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:
年巴中市通江县考研《英语一》全真模拟试题2023Section IUse ofEnglishDirections:Read the following text.Choose thebest wordsfor eachnumbered blankand markA,B,C orD on the ANSWER SHEET.10pointsWhen Iwas young,my understanding of lifewas simple.This madeit1for meto dealwith the world aroundme.As Igrewup,things seemedmore2,which madelife morechallenging.Now,middle-aged,I findmy3ofthe worldis returningto thesimple.When Itry toteach my daughter important4about life,I willbreak complicatedthings5into smallpieces.One of those basicsis6for yourself,and forothers.I teachmy daughterto7,To failfeels bad,8,but notto havetried feelsworse,because you cant respectyourself forit.And asthe saying9,if you dontrespect yourself,no oneelse will.When Iwas sevenor eight,I playedat mycousins housewith his toys.His familywas betteroff thanmine,and hehad manymoretoys.There wasone10that Idalways wanted,and I11it intomy pocket.But amoment later,I12,even atthat age,that I would neverenjoy playingwith thetoy.Iwouldalways knowI had13,and myopinionof myselfwould14,When hismother droppedme offlater thatday,I shamefacedly15out thetoy andgave itback.She knew,Im sure,what hadhappened,16she thankedme andnever spokeof it again.I hopeto helpmydaughteravoid similar17,She firsthas togain self-respect18she canstart respectingothers.I believein respect,because19it we*re allenemies.Im not20in thisregard,far fromit.But Itry mybest,and Irespect othersfor tryingtheir bestin thischanging world.
1、A.funnier B.easier C.safer D,deeper、2A.important B.awkward C.fragile D.complex
3、A.view B・experience C.aim D.expectation、4A.basics B.facts C.subjects D.choices、5A.away B.off C.down D.out6A.passion B.love C-respect D.desire、7A.forgive B.accept C.share D.try、8A.certainly B.eventually C.personally D.willingly、9A.runs B.goes C,writes D.follows、10A.for funB.in particularC.with careD.at random、11A.fetched B.arranged C.slipped D.fitted12A.doubted B.promised C.questioned D.sensed
16.D
17.B
18.A
19.C
20.DSection IIReading Comprehension、
21.A
2.D
3.B、的3diverse cultures seek to maintain health and well-being Dthe ideasabout keepingfit fromdifferent cultures
1.A推理判断题根据中的”可知在周“Room34The John Addis Gallery...Available everyFri,Sat and Sun at11:30—14:
2.
3.B推理判断题根据中的“Room95“View famousblue-and-white china,which wasfirst producedin Chinaaround AD
600...examples自要参观中国的青花瓷就在这个展室,故只有中国的爱好者才去故选of thenest china in the world JB、
41.A
2.A
3.C
4.D、
51.A
2.D
3.C
4.D、
61.to include
2.readers
3..written
4.where
5.a
6.while
7.finally
8..their
9.describes
10.In、
71.taking
2.impossible
3.for
4.the
5.which
6.to pull
7.believable
8.actually
9.is called
10.and/orSection HITranslation、
81.F
2.E
3.C
4.G
5.B、
91.E
2.G
3.A
4.D
5.F
13、A.lied B.stolen C.changed D.cheated、14A.suffer B.improve C.fade D.spread、15A.gave B.left C.pulled D.handed、16A.so B.or C.for D.but、17A.accidents B.mistakes C.results D.habits、18A.before B.until C.in caseD.now that、19A.upon B.beyond C.without D.despite、20A.honest B.casual C.curious D.perfectSection IIReading ComprehensionPartADirections:Read the following fourtexts.Answer the questions beloweach textby choosingA,B,C orD.Mark youranswers on()the ANSWERSHEET.40pointsText1Get Involved!Make aDonation!So whatis rewilding(物种)Imagine ournatural homesgrowing insteadof shrinking.Imagine speciesdiversifying insteadof declining.That*srewilding.Rewilding isecological restoration.Rewilding offershope forwildlife,humans and the planet.Why isrewilding importantand necessary•Our naturalecology isbroken.The placeswhere youwould expectwildlife toexist havebeen reducedto wetdeserts.The seabedhas beendestroyed and there havebeen nolivingcreatures anymore.•Our wildlifeis disappearing.Many wonderfulspecies havedeclined overthe pastcentury.Weve lostmore ofour largeanimalsthan anyEuropean country.(食肉动物),•We needkeystone species.These vitalspecies,including toppredators driveecological processes.Their losshasworsened ourliving systems.