还剩10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:
年衡水市安平县考研《英语一》考前冲刺试题2023Section IUse ofEnglishDirections:Read the following text.Choose the best wordsfor eachnumbered blankand markA,B,C orD on the ANSWER SHEET.10pointsOne day,some of the girlsin ourneighborhood startedacting abit strangelytowards me.They1talking tome.After aday orso of this,I finally2what was going on.Id saidsomething to a n3girl thenight beforethat shedidntlike.Id hada few4that night,and likeeveryone Isometimes saythings that5severer thanI meanthem to.Anyway,it seemedthat thegirlhad toldmany ofher friends,and nowthey wereall6at me.They founda great7to thinkof allthe othersupposedcrimes^Fdcommitted overthe pastyear.8theyd allreally liked me before,suddenly they9I was a reallybad guy.This was a difficultproblem.I10to getalong wellwith these people and I likedthem all.I didntwant them to11me because ofsomething stupidId saidwhen I was drunk.It didnt12much whetherthey orI waswrong.All Iwanted wasthings to be13to normalagain.So Iwrote thepopular girla note14saying“Im sorryif Ihurt yourfeelings.I didntmean to”.And thatwas it.The problemwassolved.15the girlswho wereangry withme nowlikedme16than ever.They feltId donesomething17in admittingI waswrong andapologizing.Learn howand whento18Often,the prideand stubbornnessyou holdonto byrefusing toback downisnt worththe_19of alastingargument.An apologycan20for healinga difficultsituation.And often,people willthink betterof youfor it.
1、A.began B.continued C.avoided D.regretted、2A.found outB.picked outC.gave outD.spoke out、3A.special B,popular C.familiar D.ordinary、4A.quarrels B.comments C.problems D.drinks、5A.look B.sound C.feel D.appear6A.surprised B.angry C.excited D.amazed、7A.right B.opportunity C.space D.need、8A.As B.Since C.As ifD.While、9A.convinced B.admitted C.decided D.promised、10A.happened B.used C.prepared D.agreed、11A.forget B.forgive C.hate D.respect12A.matter B,change C.care D.explainB.And heachieved it.C.If youthink you do,you willnot belikely tofix anything.D.There isno denyingthat you are excellentin your career.E.He nowfaces thebiggest challengeof hiscareer.F.They thinkthey mustdo itall andfix everything,and thatstoo hard.G.I toldher that the foolish choices continuedevery time she choseinaction overagain action.参考答案Section IUse ofEnglish、
11.C
2.A
3.B
4.D
5.B
6.B
7.B
8.D
9.C
10.B
11.C
12.A
13.D
14.A
15.B
16.D
17.C
20.CSection IIReading Comprehension、
21.B
2.C
3.B
4.A、
31.D
2.B
3.D
4.C、
41.A
2.B
3.C
4.D、
51.C
2.D
3.A
4.B
5.A、
61.celebrated
2.selflessness
3.official
4.when
5.a
6.better
7.At
8..is decorated
9.providing
10.places、
71.skillfully
2.that
3.curiosity
5..was brought
6.an
7.to teach
8.hid
9..amazed
10.onSection HITranslation、
81.B
2.C
3.F
4.A
5.E、
91.A
2.F
3.G
4.B
5.C
13、A.around B.叩C.about D.back、14A.simply B.generally C.regularly D.gently、15A.At firstB.In factC.At leastD.As usual、16A.rather B.worse C.less D.better、17A.doubtful B.interesting C.brave D.shameful、18A.cheer B.forgive C.worry D.apologize、19A.effort B.price C.result D.cause20A.permit B.fail C・work D.LastSection IIReading ComprehensionPartADirections:Read thefollowing fourtexts.Answer the questions beloweach textby choosingA,B,C orD.Mark youranswers onthe ANSWERSHEET.(40points)Text1(预测)Plants areflowering faster than scientistspredicted inreaction to climate change,which could have longdamagingeffects on food chainsand ecosystems.Global wanningis havinga greateffect onhundreds ofplant andanimal speciesaround theworld,changing someliving patterns,scientists say.