[考研类试卷]考研英语(一)模拟试卷13及答案与解析.doc

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1、考研英语(一)模拟试卷 13 及答案与解析一、Section I Use of EnglishDirections: Read the following text. Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark A, B, C or D. (10 points) 0 It is often observed that the aged spend much time thinking and talking about their past lives, 【C1】_about the future. These remini

2、scences are not simply random or trivial memories, 【C2 】_is their purpose merely to make conversation. The old persons recollections of the past help to【C3 】_an identity that is becoming increasingly fragile: 【C4】 _any role that brings respect or any goal that might provide【C5 】_to the future, the i

3、ndividual mentions his past as a reminder to listeners, that here was a life【C6】_living. 【C7】_, the memories form part of a continuing life【C8】_, in which the person【C9】_the events and experiences of the years gone by and【C10】_on the overall meaning of his or her own almost completed life.As the lif

4、e cycle【C11 】_to its close, the aged must also learn to accept the reality of their own impending death. 【C12】_this task is made difficult by the fact that death is almost a【 C13】_subject in the United States. The mere discussion of death is often regarded as【C14】_. As adults many of us find the top

5、ic frightening and are【C15 】_to think about it and certainly not to talk about it【C16】_the presence of someone who is dying. Death has achieved this taboo【C17】_only in the modern industrial societies. There seems to be an important reason for our reluctance to【C18】_the idea of death. It is the very

6、fact that death remains【C19】_our control; it is almost the only one of the natural processes【C20】_is so.1 【C1 】(A)better than(B) rather than(C) less than(D)other than2 【C2 】(A)so(B) even(C) nor(D)hardly3 【C3 】(A)preserve(B) conserve(C) resume(D)assume4 【C4 】(A)performing(B) playing(C) undertaking(D)

7、lacking5 【C5 】(A)orientation(B) implication(C) succession(D)presentation6 【C6 】(A)worthy(B) worth(C) worthless(D)worthwhile7 【C7 】(A)In a word(B) In brief(C) In addition(D)In particular8 【C8 】(A)prospect(B) impetus(C) impression(D)review9 【C9 】(A)integrates(B) incorporates(C) includes(D)interacts10

8、【C10 】(A)reckons(B) counts(C) reflects(D)conceives11 【C11 】(A)keeps(B) draws(C) inclines(D)tends12 【C12 】(A)Therefore(B) And(C) Yet(D)Otherwise13 【C13 】(A)taboo(B) dispute(C) contempt(D)neglect14 【C14 】(A)notorious(B) indecent(C) obscure(D)desperate15 【C15 】(A)ready(B) willing(C) liable(D)reluctant1

9、6 【C16 】(A)at(B) on(C) with(D)in17 【C17 】(A)status(B) circumstance(C) environment(D)priority18 【C18 】(A)encounter(B) confront(C) tolerate(D)expose19 【C19 】(A)under(B) above(C) beyond(D)within20 【C20 】(A)which(B) what(C) as(D)thatPart ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions b

10、elow each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points)20 Every living thing has an inner biological clock that controls behavior. The clock works all the time; even when there are no outside signs to mark the passing of time. The biological clock tells plants when to form flowers and when the flowers

11、should open. It tells insects when to leave the protective cocoon and fly away. And it tells animals when to eat, sleep and wake. It controls body temperature, the release of some hormones and even dreams. These natural daily events are circadian rhythms.Man has known about them for thousands of yea

12、rs. But the first scientific observation of circadian rhythms was not made until 1729. In that year a French astronomer, Jean Jacques dOrtous de Mairan, noted that one of his plants opened its leaves at the same time every morning, and closed them at the same time every night. The plant did this eve

13、n when he kept it in a dark place all the time.Later scientists wondered about circadian rhythms in humans. They learned that mans biological clock actually keeps time with a day of a little less than 25 hours instead of the 24 hours on a man-made clock.About four years ago an American doctor, Eliot

14、 Weitzman, established a laboratory to study how our biological clock works. The people in his experiments are shut off from the outside world. They are free to listen to and live by their circadian rhythms. Dr. Weitzman hopes his research will lead to effective treatments for common sleep problems

15、and sleep disorders caused by aging and mental illness.The laboratory is in the Montefiore Hospital in New York City. It has two living areas with three small rooms in each. The windows are covered, so no sunlight or moonlight comes in. There are no radios or television receivers. There is a control

