1、国家公共英语(五级)笔试模拟试卷 35及答案与解析 Part A Directions: You will hear a talk. As you listen, answer Questions 1-10 by circling TRUE or FALSE. You will hear the talk ONLY ONCE. You now have 1 minute to read Questions 1-10. 1 The topic of the discussion is to decide whether they have to use the new technology to
2、 attract customers or not. ( A) Right ( B) Wrong 2 Thirty-seven percent of the employees working in the mall are in favor of adding smells, ( A) Right ( B) Wrong 3 Board Member I said they are for the idea of pumping in pleasant aromas to encourage buying. ( A) Right ( B) Wrong 4 Those who are again
3、st the proposals dont like the idea of working daily in a scented environment. ( A) Right ( B) Wrong 5 Those who are for the proposal have serious doubts about putting chemicals into the air. ( A) Right ( B) Wrong 6 Those who disagreed with the proposal regard it as the only way to remain competitiv
4、e with the larger stores at other malls. ( A) Right ( B) Wrong 7 Local City Council Representative said it might be a first step to introducing smells that have controlling effects on employees. ( A) Right ( B) Wrong 8 Those who are for the proposal said they had to do something to increase sales. (
5、 A) Right ( B) Wrong 9 The town people have not gotten as much aid as in previous years from the government. ( A) Right ( B) Wrong 10 More than half of the employees are concerned about the ethics of using smells to put people in a mood to spend money. ( A) Right ( B) Wrong Part B Directions: You wi
6、ll hear 3 conversations or talks and you must answer the questions by choosing A, B, C or D. You will hear the recording ONLY ONCE. 11 The speaker wants us to appreciate that a child _. ( A) learns to do business at an early stage. ( B) matures through play. ( C) employs toys as companions. ( D) has
7、 to be taught complicated tables. 12 The potential development of a child is largely determined _. ( A) from five to seven years olds. ( B) from three to five years olds. ( C) at the moment of birth. ( D) in the first three years. 13 When children are about four years old, they are the most _. ( A)
8、original. ( B) vigorous. ( C) curious. ( D) ambitious. 14 Dr. Anne Roes work has been mainly concerned with _. ( A) children experiences. ( B) social work. ( C) peoples jobs. ( D) interviews. 15 Dr. Roe initially discovered children with warm parents might become _. ( A) engineers. ( B) teachers. (
9、C) astronomers. ( D) writers. 16 After years of hard work, Dr. Roe found that her original idea _. ( A) lacked sufficient proof. ( B) turned out to be wrong in practice. ( C) was correct in principle. ( D) became illogical in its application. 17 It seems that fudge is ( A) soft candy. ( B) hard cand
10、y. ( C) a ball of sugar in cold water. ( D) sugar being boiled in water. 18 People eat too much candy because ( A) it keeps us warm in cold weather. ( B) it is easy to make. ( C) it tastes so good. ( D) it makes a person strong. 19 When sugar is cooked enough, a bit of which of the following in cold
11、 water will make a firm ball? ( A) Hard candy. ( B) Soft candy. ( C) Peanut brittle. ( D) Chewy candy. 20 What will the students do after the talk? ( A) They will taste some candy. ( B) They will visit a candy factory. ( C) They will make some candy by themselves. ( D) The speaker does not tell us.
