1、考研英语模拟试卷 165及答案与解析 一、 Section I Use of English Directions: Read the following text. Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark A, B, C or D. (10 points) 1 In his 1979 book, The Sinking Ark, biologist Norman Myers estimated that (1)_ of more than 100 human-caused extinctions occur each
2、day, and that one million species (2)_ by the centurys end. Yet there is little evidence of (3)_ that number of extinctions. For example, only seven species on the (4)_ species list have become extinct (5)_ the list was created in 1973. Bio (6)_ is an important value, according to many scientists. N
3、evertheless, the supposed mass extinction rates bandied about are (7)_ by multiplying (8)_ by improbables to get imponderables. Many estimates, for instance, rely a great deal on a “species-area (9)_“, which predicts that twice as many species will be found on 100 square miles (10)_ on ten square mi
4、les. The problem is that species am not distributed (11)_, so how much of a forest am destroyed may be as important as (12)_. (13)_, says Ariel Lugo, director of the International Institute of Tropical Forestry in Puerto Rico, “Biologists who predict high (14)_ rates (15)_ the resiliency of nature“.
5、 One of the main muses of extinctions is deforestation. According to the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research, what destroys tropical trees is not commercial logging, (16)_ “poor farmers who have no other (17)_ for feeding their families than slashing and burning a (18)_ of fore
6、st“. In countries that practice modern (19)_ agriculture, forests are in (20)_ danger. In 1920, U.S. forests covered 732 million acres. Today they cover 737 million. ( A) an average ( B) a number ( C) a sum ( D) an amount ( A) disappeared ( B) would disappear ( C) will disappear ( D) would have disa
7、ppeared ( A) anywhere near ( B) somewhere near ( C) anytime when ( D) something like ( A) extinct ( B) endangered ( C) rare ( D) warned ( A) before ( B) although ( C) as ( D) since ( A) selection ( B) difference ( C) diversity ( D) variety ( A) distorted ( B) achieved ( C) magnified ( D) overstated
8、( A) unknowns ( B) unbalanceds ( C) inappropriates ( D) irrelevants ( A) equation ( B) calculation ( C) coordination ( D) classification ( A) where ( B) what ( C) as ( D) from ( A) heavily ( B) randomly ( C) sparsely ( D) thickly ( A) which time ( B) which parts ( C) how long ( D) how severe ( A) In
9、 addition ( B) But ( C) Instead ( D) As a result ( A) extinction ( B) extinctive ( C) extinct ( D) extinguished ( A) underplay ( B) underrate ( C) understate ( D) undermine ( A) rather ( B) as ( C) but ( D) except ( A) faculty ( B) option ( C) prospect ( D) profession ( A) plot ( B) block ( C) patch
10、 ( D) piece ( A) high-production ( B) low-production ( C) high-yield ( D) low-yield ( A) no ( B) possible ( C) imminent ( D) constant Part A Directions: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points) 21 In most peoples mind, growth is associ
11、ated with prosperity. We judge how well the economy is doing by the size of the Gross National Product (GNP), a measure, supposedly, of growth. Equally axiomatic, however, is the notion that increased pressure on declining natural resources must inevitably lead to a decline in prosperity, especially
12、 when accompanied by a growth in population. So, which is correct? What growth advocates mean, primarily, when they say growth is necessary for prosperity is that growth is necessary for the smooth functioning of the economic system. In one field the argument in favor of growth is particularly compe
13、lling and that is with regard to the Third World. To argue against growth in light of Third World poverty and degradation seems unsympathetic. But is it? Could it be that growth, especially the growth of the wealthier countries, has contributed to the impoverishment, not the advancement, of Third Wo
14、rld countries? If not, how do we account for the desperate straits these countries find themselves in today after a century of dedication to growth? To see how this might be the case we must look at the impact of growth on Third World countries the reality, not the abstract stages-of-economic-growth
15、 theory advocated through rose-colored glasses by academicians of the developed world. What good is growth to the people of the Third World if it means the conversion of peasant farms into mechanized agri-businesses producing commodities not for local consumption but for export, if it means the stri
16、pping of their land of its mineral and other natural treasures to the benefit of foreign investors and a handful of their local collaborators, if it means the assumption of a crushing foreign indebtedness? Admittedly, this is an oversimplification. But the point, I believe, remains valid: that growt
17、h in underdeveloped countries cannot simply be judged in the abstract; it must be judged based on the true nature of growth in these societies, on who benefits and who is harmed, on where growth is leading these people and where it has left them. When considered in this way, it just might be that in
