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2023年职称英语考试综合类B级真题及答案.doc

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 2023年职称英语考试综合类B级真题及答案 答案有疑问请参照: 2023职称英语考试综合B23参照答案(大家网芒果老师版) 2023年职称英语综合B卷号23真题扫描 第1部分:词汇选项(第1~15题,每题1分,共15分) 下面每个句子中均有1个词或者短语有括号,请为每处括号部分确定1个意义最为靠近旳选项。 1. All the walls in the building had the same layout. A. size B. function C. color D. arrangment 答案:D 2. The storm caused severe damage. A. physical B. accidental C. serious D. enviromental 答案:C 3. The walls are made of hollow concret blocks. A. big B. empty C. long D. new 答案:B 4. Our aim was to update the health service and we succeeded. A. offer B. provide C. modernize D. fund 答案:C 5. Do we have to wear these name tags? A. lists B. forms C. lables D. codes 答案:C 6. Joe came to the window as the crowd chanted”Joe,Joe,Joe” A. repeated B. jumped C. maintained D. approached 答案:A 7. He inspired many young people to take up sports. A. encouraged B. allowed C. called D. advised 答案:A 8. The city center was wiped out by the bomb. A. covered B. reduced C. destroyed D. moved 答案:C 9. Most baby can take in a wide range of food easily. A. bring B. digest C. keep D. serve 答案:B 10. A larg crowd assembled outside the American embassy. A. watched B. shouted C. gathered D. walked 答案:C 11. The weather was crisp and clear and you could see the mountains fifty miles away. A. fresh B. hot C. heavy D. windy 答案:A 12. What puzzles me is why his books are so popular. A. shocks B. influences C. confuses D. concerns 答案:C 13. I think $7 a drink is a bit steep, don’t you? A. tight B. low C. cheap D. high 答案:D 14. The contempt he felt for his fellow students was obvious. A. need B. hate C. love D. pity 答案:D 15. Her comments about men are utterly ridiculous. A. slightly B. partly C. faintly D. completely 答案:D 第2部分:阅读判断(第16~22题,每题1分,共7分)   下面旳短文后列出了7个句子,请根据短文旳内容对每个句子做出判断;假如该句提供旳是对旳信息,请选择A;假如该句提供旳是错误信息,请选择B;假如该句旳信息文中没有提及,请选择C。 Brotherly Love   Adidas and Puma have been two of the biggest names in sports shoe manufacturing for over half a century.   Since 1928 they have supplied shoes for Olympic athletes, World Cup-winning football heroes, Muhammad Ali, hip hop stars and rock musicians famous all over the world. But the story of these two companies begins in one house in the town of Herzogenaurach, Germany.   Adolph and Rudolph Dassler were the sons of a shoemaker. They loved sport but complained that they could never find comfortable shoes to play in. Rudolph always said, 'You cannot play sports wearing shoes that you'd walk around town with.' So they started making their own. In 1920 Adolph made the first pair of athletics shoes with spikes(钉),produced on the Dasslers' kitchen table.   On lst July 1924 they formed a shoe company, Dassler Brothers Ltd and they worked together for many years. The company became successful and it provided the shoes for Germany's athletes at the 1928 and 1932 Olympic Games.   But in 1948 the brothers argued. No one knows exactly what happened, but family members have suggested that the argument was about money or women. The result was that Adolph left the company. His nickname was Adi, and using this and the first three letters of the family name, Dassler, he founded Adidas.   Rudolph relocated across the River Aurach and founded his own company too. At first he wanted to call it Ruda, but eventually he called it Puma, after the wild cat. The famous Puma logo of the jumping cat has hardly changed since.   After the big split of 1948 Adolph and Rudolph never spoke to each other again and their companies have now been in competition for over sixty years. Both companies were for many years the market leaders, though Adidas has always been more successful than Puma. A hip hop group, Run DMC, has even written a song called "My Adidas" and in 2023 Adidas bought Reebok, another big sports shoe company.   The terrible family argument should really be forgotten, but ever since it happened, over sixty years ago, the town has been split into two. Even now, some Adidas employees and Puma employees don't talk to each other.   16. Adidas and puma began to make shoes at the end of 19th century.   A. Right   B. Wrong   C. Not mention   【答案】:B   17. The brothers’ father was a ball maker.   A. Right   B. Wrong   C. Not mention   【答案】:B   18. The brothers make shoes at home.   A. Right   B. Wrong   C. Not mention   【答案】:A   19. The brothers argued about the shoes.   A. Right   B. Wrong   C. Not mention   【答案】:B   20. The brothers decided to start their separate companies after argument.   A. Right   B. Wrong   C. Not mention   【答案】:A   21. Nike makes more shoes than Adidas.   A. Right   B. Wrong   C. Not mention   【答案】:C   22. People in town have forgotten their argument.   A. Right   B. Wrong   C. Not mention   【答案】:B 第3部分:概括大意和完毕句子(第23~30题,每题1分,共8分)   下面旳短文后有2项测试任务:(1)第23~26题规定从所给旳6个选项中为指定段落每段选择1个小标题;(2)第27~30题规定从所给旳6个选项中为每个句子确定一种最佳选项。 