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:
年河南省许昌市长葛市考研《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 onthe ANSWER SHEET.10pointsSeptember22,2018will beWorld Car-Free Day,a dayon whichpeople acrossthe globeare encouragedto find1methods tomeet theirtransportation needsand re-discover buses,bikes,and theirown2On thisday,people gettogether in the streets,intersections,and neighborhoodblocks to3the worldthat we dont have to acceptourcar-controlled society.While4along theselines hadtaken placefrom time to timestarting5the1973oil crisis,it wasonly inOctober,19946astructured callfor suchprojects was7in akeynote speechby EricBritton at the InternationalAccessibleCities Conferenceheld inToledo Spain.The firstnational campaignwas launchedin Britainin1997,and theFrench followedsuit in
1998.In2000,car Bustersissued anopen8for a“World Car-Free Day”to9with EuropesCar-Free Dayon September2210then,wehave begunto callfor citizensto organize11on ornear thisday.However,wedonot want12one dayof celebrationsand thenreturn to13life.World Car-Free Dayis the14time toremind cityplannersand politiciansto15cycling,walking andpublic transport.It isup tous,cities andgovernments tohelp16permanent changesto17pedestrians,cyclists and other peoplewho donot drivecars.While18accomplishment hasbeen achievedin termsof mediacoverage,these events19to be difficult to achieve realsuccess andevena decadelater thereis considerableuncertainty aboutthe usefulnessof thisapproach.Broad publicsupport and20to changeis执行.needed forsuccessful implementation
1、A.effective B.efficient C.useful D.alternative、2A.legs B.motors C.subway D.feet、3A.recall B.remind C.realize D.recommend、4A.projects B.events C.activities D.meetings、5A.as B.on C.with D.beyond、6A.when B.that C.where D.how、7A.undertaken B.submitted C.developed D.issued、8A.answer B.call C.wish D.longing、9A.connect B.involve C.consist D.concern、10A.Since B.Before C.After D.Right、11A.events B.affairs C.incidents D.accidents
3.B
4.A
5.C
6.B
7.D
8.B
9.C
10.A
11.A
12.C
13.B
14.A
15.B
16.C
17.B
18.D
19.A
20.DSection IIReading Comprehension、
21.C
2.D
3.A、
31.C
2.B
3.A
4.A、
41.A
2.C
3.D
4.B、
51.D、
61.to find
2.have beendiscovered
3.on
4.that/which
5..natural
6.was put
7.is taken
8.,when
9..to see
10.helplessly、
71.a
2.unbelievably
3.his
4.on
5.glorious
6.retirement
7.to show
8..whether
9.Looking
10.have changedSection III Translation、
81.F
2.C
3.A
4.B
5.E、
91.E
2.B
3.C
4.G
12、A.even B.still C.just D.ever、13A.usual B.previous C.ordinary D.average、14A.perfect B.limited C-accurate D.correct、15A.give wayto B.give priorityto C.give riseto D.give into、16A.employ B.decrease C,create D.increase、17A.assist B.benefit C.instruct D.influence、18A.constant B.similar C.envying D.considerable、19A.turn outB.work outC.carry outD.figure out、20A.approach B.attitude C.chance D.commitmentSection IIReading ComprehensionPartADirections:Read the following fourtexts.Answer the questions beloweach textby choosingA,B,C orD.Mark youranswers onthe ANSWER SHEET.40pointsText1Just asJohn Lubbocksaid,we maysit in a libraryand yetbe in all quartersof theearth.Here aresome of the coolestlibrariesof the world.Stuttgart CityLibraryDespite a classic white-on-white color,Stuttgart CityLibrary is one of the mostvisually appealingmodern libraries.The amazingmodem and simplelook is the productof theKorean architectYi Eun-young.The Germanlibrary opened in2011,and costnearly80million eurosto construct.Kanazawa Umimirai LibraryArchitects from the CoelacanthKH Architectsstudio designedthe Kanazawa UmimiraiLibrarylo createthebestreadingenvironment.Healed floors,an outpouringof naturallight,andotherfeatures werespecifically includedlo achievethis goal.The wall,which consistsof thousandsof tinyopenings,allows naturallighting into the building,improving theoverall feelof thespace.ThisJapanese librarywas openedin2011,and reflectsthe appearanceof manymodemandsimple spaces.Library ofCongressIn1800,Congress setup the Library ofCongress inWashington D.C..Fifteen yearslater,Thomas Jeffersonoffered hispersonallibrary toreplace booksthat werelost whenthe Britishset thebuilding onfire in