•Nature looksafter us.Good naturalecology canprovide uswith cleanair andwater,prevent floodingand storecarbon.Rewildingcan leavethe worldin a better statethan it is today.What arechallengesAs a long-term project,our erewildingbritain hasits challenges.Many peopleare notinterested,because wehave gotused to thelack ofnative forests.Many farmersoppose theidea.They thoughtitacrazy ideato bring back predatorsbecause theywould startkillingfarmanimals.It takestime to educate them.Above all,we needmoney!So weneed yourhelp!Make adonation.Help usbringbackliving systems and restorewild nature!With yourhelp wecan...•Open upnew chancesfor rewildingand pushfor change.•Develop toolstoeducate,influence andspread the word.Thanks foryour support.、1Which of thefollowingis theresult ofrewildingA.Species becomevarious.B.A lotof animalsdisappear.C.Environments aredestroyed.D.Natural disastershappen regularly.、2According to the passage,one of the challengesat presentis.A.peoples doubtsB.a lack of volunteersC.a shortageof timeD.farmers1disagreement、3What isthe mainpurpose of the passageA.To introducea newproject.B.To callon people to givemoney.C.To warnpeople of the naturalecology.D.To convincepeopleto change theirmind.Text2Find outway aroundthe BritishMuseum,discover someof the most famousobjects,and explorethe uniquecollection.Top tipSomeof thegalleries canbe verybusy atpeak times.If youwant to avoid thecrowds,try visitingthese galleries.Room1The EnlightenmentGallery providesan introductiontothe Museum andits collections,showing howour understandingof theworldof natureand humanachievement haschanged overtime.It isdivided intoseven sectionsthat explorethe sevenmajor ages.It isopendaily10:00—17:00,until20:30on Fridays.Rooms24The WelcomeTrust Gallerydeals withthe toughrealities oflife inmany differentways.The displaysin Room24exploredifferent approachesto ourshared challengesas humanbeings,focusing onhow diverseculturesseektomaintainhealthandwell-being.Daily11:00—16:
00.Room34The JohnAddis Galleryhouses themuseums collectionof Islamicart,which nowofficially formspart of the DepartmentofMiddle East.This includesobjects from the earliestyears ofIslam tothe20th century.Available everyFri.,Sat.andSun.at11:30—14:
00.Room77Greek andRoman ArchitectureGallery has an especiallyimportant collectionof architectureand architecturalsculpture fromancientGreek buildings.It hasthe earlierand latertemples and the architectureon displayin theroom includesexamples oftheCorinthian andComposite ordersin particular.Daily11:0016:
00.Room95View famousblue-and-white china,which wasfirst producedin Chinaaround AD
600.the skillfultransformation ofordinaryclay into beautiful objectshas attractedthe peopleacross theglobe.Within thisgallery of almost1,700objects areexamples ofthe finest、chinain theworld,dating from the3rd tothe20th century.Available Mon.--Fri.at10:30—16:
00.1You canvisit toknow thegeneralinformation abouttheMuseum.A.the WelcomeTrust GalleryB.the JohnAddis GalleryC.Room1D.Room
95、2The WelcomeTrust Galleryfeatures.A,the understandingof livingand dyingB.the waysof keepinghealthy inBritainC・the differentrealities indifferent culturesD.the ideasabout keepingfit fromdifferent cultures、3If youplan tovisit theJohnAddisGallery at12:00,youcango on.A.December1,2017Friday B.June15,2017ThursdayC.May9,2017Tuesday D.March20,2017Monday、4Who mightprefer tovisit Room95A.Professional architectsB.China loversC.Scholars majoringin religionD.Students interestedin medicineText3长牙While elephantsborn without tusks arenot unheardof,they normallyform just2to6percent ofthe population.However,that is not the case atMozambiques GorongosaNational Park,where anastonishing33percent offemale elephantsbom afterthecountrys civilwar ended in1992are tuskless.While thatmay appearto bejust acoincidence,Joyce Poole,an elephantbehaviorexpert,has anothertheory.The researcherthinks wemay bewitnessing unnaturalevolution ofthe speciesdue tothe