[考研类试卷]考研英语模拟试卷108及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语模拟试卷 108及答案与解析 一、 Section I Use of English Directions: Read the following text. Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark A, B, C or D. (10 points) 1 Karl Von Linne (or Linnaeus, as he is widely known) was a Swedish biologist who devised the system of Latinised scientific names fo
2、r living things that biologists use to this day. When he came to (1)_ people into his system, he put them into a group called Ho mo and Linnes hairless fellow humans are still known biologically as Homo sapiens. (2)_ the group originally had a second member, Homo troglodytes. It lived in Africa, and
3、 the pictures show it to be covered (3)_ hair. Modern (4)_ are not as generous as Linne in welcoming other species into Mans lofty (5)_, and the chimpanzee is now referred to (6)_ Pan troglodytes. But Pan or Homo, there is no (7)_ that chimps are humans nearest living relatives, and that if the secr
4、ets of what makes humanity special are ever to be (8)_, understanding why chimps are not people, nor people chimps, is a crucial part of the process. That, in turn, means looking at the DNA of the two species, (9)_ it is here that the (10)_ must originate. One half of the puzzle has been (11)_ for s
5、everal years: the human genome was published in 2001. The second has now been added, with the announcement in this weeks Nature (12)_ the chimpanzee genome has been sequenced as well. For those expecting (13)_ answers to age-old questions (14)_, the publication of the chimp genome may be something o
6、f an (15)_ There are no immediately obvious genes present in one, but not the other that account for such characteristic human (16)_ as intelligence or even hairlessness. And (17)_ there is a gene connected with language, known as FOXP2, it had already been discovered. But although the preliminary c
7、omparison of the two genomes (18)_ by the members of the Chimpanzee Sequencing and Analysis Consortium, the multinational team that generated the sequence, did not (19)_ any obvious nuggets of genetic gold, it does at least show where to look for (20)_. ( A) slot ( B) pledge ( C) plot ( D) scrutiniz
8、e ( A) And ( B) Or ( C) Thereby ( D) But ( A) by ( B) throughout ( C) with ( D) beyond ( A) demographers ( B) taxonomists ( C) chronologists ( D) psychologists ( A) subject ( B) dominion ( C) ideal ( D) species ( A) as ( B) in ( C) among ( D) without ( A) suspension ( B) suspicion ( C) rotation ( D)
9、 doubt ( A) disintegrated ( B) distracted ( C) deleted ( D) disentangled ( A) because of ( B) though ( C) for ( D) whereas ( A) disputes ( B) differences ( C) hunches ( D) humanities ( A) ruthless ( B) mediocre ( C) opaque ( D) available ( A) that ( B) where ( C) which ( D) in that ( A) instant ( B)
10、 instinctive ( C) constant ( D) intuitive ( A) too ( B) either ( C) though ( D) also ( A) panacea ( B) anticlimax ( C) zenith ( D) momentum ( A) defects ( B) merits ( C) flaws ( D) attributes ( A) while ( B) once ( C) when ( D) as if ( A) duplicated ( B) dwarfed ( C) made ( D) over lapped ( A) show
11、up ( B) turn up ( C) resort to ( D) tarn to ( A) him ( B) it ( C) them ( D) her Part A Directions: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points) 21 At last weekends consumer-electronics show in Las Vegas, digital convergence arrived with a
12、vengeance. Among the avalanche of new products were lots of mobile phones. Those fitted with digital cameras and camcorders are hardly new, but they now take even better pictures. Others can be used to play three-dimensional video games. Download movies, watch live TV (and record it during an incomi
13、ng call), operate home-security systems and listen to music files downloaded from the internet. More marvels are on the way. In the midst of this frenzy of new and unfamiliar gizmos, product features would seem to count for everything. But companies in the hypercompetitive electronics industry are d
14、iscovering something unexpected, and curious: brands matter almost as much as dazzling new technology. One of the clearest demonstrations of this is South Koreas Samsung Electronics, which made a big splash this year in Las Vegas. Samsung was once best known for making things like cheap microwave ov
15、ens. In the past few years it has transformed itself into one of the “coolest“ brands around, and is successfully selling stylish flat-screen TVs digital cameras and mobile phones. After a record-breaking year, it is poised to overtake Motorola as the worlds second-biggest maker of mobile phones. An
16、d it is snapping at the heels of Japans Sony for leadership in the consumer-electronics business. This would have seemed inconceivable a decade ago. But Samsung has proved that a combination of clever brand-building and well-designed, innovative products can work miracles. In such a competitive mark
17、et, a brand without good products will quickly fade. But the real surprise is that the opposite is also true. The market is crowded with firms with a few snazzy products, but week brands. To thrive and grow on the scale Samsung has achieved requires a strong brand, as well as innovative products. Ye
18、ars ago, when products did not change much and companies largely stuck to their knitting, American and European consumers faithfully bought cameras from Kodak, televisions from RCA and radios from Bush, because those brands represented a guarantee of quality. Then the Japanese got better at what the
19、y made. Now the South Koreans are doing the same. And yet with many American and European electronics companies making their gadgets in the same places, even sometimes the same factories, as their Asian competitors, the geography of production has become less important. Many consumers are now lookin
20、g for a guide through a bewildering array of choices. A strong brand offers such guidance. 21 The word “gizmos“(Paragraph 1) most probably means ( A) brands. ( B) functions. ( C) terminals. ( D) devices. 22 The case of Samsung Electronics demonstrates that ( A) Asian companies can also make a big sp
21、lash in competitive market. ( B) it is not easy for novel technology without a brand to gain a foothold. ( C) Dazzling new technology often creates sensation from time to time. ( D) it is hard for brands without good products to lost popularity with customers. 23 It can be inferred from the last par
22、agraph that ( A) the location of production carried much weight. ( B) brand has always exercised its decisive role. ( C) great changes used to take place in markets. ( D) a guarantee of quality equals a strong brand. 24 The word “snazzy“(Paragraph 3) probably means ( A) fake. ( B) conventional. ( C)
23、 inviting. ( D) digital. 25 According to the text a well-established brand can serve as ( A) a judge. ( B) a critic. ( C) a guide. ( D) a critic. 26 “We find that the fleeting uses of the words penis, vaginal, ass, bastard and bitch uttered in the context of the programs cited in the complaints, do
24、not render the material patently offensive under contemporary community standards for the broadcast medium.“ Making decisions like this is one of the more thankless tasks of Americas media regulator, the Federal Communications Commission. Since 1927 the FCC has tried to protect children from “indece
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