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:
年赣州市南康市考研《英语一》考前冲刺试题2023Section IUse ofEnglishDirections:Read thefollowing text.Choose the best wordsfor eachnumbered blankand markA,B,C orD on the ANSWER SHEET.10pointsWhen Benjaminwas born,he lookeddifferent fromother babies.The doctorstold myparents hehad Downsyndrome.I was]atthe time,so I wasnt surewhat itwas,but Tknew itwasnt
2.1also knewthat Tfinally hadthe babybrotherI3even ifhe wasntperfect.The doctorssaid Benmight needhelp doing4things suchas walking,talking,eating and5withpeople.I wastold that I wouldneed to be extracareful withBen,and thatI mightsomeday haveto6for himand protecthim.Of course,7of thesewarnings botheredme;I knewfrom thesecond Ilaid_8on himthatI loved him.As Benand I got older,we werealways together.After Benjaminlearned to9we wanted to gethim tojump,run andmove around.10Ben preferredto followmy11,his therapistor Momwould haveme dothe exercisefirst,and thenBen wouldtry todo it.12me wasBens way of sayinghe lovedme.兄弟姊A fewyears ago,I wentaway withsome friendsfor theday.Sitting in the bus,we startedtalking aboutour siblings妹.My friendswere sayinghow stupidand annoying13siblings were.I hadntsaid anything;I was just listeningin14I hadneverthought therewere brothersand sistersthat justdidnt15,Suddenly Isaid,Ilovemy brother.^^Isaid“love16because itwas true.There areno17thoughts in my headwhen Ihear peoplemaking fun of Ben.Igoright upto themand explainthat Benhas Downsyndrome,that hislife isntas easyfor himas it is forus,and thatif yougive Bena18hell be thebesthe can be at19you wanthim tobe.I thinkBen is20just theway heis.I will always loveBen,and hewillalwayslove me,no matterwhat.
1、A.curious B.little C.scared D.weak
2、A.good B.serious C.real D.rare、B.wanted3A.hated4A.special B.interesting C.simple D.dangerousC.defended D.envied
5、A.interacting B.fighting C.competing D.arguing
6、A.look outB,work outC.turn upD.stand up
7、A.none
8、one C.some D.all
8、A.head B.eyes C.heart D.hands
9、A.speak B.sit C.eat D.walk
10.A.Though B.If C.While D.Since参考答案Section IUse ofEnglish、
11.B
2.A
3.B
4.C
5.A
6.D
7.A
8.B
9.D
10.D
11.A
12.B
13.D
14.C
15.C
16.B
17.D
18.C
19.A
20.CSection IIReading Comprehension、
21.C
2.D
3.A、
31.D
2.B
3.C
4.A、4L C
3.A
4.B、
51.B
2.B
3.C
4.A、
61.have beenlooking
2.under
3.wrapped
4.when
5.knowing
6.with which
7.because
8.why
9.bringing
10.could、
71.lovely
2.times
3.which
4.be weighed
5.,took
6.sleeping
7.repeatedly
8.,were
9.for
10.aSection IIITranslation、
81.B
2.D
3.C
4.A、
91.B
2.D
3.C
4.E
5.G、11A.lead B.advice C.rules D.instructions、12A.Kissing B.Following C.Greeting D.Serving、13A.my B.our C.your D.their、14A.panic B.peace C.astonishment D.joy、15A.keep incontact B.behave wellC.get alongD.grow up、16A.angrily B.proudly C.bravely D.gently、17A.such B.enough C.practical D.second、18A.smile B.job C.chance D.hug、19A.whatever B.whichever C.whoever D.whenever20A.healthy B.mistaken C.perfect D.unfortunateSection IIReading ComprehensionPartADirections:Read thefollowing fourtexts.Answer the questions beloweach textby choosingA,B,C orD.Mark youranswers on()the ANSWERSHEET.40pointsText1“How doyou accountfor yourremarkable achievementsin life”Queen Victoriaof theUK askedHelen Keller.How doyouexplain thefact thateven thoughyou wereboth blindand deaf,you wereable toachieve somuch”(致敬)Ms.Kellefs answeris atribute toher kindteacher.If it had not been forAnne Sullivan,the nameof HelenKeller wouldhave remained unknown.”According tospeaker ZigZiglar,Annie Sullivan was nostranger tohardship.She was almost sightlessherself andwas,at onetime,diagnosed ashopelessly insane“by hercaregivers.She waslocked in the basementof amental institution.Occasionally,Anniewould violentlyattack anyonewho camenear.Most of the timeshe generallyignored everyonein herpresence.An elderlynurse believedthere washope,however,and shemade