【考研类试卷】考研英语-3及答案解析.doc
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1、考研英语-3 及答案解析(总分:100.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、BSection Use o(总题数:1,分数:10.00)BDirections:/BRead the following text. Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark A, B, C or D on ANSWER SHEET 1.Advances in computers and data networks inspire visions of a future “information economy“ in which everyone
2、 will have U(1) /U to gigabytes of all kinds of information anywhere and anytime. U(2) /U information has always been a U(3) /U difficult commodity to deal with, and, in some ways, computers and high-speed networks make the problems of buying, U(4) /U , and distributing information goods worse U(5)
3、/U better. The evolution of the Internet itself U(6) /Userious problems. U(7) /U the Internet has been privatized, several companies are U(8) /U to provide the backbones that will carry traffic U(9) /U local networks, but U(10) /U business models for interconnectionwho pays how much for each packet
4、U(11) /U , for examplehave U(12) /U to be developed. U(13) /U interconnection standards are developed that make U(14) /U cheap and easy to transmit information across independent networks, competition will U(15) /U . If technical or economic U(16) /U make interconnection difficult, U(17) /U transmit
5、ting data across multiple networks is expensive or too slow, the U(18) /U suppliers can offer a significant performance U(19) /U ; they may be able to use this edge to drive out competitors and U(20) /U the market.(分数:10.00)A.admissionB.accessC.rightD.commandA.BecauseB.ThoughC.ButD.IfA.distinctlyB.n
6、otoriouslyC.well-knownD.especiallyA.manufacturingB.sellingC.allottingD.purchasingA.more thanB.less thanC.thanD.rather thanA.posesB.producesC.makesD.bringsA.Provided thatB.In thatC.Now thatD.Given thatA.competingB.strugglingC.fightingD.contendingA.throughB.inC.onD.betweenA.imaginableB.credibleC.worka
7、bleD.tangibleA.transmittedB.transferredC.transformedD.transportedA.butB.yetC.stillD.thenA.IfB.BecauseC.ThoughD.ForA.thatB.whatC.itD.whichA.prosperB.improveC.promoteD.flourishA.elementsB.factorsC.ingredientsD.componentsA.so thatB.for thatC.in thatD.except thatA.biggestB.vastestC.largestD.greatestA.be
8、nefitB.drawbackC.profitD.advantageA.predominateB.takeC.enlargeD.monopolize二、BSection Readi(总题数:4,分数:40.00)BPart A/BBDirections:/BRead the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1. BText 1/BFor years Internet merchants ha
9、ve poured millions of dollars into new technologies to make their sites easier to use. So why arent online customers happier?Customer satisfaction levels have remained almost fiat through the last several years. The problem, according to Larry Freed, chief executive of a consulting and research firm
10、 called ForeSee Results, is not so much that consumers have ignored the many improvements made in recent years. Rather, be said, they still expect more from Internet shopping than it has delivered.“If we walk into a local store, we dont expect that experience to be better than it was a couple years
11、ago,“ Mr. Freed said. “But we expect sites to be better. The bar goes up every year.“ In ForeSees latest survey, released last month, just five e-commerce sites registered scores higher than 80 out of 100, and no site scored higher than 85. It was much the same story a year ago, when just five score
12、d higher than 80, with no site surpassing 85. “Scores have inched up over time for the best e-commerce companies, but the overall numbers havent moved drastically,“ Mr. Freed said. “At the same time though, if you dont do anything you see your scores drop steadily.“That dynamic has been a challenge
13、for online merchants and investors, who a decade ago envisioned. Internet stores as relatively inexpensive (and therefore extremely profitable) operations. Now some observers predict a future where online retailers will essentially adopt something like the QVC model, with sales staff pitching the si
14、tes merchandise with polished video presentations, produced in a high-tech television studio.QVC.com is evolving in that direction. The Web site, which sold more than $1 billion in merchandise in 2006, has for the last five years let visitors watch a live feed of the networks broadcast. But in recen
15、t months, QVC.com has also given visitors the chance to watch archives of entire shows, and in the coming months visitors will be able to find more video segments from recent shows, featuring individual products that remain in stock. Bob Myers, senior vice president of QVC.com, said the Web sites vi
16、deo salesmanship is especially effective when combined with detailed product information, customer reviews and multiple photographs.About eight months ago, for instance, a customer said that she could not determine the size of a handbag from the photographs on the site because she could not tell the
17、 height of the model who was holding it. Within two weeks the site tested and introduced a new system, showing the bags with women of three different heights. The results were immediate: women who saw the new photographs bought the bags at least 10 percent more frequently than those who had not.Stil
18、l, Mr. Myers said, video is a critically important element to sales. “E-commerce started with television commerce,“ he said. “The sites who engage and entertain customers will be winning here in the near future.“ Such a prospect is not necessarily daunting to other e-commerce executives. Gordon Mage
19、e, head of Internet marketing for Drs. Foster scientists estimate, for example, that 137 species of plant, insect or animal become extinct every day due to logging. In British Columbia, where, since 1990, thirteen rainforest valleys have been clearcut, 142 species of salmon have already become extin
20、ct, and the habitats of grizzly bears, wolves and many other creatures are threatened. Logging, however, provides jobs, profits, taxes for the government and cheap products of all kinds for consumers, so the government is reluctant to restrict or control it.Much of Canadas forestry production goes t
21、owards making pulp and paper. According to the Canadian Pulp and Paper Association, Canada supplies 34% of the worlds wood pulp and 49% of its newsprint paper. If these paper products could be produced in some other way, Canadian forests could be preserved. Recently, a possible alternative way of pr
22、oducing paper has been suggested by agriculturalists and environmentalists: a plant called hemp.Hemp has been cultivated by many cultures for thousands of years. It produces fiber which can be made into paper, fuel, oils, textiles, food, and rope. For many centuries, it was essential to the economie
23、s of many countries because it was used to make the ropes and cables used on sailing ships; colonial expansion and the establishment of a world wide trading network would not have been possible without hemp. Nowadays, ships cables are usually made from wire or synthetic fibres, but scientists are no
24、w suggesting that the cultivation of hemp should be revived for the production of paper and pulp. According to its proponents, four times as much paper can be produced from land using hemp rather than trees, and many environmentalists believe that the large-scale cultivation of hemp could reduce the
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