英语自考 00595英语阅读(一)201404 真题试卷
2004年4月全国自考《英语阅读(一)》真题及答案(圣才出品)
2004年4月全国自考《英语阅读(一)》真题及答案课程代码:00595PART ONE (70 POINTS)I. TEXT COMPREHENSIONThe following comprehension questions are based on the texts you have learned, and each of them is provided with 4 choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the best answer to each question and write the corresponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET. (20 points, 1 point each)1. In Gifts of the Magi, the two possessions Mr. and Mrs. Young took great pride in are _____ .A. Jim’s watch and Della’s hairB. Jim’s watch and Dell’s combsC. Della’s combs and Jim’s watch-chainD. Della’s hair and Jim’s watch-chain【答案】A2. In No Marriage, No Apologies, Mrs. Frishberg said, “I’m not against the institution of marriage. We just never get around to it.”The underlined sentence means _____ .A. we never have the courage to face the problem directlyB. we never go so far as to consider the matterC. we never overcome the obstacles of marriageD. we never finish discussing the problem with each other【答案】B3. Lisabetta’s brothers decided to put an end to her secret love affair by killing Lorenzo because they _____ .A. thought that he would snatch their beautiful sister away from themB. considered the secret love affair a shame to the familyC. worried that Lorenzo would inherit the family fortuneD. looked upon Lorenzo as inferior to them in social rank【答案】B4. The Wife of Bath intends to show with her tale that _____ .A. men should be obedient to their wivesB. knights should be loyal to the King and the QueenC. women should be obedient to their husbandsD. husbands should be young and loving【答案】A5. In Mark Twain’s The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County, Simon Wheeler is _____.A. a good-natured and extremely talkative old manB. fond of making fun of people with his long talesC. most curious about betting and dog fightD. a well-trained frog and the best jumper in Calaveras County【答案】A6. According to The value of Education, our purpose of educating children is to .A. choose a proper system of educationB. educate them only for the aim of educating themC. accustom them to varied lifeD. make them intelligent citizens【答案】C7. The child in A Day’s Wait kept tight control over himself throughout the day because he .A. was afraid that he would die if he lost control over himselfB. thought he was going to die and he must show courage in the face of deathC. wanted to recover quickly so that he could go hunting with his fatherD. did not want to be a bother to and a burden on others【答案】B8. Rip Van Winkle is taken from The Sketch Book, a collection of essays, sketches,and tales written by _____.A. Benjamin FranklinB. Thomas PaineC. Washington IrvingD. O. Henry【答案】C9. According to the passage English World-wide, many Third World people opposethe use of English in their countries because _____.A. they consider it a form of cultural imperialismB. the English language has produced racismC. other languages are easier to learnD. they are against modernization in general【答案】A10. Aristotle, the Greek philosopher, summed up the four chief qualities of money some 2,000 years ago as being durable, distinct, _____ and portable.A. divisibleB. definiteC. deficientD. decisive【答案】A11. In New Applications, the illegal plan first came to Miriam when she discovered by accident that _____.A. Al Cropin’s grand scheme was not practicalB .the home-type computer improved the market conditionsC. the latest version of home-type computers was actually compatible with the one in her officeD. everyone could use the terms to refer to the computer and its application software【答案】C12. According to The Story of the Bible, Noah’s drunkenness and behavior most probably reflect that _____.A. people easily forgot their past mistakesB. people tended to enjoy a peaceful lifeC. Noah wanted to escape from his lonelinessD. Noah lacked the companionship of his children【答案】A13. The Statue of Liberty reminds people of all the following EXCEPT .A. American democracyB. friendship between America and FranceC. the support of FranceD. the journey of pilgrims【答案】D14. According to the information in Gateway to the USA, New Y ork City was a bitter disillusionment to some immigrants in that .A. it turned out to be a wretched placeB. there was no gold in the cityC. the competition was severe in the cityD. there was the language problem【答案】A15. It can be concluded from the story The Perfect Match that .A. computers can be used to make every decision in people’s livesB. natural interactions are essential for human beingsC. marriage brings unexpected changes in people’s livesD. people tend to hide their true feeling before marriage【答案】B16. From about the 5th century through the 15th century, Latin was regarded as all of the following EXCEPT .A. the most suitable language in the world。
2014年04月试卷及答案详解
2014年4月高等教育自学考试全国统一命题考试英语(二)试卷真题解析(课程代码00015)第一部分:阅读判断(第1~10题,每题1分,共10分)下面的短文后列出了10个句子,请根据短文的内容对每个句子作出判断:如果该句提供的是正确信息,选择A;如果该句提供的是错误信息,选择B;如果该句的信息文中没有提及,选择C,并将所选答案的代码(指A、B或C)填在答题纸的相应位置上。
Running:Sport or Way of Life?You go through the channels several times and find that once again there's nothing onTV that interests you.Not a problem!Just put on some running shoes and comfortableclothes and go for a run.One of the best things about the sport of running is that you don't need expensiveequipment.All you need is a good pair of running shoes and a safe environment.But don't befooled into thinking the sport of running is easy.It requires discipline and concentration.Running is good for you both physically and mentally.It strengthens your heart,lungs,and muscles.It makes you more aware of your body.Running also improves your body sothat you don't get sick as easily.It can even help you to stay more focused in school becauseexercise helps you to think more clearly.How do you get engaged in the sport if you don't know much about it?Most schoolsoffer running programs.A simple Internet search can help you find some in your area.Theprograms show you how running can offer competition or just be for fun.They also teachrunners to set practical goals and take care of their bodies.Runners have great respect for each other because they know how difficult the sport canbe.If you go to a race,you'll see people cheering for all the runners.Running isn't alwaysabout how fast you are running or how far you're going.It's about getting out there and doingit.Participation is more important than competition,and effort is recognized over talent.If you're looking for more than just a sport,running may be the perfect choice for you.1.You may find it interesting to go for a run.A.True B.False C.Not Given【答案】A【解析】题干大意:你可能会发现跑步是一件有趣的事情。
2014年4月全国高等教育自学考试外贸英语写作真题
2014年4月全国高等教育自学考试外贸英语写作真题课程代码:00097请考生按规定用笔将所有试题的答案涂、写在答题纸上。
选择题部分注意事项:1. 答题前,考生务必将自己的考试课程名称、姓名、准考证号用黑色字迹的签字笔或钢笔填写在答题纸规定的位置上。
2. 每小题选出答案后,用2B铅笔把答题纸上对应题目的答案标号涂黑。
如需改动,用橡皮擦干净后,再选涂其他答案标号。
不能答在试题卷上。
Part One: Questions 1-20Directions: There are 20 sentences in this part. For each sentence there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the ONE that best completes the sentence. (在下列各题中选择一个最佳答案填空。
) 20%1. It is requested that shipment ______ before the end of this month.A. is effectedB. be effectedC. should effectD. effects2. ______ your letter of March 5, we are pleased to inform you that the L/C has been received.A. Replying toB. Replying forC. Replied toD. Replied for3. We cannot see any possibility of business ______ your price is too high.A. thoughB. whileC. sinceD. that4. We are extremely sorry about this delay, ______ you will realize was due to circumstances beyond our control.A. thatB. whatC. ifD. which5. The sellers must pack the goods as ______ in the contract.A. stipulatedB. stipulatingC. stipulateD. stipulates6. Generally speaking, a growing demand can result ______ increased price.A. fromB. inC. forD. with7. We are looking forward to developing together with friends at home and abroad and ______ a glorious future.A. build upB. building upC. buildD. building8. I would appreciate your sending us an ______ for your building materials.A. up to date price listB. price list of up to dateC. up-to-date price listD. price list of up-to-date9. Since the article you require is not available for supply at present, we should like to recommend ______ as follows.A. similar somethingB. some similar oneC. some similar thingD. some similar ones10. Your L/C calls for an insurance amount for 130% of the invoice value. ______ ,we would request you to amend the insurance clause.A. The case being itB. The case is like thisC. Such is the caseD. Such being the case11. Our two ______ both asked for leaves of absence in June.A. C.P.A.SB. CPASC. CPA’sD. CPAs12. They ______ about the turnover of the company.A. feel badlyB. badly feelC. feel badD. feel well13. Either Jane or other managers ______ the board meeting next week.A. are attendedB. are to attendC. is attendedD. is to attend14. Ron’s account of the disagreement was ______ than Sue’s version.A. more accurateB. accuraterC. more nearly accurateD. more near accurate15. Bring the proposed agenda to either Brad ______ .A. or meB. or IC. or usD. and I16. We must do ______ to adjust the procedure.A. some thingB. some thingsC. anythingD. something17. ______ traveling first class was questioned by the manager.A. HisB. HeC. HimD. He’s18. The larger the foreign exchange exposure, ______ the exchange risk.A. greaterB. the more greaterC. the greaterD. more great19. If he had been Managing Director, the company ______ collapsed.A. wouldB. shouldC. would haveD. would have been20. Mr. Howard, ______ his study of the situation, was ready to talk about it when I arrived.A. completedB. having completedC. had completedD. being completed非选择题部分注意事项:用黑色字迹的签字笔或钢笔将答案写在答题纸上,不能答在试题卷上。
高等教育自学考试英语阅读(一)真题2014年4月_真题(含答案与解析)-交互
高等教育自学考试英语阅读(一)真题2014年4月(总分100, 做题时间150分钟)课程代码:00595注意事项:1.答题前,考生务必将自己的考试课程名称、姓名、准考证号用黑色字迹的签字笔或钢笔填写在答题纸规定的位置上。
2.每小题选出答案后,用2 B铅笔把答题纸上对应题目的答案标号涂黑。
如需改动,用橡皮擦干净后,再选涂其他答案标号。
不能答在试题卷上。
I. CAREFUL READINGRead the following passages carefully. Decide on the best answer and blacken the corresponding letter on the ANSWER SH EET. (40 points, 2 points each)Passage 1Questions 1 to 5 are based on the following passage.The passengers on the bus watched sympathetically as the you ng woman with the white cane made her way cautiously up th e steps. She paid the driver and then, using her hands to feel the location of the seats, settled into one. She pla ced her briefcase on her lap and rested her cane against h er leg.It had been a year since Susan, thirty-four, became blind. As the result of a medical accident she was sightless, suddenly thrown into a world of darkness, a nger, frustration and self-pity. All she could cling to was her husband Mark.Mark was an Air Force officer and he loved Susan with all his heart. When she first lost her sight, he watched her sink into despair and he became determined to use every m eans to help his wife.Finally, Susan felt ready to return to her job, but how wo uld she get there? She used to take the bus, but she was now too frightened to get around the city by herself. Mar k volunteered to ride the bus with Susan each morning andevening until she got the hang of (摸清情况) it. And that was exactly what happened.For two weeks, Mark, military uniform and all, accompanied S usan to and from work each day. He taught her how to rely on her other senses, specifically her hearing, to determine where she was and how to adapt to her new environment. H e helped her befriend the bus drivers who could watch out for her, and save her a seat.Each morning they made the journey together, and Mark would take a taxi back to his office. Although the routine of going back and forth was costly, Mark knew it was only a matter of time before Susan would be able to ride the bus on her own.Finally, Susan decided that she was ready to try the trip on her own. Monday morning arrived. Before she left, she em braced her husband tightly. Her eyes filled with tears of g ratitude for his loyalty, his patience, and his love. She s aid good-bye and, for the first time, they went their separate ways. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday... Each day on her own went perfectly, and a wild gaiety (快乐) took hold of Susan. She was doing it! She was going t o work all by herself!.SSS_SINGLE_SEL1.When Susan got on the bus, the passengers ______.A admired herB stared curiously at herC ignored herD felt sorry for her该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:DSSS_SINGLE_SEL2.Which of the following is true of Mark?A He kept confidence in Susan.B He felt confused with Susan.C He depended more on Susan.D He was tired of Susan.该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:ASSS_SINGLE_SEL3.At the beginning of her sightless life, Susan was seized by anger, self-pity and ______.A irritationB hesitationC hopelessnessD indifference该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:CSSS_SINGLE_SEL4.Which of the following is true?A Mark realized it would take a long time for Susan to recover her sight.B Mark knew that Susan would get to work by herself sooner or later.C Mark hated to leave poor Susan alone even for one minute.D Mark loved the routine of accompanying Susan to work.该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:ASSS_SINGLE_SEL5.The passage can be used as an example of ______.A honestyB sympathyC diligenceD determination该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:CPassage 2Questions 6 to 10 are based on the following passage.Most people claim that we should judge others on the basisof how they act, not how they look. However, the reality is quite opposite. Appearance is especially important in th e early stages of a relationship.The influence of physical attractiveness begins early in life . Infants as young as six months prefer images of attractiv e faces to less appealing ones. From age five on, overweigh t boys are viewed by peers as less attractive; tall, thin ones are judged as uncommunicative and nervous; and muscular and athletic youngsters are seen as outgoing, active, and popular. The same principle continues into adult life. Handso me men and beautiful women are seen as more sensitive, kind , interesting, strong, calm, modest, sociable, outgoing, and exciting than their less attractive counterparts. Adults are more likely to interact with strangers who they view as att ractive. Senior citizens also rate good-looking people as more desirable than those who are less at tractive.Although we might assume that attractive people are radically different from those who are less attractive, the truth is that we view the familiar as beautiful. Langlois and Roggm an presented students with two types of photos: some were i mages of people from North European, Asian, and Latino backg rounds, while others **puter-generated images **bined the characteristics of several indivi duals. Surprisingly, the students consistently preferred **posi te photos of both men and women. When the features of eigh t or more individuals **bined into one image, the students rated the picture as more attractive than the features of a single person or of a **bination of people. Thus, we seem to be drawn to people who represent the most attractive q ualities of ourselves and those people aren't different from the rest of us.Even if your appearance isn't beautiful by social standards, consider these encouraging facts: first, ordinary-looking people with pleasing personalities are likely to be judged as being attractive; second, physical factors become l ess important as a relationship progress. As Hamachek puts it, “Attractive features may open doors, but apparently, it takes more than physical beauty to keep them open.”SSS_SINGLE_SEL6.“The same principle”(Para. 2) refers to the principle tha t ______.A children are more attractive than adultsB attractive people are perceived as desirableC the early stages of a relationship are importantD the influence of appearance begins early in life该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:BSSS_SINGLE_SEL7.The third paragraph emphasizes in part the importance of ___ ___.A familiarityB differenceC individualityD consistency该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:CSSS_SINGLE_SEL8.According to the passage, the **posite features people have, ______.A the more unique they areB the less ordinary they areC the more attractive they areD the less beautiful they are该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:ASSS_SINGLE_SEL9.In his statement, Hamachek is giving emphasis to ______.A social standardsB composite featuresC good characterD physical attraction该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:BSSS_SINGLE_SEL10.The best title for the passage is ______.A Beauty and AgeB Appearance and RelationshipC Standards of Social BehaviorD Features of Physical Attractiveness该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:BPassage 3Questions 11 to 15 are based on the following passage.The public schools of the United States—elementary, secondary, and higher—have a history, and it is the social history of the United States: the decades before the Civil War, in which the el ementary or “common schools”were reformed; the decades sur rounding the turn of the twentieth century, in which the se condary schools “welcomed”the “children of the plain peop le”;and the post-World War II decades, which found the public colleges and u niversities flooded non-traditional students—those traditionally excluded from higher education by sex, ra ce, and class.In each of these periods, the quantitative expansion of the student population was matched by a qualitative transformati on of the enlarged institutions. **mon schools of the mid-1800s were charged with reforming the moral character of the children of failed artisans (工匠) and farmers; the expanded high schools at the turn of the century with preparing their poor, working-class, and immigrant teenagers for future lives in city and factory; the “open-access”publicinstitutions in the postwar period with moving their students off the unemployment lines and into lower-level white-collar positions.**mon schools, the high schools, the colleges and universities—all in their own times—were expanded and transformed so that they might better main tain social order and increase material productivity. But no matter how enlarged or reformed, they could not do the jo bs expected of them: they could not solve the economic, soc ial, and human problems brought about by uncontrolled urbaniz ation and industrialization within the context of the private property system. The schooling reforms succeeded only in sh ifting the discussion and action from the social and product ive system to the people who were now held responsible for not fitting into it.SSS_SINGLE_SEL11.American education in the post-World War II decades focused mostly on ______.A early childhood educationB elementary school educationC secondary school educationD college education该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:DSSS_SINGLE_SEL12.The turn-of-the-century American education dealt partly with the problem of ______.A failed farmersB unsuccessful artisansC immigrant teenagersD lower-level white-collar workers该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:DSSS_SINGLE_SEL13.It is implied in the passage that women began to be educat ed in large numbers ______.A after the Civil WarB at the turn of the 20th centuryC before World War IID after World War II该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:DSSS_SINGLE_SEL14.One of the purposes for public school reformation is ______.A to increase material productivityB to impose the quality of educationC to urbanize rural areas in the United StatesD D. to promote industrialization in the United States该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:BSSS_SINGLE_SEL15.The author believes that public schools ______.A changed American political systemB could not solve American problemsC led to social problems in the United StatesD could not improve qualitatively in the United States该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:CPassage 4Questions 16 to 20 are based on the following passage.Historical periods are dominated by distinct sets of ideas w hich form the general spirit of a period in history. Greek philosophy, Christianity, Renaissance thought, the Scientific Revolution, and the Enlightenment are examples of sets of ideas that dominated their historical periods. The changes fr om one period to the next are usually rather gradual.; othe r changes—more abrupt—are often referred to as revolutions. The most far-reaching of all these intellectual changes was the Darwinian revolution. The worldview formed by any thinking person in the Western world after 1859, when On the Origin of Speci es was published, was by necessity quite different from a w orldview formed before 1859. It is almost impossible for a modern person to project back to the early half of the nin eteenth century and reconstruct the thinking of this pre-Darwinian period, for the impact of Darwinism on our views has been so great.The intellectual revolution brought about by Darwin went far beyond the realm of biology, causing the overthrow of some of the most basic beliefs of his age. For example, Darwin rejected the belief in the individual creation of each spe cies, establishing in its place the concept that all of lif e descended from a common ancestor. By extension, he introdu ced the idea that humans were not the special products of creation but evolved according to principles that operate eve rywhere else in the living world. Darwin upset current notio ns of a perfectly designed natural and gentle world and sub stituted in their place the concept of a struggle for survi val. Victorian notions of progress and perfectibility were se riously weakened by Darwin's demonstration that evolution brin gs about change and adaptation, but it does not necessarily lead to progress, and it never leads to perfection.Darwin would be remembered as an outstanding scientist even if he had never written a word about evolution. Indeed, som e people believe that Darwin’s most original contribution to biology was not the theory of evolution but his series of books on experimental botany published near the end of his life. This achievement is little known among non-biologists, and the same is true for his equally outstanding work on the adaptation of flowers and on animal psychology , as well as his imaginative work on earthworms. Darwin als o attacked important problems with extraordinary originality, thereby becoming the founder of several now well-recognized separate disciplines. Darwin was the first person to work out a sound theory of classification, which is stil l used by most experts today.SSS_SINGLE_SEL16.The author considers the change caused by Darwin’s On the Origin of Species ______.A gradualB abruptC religiousD philosophical该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:ASSS_SINGLE_SELThe influence of Darwinism has been so strong that it is d ifficult to ______.A know how people looked at the world before 1859B imagine people’s worldview after 1859C disregard the implications of his theoryD know what Victorian society was like该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:CSSS_SINGLE_SEL18.Darwin believed that all species in the world ______.A were created individuallyB sprang from the same originC became increasingly betterD shared the same pace of progress该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:CSSS_SINGLE_SEL19.It can be concluded from the passage that Darwin was ______ .A a modest scholarB a born thinkerC an original scientistD a practical theorist该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:CSSS_SINGLE_SEL20.The author intends to say in the last paragraph that ______ .A Darwin did outstanding work apart from his theory of evolutionB non-biologists know very little about Darwin's theory of evolutionC scholars failed to recognize Darwin’s contributions for along timeD Darwin's most outstanding contribution is his theory of classification该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:DII. SPEED READINGSkim or scan the following passages, and then decide on t he best answer and blacken the corresponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET. (10 points, 1 point each)Passage 5Questions 21 to 25 are based on the following passage.Potatoes are a tuber-producing crop originally grown in the Americas. Over 200 va rieties of wild potatoes grow from what is now Colorado to what are now Chile and Argentina. The native peoples of t he Andean region of South America were the first to domesti cate potatoes and to cultivate them as a food crop. The ea rliest potato, found in an archaeological site in central Pe ru, has been dated back to about 8000 B.C.. Scientists beli eve that American Indians began domesticating potatoes at the end of the Ice Age. Four thousand years later, native peo ples livingin the Andean highlands had begun to rely on potatoes as a major part of their diet. By about 2000 B.C.. Indians in the coastal region of what is now Peru were also cultivat ing this crop extensively.During the reign of the Inca, who established their empire in what is now Peru in about A.D. 1000, American Indian fa rmers were growing not only white potatoes but red, yellow, black, blue, green, and brown ones as well. They were del iberately developing potatoes of varying sizes and shapes tha t would do well under a number of growing conditions. Becau se potatoes were easily grown, flourish in a number of clim ates, and high in vitamin C, they were an efficient way of meeting dietary needs.In 1531, when Spanish conqueror Francisco Pizarro landed in what is now Peru, the native Andean peoples had developed a bout 3,000 types of potatoes and had also invented a method to freeze-dry them for storage. The Inca, who called potatoes papas, ate boiled potatoes as a vegetable and also made a kind of unleavened potato bread made from flour that had been grou nd from freeze-dried potatoes. They also added this potato flour to soups and stews and made porridge from it.Pedro de Cieza, who traveled with Francisco Pizarro's expedit ion, compared potatoes to chestnuts. Because the tubers grew underground and were small, the Spaniards believed potatoes were truffles (块菌) and began calling them tartuffo. When English explorer S ir Francis Drake crossed the Strait of Magellan, he ate pot atoes on the coast of what is now Chile that same year. Y et, historians are uncertain exactly whether the Spaniards or the English brought potatoes to Europe.SSS_SINGLE_SEL21.The earliest potato was found in ______.A PeruB ChileC ArgentinaD Colorado该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:ASSS_SINGLE_SEL22.Potatoes became the major source of food for American Indian s about ______.A 8000 B.C.B 4000 B.C.C 2000 B.C.D A.D.1000该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:ASSS_SINGLE_SEL23.American Indians developed potatoes of different sizes and sh apes to ______.A meet different dietary needsB get potatoes of different colorsC suit various growing conditionsD store them in convenient places该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:ASSS_SINGLE_SEL24.American Indians freeze-dried potatoes so that they could be ______.A stewedB groundC storedD boiled该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:CSSS_SINGLE_SEL25.Which of the following is true?A Historians believe that the English brought potatoes to Europe.B Sir Francis Drake ate potatoes in what is now Peru.C Francisco **pared potatoes to chestnuts.D The Spaniards thought that potatoes were truffles.