1、1990年1月大学英语六级(CET-6)真题试卷 Part I Listening Comprehension (20 minutes) Section A 1. A) Read four chapters. B) Write an article. C) Speak before the class. D) Preview two chapters.(B) 2. A) The woman is being interviewed by a reporter. B) The woman is asking for a promotion. C) The woman is ap
2、plying for a job. D) The woman is being given an examination.(C) 3. A) His car was hit by another car. B) He was hurt while playing volleyball. C) He fell down the stairs. D) While crossing the street, he was hit by a car.(A) 4. A) Took a photo of him. B) Bought him a picture. C) Held a birt
3、hday party. D) Bought him a frame for his picture.(A) 5. A) No medicine could solve the woman’s problem. B) The woman should eat less to lose some weight. C) Nothing could help the woman if she ate too little. D) The woman should choose the right foods.(D) 6. A) He meant she should make a phon
4、e call if anything went wrong. B) He meant for her just to wait till help came. C) He was afraid something would go wrong with her car. D) He promised to give her himself.(A) 7. A) No, he missed it. B) No, he didn’t. C) Yes, he did. D) Yes, he probably did.(B) 8. A) He has edited three books
5、 B) He has bought the wrong book. C) He has lost half of his money. D) He has found the book that will be used.(B) 9. A) At 7:30 B) At 8:30 C) At 9:00 D) At 9:30(D) 10. A) Six. B) Seven. C) Eight. D) Nine.(C) Section B Passage One Questions 11 to 13 are based on the passage you have j
6、ust heard. 11. A) They often take place in her major industries. B) British trade unions are more powerful. C) There are more trade union members in Britain. D) Britain loses more working days through strikes every year.(A) 12. A) Such strikes are against the British law. B) Such strikes are u
7、npredictable. C) Such strikes involve workers from different trades. D) Such strikes occur frequently these days.(B) 13. A) Trade unions in Britain are becoming more popular. B) Most strikes in Britain are against the British law. C) Unofficial strikes in Britain are easier to deal with now. D
8、) Employer-worker relations in Britain have become tenser.(D) Passage Two Questions 14 to 16 are based on the passage you have just heard. 14. A) The victory over one’s fellow runners. B) The victory over former winners. C) The victory of will-power over fatigue. D) The victory of one’s physic
9、al strength.(C) 15. A) The runner who runs to keep fit. B) The runner who breaks the record. C) The runner who does not break the rules. D) The runner who covers the whole distance.(D) 16. A) He won the first prize. B) He fell behind the other runners. C) He died because of fatigue. D) He ga
10、ve up because he was tired.(B) Passage Three Questions 17 to 20 are based on the passage you have just heard. 17. A) 17,000. B) 1,700. C) 24. D) 9,000.(C) 18. A) It’s located in a college town. B) It’s composed of a group of old buildings. C) Its classrooms are beautifully designed. D) Its
11、 library is often crowed with students.(B) 19. A) Teachers are well paid at Deep Springs. B) Students are mainly from New York State. C) The length of schooling is two years. D) Teachers needn’t pay for their rent and meals.(D) 20. A) Take a walk in the desert. B) Go to a cinema. C) Watch TV
12、programmes. D) Attend a party.(A) Part II Reading Comprehension (35 minutes) Questions 21 to 24 are based on the following passage. Automation refers to the introduction of electronic control and automatic operation of productive machinery. It reduces the human factors, mental and physical, in p
13、roduction, and is designed to make possible the manufacture of more goods with fewer workers. The development of automation in American industry has been called the “Second Industrial Revolution”. Labour’s concern over automation arises from uncertainty about the effects on employment, and fears of
14、 major changes in jobs. In the main, labour has taken the view that resistance to technical change is unfruitful. Eventually, the result of automation may well be an increase in employment, since it is expected that vast industries will grow up around manufacturing, maintaining, and repairing automa
15、tion equipment. The interest of labour lies in bringing about the transition with a minimum of inconvenience and distress to the workers involved. Also, union spokesmen emphasize that the benefit of the increased production and lower costs made possible by automation should be shared by workers in t
16、he form of higher wages, more leisure, and improved living standards. To protect the interests of their members in the era of automation, unions have adopted a number of new policies. One of these is the promotion of supplementary unemployment benefit plans. It is emphasized that since the employer
17、 involved in such a plan has a direct financial interest in preventing unemployment, he will have a strong drive for planning new installations so as to cause the least possible problems in jobs and job assignment. Some unions are working for dismissal pay agreements, requiring that permanently dism