12、Part C Directions: You will hear a talk. As you listen, answer the questions or complete the notes in your test booklet for Questions 21-30 by writing NOT MORE THAN THREE words in the space provided on the right. You will hear the talk TWICE. You now have 1 minute to read Questions 21-30. 21 In Japa
13、n you should hold a business card with _ and read the name and rifle carefully. 22 In _ it is usual for men to touch each other in a friendly way. 23 In Korea, eye contact means _ to the speaker. 24 Which country is Bob from? 25 English people tend to _ when talking to each other. 26 The proper beha
14、vior in Italy is to avoid using peoples _ unless you are invited to. 27 Which countries has Bob visited, according to the conversation? 28 Which countries has Kate visited, according to the conversation? 29 Who might be the people Bob and Kate met in various countries? 30 Embarrassing mistakes made
15、by Bob and Kate is due to ignorance of _. 一、 Section II Use of English (15 minutes) Directions: Read the following text and fill each of the numbered spaces with ONE suitable word. Write your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1. 31 Authorities and experts in Nanjing, capital of East Chinas Jiangsu Province, a
16、re calling for more attention to the sexual needs of migrant workers due (31) an increase in the number of rape cases. In one case, a 33-year-old married migrant worker was (32) to 20 years in prison last week by the citys Jiangning District Peoples Court for (33) four women. Luo Shuang, from a vill
17、age outside the district, was quoted (34) local newspaper Nanjing Daily as saying that he felt pained by his sexual (35) and regretted the crimes he conducted. Luo even asked (36) to give him the death penalty out of shame. “Luo is a typical (37) of how a migrant worker can go off the rails due to s
18、exual frustration. This tragedy definitely (38) widespread attention, because it keeps happening (39)“, said Yin Jinfu, vice-dean of the Public Prosecution Department of the Nanjing Municipal Procuratorial Department. Statistics from procuratorial bureaus in four major districts in Nanjing (40) 78 c
19、ases of rape were reported involving migrant workers (41) 2004 and 2005, accounting for 48 percent of all rape cases in the districts in the period. The youngest migrant worker rapist was only 16, while the (42) were aged around 25. Rape by migrant workers has been on the (43) in recent years, accor
20、ding to He Gal, head of the Publicity Department of the Peoples Procuratorial Bureau in Jiangning District. “Now is the time for society to work together and put a stop to this (44) crime“, he said. Nanjing has a reported 1 million long-term migrant workers, and a survey (45) by students from a loca
21、l university this May showed that most migrant workers described their lack of sex while working in the city as“ (46) “. Wu Yiming, dean of the Sociology Department of Nanjing Normal University, said ignoring (47) sexual needs of migrant workers, most of whom are male, will lead to physical and (48)
22、 problems. “Migrant workers are first and foremost (49) beings with normal sexual needs. Society cannot ask them to adhere to laws and regulations (50) suppressing and ignoring their natural demands“, said Wu. Part A Directions: Read the following texts and answer the questions which accompany them
23、by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1. 51 The United States has hosted the Olympic Games a record eight times. St. Louis, Los Angeles (twice) and Atlanta have been the sites of the summer Games while Lake Placid (twice), Squaw Valley and Salt Lake City in 2002 have welcomed t
24、he winter Games. Ten U.S. cities have entered the process to become the candidate city for the 2010 Olympic Games which will be selected by the U.S. Olympic Committee Board of directors. The U.S. city will then face competition from around the world with the International Olympic Committee making th
25、e final decision. The 10 cities have until the spring of 2000 to prepare their final bids for the U.S.O.C. Following site evaluations and the XIXth Olympic Winter Games in Salt Lake City, Utah (Feb. 8 24, 2002), the U.S. Olympic candidate city will be elected in the fall of 2002 at the U.S.OCs Board
26、 of Direction meeting. The closing date for all worldwide candidate cities to submit bids to the International Olympic will be in the winter of 2003. The IOC will then select the 2010 host city in the fall of 2005. “Our work can begin in the fall of 2002, allowing us to have a great bid and saving b
27、id cities a tremendous amount of money by shortening the expensive international campaign“, said Anita DeFrantz, an IOC vice president. The U.S. Olympic Committee is also in the process of identifying a U.S. candidate city for the 2007 “Pan American Games“. The United States has previously hosted th
28、is event for countries in North, Central and South America in Chicago (1959) and Indianapolis (1987). The timeline approved by the U.S.O.C Board for the cities registered and bidding to become the U.S. candidate city for the 2007 Pan American Games Houston; Raleigh, N.C.; San Antonio, Texas; and sou
29、th Florida calls for each citys final bids to be submitted to the U.S.O.C by September 1998. Following site evaluations, the U.S.O.C Board will select the U.S.As 2007 bid city in the spring of 1999. The Pan American Sports Organization (PASO) will select the host city in 2002. U.S.O.C Executive Dire
30、ctor Dick Schultz explained that the U.S.O.Cs objectives in setting up the timelines for the bid cities were: to maintain focus on the mission, pursue strategic initiatives, complete the Pan American Games bids before the Olympic Games bids, complete the Salt Lake City Olympic Winter Games and effor