该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:DPassage 6Questions 26 to 30 are based on the following passage.The blogging craze of a couple of years ago, when it was estimated that ten new blogs were started somewhere in the world every minute, now seems to have died down a bit. Y et thousands of blogs—probably the better ones—remain. Blogs are now no longer seen as the exclusive posse ssion of geeks, and are now seen as important and influenti al sources of news and opinions. So many people read blogs now that it has even been suggested that some blogs may have been powerful enough to influence the result of the re cent U.S. election.Blogs are very easy to set up. All you need is a computer , an internet connection and the desire to write something.A blog differs from a traditional internet site in two ways. First, a blog is one page consisting mostly of texts, though a few pictures are sometimes provided. Second, andmore importantly, a blog is a space for people to respond to what you write. The best blogs are similar to online di scussions, where people write in response to what the blogge r has written. Blogs are regularly updated—busy blogs are updated every day, or even every few hours.Not all blogs are about politics, however. There are blogs about music, films, sports, books—any subject you can imagine has its enthusiasts typing away and giving their opinions to fellow enthusiasts or anyone else who cares to read their opinions.But how influential, or important, is the blogosphere really? One problem with blogs is that many people who read and write them seem only to communicate with each other. When p eople talk about the influence of the blogosphere, they do not take into account the millions of people around the wor ld who are not bloggers, never read blogs, and don't even have access to a computer, let alone a good internet connec tion.Sometimes, it seems that the blogosphere exists only to infl uence itself, or that its influence is limited to what is actually quite a **munity. Blogs seem to promise a virtual democracy—in which anyone can say anything they like, and have their opinions heard—but who is actually listening to these opinions? Little hard evidence shows that blogs have influenced people in the wa y that traditional mass media such as television and newspap ers are able to do.SSS_SINGLE_SEL26.Now the blogging craze ______.A is emergingB has become less intenseC keeps risingD remains the same as before该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:BSSS_SINGLE_SEL27.Blogs differ from traditional internet sites in that ______.A texts are mostly shortB they present picturesC they are daily updatedD readers can **ments该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:DSSS_SINGLE_SEL28.One problem with blogs is that bloggers fail to consider __ ____.A non-bloggersB virtual democracyC U.S. politiciansD internet connection该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:DSSS_SINGLE_SEL29.In the author's opinion, the influence of the blogosphere is ______.A importantB powerfulC positiveD limited该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:DSSS_SINGLE_SEL30.According to the author, it is not difficult to ______.A set up blogsB make blogs involve everyoneC show the importance of blogosphereD make blogs surpass traditional mass media该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:DIII. DISCOURSE CLOZEThe following is taken from the textbook. Read the passage and fill in the numbered spaces (there are more suggeste d answers than necessary). Write your answers on the ANSWER SHEET. (10 points, 1 point each)The makers of the Constitution knew that changes would be n ecessary and that if there was no way of making them, the Constitution would no longer be useful. They, therefore, ma de it possible for Americans to change the Constitution by adopting amendments to it, (31) . All amendments written int o the Constitution have been made in accordance with rules (32) . An amendment may be proposed by two-thirds of both houses of Congress or by a convention called by Congress (33) . It must then be approved by three-fourths of all the states. Then and only then (34) .Since 1789 (35) . Ten of them were adopted almos t immediately (36) . They are the amendments (37) because t hey protect the rights of individuals.Some amendments have e xtended the right to vote by forbidding discrimination in re spect to the fight to vote on account of race,color or sex,and (38) .One great amendment abolished slavery in the Unit ed States.The Fourteenth Amendment,(39) ,has done much in recent years to bring greater justice to black people and others.Other amendments have changed the me thod of electing senators(40) ,and increased the taxing power of Congress.By amendment we have sought to **e defects in the Constitution and thus to keep it alive.(From The Constitution of the United States)[A] accepted after the Civil War[B] laid down in the original document[C]in order to make it more democratic[D] that we call the Bill of Rights[E] by interpretation on the part of the Supreme Court[F] twenty-six amendments to the Constitution have been adopted[G] that Congress had no power under the Constitution to pa ss such a law[H]at the request of two-thirds of the state legislatures[I]but they did not make it easy to do so[J] does the change become part of the Constitution [K] after the Constitution went into effect[L]by lowering the voting age to eighteenSSS_SIMPLE_SIN31.A B C D E F GH I J K L该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:ISSS_SIMPLE_SIN32.A B C D E F GH I J K L该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:BSSS_SIMPLE_SIN33.A B C D E F GH I J K L该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:HSSS_SIMPLE_SIN34.A B C D E F GH I J K L该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:JSSS_SIMPLE_SIN35.A B C D E F GH I J K L该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:FSSS_SIMPLE_SIN36.A B C D E F GH I J K L该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:KSSS_SIMPLE_SIN37.A B C D E F GH I J K L该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:DSSS_SIMPLE_SIN38.A B C D E F GH I J K L该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:LSSS_SIMPLE_SIN39.A B C D E F GH I J K L该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:ASSS_SIMPLE_SIN40.A B C D E F GH I J K L该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:CIV.WORD FORMATIONComplete each of the following sentences with the proper f orm of the word in brackets Write your answers on the ANSW ER SHEET. (10 points,1 point each)41.(bright)That new carpet will certainly _____ up your living room.SSS_FILL该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:brightly42.(anxiety) The foreign minister admitted he was still _____ a bout the situation in that country.SSS_FILL该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:anxiety43.(ill) Scientists have not yet found a cure for this _____ _.SSS_FILL该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:illness44.(sign) The recent decline of the stock market does not nece ssarily ____ the start of a recession.SSS_FILL该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:signs45.(simple) Some students lost marks _____ because they hadn’t read the question carefully.SSS_FILL该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:simply46.(enjoy) Lunch break at the hotdog stand in the park is the most _____ and interesting time of the day for me.SSS_FILL该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:enjoyable47.(able)This health center serves all patients,regardless of their ______ to pay.SSS_FILL该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:ability48.(understand) She expressed her opinions in such clear terms that no one would ____ her.SSS_FILL该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:understanding49.(1ead) Ever since the 1990s,Microsoft has been a world ____ in software design.SSS_FILL该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:led50.(judge) It’s too soon to make a ______ about the impact of the new policy.SSS_FILL该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:judgementV.GAP FILLINGThe following is taken from the textbook.Fill in the numb ered gaps with the correct form of the words or phrases in the box(there are more words than necessary).Write your answers on the ANSWER SHEET. (10 points,1 point each)asdevotefiercen caseinterestin thatloverejectionsetthatwhowithThe semi-barbaric king had a daughter whom he loved deeply. She was as passionate, fanciful, and strong as her father and was (51) to him. As is the case in many fairy tales, this daughter, the apple of her father’s eye, was in love wit h a young man (52) was below her in station. He was a commoner. He was also brave, handsome, and daring, and he l oved the royal daughter (53) all his being. The princess had enough barbarism in her (54) their love affair was dr amatic…too dramatic. It was a secret for months, but then the king found out about it.The king didn’t hesitate for a minute. He sent the young man to prison and (55) a date for his trial in the ar ena. When the date arrived, everyone in the kingdom wanted to attend. They all knew of the king’s(56) in the case , and there was excitement in the air.The king's men searched for the (57) tiger in the realm . They also searched for the fairest maiden in the land so that he could have a fitting bride (58) he were found innocent. Of course, everyone knew that he **mitted the “crime”of (59) the princess, but the king did not allow the facts of the case to alter his decision. The trial w ould go on (60) planned. The youth would be gone no ma tter what happened; he would either be dead or married. The king could enjoy the proceedings for the sport of it. (From The Lady or the Tiger)SSS_FILL51.该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:devoteSSS_FILL52.。
最新自考英语阅读一(00595)试卷及答案解释完整版
调研结论:综上分析,我们认为在学院内开发“DIY手工艺品”商店这一创业项目是完全可行的。
“碧芝”隶属于加拿大的beadworks公司。这家公司原先从事首饰加工业,自助首饰的风行也自西方,随着人工饰品的欣欣向荣,自制饰品越来越受到了人们的认同。1996年'碧芝自制饰品店'在迪美购物中心开张,这里地理位置十分优越,交通四八达,由于是市中心,汇集了来自各地的游客和时尚人群,不用担心客流量问题。迪美有300多家商铺,不包括柜台,现在这个商铺的位置还是比较合适的,位于中心地带,左边出口的自动扶梯直接通向地面,从正对着的旋转式楼拾阶而上就是人民广场中央,周边4、5条地下通道都交汇于此,从自家店铺门口经过的90%的顾客会因为好奇而进看一下。
(2) 缺乏经营经验
四、影响的宏观环境分析
综上所述,DIY手工艺品市场致所以受到认可、欢迎的原因就在于此。我们认为:这一市场的消费需求的容量是极大的,具有很大的发展潜力,我们的这一创业项目具有成功的前提。
5、就业机会和问题分析
据调查,大学生对此类消费的态度是:手工艺制品消费比“负债”消费更得人心。
(1)位置的优越性
大学生的消费是多种多样,丰富多彩的。除食品外,很大一部分开支都用于。服饰,娱乐,小饰品等。女生都比较偏爱小饰品之类的消费。女生天性爱美,对小饰品爱不释手,因为饰品所展现的魅力,女人因饰品而妩媚动人,亮丽。据美国商务部调查资料显示女人占据消费市场最大分额,随社会越发展,物质越丰富,女性的时尚美丽消费也越来越激烈。因此也为饰品业创造了无限的商机。 据调查统计,有50% 的同学曾经购买过DIY饰品,有90% 的同学表示若在学校附近开设一家DIY手工艺制品,会去光顾。我们认为:我校区的女生就占了80%。相信开饰品店也是个不错的创业方针。
全国2014年4月自考高级英语真题
绝密★考试结束前全国2014年4月高等教育自学考试高级英语试题课程代码:00600请考生按规定用笔将所有试题的答案涂、写在答题纸上。
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本试卷共8页,满分100分;考试时间150分钟,全部题目用英文作答(英译汉题目外),并将答案写在答题纸的相应位置上,否则不计分。
I.Each of the following sentences is given four choices of words or expressions.Choose the right one to complete the sentence and blacken the corresponding letter on your Answer Sheet.(15points,1point for each)1.With his last______,he murmured the name of the person who murdered him.A.gaspB.chokeC.exhaleD.respiration2.The teenager’s______of the pop star worried her parents.A.applauseplimentC.adulationD.recommendation3.The adventurous mission______his spirits.A.exaltedB.inspiredC.gladdenedD.exhilarated4.The girl made one last______to her father for permission to go to the party.A.appealB.prayC.suggestionD.attraction5.Working with one’s head causes a sensation of hunger quite as much as ______work.A.futileB.muscularC.diligentD.aggressive6.He asked how committed the leadership was to______its people from poverty.A.deliveringB.liberatingC.dismissingpelling7.The judge told him to______from threatening his wife.A.desistB.persistC.denounceD.persevere8.The conservation group was______in its opposition to the new airport.A.roughB.troublesomeC.tenaciousD.uninterrupted9.The terrorists entered the building______as medical workers.A.disguisingB.distortingC.disorderingD.distinguishing10.It seemed impossible that these______boats could survive in such a storm.A.frailB.fragileC.wailfulD.delicate11.His arrival______new life and energy into the team.A.drenchedB.animatedC.infusedD.saturated12.The government is ready to______houses to the homeless in that area.A.locateB.allotC.donateD.divide13.He asked me to look at both sides of a case before making a(n)______ decision.A.brutalB.rationalC.absurdD.courteous14.She______the mark on the wall for ages,but it wouldn’t come off.A.scrubbedB.brushedC.sweptD.removed15.Some fresh fruits are highly______and should be kept in cool places.A.perishableB.eligibleC.permissibleD.affordableRead the following passage carefully and complete the succeeding three items II,IV,V.(1)A rift is growing between government and higher education,with debates over funding,missions and accountability.(2)In that context,it is all the more worth watching Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels,who assumes the presidency of Purdue University on January14.Other governors have become college presidents.Some,like Tom Kean,have been very successful.However,Daniels—who brings to the job an unusual blend of leadership experiences in government at the state and national level,public policy,business,and now academe—is coming to office at a time of unusual tension.(3)Governors increasingly characterize the rising costs of higher education and its limited access as unsustainable.Many find it imperative that universities increase their productivity,affordability,access,graduation rates,and accountability.In contrast,university presidents say that quality,not cost,is the real issue in an era in which excellence in higher education is more urgent than ever before in history.The question,academic leaders say,should not be the price of college,but who pays,criticizing government for disinvesting in higher education.Bottom line:Between the governors and the presidents,there is increasingly little if any common ground other than recognizing the importance of higher education.They have entirely different views of the problem,no agreement on responsibility,and nothing in the way of a shared solution.(4)In his first public action as president of Purdue,Daniels has bridged the chasm with a salary package that incorporates the goals of both the governors and the presidents.He did this in two ways.The first was conciliatory,eliminating the red flag that sets off both government and the academy:He rejected presidential salary inflation.His salary package is smaller than his predecessor’s,placing him tenth among the12Big Ten university presidents in terms of salary.There is no deferred compensation.(5)Second,and more importantly in terms of national models,is that Governor Daniels asked for a salary based upon achieving his goals for the university. The package is divided into two buckets—base salary and bonus.The bonus is tied to graduation rates,affordability,student achievement,philanthropic support,faculty excellence,and strategic program initiatives.In establishing this bonus system,Daniels married traditional notions of academic quality—as measured by excellence in faculty,programs and resources—with an equal emphasis on effective outcomes and price controls:graduation rates,affordability,and student achievement.(6)In so doing,Daniels has demonstrated his belief that there is common ground to be found between the university and government.The choice is not quality or effectiveness,not excellence or affordability;the future of higher education is not a zero-sum game in which one side wins and the other loses.Rather,he believes it is possible to balance the seemingly conflicting goals of government and higher education.(7)Daniels is not the first president to have his salary tied to achieving institutional goals,but he is probably the most visible.Moreover,although Daniels is renouncing involvement in partisan politics as he enters the Purdue presidency,he is a former Republican governor and party leader known as a frugal fiscal conservative.Historically,the divisions have been greater between Republicans and the academy than has been the case with Democrats.In a very real sense,what Daniels has chosen to do is somewhat akin to Nixon going to China.He has undertaken an experiment to be closely watched.If successful,he will have established a potential model for the country.(8)Typically,presidents reserve such powerful statements for their inaugural addresses.Though such addresses are sincere in intent—I can vouch for that,as someone who has given two and listened to many more—they are generally aspirational;they articulate hopes and dreams for what an institution can become.Daniels has already done something very different. He is putting himself on the line in a very public fashion.Year after year his salary will be determined by his success.And perhaps even more importantly,his success or failure will be public when his board announces the size and rationale for his bonus.(9)It’s a bold step—and Governor Daniels should be applauded for taking it.II.In this section,there are ten incomplete statements or questions, followed by four choices marked A,B,C and D.Choose the best answer and blacken the corresponding letter on your Answer Sheet.(20points,2points for each)16.The word“rift”in Paragraph1means______A.gapB.dilemmaC.painD.headache17.As to higher education,the government is more and more concerned about ______.A.costs and productivityB.accountabilityC.costs and accessD.graduation rates18.Which of the following statements is true about Daniels’salary package?A.He applies for salary inflation.B.The salary should be more than bonus.C.The salary should be based on his achievement.D.His salary package is the smallest among university presidents.19.The word“married”in Paragraph5means______A.meltedbinedC.arrangedD.acknowledged20.According to the author,the future of higher education is not a zero-sum game because______.A.neither government nor higher education can winB.higher education can achieve both quality and effectivenessC.excellence can only be attained at the cost of affordabilityernment and higher education can never reach agreement21.Nixon’s visit to China is mentioned______.A.to highlight Daniels’pioneering workB.to extol Nixon’s contribution to the countryC.to point out the division between Republicans and DemocratsD.to show the importance of the relationship between the two nations22.The word“articulate”in Paragraph8means______.A.designB.cultivateC.fosterD.express23.It can be inferred from Paragraph8that the author is probably______.A.a farmerB.a freelancerC.a company employeeD.a president of an organization24.The author’s attitude towards Daniels’reformation is______.A.expectantB.indifferentC.negativeD.critical25.Which of the following is most appropriate as a title for this passage?A.A Hard TimeB.A Loyal PresidentC.A Powerful StatementD.A Promising Industry非选择题部分注意事项:用黑色字迹的签字笔或钢笔将答案写在答题纸上,不能答在试题卷上。
英语专科自考 00595英语阅读(一)201604 真题试卷
全国2016年4月高等教育自学考试英语阅读(一)试题课程代码:00595第一部分选择题I. CAREFUL READINGRead the following passages carefully. Decide on the best answer and blacken the corresponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET. (40 points, 2 points each)Passage 1Questions 1 to 5 are based on the following passage.I was bom in a pleasant old colonial house built near 1750, and bought by my grandfather sixty or seventy years ago. He joined a group of acquaintances who were engaged in the flourishing West Indian trade of that time. For many years he kept and extended his interests in shipping, building ships and buying large quantities of timber, and sending it down the river and then to the sea. The business was still in existence in my early childhood, so I came in contact with the up-country people who sold timber as well as with the sailors and shipmasters of the other side of the business. I used to linger about the busy country stores, and listen to the lively country talk.In my grandfather’s business household,my father had taken to his book,as old people said, and gone to college and begun that devotion to the study of medicine which only ended with his life. He gave me my first and best knowledge of books by his own delight and dependence upon them, and ruled my early attempts at writing by his good taste. "Don't try to write about people and things, tell them just as they are!" How often my young ears heard these words without comprehending them! But while I was too young and thoughtless to share in an enthusiasm for Sterne or Fielding, and Smollett or Don Quixote, my mother and grandmother were leading me into the pleasant ways of Pride and Prejudice, and The Scenes of Clerical Life, and the delightful stories of Mrs. Oliphant.When the time came that my own world of imagination was more real to me than any other, I was sometimes perplexed at my father's directing my attention to certain points of interest in the character or surroundings of our acquaintances. I cannot help believing that he recognized, long before I did myself, in what direction the current of purpose in my life was setting. Now, as I write my sketches of country life, I remember again and again the wise things he said, and the sights he made me see. I may have inherited something of my father’s knowledge of human nature, but my father never lost a chance of trying to teach me to observe. I owe a great deal to his patience with a little girl given far more to dreams than to accuracy, and with perhaps too little natural sympathy for the dreams of others.1.Which stat ement is true of the author’s grandfather?A.He built the old colonial house around 1750.B.He was employed by the busy country stores.C.He took great interest in neighborhood affairs.D.He made money by buying and selling timber.2.In Paragraph 1, "the other side of the business" refers to____.A.building shipsB.sailing shipsC.buying timberD.selling timber3.What the author cherishes most about her father is his____.A.devotion to medicineB.advice on writingC.enthusiasm for literatureD.interest in business4.As far as writing is concerned, the author's father emphasized the importance of____.A.country settingsB.plentiful patienceC. wild imaginationD.accurate observation5.The author is probably known for her writings about .A.country lifeB. modem businessC.colonial historyD. old-time seafaringPassage 2Questions 6 to 10 are based on the following passage.Educating girls quite possibly yields a higher rate of return than any other investment available in the developing world. Women’s education may be unusual territory for economists,but enhancing women’s contribution to development is actually as much an economic as a social issue. And economics, with its emphasis on incentives (激励),provides an explanation for why so many girls are deprived of an education.Parents in low-income countries fail to invest in their daughters because they do not expect them to make an economic contribution to the family; girls grow up only to marry into somebody else's family and bear children. Girls are thus seen as less valuable than boys and are kept at home to do housework while their brothers are sent to school—the prophecy (预言)becomes self-fulfilling,trapping women in a vicious circle (恶性循环)of neglect.An educated mother, on the other hand, earns more and faces an entirely different set of choices. She is likely to have fewer but healthier children and insist on the development of all her children, ensuring that her daughters are given a fair chance. The education of her daughters then makes it much more likely that the next generation of girls, as well as of boys, will be educated and healthy. The vicious circle is thus transformed into a virtuous circle.Few will dispute that educating women has great social benefits, but it has enormous economic advantages as well. Most obviously, there is the direct effect of education on the wages of female workers. Wages rise by 10 to 20 percent for each additional year of schooling. Such big returns are impressive by the standard of other available investments, but they are just the beginning.6.According to the author, educating girls in developing countries may____.A.be more rewarding than expectedB. cause annoying problems and difficultiesC.bring to an end social and economic problemsD.bring a family into a financially difficult situation7.By saying “…the prophecy becomes self-fulfilling in Paragraph 2, the author means that girls will____.A.be found less valuable than boysB.find their goals in life unreachableC.be discontented with their life at homeD.be capable of realizing their own dreams8.In the author's opinion, a vicious circle can turn into a virtuous circle when_____.A.there are more daughters in a familyB.a family is rich enough to educate boysC.a family has more but healthier childrenD.mothers know the importance of educating girls9.What does the author say about womens education?A.It is the most important social issue.B.It is now given top priority in developing countries.C.It yields greater returns than other known investments.D.It has aroused the interest of a growing number of economists.10.This passage mainly discusses______.A.the economic benefits of educating womenB.the social contributions of educated womenC.the political influence of well-educated womenD.the unfair treatment of girls in developing countriesPassage 3Questions 11 to 15 are based on the following passage.The history of the U.S. from Lincoln’s death to the wave of assassinations in the 1960s can be seen as a struggle to realize Lincoln’s vision of a soci ety whose citizens are not held back by parentage or origin. The struggle to secure this chance for all Americans has been bitter and bloody, and it is far from over. After Lincoln's death, the Fourteenth Amendment promised that the Federal Union would guarantee the rights of all persons against violation by the states. However, this guarantee was exploited by business corporations while remaining a hollow promise to millions of actual persons. Women did not get the vote until five amendments later, and their legal rights were often lost in marriage. As for blacks, political equality remained mostly something unreal until the passage of the V oting Rights Act one hundred years after Lincoln’s death.The struggle to realize Lincoln's ideal was undertaken not only by workers against capital but also by immigrants against the political system. In less than one human life span following the Civil War, the U.S. absorbed a great number of immigrants who formed the next wave of what Lincoln had called "prudent and penniless" beginners. They found that social services were forgotten by a political system that ran on graft (腐败). The risk of injury,disease,and early death were largelyignored, forcing millions to rely on themselves, on family, and on the charity of friends.To some who watched the immigrants pour in, it seemed that America would have to reorganize itself according to the multicultural principle that we hear so much about today. The term “multiculturalism” was popularized by Horace Kallen. He wrote in his book The Nation in 1915 that with the growth of large immigrant communities, the rate of mixed marriage would drop (he was wrong) and the likelihood of a new American race would decline. The U.S., he predicted, would turn into a democracy of nationalities in which "selfhood is ancestrally determined." To other observers,however,the country was simply sliding into disorder, as it seemed to Henry Adams in 1905 when he looked out of the club window on the turmoil of Fifth Avenue and felt himself in the disorderly Rome as witnessed by Emperor Diocletian.11.Lincoln imagined that the U.S. would be a society free from the influence of one’s____.A.wealthB. educationC.heritageD. personality12. The author points out that Lincoln’s dream of an ideal society____.A.is very unrealisticB. has not come trueC.is harmful to womenD. ignores black Americans13.The immigrants who went to the U.S. after the Civil War were extremely dissatisfied with____.A. capitalistsB. social servicesC. public facilitiesD. charity organizations14.According to Horace Kallen,the increase in immigrant population would enable immigrants to____.A.marry into other racesB. keep their own culturesC.gain economic equalityD. forget their homelands15.Which of the following statements is true?A.The blacks got the voting rights right after Lincoln died.B.The immigrants who came after the Civil War were poor.C.The rate of mixed marriage in the U.S. dropped after 1915.D.Henry Adams agreed with Horace Kallen on his prediction.Passage 4Questions 16 to 20 are based on the following passage.Some estimates are that as many as 8% of adolescents suffer from depression at some time during any one-year period, making it much more common than, for example, eating disorders, which seem to get more attention as a source of adolescent misery.Even among psychiatrists and other mental health care professionals, the extent of the disability caused by depression is vastly underestimated. The World Health Organization has found that major depression is the single greatest cause of disability in the world—more than twice as many people are disabled by depression as by the second leading cause of disability,iron-deficiency anemia (贫血症).Other diseases and disorders may get more press coverage or more research money, or more sympathy and concern from a well-meaning public, but major depression causes more long term human misery than any other single disease.When I was a resident in psychiatry,we believed that true depression was rare among teenagers, or that insofar as it existed, it was just a normal phase of adolescent development with no lasting consequences. It didn’t take long after I began treating troubled kids to see that this couldn't possibly be true. Research over recent decades has confirmed my impression. These beliefs, if any still holds them, are false and dangerous. In fact, early onset of depression is not normal, and can predict numerous unhappy life events for youngsters, including school failure, teenage pregnancy, and suicide attempts.Although depression is increasingly common today, it is among the oldest diseases recorded in the history of medicine. As early as the fourth century, the symptoms of “melancholia”were well known. In other words,depression was first thought of as an exclusively physical illness-the loss of appetite,sleeplessness,irritability,and general depression was believed to have a physical,not a psychological cause. It wasn’t until the nineteenth century-when the term depression was invented to substitute for melancholia-that a psychological understanding of the illness began to develop. Eventually this psychological explanation of depression would become the only one, although today it no longer is. We now know that depression has both psychological and physical symptoms, and that both psychological and medical treatments can help to alleviate them.16.The World Health Organization has found that .A.depression results in iron-deficiency anemiaB.depression gets more press attention worldwideC.more people are disabled by depression than by anemiaD.iron-deficiency anemia is the greatest cause of disability17.In the 4th century, depression was regarded as a_____.A.physical disorderB.psychological problemC.psychological disease caused by physical disordersD.physical disease induced by psychological disorders18.After the 19th century people began to realize that depression could result from____.A. anemiaB. iron deficiencyC. physical illnessD. psychological problems19.The word “alleviate” in Paragraph 4 is closest in meaning to_____.A. cureB. diagnoseC. preventD. ease20.The passage mainly deals with depression by informing the reader of_____.A. future developmentsB. new discoveriesC. people’s misunderstandingsD. serious consequencesII. SPEED READINGSkim or scan the following passages, and then decide on the best answer and blacken the corresponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET. (10 points, 1 point each)Passage 5Questions 21 to 25 are based on the following passage.People in the developed countries are living longer. In 2005 in the U.S. the average lifespan was 77.6 years, as against 54 years in 1920 and just 34 years in 1780. By 2050 it is estimated that the average lifespan will be in the mid 80's. By 2025 in the developed countries the share of the population over 60 will be 26 percent.This increasing longevity is starting to impact on public finances, economic growth and general living standards. This impact is greater in countries with low employment rates, such as countries in the European Union, of which Italy is a good example. In addition, as baby boomers (those bom from 1946 to 1960) reach retirement age, there is increasing pressure on social security systems and public funds for retirement and health care expenses. Economists are increasingly questioning the sustainability of the European social model with its current high welfare standards.