还剩9页未读,继续阅读
本资源只提供10页预览,全部文档请下载后查看!喜欢就下载吧,查找使用更方便
文本内容:
年多伦县考研《英语一》统考试题2023Section IUse ofEnglishDirections:Read the following text.Choose the best wordsfor eachnumbered blankand markA,B,C orD on the ANSWER SHEET.10points完形填空请认真阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的、、、四个选项中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑A BC DWhen askedbyConan OBrienif hisdaughters hadsmartphones,comedian LouisCK explainedthat he had1replied.“No,you canthave it.Its badfbryou.I dont2what youwant.^^This hithome fbrme because at thetime,I wasin difficultnegotiations withmy ten-year-olddaughter3one.And frankly,she waswinning.CK added,Im notraising the_4Im raisingthe grown-ups that theyre goingto be.Sojust5the otherstupid kidshave phonesdoesnt meanthatmy kidhas to be stupid,or6shell feelweird.OK,I wassold.Cell phonesare“toxic,especially fbrkids,“he said,because they dont helpthem learnempathy,one of the nicerhuman7When wetext,the8we getis incold,hard text-speak.Why arekids9he asked.Because theyretrying it out.They lookat anotherkid andgo.Youre fiat.Then theyfind thekids unhappy,and theythink,Ooh,that doesntfeel10There,theyveexperienced empathy.Texting“youre fiat“allows youto bypassthe painyouve caused.CK wenton toexplain tous thatsmartphones robus ofour abilityto be11Kids usesmartphones to12y!!!Afterall,one of the joysof beinghuman isallowing ourminds to13With cellphones,kids are always preoccupied.They neverdaydream,14in class.And heressomething elsewe9re15out onthanks toSteve Jobsslittle device:ourright to be.This was a rightI hadntrealized Idesired untilCK pointedout thatits yetanother of the essentialhuman emotions.一“Everybodys murderingeach otherwith theircars“as theytext,CK screamed,because theyfear beingalone.Too badtheyremissing outon alife affirmingexperience.“I wasin mycar onetime,and BruceSpringsteens Junglelandcame onJ he said.And hesounds sofar away.It mademe reallysad.And Ithink,OK,Ive gotto getthe phoneand writehi to50people.I was16for thephone,and Ithought,Dont!Just besad.So CK17over and allowed himselfto soblike alittle girlthat brand-new four-poster bedfor her AmericanGirl doll.It wasbeautiful.Youre luckyto18sad moments,hesaid.And because he didntfight and内啡肽.push itaway withthat littlephone,because heallowed himselfto bemiserable,his bodyreleased endorphins“And thatswhyI dontwant toget phonesfbr mykids.CK said.And Isuppose I dont either.1A.hardly B.simply C.voluntarily D.specially、2A.reject B.care C.neglect D.separate3A.by B.from C.over D.beyond
6.A
7.A
8.B
9.C
10.C
11.D
12.B
13.B
14.D
15.C
16.C
17.D
18.C
19.C
20.DSection IIReading Comprehension、
21.C
2.D
3.A
4.B、
31.B
2.A
3.D
4.D、
41.C
2.B
3.B、
51.C
2.A
3.D
4.C、
61.but
2.how
3.a
4.my
5..was made
6.easily
7.kinds
8.used
9.with
10.eating
1.an7N
2.smaller
3.But
4.for
5.themselves
6.studies
7.surveyed
8.who/that
9.completely
10.to remainSection III Translation、
81.A
2.F
3.BC
4.
