[外语类试卷]专业英语四级(阅读)模拟试卷40及答案与解析.doc
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1、专业英语四级(阅读)模拟试卷 40及答案与解析 0 There must be few questions on which responsible opinion is so utterly divided as on that of how much sleep we ought to have. There are some who think we can leave the body to regulate these matters for itself. “The answer is easy,“ says Dr. A. Burton. “With the right amoun
2、t of sleep you should wake up fresh and alert five minutes before the alarm rings.“ If he is right many people must be undersleeping, including myself. But we must remember that some people have a greater inertia than others. This is not meant rudely. They switch on slowly, and they are reluctant to
3、 switch off. They are alert at bedtime and sleepy when it is time to get up, and this may have nothing to do with how fatigued their bodies are, or how much sleep they must take to lose their fatigue. Other people feel sure that the present trend is towards too little sleep. To quote one medical opi
4、nion, “Thousands of people drift through life suffering from the effects of too little sleep; the reason is not that they cant sleep.“ Like advancing colonists, we do seem to be grasping ever more of the land of sleep for our waking needs, pushing the boundary back and reaching, apparently, for a po
5、int in our evolution where we will sleep no more. This in itself, of course, need not be a bad thing. What could be disastrous, however, is that we should press too quickly towards this goal, sacrificing sleep only to gain more time in which to jeopardize our civilization by actions and decisions ma
6、de weak by fatigue. Then, to complete the picture, there are those who believe that most people are persuaded to sleep too much. Dr H. Roberts, writing in Every Man in Health, asserts: “It may safely be stated that, just as the majority eat too much, so the majority sleep too much.“ One can see the
7、point of this also. It would be a pity to retard our development by holding back those people who are gifted enough to work and play well with less than the average amount of sleep, if indeed it does them no harm. If one of the trends of evolution is that more of the life span is to be spent in gain
8、ful waking activity, then surely these people are in the van of this advance. 1 The author seems to indicate that ( A) there are many controversial issues like the right amount of sleep. ( B) among many issues the right amount of sleep is the least controversial. ( C) people are now moving towards s
9、olving many controversial issues. ( D) the right amount of sleep is a topic of much controversy among doctors. 2 The author disagrees with Dr. Burton because ( A) few people can wake up feeling fresh and alert. ( B) some people still feel tired with enough sleep. ( C) some people still feel sleepy w
10、ith enough sleep. ( D) some people go to bed very late at night. 3 In the last paragraph the author points out that ( A) sleeping less is good for human development. ( B) people ought to be persuaded to sleep less than before. ( C) it is incorrect to say that people sleep too little. ( D) those who
11、can sleep less should be encouraged. 4 We learn from the passage that the author ( A) comments on three different opinions. ( B) favours one of the three opinions. ( C) explains an opinion of his own. ( D) revises someone elses opinion. 4 In its first month orbiting Saturn, the Cassini spacecraft ha
12、s detected a new radiation belt in an unexpected place, its invisible swarm of trapped high-energy particles circling the planet inside the inner edge of Saturns signature disk of luminous rings. Scientists who reported the discovery said yesterday that they were surprised to find a relatively small
13、 radiation belt completely isolated from a planets main radiation belts, which lie at much greater distances. They had not expected that such a concentration of energetic particles could be sustained inside the famous Saturnian rings. The phenomenon of a single isolated belt, the scientists said, ha
14、s never been observed at any other planet in the solar system. By contrast, the Van Allen belts of Earth consist of two related regions of intense radiation trapped by the planets magnetic field. In a NASA conference call with reporters, Dr. Donald G. Mitchell, a Cassini mission scientist from Johns
15、 Hopkins University, said the newly discovered radiation belt was detected as the spacecraft made its closest approach to Saturn immediately after rocketing into its orbit on July 1. No previous spacecraft visiting Saturn had been in the proper position to make such a discovery. Dr. Mitchell said it
16、 was the spacecrafts imaging magnetometer that had observed the radiation belt, which extended around Saturn from about 15,000 miles above the planets cloud tops to the inner edge of the innermost of its spectacular rings. The belt is much smaller, and the energies of its particles are less intense,
17、 than Saturns main radiation belts. With its discovery, Dr. Mitchell said, “we have seen something that we did not expect: that radiation belt particles can hop over obstructions like Saturns rings.“ Other Cassini mission scientists reported puzzling patterns of lightning and thunderstorms on Saturn
18、 and observations of a striking glow emanating day and night from the planets largest moon, Titan. 5 What does the passage mainly discuss? ( A) The discovery of a new radiation belt has become a breakthrough in astronomical researches. ( B) After a recent discovery of a radiation belt, a relatively
19、small radiation belt has been perceived. ( C) A belt around Saturn unlike any ever seen before has been detected. ( D) Some mystifying patterns have been observed at Saturn. 6 What is special about the belt discovered latest? ( A) It is an insular belt which unexpectedly pierces through Saturnian ri
20、ngs. ( B) It is much smaller and less intense than the formerly-discovered belts. ( C) It is different from the Van Allen belts of Earth. ( D) It is the outermost belt of Saturn. 7 Why couldnt the radiation belt be found earlier? ( A) Because visual angles are different. ( B) Because spacecrafts did
21、nt approach Saturn close enough in the past. ( C) Because viewing spot matters. ( D) Because the spacecraft had no imaging magnetometer advanced enough in the past. 8 In the last paragraph, “emanating“could be replaced by these words EXCEPT ( A) spurting. ( B) emitting. ( C) effusing. ( D) diffusing
22、. 9 It can be inferred from the passage that ( A) The newly-discovered belt is in fact the outmost layer of Saturn. ( B) We cant see the newly-discovered belt without the help of imaging magnetometer. ( C) There can hardly be any belts similar as the newly discovered one at any other planet in the s
23、olar system ( D) The main radiation belts arent connected with Saturnian rings at all. 9 Scientists have determined that Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird, was definitely birdbrained, meaning no disrespect. Indeed, they consider the fossils brain size decisive evidence that Archaeopteryx had wh
24、at it took to fly. The new research suggests, moreover, mat birds probably started flying millions of years earlier than scientists previously thought. It is just mat fossils of those first flying birds predecessors of Archaeopteryx have never been found. The researchers, at the Natural History Muse
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- 外语类 试卷 专业 英语四 阅读 模拟 40 答案 解析 DOC