“Active aging” is now being advanced by policy experts. The current division of life into three cycles—education, employment and retirement—should be changed. According to these experts, governments need to remove barriers that prevent older people from continuing to work and should extend the average working life. Schemes for lifelong learning need to be established to keep the aging workforce equipped with up-to-date job skills.The U.S. agricultural firm Monsanto is encouraging the government to allow it to introduce “phased retirement” for its workforce. Back in 1991 the company set up a Resource Re-entry Centre (RRC). Monsanto found it difficult to hire qualified temporary administrative assistants. Through the RRC it began to offer this work to retired administrative workers. The centre now sources human resources amongst its retired workforce for a diverse range of projects. In so doing, the company retains the skills, knowledge and social networks of its workers. Much of the work is project-based and highly flexible. Over 60 percent of the projects are given to workers over 60. A key feature of the scheme is workers' access to cost-effective computer-based training to maintain and update job skills. The centre strives to educate company managers regarding the cost efficiency and quality of the work achieved by the service.21.From 1780 to 2005, the average lifespan in the U.S. ____.A. had more than doubledB. had more than tripledC. increased by 26 percentD. increased to 80 years22.Italy has seen the great impact of the increasing longevity because of its____.A.high welfare standardsB. early retirement ageC.low employment ratesD. large number of baby boomers23.Which of the following is related to active aging?A.The old people should retire early.B.The three cycles of life should be retained.C.The old people should overcome work barriers.D.Lifelong learning schemes should be established.24.According to the passage,RRC is a(n) ____.ernment officeB. information officeC.human resource centerD. project management center25.The author uses Monsanto's example to show that____.A. workers should enjoy their retirement lifeB.retired workers should expand their social networksC.“active aging” has been encouraged by the governmentD.there are solutions to problems caused by increasing longevityPassage 6Questions 26 to 30 are based on the following passage.There are guavas (番石榴)at the Shop & Save. I pick one the size of a tennis ball and finger the prickly stem end. It feels familiarly bumpy and firm. The guava is not quite ripe: the skin is still a dark green. I smell it and imagine a pale pink center, the seeds tightly embedded in the flesh.A ripe guava is yellow, although some varieties have a pink tinge. The skin is thick, firm, and sweet. Its heart is bright pink and almost solid with seeds. The most delicious part of the guava surrounds the tiny seeds. If you don't know how to eat a guava, the seeds end up in the crevices between your teeth.Some years, when the rains have been plentiful and the nights cool, you can bite into a guava and not find many seeds. The guava bushes grow close to the ground, their branches laden with green then yellow fruit that seem to ripe overnight. These guavas are large and juicy, almost seedless, their roundness enticing you to have one more, just one more, because next year the rains may not come.As children,we didn’t always wait for the fruit to ripen. We raided the bushes as soon as the guavas were large enough to bend the branch.A green guava is sour and hard. You bite into it at its widest point, because it,s easier to grasp with your teeth. You grimace, your eyes water,and your cheeks disappear as your lips purse into a tight O. But you have another and then another, enjoying the crunchy sounds, the acid taste, the gritty texture of the unripe center. At night, your mother makes you drink castor oil, which she says tastes better than a green guava. That’s when you know for sure that you,re a child and she has stopped being one.I had my last guava the day we left Puerto Rico. It was large and juicy, almost red in the center, and so fragrant that I didn't want to eat it because I would lose the smell. All the way to the airport I scratched at it with my teeth, making little dents in the skin, chewing small pieces with my front teeth, so that I could feel the texture against my tongue, the tiny pink pellets of sweet.Today,I stand before a stack of dark green guavas,each perfectly round and hard, each $1.59. The one in my hand is tempting. It smells faintly of late summer afternoons and hopscotch under the mango tree. But this is autumn in New York, and I’m no longer a child. I push my cart away,toward the apples and pears of my adulthood, their nearly seedless ripeness predictable and bittersweet.26.The Shop & Save is a(n) ____.A.American supermarketB. fruit garden in AmericaC.supermarket in an airportD. fruit garden in Puerto Rico27.According to the author, a ripe guava is____.A. pale pink at its heartB. soft with bumpy skinC. yellow with tightly fixed seedsD.yellow with perhaps some tinges of pink28.Plentiful rains and cool nights may mean that guavas____ .A.grow on the groundB. have fewer seedsC.ripen slowlyD. are scarce29.The day he left Puerto Rico, the author ate a guava____.A. quicklyB. slowlyC. reluctantlyD. hungrily30.The author is quite familiar with guavas because he____.A. works at a supermarketB.is keen on eating guavasC.grew up with the memory of guavasD.suffered too much from green guavas非选择题部分注意事项:用黑色字迹的签字笔或钢笔将答案写在答题纸上,不能答在试题卷上。
2014年4月英语一试题及答案
2014年4月高等教育自学考试全国统一命题考试英语(一)试卷(课程代码00012)第一部分选择题一,阅读判断(第1-10题,每题1分,共10分)下面的短文后列出了十个句子,请根据短文的内容对每个句子作出判断:如果该句提供的是正确信息,选择A;如果该句提供的是错误信息,选择B;如果该句的信息文中没有提及,选择C,并在“答题卡”上将相应字母涂黑。
Private Car in AmericaThe private automobile(私家车)has long played an important role in the United States. In fact, it has become a necessary and important part of the American way of life. In 1986, sixty-nine percent of American families owned at least one car, and thirty-eight percent had more than one. By giving workers rapid transportation, the automobile has freed them from having to live near their place of work. This has encouraged the growth of the cities, but it has also led to traffic problems.For farm families, the automobile is very helpful. It has made it possible for them to travel to town very often for business and for pleasure, and also to transport their children to distant schools. Family life has been affected(影响)in different ways. The car helps to keep families together when it is used for picnics outings, and other shared experiences. However, when teenage children have the use of the car, their parents can’t keep an eye on them. There is a great danger if the driver has been drinking alcohol or taking drugs, or showing off by speeding or breaking down traffic laws. Mothers of victims(受害者)of such accidents have formed an organization called MADD(Mothers Against Drunk Driving). These women want to prevent further tragedies(悲剧). They have worked to encourage the government to limit the youngest drinking age. Students have formed a similar organization SADD (Students Against Drunk Driving)and are spreading the same message among their friends.For many Americans, the automobile is a necessity. But for some, it is also a mark of social position and for young people, a sign of becoming an adult. Altogether, cars mean very much to American, even though they cause a lot of environmental problems to people.1. People in the United States start to have their private automobile recently.A .True B. False C. Not given2. In 1986, thirty-eight percent of American families owned one car.A .True B. False C. Not given3. For farm families, the cows and horses are more important for them.A .True B. False C. Not given4. The automobile makes parents easier to send their children to far-away schools.A .True B. False C. Not given5. The driver who drank alcohol should not drive his car.A .True B. False C. Not given6. Speeding or breaking traffic laws is of no danger.A .True B. False C. Not given7. The organization of MADD is supported by those fathers.A .True B. False C. Not given8. Students also set up an organization to prevent traffic accident.A .True B. False C. Not given9. The automobile is only the mark of social position for many Americans.A .True B. False C. Not given10. Driving the automobile is bad for the environment.A .True B. False C. Not given二阅读选择(第11-15题,每题2分,共10分)阅读下面短文,请从短文后所给各题的四个选项(A,B,C,D)中选出一个最佳选项,并在“答题卡”上将相应字母涂黑。
英语自考 00595英语阅读(一)201410 真题试卷
全国2014年10月高等教育自学考试英语阅读(一)试题课程代码:00595本试卷满分100分,考试时间150分钟.考生答题注意事项:1.本卷所有试题必须在答题卡上作答。
答在试卷上无效。
试卷空白处和背面均可作草稿纸。
2.第一部分为选择题。
必须对应试卷上的题号使用28铅笔将“答题卡”的相应代码涂黑。
3.第二部分为非选择题。
必须注明大、小题号,使用0.5毫米黑色字迹签字笔作答。
4.合理安排答题空间。
超出答题区域无效。
第一部分选择题I. CAREFUL READINGRead the following passages carefully. Decide on the best answer and blacken the corresponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET. (40 points, 2 points each)Passage 1Questions 1 to 5 are based on the following passage.Questions 1 to 5 are based on the following passage.In the 1950s,the Sami of Finland had an economy based on fishing and reindeer herding (放养驯鹿),which provided most of the food. Reindeer had several other important economic and social functions. They were used as animals to haul wood for fuel. Their hides were made into clothing. Reindeer were also key items of exchange, both in external trade and internal gift-giving. A child was given a reindeer to mark the appearance of its first tooth. When a couple became engaged, they exchanged a reindeer with each other and when they married, reindeer were the most important wedding gift By the 1960s,all this had changed because of the introduction of the snowmobile. After that,the herds were no longer kept closely domesticated (围养)for part of the year, during which they became tame. Instead, they were allowed to roam freely all year and thus became wilder. On snowmobiles, the men covered larger amounts of territory at round-up (把牲畜赶回畜栏)time to bring in the animals, and sometimes several round-ups occurred instead of one.Herd size declined dramatically. Reasons for the decline included the stress caused to the reindeer by the extra distance traveled during round-ups and the fear aroused by the noisy snowmobiles. Round-ups were now held at a time when the females were near the end of their pregnancy, another factor causing reproductive stress. As the number of snowmobiles increased, the number of reindeer decreased.Another economic change involved the dependence on the outside through links to the cash economy. Cash was needed in order to purchase a snowmobile, gasoline, and to pay for parts and repairs. This led to social inequality, which had notexisted previously: the cash cost of effective participation in herding exceeded the resources of some families,who had to drop out of serious participation in herding; the use of snowmobiles changed the age pattern of reindeer herding in favor of youth over age; thus, older herders were squeezed out; the snowmobile pushed many Sami into debt; the dependence on cash and indebtedness forced many Sami to migrate to cities for work.1.The first paragraph focuses on_____.A. the social pattern of the Sami in FinlandB. the influence of technology upon the SamiC. the problems of reindeer herding of the SamiD.the significance of reindeer in Sami culture2. Because of the introduction of snowmobiles, the reindeer_____.A. became tamerB. grew wilderC. increased in numberD. were harder to manage3. The introduction of snowmobiles led to more dependence on_____.A. the old peopleB. the familyC. the local economyD. the outside world4. The author’s attitude towards the introduction of snowmobiles is_____.A. objectiveB. positiveC. negativeD. neutral5. The Sami had to use cash to buy_____.A. wood and gasolineB. food and woodC. wedding gifts and foodD. snowmobiles and gasolinePassage 2Questions 6 to 10 are based on the following passage.Fashion myths have led women to believe that they are more beautiful or sophisticated for wearing heels, but in reality, heels pose short as well as long term hardships. Women should fight the high heel industry by refusing to use or purchase them in order to save the world from unnecessary physical and psychological suffering.Fairly speaking,it must be noted that there is a positive side to high heels. First,heels are excellent for aerating (充氧)lawns. A simple trip around the yard in a pair of those babies eliminates all need to call for a lawn care specialist and provides the perfect sized holes to give lawn oxygen. Second, heels are quite functional for defense against oncoming enemies, who can easily be scared away with these sharp, deadly fashion accessories. Finally, anytime a hammer can’t be found, a high heel shoe makes the perfect substitute tool for pushing in a nail.Regardless of such practical uses for heels, the fact remains that wearing high heels is harmful to one’s physical health. High heels are known to cause problems such as deformed feet and tom toenails. The risk of severe back problems and twisted or broken ankles is three times higher for a high heel wearer than for a flat shoe wearer. Also of course, after wearing heels for a day, any woman knows she can look forward to a night of pain as she tries to comfort her swollen, throbbing feet.Besides the obvious physical damage heels can cause, they are also responsible for a large amount of psychological damage. A woman with a closet Ml of heels may endanger her own social well-being as well as that of a man who chooses todate her. A night on the town in a pair of shoes that makes a woman feel as if she is a towering ostrich is not something to look forward to. In addition, an evening with a woman twice his height may make an insecure man slightly less than comfortable. Instead of enjoying the date, he may be feeling uncomfortable about his own height as he attempts to equal her height by stretching his back,holding up his chin,and standing on tiptoe. Ultimately,the man will lose interest in the heel-wearer as he realizes that no woman is worth the price of his diminishing self-esteem. In short,a woman who feels likea walking skyscraper and a man who feels like an ant are not likely to feel high self-esteem.6. According to the author,women believe that high heels are____.A. stylishB. comfortableC. formalD. practical7.High heels are viewed by the author as____.A. tools to push in nailsB. devices to provide lawns with oxygenC. weapons to protect women against enemiesD. accessories harmflil to rather than good for women8. The expressio n “those babies” in Paragraph 2 refers to____.A. little shoesB. high heelsC. toy shoesD. flat heels9. Sufferings caused by high heels are____.A. cultural and economicB. cultural and spiritualC. physical and psychologicalD. social and material10. It can be inferred from the last paragraph that____.A. heel-wearers are more attractiveB. high heels make women feel safeC. men don’t love women wearing heelsD. men don’t like dating women taller than themPassage 3Questions 11 to 15 are based on the following passage.Magaret Mead, an American scholar, went to Eastern Samoa in 1925 to spend nine months studying childrearing patterns and adolescent behavior. She sought to answer these questions: “Are the adolescent problems due to the nature of adolescence itself or to the civilization? Does adolescence present a different picture under different conditions?” She observed and interviewed fifty adolescent girls of three different villages. Her conclusion was that, unlike the typical experience in the United States, children in Samoa grew up in a relaxed and happy atmosphere. As young adolescents,they made a sexually free and unrepressed (不受压抑的)transition to adulthood. These findings had a major impact on thinking about child rearing in North America, prompting attempts at more relaxed forms of child rearing in the hope of raising less stressed adolescents.In 1983, five years after Mead’s death (at which point she had no chance for response), Derek Freeman, an Australian scholar, published a strong criticism of Mead9s work on Samoa. Freeman said that Mead’s findings on adolescence were wrong. Freeman, abiological determinist, believes that universally, adolescents are driven by hormonal (荷尔蒙的)changes that cause social and psychological problems. He claims that Mead’s work was flawed in two major ways. First, he says her fieldwork was inadequate because she spent a relatively short time in the field and she had insufficient knowledge of the Samoan language. Second, he says that her theoretical bias against biological determinists led her to overlook evidence that was contrary to her interests. He compares rates of adolescent crimes in Samoa and England and finds that they are similar in both cultures. On the basis of this result, he argues that sexual and social repression also characterized Samoan adolescence. In other words, Samoa is not so different from the West with its supposedly pervasive adolescent problems.Because of Mead’s reputation,Freeman’s criticism prompted a vigorous response from scholars, most in defense of Mead. One response in defense of Mead came from Eleanor Leacock, an expert on how colonialism affects native cultures. Leacock claimed that Free man’s position failed to take history into account; Mead’s findings applied to Samoa of the 1920s while Freeman’s analysis was based on data from the 1960s. By the 1960s, Samoan society had gone through radical cultural changes due to the influence of World War II and intensive exposure to Western influences. Freeman’s data,in her view,do not contradict Mead’s because they are from a different period.11. According to the information provided in the first paragraph, Magaret Meadwould probably agree that adolescent problems are____.A. sexually determinedB. racially basedC. culturally determinedD. historically based12. Derek Freeman believes that adolescent problems originate from____.A. biological factorsB. social influencesC. individual personalityD. cultural environment13. Derek Freeman considers Magaret Mead to be wrong in her____.A. fieldwork and theoryB. fieldwork and dataC.purpose and theoryD. purpose and subjects14. The word “prompted” in the last paragraph probably means____.A. triggeredB. proposedC. promotedD. suppressed15. In Eleanor Leacock’s view,Freeman’s accusation of Magaret Mead is groundless because he pays no attention to____.A. the sexual differenceB. the racial differenceC. the historical differenceD. the cultural differencePassage 4Questions 16 to 20 are based on the following passage.Substantial research suggests that, given the existing health tendency and health condition of an individual at a particular time, the probability of better or worse future health of spouses is affected by a variety of social factors that are subject to influence of his or her spouse.There are many ways in which spouses can influence each other’s probability of good health. Spouses can promote each other’s health by alleviating psychological stress. A substantial literature provides strong evidence that psychological stress causes illness, increases mortality risk, and is an important mechanism that links socio-economic characteristics to health andmortality. Stress-reducing mechanisms include removal of sources of stress, and management of stress through confidential conversation, psychiatric treatment (精神治疗),physical exercise,recreation and other means. A spouse can provide or encourage all of these stress-reducing behaviors.Spouses can also promote each other’s health by providing supportive social co ntacts, and they can facilitate or inhibit each other’s social contact with supportive others. Evidence suggests that health is greatly advanced by supportive social contacts, including positive interaction with relatives, friends, co-workers and acquaintances. Recent data show that persons with more diverse social networks are more resistant to diseases than those with less diverse social networks.Spouses can also promote each other’s health by providing each other with money income, and they can help each other manage it effectively. Money does not buy health directly,but it can be used to purchase goods and services that make good health possible. These goods and services include nutritious food, a hygienic (卫生的)and safe environment, medical care, and facilities that reduce psychological stress. Unless estranged (分居的)or unusually wealthy,spouses share their financial resources and consume these health-promoting goods and services.16. The word “alleviating” in Paragraph 2 probably means____.A. increasingB. reducingC. removingD. enhancing17. Paragraph 3 emphasizes the influence of spouses in terms of____.A. personal incomeB. social networksC. psychological needsD. physical exercise18. How many supporting facts does the author provide for his argument?A. 2.B. 3.C. 4.D. 5.19. Spouses can promote each other’s good health with money income because_____.A. they can manage money income jointly and effectivelyB. they can make themselves cheerful with money incomeC. money is used to purchase health-promoting goods and servicesD. money is one of the best and most direct health-promoting means20. The passage focuses on____.A. how spouses promote each other’s healthB. spouses’ probability of better future healthC. the effect of psychological stress on healthD. how spouses set up stress-reducing mechanismsII. SPEED READINGSkim or scan the following passages, and then decide on the best answer and blacken the corresponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET. (10 points, 1 point each)Passage 5Questions 21 to 25 are based on the following passage.The number of speakers of English in Shakespeare’s time is estimated to have been about five million. Today it is estimated that some 260 million people speak it as a native language, mainly in the United States, Canada, Great Britain, Ireland, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand. In addition to the standard varieties of English found in these areas, there are a great many regional and social varieties of the language, as well as various levels of usage that are employed both in its spoken and written forms.It is virtually impossible to estimate the number of people in the world who have acquired an adequate working knowledge of English in addition to their own language. The purposes for which English is learned and the situations in which such learning takes place are so varied that it is difficult to define and still more difficult to assess what constitutes an adequate working knowledge for each situation.The main reason for the widespread demand for English is its present-day importance as a world language. Besides serving the infinite needs of its native speakers, English is a language in which some of the most important works in science, technology and other fields are being produced, and not always by native speakers. It is widely used for such purposes as meteorological (气象学的)and airport communications,international conferences, and the dissemination (传播)of information over the radio and television networks of many nations. It is a language of wider communication for a number of developing countries,especially former British colonies. Many of these countries have multi-lingual populations and need a language for international communication in such matters as government, commerce, industry, law and education as well as for international communication and for access to the scientific and technological developments in the West.21. Which of the following would be the most appropriate title for this passage?A. Internal CommunicationB. English as a World LanguageC. The Standard Varieties of EnglishD. The Difficulties of Learning English22. Which of the following statements is NOT true?A. English is learned for different purposes.B. English learning takes place in various situations.C. Some 260 million people speak English as a native language.D. Some 260 million people use English as a working language.23. English speaking countries are listed in____.A. Paragraph 1B. Paragraph2C. Paragraph 3D. Paragraphs 1 and 224. Paragraph 3 is about____.A. who speaks EnglishB. why English is widespreadC. when English became popularD. how people learn to speak English25. English is widely used in countries____.A. affected by the culture of the U.S.B. formerly colonized by Great BritainC. geographically close to Great BritainD. technologically influenced by the U.S.Passage 6Questions 26 to 30 are based on the following passage.In the 1950s, a collection of definitions of culture by A. L. Kroeber produced 164 different ones that had appeared in writings since 1700. The first definition was proposed by Edward Taylor. He said that “culture,or civilization is that complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, art, law, morals, customs, and any other capabilities and habits acquired by man as a me mber of society." The phrase “that complex whole” is the most longstanding feature of this proposition. Note that two other features of Taylor’s definition have not stood the test of time. First,most scholars now avoid the use of “man”to refer to all humans and instead use words such as “humans”and “people.”While you may argue that the word “man”can be used to refer to all human beings,many studies indicate that this usage can be confusing. Second, most scholars no longer equate culture with civilization. The term civilization implies a sense of “highness”versus non-civilized “lowness”and sets up a distinction placing “us”(civilized nations of Europe and North America) in a superior pos ition to “them”-the other societies.In contemporary theories of culture, there are two important definitions. Clifford Geertz believes that culture consists of symbols, motivations, moods, and thoughts. This definition focuses on people’s perceptions,thoughts,and ideas,and does not include behavior as a part of culture. Cultural materialist Marvin Harris states that a culture is the total socially acquired life-way or life-style of a group of people. It consists of the patterned repetitive ways of thinking, feeling, and acting that are characteristic of the members of a particular society or segment of society. The definition of culture used in this book follows Harris’s more comprehensive approach.26. The scholar who defined culture as a “complex whole” was____.A. Clifford GeertzB. Marvin HarrisC. Edward TaylorD. A. L. Kroeber27. The use of “man” is now avoided by most scholars because the usage____.A. is too specificB. is out-datedC. causes confusionD. can be inclusive28. According to the passage, most scholars today____.A. prefer “culture” to “civilization”B. prefer “civilization” to “culture”C. equate “culture” with “civilization”D. use “culture” and “civilization” interchangeably29. The author plans to use the definition of culture as defined by____.A. Clifford GeertzB. A. L. KroeberC. Edward TaylorD. Marvin Harris30. The passage is mainly about____.A. sexual discriminationB. racial discriminationC. the definition of cultureD. the definition of civilization非选择题部分注意事项:用黑色字迹的签字笔或钢笔将答案写在答题纸上,不能答在试题卷上。