()Increased carbondioxide CO2in theair fromburning coaland oilcan have an effecton howplants produceoxygen,whilehigher temperaturesand changeablerainfall patternscan changetheir patternsof growth.Predicting species,reaction toclimate changeis amajor challengein ecology,said theresearchers ofseveral U.S.universities.They saidplants hadbeen thekey objectof studybecause theirreaction toclimate changecould havean effectonfood chains andecosystemservices.The study,published onthe Naturewebsite,uses thefindings fromplant lifecycle studiesand experimentsacross fourcontinents(低估)and1,634species.It found that someexperiments hadunderestimated thespeed offlowering by
8.5times andleafing by4times.一“Across allspecies,the experimentsunder-predicted thespeed of the advance-for bothleafing andflowering thatresults fromtemperatureincrease/9the studysaid.The design of futureexperiments mayneed to be improvedto betterpredict howplants willreact toclimate change,it said.(光合作用)Plants arenecessary forlife onthe Earth.They arethe baseofthe foodchain,using photosynthesisto producesugarfrom carbondioxide andwater.They letout oxygenwhich isneeded bynearly everyorganism onthe planet.Scientists believethe worldsaverage temperaturehas risenby about
0.8℃since1900,and nearly
0.2℃every ten yearssince
1979.(排放)So far,efforts tocut emissionsof planet-warming greenhousegases are not seen as enoughto preventthe Earthheatingup beyond2℃this century-a pointscientists saywill bringthe dangerof achangeable climatein whichweather extremesare common,leading todrought,floods,crop failuresand risingsea levels.、1What is the mainidea ofParagraph1A.Plants reactionto weathercouldhavedamaging effectson ecosystems.B.The increasingspeed offlowering isbeyond scientists9expectation.C.Climate changeleads to the changeof foodproduction patterns.D.Food chainshave beenseriously damagedbecauseofweather.、2We canlearn from the studypublished onthe Naturewebsite that.A.plants floweringis
8.5times fasterthan leafingB.there are1,634plant speciesonthefour continentsC.scientists shouldimprove thedesignofthe experimentsD.the experimentsfailed topredict howplants reacttoclimate change、3Scientists payspecial attentionto thestudy ofplants because.A.they canprove theclimatechangeclearlyB・they arevery importantin thefood chainsC.they playa leadingrole inreducing globalwarmingD.they aregrowing andflowering muchfasterthanbefore、4What can be inferredfrom thelast twoparagraphs about the worldstemperatureA.It needsto becontrolled within2℃in thiscentury.B・Its changewill leadto weatherextremes.C.It is
0.8℃higher in1979than thatof
1900.D.It hasrisen nearly
0.2℃since
1979.Text2(食品室)When Lone Star Collegestudent Dwyanya Earnhardt firstheard abouta food pantry openingat hercollege inSeptember2015,she wasembarrassed to ask for help,but knewshe neededit.shes used thefood pantry severaltimes since.Lone StarMontgomery Campusis amonga growingnumber ofUS collegesopening food pantries for students.In theHouston()area alone,San JacintoCollege and the Universityof HoustonDowntown UHDhave alsoadded them.UHD openedits foodpantryin spring
2015.ifs hopingto increaseits useamong studentsthrough aprogram beinglaunched thisterm.About100to150students willbeawarded foodscholarships to use in a new food bankconstructed insidethe studentservicesbuilding.“More studentsof differentbackgrounds haveaccess tohigher education,but thatyou gotin doesntmean you have thesupportcoming fromhome tokeep youin Jsaid Patrick Jefferson,UHD“s assistantvice presidentforstudentaffairs.“Many ofthe studentscome afterwork,take theirclass,then theygo home,and theydont leavetheir challengesat thefrontdoor,“said Jefferson.We^e recognizingthat wejust cantay.6We onlyworry aboutour students9academic challenges/We have tothink aboutthe studentasawhole person.”The majorityof donationsto Lone Stars foodpantry havecome fromteachers andstudents.The foodpantry isopen fromnoonuntil3p.m.on Tuesdays and Fridays,but studentscan requestit at another timeif needed.Nearly590students haveusedthepantrysince itopened lastfall.San JacintoCollege hasbeen offeringfoodpantryservices twicea monthto studentssince
