[外语类试卷]专业英语四级(阅读)模拟试卷44及答案与解析.doc
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1、专业英语四级(阅读)模拟试卷 44及答案与解析 0 I was in my third year of teaching creative writing at Ralph McKee Vocational School in Staten Island, New York, when one of my students, 16-year-old Mikey, gave me a note from his mother. It explained his absence from class the day before. I had seen Mikey writing the note
2、 at his desk, using his left hand to disguise his handwriting. I said nothing. Most parental-excuse notes I received back in those days were penned by my students. Theyd been forging excuse notes since they learned to write, and if I were to confront each forger Id be busy 24 hours a day. I threw Mi
3、keys note into a desk drawer along with dozens of other notes. While my classes took a test, I decided to read all the notes Id only glanced at before. I made two piles, one for the genuine ones written by mothers, the other for forgeries. The second was the larger pile, with writing that ranged fro
4、m imaginative to lunatic. I was having an idea. Isnt it remarkable, I thought, how the students complained and said it was hard putting 200 words together on any subject? But when they forged excuse notes, they were brilliant. The notes I had could be turned into a collection of Great American Excus
5、es. They were samples of talent never mentioned in song, story or study. How could I have ignored these gems of fiction and fantasy? Here was American high school writing at its best raw, real, urgent, brief, and lying. I read: “The stove caught fire and the wallpaper went up and the fire department
6、 kept us out of the house all night.“ “Arnold was getting off the train and the door closed on his school bag and the train took it away. He yelled to the conductor who said very vulgar things as the train drove away.“ “His sisters dog ate his homework and I hope it chokes him.“ The writers of these
7、 notes didnt realize that honest excuse notes were usually dull: “Peter was late because the alarm clock didnt go off.“ One day I typed out a dozen excuse notes and distributed them to my senior classes. The students read them silently, intently. “Mr. McCourt, who wrote these?“ asked one boy. “You d
8、id,“ I said. “I omitted names to protect the guilty. Theyre supposed to be written by parents, but you and I know the real authors. Yes, Mikey?“ “So what are we supposed to do?“ “This is the first class to study the art of the excuse note the first class, ever, to practice writing them. Youre so luc
9、ky to have a teacher like me who has taken your best writing and turned it into a subject worthy of study.“ Everyone smiled as I went on, “You didnt settle for the old alarm clock story. You used your imaginations. So try it now. Imagine you have a 15-year-old who needs an excuse for falling behind
10、in English.“ The students produced excuses, ranging from a 16-wheeler crashing into a house to a severe case of food poisoning blamed on the school cafeteria. They said, “More, more. Can we do more?“ So I said, “Id like you to write “ And I finished, “An Excuse Note from Adam to God or An Excuse Not
11、e from Eve to God.“ Heads went down. Pens raced across paper. Before long the bell rang. For the first time ever I saw students so immersed in their writing they had to be urged to go to lunch by their friends. 1 What was the authors attitude towards students forging excuse notes? ( A) He found it q
12、uite understandable. ( B) He was indifferent to this phenomenon. ( C) He was aware of its prevalence. ( D) He regarded it as a minor mistake. 2 By saying that “I was having an idea“(Para. 4), the author means that ( A) he began to realize the students writing talent. ( B) he began to understand the
13、students complaints. ( C) he would read all the excuse notes to the whole class. ( D) he would incorporate the excuse notes into his class. 3 Mikey was mentioned by the author ( A) as an example of those who forged excuse notes. ( B) as a warning to those who forged excuse notes. ( C) because Mikey
14、wasnt good at writing. ( D) because Mikey didnt admit his fault. 4 The author found that compared with the genuine excuse notes, the forged ones were usually ( A) less impressive. ( B) more imaginative. ( C) better-written. ( D) less convincing. 5 The author had the students practice writing excuse
15、notes so that the students could learn ( A) the importance of being honest. ( B) how to write excuse notes skillfully. ( C) the merits of creative writing. ( D) how to be creative in writing. 5 The use of nitrous oxide, or laughing gas during childbirth fell out of favor in the United States decades
16、 ago, and just two hospitals one in San Francisco and one in Seattle still offer it. But interest in returning the dentist office staple to the delivery room is growing: respected hospitals including Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center plan to start offering it, the federal government is reviewing it
17、, and after a long break, the equipment needed to administer it is expected to hit the market soon. Lori Rowell, due to give birth to her second child in June, is interested in the option. “I would definitely think about it, and read about and talk to my doctor about it,“ said Rowell, 36, of Concord
18、. “It is nice to know that it doesnt affect the baby.“ Though laughing gas is commonly used for labor pain relief in Canada, Great Britain and other countries, its been all but abandoned in the United States in favor of other options, said Judith Bishop, a certified nurse midwife at the University o
19、f California San Francisco Medical Center and leader in the effort to reintroduce laughing gas for labor. “In this country, most people when they hear about laughing gas, they think it sounds pretty retro(重新流行的 ), that it sounds very old-fashioned and theyre sure theres something bad or dangerous ab
20、out it and we mustve chosen to eliminate it. But I think we eliminated it because we went for the more specialized, higher-tech options,“ said Bishop, who will be among the speakers Monday at a conference for New Hampshire, Vermont and Maine hospital officials. She and other advocates of reintroduci
21、ng laughing gas emphasize that it is no silver bullet it “takes the edge off“ pain rather than eliminates it. But they say it should be among the options offered to women, particularly those who give birth at small or rural hospitals that lack round-the-clock anesthesiologists(麻醉师 ). Laughing gas is
22、 easy for women to self-administer, takes effect quickly, and can be used late in labor. “Its not right for everybody, but its something that for many women will offer a certain amount of relief,“ Bishop said. 6 Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center is going to ( A) reintroduce nitrous oxide to the den
23、tist office. ( B) remove nitrous oxide from the dentist office to the delivery room. ( C) apply nitrous oxide in the delivery room. ( D) limit the use of nitrous oxide in the dentist office. 7 According to Judith Bishop, laughing gas was abandoned in the United States mainly because other options ar
24、e ( A) less dangerous. ( B) more effective. ( C) less disputable. ( D) more advanced. 8 By saying that “it is no silver bullet“(Para. 6), Judith Bishop means that ( A) laughing gas cannot eliminate pain. ( B) laughing gas cannot relieve much pain. ( C) laughing gas is not as dangerous as most people
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- 外语类 试卷 专业 英语四 阅读 模拟 44 答案 解析 DOC