16、 room between the living areas. It contains computers, one-way cameras and other electronic devices for observing the person in the living area. A doctor or medical technician is on duty in the control room 24 hours a day during an experiment. They do not work the same time each day and are not perm

17、itted to wear watches, so the person in the experiment has no idea what time it is.In the first four years of research, Dr. Weitzman and his assistant have observed 16 men between the ages of 21 and 80. The men remained in the laboratory for as long as six months. Last month, a science reporter for

18、The New York Times newspaper, Dava Sobel, became the first woman to take part in the experiment. She entered the laboratory on June 13th and stayed for 25 days. Miss Sobel wrote reports about the experiment during that time, which were published in the newspaper.21 We can conclude from the first par

19、agraph that(A)every creature has an inner biological clock.(B) the biological clock works day and night.(C) the biological clock has circadian rhythms.(D)the biological clock regulates behavior of creatures.22 In his observation, the French astronomer noticed that the leaves of a certain plant maint

20、ained its opening-and-closing cycles(A)even when it was put in a murky place all day.(B) even if it was placed in the moonlight.(C) even when he was observing it from a dark place.(D)even if it was kept in a dark place from time to time.23 The sentence “They are free to listen to and live by their c

21、ircadian rhythms. “ (Line 2-3, Para. 4) probably means(A)they can live by their biological clocks without referring to man-made ones.(B) they can listen to rhythms of biological clocks and live close to them.(C) they can live their lives by regulating their own circadian rhythms.(D)they are free fro

22、m the annoying rhythms of everyday life.24 In the experiment conducted by Dr. Weitzman, the doctor on duty doesnt work the same time each day(A)so as not to be recognized by the people.(B) so as not to indicate the time to the people when starting work.(C) so as to leave the rhythms of the people in

23、 disorder.(D)so as to observe the abnormal behavior of the people at different times.25 The first woman who took part in the experiment(A)was interviewed by The New York Times.(B) remained in the laboratory till June 25th.(C) published some articles on the experiment.(D)found out how the biological

24、clock works.25 In almost all cases, the soft parts of fossils are gone for ever but they were fitted around or within the hard parts. Many of them also were attached to the hard parts and usually such attachments are visible as depressed or elevated areas, ridges or grooves, smooth or rough patches

25、on the hard parts. The muscles most important for the activities of the animal and most evident in the appearance of the living animal are those attached to the hard parts and possible to reconstruct from their attachments. Much can be learned about a vanished brain from the inside of the skull in w

26、hich it was lodged.Restoration of the external appearance of an extinct animal has little or no scientific value. It does not even help in inferring what the activities of the living animal were, how fast it could run, what its food was, or such other conclusions as are important for the history of

27、life. However, what most people want to know about extinct animals is what they looked like when they were alive. Scientists also would like to know. Things like fossil shells present no great problem as a rule, because the hard parts are external when the animal is alive and the outer appearance is

28、 actually preserved in the fossils.Animals in which the skeleton is internal present great problems of restoration, and honest restorers admit that they often have to use considerable guessing. The general shape and contours of the body are fixed by the skeleton and by muscles attached to the skelet

29、on, but surface features, which may give the animal its really characteristic look, are seldom restorable with any real probability of accuracy. The present often helps to interpret the past. An extinct animal presumably looked more or less like its living relatives, if it has any. This, however, ma

30、y be quite equivocal. For example, extinct members of the horse family are usually restored to look somewhat like the most familiar living horses domestic horses and their closest wild relatives. It is, however, possible and even probable that many extinct horses were striped like zebras. If lions a

31、nd tigers were extinct they would be restored to look exactly alike. No living elephants have much hair and mammoths, which are extinct elephants, would doubtless be restored as hairless if we did not happen to know that they had thick, woolly coats. We know this only because mammoths are so recentl

32、y extinct that prehistoric men drew pictures of them and that the hide and hair have actually been found in a few specimens. For older extinct animals we have no such clues.26 According to the text, the soft part of fossilized animals(A)can always be accurately identified.(B) have usually left some

33、traces.(C) can usually be reconstructed.(D)have always vanished without any trace.27 The muscles of a fossilized animal can sometimes be reconstructed because(A)they were preserved with the present relatives of the animal.(B) they were lodged inside the animals skull.(C) they were hard parts of the

