【考研类试卷】考研英语-792及答案解析.doc

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1、考研英语-792 及答案解析(总分:100.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、Section Use of Eng(总题数:1,分数:10.00)For those who regard the al-Jazeera TV channel as a biased, anti-western mouthpiece for Osama bin Laden, the announcement that it will start broadcasting 24 hours a day in English next year will be unwelcome. Its likeliest audie

2、nce is Muslims (1) the Middle East who do not speak Arabic. Will al-Jazeeras reports of suffering and rage in Iraq and beyond inspire anger (2) America and its (3) at home, too?The new service may prove a bit less (4) than its Arabic sibling. Nigel Parsons, its managing editor, says that al-Jazeera

3、has been too strident on (5) in the past, and that the English channel will (6) to redress that. It will strive (7) balance, credibility and authority, he says, and it will signal a new maturity for al-Jazeera, which was started by the emir of Qatar in 1996.It will broadcast its own original content

4、news, documentaries and talk shows (8) studios in Doha, London and Washington, (9) international news beyond the Middle East. especially the developing countries often (10) by existing English-language channels.A1-Jazeera is already enjoying a fresh burst of (11) outside the Middle East. Around the

5、same time that the interim government in Iraq ordered it to shut its bureau in Baghdad, westerners started watching “Control Room,“ a film sympathetic (12) the station directed by Jehane Noujaim. At a screening in London last week an audience of local journalists laughed along (13) al-Jazeeras repor

6、ters and editors (14) the (15) of the American military.The biggest mystery about al-Jazeera surround its funding, which “Control Room“ sadly did not (16) . Qatar has a new (17) in the world (18) to the station. That may be why the emir is willing to spend (19) an English-language channel even (20)

7、the original Arabic one is probably losing money.(分数:10.00)A.outsideB.insideC.inD.outA.onB.atC.withD.againstA.enemiesB.partnersC.alliesD.supportersA.contentiousB.controversialC.competitiveD.competentA.circumstanceB.occasionC.timeD.eventsA.seekB.lookC.aimD.searchA.toB.onC.atD.forA.inB.atC.onD.fromA.d

8、ealingB.containingC.coveringD.involvingA.forgottenB.neglectedC.desertedD.disregardedA.interestB.noticeC.appealD.attentionA.toB.withC.aboutD.onA.withB.atC.aboutD.toA.onB.aboutC.atD.inA.sacrificeB.expenseC.costD.priceA.searchB.researchC.probeD.examineA.prominenceB.fameC.statusD.importanceA.due toB.bec

9、ause ofC.thanks toD.owing toA.inB.onC.atD.withA.thatB.sinceC.althoughD.though二、Section Reading Co(总题数:0,分数:0.00)三、Part A(总题数:0,分数:0.00)四、Text 1(总题数:1,分数:10.00)Clouds may have silver linings, but even the sunniest of us seldom glimpse them on foot. The marvelous Blur Building that hovers above the la

10、ke of Yverdon les Bains in Switzerland provides such an opportunity. It gives anyone who has ever wanted to step into the clouds they watch from the airplane window a chance to realize their dream. Visitors wear waterproof ponchos before setting off along a walkway above the lake that takes them int

11、o the foggy atmosphere of the cloud. The experience of physical forms blurring before your eyes as you enter the cloud is both disorientating and liberating. However firmly your feet are planted on the floor, it is hard to escape the sensation of floating. On the upper deck of this spaceship-shaped

12、structure, the Angel Bar, a translucent counter lit in tones of aqueous blue, beckons with a dozen different kinds of mineral water.To enter this sublime building situated in the landscape of the Swiss Alps feels like walking into a poemit is part of nature but removed from reality, Its architects,

13、Elizabeth Diller and Ricardo Scofidio of New York, designed it as a pavilion for the Swiss Expo 2002 in the Three Lakes region of Switzerland, an hours train ride from Geneva, which features a series of exhibits on the lakes. The Blur Building is easily the most successful. Indeed, you can skip the

14、rest of the Expoa Swiss kitsch version of Britains Millennium Domeand head straight for the cloud, which is there until the end of October.The architects asked themselves what was the ideal material for building on a lake and decided on water itself. the element of the lake, the snow. the rivers and

15、 the mist above it. They wanted to play on and lay bare the notion of a worlds fair pavilion by creating an ethereal ghost of one in which there is nothing to see. The result is a refuge from the surveillance cameras and high-definition images of our everyday worlda particular tease in Switzerland,

16、where clarity and precision are so prized. (Anti- architecture or not, the Blur Building cost a cool $7.5 million.)Out-of-the-box thinking is a trademark of Diller+Scofidio. a husband-and-wife team of architecture professors who became the first architects to win a genius grant from the MacArthur Fo