ither workto showlove to the child.Every dayshe visitedAnnie,and sheleft cookiesfor herand spokewords oflove andencouragement.She believedAnnie couldrecover,if onlyshe wereshownlove.Eventually,doctors noticedthe changein thegirl.Where theyonce witnessedanger andhate,they nawnoted agentleness andlove.They movedher upstairswhere shecontinued toimprove.Then theday finallycame whenthis seeminglyhopeless”child wasreleased.Anne Sullivangrew intoa youngwoman witha desireto helpothers asshe,herself,was helpedby thekind nurse.lt wasshe who(约束)saw thegreat potentialin HelenKeller.She lovedher,disciplined her,played with her,pushed herand workedwithheruntil the(灯塔)flickering candlethat washer lifebecame abeacon oflight to the world.Anne Sullivanworked wondersin Helenslife;but inwas a lovingnurse whofirst believedin LittleAnnie andlovingly transformedan uncommunicativechild intoa kindteacher.“If ithad notbeen forAnne Sullivan,the nameof HelenKeller wouldhave remainedunknown.^But ifithadnotbeenfor akindand dedicatednurse,the nameof AnneSullivan wouldhaveremainedunknown.、1What doesthe underlinedpart accountfbr“probably meanA.show B.proveC.explain D.present.、2What dowe knowfrom theThird paragraphA.Sullivan hadvery normalbehavior.B.Sullivan wasignored byeveryone.C.Sullivan waskept awayfrom herparents.D.Sullivanwasbelieved lohave amental problem.、3What wouldbethebest titlefor thenextA.The Powerof LoveB.Making aDifferenceC.A GoodTeacher D.Remarkable AchievementsText2Attention fromstrangers is nothing newto me.Questions aboutmy heightis thecenter of almost everypublic interaction.Myfriends saymy height!sjusta physicalquality andnot apersonality aspect.However,when Ireflect onmy life,I realizethat,my heighthas shaped mycharacter inmany waysand hashelped to make mewho Iam.I learnedhow to be kind.When Iwas younger,some parentsinmyneighborhood regardedme kindof dangerousbecause Iwas somuchlarger thanother childrenmy age.I hadto beextra welcomingand gentlesimply to play withother children.Of course.now mycoacheswish Iwerent quiteso kindon thebasketball court.I learnedthe qualityof notbeing tooproud aboutmyself.At7feet tall,everyone expectsme to be anamazing basketballplayer.They comeexpecting tosee Dirk Nowitzki,and insteadthey mightsee aperformance morelike Will Ferrellsuccessfully starredaprofessional basketballplayer.I havelearned tobe modestand towork evenharder thanmy fellowsto meettheir and myexpectations.I developeda senseof lightheartedness.When peopleplayfully makefunofmy height,Haugh atmyself too.On myfirst dayofhigh school,a girldropped her books in a busyhallway.I gotdown toher leveland gatheredsome of her notebooks.As we both stoodup,her eyeswidened asI keptrising overher.Astonished,she droppedherbooks again.Embarrassed,webothlaughed andpicked upthebooksasecond time.All of these lessonshave definedme.Looking back,I realizethat throughyears ofsuch experiences,I havebecome a confident,expressive person.Being a7-footer isboth ablessing and a curse,but in the end,accepting whoyou areis thefirst stepto happiness.、1Why doesthe author often drawattention fromstrangersA.He is interested inpublic interaction.B.He hasa uniquepersonality.C.He isphysically strong.D.He isextremely tall.、2When he was young,the author intended tobe morefriendly justto.A.gain extrafavorB.play withother childrenC,prove hiskindnessD.please hiscoach、3It can be inferredfrom Para.3that.A.Dirk Nowitzkiwas anawful basketballplayerB,the authorseldom disappointedhis basketballfansC-the authorexpected tomake somethingbetter ofhimselfD.WillFerrellwas betterat playingbasketball thanDirkNowitzki、4What doesthe textmainly talkaboutA.The heighthasshapedthe authorspersonality andlife.B.The heighthas broughtthe authora lotof trouble.C.Some funnyexperiences the author everhadD.Being tallbenefits theauthorinmany waysText3Smokers