5.G
91.C、
2.A
3.D
4.G
4、A.children B.money Cstandard D.doubtsC、5A.after B.unless thoughD.because.、c.6A.otherwise B.nevertheless rarelyD.moreover、c.7A.emotions B.hobbies issuesD.weaknesses、c.8A.error B.response troubleD.danger、c.9A.proud B.stupid meanD.delighted、c.10A.upset B.awkward goodD.crazy、c.11A.creative B.smart criticalD.alone、c.12A.spare B.occupy valueD.miss、c.13A.focus B.wander makeD.occur、c.14A.even B.still everD.except、c.15A.figuring B.finding missingD.takingc.16A.capable B.accessible changeableD.miserablec.17A.reaching B.answering applyingD.begging、c.18A.pulled B.turned gotD.camec.19A.reminded B.denied rewardedD.neglectedc.20A.live B.share ignoreD.spareSection IIReading ComprehensionPartADirections:Read thefollowing fourtexts.Answer the questions beloweach textby choosingA,B,C orD.Mark youranswers onthe ANSWER SHEET.40pointsText1Paulie receiveda remotecontrol car,some clothes,and acollection ofaction figuresfor his birthday.But whathe reallywantedwas thisvideo gamehe had been askingfor.Only Granddadspresent wasto come,so,with twofingers oneach handcrossed tightly,hehoped.“Here yougo youlittle whippersnapper.,,“Thanks Jsaid Paulie,ripping thewrapping cleanoff thepresent.His facedropped;all hegot wasa drawingpad,and anold,used,wooden pencil.“Now that there isa magicpencil Jsaid Granddad.Paulie lookedsceptical.“It bringsimagination tolife/9said Granddad,prodding戳——下his nosesecretly.Later thatnight,Paulie wassent tobed.But hecouldnt sleep.He wishedhe hadhis gameto play,but he didnt.So hegotup,took outhis pad and“magic“pencil,and startedto draw.Paulie drew a monster.He thendrew acastle forthe monsterto attack,and headded aprincess,as theyarealwaysin castles.Paulie figuredthe monsterwanted toeat theprincess asher dressmade herlook like a birthdaycake.(骑士)Then hedrew aknight,as knightsalways rescueprincesses.Then somethingmagical happened.Paulie wassucked intothis paperworld.(有劲儿的)Paulie nowstood lookingdown at the castle.A knightwas chargingat him.So,with hismighty arm,he hitthe knightrighthard outof thepicture.Then heate theprincess.(舔)Paulie soonfound himselfback in his bedroom.He lookedatthepaper;on itwasadrawing of the monster.It waslickingits finger,with abig smile.Paulie smiledback.Paulie didntwant hisgame anymore.He realisedthis shortbut thickpencil andpaper couldtake himanywhere.、1When Paulieopened hisgrandpas present,he felt.A.puzzled B.excitedC.disappointed D.angry、2Paulie couldn^fall asleepbecausehe.A.was stillexpecting hisbirthday presentB.was tooexcited with hisbirthdaypresentC.didnt knowhow toenjoy hisbirthday presentD.didnt getthe gifthehad been expecting、3Paulie gotup and.A.drewamagic fairyworld with the padand penB.ate theprincess afterfighting againstthe knightC.imagined himselfthe knightprotecting theprincessD.made friendswiththemonster in the castle、4In theend,Paulie.A.changed hisopinion on a fairystoryB.fell inlove withhis granddadspresentC.understood whyhedidntlike hispresentsD.went anywherewithhispadandpenText2Bike sharinghave becomepopular wordsin citiesfrom CapeTown toShanghai toMelbourne.Planners,politicians andmediakeep showingoff theirbenefits:reducing pollution,congestion,travel costsand oildependence,while improvingpublic health.Bikesharing alsohelps makecities appearmodern,dynamic andworld-wide-qualities muchsought afterby thecreative class.But whatmakes fora successfulpublic bike-sharing programThis isan importantquestion becauseinstalling onerequiressignificant publicand privateinvestment andadjustment tothe builtenvironment.While manyprograms have been launchedamong muchpraise,often theirpopularity hassoon declined.Many end up operatingat(交叉补贝占)a financialloss anddepend onother profitableenterprises tocross-subsidize them.Some haveresulted inthrown-awaybikes becomingan eyesore.Understanding whichfactors enhanceor stoppublic bikesharing iscritical inhelping citiesdecide whethersuch aprogram isworkable,before consideringwhat designand sittingwill workbest.