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:
年贵州省黔东南南苗族侗族自治州从江县考研《英语一》高分冲刺试题2023Section IUse ofEnglishDirections:Read the following text.Choose thebest wordsfor eachnumbered blankand markA,B,C orD on the ANSWER SHEET.10pointsOn Mother8910s Day,Trevor Wallacewoke upearly andhand-scrubbed擦洗a fountain.It wasntjust anyfountain,]it wasonethat hada special2to hisfamily.15minutes awayfrom Trevorscampus siteDe AnzaCommunity Collegewhere hisbeloved3Marilyn Rosenthal,had workedfor匾decades.Her co-workers atthe school4a largefountain inher honorwith aplaque thatsaysHearth Garden:In5of MarilynRosenthal.The fountainwas6to Trevorsmom,Sarene,who wasonly36years oldwhen hermom died.Although she7it,she didnthave theopportunity to8it.As timewent on,the fountain,which ishidden undertrees,9disrepair.Trevor calledSarene thatday to10her ahappy MothersDay andtold herto expectan
11.Then he海绵.drove toDe AnzaCommunity Collegewith his12,and twospongesWhen hearrived atthe fountain,it wascovered withleaves and13with dirt.He startedto scrub.As hecleaned,he14anotherproblem:the fountainswater wasturned off.Without water,the sitewouldnt be15,Therefore,Trevor purchaseda bottleand waspouring wateron an16fountain.Completing all these things,he tooka beforeandafter17,and senthis momtwo18emails.The subjectline of the firstemail was,“Gift One:Open the first!”It wasthe beforephoto of the fountain.The subjectline of thesecond email19,“Gift One:Part T\It wasthe afterphoto of the fountain.When Iopened thephotos,I20into tearsJSarene says.He not only honoredme,but alsohonored mymom.^^8march C.play D.visitB.brought inC.looked intoD.fell into10A.celebrate B.wish C.desire D.congratulate1A.yet B.but C.and D.otherwiseC.history D.、2A.gift B.significanceexplanation
3、A.friend B.colleague C,grandmother D.mother
5、A.memory B.place C.charge D.support
4、A.established B.gathered C-donated D.measured
6、A.special B,delicate C.valueless D.private
7、A.cherished B.shared C.hid D.reserved
3.C
4.C
5.A
6.A
7.A
8.D
9.D
10.B
11.D
12.D
13.B
14.C
15.A
16.B
17.C
18.B
19.A
20.BSection IIReading Comprehension、
21.C
2.D
3.B
4.B、
31.D
5.C
6.B、8A.spread
7.C、9A.turned in
8.
1.A
9.D
10.B、
51.B
11.C
12..understanding
13.passed
14.overlooked
15.should
16..elevated
17.but
18.As
19.that
20..surround
21.that
7.
1.that
8.sleepy
9.easier
10.have beenworking/have worked
11.usually
12.if
13.an
14.importance
15.living
16.whichSection IIITranslation、
81.D
2.A
3.F
4.B
5.E、
91.CG
2.
