stronger [B]closer [C]further [D]weaker18. [A]when [B]that [C]which [D]as19. [A]hampers [B]distinguishes [C]duplicates [D]resembles20. [A]highlights [B]implies [C]entails [D]exclaimsSection II Reading ComprehensionPart ADirections:Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing [A], [B], [C] or [D]. Mark your answers on the ANSWER SHEET. (40 points)Text 1Communication has changed dramatically over the past half-century. The term “Global Village” was first used in the early 1960’s to describe the ways in which the electronic age was reshaping the rapidity and pervasiveness with which information is disseminated across the world. Now, with the enormous growth of the Internet and other forms of digital communication, that idea is all the more applicable. New technology has changed the ways we receive information and the ways we collect and store it.If you look to past centuries, people have had to rely on word-of-mouth as a way of finding out news beyond their own towns. History itself was passed along through specialized individuals who memorized names and events from the previous centuries. The most well known form of history is myth, which comes from the Greek word for “a spoken orwritten story.” Many of these stories have been very influential and continue to be read and studied in our own times: the famous examples are the works of the Greek poet Homer.Many techniques are used to preserve a story, event, history, or myth from generation to generation. Symbols are used as devices to trigger a common connection in the listeners. Repetition of names and families throughout a single story are used as a way to keep important information fresh in the mind. The reliance on a common tradition or reference within a particular culture allows the storyteller to get more meaning across with the fewest words said. These are all memory aids that serve to allow both the teller and the listener to fully realize a story that may have its origins hundreds of years in the past. For instance, native peoples in North America’s Northwest Territory have passed down detailed methods for hunting and storing of reindeer and whale that include geographic information that still hold relevance today.The need for an oral tradition has diminished in practical value with the advent of the written text and the rapid growth of computers as a means of disseminating information. There are many harmful side effects to the loss of this practice. Younger generations can become alienated from their cultural identity and knowledge about customs, tradition, mores, the natural world and history will disappear. This is especially true in aboriginal cultures such as in Native American, Native Australian and South American peoples, where assimilation into the dominant culture can come at the cost of historical customs.Since the prevalence of the written word, and later inventions that have made passing along the printed word easier, the demands on our memory as a means of cataloging facts and historical data has been considerably reduced. However, the techniques used for hundreds of years by those whose job it was to keep these histories alive have a deeply ingrained influence on us today. Keeping that knowledge and those traditions alive is veryimportant. Spend a moment recalling a memory of an oral tradition in your family history that has impacted your education. How has this oral tradition affected you?21. The term “Global Village” implies that_____________.[A] the electronic technology is developing rapidly[B] the 1960s witnessed the birth of electronic rapidly[C] modern IT has eliminated geographical barriers[D]digital technique has found diverse application22. Centuries ago, information distribution was_____________.[A] carried out by mouth-to-mouth messages[B] conducted more by speaking than by writing[C] confined in small and enclosed districts[D]dependent on specialized individuals23. The text indicates that myth_____________.[A] is the true record of ancient history[B] is handed down by means of various symbols[C] saves key information for later generations[D]characterizes a nation’s common tradition24. The author asserts that modern communication means can_____________.[A] result in the alienation of younger generation[B]deprive the youth of their national identity[C] lead to the extinction of myth and customs[D]cause destruction of myth and customs25. The best title for the text may be_____________.[A] The Drastic Change in Communication[B] The Impact of Computer on Our Life[C] The primary Value of Oral Tradition[D] The Function of Myth and HistoryText 2Technology is a two-edged sword. Rarely is this as clear as it is in the realm of health care. Technology allows doctors to test their patients for genetic defects--and then to turn around and spread the results throughout the world via the Internet. For someone in need of treatment, that’s good news. But for someone in search of a job or an insurance policy, the tidings can be all bad.Last week President Bill Clinton proposed a corollary to the patients’ bill of rights now before Congress: a right to medical privacy. Beginning in 2002, under rules set to become law in February, patients would be able to stipulate the conditions under which their personal medical data could be revealed. They would be able to examine their records and make corrections. They could learn who else had seen the information. Improper use of records by a caregiver or insurer could result in both civil and criminal penalties. The plan was, said Clinton, “an unprecedented step toward putting Americans back in control of their own medical records.”While the administration billed the rules as an attempt to strike a balance between the needs of consumers and those of the health-care industry, neither doctors nor insurance companies were happy. The doctors said the rules could actually erode privacy, pointing to a provision allowing managed-care plans to use personal information without consent if the purpose was “health-care operations.” That, physicians sai d, was a loophole through which HMOs and other insurers could pry into the doctor-patient relationship, in the name of assessing the quality of care. Meanwhile, the insurers protested that the rules would make them vulnerable to lawsuits. They were especially disturbed by a provision holding them liable for privacy breaches by “business partners” such as lawyers and accountants. Bothgroups agreed that privacy protections would drive up the cost of health care by at least an additional $ billion, and maybe much more, over the next five years. They also complained about the increased level of federal scrutiny required by the new rules’ enforcement provisions.One aim of the rules is to reassure patients about confidentiality, thereby encouraging them to be open with their doctors. Today various cancers and sexually transmitted diseases can go untreated because patients are afraid of embarrassment or of losing insurance coverage. The fear is real: Clinton aides noted that a January poll by Princeton Survey Research Associates found that one in six . adults had at some time done something unusual to conceal medical information, such as paying cash for services.author begins his article with “technology is a two-edged sword” to _____________.[A] warn of the harm patients are prone to suffer[B] call on people’s attention to the potential danger technology can bring to us[C] show that doctor’s improper use of technology can end up in bad results[D] show the advantages and disadvantages of technologyto the proposal made by President Clinton, patients will be able to do the following EXCEPT _____________.[A] enjoy more rights to their medical records[B] be open with their doctors[C] decide how to use their medical information[D] sue their insurers for improper use of their medical recordstend to think that the rules _____________.[A] may ruin doctor-patient relationship[B] can do more harm than good[C] will prevent doctors from doing medical research[D] will end up in more health care cost and poorer medical serviceexample of the January poll by Princeton Survey Research Associates is used to show that__________________.[A] American patients’ concealment of their medical information has become a big concern[B] a large portion of patients would rather leave their diseases untreated[C] concealing medical information is widespread in the .[D] paying cash for medical service is a common practice among American patientsthe article we can learn that ________________.