[考研类试卷]考研英语模拟试卷264及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语模拟试卷 264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 Speech, whether oral or written, is a used commodity. If we are to be heard, we must (1)_ our words from those (2)_ to us within fa
2、milies, peer groups, societal institutions, and political networks. Our utterances position us both in an immediate social dialogue (3)_ our addressee and, simultaneously, in a larger ideological one (4)_ by history and society. We speak as an individual and also, as a student or teacher, a husband
3、or wife, a person of a particular discipline, social class, religion, race, or other socially constructed (5)_. Thus, to varying degrees, all speaking is a (6)_ of others words and all writing is rewriting. As language (7)_, we experience individual agency by infusing our own intentions (8)_ other p
4、eoples words, and this can be very hard. (9)_, schools, like into churches and courtrooms, are places (10)_ people speak words that are more important than they are. The words of a particular discipline, like those of “God the father“ or of “the law“, are being articulated by spokespeople for the gi
5、ven authority. The (11)_ of the addressed, the listener, is to acknowledge the words and their (12)_. In Bakhtins (13)_, “the authoritative word is located in a distanced zone, organically connected with a (14)_ that is felt to be hierarchally higher“. (15)_, part of growing up in an ideological sen
6、se is becoming more “selective“ about the words we appropriate and, (16)_, pass on to others. In Bakhtins (17)_, responsible people do not treat (18)_ as givens, they treat them as utterances, spoken by particular people located in specific ways in the social landscape. Becoming alive to the socio-i
7、deological complexity of language use is (19)_ to becoming a more responsive language user and, potentially, a more playful one too, able to use a (20)_ of social voices, of perspectives, in articulating ones own ideas. ( A) invent ( B) appropriate ( C) coin ( D) change ( A) essential ( B) attainabl
8、e ( C) usable ( D) available ( A) through ( B) by ( C) with ( D) in ( A) created ( B) avowed ( C) invented ( D) attested ( A) schedule ( B) category ( C) archives ( D) index ( A) rewriting ( B) recreating ( C) relearning ( D) revoicing ( A) users ( B) learners ( C) students ( D) educators ( A) out o
9、f ( B) onto ( C) away from ( D) into ( A) Traditionally ( B) Similarly ( C) However ( D) Strangely ( A) in where ( B) in that ( C) in which ( D) what ( A) character ( B) role ( C) function ( D) user ( A) understanding ( B) denotation ( C) sense ( D) significance ( A) terms ( B) views ( C) discourse
10、( D) opinions ( A) past ( B) present ( C) future ( D) ancient time ( A) Because ( B) Bedsides ( C) Furthermore ( D) And yet ( A) in contrary ( B) in contrast ( C) in turn ( D) in return ( A) argument ( B) points ( C) terms ( D) view ( A) word ( B) a word ( C) the word ( D) words ( A) sensible ( B) c
11、ritical ( C) emergent ( D) urgent ( A) difference ( B) colorfulness ( C) diversity ( D) variation Part A Directions: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points) 21 In most parts of the world, climate change is a worrying subject. Not so i
12、n California. At a recent gathering of green LUMINARIES in a film stars house, naturally, for that is how seriousness is often established in Los Angeles the dominant note was self-satisfaction, at what the state has already achieved. And perhaps nobody is more complacent than Arnold Schwarzenegger.
13、 Unlike Al Gore, a presidential candidate turned prophet of environmental doom, Californias governor sounds cheerful when talking about climate change. As well he might: it has made his political career. Although California has long been an environmentally-conscious state, until recently greens were
14、 concerned above all with smog and redwood trees. “Coast of Dreams“, Kevin Starrs authoritative history of contemporary, California, published in 2004, does not mention climate change. In that year, though, the newly-elected Mr. Schwarzenegger made his first tentative call for western states to seek
15、 alternatives to fossil fuels. Gradually he noticed that his efforts to tackle climate change met with less resistance, and more acclaim, than just about all his other policies. These days it can seem as though he works on nothing else. Mr. Schwarzeneggers transformation from screen warrior to eco-w
16、arrior was completed last year when he signed a bill imposing legally-enforceable limits on greenhouse gas emissions a first for America. Thanks mostly to its lack of coal and heavy industry, California is a relatively clean state. If it were a country it would be the worlds eighth-biggest economy,
17、but only its 16th-biggest polluter. Its big problem is transport meaning, mostly, cars and trucks, which account for more than 40% of its greenhouse-gas emissions compared with 32% in America as a whole. The state wants to ratchet down emissions limits on new vehicles, beginning in 2009. Mr. Schwarz
18、enegger has also ordered that, by 2020, vehicle fuel must produce 10% less carbon: in the production as well as the burning, so a simple switch to composed ethanol is probably out. Thanks in part to Californias example, most of the western states have adopted climate action plans. When it comes to s
19、etting emission targets, the scene can resemble a pose down at a Mr. Olympia contest. Arizonas climate-change scholars decided to set a target of cutting the states emissions to 2000 levels by 2020. But Janet Napolitano, the governor, was determined not to be out-muscled by California. She has decla
20、red that Arizona will try to return to 2000 emission levels by 2012. California has not just inspired other states; it has created a vanguard that ought to be able to prod the federal government into stronger national standards than it would otherwise consider. But California is finding it easier to
21、 export its policies than to put them into practice at home. In one way, Californias serf-confidence is fully justified. It has done more than any other state let alone the federal government to fix Americas attention on climate change. It has also made it seem as though the problem can be solved. W
22、hich is why failure would be such bad news. At the moment California is a beacon to other states. If it fails, It will become an excuse for inaction. 21 According to the author, Mr. Arnold Schwarzenegger is cheerful chiefly because ( A) climate change is not worrying California anymore. ( B) even fi
23、lm stars become serious about environmental protection. ( C) he has benefited personally from Californias achievements. ( D) his style of administration is always dominated by self-satisfaction. 22 Why did Mr. Schwarzenegger seem to be working on nothing else? ( A) Because California has always been
24、 environmentally-conscious. ( B) Because Kevin Start failed to talk about climate change in his book. ( C) Because his call for alternative fuels has been most strongly echoed. ( D) Because all his other policies met with more acclaim than resistance. 23 Corn-based ethanol might not be chosen as an
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