2013.The collegesends abag ofitemson certaindaysandhas receivedmore than1,000student requestssince itbegan.It allowsstudents fromall income levels torequestfood.UHD andLoneStarMontgomery Campusalso followthe samepolicy.、1When afoodpantrywas firstopened in LoneStar College.A.it was quite newto allAmericansB.all collegesin theUS followedthe exampleC.Dwyanya Earnhardtwas notaware ofits necessityD.DwyanyaEarnhardtfelt uncomfortable toaskforhelp、2The foodpantry inUHD isintended to.A.build anewfoodbankB.give supportto studentsC.offer serviceto teachersD.award250students scholarships、3PatrickJeffersonholds theidea that.A.students have to balancebetween workand studyB.students academicchallenges arehis mainconcernC.access tohigher educationmeans easilycontinuing schoolingD.students challengesinvolve academicchallenges andother problems、4What canbe inferredaboutthefoodpantriesinLoneStarCollegeand SanJacinto CollegeA.Both ofthem offerservices twicea weekB.Both oftheir donatorsare teachersand studentsC.Neither ofthem setsincomelevelstandards forstudentsD.Neither ofthem hasreceived asmany as1000student requestsText3When Imet afriend recently,I askedhim howwork was.Oh,not thatbusy,Im justcoasting,“he said.Hes notalone.According toa recentpoll,one thirdofthe3,000people surveyedsaid theywere“coasting“at work.This maycome asa surprisein anagewhen somany peoplespend somuch timecomplaining abouthow busy they are.But mostofthistalk aboutbusyness isnonsense.According toa studyby researchersat OxfordUniversity,we donot,in fact,spend moretime workingthan wehave in the past.Onsome measures,the amountwe workhas gonedown.Instead,many peoplejust havejobs filledwith tasksthat dontreally needto bedone.The waywe lookat coastinghas radicallychanged.In thepast,being relaxedand notburdened withtoo muchwork withinyourorganisation wasa signof status.Now,being extremelybusy showsyou areimportant.If youare notextremely overburdened,then youareseenasa slacker,a lazyperson.This does not makesense.Most people are notas busyas theysay they are.In fact,most pressingtasks at work areoften unrelatedtoproductivity.Many busypeople areactually overburdenedwith tellingothers how busytheyare.Being overly-fbcused onyour jobmaymake youfeel important,but itslikely toannoy friends,co-workers andyour family.Whafs more,being super-busy allthe timeisnot goodfor you.A CornellUniversity studyfoundthatpeople whoare overburdenedwith worktend tohaveaworse senseofwellbeing thanthose whoare morerelaxed.The researchersalso foundthat beingsuper-busy isbad foryourcareer.Those whoreportedworking veryintensely wereassociated withpoorer careeroutcomes.So,perhaps coastersarenota dragon productivity.Maybe theyhave workedout that the secrettoaproductive andhealthy lifeisnot beingtoo busy,and certainlynot talkingcontinuously abouthow busyyouare.We shouldremember BertrandRusseirs adage:Oneof thesymptoms ofan approachingnervous breakdownisthebelief thatones workis terriblyimportant.”、1What canwe inferfrom thefindings ofthe OxfordUniversity studyA.People havea falseimpression abouthowbusytheyareat work.B.Less busyemployees havea greaterlikelihood ofpromotion.C.One thirdof employeesdont considerthemselves to be busy.D.People overburdenedat workare likelyto feelmore energised.