00595自考英语阅读试卷(答案全面)
自考课程综合测验英语阅读(一) 试卷 (课程代码 00595 )PART ONE( 60 POINTS)I. CAREFUL READINGRead the following passages carefully. Decide on the best answer and write it on the ANSWER SHEET. (40 points, 2points each)Passage 1Questions 1 to 5 are based on the following passage.Failure is probably the most fatiguing experience a person ever has. There is nothing more exhausting than not succeeding--being blocked, not moving ahead. It is an evil circle. Failure breeds fatigue, and fatigue makes it harder to get to work,which adds to the fatigue.We experience this tiredness in two main ways, as start-up fatigue and performance fatigue. In the former case, we keepputting off a task that we are forced to take up. Either because it is too tedious or because it is too difficult, we avoid it. Andthe longer we postpone it, the more tired we feel.Such start-up fatigue is very real, even not actually physical, not something in our muscles and bones. The remedy isobvious, though perhaps not easy to apply: willpower exercise. The moment I find myself turning away from a job, orputting it under a pile of other things I have to do, I clear my desk of everything else and attack the objectionable item first.To prevent start-up fatigue, always treat the most difficult job first.Performance fatigue is more difficult to handle. Here we are willing to get started, but We can not seem to do the job right.Its difficulties appear to be insurmountable and however hard we work, we fail again and again. The mounting experienceof failure carries with it an ever increasing burden of mental fatigue. In such a situation, I work as hard as I can- -then letthe unconscious take over.1. Which of the following can be called an evil circle?A. Success - zeal - success - zeal.B. Failure - tiredness - failure - tiredness.C. Failure - zeal - failure - tiredness.D. Success 一exhaustion - success - exhaustion.2. According to the passage, when keeping putting off a task, we can experience_______.A. tirednessB. performance fatigueC. start-up fatigueD. unconsciousness3. To overcome start-up fatigue, we need_________.A. toughnessB. preventionC. musclesD. strong willpower4. The word insurmountable in the last paragraph probably means___________. A. unable to be solved B. unlikely to be understood C. unable to be imagined D. unlikely to be rejected5. According to the passage ,which of the following statements is NOT true?A .It is easier to overcome start-up fatigue.B. Performance fatigue occurs when the job we are willing to take gets blocked.C. One will finally succeed after experiencing the evil circle.D. Fatigue often accompanies failure.Passage 2Questions 6 to 10 are based on the following passage.Whenever I see anyone buying a National Lottery ticket I want to stop them and ask if they just know where theirmoney is going.The lottery money is Posed to go to charity- but it makes me angry to see some of the so-called “good causes” it's beingused to support. Also, Camelot, the organizer, has made a profit of £10.8 million in five months. We hear now that alot of that money is booting the pay packets of the company’s bosses.For the past 10 years I've been helping to raise funds for a cancer research charity called Tenovus. My husband, Sandy,died from cancer 11 years ago- -he was only 51. There's been a long line of deaths in our family through cancer and it'sbeen devastating. I've also lost two sisters-in-law, my brother, Michael, my father in-law and my father. That' s apartfrom several close friends.The charity is 50 years old now and raises money mainly for breast cancer research. It also runs a support line for thefamilies of caner sufferer. Our local group rises money through dances, sales and coffee mornings, and all the funds godirectly 10 caner research. In 1933 Tenovus raised £3million---and half that money came from sales of our own lotterytickets at supermarkets. But our income has dropped by half since the National Lottery was introduced.I'm not against people playing the National Lottery, but they should think about what they`re doing. The chances ofwinning the jackpot are so small; they might as well throw their money away. The Government tells us that the proceedsare going to things like the arts and sports but what about the National Health Service? They should give some cash tothat, too. How can they justify spending ridiculous amounts of cash on so-called works of art- like displays of photos -orbuying up Winston Churchill's papers at a cost of £ 12 million?So who really are the winners in the National Lottery? When I think of all that money peoplecould be donating to cancer research, I could weep. It' s time people realized how charities across the country aresuffering because of the National Lottery. It's disheartening and so infuriating.6. The writer seems to hope that_________.A. people will spend more money on the National LotteryB. people will give more money to charityC. most of the lottery money will go to charityD. most of the lottery money will be used for cancer research7. The reason why the writer raises funds for cancer research is that_________.A. she herself is suffering from cancerB. the cancer is the most frightening diseaseC. a number of her relatives died of cancerD. some cancer research needs more money than other research年级 班级 准考证号 姓名8. In this text the writer is expressing________.A. her personal opinionsB. the opinions of the general publicC. her feelings about cancer sufferersD. some ideas of fund-raising9. The organization “Tenovus" is_________.A. run by a group of people in the writer’ s townB. a charity organization which has some local groupsC. set up to collect money for people who lose their relativesD. set up to assist the National Lottery10. From the text we can conclude that__________A. the writer is enthusiastically supporting the National LotteryB. the writer has objections to the National LotteryC. the writer believes that the lottery money should be used for cancer researchD. the writer is just expressing her feelings about collecting money for charityPassage 3Questions 11 to 15 are based on the following passage.“Burn rate" is the speed at which a start-up business consumes money. My rate would be $ 50 000 a month when my new media company started. So, I began looking around for individuals who would be my first investors.“ Angel money" it was called. But when I reviewed my list of acquaintances to find those who might be able to help, I found the number got small. With no other choices, I began meeting with the venture-capital companies. But I was warned they took a huge share of your company for the money they put in. And if you struggled, they could drop you cold.As I was searching for“Angel money”, I star ted to build a team who trusted me even though Ididn't have money for paychecks yet.Bill Becker was an expert in computer programming and image processing at a very famousMedia Lab at M. I. T. With his arrival, my company suddenly had a major technolog y“guy" in-house.Katherine Henderson, a film-maker and a former real-estate dealer,joined us as our director of market research. Steve White came on as operating officer. He had worked for the developer of a home- finance software, Quicken. We grabbed him.We had some really good people, but we still didn’t have enough money. One night, my neighbor, Louise Johnson, came for a visit. She and I were only nodding acquaintances, but her boys and ours were constant companions. She ran a very good business at the time.Louise was brilliant and missed nothing. She had been watching my progress closely. She knew I was dying for money and I had prospects but could offer no guarantees of success. She told me that her attorney had talked to mine and the terms had been agreed upon.She handed me an envelope. Inside was a check for $ 500 ,000.I almost fell down. I heard her voice as if from heaven.“I have confidence in your plan,” she said. “You'll do well. You’re going to work hard for it, but it's satisfying when you build your own company.”Who would have thought I' d find an angel so close to home? There were no words sufficient for the moment. We just said good night. She left and I just stood there,completely humbled and completelycommitted.11. For a newly-estab lished business,“burn rate”refers to_________.A. The salary it pays to its staffB. the interest it pays to the bankC. the way in which it raises capitalD. the speed at which it spends money12. By“Angel money”, the author refers to________.A. the money borrowed from banksB. the money spent to promote salesC. the money raised from close friendsD. the money needed to start a business13. To get help from a venture-capital company, you may have to______.A. put up with unfair termsB. change your business lineC. enlarge your business scopeD. let them operate your business14. The author easily built a team for his company because______.A. They were underpaid at their previous jobsB. They were turned down by other companiesC. They were confident of the author and his businessD. They were satisfied with the salaries in his company15. Louise decided to lend money to the author because______.A. she wanted to join his companyB. she knew he would build a teamC. she knew his plan would succeedD. she wanted to help promote his salesPassage 4Questions 16 to 20 are based on the following passage.Pronouncing a language is a sill. Every normal person is expert in the skill of pronouncing his own language; but few people are even moderately proficient at pronouncing foreign language. Now there are many reasons for this, some obvious, some perhaps not so obvious. But I suggest that the fundamental reason why people in general do not speak foreign languages very much better than they do their own languages is that they fail to grasp the true nature of the problems of learning to pronounce, and consequently never set about tackling it in the right way. Far too many people fail to realize that pronouncing a foreign language is a skill--one that needs careful training of a special kind, and one that cannot be acquired by just leaving it to take care of itself.I think, even teachers of language, while recognizing the importance of a good accent, tend to neglect the branch of study concerned with speaking in their practical teaching. So,the first point I want to make here is that the teacher should be prepared to devote some of the lesson time to the teaching of English pronunciation. There should be occasions when other aspects of English, such as grammar or spelling, are allowed for the moment to take the second place.Apart from this question of the time given to pronunciation, there are two other requirements for the teacher: the first, knowledge ; the second,technique.It is important that the teacher should be in possession of the necessary information. This cangenerally be obtained from books. It is possible to get from books some idea of the mechanics of speech, and of what we call general phonetic theory. But the first and most important part of a language teacher' s technique is his ownperformance,his ability to demonstrate the spoken language. in every detail of articulation (发音) as well as in fluent speaking, so that the student' s talent capacity for imitation is given the fullest scope and encouragement.16. What does the author actually say about pronouncing foreign languages?A. Quite a few people are proficient.B. Few people are reasonably proficient.C. People realize the importance of pronouncing foreign languages.D. People tend to spend more time on pronouncing than selling.17. According to the author, pronouncing a foreign language is a skill that requires___A. leaving it to take care of itselfB. careful training of a special kindC. focusing on learners ’own performancesD. obtaining much of the theoretical knowledge18. Regarding the teaching of English pronunciation, the author has made all the following suggestions EXCEPT_________A. to learn from a native speakerB. to devote some lesson timeC. to demonstrate the spoken languageD. to possess the necessary information19. In the author's view, priority should sometimes be given to _____ in the practical teaching.A. grammarB. spellingC. writingD. pronunciation20. The language teacher' s own oral performance is particularly important because_____.A. the students may admire the teacher’s spoken languageB. the students may have a high respect for the teacher' s authorityC. the student's vision can be widened to the fullest scopeD. the student' s speaking ability can be developed through imitationII. SPEED READINGSkim or scan the following passages, and then decide on the best answer and write it on the ANSWER SHEET. ( 10 points, 1 point each )Passage 5Questions 21 to 25 are based on the following passage.Sine he Second Word War, there has been an obvious trend, especially among the growing group of college students, toward early marriage. Many youths begin dating in the first stages of adolescence, "go steady” through high school,and marry before their formal education has been completed. In some quarters, there is much shaking of graying heads over the ways of rebellious youth. However, emotional maturity does not grow with age; it does not arrive automatically at twenty -one or twenty-five. Some achieve it surprisingly early, while others never do, even in three -score years and ten.Many students are marrying as an escape, not only from an unsatisfying home life, but also from their own personal problems of isolation and loneliness. However, any marriage entered into as an escape cannot prove entirely successful. The sad fact is that marriage seldom solves one’s problems ; more often, it merely worsens them. Furthermore, it is doubtful whether the home is capable of carrying all that the young are seeking to put into it; one might say that they are abandoning one idol only to worship another. Young people correctly understand that their parents are wrong in believing that success is the ultimate good, but they themselves are wrong i n believing that they have found the true center of life’s meaning. Their expectations of marriage are essentially unrealistic and therefore incapable of fulfillment. They want too much, and tragic disillusionment is often bound to follow. Shall we, then, join the chorus of those against early marriages? One cannot generalize: all early marriages are not bad any more than all later ones are good. Satisfactory marriages are determined not by how old one is, but by the emotional maturity of the partners. Therefore, each case must be judged on its own merits. If the early marriage is not an escape, if it is entered into with relatively few illusions or false expectations, and if it is economically feasible, why not? Good marriages can be made from sixteen to sixty, and so can bad ones.21. The phrase “go steady" (Para. 1) can be replaced by_____A. break up very oftenB. keep changing partnersC. maintain the relationshipD. believe in early marriages22. The phrase “shaking of graying heads" (Para. 1) refe rs to______.A. the anger of parentsB. the disapproval of old peopleC. the radical behaviors of the youngD. the unruly manners of young lovers23. Besides escaping from unsatisfying home life, young people also marry early___A. for personal developmentB. for financial supportC. to get rid of their lonelinessD. to stay away from their parents24. According to the author,marriage more often than not________.A. ends up in divorceB. leads to tragediesC. proves to be successfulD. worsens one’s problems25. The author argues that_____A. older people suspect early marriagesB. early marriages should not be encouragedC. early marriages are not always unsuccessfulD. older people are wrong about early marriagesPassage 6Questions 26 to 30 are based on the following passage.Seventeenth-century houses in colonial North America were simple structures that were primarily functional, carrying over traditional designs that went back to the Middle Ages. During the first half of the eighteenth century, however, houses began to show a new elegance. As wealth increased, more and more colonists built fine houses.Since architecture was not yet a specialized profession in the colonies,the design of buildingswas left to carpenters who undertook to interpret architectural manuals imported from England. There are an astonishing number of these handbooks for builders in colonial libraries, and the houses erected during the eighteenth century show their influence. Most domestic architecture of the first three-quarters of the eighteenth century displayed a wide range of taste and freedom of application of the rules laid down in these books.Increasing wealth throughout the colonies resulted in houses of improved design, whether the material was wood,stone or brick. New England still favored wood, though brick houses became common in Boston and other towns, where the danger of fire forced people to use more durable material. A few houses in New England were built of stone, but only in Pennsylvania and its neigh-boring areas stone was widely used in dwellings. An increased use of bricks is noticeable in Virginia and Maryland, but wood remained the most popular material even in houses built by wealthyland-owners. In the Carolinas, even in the crowded town of Charleston,wooden houses were much more common than brick houses.Eighteenth-century houses showed great interior improvements over their predecessors. Windows were made lager and shutters removed. Large, clear panes replaced the gray glass of the seventeenth century. Doorways were larger and more decorative. Fireplaces became decorative features of rooms. Walls were sometimes elaborately decorated. White paint began to take the place of blue, yellow, green and gray colors, which had been popular for walls in the earlier years. After about 1730,advertisements for wallpaper styles in scenic patterns began to appear in colonial newspapers.26. The passage mainly discusses_____.A. the improved design of the 18th century colonial housesB. the role of carpenters in building the 18th century housesC. the varieties of decorations used in the 18th century housesD. a comparison of the 18th century houses and modern houses27. Those responsible for designing houses in the 18th century North America were_____A. customersB. carpentersC. interior decoratorsD. professional architects28. Stones were commonly used to build houses in_____A. VirginiaB. BostonC. CharlestonD. Pennsylvania29. The word“ predecessors"(Para.4) refers to____A. colonists in the 17th centuryB. wooden houses in CharlestonC. houses before the 18th centuryD. interior improvements in houses30. It can be inferred from the 4th paragraph that before 1730_____.A. patterned wallpaper was not widely usedB. patterned wallpaper was not used in stone housesC. wallpaper samples could be found in librariesD. wallpaper was the same color as the wall paintsⅢ DISCOURSE CLOZERead the passage, and fill in the numbered spaces ( there are more suggested answers than necessary ) . Write your answers on the ANSWER SHEET. (10 points, 1 point each)We have all had to work and do things (31) ______. Usually, some chirpy (话泼的)person would tell us to be more enthusiastic. “You’' II have more fun," they would say. Well, they were partly right. Being enthusiastic about something means being excited about a given project. Enthusiasm entails having a strong interest in the task at hand. If you decided to learn a newlanguage, (32) ______, you would have to dedicate yourself wholehearted to the cause. Anything less would result in failure.What is real enthusiasm? In your quest for success,enthusiasm means (33) ______. You also believe that your job is important and contributes to the cause. It means that you’re willing to work your butt off (努力做某事) to achieve the company's goals. Real enthusiasm is (34) ______.You have zeal for the work you do and the people you work with. This pushes you to improve and become a better person. Enthusiasm means that you are stimulated by your work, and are able to find new challenges and keep growing professionally. Furthermore, (35) ______..This is where passion really comes into play. When you love what you do, it isn`t too difficult to get psyched up and get the job done. The hard part is performing equally well in those less interesting tasks.Passion helps you get ahead. Enthusiasm about a job or project usually translates into positiveenergy. That is, (36) ______, you will be anxious to get started and get results. The mere fact of looking forward to your work will help make you more productive and effective. You will plan more effectively and pay careful attention to detail. You will carry out your plan more carefully and aim for the best results possible. Another important point is (37 )_______. A leader must hare zest(38) _______. A leader must inspire his troops. To inspire them, he needs to exude enthusiasm. In leaders, this translates into charisma (领袖人物的超凡魅力). Being fervent about your work shows a willingness to do more and learn more. This will definitely help you stand out from the crowed and get top management’s attention.Increasing your enthusiasm. Most men aren`t born great- -they become great. Similarly,(39)_______.However, do not despair; there are ways to become more passionate. One good way boost your gusto is by reading about successful people, it will help you realize (40) _______ Reading about real success stories often illustrates that people much like yourself have become business leaders. In most cases ,they all share one trait: enthusiasm. If you want to succeed, you should be excited about your work,your life and your coworkers.( From Enthusiasm Leads to Success)A. if you are excited about a projectB. if people are to follow him and achieve the corporate missionC. not everyone is the enthusiastic type that falls in love with their workD. that we did not especially enjoyE. that passionate people are usually those that are thrust into positions of leadershipF. when you leap out of bed in the morning and attack your day with gusto (热忱)G. that you too can make it happenH. when you have conflict of interest with your companyI. which is not easy by any accountJ. most jobs have some elements that are less fun and more difficult to carry outK. that you believe deeply in what the company is doingPART TWO( 40 POINTS )IV. WORD FORMA TIONSComplete each of the following sentences with the proper form of the word in the bracket. Write your answers on the ANSWER SHEET. ( 20 points, 2 point each)41. ( reflect) In his latest collection of poems readers are confronted with a series of ____ on death.42. (hope) We tried to stop the flames from spreading, but we knew it was ____ .43. ( relation ) He suffers from memory loss ____ to his disease.44. ( courage) When things aren't going well, my coach will ____ me, telling me not to give up.45. ( easy) For him, learning French is ____ than learning Russian.46. ( frank) I’m concerned about your lack of marketing experience and,____ , you' re pretty new at all this.47. ( office) The report has not yet revealed ____ corruption in relation to road building.48. ( hand) John invited twelve people to his birthday party, but only a ____ of them came.49. ( understand) Don't ____ me-I' m not criticizing your decision.50. ( dead) The old woman was very sad about the ____ of her only son.V. GAP FILLINGFill in the numbered gaps with the correct form of the words in the box ( there are more words than necessary ).There was a time in the early history of man when the days had no names! The (51)____was quite simple: Man had not invented the week.In those days, the only division of times was the (52)n____, and there were too many days in the month for each of them to have a separate name. But when men began to build cities, they wanted to have a special day on which to (53 )______,a market day. Sometimes thesemarket days were fixed at every tenth day, some every seventh or every fifth day. The Babylonians (54)_______ that it should be every seventh day. On this day they didn't work, but met for trade or religious festivals.The Jews followed their (55) _______, but kept every seventh day for religious purposes. On this day the week came into existence. It was space between market days. The Jews gave (56)_______ of the seven days a name, but it was really a number after the Sabbath day ( which was Saturday). For example, Wednesday was (57)_______ the fourth day ( four days after Saturday).When the Egyptians adopted s the seven-day week, they named the days after five (58)________, the sun and the moon. The Romans used the Egyptian names for their days of the week: the day of the sun, of the moon, of the planet Mans, of Mercury of Jupiter, of Venus and of Saturn.We get our names for the days not from the Romans but from the Anglo-Saxons, who called most of the days after their own (59 )_____,which were roughly the same as the gods of theRomans. The day of the sun became Sannandaeg, or Sunday. The day of the (60)_____ was called Monandaeg, or Monday. The day of Mars became the day of the Tiw, who was their god of war. This became Tiwesdaeg,or Tuesday. Instead of Mercu ry’s name, that of the god Woden was given to Wednesday. The Roman day of Jupiter, the thunder, became the day of the thunder god Thor, and this became Thursday. The next day was named for Frigg, the wife of their god Odin, and so we have Friday. The day of Saturn became Saeterndaeg, a translation from the Roman, and then Saturday.VI. TRANSLATIONThe following excerpt is taken from the textbook. Read it carefully and translate into Chinese each of the numbered and underlined parts. Write your answers on the ANSWER SHEET. ( 10 points ,2 points each )(61) Learning together is a fruitful source of relationship between children and parents. By playing together, parents learn more about their children and children learn more from their parents. (62) Toys and games which both parents and children can share are an important means of achieving this co-operation. Building block toys and jigsaw puzzles and crosswords are good examples.(63)Parents vary greatly in their degree of strictness and indulgence towards their children. Some may be especially strict in money matters, others are severe over times of coming home at night, punctuality for meals or personal cleanliness. In general, the controls imposedrepresent the needs of the parents and the values of the community as much as the child's own happiness and well-being. (64) As regards the development of moral standards in the growing child, consistency is very important in parental teaching. To forbid a thing one day and excuse it the next is no foundation for morality. (65) Also, parents should realize that“example is better than precept”.答案:阅读一(00595)PART ONE( 60 POINTS)I. CAREFUL READINGRead the following passages carefully. Decide on the best answer and。
