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同等学力申硕英语真题B卷.doc

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2011年同等学力申硕英语真题(B卷) Part One (90 minutes) Part 1 Dialogue communication (10 minutes, 10 points, 1 for each) Section A Dialogue completion Directions: In this section, you will read 5 short incomplete dialogues between two speakers, each followed by 4 choices marked A, B, C, and D. Choose the answer that best suits the situation to complete the dialogue. Then mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square brackets on your machine-scoring ANSWER SHEET. 1.A: Dan gave me a free ride home, but I paid for the gas. B: You know what they say, ____. A one good turn deserves another B there’s no free lunch C it’s who you know that counts D don’t bite off more than you can chew 2. A: David said he bought a new BMW for $5,000! B: _____. Sounds pretty cheap to me! A: Well, that’s what he said. A Come to think of it. B Are you sure? C Do you think so? D Is he crazy? 3. A: We just came back from Phoenix. And we had the best vacation in years. B: ____. I’m glad to hear it. A How was it? B Oh, my goodness! C Good for you. D Oh, there you go again. 4. A: I just can’t stand this class any more? B: ____. It’s required, and you have to sit in it in order to graduate. A Why, you can say that again! B Well, why not just drop out of it? C Why, I couldn’t agree more! D Well, you might as well get used to it. 5. A: I don’t know about you, but I thought that film was terrific. B: ____. The action was great, and so was the music. A I’m with you there B Just the same. C More or less. D I sure do. Section B Dialogue Comprehension Directions: In this section, you will read 5 short conversations between a man and a woman. At the end of each conversation there is a question followed by 4 choices marked A, B, C, and D. Choose the best answer to the question from the 4 choices by marking the corresponding letter with single bar across the square brackets on your machine-scoring ANSWER SHEET. 6. Woman: I’m tired of driving all the way to work and back every day. If only cars could drive themselves! Man: Well, some car manufactures are working on them. I guess you’ll soon buy one if you can afford it. Question: What does the man imply? A Cars that drive themselves may be very expensive. B The woman will be able to buy an intelligent car. C He is working with a car producer on intelligent cars. D Driving to work is really a headache. 7. Woman: I’d rather not talk about it. Just don’t ask. Man: Come on. I think you need to let off some steam. Question: What does the man advise the woman to do? A To keep the secret. B To talk to him about the problem. C To reduce the workload. D To have a good rest. 8. Woman: Julie’s dress looks funny. That style went out last year. Man: Oh, come on, as long as it looks good on her. Question: What does the man try to emphasize? A Julie’s dress is not outdated. B Julie’s dress does not suit her. C Julie looks fine in that dress. D Julie should follow the fashion.   9. Man: What kind of snacks do you prefer? Woman: Oh, I’ve got a sweet tooth, you know. Question: What does the woman probably like? A Sandwich. B Hot dogs. C Potato chips. D Ice cream.   10. Man: Annie, how does it not even cross your mind that you might want a future with someone? Woman: It’s simple. I don’t mind being married to may career. Question: What’s Annie’s attitude towards her future? A She will stay with someone unmarried. B She will live a simple life. C She will fully focus on her job. D She will quit her job to get married. Part II Vocabulary (20 minutes, 10 points, 0.5 for each) Section A Directions: In this section, there are 10 sentences, each with one word or phrase underlined. Choose the one from the 4 choices marked A, B, C, and D that best keeps the meaning of the sentence. Then mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square brackets on your machine-scoring ANSWER SHEET. 11. The tendency of the human body to reject foreign matter is the main obstacle to successful organ transplantation. A factor B constituent C break D barrier 12. Whenever you need Tom, he is always there whether it be an ear or a helping hand, so you can always lean on him. A benefit from B count on C stand for D stick to 13. The news reports completely overlooked the more profound political implications of the events. A foresaw B neglected C explored D assessed 14. Teachers and nurses who deal with children are obliged to report cases of suspected child abuse to authorities. A reminded B expected C requested D compelled 15. Your grade will be based in large part on the originality of your ideas. A popularity B creativity C feasibility D flexibility 16. We suspect there is a quire deliberate attempt to sabotage the elections and undermine the electoral commission. A conscious B desperate C intentional D clumsy 17. So strange were