[外语类试卷]专业英语四级(阅读)模拟试卷94及答案与解析.doc

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1、专业英语四级(阅读)模拟试卷 94及答案与解析 SECTION A In this section there are several passages followed by ten multiple-choice questions. For each question, there are four suggested answers marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that you think is the best answer. 0 Google has an ambitious vision for spectacles. On June

2、 27th Sergey Brin, one of the companys co-founders, revealed the next stage of Project Glass, its effort to create wireless-connected glasses that allow their wearers to do a host of things, including receiving and responding to messages, and taking and sharing photos and videos. The goal is to get

3、prototypes in the hands of software developers early next year and then to sell a more polished set of specs to consumers in late 2013 or early the following year. A product of Googles secretive X Lab, whose mission is to push the boundaries of computing, the glasses were on show at the companys dev

4、eloper conference in San Francisco along with several other gadgets, including a cheap tablet computer and a new wireless media player for the home. These gadgets attracted plenty of attention, but the longest queues at the event were at booths where folk were trying on Googles spectacles. That is h

5、ardly surprising because the glasses seem like something out of a science-fiction novel. A tiny transparent display towards the top of one lens allows wearers to see text and images by glancing upwards. And the spectacles can be controlled using either voice commands or a somewhat bulky touchpad int

6、egrated into one of the arms. Mr. Brin says the goal is to “get technology out of the way“ so people can, say, take videos without having to pull out a camera or smartphone each time they do so. Googles glasses reflect a growing interest in wearable computing, which many experts think could be the n

7、ext big thing in personal technology after smartphones and tablets. But some tech veterans give warning that designing novel and comfortable devices is an especially tricky task. “ In general, the first attempt at producing new computing paradigms rarely sticks, “ notes Sumeet Jain of CMEA Capital,

8、a venture-capital firm. If Googles glasses are to prove an exception to that rule, the firm will have to meet several challenges. One is to refine their design so that wearers dont look like nerds from a laboratory. Another is to relieve inevitable concerns around privacy that the glasses will raise

9、. The firm will also need to reassure people their eyeballs wont be blitzed with advertising, which is Googles preferred way to mint money. Mr. Brin stresses the aim is to make a profit on the glasses themselves, whose mass-market price will be well below the $ 1, 500 developers are paying for a pai

10、r. That should make them worth a close look. 1 The most popular product(s)at Googles developer conference in San Francisco was/were_. ( A) a tablet computer ( B) a wireless media player ( C) the spectacles ( D) smartphones 2 Some experts believe it is a difficult task to_. ( A) design new and comfor

11、table devices ( B) increase customers interests in spectacles ( C) push the boundaries of wearable computing ( D) invent new wearable computing devices 3 Which of the following is NOT among the challenges to be met by Google? ( A) To improve the design of the glasses. ( B) To ease peoples concerns a

12、bout privacy. ( C) To make people stop worrying about advertising. ( D) To earn a profit by increasing the mass-market price. 3 Because I married a photographer, once we had children, our holiday cards of course became vehicles for their cuteness and his creativity. In 2000, baby number ones chubby

13、smiling face in a Santa hat was the cover image. In 2004, our now-four faces were ornaments on a tree. By 2006, we wore stocking caps and lay down in bed together with a thought bubble over our sleeping heads filled with cherries. Our best card was our last, in 2010. We dressed in extravagant holida

14、y finery, gowns, jackets and bow-ties. We titled it:“Don We Now Our Gay Apparel. “ That was two years ago. We mailed it out in envelopes, signed, sealed and delivered by the US Postal Service and its analogues in distant lands. Good cheers and laughs in mailboxes all around! Its been downhill ever s

15、ince. By last year, wed let our mailing list go to seed. We communicated with most of our friends online and no longer had street addresses for them. I didnt know it then but my world, my social world, was changing. Today, my 1, 500 Facebook friends 1, 300 of whom I have never actually met have alre

16、ady seen the best of the years haul of pictures of my kids. They also know where Ive gone on vacation and sometimes, what I cooked for dinner or what I thought of a movie on a Saturday night in May. Theres little point in writing a Christmas update now, with boasts about grades and athletic skill, h

17、ospitalizations and holidays, and the dogs accidents, when we have already posted these events and so much more of our trifles all year long. The urge to share has already been well satisfied. Likewise, as receivers, we already have real-time windows into the lives of people thousands of miles away.

