[外语类试卷]专业英语八级(阅读)模拟试卷175及答案与解析.doc
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1、专业英语八级(阅读)模拟试卷 175及答案与解析 SECTION A MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS 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 is the best answer. 0 (1) O
2、f all the extraordinary events in the life of John Paul II, few can compare with the 21 minutes he spent in a cell in Romes Rebibia prison. Just after Christmas, 1983, the pope visited Mehmet Ali Agca, the man who 30 months earlier had shot him in St. Peters Square. He presented Agca with a silver r
3、osary, and something else as well: his forgiveness. (2) It requires a Christ-like forbearance to pardon a would-be assassin, of course. But how many of us are ready to forgive an unfaithful lover or a scheming colleague? Persistent unforgiveness is part of human nature, but it appears to work to the
4、 detriment not just of our spiritual well-being but our physical health as well. The subject is one of the hottest fields of research in clinical psychology today, with more than 1,200 published studies. It even has its own foundation A Campaign for Forgiveness Research which sponsored a conference
5、last year with papers on topics like “Exploring Gender Differences in Forgiveness. “ Dr. Dean Ornish, Americas all-purpose lifestyle guru, regards forgiveness as the nutrition of the soul, a healthful alternative to the anger and vengeance. “In a way,“ Ornish says, “the most selfish thing you can do
6、 for yourself is to forgive other people. “ (3) Research suggests that forgiveness works in at least two ways. One is by reducing the stress of the state of unforgiveness, a potent mixture of bitterness, anger, hostility, hatred, resentment and fear (of being hurt or humiliated again). These have sp
7、ecific physiologic consequences such as increased blood pressure and hormonal changeslinked to cardiovascular disease, immune suppression and, possibly, impaired neurological function and memory. One study examined 20 individuals in happy relationships, matched with 20 in troubled relationships. The
8、 latter had higher baseline levels of Cortisol, a hormone associated with impaired immune function which shot up even further when they were asked to think about their relationships. “It happens down the line, but every time you feel unforgiveness, you are more likely to develop a health problem,“ s
9、ays Everett Worthington, executive director of A Campaign for Forgiveness Research. (4) The other benefit of forgiveness is more subtle; it relates to research showing that people with strong social networks of friends, neighbors and family tend to be healthier than loners. Someone who nurses grudge
10、s and keeps track of every slight is obviously going to shed some relationships over the course of a lifetime. Forgiveness, says Charlotte Van Oyen Witvliet, a researcher at Hope College in Holland, Mich., should be incorporated into ones personality, a way of life, not merely a response to specific
11、 insults. (5) In fact, forgiveness turns out to be a surprisingly complex process, according to many researchers. Worthington distinguishes what he calls “decisional forgiveness“ a commitment to reconcile with the perpetrator from the more significant “emotional forgiveness,“ an internal state of ac
12、ceptance. Forgiveness does not require us to forgo justice, or to make up to people we have every right to despise. Anger has its place in the panoply of human emotions, but it shouldnt become a way of life. “When I talk about forgiveness, I mean letting go, not excusing the other person or reconcil
13、ing with them or condoning the behavior,“ says Ornish. “ Just letting go of your own suffering. “ (6) “Its a process, not a moment,“ says Dr. Edward M. Hallowell, a Harvard psychiatrist and the author of Dare to Forgive. Forgiveness, he emphasizes, has to be cultivated; it goes against a natural hum
14、an tendency to seek revenge and the redress of injustice. For that reason, he recommends doing it with help of friends, a therapist or through prayer. It was from his faith that John Paul drew the strength to forgive Mehmet Agca, setting (as he no doubt intended) an example for the rest of us. The m
15、essage is the same whether its couched in the language of Christian charity, clinical psychology or the wisdom of Confucius, as quoted by Hallowell: “ If you devote your life to seeking revenge, first dig two graves. “ 1 The word “detriment“ in the second paragraph probably means_. ( A) determinatio
16、n ( B) benefit ( C) damage ( D) adversity 2 According to researches in clinical psychology, unforgiveness will lead to all the physiologic consequences EXCEPT_. ( A) immune suppression ( B) impaired memory ( C) increased blood pressure ( D) lower baseline levels of Cortisol 3 The fourth paragraph st
17、ates all of the following EXCEPT that_. ( A) loners do not forgive others ( B) to be sociable is better for peoples health ( C) forgiveness is not just a reaction to some insults ( D) forgiveness should become part of ones personality 4 According to Hallowell, which of the following is INCORRECT? (
18、A) It takes time to forgive. ( B) It is difficult for people to forgive. ( C) One will get hurt by ones revenge against others. ( D) John Paul forgave Mehmet Agca in order to set an example for me others. 5 What would be a suitable title for the passage? ( A) Forgive or Not, It Is a Question. ( B) F
19、orgive and Let Live. ( C) John Paul A Model for Us. ( D) Forgiveness Is Not Easy. 5 (1) Compared with the systems in other industrialized countries, the American unemployment-insurance (UI) scheme pays lower benefits for less time and to a smaller share of the unemployed. In expansions this encourag
20、es the jobless to return quickly to work and unemployed Americans do indeed work harder at finding jobs than their European counterparts (see chart). But in recessions, when there is less work to return to, it causes hardship. Like Americas training system, UI is ripe for attention from the incoming
21、 Obama administration. (2) Like much of the social safety net, the current UI system was a product of Franklin Roosevelts New Deal. States were prodded to provide benefits in accordance with federal guidelines; in return the federal government paid their administrative costs. But the system has not
22、kept up with changes in Americas labor force. (3) States often require beneficiaries to have worked or earned an amount that disqualifies many part-time and low-wage workers. They also disqualify people seeking only part-time work even though many people now work part-time for family reasons. Benefi
23、ts typically last for only six months, more than enough time to find a new job in normal times but not in recessions. Extended benefits kick in automatically when unemployment reaches certain thresholds, but those thresholds are so high that they are almost never triggered. (4) Congress therefore ha
24、s to pass special legislation to extend benefits, as it did twice last year, but political wrangling often delays such action. In the week that ended on December 20th, 586,000 workers filed a first claim for unemployment benefits, the largest number for 26 years. Yet such claimants are, in one sense
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- 外语类 试卷 专业 英语 阅读 模拟 175 答案 解析 DOC
