[外语类试卷]大学英语四级模拟试卷12及答案与解析.doc
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1、大学英语四级模拟试卷 12及答案与解析 一、 Part I Writing (30 minutes) 1 For this part, you are allowed to write a composition on the topic How to Persuade People to Visit a Pet Fish Market. You may first describe the attraction of such a market, then present details of this source of enjoyment. You should write at lea
2、st 120 words. 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 1-7, mark: Y (for YES) if the statement agrees with the information gi
3、ven 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. 2 Home, Sweet(and Sour) Home On August 15, 1945, the day that war ended, Australia was jubilant. A month later it was more wary. In con
4、versations around the teapot on the kitchen table, there was not often a glowing optimism about the future. It was the best and worst of times for the 550,000 Australian servicemen and women who began to return home from the war. Australia then had only seven million people. Regulations and rationin
5、g abounded. You could get a job, but not a car. Beer was hard to get, telephone calls hard to make. What we ate was stodge and the clothes we wore were often ill-fitting. Life was dull, but safe. Violent crime was almost non-existent, drugs unknown. The new era of the atom bomb was expected to be un
6、safe. Many also predicted unemployment would return just as it returned after World War I. And yet many Australians believed that with determination and purpose they might somehow create a better Australia. Joseph Chifley, the nations Prime Minister, was probably closer to socialism than any other P
7、rime Minister in Australias history. A steam locomotive driver for much of his working life, he had educated himself in nearly everything from public finance to literature after he left school, and now in his sixtieth year his chance had come. In Canberra he and his political colleagues sketched pla
8、ns for providing more social security and economic regulations than Australians had ever known. In the following four years Chifley controlled daily life far more than most Australians would now accept, but in 1945 they gladly accepted regulations in the belief that they were temporary and in the na
9、tions interest in a time of scarcity and transition. There was regulation of rents, regulation of food prices, regulation of the size and design of new houses, regulation of travel, regulation of the workplace of dentists as well as that of unskilled workers. Even after the war various goods continu
10、ed to be rationed. People had to hand in a rationing coupon(票据 ) to buy meat and sugar, butter and tea. Petrol was rationed until 1950. Nearly all communications were still impeded by wartime shortages. In 1942, the sending of congratulatory telegrams for Christmas, New Year or Mothers Day had been
11、banned, and they did not appear again until the first Christmas after the war. In those days a telegram was delivered by a boy on a government bicycle. At that time most houses in Australia possessed no telephone exchange. You did not dial a numberrather you took the phone off the hook and waited fo
12、r someone at the telephone exchange to pick up your call and connect the number you requested. The idea of making an overseas phone call just did not enter most peoples heads. For a year or so after the war, many goods were too scarce to be rationed and were rarely to be found. Beef and cigarettes w
13、ere often in short supply. A thousand items available in shops in 1940 could not be bought at the end of 1945. Early in the war tens of thousands of Australians had predicted shortages and put away small hoards of items likely to become unprocurable: Imported tins of salmon and sardines, bottles of
14、Scotch and imported lime juice and perfume, and many kinds of foods and trinkets. Even when the war ended, many people kept their hoards untouched because the scarcity continued. Farmers, then as now, were struggling. The typical farm was in debt, either to banks or to country storekeepers, many of
15、whom themselves were in debt. We complain about droughts but in the south-eastern quarter of Australia a typical in land farmer and his wife aged about 50 had experienced more droughts and more dust storms than their children and grand children were to experience. Drought parched most wheatlands in
16、the last phase of the war and towns were blinded by dust storms. In November 1944, some trains were halted by sands drifting onto tracks, irrigation channels were filled by sand in stead of water and a frightened citizen of one country town told the local paper that the end of the world must be in s
17、ight. To travel in 1945 from a city to a typical farm was to re-enter the 19th century. There was no electric light and no refrigerator. On a few thousand farms the heavy horses were still used for ploughing although the scarcity of labor was so a cute that many farmers turned to tractorsif they cou
18、ld buy one. On Australian farms the wives were renowned for their hard work but in the war most worked even harder. Even in the cities of 1945 the typical house did not have many laborsaving amenities(设施 ). The most common were the electric iron, the ice chest, and the Singer sewing machine that was
19、 usually pedaled by foot. Most houses did not own a washing machine. Mum was the washing machine, and the spin-dryer was the wind out of doors. Anyone who walked a long a back lane in a suburb on Monday morning could hear the flapping sound coming from the wet washing that was pegged on the clothesl
20、ines in nearby backyards. Passers-by could also smell the wood smoke rising from the washhouse copper where the next batches of clothes were being boiled. Television did not exist. The transistor and the car radio had not yet been invented, if you wanted to hear the radio in the open air, you opened
21、 the kitchen window and turned up the volume. In the evening, while the radio was turned on, the ironing of shirts and dresses and the knitting, patching and mending of clothes were taking place. In those days, holes appeared frequently in toes and heels of socks, and the women of the house darned t
22、hem with needle and wool. The nylon socks and drip-dry synthetic shirts belonged to the future. Eating habits had changed very little in the previous 40 years. A city restaurant or cafe was a rarity, partly because people had no money to spare on luxuries. On the other hand, some of todays luxuries
23、were cheap. In Tasmanian towns the scallops and mutton birds were cheap pleasures in season. Crayfish were not yet exorbitant in price, and a laborer on his way home from the pub on Saturday night might halt at the fish and chip shop to buy a large crayfish wrapped in newspaper. Nurses and airmen ba
24、ck from the war were often reassured to see familiar sights: The bread always placed on the wood en bread board and cut into slices by the head of the household, who rightly sat at the head of the table. Packaged food was still uncommon. The packet of sliced bread was probably unknown in Australia.
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- 外语类 试卷 大学 英语四 模拟 12 答案 解析 DOC
