[考研类试卷]考研英语模拟试卷2及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语模拟试卷 2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 Sometimes we have specific problems with our mother; sometimes, life with her can just be hard work. If there are difficulties in you
2、r (1)_, its best to deal with them, (2)_ remember that any (3)_ should be done (4)_ person or by letter. The telephone is not a good (5)_ because it is too easy (6)_ either side to (7)_ the conversation. Explain to her (8)_ you find difficult in your relationship and then (9)_ some new arrangements
3、that you think would establish a (10)_ balance between you. Sometimes we hold (11)_ from establishing such boundaries because we are afraid that doing (12)_ implies we are (13)_ her. We need to remember that being (14)_ from our mother does not (15)_ mean that we no longer love her. If the conflict
4、is (16)_ and you cannot find a way to (17)_ it, you might decide to give up your relationship with your mother for a while. Some of my patients had (18)_ “trial separations“. The (19)_ allowed things to simmer down, enabling (20)_. ( A) relationship ( B) emission ( C) emulation ( D) interpretation (
5、 A) and ( B) but ( C) thus ( D) or ( A) contradiction ( B) estimation ( C) confrontation ( D) immersion ( A) by ( B) for ( C) to ( D) in ( A) innovation ( B) manoeuvre ( C) medium ( D) synthesis ( A) on ( B) for ( C) off ( D) to ( A) formulate ( B) commence ( C) perceive ( D) terminate ( A) whether
6、( B) how ( C) what ( D) why ( A) propose ( B) perform ( C) remove ( D) outline ( A) distinctive ( B) turbulent ( C) spontaneous ( D) healthier ( A) back ( B) on ( C) off ( D) by ( A) it ( B) which ( C) what ( D) so ( A) mustering ( B) ejecting ( C) insulting ( D) retaliating ( A) harmonious ( B) who
7、lesome ( C) malignant ( D) independent ( A) instantly ( B) reluctantly ( C) necessarily ( D) steadily ( A) moderate ( B) hereditary ( C) inevitable ( D) extreme ( A) shape ( B) resolve ( C) simulate ( D) grind ( A) successful ( B) compulsory ( C) miserable ( D) stationary ( A) blunder ( B) temptatio
8、n ( C) break ( D) trait ( A) reconciliation ( B) rebellion ( C) recreation ( D) rehearse Part A Directions: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points) 21 If soldiering was for the money, the Special Air Service (SAS) and the Special Boat
9、 Service (SBS) would have disintegrated in recent years. Such has been the explosion in private military companies (PMCs) that they employ an estimated 30,000 in Iraq alone and no government can match their fat salaries. A young SAS trooper earns about 2,000($3,500) a month; on the “circuit“, as sol
10、diers call the private world, he could get 15,000. Why would he not? For reasons both warm-hearted and cool-headed. First, for love of regiment and comrades, bonds that tend to be tightest in the most select units. Second, for the operational support, notably field medicine, and the security, includ
11、ing life assurance and pension, that come with the queens paltry shilling. Although there has been no haemorrhaging of special force (SF) fighters to the private sector, there has been enough of a trickle to cause official unease. A memo recently circulated in the Ministry of Defence detailed the lo
12、ss of 24 SF senior non-commissioned officers to private companies in the past year. All had completed 22 years of service, and so were eligible for a full pension, and near the end of their careers. Yet there is now a shortage of hard-bitten veterans to fill training and other jobs earmarked for the
13、m, under a system for retaining them known as “continuance“. America has responded to the problem by throwing cash at it, offering incentives of up to $150,000 to sign new contracts. The Ministry of Defence has found a cheaper ploy. It has spread the story of two British PMC employees, recently kill
14、ed in Iraq, whose bodies were left rotting in the sun. 21 It can be inferred from the first paragraph that _. ( A) the private world is called “circuit“ by soldiers ( B) PMCs employ an estimated 30,000 soldiers in Iraq alone ( C) Britains best soldiers stand resolute against mammon ( D) A young SBS
15、trooper earns about 15,000 22 The word “security“ in the second paragraph most probably means _. ( A) protection ( B) document ( C) certificate ( D) safety 23 Paragraph 2 is written to _. ( A) advance both warm-hearted and cool-headed causes ( B) reinterate the significance of queens paltry shilling
16、 ( C) shed light on the love of regiment and comrades ( D) interpret why young SAS troopers would not get 15,000 24 The conclusion can be made from the third paragraph that _. ( A) the Ministry of Defence detailed 24 SBS troopers ( B) the fat salaries by the private military companies have worked to
17、 some SF troopers ( C) the present system for retaining hard-bitten veterans is impeccable ( D) 20 years of service underlies a full pension 25 In the last paragraph of the text, the author has _. ( A) comment on a tip ( B) anticipate a result ( C) made a contrast ( D) depict a sample 26 As any dipl
18、omat from Britain, Austria or Turkey can tell you, handling the legacy of a vanished, far-flung empire is a tricky business. But for Georgia, the gap between old glory and present vulnerability is especially wide. Todays Georgia is diminished by war, buffeted by geopolitics and recovering from post-
19、Soviet chaos. But 800 years ago the country was a mighty military, cultural and ecclesiastical force. Its greatest monarch, Queen Tamara, defeated many foes (including her first husband) and built fine monuments. In her time, Georgia also had a big stake in the Christian life of the Holy Land. From
20、Jerusalem to the Balkans, Georgias priests, artists and church-builders were active and respected. So too were its poets, like Shota Rustaveli, the national bard who dedicated an epic to his beloved queen. In between seeking western aid and coping with power cuts, modern Georgia has pledged to keep
21、a wary eye on every place where churches, inscriptions and frescoes testify to its golden age. That includes Greece, Turkey, Bulgaria, Romania and above all, Israel. Last year, Georgians were enraged when a fresco of Rustaveli, in a Jerusalem church under the care of the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate,
22、 was defaced, then badly restored. This year, a better restoration was done, but Georgians now want a promise that in all future restoration their own experts can take part. They also want to stop the seepage of Georgian frescoes and icons, supposedly under the Patriarchates care, on to the art mark
23、et. Several times, Georgia has had to use its meagre resources to buy back pieces of the national heritage. The hope is that things will improve with the recent election of a new Jerusalem Patriarch, after his predecessor was ousted under a cloud of scandal. Georgias ties with Israel are good, thank
24、s to a thriving Georgian-Jewish community with happy memories of its homeland. Georgia also gets along with Greece, amid a fug of sentimentality over legends about the Argonauts that link the two nations. But can these warm, fuzzy feelings translate into better protection for an ancient culture? Tha
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