(基石出设施)Drawing oncurrent knowledge,we discussthe importanceofthelocal landscape,climate,cycling infrastructureandland use.We alsotouch onother factors,such as the legalenvironment and the characteristicsofthebike-sharing programitself.Take natural environment for example.Two natural environment factorsare knownto affectparticipation:hilliness andweather.Hilliness discouragesbalanced bike-sharing use,as usersavoid returningbicycles tostations onhilltops.Those stationsendupbeingempty,while stationson flat areas areoften full,so userscannot finda stationto returntheir bikes.As forweather,ideal temperatureranges varyby theclimate zone.Case studiesshow warmand dryweather encouragespublicbike-sharing use.Rain andstrong windreduce thefrequency oftrips.However,some approaches,such asproviding sheltered,shaded,or evenheated orcooled cyclinginfrastructure,could proveuseful.、1What canwe inferabout bikesharing fromParagraph1A.It hasno disadvantage.B.It iswelcomed worldwide.C.It cansolve everyproblem.D.It is the symbolof moderncities.、2What isthe currentsituation of bike-sharing programsA.Many ofthem runataloss.B.Most ofthem makehuge profits.C.They arethe mostpromising business.D.Their developmentis determinedby publicinvestment.、3Why doesthe authormention thenatural environmentA.To showusers interestin variousnaturalenvironment.B.To showthe decisivefunction ofnaturalenvironment.C.To showthe necessityofbike-sharing programs.D.To showthe significanceof somefactors.、4Which ofthefollowingmight increasebike-sharing useA.Hilliness.B.Attractive bikes.C.Rain andstrong wind.D.Perfect cyclinginfrastructure.Text3What doLeonardo daVincii,Marie Curie,and AlbertEinstein havein commonThey wereall left-handed,along withotherfamous peopleincluding BradPitt PrinceWilliam,and BarackObama.In fact,an estimated13percent ofthe worldspopulation maybeleft-handed andstill mostpeople aroundthe worldare right-handed.What makesa person become right-handed ratherthan left-handed Asyet noone reallyknows forsure.One simpleidea suggeststhatpeople normallyget right-handedness from their parents.Studies havefound thattwo right-handed parentshave onlya
9.5percentchance of having a left-handed child,whereas twoleft-handed parentshave a26percent chance ofhavingaleft-handed child.Anothercommon theoryis thatleft-handed peoplesuffer mildbrain damage during birth,which makesthem left-handed.However,if thistheorywere true,it wouldnot explainwhy thepercentage ofleft-banded peopleis sosimilar inevery society,when birthconditionsvary somuch fromsociety tosociety.Whatever thereasons behindit,peoples attitudestoward left-handedness havechanged alot overthe years.Statistics showthatalthough13percent of young people10-20years oldare left-handed,only6percent ofthe elderly are left-handed.Left-handedchildren usedtobepunished untilthey beganusing theirright handlike otherchildren,but todaypeople whoare left-handed arenolonger lookeddown onnor arethey consideredabnormal.For mostpeople today,either caseis perfectlyacceptable.、1What makesone right-handedA.The environment.B.Mild braindamageduringbirth.C.The reasonis uncertain.D.Other people.、2Why isthe numberofyoungpeople whoare left-handed biggerthan thatoftheelderlyA.Because theelderlyareforced tobecome right-handed.B.Because left-handed peopleare consideredabnormal.C.Because left-handedness can be cured.D.Because theyoung areeasily damaged.、3What doesthe textmainly talk aboutA.Left-handed peopleare lookeddown upon.B・General factsabout left-handed people.C.Some famousleft-handed people.D.The reasonswhy peopleare left-handed.Text4“Mom,what isthat”asked myson.“The Brideof Chucky^^The olddoll Iwas holdingwas prettyscary.Her glasseyes wereespecially horrible,closing whenshe stoodupright andflying阁楼open whenshe layflat.Once shehadbeenloved,but shehadbeenstored in an atticfor decades,where theextremes ofheat andcoldcanbehard ona girPslooks.Throw herin the waste binMaybe.But first,lefs checkeBay.I clicked,supplied therequired informationabout condition,including defectsie,Only amiracle couldsave thisdoll,anduploaded itsphotos.I soldit for$