1814.His books,which tooknearly50years tocollect,varied fromtexts onscience,literature andphilosophy,to booksin a variety offoreign languages.These days,theLibrary of Congressoffersmore than155million itemsand thelargest rarebook collectionin NorthAmerica.State Library of VictoriaTheSlate Libraryof Victoria,located inMelbourne,Australia,isone of thelargest exhibitinglibraries in theworld.Though itopenedin1856,major repairstook placebetween1990and
2004.The LaTrobe ReadingRoom isoneof the librarysmainattractions dueto itsvisually amazingarchitecture.The lawnat thelibrarys frontattracts hundredsof cityfolk eachday,who gatherfor(盔甲)lunch or to enjoythe statuesthere.The librarycurrently containsover twomillion books,as wellas armorof NedKelly,a folkheroagainst theruling class.、1Which libraryhas thelongest historyA.Stuttgart CityLibrary.B.KanazawaUmimiraiLibrary.C・LibraryofCongress.D.State Libraryof Victoria.、2Whats specialabout StaleLibraryofVictoriaA,It hasgreat architecture.B.It has a folkheros statuein it.C.It is the worldslargest exhibitinglibrary.D.It servesasameeting placefor thecitizens.、3What doesthe firsttwo librarieshave incommonA.They areconstructed in the modemstyle.B,They costa largeamount ofmoney.C.They aredesigned byKorean architects.D.They featureproviding readerswith naturallight.Text2One dayin1995,a large,heavy middle-aged manrobbed twoPittsburgh banksin broaddaylight.He didntwear amask andhesmiled atsurveillance camerasbefore walkingout ofeach bank.Later that night,police arresteda surprisedMcArthur Wheeler.When theyshowed himthe surveillancetapes,Wheeler staredin disbelief.€€But Iwore thejuice,“he said.Apparently,Wheeler thoughtthatrubbing lemon juice onhis skinwould makehim invisibleto videotapecameras.After all,lemonjuiceis usedas invisibleink,so,aslong ashe didntcome neara heatsource,he shouldhave beencompletely invisible.The casecaught theeye of the psychologistDavid Dunningat CornellUniversity,who enlistedhis graduatestudent,Justin Kruger,to seewhat wasgoing on.They reasonedthat,while almosteveryone holdsfavourable viewsof their abilities invarious socialandintellectual fields,some peoplemistakenly assess their abilitiesas beingmuch higherthan theyactually are.This illusionofconfidence^^is nowcalled the Dunning-Kruger effecf\and describesthe cognitivebias toinflate self-assessment.To investigatethis phenomenonin thelab,Dunning andKruger designedsome cleverexperiments.In onestudy,they askedundergraduatestudents a series ofquestions aboutgrammar,logic andjokes,and thenasked eachstudent toestimate his or herscoreoverall,as wellas theirrelative rankingscompared to the other students.Interestingly,students whoscored thelowest inthese cognitivetasksalways overestimatedhow wellthey did-by alot.Students whoscored inthe bottomestimated thatthey hadperformed betterthantwo-thirds of the otherstudents!Sure,its typicalfor people to overestimatetheirabilities.The problemis thatwhen peopleare incompetent,not onlydo theyreachwrong conclusionsand makeunfortunate choices,but alsothey arerobbed ofthe abilityto realizetheir mistakes.In asemester-longstudy ofcollege students,good studentscould betterpredict theirperformance onfuture examsif givenfeedback about their scoresandrankings.However,the poorestperformers showedno recognition,despite clearand repeatedfeedback thatthey weredoing badly.Instead ofbeing confusedor thoughtfulabout theirincorrect ways,incompetent peopleinsist thattheir waysare correct.As CharlesDarwinwrote inThe Descentof Man1871:Ignorance morefrequently begetsconfidence thandoes knowledge.”Interestingly,really smartpeople alsofail toaccurately self-assesstheirabilities.As muchas D-and F-grade studentsoverestimatetheir abilities,A-grade studentsunderestimate theirs.The differenceis thatcompetent peoplecan anddo adjusttheir self-assessment ifgivenappropriate feedback,while incompetentindividuals cannot.