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:
年湖南省株洲市考研《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.10pointsWe alwayswant whatwe cannothave.When we9re young,we want to stayout late,have romanticrelationships,and be1However,when were2,we wantto goback to being youngand we3the dayswhen wedidnt haveto worryaboutcomplex loveaffairs,4pressure,and moneyproblems.Young peoplebelieve adulthood5freedom fromparents andschoolwork.When theyget older,they feel that6isfreedom fromwork pressureand familyresponsibilities.To7this feeling,people say,“The grassis always8on theother side.”As teenagers,we liketo belike adultsbut asyoung adults,we9to beyoung again.We thinkabout staying out late,10our ownmoney tospend.Suddenly,they seethat lovecan resultin11hearts;stayingoutlate makesit hardto getreadyfor12the nextmorning.They findout that adult lifeis notas13as theythought itwould beand suddenly,14becomes veryscary.Life is15It givesus timeto16but alsorequires us to work.The timewill comewhen wemust growup andwe willalways look17wishing we18being younga bitlonger.That timewill notcome back.It is normal towant whatwe cannothave butthe19is thatto behappyis toappreciate whatwe have.That is the firststep togrowing up.20life becomesmore complexwe willnot regretthe timewewasted wishingwe wereadults.、1A.comfortable B.dependent C.independent D.polite、2A.older B.defeated C.married D.confident、3A.like B.forget C.regret D.miss、4A.study B.job C.age D.health、5A.creates B.shows C.means D.limits、6A.childhood B.adulthood C.parenthood D.romanticism、7A.reduce B.describe C.experience D.understand、8A.greener B.thinner C.yellow D.colorful、9A.wish B.decide C.return D.stop、10A.making B.having C.worrying aboutD.showing off、11A.healthy B.ambitious C.broken D.excited、12A.breakfast B.school C.exercise D.work、13A.rich B.busy C.free D.easy
3.D
4.B
5.C
6.A
7.B
8.A
9.A
10.B
11.C
12.D
13.D
14.A
15.C
16.C
17.C
18.B
19.D
20.BSection IIReading Comprehension、
21.A
2.B
3.D、
31.C
2.D
3.B
4.A、
41.B
2.A
3.D
4.C、
51.D
4.A6^
1.accessible
2.leaving
3.tears
4.that
5.But
6.to help
7.a
8.crashes
9.getting
10.quietly、
71.where
2.puzzled
3.had tried
4.while/but
5.can
6.said
7.depending
8.to clean
9.the mostdensely
10.IfAVhen/OnceSection IIITranslation、
81.C
2.G
3.F
4.A
5.B、
91.A
2.E
3.G
4.D
14、A.life B.love C,career D.future
15、A.long B,short C.fair D.beautiful
16、A.study B.think C.play D.live
17、A.up B.down C.back D.into
18、A.stopped B.enjoyed C.imagined D.tried
19、A.reason B.result C.dream D.truth
20、A.If B.When C.Unless D.BeforeSection IIReading ComprehensionPartADirections:Read thefollowing fourtexts.Answer the questions beloweach textby choosingA,B,C orD.Mark youranswers onthe ANSWER SHEET.40pointsText1Teen ToursSummerTravel TeenTour Programsfor Ages12-18Tips OnTrips andCamps has been recommendingquality teentours forover40years.Teen tours are summer travel programsforteenagers choosinga comfortableway to see thesites andexperience cultures.Housings includehotels,dormitories andevencomfortable camping.Sailing trips,where teensare able to experienceliving aboarda sailboat,is anotherpopular teenexperience.Traveling is also doneby van,bus,bike orboat.PLACES TOGO•Go on a2-week tripthrough NewEngland•Visit theNorthwest•Take a3-or4-week adventureacross theUSA•Bike throughEurope•Camp inColorado underthe stars甲板•Sleep onthe deckof asailboat in the FrenchWest Indies•Visit CollegeCampuses THINGSTO DO•White WaterRafting;Amusement Parks;Water Ski;National Parks;Hike;Snowboard;Shop•EAT,EAT,EATThings ToThink AboutWhen ChoosingA Tour:•Specific datesfor the trip;Place;Price range.