[外语类试卷]大学英语四级模拟试卷62及答案与解析.doc
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1、大学英语四级模拟试卷 62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 A Letter to the Minister of Education. You mast base your composition on the following instructions(given in Chinese). Your composition should be no less than 120 words.
2、 Remember to write it neatly. 假设你是李文,请你就学校假期的安排给教育部部长写一封信,向他建议将学校传统的长假调整为几次短假并陈述相关的原因,比如:学习时间过长可能引起过度疲劳,而放假过长则可能导致浪费时间等等。 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 a
3、ttached 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 contradicts the information given in the passage; NG (for NOT GIVEN) if the information is not given in the passage. 2 Transportation Visitors t
4、o America are immediately struck by the tremendous numbers of automobiles filling the highways and crowding the city streets. The automobile, which has transformed the American way of life, is the most indispensable workhorse of the family. During the week the father drives it to his job in the city
5、, alone, or in a “car pool“ arrangement with several of his fellow workers. When he leaves it at home, his wife uses it constantly to do errands(差事 ), to haul groceries, to drive children to lessons or appointments, to shops or swimming pools. On weekends the family drives out to the country for a p
6、icnic lunch or may take a trip of several hundred miles. On vacations, no corner of the country is beyond the familys reach. Transportation Changed Peoples Life All of America has felt the changes which came with the automobile and with the network of highways that have been built to serve it. Farme
7、rs, who live far from their neighbors, are no longer isolated. Tractors do the work of the many farmhands they cannot afford to hire; trucks carry their products to market, to storage elevators or to railroads. Ownership of cars has made it possible for families to move out of cities to suburban are
8、as and to small towns in the countryside, sometimes as much as 50 miles from where they work. Many businesses and stores have followed their customers to establish rural factories and suburban shopping centers surrounded by huge parking lots. Traffic Problems Traffic jams in cities and along the app
9、roaches to cities, especially at morning and evening rush hours and at the start and end of weekends, are difficult problems. How to find enough parking spaces in the cities, even with underground parking lots and many-storied “pigeonhole“ parking structures, is another problem. More highways and wi
10、der ones are needed as fast as they can be built. New Means of Transportation Americas good roads are very recent. When pioneer families crossed the country in covered wagons little more than 100 years ago along deep-rutted(有车辙的 ) roads, they were fortunate if they could make the trip in 109 days. L
11、ess than 60 years ago an automobile made the same trip and it still took 74 days, rather than 7 days it might take today. America had very few good roads before the mass production of the automobile made them necessary. Now it takes a tremendous road building program, great sums of money, thousands
12、of men, machines with wheels taller than the men who drive them and a great deal of planning to keep up with the highway needs of American. Thousands of miles of roads, most of which four and eight lanes wide, are being built, including expressways through and around large cities. They will scarcely
13、 keep up with the need, for there are many more cars each year. The number of cars in America is growing faster than the population. In two cities there are already more cars than families. Before the modern highways were built, Americas railroads carried people and products across the country. Rail
14、roads played an exciting and colorful part in the growth of America in the second half of the nineteenth century. Their iron tracks bound the country together and along their lines sprang up the cities, towns and villages that served as the market places for Americans moving West. In 1869 the first
15、transcontinental railway was completed and at the point in Utah where the track from the East met the track from the West, a solid gold railway spike was driven in to fasten down the rail. Today the railroads still serve as Americas largest carrier of freight, hauling raw materials and goods to fact
16、ories and stores, but they no longer carry many of Americas travelers. In 1971 part of the railroads were put under government control when the National Passenger Corporation(known as Amtrak) took over responsibility for all intercity passenger trains. Freight service and commuter lines still remain
17、 in the hands of private railroad companies. Traffic planners are worried by the fact that the railroads have cut down on the number of commuter trains, carrying workers from suburban homes to their offices in the citythus adding more automobiles where city streets are already too crowded and parkin
18、g space hard to find. Highway buses, some of them air-conditioned and luxurious, have attracted many of the railroads former passengers for trips from city to city. Smaller buses within the city have displaced streetcars. The oldest forms of transportation in America, of course, are like those of ot
19、her countrieswalking, horseback or animal-drawn wagons and various kinds of boats. All of these are still used, and especially boats on Americas rivers and Great Lakes. Since the opening of the St. Lawrence Seaway connecting the Great Lakes with the Atlantic Ocean, oceangoing ships in greater and gr
20、eater numbers will be landing cargoes at inland American ports, such as Chicago, Milwaukee and Duluth. The newest form of transportation which ties the country together is the airplane. While less than 60 years ago Orville Wright kept this plane in the air for 120 feet, today large jet airplanes cro
21、ss the country in five hours and land at 33 major airports. Smaller planes connect nearby cities and towns, and often the towns themselves are connected to their airports by helicopter service. In fact with increasingly difficult driving conditions in the cities, the President of the United States n
22、ow has helicopters on call, which are on the White House lawn to carry him to important meetings or out of the city for a weekends relaxation at his country home. 2 On vacations, people can take a trip to every comer of America except great sections of desert. ( A) Y ( B) N ( C) NG 3 The ownership o
23、f cars enables the establishment of rural factories and suburban shopping centers with huge parking lots. ( A) Y ( B) N ( C) NG 4 The traffic jams are difficult problems in cities and along the approaches to cities at morning and evening rush hours. ( A) Y ( B) N ( C) NG 5 It is easy for people to f
24、ind enough parking space, with those underground parking lots and many-storied “pigeonhole“ parking structures in big cities. ( A) Y ( B) N ( C) NG 6 Because the number of cars in America is growing faster than the population, there are already more automobiles than families in the whole country. (
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- 外语类 试卷 大学 英语四 模拟 62 答案 解析 DOC
