[外语类试卷]大学英语四级模拟试卷173及答案与解析.doc
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1、大学英语四级模拟试卷 173及答案与解析 一、 Part I Writing (30 minutes) 1 For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a composition on the topic: Keeping Our City Clean. You should write at least 120 words and you should base your composition on the outline (given in Chinese) below: 1城市无论大小都应该保持清洁 2保持城市清洁不是一件容易的
2、事 3为了保持城市的清洁,我们的政府做了大量的工作 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 in
3、formation 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 A triumph for scientific freedom This weeks Nobel Prize winners in medicineAustralians Barry J. Marshall and J. Robin War
4、ren toppled the conventional wisdom in more ways than one. They proved that most ulcers were caused by a lowly bacterium, which was an outrageous idea at the time. But they also showed that if science is to advance, scientists need the freedom and the funding to let their imaginations roam. Lets sta
5、rt with the Nobel pairs gut instincts. In the late 1970s, the accepted medical theory was that ulcers were caused by stress, smoking, and alcohol. But when pathologist Warren cranked up his microscope to a higher-than-usual magnification, he was surprised to find S-shaped bacteria in specimens taken
6、 from patients with gastritis. By 1982, Marshall, only 30 years old and still in training at Australias Royal Perth Hospital, and Warren, the more seasoned physician to whom he was assigned, were convinced that the bacteria were living brazenly in a sterile, acidic zonethe stomachthat medical texts
7、had declared uninhabitable. Marshall and Warrens attempts to culture the bacteria repeatedly failed. But then they caught a lucky breaker rather, outbreak. Drug-resistant staph was sweeping through the hospital. Preoccupied with the infections, lab techs left Marshalls and Warrens petri dishes to la
8、nguish in a dark, humid incubator over the long Easter holiday. Those five days were enough time to grow a crop of strange, translucent microbes. Marshall later demonstrated that ulcer-afflicted patients harbored the same strain of bacteria. In 1983, he began successfully treating these sufferers wi
9、th antibiotics and bismuth (the active ingredient in Pepto-Bismol). That same year, at an infectious disease conference in Belgium, a questioner in the audience asked Marshall if he thought bacteria caused at least some stomach ulcers. Marshall shot back that he believed bacteria caused all stomach
10、ulcers. Those were fighting words. The young physician from Perth was telling the fields academically pedigreed experts that they had it all wrong. “It was impossible to displace the dogma,“ Marshall explained to me in a jaunty, wide-ranging conversation several years ago. “Their agenda was to shut
11、me up and get me out of gastroenterology and into general practice in the outback.“ At first, Marshall couldnt produce the crowning scientific proof of his claim: inducing ulcers in animals by feeding them the bacterium. So in 1984, as he later reported in the Medical Journal of Australia. “a 32-yea
12、r-old man, a light smoker and social drinker who had no known gastrointestinal disease or family history of peptic ulceration“a superb test subject, in other words“ swallowed the growth from a flourishing three-day culture of the isolate.“ The volunteer was Marshall himself, Five days later, and for
13、 seven mornings in a row, he experienced the classic and unpretty symptoms of severe gastritis. Helicobacter pylori have since been blamed not only for the seething inflammation ,of ulcers but also for virtually all stomach cancer. Marshalls antibiotic treatment has replaced surgery as standard care
14、. And the wise guy booed off the stage at scientific meetings has just won the Nobel Prize. What does all this have to do with scientific freedom? Today, US government funding favors “hypothesis-driven“ rather than “hypothesis-generating“ research. In the former, a scientist starts with a safe suppo
15、sition and conducts the experiment to prove or disprove the idea. “If you want to get research funding; you better make sure that youve got the experiment half done,“ Marshall told me. “You have to prove it works before theyll fund you to test it out.“ By contrast, in hypothesis-generating research,
16、 the scientist inches forward by hunch, gathering clues and speculating on their meaning. The payoff is never clear. With todays crimped science budgets and intense competition for grants, such risky research rarely gets funded. Proceeding on intuition, Mar- shall told me, “is a luxury that not many
17、 researchers have.“ It helps, he added, to be an outsider. “The people who have got a stake in the old technology arc never the ones to embrace the new technology. Its always someone a bit on the periphery-who hasnt got anything to gain by the status quowho is interested in changing it.“ 2 This week
18、s Nobel Prize winners in medicine proved that most ulcers were caused by a lowly bacterium, ( A) Y ( B) N ( C) NG 3 In the late 1970s, the accepted medical theory was that ulcers were caused by stress, smoking, and alcohol, ( A) Y ( B) N ( C) NG 4 In 1983, Warren began successfully treating sufferer
19、s with antibiotics and bismuth. ( A) Y ( B) N ( C) NG 5 Chinese scientists will win the Nobel Prize soon. ( A) Y ( B) N ( C) NG 6 At first, Marshall couldnt produce the crowning scientific proof of his claim. ( A) Y ( B) N ( C) NG 7 Mars rolls antibiotic treatment has replaced surgery as standard ca
20、re. ( A) Y ( B) N ( C) NG 8 In hypothesis-driven research, the scientist inches forward by hunch, gathering clues and speculating on their meaning. ( A) Y ( B) N ( C) NG 9 If science is to advance, scientists need the _ and the _ to let their imaginations roam. 10 Marshall and Warrens attempts to _
21、repeatedly failed. 11 Today, US government funding favors _ rather than _ research. Section A Directions: In this section, you will hear 8 short conversations and 2 long conversations. At the end of each conversation, one or more questions will be asked about what was said. Both the conversation and
22、 the questions will be spoken only once. After each question there will be a pause. During the pause, you must read the four choices marked A, B, C and D, and decide which is the best answer. ( A) 35. ( B) 36. ( C) 34. ( D) 40. ( A) Uncle and niece. ( B) Aunt and nephew. ( C) Cousins. ( D) Father an
23、d daughter. ( A) She had an accident. ( B) She wants to go to a foreign country to learn its language. ( C) Andrew is a native speaker of English. ( D) Andrew speaks English quite well. ( A) To help her solve the problem. ( B) To make an arrangement. ( C) To deal with the hardest problem first. ( D)
24、 To handle the most important problem first. ( A) She has not enjoyed a good film for long. ( B) She seems reluctant to see the film. ( C) She believes the film if not worth seeing. ( D) She has seen Titanic. ( A) She doesnt like playing cards. ( B) She has something else to do this evening. ( C) Sh
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- 外语类 试卷 大学 英语四 模拟 173 答案 解析 DOC