•Anything youthink isimportant in making thisdecision for your childssummertravelprogram.Do You•Want aquick way to narrowdown yoursummer opportunitiesand makea wisedecision•Want tochoose thetrip thatis rightfor yourchild(中介机构)•Want to work witha FREEcamp referralagency thathasbeenaround for41years(顾问)、Register nowtoworkwith oneof ourexpert teentours consultantsand find the perfectprogram foryour teenager.1Which programwill youchoose if you areinterested in the seaA.Sleep onthe deckof asailboat.B.Take a3-or4-week adventureacross theUSA.C.Go on a2-week tripthrough NewEngland.D.Camp inColorado underthe stars.、2What willyou doin thetour programA.Diving.B.Hiking.C.Fishing.D.Ice skating.、3Why doesthe adlist manyquestions in the endA.To provethe difficultyin decidinga trip.B,To offerparents helpinmakinga choice.C.To showthetripis designedespecially forchildren.D.To persuadeparents tochoose itsprograms.Text2Do youwanttolive another100years ormore Someexperts saythat scientificadvances willone dayenable humans to lasttensof yearsbeyond whatis nowseen asthe naturallimit of the humanlife span.(永生)“I thinkwe areknocking at the doorof immortalityJ saidMichael Zey,a MontclairState Universitybusiness professor(保守的估计)and authorof twobooks onthe future.think by2075we willsee itand thatsa conservativeestimateAt theconference inSan Francisco,Donald Louria,a professorat NewJersey MedicalSchool inNewark saidadvances inusing(纳米技术)genes aswell asnanotechnology makeit likelythat humanswill livein thefuture beyondwhat hasbeen possiblein thepast.There isa greateffort sothat people can live from120to180years,“he said.Some havesuggested that there isno limitand thatpeoplecould liveto200or300or500years.”However,many scientistswho specializein agingare doubtfulabout itand saythe humanbody isjust notdesigned tolast pastabout120years.Even withhealthier lifestylesand lessdisease,they sayfailure of the brainand organswill finallylead allhumans todeath.Scientists alsodiffer onwhat kindof lifethe superaged mightlive.It remainstobeseen if you pass120,you know;could youbehealthy enoughto havegood qualityof life^said LeonardPoon,director of the University of GeorgiaGerontology Centre.At present、people whocould getto thatpoint arenot ingood healthat all.”1By saying“we areknocking atthe doorof immortality,Michael Zeymeans.A.they believethatthere isnolimit of livingB.they aresure tofindthetruth aboutlong livingC.they havegot someideas aboutliving foreverD.they areableto make peoplelive pastthe present life span
2、Donald Louria9s attitude towards longliving isthat.A.peoplecanlivefrom120to180B.it isstill doubtfulhow longhumans canliveC.the humanbody isdesigned tolast pastabout120years、D.it ispossible forhumanstolive longerin thefuture3The underlinedin paragraph4refers to.A.a greateffortB,the ideaof livingbeyond thepresentlifespanC.the ideaoflivingfrom200to300years D.the conservativeestimate、4What wouldbe thebest titlefor thistextA.Living Longeror NotB.Science,Technology and Long LivingC.No Limitfor HumanLifeD.Healthy LifestyleandLongLivingText3Throughout ourdaily lives,we haveknown plentyof peopleand willknow more.But how can wetell ifsomeone istrustworthyIn apaper publishedrecently in the Journalof Personalityand SocialPsychology,researcher gaveus theanswer.内疚彳顷The researchersasked101adults from the UnitedStates tofill outa questionnairemeasuring theirguilt-proneness向in differentsituations aswell asseveral otherqualities,and thenplay ashort onlinegame.In thisgame.Player1is given$1,whichthey canchoose togive to Player
2.Any moneygiven toPlayer2is thenautomatically increasedto$
2.
