1、2023年广东学位英语统考试题Part I Dialogue Completion (15 points)Directions: There are 15 short incomplete dialogues in this part, each followed by 4 choices marked A, B. C and D. Choose the best one to complete the dialogue and mark your answer on the ANSWER SHEET with a single line through the center.1. Clerk
2、: Please fill out the form.Guest: All right._ , please?Clerk: Its August, the thirteenth.A. What day is it today B. Whats the numberC. Whats the date today D. Whats the time now2. Speaker A: Can you tell me the way to the library?Speaker B: Sure. Turn left at the next crossing.Speaker A: Is it on Ki
3、ng Street?Speaker B:_.A. Thats alright B. Yes. You cant miss itC. Its obvious D. OK. Just do it3. Patient: Could you arrange for me to see Doctor Smith tomorrow morning?Nurse:_ . He wont be free until 12:00.A. You can call later B. Youre unlucky C. I cant do that D. Im afraid not4. Lisa: You look gr
4、eat. Any good news?Alex: I just came back from my vacation.Lisa: Wow, _! Maybe I should take a vacation, too.A. I didnt see it B. good for youC. I didnt find it D. hard to believe5.Waiter: Hello, sir. _?Customer: Could you give us a second, please?Waiter: Sure.A. Are you ready to order B. How can I
5、help youC. Ready to take my order D. Can I do you a favor6. Heather: Look, Ive got a problem here. Will you help me?Rebecca:_ , but Ill try.A. No, I wont B. Im really willing toC. Yes, Im glad D. Im not sure if I can7. Conductor:Good morning,_ , please?Passenger: Here you are. A. can I have your tic
6、ket B. anything to declareC. can I help you D. anything special8. Waitress: Yes, sir, anything the matter?Customer:_ , but this soup is too salty.Waitress: Im very sorry, sir. Ill change it for you.A. I cant stand it B. Sorry to do itC. I hate to complain D. Sorry to bother you9. Student: Professor
7、Lance, your lecture on cloning is very interesting!Professor: _. Are you a student of biology?Student: No. I major in chemistry.A. I think so B. Im glad to hear thatC. It must be D. Its not so interesting10. Clerk: Central Ballet._?Customer: Yes, whats on tonight?Clerk: Sleeping Beauty.A. May I help
8、 you B. What do you wantC. Can you speak out D. Whats the matter11. Mary: Im sorry, but I cant seem to find that tape you lent me. I must have lost it.Susan: Oh no!_!Mary: But dont worry. Ill buy you a new one.A. Dont do that B. What a shameC. Dont say that D. How pity it is12. Richard: _. My name i
9、s Richard Stewart. May I take a picture of you?Mrs. Vann: By all means. Im Mrs. Vann. Glad to meet you.A. Im sorry B. Excuse meC. Pardon me D. Attention, please13. Susan: Lets; go to the restaurant and have dinner right now!Marilyn: OK. Lets get in.Susan: Thanks._.A. After you B. You go first C. Ill
10、 follow you D. Have fun14. Alexandra: Excuse me, officer. Can you tell me how to get to Linden Street?Policeman: Sure. You should take No. l Train to Van Cortland Park.Alexandra: Thank you.Policeman: Anytime._.A. Congratulations B. Pleasant journeyC. God bless you D. Good luck15. Richard: Oh, Ive go
11、t to go._.Robbie: It was a pleasure meeting you, too. Bye-bye.A. It was nice of you to meet me B. It was nice to have met you C. It was nice meeting you here D. It was nice for you to meet mePart II Reading Comprehension (40 points)Directions: There are 4 passages in this part. Each of the passages
12、is followed by 5 questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are 4 choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the best one and mark your answer on the ANSWER SHEET with a single line through the center.Passage OneIn your car you may have a cell phone, a telephone also known as a mobile phon
13、e that you can carry around and use anywhere. On your way, you may feel coordinated and enjoy your hands-free phone talking while driving. But recent studies suggest that it isnt the dialing or the arm waving that makes driving while talking on a cell phone dangerous. It is the yakking itself - or m
14、ore precisely, the continuous conversation with someone who isnt present - that makes. David Strayer, a Utah psychologist, says “Your driving performance while talking on a cell phone is weakened at levels comparable to, or worse than, driving with a blood alcohol level of 0.08,” which is the legal
15、limit in most states of America.Using a driving-training simulator, Strayer and his colleagues compared the attention levels and response time of 110 drivers in various situations. In dense traffic, cell phone users were about 20 percent slower to respond to sudden hazards than other drivers, and th
16、ey were about twice as likely to drive into the back of a braking car in front of them. Cell phone drivers are obtaining less than 50 percent of the visual information that non-cell drivers are getting, says Strayer. Looking and seeing are not one and the same. By contrast, the researchers found tha
