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:
年晋中市榆次区考研《英语一》模拟试题2023Section IUse ofEnglishDirections:Read thefollowing text.Choose thebest wordsfor eachnumbered blankand markA,B,C orD on the ANSWER SHEET.10pointsLast weekI wasdriving backto townfrom theairport duringa heavyrainstorm whenI sawsomething rather large]of thebusy roadas thetraffic drovepast2close.As I got3I found out that it was a turtle,and Ihit the
4.Igotout ofmy carwith trafficbeing5behind me and dashedinto themiddle of the road.I sawthatit was verymuch6but refusingto
7.Although Pman animallover,Im notone totouch ananimal likea turtlethat isn*t8,but Iwasnt going to9him there.I lookedthroughmy car10for somethingwith whichto11the turtle-paper towels,a rag,anything.But therewas nothing.A womandrove in the oppositedirection stoppedand sawthe12situation.I askedher ifshe hadanything13I coulduse topick thisratherlargeturtle up,and she14meawhite towel.As I15my friend,he quickly16his headand feet,and Iset himdown by the riverto
17.I thankedthe womanwith thetowel whocame tomy18——and theturtle does,too!Tm also19to thedriversbehind me.They were20for overhalf anhour butnone complainedat all!1A.in themiddle B.on theside C.at theend D.on thecorner、2A.reasonably B.increasingly C.strangely D.dangerously、3A.father B.nearer C,nearly D.further、4A.wheel B.door C,brake D.window、5A.reduced B.followed C.avoided D.blocked、6A.alive B.gentle C.heavy D.large、7A.dash B.move C.slip D.run、8A.cute B.lucky C.mild D.brave、9A.put B.take C-send D.leave10A.slowly B.nervously C.wildly D.occasionally、11A.turn overB.throw awayC.pick upD.put up、12A.hopeless B.difficult C.ridiculous D.different、13A.at theairport B.on theroad C.bytheriver D.in hercar、14A.sold B.lent C.threw D.showed、15A.foundoutB.wrapped upC.came acrossD.stared at
10.c
11.c
12.B
13.D
14.C
15.B
16.C
17.B
18.C
19.A
20.DSection IIReading Comprehension、
21.A
2.B
3.D
4.D、
31.D
2.A
3.B
4.C、
41.A
2.C
3.B
4.D、
51.A
2.B
3.C
4.A
5.
1.is made
2.easier
3.comfortable
4.choice
6.about
7.Bringing
8.if
9.his
10.a
11.is known
12.western
13.powerful
14.Buildings
15.since、
71.to/for
2.making
3.has beenbuilt
4.explanation
5.techniques
6.The
7.to accelerate
8..proudly
9.it
10.broaderSection IIITranslation、
81.C
2.B
3.G
4.D
5.F、
91.F
2.G
3.C
4.D
16、A.raised B.pulled C,withdrew D.lowered17A.keep onB.live onC,work onD.decide on、18A.attention B.mind C.rescue D.memory、19A.grateful B.generous C.helpful D.sensitive、20A.challenged B.prepared C,panicked D.delayedSection IIReading ComprehensionPartADirections:Read thefollowing fourtexts.Answer the questions beloweach textby choosingA,B,C orD.Mark youranswers onthe ANSWERSHEET.40pointsText1The clockalways seemsto beticking rathertoo fastin thedoctors officeand thequeue of patients outsidethe doorseems tobepressing rathertoo hard.Some sayits hightime for the modelof short,sharp one-to-one appointmentsto giveway toshared medicalappointmentsSMAs.咨询,SMAs aredoctor-patient visitsin whicha groupofpatientsreceive patienteducation andcounseling physicalexamination and medicalsupport ina groupsetting.Typically SMAsare designedto haveone ormore doctorsattend to a groupofpatients whoshare a common illnessor medicalcondition.In contrastto one-to-one visits,SMAs provide a longerappointmenttime-frame as well as the opportunityfor patientsto haveimproved accessto theirphysicians andmeanwhile pickup additionalinformation and supportfrom peers.However,doctors whohave pioneeredthe sharedappointment approachreport that there aresignificant challengesinvolved.Dr.Sumego,director ofshared medical appointments,Cleveland Clinic,identifies culturechange as the mostsignificant challenge.Physicians andnurses aretrained ina modelof personalservice andprivacy;the SMA approach is a fundamentalchallenge tothosefixed ideas.They needshared goalsand a way oftesting theinnovation againstagreed standards.Dr.Sumego says,The physiciansmaybe worriedabout thepossible chaosand efficienciesthat aremarketed.They alsohave to make thepatients understand what theirappointmentis,andwhatthe expectationis.”