constanthunting ofelephantsfor valuableivory.Poole saysbefore thecountrys15-year-long civilwar,the100,000——acre parkwas hometo over4,000elephants.However,by武器the timethe conflictendedin1992,about90percent ofthem hadbeen killedfor ivoryto helpfinance weaponsand meatto feedthe soldiers.Of theless than200survivors,over50percent of adult femaleshad notusks.Therefore,it isnot surprisingthat theparkstuskless elephantpopulation hasgrown greatly.This isnot the first timeresearchers haveobserved a great changein thepopulation of elephants.At ZambiasSouth LuangwaNational Park andLupande GameManagement Areaareas whichwere heavilyhunted in the1970sand1980s,2%2ofelephants25years orolder and13%ofthoseyounger than25are nowwithouttusks.A2008study publishedin theAfrican JournalofEcology foundthat thenumber of tuskless femalesat theRuaha National Park inTanzania wentfrom
10.5percent in1969to almost40percent in1989,largely dueto illegalhunting forivory.The recentban onivory inboth theUS andChina shouldhelp getrid of,or atleast reduce,elephant hunting.However,scientistsare notsure howlong itwill takefor elephantswith ahigher rateoftusklessfemales,tochangethe trend.、1What isthe probablecause ofthe phenomenonmentioned inParagraph1A.Illegal hunting.B.Constant farming.C.A purecoincidence.D.Natural evolution.、2Why didpeople killso manyelephants during the civilwar inMozambiqueA.To getfunds byselling ivory.B.To developnew weapons.C.To providefood forlocal people.D.To makeivory products.、3Which ofthefollowinghad theearliest recordon tusklesselephantsA.Gorongonsa NationalPark.B.South LuangwaNationalPark.C,The RuahaNationalPark.D.Lupande GameManagement Area.、4What doesthe underlinedphrase“the trend^in thelast paragraphrefer toA.Elephants facinggreater danger.B.Elephants growingmore slowly.C.Fewer femaleelephants stayingalive.D.More femaleelephants beingtuskless.Text4Learning NewVocabulary duringDeep SleepSleepingtime issometimes consideredunproductive time.This raisesthequestionwhether thetime spentasleep couldbe usedmoreproductively,e.g.for learninga newlanguage Up-to-now sleepresearch focusedon thestabilization andstrengthening ofmemoriesthat hadbeen formedduring wakefulness.However,learning during sleep hasrarely beenexamined.There isenoughevidence forwake-learned informationundergoing arevision byreplay in the sleeping brain.The replay during sleepstrengthens thestillweak memoryand leavesthe newlyacquired informationin thepre-existing storeof knowledge.If re-play during sleep improvesthe storageof wake-learned information,then first-play,i.e.the initialprocessing ofnewinformation,should also be possibleduringsleep.(语义的)The researchgroup ofKatharina Henkeexamined whethera sleepingperson isable toform newsemantic associationsbetweenplayed foreignwords andtranslation wordsduringthe brain cells active states,theso-called Up-states.”It turnedout to be thatwhat theythought wasreasonable.When wereach deep sleep stages,our braincells progressivelycoordinatetheir activity.During deep sleep,the braincells arecommonly activefor abrief periodof timebefore theyjointly enterinto astate of(交替)brief inactivity.The activestate iscalled“Up-state“and theinactive state“Down-state”.The twostates alternateabout everyhalf-second.New evidencefor sleep-learning challengescurrent theoriesof sleepand theoriesof memory.The concept of sleepthat weareseparated fromthe physical environment isno longerreasonable.It^false thatcomplex learningbe impossibleduring deepsleep JsaysSimon Ruch,co-first-author.MIn howfar andwith whatconsequences deepsleep canbe appliedfor theacquisition ofnew informationwill be atopic ofresearch inupcoming years,*says Katharina Henke.()The researchgroup ofKatharinaHenkeis part oftheInterfaculty ResearchCooperation IRC.Thirteen research groups inmedicine,biology andpsychology arepartofthe IRC.The aimof theseresearchgroupsistogain a better understandingofthe(原理)mechanisms involvedin sleepand consciousness.