5.The buyerwas happy:As described!^^he wroteon myfeedback page.Super seller!^^The dollfound ahome and,I hope,a newlife.Maybe she was usedto repairother dolls.Perhaps thosestrange eyesgot fixedand onceagain caninspire achilds love.Ifs awin-win,if youask me.I alsosold lotsof otherstuff.None ofthem broughtin alot ofmoney,though Ihave beensurprised atthe occasionalbidding war,like,for example,the oneover anold swimsuitthat wouldhave madeBrigitte Bardotlook bad.And somecustomers,lets faceit,arestrange.Recently Ihad ahard timeconvincing anAustralian would-be buyerof anIrish souvenirbell that I dontshop internationally;ifs justtoo muchtrouble.He couldhave flownto Irelandand boughthis ownbell forthe pricehewaswilling topay.Another time,abuyer complainedthattheelectric wireon anold radiowas dirty.Really DirtyThe wirewas black.But Iaim toplease,so Ioffered arefund.So whybother withthe dealingand smallprofits BecauseIdontlike abandoningthe past.All thesetreasures oncehad stories.They meantsomething.But the people whogave themthat meaningare gone,and Isimply cannotrescue everything.I canteven sew.So Ifind itsatisfying thata newowner,discovered viaeBay,will continuethe storyinhisorherown way.1What wasthe dolllikeA.It waslovely.B.It wasbeautiful.C.It lookedfrightening.D.It waspretty ordinary.、2Which canbest replacethe underlinedword“defects”in Paragraph3A.Faults.B.Virtues.C.Pictures.D.Requirements.、3Why didthe authorrefuse tosell theAustralian thebellA.She thoughthewasstrange.B.His bidwas nothigh enough.C.Someone elsehad alreadybought it.D.Delivering itto himwas troublesome.、4After receivingthe complaintabout theradio,the author.A.felt deeplysorryB.explained patientlyC.returned themoneyD.apologized immediately、5Why doesthe authorsell usedstuff viaeBayA.She needsmoney badly.B.She isan environmentalist.C.She isinterested inmarketing.D.She wantstheir storiestobecontinued.Part BDirections:Read thefollowing textand answerthequestionsby choosingthe mostsuitable subheadingfromthelist A-G foreachnumbered paragraph41-
45.There aretwo extrasubheadings whichyou donot needto use.Mark youranswerson theANSWERSHEET.10pointsIts almosta commonbelief thatthebestfood you can findinaplace isnot inthe fancyrestaurants,1,inthebackstreets Thesespotsare usuallyaway frompopular touristattractions,which meansthat tofind themyoull needthe spiritof anexplorer」」Thats2I cameacross roujiamowhen Iwas exploringBeijing Ifound3restaurant thatsold dishesfrom Xianwhen Iexploredthe areaaround
4.I officeone dayI decidedto tryitout」My roujiamo5make fresh,so thebread wasstill warmIt wassoft whenI bitinto it,andthe meat insidewas deliciousand tenderInfact,I enjoyedit somuch thatI orderedmore totake homewith meThough itsjust asnack,ifs stillquite fillingand can
6.easysatisfy yourappetiteThere are7」kind ofthings you can putinside the“mo,asthebread iscalled For example,in certainareas inXian,themeat
8.use isusually beef,but inGansu Province,lamb ismore commonAnd thefirst roujiamothatItried wasmade
9.pork Howeveritsmade,its stilla tastysnack Andfor anAmerican likeme whogrew up10,eat hamburgers,its aperfect combinationof Eastand WestItis quiteclear thatair planesprovide
1.efficient andconvenient wayto travelThanks toplanes,the worldwe livein hasbecomea
2.small place3,getting tosomewhere byair cancausealot ofstress forpeople sometimesThereare manyreasons
4.an unpleasantjourney,such aslong linesattheairport orscreaming kidswho seat5,them behindyou」However,recent6study conductedby UStravel platformExpedia havefound thatmore thanhalf ofthepeople