mayignore the health warningsby tellingthemselves theirhabit makesthem lookcool.After all,sex symbolsJamesDean andHumphrey Bogartwere rarelyseen withouta cigarette.However,the latestevidence showsthat smoking actually makesyouless attractivetotheopposite sex.Wrinkles fromsmokingacigarette maybe toblame forpeople judgingnon-smokers tobebetter-looking.This was the resultofastudy askingmore than500people topick the most attractiveof twinswhere onesmoked and the otherdidnot.Men foundfemale non-smokers the most attractivein two-thirds ofcases,while womenchose non-smoking menasthemostattractive68percent of the time.Professor IanPenton-Voak,aco-author of the studyfrom BristolUniversity,said,People assumethat smokingcauses damagetothe skinand appearance,but this is areally neatwayoflooking atit because these twinsare geneticallyidentical,so wecan controlforgenetic factorsinvolved inageing.Appearance seemstobeimportant topeople,especially youngpeople,so wecould usethese sortsoffindings asa basisfor futureinterventions tostop peoplesmoking.”Smoking canspeed upthe normalageing,even afteronly adecade.Nicotine causesnarrowing of the bloodvessels in theoutermost layersoftheskin,while thechemicals intobacco smokedamage collagenand elastin,fibres whichgive theskin itselasticity(弹性).(吸气)The wrinklesthis causesare addedto byfacial expressionsmade whensmoking suchas pursingthe lipswhen inhalingorsquinting to keep smokeout ofyour eyes.、1Why doestheauthormention JamesDean andHumphrey BogartA.To persuadesmokers togive upsmoking.B,To comparethem withnon-smokers.C.To tellus manypeople areinfluenced bythem.D.To showunderstanding andcomfort smokers.、2What canwe learnfrom Para.2and Para.3A.500twins weresurveyed for the study.B.Probably youngpeople paymore attentionto theirappearance.C.Female non-smokers are more attractivethan maleones.D.Professor IanPenton-Vbak isthe leadingauthorofthe study.、3What isProfessor IanPenton-Vbak^altitude tosmokingA.Disapproving.B.Favorable.C.Unconcerned.D.Cautious.、4What can be inferredfrom thetextA.Smokers lookcooler thannon-smokers.B.Smoking mayspeed upskins ageing.C.Smokers lookyounger thannon-smokers.D.Smoking shouldbe bannedright away.Text4Alma Deutschercould readmusic beforeshe couldread words.She composedher firstpiano sonataat six,her firstshortopera atseven,and herfirst full-length operaat
10.Alma Alma,a giftedmusician as well asa composer,the childprodigy,or LittleMozart,whose musicisin theclassical-romantic tradition,was onstage throughout,switching betweenthe pianoand the violin.Her parents,mother Janie,and fatherGuy,are quiteformal.They thinkdeeply beforethey speak,and appeartobequiet.Theymaintain Almais anadult whenit comesto music andanormal girlin otherways.She hasalways beenhome-schooled andis readingPhilip PullmansHis DarkMaterials whenwe meet.Janie,who hasgiven upheruniversity job,is alsoa hugesupport,home-schooling bothgirls.And theybelieve Almawouldnt havedeveloped inmainstreameducation anyway.Because herneeds aredifferent and its quitedifficult forany school.(强度)But perhapswhat mostsets herapart isthe intensityofherimagination.Spend timewith Almaand youare struckby howoftenshe talksabout Transylvanian,which isunrelated tothe regionin Romania.nI musthave heardthe namesomewhere,because Ididntknow itwasareal placeuntil muchlater,nshe says.Transylvanian isnmy ownland withits ownlanguage andthere arebeautiful composersthere,named AntoninYellow sinkandAshy andShell andFlare”.Transylvanian isoutside,inside;everywhere andnowhere.She haswritten biographiesabout thecomposers,created amagazine,Paris Flash,for theinhabitants,and evencomposed aTransylvaniannational anthem.Her fatherbelieves hermusical abilityis asign ofthis imagination.nIt allpours outlike avolcano/hesays.