34、animals body.(D)they were attached to the animals skeleton.28 A fossilized animals external appearance is still reconstructed to(A)satisfy popular curiosity.(B) answer scientific questions.(C) establish its activities.(D)determine its eating habits.29 The word “equivocal“ (Line 6,Para. 3) is closest

35、 in meaning to(A)equally important.(B) definable.(C) equally doubtful.(D)deliberate.30 According to the third paragraph, which of the following is true?(A)A fossilized animals appearance is usually restored accurately.(B) It is difficult to restore some fossilized animals because they had no externa

36、l parts.(C) The prehistoric elephants are hairless.(D)An extinct animal does not definitely look like its living relatives.30 That Louise Nevelson is believed by many critics to be the greatest twentieth-century sculptor is all the more remarkable because the greatest resistance to women artists has

37、 been, until recently, in the field of sculpture. Since Neolithic times, sculpture has been considered the prerogative of men, partly, perhaps, for purely physical reasons: it was erroneously assumed that women were not suited for the hard manual labor required in sculpting stone, carving wood, or w

38、orking in metal. It has been only during the twentieth century that women sculptors have been recognized as major artists, and it has been in the United States, especially since the decades of the fifties and sixties, that women sculptors have shown the greatest originality and creative power. Their

39、 rise to prominence parallels the development of sculpture itself in the United States: while there had been a few talented sculptors in the United States before the 1940s, it was only after 1945 when New York was rapidly becoming the art capital of the world that major sculpture was produced in the

40、 United States. Some of the best was the work of women.By far the most outstanding of these women is Louise Nevelson, who in the eyes of many critics is the most original female artist alive today. One famous and influential critic, Hilton Kramer, said of her work, “For myself, I think Ms. Nevelson

41、succeeds where the painters often fail.“Her works have been compared to the Cubist constructions of Picasso, the Surrealistic objects of Miro, and the Merzbau of Schwitters. Nevelson would be the first to admit that she has been influenced by all of these, as well as by African sculpture, and by Nat

42、ive American and pre-Columbian art, but she has absorbed all these influences and still created a distinctive art that expresses the urban landscape and the aesthetic sensibility of the twentieth century. Nevelson says, “I have always wanted to show the world that art is everywhere, except that it h

43、as to pass through a creative mind. “Using mostly discarded wooden objects like packing crates, broken pieces of furniture, and abandoned architectural ornaments, all of which she has hoarded for years, she assembles architectural constructions of great beauty and power. Creating very freely with no

44、 sketches, she glues and nails objects together, paints them black, or more rarely white or gold, and places them in boxes. These assemblages, walls, even entire environments create a mysterious, almost awe-inspiring atmosphere. Although she has denied any symbolic or religious intent in her works,

45、their three-dimensional grandeur and even their titles, such as Sky Cathedral and Night Cathedral, suggest such connotations. In some ways, her most ambitious works are closer to architecture than to traditional sculpture, but then neither Louise Nevelson nor her art fits into any neat category.31 T

46、he writer implies in the first paragraph that(A)Louise Nevelson was known before 1940s.(B) until the 1950s and the 1960s, there was no major sculpture made by women artists.(C) Ameirican sculpture developed with the appearance of women sculptors.(D)New York became the art capital because of the cont

47、ributions made by women sculptors.32 The author quotes Hilton Kramer in the second paragraph most probably to illustrate(A)realism in Nevelsons work.(B) the unique qualities of Nevelsons work.(C) the extent of critical approval of Nevelsons work.(D)a distinction between sculpture and painting. 33 Th

48、e word “assemblages“ (Line 4, Para. 4) is closest in meaning to(A)assignments.(B) assumptions.(C) connotations.(D)collections.34 Which of the following is a major theme of Nevelson art?(A)Architectural construction.(B) Landscape.(C) Modern city.(D)Religion.35 Which of the following statement about N

49、evelsons sculpture can be inferred from the text?(A)They are meant for display.(B) They are often painted in several colors.(C) They are sometimes very large.(D)They are hand-carved.35 “Two centuries ago, Meriwether Lewis and William Clark left St. Lois to explore the new lands acquired in the Louisiana Purchase, “ George W. Bush said, announcing his desire for a program to send men and women to Mars. “They made that journey in the spirit of discovery. America ha

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