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本文([外语类试卷]专业英语八级模拟试卷62及答案与解析.doc)为本站会员(eventdump275)主动上传,麦多课文库仅提供信息存储空间,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对上载内容本身不做任何修改或编辑。 若此文所含内容侵犯了您的版权或隐私,请立即通知麦多课文库(发送邮件至master@mydoc123.com或直接QQ联系客服),我们立即给予删除!

[外语类试卷]专业英语八级模拟试卷62及答案与解析.doc

1、专业英语八级模拟试卷 62及答案与解析 SECTION A MINI-LECTURE Directions: In this section you sill hear a mini-lecture. You will hear the lecture ONCE ONLY. While listening, take notes on the important points. Your notes will not be marked, but you will need them to complete a gap-filling task after the mini-lecture.

2、When the lecture is over, you will be given two minutes to check your notes, and another ten minutes to complete the gap-filling task on ANSWER SHEET ONE. Use the blank sheet for note-taking. 0 Food and Fitness: the American Obsession Americans seem to be always in a hurry, which has become one 【 1】

3、 【 1】_ _as national impatience. This impatience is not only obvious in the streets, but also evident in American eating habits. The 【 2】 _ 【 2】_ fast food chains like McDonalds and Kentucky, which can offer fast serv- ice, can best express this impatience. As for the popularity of these fast food ch

4、ains; “fast“ and“ instant“ are the very reasons. The salad bar fulfils the first 【 3】 _very well 【 3】_ and is thus welcomed. “Take Out“ food as an instant meal can be taken wherever you like, so it is very popular in American and have actually be- come an American way of life. To heat the instant fo

5、od, another invention to 【 4】 _the speed is the microwave oven. 【 4】 _ Americans eat abundant food in such an instant way that they tend to be 【 5】 _. As a result, Americans become 【 6】 _in an- 【 5】_ other problem-keeping beautiful and fit. Thus business to meet these 【 6】_ needs, like-books on diet

6、s and fitness, and Weight Watchers, develops very quickly and has made very great profits. Apart from being 【 7】 _, people would also like a firm body 【 7】_ and a young appearance, therefore, exercise has become another fixation in the last10 years. Many people, young or old, take exercises very ser

7、ious-ly. And both outdoor exercise and indoor exercise are very popular, and to meet the 【 8】 _need of exercise a full line of exercise equipment 【 8】_ is invented and offered. It seems that Americans have spent no little time on diets and fitness, but how is it so many Americans 【 9】 _fat? That s p

8、erhaps one of 【 9】_ the 【 10】 _of American society. However, facing to all kinds of 【 10】_ temptations, the optimistic Americans are slowly adapting the way they eat and live for a longer and healthier life. 1 【 1】 2 【 2】 3 【 3】 4 【 4】 5 【 5】 6 【 6】 7 【 7】 8 【 8】 9 【 9】 10 【 10】 SECTION B INTERVIEW

9、Directions: In this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow. Questions 1 to 5 are based on an interview. At the end of the interview you will be given 10 seconds to answer each of the following five questions. Now listen to the interview

10、. 11 Mr. Swift has marked some lines on the page because _. ( A) he thought Mr. Sun has written the letter well ( B) there is something wrong about the grammer ( C) they can be improved according to western culture ( D) these are not polite ways of expression 12 Which of the following did not occur

11、in the conversation? ( A) The year when Mr. Sun has graduated. ( B) How Mr. Sun left his school. ( C) The name of the school from which Mr. Sun has graduated. ( D) Mr. Sun s major in the school. 13 According to Mr. Swift ,which is the polite and appropriate way of writing? ( A) To fill the page with

12、 beautiful while extraneous expressions. ( B) To make things as easy as possible for your addressee. ( C) To express your thanks or apologies again and again. ( D) All of the above. 14 In the conversation, Mr. Sun said “Maybe I shall forget the whole thing“. What is the exact meaning? ( A) He thinks

13、 to write anotehr letter. ( B) He thinks to give up writing such a letter. ( C) He thinks to forget all about Mr. Swift s directons. ( D) He thinks to forget all about this unpleasant experience. 15 According to the conversation, an application letter should _. ( A) be a long one with all possible i

14、nformation about the applicant ( B) be a brief one with the purpose of writing made clear ( C) be a brief one with the purpose of writing made clear, together with a resume ( D) all of the above ways are welcome SECTION C NEWS BROADCAST Directions: In this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY.

