[考研类试卷]考研英语模拟试卷154及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语模拟试卷 154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 Soft money is the huge, unlimited contributions from corporations, labor union and wealthy individuals that political parties raise
2、 and spend on campaign attack ads and other (1)_ designed to influence elections. The soft money system undermines campaign finance laws (2)_ limit contributions and (3)_ the sources of funds that can be spent on federal campaigns. It provides corporations, labor unions, and wealthy individuals a wa
3、y to circumvent federal election laws and (4)_ campaigns with tens of millions of special interest dollars, (5)_ corporations and unions have been (6)_ from contributing or spending their treasury finds to influence federal elections since 1907 and 1947, (7)_. Individuals can contribute to federal (
4、8)_ through parties and candidates, but only in (9)_ amounts. The Democratic and Republican parties (10)_ $262 million in (11)_ money for the 1996 elections. The parties raise soft money under the (12)_ that it will be used for general party building activities. (13)_, soft money pays for campaign a
5、ds in the way as issue discussion, political research, polling, fund raising, and get out the-vote efforts all of which affect the (14)_ of federal elections. Soft money was the source of the 1996 political fund-raising scandals, (15)_ the selling of the Lincoln bedroom, White House coffees and the
6、influx of foreign money into the (16)_ campaign. The McCain-Feingold bill (17)_ the soft money system by prohibiting candidates and national political parties from raising soft money, and by prohibiting state political parties from (18)_ soft money on activities which affect federal elections. In ot
7、her (19)_,the current practice of raising unlimited soft money contributions from corporations, unions and wealthy individuals, and then channeling this money into federal elections would end. The national parties would be (20)_ to raise all of their funds under the limits and restrictions in the la
8、w. ( A) activities ( B) affairs ( C) events ( D) accidents ( A) what ( B) that ( C) and ( D) it ( A) bind ( B) confine ( C) reduce ( D) restrict ( A) load ( B) feed ( C) flood ( D) stuff ( A) even though ( B) even so ( C) even now ( D) even as ( A) isolated ( B) forbidden ( C) released ( D) banned (
9、 A) respectively ( B) together ( C) totally ( D) regularly ( A) institutions ( B) campaigns ( C) bureaus ( D) unions ( A) considerable ( B) limitless ( C) limited ( D) considerate ( A) rise ( B) arise ( C) arouse ( D) raise ( A) cash ( B) soft ( C) easy ( D) ready ( A) guideline ( B) protection ( C)
10、 guise ( D) help ( A) In response ( B) In reality ( C) In particular ( D) In addition ( A) outcomes ( B) processes ( C) broadcasts ( D) candidates ( A) concerning ( B) excluding ( C) providing ( D) including ( A) presidential ( B) local ( C) advertising ( D) national ( A) supports ( B) ends ( C) deb
11、ates ( D) illustrates ( A) spending ( B) drawing ( C) collecting ( D) planning ( A) ways ( B) senses ( C) words ( D) respects ( A) required ( B) forbidden ( C) allowed ( D) financed Part A Directions: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 p
12、oints) 21 Mary Eberstadt writes in Home-Alone America that growing obesity, the high incidence of sexually transmitted disease among teenagers and an overdependence on drugs such as Ritalin for attention deficit disorder are often the fault of parents who “outsource“ their responsibilities. “We tend
13、 to think that the problems with juveniles are located at the bottom end of the social spectrum, but latchkey children are more common among the affluent,“ said Eberstadt, a mother of four who is a conservative writer and research fellow at Stanford Universitys Hoover Institution. According to the m
14、ost recent figures from the US Census Bureau, 41% of children aged 12 to 14 regularly look after themselves at the end of the school day. The figures rise with prosperity. For children aged 5 to 14, “self-care increases from 11% of children in poverty to 22% of those with family incomes at least dou
15、ble the poverty line.“ Eberstadts book is dividing sociologists, critics and partisans in the “mommy wars“ between stay-at-home and working parents. A child clings to the ankles of his smartly dressed mother to stop her leaving for work on the front of the book; he does the same to his father on the
16、 back. P. J. ORourke, the conservative commentator and satirist, supports Eberstadts thesis. “If you dont think (her) arguments have merit, try treating your dog the way America treats its kids,“ he said. “Give the puppy her own set of house keys and put her in front of the television instead of tak
17、ing her for a walk. Let her eat anything she wants and house train herself. Send her to another master for visitation at the weekends. And when she comes into heat, turn her loose in the pound.“ James Q. Wilson, author of The Marriage Problem: How Our Culture Has Weakened Families is one of the inte
18、llectual forces behind zero tolerance policing. He praised the books “great, unarguable theme that parental care is of decisive importance in shaping the character of our children“. Feminist critics, in contrast, accuse Eberstadt of Taliban-style thinking. The Washington Post attacked her “seductive
19、“ but “nasty“ opinions and lack of “interest in how real people live or think about their lives“. Eberstadt insists that she is not ordering women back to the home. “The bottom line is a lot more nuanced,“ she said. “It doesnt have to be you there after school, but there are not enough protective, s
20、upporting, loving adults around.“ Neighbourhoods, she added, “are so emptied of adult presence that even the richest kids just go home, throw the deadbolt and get no exercise more strenuous than walking from the video game to the refrigerator.“ The result of being home alone is not just snacking and
21、 obesity but casual sex, leading to an explosion in venereal diseases that can lead to infertility and cervical cancer, Eberstadt said. 21 The word “outsource“(Paragraph 1) may be best replaced by ( A) abandon. ( B) renounce. ( C) transfer. ( D) submit. 22 James Q. Wilson supports Mary Eberstadts ne
22、w book because ( A) he thinks the most important factor in shaping the character of our children is parental care. ( B) he agrees that it is our culture that weakens families. ( C) the way America treats its kids is somewhat similar to the way one treats his dog. ( D) he is the author of The Marriag
23、e Problem: How our culture has weakened Families. 23 Mary Eberstadt would mostly agree ( A) the problems with juveniles are located at the bottem end of the social spectrum. ( B) women shall not go out to work but stay at home. ( C) children in rich families are lack of exercises. ( D) leaving child
24、ren alone will lead to many diseases. 24 The phrase “Taliban-style thinking“ (Line 1, Paragraph 8) most probably refers to ( A) the way that people of Taliban thinks. ( B) the guess that Mary Eberstadt may come from Taliban. ( C) the conservative way Mary Eberstadt shows in her new book. ( D) Mary E
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