【考研类试卷】考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷481及答案解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷 481 及答案解析(总分:60.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、Reading Comprehensio(总题数:6,分数:60.00)1.Section II Reading Comprehension(分数:10.00)_2.Part B(分数:10.00)_AHowever, the culture of Atlantis began to decay. Plato recounts that the people changed their law-respecting way of life. They began to disregard their re
2、ligion, gradually living with less restraint and piety. They began to value luxuries, wealth, and idleness. Then in one day and one night the continent was completely destroyed. Plato concludes that a decadent society deserved such punishment. But two questions remain unanswered. Where was Atlantis,
3、 and where did it go? BThis story intrigues people so much that many have been searching for the explanation of the “lost continent“ for 23 centuries. There are three probable locations for Atlantis: the Azores, in the Atlantic Ocean:the Bimini Islands, in the Caribbean Sea:and Santorini, or Kallist
4、e, in the Aegean Sea. Several facts make the Azores a possible location. In the Azores and near Iceland there have been many volcanic islands that have risen from the sea and then disappeared later. Also, Plato was sure that Atlantis was in the Atlantic, as the name implies. The theory that Atlantis
5、 was in the Azores has only recently been refuted. CThe Greek philosopher Plato(approximately 427 to 347 B.C.)is the primary source for the legend of Atlantis. His description of the “lost continent“ still excites the modern mind. Plato s Atlantis was a kind of paradisea vast island “larger than Lib
6、ya and Asia put together“with magnificent mountain ranges, green plains that were full of every variety of animal, and luxuriant gardens where the fruit was “fair and wondrous and in infinite abundance.“ The earth was rich with precious metals, especially the one prized most highly by the ancients,
7、orichalc, an alloy of copper, perhaps brass. DThe second credible possibility for Atlantis is in the Bahamas, in the Biminis. In 1958 some strange structures were noticed on the seabed under the water. Curious geometric structuresregular polygons, circles, triangles, rectangles , and completely stra
8、ight linesextend over several miles. A giant “wall“ several hundred yards long was found submerged in the waters off the small island of North Bimini. The wall has two branches, running at right angles, in perfectly straight lines. The construction, which is precisely perpendicular, is made of massi
9、ve stone blocks over 16 feet square. Part of the structure even resembles a harbor with a dock for boats. The geology of the Bahamas shows, however, that the submersion of the plateau had been caused by the melting of the polar glaciers that raised the level of the worlds oceans. This diminishes the
10、 possibility that Atlantis was in the Caribbean Sea. There were no violent eruptions, merely the slowly rising ocean from approximately 8, 000 to 7, 000 B.C EThe capital of Atlantis was beautifully constructed in white, black, and red stone. The city was carefully planned in five zones built in perf
11、ect concentric circles. Each circular zone was built inside a larger one. Plato says that the capital s canals and its nearby port were “full of vessels and merchants coming from all parts, who kept up din and clatter night and day.“ The city was full of life, activity and culture. FThe last reasona
12、ble possibility to date is that Atlantis was located in the Aegean, not far from Crete. However, mis assumption cannot be proved beyond doubt, and the disappearance of Atlantis remains a lasting mystery. GThirty-five hundred years ago, a tremendous explosion blew apart an island and completely destr
13、oyed a civilization called Atlantis. Where was Atlantis? What kind of people lived there? Why and how was it destroyed? No one knows the answers to these questions , but there have been hundreds of guesses and theories. Order: (分数:10.00)填空项 1:_填空项 1:_填空项 1:_填空项 1:_填空项 1:_AMost of us know what its li
14、ke to stay in a job after its stopped being satisfying, or to take on a project thats too big and be reluctant to admit it. CEOs have been known to allocate manpower and money to projects long after it becomes clear that they are failing. The costs to a person who does not know when to quit can be e
15、normous. In economics its known as sunk cost fallacy. While we recognize the fallacy almost immediately in others, it s harder to see in ourselves. Why? BIn one of their studies, they put participants into either a promotion or prevention focus. Next, each participant was told to imagine that he or
16、she was CEO of an aviation company that had committed $ 10 million to developing a plane that can t be detected by radar. With the project near completion and $ 9 million already spent, a rival company announces the availability of their own radar-blank plane, which is both superior in performance a
17、nd lower in cost. The question put to CEOs was simple: do you invest the remaining $ 1 million and finish your company s plane, or cut your losses and move on? CSunk costs are the investments that youve put into something that you cant get back out. They are the years you spent training for a profes
18、sion you hate. They are the thousands of dollars you spent on redecorating your living room, only to find that you hate living in it. Once youve realized that you probably won t succeed, or that you are unhappy with the results, it shouldn t matter how much time and effort you ve already put into so
19、mething. DRecent research by Northwestern University psychologists Daniel Molden and Chin Ming Hui demonstrates an effective way to be sure you are making the best decisions when things go awry: Focus on what you have to gain by moving on, rather than what you have to lose. When people think about g
20、oals in terms of potential gain, thats a “promotion focus“, which makes them more comfortable making mistakes and accepting losses. When people adopt a “prevention focus“ , they think about goals in terms of what they could lose if they dont succeed, so they become more sensitive to sunk costs. This
21、 is the focus people usually adopt, if unconsciously, when deciding whether or not to walk away. It usually tells us not to walk away, even when we should. EThere are several powerful, largely unconscious psychological forces at work. We may throw good money after bad or waste time in a dead-end rel
22、ationship because we haven t come up with an alternative: or because we dont want to admit to our friends and family, or to ourselves, that we were wrong. But the most likely cause is this innate, overwhelming aversion to sunk costs. FThe two researchers found that participants with a prevention foc
23、us stayed the course and invested the remaining $ 1 million roughly 80 percent of the time. The odds of making that mistake were significantly reduced by adopting a promotion focus: those people invested the remaining $ 1 million less than 60 percent of the time. When we see our goals in terms of wh
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