31、t, and to then launch an international bid off the success of Salt Lake City. 51 Anita DeFrantz is_ ( A) vice president of U.S.O.C. ( B) president of I.O.C. ( C) president of U.S.O.C. ( D) vice president of I.O.C. 52 Which city is NOT among the U.S. cities that have hosted the Olympic Games? ( A) Sq
32、uaw Valley. ( B) San Antonio. ( C) St. Louis. ( D) Los Angeles. 53 Year 2003 is the time for_ ( A) the ten U.S. cities to begin the process to become the U.S. candidate city for the 2012 Olympic Games. ( B) the four U.S. cities to register and bid to become the U.S. candidate city for the 2007 Pan A
33、merican Games. ( C) all the worldwide candidate cities to submit bids to I.O.C. ( D) the U.S.O.C. to select the U.S.As 2007 bid city. 54 One of the purposes for the U.S.O.C. to set up the timelines for the bid cities is_ ( A) to complete the Pan American Games bids before the Olympic Game bids. ( B)
34、 to complete the Olympic Games bids before the Pan American Games bids. ( C) to complete the Salt Lake City Olympic Winter Games bids before the Pan American Games bids. ( D) to complete the Pan American Games bids before the Salt Lake City Olympic Winter Games bids. 55 The best title for the passag
35、e is: _ ( A) How Many Olympic Games Has America Hosted? ( B) Americas Next Olympic City ( C) America An Active Participant in World Games ( D) Salt Lake City the Host of the 2002 Olympic Winter Games 56 Economists believe that investors are rational, and that stock prices are therefore unpredictable
36、. It sounds peculiar, but the logic is ironclad. Rational investors would take into account everything they know when buying or selling stock all the information available about where profits, interest rates, technology and so on are going. So stock prices would reflect all available knowledge, and
37、would change only when new information came in. And new information is, by definition, unpredictable, which means that changes in stock prices would be unpredictable, too. But investors, being human, are driven by fear, greed and the madness of crowds. In principle this should create patterns in sto
38、ck prices, and in principle you can use those patterns to outperform the market. But while it may be very hard to tell whether the market is overvalued or undervalued, one thing is for sure: It fluctuates more than it should. That is, instead of rising or falling only when there is real news about f
39、uture, stocks surge and plunge for no good reason. People sell because other people are selling, or buy because other people are buying. And, as a result, it is more a series of random leaps than a random walk. Tuesday was a case in point. On a slow news day, markets suddenly dived, with the Dow fal
40、ling by more than 3 percent and the Nasdaq by more than 5 without anything happening to change your fundamental view about what is going on in the U.S. economy. Why was the market so easily spooked? Presumably because everyone is even more confused than usual about what stocks are really worth these
41、 days. On one side, the U.S. economy has been wallowing in good news. Productivity has been soaring, allowing the economy to grow far faster than seemed possible. And with clever new applications of silicon chips coming out every day, it is easy to become exuberant about the future. On the other han
42、d, as any financial theorist could tell you, good news that you already expect to hear isnt news. Five years ago, a 2 percent annual increase in worker productivity would have been regarded as excellent, and stocks would have risen sharply. Today it would be regarded as a disappointing performance,
43、and would drive stocks down. So, is it terrific or incredible? Nobody really knows. And a rational market would accept this ignorance, and wait for some actual evidence in favor of one side or the other. Of course, it doesnt work that way. On Tuesday, something caused investors to become slightly le
44、ss convinced than they had been the day before that we are living in the best of all possible world. And the result was a huge destruction of paper virtualwealth. 56 Paragraph 2 seems to suggest that_ ( A) investors are not always rational. ( B) stock price reflects all available knowledge. ( C) a r
45、ational investor should be good in prediction of the market. ( D) because new information is unpredictable, it is hard for investors to be rational. 57 According to the text, investors become irrational because_ ( A) they are not experienced. ( B) they possess the nature we all have. ( C) the U.S. e
46、conomy is sometimes unpredictable. ( D) they are confused about the changes of the stock market. 58 The result of “Tuesday case“ is that_ ( A) the U.S. economy soared. ( B) the U.S. stock price fell sharply. ( C) people were disappointed about U.S. economy. ( D) people were not sure about what stock
47、s were really worth. 59 In paragraph 5, the phrase “wallowing in“ may be replaced by_ ( A) delighted in. ( B) surprised by. ( C) convinced by. ( D) doubtful about. 60 We learn from the text that_ ( A) the investors are ignorant. ( B) the stock market can be frightened very easily. ( C) the falling o
48、f Dow by 3 percent is considered as a “random walk“. ( D) a 2 percent annual increase in worker productivity is not a good result. 61 We enter the new millennium with more poor people than the world has ever known. Out of 6 billion now (compared with fewer than 2 billion in 1900), 1.3 billion are be
49、low the absolute poverty line, living on less than $1 a day, and 2.8 billion eke out survival on less than $2 a day. Inequality has multiplied enormously. The gap between the one-fifth of the worlds people who live in the poorest countries and the one-fifth who live in the richest countries is now 71 to 1. In 1990 it was 60 to 1 and in 1960 it was 30 to 1. Yet in Asia, the absolutely poor are now one-third of the total, compared with one half in 1970. Their
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