18、issed workers be paid a sum of money based on length of service. Another approach is the idea of the “improvement factor”, which calls for wage increases based on increases in productivity. It is possible, however, that labour will rely mainly on reduction in working time. 21. Though labour worries
19、 about the effect of automation, it does not doubt that ________. A) automation will eventually prevent unemployment B) automation will help workers acquire new skills C) automation will eventually benefit the workers no less that the employers D) automation is a trend which cannot be stopped(D)
20、 22. The idea of the “improvement factor” (Line 6, Para. 3) probably implies that ________. A) wages should be paid on the basis of length of service B) the benefit of increased production and lower costs should be shared by workers C) supplementary unemployment benefit plans should be promoted
21、 D) the transition to automation should be brought about with the minimum of inconvenience and distress to workers(B) 23. In order to get the full benefits of automation, labour will depend mostly on ________. A) additional payment to the permanently dismissed workers B) the increase of wages in
22、proportion to the increase in productivity C) shorter working hours and more leisure time D) a strong drive for planning new installations(C) 24. Which of the following can best sum up the passage? A) Advantages and disadvantages of automation. B) Labour and the effects of automation. C) Unemp
23、loyment benefit plans and automation. D) Social benefits of automation.(B) Questions 25 to 30 are based on the following passage. The case for college has been accepted without question for more than a generation. All high school graduates ought to go, says conventional wisdom and statistical evi
24、dence, because college will help them earn more money, become “better” people, and learn to be more responsible citizens than those who don’t go. But college has never been able to work its magic for everyone. And now that close to half our high school graduates are attending, those who don’t fit t
25、he pattern are becoming more numerous, and more obvious. College graduates are selling shoes and driving taxis; college students interfere with each other’s experiments and write false letters of recommendation in the intense competition for admission to graduate school. Others find no stimulation i
26、n their studies, and drop out-often encouraged by college administrators. Some observers say the fault! Is with the young people themselves-they are spoiled and they are expecting too much. But that’s a condemnation of the students as a whole, and doesn’t explain all campus unhappiness. Others blam
27、e the state of the world, and they are partly right. We’ve been told that young people have to go to college because our economy can’t absorb an army of untrained eighteen-year-olds. But disappointed graduates are learning that it can no longer absorb an army of trained twenty-two-year-olds, either.
28、 Some adventuresome educators and campus watchers have openly begun to suggest that college may not be the best, the proper, the only place for every young person after the completion of high school. We may have been looking at all those surveys and statistics upside down, it seems, and through the
29、 rosy glow of our own remembered college experiences. Perhaps college doesn’t make people intelligent, ambitious, happy, liberal, quick-learning people are merely the ones who have been attracted to college in the first place. And perhaps all those successful college graduates would have been succes
30、sful whether they had gone to college or not. This is heresy (异端邪说) to those of us who have been brought up to believe that if a little schooling is good, more has to be much better. But contrary evidence is beginning to mount up. 25. According to the passage, the author believes that ________. A)
31、 people used to question the value of college education B) people used to have full confidence in higher education C) all high school graduates went to college D) very few high school graduates chose to go to college(B) 26. In the 2nd paragraph, “those who don’t fit the pattern” refers to ______
32、 A) high school graduates who aren’t suitable for college education B) college graduates who are selling shoes and driving taxis C) college students who aren’t any better for their higher education D) high school graduates who failed to be admitted to college(C) 27. The drop-out rate of coll
33、ege students seems to go up because ________. A) young people are disappointed with the conventional way of teaching at college B) many young people are required to join the army C) young people have little motivation in pursuing a higher education D) young people don’t like the intense competit
34、ion for admission to graduate school(C) 28. According to the passage the problems of college education partly arise from the fact that ________. A) society cannot provide enough jobs for properly trained college graduates B) high school graduates do not fit the pattern of college education C) to