[A] American governmen t will tighten its control over the use of patients’ personal information. [B] doctors and insurers are both against the rules for the same reasons[C] patients are entitled to have complete control of their medical information[D] the new rules put insurers in a very disadvantageous positionText 3A new malady is running rampantly in corporate America: management phobia. Many people don’t want to be a manager, and many people who are managers are desired to jump off the management track—or have already. “I hated all the meetings,” says a 10-year award-winning manager, “And I found the more you did for people who worked for you, the more they expected. I was a counselor, motivator, financial adviser and psychologist. ”With technology changing in a wi nk, you can never slack off 4 these days if you’re on the technical side. It’s a rare person who can manage to keep up on the technical side and handle a management job, too. In addition, with Scott Adams’s popular cartoon character as well as many television situation comedies routinely portraying managers as idiots or enemies, they just don’t get much respect anymore.Supervising others was always a tough task, but in the past that stress was offset by hopes for career mobility and financial rewards. Along with a sizable pay raise, people chosen as managers would begin a nearly automatic climb up the career ladder to lucrativeexecutive perks: stock options, company cars, club memberships, plus the key to the executive washroom. But in today’s global, more competitive arena, a manager sits on an insecure perch. Restructuring have eliminated layer after layer of management as companies came to view their organizations as collections of competencies rather than hierarchies. There are far fewer rungs on the corporate ladder for managers to climb. In addition, managerial jobs demand more hours and headaches than ever before but offer slim, if any, financial paybacks and perks.In an age of entrepreneurship, when the most praised people in business are those launching something new, management seems like an invisible, thankless role. Employers are looking for people who can do things, not for people who make other people do things. Management layoffs have done much to erode interest in managerial jobs.With more people wary of joining management, are corporations being hurt or worrying about developing future leadersNot many are. While employers have dismissed a lot of managers, they believe a surplus lingers on at many companies. Another reason co mpanies aren’t short of managers, contends Robert Kelley, a Carnegie Mellon University business professor, “is that so many workers today are self-managed, either individually or via teams, you don’t need a manager.”31. The 10-year award-winning manager suggests that__________.[A] managerial jobs demand more hours and offer more headaches[B] managers should not do too much beyond the scope of his job[C] being a manager requires many other skills besides management[D] a person can get a lot of development in a management role.32. The word “perk”(Line3, Paragraph 3) probably means___________.[A] privileges[B] status[C] mobility[D] rungs33. Which one of the following statements applies to today’s managers?[A] Their stress can be reduced by the financial and emotional rewards.[B] They are beginning to neglect their development on the technical side.[C] They feel more insecure in their positions because of the reduction in company hierarchies.[D] They are not respected any more by the media despite their hard efforts.34. Which skill do employers value most in this age of entrepreneurship?[A] Management[B] Creativity[C] Cooperation[D] Diligence35. We can learn from the last paragraph that______________.[A] the loss of interest in the managerial jobs would damage America corporate culture[B] more and more managers would be laid off in order to relieve the financial burden[C] those who are still lingering on managerial jobs are not foresighted.[D] many employees are to some extent a managers of themselvesText 4Thanks to slumping markets, investment banks are shedding many of their highly-paid traders. When markets recover, the banks might be tempted to replace them with rather cheaper talent. One alternative has been around for a while but has yet to catch on: autonomous trading agents-computers programmed to act like the human version without such pesky costs as holidays, lunch breaks or bonuses. Program trading has, of course, beendone before; some blamed the 1987 stockmarket crash on computers instructed with simple decision-making rules. But robots can be smarter than that.Dave Cliff, a researcher at Hewlett-Packard Laboratories in Bristol, England, has been creating trading robots for seven years. In computer simulations he lets them evolve “genetically”, and so allows them to adapt and fit models of real-world financial markets. His experiments have suggested that a redesign of some markets could lead to greater efficiency. Last year, a research group at IBM showed that Mr. Cliff’s artificial traders could consistently beat the human variety, in various kinds of market. Nearly all take the shape of an auction. One well-known type is the English auction, familiar to patrons of the salesrooms of Christie’s and Sotheby’s, where sellers keep mum on their offer price, and buyers increase their bids by stages until only one remains.At the other extreme is the Dutch auction, familiar to 17th-century tulip-traders in the Netherlands as well as to bidders for American Treasury bonds. Here, buyers remain silent, and a seller reduces his price until it is accepted. Most markets for shares, commodities, foreign exchange and derivatives are a hybrid of these two types: buyers and sellers can announce their bid or offer prices at any time, and deals are constantly being closed, a so-called “continuous double auction”.Mr. Cliff’s novel idea was to apply his evolutionary computer programs to marketplaces themselves. Why not, he thought, try and see what types of auction would let traders converge most quickly towards an equilibrium priceThe results were surprising. In his models, auctions that let buyers and sellers bid at any time like most of today’s financial exchanges were less efficient than ones that required relatively more bids from e ither buyers or sellers. These “evolved auctions” also withstood big market shocks, such as crashes and panics, better than today’s real-world versions. Mr. Cliff’s most recent results, which will be presented in Sydney, Australia, on December 10th, show that the best type of auction for any market depends crucially on even slight differences in the number of buyers and sellers.Bank of America has been investigating these new auctions, along with robotic traders, for possible use in electronic exchanges. The hope is that today’s financial auctions and online marketplaces might work better by becoming more like their English and Dutch forebears. But what to call such multi-ethnic hybridsHere’s introducing the “Cliffhanger”.passage is mainly_____________.[A] an introduction of trading robots[B] a review of two kinds of auctions[C] a survey of the trading market[D] about trading alternativesof the following is true according to the text?[A] David’s robot traders have now bee n used in real-world markets.[B] Robot traders can evolve like creatures.[C] There is room for improvement in efficiency in trading markets.[D] The English auction is the most popular trading form.you were trading American Treasury bonds, you would most likely take the tradingform of_____________.[A] the English auction[B] the continuous double auction[C] the Dutch auction[D] the evolved auctioncan infer from the text that_____________.[A] existing auctions can not withstand market shocks[B] the Dutch auction is better than the continuous double auction[C] it’s hard for traders to reach an equilibrium price[D] the best type of auction takes place when the number of the buyers is equal to that of sellersrobot traders, the writer’s attit ude can be said to be_____________.[A] biased [B] objective [C] pessimistic [D] optimisticPart BDirections:In the following text, some segments have been removed. For Questions 41- 45, choose the most suitable one from the list A-G to fit into each of the numbered blanks. There are two extra choices, which do not fit in any of the blanks.Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.