1、湖北省考博英语-试卷 3 及答案解析(总分:96.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、Reading Comprehensio(总题数:5,分数:40.00)The National Trust in Britain plays an increasingly important part in the preservation for public enjoyment of the best that is left unspoiled of the British countryside. Although the Trust has received practical and moral
2、support from the Government, it is not a rich Government department. It is a voluntary association of people who care for the unspoiled countryside and historic buildings of Britain. It is a charity which depends for its existence on voluntary support from members of the public. Its primary duty is
3、to protect places of great natural beauty and places of historical interest. The attention of the public was first drawn to the dangers threatening the great old houses and castles of Britain by the death of Lord Lothian, who left his great seventeenth-century house to the Trust together with the 45
4、00-acre park and estate surrounding it. This gift attracted wide publicity and started the Trusts “Country House Scheme“. Under this scheme, with the help of the Government and the general public, the Trust has been able to save and make accessible to the public about one hundred and fifty of these
5、old houses. Last year about one and three quarters of a million people paid to visit these historic houses, usually at a very small charge. In addition to country houses and open spaces the Trust now owns some examples of ancient wind and water mills, nature reserves, five hundred and forty farms an
6、d nearly two thousand five hundred cottages or small village houses, as well as some complete villages. In these villages no one is allowed to build, develop or disturb the old village environment in any way and all the houses are maintained in their original sixteenth-century style. Over four hundr
7、ed thousand acres of coastline, woodland, and hill country are protected by the Trust and no development or disturbances of any kind are permitted. The public has free access to these areas and is only asked to respect the peace, beauty and wildlife. So it is that over the past eighty years the Trus
8、t has become a big and important organization and an essential and respected part of national life, preserving all that is of great natural beauty and of historical significance not only for future generations of Britons but also for the millions of tourists who each year invade Britain in search of
9、 a great historic and cultural heritage.(分数:8.00)(1).The National Trust is dedicated to_.(分数:2.00)A.preserving the best public enjoymentB.providing the public with free access to historic buildingsC.offering better services to visitors home and abroadD.protecting the unspoiled countryside and histor
10、ic buildings(2).We can infer from paragraph 2 that Lord Lothion_.(分数:2.00)A.donated all his money to the TrustB.started the Country House SchemeC.saved many old country houses in BritainD.was influential in his time(3).All the following can be inferred from the passage except_.(分数:2.00)A.the Trust i
11、s more interested in protecting the 16 century housesB.many people came to visit the historic houses saved by the TrustC.visitors can get free access to some places owned by the TrustD.the Trust has a history which is longer than 80 years.(4).The word “invade“ in paragraph 4 is closest in meaning to
12、_.(分数:2.00)A.come in without permissionB.enter with invitationC.visit in large numberD.appear all of a suddenSo what are books good for? My best answer is that books produce knowledge by encasing it. Books take ideas and set them down, transforming them through the limitations of space into thinking
13、 usable by others. In 1959, C. P. Snow threw down the challenge of “two cultures“ , the scientific and the humanistic, pursuing their separate, unconnected lives within developed societies. In the new-media ecology of the 21st century, we may not have closed that gap, but the two cultures of the con
14、temporary world are the culture of data and the culture of narrative. Narrative is rarely collective. It isnt infinitely expandable. Narrative has a shape and a temporality, and it ends, just as our lives do. Books tell stories. Scholarly books tell scholarly stories. Storytelling is central to the
15、work of the narrative-driven disciplinesthe humanities and the nonquantitative social sciencesand it is central to the communicative pleasures of reading. Even argument is a form of narrative. Different kinds of books are, of course, good for different things. Some should be created only for downloa
