[外语类试卷]阅读同步练习试卷2及答案与解析.doc
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1、阅读同步练习试卷 2及答案与解析 一、 Part III Reading Comprehension (40 minutes, 40 points) Directions: There are 4 passages in this part. Each of the passages is followed by 5 questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are 4 choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the best one and mark your answer on t
2、he ANSWER SHEET with a single line through the center. 0 In what now seems like the prehistoric times of computer history, the earths postwar era, there was quite a wide-spread concern that computers would take over the world from man one day. Already today, less than forty years later, as computers
3、 are relieving us of more and more of the routine tasks in business and in our personal lives, we are faced with a less dramatic but also less foreseen problem. People tend to be over-trusting of computers and are reluctant to challenge their authority. Indeed, they behave as if they were hardly awa
4、re that wrong buttons may be pushed, or that a computer may simply malfunction (失误 ). Obviously, there would be no point in investing in a computer if you had to check all its answers, but people should also rely on their own internal computers and check the machine when they have the feeling that s
5、omething has gone wrong. Questioning and routine double-checks must continue to be as much a part of good business as they were in pre-computer days. Maybe each computer should come with the warning: for all the help this computer may provide, it should not be seen as a substitute for fundamental th
6、inking and reasoning skills. 1 What is the main purpose of this passage? ( A) To look back to the early days of computers. ( B) To explain what technical problems may occur with computers. ( C) To discourage unnecessary investment in computers. ( D) To warn against a mentally lazy attitude towards c
7、omputers. 2 According to the passage, the initial concern about computers was that they might_. ( A) change our personal lives ( B) take control of the world ( C) create unforeseen problems ( D) affect our businesses 3 The passage recommends those dealing with computers to_. ( A) be reasonably doubt
8、ful about them ( B) check all their answers ( C) substitute them for basic thinking ( D) use them for business purposes only 4 The passage suggests that the present-day problem with regard to computers is_. ( A) challenging ( B) psychological ( C) dramatic ( D) fundamental 5 It can be inferred from
9、the passage that the author would disapprove of_. ( A) investment in computers ( B) the use of ones internal computer ( C) double-checks on computers ( D) complete dependence on computers for decision-making 5 Sequoyah was born about 1770 in the village of Taskigi. He was a Cherokee Indian, and, alo
10、ng with his entire tribe, he was illiterate. As a result of a hunting accident that left him partially crippled, he enjoyed more leisure time than other tribesmen. And he began to ponder the idea that the Indian people might also come to possess the secret of the “talking leaf“. Alone in the woods,
11、he spent hours playing with pieces of wood or making odd little marks on one stone with another. Neither his wife nor his friends offered him any encouragement, and many ridiculed him. But Sequoyah was obsessed with his dream of developing an alphabet for the Cherokee language. At first, Sequoyah tr
12、ied to give every word a separate character, but eventually he realized the futility of such approach and settled on assigning one character to each sound. What he achieved twelve years later was a syllabary of eighty-six characters representing all of the sounds of Cherokee. In combination, they pr
13、oduced a written language of remarkable simplicity and effectiveness. It was so simple, in fact, that it could be learned in a few days. Within a matter of months, a population that had been entirely illiterate became almost entirely literate. As a tribute to this great Indian educator, the tallest
14、trees in North America, the Sierra Redwoods, were given the name Sequoyahs. 6 From this passage, we know that Sequoyah was_. ( A) a very tall person ( B) a Taskigi Indian ( C) a married man ( D) easily discouraged 7 Sequoyah had more free time than the other tribesmen because he was_. ( A) developin
15、g an alphabet ( B) a hunter ( C) a very old man ( D) crippled 8 Why did Sequoyah spent so much time in the woods? ( A) Because he did not have any friends. ( B) Because he liked to play. ( C) Because he was experimenting with a system for an alphabet. ( D) Because he was hunting for food. 9 The Cher
16、okee alphabet_. ( A) had a separate character for each word ( B) had a separate character for each sound ( C) was very complicated to learn ( D) was not accepted by the tribe 10 How long did it take Sequoyah to develop his alphabet? ( A) A few days. ( B) Several months. ( C) Twelve years. ( D) All o
17、f his life. 10 Change or the ability to adapt oneself to a changing environment is essential to evolution. The farmer whose land is required for housing or industry must adapt himself: he can move to another place and master the problems peculiar to it; he can change his occupation, perhaps after a
18、period of training; or he can starve to death. A nation which cannot adapt its trade or defense requirements to meet world conditions faces economic or military disaster. Nothing is fixed and permanently stable. There must be movement forward, which is progress of a sort, or movement backwards, whic
19、h is decay and deterioration. In this context, tradition can be a force for good or for evil. As long as it offers a guide, it helps the ignorant and the uninformed to take a step forward and, thereby, to adapt themselves to changed circumstances. Tradition, or custom, can guide the hunter as effect
20、ively as it can influence the nervous hostess. But if we make an idol (偶像 ) of tradition, it ceases to become a guide and becomes an obstacle lying across the path of change and progress. If we insist on trying to plot the future by the past, we clearly handicap ourselves and invite failure. The bet
21、ter course is to accept the help which tradition can give, but realizing that it necessarily has its roots in the past, to be well aware of its limitations in a changing world. 11 According to this passage, which of the following statements is true? ( A) To avoid decay and deterioration, we must kee
22、p the world permanently stable. ( B) The world is always changing, so we must adjust ourselves to new conditions. ( C) The important point of evolution is that the world undergoes movement forward and movement backward alternately. ( D) Tradition often become an obstacle lying across the path of cha
23、nge and progress. 12 The author uses the incident of the farmer in the passage to illustrate that_. ( A) people should adapt themselves to the changed circumstances ( B) farmers are especially influenced by tradition ( C) the farmer may have to undergo a period of training ( D) the farmer will starv
24、e to death if he does not pay due regard to tradition 13 In the second paragraph, “this context“ refers to_. ( A) decay and deterioration ( B) movement forward ( C) tradition ( D) a changing world 14 Tradition becomes an obstacle across the path of change and progress when we_. ( A) accept tradition
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