3.D
11、A.email B.fountain C.card D.surprise
19、A.read B.wrote C.looked D.directed20A.moved B.burst C.brokeD.wept
12、A.present B.fortune C.trick D.cameraSection IIReading Comprehension
13、A.provided B.caked C.decorated D.mixed PartADirections:、14A.crashed intoB.gave outC.met withD.came upwithRead thefollowing fourtexts.Answer the questions
15、A.shiny B.fragrant C.precise D.transparentbelow eachtext by choosing A,B,C orD.Mark()
16、A.polished B.abandoned C.furnished D.transformed youranswers onthe ANSWERSHEET.40pointsText
117、A.look B.expression C.shot D.performanceOumuamua,an objectthrough spacethat was
18、A.practical B.separate C.reliable D.outstandingdiscovered onOctober19th,has alreadymadehistory.The speed at whichit ismoving relativeto the sun meansthat it cannot benative to the solar system.Its officialname isthus(星际)“一11/2017UI,with theT standingfor interstellarthefirsttime thisname hasever beenused.That isexciting.Some scientists,though,entertain aneven moreexciting possibility:what ifOumuamua is not an(小行星),(外星的)asteroid asmost think,but an alien spacecraftAsteroids comein11sorts ofshapes andsizes,but Oumuamuaseemsparticularly different.As bestas astronomerscan tell,it iscigarlike,being roughly180meters long but onlyabout30meterswide.That makesit longerthan anythingknown ofin thesolar system.Such ashape would be asensible choicefor a spaceship,since it(冲刷)would minimizethe scouringeffect of interstellar dust.With thatin mindthe BreakthroughListen project,an organization aimed athunting for alien life,plans toturn the worlds biggestradiotelescope,the GreenBank instrumentin Virginia,towards Oumuamuato seeif itcan hear anything interesting.Oumuamua iscurrentlyabout twiceas far from Earthas Earthis from thesun.At thatrange,the telescopeshould besensitive enoughto pickup atransmitterabout aspowerful as a mobilephone afterjust a few seconds-worthy ofobservations.Will itfind anythingAlmost certainlynot.Oumuamua hasthe samereddish coloras manyas asteroids,so probablyhas asimilarcomposition.And,if itreally is aspaceship,it isstrange thatsigns ofits artificialorigin havenot beenseen already.lt could,in theory,(遗弃星球).be aderelict Butin thatcase thetelescope isunlikely tohearanything.By farthe mostlikely optionis that it isexactlywhat itseems to be:a hugespace rock,one that has cometo thesolar systemfrom thevast spacebetween thestars.1What makessome scientiststhink Oumuamuais possiblyanalienspacecraftA.Its size.B.Its color.C.Its shape.D.Its speed.、2What doesthe underlinedword“that”in thethird paragraphprobably meanA.The researchinto thesolarsystem.B.The purpose of huntingforalienlife.C.The effectofinterstellardust onOumuamua.D.The possibilityof Oumuamuabeing aspaceship.、3What isOumuamua mostlikely to be accordingto the authorA.An asteroid.B.A spacerock.C.Interstellar dust.D.An alienspacecraft.、4It can be inferredfrom thelast paragraphthat.A.Oumuamua willreturn towhere ifsfrom soonB.Oumuamua^real identityremains to be foundoutC.astronomers havenot seensigns ofOumuamua^artificial originD.the GreenBank telescopehas alreadyheard something from OumuamuaText2Im partof theRootsShoots programfounded byDr.Jane Goodall.The program is intendedto makeand promotepositivechanges in the world.As Dr.Goodall says,What you do makesa difference,and youhave todecide whatkind ofdifference youwantto make.”In Bulgaria,where Ilive,homeless dogsare everywhere.Many peoplehere turna blindeye to them.But I cannot ignorethe lifeofa streetdog wheneverI seeone wanderingin thestreet,looking forsomething toeat.Thats whyIm no longer afood waster.When Iseewasted food,I alwaysthink of a hungrydog climbingto garbage bins,searching forfood thatpeople havethrown there.Wheneating in a restaurant,Tm not afraid totake leftoverfood to feed straycats ordogs.A weekago,I sawa homeless dog aroundthe garbagebins.Immediately Iknelt down,spoke toher softlyand ranmy handsoverher.I couldsee thatshe hadhad puppies.I couldntimagine howshe couldhave beenable tocare for them.Hours earlier,Id baggedupa plateof leftover fish.As Iunwrapped it,she waggedher tailand sniffedatit.She ateallthefish in no time.Its sad,isnt itI cantunderstand whymany ofus wasteso muchand thinklittle ofit.These homelessanimals havetaught methatfood isprecious.Even whenI donthave leftoverswith me,Ill take the time to getsomethingfrom the grocerystore tofeed them.I knowmy poweris small,so Ihope thatnext timeyou seewasted food,do turnit intoworthy food.You havethe powerto savealife!