(10 points)The patriotic outpouring that followed the World Trade Center and Pentagon attacks—80 percent of Americans displayed the flag on their car, house, or lapel—brought hopes of renewed voter interest. Yet turnout in this year’s congressional primaries was a mere 17 percent, no better than four year. No doubt, ordinarily Americans share responsibility for their lapse in participation; it is always easier to leave the work of democracy to others.41 .America’s politicians have also managed to invent the most unappetizing campaigns imaginable. 42 . Many of the attacks are so twisted that even a whiff of fresh air would topple them.True leadership has become so rare that politicians may no longer even dream of stepping forward to say something other than what polls tell them is safe. Tuesday’s electio n will surely pass without much of a debate on the momentous foreign and domestic issues facing the nation.And where are the news media 43 . And it’s failing again—a comparison of news coverage in 10 states shows the midterm election is getting 13 percent less coverage this year than in 1998.When journalists deign to cover elections, they magnify the very things they rail against. Candidates are ignored or portrayed as boring if they run issue-based campaigns. Attack sound bites get airtime; positive statements land on the cutting-room floor. As for trivial issues, why did candidate Bush’s 1970s drunk-driving arrest get more time on the network newscasts in the final days of the 2, 000 election than Gore’s foreign policy statements got in the entire general election?It’s not surprising voters are disenchanted with campaigns. During the 2, 000 election, as part of the Vanishing Voter Project at Harvard University’s Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy, we interviewed 100, 000 Americans to discover why they’re disengaging from elections. 44 .Officials unfailingly urge citizens “to do your duty and vote.” Yet, these officials embrace policies that make it harder to do that. Today, 87 percent of Americans reside in states that close registration two weeks or more before the election. The majority of unregistered Americans who otherwise would cast a vote are out of luck. Only six states allow election-day registration.45 .[A] Electoral competition is key to democracy, a nd America’s voters aren’t getting the full benefit of that. Only a couple of dozen of this year’s 435 US House races are competitive. Two years ago, percent of incumbents won, typically by margins of 70 percent or more.[B] If equivalent offerings were served at restaurants, Americans would never eat out. Attack ads have doubled in frequency since the 1, 770s and now account for a majority of the ads featured prominently in campaigns.[C] Amid the uproar over Florida’s ballot irregularities, no commentator has seen fit to ask why polls there close at 7 p. m. Florida is one of 26 states that close their polls before 8 p. m. Unsurprisingly, turnout in these states is several percentage points below that of states where polls are open until 8 p. m. or later.[D] They’re so enamored of infotainment and sensationalism that they can’t find time for the midterm elections. In the 1998 midterms, coverage was down by more than half over 1994.[E] But it’s time to stop blaming the citizens. Candidates, public officials, and journalists are not giving Americans the type of campaign they deserve.[F] So look for a small turnout Tuesday, but don’t ask citizens to look in the mirror. Some of them have cast their eye on what’s going on in candidate—land media—land and are asking why they should be bit players in that artifice.[G] Their responses tell the story: 81 percent believe “most political candidates will say alm ost anything to get themselves elected”; 75 percent feel “political candidates ar e more concerned with fighting each other than with solving the nation’s problems”.Part CDirections:Read the following text carefully and then translate the underlined segments into Chinese. Your translation should be written neatly on the Answer Sheet. (10 points)Light pollution now has become a big problem and led to much waste in our society. It has been estimated that 30% of the electricity generated for outdoor illumination is wasted. Important, too, are the environmental costs of producing the energy to power wasted light. For example, for every kilowatt-hour of electricity used, almost two pounds of carbon dioxide and almost two grams of sulphur dioxide are emitted into the environment. 46) Thus by simply eliminating wastedlight, those amounts can be substantially reduced with no negative effect on necessary lightning and with decidedly positive environmental benefits for the region.For individuals and families another significant issue is that of light intrusion, the spilling of unwanted light onto private property. This concern is already addressed in some local zoning codes where maximum light levels at property lines are established; 47) but as the problem becomes more common, homeowners may also sense that the intrusion of unwanted light keeps them from using their outside property at night as they wish or may even interfere with indoor activities by shining into the house interior. Indeed, legal proceedings could result from unwanted intrusion as a violation of property rights. Furthermore, poor quality lighting, whether commercial, municipal, or residential, can lessen the appeal of a neighborhood, lowering property values if the area begins to look too bright and gaudy.Yet the problem of light pollution is easily remedied. In general, good lighting uses only the amount of light necessary for a specific purpose, and that light is directed properly. 48) Lights allowing no illumination above the horizontal plane of fixed objects and mounted at the proper height to do their job while avoiding glare and light intrusion are the ideal. In recent years, there has been a conscious effort by many municipalities, businesses, and individuals to better address the ways lightning is used.So the next time you are out at night, make a note of the way things are lit. 49) Remember, regardless of how we achieve the goal of reducing light pollution, the simple fact remains that we all win when sensible lightning is used. Good lightning energy saves energy and money, it produces pollution, it improves the appearance of neighborhoods and maintains property values, it enhances the scientific and aesthetic appreciation of the glories of the night sky, and it preserves that beauty and inspiration for us and for our children. 50) So when you find yourself lucky enough to be in a place where it is still dark enough to see the sky sparkling with stars, think how much less beauty there would be in the world without it! And become an advocate for sensible and efficient lightning.Section III WritingPart A51. Directions:You have made an appointment with Prof. Wang, but failed to keep it. Write a letter to your teacher to1)apologize for your failure to keep the appointment,2)explain your reason to your teacher, and3)express your wish to make another appointment.You should write about 100 words on ANSWER SHEET 2. Do not sign your own name at the end of the letter. Use “Li Ming” instead. You do not need to write the address. (10 points) Part B52. Directions:Study the following drawing carefully and write an essay in which you should1) describe the drawing,2) interpret its meaning and implications, and3) give your comments.You should write 160--200 words neatly on ANSWER SHEET 2. (20 points)。

考研冲刺练习题及参考答案(翻译硕士(MTI)英语)

考研冲刺练习题及参考答案(翻译硕士(MTI)英语)

考研冲刺练习题及参考答案(翻译硕士(MTI)英语)考研英语是个经久不衰的话题,不管何时都会听到看到关于考研英语的求助,小编认为单词也是讲究一回生两回熟的,多做练习多记词汇总是没有错的。

