[外语类试卷]GRE(VERBAL)综合模拟试卷5及答案与解析.doc
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1、GRE( VERBAL)综合模拟试卷 5及答案与解析 一、 SECTION 3 Directions: Each passage in this group is followed by questions based on its content. After reading a passage, choose the best answer to each question. Answer all questions following a passage on the basis of what is stated or implied in the passage. 1 The pla
2、nt called the scarlet gilia can have either red or white flowers. It had long been thought that hummingbirds, which forage by day, pollinate its red flowers and that hawkmoths, which forage at night, pollinate its white flowers. To try to show that this pattern of pollination by colors exists, scien
3、tists recently covered some scarlet gilia flowers only at night and others only by day: plants with red flowers covered at night became pollinated; plants with white flowers covered by day became pollinated. Which of the following, if true, would be additional evidence to suggest that hummingbirds a
4、re attracted to the red flowers and hawkmoths to the white flowers of the scarlet gilia? ( A) Uncovered scarlet gilia flowers, whether red or white, became pollinated at approximately equal rates. ( B) Some red flowers of the scarlet gilia that remained uncovered at all times never became pollinated
5、. ( C) White flowers of the scarlet gilia that were covered at night became pollinated with greater frequency than white flowers of the scarlet gilia that were left uncovered. ( D) Scarlet gilia plants with red flowers covered by day and scarlet gilia plants with white flowers covered at night remai
6、ned unpollinated. ( E) In late August, when most of the hummingbirds had migrated but hawkmoths were still plentiful, red scarlet gilia plants produced fruit more frequently than they had earlier in the season. 1 While the best sixteenth-century Renaissance scholars mastered the classics of ancient
7、Roman literature in the original Latin and understood them in their original historical context, most of the scholars educated contemporaries knew the classics only from school lessons on selected Latin texts. These were chosen by Renaissance teachers after much deliberation, for works written by an
8、d for the sophisticated adults of pagan Rome were not always considered suitable for the Renaissance young: the central Roman classics refused(as classics often do)to teach appropriate morality and frequently suggested the opposite. Teachers accordingly made students needs, not textual and historica
9、l accuracy, their supreme interest, chopping dangerous texts into short phrases, and using these to impart lessons extemporaneously on a variety of subjects, from syntax to science. Thus, I believe that a modern reader cannot know the associations that a line of ancient Roman poetry or prose had for
10、 any particular educated sixteenth-century reader. 2 The passage is primarily concerned with discussing the ( A) unsuitability of the Roman classics for the teaching of morality ( B) approach that sixteenth-century scholars took to learning the Roman classics ( C) effect that the Roman classics had
11、on educated people in the Renaissance ( D) way in which the Roman classics were taught in the sixteenth century ( E) contrast between the teaching of the Roman classics in the Renaissance and the teaching of the Roman classics today 3 The information in the passage suggests that which of the followi
12、ng would most likely result from a student s having studied the Roman classics under a typical sixteenth-century teacher? ( A) The student recalls a line of Roman poetry in conjunction with a point learned about grammar. ( B) The student argues that a Roman poem about gluttony is not morally offensi
13、ve when it is understood in its historical context. ( C) The student is easily able to express thoughts in Latin. ( D) The student has mastered large portions of the Roman classics. ( E) The student has a sophisticated knowledge of Roman poetry but little knowledge of Roman prose. 4 Which of the fol
14、lowing, if true, would most seriously weaken the assertion made in the passage concerning what a modern reader cannot know? ( A) Some modern readers are thoroughly familiar with the classics of ancient Roman literature because they majored in classics in college or obtained doctoral degrees in class
15、ics. ( B) Some modern readers have learned which particular works of Roman literature were taught to students in the sixteenth century. ( C) Modern readers can, with some effort, discover that sixteenth-century teachers selected some seemingly dangerous classical texts while excluding other seemingl
16、y innocuous texts. ( D) Copies of many of the classical texts used by sixteenth-century teachers, including marginal notes describing the oral lessons that were based on the texts, can be found in museums today. ( E) Many of the writings of the best sixteenth-century Renaissance scholars have been t
17、ranslated from Latin and are available to modern readers. 4 In humans, the pilomotor reflex leads to the response commonly known as goose bumps, and this response is widely considered to be vestigial that is, something formerly having a greater physiological advantage than at present. It occurs when
18、 the tiny muscle at the base of a hair follicle contracts, pulling the hair upright. In animals with feathers, fur, or quills, this creates a layer of insulating warm air or a reason for predators to think twice before attacking. But human hair is too puny to serve these functions. Goose bumps in hu
19、mans may, however, have acquired a new role. Like flushinganother thermoregulatory(heat-regulating)mechanism goose bumps have become linked with emotional responses, notably fear, rage, or the pleasure of, say, listening to beautiful music. They may thus serve as a signal to others. 5 In explaining
20、the “new role“(line 7)that goose bumps in humans may have acquired, the author assumes which of the following? ( A) Emotional responses in humans can be triggered by thermoregulatory mechanisms. ( B) The perceptibility of emotional responses to other humans offers some kind of benefit. ( C) If human
21、 hair were more substantial, goose bumps would not have acquired a new role. ( D) Goose bumps in animals with feathers, fur, or quills may also be linked to emotional responses. ( E) In humans, goose bumps represent an older physiological response than flushing. 6 Which of the following best describ
22、es the primary function of the next-to-last sentence(“Like . music“)? ( A) It makes a distinction between two types of mechanisms. ( B) It corrects a common misconception about the role of goose bumps in humans. ( C) It suggests reasons for the connection between emotional responses and goose bumps
23、in humans. ( D) It suggests that flushing and goose bumps signal the same emotional state. ( E) It helps explain a possible role played by goose bumps in humans. 6 This passage is adapted from material published in 2001. Frederick Douglass was unquestionably the most famous African American of the n
24、ineteenth century; indeed when he died in 1895 he was among the most distinguished public figures in the United States. In his study of Douglass career as a major figure in the movement to abolish slavery and as a spokesman for Black rights, Waldo Martin has provoked controversy by contending that D
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- 外语类 试卷 GRE VERBAL 综合 模拟 答案 解析 DOC