“So,if anorganization waslooking to start sharedmedicalappointments,I wouldadvise them to start the buy-in from a fewchampionphysicians,develop thework-flow anddevelop someexperience.Provide somesupport behindwhat thatbest practiceshouldlook like.Create somestandards so that,astheconcept spreads,you canemploy thatexperience tostartthe next sharedmedicalappointments and the next.^^、1What isthe purposeof the SMA approachA.To improvemedical service.B.To promotedoctors*reputation.C.To conductmedical research.D.To meetpatients*expectation.、2According toDr.Sumego,what preventstheSMAapproach from being widelyadoptedA.Personal service.B.Fixed ideas.C.Lack ofequipment.D.Shared goals.、3What canthe underlinedbuy-in^in Paragraph4be replacedbyA.Support.B.Organization.C.Purchase.D.Practice.、4What canbe learnedabout theSMAapproachin thelast paragraphA.It iscurrently beingquestioned.B.It isimpractical insome areas.C.It willenjoy widepopularity soon.D.It should be carriedout stepby step.Text2Its3oclock and youve beenhard atwork.As yousit atyour desk,a strong desire forchocolate overcomesyou.You tryto busyyourself to make it goaway.But itdoesnt.Here is another situation.Perhaps you are notfeeling well.The onlything you want toeat isabig bowlof chickensoup,like yourmom usedtomakewhen youwere sickas achild.Food cravingsare astrongdesirefor aspecifictype of food.And they are normal.Scientists atthe websiteHow StuffWorks comparehunger andcravings thisway.Hunger isa fairlysimple connection betweenthe stomachand the brain.They evencall itsimply stomachhunger.When ourstomachs bumup allof thefood wehave eaten,a(荷尔蒙)hormone sendsa messageto onepart ofthe brainfor morefood,which regulatesour mostbasic bodyfunctions such as thirst,hunger andsleep.The brain then producesa chemicaltostartthe appetiteandyoueat.Hunger isa function of survival.(使*舌跃)A cravingis morecomplex.It activatesbrain areasrelated toemotion,memory andreward.These are the sameareasof thebrain activatedduring drug-craving studies.So,some scientistscall foodcravings“mind hunger.People oftencrave foodsthatare highin fatand sugar.Foods thatare highin fator highin sugarproduce chemicalsin thebrain.These chemicalsgive usfeelings ofpleasure.In a2007study,researchers atCambridge Universityfound thatdieting orrestricted eatinggenerally increasesthe possibilityoffood craving.^^So,the moreyou denyyourself afood that youwant,the moreyou maycrave it.However,fasting isa bitdifferent.They foundthat eatingno foodat allfor ashort periodof timelessened foodcravings.、50,thenexttime youcrave somethingvery specific,know that your brainmay bemore toblame thanyour stomach.1What isthefunctionofthe firstparagraphA.To remindreaders oftheir ownspecial food.B.To deepenthe understanding of hunger.C.To reportthe discoveryof cravingstudy.D.To leadto thetopic ofthe wholepassage.、2What dowe learn about foodcravingA.It showsfood islinked tofeelings.B.It ensuresa personsurvives hunger.C.It meansthe stomachfunctions well.D.It provesthebraindecides yourappetite.、3Whafs thelikely resultof dietingA.The decreaseof chemicals.B.The increaseof fooddesire.C.The refusalof fatand sugar.D.The disappearanceof appetite.、4What doesthe passagemainly discussA.The functionsof brainareas.B.What hungeris allabout.C.The findingsoffoodcraving.D.What dietingmay bringus.Text3Electric cars are dirty.In fact,not onlyare theydirty,they mighteven bedirtier thantheir gasoline-powered cousins.People inCalifornia love to talkabout zero-emissions vehicles”,but peopleinCalifbmia seemto beclueless aboutwhereelectricity comesfrom.Power plantsmostly usefireto makeit.Aside from the newfolks whohave theirroofs coveredwith solarcells,(发电机).we getourelectricity fromgenerators Generatorsare fueledby something—usually coal,oil,but alsoby heatgenerated in(地热)nuclear powerplants.There are a fewwind farmsandgeothermal