翻译硕士(MTI)英语练习题I. V ocabulary and grammar (30’)Multiple choicesDirections: Beneath each sentence there are four words or phrases marked A, B, C and D. Choose the answer that best completes the sentence. Mark your answers on your answer sheet.1. Thousands of people turned out into the streets to _________ against the local authorities’decision to build a highway across the field.A. contradictB. reformC. counterD. protest2. The majority of nurses are women, but in the higher ranks of the medical profession women are in a _________.A. minorityB. scarcityC. rarityD. minimum3. Professor Johnson’s retirement _______ from next January.A. carries into effectB. takes effectC. has effectD. puts into effect4. The president explained that the purpose of taxation was to ________ government spending.A. financeB. expandC. enlargeD. budget5. The heat in summer is no less _________ here in this mountain region.A. concentratedB. extensiveC. intenseD. intensive6. Taking photographs is strictly ________ here, as it may damage the precious cave paintings.A. forbiddenB. rejectedC. excludedD. denied7. Mr. Brown’s condition looks very serious and it is doubtful if he will _________.A. pull backB. pull upC. pull throughD. pull out8. Since the early nineties, the trend in most businesses has been toward on-demand, always-available products and services that suit the customer’s _________ rather than the company’s.A. benefitB. availabilityC. suitabilityD. convenience9. The priest made the ________ of the cross when he entered the church.A. markB. signalC. signD. gesture10. This spacious room is ________ furnished with just a few articles in it.A. lightlyB. sparselyC. hardlyD. rarely11. If you explained the situation to your solicitor, he ________ able to advise you much better than I can.A. would beB. will have beenC. wasD. were12. With some men dressing down and some other men flaunting their looks, it is really hard to tell they are gay or _________.A. straightB. homosexualC. beautifulD. sad13. His remarks were ________ annoy everybody at the meeting.A. so as toB. such as toC. such toD. as much as to14. James has just arrived, but I didn’t know he _________ until yesterday.A. will comeB. was comingC. had been comingD. came15. _________ conscious of my moral obligations as a citizen.A. I was and always will beB. I have to be and always will beC. I had been and always will beD. I have been and always will be16. Because fuel supplies are finite and many people are wasteful, we will have to install _________ solar heating device in our home.A. some type ofB. some types of aC. some type of aD. some types of17. I went there in 1984, and that was the only occasion when I ________ the journey in exactly two days.A. must takeB. must have madeC. was able to makeD. could make18. I know he failed his last test, but really he’s _________ stupid.A. something butB. anything butC. nothing butD. not but19. Do you know Tim’s brother? He is _________ than Tim.A. much more sportsmanB. more of a sportsmanC. more of sportsmanD. more a sportsman20. That was not the first time he ________ us. I think it’s high time we ________ strong actions against him.A. betrayed…takeB. had betrayed…tookC. has betrayed…tookD. has betrayed…takeII. Reading comprehension (40’)Section 1 multiple choice (20’)Directions: In this section there are reading passages followed by multiple-choice questions. Read the passages and then mark your answers on your answer sheet.Passage AThe Welsh language has always been the ultimate marker of Welsh identity, but a generation ago it looked as if Welsh would go the way of Manx, once widely spoken on the Isle of Man but now extinct. Governments financing and central planning, however, have helped reverse the decline of Welsh. Road signs and official public documents are written in both Welsh and English, and schoolchildren are required to learn both languages. Welsh is now one of the most successful of Europe’s regional languages, spoken by more than a half-million of the country’s three million people.The revival of the language, particularly among young people, is part of a resurgence of national identity sweeping through this small, proud nation. Last month Wales marked the second anniversary of the opening of the National Assembly, the first parliament to be convened here凯程2016年集训营考取北京地区翻译硕士学员30多人,成功率85%以上!since 1404. The idea behind devolution was to restore the balance within the union of nations making up the United Kingdom. With most of the people and wealth, England has always had bragging rights. The partial transfer of legislative powers from Westminster, implemented by Tony Blair, was designed to give the other members of the club—Scotland, Northern Ireland, and Wales —a bigger say and to counter centrifugal forces that seemed to threaten the very idea of the union. The Welsh showed little enthusiasm for devolution. Whereas the Scots voted overwhelmingly for a parliament, the vote for a Welsh assembly scraped through by less than one percent on a turnout of less than 25 percent. Its powers were proportionately limited. The Assembly can decide how money from Westminster or the European Union is spent. It cannot, unlike its counterpart in Edinburgh, enact laws. But now that it is here, the Welsh are growing to like their Assembly. Many people would like it to have more powers. Its importance as figurehead will grow with the opening in 2003, of a new debating chamber, one of many new buildings that are transforming Cardiff from a decaying seaport into a Baltimore-style waterfront city. Meanwhile a grant of nearly two million dollars from the European Union will tackle poverty. Wales is one of the poorest regions in Western Europe—only Spain, Portugal, and Greece have a lower standard of living.Newspapers and magazines are filled with stories about great Welsh men and women, boosting self-esteem. To familiar faces such as Dylan Thomas and Richard Burton have been added new icons such as Catherine Zeta-Jones, the movie star, and Bryn Terfel, the opera singer. Indigenous foods like salt marsh lamb are in vogue. And Wales now boasts a national airline, Awyr Cymru. Cymru, which means “land of compatriots”, is the Welsh name for Wales. The red dragon, the nation’s symbol since the time of King Arthur, is everywhere—on T-shirts, rugby jerseys and even cell phone covers.“Until very recent times most Welsh people had this feeling of being second-class citizens,”said Dyfan Jones, an 18-year-old student. It was a warm summer night, and I was sitting on the grass with a group of young people in Llanelli, an industrial town in the south, outside the rock music venue of the National Eisteddfod, Wales’s annual cultural festival. The disused factory in front of us echoed to the sounds of new Welsh bands.“There was almost a genetic tendency for lack of confidence,”Dyfan continued. Equally comfortable in his Welshness as in his membership in the English-speaking, global youth culture and the new federal Europe, Dyfan, like the rest of his generation, is growing up with a sense of possibility unimaginable ten years ago. “We used to think. We can’t do anything, we’re only Welsh. Now I think that’s changing.”1. According to the passage, devolution was mainly meant toA. maintain the present status among the nations.B. reduce legislative powers of England.C. create a better state of equality among the nations.D. grant more say to all the nations in the union.2. The word “centrifugal”in the second paragraph meansA. separatist.B. conventional.C. feudal.第3页共5 页D. political3. Wales is different from Scotland in all the following aspects EXCEPTA. people’s desire for devolution.B. locals’turnout for the voting.C. powers of the legislative body.D. status of the national language.4. Which of the following is NOT cited as an example of the resurgence of Welsh national identity?A. Welsh has witnessed a revival as a national language.B. Poverty-relief funds have come from the European Union.C. A Welsh national airline is currently in operation.D. The national symbol has become a familiar sight.5. According to Dyfan Jones what has changed isA. people’s mentality.B. pop culture.C. town’s appearance.D. possibilities for the people.凯程教育:凯程考研成立于2005年,国内首家全日制集训机构考研,一直从事高端全日制辅导,由李海洋教授、张鑫教授、卢营教授、王洋教授、杨武金教授、张释然教授、索玉柱教授、方浩教授等一批高级考研教研队伍组成,为学员全程高质量授课、答疑、测试、督导、报考指导、方法指导、联系导师、复试等全方位的考研服务。

考研《英语》(一)冲刺预测练习题及答案

考研《英语》(一)冲刺预测练习题及答案

