托福-练习二十及答案解析.doc
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1、托福-练习二十及答案解析(总分:35.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、Passage 1(总题数:2,分数:10.00)JOHNNY APPLESEED1 In 1801, a 26-year-old man named John Chapman wandered the sparsely populated “western country“ that was still two years away from becoming the state of Ohio. Chapman had a simple purpose: wherever he found suitable soil,
2、he planted apple seeds. To the settlers of the Ohio frontier, Chapman became known as Johnny Appleseed, a strange man who wore odd clothes and went barefoot. He was a pacifist in a time of warfare and brutality against the Indians, treating Indians and settlers alike with respect. He killed no anima
3、ls and was a vegetarian. He even opposed pruning his apple trees because he did not want to cause them pain.2 Chapman spent forty years wandering as Johnny Appleseed. Journeying by foot and canoe through Ohio and Indiana, he planted seeds, sold and gave away apple saplings, and exchanged knowledge o
4、f medicinal plants with Indians and settlers. He prepared the way for farms and towns by planting apple seeds in clearings along rivers and constructing simple wooden fences to keep animals out of his primitive orchards.3 The agricultural development that Chapman anticipated was in fact marching acr
5、oss the eastern half of the continent at an ever-increasing pace. When Chapman started his “apple seeding“ in 1801, the population of Ohio was 45,000, and ninety percent of the land was still covered with elm, ash, maple, oak, and hickory trees. By the time of Chapmans death in 1845, the states popu
6、lation had reached two million, and more than forty percent of the land had been cleared of trees and converted to farms. Not until 1880 did the cutting of trees subside. By then, three-quarters of Ohio had been cleared, and people were becoming aware of the limits of expansion. Only then did they b
7、egin to take seriously the tree-loving ideas of Johnny Appleseed, who had become the subject of folk tales.(分数:4.00)(1).The phrase sparsely populated in paragraph 1 means that(分数:1.00)A.the area had many resourcesB.most of the people were youngC.few people lived in the regionD.the land was undevelop
8、ed(2).The word pacifist in paragraph 1 is closest in meaning to(分数:1.00)A.citizen soldierB.peace advocateC.social scientistD.respected speaker(3).The word marching in paragraph 3 is closest in meaning to(分数:1.00)A.crawlingB.advancingC.attackingD.declining(4).The word subside in paragraph 3 is closes
9、t in meaning to(分数:1.00)A.matterB.succeedC.resumeD.decreaseTHE ORIGIN OF THE UNIVERSE1 Astronomers believe that the universe began with a large, dense mass of gas consisting mainly of hydrogen, the simplest of all the naturally occurring chemical elements. The mass of hydrogen was very hot and cause
10、d intense light and much expanding motion. As the universe expanded, its light became dimmer, yet even now some of the primeval light may be present.2 The original universe underwent a physical transition that gradually differentiated it into galaxies, stars, and planets. As the original mass of gas
11、 expanded and cooled, large clouds separated themselves from the parent mass. Gravity played an important role in this mechanism. Matter is subject to gravity, yet matter is also the cause of gravity since it is matters mass that determines the strength of the gravitational force.3 Scientists believ
12、e that the original mass of gas in the universe was not completely uniform, and there were some regions that were slightly denser and capable of generating stronger gravitational fields than others. Since gravity tends to pull matter together, the denser regions tended to become even more compact. T
13、hus, small variations in the original mass evolved into denser clouds that gradually separated from the expanding parent mass. From these clouds, the galaxies were formed.4 At the end of the first phase of the universe, a great number of huge clouds had become separate entities that could start thei
14、r own independent evolution. These turbulent clouds- ancient galaxies-contained variations that grew in importance over time. The clouds divided into smaller and smaller “cloudlets“ that gravity caused to contract. The increase in pressure from this contraction caused the temperature to rise until t
15、he cloudlets began to glow as individual, luminous stars.5 Astronomers believe that the earliest galaxies were small when they formed most of their stars, but accumulated most of their mass later through collisions. Large galaxies formed in stages as smaller galaxies were attracted to one another by
16、 gravity. As the smaller galaxies were pulled together over time, they merged into larger and larger structures, eventually forming massive galaxies. As many as half of all galaxies are thought to have been involved in some sort of collision.(分数:6.00)(1).The word primeval in paragraph 1 is closest i
17、n meaning to(分数:1.00)A.originalB.importantC.expandingD.beautiful(2).The word transition in paragraph 2 is closest in meaning to(分数:1.00)A.transactionB.struggleC.combinationD.change(3).The word uniform in paragraph 3 is closest in meaning to(分数:1.00)A.suitableB.unusualC.consistentD.filled(4).The word
18、 compact in paragraph 3 is closest in meaning to(分数:1.00)A.distinctB.denseC.disconnectedD.distant(5).The word luminous in paragraph 4 is closest in meaning to(分数:1.00)A.light-emittingB.densely packedC.high-pressureD.very beautiful(6).The word merged in paragraph 5 is closest in meaning to(分数:1.00)A.
19、bentB.frozeC.blendedD.eroded二、Passage 2(总题数:3,分数:25.00)ROAD BUILDING AND THE AUTOMOBILE1 Car registrations in the United States rose from one million in 1913 to ten million in 1923. By 1927, Americans were driving some twenty-six million automobiles, one car for every five people in the country. Aut
20、omobile sales in the state of Michigan outnumbered those in Great Britain and Ireland combined. For the first time in history, more people lived in cities than on farms, and they were migrating to the city by automobile.2 The automobile was every Americans idea of freedom, and the construction of ha
21、rd- surface roads was one of the largest items of government expenditure, often at great cost to everything else. The growth of roads and the automobile industry made cars the lifeblood of the petroleum industry and a major consumer of steel. The automobile caused expansions in outdoor recreation, t
22、ourism, and related industries-service stations, roadside restaurants, and motels. After 1945, the automobile industry reached new heights, and new roads led out of the city to the suburbs, where two-car families transported children to new schools and shopping malls.3 In 1956 Congress passed the In
23、terstate Highway Act, the peak of a half-century of frenzied road building at government expense and the largest public works program in history. The result was a network of federally subsidized highways connecting major urban centers. The interstate highways stretched American mobility to new dista
24、nces, and two-hour commutes, traffic jams, polluted cities, and Disneyland became standard features of life. Like almost everything else in the 1950s, the construction of interstate highways was justified as a national defense measure.4 The federal government guaranteed the predominance of private t
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