全国2014年4月自考初中英语学科基础真题
绝密★考试结束前全国2014年4月高等教育自学考试初中英语学科基础试题课程代码:09296请考生按规定用笔将所有试题的答案涂、写在答题纸上。
选择题部分注意事项:1.答题前,考生务必将自己的考试课程名称、姓名、准考证号用黑色字迹的签字笔或钢笔填写在答题纸规定的位置上。
2.每小题选出答案后,用2B铅笔把答题纸上对应题目的答案标号涂黑。
如需改动,用橡皮擦干净后,再选涂其他答案标号。
不能答在试题卷上。
一、语音测试(本大题共10小题,每小题0.5分,共5分)(请选出1个划线部分读音与其它3个不同的。
)1. A. wash B. fat C. candle D. calculation2. A. secret B. telegraph C. elephant D. second3. A. thirsty B. Australia C. music D. second4. A. roof B. tooth C. foot D. moon5. A. station B. question C. operation D. instruction6. A. meat B. mean C. weak D. break7. A. played B. stopped C. carried D. tried8. A. truth B. otherwise C. feather D. therefore9. A. bow B. cow C. town D. blow10. A. reaches B. decides C. bridges D. boxes二、口语表达(本节共10个小题,每小题1分,共10分)(请选出1个符合语境的选项。
)11. —Would you like to go on a picnic with me today?—______.A. I‟d love to, but I can‟t because I have an appointment today.B. No, I don‟t like going today because I went on a picnic yesterday.C. No, I can‟t go with you today because I am not free.D. No, I am not feeling well.12. —Would you mind returning this book to the library for me, please?—______.A. Yes, of courseB. SureC. Certainly notD. You are welcome13. —You seem upset. Is anything wrong?—______.A. Yes. My best friend is angry with meB. Oh, no. I am OKC. Oh, thank you for your careD. Not really14. —Here are some new books.—______?A. But do you think which one is the most interestingB. But which one do you think is the most interestingC. But what do you think of the most interesting oneD. But how do you love them15. —I‟m sorry I didn‟t do well.—______.A. NoB. No sorryC. You‟re welcomeD. Never mind16. —Conductor, I am going to York Road. Can you tell me where to get off?—______.A. You have to ride of three stopsB. You can get off at the next stopC. You must get off at three stops laterD. York Road is at the three stops away17. —I am just back from a holiday in Hawaii.—______.A. Really! Did you have a good time?B. Really! Had you had a good time?C. Really! Have you had a good travelling?D. Really! That‟s very interesting.18. At the party, Mr. Brown meets Lin Hong for the first time.Brown: May I introduce myself? My name is Richard Brown.Lin: ______A. I am Mr. Lin Hong. Glad to meet you.B. How do you do? My name is Lin Hong.C. How do you do, Richard?D. How are you, Mr. Brown?19. —It‟s very warm today, isn‟t it?—______(show disagreement)A. No, it is not warm at all.B. It‟s cold, I think.C. Well, I wouldn‟t call it really warm.D. No, actually it‟s very cold.20. At the dinner table—Would you mind passing me the pepper?—______A. Certainly. Here you are.B. Yes, here you are.C. Yes, but I don‟t know where it is.D. Not at all. Here you are.三、语法和词汇(本大题共15小题,每小题1分,共15分)(在每小题列出的四个备选项中有一个符合题目要求的。
7月全国英语阅读(一)自考试题及答案解析
全国2018年7月高等教育自学考试英语阅读(一)试题课程代码:00595请将答案填在答题纸相应位置上Ⅰ. Vocabulary. (10%)Complete each of the following sentences with the proper form of the word in the brackets. Write the word on the Answer Sheet.1. (inferior)Having realized her bodily ________ to her cousins, Jane Eyre dreaded coming home.2. (stir)His ________ speech encouraged us to study even harder.3. (propose)Shall we discuss the intention book ________last week.4. (sympathy)I know you feel angry, and I ________ you.5. (conspicuous)The shy girl tried to make herself as ________ as possible.6. (dignify)Our English teacher is a ________ lady.7. (agree)Smile at me, and stop being so________.8. (caution)She opened the door ________so as not to wake the bady.9. (commit)He has a lot of ________for he has agreed to pay his brother’s school expenses.10. (exasperate)The ________ noise upstairs made me upset.Ⅱ. Text Comprehension. (20%)According to the texts you have learned, decide whether each of the following statements is true or false. Write T or F on the Answer Sheet.1. In No Marriage, No Apologies, families and households are the same concepts.2. In The Decameron, Filomena’s story was concerned with the people in the royal palace.3. According to Bringing up Children, an adult’s character is in a great measure decided by hischildhood experiences.4. In A Day’s Wait, what led the boy to think that he was going to die was that he mistook theFahrenheit scale for the Celsius one.5. In How to Live Like a Millionaire, according to the author, marriage is one of the importantfactors in building wealth.6. In Rip Van Winkle, Rip had formed the habit of being agreeable to all by thinking highly ofeveryone except his wife.7. In The Lady or the Tiger, the king was cruel and had none of the grace and polish of hisneighbors.8. In New Applications, the bank manager, AI Gropin, was such an extravagant person that he wasnot accepted by many people in the town.9. According to The World at War, Britain favored the camp of Germany because Francethreatened her interests in Africa and Russia threatened her Indian border.110. According to The Story of the Bible, the face of nature was a formless mass in darkness in thebeginning.11. According to Stories from Greek Myths, Prometheus had never rebelled against Zeus’supremacy; his only crime was to help mortal men to raise themselves above all animals. 12. In Bricks from the Tower of the Babel, the author does not agree that International languagescan make successful translations of fictions.13. According to What Body Language Can Tell You That Words Cannot, in early courtship bothman and woman are behaving awkwardly, often very uncertain as to what is best to say.14. In The Girls in Their Summer Dresses, Frances said,“Look out you’ll break your neck. ”Shesaid so to warn her husband of the danger in the street.15. In True Love, Joe’s task is to search for the ideal woman for himself.16. In Jane Eyre, Mrs. Reed didn’t allow Jane to join the company of her son and daughters.17. According to The Merchant of Venice, many noble and princely suitors wished to marry Portiabecause she inherited a large sum of money from her father who had died recently.18. In The canterbury Tales, the three young men forgot their attempt to find out and kill Deathwhen they caught a glance of great number of gold pieces on the ground.19. In The Necklace, the heroine was pretty and charming, but she was unfortunately born into afamily of a factory worker.20. According to How Gorge, Once upon a Time, Got up Early in the Morning, Gorge’s watchwent wrong one evening and stopped at a quarter past eight because he hung it up over his pillow without ever looking at it.Ⅲ. Reading Comprehension. (50%)Section A: Reading Comprehension In this part there are 4 reading passages followed by 20 questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are 4 options marked A,B,C, and D, you should decide on the best one and write your answer on the Answer Sheet. (40%)Passage 1Telecommuting —substituting the computer for the trip to the job—has been hailed as a solution to all kinds of problems related to office work.For workers it promises freedom from the office, less time wasted in traffic, and help with child-care conflicts. For management, telecommuting helps keep high performers on board, minimizes tardiness and absenteeism by eliminating commutes, allows periods of solitude for high-concentration tasks, and provides scheduling flexibility, in some areas, such as Southern California and Seattle, Washington, local governments are encouraging companies-to start telecommuting programs in order to reduce rush-hour congestion and improve air quality.But these benefits do not come easily. Making a telecommuting program work requires careful planning and an understanding of the differences between telecommuting realities and popular images.Many workers are seduced by rosy illusions of life as a telecommuter. A computer2programmer from New York City moves to the tranquil Adirondack Mountains and stays in contact with her office via computer. A manager comes into his office three days a week and works at home the other two. An accountant stays at home to care for her sick child; she hooks up her telephone modem connections and does office work between calls to the doctor.These are powerful images, but they are a limited reflection of reality. Telecommuting workers soon learn that it is almost impossible to concentrate on work and care for a young child at the same time. Before a certain age, young children cannot recognize, much less respect, the necessary boundaries between work and family. Additional child support is necessary if the parent is to get any work done. Management, too, must separate the myth from the reality. Although the media has paid a great deal of attention to telecommuting, in most cases it is the employee’s situation, not the availability of technology, that precipitates a telecommuting arrangement.That is partly why, despite the widespread press coverage, the number of companies with work-at-home programs or policy guidelines remains small.1. What is the main subject of the passage?A. Business management policiesB. Driving to workC. Extending the workplace by means of computersD. Computers for child-care purposes2. Which of the following is NOT mentioned as a problem for office employees?A. Being restricted to the officeB. Incurring expenses for lunches and clothingC. Taking care of sick childrenD. Driving in heavy traffic3. Which of the following is NOT mentioned as a problem for employers that is potentially solvedby telecommuting?A. Employees’ lateness for workB. Employees’ absence from workC. Employees’ need for time alone to work intensivelyD. Employees’ conflicts with second jobs4. Which of the following does the author mention as a possible disadvantage of telecommuting?A. Small children cannot understand the boundaries of work and play.B. Computer technology is not advanced enough to accommodate the needs of every situation.C. Electrical malfunctions can destroy a project.D. The worker often does not have all the needed resources at home.5. Which of the following is an example of telecommuting as described in the passage?A. A scientist in a laboratory developing plans for a space stationB. A technical writer sending via computer documents created at homeC. A computer technician repairing an office computer network3D. A teacher directing computer assisted learning, in a private schoolPassage 2No sooner had the first intrepid male aviators safely returned to Earth than it seemed that women, too, had been smitten by an urge to fly. From mere spectators they became willing passengers and finally pilots in their own right, plotting their skills and daring line against the hazards of the air and the skepticism of their male counterparts. In doing so, they enlarged the traditional bounds of a women’s world, won for their sex a new sense of competence and achievement, and contributed handsomely to the progress of aviation.But recognition of their abilities did not come easily. “Men do not believe us capable. ”the famed aviator Amelia Earhart once remarked to a friend. “Because we are women, seldom are we trusted to do an efficient job. ”Indeed old attitudes died hard: when Charles Lindbergh visited the Soviet Union in 1938 with his wife, Anne-herself a pilot and gifted proponent of aviation-he was astonished to discover both men and women flying in the Soviet Air Force.Such conventional wisdom made it difficult for women to raise money for the up-to-date equipment they needed to compete on an equal basis with men. Yet they did compete, and often they triumphed finally despite the odds.Ruth Law, whose 590-mile flight from Chicago to Hornell, New York, set a new nonstop distance record in 1916, exemplified the resourcefulness and grit demanded of any woman who wanted to fly. And when she addressed the Aero Club of America after completing her historic journey, her plainspoken words testified to a universal human motivation that was unaffected by gender:“My flight was done with no expectation of reward,”she declared, “just purely for the love of accomplishment. ”6. Which of the following is the best title for this passage?A. A Long FlightB. Women in Aviation HistoryC. Dangers Faced by PilotsD. Women Spectators7. According to the passage, women pilots were successful in all of the following EXCEPT________.A. challenging the conventional role of womenB. contributing to the science of aviationC. winning universal recognition from menD. building the confidence of women8. What can be inferred from the passage about the United States Air Force in 1938?A. It had no women pilots.B. It gave pilots handsome salaries.C. It had old planes that were in need of repair.D. It could not be trusted to do an efficient job.9. In their efforts to compete with men, early women pilots had difficulty in________.A. addressing clubsB. flying nonstop4C. setting recordsD. raising money10. According to the passage, who said that flying was done with no expectation of reward?A. Amelia EarhartB. Charles LindberghC. Anne LindberghD. Ruth LawPassage 3Of all the folk artists in the United States the most well known of the twentieth century is certainly Grandma Moses-Anna Mary Robertson Moses(1860-1961). She was also the most successful within her lifetime and her work was reproduced on greeting cards and calendars and in prints. As with many folk artists, her career as a painter started late in life, at the age of 67, but she continued painting until her death at the age of 101, so her active painting life still spanned over 34 years.Her subjects are based on the New England countryside and evoke a strong mood of nostalgia. Many of her early paintings are copies of, or use sections from, prints by Currier and Ives that she then recomposed in her own way. In her versions the figures became more stylized and the landscapes less naturalistic. Her painting was preceded by the production of landscapes in needlework, and it was only the onset of arthritis that forced the change of medium. The images, however, continued the same, and she reexecuted some of her needlework landscapes in paint at a later date.From these early sources she then began to compose original paintings such as Housick Falls, New York in Winter (1944) that relied on her surroundings and her memories of country life and activities; these paintings display an increasing technical ability. By the 1940’s her work had become a marketable commodity and collectors created a demand for her paintings.Like many painters of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, Grandma Moses made use of photographs for information, for figures, for fragments of landscape, and for buildings, but her work, especially that of her later years, was not a slavish copying of these but compositions using them as source material. Her output was prodigious, and consequently her work is of varying quality. Although much of her public appeal is based on the emotive image of the“Grandma”figure producing naive pictures of country life, her paintings place her among the top folk painters of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.11. What is the main topic of the passage?A. The painting materials used by Grandma MosesB. The major artistic influences on Grandma MosesC. The folk art of Grandma MosesD. The life of Grandma Moses12. According to the passage, Grandma Moses started her painting career.A. whithout much successB. in her sixtiesC. after much studyD. by producing greeting cards13. Why does the author mention Currier and Ives in lines 8-9?5A. They are folk artistsB. They collected many of Grandma Moses’ paintingsC. They made calendars from Grandma Moses’ landscapesD. Grandma Moses based some paintings on their work14. According to the passage, Grandma Moses switched from needlework to painting becauseof________.A. her desire to create landscapesB. the public’s interest in paintingC. her need to make moneyD. a physical condition that affected her15. The word“naive”in line 24 is closest in meaning to which of the following?A. UnsophisticatedB. IgnorantC. UnspoiledD. TrustingPassage 4Before the 1850’s the United States had a number of small colleges, most of them dating from colonial days. They were small, church-connected institutions whose primary concern was to shape the moral character of their students.Throughout Europe, institutions of higher learning had developed, bearing the ancient name of university. In Germany a different kind of university had developed. The German university was concerned primarily with creating and spreading knowledge, not morals. Between midcentury and the end of the 1800’s, more than nine thousand young Americans, dissatisfied with their training at home, went to Germany for advanced study. Some of them returned to become presidents of venerable colleges—Harvard, Yale, Columbia—and transform them into modern universities. The new presidents broke all ties with the churches and brought in a new kind of faculty. Professors were hired for their knowledge of a subject, not because they were of the proper faith and had a strong arm for disciplining students. The new principle was that a university was to create knowledge as well as pass it on, and this called for a faculty composed of teacher-scholars. Drilling and learning by rote were replaced by the German method of lecturing, in which the professor’s own research was presented in class. Graduate training leading to the Ph. D, an ancient German degree signifying the highest level of advanced scholarly attainment, was introduced. With the establishment of the seminar system, graduate students learned to question, analyze, and conduct their own research.At the same time, the new university greatly expanded in size and course offerings, breaking completely out of the old, constricted curriculum of mathematics, classics, rhetoric, and music. The president of Harvard pioneered the elective system, by which students were able to choose their own courses of study. The notion of major fields of study emerged. The new goal was to make the university relevant to the real pursuits of the world. Paying close heed to the practical needs of society, the new universities trained men and women to work at its tasks, with engineering students being the most characteristic of the new regime. Students were also trained as economists, architects, agriculturalists, social welfare workers, and teachers.616. The word“this”in line 14 refers to which of the following?A. Creating and passing on knowledgeB. Drilling and learning by roteC. Disciplining studentsD. Developing moral principles17. According to the passage, the seminar system encouraged students to.A. discuss moral issuesB. study the classics, rhetoric, and musicC. study overseasD. work more independently18. The word“constricted”in line 21 is closest in meaning to which of the following?A. MandatoryB. LimitedC. ChallengingD. Competitive19. It can be inferred from the passage that before 1850, all of the following were characteristic ofhigher education EXCEPT________.A. the elective systemB. drillingC. strict disciplineD. rote learning20. Those who favored the new university would be most likely to agree with which of thefollowing statements?A. Learning is best achieved through discipline and drill.B. Shaping the moral character of students should be the primary goal.C. Higher education should prepare students to contribute to society.D. Teachers should select their students’ courses.Section B: Skimming and ScanningIn this part there are 2 reading passages followed by 10 questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are 4 options marked A,B,C and D. Skim or scan them and decide on the best answer and write your answer on the Answer Sheet. (10%)Passage 1Taking natural objects such as rocks, bones, clouds and flowers for subject matter, Georgia O’Keeffe reduced them to their simplest form, often by employing a close-up view or some other unusual vantage point. With such techniques, including the use of thin paint and clear colors to emphasize a feeling of mystical silence and space, she achieved an abstract simplicity in her paintings. O’Keeffe spent a summer in New Mexico in 1929 and the bleak landscape and broad skies of the desert so appealed to her that she later settled there permanently. Cows’ skulls and other bare bones found in the desert were frequent motifs in her paintings. Other common subjects included flowers, the sky, and the horizon lines of the desert. After O’Keeffe’s three-month trip around the world by plane in 1959, the sky“paved with clouds”as seen from an airplane also became one of her favorite motifs and the subject of her largest work, a 24-foot mural that she began in 1966.21. With what subject is the passage mainly concerned?A. Georgia O’Keeffe’s trip around the worldB. The private life of Georgia O’Keeffe7C. The paintings of Georgia O’KeeffeD. Georgia O’Keeffe’s greatest work of art22. Which of the following is an example of something often painted by O’Keeffe?A. An airportB. A deserted streetC. An astronaut in outer spaceD. A cloud formation23. With which of the following statements concerning Georgia O’Keeffe’s paintings would theauthor of the passage be most likely to agree?A. They generally create a sense of stillness and open spaceB. They are so realistic that they often resemble ordinary photographic imagesC. Most of them are portraits of the painter’s friends and relativesD. They represent humans in an eternal struggle with the forces of nature24. Which of the following aspects of the desert landscape is NOT mentioned by the author as onethat attracted O’Keeffe’s attention?A. BonesB. SandC. The skyD. FlowersPassage 2In general, as soon as the newborn child’s muscles, sense organs, and nerves are fully formed, the child begins to use them. But much of the human nervous system is not fully developed until the child is a year or two old, and some parts, such as the corpus callosum, continue to mature for at least the next 20 years.The general pattern of bodily development is from head to foot. Simple skills, such as head movements, appear first because the structures that control these skills are among the first to mature. More complex behavior patterns, such as crawling, standing, and walking, come much later in the developmental sequence than head movements do.The motor centers in the brain are connected by long nerve fibers(usually through one or more synapses) to the muscles in various parts of the body. Since the head muscles are closer to the brain than the foot muscles, according to one theory, the head comes under the control of the motor centers long before the feet do. The appearance of a new motor skill(such as crawling and grasping) always suggests that a new part of the child’s body has just matured—that is, that the brain centers have just begun to control the muscles involved in the new motor skill.25. What is the author’s main purpose in this passage?A. To describe how children crawl, stand, and walkB. To explain why some children are slow to developC. To describe early physical development in childrenD. To explain the function of the corpus callosum26. According to the passage, the corpus callosum is part of the human ________.A. muscular systemB. digestive systemC. circulatory systemD. nervous system827. According to the passage, which of the following motor skills does an infant first develop?A. Moving the headB. CrawlingC. Controlling the armsD. KickingPassage 3When we accept the evidence of our unaided eyes and describe the Sun as a yellow star, we have summed up the most important single fact about it—at this moment in time. It appears probable, however, that sunlight will be the color we know for only a negligibly small part of the Sun’s history.Stars, like individuals, age and change. As we look out into space, we see around us stars at all stages of evolution. There are faint bloodred dwarfs so cool that their surface temperature is a mere 4,000 degrees Fahrenheit, there are searing ghosts blazing at 100,000 degrees Fahrenheit and almost too hot to be seen, for the great part of their radiation is in the invisible ultraviolet range. Obviously, the“daylight”produced by any star depends on its temperature; today(and for ages to come) our Sun is at about 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit, and this means that most of the Sun’s light is concentrated in the yellow band of the spectrum, falling slowly in intensity toward both the longer and shorter light waves.That yellow“hump”will shift as the Sun evolves, and the light of day will change accordingly. It is natural to assume that as the Sun grows older, and uses up its hydrogen fuel—which it is now doing at the spanking rate of half a billion tons a second-it will become steadily colder and redder.28. What is the passage mainly about?A. Faint dwarf starsB. The evolutionary cycle of the SunC. The Sun’s fuel problemD. The dangers of invisible radiation29. What does the author say is especially important about the Sun at the present time?A. It appears yellowB. It always remains the sameC. It has a short historyD. It is too cold30. Why are very hot stars referred to as“ghosts”?A. They are short-lived.B. They are mysterious.C. They are frightening.D. They are nearly invisible.Ⅳ. Answer the questions. (20%)There are 4 simple questions in this part, which are based on the texts you have learned.Give the brief answer to each of the questions. Your answers must be to the point and grammatically correct. Write your answers on the Answer Sheet.1. In The Lady or the Tiger, what was the king like? How was he different from his neighbors?2. What kind of woman was the heroine in The Necklace ?3. What insects appear in the last story of The Animals of Aesop? And what did the grasshopper doall summer?4. Why did Shylock in The Merchant of Venice have a special hatred for Antonio?910。
全国2014年4月高等教育自学考试基础英语试题
全国2014年4月高等教育自学考试基础英语试题 课程代码:00088 请考生按规定用笔将所有试题的答案涂、写在答题纸上。
选择题部分 注意事项: 1. 答题前,考生务必将自己的考试课程名称、姓名、准考证号用黑色字迹的签字笔或钢笔填写在答题纸规定的位置上。
2. 每小题选出答案后,用2B铅笔把答题纸上对应题目的答案标号涂黑。
如需改动,用橡皮擦干净后,再选涂其他答案标号。
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一、词汇应用和语法结构(本大题共30小题,每小题1分,共30分) (一)词汇应用(15分) 选择最佳答案完成句子,错选、多选或未选均无分。