考研《英语》(一)冲刺预测练习题及答案一、单选题(共60题,共120分)1.T he problem __________ when the students refused to do their homework.A.aroseB.arousedC.roseD.raised2.When he suddenly ___________ up the subject of genetic engineering, there was an embarrassedsilence.A.tookB.broughtC.showedD.came3.________ so many people in the United States been out of work as today.A.More than ever beforeB.In the past, there have neverC.Never before haveD.Formerly, there never were4.It _________ as a shock to realize that I was not alone inthe room.A.cameB.appearedC.arrivedD.reached5.Since William had been seriously ill for several months, his parents were worried about _________ to return to school fpl-time.A.he wantedB.he wantingC.him to wantD.his wanting6.The association is __________ to raising funds to help the blind.A.conductedmittedC.concentratedD.concerned7.I won,t _________ those children making a noise in my house!A.allowB.letC.haveD.permit8.The TV station, in ___________ to massive poppar demand, decided to continue the soap opera(月巴皂居U ).A.regardB.relationC.respectD.response9.The opposition leaders ___________ the government for not taking action sooner.A.warnedB.criticizedC.threatenedD.urged10.In some schools children who prefer to read books ratherthan football become social outcasts (被抛弃者).A.playB.playingC.to playD.to playing11.When workers are organized in trade unions, employers find it hard to lay them ___________ .A.offB.sideC.outD.down12.Others argue that since the earth has endured a long string of ice ages in the last two millionto three million years, any warming is __________ to be temporary.A.seemedB.likelyC.tendedD.possible13.______ the concert had begun did we realize what a splendid show it was going to be.A.No soonerB.Only afterC.HardlyD.Scarcely14.________ , John has been to several foreign countries.A.Even he is youngB.Young though he isC.In spite of he is youngD.Young is as he15.________ they've got to know each other a little better,they get along just fine.A.Due toB.Ever sinceC.Now thatD.Regardless of16.She got a job as an assistant stage manager at the CambridgeArts Festival Theatre, thinkingthat it might _____________ to a career as a playwright (剧作家).A.pave the wayB.work wonderC.point outD.stand a chance17.Human behavior is mostly a product of learning ___________ the behavior of animals dependsmainly on instinct.A.soB.unlessC.ifD.while18.After so many days without rain, the ground quickly________ the little rain that fell last night.A.droppedB.floodedC.graspedD.absorbed19.If you want to find a decent location for your own home,________ Mr. Smith for advice.A.turn toB.pass throughC.shut inD.write up20.Senior members of the staff competed eagerly _____________ the position of sales manager in the company.A.inB.withC.forD.on21.It was three British sportsmen who ____________ banned drugs.A.were catching takingB.caught to takeC.caught in takingD.were caught taking22.The address book __________ the email addresses of yourfriends or groups of colleagues.A.makes it easy to recallB.makes it easy recallC.makes easy to recallD.makes recall it easy23.She _________ her nervousness to the importance of the interview.A.contributedB.dedicatedC.distributedD.attributed24.We regret to __________ that it may not be possible to deal with every request.A.put offB.pass onC.help alongD.point out25.General Motors, one of the world,s largest auto manufacturers, is expanding its ____________ in this country.A.existenceB.presenceC.locationD.residence26.________ to the papers is restricted to Defense Department personnel only.A.ApplicationB.ExceptionC.AccessD.Glance27.We were told that Sue wopd be ideal for the job, but shebadly when we talked to her.A.came acrossB.fell outC.looked toD.brought up28.________ from the occasional late night party, our neighbors are very quiet.A.ApartB.ButC.ExceptD.As29.I don,t know how we can make on the timetable for any more courses.A.schedpeB.placeC.planD.room30.r m sorry I forgot to write: I had so much else ______________ my mind.A.overB.forC.onD.about31.The boy ran out of the classroom without the teacher'smandB.convictionC.consentpromise32.______ the movie I wopd have finished my paper last Sunday.A.In spite ofB.But forC.Because ofD.As for33.Be carefp, _________ you'll fall down.A.on the contraryB.or ratherC.or elseD.as forthat the experiment is controlled as rigidly 34. We mustas possible.A.assureB.secureC.ensureD. issuethe earth as an object in 35.It is usefp to sciencespace.A.to considerB.which considersC.considersD.the consideration of36.________ with the size of the whole earth, the highest mountains do not seem high at all.A.If you comparepare themC.When comparedD.A comparison37.A baby might show fear of an unfamiliar adpt, ____________ he is likely to smile and reach out to another infant.A.ifB.whereverC.so thatD.whereas38.The student found the novel __________ . It provided him with so much information about the subject.A.enlighteningB.confusingC.frustratingD.delighting39.Sorry sir, we don,t have wine or beer. We are only licensed to sell ________ drinks.A.pureB.sweetdD.soft40.Let,s drink Dicks, success in business.A.ofB.forC.toD.with41.The terrible noise is _________ me mad.A.turningB.settingC.drivingD.putting42.The engine has broken and the boat is __________ o n the water.A.f lowingB.floatingC.driftingD.sailing43.Attendance at football matches have _________ s ince the coming of television.A.dropped inB.dropped offC.dropped outD.dropped down44.Each year in the United States, many black teenagers_______ of school, either because they cannot keep up or they have to work to support their family.A.go outB.drop outC.check outD.ppi out45.When I came through the customs at the airport, I had topay _________ on a clock I had bought.A.taxesB.dutyC.finesD.fees46.r m ______ to graduate in the next half of the year.A.owingB.thanksC.dueD.because47.Take it ______ . It is nothing but a joke.A.easyB.easilyC.seriousD.seriously48.Construction of the railways helped to develop the national _______ of Tanzania and Zambia.A.economicB.economiesC.economicsD.economical49.Only a(n) _________ few were invited to the dancing party.A.electB.specialC.selectD.selective50.In the future, more ________ shopd be placed on the education of the young.A.crisisB.implicationsC.impressionsD.emphasis51.Sixty per cent of television viewers chose him as their_______ actor.A.popparB.desirableC.favoriteD.superior52.The farmer had to wear heavy boots in the winter because the fields were too wet and ___________ .A.earthyB.solidC.dustyD.muddy53.As you like pop music, ______________ I like literature.A.soB.thereforeC.asD.thus54.I bought this eighteenth century writing desk at a quiteprice.A.reasonableB.cheapC.smallD.expensive55.He thoroughly understood the society _______________ .A.He thoroughly understood the society _____ _________ .B.which had he grown upC.in which he had grown upD.he had grown up in it56.______________________________________ To study a foreign language, _____________________________________ .A.a good dictionary shopd be boughtB.buying a good dictionary is necessaryC.you shopd buy a good dictionaryD.it is necessary that you will buy a good dictionary57.It's more __________ to buy a season ticket if you travel every day.A.cheapB.economicC.economicalD.saving58.__________________________________________________ T he wealth of a country shopd be measured ______________________ thehealth and happiness of its people as well as the material goods it can produce.A.in line withB.in terms ofC.in regard withD.by means of59.She had clearly no __________ of doing any work, although she was very well paid.A.tendencyB.ambitionC.intentionD.willingness60.For the new country to survive, ___________ f or its people to enjoy prosperity, new economic policies will be required.A.to name a fewB.let aloneC.not to speakD.let's say1、正确答案:A2、正确答案:B3、正确答案:C5、正确答案:D6、正确答案:B7、正确答案:C8、正确答案:D9、正确答案:B10、正确答案:A11、正确答案:A本题解析:本题为短语动词词义辨析题。

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考研英语冲刺试卷考试时间:180分钟满分:100分Section I Use of EnglishDirections:Read the following text. Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark [A], [B], [C] or [D] on the ANSWER SHEET.(10 points)You probably have a long mental list of moments and facts you wish you could remember---but actually you cannot. The good news, 1 , is that while such memories may be currently 2 , they are not entirely gone, and could theoretically be 3 ,according to a new brain research.In the study, biologist Jeffrey Johnson 4 16 college participants through an FMRI machine (which 5 nervous activity via blood flow) to compare brain patterns 6 memory formation and recall. First, he showed the students various common words and had them 7 a few tasks: say the word backwards in your head, 8 its uses, and picture how an artist would 9 it. Then, 20 minutes later, after the students re-entered the FMRI machine, Johuson showed them the list of words and asked them to recall 10 they could from before. Finally, he compared brain activity from both 11 and what he found will surprise you.Using 12 is called “pattern analysis”, it’s possible to13 a unique pattern of brain activity to every individual thing we do. This means that when a participant says the word “apple” backwords the 14 pattern of brain activity is different than when he pictures the fruit. 