18、 We already know exactly how theyve fared in the past year, much more than could possibly be conveyed by any single Christmas card. If a child or grandchild has been born to a former colleague or high school friend living across the continent, not only did I see it within hours on Shutterfly or Inst

19、agram or Facebook, I might have seen him or her take his or her first steps on YouTube. Still, the demise of the Christmas photo card saddens me. It predicts the end of the US Postal Service. It signals the day is near when writing on paper is non-existent. Finally, it is part of a decline of a cert

20、ain quality of communication, one that involved delay and anticipation, forethought and reflection. Opening these cards, the satisfaction wasnt just in the Peace on Earth greeting, but in the recognition that a distant friend or relative you hadnt heard from in a year was still thinking about you, a

21、nd maybe sharing news about major events of the past 12 months. We know each other so well now, perhaps too well. And yet, all the time logged into our computers has also taken us away from our nearest and dearest. Who can say they spent as much time looking into the eyes of family, friends and neig

22、hbors as into the colorful phone or laptop screen last year? This season, instead of sending cards, my winter holiday greeting at the end of 2012 will be this: after posting the obligatory seasonal wishes online on Christmas Eve, I will be clicking off the electronic messaging services, and trying t

23、o connect in person with my friends, neighbors and family members for a change. 4 What is NOT mentioned as the things my Facebook friends know about me? ( A) My friends in real life. ( B) The place where I spent my holiday. ( C) The dishes I cooked. ( D) My idea about a movie. 5 It can be inferred f

24、rom Paragraphs 4 and 5 that_. ( A) we can see other peoples life through windows ( B) its easy to learn about distant friends over the network ( C) writing on paper doesnt exist any longer ( D) opening photo cards gives us the satisfaction of peace 6 Which of the following is the best title for the

25、passage? ( A) How Did I Make the HoUday Photo Cards? ( B) What Is the Best Way to Connect with Friends? ( C) Why Did I Stop Sending Holiday Photo Cards? ( D) What Is the Disadvantage of Online Contact? 6 In The Art of Choosing, Sheena Iyengar, a business professor at Columbia University and a leadin

26、g expert on decision making, tells us that making sound choices is even more difficult than we think. To learn how to make better decisions, we first need to become aware of the pitfalls(陷阱 )we typically encounter. Iyengar reveals, for example, that having many options to choose from does not lead t

27、o better outcomes, despite popular assumptions to the contrary. For instance, she found that consumers were far more likely to buy jam when given fewer flavor choices, not more. “ We frequently pay a mental and emotional tax for freedom of choice, “ she writes. To become better choosers, Iyengar pro

28、poses that when confronted with an abundance of options, people should focus first on the easiest elements of the decision and work up to the more complex parts. She illustrates this point using one study in which Audi buyers had to choose among 144 total car features. One group started with the fea

29、tures that required fewer options, such as whether they wanted leather or upholstered interiors, and worked up to features with many options, such as choosing among 56 colors for the cars interior and exterior. The other group started with the hardest choices and moved toward the easier ones. In the

30、 end, those in the group that went from the hardest to easiest spent an average of 1, 500 euros more on their cars than the other group and reported they were less happy with their decisions. Iyengar also explains that we often make decisions not based on our tastes but on how we think our decisions

31、 will be perceived. In 2000, a team of psychologists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Columbia University showed that people receiving a free sample of beer chose against their tastes to avoid looking like copycats to their peers. Individuals who picked their beers in private, howeve

32、r, chose what they enjoyed and said they were happy with their decisions. Iyengar points out that the people who chose against their tastes were often unconscious of what motivated their decisions. Thus, she proposes that one way to avoid strong and sometimes silent influences is to try to become mo

33、re aware of them in the first place. Ultimately, Iyengar wants us to recognize that our decisions both the mundane(普通的 )and momentous are influenced by many factors and that the more we recognize those factors, the more satisfied we will be. 7 Compared with the other group, those Audi buyers who sta