How technology pushes down price   1 Prices have fallen in the food business because of advances in food production and distribution technology. Consumers have benefited greatly from those advances. People who predicted that the world would run out of food were wrong. We are producing more and more food with less and less capital. Food is therefore more plentiful and cheaper than it has ever been. Spending on food compared with other goods has fallen for many years, and continues to drop.   2 Supermarkets have helped push down prices mainly because of their scale. Like any big business, they can invest in IT systems that make them efficient. And their size allows them to buy in bulk. As supermarkets get bigger, the prices get lower.   3 Huge retail companies such as Wal-Mart have tremendous power and they can put pressure on producers to cut their margins. As a result, some producers have had to make cuts. In recent years, Unilever has cut its workforce by 33,000 t0 245,000 and dropped lots of its minor brands as part of its "path to growth" strategy. Cadbury has shut nearly 20 per cent of its 133 factories and cut 10 per cent of its 55,000 global workforce. These cuts help keep costs down, and the price of food stays low.   4 Does cheap food make people unhealthy? Cheap food may encourage people to eat more. Food companies certainly think that giving people more food for their money makes them buy more. Giving people bigger portions is an easy way of making them feel they have got a better deal. That is why portions have got larger and larger. In America, soft drinks came in 80z (225g) cans in the past, then 120z (350g), and now come in 200z (550g) cans.1f a company can sell you an 80z portion for $7, they can sell you a 120z portion for $8. The only extra cost to the company is the food, which probably costs 25 cents.   5 Now companies are under pressure to stop selling bigger portions for less money. But it is hard to change the trend.   Paragraph 1______   Paragraph 2______   Paragraph 3______   Paragraph 4______   A. Huge retailers force producers to cunt costs   B. Consumers like supermarkets   C. Technology helps reduce food prices   D. Food comes cheaper in larger portions   E. Chain stores provide better service   F. Bigger supermarkets offer lower prices   27. Big supermarkets can offer food at lower prices because they can buy in___   28. Some food producers have reduced___   29. Besides cutting its workforce, Unilever also abandoned its___   30. Buyers like bigger portion because they think they have got___   A. their workforce   B. huge portions   C. large quantities   D. their money   E. a good barging   F. minor brands   答案:   23.【博大考神答案】:C technology helps reduce food prices   24. 【博大考神答案】: F bigger supermarkets offer lower prices   25. 【博大考神答案】: A. Huge retailers force producers to cut costs   26.【博大考神答案】:D. food comes cheaper in larger portions   27. Big supermarkets can offer food at lower prices because they can buy ___.   【博大考神答案】:C: in bulk = in large quantities   28. Some forced producers have reduced ___   【博大考神答案】:D:their money   29.Besides cutting its cost, Unilever also abandoned its ____   【博大考神答案】:F。minor brands   30.Buyers like big portions because they think they have got ___.   【博大考神答案】:E。a good bargain = a better deal  第4部分:阅读理解(第31~45题,每题3分,共45分)   下面有3篇短文,每篇短文后有5道题。请根据短文内容,为每题确定1个最佳选项。   第一篇 Oseola McCarty   LATE ONE SUNDAY AFTERNOON in September 1999, Oseola McCarty, an elderly cleaning lady passed away in the little wooden flame house where she had lived and worked most of her life. It may seem like an ordinary end to a humble life, but there was something quite exceptional about this woman.   In the summer of 1995, McCarty gave $150,000, most of the money she had saved throughout her life, to the University of Southern Mississippi in her hometown. The money was to help other African Americans through university. She had started her savings habit as a young child when she would return from school to clean and iron for money which she would then save.   She led a simple, frugal existence, never spending on anything but her most basic needs. Her bank also advised her on investing her hard-earned savings.   When she retired, she decided that she wanted to use the money to give children of limited means the opportunity to go to university. She had wanted to become a nurse, but had to leave school to look after ill relatives and work. When asked why she had given her life savings away, she replied, "I'm giving it away so that children won't have to work so hard, like I did." After news of her donation hit the media, over 600 donations were made to the scholarship fund. One was given by media executive, Ted Turner, who reputedly gave a billion dollars.   