15 interestingly, there is close similarity between the pattern that emerges when we 16 an activity and when we later recall it. The stronger our memory, the 17 the pattern, but as Johnson found, even at a moment 18 we cannot remember anything, our nerve cells still fire in a way that 19 the activity of when we formed the memory. This 20 that sometime in the future we may be able t o retrieve the memories we thought we’d lost forever.1. [A]although [B]rather [C]though [D]therefore2. [A]forgetful [B]absent [C]faultless [D]unavailable3. [A]retrieved [B]recognized [C]claimed [D]accumulated4. [A]let [B]put [C]ran [D]got5. [A]measures [B]calculates [C]assesses [D]evaluates6. [A]between [B]during [C]across [D]throughout7. [A]assign [B]display [C]perform [D]overtake8. [A]bring forward [B]think of [C]check out [D]catch on9. [A]predict [B]manifest [C]depict [D]specify10. [A]however [B]whenever [C]whatever [D]whichever11. [A]procedures [B]sessions [C]progresses [D]sections12. [A]which [B]that [C]as [D]what13. [A]attach [B]subject [C]submit [D]stick14. [A]controversial [B]relevant [C]particular [D]associated15. [A]Even [B]But [C]So [D]As16. [A]set about [B]sit for [C]engage in [D]go through17. [A]stronger [B]closer [C]further [D]weaker18. [A]when [B]that [C]which [D]as19. [A]hampers [B]distinguishes [C]duplicates [D]resembles20. [A]highlights [B]implies [C]entails [D]exclaimsSection II Reading ComprehensionPart ADirections:Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing [A], [B], [C] or [D]. Mark your answers on the ANSWER SHEET. (40 points)Text 1Communication has changed dramatically over the past half-century. The term “Global Village” was first used in the early 1960’s to descr ibe the ways in which the electronic age was reshaping the rapidity and pervasiveness with which information is disseminated across the world. Now, with the enormous growth of the Internet and other forms of digital communication, that idea is all the more applicable. New technology has changed the ways we receive information and the ways we collect and store it.If you look to past centuries, people have had to rely on word-of-mouth as a way of finding out news beyond their own towns. History itself was passed along through specialized individuals who memorized names and events from the previous centuries. The most well known form of history is myth, which comes from the Greek word for “a spoken or written story.” Many of these stories have been very influ ential and continue to be read and studied in our own times: the famous examples are the works of the Greek poet Homer.Many techniques are used to preserve a story, event, history, or myth from generation to generation. Symbols are used as devices to trigger a common connection in the listeners. Repetition of names and families throughout a single story are used as a way to keep important information fresh in the mind. The reliance on a common tradition or reference within a particular culture allows the storyteller to get more meaning across with the fewest words said. These are all memory aids that serve to allow both the teller and the listener to fully realize a story that may have its origins hundreds of years in the past. For instance, native peoples in North America’s Northwest Territory have passed down detailed methods for hunting and storing of reindeer and whale that include geographic information that still hold relevance today.The need for an oral tradition has diminished in practical value with the advent of the written text and the rapid growth of computers as a means of disseminating information. There are many harmful side effects to the loss of this practice. Younger generations can become alienated from their cultural identity and knowledge about customs, tradition, mores, the natural world and history will disappear. This is especially true in aboriginal cultures such as in Native American, Native Australian and South American peoples, where assimilation into the dominant culture can come at the cost of historical customs.Since the prevalence of the written word, and later inventions that have made passing along the printed word easier, the demands on our memory as a means of cataloging facts and historical data has been considerably reduced. However, the techniques used for hundreds of years by those whose job it was to keep these histories alive have a deeply ingrained influence on us today. Keeping that knowledge and those traditions alive is very important. Spend a moment recalling a memory of an oral tradition in your family history that has impacted youreducation. How has this oral tradition affected you?21. The term “Global Village” implies that_____________.[A] the electronic technology is developing rapidly[B] the 1960s witnessed the birth of electronic rapidly[C] modern IT has eliminated geographical barriers[D]digital technique has found diverse application22. Centuries ago, information distribution was_____________.[A] carried out by mouth-to-mouth messages[B] conducted more by speaking than by writing[C] confined in small and enclosed districts[D]dependent on specialized individuals23. The text indicates that myth_____________.[A] is the true record of ancient history[B] is handed down by means of various symbols[C] saves key information for later generations[D]characterizes a nation’s common tradition24. The author asserts that modern communication means can_____________.[A] result in the alienation of younger generation[B]deprive the youth of their national identity[C] lead to the extinction of myth and customs[D]cause destruction of myth and customs25. The best title for the text may be_____________.[A] The Drastic Change in Communication[B] The Impact of Computer on Our Life[C] The primary Value of Oral Tradition[D] The Function of Myth and HistoryText 2Technology is a two-edged sword. Rarely is this as clear as it is in the realm of health care. Technology allows doctors to test their patients for genetic defects--and then to turn around and spread the results throughout the world via the Internet. For someone in need of treatment, that’s good news. But for someone in search of a job or an insurance policy, the tidings can be all bad.Last week President Bill Clinton proposed a corollary to the pat ients’ bill of rights now before Congress: a right to medical privacy. Beginning in 2002, under rules set to become law in February, patients would be able to stipulate the conditions under which their personal medical data could be revealed. They would be able to examine their records and make corrections. They could learn who else had seen the information. Improper use of records by a caregiver or insurer could result in both civil and criminal penalties. The plan was, said Clinton, “an unprecedented step toward putting Americans back in control of their own medical records.”While the administration billed the rules as an attempt to strike a balance between the needs of consumers and those of the health-care industry, neither doctors nor insurance companies were happy. The doctors said the rules could actually erode privacy, pointing to a provision allowing managed-care plans to use personal information without consent if the purpose was “health-care operations.” That, physicians said, was a loophole through which HMOs and other insurers could pry into the doctor-patient relationship, in the name of assessing the quality of care. Meanwhile, the insurers protested that the rules would make them vulnerable to lawsuits. They were especially disturbed by a prov ision holding them liable for privacy breaches by “business partners” such as lawyers and accountants. Both groups agreed that privacy protections would drive up the cost of health care by at least an additional $3.8 billion, and maybe much more, over the next five years. They also complained about the increased level of federal scrutiny required by the new rules’ enforcement provisions.One aim of the rules is to reassure patients about confidentiality, thereby encouraging them to be open withtheir doctors. Today various cancers and sexually transmitted diseases can go untreated because patients are afraid of embarrassment or of losing insurance coverage. The fear is real: Clinton aides noted that a January poll by Princeton Survey Research Associates found that one in six U.S. adults had at some time done something unusual to conceal medical information, such as paying cash for services.26.The author begins his article with “technology is a two-edged sword” to _____________.[A] warn of the harm patients are prone to suffer[B] call on people’s attention to the potential danger technology can bring to us[C] show that doctor’s improper use of technology can end up in bad results[D] show the advantages and disadvantages of technology27.According to the proposal made by President Clinton, patients will be able to do the following EXCEPT _____________.