[外语类试卷]大学英语四级模拟试卷1004及答案与解析.doc
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1、大学英语四级模拟试卷 1004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 entitled My View on Money. You should write at least 120 words following the outline given below: 1有人喜欢存钱 2有人却喜欢提前消费 3我的观点 My View on Money 二、 Part II Reading Comprehension (Skimmi
2、ng 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 1-7, mark: Y (for YES) if the statement agrees with the information given in the passage; N (for NO) if the statement contra
3、dicts the information given in the passage; NG (for NOT GIVEN) if the information is not given in the passage. 1 Quick Change in Strategy for a Bookseller In the movie Youve Cot Mail, Tom Hanks played the aggressive big-box retailer Joe Fox driving the little bookshop owner played by Meg Ryan out of
4、 business. Twelve years later, it may be Joe Foxs turn to worry. Readers have gone from skipping small bookstores to wondering if they need bookstores at all. More people are ordering books online or getting them from the best-seller bin at Wal-Mart. But the threat that has the industry and some rea
5、ders the most rattled is the growth of e-books. In the first five months of 2009, e-books made up 2.9 percent of trade book sales. In the same period in 2010, sales of e-books, which generally cost less than hardcover books, grew to 8. 5 percent, according to the Association of American Publishers,
6、spurred by sales of the Amazon Kindle and the new Apple iPad. For Barnes McDonalds now sells【 S5】 _salads than any other eating establishment. 【 S6】 _last month came the discouraging word from the National Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that Americans have【 S7】 _far short of the goals se
7、t a decade ago to increase consumption of vegetables. In 2009, just one in three adults had three or more servings a day. That was half the【 S8】 _public health officials had hoped for. And it falls【 S9】 _shorter if you look at the current recommendations: at least four to five vegetable servings dai
8、ly. Please note the【 S10】_of a serving: half a cup of cut-up or cooked vegetables, one cup of fresh greens, half a cup of cooked dried beans, or, if you must, six ounces of vegetable juice. A)percentage F)springing K)Yet B)accumulated G)introducing L)comments C)disagree H)Already M)different D)defin
9、ition I)more N)fallen E)encourage J)even O)rate 48 【 S1】 49 【 S2】 50 【 S3】 51 【 S4】 52 【 S5】 53 【 S6】 54 【 S7】 55 【 S8】 56 【 S9】 57 【 S10】 Section B Directions: There are 2 passages in this section. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four
10、choices marked A, B, C and D. You should decide on the best choice. 57 Environmental asceticism has created a vogue for upgrading light-bulbs and tweaking thermostats(恒温器 ). But according to a new piece of research, many of these actions however virtuous arise from faulty perceptions of energy savin
11、gs. Shahzeen Attari of Columbia University and her colleagues recruit 505 volunteers from across America. Each was asked to estimate the energy consumption of nine household devices as well as the energy savings incurred by six green activities. The researchers then compared the volunteers estimates
12、 with the actual energy requirements or savings in question. Their results suggest that although people do grasp basic energy trends, they are decidedly hazy on the details. On average, participants underestimated both energy use and energy savings by a factor of 2. 8 mostly because they undervalued
13、 the requirements of large machines like heaters and clothes dryers. As a result, they failed to recognize the huge energy savings that can come from improving the efficiency of such appliances. Miscalculations like these hinder conservation efforts. When asked to rank the single most effective way
14、to save energy, participants typically endorsed activities with small savings, such as turning off lights, while ignoring what they could economize on larger devices. This suggests that people misallocate their efforts, fretting(烦恼 )over an unattended lamp(at 100 watts)while neglecting the energy th
15、ey could save by shifting their washer settings from “hot“ to “warm“(4 000 watt-hours for each load of laundry). A quirk(怪癖 )of human psychology could help to explain these persistent underestimates. When calculating such things, people often adopt a familiar unit as a mental scale and then generate
16、 predictions based on that unit. As a side-effect, their estimates cluster too closely around the measure a phenomenon called “anchoring.“ This suggests an obvious criticism: by providing the light-bulb figure, the researchers primed their subjects to underestimate energy consumption. But the author
17、s argue that rather than introducing a methodological flaw, they simply acknowledged a shared point of reference. When it comes to an accessible, quantitative measure of energy, consumers are uniquely familiar with the 100W bulb. As a result, Dr. Attari expects bulbs to exert an anchoring effect on
18、the general population as well as on her volunteers, contributing to widespread underestimates of the energy demands of large appliances. 58 What can we learn from the new research? ( A) Many energy-saving measures are based on wrong ideas. ( B) Many people overestimate the energy consumption of bul
19、bs. ( C) Some energy-saving actions are not well-intentioned. ( D) Urgent measures should be taken to save energy. 59 Why do people fail to realize the energy savings from improving the efficiency of appliances? ( A) Because they overlook the use of energy-saving appliances. ( B) Because they dont k
20、now the details of basic energy trends. ( C) Because they underestimate the demands of highly energy-consuming appliances. ( D) Because they tend to miscalculate the energy consumption of larger appliances. 60 What is the most effective way to save energy according to the author? ( A) Realizing the
21、benefit from turning off a bulb. ( B) Cutting down the use of larger devices. ( C) Calculating energy consumption accurately. ( D) Changing the settings of appliances. 61 What causes the underestimate of energy consumption? ( A) People dont know the related figures of appliances. ( B) People incline
22、 to be close to mental scales when estimating things. ( C) Researchers indicate participants may overestimate consumption. ( D) People dont have the same points of reference. 62 What does Dr. Attari learn from the findings of the research? ( A) A methodological fault may lead to the wrong estimate o
23、f energy use. ( B) Most people tend to underestimate the energy consumption. ( C) There is not an accessible way to measure the use of energy. ( D) Familiarity with bulbs leads to the underestimate of energy consumption. 62 Holding on to the belief that children will shed their “baby fat“ as they ge
24、t older may allow the childhood obesity epidemic last forever, and laying a foundation for obesity later in life among overweight kids. According to 2006 data from the Centers for Disease Control, 16% of American children were obese, and 32% overweight, with a growing proportion of overweight and ob
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- 外语类 试卷 大学 英语四 模拟 1004 答案 解析 DOC