2、In the19th centurywhich ofthesepeoplewould probablyhave beenthe LEASTbusy in their jobA.A bankclerk.B,A bankowner.C,An officecleaner.D.An officesecretary.、3Why might“coasters“actually besuccessful intheir workA.They donot feelthreatened bya challengingtask.B,They workmore co-operatively with their colleagues.C.They areable tofocus onthe mostimportant andnecessary tasks.D.They areoften more intelligent andabletocomplete theirwork faster.、4Which ofthefollowingbest summarizesthe authorsattitudeA.He expressesno personalopinion aboutthe topic.B,He thinksthat lazypeoplearein factthebestworkers.C.He issympathetic towardsdifficulties ofsuper-busy workers.D.He believesthat busynessatworkdoesnotequal effectiveness.Text4I beganworking injournalism whenIwaseight.It wasmy mothersidea.She wantedme to“make something”of myself,anddecided Ihad betterstart youngif Iwas tohave anychance ofkeeping upwiththecompetition.With myload ofmagazines Iheaded towardBelleville Avenue.The crowdswere there.There weretwo gasstations onthe cornerof Belleville and Union.For severalhours Imade myselfhighly visible,making sureeveryone couldsee me andtheheavy blackletterson thebag thatsaid THESATURDAY EVENINGPOST.When itwas suppertime,I walkedback home.“How manydid yousell,my boymy motherasked.“None.“Where didyou go“The cornerofBellevilleandUnionAvenues.“What didyou do”“Stood onthe comerwaiting fbrsomebody tobuy aSaturday EveningPost.”“You juststood there”Didnt sella singleone.^^“My God,Russell!”(五分银币).Uncle Allenput in,Well,Ive decidedto takethe Post.I handedhim acopy andhe paidmeanickel Itwas thefirstnickel Iearned.Afterwards my mother taughtme howto bea salesman.I wouldhavetoring doorbells,address adultswith self-confidence,andpersuade themby sayingthat noone,no matterhow poor,could affordtobewithout theSaturday EveningPost inthe home.One day,I toldmymotherId changedmy mind.I didntwant to make asuccess inthe magazinebusiness.“If youthink youcan changeyour mindlike this,“she replied,youll becomea good-for-nothing.She insistedthat,as soonasschool wasover,I shouldstart ringingdoorbells,selling magazines.Whenever Isaid no,she wouldscold me.My motherandIhad foughtthis battlealmost aslong asI couldremember.My mother,dissatisfied withmy fathersplainworkmans life,determined thatI wouldnot growup likehim and his people.But neverdid sheexpect that,forty yearslater,such asuccessfuljournalist asme wouldgo backto herhusbands peoplefor truelife andlove.、1Why didthe boystart hisjob youngA.He wanted tobefamous inthe future.B,The job wasquiteeasy forhim.C.His motherhad highhopes forhim.D.The competitionfor thejobwasfierce.、2From thedialogue between the boy andhis mother,we learnthatthe mother was.A.excitedB・interestedC・ashamedD.disappointed、3What didthemotherdo whenthe boywantedtogive upA.She forcedhim tocontinue.B,She punishedhim.C.She gavehim somemoney.D.She changedher plan.
4、What doesthe underlinedphrase“this battle,,last paragraphrefer toA.The warbetween theboys parents.B,The arguingbetween theboy andhismother.C.The quaiTelbetween theboy andhis customers.D.The fightbetweentheboyandhis father.、5What isthe textmainly aboutA,The earlylife ofa journalist.B,The earlysuccess ofa journalist.C.The happychildhood ofthe writer.D.The importantrole ofthe writerin hisfamily.Part BDirections:Read thefollowing textand answerthequestionsby choosingthe mostsuitable subheadingfromthelist A-G foreachnumbered paragraph41-
45.There aretwo extrasubheadings whichyoudonot needtouse.Mark youranswers ontheANSWER SHEET.10pointsKentucky FriedChicken haslaunched anew themedbranch inhonor ofLei Feng,a legendarysoldier
1.celebrate inChina forhis
2.self andmodesty,in his hometown Changsha,Hunan provinceTherestaurant openedon Sunday,two daysbefore the3_officeremembrance daymarked acrossthe countryevery yearon MarchJ
4.people celebratehis spiritsby showinggoodwill andgiving
5.helping handto othersTherestaurant willorganize seriesof activitiesand alsocooperate withthe localLei FenMemorial Hallto
6.well promoteLeiFengs spirits,the entrancetotherestaurant standtwo bigLei-like statuesand itsinner part