35、o many students have to earn their own living D) college administrators encourage students to drop out(A) 29. In this passage the author argues that ________. A) more and more evidence shows college education may not be the best thing for high school graduates B) college education is not enough
36、if one wants to be successful C) college education benefits only the intelligent, ambitious, and quick-learning people D) intelligent people may learn quicker if they don’t go to college(A) 30. The “surveys and statistics” mentioned in the last paragraph might have shown that ________. A) colleg
37、e-educated people are more successful than non-college-educated people B) college education was not the first choice of intelligent people C) the less schooling a person has the better it is for him D) most people have sweet memories of college life(A) Questions 31 to 35 are based on the followi
38、ng passage. Ours has become a society of employees. A hundred years or so ago only one out of every five Americans at work was employed, i.e., worked for somebody else. Today only one out of five is not employed but working for himself. And when fifty years ago “being employed” meant working as a f
39、actory labourer or as a farmhand, the employee of today is increasingly a middle-class person with a substantial formal education, holding a professional or management job requiring intellectual and technical skills. Indeed, two things have characterized American society during these fifty years: mi
40、ddle-class and upper-class employees have been the fastest-growing groups in our working population-growing so fast that the industrial worker, that oldest child of the Industrial Revolution, has been losing in numerical importance despite the expansion of industrial production. Yet you will find l
41、ittle if anything written on what it is to be an employee. You can find a great deal of very dubious advice on how to get a job or how to get a promotion. You can also find a good deal of work in a chosen field, whether it be the mechanist’s trade or bookkeeping (簿记). Every one of these trades requi
42、res different skills, sets different standards, and requires a different preparation. Yet they all have employeeship in common. And increasingly, especially in the large business or in government, employeeship is more important to success than the special professional knowledge or skill. Certainly m
43、ore people fail because they do not know the requirements of being an employee than because they do not adequately possess the skills of their trade; the higher you climb the ladder, the more you get into administrative or executive work, the greater the emphasis on ability to work within the organi
44、zation rather than on technical abilities or professional knowledge. 31. It is implied that fifty years ago ________. A) eighty per cent of American working people were employed in factories B) twenty per cent of American intellectuals were employees C) the percentage of intellectuals in the tot
45、al work force was almost the same as that of industrial workers D) the percentage of intellectuals working as employees was not so large as that of industrial workers(D) 32. According to the passage, with the development of modern industry, ________. A) factory labourers will overtake intellectua
46、l employees in number B) there are as many middle-class employees as factory labourers C) employers have attached great importance to factory labourers D) the proportion of factory labourers in the total employee population has decreased(D) 33. The word “dubious” (L. 2, Para. 2) most probably me
47、ans ________. A) valuable B) useful C) doubtful D) helpful(C) 34. According to the writer, professional knowledge or skill is ________. A) less importance than awareness of being a good employee B) as important as the ability to deal with public relations C) more important than employer-empl
48、oyee relations D) more important as the ability to co-operate with others in the organization(A) 35. From the passage it can be seen that employeeship helps one ________. A) to be more successful in his career B) to be more specialized in his field C) to solve technical problems D) to develop
49、his professional skill(A) Questions 36 to 40 are based on the following passage. We all know that the normal human daily cycle of activity is of some 7-8 hours’ sleep alternation with some 16-17 hours’ wakefulness and that, broadly speaking, the sleep normally coincides with the hours of darkness.
50、 Our present concern is with how easily and to what extent this cycle can be modified. The question is no mere academic one. The ease, for example, with which people can change from working in the day to working at night is a question of growing importance in industry where automation calls for rou
©2010-2025 宁波自信网络信息技术有限公司 版权所有
客服电话:4009-655-100 投诉/维权电话:18658249818