[外语类试卷]中国科学院考博英语模拟试卷22及答案与解析.doc
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1、中国科学院考博英语模拟试卷 22及答案与解析 一、 Reading Comprehension 0 Traffic statistics paint a gloomy picture. To help solve their traffic woes, some rapidly growing U.S. cities have simply built more roads. But traffic experts say building more roads is a quick-fix solution that will not alleviated the traffic probl
2、em in the long nm. Soaring land costs, increasing concern over social and environmental disruptions caused by road-building, and the likelihood that more roads can only lead to more cars and traffic are powerful factors bearing down on a 1950s-style construction program. The goal of smart-highway te
3、chnology is to make traffic systems work at optimum efficiency by treating the road and the vehicles traveling on them as an integral transportation system. Proponents of the advanced technology say electronic detection systems, closed-circuit television, radio communication, ramp metering, variable
4、 message signing, and other smart-highway technology can now be used at a reasonable cost to improve communication between drivers and the people who monitor traffic. Pathfinder, a Santa Monica, California-based smart-highway project in which a 14-mile stretch of the Santa Monica Freeway, making up
5、what is called a “smart corridor“, is being instrumented with buried loops in the pavement. Closed-circuit television cameras survey the flow of traffic, while communication linked to property equipped automobiles advise motorists of the least congested routes or detours. Not all traffic experts, ho
6、wever, look to smart-highway technology as the ultimate solution to traffic gridlock. Some say the high-tech approach is limited and can only offer temporary solutions to a serious problem. “Electronics on the highway addresses just one aspect of the problem: how to regulate traffic more efficiently
7、,“ explains Michael Renner, senior researcher at the world-watch Institute. “It doesnt deal with the central problem of too many cars for roads that can t be built fast enough. It sends people the wrong message. They start thinking “Yes, there used to be a traffic congestion problem, but thats been
8、solved now because we have, advanced high-tech system in place.“ Larson agrees and adds, “Smart highways is just one of the tools that we use to deal with our traffic problems. It snot the solution itself, just pan of the package. There are different strategies.“ Other traffic problem-solving option
9、s being studied and experimented with include car pooling, rapid mass-transit systems, staggered or flexible work hours, and road pricing, a system whereby motorists pay a certain amount for the time they use a highway. It seems that we need a new, major thrust to deal with the traffic problems of t
10、he next 20 years. There has to be a big change. 1 What is the appropriate title for the passage? ( A) Smart Highway Projects The Ultimate Solution to Traffic Congestion. ( B) A Quick Fix Solution for the Traffic Problems. ( C) A Venture to Remedy Traffic Woes. ( D) Highways Get Smart Part of the Pac
11、kage to Relieve Traffic Gridlock. 2 The compound word “quick-fix“ in Paragraph 1, sentence 3 is closest in meaning to _. ( A) an optional solution ( B) an expedient solution ( C) a ready solution ( D) an efficient solution 3 According to the passage, the smart-highway technology is aimed to _. ( A)
12、develop sophisticated facilities on the interstate highways ( B) provide passenger vehicle with a variety of services ( C) optimize the highway capabilities ( D) improve communication between driver and the traffic monitors 4 According to Larson, to redress the traffic problem, _. ( A) car pooling m
13、ust be studied ( B) rapid mass transit system must be introduced ( C) flexible work hours must be experimented ( D) overall strategies must be coordinated 5 Which of the following best describes the organization of the whole passage? ( A) Two contrasting views of a problem are presented. ( B) A prob
14、lem is examined and complementary solutions are proposed or offered. ( C) Latest developments are outlined in order of importance. ( D) An innovation is explained with its importance emphasized. 5 A strange thing about humans is their capacity for blind rage. Rage is presumably an emotion resulting
15、from survival instinct, but the surprising thing about it is that we do not deploy it against other animals. If we encounter a dangerous wild animal a poisonous snake or a wildcat we do not fly into a temper. If we are unarmed, we show fear and attempt to back away; if we are suitably armed, we atta
16、ck, but in a rational manner not in a rage. We reserve rage for our own species. It is hard to see any survival value in attacking ones own, but if we take account of the long competition which must have existed between our own subspecies and others like Neanderthal man indeed others still more remo
17、te from us than Neanderthal man man rage becomes more comprehensible. In our everyday language and behavior there are many reminders of those early struggles. We are always using tile words “us and them“. “Our“ side is perpetually trying to do down the “other“ side. In games we artificially create o
18、ther subspecies we can attack. The opposition of “us“ and “them“ is the touchstone of the two-party system of “democratic“ politics. Although there are no very serious consequences to many of this modem psychological representation of the “us and them“ emotion, it is as well to remember that the ori
19、ginal aim was not to beat the other subspecies in a game but to exterminate it. The readiness with which human beings allow themselves to be regimented has permitted large armies to be formed, which, taken together with the “us and them“ blind rage, has led to destructive clashes within Our subspeci
20、es itself. The First World War is an example in which Europe divided itself into two imaginary subspecies. And there is a similar extermination battle now in Northern Ireland. The idea that there is a religious basis for this clash is illusory, for not even the pope has been able to control it. The
21、clash is much more primitive than the Christian religion, much older in its emotional origin. The conflict in Ireland is unlikely to stop until a greater primitive fear is imposed from outside the community, or until tile combatants become exhausted. 6 A suitable title for this passage would be _. (
22、 A) Wily Human Armies Are Formed ( B) Man s Anger Against the World ( C) The Human Capacity for Rage ( D) Early Straggles of Angry Mail 7 According to the author, the surprising aspect of human anger is _. ( A) its lengthy and complex development ( B) a conflict such as is now going on in Northern I
23、reland ( C) that we do not fly into a temper more often ( D) that we reserve anger for mankind 8 The passage suggests that _. ( A) historically, we have created an “us“ versus “them“ society ( B) humans have had a natural disinclination toward formal grouping ( C) the First World War is an example o
24、f how man has always avoided domination ( D) the emotional origin of the war in Ireland is lost in time 9 From the passage we can infer that _. ( A) the artificial creation of a subspecies unlike us is something that never happens ( B) games are psychologically unhealthy ( C) any artificially create
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- 外语类 试卷 中国科学院 英语 模拟 22 答案 解析 DOC