17、undation in 1999. Although they have built very little, they are interested in the social experience of architecture, in challenging peoples ideas about buildings. They treat architecture as an analytical art form that combines other disciplines, such as visual art and photography, dance and theatre

18、.To realize its Utopian poetry, the Blur Building has to be technologically state-of-the-art. Water from the lake is pumped through 32.000 fog nozzles positioned throughout the skeleton-like stainless steel structure; so the building does not just look like a cloud on the outside, it feels like a cl

19、oud on the inside. And while the 300-foot-wide platform can accommodate up to 400 people, visitors vanish from each other in the mist at about five paces, so you really can wander lonely as a cloud. Wordsworth must be smiling.(分数:10.00)(1).The spectacle on the deck of this structure is NOT_.(分数:2.00

20、)A.dazingB.freeC.spine-chillingD.dazzling(2).One should directly come to the Blur Building in the Expo 2002 and skip the rest because_.(分数:2.00)A.it will be there temporarilyB.its the most important expo workC.its not real and will vanish in the thin airD.its near Geneva(3).The expression“ out-of-th

21、e-box“(Line 1. Par(分数:2.00)A.4) most probably means_.A. traditionalB. logicalC. invariableD. inspirational(4).The last sentence “Wordsworth must be smiling“ means_.(分数:2.00)A.Wordsworth has asked the architects to build it in this wayB.the architecture is just like a beautiful poemC.Wordsworth will

22、be happy to see the scene in his poem come trueD.Wordsworth is satisfied with this architecture(5).Which one is NOT true about the building?(分数:2.00)A.It is a piece of art.B.It differs from the traditional concept of buildings.C.There is no difference from the images of our everyday world.D.The sple

23、ndid spectacle cant be photoset.五、Text 2(总题数:1,分数:10.00)During its formative years, the inner solar system was a rough-and-tumble place. There were a couple of hundred large objects flying around. Moon-size or bigger, and for millions of years they collided with one another. Out of these impacts gre

24、w the terrestrial planetsMercury, Venus, Earth with its Moon, and Marsand the asteroids.Scientists have thought of these collisions as mergers: a smaller object (the impactor) hits a larger one (the target) and sticks to it. But new computer modeling by Erik Asphaug and Craig B. Agnor of the Univers

25、ity of California, Santa Cruz, shows that things werent that simple. “Most of the time, the impactor and the target go off on their merry ways,“ Dr. Asphaug said. About half the collisions are these hit-and-nm affairs. Now the two researchers and a colleague, Quentin Williams. have done simulations

26、to study the effects of these collisions on the impactors. They are not pretty.“The impactors suffer all kinds of fates,“ Dr. Asphaug said. They undergo tremendous shearing and gravitational forces that can cause them to fracture into smaller pieces or melt, causing chemical changes in the material

27、and loss of water or other volatile compounds. Or the crust and cover can be stripped off. leaving just an embryonic iron core.The researchers, whose findings are published in Nature, discovered that two objects did not even have to collide to create an effect on the smaller one. from the gravitatio

28、nal forces of a near-collision. During the simulations. Dr. Asphaug said, “Wed look and say, Gosh, we just got rid of the whole atmosphere of that planetoid: it didnt even hit and it sucked the whole atmosphere off.“The researchers suggest that the remains of these beaten-up, fractured and melted ob

29、jects can be found in the asteroid belt. Dr. Asphaug said that could explain the prevalence of “iron relics“ in the belt. Some of these planetoid remnants also eventually hit Earth: that would help explain why certain meteorites lack water and other volatile elements.The hit-and-run collision model

30、also provides an explanation for Vesta. a large asteroid with an intact crust and cover. How did Vesta keep its cover while so many other objects were losing theirs? Dr. Asphang said it could be that Vesta was always the target, never the impactor, and was thus less affected. “It just had to avoid b

31、eing the hitter,“ he said, “until bigger objects left the system./(分数:10.00)(1).The planets were formed as a result of_.(分数:2.00)A.collisions of objects in inner solar systemB.the merging of a smaller object and a larger oneC.the impactor sticking to the targetD.chemical changes(2).In the last sente

32、nce of the second paragraph, “they“ refers to_.(分数:2.00)A.the researchersB.the collisionsC.the simulationsD.the impactors(3).Certain meteorites lack water and other volatile elements probably because_.(分数:2.00)A.these elements are not suitable to exist in these meteoritesB.these elements are lost du