16、d and occasional access, as in the case of most reference projects, which these days are born digital or at least given dual passports. But scholarly writing requires narrative fortitude, on the part of writer and reader. There is nothing wiki about the last set of Cambridge University Press monogra
17、phs(专著)I purchased, and in each I encounter an individual speaking subject. Each single-author book is immensely particular, a story told as only one storyteller could recount it. Scholarship is a collagist(拼贴画家), building the next road map of what we know book by book. Stories end, and that, I thin
18、k, is a very good thing. A single authorial voice is a kind of performance, with an audience of one at a time, and no performance should outstay its welcome. Because a book must end, it must have a shape, the arc of thought that demonstrates not only the writers command of her or his subject but als
19、o that writers respect for the reader. A book is its own set of bookends. Even if a book is published in digital form, freed from its materiality, that shaping case of the codex(古书的抄本)is the ghost in the knowledge-machine. We are the case for books. Our bodies hold the capacity to generate thousands
20、 of ideas, perhaps even a couple of full-length monographs, and maybe a trade book or two. If we can get them right, books are luminous versions of our ideas, bound by narrative structure so that others can encounter those better, smarter versions of us on the page or screen. Books make the case for
21、 us, for the identity of the individual as an embodiment of thinking in the world. The heart of what even scholars do is the endless task of making that world visible again and again by telling stories, complicated and subtle stories that reshape us daily so that new forms of knowledge can shine out
22、.(分数:8.00)(1).Storytelling can be regarded as the essence of all the following EXCEPT_.(分数:2.00)A.the humanitiesB.the reference booksC.the social sciencesD.the pleasures of read(2).What does the phrase “nothing wiki about“(Para. 2)mean according to the passage?(分数:2.00)A.Nothing casual about.B.Nothi
23、ng stimulating about.C.Nothing referential about.D.Nothing controversial about.(3).Why is each single-author book immensely particular according to the passage?(分数:2.00)A.Because it enriches and restructures our knowledge in its own way.B.Because it puts together the particular stories we need.C.Bec
24、ause it tells single-handedly how we should perform.D.Because it helps to make the map for our travel in particular places.(4).We may think highly of a writer if his or her work helps_.(分数:2.00)A.to haunt us like a ghost in the knowledge-machineB.to publish books in a narrative structureC.to review
25、a book on the page or screenD.to illuminate us in a new form of knowledgeThis month is expected to see that seminal(有创意的)moment when digital cinema will outstrip the 35mm technology that has been the dominant projection format in movie theatres for over 120 years. In 2009, digital accounted for only
26、 15% of global screens. But the movie Avatar changed all that. 3D movies required digital, and Avatars phenomenal success with 3D pushed cinemas to adopt digital screens. IMS Screen Digest Cinema Intelligence Service estimates that by the end of 2012, digital will account for 63% of screens, and by
27、2015, 83% . A majority of those screens will be based on Texas Instruments digital light processing(DLP)technology, a technology that uses millions of tiny mirrors on a tiny chip, each of them capable of moving thousands of times per second to create a digital image. That same technology today is al
28、so beginning to be used in cellphones and digital cameras to project images in those devices onto ordinary surfaces. That will be a bigger opportunity, says Kent Novak, Texas Instruments senior VP for DLP products, who was in Bangalore recently. Cinemas are moving rapidly to digital screens. Why? Th
29、e first digital movie was premiered(首演)in 1999. Initially it was thought moving to digital would givebetter picture quality and cost savings, but it took many years for a few systems to get deployed. And then Avatar happened. That was really the tipping point. In 2008, 153D movies were released; in
30、2009, it was close to 50. Theatres were able to get more people and get a higher price for the ticket, so it became a significant revenue generator. We have seen more conversion of film to digital in the last two years than in the previous ten. You are now bringing the technology to smaller devices.