18、 the pre sent context growth is more detrimental to the well-being of the wretched of the earth than beneficial. So, do we need growth for prosperity? Only the adoption of zero growth can provide the answer. But that is a test not easily undertaken. Modern economies are incredibly complex phenomena,
19、 a tribute to mans ability to organize and a challenge to his ability to understand. Anything that affects their functioning, such as a policy of zero growth, should not be proposed without a wary carefulness and self-doubting humility. But if the prospect of leaping into the economic unknown is fea
20、r-inspiring, equally so is the prospect of letting that fear prevent us from acting when the failure to act could mean untold misery for future generations and perhaps environmental disaster which threaten our very existence. 21 21 Which of the following statements does the author agree with? ( A) G
21、ross National Product is a safe measure for economic growth. ( B) Increasing natural resources will bring social well-being. ( C) Prosperity decline mostly accompanied by population growth. ( D) Growth does not necessarily result in prosperity. 22 The author seem to believe that prosperity ( A) wont
22、 be achieved without economic growth. ( B) can only be achieved with economic growth. ( C) can be achieved without the participation of the wealthy countries. ( D) will be achieved by selling farm produce in local market. 23 through rose-colored glasses(Paragraph 3) means ( A) overoptimistically, (
23、B) romantically. ( C) purposelessly ( D) shortsightedly. 24 The authors attitude towards the impact of growth on the current socio-economic situation is ( A) negative, ( B) positive. ( C) contradictory. ( D) uncertain. 25 We can learn from the last paragraph, zero growth ( A) will be attained throug
24、h dramatic social changes ( B) is the best policy in the long rum ( C) is worth trying though perhaps not safe. ( D) needs further consideration to determine its feasibility. 26 IT is a startling claim, but one that Congresswoman Deborah Pryce uses to good effect: the equivalent of two classrooms, f
25、ull of children are diagnosed with cancer every day. Mrs. Pryce lost her own 9-year-old daughter to cancer in 1999. Pediatric cancer remains a little-understood issue in America, where the health-care debate is consumed with the ills, pills and medical bills of the elderly. Cancer kills more childre
26、n than any other disease in America. Although there have been tremendous gains in cancer survival rates in recent decades, the proportion of children and teens diagnosed with different forms of the disease, increased by almost a third between 1975 and 2001. Grisly though these statistics are, they a
27、re still tiny when set beside the number of adult lives lost to breast cancer (41,000 each year) and lung cancer (164,000). Advocates for more money for child cancer prefer to look at life-years lost. The average age for cancer diagnosis in a young child is six, while the average adult is diagnosed
28、in their late 60s. Robert Arceci, a pediatric cancer expert at Johns Hopkins, points out that in terms of total life-years saved, the benefit from curing pediatric cancer victims is roughly the same as curing adults with breast cancer. There is an obvious element of special pleading in such calculat
29、ions. All the same, breast cancer has attracted a flurry of publicity, private fund-raising and money from government. Childhood cancer has received less attention and cash. Pediatric cancer, a term which covers people up to 20 years old, receives one-twentieth of the federal research money doled ou
30、t by the National Cancer Institute. Funding, moan pediatric researchers, has not kept pace with rising costs in the field, and NCI money for collaborative research will actually be cut by 3 % this year. There is no national pediatric cancer registry that would let researchers track child and teenage
31、 patients through their lives as they can do in the case of adult sufferers. A pilot childhood-cancer registry is in the works. Groups like Mr. Reamans now get cash directly from Congress. But it is plainly a problem most politicians dont know much about. The biggest problem could lie with 15-19-yea
32、r-olds. Those diagnosed with cancer have not seen the same improvement in their chances as younger children and older adults have done. There are some physical explanations for this: teenagers who have passed adolescence are more vulnerable to different sorts of cancer. But Archie Bleyer, a pediatri
33、c oncologist at the M.D. Anderson Cancer Centre in Texas, has produced some data implying that lack of health insurance plays a role. Older teenagers and young adults are less likely to be covered and checked regularly. 26 The author cites the example of Mrs. Pryce to show that ( A) child cancer is