33、ring the medical changes during collisionC.their crest and cover have been stripped offD.they are planetoid remnants(4).According to the hit-and-nm collision model, Vesta keeps its cover probably because_.(分数:2.00)A.it was always staticB.it always acted as the targetC.there is no collision happening

34、 to itD.its cover is very hard(5).The model developed by Erik Asphaug and Craig B. can explain the following facts EXCEPT_.(分数:2.00)A.there are a lot of remnants in the asteroid beltB.some elements are scarcer in some planetoid remnantsC.the terrestrial planets grew out of the collisionD.the impacto

35、rs are still affected in near-collision六、Text 3(总题数:1,分数:10.00)Zimbabweans cope with the shortage of the dollars that count in various ways. The government grabs them from other people. On February 9th. it told the countrys banks to start selling all their hard- currency inflows to the central bank

36、and the state petrol-importing monopoly, at the official rate. It said that Zimbabwean embassies abroad face power cuts because they cannot pay their bills. But if staff in Moscow felt chilly, the grab did not warm them. Exporters told their customers to delay payments.Hard-currency inflows fell by

37、some 90%, forcing the government to relent.Business folk were relieved. The economy is so stormy that many exporters stay afloat only by selling American dollars on the black market. Others try to keep their foreign earnings offshore. This is not easy, since most sell tobacco, gold, roses and other

38、goods that can be observed and recorded as they leave the country. But some quietly set up overseas subsidiaries to buy their own products at artificially low prices. The subsidiary then sells the goods m the real buyer, and keeps the proceeds abroad.Since petrol, which must be imported, is scarce,

39、some employers give their staff bicycles. But the two local bicycle makers have gone bankrupt, so bicycles must be imported too. Where possible, local products are replaced for imports. One firm, for example, has devised a way to make glue using oil from locally-grown castor beans instead of petrole

40、um-based chemicals. But even the simplest products often have imported components. One manufacturer found it could not make first-aid kits, because it could not obtain zips for the bags. The local zip-maker had no dollars to import small but essential metal studs. An order worth $8,000 was lost for

41、want of perhaps $100 in hard cash.Rich individuals are putting their savings into tangible assets, though not houses or land, which they fear the government may seize. Instead, they buy movable goods such as cars or jewellery. Unlike the Zimbabwean dollar, such assets do not lose half their value ev

42、ery year. Jewellery is also an easy way m move money abroad. Wear it on the plane, sell it in London. and leave the money there. The poor have fewer options. A typical unskilled wage now buys a loaf of bread and a litre of milk a day, plus the bus fare to work. For most poor Zimbabweans, the only me

43、asure against inflation is to plant maize in the back yard and hope they can harvest it before their landlord expels them.(分数:10.00)(1).“But if staff in Moscow felt chilly, the grab did not warm them.“ means the measure government adopted is_.(分数:2.00)A.funnyB.efficientC.activeD.useless(2).The overs

44、eas subsidiaries arc set up to_.(分数:2.00)A.puzzle the Zimbabwean governmentB.act as a sellerC.import some productsD.store the products which are produced in Zimbabwean(3).The example of “zips“ reflects_.(分数:2.00)A.if possible, imports will be replaced by the local productsB.some products cant be pro

45、duced without imported componentsC.the people try to find a way m produce the local materialsD.a small lack leads to a big loss(4).Under current circumstances, people in the country do the following EXCEPT_.(分数:2.00)A.put savings into tangible assetsB.buy cars and jewelersC.plant maize in the back y

46、ardD.buy houses and land(5).Which one is NOT true about effects resulted from economic problems in Zimbabwea?(分数:2.00)A.People dont want to hold the Zimbabwean dollars.B.Some people will give you mom Zimbabwean dollars for hard currency.C.The staff use bicycles instead of cars.D.Business folk have n

47、othing to do with the governmental policies.七、Text 4(总题数:1,分数:10.00)Stephen Colberts performance at the White House Correspondents Dinner nine days ago has already created a debate over politics, the press and humor. Now, a commercial rivalry has broken out over its rebroadcast.On Wednesday, C-Span,

48、 the nonprofit network that first showed Mr. Colberts speech, wrote letters to the video sites YouT and , demanding that the clips of the speech be taken off their Web sites. The action was a first for C-Span, whose prime-time schedule tends to feature events like Congressional hearings on auto fuel

49、-economy standards.“We have had other hotI hate to use that wordvideos that generated a lot of buzz,“ said Rob Kennedy, executive vice president of C-Span, which was founded in 1979. “But this is the first time it has occurred since the advent of the video clipping sites.“After the clips of Mr. Colberts performance were ordered taken down at You Tubewhere 41 clips of the speech had been viewed a total of 2.7 million times in less than 48 hours, according to the sitethere were

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