plantsaswell,but byfar we get electricity mainly by burningsomething.In otherwords,those zero-emissions“carsarelikely coal-burning cars.It9s justbecausethe coalis burnedsomewhere else,itlooks clean.It isnot.Its asif theCalifbmiaGreens arecovering theireyes——u IfI cantsee it,its nothappening.Gasoline is()anincredibly efficientway topower avehicle;a gallon of gashas a lot ofenergy init.But whenyou take thatgas or another fuelandfirst useit tomake electricity,you wastea nicepartof thatenergy,mostly in the formof wastedheat——atthegenerator,through thetransmissionlines,etc.A gallonof gas may propelyour car25miles.But theelectricity youget fromthat gallonofgas wontget you as far—so electriccarsburn morefuel than gasoline-poweredones.If ourelectricity camemostly fromnukes orgeothermal,or hydroor windor solar,thenan electriccar trulywould beclean.But fbrpolitical,technical,and economicreasons,wedont usemuch ofthose energysources.In addition,electric carsbatteries whichare poisonousfbr along timewill eventuallyendup ina landfill.And finally,when carsare the polluters,the pollutionis spreadacrossall theroads.When itsa powerplant,though,all thejunk isin oneplace.Nature isverygood at cleaning up when things aretoo concentrated,but it takes alot longerwhen allthegarbage isin onespot.、1What isthe mainidea ofthe textA.Electric carsare farfrombeingclean.B.Electric carsare betterthangasoline-powered ones.C.People castdoubts onelectric carsbatteries.D.Gasoline isan efficientway topower avehicle.、2The electricitywe getfrom agallonofgasmaymake ourcar run.A.no less than25miles B.as faras50milesC.lessthan25miles D.as faras25miles、3According to the text,electric cars.A.are moreenvironmentally friendlyB.burn morefuel thangas-powered onesC.are verygoodatcleaningupwhen thingsare nottoo concentratedD.are poisonousfor along timeand willeventually endup ina landfill、4It canbe inferredfrom thetext that.A.being greenis goodand shouldbe encouragedin communicationB.electric carsarethedominant vehiclescompared with their gas-poweredcousinsC.zero-emissions vehiclesshouldbechosen toprotect ourenvironmentD.electric carsare notclean becausewegetelectricitymainlybyburningsomethingText4Intelligent people are morelikely totrust others,while thosewho scorelower onmeasures ofintelligence areless likelyto doso.Oxford Universityresearchers basedtheir findingonananalysis ofthe GeneralSocial Survey.The authorssay oneexplanation could be thatmore intelligent individuals arebetter atjudging charactersand mayspend moretimebuilding relationshipswith peoplethey cantrust.Another reasoncouldbethat smarterpeople arebetter atweighing upsituationsand assessingwhether ornot theother personwill holdup hisor herend ofa bargain.Intelligence isshown tobe linkedwith trustingothers.said the study*s leadauthor,Noah Carlof OxfordUniversity,“This findingsupportswhat otherresearchers haveargued,namely thatbeing agood judgeof characterisadistinct part of humanintelligence.^^In addition,the studyshows that individuals whoare more trusting arealso happierwith theirlives andhad higher levels ofphysicalhealth.The Oxfordresearchers found,however,that thelinks betweentrust andhealth,and betweentrust andhappiness,are notexplainedby intelligence.The findingsconfirmed that trust isa valuableresource foran individual,and isnot simplya measureofintelligence.The authorssay the research issignificant becausethe studyof socialtrust couldhave far-reaching implicationsin publicwelfare,as socialtrust contributestothesuccess ofimportant socialinstitutions,suchaswelfare systemsand financialmarkets.According toOrganization forEconomic Co-operation andDevelopment,trust isin increasinglyshort supplyin currentgeneration.This declinethreatens worldleaders9ability tohandle someof todayskey challengeslike globalwarming,andthepoliticalsystem.There aregood reasonsto thinkthat governmentsshould tryto developmoretrust in society.Distrust usuallycauses frictionin personalrelationships,careers andpolitics amongothers,says StephenCovey.Although majorityofpeople saythattrustcan neverbe restoredonce itsbroken,Stephen feelsit canbe broughtback.Its noteasy,ittakestime,but you doit throughyour behavior,not justthings yousay.”