[外语类试卷]大学英语四级改革适用(阅读)模拟试卷88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 88及答案与解析 Section C 0 Much of Canadas forestry production goes towards making pulp and paper. According to the Canadian Pulp and Paper Association, Canada supplies 34% of the world s wood pulp and 49% of its newsprint paper. If these paper products could be produced in some other w
2、ay, Canadian forests could be preserved. Recently, a possible alternative way of producing paper has been suggested by agriculturalists and environmentalists: a plant called hemp(麻类植物 ). Hemp has been cultivated by many cultures for thousands of years. It produces fibre which can be made into paper,
3、 fuel, oils, textiles, food, and rope. For centuries, it was essential to the economies of many countries because it was used to make the ropes and cables used on sailing ships; colonial expansion and the establishment of a world-wide trading network would not have been feasible without hemp. Nowada
4、ys, ships cables are usually made from wire or synthetic fibres, but scientists are now suggesting that the cultivation of hemp should be revived for the production of paper and pulp. According to its proponents, four times as much paper can be produced from land using hemp rather than trees, and ma
5、ny environmentalists believe that the large-scale cultivation of hemp could reduce the pressure on Canada s forests. However, there is a problem: hemp is illegal in many countries of the world. This plant, so useful for fibre, rope, oil, fuel and textiles, is a species of cannabis, related to the pl
6、ant from which marijuana is produced. In the late 1930s, a movement to ban the drug marijuana began to gather force, resulting in the eventual banning of the cultivation not only of the plant used to produce the drug, but also of the commercial fibre-producing hemp plant. In fact, marijuana cannot b
7、e produced from the hemp plant, since it contains almost no THC(the active ingredient in the drug). In recent years, a movement for legalization have been gathering strength. It is concerned only with the hemp plant used to produce fibre; this group wants to make it legal to cultivate the plant and
8、sell the fibre for paper and pulp production. 1 Why is pulp and paper production important to Canada? ( A) Canada needs to find a way to use all its spare wood. ( B) Canada publishes a lot of newspapers and books. ( C) Pulp and paper export is a major source of income for Canada. ( D) Hemp is a trad
9、itional plant of Canada. 2 Why was the plant hemp essential to world-wide trade in the past? ( A) Ships ropes were made from it. ( B) Hemp was a very profitable export. ( C) Hemp was used as fuel for ships. ( D) Hemp was used as food for sailors. 3 Why do agriculturalists think that hemp would be be
10、tter for paper production than trees? ( A) It is cheaper to grow hemp than to cut down trees. ( B) More paper can be produced from the same area of land. ( C) Hemp produces higher quality paper. ( D) It causes less pollution of the environment. 4 Why was hemp banned? ( A) It is related to the mariju
11、ana plant. ( B) It can be used to produce marijuana. ( C) It was no longer a useful crop. ( D) It was destructive to the land. 5 What does “proponents“(line 8, pan. 2)mean ? ( A) People who are against something. ( B) People who support something. ( C) People in charge of something. ( D) People who
12、do research on something. 5 The medical world is gradually realizing that the quality of the environment in hospitals may play a significant role in the process of recovery from illness. As part of a nationwide effort in Britain to bring art out of the galleries and into public places, some of the c
13、ountrys most talented artists have been called in to transform older hospitals and to soften the hard edges of modern buildings. Of the 2,500 National Health Service hospitals in Britain, almost 100 now have significant collections of contemporary art in corridors, waiting areas and treatment rooms.
14、 These recent initiatives owe a great deal to one artist, Peter Senior, who set up his studio at a Manchester hospital in northeastern England during the early 1970s. He felt the artist had lost his place in modern society, and that art should be enjoyed by a wider audience. A typical hospital waiti
15、ng room might have as many as 500 visitors each week. What better place to hold regular exhibitions of art? Senior held the first exhibition of his own paintings in the out-patients waiting area of the Manchester Royal Hospital in 1975. Believed to be Britain s first hospital artist, Senior was so m
16、uch in demand that he was soon joined by a team of six young art school graduates. The effect is striking. Now in the corridors and waiting rooms the visitor experiences a full view of fresh colors, playful images and restful courtyards. The quality of the environment may reduce the need for expensi
17、ve drugs when a patient is recovering from an illness. A study has shown that patients who had a view onto a garden needed half the number of strong pain killers compared with patients who had no view at all or only a brick wall to look at. 6 According to the passage, “to soften the hard edges of mo
18、dern buildings“ means_. ( A) to pull down hospital buildings ( B) to decorate hospitals with art collections ( C) to improve the quality of treatment in hospitals ( D) to make the corners of hospital buildings round 7 What can we say about Peter Senior? ( A) He is a pioneer in introducing art into h
19、ospitals. ( B) He is a doctor interested in painting. ( C) He is an artist who has a large collection of paintings. ( D) He is a faithful follower of hospital art. 8 According to Peter Senior,_. ( A) art is losing its audience in modern society ( B) art galleries should be changed into hospitals ( C
20、) patients should be encouraged to learn painting ( D) art should be encouraged in British hospitals 9 After the improvement of the hospital environment,_. ( A) patients no longer need drugs in their recovery ( B) patients are no longer wholly dependent on expensive drugs ( C) patients need good-qua
21、lity drugs in their recovery ( D) patients use more pain killers in their recovery 10 The fact that six young art school graduates joined Peter shows that_. ( A) Peter s enterprise is developing greatly ( B) Peter Senior enjoys great popularity ( C) they are talented hospital artists ( D) the role o
22、f hospital environment is being recognized 10 When was the last time you saw a frog? Chances are, if you live in a city, you have not seen one for some time. Even in wet areas once teeming with frogs and toads, it is becoming less and less easy to find those slimy, hopping and sometimes poisonous me
23、mbers of the animal kingdom. All over the world, and even in remote parts of Australia, frogs are losing the ecological battle for survival, and biologists are at a loss to explain their demise. Are amphibians(两栖动物 )simply oversensitive to changes in the ecosystem? Could it be that their rapid decli
24、ne in numbers is signaling some coming environmental disaster for us all? This frightening scenario is in part the consequence of a dramatic increase over the last quarter century in the development of once natural areas of wet marshland-home not only to frogs but to all manner of wildlife. However,
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