the circumstances of my story that I can scarcely believe myself to have been a party to them. A hardly B just C almost D definitely 18. Smoke particles and other air pollutants are often trapped in the atmosphere, thus forming dirty fog. A caught B constrained C concealed D concentrated 19. Employees in chemical factories are entitled to receive extra pay for doing hazardous work, A poisonous B difficult C harmful D dangerous 20. Curt Carlson, the wealthiest man in Minnesota, owned a hotel and travel company with sales reaching in the neighborhood of $9 billion. A precisely B merely C approximately D substantially Section B Directions: In this section, there are 10 incomplete sentences. For each sentence there are 4 choices marked A, B, C, and D. Choose the one that best completes the sentence. Then mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square brackets on your machine-scoring ANSWER SHEET. 21. Susan never took any cookery courses; she learned cooking by ____ useful tips from TV cookery programs. A bringing up B picking up C putting up D pulling up 22. The President _____ his deputy to act for him while he was abroad. A promoted B substituted C displaced D authorized 23. It ____ without saying that consumers would be happier if prices were lower. A takes B appears C goes D makes 24. The world economic recession put an ____ end to the steel market upturn that began in 2002. A irregular B illegal C absurd D abrupt   25. I’m ____ about how you discovered my website, and am very glad if you enjoy it. A mysterious B furious C serious D curious   26. The Labor Party’s electoral strategy, based on an ____ with other smaller parties, has proved successful. A acquaintance B integration C intimacy D alliance   27. The new aircraft will be ____ to a test of temperatures of -65℃ and 120℃. A suspended B suppressed C subjected D summoned   28. The money I got from teaching on the side was a useful ____ to my ordinary income. A supplement B profit C subsidy D replacement   29. Chinese people are now enjoying better dental health, as shown by the declining ____ of tooth decay. A incidence B treatment C consequence D misfortune   30. Many countries have conversation programs to prevent certain ____ of fish from becoming extinct. A sources B species C numbers D members Part III Reading Comprehension (45 minutes, 30 points, 1 for each) Directions: There are 5 passages in this part. Each passage is followed by 6 questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are 4 choices marked A, B, C, and D. Choose the best one and mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square brackets on your machine-scoring ANSWER SHEET. Passage One People are living longer than ever, but for some reason, women are living longer than men. A baby boy born in the United States in 2003 can expects to live to be about 73, a baby girl, about 79. this is indeed a wide gap, and no one really knows why it exists. The greater longevity (长寿)of women, however, has been known for centuries. It was, for example, described in the seventeenth century. However, the difference was smaller then – the gap is growing. A number of reasons have been proposed to accounts for the differences. The gap is greatest in industrialized societies, so it has been suggested that women are less susceptible to work strains that may raise the risk of heart disease and alcoholism. Sociologists also tell us that women are encouraged to be less adventurous than men (and this may be why they are more careful drivers, involved in fewer accidents). Even smoking has been implicated in the age discrepancy. It was once suggested that working women are more likely to smoke and as more women entered the work force, the age gap would begin to close, because smoking is related to earlier deaths. Now, however, we see more women smoking and they still tend to live longer although their lung cancer rate is climbing sharply. One puzzling aspect of the problem is that women do not appear to be as healthy as men. That is, they report far more illnesses. But when a man reports an illness, it is more likely to be serious. Some researchers have suggested that men may die early because their health is more strongly related to their emotions. For example, men tend to die sooner after losing a spouse than women do. Men even seem to be more weakened by loss of a job. (Both of these are linked with a marked decrease in the effectiveness of the immune system.) Among men, death follows retirement with an alarming promptness. Perhaps we are searching for the answers too close to the surface of the problem. Perhaps the answers lie deeper in our biological heritage. After all, the phenomenon is not isolated to humans. Females have the edge among virtually all mammalian (哺乳动物的) species, in that they generally live longer. Furthermore, in many of these species the differences begin at the moment of