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大学六级模拟968及答案解析.doc

1、大学六级模拟 968 及答案解析(总分:710.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、Part Writing(总题数:1,分数:106.50)1.Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a short essay entitled A Harmonious Society in My Mind. You should write at least 150 words but no more than 200 words. Write your essay on Answer Sheet 1. (分数:106.50

2、)_二、Part Listening Com(总题数:0,分数:0.00)三、Section A(总题数:2,分数:104.00)Questions 1 to 4 are based on the conversation you have just heard. (分数:52.00)A.Play basketball with his colleagues.B.Go to hospital and have a physical check.C.Lose weight and strengthen the muscles.D.Compete in a cycling race with co

3、lleagues.A.He should start with a light workout.B.He should go to have a check-up.C.He should eat less fatty foods.D.He should visit a fitness trainer.A.It helps improve the physical health.B.It is good for a sound sleep.C.It helps develop mental toughness.D.It helps lose weight.A.He wakes up very e

4、arly.B.He stays up watching TV.C.He often plays baseball.D.He hates fruits and vegetables.Questions 5 to 8 are based on the conversation you have just heard. (分数:52.00)A.A literature professor.B.An academic advisor.C.Dean of the English Department.D.A Doctor of Applied Linguistics.A.To inquire about

5、 switching majors.B.To find a helping supervisor.C.To make up the remaining credits.D.To apply for a master“s degree.A.He can“t catch up with his classmates.B.He finds the English course load too heavy.C.He is not interested in his present major.D.He is good at Applied Linguistics.A.Twenty-four cred

6、its.B.Twelve credits.C.Three Credits.D.Thirty-six credits四、Section B(总题数:2,分数:73.50)Questions 9 to 12 are based on the passage you have just heard. (分数:42.00)A.It allows one to show his personal information.B.It offers only the children“s personal information.C.It is against parents“ will to educate

7、 the kids.D.It only offers stories about other people.A.It“s a reliable way to make friends online.B.It is convenient to get in touch with their parents.C.It is regarded as a way of judging high school popularity.D.It is regarded as a way of judging subject scores.A.There are too many complaints fro

8、m net users.B.Hackers“ attack of MySpace cannot be forbidden.C.Parents cannot help checking children“s information.D.It is easy for trouble-makers to do harm to children.A.Do parents like MySpace?B.Is MySpace good or bad?C.MySpace is the home of children.D.MySpace is the bank of children“s informati

9、on.Questions 13 to 15 are based on the passage you have just heard. (分数:31.50)A.They may feel exhausted.B.They may feel very nervous.C.They may have heartache.D.They may suffer a cold.A.The building method the builders use to save energy.B.The limit of the flow of air between inside and outside.C.Th

10、e use of man-made building materials.D.The limit of air-flow and the man-made materials.A.To let out clean gas.B.To take in harmful gas.C.To use various plants.D.To let the air flow freely.五、Section C(总题数:3,分数:71.00)Questions 16 to 18 are based on the recording you have just heard. (分数:21.30)A.Culti

11、vating creative talents.B.Producing university professors.C.Fostering industrial leaders.D.Nurturing great artists.A.All-around development.B.Creativity for the future.C.Basic social skills.D.Academic capability.A.Very normal in the 21st century.B.Absolutely correct forever.C.Profoundly wrong for no

12、w.D.Rather absurd in the 19th century.Questions 19 to 22 are based on the recording you have just heard. (分数:28.40)A.It“s a commercial plane with two captains.B.It“s a newly produced American plane.C.It“s a fighter armed with high technology.D.It“s an auto-driven plane without pilots.A.They are only

13、 in restricted use by army.B.They early passengers but no pilots.C.They drive automatically with pilots in them.D.They themselves can handle anything wrong.A.They“re similar to a radio-controlled model aircraft.B.They fly throughout the world freely just like eagles.C.They can autonomously comply wi

14、th the air rules.D.They are more flexible and faster than bigger aircraft.A.They are always safer than manned planes.B.They are faster than many helicopters.C.They can do many jobs at a lower cost.D.They can carry out all jobs conveniently.Questions 23 to 25 are based on the recording you have just

15、heard. (分数:21.30)A.The advanced science and high technology.B.The close connections across the globe.C.The well-educated young generation.D.The wise policy made by governments.A.Good relationship with the managers of the company.B.Willingness to work overtime for the company.C.Adaption to business t

