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本文([外语类试卷]大学英语六级模拟试卷140及答案与解析.doc)为本站会员(roleaisle130)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]大学英语六级模拟试卷140及答案与解析.doc

1、大学英语六级模拟试卷 140及答案与解析 一、 Part I Writing (30 minutes) 1 How to Treat Our Aging Population 1中国已渐渐步入老龄化社会 (65 岁以上的老年人已占全国人口的 7%) 2我认为应如何对待老年人群 (社会关爱与福利制度,家庭温暖,社区服务 ) 3我的结论 二、 Part II Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning) (15 minutes) Directions: In this part, you will have 15 minutes to go over

2、the passage quickly and answer the questions attached to the passage. For questions 1-4, mark: Y (for YES) if the statement agrees with the information given in the passage; N (for NO) if the statement contradicts the information given in the passage; NG (for NOT GIVEN) if the information is not giv

3、en in the passage. 2 Social Networking A large but long-in-the-tooth technology company hoping to become a bigger force in online advertising buys a small start-up in a sector that everybody agrees is the next big thing. A decade ago, this was Microsoft buying Hotmail-the firm that established web-b

4、ased e-mail as a must-have service for internet users, and promised to drive up page views, and thus advertising inventory, on the software giants websites. This month it was AOL, a struggling web portal (入口网站 ) that is part of Time Warner, an old-media giant, buying Bebo, a small but up-and-coming

5、online social network, for $ 850m. Both deals, in their respective decades, illustrate a great paradox of the internet in that the premise underlying them is precisely half right and half wrong. The correct half is that a next big thing-web-mall then, social networking now-can indeed quickly become

6、something that consumers expect from their favorite web portal. The non sequitur(推论,结论 ) is to assume that the new service will be a revenue-generating business in its own right. Web-mall has certainly not become a business. Admittedly, Google, Microsoft, Yahoo!, AOL and other providers of web-mall

7、accounts do place advertisements on their web-mail offerings, but this is small beer. They offer e-mail-and volumes of free archival (档案的 ) storage unimaginable a decade ago-because the service, including its associated address book, calendar, and other features, is cheap to deliver and keeps consum

8、ers engaged with their brands and websites, making users more likely to visit affiliated pages where advertising is more effective. Social networking appears to be similar in this regard. The big internet and media companies have bid up the implicit valuations of MySpace, Facebook and others. But th

9、at does not mean there is a working revenue model. Sergey Brin, Googles co-founder, recently admitted that Googles “social networking inventory as a whole“ was proving problematic and that the “monetization work we were doing there didnt pan out as well as we had hoped“. Google has a contractual agr

10、eement with News Corp to place advertisements on its network, MySpace, and also owns its own network, Orkut. Clearly, Google is not making money from either. Facebook, now allied to Microsoft, has fared worse. Its grand attempt to redefine the advertising industry by pioneering a new approach to soc

11、ial marketing, called Beacon, failed completely. Facebooks idea was to inform a users friends whenever he bought something at certain online retailers, by running a small announcement inside the friends “news feeds“. In theory, this was to become a new recommendation economy, an algorithmic (算术的 ) f

12、orm of word of mouth. In practice, users rebelled and privacy watchdogs cried foul. Mark Zuckerberg, Facebooks founder, admitted in December that “we simply did a bad job with this release“ and apologized. So it is entirely conceivable that social networking, like web-mail, will never make oodles of

13、 money. That, however, in no way detracts from its enormous utility. Social networking has made explicit the connections between people, so that a thriving ecosystem of small programs can exploit this “social graph“ to enable friends to interact via games, greetings, video clips and so on. But shoul

14、d users really have to visit a specific website to do this sort of thing? “We will look back to 2008 and think that we had to go to a destination like Facebook or LinkedIn to be social,“ says Charlene IA at Forrester Research, a consultancy. Future social networks, she thinks, “will be anywhere and

15、everywhere we need and want them to be“. No more logging on to Facebook just to see the “news feed“ of updates from your friends; instead it will come straight to your e-mail inbox, RSS reader or instant messenger. No need to upload photos to Facebook to show them to friends, since those with privac

16、y permissions in your electronic address book can automatically get them. The problem with todays social networks is that they are often closed to the outside web. The big networks have decided to be “open toward independent programmers, to encourage them to write fun new software for them. But they

