[外语类试卷]大学英语四级改革适用(阅读)模拟试卷129及答案与解析.doc
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1、大学英语四级改革适用(阅读)模拟试卷 129及答案与解析 Section A 0 Getting a university degree isnt just good for your mind its good for your heart, says a new study in the journal BMC(British Medical Council)Public Health. The longer you spend in education, the lower your blood pressure is likely to be. This is【 C1】_true fo
2、r women. Scientists from the US, Canada, UK and Australia examined 30 years of【 C2】_from 3 890 people who were being followed as part of the Framingham Offspring Study, which【 C3】 _the education and medical histories of 3 890 people. Researchers divided subjects into three groups, low education(12 y
3、ears or less),【 C4】_education(13 to 16 years)and high education(17 years or more). They then【 C5】_the average systolic(收缩的 )blood pressure for the 30-year period. Women with low education had a blood pressure 3.26 mmHg higher than those with a high【 C6】 _of education. In men the difference was 2.26
4、mmHg. Lead author Eric Loucks, assistant professor of【 C7】 _health at Brown University, said the analysis may【 C8】 _a well-known association in the developed world between education and heart disease. Uneducated people tend to【 C9】 _up in demanding jobs that give workers little control, which have b
5、een associated with high blood pressure, said researchers. The effect is greater in women, said Loucks, because “women with【 C10】 _education are more likely to be experiencing depression, they are more likely to be single parents, more likely to be living in impoverished areas and more likely to be
6、living below the poverty line. “ A)calculated F)explain K)particularly B)community G)less L)pressure C)data H)level M)strangely D)end I)life N)study E)essential J)middle O)tracked 1 【 C1】 2 【 C2】 3 【 C3】 4 【 C4】 5 【 C5】 6 【 C6】 7 【 C7】 8 【 C8】 9 【 C9】 10 【 C10】 Section B 10 Farewell, Libraries A)Ama
7、zon, corns recent announcement that sales of e-books at the online megastore had overtaken sales of hardcover books came as no surprise. It had to happen sometime. But the news did conjure quite an interesting mental image: libraries that from now on will look smaller and less crowded. B)For the mom
8、ent, lets not argue with the proposition that people will read as much as they ever have, no matter whether they read an actual book or a book on a screen. The habits of readers may not change(if anything, people may read more, or at least buy more several stories have quoted e-book owners who say t
9、hey buy more titles for their e-readers than they did when they were buying hardcover books). But if readers arent changing, their environments will. Rooms that once held books will well, whatever they hold from now on, it wont be books, or not as many books. Theoretically, your space will be more s
10、pare, more serenely uncluttered. Thats the theory, at least. My experience is that stuff expands to fill the space available. But you can dream. C)All of this has already happened big time in the music business, where downloads have gradually but surely replaced CDs. I dont know how many people Ive
11、overheard crowing because they managed to transfer their entire music collections onto their computers. All those CDs taking up space on the wall have gone -All those CDs that travel from car to kitchen to bedroom to living room, with the CD and the case getting separated somewhere along the way a p
12、roblem no more in the digital age. From now on, well own what might be described as the idea of stuff, since the actual physical thingsrecords, tapes, photographs, CDs. and now books have been as good as vaporized, with the information contained therein stored away on a hard drive. D)This, of course
13、, is merely collateral damage(附带损害 )in the digital revolution, if damage it is. Theres as yet no way to tell if this transition is good, bad, both, or neither, but surely the absence of a physical library, be it musical or literary, marks a fundamental shift in the way we live and think about things
14、. In music, for example, the rise of iTunes, Pandora, YouTube. and all the other online music players has quickly eroded our devotion to the long-playing album as the principal means of organizing music. After a half century of neglect, the lowly single is back on top. Most immediately this has cons
15、equences for artists, maybe not so much for the people who buy their music. But who knows? E)With books, the absence of packaging does nothing to the contents. I can buy a hardcover copy of Moby-Dick or download it onto an e-reader, and Melville is still Melville. But I grew up loving Rockwell Kents
16、 illustrations of that novel, and later Barry Mosers. Its hard to think of the book without them. I can do that, certainly, but some little thing is lost. F)Paperbacks and public libraries made books cheap or free but certainly available to millions who might otherwise not have been able to afford t
17、hem, and all that happened long before I was born. Nevertheless, I was brought up by people who had been taught- and who taught me that books were valuable things, things to be cared for and cherished, and I have owned some volumes for close to half a century(almost none of them, I should point out,
18、 qualify as “collectible“ or valuable to an antiquarian book collector; owning a rare book makes me nervous. I like books I can hold, read, and even here my mother is spinning in her grave write in). G)I come from a generation for whom the books and records on the shelf signaled, in some way, who yo
19、u were(starting with the fact that you were a person who owned books or records or CDs). If you visited a friend, you took the first chance you had to secretly scan that friends shelves to get a handle on the person. I suppose I could sneak a peek at a friends Kindle, but is that the same? And try t
20、hat kind of snooping on a bus or in a coffee shop and youll probably get arrested. H)The stuff of our lives is a comfort. We look up at the shelves and we see old friends. Yes, there are books on my shelves that arent my friends, that I havent finished or even started, but someday I will, I promise
21、my home library is a physical manifestation of ambivalence. There is comfort in the continuity of seeing the same books year after year. I guess there might be some of the same pleasure in scrolling through a digital library or music playlist, but somehow I think something will be lost. I)For years
22、audiophiles(高保真度录音爱好者 )have tried to persuade more casual music fans that a vinyl record played on a decent sound system sounds better than a digital record played on the same system. Digital sound is not as warm, not as seductive to the ear. The resurgence, albeit modest, of vinyl, especially among
23、 young listeners and musicians, proves that this argument is not generational. Its not, in other words, just old fogies versus young hipsters. J)Something of the same argument might be made for books, or for the tactile(触觉的 )pleasure of holding and reading a well-made book. At its simplest, a book i
24、s a tool, or an information-delivery system, if you will, and it does what it does supremely well. To conceive of a world without physical books is to conceive of a world somehow diminished. It may be more efficient yes, you can take a “stack“ of books on vacation with an e-reader. It may spare quit
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- 外语类 试卷 大学 英语四 改革 适用 阅读 模拟 129 答案 解析 DOC
