[外语类试卷]专业英语四级(阅读)模拟试卷56及答案与解析.doc
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1、专业英语四级(阅读)模拟试卷 56及答案与解析 0 Climbing to the top of my nearest hill in San Francisco, my purpose is not to enjoy the view but to experience a bit of fresh air and nature. Some birds dwell in these urban islands of trees, bushes and soil. So few people are there, but they are happy, relaxed and friendly
2、(unless insane and out to rob). I find the view of San Francisco Bay and the metropolis most disturbing, seeing in all directions the industrial activity and oil-fueled trade of questionable imported products. Massive port facilities dwarf the human scale of sustainable import/export. A very small n
3、umber of sailboats for pleasure cant quite offer a vision of renewable-energy travel and exchange. Passenger planes take off, military jets show off their ear-splitting capabilities, all against the backdrop of polluted air that is warming in general thanks to commercial activity and the mindless co
4、nsumption by the individual. The hills are full of roads and energy-wasting houses. Its not like this everywhere; the hills around Kyoto are pitch black at night, for they consist of forest, trails and small, outdoor temples. Seven million people surround me in this metropolitan area. Those among th
5、em who really care whether Barry Bonds used steroids to hit baseballs, or what pregnant celebrity has checked into a drug rehabilitation facility, are not likely to be trying to live lightly on the planet. Normal citizens under the spell of mass media want to consume, and be given answers and easy f
6、ixes. They may get what they want tonight, and again, and again, but it will come to an abrupt end, and will people pick up a shovel to plant food or pick up the gun to take others food? That depends on the area affected, the culture(urban U.S. or otherwise), and population size. Why should I be dis
7、turbed by what I see now, when all is basically calm? Or feel uneasy as I stroll about in the safety of my comfortable home? Is not San Francisco and the surrounding area a great city, with many wonderful people and activities to appreciate? What about the noble struggles of valiant, compromised har
8、d-working people, or the dysfunctional and disabled folk who are really kind? The social injustice that is still pervasive, in our boastful age of scientific and technological power, is outrageous and occupies many of the best hearts and minds in the world who live in our very midst. Much of what ai
9、ls people, it is thought, is that they do not have enough cheap, affordable energy or material things that are supposed to both satisfy and uplift. More public funds for health care, through an end to costly, imperialist wars, would be the ticket to a healthy society, in the eyes of more and more. E
10、xcept, that selfless aspiration is becoming clouded with the uncertainty and fright growing around our awakening to climate change. In the buzzing Bay Area and every other large and small city, we are behaving as if there is no threat to the climate and thus our future survival as a species. Just lo
11、oking around at the unceasing traffic, it is clear that basic, radical but easy solutions are being kept on the shelf or buried. Tiny changes, usually just initiatives that dont threaten the current life style(e.g., different engines), are called “green“. Green this and green that. But the big “gree
12、ning“ will be the rediscovery of community and working with others as if our survival depends on our collaboration as equals. Our bosses and political leaders have been as useful in the needed transition asto borrow an expression from my late father tits on a bull. 1 What do the “few people“ do on t
13、op of the hill? ( A) They are the rich residents of the city. ( B) They are there to enjoy the natural beauty. ( C) They are attracted by the view of San Francisco Bay. ( D) They attack the tourists and rob them. 2 In the aspect of sustainable energy, the author favors _ most. ( A) oil-fueled trade
14、( B) massive port facilities ( C) sailboats ( D) passenger planes 3 What does the author feel about the hills around Kyoto? ( A) They are worth appreciating. ( B) They are not well-lit at night. ( C) They provide us with the best living environment. ( D) They have scenes different from all the other
15、 hills. 4 According to the author, the people who care whether Barry Bonds used steroids to hit baseballs are likely to ( A) look at others with a critical eye. ( B) live a comparatively lavish life. ( C) value environmental protection. ( D) disregard their health conditions. 5 According to the thir
16、d paragraph, the author was most disturbed by ( A) the struggles of the hard-working people. ( B) the public funds for health care. ( C) the lack of affordable energy or materials. ( D) the outrageous social injustice. 5 Growing up as an Asian in Britain is much more than a question of facing discri
17、mination and trying to find a decent job especially for a girl. She has to keep a delicate balance between two cultures: her own(Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi, etc.)and the British. Seetha Crishna has written a booklet called Girls of Asian Origin in Britain. In it the girls she is most concerned w
18、ith are those who are definitely different because they have gone through the British educational system and have therefore emerged with an identity which is distinct from that of their parents. “They speak English with regional English accents, they look comfortable in Western clothes, and they do
19、not necessarily choose to work in a factory.“ But they are unmistakably Asian and they are still held by their Asian cultural roots. At home, an Asian girl may find herself conforming to the traditions and values of her parents, while at school she develops the attitudes and appetites of her British
20、 contemporaries. As a result, Seetha Crishna found girls existing at two levels and inclined to question both. “But unless they can successfully accept both, they will swing constantly from one level to the other, feeling trapped between the two at considerable cost to their own confidence and happi
21、ness.“ For teenage girls, the main difficulty is to match the social life which their parents expect them to live with that enjoyed by their schoolmates. “If an Asian girls is invited out to a party or to a film by someone her mother has not met, that person must come and meet her mother before perm
22、ission is given or refused. If a group of girls plan to go to the cinema, parents want them to be accompanied by brothers or male cousins, or even by an older relative or a trusted adult friend of the family.“ Friends are girl friends. “Friends of the opposite sex simply do not exist, except for a b
23、rothers male friends, who fall into the category of brothers.“ In South Asia, all this is taken for granted and all girls are subject to the same rule. But in Britain an Asian girl can immediately see the difference between her own life and that of her English schoolmates, and this makes it seem unj
24、ust and unfair. Some parents are aware that this puts a strain on their daughters and are therefore prepared to turn a blind eye if the code is sometimes broken. But above all they are anxious to “protect“ the girls. 6 Seetha Crishna is most concerned about girls of ( A) East Asian origin. ( B) Sout
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