1. Did he give a ______ account of what have happened?A. truthfulB. wastefulC. stressfulD. harmful 2. It can kill you if you don’t notice the ______ signals.A. warnedB. misleadingC. warningD. fancy-sounding 3. Then it’s time to join a relaxation class or ______ dancing, painting or gardening.A. take upB. take intoC. get downD. get into 4. By using UPC, the computer can print out the ______ price of the item.A. averageB. accurateC. activeD. artificial 5. The potato chip bags weigh 75 grams ______.A. pieceB. apieceC. alikeD. a like 6. Many other trains were stopping and ______ their passengers, and there were thousands of people in the station.A. unfoldingB. unlockingC. unloadingD. unfastening 7. Rust ______ very quickly when iron is not protected from dampness by paint, or in some other way.A. makesB. comesC. formsD. refines 8. —What’s wrong with him? —He is quite ______ about his chances of getting a decent job.A. excitedB. interestedC. confidentD. pessimistic 9. Being away for more than a decade, he is still strongly ______ to his homeland.A. appliedB. assortedC. attachedD. allocated 10. He thought he could ______ from attending the MBA program. That’s why he quit the job.A. benefitB. gainC. promoteD. achieve 11. The president ______ a plan to cut the government spending in the following year.A. put offB. put onC. put forwardD. put out 12. You are in a very ______ position to apply for this job. Have a try!A. comparableB. crucialC. exclusiveD. advantageous 13. All the speakers are required to ______ their speech to this topic.A. restrictB. limitC. referD. confine 14. He has been ______ in advertising for a number of years. Maybe you could turn to him for some advice?A. estimatedB. exposedC. engagedD. embodied 15. Don’t worry. He’s very much ______ of finishing the job on his own.A. capableB. strongC. ableD. wise (二)语法结构(15分) 选择最佳答案完成句子,错选、多选或未选均无分。
自考英语(一)2014年04月试题及答案
自考英语(一)2014年04月试题及答案自考英语(一)2014年04月试题及答案一、阅读理解(共20分,每题4分)1. 阅读下面短文,然后回答问题。
A New Era for EducationThe traditional model of education, where teachers stand in front of a classroom and students passively listen, is undergoing a significant transformation. With the advent of technology, the way students learn is changing. Now, students can access a wealth of information online, participate in virtual classrooms, and engage with their peers in a global community.Question: What is the main idea of the passage?A. The traditional model of education is outdated.B. Technology is changing the way students learn.C. Students are now more active in the learning process.D. The role of teachers is diminishing.Answer: B2. 阅读第二篇短文,然后回答问题。
The Importance of TeamworkTeamwork is essential in today's workplace. It involvescollaboration, communication, and mutual respect among team members. When a team works well together, it can achieve more than individuals working alone. Companies that value teamwork often have a competitive edge because they can innovate and adapt to changes more quickly.Question: What is the main benefit of teamwork mentioned in the passage?A. It promotes individual achievements.B. It leads to better communication among team members.C. It allows companies to innovate and adapt faster.D. It ensures mutual respect among team members.Answer: C(注:由于没有提供具体的短文内容,以上题目和答案为示例性质,实际试题应包含完整的短文和相应的问题及选项。
全国英语阅读一自考试题及答案解析.doc
⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯精品自学考试资料推荐⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯全国 2019 年 4 月高等教育自学考试英语阅读(一)试题课程代码: 00595PART ONE(70 POINTS)I.TEXT COMPREHENSIONThe following comprehension questions are based on the texts you have learned, and eachof them is provided with 4 choices marked A,B,C and D. Choose the best answer to each question and write the corresponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET.(20 points, 1 pointeach)1.In Gifts of the Magi , the two possessions Mr. and Mrs. Young took great pride in are ().A . Jim ’ s watch and Della’ s hairB . Jim ’ s watch and Dell’ s combsC. Della ’ s combs and Jim’-chainswatchD . Della ’ s hair and Jim’-chainswatch2.In No Marriage, No Apologies,Mrs. Frishberg said, “ I ’ m not against the institution of marriage. We just never get around to it. ”The underlined sentence means.A . we never have the courage to face the problem directlyB . we never go so far as to consider the matterC. we never overcome the obstacles of marriageD . we never finish discussing the problem with each other3.Lisabetta’ hersbrotdecided to put an end to her secret love affair by killing Lorenzo because they.A . thought that he would snatch their beautiful sister away from themB . considered the secret love affair a shame to the familyC. worried that Lorenzo would inherit the family fortuneD . looked upon Lorenzo as inferior to them in social rank4.The Wife of Bath intends to show with her tale that.A . men should be obedient to their wivesB . knights should be loyal to the King and the QueenC. women should be obedient to their husbandsD . husbands should be young and loving5.In Mark Twain The’sCelebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County , Simon Wheeler is.A . a good-natured and extremely talkative old manB . fond of making fun of people with his long talesC. most curious about betting and dog fightD . a well-trained frog and the best jumper in Calaveras County16.According to The value of Education , our purpose of educating children is to.A . choose a proper system of educationB . educate them only for the aim of educating themC. accustom them to varied lifeD . make them intelligent citizens7.The child in A Day ’sWait kept tight control over himself throughout the day because he.A . was afraid that he would die if he lost control over himselfB . thought he was going to die and he must show courage in the face of deathC. wanted to recover quickly so that he could go hunting with his fatherD . did not want to be a bother to and a burden on others8.Rip Van Winkle is taken from The Sketch Book, a collection of essays, sketches, and tales written by.A . Benjamin Franklin B. Thomas PaineC. Washington Irving D. O.Henry9.According to the passage English World-wide , many Third World people oppose the use of English in their countries because.A . they consider it a form of cultural imperialismB . the English language has produced racismC. other languages are easier to learnD . they are against modernization in general10.Aristotle, the Greek philosopher, summed up the four chief qualities of money some 2,000years ago as being durable, distinct,and portable.A . divisible B. definiteC. deficient D. decisive11.In New Applications , the illegal plan first came to Miriam when she discovered by accidentthat.A . Al Cropin’ s grand scheme was not practic lB . the home-type computer improved the market conditionsC. the latest version of home-type computers was actually compatible with the one in heroffice D . everyone could use the terms to refer to the computer and its application software12.According to The Story of the Bible , Noah ’ s drunkenness and behavior most probably reflectthat.A . people easily forgot their past mistakesB . people tended to enjoy a peaceful lifeC. Noah wanted to escape from his lonelinessD . Noah lacked the companionship of his children13.The Statue of Liberty reminds people of all the following EXCEPT.A . American democracy2B . friendship between America and FranceC. the support of FranceD . the journey of pilgrims14.According to the information in Gateway to the USA, New York City was a bitter disillusionment tosome immigrants in that.A . it turned out to be a wretched placeB . there was no gold in the cityC. the competition was severe in the cityD . there was the language problem15.It can be concluded from the story The Perfect Match that.A . computers can be used to make every decision in people’ s livesB . natural interactions are essential for human beingsC. marriage brings unexpected changes in people’ s livesD . people tend to hide their true feeling before marriage16.From about the 5th century through the 15th century, Latin was regarded as all of the followingEXCEPT.A . the most suitable language in the worldB . the second language of educated people in EuropeC. a subject taught in schools and in collegesD . the language of the church17.In style, the story True Love is.A . a real love story B. an autobiographyC. a journalistic report D. a satirical fantasy18.In Bricks from the Tower of the Babel, the writer Jessica Davidson provides a detailedexplanation for.A . the construction of the towerB . the structure and sound system of EsperantoC. internationalization of some natural languagesD . the Indo-European language family19.According to The Merchant of Venice , all the following words can be used to describe PortiaEXCEPT.A . wiseB .courageousC. merciful D. cautious20.Hollywood became an ideal site for shooting motion pictures chiefly because.A . most of the glamorous movie stars lived thereB . famous film corporations operated thereC. the climate there was sunny and mildD . the studio chiefs liked it very much3II.READING COMPREHENSIONIn this part there are 4 reading passages followed by 20 questions or unfinished statements. Foreach of them there are 4 choices marked A,B,C and D. You should decideon the best answer or the best choice to complete the statement and write the correspondingletter on the ANSWER SHEET.(40 points, 2 points each)Passage 1When you ’ re negotiating with someone, listen for the messages that he or shemight be sending toyou. For example, the word“ difficult” does not mean the same as impossible. Imagine you’ re staying in a hotel, and you want to change your room. The manager“ That’wouldsanswerb of,very difficult, sir ”,does not mean that he is saying“ no.” It just means that he wants to knowwhat you are prepared to offer him in return for the change of room.If you are buying a new car, and want to pay less than the price being asked, then the salesmancomment, “ I ’ m sorry, but we never negotiateon the price”, means that they do negotiate on otherthings, like the delivery time, or the “ extra” that might be available as part of the purchase. In thesame car showroom, if the salesman says, “ Sorry, I can ’ t negotiate prices”,then yourresponse should be to ask who can. The message the salesman is sending suggests that his boss isthe one you need to be talking to.In all of these situations, the message is never communicated in clear terms. In any negotiation,the two “ players” wish to get as much out of it as they can, of course. In the three examplesabove, the salesmen and the hotel manager are hoping that you will accept their price or conditions— but their “ messages” make it clear that there may be room for movement and compromise. Ina successful negotiation, the two sides move towards each other and reach agreement on conditionsthat satisfy both sides.21.The hotel manager’ s answer“That would be very difficult, sir” implies.A . you can change the room if you find some excuseB . someone else has paid more for the room under discussionC. the room is available if an extra sum of money is offeredD . someone else has booked the room in return for more money22.When the salesmen tell you that they never negotiate on the price, you can.A . negotiate the price with the managerB . demand to see the one who canC. find out other possibilities in the purchaseD . accept the price without any further negotiation23.This passage is intended for.A . managers B. customers4C. salesmen D. scholars24.The passage tells us how to.A . send massages in a negotiationB . become a successful salesmanC. profit from business transactionsD . receive messages in a negotiation25.It can be safely concluded from the passage that.A . at least two players should be in the room for communicationB . a lot can be inferred from what is actually stated in a negotiationC. you should never communicate your ideas in clear termsD . you should play the roles of a salesman and manager in a negotiationPassage 2Following football hero O.J.Simpson’ s arrest in June 1994 for the murder-wifeofhisandex oneof her friends, Newsweek and Time magazines ran the same police mug shot of Simpson on their covers. Newweek’s version was a straight reproduction. Time electronically manipulated the phototo darken it and achieve a gloomy and threatening look that emphasized Simpson ’unshaven cheeks and African-American skin color. The alteration offended many readers and raised an increasingly familiar question: In an age of computer-controlled images, can anyone still trust a photograph?Altering a digitized image( 数码技术相片), as Time did for its cover, has been one of the fastest-growing, most far-reaching, and most controversial(有争议的) techniques in contemporary photography. With this method a photograph is scanned(扫描), digitized (converted into a set of numeric values), and entered into a computer from which the operator can control the image almost in any way imaginable: add, delete, or change the position of visual elements; modify tones and colors; create montages; combine photographs; and even create entirely imaginary scenes. The digitized image can be stored in a data base, output as a print( 底片 ) or transparency( 透明胶片 ), or converted for video-screen display.Electronic image manipulation arrived in force in the 1980s with a new type of computers that cost on the order of $500,000 or more and occupied and entire room. More compact and far less expensive desktop systems soon appeared, capable of, at least, limited image control and available at chain-store prices.The ever-rising flood of digitized visual information may not, as some critics fear, fatally destroythe certainty of photographic evidence. Yet many observers agree that both suppliers and consumers of photographic information must exercise greater care than before to tell fact from falsehood in the images they use.526.Which of the following magazines was accused of distorting the murderer ’photographs by many readers?A . Time.B. Newsweek.C. Washington Post.D. Not mentioned in the passage27.Nowadays, electronic image alterations are.A . unbearably expensiveB . more expensive in the StatesC. only available in chain storesD . far less expensive than before28.The digitized alteration technique is.A . developing with great careB . very capable and developing rapidlyC. strongly criticized due to its easy accessD . fatal in destroying the certainty of photographic evidence29.According to the passage, which of the following statements is NOT true?A . With digitized alteration techniques, a photograph may be scanned, digitized and altered.B . With digitized alteration techniques, the digitized images can be stored in a data base or transformed for video-screen display.C.With digitized alteration techniques, both suppliers and consumers of photographicinformation are able to tell fact from falsehood in the image they use.D . With digitized alteration techniques, it is possible for the computer operators to control the image almost in any conceivable way.30.W hat is the author’ s attitude toward the technique of digitized image manipulation?A . Critical.B. Objective.C. Indifferent.D. Supportive.Passage 3The importance of symbols as a source of cultural diversity can be seen in the dress codes and hairstyles of different societies. In most situations, the symbolism of clothing and hairstyles communicates different messages ranging from political beliefs to identification with specific ethnic or religious groups. The tartan( 格子呢 ) of a Scottish clan, the black leather jacket and long hair of a motorcycle gang member in the United States, and the veil of an Islamic woman in Saudi Arabia provide a symbolic vocabulary that creates cultural diversity.Many examples of clothing styles could be used to illustrate how symbols are used to produce cultural diversity. Consider, for instance, changing dress codes in the United States. During the 1960s, many young people wore jeans, sandals, and beads to symbolize their rebellion against6what they conceived as the conformist inclinations of American society. By the 1980s, many of the same people were wearing “ power suits” as they sought to advance up the corporate ladder.An example of how hairstyles can create meaningful symbolic codes can be seen in a group known as the Rastafarians(sometimes known as Rastas or Rastaman) of Jamaica. The majority of the people of Jamaica are of African descent. During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, they were brought to Jamaica by European slave traders to work on plantations. The Rastafarians are a specific religious group within Jamaica who believe that Haile Selassie(1892-1975), the former emperor of Ethiopia, whose original name was Ras Tafari, was the black Messiah who appeared in the flesh for the redemption of all blacks exiled in the world of white oppression. Rastafarian religion fuses Old Testament teachings, Christian mysticism, and Afro-Jamaican religious beliefs. The Rastafarian movement originated as a consequence of harsh economic, political, and living conditions in the slums of Jamaica.In the 1950s, during the early phase of the Rastafarian movement, some male members began to grow their hair in “ locks ” or “ dreadlocks” to symbolize their religious and political commitments. This hairstyle became well known in Western society through reggae( 强节奏黑人音乐 ) music and Rasta musicians such as the late Bob Marley. Rastafarians derive the symbolism of the dreadlock hairstyle of the Rastafarians from the Bible. They view the unshaven man as the natural man and invoke Samson as one of the most important figures in the Bible. Dreadlocks also reflect a dominant symbol within the Rastafarian movement, the lion, which is associated with Haile Selassie, one of whose titles was the “ Conquering Lion of Judah( 犹大 ).” To simulate the spirit of the lion, some Rastas do not cut their hair, sometimes growing their locks 20 inches or more.Thus, to a great extent, culture consists of a network of symbolic codes that enhance values, beliefs, worldviews, and ideologies within a society, Humans go to a great length to create symbols that provide meaning for individuals and groups. These symbolic meanings are a powerful source of cultural diversity.31.What is the main idea of this selection?A . Hairstyles and dress codes identify political beliefs in diverse societies.B . The Rastafarian movement symbolized a religious and political commitment.C. Symbols provide meaning and a satisfaction of biological needs in society.D .Hairstyles and dress codes can be important symbols of cultural diversity in different societies.32.The author uses the examples of the Scottish tartan, the motorcycle jacket, and the Islamic veilto show.A . the political power of dress codes in different societies7B . the diversity of clothing styles throughout the worldC. dress codes that symbolize different ethnic and religiousgroups D . the resistance to change of culturally different groups33.The author suggests that the young people wearing jeans in the 1960s wore“ power suits” inthe 1980s because.A . styles changedB .the American government changedC. their attitudes and goals changed D. both outfits symbolized rebellion34.All of the following are true of the Rastafarians EXCEPT.A . they believe that Emperor Haile Selassie was the blackMessiah B . they are the original natives of JamaicaC. they are a religious group with political commitmentsD . they formed as a result of harsh living conditions in Jamaica35.The Rastafarian movement began.A . at the beginning of the nineteenth centuryB . around the middle of the twentieth centuryC. before European slave traders arrivedD . in the early eighteenth centuryPassage 4A child who has once been pleased with a tale likes, as a rule, to have it retold in identically the same words, but this should not lead parents to treat printed fairy stories as sacred texts. It is always much better to tell a story than read it out of a book, and, if a parent can produce what, in the actual circumstances of the time and the individual child, is an improvement on the printed text, so much the better.A charge made against fairy tales is that they harm the child by frightening him or arousing his sadistic impulses. To prove the latter, one would have to show in controlled experiment that children who have read fairy stories were more often guilty of cruelty than those who had not. Aggressive, destructive, sadistic(虐待狂的 ) impulses every child has and, on the whole, their symbolic verbal discharge seem to be rather a safety valve than an incitement to overt action. As to fears, there are , I think, well-authenticated cases of children being dangerously terrified by some fairy story. Often, however, this arises from the child having heard the story once. Familiarity with the story by repetition turns the pain of fear into the pleasure of a fear faced and mastered.There are also people who object to fairy stories on the grounds that they are not objectively true, that giants, witches, two-headed dragons, magic carpets, etc., do not exist; and that, instead of indulging his fantasies in fairy tales, the child should be taught how to adapt to reality by studying history and mechanics. I find such people, I must confess, so unsympathetic and peculiar that I do8⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯精品自学考试资料推荐⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯not know how to argue with them. If their case were sound, the world should be full of madmenattempting to fly from New York to Philadelphia on a broomstick or covering a telephone withkisses in the belief that it was their enchanted girlfriend.No fairy story ever claimed to be a description of the external world and no sane child has everbelieved that it was.36.The author considers that a fairy story is more effective when it is .A . repeated without variationB .treated with respectC. adapted by the parent D. set in the present37.Fairy stories are a means by which children ’ s impulses. may beA . beneficially channeledB .given a destructive tendencyC. held back until maturity D. effectively suppressed38.According to the passage great fear can be stimulated in a child when the story is .A . in a realistic settingB .heard for the first timeC. repeated too often D. dramatically told39.The advantage claimed for repeating a fairy story to young children is that it.A . makes them come to terms with their fearsB . develops their power of memoryC. convinces them there is nothing to be afraid ofD . encourages them not to have ridiculous beliefs40.The author’ s mentioning of broomsticks and telephones is meant to suggest that.A . fairy stories are still being made upB . there might be confusion about different kinds of truthC. people try to modernize old fairy storiesD . there is more concern for children’ s fears nowadaysIII.SKIMMING AND SCANNINGIn this part there are 3 reading passages followed by 10 questions or unfinished statements. Foreach of them there are 4 answers marked A,B,C and D. Skim or scan the passages, thendecide on the best answer or the best choice to complete the statement and write thecorresponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET.(10 points,1 point each)Passage 1When we call someone a pig or a swine, we do not mean it as a compliment. But pigs do notdeserve to be used as a symbol for an insult. They are probably not as dirty as they are made out tobe. According to one pig keeper, swine are very clean when allowed to live in a clean environment.He feels pigs are usually dirty simply because their keepers don ’ t clean their pens. In any case, n one has proven that the pig that wallows in mud prefers that to a cool bath. Furthermore, pigs aresmarter than most wallows in mud prefers that to a cool bath. Furthermore, pigs are smarter than9⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯精品自学考试资料推荐⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯most people think. Many farmers, for example, have observed that pigs frequently undo complicated bolts on gates in search of adventure or romance. So the next time you call someone a pig, perhaps he or she ought to be someone you wish to praise.41.This passage deals with.A . the reasons why pigs are dirtyB . people ’ s wrong perceptions of pigsC. how to insult or compliment peopleD . why people like to keep pigs42.One pig keeper feels that pigs will stay clean if they are.A . given cool baths every dayB . praised from time to timeC. kept in a clean environmentD . allowed to seek adventure or romance43.The detail that pigs “ can undo complicated bolts on gates ” supports the opinion that.A . pigs sometimes can be adventurousB . pigs are generally misunderstood by peopleC. pigs are also mischievous and romanticD . pigs are smarter than most people thinkPassage 2The large, gleaming refrigerator is the focal point of most American kitchens. It holds enough food to last many days. It is cold enough to preserve that food well. Its advantages are clear. But that big refrigerator has its drawbacks as well, although they are not usually recognized. First of all, the large refrigerator encourages the hoarding of food, obesity and other eating problems. Also, it hasdestroyed the pleasant custom, still common in Europe, of going to market each day. Picking outone ’ s fresh produce daily while chatting with friends and neighbors is no longer a part of our lives.In addition, people ’desire to buy huge amounts of groceries just a few times a month has encouraged the growth of supermarkets and destroyed local grocery stores. Another victim of thegi ant refrigerator has been small local farmers, who can ’compete against the mega-producers favored by the supermarkets.44.According to the passage, which of the following is regarded by the author as one of the victims of the “ giant refrigerator ”?A . The supermarkets.B .The local grocery stores.C. The American kitchens D. The mega-producers45.From this passage, you could infer that many Europeans .A . are more economical shoppers than AmericansB . are better cooksC. enjoy eating moreD . don ’ taveh “ giant” refrigerators1046.The author’ s tone in this passage is mainly.A . cheerfulB .depressingC. critical D. optimistic47.The passage mainly deals with.A . the advantages of shopping patterns in EuropeB . disadvantages and advantages of large refrigeratorsC. fresh, healthy produce and daily meeting with friendsD . wonderful modern kitchen appliancesPassage 3Urbanization and industrialization demanded new directions in education. Public education, once a dream, now becomes a reality. Education was forced to meet new social changes. American society was getting much more complex; literacy became more essential. Secondary education, which had been almost totally in the hands of private individuals up to the time of the Civil War, gradually became a public concern. By the early 1900s there were over 7000 high schools, totaling an enrollment of over 1 million. Technological changes demand more vocational training. Subjects such as bookkeeping, typing, agriculture, woodworking, and metalworking were introduced intothe curriculum. American education finally was becoming universal.Higher education also responded to the need for more and different education. The Morril Act of 1862 established state land grant colleges that taught agricultural methods and vocational subjects. While curriculums included a large number of required courses during the first two years of college, more elective subjects were added during the last two years. In 1876 Hopkins University instituted America ’first graduate school for a dvanced study. In general, American education began to respond to the complexities of the i ndustrial age and the need for a new focus in education.48.One factor, repeatedly emphasized in the passage, is that .A . technological changes demanded more vocational trainingB . teaching methods were also changingC. higher education also responded to the need for more different educationD . education was forced to meet new social changes49.Literacy became more essential because .A . American public education was far from enoughB . American society was growing more complexC. the public was concerned about secondary educationD . far fewer subjects were introduced into the school curriculum50.In the last paragraph of the passage, the word “instituted ” means .A . set up B. provided11C. set forth D. preparedPART TWO(30 POINTS)IV .WORD FORMATIONSComplete each of the following sentences with the proper form of the word given in thebrackets. Write your answers on the ANSWER SHEET.(10 points, 1 point each)51.(title) Being a member you to discounts on tickets.52.(essence) She has added a few characters and changed some names but this is atrue story.53.(advantage) She argued that social , such as lacking a good living condition or agood standard of education, are major causes of crime.54.(effect) She is not officially our boss, but she is in control of the office.55.(courage) It was of the young man to challenge the professor as to the potentialgenetic therapies.56.(supervise) Most health services are provided free of charge for low-income groups and atmoderate charges for others, through local and national agencies, under theof the Department of Health.57.(employ) Four out of five U.S.corporations with more than 500 now offereducational opportunities to workers, and many professional associations haveeducational programs for their members.58.(wide) The range of university courses available has tremendously in recentyears.59.(consider) The nature of Canadian households has changed over the pastquarter-century.60.(afford) Radio exposed a wider audience to country music while new, relativelyinexpensive recording technology made records available at prices. V.ANSWER THE QUESTIONSThere are 4 groups of simple questions in this part, which are based on the texts you have learned. Give a brief answer to each of the questions. Your answers must be to the pointand grammatically correct. Write your answers on the ANSWER SHEET.(20 points, 5 points each)61.In The Necklace by de Maupassant, what did Mme. Loisel strongly wish for and how do youaccount for those wishes? What is the irony in the story?(From The Necklace) 62.Why did Smiley name his frog Daniel Webster? What did Smiley try to train him to do? Forwhat purpose did he train his frog?(From The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Cavaveras County ) 63.According to Bricks from the Tower of the Bable, what are the purpose, ideal features and12。