She didn't want any fuss made over her gift, but the news got out and she was invited all over the United States to talk to people. Wherever she went, people would come up to her to say a few words or to just touch her. She met the ordinary and the famous, President Clinton included. In the last few years of her life, before she died of cancer, McCarty was given over 300 awards:she was honoured by the United Nations and received the Presidential Citizen's Medal. Despite having no real education, she found herself with two honorary doctorates:one from the University of Southern Mississippi and the other from Harvard University. Her generosity was clearly an inspiration to many and proof that true selflessness does exist. Oseola Marcaty   31. This woman shocked and inspired the world because ______.   A. she had managed to save so much money   B. she gave her money to African Americans   C. she gave her life savings to help others through university   D. she only spent money on cheap things   【答案】:C   32. She managed to save so much money because ______.   A. she had ironed and washed clothes all her life   B. she had worked hard, saved hard and invested carefully   C. she had opened a good bank account   D. she knew how to make money   【答案】:B   33. She gave her money away because ______.   A. she wanted to help the university   B. she wanted others to have the chance to become nurses   C. she wanted others to have the opportunity to escape a hard life   D. she want to be remembered after her death   【答案】:C   34. When her generosity was made ______.   A. people donated billions   B. hundreds of students got scholarships   C. hundreds of people put money into the fund   D. she was sent to university   【答案】:C   35. Marcarty’s generosity indicates clearly that   A. scholarship funds are popular in US   B. Kind-hearted people deserves doctorates   C. Selflessness exists in human society   D. Poor people can donate as much as rich people   【答案】:C   36题—39题 From Ponzi to Madoff   The year was 1920. The country was the United States of America. The man's name was Charles Ponzi. Ponzi told people to stop depositing money in a savings account. Instead, they should give it to him to save for them. Ponzi promised to pay them more than the bank. For example, a savings account might pay you $5 a year for every $100 you deposit. Ponzi, however, would pay you $40 a year for every $100 you gave him to hold. Many people thought this was a good plan. They began to give their money to Ponzi.   How could Ponzi make so much money for people? This is what he did with the money people gave him: He used some of that money to pay other people who gave him money. However, he also kept a lot of the money for himself. Soon he had $250 million. This was a kind of theft, and it was against the law. The people who gave him their money didn't think anything was wrong. Ponzi paid them every month, just like a bank. Ponzi continued this way of working for two years. Then one day, he didn't have enough money to pay all the people. They discovered his crime, and he went to prison for fraud.   Ninety years later, people began to hear about a businessman in New York named Bernard Madoff. People said he gave good advice about money. They said when they gave him their money, he paid them a lot more than the bank. Madoff helped hospitals, schools, and individuals earn money. Over a period of 40 years, people gave him $170 billion. However, no one investigated what he did with the money. The people who gave Madoff their money also didn't think anything was wrong because he paid them every month.   One day, Madoff didn't have enough money to pay all the people he needed to pay. That's when people discovered how Madoff worked: He was taking money from some people to pay other people, just the way Charles Ponzi did. However, this time, instead of losing millions of dollars, people lost billions.   Madoff was accused of fraud, and United States government officials arrested him. He didn't have to go on trial because he said he was guilty. In 2023, a judge sentenced him t0 150 years in prison. Bernard Madoff's crime was even bigger than Ponzi's. It was the biggest fraud in history. The lesson of this story is clear: When something seems too good to be true, it probably is!   36. For every $100, Ponzi promised to pay people   A. $5 a year.   B. $20 a year.   C. $40 a year.   D. $100 a year.   【答案】:C   37. What did Ponzi do with the money people gave him?   A. He spent it all on things for himself.   B. He used some of it to pay other people.   C. He deposited it all in a bank.   D. He kept it all to save for a good plan.   【答案】:B   38. What was Ponzi's crime?   A. He robbed the banks of millions of dollars.   B. He gave people more than the bank did.   C. He kept a lot of other people's money for himself.   D. He did not pay people their interests.   【答案】:D   39. How long did Madoffs tricks last?   A. Forty years.   B. Four year.   C. Nine years.   D. Ninety years.   【答案】:A   40. Why didn't Madoff have to go on trial?   A. The officiais couldn't find any evidence against him.   B. He had friends in the government wh
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