、1It canbe concludedfrom theanalysis ofthe GeneralSocial Surveythat.A.intelligent peopletend toshow moretrustinothersB.judgment ofcharacters determinesthe levelof intelligenceC.intelligence accountsfortheconnectionbetweentrust andhealthD.intelligentindividualsspend lesstime oninterpersonal relationship、2What doesthe underlinedphrase inparagraph2probably meanA.Make thebest ofa situation.B.Stick toones promiseas agreed.C.Figure outthe truevalue ofa bargain.D.Make anassessment ofa deal.、3According totheresearch,higherlevelof socialtrust is.A.a decisivebasis forstable politicalsystemB.a basicstep to deal withglobal warmingC.a contributingfactor tosuccessful publicinstitutionsD.a completesolution tointerpersonal conflicts、4When itcomes torebuilding trust,Stephen ismost likelyto agreethat.A.actions alwaysspeak louderthan wordsB.behavior isa mirrorin whicheveryone showshis imageC,behavior islargely determinedby mindD.action isthe properfruit ofknowledgePart BDirections:Read thefollowing textand answerthequestionsby choosingthe mostsuitable subheadingfromthelist A-G foreachnumbered paragraph41-
45.There aretwo extrasubheadings whichyoudonot needto use.Mark youranswers onthe ANSWERSHEET.10points
1.Kids wouldlovetohave moremoney in their pocketsWith themoney thatmakeby themselvesthey canbuy the things theywantActually,making moneywhen youareakid ismucheasy thanyou thinkHere isa greatmethod ofmaking moneyfor you,if youare akidIts dog walkingDont tryto dodogwalkingasabusiness if youarenotcomfort with dogs However,ifyoulove dogs,this canbe agoodchooseUsually yourcustomers arein theneighborhood Askdog ownertellyouasmuch aspossible theirdogsand theirhabits Itsvery importantthatyoukeep friendlywiththe dogsbring atreat tothedogscan helpdevelop afriendship withthemYou cancharge5dollars awalk lasts30minutes Ifa dogsowner wantsyou towalkhe dogfor anhour,you cancharge10dollars oreven15dollarsThe onlydisadvantage ofthis methodis thatyou havetodealwithdogwaste Besure totake bagand cleanupafter thosedogs
2.Athens,the capitalof Greece,knowas thebirthplace ofwestcivilization Twothousand fourhundred yearsago,itwasthe worldsmostpowercitybuild suchastheParthenon onthe AcropolisHill werebuilt duringthis periodGreece5s bestwriters lived in ancientAthensTheir workhas influencedother writerseverAccording toXinhua NewsAgency,the Palace Museum andHuawei signeda strategic cooperation agreementon March
1.The twosides willset anexample2-5G applicationThePalace Museumreceived more than17million visitorsin2018,
3.makeitthe mostvisited museuminthe world Inthe past20years,an officeinformation networkcovering thewhole museum
4.build graduallyThe museumhas developedan Appthatprovides anin-depth
5.explain ofcultural relicinformationandcultural servicesAlso,the museumhas researchontheapplication ofVR,AR,AI andother
6.technique inmuseums
7.signing ofthe agreementmarks a new chapterinthestrategiccooperationbetween thePalace Museumand HuaweiTechnologiesCo So,Huawei willmake efforts
8.accelerate theintelligent constructionofthePalace MuseumThe600-year-old PalaceMuseum hasnever beenso closeto scienceand technology,1Shan Jixiangsaid
9.proud,director ofthePalace MuseumShanshared manyideas about the5G PalaceMuseum Withthe helpof advancedtechnology,
10.is expectedthatinthe future,audiences aroundtheworldwill be able toexperience andvisit thePalaceMuseum,whether itisafield triporavirtual tourAlso,theuse ofAI technologyprovides a