31、 We are moving to put these chips into cellphones, digital still cameras, camcorders, laptop accessories, tablets, docking stations, media players. Weve been hearing of pico(handheld)projectors for some time now. But we dont really see products in the market. The technology has only recently reached
32、 a tipping point in terms of lighting efficiency and total brightness. Three years ago, 1 watt of power could get the brightness measurement of about 5 lumens. Today that 1 watt can give 20 lumens(making the projected image brighter). We designed the chip to be more efficient. Also, the industry dri
33、ver for efficiency is LED. The amount of investment going into LED is enormous. As technology has improved, volumes have gone up, and cost has come down. Micromax and Spice in India have put projection even in some of their feature phones; Samsung has put projection on some of their phones. Nikon ha
34、s DLP embedded in some of their digital still cameras; Sony has them in camcorders. What are the use cases that you see? You can use your phone to show video clips, pictures, power point presentations, and make it a shared experience. India has been more progressive in adopting the technology becaus
35、e feature phones are a phone during the day and become the primary entertainment source in the evenings. India also has mobile TV phones with pre-loaded Bollywood movies that can be projected out of the phone.(分数:8.00)(1).The word “outstrip“ in the first paragraph most possibly mean “_“.(分数:2.00)A.t
36、ake offB.outliveC.surroundD.surpass(2).What makes the digital screens possible, according to the passage?(分数:2.00)A.Digital light processing technologyB.Use of millions of tiny mirrors on the chip.C.The chip capable of moving thousands of times per second.D.The American movie entitled Avatar made in
37、 Hollywood.(3).The author mentions Micromax, Spice, Samsung, Nikon and Sony to prove that_.(分数:2.00)A.DLP technology has made a rapid progress in increasing brightness of imagesB.LED is getting more efficient and more widely used in electronic devicesC.these companies are making more and more profit
38、s by adopting LEDD.these companies are taking different attitudes towards LED applications(4).By “make it a shared experience“ in the last paragraph the author means that_.(分数:2.00)A.feature phones are enriching peoples interactions in their lifeB.a cellphone user can share his phone with other peop
39、le aroundC.India has been more progressive in adoption of DLP technologyD.Spice company can preload movies into the phoneBored of using a mouse? Soon youll be able to change stuff on your computer screenand then move it directly onto your smart phone or tablet(平板电脑)with nothing more than a glance. A
40、 system called Eye Drop uses a head-mounted eye tracker that simultaneously records your field of view so it knows where you are looking on the screen. Gazing at an objecta photo, sayand then pressing a key, selects that object. It can then be moved from the screen to a tablet or smart phone just by
41、 glancing at the second device, as long as the two are connected wirelessly. “ The beauty of using gaze to support this is that our eyes naturally focus on content that we want to acquire,“ says Jayson Turner, who developed the system with colleagues at Lancaster University, UK. Turner believes Eye
42、Drop would be useful to transfer an interactive map or contact information from a public display to your smart phone or for sharing photos. A button needs to be used to select the object you are looking at otherwise you end up with the “Midas touch“(点石成金)effect, whereby everything you look at gets s
43、elected by your gaze, says Turner. “Imagine if your mouse clicked on everything it pointed at,“ he says. Christian Holz, a researcher in human-computer interaction at Yahoo Labs in Sunnyvale, California, says the system is a nice take on getting round this fundamental problem of using gaze-tracking
44、to interact. “Eye Drop solves this in a slick(灵巧的)way by combining it with input on the touch devices we carry with us most of the time anyway and using touch input as a clutching mechanism,“ he says. “This now allows users to seamlessly(无缝地)interact across devices far and close in a very natural ma
45、nner. “ While current eye-trackers are rather bulky, mainstream consumer devices are not too far away. Swedish firm Tobii is developing gaze-tracking technology that can be installed in laptops and tablets and is expected to be available to buy next year. And the Google Glass headset is expected to
46、include eye-tracking in the future. Turner says he has also looked at how content can be cut and pasted or drag-and-dropped using a mix of gaze and taps on a touch screen. The system was presented at the Conference on Mobile and Ubiquitous Multimedia in Sweden, last week.(分数:8.00)(1).The eye-tracker
47、 technology enables us to_.(分数:2.00)A.change our computer screenB.focus on anything that interests usC.get a smart phone connected wirelesslyD.move an object from screen with a glance(2).Why is a button needed?(分数:2.00)A.To minimize the cost of Eye Drop.B.To choose as many objects as possible.C.To m
48、ake Eye Drop different from others.D.To select what we want.(3).Which of the following statement is true of eye-trackers for consumer devices?(分数:2.00)A.They are costly.B.They are available.C.They are installed in Google Glass headset.D.They are expected to come out soon.(4).What is Turner likely to
49、 study next?(分数:2.00)A.How to drag and drop with gaze and taps.B.How to present the system in public.C.How to get touch screen involved.D.How to cut and paste content from a public display.The University in Transformation, edited by Australian futurists Sohail Inayatullah and Jennifer Gidley, presents some 20 highly varied outlooks on tomorrows universities by writers representing both Western and non-Western perspectives. Their essays raise a broad range of issues, questioning nearly every key assumption we have about higher e