16、rips around the world.D.Overseas experience with languages and cultures.A.Finding a good job in a famous international company.B.Shaping the future of your country and the whole world.C.Bringing honor to your family by the oversea study experience.D.Getting a Green Card to work and live in a foreign

17、 country.六、Part Reading Compr(总题数:0,分数:0.00)七、Section A(总题数:1,分数:35.50)That health and beauty are linked is not in doubt. But it comes as something of a surprise that who is 1 as beautiful depends not only on the health of a person but also on the average level of health in the place where she lives

18、. This, though, is the conclusion of a study just published in Biology Letters by Urszula Marcinkowska of the University of Turku, in Finland, and her 2 for Ms. Macinkowska has found that men in healthy countries think women with the most 3 face are the prettiest whilst those in unhealthy places pre

19、fer more masculine-looking ones. Ms Marcinkowska came to this conclusion by showing nearly 2,000 men from 28 countries various versions of the same female faces, 4 to look less or more feminine and thus 5 the effect of different levels of oestrogen and testosterone. Oestrogen promotes 6 such as larg

20、e eyes and full lips that are 7 feminine. Testosterone promotes 8 features, such as wide faces and strong chins. Previous studies have shown that women with feminine features are more fertile. A man“s 9 for them is thus likely to enhance his reproductive success. Ms Marcinkowska speculates that test

21、osterone-induced behavioral characteristics like 10 which might be expected to correlate with masculine-looking faces even in women (they certainly do in men), help in the competition for resources needed to sustain children once they are born. But why that should be particularly important in an unh

22、ealthy country is unclear. A. features B. refined C. feminine D. favorable E. modified F. perceived G. preference H. dominance I. genetically J. personality K. characteristically L. masculine M. valuable N. colleagues O. reflect(分数:35.50)八、Section B(总题数:1,分数:71.00)Triumph of the CityA. 243 million A

23、mericans crowd together in the 3 percent of the country that is urban. 36 million people live in and around Tokyo, the most productive metropolitan area in the world. Twelve million people reside in central Mumbai. On a planet with vast amounts of space, all of humanity could fit in Texas each of us

24、 with a personal townhouse, we choose cities. Although it has become cheaper to travel long distances, or to telecommute, more and more people are clustering closer and closer together in large metropolitan areas. Five million more people every month live in the cities of the developing world, and i

25、n 2011, more than half the world“s population is urban. B. Cities, the dense agglomerations (凝聚体) that dot the globe, have been engines of innovation since Plato and Socrates argued in an Athenian marketplace. The streets of Florence gave us the Renaissance, and the streets of Birmingham gave us the

26、 Industrial Revolution. The great prosperity of contemporary London and Tokyo comes from their ability to produce new thinking. Wandering these citieswhether down stone sidewalks or grid-cutting cross streets, around roundabouts or under freewaysis to study nothing less than human progress. C. In th

27、e richer countries of the West, cities have survived the end of the industrial age and are now wealthier, healthier, and more tempting than ever. In the world“s poorer places, cities are expanding enormously because urban density provides the clearest path from poverty to prosperity. Despite the tec

28、hnological breakthroughs that have caused the death of distance, it turns out that the world isn“t flat; it“s paved. D. The city has triumphed. But as many of us know from personal experience, sometimes city roads are paved to hell. The city may win, but too often its citizens seem to lose. Every ur

29、ban childhood is shaped by extraordinary people and experiencessome delicious, like the sense of power that comes from a preteen“s first subway trip alone; some less so, like a first exposure to urban gunfire. For every Fifth Avenue, there“s a Mumbai slum; for every Sorbonne, there“s a D.C. high sch

30、ool guarded by metal detectors. E. Indeed, for many Americans, the latter half of the twentieth centurythe end of the industrial agewas an education not in urban splendor (辉煌) but in urban squalor (惨状). How well we learn from the lessons our cities teach us will determine whether our urban species w

31、ill flourish in what can be a new golden age of the city. F. My passion for the urban world was inspired by my metropolitan childhood; I“ve spent my life trying to understand cities. That quest has been rooted in economic theory and data, but it has also meandered (漫步) through the histories of metro

32、politan areas and the everyday stories of those who live and work in them. I find studying cities so interesting because they pose fascinating, important, and often troubling questions. Why do the richest and poorest people in the world so often live side by side? How do once-mighty cities fall into

