专业八级分类模拟358及答案解析.doc
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1、专业八级分类模拟 358及答案解析(总分:100.10,做题时间:90 分钟)一、READING COMPREHENSIO(总题数:1,分数:100.00)Section A In this section there are several passages followed by fourteen multiple-choice questions. For each multiple-choice question, there are four suggested answers marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that you think i
2、s the best answer and mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET TWO. Passage One Letty the old lady lived in a “Single Room Occupancy“ hotel approved by the New York City welfare department and occupied by old losers, junkies, cockroaches and rats. Whenever she left her rooma tiny cubicle with a cot, a chai
3、r, a seven-year-old calendar and a window so filthy it blended with the unspeakable wallsshe would pack all her valuables in two large shopping bags and carry them with her. If she didn“t, everything would disappear when she left the hotel. Her “things“ were also a burden. Everything she managed to
4、possess was portable and had multiple uses. A shawl is more versatile than a sweater, and hats are no good at all, although she used to have lots of nice hats, she told me. The first day I saw Letty I had left my apartment in search of a “bag lady“. I had seen these women round the city frequently,
5、had spoken to a few. Sitting around the parks had taught me more about these city vagabonds. As a group, few were eligible for social security. They had always been flotsam and jetsam, floating from place to place and from job to jobwaitress, short order cook, sales clerk, stock boy, maid, mechanic,
6、 porterall those jobs held by faceless people. The “bag ladies“ were a special breed. They looked and acted and dressed strangely in some of the most determinedly conformist areas of the city. They frequented Fourteen Street downtown, and the fancy shopping districts. They seemed to like crowds but
7、remained alone. They held long conversations with themselves, with telephone poles, with unexpected cracks in the sidewalk. They hung around lunch counters and cafeterias, and could remain impervious to the rudeness of a determined waitress and sit for hours clutching a coffee cup full of cold memor
8、ies. Letty was my representative bag lady. I picked her up on the corner of Fourteenth and Third Avenue. She had the most suspicious face I had encountered; her entire body, in fact, was pulled forward in one large question mark. She was carrying a double plain brown shopping bag and a larger white
9、bag ordering you to vote for some obscure man for some obscure office and we began talking about whether or not she was an unpaid advertisement. I asked her if she would have lunch with me, and let me treat, as a matter of fact. After some hesitation and a few sharp glances over the top of her glass
10、es, Letty the Bag Lady let me come into her life. We had lunch that day, the next, and later the next week. Being a bag lady was a full-time job. Take the problem of the hotels. You can“t stay to long in any one of those welfare hotels, Letty told me, because the junkies figure out your routine, and
11、 when you get your checks, and you“ll be robbed, even killed. So you have to move a lot. And every time you move, you have to make three trips to the welfare office to get them to approve the new place, even if it“s just another cockroach-filled, rat-infested hole in the wall. During the last five y
12、ears, Letty tried to move every two or three months. Most of our conversations took place standing in line. New York State had just changed the regulations governing Medicaid cards and Letty had to get a new card. That took two hours in line, one hour sitting in a large dank-smelling room, and two m
13、inutes with a social worker who never once looked up. Another time, her case worker at the welfare office sent Letty to try and get food stamps, and after standing in line for three hours she found out she didn“t qualify because she didn“t have cooking facilities in her room. “This is my social life
14、,“ she said. “I run around the city and stand in line. You stand in line to see one of them fancy movies and calling it art; I stand in line for medicine, for food, for glasses, for the cards to get pills, for the pills; I stand in line to see people who never see who I am; at the hotel, sometimes I
15、 even have to stand in line to go to the john. When I die there“ll probably be a line to get through the gate, and when I get up to the front of the line, somebody will push it closed and say, “Sorry. Come back after lunch.“ These agencies, I figure they have to make it as hard for you to get help a
16、s they can, so only really strong people or really stubborn people like me can survive.“ Letty would talk and talk; sometimes, she didn“t seem to know I was even there. She never remembered my name, and would give a little start of surprise whenever I said hers, as if it had been a long time since a
17、nyone had said “Letty.“ I don“t think she thought of herself as a person, anymore; I think she had accepted the view that she was a welfare case, a Mediaid card, a nuisance in the bus depot in the winter time, a victim to any petty criminal, existing on about the same level as cockroaches. (此文选自 The
18、 New York Times)Passage Two About two-thirds of the world“s population is expected to live in cities by the year 2020 and, according to the United Nations, approximately 3.7 billion people will inhabit urban areas some ten years later. As cities grow, so do the number of buildings that characterize
19、them: office towers, factories, shopping malls and high-rise apartment buildings. These structures depend on artificial ventilation systems to keep clean and cool air flowing to the people inside. We know these systems by the term “air-conditioning“. Although many of us may feel air-conditioners bri
20、ng relief from hot, humid or polluted outside air, they pose many potential health hazards. Much research has looked at how the circulation of air inside a closed environmentsuch as an office buildingcan spread disease or expose occupants to harmful chemicals. One of the more widely publicised dange
21、rs is that of Legionnaire“s disease, which was first recognised in the 1970s. This was found to have affected people in buildings with air-conditioning systems in which warm air pumped out of the system“s cooling towers was somehow sucked back into the air intake, in most cases due to poor design. T
22、his warm air was, needless to say, the perfect environment for the rapid growth of disease-carrying bacteria originating from outside the building, where it existed in harmless quantities. The warm, bacteria-laden air was combined with cooled, conditioned air and was then circulated around various p
23、arts of the building. Studies showed that even people outside such buildings were at risk if they walked past air exhaust ducts. Cases of Legionnaire“s disease are becoming fewer with newer system designs and modifications to older systems, but many older buildings, particularly in developing countr
24、ies, require constant monitoring. The ways in which air-conditioners work to “clean“ the air can inadvertently cause health problems, too. One such way is with the use of an electrostatic precipitator, which removes dust and smoke particles from the air. What precipitators also do, however, is to em
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