1、Which ofthe followingshaven9t sleepresearchers achievedso farA.People canlearn vocabularyduring deepsleep.B.Memories canbe stableand strongduringsleep.C.Wake-learned informationcan appear inthesleepingbrain.D.Re-playduringsleep improvesthe storageof wake-learned information.、2What canbe inferredfrom Paragraph3A.“Up-state”and Down-state“appearinturn duringdeepsleep.B.“Up-states”is anothername fbrthebraincellsactive states.C.Semantic associationsare importantfor languagelearning.D.The braincells,activestatesare centralfor sleep-learning.、3What willresearchers dowithin severalyears accordingtothe passageA.Make studyinthefollowing fieldssuch asmedicine andbiology.B.Separate usfromthephysicalenvironment.C.Apply deepsleep forinformation learning.D.Discover theconceptof sleep.、4What isthe mainpurpose ofthepassageA.To introducea newway of vocabulary learning.B.To gainabetterunderstandingofthe mechanisms.C,To challengecurrent theoriesofsleepand theoriesof memory.D.To explainthe possibilityofvocabularylearning duringdeepsleep.Part BDirections:Read thefollowing textand answerthe questionsby choosingthemostsuitable subheadingfromthelist A-G foreachnumbered paragraph41-
45.There aretwo extrasubheadings whichyoudonot needto use.Mark youranswerson the ANSWERSHEET.10pointsThere isa widevariety ofbooks availablethat containcross-cultural charactersMany ofthe friendshipsfeatured inearly picturebookstend
1.include verysimple examples,but aschildren becomemore fluent
2.read,there isa greatervariety ofbooks withcomplexexamples of friendship amongthe maincharacters」For example,inthepicture bookThe SandwichSwap3write byQueen RaniaAl Abdullahof Jordan,the authorillustrates thecross-cultural friendshipbetween Salmaand Lily,andthesimilarities anddifferences theyshare Theyare bestfriends atschool,4-theyhappily drawpictures,play onthe swings,and jumprope Salmaand Lilyalso eattheir lunchtogether inthe cafeteria,and atthat point鹰嘴豆泥they recognize5-difference Salmaeats ahumus sandwich6-Lily eatsa peanutbutter andjelly sandwichAt first,they、announce thateach otherssandwich isyucky,“andthedisagreement continuesuntil it7final leadstoafood fightHowever,Salma二and Lilylearn to work out8they differencesWhen theyeach trythe otherssandwich,they realizethe differentsandwiches aretastyAlthough thisbook
9.describe friendswho enjoysocializing togetherandtherelationship isa lesscomplex formoffriendship,it doesshowthat smallthings canruin friendshipsHowever,
10.this case,the friendshipturns outtobestronger」Imagine1take aphoto ofan appleonthemoon withyour smartphoneIt seems
2.possible,right Butthats whatit waslike
3.scientists totake aphoto ofa black hole inspace Inspite ofmany challenges,scientists havefinally gottenthe firstimage ofa blackholeBlack holes are oneofthemost mysteriousthings in4-universe Accordingto Einsteinstheory,a blackhole comesfrom adying坍塌star5-collapses intoa smallpoint witha lotof massand strong gravity Thestronggravityof blackhole allowsit
6.pull otherthingsin andneatnthemNot evenlight canescape ablack holeThephoto provesEinstein wasright Itmakes thegeneral theoryof relativity7^believe Althoughthey aremysterious,itislikely」that blackholesare8actual quitecommon Scientistsbelieve thatevery largegalaxy hasa bigblackholeat itscenter-the onein our」galaxy9call SagittariusA.Considering this,studying blackholes cantell usmany thingsabout othergalaxies
10.even theentireuniverseSection IIITranslation Directions:Translate thefollowing textinto Chinese.Write yourtranslation ontheANSWERSHEET.15pointsThe firstThursday inMay isWorld PasswordDay,but dontbuy acake orsend cards.Computer chipmaker Intel、.created theevent asan annualreminder.1The purposeofapassword isto limitaccess toinformation.Having avery commonor simpleone like“abcdef oreven normalwordslike“password”,is barelyany securityat all.
