[外语类试卷]雅思(阅读)模拟试卷52及答案与解析.doc
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1、雅思(阅读)模拟试卷 52及答案与解析 一、 Reading Module (60 minutes) 0 You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1 - 12 which are based on Reading Passage 1 below. SPOKEN CORPUS COMES TO LIFE A The compiling of dictionaries has been historically the provenance of studious professorial types usually bespectacled
2、who love to pore over weighty tomes and make pronouncements on the finer nuances of meaning. They were probably good at crosswords and definitely knew a lot of words, but the image was always rather dry and dusty. The latest technology, and simple technology at that, is revolutionising the content o
3、f dictionaries and the way they are put together. B For the first time, dictionary publishers are incorporating real, spoken English into their data. It gives lexicographers(people who write dictionaries)access to a more vibrant, up-to-date vernacular language which has never really been studied bef
4、ore. In one project, 150 volunteers each agreed to discreetly tie a Walkman recorder to their waist and leave it running for anything up to two weeks. Every conversation they had was recorded. When the data was collected, the length of tapes was 35 times the depth of the Atlantic Ocean. Teams of aud
5、io typists transcribed the tapes to produce a computerised database of ten million words. C This has been the basis along with an existing written corpus for the Language Activator dictionary, described by lexicographer Professor Randolph Quirk as the book the world has been waiting for. It shows ad
6、vanced foreign learners of English how the language is really used. In the dictionary, key words such as eat are followed by related phrases such as wolf down or be a picky eater, allowing the student to choose the appropriate phrase. D This kind of research would be impossible without computers, sa
7、id Delia Summers, a director of dictionaries. It has transformed the way lexicographers work. If you look at the word like, you may intuitively think that the first and most frequent meaning is the verb, as in I like swimming. It is not. It is the preposition, as in: she walked like a duck. Just bec
8、ause a word or phrase is used doesnt mean it ends up in a dictionary. The sifting out process is as vital as ever. But the database does allow lexicographers to search for a word and find out how frequently it is used something that could only be guessed at intuitively before. E Researchers have fou
9、nd that written English works in a very different way to spoken English. The phrase say what you like literally means feel free to say anything you want, but in reality it is used, evidence shows, by someone to prevent the other person voicing disagreement. The phrase its a question of crops up on t
10、he database over and over again. It has nothing to do with enquiry, but its one of the most frequent English phrases which has never been in a language learners dictionary before: it is now. F The Spoken Corpus computer shows how inventive and humorous people are when they are using language by twis
11、ting familiar phrases for effect. It also reveals the power of the pauses and noises we use to play for time, convey emotion, doubt and irony. G For the moment, those benefiting most from the Spoken Corpus are foreign learners. Computers allow lexicographers to search quickly through more examples o
12、f real English, said Professor Geoffrey Leech of Lancaster University. They allow dictionaries to be more accurate and give a feel for how language is being used. The Spoken Corpus is part of the larger British National Corpus, an initiative carried out by several groups involved in the production o
13、f language learning materials: publishers, universities and the British Library. Questions 1-6 Reading Passage 1 has seven paragraphs(A - G). Choose the most suitable heading for each paragraph from the list of headings below. Write the appropriate numbers(i - Xi)in boxes 1 - 6 on your answer sheet.
14、 Paragraph C has been done for you as an example. NB There are more headings than paragraphs so you will not use all of them. You may use any heading more than once. List of Headings i Grammar is corrected ii New method of research iii Technology learns from dictionaries iV Non-verbal content V The
15、first study of spoken language Vi Traditional lexicographical methods Vii Written English tells the truth Viii New phrases enter dictionary iX A cooperative research project X Accurate word frequency counts Xi Alternative expressions provided 1 Paragraph A 2 Paragraph B 3 Paragraph D 4 Paragraph E 5
16、 Paragraph F 6 Paragraph G 6 The diagram below illustrates the information provided in paragraphs B - F of Reading Passage 1 . Complete the labels on the diagram with an appropriate word or words. Use NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each space. Write your answers in boxes 7 - 11 on your answer sheet. C
17、hoose the appropriate letter A - D and write it in box 12 on your answer sheet. 12 Why was this article written? ( A) To give an example of a current dictionary. ( B) To announce a new approach to dictionary writing. ( C) To show how dictionaries have progressed over the years. ( D) To compare the c
18、ontent of different dictionaries. 12 You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 13 26 which are based on Reading Passage 2 below. Moles happy as homes go underground A The first anybody knew about Dutchman Frank Siegmund and his family was when workmen tramping through a field found a narrow ste
19、el chimney protruding through the grass. Closer inspection revealed a chink of sky-light window among the thistles, and when amazed investigators moved down the side of the hill they came across a pine door complete with leaded diamond glass and a brass knocker set into an underground building. The
20、Siegmunds had managed to live undetected for six years outside the border town of Breda, in Holland. They are the latest in a clutch of individualistic homemakers who have burrowed underground in search of tranquillity. B Most, falling foul of strict building regulations, have been forced to dismant
21、le their individualistic homes and return to more conventional lifestyles. But subterranean suburbia, Dutch-style, is about to become respectable and chic. Seven luxury homes cosseted away inside a high earth-covered noise embankment next to the main Tilburg city road recently went on the market for
22、 $296,500 each. The foundations had yet to be dug, but customers queued up to buy the unusual part-submerged houses, whose back wall consists of a grassy mound and whose front is a long glass gallery. C The Dutch are not the only would-be moles. Growing numbers of Europeans are burrowing below groun
23、d to create houses, offices, discos and shopping malls, It is already proving a way of life in extreme climates; in winter months in Montreal, Canada, for instance, citizens can escape the cold in an underground complex complete with shops and even health clinics. In Tokyo builders are planning a ma
24、ssive underground city to be begun in the next decade, and underground shopping malls are already common in Japan, where 90 percent of the population is squeezed into 20 percent of the landspace. D Building big commercial buildings underground can be a way to avoid disfiguring or threatening a beaut
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- 外语类 试卷 雅思 阅读 模拟 52 答案 解析 DOC