20.Player2can thendecidewhether tokeep allofthe money orbehave ina trustworthyway byreturning aportion ofthemoneytoPlayer
1.The researchers foundmore guilt-prone peoplewere morelikely toshare themoney withPlayer
1.Actually,in follow-up studies,guilt-proneness predictedtrustworthinessbetter thanother personalityqualities theresearchers measured.Why mightguilt leadto trustworthybehavior Theresearchersfoundpeople whowere guilt-prone alsoreported feelingan(合乎道德的)(互动)obligation toact inethical andresponsible wayswhile interactingwith theirpartners inthe game.People whoareguilt-prone tendto avoidengaging inbehavior thatmight harmor disappointothers.If theydo somethingbad,guilt encouragesthemto try to makethings rightagain.Then,howcanwe usethis researchto ascertainwhether someoneis trustworthy”One wayto dothis mightbe observehow theyrespondto experienceregret,lead authorEmma Levine,assistant professorattheUniversityofChicago Levine,explains.Another wayisto askthem todescribe adifficult dilemmathey facedinthepast,suggests co-author TayaCohen,associate professorat CarnegieMellonUniversity.This isparticularly effective,Cohen andher colleagueshave found,because itallows us toseeif theyreconcernedabout theeffects theiractions haveon others.、1What maymake othersfeelthatwe arereliable according to the textA.Our goodqualities to help themout.B.Our tendencyto experienceguilt.C.Our kindattitudetowardsthem.D.Our teamspirit inthe game.、2What mayconnect guiltwith trustworthybehaviorA.A senseof responsibility.B,A feelingof disappointment.C.The wayone interactswith others.D.The abilityto tellright fromwrong.、3What doesthe underlinedword ascertain”inthelast paragraphmeanA.Ask B.ExpressC.Describe D.Determine、4How is thetextorganized anddevelopedA.By providingbackground.B.By makinga lotof comparisons.C.By answeringthe raisedquestions.D.By analyzingeffects ofguilt-proneness.Text4Derek Rabclois notthe onlysurfer to conquer Hawaiisfamous Pipelinebig wave break,but whileall othersuse theirsight todoit,this youngprofessional surfermust relyonly onhis othersenses.Thats becausehe iscompletely blind.When Derekwas born,over24years ago,he gothis namefrom DerekHo,the firstHawaiian surfingworld champion.A surfingenthusiasthimself,Ernesto dreamedthat hisson wouldshare thetalent ofhis uncle,a professional surfer.Unfortunately,Derek wasborncompletely blind,but thisdidn*t slophis familyfrom believingIhat hecould doanything hewanted,even ifthat meantbecominga surfer.At age2,Derek receiveda bodyboardand thebeaches ofGuarapari,Brazil,became hisbackyard.He wasalways comfortableinthe waterand surfingwas inhis blood,but hedidnt actuallytry ridinga waveuntil heturned17,when hisfather boughthim asurfboard.His fathertaught himthe basicsand encouragedhim tokeep practicing,but aftersuccessfully standingup onthe surfboard,Derek knewheneeded to become muchbetter ifhe wasgoing toachieve Ernestosdream andbecome aprofessional surfer.So hejoined thePraia doMoroosurf school,where hestudied undercoach FabioMaru.Standing up onasurfboard andconquering smallwaves isone thing,while gatheringthe courageto takeon Hawaiisboard-breaking Pipelineis another.But thatsexactly whatDerek Rabeloset outto dojust monthsafter learninghow tosurf.Everyonetold himit wastoo dangerous,but hefelt hecould doit.And hedid,earning thepraise offamous professionalsurfers likeKelly SlaterandMick Fanning.Now24,Rabelo hasbeen surfingthe Pipelineevery wintersince.、1What doesthe firstparagraph tellusA.Good eyesightis necessaryfor becominggood suffers.B.Nobody hasever conqueredHawaiis big wave break.C.Derek Rabelodreams toconquer Hawaiis bigwavebreak.D.Derek Rabeloistheonly blindprofessionalsurfertoconquerHawaii9sbigwavebreak.、2How didErnesto behave after Derekwas bornA.He namedhim afterhis uncle.B.He neverlost confidencein him.C.He senthim toa surfingchampion.D.He startedhis owninterest insurfing.、3After Derekwas ableto standuponthe surfboard,he.A・began totry ridinga waveB.was nolonger afraidof waterC.realized hestill hada longwaytogo D.knew hisfathers dreamhad cometrue、4Which ofthefollowingwords canbest describeDerek accordingto thelast paragraphA.Brave andconfident.B.Skillful butproud.C.Thoughtful andmodest.D.Courageous butstubborn.Part BDirections:Read thefollowing textand answerthequestionsby choosingthe mostsuitable subheadingfromthelist A-G foreachnumbered paragraph41—
