[考研类试卷]考研英语二(阅读)模拟试卷3及答案与解析.doc

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1、考研英语二(阅读)模拟试卷 3 及答案与解析Part ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points)0 In 1930, when the world was “suffering from a bad attack of economic pessimism“ , John May-nard Keynes wrote a broadly optimistic essay, “Economic Possib

2、ilities for our Grand-children“. It imagined a middle way between revolution and stagnation that would leave the grandchildren a great deal richer than their grandparents. But the path was not without dangers.One of the worries Keynes admitted was a “new disease“ : “technological unemployment due to

3、 our discovery of means of economising the use of labour outrunning the pace at which we can find new uses for labour. “ His readers might not have heard of the problem, he suggestedbut they were certain to hear a lot more about it in the years to come.For the most part, they did not. Nowadays, the

4、majority of economists confidently wave such worries away. By raising productivity, they argue, any automation which economises on the use of labour will increase incomes. That will generate demand for new products and services, which will in turn create new jobs for displaced workers. To think othe

5、rwise has meant being tarred a Luddite the name taken by 19th-century textile workers who smashed the machines taking their jobs.For much of the 20th century, those arguing that technology brought ever more jobs and prosperity looked to have the better of the debate. Real incomes in Britain scarcely

6、 doubled between the beginning of the common era and 1570. They then tripled from 1570 to 1875. And they more than tripled from 1875 to 1975. Industrialisation did not end up eliminating the need for human workers. On the contrary, it created employment opportunities sufficient to absorb the 20th ce

7、nturys exploding population. Keynes vision of everyone in the 2030s being a lot richer is largely achieved. His belief they would work just 15 hours or so a week has not come to pass.1 According to Maynard Keynes, which one of the following is NOT true?(A)Economic stagnation will last for a long per

8、iod.(B) Economic depression may seem not so pessimistic.(C) Economic possibilities may be bright for our grandchildren.(D)Our grandchildren may be much more affluent than their forefathers.2 The phenomenon of technological unemployment appears because_.(A)machine will finally replace all human labou

9、r(B) machine can complete some work that human cant(C) with the advent of machine, many workers become lazier(D)the pace of making new machine is faster than finding new use of labour3 Most economists argue that automation will increase incomes if_.(A)new jobs are created(B) productive force is boos

10、ted(C) machine replaces human labour(D)demand for new products is generated4 We can infer from the last paragraph that_.(A)industrialization will increase the unemployment rate(B) technology will bring less work opportunities but more fortune(C) generally speaking, people now work more than 15 hours

11、 a week(D)Keynes predicted people would become richer but it didnt come true5 What is the main idea of the text?(A)Machine Will Be the Future.(B) Technology Delivers More Employment.(C) Technological Unemployment Will Long Exist.(D)Economic Depression Leads to Unemployment.5 Three years ago, on Janu

12、ary 13th, Rukhsar Khatun, then 15 months old, was diagnosed with polio. She now has a crippled leg and struggles to keep up with her friends. But this little girl, from a West Bengali village, can claim some fame: she is, with luck, the last Indian to be infected with the wild polio virus. Enough ti

13、me has passed with no new case for India shortly to be certified as free of the pain.That is a big success. Indias anti-polio campaign began in 1995 with severe disadvantages. The country spends little on public health, barely 1% of GDP, and has been awful at immunising children. Too few parents kno

14、w the basics of hygiene and nutrition, let alone the benefits of vaccines. India has bad sanitation, large remote populations and vast migration from village to slum.Yet much has gone right. The anti-polio campaign received over $ 3 billion, mostly from within India itself, and deployed 2.4m vaccina

15、tors. UNICEF, the World Health Organisation(WHO), Rotary International and the Gates Foundation(both charities)gave technical help. Religious leaders reassured people suspicious about vaccinations, and politicians knocked on doors to make sure children took their medicine.At the peak of coverage, 99

16、. 7% of the target population swallowed anti-polio drops, says An-uradha Gupta of the national health ministry. That is surprisingly high, considering that a decade ago “universal“ vaccination coverage for seven preventable diseases was a pitiful 30% in Bihar, a big, poor northern state.Indias campa

17、ign has been successful enough for its lessons to be applied in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Nigeria, the last places with endemic polio. Vaccinators learned to attend especially to mobile populations, like seasonal workers at brick kilns, and found that many migrants are best reached not at home but i