[A] enjoy more rights to their medical records[B] be open with their doctors[C] decide how to use their medical information[D] sue their insurers for improper use of their medical records28.Doctors tend to think that the rules _____________.[A] may ruin doctor-patient relationship[B] can do more harm than good[C] will prevent doctors from doing medical research[D] will end up in more health care cost and poorer medical service29.The example of the January poll by Princeton Survey Research Associates is used to show that __________________.[A] American patients’ concealment of their medical information has become a big concern[B] a large portion of patients would rather leave their diseases untreated[C] concealing medical information is widespread in the U.S.[D] paying cash for medical service is a common practice among American patients30.From the article we can learn that ________________.[A] American government will tighten its control over the use of patients’ personal information. [B] doctors and insurers are both against the rules for the same reasons[C] patients are entitled to have complete control of their medical information[D] the new rules put insurers in a very disadvantageous positionText 3A new malady is running rampantly in corporate America: management phobia. Many people don’t want to be a manager, and many people who are managers are desired to jump off the management track—or have already. “I hated all the meetings,” says a 10-year award-winning manager, “And I found the more you did for people who worked for you, the more they expected. I was a counselor, motivator, financial adviser and psychologist. ”With technology changing in a wink, you can never slack off 4 these days if you’re on the technical side. It’s a rare person who can manage to keep up on the technical side and handle a management job, too. In addition, with Scott Adams’s popular cartoon c haracter as well as many television situation comedies routinely portraying managers as idiots or enemies, they just don’t get much respect anymore.Supervising others was always a tough task, but in the past that stress was offset by hopes for career mobility and financial rewards. Along with a sizable pay raise, people chosen as managers would begin a nearly automatic climb up the career ladder to lucrative executive perks: stock options, company cars, club memberships, plus the key to the executive washroom. But in today’s global, more competitive arena, a manager sits on an insecure perch. Restructuring have eliminated layer after layer of management as companies came to view their organizations as collections of competencies rather than hierarchies. There are far fewer rungs on the corporate ladder for managers to climb. In addition, managerial jobs demand more hours and headaches than ever before but offer slim, if any, financial paybacks and perks.In an age of entrepreneurship, when the most praised people in business are those launching something new, management seems like an invisible, thankless role. Employers are looking for people who can do things, not for people who make other people do things. Management layoffs have done much to erode interest in managerial jobs.With more people wary of joining management, are corporations being hurt or worrying about developing future leaders? Not many are. While employers have dismissed a lot of managers, they believe a surplus lingers on at m any companies. Another reason companies aren’t short of managers, contends Robert Kelley, a Carnegie Mellon University business professor, “is that so many workers today are self-managed, either individually or via teams, you don’t need a manager.”31. The 10-year award-winning manager suggests that__________.[A] managerial jobs demand more hours and offer more headaches[B] managers should not do too much beyond the scope of his job[C] being a manager requires many other skills besides management[D] a person can get a lot of development in a management role.32. The word “perk”(Line3, Paragraph 3) probably means___________.[A] privileges[B] status[C] mobility[D] rungs33. Which one of the following statements applies to today’s manage rs?[A] Their stress can be reduced by the financial and emotional rewards.[B] They are beginning to neglect their development on the technical side.[C] They feel more insecure in their positions because of the reduction in company hierarchies.[D] They are not respected any more by the media despite their hard efforts.34. Which skill do employers value most in this age of entrepreneurship?[A] Management[B] Creativity[C] Cooperation[D] Diligence35. We can learn from the last paragraph that______________.[A] the loss of interest in the managerial jobs would damage America corporate culture[B] more and more managers would be laid off in order to relieve the financial burden[C] those who are still lingering on managerial jobs are not foresighted.[D] many employees are to some extent a managers of themselvesText 4Thanks to slumping markets, investment banks are shedding many of their highly-paid traders. When markets recover, the banks might be tempted to replace them with rather cheaper talent. One alternative has been around for a while but has yet to catch on: autonomous trading agents-computers programmed to act like the human version without such pesky costs as holidays, lunch breaks or bonuses. Program trading has, of course, been done before; some blamed the 1987 stockmarket crash on computers instructed with simple decision-making rules. But robots can be smarter than that.Dave Cliff, a researcher at Hewlett-Packard Laboratories in Bristol, England, has been creating trading robots for seven years. In computer s imulations he lets them evolve “genetically”, and so allows them to adapt and fit models of real-world financial markets. His experiments have suggested that a redesign of some markets could lead to greater efficiency. Last year, a research group at IBM showed that Mr. Cliff’s artificial traders could consistently beat the human variety, in various kinds of market. Nearly all take the shape of an auction. One well-known type is the English auction, familiar to patrons of the salesrooms of Christie’s and Sotheby’s, where sellers keep mum on their offer price, and buyers increase their bids by stages until only one remains.At the other extreme is the Dutch auction, familiar to 17th-century tulip-traders in the Netherlands as well as to bidders for American Treasury bonds. Here, buyers remain silent, and a seller reduces his price until it isaccepted. Most markets for shares, commodities, foreign exchange and derivatives are a hybrid of these two types: buyers and sellers can announce their bid or offer prices at any time, and deals are constantly being closed, a so-called “continuous double auction”.Mr. Cliff’s novel idea was to apply his evolutionary computer programs to marketplaces themselves. Why not, he thought, try and see what types of auction would let traders converge most quickly towards an equilibrium price? The results were surprising. In his models, auctions that let buyers and sellers bid at any time like most of today’s financial exchanges were less efficient than ones that required relatively more bids from e ither buyers or sellers. These “evolved auctions” also withstood big market shocks, such as crashes and panics, better than today’s real-world versions. Mr. Cliff’s most recent results, which will be presented in Sydney, Australia, on December 10th, show that the best type of auction for any market depends crucially on even slight differences in the number of buyers and sellers.Bank of America has been investigating these new auctions, along with robotic traders, for possible use in electronic exchanges. The hope is that today’s financial auctions and online marketplaces might work better by becoming more like their English and Dutch forebears. But what to call such multi-ethnic h ybrids? Here’s introducin g the “Cliffhanger”.36.The passage is mainly_____________.[A] an introduction of trading robots[B] a review of two kinds of auctions[C] a survey of the trading market[D] about trading alternatives37.Which of the following is true according to the text?[A] David’s robot traders have now been used in real-world markets.[B] Robot traders can evolve like creatures.[C] There is room for improvement in efficiency in trading markets.[D] The English auction is the most popular trading form.38.If you were trading American Treasury bonds, you would most likely take the tradingform of_____________.