[外语类试卷]专业英语八级模拟试卷125及答案与解析.doc
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1、专业英语八级模拟试卷 125及答案与解析 SECTION A MINI-LECTURE Directions: In this section you sill hear a mini-lecture. You will hear the lecture ONCE ONLY. While listening, take notes on the important points. Your notes will not be marked, but you will need them to complete a gap-filling task after the mini-lecture.
2、 When the lecture is over, you will be given two minutes to check your notes, and another ten minutes to complete the gap-filling task on ANSWER SHEET ONE. Use the blank sheet for note-taking. 0 Exposition Exposition is writing that explains. Most of the books in university li- braries are examples
3、of exposition. Although exposition is often formal and【 1】 _, it appears also in 【 1】_ magazines and newspapers, in any place where people look for explana- tions. It is a writing with which we attempt to control our world, whether our means of doing so is a complicated system of philosophy or a coo
4、k book or a medical instruction. Exposition is a wide net. If the【 2】 _ purpose of the writer is to 【 2】 _ tell a story, the writing is【 3】 _ rather than exposition. If the writer 【 3】 _ tends to tell us how something looks, we may call it【 4】 _ .The subject 【 4】_ of the expository writer may be peo
5、ple, things, ideas or a combination of these, but always he is a man thinking, interpreting, informing and per- suading. He is more likely to appeal to our【 5】 _ by using evidence and 【 5】_ logic. 【 6】 _ seldom is a piece of writing pure exposition. So the exposito- 【 6】_ ry writer will do well to r
6、emember that his primary purpose -the purpose that guides and shapes his total organization-is to explain by【 7】 _ 【 7】_ and to show relationships. The writing of exposition begins in an understanding of the broad pur- pose to be achieved. It begins in the writers head. Before the writing, the expos
7、itory writer must ask himself four questions: What specific purpose do I intend to make? Is it worth making? For whom am I making? And how can I best convey my point to my readers?【 8】 _ the writer has careful- 【 8】_ ly answered these questions, no amount of good grammar and correct spell- ing will
8、save him, and his composition is already worthless even before he begins to scrible. Once the writer is【 9】 _ what point he intands to 【 9】_ make, his comportion is already half organized. With his reader in mind, he has already solved many of his problems of diction and【 10】 _ as well. 【 10】_ 1 【 1
9、】 2 【 2】 3 【 3】 4 【 4】 5 【 5】 6 【 6】 7 【 7】 8 【 8】 9 【 9】 10 【 10】 SECTION B INTERVIEW Directions: In this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow. Questions 1 to 5 are based on an interview. At the end of the interview you will be given
10、 10 seconds to answer each of the following five questions. Now listen to the interview. 11 What is the librarians first suggestion? ( A) To find articles on ecology. ( B) To look into some of the specilialized indexes. ( C) To look for articles published in 297 periodicals. ( D) To look for article
11、s published from November 10th,1990 to December 28th,2000. 12 Where can Li Hua find those articles? ( A) In the Reading Room. ( B) In the Reception Room. ( C) In the Reference Room. ( D) In the Periodical Reading Room. 13 Which of the following statements is NOT true? ( A) Current issues are kept on
12、 the shelves. ( B) Back issues are bound together in volumes. ( C) The procedure of borrowing a back issue is slightly different from that of a book. ( D) Current issues of periodicals are put on microfilm. 14 Which of the following statements is right? ( A) Microfilm is a tiny square film no bigger
13、 than your thumbnail. ( B) To borrow a microfilm you do not need to find out the call slip. ( C) You can read the materials on a microfilm directly. ( D) You must use a machine to read the material on a microfilm. 15 Where did the conversation take place? ( A) In the Reading Room. ( B) In the Refere
14、nce Room. ( C) In the Reception Room. ( D) In the Periodical Room. SECTION C NEWS BROADCAST Directions: In this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow. At the end of each news item, you will be given 10 seconds to answer the questions.
15、16 The safty debate is now focused on protection of _. ( A) the spectators and officials ( B) the cars ( C) the sports stars ( D) All of the above 17 Mosley, head of the FIA, has promised _. ( A) further actions to force speeds up ( B) further actions to force speeds down ( C) no further actions to
16、force speeds up ( D) no further actions to force speeds down 18 What is not of the most controversial topics in grand prix racing? ( A) Security. ( B) Engine. ( C) The “tyre war“. ( D) Deaths and accidents. 19 Who won the All England Championship? ( A) Pulleta Gopichand ( B) Peter Gade. ( C) Chen Ho
17、ng. ( D) Prakash Padukone. 20 Who won the second place in mens single? ( A) Peter Gade. ( B) Ji Xin peng. ( C) Xia Xuanze. ( D) Chen Hong. 20 Robots have been the stuff of popular culture for so long that We think of them mostly as a fun. In the next decade they will finally become practical beyond
18、factory assembly lines. Granted, they wont perform the wonderous stunts they do in movies; the first generation of “real“ robots may seem a bit crude. But by the end of the decade, we may well encounter tiny robots cooking hamburgers in fast - food restaurants, mopping up shopping malls, even delive
19、ring meal trays in hospitals. Two factors are pushing the development of robotics: technology and economics. Artificial intelligence is the key to a successful robot, but some of the simplest tasks for a human mind are difficult for a robot. One example: the ability to look at the comer of a room, w
20、here walls and ceiling meet, and know that the corner goes in, not out. Easy for humans, very tough for real -world R2D25. But new neural-network computers, which more closely resemble the human brain ,look particularly promising for teaching robots how to adapt to: their surroundings. Economics is
21、the key to the acceptance of robots. As declining birthrates lead to a shortage of entry- level workers in much of the industrialized world, researchers are designing robots that can manage at least portions of such jobs as burger flippers or hospital orderlies. Fast -food robots will probably cook
22、and package food; humans will still greet the public at the counter and make incorrect change. By the late 90s,improved robots will be inexpensive enough to serve as aides for the disabled, giving even quadriplegics the ability to feed themselves and perform office work. Not all robots will be so be
23、nign. Another model in production is a security guard designed to wander deserted warehouses and signal a human guard when it encounters intruders. At least one American firm has designed an armed security robot capable of firing a weapon. And the long-promised home robot? This little electronic ser
24、vant, capable of delivering a frosty beer from the fridge, picking up the kids toys and washing the occasional window, probably wont be a mass - market item in the 90s-unless we modify our homes to accommodate them. Every room would need to have tiny radio beacons to tell the robot where it is, and
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