、1What canwe learn about Almafrom thefirst twoparagraphsA.She is too youngtobea musician.B.She isa wonderchild on music.C.She isa hard-working childon music.D.Her musicworks arewell-known aroundthe world.、2Why didAlma receiveeducation athomeA.Because shedidnt likeschool.B.Because ofher specialneeds.C-Because hermother losther job.D.Because shewantedtostay withher sister.、3What dowe knowabout TransylvanianA.Transylvanian isa place in Alma*s city.B.Transylvanian isa placeinthebook Almaread.C,Transylvanian isa placethat Almaimagined.D.Transylvanian isa groupfor musiciansand composers.、4According toher father,what isthe keyto AlmassuccessC・Her teachers*instruction.D.Her hardworkonmusic.A.Her richimagination.B.Her parents*influence.Part BDirections:Read thefollowing textand answerthequestionsby choosingthemostsuitable subheadingfrom thelist A-G foreachnumbered paragraph41-
45.There aretwo extrasubheadings whichyou donot need to use.Mark youranswerson the ANSWERSHEET.10pointsDirections:After readingthe passagebelow,fill inthe blankstomakethe passagecoherent andgrammatically correctFor theblankswith agiven word,fill ineach blankwith theproper formofthegiven word;fortheother blanks,use oneword thatbest fitseach blank」In twodays,it willbe Christmas,children allover world1look forwardto thisday forweeks Peoplecelebrate Christmaswithfood,decorations,musicandmore Butfor manypeople,gift-giving isthemostexciting partoftheholidayI havefound memoriesof Christmasshopping withmy familyasachild Ienjoyed thechallenge ofkeeping myparents giftsasecret Itwas hardto buygifts right2,their noseswithout themseeing Everyoneplaced
3.wrap giftsunder theChristmas treeuntilChristmas morning,4,we openedthem」Picking agreat giftrequire5know the person youregiving itto Youneedtoknow the persons tastesand findsomething thepersondoesnt alreadyhave Thiscanbequite abig challengeOften itswise toprovide areceipt
6.thepersonneeds toexchange thegiftThe bestgifts arepersonal ManyAmericans dontfeel moneyconstitutes agood gift7-it doesntrequire anythought Theyprefersomething chosenjust forthepersonIf thegift isa high-quality homemadegift,thats evenbetter」Gift-giving reflectsthe reason8people celebrateChristmas Christiansin particularremember thebirth ofJesus Whenhewas二born,wise mentraveled manymiles tovisit him,9bring expensivegifts Butthe greatestgift wasntfrom thewise man,but fromGod-the babyJesus Godgave thisgift becauseeveryone neededit Weneeded Godto forgiveour badactions sothat we10,live foreverwithhim Soon Christmaswe givepresents toimitate Godsaction ofgiving theperfect giftThenursing homeinvited metoplaymy violinfor three
1.love listenersI stoppedinthe room ofthe quietand gentlewoman,forwhom Ihad playedfor two2_timebefore Shewas sleepingbut Iset upanyway asI knowshe lovestheviolin Her roommatewas alsoJwiththehealthcenter forS^I volunteerand Iasked ifshe wouldntmind andmaybe shewould likeit aswell She told meyes,please playbutshe wasgoing to
4.weighsoon Theweighing
5.take aboutthree minutesMy
6.sleep beautyslept asI playedandmyotherlistener toldme7,repeated howmuch sheloved itand thatIwasjust wonderfulIthappened thatanother womaninthenext doorwas sleepinglightly infront ofher TVShetoldme,Why,sure,I wouldlikemusic!Come onin!nHerTV andher roommates TV
8.be ontheroommate wasn*t thereI playedthrough itfor onepiece andaskedif Icould turnthem off