2005年4月全国英语阅读(一)试题及答案
全国2005年4月高等教育自学考试英语阅读(一)试题课程代码:00595PART ONE (70 POINTS)Ⅰ.TEXT COMPREHENSIONThe following comprehension questions are based on the texts you have learned, and each of them is provided with 4 choices marked A,B,C and D. Choose the best answer to each question and write the corresponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET.(20 points ,1 point each)1.“With that chain on his watch ,Jim might loot at the time in any company.”The underlined partin this sentence from Gifts of the Magi means ____.A. in the presence of any personB. while working in a firmC. when interviewed by a corporationD. doing any business2.According to The Wife of Bath's Tale, what women want most is ____.A. jewels and moneyB. happinessC. fine clothesD. leadership in the family3.In The Fisherman and His Wife, the Fisherman was ____ when his wife wished for one thing after another.A. tolerant but not pleasedB. bewildered but not madC. anguished but not rebelliousD. furious but not daring4.In Little Match Girl, when her little hands were almost benumbed with cold, the little match girl ____.A. thought of the kindness of her grandmotherB. thought of the pleasant smell of the roast gooseC. went home but received a beating from her fatherD. rubbed the match against the wall and warmed her hands5.The title of the story A Day's Wait most probably means that the boy ____.A. had been waiting all day to dieB. had waited a whole day for his father to come backC. had been waiting all day to recover from his illnessD. had waited a whole day before the drugs took effect6.According to Bringing up Children,“upbringing”and “education”are ____.A. merely two different terms for the same processB. the same term for the different processesC. two utterly different but closely related processes because children are involved in different1environmentsD. interdependent because both parents and teachers are responsible for the opportunities providedfor children's development7.The National Gallery in London overlooks ____.A. ParliamentB. Trafalgar SquareC. the National Gallery of British ArtD. the National Portrait Gallery8.According to How to Live like a Millionaire, most millionaires measure success by ____.A. incomeB. consumptionC. investment worth9.Based on the passage United Nations, which of the following statements is NOT true?____.A. The U.N. has the right to intervene in the member states' internal affairs.B. All the member states, big or small, have the same rights and obligations.C. The day that United Nations came into existence is United Nations Day.D. Armed forces should not be used except in protecting the common interest.10.According to Universities and Polytechnics,London University is similar to Oxford andCambridge in that ____.A. they all consist of many constituent collegesB. they were all founded in the 13th centuryC. students all live outside the campusD. they set up a different pattern of university life11.“Hitler knows that he will have to break us in this island or lose the war. If we can stand up tohim, all Europe may be free. But if we fail, then the whole world, including the United States, will sink into a Dark Age.”This quotation comes from the famous speech of ____ during the Second World War.A. Queen VictoriaB. George V.C. Lloyd GeorgeD. Winston Churchill12.The information from What Body Language Can Tell You That Words Cannot best supportswhich of the following statements?A. It is never too late to learn something new.B. Action speaks louder than words.C. Wisdom is born of experience.D. It is easier to preach than to practice.13.Through the examples given in Nonverbal Communication, the writer tries to tell us that ____.A. the nonverbal behavior of animals is instinctive, but it is not the case with humansB. animals have more elaborate nonverbal behavior than humansC. nonverbal communication exists in both humans and animals naturally2D. humans might imitate each other's nonverbal behavior whereas animals' are entirely inborn14.The story The Girls in Their Summer Dresses deals with the subject of ____.A. the individual's lifestyle and outlookB. a person's imaginationC. the fashion of a certain periodD. the tradition of a society15.In The Constitution of the United States, ____is considered a great turning point in American history.A. the revolt against British ruleB. the Constitutional ConventionC. the establishment of legislature in each colonyD. the aid of France through independence16.In Lady in the Dark, which of the following words best describes Mrs. Courtenay's behavior inthe face of danger?A. Irritable.B. Scared.C. Calm.D. Watchful.17.According to Helen Keller in Three Days to See, which of the following statements is NOTtrue?A. Darkness would make people more appreciative of sight.B. Silence would teach people the joys of sound.C. It would be an excellent rule to live each day as if we should die tomorrow.D. Court records reveal every day how accurately “eyewitnesses”see.18.At the end of the story by Jerome K. Jerome, getting up too early had been a ____to George.A. routineB. necessityC. warningD. pleasure19.According to some official records, the earliest Olympic Games took place ____.A. in the seventh century A.D.B. before 700 B.C.C. over three thousand years agoD. a thousand years ago20.Which of the following novels is NOT written by Charlotte Brontë ?A. Pride and PrejudiceB. The ProfessorC. Jane EyreD. ShirleyⅡ.READING COMPREHENSIONIn this part there are 4 reading passages followed by 20 questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are 4 choices marked A,B,C and D. Y ou should decide on the best answer or the best choice to complete the statement and write the corresponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET.(40 points, 2 points each)Passage 1There are two basic differences between the large and the small enterprises. In the small enterprise3you operate primarily through personal contacts. In the large enterprise you have established “policies,”“channels”of organization, and fairly rigid procedures. In the small enterprise you have, moreover, immediate effectiveness in a very small area. Y ou can see the effect of your work and of your decisions right away, once you are a little above the ground floor. In the large enterprise even the man at the top is only part of a big machine. To be sure, his actions affect a much greater area than the actions and decisions of the man in the small organization, but his effectiveness is remote, indirect, and difficult to see at first sight. In a small and even in a middle-sized business you are normally exposed to all kinds of experiences, and expected to do a great many things without too much help or guidance. In the large organization you are normally taught one thing thoroughly. In the small one the danger is of becoming a jack-of-all-trades and master of none. In the large one it is of becoming the man who knows more and more about less and less.There is one other important thing to consider: do you get a deep sense of satisfaction from being a member of a well-known organization--General Motors, the Bell Telephone System, the government? Or is it more important to you to be a well-known and important figure within your own small pond? There is a basic difference between the satisfaction that comes from being a member of a large, powerful, and generally known organization, and the one that comes from being a member of a family; between impersonal grandeur and personal —often much too personal —intimacy; between life in a small office on the top floor of a skyscraper and life in a crossroads gas station.21.It can be inferred from the first paragraph that in a large enterprise ____.A. new technology is employed quicklyB. all people work efficientlyC. one's effectiveness is felt very slowlyD. one can get promotion easily22.Generally speaking, the person working in a large enterprise ____.A. has to deal with a great many thingsB. knows how everything is going on around himC. acquires increasingly thorough knowledge within a limited fieldD. feels more secure than the one employed by a small enterprise23.In the second paragraph, the writer mentions “your own small pond”to refer to ____.A. a top leader in a larger enterpriseB. a manager of a small enterpriseC. a large enterpriseD. a small enterprise24.According to the information provided in the passage, if you are interested in personal intimacy, you should work ____.4A. for General MotorsB. for the Bell Telephone SystemC. in a department in the governmentD. in a crossroads gas station25.The writer of this passage ____.A. compares the large and the small enterprises objectivelyB. obviously prefers to work for a large enterpriseC. intends to show the advantages of working in a small businessD. explains the disadvantages of being a top leader in a large businessPassage 2In the old days, when a glimpse of stockings was looked upon as something far too shocking to distract the serious work of an office, secretaries were men.Then came the First World War and the male secretaries were replaced by women. A man's secretary became his personal servant ,charged with remembering his wife's birthday and buying her presents; taking his suits to dry-cleaners; telling lies on the telephone to keep people he did not wish to speak to at bay; and of course, typing and filing and taking shorthand.Now all this may be changing again .The microchip (集成块) and high technology is sweeping the British office, taking with it much better of the routine clerical work that secretaries did.“Once office technology takes over generally, the status of the job will rise again because it will involve only the high-powered work—and then men will want to do it again.”That was said by one of the executives(male) of one of the biggest secretarial agencies in this country.What he has predicted is already under way in the U.S.Once high technology has made the job of secretary less routine, will there be a male takeover? Men should beware of thinking that they can walk right into better jobs. There are a lot of women secretaries who will do the job as well as they—not just because they can buy negligees(妇女长睡衣) for the boss's wife, but because they are as efficient and well-trained to cope with word processors and computers as men.26.Before 1914 female secretaries were rare because they ______.A. were less efficient than menB. were not as serious as menC. liked stockingsD. would have disturbed other office workers27.Besides fulfilling other duties, a female secretary was expected to _____.5A. be her boss's memoryB. clean her boss's clothesC. do what her boss asked her toD. telephone her boss's wife28.Secrtaries,until recently, had to do a lot of work now done by _____.A. machinesB. other staffC. servantsD. wives29.A secretary in the future will ______.A. be better paidB. have higher statusC. have less work to doD. have more work to do30.The writer believes that before long _____.A. both men and women will be qualified secretariesB. men will be better than machinesC. men will take over women's jobs as secretariesD. women will operate most office machinesPassage 3Clutter is the disease of American writing. We are a society strangling in unnecessary words, circular constructions, pompous frills and meaningless jargon.Who really knows what the average businessman is trying to say in the average business letter? What member of an insurance or medical plan can decipher the brochure that tells him what his costs and benefits are? What father or mother can put together a child's toy—on Christmas Eve or any other eve—from the instructions on the box? Our national tendency is to inflate and thereby sound important. The airline pilot who wakes us to announce that he is presently anticipating experiencing considerable weather wouldn't dream of saying that there's a storm ahead and it may get bumpy. The sentence is too simple—there must be something wrong with it.But the secret of good writing is to strip every sentence to its cleanest components. Every word that serves no function, every long word that could be a short word, every adverb winch carries the same meaning that is already in the verb, every passive construction that leaves the reader unsure of who is doing what—these are the thousand and one adulterants (赘词)that weaken the strength of a sentence. And they usually occur, ironically, in proportion to education and rank.During the late 1960's the president of Princeton University wrote a letter to mollify the alumni after a spell of campus unrest. “Y ou are probably aware,”he began,“that we have been experiencing very considerable potentially explosive expressions of dissatisfaction on issues only6partially related.”He meant that the students had been hassling them about different things. As an alumnus I was far more upset by the president's syntax than by the students' potentially explosive expression of dissatisfaction. I would have preferred the presidential approach taken by Franklin D. Roosevelt when he tried to convert into English his own government's memos, such as this blackout order of 1942:Such preparations shall be made as will completely obscure all Federal buildings and non-Federal buildings occupied by the Federal government during an air raid for any period of time from visibility by reasons of internal or external illumination.“Tell them,”Roosevelt said,“that in buildings where they have to keep the work going to put something across the windows.”31.What is the author's main purpose in writing the passage?A. To show the intellectual level of most Americans.B. To criticize wordy writing.C. To inform readers of the American writing style.D. To describe the best way of communication.32.The reason why the author quotes Roosevelt is to ____.A. provide evidence for the government documentB. reveal the hidden power of wordsC. give an example of the authority's role during the crisisD. show how simply the blackout order could have been stated33.According to the passage, the airline pilot avoids using the word“storm”because the word____.A. may frighten the passengersB. is ambiguousC. is too ordinary.D. sounds important34.The author gives the example of the president of Princeton in order to show that____.A. educated people usually communicate clearlyB. educated people tend to act like leadersC. simplicity is something easily forgotten by leaders or educated peopleD. simplicity is not suitable for the style of leaders or educated people35.Which of the following words is NOT negatively slanted?A. ClutterB. JargonC. DecipherD. BrochurePassage 4When I first considered becoming a college professor, tenure was not an attraction or even an issue. I was drawn to the profession by the work and the environment. Even after earning a Ph.D.,7spending time working in Washington D.C., and finally getting my first teaching job in public administration, I was not particularly concerned with tenure. I now work at a regional institution that requires an attainable balance between teaching, research, and service. I have always been a hard worker and see no reason to stop.But my vision of tenure has changed, I do not want to always by the same kind of professor I am now. Now, I am working on articles, course preparations, learning the details of the curriculum so I can advise students, and building institutional knowledge by serving on university committees. Today, my productivity is high and I focus on “collecting beans,”tomorrow, I would like to focus on quality.Whether tenure can give me the opportunity to focus on quality is questionable, but the idea of longevity is a concept that seems to have broad acceptance in most professions. My friends w ho became lawyers and accountants spend their time talking about becoming partners; medical doctors talk about establishing a practice; civil servants are protected by the merit system. The professionals in these fields serve a probationary period(试用期) and demonstrate competence to attain a certain level of freedom in their fields. After that, we expect that their professionalism can be used to serve society.Are college professors and universities different from lawyers, law firms, and the American Bar Association or doctors, practices, and the American Medical Association? The answer is both yes and no. Rarely does one hear about a professor being brought to court for malpractice. Still, the college professors I know work long hours, serve arduous, poorly-paid probationary periods, are dedicated to their students and their fields and do not want to work in another profession after they have arrived in this one. Thus tenure is often seen as the reward for years of struggle. Tenure, therefore, has become something important to me, specifically as a way to become firmly established in my profession.36.What does “tenure”probably mean in the passage?A. The reward to a lawyer or an accountant for his or her hard work.B. The right to keep one's job at a university until retirement.C. The chance of being promoted to a higher administrative position.D. The possibility of establishing one's own practice after a probationary period.37.By “I do not want to always be the same kind of professor I am now,”the author means that______.A. he is thinking of leaving his present jobB. he does not really enjoy writing articles or preparing for coursesC. he wants to do something more important and worthwhileD. he does not like the teaching environment any more838.In the second paragraph, “collecting beans”is nearest in meaning to ______.A.“making significant contributions”B.“making small achievements”C.“enjoying the rewards of hard work”D.“gaining greater professional competence”39.Which of the following is NOT true according to the passage?A. The writer is not sure that tenure would let him focus on quality.B. Y oung lawyers look forward to sharing the ownership of the firm they work for.C. College professors have small salaries until their probationary period is over.D. College professors may consider working in some other professions if they are not properlyrewarded.40.The writer mentions lawyers and accountants in order to ______.A. explain why he chose teaching as his careerB. illustrate how other professionals view their workC. prove that professors and other professionals have the same idea about qualityD. show that college professors' expectation of job security is reasonableⅢ.SKIMMING AND SCANNINGIn this part there are 3 reading passages followed by 10 questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are 4 choices marked A,B,C and D. Skim or scan the passages, then decide on the best answer and write the corresponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET.(10 points, 1 point each)Passage 1Nurse Kettle took the river path. Dusk had fallen over the valley and as she descended into it her own footfall sounded unnaturally loud on the firm turf. Thump, Thump, Thump, she went, down the hillside. Were those only her footsteps? She stopped dead, tilted her head and listened. Only occasional rural sounds disturbed the quiet of nightfall. She could actually hear the cool voice of the stream.She did not cross Harper's Bridge but followed a rough path along the right bank of the river, past a group of alders and another of willows, this second group, extending in a sickle-shaped mass from the water's edge into Harper's Meadow, rose up in the dusk. She could smell willow leaves and wet soil. As sometimes happens when we are solitary, she had the sensation of being observed but she was not a fanciful woman and soon dismissed the feeling.“It's turned much cooler,”she thought.A cry of mourning, intolerably loud, rose from beyond the willows and hung on the night air. A9brown bird whirred out of the thicket close to her face and the cry broke and moved again gently in several different directions. It was the howl of a dog. She pushed through the thicket into a clearing by the river and found the body of Colonel Carter with his dog Skip bedside him, mourning him.41.Why did Nurse Kettle suddenly stop?A. She thought she was dying.B. She wondered if she was alone.C. She wanted to hear the sound of the stream.D. She thought she heard a voice.42.Which direction did Nurse Kettle take when she reached Harper’s Bridge?A. She crossed it and continued along the right bank.B. She didn't cross it and turned away from the trees.C. She followed a path through some tress.D. She followed a path by the river bank.43.What caused Nurse Kettle to feel that she was being watched?A. The strange shape in the mist.B. The damp smell of the wet earth.C. A sense of not being alone.D. A drop in the temperature.44.Where did Nurse Kettle discover the body of Colonel Carter?A. In some thick bushes.B. In the river with his dog.C. Among the willow trees.D. In an opening beyond the bushes.Passage 2The idea of “a chain of stores,”buying directly from the manufacturer in large quantities and selling in many different places throughout the country, had its beginning with Woolworth, Kress, Kresge, and others who followed them. They were the forerunners of the large retail chain and department stores. These men had the vision to see that the more the manufacturers produced, the greater would be the saving to the consumer.Frank Woolworth was born in the town of Rodman in New Y ork State, in the year 1855. He had a poverty-stricken childhood, which meant hardly enough to eat, one pair of boots a year, and never a warm coat for the winter. Frank did not like farming. He dreamed of being a railroad engineer. Later, he changed his ambition and wanted to become a merchant.When Frank Woolworth was a young man, apprenticeship was still in existence, particularly in the eastern part of the United States. A boy was taken into a business to learn a trade, or to learn how10to conduct the business. He was considered to be worth very little to the owner during his learning period. Sometimes, the apprentice would be given his board and a room. The businessman felt that he was doing something worthwhile for the young man he took as an apprentice. He reasoned that it was like sending the young man to a school and paying his tuition.Woolworth managed to take a short commercial course which he knew he needed to become a merchant. At first, he was given a small wage of three dollars and fifty cents a week in the firm of Moore and Smith. After a while Woolworth came to the conclusion that while he was not a good salesman, he could trim the store and dress the windows to attract customers. In time, he worked up to six dollars a week. Another merchant offered him ten dollars a week and Woolworth decided that it was enough to marry on. Unfortunately, his new employer was not interested in having his windows dressed. And after a week or two of Woolworth's poor salesmanship, he reduced his wages to eight dollars a week.With a wife to support now, Woolworth decided to try farming. He bought a farm on mortgage and he and his wife raised chickens. But in a short time farming bored him. Besides, Moorc and Smith asked him to return to his job. They found that they needed Woolworth as a window trimmer, to attract customers. When they offered him the job at ten dollars a week, Woolworth went back to working in the store.45.One thing that a store chain can do but an independent storekeeper cannot do is to ______.A. hold salesB. competeC. advertiseD. buy in large quantities46.Frank Woolworth had ability in ______.A. farmingB. salesmanshipC. dressing store windowsD. bargaining47.Woolworth's first ambition was to become ______.A. a farmerB. a railroad engineerC. a merchantD. a designerPassage 3More and more residences, businesses, and even government agencies are using telephone answering machines to take messages or give information or instructions. Sometimes these machines give confusing instructions, or play messages that are difficult to understand. If you make telephone calls, you need to be ready to respond if you get a recording.The most common machine is the type used in residences. If you call a home where there is a telephone answering machine in operation you will hear several rings and then a recorded message that usually says something like this:“Hello. We can't come to the phone right now. If you want us to call you back, please leave your name and number after the beep.”Then you will hear a11“beep,”which is a brief, high-pitched tone. After the beep, you can say who you are, whom you want to speak to, and what number the person should call to reach you, or you can leave a message. Some telephone answering machines record for only 20 or 30 seconds after the beep, so you must respond quickly.Some large businesses and government agencies are using telephone answering machines to provide information on topics about which they receive a large volume of inquires. Using these systems requires you to have a touch-tone phone(a phone with buttons rather than a rotary dial). The voice on the machine will tell you to push a certain button on your telephone if you want information on Topic A, another button for Topic B, and so on. Y ou listen until you hear the topic you want to learn about, and then you push the appropriate button. After making your selection, you will hear a recorded message on the topic.48.In the passage, the writer elaborates on ______.A. the problems of telephone answering machinesB. the beep of the telephone answering machinesC. touch-tone phonesD. how to use telephone answering machines49.“Beep”is a brief, high-pitched tone used ______.A. to urge the caller to speak more quicklyB. to urge the caller to respond quicklyC. as a signal to remind the caller of the time leftD. as a signal to remind the caller that he may leave a message50.Which of the following would be the best title of this passage?A. Directions of Telephone Answering MachinesB. Advantages of Telephone Answering MachinesC. Know-how of Telephone Answering MachinesD. Problems of Telephone Answering MachinesPART TWO (30 POINTS)Ⅳ.WORD FORMATIONSComplete each of the following sentences with the proper form of the word in the brackets. Write your answers on the ANSWER SHEET.(10 points, 1 point each)51.(short) The drop in the birth rate 20 years ago has created a severe ______ of workers.52.(strong) Fresh evidence has greatly ______ the case against him.53.(grow) The US portion of the Internet is experiencing rapid ______ in the number ofnetworks connected to it.54.(courage) I want to thank everyone who has ______ and supported me.55.(increase) As resources become______ scarce, choices have to be made and priorities set.56.(memory) They listen to stories, ______ nursery rhymes, read picture books and gain other12。
全国2014年4月自考高级英语试题和答案
1.With his last ______ , he murmured the name of the person who murdered him.