34、rted from the hardest choices to the easiest ones_. ( A) spent less money and were happier ( B) spent less money and were less happy ( C) spent more money and were happier ( D) spent more money and were less happy 8 According to Paragraph 4, which of the following statements is INCORRECT? ( A) Peopl

35、e chose the beer against their tastes so that they wouldnt be thought to imitate others. ( B) People could realize what caused them to choose against their own tastes in public. ( C) People enjoyed the beer that they chose in private and were satisfied with the choice. ( D) People often chose the be

36、er based on their tastes in private but against them in public. 8 Executive coaching is primarily concerned with confidential one-to-one discussions between the coach and the executive. It is aimed at performance improvement. Primary needs are diagnosed and agreed upon, a “developmental-action plan“

37、is drawn up, the skill base of the executive is broadened by coaching, and then the new skill sets are tested in the workplace under the guidance of the coach. Sometimes, these needs involve team coaching, but individual coaching is the normal starting point. The coach needs to guide the executive o

38、utside his or her comfort zone in order to improve performance. A coaching assignment normally focuses on two or three developmental needs of the individual, and lasts for 6 to 12 months. However, it sometimes involves multiple assignments aimed at bringing about cultural change in an organization.

39、For example, a new chief executive may want to change the culture of his organization. He could then hire a coach, and brief him or her to change the mindset of his direct subordinates on a one-to-one basis. Compared with traditional management training, which is typically related to broadbased orga

40、nizational change, sometimes of a technical nature, executive coaching is targeted to individual and small-group change. The primary focus of coaching is often behavioural and leadership change, and is rarely of a technical nature. The difference between coaching and training is that coaching is one

41、-to-one, highly confidential and over 6-12 months, whereas training is typically of a short-term, group-work-shop nature. Referring to the key ingredients for enhanced performance and team success, business coaching has a lot to learn from sports. According to sports coaches, a coach is a catalyst f

42、or change, and is not paid to preserve the status quo, but to lift people out of their comfort zone, so that they grow and develop. The coach must stay in touch with the state of the art and extract from it what is relevant. All sports coaches believe passionately in the power of the team to lift pe

43、rformance not by just a little, but by 100% . Considerable energy is devoted to defining goals, roles, a code of conduct and to fostering group dynamics in order to optimize team productivity. Both success and failure are learning opportunities, and there is a severity in their cold-eyed, weekly ana

44、lysis, which business has yet to develop. Top athletes scrutinize both success and failure with their coach to extract lessons from them, but they are never distracted from longer-term goals. To be a champion athlete means developing an elitist attitude not involving arrogance, but rather an unceasi

45、ng desire to learn and improve. They never accept second best, but always strive for what has not yet been achieved. There must be a sport/life balance, so that athletes are not obsessed by their goals, and thus lack a sense of perspective to cope with inevitable failure or occasional success, or th

46、e ability to re-charge their batteries outside the sporting arena. 9 Which of the following statements is INCORRECT according to Paragraph 5? ( A) Executive coaches update their minds constantly. ( B) Coaches are aimed to broaden peoples horizon. ( C) Its difficult to evaluate the performance of a c

47、oach. ( D) If a coach can not make the executive get touch with something unfamiliar, he will probably be fired. 10 With the passage, the author intends to_. ( A) introduce the job of executive coaching ( B) compare executive coaching with sports coaching ( C) explain the tasks of executive coaching

48、 ( D) tell the aims of executive coaching SECTION B In this section there are five short answer questions based on the passages in Section A. Answer the questions with No more than TEN words in the space provided. 11 PASSAGE ONE 11 Whats the mission of Googles secretive X Lab? 12 PASSAGE TWO 12 What

49、 does the phrase “go to seed“ mean in Paragraph 2? 12 PASSAGE THREE 13 When faced with many choices, what should people do? 14 What does the passage mainly discuss? 15 PASSAGE FOUR 15 According to the passage, what is the main task of “ executive coaching“ ? 专业英语四级(阅读)模拟试卷 94答案与解析 SECTION A In this section there are several passages followed by ten multiple-choice questions. For each question, there are four suggested answers marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that you think is the best answer. 【知识模块】

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