34、no longer a rare case. ( B) nowadays Americans care little about child cancer. ( C) the current health-care debate is rather time-consuming. ( D) school kids are more likely to be diagnosed with cancer. 27 According to Robert Arceci, child cancer research is also worth funding because ( A) the stati
35、stics of child cancer is rather scary. ( B) a saved child may enjoy a longer life span. ( C) adults with cancer do not deserve that much funding. ( D) funding on child cancer is economical and effective. 28 Those 15-19-year-olds diagnosed with cancer ( A) were born with defects in immune systems. (
36、B) are more likely to recover from a cancer. ( C) can not get enough medical care. ( D) suffer a lot during adolescence. 29 The author writes this passage to ( A) inspire greater concern for the well being of children. ( B) warn people of the harms caused by cancer. ( C) interpret the possible cause
37、 of child cancer. ( D) change the publics indifference to kids with cancer. 30 The authors attitude towards the current state of childhood cancer ( A) concerned. ( B) desperate. ( C) carefree. ( D) indignant. 31 The uniqueness of the Japanese character is the result of two seemingly contradictory fo
38、rces: the strength of traditions, and the selective receptivity to foreign achievements and inventions. As early as 1860s there were counter movement to traditional orientation. One of the fan, us spokesmen of Japans “Enlightenment“ claimed “the Confucian civilization of the East seems to me to lack
39、 two things possessed by Western civilization: science in the material sphere and a sense of independence in the spiritual sphere.“ Another break of relative liberalism followed World War I, when the democratic idealism of President Woodrow Wilson had an important impact on Japanese intellectuals an
40、d, especially, students; but more important was the Leninist ideology of the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution. Again, in the early 1930s, nationalism and militarism became dominant. Following the end of World War , substantial changes were undertaken in Japan to liberate the individual from authoritarian r
41、estraints. The new democratic value system was accepted by many teachers, students, intellectuals, and old liberals, but it was not immediately embraced by the society as a whole. Japanese traditions were dominated by group values, and notions of personal freedom and individual rights were unfamilia
42、r. Today, democratic processes are clearly evident in the widespread participation of the Japanese people in social and political life. School textbooks emphasize equality over hierarchy and rationalism over tradition; but in practice these values are often misinterpreted and distorted, particularly
43、 by the youth who translate the individualistic and humanistic goals of democracy into egoistic and materialistic ones. Most Japanese people have consciously rejected Confucianism, but leftovers of the old order remain. An important feature of relationship in many institutions, including political p
44、arties and universities is the “oyabun-kobun“ or parent-child relation. The corresponding loyalty of the individual to his patron reinforces his allegiance to the group to which they both belong. A willingness to cooperate with other members of the group and to support without qualification the inte
45、rests of the group in all its external relations is still a widely respected virtue. The “oyabun-kobun“ creates ladders of mobility which an individual can ascend, rising as far as abilities permit, so long as he maintains successful personal ties with a superior in the vertical channel, the latter
46、requirement usually taking precedence over a need for exceptional competence. As a consequence, there is little horizontal relationship between people even with the same profession. 31 The spokesman of Japans “Enlightenment“ thinks that ( A) the traditional culture should be replaced by western civi
47、lization. ( B) Japanese ought to forsake the Confucian civilization of the East. ( C) the Confucian civilization in Japan should be revived. ( D) Japan should introduce western civilization. 32 Which of the following statement of the Japans culture is true according to the passage? ( A) Substantial
48、changes occurred in democratic process at the end of World War . ( B) The democratic idea was accepted immediately by the whole society after the World War . ( C) Nowadays the Confucianism outweighs the new value system in Japan. ( D) Today the Confucianism is a functioning part of the Japanese soci
49、ety. 33 Today in Japan, democratic values ( A) are frequently misunderstood and exaggerated by the young. ( B) have been systematically excluded from textbooks. ( C) are consciously rejected by adults who cherish traditions. ( D) have made it possible for the tradition to last long. 34 Which of the following is most like the relationship of the “oyabun-kobun“ described in the passage? ( A) A political candidate and the voting public. ( B) A gifted scientist and his learners. ( C) A judge