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本文([外语类试卷]成人本科学位英语模拟试卷86及答案与解析.doc)为本站会员(livefirmly316)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]成人本科学位英语模拟试卷86及答案与解析.doc

1、成人本科学位英语模拟试卷 86及答案与解析 一、 Dialogue Communication 1 Pupil: I apologize for being late this morning. My alarm clock didnt ring. Teacher: _ ( A) Thats all right. These things often happen. ( B) Would you please forgive me? I never accept any apologies at all. ( C) Thank you. Youre really too kind apolog

2、izing to me. ( D) Never mind. You dont have to be so polite. 2 Mary: Hello, John. How are you feeling now? Somebody said you had been sick. John: _ ( A) Hello, Mary. They must have had me confused with my brother, George. He has been sick all week. I have never felt better in my life. ( B) Hello, Ma

3、ry. Whos sick? How can I be sick? Im as strong as a horse. They must have gone mad. ( C) Hello, Mary. How are you? ( D) Hello, Mary. Im quite happy. My wife has fallen ill. And, how about you? 3 Speaker A: May I have an inquiry ( 咨询 ), please? Speaker B: _ ( A) Never mind. You can ask whatever you w

4、ant. ( B) Id like to know what inquiry it is. ( C) I m sorry. I know little about it. ( D) Yes, of course. So far as I know. 4 M: Thats the worst painting Ive ever seen. W: _ ( A) Never mind. Lets continue to look at it. ( B) Come on. Its not that bad. ( C) No, it is not the worst painting. ( D) Yes

5、. It looks the worst. 5 Speaker A: I heard Joe say something terrible to you yesterday. Speaker B: _ ( A) But, you know, I wish you could pardon me. ( B) But, you know, every coin has two sides. ( C) Yes, I have never been angrier in my life. ( D) But I dont mind that Joe says something terrible to

6、you. 6 Cindy: _Rose: No, what happened? Cindy: They let him go as he is suspected to be cheating. ( A) Did you know John? ( B) Did you like John? ( C) Did you hate John? ( D) Did you hear about John? 7 Speaker A: Hello, May I speak to Mr. Smith? Speaker B: _ ( A) Yes, I am Mr. Smith. ( B) No, he is

7、not in the office right now. ( C) Speaking! ( D) He is not here. Can I speak for him? 8 Speaker A: Id like to fix an appointment with the personal manager. Will nine tomorrow morning be all right? Speaker B: _ ( A) No. Its impossible. Hell be busy tomorrow. ( B) Ive told you hell be busy. Why do you

8、 come again? ( C) Im afraid not. Hes got a rather full day tomorrow. ( D) Hell be free the whole day tomorrow. 9 Salesman: _Customer: Yes. What size is that green T-shirt? ( A) Do you want to buy anything? ( B) Excuse me, what are you doing? ( C) Are you just looking around? ( D) Anything I can do f

9、or you? 10 Speaker A: Hi, John. Nice to meet you again. How is your project going? Speaker B: _ ( A) How do you do? My project has gone well. ( B) Nice to meet you, too. My project has gone well as we expected. ( C) Hi, Mike. My project has gone well. ( D) Im glad to meet you. My project is really a

10、 difficult one. 11 Speaker A: So far as I can see, it is the fault on the third party. Speaker B: _ ( A) I dont agree with the third party. ( B) Yes. I cant agree more. ( C) I think you are not meeting that. ( D) I can go along with you. 12 W: Boy, how quickly technology changes! So many people have

11、 a computer in their home nowadays. M: _ ( A) Computers? There are so many computers in the office. ( B) Yes, I know. I feel so behind the time. ( C) But I know a lot of computers. ( D) Yes, I know. Without computer, there would be no Internet. 13 Speaker A: Mind if I call you Albert? Speaker B: _ (

12、 A) Yes, just call me Al. ( B) Yes, you may do that. ( C) Of course not. But just plain “Al“ will do. ( D) OK. Everyone does. 14 W: What is your general price range (范围 ) ? M: _ ( A) We are looking for a three-bed-room home on the east side of the town. ( B) I think it would be hard to find somethin

13、g in that range. ( C) Were hoping to find something under $200. ( D) The range is about $200 or so. 15 Speaker A: Id like to book a ticket for next Monday morning to New York. Speaker B: ( A) What can I do for you? ( B) Whats the matter? ( C) At your service. ( D) Just a second, please. 二、 Part I Re

14、ading Comprehension (30%) Directions: There are three passages in this part. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. You should decide on the best choice and mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet w