15、 Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow. At the end of each news item, you will be given 10 seconds to answer the questions. 16 Gustavo Kuerten has won five titles in 2000, including _. ( A) the US Open ( B) the Australian Open ( C) the French Open ( D) the Hongkong Championship

16、17 Gustavo kuerten has won which one of the awards? ( A) The Fans Favourite Award. ( B) Most Improved Players. ( C) New Balls Please Player of the Year. ( D) Sports Most Quotable Player of the Year. 18 Which of the organizations offered a critique on March 11 of Torontos bid for the 2008 summer Olym

17、pic Games? ( A) The lO C ( B) The lOC executive committee. ( C) The IOCs technical evaluation team. ( D) The IOC committee. 19 The IOC committee was impressed with Torontos _. ( A) multibillion - dollar bid ( B) athlete - oriented focus ( C) plans for an Olympic park ( D) diversity of cultural backg

18、round 20 The same IOC team was set to visit _ other cities after visiting Toronto. ( A) two ( B) three ( C) four ( D) five 20 In a few weeks or so the wreckers will come. They will tear down the two venerable brick and brown stone mansions that have stood hard by the First Presbyterian Church in Wes

19、t Twelfth Street for more than 100 years. No. 12,nearest the churchyard, was built in 1849 for James W. Phillips, son of the Rev. William Wirt Phillips ,who held the pulpit next door from 1826 to 1865. No. 14 ,built at the same time as a twin, except for the interior, was the home of Charles C. Tabe

20、rs, a prosperous cotton merchant. The two buildings are the last remaining two town houses in this city of the many designed by Alexander Jackson Davis. A modest man, he conceded that the interiors of his Twelfth street designs were “remarkable“. Even in their last stages of neglect the unpracticed

21、eye can see that. They are lovely. The buildings had famous tenants, too, at one time or another. Thurlow Weed, nineteenth century war wick he was called that in his own day for his genius in moulding political careers lived in No. 12 from 1866 to 1882. Most of the important men and women of his tim

22、e were his guests there. Down the street lived Gen. Windfield Scott. Probably the chief feature of that old Weed house was the octagonal stairwell with the stained - glass skylight at the top. The stairwell in the other house oval, but it has the same glowing dome skylight. In both dwellings you fin

23、d rich stucco molding, handsome fireplaces, magnificent woods. Just outside the old Weed study there stood, in his lifetime, a handsome willow brought from St. Helena near the grave of Napoleon. It was uprooted long ago to make play place in the churchyard for the children of the church school. Inci

24、dently, after the old mansion come down, a new church school will rise on the spot. The Davis mansions are now a five -trap. The most famous dweller in No. 14 was John Rogers, a nineteenth -century sculptor, a kind of Edgar Guest who worked in stone. His studio was on the second floor. It looks toda

25、y pretty much as it did when he worked in it from 1888 to 1895 ,turning out such groups as “Checkers up at the Farm, “ Fetching the Doctor“. A part of his work are in the church office. Each has the Twelfth Street house address worked into it. Though church folk dislike the idea of having the old ma

26、nsion torn down. and architects in town frown on the notion, too, they know they must go. The place is sorely needed for the children. So, one by one, the master works of the great architects vanish from the city Davis did preliminary sketches for the old tombs, worked on the old Custom House, on ma

27、ny hospitals and colleages. All that will remain of his dreaming on paper, when the Twelfth Street Mansions go down in rubble, will be a few villas up in the Hudson River Valley. 21 The two houses were not _. ( A) of the same style ( B) designed by the same designer ( C) the same looking from the ou

28、tside ( D) the same looking from the inside 22 One of the proprietors was a _, the other a _. ( A) priest; merchant ( B) professer; merchant ( C) priest; doctor ( D) professer; doctor 23 Which one of the four figures was the designer of the two mansions? ( A) James W. Phillips. ( B) Alexander Jackso

29、n Davis. ( C) Thurlow Weed. ( D) John Rogers. 24 The chief feature of the two mansions was _. ( A) the stairwell and the skylight ( B) the rich stucco molding ( C) the handsome fireplaces ( D) the magnificent woods 25 Which of the following statements is not true? ( A) The old mansions will make pla

30、ce for a church school. ( B) The old mansions were the last remaining two town houses in the city of the many designed by Alex ander Jackson Davis. ( C) The old mansions had famous dwellers. ( D) The church folk liked the idea of having the old mansions torn down. 25 A battery-driven bus, which is n

31、ot only quiet and pollution-free but competitive with the conventional bus on cost and performance has been developed by a group of British companies. The prototype, fifty-passenger single-deck vehicle, is to go in operation in Manchester shortly, and discussions with the Department of the Environme

32、nt are expected to lead to a further batch of twenty going into regular passenger service in Manchester within two year and possibly in other cities, including London. Unlike the small government-sponsored battery bus now undergoing trials in provincial cities, whose low speed and range effectively

