[外语类试卷]考博英语模拟试卷84及答案与解析.doc
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1、考博英语模拟试卷 84及答案与解析 一、 Reading Comprehension 0 One of the youngest independent countries in the Western Hemisphere, Trinidad and Tobago, became a nation on August 31, 1962. For a long time this nation has attracted tourists it is the home of calypso music and limbo dancing and in recent years its heal
2、thy economy has attracted investors as well. Trinidad and Tobago is a single country composed of two islands Trinidad, with the majority of the countrys 900,000 inhabitants, is a rectangle of roughly fifty by forty miles. Tobago, nineteen miles to the north, is smaller and has a population of about
3、35,000. Situated at the end of the long chain of Windward and Leeward Islands, Trinidad is at one point only seven miles off the coast of Venezuela. Its geology, flora, and fauna are similar to those of the South American mainland. Like Venezuela, the backbone of Trinidad and Tobagos economy is petr
4、oleum and its first colonists were Spaniards. Three mountain ranges, with summits of up to 3,000 feet, cross Trinidad from east to west, while Tobago is a relatively flat coral island, rimmed with fine beaches. The broad plains between Trinidads mountain ranges are dominated by vast fields of sugar
5、cane that present a symmetrical green pattern when seen from the air. A closer inspection reveals the coconut plantations along the coast and the profusion of brilliant red and yellow flowers of various species that are found all over the island. Houses on both islands tend to be light-colored, with
6、 an open style of architecture, in many cases with open space under the entire dwelling. Port-of-Spain, the capital, is a bustling modern city where the pulse of the people reflects Britist, Spanish, and East Indian influences. 1 The title below that best expresses the main idea of this passage is _
7、. ( A) Trinidad and Tobago, A Young Country ( B) Two Islands ( C) Trinidads Attraction to Tourists ( D) Sugar Cane Production 2 Tobagos area is _. ( A) approximately 2,000 square miles ( B) less than 2,000 square miles ( C) 19 miles from Trinidad ( D) more than 2,000 square miles 3 The flowers of Tr
8、inidad resemble those of _. ( A) Cuba ( B) Puerto Rico ( C) Windward Islands ( D) Venezuela 4 Trinidads economy depends on _. ( A) sugar cane ( B) coconuts ( C) tourists ( D) oil 5 Sugar cane grows best _. ( A) in mountainous areas ( B) along the coast ( C) in valleys ( D) in coral islands 5 Observe
9、 the dilemma of the fungus: it is a plant, but it possesses no chlorophyl. While all other plants put the suns energy to work for them combining the nutrients of ground and air into body structure, the chlorophylless fungus must look elsewhere for an energy supply. It finds it in those other plants
10、which, having received their energy free from the sun, relinquish it at some point in their cycle either to other animals (like us humans) or to fungi. In this search for energy the fungus has become the earth s major source of rot and decay. Wherever you see mold forming on a piece of bread, or a p
11、ile of leaves turning to compost, or a blown-down tree becoming pulp on the ground, you are watching a fungus eating. Without fungus action the earth would be piled high with the dead plant life of past centuries. In fact, certain plants which contain resins that are toxic to fungi will last indefin
12、itely. Specimens of the redwood, for instance, can still be found resting on the forest floor centuries after having been blown down. 6 The title below that best expresses the main idea of this passage is _. ( A) Life without Chlorophyl ( B) The Source of Rot and Decay ( C) The Harmul Qualities of F
13、ungi ( D) The Strange World of the Fungus 7 The statement “you are watching a fungus eating“ is best described as _. ( A) figurative ( B) ironical ( C) parenthetical ( D) joking 8 The author implies that fungi _. ( A) are responsible for all the worlds rot and decay ( B) cannot live completely apart
14、 from other plants ( C) attack plants in order to kill them ( D) are poisonous to resin-producing plants 9 The author uses the word “dilemma“ to indicate that _. ( A) the fungus is both helpful and harmful in its effects ( B) no one understands how a fungus lives ( C) fungi are not really plants ( D
15、) the fungus seems to have its own biological laws 10 Which word best describes the fungus as depicted in the passage? ( A) Quixotic. ( B) Sporadic. ( C) Enigmatic. ( D) Parasitic. 10 In their world of darkness, it would seem likely that some of the animals might have become blind, as has happened t
16、o some cave fauna. So, indeed, many of them have, compensating for the lack of eyes with marvelously developed feelers and long, slender fins and processes with which they grope their way, like so many blind men with canes, their whole knowledge of friends, enemies, or food coming to them through th
17、e sense of touch. The last traces of plant life are left behind in the thin upper layer of water for no plant can live below about 600 feet even in very clear water, and few find enough sunlight for their food-manufacturing activities below 200 feet. Since no animal can make its own food, the creatu
18、res of the deeper waters live a strange, almost parasitic existence of utter dependence on the upper layers. These hungry carnivores prey fiercely and relentlessly upon each other, yet the whole community is ultimately dependent upon the slow rain of descending food particles from above. The compone
19、nts of this never-ending rain are the dead and dying plants and animals from the surface, or from one of the intermediate layers. For each of the horizontal zones or communities of the sea that lie between the surface and the sea bottom, the food supply is different and in general poorer than for th
20、e layer above. Pressure, darkness, and silence are the conditions of life in the deep sea. But we know now that the conception of the sea as a silent place is wholly false. Wide experience with hydrophones and other listening devices for the detection of submarines has proved that, around the shore
21、lines of much of the world, there is the extraordinary uproar produced by fishes, shrimps, porpoises and probably other forms not yet identified. There has been little investigation as yet of sound in the deep, offshore areas, but when the crew of the Atlantis lowered a hydrophone into deep water of
22、f Bermuda, they recorded strange mewing sounds, shrieks, and ghostly moans, the sources of which have not been traced. But fish of shallower zones have been captured and confined in aquaria, where their voices have been recorded for comparison with sounds heard at sea, and in many cases satisfactory
23、 identification can be made. During the Second World War the hydrophone network set up by the United States Navy to protect the entrance to Chesapeake Bay was temporarily made useless when, in the spring of 1942, the speakers at the surface began to give forth, every evening, a sound described as be
24、ing like “a pneumatic drill tearing up pavement“. The extraneous noises that came over the hydrophones completely masked the sounds of the passage of ships. Eventually it was discovered that the sounds were the voices of fish known as croakers, which in the spring move into Chesapeake Bay from the o
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- 外语类 试卷 英语 模拟 84 答案 解析 DOC