33、 disrepair? Why do so many artistic movements arise so quickly in particular cities at particular moments? Why do so many smart people enact so many foolish urban policies? G. There“s no better place to ponder these questions than what many consider to be the prototypical cityNew York. Native New Yo

34、rkers, like myself, may occasionally have a slightly exaggerated view of their city“s importance, but New York is still a model of urbanity and therefore an appropriate place to start our journey to cities across the world. Its story includes the past, present, and future of our urban centers, and p

35、rovides a springboard for many of the themes that will emerge from the pages and places ahead. H. If you stand on Forty-seventh Street and Fifth Avenue this Wednesday afternoon, you“ll be surrounded by people. Some are rushing uptown for a meeting or downtown to grab a drink. Others are walking east

36、 to enter the Grand Central Terminal, which has more platforms than any other train station in the world. Some people may be trying to buy an engagement ringafter all, forty-seventh Street is the nation“s premier market for jewels. There will be visitors gazing upwardsomething New Yorkers never doon

37、 their way from one landmark to another. If you imitate a tourist and look up, you“ll see two great ridges of skyscrapers framing the valley that is Fifth Avenue. I. Thirty years ago, New York City“s future looked far less bright. Like almost every colder, older city. The city“s subways and buses fe

38、lt out of date in a world being rebuilt around the car. The city“s port, once the glory of the Eastern seaboard, had sunk into irrelevance. Under the leadership of John Lindsay and Abe Beame, the city“s government had come near default despite having some of the highest taxes in the nation. Not just

39、 Jerry Ford, but history itself seemed to be telling New York City to drop dead. J. New York, or more properly New Amsterdam, was founded during an earlier era of globalization as a distant outpost of the Dutch West India Company. It was a trading village where a hodgepodge (大杂绘) of adventurers came

40、 to make fortunes swapping pearls for furs. Those Dutch settlers clustered together because proximity made it easier to exchange goods and ideas and because there was safety behind the town“s protective wall (now Wall Street). K. In the eighteenth century, New York passed Boston to become the Englis

41、h colonies, most important port; it specialized in shipping wheat and flour south to feed the sugar and tobacco colonies. During the first half of the nineteenth century, with business booming, New York“s population grew from sixty thousand to eight hundred thousand, and the city became America“s ur

42、ban giants. That population explosion was partly due to changes in transportation technology. At the start of the nineteenth century, ships were generally smallthree hundred tons was a normal sizeand, like smaller airplanes today, ideal for point-to-point trips, like Liverpool to Charlestown or Bost

43、on to Glasgow. Between 1800 and 1850, improvements in technology and finance brought forth larger ships that could carry bigger loads at faster speeds and lower cost. L. There was no percentage in having these huge ships traveling to every point along the American coast. Just like today“s Boeing 747

44、s, which land at major centers and transfer their passengers onto smaller planes that take them to their final destinations, the big ships came to one central bay and then transferred their goods to smaller vessels for delivery up and down the Eastern seaboard. New York was America“s super port, wit

45、h its central location, deep, protected harbor, and river access far into the inland. When America moved to a hub-and-spoke shipping system, New York became the natural hub.(分数:71.00)(1).Cheaper long-distance travel and telecommunication did not lead people to move away from the cities.(分数:7.10)(2).

46、The author considers New York as a proper place to start our trip to other cities because it is a model of urbanity.(分数:7.10)(3).When traveling through contemporary London and Tokyo, people learn a lot about human progress.(分数:7.10)(4).New York City seemed to drop dead thirty years ago.(分数:7.10)(5).

47、Cities in the world“s poorer places are experiencing great expansion because urban density facilitates the breaking away from poverty.(分数:7.10)(6).A mess of adventurers who wanted to make fortunes came to New York, the former trading village.(分数:7.10)(7).The lessons we draw from our cities will dete

48、rmine whether urban people will have a prosperous future.(分数:7.10)(8).In the 18th century, New York functioned as the most important port shipping food to feed the sugar and tobacco colonies.(分数:7.10)(9).The author“s metropolitan childhood inspired his enthusiasm for cities.(分数:7.10)(10).Between 180

49、0 and 1850, larger ships that could carry bigger loads at faster speeds and lower cost could be built due to improvements in technology and finance.(分数:7.10)九、Section C(总题数:0,分数:0.00)十、Passage One(总题数:1,分数:71.00)In a country with a shrinking population, the latest trend in Germany“s higher education is something of a mystery: the number of universities and academic programs is rising. The growth is the sharpest for professional graduate schools, where the number has soared from practically

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