[外语类试卷]专业英语四级(阅读)模拟试卷141及答案与解析.doc
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1、专业英语四级(阅读)模拟试卷 141及答案与解析 一、 SECTION A In this section there are several passages followed by ten multiple-choice questions. For each question, there are four suggested answers marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that you think is the best answer. 0 (1)The idea of creating a system that allows the u
2、nderprivileged the opportunity to break the cycle and achieve something is praiseworthy. So it never ceases to amaze me how something so noble can be so blatantly abused and the offenders are able to get away with it. (2)I live in a countrythe only country, I might addthat was colonised through an a
3、ct of diplomacy and not force. The citizens of the country became members of the British Empire by scratching ink on the paper of a poorly translated treaty that disadvantaged them from the beginning. All because of some greedy Brits wanted to trade land for glass beads, tobacco and blankets.(In som
4、e ways, this treaty protected the natives from some pretty nasty scams, but only so that the government could scam the tribes themselves). The third article of this treaty allowed the “natives“(although their claim to be native of the land in question is dubious in itselfthey were merely there befor
5、e the British)all the rights and benefits of a subject under the rule of Her Majesty Queen Victoria. The history lesson is nearly overbear with me, it is relevant. (3)The rights and benefits of becoming a member of the British Empire included the banning of the native language to be taught in school
6、s and used to communicate in public. The savages were to be tamed. For a country so progressive that gave women the vote 10 years before the rest of the world(if only to call a politicians bluff), this was a barbaric act. But these acts of naturalisation, and reparation have since been carried out b
7、y the government for the last 50-75 years, allowing the natives extra rights and benefits as to soothe the indignity done to their ancestors. Now a considerable number of the “disenfranchised“ live on a social welfare benefit from the government, and can afford cable TV, all the latest mod-cons and
8、a fast track into the good life of higher education(all subsidised, of course)in the name, not of affirmative action although it isbut of racial appeasement. Now I could talk about some of the blind privileges that come with this, but I will save that essay for another day. The topic I wish to addre
9、ss today are those who are born with silver spoons in their mouths that claim these benefits without batting an eyelid. (4)In order to claim a number of these benefits, one need only 1/16th of native blood in ones family to be considered “native“. So you have blond-haired blue-eyed “natives“ that ha
10、ve no clue of their whakapapa, let alone can speak the language. These young opportunists come from upper class families. They went to the best private schools, and for birthdays, mummy and daddy dearest sent them around the world to see history and what real culture is. These bright young things ha
11、ve trust funds amounting to tens of thousands that they will get when they turn 21. Theyre on a first name basis with all the hot shot company directors and politicians, and they still have the audacity to claimand receivethe scholarships and benefits their less fortunate counterparts deserve. (5)Th
12、is is where the “blind eye“ of privilege amazes me. As Betacandys first post so beautifully sets outprivilege is something given or assumed so often that a set of actions and expectations are built up and become a normal attitude to associate with specific practices, races and gender. The selection
13、process assures us that equal opportunities are afforded to each applicant(that assertion is worth another whole rant in itself). How can the close examination of each applicanttheir achievements and backgroundallow such a gross abuse of privilege to take place? This is merely one country where it h
14、appens, and I could go on for ever on this subject. (6)The privileged are simply thatprivileged. What gives them the right to take for themselves the opportunities offered to those who cannot afford to pay for the experience in the first place? Somebody, please, answer me this. 1 There was a “poorly
15、 translated“ treaty because _. ( A) the Brits didnt take it seriously ( B) the Brits intended it as a scam ( C) the natives were mostly unable to read or write ( D) the natives were guaranteed what they wanted 2 What does the author think about the blond-haired blue-eyed “natives“? ( A) They are pro
16、ud of being natives. ( B) They are ashamed of their identity. ( C) Their family origin is hard to trace back. ( D) They dont know about their family origin. 3 According to the fifth paragraph, the author thinks that the “selection process“_. ( A) offers equal opportunity to each applicant ( B) close
17、ly examines each applicant ( C) allows a gross abuse of privileges ( D) neglects achievements and background 3 (1)Yellowstone National Park is in the western state of Wyoming. It is one of the most unusual places in the world. Extremely hot water shoots out of the ground in several hundred places. S
18、mall lakes contain water that is so hot it is dangerous to come too close. (2)Visitors can watch bubbles coming up through boiling hot mud. They can see rocks that were once liquid and have cooled into strange shapes. (3)Yellowstone is built on an ancient volcano. A lake of hot liquid rock is about
19、six kilometers under the park. This lake is about sixty-five kilometers wide. Experts say this lake is under huge amounts of pressure. The pressure and heat cause hot water to shoot out of the ground and mud to boil at Yellowstone. (4)Yellowstone National Park is the oldest national park in the worl
20、d. About three million people visit it each year. Its great natural beauty has made it one of the most popular national parks. (5)Most visitors like to see “Old Faithful,“ the worlds most famous geyser. A geyser shoots hot water high into the air. There are more than three hundred geysers in Yellows
21、tone. (6)Old Faithful is not the biggest or the most beautiful geyser. But it is the most popular. Visitors gather around Old Faithful before each eruption. Experts at the park are able to predict when these will happen. The average time between eruptions is about ninety minutes. Old Faithful shoots
22、 water an average of forty meters into the air. This eruption lasts between two and five minutes. Old Faithful releases up to about thirty thousand liters of water into the air each time. (7)The hot spot deep under the ground produces geysers like Old Faithful. Old Faithful is evidence of the volcan
23、ic activity at Yellowstone. But will the Yellowstone volcano erupt again? Most experts think the answer is yes. But no one knows when. The most recent of the three extremely powerful eruptions was about six hundred fifty thousand years ago. (8)Experts say at least thirty smaller volcanic eruptions h
24、ave taken place at Yellowstone. Some of these were perhaps as big as the nineteen ninety-one eruption at Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines. Several are believed to have been much larger. The most recent of these smaller eruptions took place about seventy thousand years ago. (9)Volcano experts say it
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