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本文([外语类试卷]大学英语四级(2013年12月考试改革适用)模拟试卷203及答案与解析.doc)为本站会员(tireattitude366)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]大学英语四级(2013年12月考试改革适用)模拟试卷203及答案与解析.doc

1、大学英语四级( 2013年 12月考试改革适用)模拟试卷 203及答案与解析 一、 Part I Writing 1 For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a short essay on the following topic. You should write at least 120 words but no more than 180 words. It is very common in college that many students are absent from the class and some teach

2、ers tend not to care about it. What do you think of this phenomenon? Section A ( A) The police. ( B) The district lawyer. ( C) The prison authorities. ( D) Institute of Childhood and Family. ( A) To be imprisoned and fined. ( B) To have their children taken away. ( C) To be handed over to the author

3、ities. ( D) None. ( A) 0.4 percent. ( B) 3.4 percent. ( C) 4.4 percent. ( D) 3 percent. ( A) 2. ( B) 3. ( C) 4. ( D) 5. ( A) Engineer. ( B) Passengers. ( C) Architects. ( D) Workers of airport. ( A) Airports. ( B) Passengers. ( C) Architects. ( D) Companies. ( A) Sleep boxes can be rented for differ

4、ent lengths of time. ( B) Renters of normal height can stand up inside. ( C) Bedding can be automatically changed. ( D) Renters can surf the Internet inside the box. Section B ( A) Weather patterns that can affect Florida. ( B) How strong winds develop into a hurricane. ( C) Memories of a recent sto

5、rm. ( D) Planning a summer vacation. ( A) Late summer is cloudy season. ( B) Late summer is hurricane season. ( C) Late summer is rainy season. ( D) Late summer is sunny season. ( A) Wind speed. ( B) Rainfall. ( C) Direction of approach. ( D) Water temperature. ( A) By month. ( B) By number. ( C) By

6、 location. ( D) By name. ( A) Because he just had a holiday. ( B) Because he resolved his problem. ( C) Because he finished the story. ( D) Because he got some new idea. ( A) Her professor did not like her story. ( B) She had trouble finishing her assignment. ( C) She did not like the topic she had

7、chosen for her paper. ( D) She was taking too many courses. ( A) Take some extra time. ( B) Do writing exercise. ( C) Do some work for another course. ( D) Write the story ending first. ( A) To go shopping. ( B) To do research for her story. ( C) To meet with her professor. ( D) To take a break from

8、 her work. Section C ( A) It should only be attempted by experienced researchers. ( B) It may cause researchers to avoid publishing good work. ( C) It is currently being done to excess. ( D) It can be useful in planning future research. ( A) The research has not been written in an interesting way. (

9、 B) The research has been done in unimportant fields. ( C) The researchers did not adequately establish the relationships involved. ( D) The researchers failed to provide an appropriate summary. ( A) It is more difficult than the students researchers may realize. ( B) The researcher should get help

10、from other people. ( C) The questions should be brief so that they will be understood. ( D) It is important to follow formulas closely. ( A) In the white page. ( B) In the blue page. ( C) In the yellow page. ( D) In a special section. ( A) On the first page of the telephone book. ( B) At the end of

11、the telephone book. ( C) In the front of the white page. ( D) Right after the white page. ( A) Check your number and call again. ( B) Tell the operator what has happened. ( C) Ask the operator to put you through. ( D) Ask the operator what has happened. ( A) College. ( B) High school. ( C) Sports ev

12、ent. ( D) Park. ( A) Johnny Bell. ( B) John Campbell. ( C) Johnny Campbell. ( D) Johnny Camp. ( A) In 1898. ( B) In 1938. ( C) In 1913. ( D) In 1930. ( A) They jump and dance in front of the crowd and shout the name of their team. ( B) Their job is to excite the crowd. ( C) They want their team to w

13、in the game. ( D) All of the above. Section A 26 It has been said that everyone lives by selling something. In the light of this statement, teachers live by selling【 C1】 _, philosophers by selling wisdom and priests by selling【 C2】 _comfort. Though it may be possible to measure the value of【 C3】 _go

14、od in terms of money, it is extremely difficult to estimate the true value of the services which people perform for us. There are times when we would【 C4】 _give everything we possess to save our lives, yet we might grudge paying a surgeon a high fee for offering us precisely this service. The condit

15、ions of society are such that【 C5】 _have to be paid for in the same way that goods are paid for at a shop. Everyone has something to sell. Tramps(流浪汉 )seem to be the only【 C6】 _to this general rule. Beggars almost sell themselves as human being to【 C7】 _the pity of passers-by. But real tramps are no