17、t listening to the radio or conversing with passengers is not as hazardous. When a dangerous situation arises, the driver and passengers put their conversation on pause, Strayer says.Whether talking with a passenger or someone on a cell phone, however, people are less able to recall the details of a
18、 conversation carried on while driving. So it might not be good for your economic health to discuss investment strategies with your agent while either of you is driving. Strayer adds lastly.16. According to the recent studies, which of the following makes driving dangerous?A. A cell phone dialing by
19、 the driver.B. The drivers endless arm waving.C. The drivers continuous cell phone talking.D. The absence of another phone speaker.17. Which of the following does Strayer want to stress most?A. The driving performance may be weakened by a cell phone talking.B. The driving performance may be affected
20、 by a high blood alcohol level.C. Drivers are not to drive over the cell phone or after drinking.D. A cell phone talking is no less hazardous than alcohol in driving.18. The experiment shows all the following EXCEPT that_.A. the cell phone drivers get less than half of the visual informationB. the c
21、ell phone drivers are twice as likely to hit the front carsC. the cell phone drivers response to sudden dangers is slowerD. the 110 drivers were reluctant to take part in the experiments 19. Strayer discourages drivers from talking, about business on cell phones while driving because_.A. they tend t
22、o forget the details of a conversation B. both the driver and his agent happen to be drivingC. it might not be good for the drivers memoryD. the other passengers would overhear the conversation20. It can be inferred that the authors attitude toward cell phone yakking is_.A. approving B. disapproving
23、 C. encouraging D. indifferentPassage TwoIts no great surprise that Bill Gates has decided to walk away from his day-to-day involvement with Microsoft, and use his full attention to oversee how the Bill Gates Foundation spends its $ 16 billion on philanthropy, or charity. But Gates is not the first
24、one to follow the path. Ever since the industrial revolution, wealthy self-made businessmen and businesswomen have felt a calling to create a legacy that goes beyond a profit and loss sheet. The saying He who dies rich, dies disgraced runs deeply through the business community.But out of all the gre
25、at philanthropists, Mr. Gates career path appears to be closest to the oil millionaire John Rockefeller. Both were self-made men and both became the richest men on the planet. Rockefeller was in his late fifties when he turned his attention full time to philanthropy- creating vast charitable foundat
26、ions to promote health and education. Now Gates says he will do the same in his early fifties. With great wealth comes great responsibility, he adds.Like Gates, many philanthropists do not want to pass on too much wealth to their children. They want them to be comfortable, with a nice house and some
27、 money in trust for their grandchildren. But they dont want to leave them millions and millions because they know how important it is for them to make their own way. In Britain, for instance, the newspaper rich lists are increasingly dominated by self-made millionaires, rather than inherited wealth.
28、 New money is less likely to be tied up in assets, making it ripe for philanthropy The appearance of the welfare state also had a great impact on attitudes to philanthropy. The state was saying it would take over much of the role of what was once regarded as the responsibility of private philanthrop
29、ists.21. Bill Gates has done all the following EXCEPT_.A. abandoning his career with Microsofts daily businessB. devoting the rest of his life to philanthropic causesC. leaving his children enough money for a comfortable lifeD. defying John Rockefeller in creating charitable foundations22. The sayin
30、g He who dies rich, dies disgraced properly means that_.A. the wealthy people should give away their fortunes after deathB. the wealthy people should feel ashamed for-their assetsC. the wealthy people should abandon their careers for charitiesD. it is shameful for the wealthy people to keep their we
31、alth till death23. Gates and Rockefeller are similar in that_.A. both of them inherited their wealthB. their career paths are exactly the sameC. both decided to devote to charity in their fiftiesD. both made their fortunes in the same way24. Many wealthy people dont want to leave too much behind mai
32、nly because_.A. it is not easy for them to make their fortunesB. they want their children to make their own wayC. they just wish their children to have a comfortable lifeD. they hope to gain reputation by donating their wealth25. The chief reason why philanthropy has come into a good stage is that_.