17、 are reluctant to become equally open towards their users, because the networks lofty valuations depend on maximizing their page views-so they maintain a tight grip on their users information, to ensure that they keep coming back. As a result, avid internet users often maintain separate accounts on

18、several social networks, instant-messaging services, photo-sharing and blogging sites, and usually cannot even send simple messages from one to the other. They must invite the same friends to each service separately. It is a drag. Historically, online media tend to start this way. The early services

19、, such as CompuServe, Prodigy or AOL, began as “walled gardens“ before they opened up to become websites. The early e-mail services could send messages only within their own walls (rather as Facebooks messaging does today). Instant-messaging, too, started closed, but is gradually opening up. In soci

20、al networking, this evolution is just beginning. Parts of the industry are collaborating in a “data portability workgroup“ to let people move their friend lists and other information around the web. Others are pushing Open ID, a plan to create a single, federated sign-on system that people can use a

21、cross many sites. The opening of social networks may now accelerate thanks to that older next big thing, webmail. As a technology, mall has come to seem rather old-fashioned. But Google, Yahoo!, Microsoft and other firms are now discovering that they may already have the ideal infrastructure (基础设施 )

22、 for social networking in the form of the address books, in-boxes and calendars of their users. “E-mail in the wider sense is the most important social network,“ says David Ascher, who manages Thunder-bird, a cutting-edge open-source e-mail application, for the Mozilla Foundation, which also oversee

23、s the popular Firefox web browser. That is because the extended in-box contains invaluable and dynamically updated information about human connections. On Facebook, a social graph notoriously deteriorates after the initial thrill of finding old friends from school wears off. By contrast, an e-mail a

24、ccount has access to the entire address book and can infer information from the frequency and intensity of contact as it occurs. Joe gets e-malls from Jack and Jane, but opens only Janes; Joe has Jane in his calendar tomorrow, and is instant-messaging with her right now; Joe tagged Jack “work only“

25、in his address book. Perhaps Joes party photos should be visible to Jane, but not Jack. This kind of social intelligence can be applied across many services on the open web. Better yet, if there is no pressure to make a business out of it, it can remain intimate, and discreet. Facebook has an econom

26、ic incentive to publish ever more data about its users, says Mr Ascher, whereas Thunderbird, which is an open-source project, can let users minimise what they share. Social networking may end up being everywhere, and yet nowhere. 2 Nearly everyone has realized that Microsoft buying Hotmail has illus

27、trated the paradox of Internet. 3 The providers of web-mail like Google, Microsoft and Yahoo!, have reaped huge profits by placing advertisements. 4 The Internet and media companies have realized the implicit valuations of social networking, but havent made it a working revenue model. 5 Facebooks id

28、ea to social marketing has problems both in theory and in practice. 6 Social networking has its enormous utility and enables friends to interact via means such as games, greetings and _. 7 Charlene Li considered that the future social networks will be _. 8 The disadvantage of todays social networks

29、is that to the outside web, they are not _. 9 The program aimed at creating a single, federated sign-on system is called _. 10 The opening of social network may now accelerate owing to _. 11 Contrary to the opening up of Facebook, the Thunderbird can make users minimize _. Section A Directions: In t

30、his section, you will hear 8 short conversations and 2 long conversations. At the end of each conversation, one or more questions will be asked about what was said. Both the conversation and the questions will be spoken only once. After each question there will be a pause. During the pause, you must

31、 read the four choices marked A, B, C and D, and decide which is the best answer. ( A) Three quarters of an hour. ( B) Ten minutes. ( C) Half an hour. ( D) A quarter of an hour. ( A) The clothes dont look clean to him. ( B) He doesnt intend to get the clothes. ( C) The woman can pick up her own clot

32、hes. ( D) The woman should stop staring at his clothes. ( A) Satisfied with their price. ( B) Displeased with their quality. ( C) Pleased with modern mass-production techniques. ( D) Displeased with their technological complexity. ( A) Miss part of the performance. ( B) Find their seats in the theat

33、er. ( C) Enter the mission. ( D) Look for a gas station. ( A) The solar system is a bit smaller than the great bear. ( B) The solar system is bigger than the great bear. ( C) The solar system is much smaller than the great bear. ( D) The solar system is as big as the great bear. ( A) To enter the ma