18、n bus and railway stations.Good monitoring was crucial, too. In Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, vaccinators visited 60m households several times a year, says Hamid Jafari of the WHO. To compile data on receivers, some 400,000 hard-to-reach population groups were carefully tracked and plotted, down to each

19、household. Data passed early to decision-makers, at the district-official level, allowed a quick response to new cases.6 Rukhsar Khatun was mentioned to_.(A)depict the life of poor people in India(B) describe the life of handicapped children(C) introduce the topic of anti-polio campaign(D)show the d

20、evelopment of medical treatment7 We know from the second paragraph that_.(A)India spends least on public health in the world(B) few parents in India know the ABC of health care(C) few Indians would stay in slum because of bad hygiene(D)most parents in India are aware of the advantages of vaccines8 W

21、hich one is NOT a piece of good news for anti-polio campaign?(A)Many international organizations offer help.(B) A large amount of money has been received.(C) Officers ensure that medicine has been taken.(D)Most people remain suspicious about vaccinations.9 We can learn from the text that_.(A)vaccina

22、tion coverage was 30% in India ten years ago(B) 99.7% of Indians took anti-polio medicine at the peak(C) migrant workers in India have received care from vaccinators(D)Indias campaign has been accepted in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Nigeria10 The authors attitude towards Indian governments supervision

23、 is_.(A)favorable(B) pessimistic(C) suspicious(D)indifferent10 It is hard to make money peddling social media anywhere. During their first few years in business , Facebook and Twitter lost pots of money. Yet somehow Tencent, an innovative Chinese firm that released the WeChat app in 2011, seems to h

24、ave cracked the code. Alicia Yap of Barclays, an investment bank, forecasts that WeChat will earn some 6. 8 billion yuan($1.1 billion)this year and 9. 6 billion yuan next year. The reasons for optimism include clever integration of the app with other money-making services and spectacular growth in u

25、sers at home and, unusually for a Chinese app, abroad.WeChat started off as a messaging service, similar to Americas WhatsApp, but it has grown rapidly into much more. In recent months, Tencent has integrated online-payment functions into it. Customers can do their banking through it and a wealth-ma

26、nagement service has just been launched. It is also promoting e-commerce: during a recent sale held exclusively on WeChat, Xiaomi, Chinas hottest smartphone-maker, is said to have sold 150,000 of its latest model in under ten minutes.Most internet companies that make money do so by selling online ad

27、s, but Tencent makes most of its money selling customers virtual goods. About 85% of the money Tencent will make this year from the app will come from gaming. Tencent says that WeChat has 270m active users, including tens of millions overseas. Their number and enthusiasm matter a lot to marketers. A

28、t the moment, Tencent allows companies to send occasional, targeted messages to some users without charge. Mark Natkin of Marbridge, a consultancy, says that in future it might ask for a fee.The biggest unknown about WeChat is whether the app can become a global blockbuster like Twitter or Facebook.

29、 Mr Natkin points out that the app will lose one of its most attractive features outside the country. WeChat usage exploded in part because it integrates a users address book from Tencents QQ, an old-fashioned instant-messaging service that has over 800m registered users, though few outside China.We

30、Chat is already used in South-East Asia, Russia and India. The app is available in the Japanese and Korean languages, but strong local rivals already exist in those markets. America and Europe will be harder to crack. To succeed there, it must beat WhatsApp and other rivals.11 According to Paragraph

31、 1, which one is true?(A)Most Chinese apps are popular in the world.(B) Foreign social software earns more money in China.(C) WeChat has broken the rule and made money illegally.(D)WeChat has combined the app with other profitable services.12 We can conclude from Paragraph 2 that_.(A)both WeChat and

32、 WhatsApp are chatting tools(B) WhatsApp has more functions compared with WeChat(C) customers can shop online through most chatting softwares(D)Xiaomi is so popular that 150,000 phones are sold every ten minutes13 Internet companies can make money by selling all EXCEPT_.(A)gaming apps(B) actual good

33、s(C) virtual articles(D)online advertisements14 WeChat has a large number of users partly because_.(A)it is the first domestic chatting software(B) it is much more attractive than other apps(C) apps like Twitter and Facebook are out of date(D)it is related with another popular message service15 WeCh

34、at may succeed more easily in_.(A)Japan and Korea(B) America and European countries(C) South-East Asia, Russia and India(D)African countries and South America15 A young woman goes to university and earns a degree in religious and womens studies. In the process she piles up some $ 100,000 in student-

