[外语类试卷]专业英语四级(阅读)模拟试卷184及答案与解析.doc
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1、专业英语四级(阅读)模拟试卷 184及答案与解析 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 village of Lentshin was tiny a sandy market-p
2、lace where the peasants of the area met once a week. It was surrounded by little huts with thatched roofs or shingles green with moss. The chimneys looked like pots. Between the huts there were fields, where the owners planted vegetables or pastured their goats. (2) In the smallest of these huts liv
3、ed old Berl, a man in his eighties, and his wife, who was called Berlcha (wife of Berl). Old Berl was one of the Jews who had been driven from their villages in Russia and had settled in Poland. In Lentshin, they mocked the mistakes he made while praying aloud. He spoke with a sharp “ r“. He was sho
4、rt, broad-shouldered, and had a small white beard, and in summer and winter he wore a sheepskin hat, a padded cotton jacket, and stout boots. He walked slowly, shuffling his feet. He had a half acre of field, a cow, a goat, and chickens. (3) The couple had a son, Samuel, who had gone to America fort
5、y years ago. It was said in Lentshin that he became a millionaire there. Every month, the Lentshin letter carrier brought old Berl a money order and a letter that no one could read because many of the words were English. How much money Samuel sent his parents remained a secret. Three times a year, B
6、erl and his wife went on foot to Zakrocaym and cashed the money orders there. But they never seemed to use the money. What for? The garden, the cow, and the goat provided most of their needs. Besides, Berlcha sold chickens and eggs, and from these there was enough to buy flour for bread. (4) No one
7、cared to know where Berl kept the money that his son sent him. There were no thieves in Lentshin. The hut consisted of one room, which contained all their belongings: the table, the shelf for meat, the shelf for milk foods, the two beds, and the clay oven. Sometimes the chickens roosted in the woods
8、hed and sometimes, when it was cold, in a coop near the oven. The goat, too, found shelter inside when the weather was bad. The more prosperous villagers had kerosene lamps, but Berl and his wife did not believe in newfangled gadgets (新奇的玩意儿 ). What was wrong with a wick in a dish of oil? Only for t
9、he Sabbath would Berlcha buy three tallow candles at the store. In summer, the couple got up at sunrise and retired with the chickens. In the long winter evenings, Berlcha spun flax at her spinning wheel and Berl sat beside her in the silence of those who enjoy their rest. (5) Once in a while when B
10、erl came home from the synagogue after evening prayers, he brought news to his wife. In Warsaw there were strikers who demanded that the czar abdicate. A heretic by the name of Dr. Herzl had come up with the idea that Jews should settle again in Palestine. Berlcha listened and shook her bonneted hea
11、d. Her face was yellowish and wrinkled like a cabbage leaf. There were bluish sacks under her eyes. She was half deaf. Berl had to repeat each word he said to her. She would say, “ The things that happen in the big cities. “ (6) Here in Lentshin nothing happened except usual events: a cow gave birth
12、 to a calf, a young couple had a circumcision party, or a girl was bom and there was no party. Occasionally, someone died. Lentshin had no cemetery, and the corpse had to be taken to Zakroczym. Actually, Lentshin had become a village with few young people. The young men left for Zakroczym, for Nowy
13、Dwor, for Warsaw, and sometimes for the United States. Like Samuels, their letters were illegible, the Yiddish (意第绪语 ) mixed with the languages of the countries where they were now living. They sent photographs in which the men wore top hats and the women fancy dresses like squiresses. (7) Berl and
14、Berlcha also received such photographs. But their eyes were failing and neither he nor she had glasses. They could barely make out the pictures. Samuel had sons and daughters with Gentile names and grandchildren who had married and had their own offspring. Their names were so strange that Berl and B
15、erlcha could never remember them. But what difference do names make? America was far, far away on the other side of the ocean, at the edge of the world. A Talmud teacher who came to Lentshin had said that Americans walked with their heads down and their feet up. Berl and Berlcha could not grasp this
16、. How was it possible? But since the teacher said so it must be true. Berlcha pondered for some time and then she said, “One can get accustomed to everything. “ 1 In Lentshin, people mocked old Berl for_. ( A) his funny pronunciation mistake ( B) his small white beard ( C) praying aloud ( D) his way
17、 of walking 2 It can be concluded from Para. 3 that_. ( A) people in Lentshin didnt speak English ( B) old Berl kept secrets from others ( C) Berl and his wife liked to go hiking ( D) Berl and his wife had no money 3 Why did Berl and Berlcha believe the Talmud teachers saying about the way Americans
18、 walked even though they found it hard to grasp? ( A) They knew the Talmud teacher well. ( B) They trusted teachers with high reliability. ( C) They had seen people walk that way. ( D) They thought Americans were strange. 3 (1) In his book In Defence of Food. An Eaters Manifesto, Michael Pollan urge
19、d people to “Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants. “ Although a paltry 2. 7% of Americans have a “healthy lifestyle“ , according to the Mayo Clinic, their diets are improving. A recent study by researchers at the Tufts University Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy (TUFSNSP), tracking c
20、hanges in eating habits between 1999 and 2012, suggests that Americans are nibbling more whole fruits, nuts and seeds, and gulping fewer sugary drinks, than they were in the fairly recent past. But the study also revealed that the gap between the diets of rich and poor seems to be widening. (2) That
21、 rich Americans eat more healthily than poor ones is not a new revelation. Low-income places are less likely to have full-service grocery stores or farmers markets, let alone organic stuff. Poor people often have no cars, so they have to shop at the sort of convenience stores that offer crisps and d
22、oughnuts rather than fresh produce. And fruit and vegetables are heavy to lug home. In Newark, New Jersey, Renee Fuller, an elderly woman who walks with a stick, has to go to the next town, West Orange, to shop. “ You want a banana, you have to travel. Theres not many supermarkets. Theres nothing co
23、nvenient. You have bodegas and corner stores that sell cold cuts and sandwiches, but not many vegetables. I get my food stamps once a month. I cant stock up on fruits for the whole month. “ Low-income urban areas that are at least a mile from the nearest supermarket, and rural areas that are at leas
24、t ten miles from any grocery store, are considered “food deserts“. In 2009 the Department of Agriculture calculated that 115m people, or 4. 1% of Americas population, live in such deserts. (3) If fresh food becomes more available, though, it will not necessarily get eaten. In Morrisania, a deprived
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