33、limits it to city-center operation, the new Silent Rider, with a range 40 miles between charges and a speed of 40 m. p. h. , will take its place with diesel buses for normal urban and sub urban services. Its capital cost is higher (about 20,000 pounds compared with 1500 pounds) but lower maintenance

34、 and fuel costs bring it down to fully competitive cost with the diesel bus over thirteen year without taking into account the environmental benefits. The Chloride battery group-which is developing it in partnership with SELN (South-East Lancashire and North-East Cheshire Passenger Transport Authori

35、ty) is confident of a market potential of 400 vehicles a year by 1980. The prototype weighs 16 tons, of which the batteries and passengers account for each. It has a single set of batteries, which take three and a half hours to recharge, against the normal eight hours of passenger traffic. A larger

36、, Mark II version is being designed with two sets of batteries which can be charged in under a minute. That will allow low-cost night charging and greater operational flexibility. 26 What had been the main factor preventing the development of battery buses? ( A) Their limited range. ( B) Their high

37、cost. ( C) Their heavy weight. ( D) Their loud noise. 27 Battery buses have some advantages over conventional buses. Which of these advantages is not mentioned in the passage? ( A) They use less fuel. ( B) They make less noise. ( C) They produce less pollution. ( D) They cost less to produce. 28 The

38、 Mark will have a number of advantages over the prototype. Which of these is NOT one of them? ( A) It will carry more passengers. ( B) It will have a wider range. ( C) It can be used all through the way. ( D) It will cost less to recharge. 29 How many of new Silent Riders were in regular service at

39、the moment? ( A) None. ( B) Twenty. ( C) Fifty. ( D) One. 30 Why will battery buses cost less than conventional buses in the long run? ( A) They will spread the capital cost over a long period. ( B) They will be stronger and last longer. ( C) They will use less fuel and cost less to maintain. ( D) T

40、hey will be charged at night when electricity costs less. 30 Los Angeles cabinet-maker Edward Stewart may be a modern Dr. Frankenstein. In 1959, he claims, he restored a dead friend to life with a simple technique. He opened the dead mans chest, rubbed his heart with a “secret, life-giving“ plant ju

41、ice, then stimulated the heartbeat with 110 volts of electricity. The friend, says Stewart, has. been living in Hawaii ever since. Stewart also claims his revivification technique works on the small animals he suffocates in jars in his garage. It takes three hours to revive a dead mouse, he reports,

42、 and five hours for a small dog. “Some times, “he adds , “I buy those little chicken hearts in the super-market, and I make them beat again using my plant juice before I cook them for dinner.“ According to Stewart, he discovered the plant juice one day while cutting hedges around his former home in

43、Hawaii. Juice from one of the plants splattered onto his wrist, he says, and he suddenly noticed the skin begin to twitch. Nonetheless, he adds, he cant reveal the name of the plant. “When the juice is zapped with electricity, “he says, “it gives off a deadly gas.“ To promote his idea, Stewart has s

44、pent the past decade sending his papers to the University of California, the Army, and a number of government agencies. One scientist who evaluated the concept was Lynn Eldridge, of the Jerry Lewis Neuromuscular Research Center, in Los Angeles. She says Stewart may not be joking. “The extracts from

45、plant like belladonna are used to supply nutrients to human organs, which must be kept alive while traveling to a transplant. So Stewart might cut the heart out of a mouse and keep it alive with plant juice. But this effect is short-lived, and the organ must be placed into a healthy body or it dies.

46、 Its impossible to place a live organ in a dead body and expect it to revive every other organ in that body. I think Stewart has observed a basic scientific phenomenon, but his interpretation is crazy.“ 31 According to the passage you have just read, it seemed that Edward Stewart was _. ( A) a train

47、ed surgeon ( B) an expert botanist ( C) a skilled electrician ( D) an experienced craftsman 32 Steward sent his research to various agencies just because _. ( A) he wanted to become a university professor ( B) he sought to get official recognition and acceptance ( C) he hoped the Army could use it i

48、n military warfare ( D) he hoped the government would invest money in the project 33 According to Stewarts opinion, his revivification technique can _. ( A) restore a dead man or animal to life ( B) make the skin begin to twitch ( C) keep a live organ alive ( D) supply nutrients to human organs 34 L

49、ynn Eldridge thinks there may be some truth in what Stewart says because _. ( A) organs containing plant extracts remain healthy indefinitely ( B) dead bodies can be kept alive with transplanted organs ( C) organs treated with certain plant juices revive dead bodies ( D) extracts from certain plants help keep organs alive

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