2.Hackers passwordcracking toolstake advantageof thislackofcreativity andgetin ouraccounts easily.More experiencedusers wouldchoose aless commonpassword.However,they mightstill fallvictim tocrackingsoftware.
3、?A securepassword isall thatstands betweenus anda cybercriminal.It shouldbe uniqueand complex,which ahacker canteasilyguess orcrack.The bestpasswords aresupposed tobe atleast15characters longand fullof randomnumbers andletters.、However,alongpassword meansa complicatedprocess tolog intoa website.
4.You maywant towrite itdown,but itisnotsuggesteddue torisk.、(缩Then whatshould wedo5,You canchoose aphrase suchas“I wantto goto England.Next,convert itto anabbreviation略语)by usingthefirstletters ofeach wordand changingthewordto to
2.Then youget followingpassword phrase:iw2g2e.Youcan makeit evenmore complexby addingpunctuation,spaces orsymbols:%iw_2g2e!@.It ismuch easierto remember and safer.Cant waitto tryLets saygoodbye to“666666and changeyour passwordright now.A.What donetwork securityexperts doB.Try usingshortened phrasesfor passwordsC-How canwe ensurethe safetyofapasswordD.Changing passwordregularly isan effectivewayE.That islike closinga doorbut notactually lockingitF.It isused tosay farewellto popularpasswords like“123456”G.And itis alsodifficult forus torememberalong irregularpasswordFlextime isa flexiblehours schedulein whichemployees choosetheir ownworking hours,usually workingwithinapproximate limitsset bythe employeror bythe government.j flextimehasaclear advantage.2For example,people canuseflextime to create scheduleswhich willallow them to goto school,handle childcare,assist relatives,and performother tasks.Employees mayalso usetheir flextimetocreatea schedulewhich optimizescreativity,as inthecaseof someone who wouldprefer toworkearlier inthe dayto getmore accomplished.、3First,it tendsto increaseemployees Satisfaction.This makesthe companyabetterand moreproductive placeto work.Inaddition,flextime canallow companiesto serveclients foragreatportion ofthe day,as employeeswillbearound atvarying hourstoanswer phones,attend meetings,and soforth.Most flextime schedules includecore time.4_Employees arealso usuallygiven anhourly,daily orweekly limitto ensurethatthey donot violatelaws aboutworking hoursOr thecompany isonly willingto paywages forso manyhours ofwork eachweek.A classicexample ofa flexibletimescheduleis thatsomeonewhoworks four1O-hour shiftsa weekcan takethree daysoff.、Flextime canalsobecombined withflexplace,in whichthe environmentis betterthan thatoftheoffice.5Employers mayalso allowpeopletoworkin untraditionalsettings suchas coffeehouses.A.Employers benefitfrom flextimea lot.B.Its alsoseen asa family-friendly policy.C.However,flextime maynot beapplicable toall fields.D.It isa periodoftheday inwhich everyoneis expectedtobeat work.E.Many employersall overtheworldoffer thismethod to their employees.F.For example,home officesare increasinglypopular amongmany companies.G.It allowsthemtomake changestotheirwork schedulewhich willsuit theirlives.参考答案Section IUse ofEnglish、
11.B
2.D
3.A
4.A
5.C
6.C
7.D
8.A
9.B
10.B
11.C
12.D
13.B
14.A
15.C。