7.survey saywhatannoys themmost arethe passengers8-continually kick,bump orgrab airplaneseatsWhy dotheydothat Arethey bored,nervous orjust
9.complete unawareThere isno sureanswer tothat question,it seemsSectionIIIAccording toExpedia,this behavioris likely
10.remain one ofthemost commonand hatedparts oftravelling byairTranslationDirections:Translate thefollowing textinto Chinese.Write yourtranslation ontheANSWERSHEET.15pointsYou aresitting onthe desk.A teacheris writingontheblackboard.Kids areyelling inthe playgroundoutside.A bookfallsoff thedesk nextto you.Suddenly,the teacherhands youa popquiz.、虚拟的Dont panic!1Youre ina virtualclassroom”.Everything yousee andhear iscoming toyou throughacomputer-operated displaythat yourewearing onyour headlikeapair ofvery bigglasses.Wearing thiskind ofvirtual-realityequipment,you canfind yourselfsitting ina classroom,touring afamous museum,wandering acrossa strangelandscape,flying into、space,or playingwith acartoon character.2Virtual-reality equipmentthat deliversimages andsounds directlyto youreyes andearsmakes thesefake worldsseem lifelike.Unlike theclassroom,the technologyis real.Its atype oftechnology thatuses computerprograms toimitate realworld situation.、3Movie directorsand videogame producershavebeenusing computersfor yearsto createever morerealistic specialeffects.Some三维companies arenow buildingthree-dimensional fantasyworlds inwhich players,linked bycomputer networks,appear tomeetand goon explorationstogether.、4They seevirtual realitytechnology asa usefultool forlearning moreabout whypeople actas theydo.It couldhelppsychologists deteridentify andcome upwith solutionsfor behaviorsproblems,forexample.“Weve spentthe last100years lookingfor certainlaws inhow peopleinteract withthe realworld/9says psychologistAlbert.A、This ispsychologisfs dream.^^A.You arentactually inschool.B.This technologyhas beenused inmany fields.C.Some psychologistsare alsogetting intothe act.D.Grown-ups,too,stand achanceofbenefiting fromthis technology.E.As partof oneclassic test,you watchletters flashedonacomputer screen.F.You donthave toleave yourroom toexperience allthat mentionedabove.G.Now,weve gota powerfultool thatlets uscreate worldsand seehow peopleperform.Small talkistheshort conversationswe haveat parties,while wewait inline atthe store,at familyevents orwork.、Sometimes wemake small talk withpeople wealready knowbut notwell.Often wehave tomake small talk withcomplete strangers.1Here aresome tipsto improve your small-talking ability.If youhave seena really good movieor haveread areallygoodbook,youcantalk aboutthat.When youare sharingthe sameexperience withsomeone,its easyto starta conversation.You simplynotice andcomment onwhafsgoing onaround you.Forexample,if youare ata partyandasong comeson thatyou likeor thatreminds youof something,youcantalkabout that.
2.Ask open-ended questions、These typesof questionsrequire morethought andmore thana simpleone-word answer,3,the conversationwill goon longer.
3.Become astudentNobody knowseverything.So,as someoneis answeringoneofyour open-ended questions,they bringup somethingabout which、you knownothing.So,tell them!This letsthe otherpersonbecomethe teacher.
4.Its awin-win situation.Like anything,getting good at makingsmalltalktakes practice.
5、,youmight becomehappier.If youare makingsmalltalkusingEnglish,you willmost definitelyimproveyourspeaking andlistening skills.A.Have someconversation startersreadyB.If youmake smalltalk inyour nativelanguageC.However,some peopleare notgoodatsmall talkD.If youask questionsthat needmore detailsto answerE.You cantalkaboutsomething thatyou recentlylearnedF.Many peoplefind thesesmall conversationsabout randomtopics easyG.They feelgood aboutsharing theirknowledge andyou getto learnsomething参考答案SectionIUse ofEnglish、
11.B
2.B
3.C
4.A
5.D。