8.decorate withLeis cartoonportraits andquotesfrom hisdiary,with wordsfrom hispoems playinginthebackgroundHe Min,general managerof KFCin Hunanprovince,told voccom enthat inaddition tothe themedrestaurant,they willalso门店launch aproject devotedto Leisvirtues in250outlets acrossthe province,including
9.providefree drinkingwater andresting
10.place forgate guards」On aclear Februarymorning,a Californiablack bearwas setfree Lookingaround,he1skillful climbedthe nearesttree Fromhighabove theground,he couldsee thehundreds ofacres
2.were nowhishomeHis eyeswere filledwith
3.curious幼兽The bearhad comea longway Lastfall,the seven-month-old bearbub wasfound allalone Hehad nomother tocare forhimHe wasthin,
4.weight only20pounds——about halfthe normalweight fora bearthat ageLuckily the bub
5.bring toThe Fundfor围栏Animals WildlifeCenter inRamona,California Atthe center,the bubshared
6.outdoor enclosurewith anotherbear Therewere兽穴二trees toclimb andplaces for themtodig dens7teach thecub tofind his own food,people workingatthecenter
8.hide fruitintree branchesSoon,the bearwas anexpert atclimbing treesand pickingthe fruitAll thestaff felt
9.amaze athis adaptabilityFinally,the dayhad comeWith hisnew skilland strongbody,thebubwas readytobe
10.hisown,and readyto livelike abearshould-inthewildSection IIITranslationDirections:Translate thefollowing textinto Chinese.Write yourtranslation ontheANSWERSHEET.15points Howto HaveaSuccessful RemoteInterview、If interviewsmake younervous,the thoughtof doingone remotelymight bea relief.1Even ifyour interviewermay havea hardtimeseeing yousweat,they willstill askquestions.Think ofa phone or video interview asan extraopportunity toimpress.If youcreate、a genuineconnection withsomeone withoutbeing inthe sameplace asthem,chances aretheyll trustyour ability.2・Test yourequipment.、3For avideointerview,its importantto doa trialrun inadvance,since theycanbeespecially troublesome.These arelive,so itsveryimportant totest yourconnection aheadof timeJ saysScott Dobroski,the directorof CorporateCommunication atGlassdoor.■工You dont want yourinterviewer tothink yourein anunderground place.So skipthe dark,dull moodlighting.Pick aspot wherethelight isfacing youand tryto setyourself upinarelaxing atmosphereand at a comfortabledistance.Ideally,have slightlyan inchofspace aboveyour head.•Take yourtime.A commonmistake peoplemake iscutting someoneelse offin conversation.This iseven easierto dowhen youcant seethe、person youretalking to.So evenif itfeels slightlyunnatural,wait fora whileafter yourinterviewer finishesa sentence.5He mayunderstandwhy.But youdontwantto comeacross asrushing theconversation orbeing moreinterested inhearing yourselftalk thanestablishinga connection.A,Get theatmosphere right.B.But youshould stilltake themseriously.C.Here arethree tipstomakethe wholeprocess gosmoothly.D.Buy aphoneorvideo beforeyouhavethe interview.E.Gutting himoff a time ortwo mightnot bea bigproblem.F.Make surethat yourphone ischarged andyour Wi-Fi works.G.Your interviewerwill behappy tosee youcut himoff.You dontlose fiftypounds intwo weeks.You losethem onepound atatime.、So dontexpect torebuild yourlife bychanging everythingby midnighttonight.1The onething Ihave seenrepeatedly inpeople whoface discouragingchallenges isthat theyoften wonttry becausethe situation、(现状).seems toohard tochange.2Therefore,they justdont botherand settleforthestatus quo1know avery brightyoung womanwho hada childwhen she was17and woundup cleaninghouses.By thetimeshehit her30s,、shewasconvinced thatshe couldhave nothingmorein her life.She blamedit onfoolishchoicesinheryouth.3I toldher abouta manI interviewedatacollege graduation.He startedhis studiesasayoung fatherand ittook himtenyearsto getthatbachelors degree.He didone classatatime.It didntmatter whatwasgoingon inhis life.He alwayshad oneclass inprogress to、move himforward hislong-term goal.
4、You donthavetofix everythingin oneday.5Just takesmall steps.一一A.You maywant changes,but thosechanges cantand wont---happen inan instant.。