45.There aretwo extrasubheadings whichyou donot needto use.Mark youranswerson theANSWERSHEET.10points一How wouldyou feelifyouwoke upand foundyour entirecomputers-including yourphotos,your recentdocuments nolonger」1access Whatifyoufound outthat theyhad beenwiped fromyour computer,
2.leave youwith nothingbut heartache」Guess whatIt happensto peopleevery singleday Everyday,people acrossthe countryhead intotheir localApple storein3tear,broken computerin hand,praying asthey waitin line4-an expensiverepair might,just might,recover thepriceless,irreplaceablefiles Afew getlucky
5.for therest,theres nothinganyone cando
6.helpHasnt ithappened toyou Ifyour computerremains unprotected,it will,and itsonly7-matter oftime Butthanks torecent备份breakthroughs incomputer backuptechnology,you nowhaveanumber ofoptions toprepare,and ifyoure smart,when your」」computer8crash,you shouldnthave anytrouble9get100%of yourfiles backthat sameday Imnot talking about anexternal hard安drive Imtalkingaboutan onlinebackup solutionthat runs
10.quiet inthe backgroundon yourcomputer Ifyou haveone installed装,when yourcomputer crashes,you911be justone clickaway frombringing yourfiles backto lifeDirections:After readingthe passagebelow,fill inthe blankstomakethe passagecoherent andgrammatically correctFor theblankswith agiven word,fill ineach blankwith theproper formofthegiven word;for theother blanks,use oneword thatbest fitseach blankITWAS1:00am inTokyo Wedgot losttrying tofind ourAirbnb,and werenow atan addressthat looked90%right Therewerekeys inthe letterbox,1-our hostsaid theydbe Sowhen thesecurity codedidnt work,I justgrabbed themout throughthe narrowholewith myhandsBut whenI wasturning thekeys inthe lock,the dooropened Alady andher daughterlooked outat us,
2.puzzle Definitelynotour Airbnbthen Amazinglythough,they didntscream atus,call thepolice,or bothFor thenext20minutes,they triedtohelpus findtheright address Andwhen weturned upnothing,they formallyapologized tous-the foreignerswho
3.trytobreak intotheir homeInJapan,there aremany waysto apologizeThe ladyused“gomen-nasai,
4.most peopleuse themore casual“sumimasen“Oftentranslated asan apologeticexcuse meJ it5-be heardin doorways,taxis,shops andrestaurants in Japan“Only10%of asumimasen,is anapology/96-Laurie Inokuma,who holdsa degreein Japanesefrom CornellUniversity“Ninetypercent isused toshow respect,politeness andhonesty,she saidIts aneveryday wordWhen someonedoes somethingforyou,gettingout ofyour wayinthegrocery store,or holdinga door,sumimasen,isthecommon response”Just aseasily asa thankyou ora sorry,sumimasen“is regularlyused toacknowledge thetrouble someonehas goneto foryouTheres amodesty init;
7.depend onthe situation,its eitherapologetic orgrateful/7Inokuma saidErinNiimi Longhurst,a British-Japanese author,agrees“Theres aculture ofapology butalso aculture ofthankfulness inJapan Jshesaid Thisyears WorldCup isan exampleof thislevel ofcourtesy:When Japanlost itsfinal match,the teammade headlineswhenthey stayedbehind
8.clean theentire changingroom Theyeven lefta thank-you note齿轮If apologiesare justone coginthelarger movingwheel ofJapanese politeness,where doesthis culturalconcept comefromThere isa needfbr politenessinJapanto getalong withyour neighborsliving aboveyou-its arespect forothers/9Inokuma saidJapanhas someof