16、t beggars. They have nothing to sell and require nothing from others. In seeking independence, they do not【 C8】 _their human dignity. A tramp may ask you for money, but he will never ask you to feel sorry for him. We often speak of tramps with【 C9】 _and put them in the same class as beggars, but how

17、 many of us can honestly say that we have not felt a little【 C10】 _of their simple way of life and their freedom from care? A)arouse B)knowledge C)scored D)sacrifice E)material F)invulnerable G)spiritual H)anxious I)envious J)willingly K)skills L)associate M)happiness N)exception O)contempt 27 【 C1】

18、 28 【 C2】 29 【 C3】 30 【 C4】 31 【 C5】 32 【 C6】 33 【 C7】 34 【 C8】 35 【 C9】 36 【 C10】 Section B 36 A Loggers Lament A)My father was a logger. My husband is a logger. My sons will not be loggers. Loggers are an endangered species,but the environmental groups, which so righteously protect endangered spec

19、ies in the animal kingdom, have no concern for their fellow human beings under siege. Loggers are a much misunderstood people, pictured as brutal rapists of our planet, out to denude it of trees and, as a result, of wildlife. B)It is time to set the record straight. Loggers take great pride in the o

20、ld growth trees, the dinosaurs of the forests,and would be sorry to see them all cut. There are in the national forests in Washington and Oregon(not to mention other states)approximately 8.5 million acres of forested land,mostly old growth set aside,never to be used for timber production. In order t

21、o see it all,a man would have to spend every weekend and holiday for sixty years looking at timber at a rate of more than one-thousand acres per day. This does not include acreage to be set aside for spotted-owl protection. C)In addition to this amount of forested land never to be logged,the State o

22、f Washington forest Practices Act,established in 1973,specifies that all land that is clear-cut of trees must be replanted unless converted to some other use. As a tree farmer generally plants more trees per acre than he removes,more trees are being planted than are being cut. In the last twenty yea

23、rs in Clark County,Washington,alone,the Department of Natural Resources has overseen the planting of at least 15000 acres of previously unforested private lands. D)The term logger applies to the person harvesting trees. A tree farmer is the one who owns the land and determines what is to be done wit

24、h it. To a tree farmer, clear-cutting is no more than the final harvest of that generation of trees. The next spring,he reforests the land. To the public, clear-cutting is a bad word, Does the public cry shame when a wheat farmer harvests his crop and leaves a field of stubble in place of the beauti

25、ful wheat? E)In the Pacific Northwest,in five years,the nearly planted trees will grow taller than the farmers head: in ten years, more than fifteen feet tall: and in twenty to thirty years, the trees will be ready for the first commercial harvest. The farmer then thins the trees to make room for be

26、tter growth. In forty to fifty years,he will be ready to clear-cut his farm and replant again. Contrary to public opinion,it does not take three hundred years to grow a Douglas fir tree to harvestable age. F)Tree farming keeps us in wood products. We build with wood,write on paper,and even use the u

27、nmentionable in the bathroom. But in order to keep this flow of wood products available,we need to keep it economically feasible to grow trees. If we restrict the tree-farming practices because we do not like clear-cuts or because some animals might(and probably might not)become extinct,or we restri

28、ct markets for the timber by banning log exports or overtax the farmer, we are creating a situation where the farmer will no longer grow trees. If he cannot make money,he will not tree-farm. He will sell his tree farm so that it can grow houses. The land that grows trees is the natural resource: the

29、 trees are just a crop. G)Legislation is constantly being introduced to take away the private property rights of tree farmers. They are beleaguered by the public, who believe that any forest belongs to the public. Who, after all,buys the land and pays the taxes? Who invests money in property that wi

30、ll yield them an income only once every twenty to thirty years? Would John Q. Public picnic in a farmer s wheat field? H)The tree farmer must have a diversified market. When there is a building slump in this country,it is vital to the industry to have an export market. Earlier recessions were devast

31、ating to tree farmers until markets were developed overseas. Some trees have little market value in the United States. The logs China and Korea bought in the late 1980s could not be sold here to cover the cost of delivery. I)As to the wildlife becoming extinct,that is a joke that is not very funny.