[A] the English auction[B] the continuous double auction[C] the Dutch auction[D] the evolved auction39.We can infer from the text that_____________.[A] existing auctions can not withstand market shocks[B] the Dutch auction is better than the continuous double auction[C] it’s hard for traders to reach an equilibrium price[D] the best type of auction takes place when the number of the buyers is equal to that of sellers40.Toward robot traders, the writer’s attitude can be said to be_____________.[A] biased [B] objective [C] pessimistic [D] optimisticPart BDirections:In the following text, some segments have been removed. For Questions 41- 45, choose the most suitable one from the list A-G to fit into each of the numbered blanks. There are two extra choices, which do not fit in any of the blanks.Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1. (10 points)The patriotic outpouring that followed the World Trade Center and Pentagon attacks—80 percent of Americans displayed the flag on their car, house, or lapel—brought hopes of renewed voter interest. Yet turnout in this year’s congressional primaries was a mere 17 percent, no better than four year. No doubt, ordinarilyAmericans share responsibility for their lapse in participation; it is always easier to leave the work of democracy to others. 41 .America’s politicians have also managed to invent the most unappetizi ng campaigns imaginable.42 . Many of the attacks are so twisted that even a whiff of fresh air would topple them.True leadership has become so rare that politicians may no longer even dream of stepping forward to say something other than what polls tell them is safe. Tuesday’s electio n will surely pass without much of a debate on the momentous foreign and domestic issues facing the nation.And where are the news media? 43 . And it’s failing again—a comparison of news coverage in 10 states shows the midterm election is getting 13 percent less coverage this year than in 1998.When journalists deign to cover elections, they magnify the very things they rail against. Candidates are ignored or portrayed as boring if they run issue-based campaigns. Attack sound bites get airtime; positive statements land on the cutting-room floor. As for trivial issues, why did candidate Bush’s 1970s drunk-driving arrest get more time on the network newscasts in the final days of the 2, 000 election than Go re’s foreign policy statements got in the entire general election?It’s not surprising voters are disenchanted with campaigns. During the 2, 000 election, as part of the Vanishing Voter Project at Harvard University’s Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy, we interviewed 100, 000 Americans to discover why they’re disengaging from elections. 44 .Officials unfailingly urge citizens “to do your duty and vote.” Yet, these officials embrace policies that make it harder to do that. Today, 87 percent of Americans reside in states that close registration two weeks or more before the election. The majority of unregistered Americans who otherwise would cast a vote are out of luck. Only six states allow election-day registration.45 .[A] Electoral competition is key to democracy, and America’s voters aren’t getting the full benefit of that. Only a couple of dozen of this year’s 435 US House races are competitive. Two years ago, 98.5 percent of incumbents won, typically by margins of 70 percent or more.[B] If equivalent offerings were served at restaurants, Americans would never eat out. Attack ads have doubled in frequency since the 1, 770s and now account for a majority of the ads featured prominently in campaigns.[C] Amid the uproar over Florida’s ballot irregularities, no commentator has seen fit to ask why polls there close at 7 p. m. Florida is one of 26 states that close their polls before 8 p. m. Unsurprisingly, turnout in these states is several percentage points below that of states where polls are open until 8 p. m. or later.[D] They’re so enamored of infotainment and sensationalism that they can’t find time for the midterm elections. In the 1998 midterms, coverage was down by more than half over 1994.[E] But it’s time to stop blaming the citizens. Candidates, public officials, and journalists are not giving Americans the type of campaign they deserve.[F] So look for a small turnout Tuesday, but don’t ask citizens to look in the mirr or. Some of them have cast their eye on what’s going on in candidate—land media—land and are asking why they should be bit players in that artifice.[G] Their responses tell the story: 81 percent believe “most political candidates will say almost anything to get themselves elected”; 75 percent feel “political candidates are more concerned with fighting each other than with solving the nation’s problems”.Part CDirections:Read the following text carefully and then translate the underlined segments into Chinese. Your translation should be written neatly on the Answer Sheet. (10 points)Light pollution now has become a big problem and led to much waste in our society. It has been estimated that 30% of the electricity generated for outdoor illumination is wasted. Important, too, are the environmental costs of producing the energy to power wasted light. For example, for every kilowatt-hourof electricity used, almost two pounds of carbon dioxide and almost two grams of sulphur dioxide are emitted into the environment. 46) Thus by simply eliminating wasted light, those amounts can be substantially reduced with no negative effect on necessary lightning and with decidedly positive environmental benefits for the region.For individuals and families another significant issue is that of light intrusion, the spilling of unwanted light onto private property. This concern is already addressed in some local zoning codes where maximum light levels at property lines are established; 47) but as the problem becomes more common, homeowners may also sense that the intrusion of unwanted light keeps them from using their outside property at night as they wish or may even interfere with indoor activities by shining into the house interior. Indeed, legal proceedings could result from unwanted intrusion as a violation of property rights. Furthermore, poor quality lighting, whether commercial, municipal, or residential, can lessen the appeal of a neighborhood, lowering property values if the area begins to look too bright and gaudy.Yet the problem of light pollution is easily remedied. In general, good lighting uses only the amount of light necessary for a specific purpose, and that light is directed properly. 48) Lights allowing no illumination above the horizontal plane of fixed objects and mounted at the proper height to do their job while avoiding glare and light intrusion are the ideal. In recent years, there has been a conscious effort by many municipalities, businesses, and individuals to better address the ways lightning is used.So the next time you are out at night, make a note of the way things are lit. 49) Remember, regardless of how we achieve the goal of reducing light pollution, the simple fact remains that we all win when sensible lightning is used. Good lightning energy saves energy and money, it produces pollution, it improves the appearance of neighborhoods and maintains property values, it enhances the scientific and aesthetic appreciation of the glories of the night sky, and it preserves that beauty and inspiration for us and for our children. 50) So when you find yourself lucky enough to be in a place where it is still dark enough to see the sky sparkling with stars, think how much less beauty there would be in the world without it! And become an advocate for sensible and efficient lightning.Section III WritingPart A51. Directions:You have made an appointment with Prof. Wang, but failed to keep it. Write a letter to your teacher to1)apologize for your failure to keep the appointment,2)explain your reason to your teacher, and3)express your wish to make another appointment.You should write about 100 words on ANSWER SHEET 2. Do not sign your own name at the end of the letter. Use “Li Ming” instead. You do not need to write the address. (10 points)Part B52. Directions:Study the following drawing carefully and write an essay in which you should1) describe the drawing,2) interpret its meaning and implications, and3) give your comments.You should write 160--200 words neatly on ANSWER SHEET 2. (20 points)。

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