34、ns apartment. ( B) The man forgot where he hid it. ( C) The man forgot it. ( D) The man lost it. ( A) He doesnt know if Mr. Lee was born in Indonesia. ( B) He doesnt know where Mr. Lee lived before. ( C) He doesnt know when Mr. Lee would go to Hong Kong. ( D) He doesnt know where Mr. Lee grew up. (

35、A) She doesnt like to go shopping. ( B) She went shopping yesterday. ( C) She doesnt live near the shops. ( D) She prefers shopping to studying. ( A) Problems with living in an apartment. ( B) The chance to find a part-time job. ( C) The cost of rent near universities. ( D) A search for a new apartm

36、ent. ( A) Somewhere that is within a short driving distance of campus. ( B) An apartment with furniture already in it. ( C) A place where she can live alone. ( D) A quiet room where she can study without interruption. ( A) He is planning on calling a friend who owns an apartment building. ( B) He wi

37、ll check the newspapers to see if he can find an apartment for rent. ( C) He will put an advertisement on the local BBS. ( D) He is going to visit an apartment building near his place. ( A) Computer sales negotiations. ( B) A preliminary interview. ( C) An Internet seminar meeting. ( D) An oral test

38、 for computer science. ( A) A web page authoring program. ( B) A kind of drinks. ( C) A computer game software. ( D) A foreign name for a famous programmer. ( A) She will call Mr. Taylor in the next few days. ( B) She will talk over their discussion with others. ( C) She will not contact him for fur

39、ther consideration. ( D) She advises the man to give it up. ( A) Hardworking at his former company. ( B) Confident in his abilities. ( C) Poor at computer technology. ( D) Promising for the position. Section B Directions: In this section, you will hear 3 short passages. At the end of each passage, y

40、ou will hear some questions. Both the passage and the questions will be spoken only once. After you hear a question, you must choose the best answer from the four choices marked A, B, C and D. ( A) The weather will be clear and fine. ( B) Rain will probably come. ( C) There will be a fog. ( D) Fine

41、weather will continue. ( A) When there is a heavy rain. ( B) When fine weather continues. ( C) When there is a fog. ( D) When wet weather is coming. ( A) The following day will be fine. ( B) Fine weather will continue. ( C) Rainy weather will probably come. ( D) The rain will stop. ( A) It first bec

42、ome serious about five years ago. ( B) It has finally been brought under control. ( C) It may lead to prosperity. ( D) It has been climbing. ( A) Its one half as much as 1976. ( B) Its twice as much as 1976. ( C) Its close to the same. ( D) Its two-thirds as much as 1976. ( A) Income tax is collecte

43、d from even the poorest citizen. ( B) State tax is collected from even the poorest citizen. ( C) Social security tax is collected from even the poorest citizen. ( D) Sales tax is collected from even the poorest citizen. ( A) There were only grandparents and children. ( B) There was one father, one m

44、other, and their children. ( C) There were many relatives. ( D) There were two or more brothers with their wives. ( A) Women have more freedom and can share in decisions. ( B) Women do not have to be the heads of the family. ( C) Womens relatives do not help them with the housework and children. ( D

45、) Women have all the power of the family. ( A) Husbands share power with their wives and help them with the housework. ( B) Older women do not often have important positions. ( C) Family structure is more patriarchal in the nuclear family. ( D) Women have to help sisters, grandparents with housework

46、 and children. ( A) They want to stay home and do the housework. ( B) They dont have enough money. ( C) They have too much work and not much free time. ( D) They have more freedom than in the past. Section C Directions: In this section, you will hear a passage three times. When the passage is read f

47、or the first time, you should listen carefully for its general idea. When the passage is read for the second time, you are required to fill in the blanks numbered from 36 to 43 with the exact words you have just heard. For blanks numbered from 44 to 46 you are required to fill in the missing informa

48、tion. For these blanks, you can either use the exact words you have just heard or write down the 37 Everyone living in this society should communicate with each other. They get what they want by buying and sell what they dont want by selling. The most important way is to buy or to sell. Today, buyin

49、g and selling merchandise is a 【 B1】 business. Some practice it as a 【 B2】 trade; others regard it as a 【 B3】 requiring, what we say, is the 【 B4】 knowledge and also with so many years of 【 B5】 . The storekeepers in Frank Woolworths time knew nothing about this. The idea of “a chain of stores“ is buying directly from the 【 B6】 . Sometimes they could buy it in large 【 B7】 and selling in many different places 【 B8】 the country. It had its beginn

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