、1The authoruses whatDr.Goodall saysto show.A.how wecan developour businessB.why it is important to begreatC.why theprogramispopular globallyD.how wecan changetheworldpositively、2What canbe concludedfrom thetextA.There arefew homeless dogs wherethe authorlivesB.The authortakes homeless dogs homeand raisesthemC.Seeing homelessdogs makestheauthornever wastefoodD.People throwfood intogarbagebinstofeedhomelessdogs、3The authortook theleftoverfishwith himto.A.feed ahomelessdoghe metB.eat itwhen hewas hungryC-look for more homelessanimalsD.set anexample tothose whothrow awayfood、4The authorwrote thetext to ask usto.A.value ourfood B.treat dogsas ourfriendsC.save wastedfood forhomelessdogsD.raise homelessdogs andcatsText3Four teenagegirls fromMinnesota,US.120hours ofnon-stop togetherness.No cellphones.This is not a reality show,but anadventure journey.“It wasreally perfect,“said Julia Ruelle ofher recentadventure to the Boundary Waters CanoeArea Wildernesswith threeof herchildhoodfriends.“By unplugging,we hadan amazingtime.”Last year,the16-year-old tookpart inan essaycontest andcarried offa prize.The awardwas a5-day canoeand campingadventurewith upto threefriends.No parents or guideswouldbethere.So Juliainvited her friends AnnaWander,Madeline WilsonandJulianna Torelli.The fourMinnetonka HighSchool juniorsarrived inEly fortraining theday beforethey beganthe journey.They setout thenextday at7a.m.,quickly developinga routine.(吊床),“We weredone paddlingby noonJ Juliasaid.We atelunch atthe campsitesand thenit wastime forhammocks(手镯)reading,making friendshipbracelets andtalking.”The girlsall hadsome experiencein theoutdoors before.Anna had been tothe Boundary Waters withher family.I lovehow you are separatedfrom everythingin yourlife,especiallytechnology,Anna said.Without herphone,she said,“Im lessworried aboutthings.Madeline,too,hadbeentothe BoundaryWatersafew yearsback.But thistime,I hadto paddleright andset upcamp;she said.The girlsmade fireand cookedmeal together.No onewasever hungryor homesick,but they were nervousthe finalnight asthey waitedout athunderstorm.They leftwet sleepingbags inonetent,and squeezedinto anotherfor thenight.Every thunderstormin theBoundaryWatersfeels hugeJ Juliasaid.On thecar ridehome,theywereall on their phonescatching upwith friends.It wasa littleat aloss turningmy phoneon,“saidAnna.Mental healthcanbeimproved somuch in theBoundaryWaters.It reallyhelps toget awayand reconnectwith yourself.^^、1How didJuliaRuelleget thechance tocampA.She won an essaycontest.B.She wasinvited byherfriends.C.She performedwell inher school.D.She askedher parentsfor support.、2Why wasthe5-day adventureunique tothe girlsA.They neededto completemany tasks.B,They neededto finda guideontheirown.C.They hadto liveonaboat forseveral days.D.They hadto livewithout theirsmartphones.、3What canwe knowabout thegirls fromthe storyA.They hadnot gotany campingexperience before.B・They allfelt refreshedafter theadventurejourney.C.They enrichedtheir learningexperiences byexploring.D.They usedto keepin closetouch with their friendsby phone.Text4The deathof languages is nota newphenomenon.Languages usuallyhave arelatively shortlife spanas wellasavery highdeathrate.Only afew,including Egyptian,Chinese,Greek,Latin,have lastedmore than2,000years.What isnew,however,is thespeedatwhich theyare dyingout.Europes colonialconquests causeda sharpdecline inlinguisticdiversity,eliminating atleast15percent ofall languagesspoken atthe time.Over thelast300years,Europe haslost adozen,andAustralia hasonly20left of the250spoken atthe endofthe18th century.The riseof nation-states hasalso beendecisive inselecting andconsolidating nationallanguages andsidelining others.By makinggreatefforts toestablish anofficial languagein education,the media and thecivil service,national governmentshave deliberatelytriedto eliminateminority languages.This processof linguisticstandardization hasbeen boostedby industrializationand scientificprogress,which haveimposed