、1Which ofthefollowingstatements abouttheDunning-Kruger effectis TRUEA.The effectis truefor everyonein dailylife.B.It suggeststhat mostpeople lackcognitive abilities.C.Some peopleare overconfidentabouttheirabilities.D.The conclusionis drawnbased on aseriesof bankrobberies.、2What dothe collegestudents*behaviors mentionedintheexperiments proveA.Feedback playsa significantrole inestimating one*s ability.B.Incompetent peoplehave arather fixedattitude towardstheir choice.C.Good studentsalways predicttheir futureperformance accurately.D.People cantrely ontheir previousbehavior tomake adjustments.、3The underlinedword“begets“in Paragraph4can bereplaced byA.gives riseto B.takes advantageofC-makes upfor D.breaks awayfrom、4What canwe inferfrom thepassageA.Real knowledgeis knowingthe extentof onesignorance.B.It isimpossible forpeopletoevaluate theirreal competence.C.Illusion ofconfidence isthe majorsource ofpeoples failure.D.Those withgreat abilitiesoften have a lowopinion ofthemselves.Text3(插图家)If anyoneknows whatmakes agreat childrens book,it mustbe Sussexauthor andillustrator JaneHissey.Her OldBear**books haveachieved classicstatus inavarietyof formats.1caught upwith Janeat herhome inthe EastSussex countrysideand askedher whatshe thinksisthesecret ofaclassicchildrensbook.Thats adifficult one.I supposeits gotto berelevant tothe childsstage ofdevelopment-for youngchildren,pictures ona pagethat are familiar,for olderchildren,an experience.The bookshould befamiliar,but holdsome surprisestoo to keep theinterest.It mustinspireand delight,but thereare thethings thathappen everyday.”After thebirth ofher firstchild,she gaveup teachingand workedon her own artwork,drawing picturesof teddybears.An editorfroma publishingcompany sawher work and invitedJane todo achildrensbook.Over theyears,from thefirst nOldBear”book in1988,her children have madea hugecontribution-not leastin termsof plot.She said,HI usedto givemy childrenthe toysto playwith——andthey hadtea partiesand soon.One ofmy bearcharacters,Little Bear**,isthe same ageas Ralph,my youngest,whos sevennow.Allthe childrenhave joinedin my workand,in yearsto come,they willrealize howmuch.”nI hopeFil knowwhen peopleare gettingtired ofthe characters.If everthey did,I thinkId goon drawingthem forfun JJanecontinued,MMy ownchildrenhavebeen veryuseful tome inmywork,but asthey areolder now,Ill justhavetohope thatother peopleschildrencan inspireme.”、1What isJanes opinionabout a successful childrensbookA.It containssomething unexpected.B.It offersan escapefrom everydaylife.C.Its attractiveas childrenget older.D.Its setinaplace knownto itsreaders.、2Why didJane takeup bookwritingA.She gotto knowan editor.B.Her husbandencouraged herto try.C.Her artworkattracted professional.D.She wrotestories for herownchildren.、3How didJanes childrenassist herin herworkA.By helpingher concentrateon herwork.B.By tellingher howthey foundher stories.C.By suggestingcharacters forher stories.D.By givingher ideasforherstories.A.Encouraged.B.Uncertain.C.Tired.D.Unfit.