[外语类试卷]大学英语六级模拟试卷824及答案与解析.doc
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1、大学英语六级模拟试卷 824及答案与解析 一、 Part I Writing (30 minutes) 1 For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a short essay on the topic of Students Starting Their Own Businesses. You should write at least 150 words according to the outline given below. 目 前有不少大学生开始创业 1对此不少人给予了肯定 2也有人有不同的看法 3我认为 Students
2、Starting Their Own Businesses 二、 Part II Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning) (15 minutes) Directions: In this part, you will have 15 minutes to go over the passage quickly and answer the questions attached to the passage. For questions 1-4, mark: Y (for YES) if the statement agrees with th
3、e information given in the passage; N (for NO) if the statement contradicts the information given in the passage; NG (for NOT GIVEN) if the information is not given in the passage. 1 Food Inflation Kept Hidden in Tinier Bags Chips are disappearing from bags, candy from boxes and vegetables from cans
4、. As an expected increase in the cost of raw materials looms for late summer, consumers are beginning to encounter shrinking food packages. With unemployment still high, companies in recent months have tried to hide price increases by selling their products in tiny and tinier packages. So far, the c
5、hanges are most visible at the grocery store, where shoppers are paying the same amount, but getting less. For Lisa Stauber, stretching her budget to feed her nine children in Houston often requires careful monitoring at the store. Recently, when she cooked her usual three boxes of pasta for a big f
6、amily dinner, she was surprised by a smaller yield, and she began to suspect something was up. “Whole wheat pasta had gone from 16 ounces to 13.25 ounces,“ she said. “I bought three boxes and it wasnt enough that was a little embarrassing. I bought the same amount I always buy, I just didnt realize
7、it, because who reads the sizes all the time?“ Ms. Stauber, 33, said she began inspecting her other purchases, aisle by aisle. Many canned vegetables dropped to 13 or 14 ounces from 16; boxes of baby wipes went to 72 from 80; and sugar was stacked in 4-pound, not 5-pound, bags, she said. Five or so
8、years ago, Ms. Stauber bought 16-ounce cans of corn. Then they were 15.5 ounces, then 14.5 ounces, and the size is still dropping. “The first time Ive ever seen an 11-ounce can of corn at the store was about three weeks ago, and I was just floored,“ she said. “Its sneaky, because they figure people
9、wont know.“ In every economic downturn in the last few decades, companies have reduced the size of some products, disguising price increases and avoiding comparisons on same-size packages, before and after an increase. Each time, the marketing campaigns are coy; this time, the smaller versions are “
10、greener“(packages good for the environment)or more “portable“(little carry bags for the takeout lifestyle)or “healthier“(fewer calories). Where companies cannot change sizes as in clothing or appliances they have warned that prices will be going up, as the costs of cotton, energy, grain and other ra
11、w materials are rising. “Consumers are generally more sensitive to changes in prices than to changes in quantity,“ John T. Gourville, a marketing professor at Harvard Business School, said. “And companies try to do it in such a way that you dont notice, maybe keeping the height and width the same, b
12、ut changing the depth so the silhouette(轮廓 )of the package on the shelf looks the same. Or sometimes they add more air to the chips bag or a scoop in the bottom of the peanut butter jar so it looks the same size.“ Thomas J. Alexander, a finance professor at Northwood University, said that businesses
13、 had little choice these days when faced with increases in the costs of their raw goods. “Companies only have pricing power when wages are also increasing, and were not seeing that right now because of the high unemployment,“ he said. Most companies reduce products quietly, hoping consumers are not
14、reading labels too closely. But the downsizing keeps occurring. A can of Chicken of the Sea albacore tuna is now packed at 5 ounces, instead of the 6-ounce version still on some shelves, and in some cases, the 5-ounce can costs more than the larger one. Bags of Doritos, Tostitos and Fritos now hold
15、20 percent fewer chips than in 2009, though a spokesman said those extra chips were just a “limited time“ offer. Trying to keep customers from feeling cheated, some companies are introducing new containers that, they say, have terrific advantages and just happen to contain less product. Kraft is int
16、roducing “Fresh Stacks“ packages for its Nabisco Premium saltines and Honey Maid graham crackers. Each has about 15 percent fewer crackers than the standard boxes, but the price has not changed. Kraft says that because the Fresh Stacks include more sleeves of crackers, they are more portable and “th
17、e packaging format offers the benefit of added freshness,“ said Basil T. Maglaris, a Kraft spokesman, in an e-mail. And Procter and “document drops“(who would help them retrieve a pile of “accidentally“ dropped papers?). Along the way, the reporters encountered all types: men and women of different
18、races, ages, professions, and income levels. While 90 percent of the people passed the door test, only 55 percent aced the document drop. Are people less likely to help others when doing so takes extra effort or time? Not always, the reporters found. Take the pregnant woman who thought nothing of be
19、nding down to help us with our papers. Or the woman named Liz who precariously balanced two coffees, her keys and her wallet on a takeout tray with one hand, while picking up papers off the wet pavement with the other. Her reason for helping? “I was there,“ she said matter-of-factly. Overall, men we
20、re the most willing to help, especially when it came to document drops. In those, men offered aid 63 percent of the time, compared to 47 percent among women. Of course, men werent entirely democratic about whom theyd help. All of them held the door for the female reporter, and were more than twice a
21、s likely to help her pick up fallen papers than they were to help our male reporter. By far, the most common reason people cited for being willing to go out of their way to help others was their upbringing. “Its the way I was raised,“ said one young woman who held a door open despite struggling with
22、 her umbrella on a rainy day in Brooklyn. We realize this isnt a rigorous scientific study, but we believe it is a reasonable real-world test of good manners around the globe. And its comforting to know that in a place where millions of people jostle(推挤 )one another each day to get ahead, theyre abl
23、e to do it with a smile and a thank-you. Hey, if they can make nice here, they can make nice anywhere. 48 Plenty of people hold the view that in todays world, good manners are_. 49 The author suggests that less people passed the document drop than the door test not always because the former_. 50 The
24、 experiment of document drops revealed that men were generally_to offer aid. 51 The reporters found that helping others is a behavior that is largely influenced by the way people_. 52 The author believes the results of the experiments have shown that_are still with us. Section B Directions: There ar
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- 外语类 试卷 大学 英语六级 模拟 824 答案 解析 DOC
