大学英语六级改革适用(阅读)-试卷212及答案解析.doc
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1、大学英语六级改革适用(阅读)-试卷 212及答案解析(总分:60.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、Reading Comprehensio(总题数:8,分数:60.00)1.Part III Reading Comprehension_2.Section A_People who spend a lot of time surfing the Internet are more likely to show signs of depression, British scientists said on Wednesday. But it is not clear whether the Int
2、ernet causes depression or whether depressed people are 1to it. Psychologists from Leeds University found what they said was “striking“ evidence that some net users develop 2Internet habits in which they replace real life social interaction with online chat rooms and social networking sites. “This s
3、tudy 3the public speculation that over-engaging in websites that serve to replace normal social function might be linked to psychological disorders like depression and addiction,“ the studys lead author, Catriona Morrison, wrote in the journal Psychopathology. “This type of addictive surfing can 4im
4、pact the mental health.“ In the first large-scale study of Western young people to look at this 5, the researchers analyzed Internet use and depression levels of 1,319 Britons aged between 16 and 51. Of these, 1.2 percent were “Internet addicted“, they concluded. These “Internet addicts“ spent 6more
5、 time browsing sexually pleasing websites, online gaming sites and online 7, Morrison said. They also had a higher incidence of moderate to 8depression than normal users. “Excessive Internet use is 9with depression, but what we dont know is which comes first are depressed people drawn to the Interne
6、t or does the Internet cause depression?“ Morrison said. “What is clear is that for a small set of people, excessive use of the Internet could be a warning 10for depressive tendencies. “ A)associated B)gravely C)quantitatively D)reinforces E)signal F)dividends G)drawn H)issue I)evaluates J)communiti
7、es K)severe L)sunk M)proportionately N)reckless O)compulsive(分数:20.00)填空项 1:_填空项 1:_填空项 1:_填空项 1:_填空项 1:_填空项 1:_填空项 1:_填空项 1:_填空项 1:_填空项 1:_4.Section B_The History of Chinese Americans AChinese have been in the United States for almost two hundred years. In fact, the Chinese had business relations w
8、ith Hawaii prior to relations with the mainland when Hawaii was not yet part of the United States. But United States investments controlled the capital of Hawaii at that time. In 1788, a ship sailed from Guangzhou to Hawaii. Most of the crewmen were Chinese. They were considered the pioneers of Hawa
9、ii. The Immigration Commission reported that the first Chinese arrived in the United States in 1820, eight in 1830 and seven hundred and eighty in 1850. The Chinese population gradually increased and reached 64,199 in 1870. BFor many years it was common in the United States to associate Chinese Amer
10、icans with restaurants and laundries. People did not realize that the Chinese had been driven into these occupations by the prejudice and discrimination that faced them in this country. CThe first Chinese to reach the mainland United States came during the California Gold Rush of 1849. Like most of
11、the other people there, they had come to search for gold. In that largely unoccupied land, the men staked a claim for themselves by placing markers in the ground. However, either because the Chinese were so different from the others or because they worked so patiently that they sometimes succeeded i
12、n turning a seemingly worthless mining claim into a profitable one, they became the scapegoats of their envious competitors. They were harassed in many ways. Often they were prevented from working their claims; some localities even passed regulations forbidding them to own claims. DThe Chinese there
13、fore started to seek out other ways of earning a living. Some of them began to do the laundry for the white miners; others set up small restaurants.(There were almost no women in California in those days, and the Chinese filled a real need by doing this “womans work“.)Some went to work as farmhands
14、or as fishermen. EIn the early 1860s many more Chinese arrived in California. This time the men were imported as work crews to construct the first transcontinental railroad. They were sorely needed because the work was so strenuous and dangerous, and it was carried on in such a remote part of the co
15、untry that the railroad company could not find other laborers for the job. As in the case of their predecessors, these Chinese were almost all males; and like them, too, they encountered a great deal of prejudice. FThe hostility grew especially strong after the railroad project was complete, and the
16、 imported laborers returned to Californiathousands of them, all out of work. Because there were so many more of them this time, these Chinese drew even more attention than the earlier group did. They were so very different in every respect: in their physical appearance, including a long “pigtail“ at
17、 the back of their otherwise shaved heads; in the strange, non-Western clothes they wore; in their speech(few had learned English since they planned to go back to China); and in their religion. They were contemptuously called “heathen Chinese“ because there were many sacred images in their houses of
18、 worship. GWhen times were hard, they were blamed for working for lower wages and taking jobs away from white men, who were in many cases recent immigrants themselves. Anti-Chinese riots broke out in several cities, culminating in arson and bloodshed. Chinese were barred from using the courts and al
19、so from becoming American citizens. Californians began to demand that no more Chinese be permitted to enter their state. Finally, in 1882, they persuaded Congress to pass the Chinese Exclusion Act, which stopped the immigration of Chinese laborers. Many Chinese returned to their homeland, and their
20、numbers declined sharply in the early part of this century. HHowever, during the World War n, when China was an ally of the United States, the Exclusion laws were ended; a small number of Chinese were allowed to immigrate each year, and Chinese could become American citizens. In 1965, in a general r
21、evision of our immigration laws, many more Chinese were permitted to settle here, as discrimination against Asian immigration was abolished. IFrom the start, the Chinese had lived apart in their own separate neighborhoods, which came to be known as “Chinatowns“. In each of them the residents organiz
22、ed an unofficial government to make rules for the community and to settle disputes. Unable to find jobs on the outside, many went into business for themselvesprimarily to serve their own neighborhood. As for laundries and restaurants, some of them soon spread to other parts of the city, since such s
23、ervices continued to be in demand among non-Chinese, too. To this day, certain Chinatowns, especially those of San Francisco and New York, are busy, thriving communities, which have become great attractions for tourists and for those who enjoy Chinese food. JMost of todays Chinese Americans are the
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