、4What isJanes attitudetowards herfuture workText4The O.Henry Museum(档案的)The aimofthe O.Henry Museumis tocollect,preserve,and interpretartifacts,works and archival materialsrelative totheauthor,for literary,educational,and historicalpurposes thatare accessibletothe public.The museumwas establishedin334,underthe authorityoftheCity ofAustin,and isboth a National RegisterProperty andaNationalLiterary Landmark.The O.Henry Museumis openWednesday throughSunday,noon to5:00p.m.Admission isfree.Tours arealso availablefor free.Please contactthe museumat leastone weekin advanceto schedulea tourfor agroup of2or more.Metered parkingis availableon thestreetin frontofthemuseum.The museumsgift shophas forsale t-shirts,coffee mugs.DVDs,and anarray ofbooks byand aboutO.Henry.Group tours:We askfor one-week advancenotice ofgroups largerthan2people,including schools,church groups,and organizations.Donations:Donations greatlybenefit themuseum andits programs.Inquire aboutcontributing.Volunteer:(讲解员).Contact usabout volunteeringatthemuseum.We arecurrently inneed ofa gardenerandavolunteer docentStaff:Valerie Bennett,CuratorValerie.bennett@ci.austin.tx.usMichael Hoinski,CultureArts EducationSpecialistMichael.hoinski@ci.austin.tx.usElizabeth Taylor,DocentLocation:401East FifthStreet,Austin,Texas
78701、1According tothe text,we canknow theO.Henry Museum.A.opens tothepublicfor awhole dayB,won itsfame whenit wasset upC.teaches peoplehow towrite literaryworksD.focuses oncollecting worksof O.Henry、2When visitingtheO.Henry Museum,visitors can.A.buy bookswritten byO.HenryB,get paidby becominga docentC.get manydonations fromthe museumD.park carsnear themuseum inany time、3What isa mustif schoolteachers planto taketheir studentsto visitthe museumA.Gong thereonaworkdayB.Contacting themuseum inadvanceC.Donating somemoney tothe museumD.Preparing wellto beherstudents9guidePart BDirections:Read thefollowing textand answerthequestionsby choosingthe mostsuitable subheadingfromthelist A-G foreach一numbered paragraph
4145.There aretwo extrasubheadings whichyou donot needto use.Mark youranswers ontheANSWERSHEET.10pointsRead thepassage andfill inthe blankswith properwords orthe properforms ofthe givenwords迁移的」Why dontbirds getlost ontheir longmigratory flightsScientists triedtheir best1find theanswer tothis questionfor」many yearsThe reasons2discover latelyNotlong agoexperiments showedthat birdsdepend3,the sunto guidethem duringdaylight hoursBut whatabout birds
4.flymainly atnight Testswith man-made starshave provedthat certainnight-flying birdsare ableto followthe starsin theirlong-distanceflights莺,One suchbird,a warblerhad spentits lifetimeinacage andhad neverflown underan
5.nature skyYet itshowed itsabilityby birthto use the starsfor guidanceThe birdscage
6.put undera man-made star-filled skyat migrationtime Thebird triedtofly inthesamedirection asthe onethat7・take byother birdsinthebuilding Anychange inthe positionofthemake-believe虚构的stars causeda changeinthedirection ofits flightScientiststhink thatwarblers,
8.they flyin daylight,use thesun forguidance Butstars areclearly theirimportant meansof导航navigation Whatdo theydo whenthe starsare hiddenbehind theclouds Clearly,they findtheir wayby suchlandmarks as」mountains,coastlines andriver coursesBut whenits toodark9see these,warblers circle102_help,unable tofind outwhere theywereFrom1-teenage boytoa38-year-old man,the skillfulfigure ofKobe inthe basketballcourt isthe memory of youthfor manyChinese basketball fansOnApril14th,2016,Kobe Bryant
2.unbelievable won60points inthe matchversus UtahJazz ending
3.he twenty-year careerinNBA perfectlyOn thatday thismatch becamea hottopic
4.Weibo andWeChat inChina Kobes
5.glory20-year careerin NBAbecamea wonderfulmemoryofplenty ofChinesebasketballfansKobes
6.retire bringsdifferent kindsof feelingsto manyfans Forone thousandof Kobesfans thereare onethousand different」feelings Itis difficultfor you7show norespect forhim inthe heart8-you haveever lovedKobe ornot Heis nota geniusbut hecouldface thewhole LosAngeles cityalone atmorning4oclock topractice;he hassuffered frominjuries,while heshouldered theduty to」inspire theteam withdetermination andcourage Hisdiligence,motivation andenthusiasm willbe rememberedforever9look backoverthe pasttwenty years,we haveto admitthat thisman andthe number23player ofthe ChicagoBulls