9.her Ohplease,she saidWhatlO^difference today!Section IIITranslationDirections:根据短文内容,Translate thefollowing textinto Chinese.Write yourtranslation ontheANSWERSHEET.15points从下框选项中选出能概括每段主题的最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该选项涂黑选项中有一项为多A〜F余项A.Control of respirationB.Basic tipsfor preservingcut flowersC.Role ofrespirationD.Most importantaspect offlower careE.Need forclean waterF.Ways ofstopping respirationWhileeverybody enjoysfresh cut flowers aroundhis house,few peopleknow how to keep them foras longas possible.This maybe(done bykeeping inmind afew simplefacts.The keyto keepingfresh cutflower fora weekor morewithout preservativeswhich(杀虫齐))contain biocidesU thatkill bacterialand fungusistokeepthe water freshandthestems freeof airpockets sothey cancontinueto drawup water.An importantthing toremember aboutcutflowers is thatthey aresensitive totemperature.For example,studies haveshown thatcutcarnations retain their freshnesseight timeslonger whenkept at12℃than whenkept at26℃.Keeping freshlyharvested floweredatthe righttemperatures isprobably themost importantaspect offlower care.(呼吸),The processby whichflowers consumeoxygen andproduce carbondioxide,called respirationsupplies theenergy the flowerneeds togive theflower itsshape andcolor.The makingof seedsalso dependson thisenergy.While allliving thingsrespire,flowershave ahigh level ofrespiration.A resultof allthis respiration is heat,and forflowers thelevel ofheat relativetothemass ofthe flowerisvery high.Respiration alsobrings aboutthe eventualdeath oftheflower.Thus thegreater thelevelofrespiration,the soonertheflower dies.How,then,to controlthe speedat whichflowers dieBy controllingrespiration.How isrespiration controlledBy controlling(反面)temperature,we knowthat respirationproduces heat,but thereverse isalso true.Thus bykeeping lowtemperatures,respirationisreduced andthe cutflower willage moreslowly.Another vitalfactor inkeeping cutflowersisthe qualityofthewater inwhich theyare placed.Flowers findit difficultto“drink“waterthat isdirty orotherwise polluted.Even whenwater looksand smellsclean,it almostcertainly containsharmful substancesthat can(含氯漂白齐)endanger theflowers.To ridthewaterof theseunwanted substances,chlorine bleachll canbe usedin smallquantities.溶液It isrecommended that15drops ofchlorine bleachbe addedto eachliter ofwater.The waterand solutionshould alsobereplaced eachday.EarwormMost peoplehave hadsongs stuckin theirheads atsome point.The scientificname forthisisinvoluntary musicalimagery INMI,which simplymeans thatpeople donot choosetokeepthe songsintheirheads,but thatit happensunconsciously.Experts havenicknamed thiscondition earwormJ eventhough itisnotan actualworm,anditdoes nottake placeintheear.、1It occurswhen acatchy tunesticks“ina persons mind.What makesa songstick dependsontheindividual.Some peopleget stuckontheir favoritesongs,while othersend upfixated onsongs theyfind annoying.、2It canbe broughton afterrecently hearinga song,or it canbetriggered bya memory.Although earwormcan happentoanyone atany time,certain peoplearemorelikely than others tosuffer fromit.Most commonly,musicians experienceit,but peoplewhosimply listento musicmore frequentlythanothersare alsomore proneto earworm.、No evidencehas provenone effectivecure,but anythingthat disturbsthe braincan help.3For example,actively chewinggummight switchthe brainsfocus fromthe repeatingsong tothe movingjaw.Engaging ina taskthat requiresconcentration canremove the、pesky earwormaswell.However,if thetask requirestoo mucheffort,itcanactually prolongthe earworm.
4、While earwormcanbevery annoying,there isno evidencethat suggestsitisactually harmful.5After all,these songsrepeatautomatically withno effort.What ifscience couldapply thisinformation tolearning Whatif everyonecould learnnew thingswithouthaving totry sohard Ifscientists canfigure outhowtotap intothis typeof memory,learning mightlook differentinthefuture.A.We havea tendencyto moveto earworms.B.Rather,it takesplaceinthe memory centers ofthe brain.C.One possibilityto helpshift thebrain isto occupyit witha newactivity.D.Nobody knowsexactly whya particularsong getscaught inapersonsbrain.E.This isbecausethemind tendsto wanderto escapethe difficultyofthejob athand.F.Psychologists havelong beenlooking forways toturn offthose unwelcomethoughts.G.In fact,some expertsare studyingearworm tosee whatthey canlearnaboutmemorycenters.。