[考研类试卷]考研英语模拟试卷206及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语模拟试卷 206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 Alan “Ace“ Greenberg chose his nickname to improve his chances with girls at the University of Missouri. But it is an apt (1)_ of h
2、is wading skills on Wall Street. This week, as the 73-year-old (2)_ down (3)_ chairman of Bear Stearns, the investment bank where he has worked since 1949 is in a high. It (4)_ an increase in post-tax profits in the second quarter of 43% on a year earlier, (5)_ a time when many of its Wall Street ri
3、vals have (6)_. On June 26th Merrill Lynch (7)_ a warning that its profits in the second quarter would fall by half, far (8)_ of expectations. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley have also reported lower profits. Strange that this surprised. (9)_ Alan Greenspans frenetic cuts (10)_ interest rates, time
4、s are good for underwriters and waders of bonds, core activities for Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers, (11)_ also recorded a sharp increase in profits. It has been a terrible (12)_ for equity underwriters and for advisers on the small amounts of mergers and acquisitions (M A) this year. Merrill, Gol
5、dman and Morgan Stanley are three of the investment banks that gained (13)_ during the boom in equity and M A business, and they are now (14)_ the most. Of the three, Merrill is weakest in bonds. It cut (15)_ its fixed-income activities after the collapse of Lung-Term Capital Management (LTCM) in 19
6、98. As it happens, both Bear Stearns and Lehman have long been criticised for their weakness in equities. Mr. Greenberg is famous for worrying about even the price of a paper-clip at Bear Stearns. This used to seem terribly (16)_,but these days other Wall Street firms are (17)_ about costs. Lay-offs
7、 are (18)_ though not yet alarmingly not least, because banks saw how Merrill Lynch lost (19)_ when the markets rebounded quickly after the LTCM crisis. Still, if few (20)_ of improvement show soon, expect real blood-letting on Wall Street. ( A) cover ( B) encapsulation ( C) jacket ( D) shell ( A) g
8、oes ( B) comes ( C) strides ( D) steps ( A) be ( B) being ( C) as ( D) to be ( A) recorded ( B) logged ( C) chronicled ( D) noted ( A) during ( B) at ( C) on ( D) in ( A) stumbled ( B) slip ( C) blundered ( D) crept ( A) delivered ( B) distributed ( C) conveyed ( D) issued ( A) out ( B) lacking ( C)
9、 lack ( D) short ( A) Because of ( B) Because ( C) Since ( D) For ( A) at ( B) in ( C) on ( D) upon ( A) who ( B) what ( C) whom ( D) which ( A) time ( B) age ( C) epoch ( D) era ( A) most ( B) much ( C) a lot ( D) a great deal ( A) lost ( B) losing ( C) suffering ( D) suffered ( A) down ( B) back (
10、 C) off ( D) out ( A) unnecessary ( B) unreasonable ( C) unpopular ( D) unfashionable ( A) obsessed ( B) worried ( C) suffered ( D) tormented ( A) decreased ( B) increased ( C) increasing ( D) decreasing ( A) field ( B) ground ( C) future ( D) hope ( A) signals ( B) symbol ( C) signs ( D) symptom Pa
11、rt A Directions: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points) 21 It is commonly supposed that the health of Long Island Sound is chiefly the responsibility of the shoreline communities in Long Island, Westchester County and Connecticut. Th
12、is is largely true. It is also true, however, that New York City has long been a major contributor to the environmental ills that torture this noblest of American estuaries. The main reason is four old municipal sewage treatment plants on the East River. Every day of every year, these plants deposit
13、 hundreds of thousands of gallons of partly treated wastewater into the river, which then, with tidal certainty, propels the polluted water into the Sound itself The most damaging of the pollutants leaving the plants is nitrogen useful as a fertilizer on land but, in sufficient quantities, fatal to
14、bodies of water like the Sound, where it stimulates the growth of bacteria and algae and robs the water of oxygen. This condition is known as hypoxia, and it suppresses marine life. Roughly half the nitrogen comes from treatment plants and other sources in about 80 shoreline communities, the other h
15、alf comes from the New York City plants. It is thus cause for great celebration that the city agreed last week to settle a longstanding legal action and spend at least $700 million to upgrade these four plants, cutting their nitrogen output by nearly 60 percent by 2017. Audubon New York, a leader am
16、ong the environmental groups that helped shape the agreement and move it forward, when negotiations seemed to falter, called the agreement an historic moment in the struggle to restore the Sound to good health. In retrospect, the most important moment in that struggle the moment from which all else
17、has flowed, including last weeks agreement came m 1994, when New York and Connecticut. after sustained pressure from the federal Environmental Protection Agency, approved a comprehensive plan to clean up the Sound. The citys main responsibility was to modernize its sewage treatment plants. The Giuli
18、ani administration left the bulk of the task to Mayor Michael Bloomberg. Alarmed by the projects estimated $1.3 billion price tag, Mr. Bloomberg dispatched Christopher Ward, then the environmental commissioner, to Europe and elsewhere to find new, more cost-efficient waste treatment technologies. In
19、 due course, Mr. Ward and his counterpart in Albany, Erin Crotty, reached an agreement in principle to reform the plants at well under the original cost. Mr. Ward and Ms. Crotty left public service, but after further debating aimed partly at ensuring that future city administrations could not wiggle
20、 out of the deal, and after further prodding by Attorney General Eliot Spitzer, their successors. Emily Lloyd and Denise Sheehan, brought the matter to a close. This does not mean the Sound is no longer at risk. The Sound passes through the densest population corridor in the country, and will remain
21、 forever stressed by the 20 million people who live within 50 miles of its shores. Thus the shoreline communities in Long Island, Westchester and Connecticut must do more than ever to contain pollution. 21 The following units are responsible for the health of Long Island Sound EXCEPT_. ( A) the shor
22、eline community in Long Island ( B) the shoreline community of Westchester County ( C) the shoreline community of Connecticut ( D) the shoreline community of New York city 22 What is probably the meaning of “falter“(Para.4)? ( A) succeed ( B) finish ( C) stumble ( D) fall 23 According to the text, t
23、he following statements about nitrogen are true EXCEPT_. ( A) nitrogen suppresses marine life ( B) nitrogen is a fertilizer Which helps plants grow ( C) nitrogen in large quantities is fatal to bodies of water ( D) nitrogen can rob water of oxygen 24 The modernization of the sewage treatment plants
24、was finished by_. ( A) Mr. Bloomberg ( B) Emily Lloyd and Denise Sheehan ( C) Mr. Ward ( D) Attorney General Eliot Spitzer 25 Why the author suggests that the shoreline communities do more than ever to solve pollution problem? ( A) Because the agreement has not been reached ( B) Because people livin
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