[考研类试卷]考研英语模拟试卷213及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语模拟试卷 213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 To the people of the Bijagos archipelago, the shark is sacred. In (1)_ ceremonies young men from these islands (2)_ the coast of Gu
2、inea-Bissau must spear a shark and present the liver to their (3)_ But can this ancient ceremony (4)_ the economic fact that a bowl of sharks fin soup can cost $150 in the Far East? In the archipelago, and all along West Africas coast, sharks are being “finned“ to (5)_ Fishermen can earn $50-80 (6)_
3、 a kilo of sharks fins, far more than ordinary fish. By the time they (7)_ the Far East, they could be (8)_ $500 a kilo or more valuable (9)_ aphrodisiacs as well as for gourmets. The high demand is (10)_ shark populations in West Africa and elsewhere. Most fish, vulnerable to (11)_ eaten by bigger
4、fish, protect their species by laying millions of eggs. But the shark has no natural enemy (12)_ man, and gives birth to just a (13)_ of young. (14)_ female harks are often caught (15)_ pregnant, the result has been predictably disastrous. Shark-like sawfish, which are also “finned“, are already vir
5、tually (16)_ off the Bijagos islands, and guitarfish are (17)_ threat. In some parts of West Africa, when sharks and other similar fish have been finned, the rest of the flesh is often (18)_, salted and exported to places like Ghana, where there is a (19)_ for lt. Dried shark is used much (20)_ a st
6、ock cube would be elsewhere. But in the Bijagos islands, where traders are uninterested in exporting dried shark, carcasses are often left to rot on the beach. ( A) beginning ( B) start ( C) initiation ( D) initial ( A) above ( B) along ( C) on ( D) off ( A) elders ( B) ancestors ( C) family ( D) re
7、latives ( A) endure ( B) live on ( C) outlast ( D) survive ( A) death ( B) die ( C) dying ( D) be died ( A) by ( B) for ( C) at ( D) from ( A) attain ( B) reach ( C) arrive ( D) achieve ( A) worthful ( B) worthwhile ( C) worthy ( D) worth ( A) as ( B) like ( C) because of ( D) for ( A) mining ( B) d
8、evastating ( C) destroying ( D) spoiling ( A) being ( B) be ( C) been ( D) is ( A) excluding ( B) besides ( C) but ( D) beside ( A) hand ( B) little ( C) few ( D) handful ( A) When ( B) Since ( C) Because ( D) As ( A) when ( B) as ( C) during ( D) whist ( A) destroyed ( B) extinct ( C) died ( D) van
9、ished ( A) in ( B) under ( C) at ( D) below ( A) parched ( B) dry ( C) drying ( D) dried ( A) demand ( B) need ( C) want ( D) request ( A) same ( B) liking ( C) as ( D) alike Part A Directions: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points)
10、21 The gap between those who have access to computers and the Internet and those who couldnt spell trouble not only for classroom learning today, but in turn for producing the kind of students who are ready to compete for the jobs of tomorrow. By the year 2000, 60 percent of all jobs will require hi
11、gh-tech computer skills. Over the next seven years, according to Bureau of Labor statistics, computer and technology related jobs will grow by an astounding 70 percent. “We as a nation are missing the opportunity of a lifetime“, insists Riley. “The ability of all students to learn at the highest lev
12、els with the greatest resources and have the promise of a future of real opportunity-this is the potential of technology“. Riley proposes dosing the gaps in technology access by providing discounted services for schools and libraries. The 1996 Telecommunications Act called for providing all K-12 pub
13、lic and nonprofit private schools, as well as libraries, with discounts-an Education Rate, or E-Rate for telecommunication services, in May 1997, the Federal Communications Commission unanimously voted to provide $2.25 billion a year in discounts ranging from 20 to 90 percent on a sliding scale, wit
14、h the biggest discounts for the poorest schools. (The E-Rate covers Internet access and internal school connections, but not computers or software.) The first round of applications for the discounts ended in April 1998 with more than 30,000 received, in time for the beginning of the school year. Wit
15、h the E-Rate in place, it was hoped that most U.S. classrooms would be connected to the Internet (up from 44 percent now), including almost every classroom in the nations 50 largest school districts. However, criticism from Congress and the telecommunications industry led the FCC in Jurm to reduce t
16、he amount available for 1998 to $1.3 billion. Still, the importance of connecting our schools to this vast and potentially powerful learning tool called the Internet is taking hold. In a June commencement address at MIT, the first by a sitting president to be broadcast on the Internet, President Cli
17、nton firmly emphasized the need to eliminate the digital divide. “Until every child has a computer in the classroom and the skills to use it, until every student can tap the enormous resources of the Internet, until every high tech company can find skilled workers to fill its high-tech jobs, America
18、 will miss the full promise of the Information Age“, he noted. “The choice“, he said, “is simple. We can extend opportunity today to all Americans or leave me behind. We can erase lines of inequity or etch them indelibly. We can accelerate the most powerful engine of growth and prosperity the world
19、has ever known, or allow the engine to stall“. 21 In the passage, the word “spell“(Sentence 1, Paragraph 1) probably means_. ( A) name or write the letters of a word ( B) form ( C) mean ( D) solve 22 In order to get the discounts in question, the schools or libraries have to_. ( A) buy computers and
20、 software ( B) submit applications ( C) be within the 50 largest school districts ( D) be connected to the Internet 23 What would eventually happen if the gap in technology access remains unclosed? ( A) Some students would lag behind in science and math. ( B) Some students wouldnt be able to get the
21、 E-rate. ( C) Some graduates would not have the skills to use the computer. ( D) Some graduates would be at a disadvantage in finding jobs. 24 Which of the following is the best title for the passage? ( A) The Digital Divide ( B) The Necessity of Eliminating the Digital Divide ( C) How to Close the
22、Gaps in Technology ( D) Discounted Services 25 According to the passage, which of the statements is NOT true? ( A) More and more jobs require high-tech computer skills. ( B) The telecommunication industry objects to providing discounted services to schools and libraries. ( C) America will miss the b
23、right future of the Information Age. ( D) Many people agree that Internet is a very important learning tool. 26 A major reason most experts today support concepts such as a youth services bureau is that traditional correctional practices fail to rehabilitate many delinquent youth. It has been estima
24、ted that as many as 70 percent of all youth who have been institutionalized are involved in new offenses following their release. Contemporary correctional institutions are usually isolated geographically and socially from the communities in which most of their inmates live. In addition, rehabilitat
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- 考研 试卷 英语 模拟 213 答案 解析 DOC
