[外语类试卷]2016年湖北省成人本科学位英语真题试卷及答案与解析.doc
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1、2016年湖北省成人本科学位英语真题试卷及答案与解析 一、 Part I Reading Comprehension (30%) Directions: There are three passages in this part. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. You should decide on the best choice and mark the cor
2、responding letter on the Answer Sheet with a single line through the center. 0 We have heard a lot about the health benefits of tea, especially green tea. It is high in polyphenols, compounds with strong antioxidant activity that in test-tube and animal models show anticancer and heart-protective ef
3、fects. Good clinical studies are few, however, and although physicians tell their patients to drink green tea, there hasnt been any definite proof of the value of that advice. A team of Japanese researchers was able to link green tea consumption with decreased mortality from many causes-including he
4、art disease. The researchers tracked 40,530 healthy adults ages 40 to 79 in a region of northeastern Japan where most people drink green tea, following them for up to 11 years. Those who drank five or more cups of green tea a day had significantly lower mortality rates than those who drank less than
5、 one cup a day. There were also fewer deaths from cardiovascular disease. But no such association was seen with deaths from cancer. Nor was consumption of oolong or black tea connected with any decrease in mortality. Those teas are easier to be combined with oxygen in processing, which not only dark
6、ens the color of the leaves and changes their flavor but also reduces their polyphenol content. Coffee is more complicated. It has received both gold stars and black marks in medical literature. It, too, contains antioxidants, although they are less well studied than tea polyphenols. Evidence for th
7、e health benefits of coffee is growing, however. A group of investigators from Finland, Italy and the Netherlands reports that coffee seems to protect against age-related decline in mental capacity. The scientists studied 676 healthy men born from 1900 to 1920 and followed them for 10 years, using s
8、tandardized measures of brain function. Their conclusion: the men who consumed coffee had significantly less decline in mental capacity than those who didnt. Three cups a day seemed to provide the most protection. Population studies like those help us form assumptions about relationships between die
9、tary habits and long-term health. We still have to test our suppositions in controlled conditions, and measure the effects of coffee and tea on various systems of the body. 1 Physicians often tell their patients to drink green tea because( ). ( A) its medical value has been proved ( B) it is believe
10、d to be good for ones health ( C) it has long since been used clinically ( D) its effectiveness has been shown in animals 2 The Japanese study seems to have confirmed the positive effect of green tea on( ). ( A) young adults ( B) Asian people ( C) patients with cancer ( D) patients with heart diseas
11、e 3 The text indicates that black tea differs from green tea in that( ). ( A) it can retain the color of its leaves ( B) it can reduce cancer-related deaths ( C) it contains less polyphenol content ( D) it is stronger in flavor than the latter 4 Coffee is beneficial to ones health because( ). ( A) i
12、t has more antioxidants than green tea ( B) it slows down the rate of brain aging ( C) it lowers the rate of natural mortality ( D) it keeps systems of the body active 5 The text indicates that the relationships between dietary habits and long-term health( ). ( A) are a falsely perceived supposition
13、 ( B) are a conflicting issue among people ( C) deserve further scientific research ( D) deserve to be tested on a larger population 5 Sometime in the middle of the 15th century, a well-to-do merchant from London buried more than 6, 700 gold and silver coins on a sloping hillside in Surrey. He was f
14、leeing the War of the Roses and planned to return during better times. But he never did. The coins lay undisturbed until one September evening in 1990,when local resident Roger Mintey chanced upon them with a metal detector, a device used to determine the presence of metals. Minteys find much of whi
15、ch now sits in the British Museumearned him roughly $ 350,000, enough to quit his job with a small manufacturer and spend more time pursuing lost treasure. But digging up the past is controversial in Britain. In many European countries, metal detectorists, or people using metal detectors, face tough
16、 regulations. In the U. K., however, officials introduced a scheme in 1997 encouraging hobbyists to report their discoveries(except for those falling under the definition of treasure, like Minteys find, which they are required to report) but allowing them to keep what they find, or receive a reward.
17、 Last year, a hidden store was uncovered in a field outside Birmingham. It consists of more than 1,500 gold and silver objects from the seventh century and was valued at more than $ 4.5 million. While local museums hurry to raise enough money to keep the find off the open market, it sits in limbo, o
18、wned by the Crown but facing claims by the landowner and the metal detectorist who found it. The find marks the latest battleground in the increasingly heated conflict between the countrys 10, 000-20,000 metal detectorists and the museum workers determined to protect its precious old objects. Suppor
19、ters say the scheme stems the loss of valuable information about precious old objects, while opponents argue that metal detectorists dont report everything. The debate centers on the larger question of who owns the past. “Theres been a slow move over the centuries that precious old things belong to
20、us all,“ says Professor Christopher Chippindale of Cambridge University. But in Britain at least, the temptation of buried treasure could change all that. 6 According to the first paragraph, the coins in Surrey were( ). ( A) worth roughly $ 350,000 ( B) possessed by a local resident ( C) unearthed a
21、bout 500 years ago ( D) left by a merchant during a war 7 What do we know about Roger Mintey? ( A) He produces metal detectors. ( B) He owns a manufacturing firm. ( C) He works for the British Museum. ( D) He seeks buried treasure as a hobby. 8 In the U. K., metal detectorists( ). ( A) are rewarded
22、for whatever they find ( B) are forced to obey tough regulations ( C) may keep what they have discovered ( D) should report whatever they discover 9 As for the find outside Birmingham, it is still unclear( ). ( A) how much it is worth ( B) how it was discovered ( C) who is entitled to it ( D) what i
23、t is made up of 10 According to Professor Christopher Chippindale, buried treasure( ). ( A) is owned by the public ( B) is debated in a heated way ( C) remains a big temptation ( D) turns precious over time 10 Every year for more than a decade Ive gone with some good male friends to the music festiv
24、al. Women are not invited, but they do prepare a picnic for our trip. The better the food, the more likely we are to continue our annual tradition and give them peace at least one week out of the year. When were not eating, we sit around in circles and talk about manly stuff; women, mostly. After ye
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