15、ith a single line through the center. 15 Concerning money or anything else, conflicts between husband and wife usually reflect a power struggle. Conflicts between parent and child often center around the same issue. As children enter adolescence, they begin to demand greater freedom to go where they

16、 please, do what they please, and make decisions without parental interference. Many American parents do not know how to deal with their teenagers and seek advice from books, lectures, and parent training courses. Parents want to maintain a friendly relationship with their teenagers and also want to

17、 guide them so that their behavior will be whatever the parents consider proper and constructive. But in a society of rapidly changing social and moral values, parents and children often disagree about what is important and what is fight. Arguments may concern such unimportant matters as styles of d

18、ress or hairdos. But quarrels may also concern school work, after school jobs, decisions, use of the family car, dating, and sex behavior. Some families have serious problems with teenagers who drop out of school, run away from home, or use illegal drugs. Because so much publicity is given to the pr

19、oblem teenager, one gets the impression that all teenagers are troublemakers. Actually, relatively few adolescents do anything wrong, and nearly all grow up into “solid citizens“ who fulfill most of their parents expectations. In fact, recent studies show that the “generation gap“ is narrowing. The

20、vast majority of teenagers share most of their parents values and ideas. Many parents feel that they get along with their adolescents quite well. 16 According to the writer, conflicts between husband and wife usually reflect _ ( A) feeling of hatred ( B) power struggle ( C) that they dont care for e

21、ach other ( D) that they may appeal to divorce 17 As children enter adolescents, they begin to do the following EXCEPT_ ( A) demanding greater freedom to go wherever they please ( B) making decisions without parental interference ( C) getting married whenever they please ( D) doing what they please

22、18 “. . . generation gap is narrowing. “means_ ( A) the adolescents now become timid ( B) parents come to get along with their children ( C) the vast majority of teenagers share most of their parents values and ideas ( D) parents and teenager dont like to quarrel 19 Parents and children often disagr

23、ee about what is important or right because_ ( A) they have different styles of life ( B) they hate each other ( C) parents think that their children are troublemakers ( D) they are in a society of rapidly changing social and moral values 20 When many American parents dont know how to deal with thei

24、r children they seek advice from the following EXCEPT _. ( A) neighbors ( B) parent-training courses ( C) books ( D) lectures 20 Another thing an astronaut has to learn about is eating in space. Food is weightless, just as men are. Food for space has to be packed in special ways. Some of it goes int

25、o tubes that a man can squeeze into his mouth. Bite-sized cookies are packed in plastic. There is a good reason for covering each bite. The plastic keeps pieces of food from traveling in the spaceship. On the earth very small pieces of food would simply fall to the floor. But gravity doesnt pull the

26、m to the floor when they are out of the plastic in a spaceship. They move here and there and can get into a mans eyes or into the spaceships instruments. If any of the instruments is blocked, the astronauts may have trouble getting safely home. As astronauts travel on longer space trips, he must tak

27、e time to sleep. An astronaut can fit himself to his seat with a kind of seat belt. Or, if he wants to, he can sleep in a sleeping bag which is fixed in place under his seat. But be careful he must put his hands under the belt when he goes to sleep. This is because he is really afraid that he might

28、touch one of controls that isnt supposed to be touched until later. 21 Why would astronauts cover each bite of food in space? ( A) Because small pieces of food would fall down to the floor. ( B) Because weightless pieces of food might make trouble when they travel around. ( C) Because they havent en

29、ough food for longer trips. ( D) Because astronauts dont want to waste food. 22 In a spaceship, astronauts can_ ( A) walk just as they do on the earth ( B) not eat anything because its dangerous ( C) control the spaceship when they are sleeping ( D) not litter small things or it will make trouble 23

30、 In what way is food for space packed? ( A) Very small pieces of food are put on the floor. ( B) Some of it is put into robes. ( C) Small-sized cookies are packed in plastic. ( D) Both B and C 24 Why does an astronaut put his hand under his belt when he sleeps? ( A) Because he thinks it is comfortab

31、le to sleep in that way in space. ( B) Because he doesnt want to touch any controls when he sleeps. ( C) Because the instruments of the spaceship are easily broken. ( D) Because he is afraid that the seat will move. 25 The best title of this article is_. ( A) Eating and Sleeping in Space ( B) How As

32、tronauts Eat in Space ( C) Food for Space ( D) How Astronauts Sleep in Space 25 The Chinese have used a method called acupuncture (针炙 ) to perform operations for about4,000 years without putting the patient to sleep. This involves placing flexible needles into certain parts of the body. The needles