10.change thebasketballgameSection IIITranslationDirections:Common publicTranslatethefollowingtext intoChinese.Write yourtranslation ontheANSWERSHEET.15pointsspeaking problemsTheuse ofI feel,1think andmaybe1Tn thequestion-and-answer sessionofthespeaking competition,many contestantsbegan theiranswers withuncertain expressionslike“I feel,1guess,1hear,maybe andnperhaps.These wordsshow thatthe personis onlyspeaking fromhisorher pointof view.1Work onkeeping youranswers briefand tothe point,
2、.Instead ofthe empty-sounding HIguess1,using facts,together withaclear conclusionbased onthose facts,is farmore likelyto bepopular withan audience.Using onlyone speakingstyleDont sticktothesame tone.3For example,when theyspoke abouttheir dreams,some soundedromantic.Others usedhumor.Very fewused severaldifferentstyles together.Try mixingmore thanone style,rather thanjust stickingwith thesame one.Irresponsible answers、Public speakingis differentfrom personalconversations.Youre responsiblefor yourwords.4So youshould thinktwice before盗版,you talk.Dont belike thestudent who,when askedabout hisopinion onbook piracystarted bysaying hesupported it.Talking aroundthe topicrather thandirectly answeringitYou shouldfocus onone pointand give a clearsolution.The keyis towork outwhat questionis beingasked.Is itasking youtodiscuss acertain topicortopresent yourown pointof viewUseone ortwo argumentstogether andgiveastrong conclusion.5A.It canbe boring.Try tomix itup.B.Even thoughyou want to answerquickly,you dontwanttosound foolish.C.Also workon deliveringthem withcalmness andconfidence.做作的D.Deliberate gesturesand affectedexpressions offeelings areimproper inasuccessfulspeech.E.Remember thatjudges arenot judgingyou onwhether theyagree,but onyour abilityto saywhat youthink clearly.F.This lacksthe supportof factsand seemsnot to be reliablefor thejudges andaudience.G.Confidence isextremely importantin publicspeaking asit letsa speakersound moreconvincing.、The dailylife ofa highschool studentis busyand oftenvery stressful.1How canyou dealwith itHere aresome tipsto helpmakeyour lifea littlesmoother.、2Instead ofspending timeaimlessly duringstudy time,actually study!You maynot feellike it,but ifit givesyou morefreetime towatch yourfavorite showthatnight,ifs worthit.During yourcommute toand fromschool,usethetimeto study orreview classnotes.Make ityour dailygoal topractice usingtime wisely.Stay awayfrom distractions.If youhate tomiss yourfavorite show,make timetostudybefore theshow comes.Studying withthe、television onis muchmore difficult.3If thephone isa distraction,explain tofriends thatyou canonly talkatacertain timeor turnit off.Get plentyof rest.Take asecond andsee howmany hoursof sleepyou geteach night.Is itless thaneight Ifso,you needtobe、getting moresleep.A studyfound thatmost teensneed abouteight hoursof sleepper nightto feelenergetic.4Make timefor you.Studying fortwo orthree hoursstraight canwear youout,and inthe end,you maybe havinga hardtimeconcentrating.5_A goodsuggestion is to spendevery45minutes instudying andtake a15-minute rest.During thebreak,dosomething youfind relaxing,such aseating ahealthy snackor readinga magazine.A.Kill timefreely.B.Watch thoseminutes.C.You willhaveaharder timefocusing onthe learningmaterial.D.Another wayistolisten tosome lightmusic whenyou arelearning.E.Many thingsand activitiesa studentfaces canbedifficultand confusing.F.Make sureto includeshort breakswhile studyingtokeepyour mindactive.G.By managingyour timewisely,you willmake roomfor moresleep inyour schedule.参考答案SectionIUse ofEnglish
1、
1.D
2.D。