9.densely packedcities inthe world10,theres alimit onspace,it suddenlyseems naturalto becomeas considerateaspossibleSection IIITranslationDirections:Life isjust likeaTranslate thefollowing textinto Chinese.Write yourtranslation ontheANSWERSHEET.15pointsbox.Inside itare happinessand sorrow,failure andsuccess,hope anddespair.Life isa learningprocess.Experiences init teachus newlessonsand makeus abetter person.LoveLove playsa keyrole onour life.Love makesyou feelwanted.Without lovea personcould becomecruel andviolent.In theearlystage ofour life,our parentsare theones whoshow uswith unconditionallove andcare.They tellus whatis right or wrong,good orbad.1,It isonly aftermarriage andhaving kidsthataperson understandsand becomessensitive tothe feelingsof others.Kids makeaperson responsibleand matureand helpustounderstand lifebetter.Happiness andSorrow、Materialistic happinessis short-lived,but happinessachieved bybringing asmile onothers givesa certainlevel offulfillment.2,No mind is happywithout peace.We realizethe trueworth ofhappiness whenwe arein sorrow.Sorrow isbasically due to deathof alovedone,failure anddespair.But thesethings aretemporary andpass away.Failure andSuccess、3,It helpsustotouch thesky,teaches usto surviveand showsus aspecific way.Hope andDespairHope iswhat keepslife going.Parents alwayshope theirchildren willdo well.Hope makesus dream.Hope buildsinpatience.
4.because afterevery nightthereisa day.Nothing remainsthe same.We haveonly onechoice-keep movingon inlife andbehopeful.Life teachesus notto regretover yesterday,for ithas passedand isbeyond ourcontrol.Tomorrow isunknown,for itcould eitherberightordulL
5.So thatwe willenjoy abetter tomorrow.A,Life teachesus notto despaireven inthe darkesthourB.So theonly alternativeis workhard todayC.But wealways tendto takethis forgrantedD.Success liesin trustingyourselfE.So letsenjoy everydayF.Failure isthe pathto successG.Peace ofmindisthe mainlink tohappinessSnowblind-it9safrightening word.Thankfully,its acondition thatis totallypreventable.Snow blindnessisapainful,temporary lossof visionduetooverexposure tothe suns UV rays.Essentially,snow blindnessiscaused bya sunburnedeye.1Though itis commonlycalled snow blindness,the conditioncan andoften doesoccur inthe absenceof snow.The termsnsnowblindH andsnow blindnesshave becomepopular becausesnow ishighly reflective of ultravioletradiation.
2、Also,skiing,mountain climbingand snowboardingusually takeplace atrelatively highaltitudes,where the suns UVrays arestronger.Combined,these factorscan doubleyour riskof gettingsunburned eyes,compared withbeing outdoorsat loweraltitudes inthesummertime.3Television journalistAnderson Cooperexperienced snow-free snow blindness first-hand afew yearsago whenhe spenta couplehoursonaboat inPortugal withoutsunglasses andended up“blind for36hours,accordingtohis reportoftheincident.、Not onlycan youbecome snowblindwithout snow—it canhappen withoutsunlight,too!4For example,sun lampscan causetemporarysnow blindnessif propereye protectionis notused.、5To relievepain ordiscomfort fromsnowblindness,stay indoorsand wearsunglasses.Keep youreyes well-moistened withartificialtears.For additionalrelief,use over-the-counter painrelievers.Be sureto useonly painrelievers youknow youcan takewithoutworry ofan allergicreaction.You alsomay findthat placinga cool,dampened washclothover yourclosed eyelidsiscomforting.A.You dontneed snowtobecomesnowblindB.It willlikely affectthose travelingin snowyconditionsC.To preventsnowblindnessontheslopes,wear sunglassesD.Sometimes itoccurs fromman-made sourcesof ultravioletradiationE.In fact,snow canreflect over80percent ofthe UVrays thatfall uponitF.Snow blindnessis scary,but usuallyits temporary,and thereare waysto relievethe discomfortG.But waterand whitesand alsoare highlyreflectiveofthesun*sUVrays,thus increasingthe risk参考答案Section IUse ofEnglish、
11.C
2.A。