33、are available in a number of stores in China and anyone may buy them. To learn how to use the needles takes about one month of training, But to be skillful requires greater time. The person who performs the acupuncture knows how to put in the needles so the needles themselves are not painful. This p

34、erson also knows where to place the needles so the patient feels no pain in the area where the operation is to be performed A particular operation might require 25 or more needles placed in various parts of the body. But now this operation requires only 3 or 4 needles. Today, the Chinese doctors are

35、 trying to learn more about acupuncture. They are trying to develop a convincing theory to explain how the needles work in preventing pain, or why a nee die in the wrist, for example, would prevent the pain in the area of the mouth. A patient who needs an operation is given a choice between having a

36、cupuncture or having one of the chemicals used for putting him to sleep. It has been estimated that over half of the patients choose acupuncture because there is no sickness after the operation but the chemical may make the patient sick for a few hours or a day. 26 Acupuncture is_ ( A) a medical ope

37、ration ( B) a medical needle ( C) a medical technique ( D) a medical machine 27 Which statement is NOT tree of the performer of acupuncture? ( A) He knows where to place the needles without pain. ( B) He knows where the operation is to be performed. ( C) He knows how to perform the operation to cure

38、 the patient. ( D) He knows how to use the needles in an operation. 28 To learn how to use the needles, it takes a person_ ( A) several months ( B) a couple of weeks ( C) a little time ( D) almost one month 29 It can be learned from the passage that_ ( A) the person performing the acupuncture knows

39、a lot about the making of needles ( B) an operation now needs fewer needles than in the past ( C) acupuncture has existed in China for as long as 2,000 years ( D) few patients prefer acupuncture to chemicals 30 Which is implied but not stated in the passage? ( A) The Chinese mainly use acupuncture t

40、o cure strange disease. ( B) The Chinese are learning to be more skillful and efficient in acupuncture. ( C) The Chinese have spread acupuncture all over the world. ( D) Most Chinese patients prefer acupuncture to chemicals in curing diseases. 30 Spending 50 minutes with a cell phone close to your e

41、ar is enough to change brain cell activity in the part of the brain closest to the antenna(天线 ). But whether that causes any harm is not clear, scientists at the National Institute of Health said at a conference last month, adding that the study will not likely settle concerns of a link between cell

42、 phones and brain cancer. “ What we showed is glucose(葡萄糖 ) metabolism(代谢 ) (a sign of brain activity) increases in the brain in people who were exposed to a cell phone in the area closest to the antenna,“ said Dr. Nora Volkow of the NIH, whose study was published in the Journal of the American Medi

43、cal Association. The study was meant to examine how the brain reacts to electromagnetic fields caused by wireless phone signals. Volkow said she was surprised that the weak electromagnetic radiation(电磁辐射 ) from cell phones could affect brain activity, but she said the findings do not shed any light

44、on whether cell phones cause cancer. “This study does not in any way indicate that. What the study does is to show the human brain is sensitive to electromagnetic radiation from cell phone exposures. “ Use of the devices has increased dramatically since they were introduced in the early 1980s, with

45、about 5 billion cell phones now in use worldwide. Some studies have linked cell phone exposure to an increased risk of brain cancers, but a large study by the World Health Organization did not offer a clear answer to this. Volkow s team studied 47 people who had their brain examined while a cell pho

46、ne was turned on for 50 minutes and another while the phone was turned off. While there was no complete change in brain metabolism, they found a 7 percent increase in brain metabolism in the region closest to the cell phone antenna when the phone was on. Experts said the results were interesting, bu

47、t urged that they be understood with great care. “ Although the biological significance, if any, of increased glucose metabolism from too much cell phone exposure is unknown, the results require further investigation,“ Henry Lai of the University of Washington in the U. S. and Dr. Lennart Hardell of

48、 University Hospital in Sweden, wrote in an article in JAMA. “Much has to be done to further investigate and understand these effects. “ They wrote. 31 According to the passage, which of the following is TRUE? ( A) Cell phone use is dangerous. ( B) Cell phone use causes cancer. ( C) The human brain

49、is an electromagnetic field. ( D) There are about 5 billion cell phone users in the world right now. 32 Doctor Volkow was astonished because_. ( A) her research has shed light on her understanding of cell phone ( B) she found that cell phone exposure is harmful to human brain ( C) she found that using a cell phone for about 50 minutes could influence or change brain activity ( D) human brain is not r

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