【考研类试卷】考研英语(一)-75及答案解析.doc
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1、考研英语(一)-75 及答案解析(总分:100.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、Reading Comprehensio(总题数:0,分数:0.00)More Americans are giving up their landlines for cell phones, but new research indicates that there may be health risks associated with long term wireless use. What“s a mobile addict to do? Americans logged more than 1 trilli
2、on cell-phone minutes in the first half of 2007 alone, so it came as little surprise that this is the year cellular-phone spending is predicted to surpass that of landlines, according to Labor Department data released this week. 1 But even as more people give up their traditional home phones altoget
3、her and ever younger kids get their own cell phones, there are still questions in the scientific community about whether this new American staple is safe for heavy or long-term use. 2 Experts say the concern over cell-phone use stems from a form of radiation that“s produced when the devices communic
4、ate with their base station. Wireless phones transmit via radio frequency (RF), a low-frequency form of radiation that is also used in microwave ovens and AM/FM radios. While high-frequency radiation (the kind used in X-rays) is known to cause cancer at high doses. The risks of this milder form rema
5、in unclear. A cell phone“s main source of RF is its antenna, from which it sends a signal to the nearest base-station antenna. The further a cell phone is from the base station, the more RF it needs to establish and maintain a connection. So, the theory is that any risks posed by RF would be greater
6、 for people who live and work in areas with fewer base stations. 3 In fact, Israeli researchers reported earlier this month in the A merican Journal of Epidemiology that long-term cell-phone users living in rural areas faced a “consistently elevated risk“ of developing tumors compared with users who
7、 live in suburban or urban areas. Other research, including an ongoing multinational initiative known as INTERPHONE, has yielded mixed results so far. While a number of studies have found no correlation between cell-phone use and various types of brain tumors, most of those studies focused on people
8、 who had been using cell phones for three to five years. Long-term cell-phone use may be another story. 4 A handful of small studies have indicated that using a cell phone for an hour each day over a 10-year period can increase the risk of developing a rare brain tumor and that those tumors are more
9、 likely to be on the side of your head that you use to talk on the phone. But quantifying the health risks of cell phones is a trickier proposition than understanding how they work. The gadgets have been widely available for only about a decade; tumors can take twice as long to develop. And hands-fr
10、ee devices minimize a person“s RF exposure by enabling them to keep the phone“s antenna away from their head have only been commonplace for a few years. The data on kids who use cell phones is even scarcer because not enough time has passed to examine the effects on children who use them extensively
11、 as they grow. 5 However, many researchers believe younger cell-phone users may face a higher risk of developing tumors because their nervous systems are not fully developed and their skulls are not as thick as those of adults.(分数:20.00)_In the two decades between 1929 and 1949, sculpture in the Uni
12、ted States sustained what was probably the greatest expansion in sheer technique to occur in many centuries. There was, first of all, the incorporation of welding into sculptural practice, with the result that it was possible to form a new kind of metal object. 6 For sculptors working with metal ear
13、lier restricted to the dense solidity of the bronze cast, it was possible to add a type of work assembled from paper-thin metal sheets or sinuously curved rods. Sculpture could take the form of a linear, two-dimensional frame and still remain physically self-supporting. Along with the innovation of
14、welding came a correlative departure: freestanding sculpture that was shockingly flat. Yet another technical expansion of the options for sculpture appeared in the guise of motion. 7 The individual parts of a sculpture were no longer understood as necessarily fixed in relation to one another, but co
15、uld be made to change position within a work constructed as a moving object; motorizing the sculpture was only one of many possibilities taken up in the 1930“s. Other strategies for getting the work to move involved structuring it in such a way that external forces, like air movements or the touch o
16、f a viewer could initiate motion. 8 Movement brought with it a new attitude towards the issue of sculptural unity: a work might be made of widely diverse and even discordant elements: their formal unity would be achieved through the arc of a particular motion completing itself through time. Like the
17、 use of welding and movement, the third of these major technical expansions to develop in the 1930“s and 1940“s addressed the issues of sculptural materials and sculptural unity. 9 But its medium for doing so was the found object and item not intended for use in a piece of artwork, such as a newspap
18、er or metal pipe. To create a sculpture by assembling parts that had been fabricated originally for a quite different context did not necessarily involve a new technology. 10 But it did mean a change in sculptural practice, for it raised the possibility that making sculpture might involve more a con
19、ceptual shift than a physical transformation of the material from which it is composed.(分数:20.00)_One stereotype of wisdom is a wizened Zen-master smiling benevolently at the antics of his pupils, while referring to them as little grasshoppers or some such affectation, safe in the knowledge that one
20、 day they, too, will have been set on the path that leads to wizened masterhood. But is it true that age brings wisdom? A study two years ago in North America, by Igor Grossmann of the University of Waterloo, in Canada, suggested that it is. 11 In as much as it is possible to quantify wisdom, Dr. Gr
21、ossmann found that elderly Americans had more of it than youngsters. He has, however, now extended his investigation to Asiathe land of the wizened Zen-master-and, in particular, to Japan. There, he found, in contrast to the West, that the grasshoppers are their masters“ equals almost from the begin
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- 考研 试卷 英语 75 答案 解析 DOC