A.gaspB.choke
C.exhaleD.respiration
正确答案:A(1分)
2.The teenager’s ______ of the pop star worried her parents.
3.第二部分为非选择题。必须注明大、小题号,使用0.5毫米黑色字迹签字笔作答。
4.合理安排答题空间。超出答题区域无效。
第一部分选择题
I.Each of the following sentences is given four of words or expressions.Choose the right one to complete the sentence and blacken the corresponding letter on your Answer Sheet. (15 points, 1 point for each)
英语(一)真题2014年04月
英语(一)真题2014年04月(总分:100.00,做题时间:90分钟)一、第一部分:阅读判断(总题数:1,分数:10.00)Away from HomeCristobal Martin was born in Granada, Spain, 38 years ago. "Granada is the most beautiful city in the world," says Mr. Martin. "Its sun is warm and its air is clear." Today, Mr. Martin works in Germany, where the weather is often cold and rainy. But in Germany, he works in a factory and makes a much better pay. "In Granada, there is very little industry. I was only a farm worker. When the German company came and offered me a job, I took it right away." Mr. Martin works in a chemical factory. He works from 7:00 am to 4:00 pm. From 10:00 pm to 1:00 am, he has another job cleaning out the office of a doctor in his neighborhood.Mr. Martin does not speak much German. "I wish I had time to go to school and learn more. It would be easier to tive here. I have sat with the same men at lunch every day for four years, and we never talk to each other. They think of me as a "foreigner"," he says.After work, Mr. Martin rides home on the bicycle he brought with him from Spain. "I live in a small room that I don"t like very much. But I know that a better room is not why I came to Germany." Mr. Martin hopes that in two years he will have enough money to return home. "I want to open up a small shop, find a wife, and have a satisfactory life for me and my family."Mr. Martin lives in a neighborhood with Italians and Spanish people. "We think alike," he says, "and we don"t mind the noise of the wives and children that the Germans complain about. I am thankful for the jobs Germany has given me. But Germany is not the proper place for me. It is not my home."(分数:10.00)(1).The weather in Granada is cold and rainy.(分数:1.00)A.TrueB.False √C.Not Given解析:[考点] 正确理解文意[解析] 根据文章第一段第2、3句可知,Granada是一个温暖而干净的地方。
全国2014年4月高等教育自学考试综合英语(一)试题
全国2014年4⽉⾼等教育⾃学考试综合英语(⼀)试题 课程代码:00794 请考⽣按规定⽤笔将所有试题的答案涂、写在答题纸上。
选择题部分 注意事项: 1.答题前,考⽣务必将⾃⼰的考试课程名称、姓名、准考证号⽤⿊⾊字迹的签字笔或钢笔填写在答题纸规定的位置上。
2.每⼩题选出答案后,⽤2B铅笔把答题纸上对应题⽬的答案标号涂⿊。
如需改动,⽤橡⽪擦⼲净后,再选涂其他答案标号。
不能答在试题卷上。
Ⅰ.语法和词汇填空。
阅读下⾯的句⼦或对话,从A、B、C和D四个选项中选出⼀个能填⼊空⽩处的选项,并在答题纸上将该项的字母涂⿊。
错涂、多涂或未涂均⽆分。
(本⼤题共20⼩题,每⼩题1分,共20分) 1. I can’t help wondering ________ that has made her so excited.A. what it isB. how it isC. what is itD. how is it 2.________ his leg was badly injured, the boy managed to attend class every day.A. IfB. UnlessC. AlthoughD. Because 3. Some 40 percent of the hired hands left before they ________ their term of service.A. finishB. finishedC. would finishD. have finished 4. His best novel was written in ________ he called the “sweet new style” of the language.A. thatB. whereC. whatD. which 5. I think if I ________ stay in Italy for another three months, we, Jim and I, might become good friends.A. willB. shallC. wouldD. were to 6. When I arrived she greeted me at the door, her kids all ________ behind.A. standingB. stoodC. have been standingD. were standing 7. Across the continent of South America ________ the Amazon River.A. lieB. liesC. is lyingD. lying 8. According to a recent official report, Britain’s economy grew ________ the first quarter of the year.A. half as fast asB. half faster thanC. half fast asD. as half fast as 9. Mr. Smith fully shares the view of the speaker ________ every man is as good as his neighbor.A. whichB. whomC. whoD. that 10. Henry’s plan was ________ the couple to dinner at a nice restaurant and then ask them for their forgiveness.A. invitingB. invitedC. to inviteD. going to invite 11. Most students make a study plan ________ the beginning of the new term.A. onB. inC. fromD. at 12. The family found it hard to ________ from the traditions of their own country and adapt to the new environment.A. break awayB. break downC. break outD. break up 13. Three years ________ a long time to be cut off from contact with your friends.A. areB. wereC. isD. be 14. I wonder why Alice ________ to us recently. We should have heard from her by now.A. hasn’t writtenB. hadn’t writtenC. didn’t writeD. doesn’t write 15. No fund has been provided to build a system ________ reading fingerprints more efficiently.A. good atB. keen onC. concerned forD. capable of 16. Drying is the oldest type of food storage. Drying fruit sometimes ________ a completely new product.A. turns intoB. results inC. turns fromD. results from 17. The police with a group of experts arrived at the ________ of the accident in ten minutes.A. sightB. pointC. sceneD. space 18. The governor spoke to the earthquake victims, ________them that everything would be done to help them rebuild their homes.A. providingB. assuringC. comfortingD. advising 19. In many countries, there aren’t sufficient water resources ________ for future development.A. offeredB. providedC. existentD. available 20. The flight has been delayed for four hours ________ the foggy weather.A. for fear ofB. owing toC. for the sake ofD. according to Ⅱ.阅读理解。
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全国2014年4月高等教育自学考试英语阅读(一)试题课程代码:00595本试卷满分100分,考试时间150分钟.考生答题注意事项:1.本卷所有试题必须在答题卡上作答。
答在试卷上无效。
试卷空白处和背面均可作草稿纸。
2.第一部分为选择题。
必须对应试卷上的题号使用28铅笔将“答题卡”的相应代码涂黑。
3.第二部分为非选择题。
必须注明大、小题号,使用0.5毫米黑色字迹签字笔作答。
4.合理安排答题空间。
超出答题区域无效。
第一部分选择题I. CAREFUL READINGRead the following passages carefully. Decide on the best answer and blacken the corresponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET. (40 points, 2 points each)Passage 1Questions 1 to 5 are based on the following passage.The passengers on the bus watched sympathetically as the young woman with the white cane made her way cautiously up the steps. She paid the driver and then, using her hands to feel the location of the seats, settled into one. She placed her briefcase on her lap and rested her cane against her leg.It had been a year since Susan, thirty-four, became blind. As the result of a medical accident she was sightless, suddenly thrown into a world of darkness, anger, frustration and self-pity. All she could cling to was her husband Mark.Mark was an Air Force officer and he loved Susan with all his heart. When she first lost her sight, he watched her sink into despair and he became determined to use every means to help his wife.Finally, Susan felt ready to return to her job, but how would she get there? She used to take the bus, but she was now too frightened to get around the city by herself. Mark volunteered to ride the bus with Susan each morning and evening until she got the hang of (摸清情况) it. And that was exactly what happened.For two weeks, Mark, military uniform and all, accompanied Susan to and from work each day. He taught her how to rely on her other senses, specifically her hearing, to determine where she was and how to adapt to her new environment. He helped her befriend the bus drivers who could watch out for her, and save her a seat.Each morning they made the journey together, and Mark would take a taxi back to his office. Although the routine of going back and forth was costly, Mark knew it was only a matter of time before Susan would be able to ride the bus on her own.Finally, Susan decided that she was ready to try the trip on her own. Monday morning arrived. Before she left, she embraced her husband tightly. Her eyes filled with tears of gratitude for his loyalty, his patience, and his love. She saidgood-bye and, for the first time, they went their separate ways. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday... Each day on her own went perfectly, and a wild gaiety (快乐) took hold of Susan. She was doing it! She was going to work all by herself!.1. When Susan got on the bus, the passengers ______.A. admired herB. stared curiously at herC. ignored herD. felt sorry for her2. Which of the following is true of Mark?A. He kept confidence in Susan.B. He felt confused with Susan.C. He depended more on Susan.D. He was tired of Susan.3. At the beginning of her sightless life, Susan was seized by anger, self-pity and ______.A. irritationB. hesitationC. hopelessnessD. indifference4. Which of the following is true?A. Mark realized it would take a long time for Susan to recover her sight.B. Mark knew that Susan would get to work by herself sooner or later.C. Mark hated to leave poor Susan alone even for one minute.D. Mark loved the routine of accompanying Susan to work.5. The passage can be used as an example of ______.A. honestyB. sympathyC. diligenceD. determinationPassage 2Questions 6 to 10 are based on the following passage.Most people claim that we should judge others on the basis of how they act, not how they look. However, the reality is quite opposite. Appearance is especially important in the early stages of a relationship.The influence of physical attractiveness begins early in life. Infants as young as six months prefer images of attractive faces to less appealing ones. From age five on, overweight boys are viewed by peers as less attractive; tall, thin ones are judged as uncommunicative and nervous; and muscular and athletic youngsters are seen as outgoing, active, and popular. The same principle continues into adult life. Handsome men and beautiful women are seen as more sensitive, kind, interesting, strong, calm, modest, sociable, outgoing, and exciting than their less attractive counterparts. Adults are more likely to interact with strangers who they view as attractive. Senior citizens also rate good-looking people as more desirable than those who are less attractive.Although we might assume that attractive people are radically different from those who are less attractive, the truth is that we view the familiar as beautiful. Langlois and Roggman presented students with two types of photos: some were images of people from North European, Asian, and Latino backgrounds, while others were computer-generated images that combined the characteristics of several individuals. Surprisingly, the students consistently preferred the composite photos of both men and women. When the features of eight or more individuals were combined into one image, the students rated the picture as more attractive than the features of a single person or of a smaller combination of people. Thus, we seem to bedrawn to people who represent the most attractive qualities of ourselves and those people aren't different from the rest of us.Even if your appearance isn't beautiful by social standards, consider these encouraging facts: first, ordinary-looking people with pleasing personalities are likely to be judged as being attractive; second, physical factors become less important as a relationship progress. As Hamachek puts it, “Attractive features may open doors, but apparently, it takes more than physical beauty to keep them open.”6. “The same principle” (Para. 2) refers to the principle that ______.A. children are more attractive than adultsB. attractive people are perceived as desirableC. the early stages of a relationship are importantD. the influence of appearance begins early in life7. The third paragraph emphasizes in part the importance of ______.A. familiarityB. differenceC. individualityD. consistency8. According to the passage, the more composite features people have, ______.A. the more unique they areB. the less ordinary they areC. the more attractive they areD. the less beautiful they are9. In his statement, Hamachek is giving emphasis to ______.A. social standardsB. composite featuresC. good characterD. physical attraction10. The best title for the passage is ______.A. Beauty and AgeB. Appearance and RelationshipC. Standards of Social BehaviorD. Features of Physical AttractivenessPassage 3Questions 11 to 15 are based on the following passage.The public schools of the United States—elementary, secondary, and higher—have a history, and it is the social history of the United States: the decades before the Civil War, in which the elementary or “common schools” were reformed; the decades surrounding the turn of the twentieth century, in which the secondary schools “welcomed” the “children of the plain people”; and the post-World War II decades, which found the public colleges and universities flooded non-traditional students—those traditionally excluded from higher education by sex, race, and class.In each of these periods, the quantitative expansion of the student population was matched by a qualitative transformation of the enlarged institutions. The common schools of the mid-1800s were charged with reforming the moral character of the children of failed artisans (工匠) and farmers; the expanded high schools at the turn of the century with preparing their poor, working-class, and immigrant teenagers for future lives in city and factory; the “open-access” public institutions in the postwar period with moving their students off the unemployment lines and into lower-level white-collarpositions.The common schools, the high schools, the colleges and universities—all in their own times—were expanded and transformed so that they might better maintain social order and increase material productivity. But no matter how enlarged or reformed, they could not do the jobs expected of them: they could not solve the economic, social, and human problems brought about by uncontrolled urbanization and industrialization within the context of the private property system. The schooling reforms succeeded only in shifting the discussion and action from the social and productive system to the people who were now held responsible for not fitting into it.11. American education in the post-World War II decades focused mostly on ______.A. early childhood educationB. elementary school educationC. secondary school educationD. college education12. The turn-of-the-century American education dealt partly with the problem of ______.A. failed farmersB. unsuccessful artisansC. immigrant teenagersD. lower-level white-collar workers13. It is implied in the passage that women began to be educated in large numbers ______.A. after the Civil WarB. at the turn of the 20th centuryC. before World War IID. after World War II14. One of the purposes for public school reformation is ______.A. to increase material productivityB. to impose the quality of educationC. to urbanize rural areas in the United StatesD. to promote industrialization in the United States15. The author believes that public schools ______.A. changed American political systemB. could not solve American problemsC. led to social problems in the United StatesD. could not improve qualitatively in the United StatesPassage 4Questions 16 to 20 are based on the following passage.Historical periods are dominated by distinct sets of ideas which form the general spirit of a period in history. Greek philosophy, Christianity, Renaissance thought, the Scientific Revolution, and the Enlightenment are examples of sets of ideas that dominated their historical periods. The changes from one period to the next are usually rather gradual.; other changes—more abrupt—are often referred to as revolutions. The most far-reaching of all these intellectual changes was the Darwinian revolution. The worldview formed by any thinking person in the Western world after 1859, when On the Origin of Species was published, was by necessity quite different from a worldview formed before 1859. It is almost impossible for a modern person to project back to the early half of the nineteenth century and reconstruct the thinking of this pre-Darwinian period, for the impact of Darwinism on our views has been so great.The intellectual revolution brought about by Darwin went far beyond the realm of biology, causing the overthrow of some of the most basic beliefs of his age. For example, Darwin rejected the belief in the individual creation of each species, establishing in its place the concept that all of life descended from a common ancestor. By extension, he introduced the idea that humans were not the special products of creation but evolved according to principles that operate everywhere else in the living world. Darwin upset current notions of a perfectly designed natural and gentle world and substituted in their place the concept of a struggle for survival. Victorian notions of progress and perfectibility were seriously weakened by Darwin's demonstration that evolution brings about change and adaptation, but it does not necessarily lead to progress, and it never leads to perfection.Darwin would be remembered as an outstanding scientist even if he had never written a word about evolution. Indeed, some people believe that Darwin’s most original contribution to biology was not the theory of evolution but his series of books on experimental botany published near the end of his life. This achievement is little known among non-biologists, and the same is true for his equally outstanding work on the adaptation of flowers and on animal psychology, as well as his imaginative work on earthworms. Darwin also attacked important problems with extraordinary originality, thereby becoming the founder of several now well-recognized separate disciplines. Darwin was the first person to work out a sound theory of classification, which is still used by most experts today.16. The author considers the change caused by Darwin’s On the Origin of Species ______.A. gradualB. abruptC. religiousD. philosophical17. The influence of Darwinism has been so strong that it is difficult to ______.A. know how people looked at the world before 1859B. imagine people’s worldview after 1859C. disregard the implications of his theoryD. know what Victorian society was like18. Darwin believed that all species in the world ______.A. were created individuallyB. sprang from the same originC. became increasingly betterD. shared the same pace of progress19. It can be concluded from the passage that Darwin was ______.A. a modest scholarB. a born thinkerC. an original scientistD. a practical theorist20. The author intends to say in the last paragraph that ______.A. Darwin did outstanding work apart from his theory of evolutionB. non-biologists know very little about Darwin's theory of evolutionC. scholars failed to recognize Darwin’s contributions for a long timeD. Darwin's most outstanding contribution is his theory of classificationII. SPEED READINGSkim or scan the following passages, and then decide on the best answer and blacken the corresponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET. (10 points, 1 point each)Passage 5Questions 21 to 25 are based on the following passage.Potatoes are a tuber-producing crop originally grown in the Americas. Over 200 varieties of wild potatoes grow from what is now Colorado to what are now Chile and Argentina. The native peoples of the Andean region of South America were the first to domesticate potatoes and to cultivate them as a food crop. The earliest potato, found in an archaeological site in central Peru, has been dated back to about 8000 B.C.. Scientists believe that American Indians began domesticating potatoes at the end of the Ice Age. Four thousand years later, native peoples livingin the Andean highlands had begun to rely on potatoes as a major part of their diet. By about 2000 B.C.. Indians in the coastal region of what is now Peru were also cultivating this crop extensively.During the reign of the Inca, who established their empire in what is now Peru in about A.D. 1000, American Indian farmers were growing not only white potatoes but red, yellow, black, blue, green, and brown ones as well. They were deliberately developing potatoes of varying sizes and shapes that would do well under a number of growing conditions. Because potatoes were easily grown, flourish in a number of climates, and high in vitamin C, they were an efficient way of meeting dietary needs.In 1531, when Spanish conqueror Francisco Pizarro landed in what is now Peru, the native Andean peoples had developed about 3,000 types of potatoes and had also invented a method to freeze-dry them for storage. The Inca, who called potatoes papas, ate boiled potatoes as a vegetable and also made a kind of unleavened potato bread made from flour that had been ground from freeze-dried potatoes. They also added this potato flour to soups and stews and made porridge from it.Pedro de Cieza, who traveled with Francisco Pizarro's expedition, compared potatoes to chestnuts. Because the tubers grew underground and were small, the Spaniards believed potatoes were truffles (块菌) and began calling them tartuffo. When English explorer Sir Francis Drake crossed the Strait of Magellan, he ate potatoes on the coast of what is now Chile that same year. Yet, historians are uncertain exactly whether the Spaniards or the English brought potatoes to Europe.21. The earliest potato was found in ______.A. PeruB. ChileC. ArgentinaD. Colorado22. Potatoes became the major source of food for American Indians about ______.A. 8000B.C. B. 4000 B.C.C. 2000 B.C.D.A.D. 100023. American Indians developed potatoes of different sizes and shapes to ______.A. meet different dietary needsB. get potatoes of different colorsC. suit various growing conditionsD. store them in convenient places24. American Indians freeze-dried potatoes so that they could be ______.A. stewedB. groundC. storedD. boiled25. Which of the following is true?A. Historians believe that the English brought potatoes to Europe.B. Sir Francis Drake ate potatoes in what is now Peru.C. Francisco Pizarro compared potatoes to chestnuts.D. The Spaniards thought that potatoes were truffles.Passage 6Questions 26 to 30 are based on the following passage.The blogging craze of a couple of years ago, when it was estimated that ten new blogs were started somewhere in the world every minute, now seems to have died down a bit. Yet thousands of blogs—probably the better ones—remain. Blogs are now no longer seen as the exclusive possession of geeks, and are now seen as important and influential sources of news and opinions. So many people read blogs now that it has even been suggested that some blogs may have been powerful enough to influence the result of the recent U.S. election.Blogs are very easy to set up. All you need is a computer, an internet connection and the desire to write something. A blog differs from a traditional internet site in two ways. First, a blog is one page consisting mostly of texts, though a few pictures are sometimes provided. Second, and more importantly, a blog is a space for people to respond to what you write. The best blogs are similar to online discussions, where people write in response to what the blogger has written. Blogs are regularly updated—busy blogs are updated every day, or even every few hours.Not all blogs are about politics, however. There are blogs about music, films, sports, books—any subject you can imagine has its enthusiasts typing away and giving their opinions to fellow enthusiasts or anyone else who cares to read their opinions.But how influential, or important, is the blogosphere really? One problem with blogs is that many people who read and write them seem only to communicate with each other. When people talk about the influence of the blogosphere, they do not take into account the millions of people around the world who are not bloggers, never read blogs, and don't even have access to a computer, let alone a good internet connection.Sometimes, it seems that the blogosphere exists only to influence itself, or that its influence is limited to what is actually quite a small community. Blogs seem to promise a virtual democracy—in which anyone can say anything they like, and have their opinions heard—but who is actually listening to these opinions? Little hard evidence shows that blogs have influenced people in the way that traditional mass media such as television and newspapers are able to do.26. Now the blogging craze ______.A. is emergingB. has become less intenseC. keeps risingD. remains the same as before27. Blogs differ from traditional internet sites in that ______.A. texts are mostly shortB. they present picturesC. they are daily updatedD. readers can make comments28. One problem with blogs is that bloggers fail to consider ______.A. non-bloggersB. virtual democracyC. U.S. politiciansD. internet connection29. In the author's opinion, the influence of the blogosphere is ______.A. importantB. powerfulC. positiveD. limited30. According to the author, it is not difficult to ______.A. set up blogsB. make blogs involve everyoneC. show the importance of blogosphereD. make blogs surpass traditional mass media非选择题部分注意事项:用黑色字迹的签字笔或钢笔将答案写在答题纸上,不能答在试题卷上。