11.broad platformand strongerknowledge supportfor culturalrelics amongyoung peopleSection III TranslationDirections:Translate thefollowing textinto Chinese.Write yourtranslation ontheANSWERSHEET.15pointsCulture shockisnt aclinical termor medicalcondition.It*s simplyacommonway todescribe theconfusing and、nervous feelingsa personmay haveafter leavinga familiarculture to live ina newand differentculture.1Those canbe exciting,but thosecan alsobe overwhelming.You mayfeel sad,anxious,frustrated andwant togo home.Everyone mayfeel thepressure to change himselfto fitin atone timeor another—whether theyvelivedinthe areafor daysor、years.2All of your experiencesbefore youcome toyour newhome arepartofyou andwhat makesyou special.The followingtips may help youlive ina new culture moreeasily and make surethe new culture doesntoverpower theold.Teach peopleyour culture.You*retheone whomeets the newculture,but itdoesnt meanyou shouldbe theone doingall thelearning.Take theopportunity toteach yourclassmates andnew friendsabout yourculture.3Invite themfor traditionaldishes fromyourculture,or showthem howyou celebrateyour holidays.Find asupport group.Find peoplein yourclass orneighborhood whohave recentlymoved here,too.You canshare experiences,cheer eachother upwhenthingsget difficult.Keep intouch withhome.You probablyleft behindyour goodfriends andfamily whenyou moved.If itsgoingtobealong timeuntilyour nextvisit,keep intouch.4_You notonly leftbehind people,but alsoother things,like yourfavorite spotsto hangout.Keeppictures aroundto remindyou ofhome.Remember,the keyto gettingover yourculture shockis tounderstand thenewcultureand findaway tolivecomfortably withinitwhile keepingtrue tothe partsofyourown culturethatyouvalue.、Its alsoimportant tobe yourself.Try notto forceyourselftochange toofast ortoo manythings allat once.5As longas youfinda goodcombination betweenold andnew cultures,youll befine.A.Making friendswho arentnew tothe culturemayhelpyou understandthenewculture better.B.But dontfeel thatyou needtochangeeverything about yourself soyou canstand outless.C.When youmove toanewplace,youre boundto facealotof changes.D.Write letters,send emails,andmakephone callssothatyou canlearnabout thethingshappening there.E.You willhave yourown paceof adjusting.F.But thegood newsis thatculture shockis temporary.G.It willalso helpthemto learn moreaboutyouintheprocess.For manypeople,history classesare seenas nomorethanrequirements forgetting degrees in chemistry,biology,business,、marketing,etc.1Below area fewreasons whyits vitalthat todays people continueto learnaboutthe past.、Understanding wherepeople comefrom playsa keyrole inunderstanding whotheyare.2For thisreason,its extremelyimportantto learnhistory inorder tounderstand whypeoplearethe waythat theyare.(改革)、Through historyclasses,you canexperience ashift inthe wayyou think.3Its importantto developminds tobe abletoconsider problemsfrom differentangles.Finally,this shiftcan improveyour abilityto analyzeand understandsituations,to makeeducateddecisions andtolearnhow toweigh theconsequences relatedto eachchoice beforeyou.、4The ideathat historyrepeats itselfis rootedin truth.From warsto fashionto politicaltrends,historians areoften ableto makepredictionsaboutthefuture basedupon thepast.By havinga deepunderstandingofwhat happenedinthepast,todayspeoplecan betterpreparefbr brighterfutures bymaking theright decisions-instead ofrepeating oldmistakes.Many peoplemay notbelieve thata degreein history can leadtoawell-paid job.In fact,students whograduate withdegreesin、.history canbecome lawyers,business owners,think tankmembers,educators,leaders inhistorical organizationswriters andso on.5A.Whichever jobyoutake,it canprovideacomfortable life.B,Learning abouthistorycanget studentsadmitted tokey universitiesC.That meansyou lookat thingsfromanew pointof view.D.Learning fromthepastprevents futuremistakes.E.The keyto enjoyingthestudyof historyis tofind classesthat interestyou.F.But thetruth isthat studyinghistoiy isa wonderfulwaytoprepare fora successfulfuture.GHistory hasshaped cultures,attitudes andsocial structures;it hasshaped theworld andits citizens.参考答案SectionIUse ofEnglish、
11.A
2.D
3.B
4.C
5.D
6.A
7.B
8.A
9.D。