32、Animals thrive in clear-cuts better than in old-growth timber. Look at the Mount St. Helens blast area. Nature created an immense clearing and now deer,elk,and other wildlife are returning in numbers. Why? Because there is more food growing in an open area than under the tall trees. And as for the s

33、potted owl, surely the 8.5 million acres set aside is enough to maintain quite a respectable owl population. Numerous recent observations show that the owl lives in second-growth timber as well as in old growth. In the Wenatchee National Forest there are more than two hundred fifty examples of spott

34、ed owls living in other than old-growth timber. The owl is a tool of the environmentalist groups to get what they want: the complete eradication of the species Logger. J)Consider the scenic value of a preserved old-growth forest versus a managed stand of timber. In Glacier National Park,Montana,for

35、example,which is totally untouched,one sees the old trees, the dead and dying trees,the windfalls crisscrossing the forest. In a managed forest,one sees the older stands with the forest floor cleared of the dead windfalls, leaving a more parklike setting. In the younger stands, one sees the beautifu

36、l new trees with their brilliant greens thrusting their tops to the sky and,in the clear-cuts,before the new trees obscure the view,one sees the huckleberry bushes with their luscious-tasting berries,the bright pink of fireweed and deer and elk feeding. True environmentalists husband the land:they d

37、o not let the crops stagnate and rot. Tree farming regenerates the trees and utilizes the product. 37 Tree farmers need an economical guarantee to keep the wood products markets run smoothly. 38 The number that a logger plants trees is much larger than the number of trees removed. 39 For the forestr

38、y, it is necessary to develop an export market in case of a building slump. 40 Animals live and multiply better in clear-cuts than in areas full of old trees. 41 The environmental groups are not concerned about loggers who are usually misunderstood by people. 42 True environmentalists economize each

39、 acre, and will certainly not let the land be covered with rotted crops. 43 In the Pacific Northwest, the planted trees will be cut and replanted again in forty to fifty years. 44 Clear-cutting means differently to a tree farmer and the public. 45 The owl is a helper for the environmentalist groups

40、to eliminate loggers. 46 The public think no forest belongs to the tree farmers who are supposed to be deprived of the private property rights. Section C 46 There are people who are especially attracted to the notion of “climbing the ladder“ so as to increase their status, financial position, and se

41、nse of self-worth. In part, as a result of the work ethic, these people are internally “driven“ to work. Not infrequently, foreign visitors have observed that Americans spend an inordinate(过度的 )amount of time working and, as a consequence, Americans have little time for leisure or personal relations

42、hips. In American English a new word “workaholic“ has been created to describe an individual who is as addicted to work as an alcoholic(酒鬼 )is to liquor. There are conflicting points of view about workaholics. Those concerned with problems of mental stress believe workaholics abuse themselves physic

43、ally and mentally. Others hold that workaholics are valuable members of society because they are extremely productive. The Americans culture values achievement, efficiency, and production a workaholic supports these values. Despite the presence of workaholics, there is a growing realization in the U

44、nited States that excessive work demands can be physically and mentally harmful. Many people have been rebelling against the work ethic, claiming that when a job is so important, personal relationships suffer and relaxation becomes secondary. Consequently there has been a shift in values, with more

45、emphasis being given to personal relationships and non-work activities. Increased leisure time in the United States has not changed the idea that work and play are distinct activities. “There is a belief that it is desirable“ to work hard and play hard, and undesirable to combine the two. In many of

46、fices, stores and factories socializing among employees is discouraged. An employee under pressure at work often cannot afford to respond to social calls and visits. However, the amount of personal contact on the job depends on the nature of the work. People are ambivalent(矛盾 的 )toward work: it is,

47、at the same time, glorified and belittled. In the words of former President Richard Nixon: “The work ethic holds that labor is good in itself: that a man or woman becomes a better person by virtue of the act of working. America s competitive spirit, the work ethic of this people, is alive and well.“

48、 Another viewpoint is expressed in an Anacin commercial: “I like my job and am good at it, but it sure grinds me down(折磨 )sometimes, and the last thing I need to take home is a headache.“ 47 An individual who is addicted to work is_. ( A) a drug addict ( B) a compulsive worker ( C) an alcoholic(drin

49、ks too much alcohol) ( D) a competitive worker 48 The author states that workaholics_. ( A) abuse themselves physically and mentally ( B) are highly productive members of society ( C) torture themselves physically ( D) both A and B 49 Why have some people begun to place less emphasis on work and more on non-work activities? ( A) Because they realize that work is not useful. ( B) Because they realize that leisure time should be enjoyed. ( C) Because they realize that excessive work demands can be harmful to

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