35、loan debt. Upon graduation, she cannot find a job in her field and struggles to pay her bills. An example of unwise decision-making perhaps, but is it also proof of a long-debated bubble in American higher education?It is for Glenn Reynolds, the productive blogger, law professor and author of a new

36、book, “ The New School“. With tuition costs rising much faster than inflation, Americans are taking on record amounts of debt over $ 1 trillion by 2013to fund their education. Many are finding that their job prospects do not justify the investment. Whereas a university degree once meant automatic en

37、try into the middle class, it now comes with no such guarantee.But is higher education as bad a deal as Mr Reynolds makes it out to be? “Some people are graduating with debts of $ 100,000 or more,“ he says, “sometimes much more. “ Most are not, though. The average graduate holds student-loan debt of

38、 $ 29,400, a number not found in this book. College Board, a non-profit organisation, finds that the median earnings of university graduates emerging from four-year courses and without a further degree, such as a masters, are 65% higher over their lifetimes than those of high-school graduates.Short

39、on numbers, the book contributes little to the bubble debate. But Mr Reynolds puts forward criticism of American universities that will ring true to anyone who has attended one recently. Universities can help people make money in three ways: by teaching them skills, giving them credentials that empl

40、oyers want and providing access to a valuable social network. Some studies have shown that university students fail to learn much of anything.Acquiring skills, of course, can be quite expensive. Prices should not continue going up forever, so new thinking is needed. The web provides one way forward,

41、 and although Mr Reynolds is doubtful about the ability of colleges to reinvent themselves, some are catching on. Take the Georgia Institute of Technology, which has joined up with Udacity, an online educator, to offer a masters degree in computer science for $ 7,000. “Its a real, accredited degree,

42、“ says Mr Reynolds, “just like the ones that cost six times as much if earned on campus. “16 The example of a young woman in the opening paragraph is to show_.(A)the failure of higher education(B) the condition of education debt(C) an example of unwise decision-making(D)the unemployment situation in

43、 the U. S.17 Many Americans are finding that_.(A)the money spent on college is not worthy(B) investment requires cautious consideration(C) college degree is a visiting card to the middle class(D)expectation of future career seems great after college18 We can learn from Paragraph 3 that_.(A)most grad

44、uates hold a loan debt of over $ 100,000(B) salaries have nothing to do with educational background(C) generally speaking, one with higher education earns more(D)Mr Reynolds book is popular and his view is well accepted19 Mr Reynolds attitude towards American universities seems_.(A)suspicious(B) ent

45、husiastic(C) supportive(D)prejudiced20 We can conclude from the last paragraph that_.(A)college tuition will drop in the near future(B) online education will soon become popular(C) online education only offers degree of computer science(D)online education may save a lot of money for some students考研英

46、语二(阅读)模拟试卷 3 答案与解析Part ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points)【知识模块】 阅读1 【正确答案】 A【试题解析】 根据大写词 Maynard Keynes 定位到第一段。选项 A的内容文章并没有提到,属于无中生有。选项B则对应第一句:In 1930,when the world was“suffering from a bad attackof economic pessimi

47、sm”,John Maynard Keynes wrote a broadly optimistic essay该项的 not sopessimistic 对应原文中的 broadly optimistic,属于正话反说,故选项B正确。选项C和D对应倒数第二句:It imagined a middle way between revolution and stagnation that would leave thegrandchildren a great deal richer than their grandparentsC 和D两项的“bright 前景光明”和“affluent 富裕

48、的”与其中的“a great deal richer 更加富裕”信息相匹配,故这两项表述都正确。综上所述,该题答案为选项A。【知识模块】 阅读2 【正确答案】 D【试题解析】 根据题干中的 technological unemployment 定位到第二段首句。而due to 之后的内容即该题 because 之后的答案。该句提到: our discovery of means of economising the use of labouroutrunning the pace at which we can find new uses for labour大意为:我们发现节省劳动力使用的方

49、法比我们找到劳动力新用途的步伐还快。而这个句子相当于选项Dthe pace of makingnew machine is faster than finding new use of labour(发明新机器比起寻找劳动力的新用途速度还快)。故该题答案为选项D 。【知识模块】 阅读3 【正确答案】 B【试题解析】 根据题干中的 most economists 定位到第三段第一行:the majority of economists下文的 they argue 即等同于题干中的 most economists argue,故答案来自这个句子:By raisingproductivity,they argue,any automation which economises on the use of labour will increase incomes(他们认为,通过提高生产力,任何节省人力成本的自动化生产都可以增加收益。)可见答案是与“raising productivity 提高生产力”相关的内容,所以

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