conception; there are more male miscarriages(流产). In human, after birth, more baby boys than baby girls die. 31. What can we learn from the first two paragraphs? A Men’s lifespan remains almost unchanged. B Researchers have found the cause of the age gap/ C The age gap was noticed only recently. D The more advanced a society, the greater the age gap. 32. As is suggested in Paragraph 2, the two factors relevant to women’s longer lifespan are ____. A diseases and road accidents B industrialization and work strains C their endurance of work strains and reluctance for adventure D their immunity to heart disease and refusal of alcohol   33. According to Paragraph3, which of the following statements is true? A The great number of male smokers contributes to the age gap. B The growing number of smoking women will narrow the age gap. C Smoking does not seem to affect women’s longevity. D Female workers are more likely to smoke than make workers.   34. Which of the following phenomena makes researchers puzzled? A Through more liable to illnesses, women still live longer.. B Men’s health is more closely related to their emotions C Men show worse symptoms than women when they fall ill. D Quite a number of men die soon after their retirement.   35. The word” edge” in Paragraph 6 means “_____”. A margin B side C quality D advantage   36. What is the main idea of the passage? A That women are healthier than men well explains their longevity. B The greater longevity of women remains a mystery. C People are living longer as a result of industrialization. D Women are less emotionally affected by difficulties in life.   Passage Two Until last spring, Nia Parker and the other kids in her neighborhood commuted to school on Bus 59. But as fuel prices rose, the school district needed to find a way to cut its transportation costs. So the school’s busing company redrew its route map, eliminating Nia’s bus altogether. Now Nia and her neighbors travel the half mile to school via a “walking school bus”—a group of kids, supervised by an adult or two, who make the walk together. Like the rest of us, school districts are feeling pinched by rising fuel costs—and finding new way to adapt. The price of diesel fuel has gone up 34 percent in the past two years. For the typical American school district, bus bills total 5 percent of the budget. As administrators look to trim, busing is an inviting target, since it doesn’t affect classroom instruction (or test scores). More than one third of American school administrators have eliminated bus stops or routes in order to stay within budget. Many parents are delighted to see their kids walking to school, partly because many did so themselves: according to a 1969 survey, nearly half of school kids walked or biked to school, compared with only 16 percent in 2001. modern parents have been unwilling to let kids walk to school for fear of traffic, crime or simple bullying, but with organized adult supervision, those concerns have diminished. Schools and busing companies are finding other ways to save. In rural areas where busing is a must, some schools have even chosen four-day school weeks. Busing companies instruct drivers to eliminate extra stops from routes and to turn off the engine while idling. They are also using computer software to determine the most fuel-efficient routes, which aren’t always the shortest ones. There could be downsides, however, to the busing cutbacks. If every formerly bused student begins walking to school, it’s an environmental win—but if too many of their parents decide to drive then instead, the overall carbon footprint can grow. Replacing buses with many more parent-driven cars can also increase safety risks: A 2002 report concluded students are 13 times safer on a school bus than in a passenger car, since buses have fewer accidents and withstand them better due to their size. And some students complain about the long morning hikes, particularly when the route contains a really big hill.   37. The “walking school bus” _____. A aims to keep children fit B does not consume fuel C seldom causes traffic jams D is popular with school kids   38. In America the responsibility for busing kids to school lies with ____. A school districts B individual schools C teacher D parents   39. As regards walking to school, modern parents seem much concerned with the _____. A time spent on the way B changes in the route C safety of their children D kid’s physical strength   40. To save money, some schools choose to _____. A shorten the school week B take the shortest routes C give drives better training D use fuel efficient buses   41. Busing cutbacks may eventually lead to _____. A fiercer competition among bus companies B more students taking public transportation C a decrease in the safety of school buses D an increase in carbon dioxide emissions  
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