newmethodsof communicationthat areswift,straightforward andpractical.Language diversitycame to be seen as an obstacle totrade andthe spread ofknowledge.Monolingualism becamean ideal.More recently,the internationalizationof financialmarkets,thespreadof informationby electronicmediaandother aspects ofglobalization haveintensified thethreat tosmair,languages.A languagenotonthe Internetis alanguage that“nolongerexists inthemodern world.It isout ofthe game.The seriouseffects ofthe deathof languagesare evident.First ofall,it ispossible thatif weall endedup speakingthe samelanguage,our brainswould losesome of their naturalcapacity forlinguistic inventiveness.We wouldnever beable tofigure outtheorigins of human languageor resolvethe mysteryof nthefirst language*
1.As eachlanguage dies,a chapterof humanhistory closes.Multilingualism isthe mostaccurate reflectionof multiculturalism.The destructionofthefirst willinevitably lead tothe loss ofthesecond.Imposing alanguage withoutany linkstoapeoples cultureand wayof lifestifles theexpression oftheir collectivegenius.A languageis notonly usedfor themain instrumentof humancommunication.It alsoexpresses theworld visionof thosewho speakit,their waysof usingknowledge.To safeguardlanguagesisan urgentmatter.、1Which ofthefollowingdoes notcontribute tothe deathof languagesA,Colonial conquestsof EuropeB,The boomofhumanpopulationC.Advances inscience andindustrializationD.The riseof nation-states、2The underlinedword stiflesinthelast paragraphprobably meansA.boosts B.fuelsC.imposes D.kills、3The seriouseffects ofthe deathof languagesinclude allexcept that.A.People wouldfail tounderstand howlanguages originatedB,Language diversitywould becomeanobstacleto globalizationC.Monolingualism wouldleadtothelossof multiculturalismD.Human brainswould becomeless creativelinguistically4What isthe authorspurposeofwriting thispassageA.To explainthe reasonswhy languagesare dyingout.B.To warnpeople ofthe negativeaspectsofglobalization.C.To callpeoples attentiontotheurgency oflanguage preservation.Part BDirections:D.To arguehow importantitisfor peopleto speakmore languages.Read thefollowing textand answerthequestionsbychoosingthe mostsuitable subheadingfromthelist A-G foreachnumbered paragraph41-
45.There aretwo extrasubheadings whichyoudonot needto use.Mark youranswerson the ANSWERSHEET.10pointsDirections:After readingthe passagebelow,fill inthe blanksto makethe passagecoherent andgrammatically correctFor theblankswith agiven word,fill ineach blankwith theproper formofthegiven word;fortheother blanks,use oneword thatbest fitseach blankAtrail ofhot springsdot thenorthern KapongDistrict Fortree worshipers,its asite bestdescribed asawesome Visitorscan enjoy」the ancienthot springs,1understand theirtherapeutic propertiesfrom knowledge
2.pass downfrom onegeneration toanother Rain,drizzle andcloudy skiesare typicalin Phang Nga,making secludedplaces evenmore mesmerizingin scenery」Visit Phang Nga forafewdays andyou willimmediately realisethat once3overlook thingsturn outtobehidden gemsand one
4.have plannedformoretimetoenjoy themall Theever-famous PhangNga bay is infact bestseen notfromthemiddle ofthe bay,butinstead fromthe
5.elevate shoresof SamedNang CheeYou cantpick thebest weather,6-even onpartly cloudydays,themagnificent naturallimestone structuresofthebayissimply spectacularIfyouve heardabout thetrading routesoftheThai southand theMalay peninsula,you willnotice aremnant of this directlink普吉攀牙between Phuketand PhangNga7-the majortrading hubof PhangNga inthe olddays,the districtof Takua Pa boastsasmall butuntainted stretchof anold Sino-English communityThese originalcentury-old shophousesare“so authentic^^here alocaltold me,itcanoverwhelm Phuketpeople withnostalgia二However,the towncentre ofPhangNgaisnotTakuaPa,though Thestory hasit8back in1809,the Siam-Burmese warsdrovepeople downto PhangNga bay,hence thenew settlementthathasnow becomethe provincesmunicipal seatIts stillsmall insize,butwith newernatural charmsMountains