33、A. the new money is less likely to be regarded as ones private wealthB. Gates will devote his full attention to philanthropyC. the welfare state would take over all the charity responsibilitiesD. many new millionaires are self-made rather than inheritedPassage Three In 1991, when announced to be HIV
34、 positive, Magic Johnson became the face of a disease that the public still had a lot to learn about. The basketball star established the Magic Johnson Foundation that year and took a leading role on the public relations and fund-raising fronts in the fight against HIV and AIDS. Fifteen years later,
35、 there is still more work to do.“A lot of times, what happens is that the posters not enough,”Johnson says, motioning to his likeness on the blackboard behind him. “So I have to get out and tell them myself, like Im doing here today.” Johnson is now talking to an assembly at Boys and Girls High Scho
36、ol in his neighborhood of Brooklyn, N.Y. The crowd is a few hundred students in a mostly black, working-class neighborhood. Thus event is the fourth of a 10-city speaking tour that is organized for minority communities.According to drug maker Abbot, half of the more than I million Americans living w
37、ith HIV are black. African-American men are being diagnosed with the disease at a rate 10 times as high as that of white men. For women, the situation is even worse. The rate of diagnosis for African-American women is 23 times as high as that for their white counterparts.“Right now, we dont have a s
38、olution on how to combat it, so were trying to do some different things than what has happened before,” Johnson says.Getting the word out is what draws Johnson to black neighborhood high schools such as this one, and the message he brings with him is a practical one. “The safest sex is no sex,” he s
39、ays. “But, in reality, we know only a certain number of people are going to hear that. Then I hit them with Hey, if youre going to do it, youve got to protect yourself and your partner.”Hopefully, by talking realistically instead of avoiding the issues, Johnson can help make the next generation of A
40、frican-Americans less likely to have HIV and AIDS. “just try to be real with them,” he says. “They appreciate that.”26. The phrase “disease that the public still had a lot to learn about here means a disease that_. A. was already well-known thenB. was too complicated for peopleC. was still too new t
41、o be understoodD. killed too many victims then27. According to the passage, the group with the Highest ASS rate is_.A. the white Americans B.African-American menC. the American women D. the black American women28.The speaker is named Magic Johnson because_.A. he was once a famous basketball coachB.
42、he was a happy survivor of the unhappy diseaseC. he was given chance to talk of his own experienceD. he was a very practical and realistic person in life29. The word combat (Paragraph 4) is closest in meaning to_.A. comeback B. combineC. fight againstD. avoid30. What is the purpose of Johnsons speec
43、h tour?A. To take himself as an example in fighting the disease.B. To raise the awareness of young Americans against the disease.C. To provide a better cure for the black American HIV sufferers. D. To try some new medical solutions on the HIV and AIDS sufferers.Passage FourOnce upon a time all you n
44、eeded for a camping trip was a sleeping bag, a compass and some common sense. Now, according to my local sporting goods retailer, a lot more should be added. However, outdoor travel has become such a trend that urban people find themselves with some upscale retailers to address their every desire.Ec
45、o and adventure are the latest fashionable words in destination travel; those n the industry know they can make serious cash off all the consumers. These are consumers who get outdoors not for natures sake, but to work out simply for a splendid cocktail party.As a result of high-end demand, the grea
46、t outdoors is becoming less affordable and accessible for ordinary people. Our national parks used to be vast acres of wilderness where people could go and enjoy nature, for free. But over the past 100-years, the government has been slowly selling or leasing off public lands-for-profit, and our curr
47、ent president is continuing the trend. Large ski resorts have swallowed up plenty of wilderness and small towns in the West by attracting more high-end businesses. Nature is now a commodity that can be repackaged and sold to the wealthy developers. As for the small amount of public land Left, well, try to remember the last time you camped at