大学英语四级-89及答案解析.doc
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1、大学英语四级-89 及答案解析(总分:100.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、Reading Comprehensio(总题数:3,分数:100.00)Last year“s economy in the United States should have won the Oscar for best picture. Growth in gross domestic product was 4.1 percent profits 1 up exports flourished and inflation (通货膨胀) stayed around 3 percent for the third
2、 year. So why did so many Americans give the picture only a B rating? The answer is jobs. The macroeconomic (宏观经济的) situation was good, but the microeconomic (微观经济的) numbers were not. Yes, 3 million new jobs were there, but not enough of them were 2 , good jobs paying enough to support a family. Job
3、 insecurity was serious. Even as they 3 higher sales and profits, corporations acted as if they were operating at a 4 , cutting 516,069 jobs in 1994 alone, almost as many as in the bad year of 1991. Yes, unemployment went down. But over 1 million workers were so 5 they left the labor force. More tha
4、n 6 million who wanted full time work were only partially 6 and another large group was sheltered behind serf-employment. We lost a million good manufacturing jobs between 1990 and 1995, continuing the 7 that has reduced the blue-collar work force from about 30 percent in the 1950s to about half tha
5、t today. White-collar workers found out they were no longer 8 . In 1995, for the first time, they were let go in numbers 9 equal to those for blue-collar workers. Many turn to 10 workwith lower pay, fewer benefits and less status. All this is a country where people meeting for the first time say, “W
6、hat do you do?“ A. announced B. trend C. performed D. temporary E. permanent F. virtually G. technical H. employed I. exposure J. originally K. soared L. significance M. secure N. discouraged O. loss(分数:30.00)They call them the new bread earners. They are women, and they are set to take over. Women
7、are beginning to rise 11 to the top in the workplace all over the developed world. New figures show that in almost a third of American 12 with a working wife, the woman brings home more money than her husband and that they now occupy half the country“s “high-paying, executive, administrative and 13
8、occupations“, compared with 34 per cent 20 years ago. The trend is 14 by two main factors, experts saya 15 acceptance of men as househusbands and mass unemployment of male white-collar workers from the technology, finance and media industries in the last three years. The University of Maryland has 1
9、6 a report that shows women to be the chief earner in 11 per cent of all US marriages. Pushing a buggy (婴儿车) on a sunny afternoon in New York“s Central Park last week, Jonathan Blinderman, 33, said, he was 17 he had been able to see every moment of his daughter Lindsay“s first six months of life whi
10、le his wife, Sage, was out working. It is a sign of these times of 18 that when he mentions his status at parties he is either praised as a saint or 19 as a slave-cure-freeloader (爱占便宜的奴隶). For the revolution is nowhere near complete. But Maria Cancian, an economist at the University of Wisconsin, s
11、aid 20 women were increasingly looking for househusbands. A. caused B. proud C. carelessly D. mocked E. produced F. managerial G. greedy H. precaution I. argued J. transition K. ambitious L. tackled M. growing N. steadily O. households(分数:30.00)Sarr Elyse took a sip from a plastic cup. Like a practi
12、sed wine taster, she swilled the dark liquid around in her mouth then swallowed. “I love Coca-Cola and this is not Coca-Cola,“ she said with a slight grimace (鬼脸). It certainly wasn“t and that“s the point of Mecca-Colaa soft drink named after Islam“s holiest land and created to protest against US fo
13、reign policy in the Middle East. Senegal is one of the first sub-Saharan African countries to put Mecca-Cola on the market, and it“s an obvious choice. The population is 95 percent Muslim and opposition to the war in Iraq has been more 21 here than elsewhere in the region. Thousands took to the stre
14、ets to protest against the fighting in Iraq and now Mecca-Cola, which has sales of about five million bottles in Europe, will gives thirsty Senegaiese a thought-provoking, 22 thirst reliever to the US brand. “Being a Muslim, I was attracted by the name Mecca-Cola,“ said Hassane Brahim Fardoun, the b
15、usinessman behind the drink“s distribution in Senegal. “I will do my best to 23 the Senegalese market with this new product.“ The drink“s launch 24 with increasing popular opposition to US foreign policy and the first six- packs of Mecca-Cola were delivered to two shops in Senegal“s capital Dakar th
16、e same week US troops stormed Baghdad. More will follow if it sells well. He says the advertising 25 has not yet started because posters have not arrived from France, but he has high hopes for word of mouth marketing. Elyse is one of the first to taste the new drink at a tiny shop in the city centre
17、. Unfortunately for Fardoun, she is Catholic, and a little reserved about whole-heartedly 26 the political viewpoints behind Mecca-Cola“s existence. Mecca-Cola has already found fans in Africa, as well as in Europe. The cola with a crusade (改革运动) is the 27 of French businessman Tawfik Mathlouthi, wh
18、o launched the drink last November in France as a protest against US foreign policy. Mecca-Cola is not unique. There is a wide range of similar 28 drinks, like Muslim Up or British-based Qibla-Cola, whose website cries “Liberate your taste“. 29 , the drink that typifies the American way of life was
19、flavoured originally with cola nuts, widely prized in West Africa as a 30 and a dowry gift at weddings. A. injected B. alternative C. racially D. brainchild E. constituent F. vocal G. campaign H. ironically I. optimum J. backing K. coincided L. ideological M. penetrate N. stimulus O. inherently(分数:4
20、0.00)大学英语四级-89 答案解析(总分:100.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、Reading Comprehensio(总题数:3,分数:100.00)Last year“s economy in the United States should have won the Oscar for best picture. Growth in gross domestic product was 4.1 percent profits 1 up exports flourished and inflation (通货膨胀) stayed around 3 percent for the t
21、hird year. So why did so many Americans give the picture only a B rating? The answer is jobs. The macroeconomic (宏观经济的) situation was good, but the microeconomic (微观经济的) numbers were not. Yes, 3 million new jobs were there, but not enough of them were 2 , good jobs paying enough to support a family.
22、 Job insecurity was serious. Even as they 3 higher sales and profits, corporations acted as if they were operating at a 4 , cutting 516,069 jobs in 1994 alone, almost as many as in the bad year of 1991. Yes, unemployment went down. But over 1 million workers were so 5 they left the labor force. More
23、 than 6 million who wanted full time work were only partially 6 and another large group was sheltered behind serf-employment. We lost a million good manufacturing jobs between 1990 and 1995, continuing the 7 that has reduced the blue-collar work force from about 30 percent in the 1950s to about half
24、 that today. White-collar workers found out they were no longer 8 . In 1995, for the first time, they were let go in numbers 9 equal to those for blue-collar workers. Many turn to 10 workwith lower pay, fewer benefits and less status. All this is a country where people meeting for the first time say
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- 大学 英语四 89 答案 解析 DOC