9.surround PhangNga withthe mostmagnificent limestonepeaks10-create wonderfullyamazingsignature viewsDriving through the townssmall parallelstreets andlooking up,one canonly marvelat MotherNaturePerpetual rainand mistymornings tovirtual greenness-PhangNgapeople willensure youget allthatW=the wife;M=the husbandW:One legofthistable isloose Icant takeitM:Well,select anotherone thenW:Ive aslight feeling12_you areangry withme Whafsup,darlingM:To acertain extent,youre rightIm angrythat youvemade mecome shoppingwith youbut Imso tiredand2,sleep nowW:Please dontmisunderstand meBut dontyou thinkwe shouldtake thingsa bit
3.」easy,darling WhatIm concernedabout isyour physicalfitness You4work lateevery nightsince lastmonth Youre
5.usualsuch amild personbut youvebeen ina badmood thesedays!M:Sorry Ishould havebeen morepatient withyou todayWell,Tm workingonahuge assignmentand
6.I dontdo well,that willruin my reputationas
7.excellent accountant!W:Anyway,I thinkit ofgreat
8.importanttokeep ahealthy lifestyle;ifs thekey to9-aive along andhappy lifeYou seemtobein poorhealth now,10-I thinkis closelyrelated toyour unhealthylifestyle M:I seeIpromise Iwont stayup latefrom nowonSection IIITranslationDirections:Actions speaklouderTranslate thefollowing textinto Chinese.Write yourtranslation ontheANSWERSHEET.15pointsthan words.A smilesays/I likeyou.You makeme happy.^^、Thats whydogs makesuch ahit.They areso glad to seeus thatthey almostjump outoftheirskins.1A babyssmile hasthe sameeffect.Have youever beeninadoctors waitingroom andlooked aroundat allthe sadfaces waitingimpatientlytobeseen There were sixor sevenpatients waitingwhen ayoung womancame inwith anine-month-old baby.She satdownnext toa gentlemanwho wasmore thana littleimpatient aboutthe longwait forservice.The babyjust lookedup athim withthatgreat bigsmile thatis socharacteristic ofbabies.2Soon hestruck upa conversationwiththewoman abouther babyand hisgrand-children and then theentire receptionroom joinedin,andtheboredom andtension werechanged intoa pleasantand enjoyableexperience.3Telephone companiesthroughout theU.S havea programcalledccphone powerwhich isoffered toemployees whouse thetelephonefor sellingtheir Servicesor products.In thisprogram theysuggest thatyou smilewhen talkingonthephone.Youfsmile^comes throughin yourvoice.生」You dontfeel likesmiling Ifyouarelone,force yourselfto whistleor huma tuneor sing.Act asif youwere alreadyhappy,and thatwill tendto makeyou happy.、Your smile isamessenger ofyour goodwill.5To someonewho hasseenadozen peoplefrown orturn theirfaces away,yoursmile islike thesun breakingthroughtheclouds.Especially whenthat someoneis underpressure fromhis bosses,his customers,histeachers orparentsorchildren,a smilecan helphim realizethat allisnothopeless-that thereis joyintheworld.A.He smiledback atthebaby.B.Well,force yourselfto smile.C.Smile getsmuch easierwith practice.D.So,naturally,we aregladtosee them.E.Your smilebrightens thelives ofall whosee it.F.The effectofa smileispowerful,evenwhen itis unseen.G.We shouldgive othersarealsmile,asmilethat comesfrom within.It wasa beautifulmorning inNew Mexico.!was runningup themountain.I wascarrying aloaf ofbread,two poundsofapples,and afresh changeof clothes.This inotacrazy dreamT had.Like manypeople,I oftenrun errandson myway towork.Unlikemost people,!taketherunning partnword byworcT.l、I dontdrive.I rarelybike.So toget places,!run.In atypical week,!run about70miles.I haven9t alwaysrun everywhere.2After alongbutproductive day,I wokeup inthe hospital—I wasdiagnosed withepilepsy(癫痫).Thereweremedical teststobetaken andof courselots offorms tobe filledin.I realizedthat whereI thoughtI hadanswers,there(发were onlyquestions.!was aboutto moveto SantaFe fora dreamjob.Would itbe safeto livethere alone3What ifI hada seizure作)while Iwas running,in thistown Ididnt know,farfrommy familySoI satdown,and penneddown whatI plannedto do.So itgotstarted.Running meansindependence.Running meantI couldrely onmyself.4Now Istill run everywhere,even ifI don*t needtoanymore,5Icannotimagine mylife withoutit.Running hastaught melo notbe afraid.To acceptwhat comes.Even ifpeople thinkIlook sillyrunning.A.No onebelieves inme.B・Running meanta choice.C.As amatter offact,!runeverywhere.D.But anotherquestion jumpedat meinnotime.E.I knowI willhave tostop somewhereinmylife.F.It turnsout thatmy illnesshasnt shapeme,but runninghas.G.It startedone eveningmore thaneight yearsago duringa worktrip.参考答案Section IUse ofEnglish、
11.B
2.B。