[考研类试卷]考研英语模拟试卷31及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语模拟试卷 31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 The earliest controversies about the relationship between photography and art centered on whether photographers fidelity to appearan
2、ces and dependence on a machine allowed it to be a fine art (1)_ distinctive from merely a practical art. Throughout the nineteenth century, the defense of photography was identical with the (2)_ to establish it as a fine art. (3)_ the charge that photographers was a soulless mechanical duplication
3、of (4)_, photographers (5)_ that it was instead a privileged (6)_ of seeing, a revolt against commonplace vision, and (7)_ worthy an art than painting. Ironically, (8)_ photography is securely established as a fine art, many photographers find it pretentious or (9)_ to label it as such. Serious phot
4、ographers are no longer willing to (10)_ whether photography is not involved with art, (11)_ to proclaim that their own work is not involved with it. This shows the extent (12)_ which they simply take for granted the concept of art imposed by the (13)_ of Modernism: the better the art, the more subv
5、ersive it is of the traditional aims of art. Photographers disclaimers of any interest in making art tell us more about the troubled status of the contemporary (14)_ of art (15)_ about whether photography is or is not art. Photography, (16)_ Pop painting, reassures viewers that art is not hard; phot
6、ography seems to be more about its subjects than about art. Photography, (17)_, has developed all the (18)_ and self-consciousness of a classic Modernist art. Many professionals privately have begun to worry that the (19)_ of photography as an activity subversive of the traditional pretensions of ar
7、t has gone so far that the public will forget that photography is a distinctive and exalted activity (20)_, an art. ( A) for ( B) apart ( C) as ( D) beside ( A) intend ( B) wish ( C) plea ( D) struggle ( A) Against ( B) Above ( C) With ( D) Upon ( A) idea ( B) reality ( C) illusion ( D) truth ( A) c
8、onsented ( B) asserted ( C) complained ( D) assumed ( A) means ( B) style ( C) medium ( D) way ( A) no less ( B) much more ( C) no more ( D) any more ( A) if only ( B) even though ( C) now that ( D) only if ( A) illogical ( B) improbable ( C) improper ( D) irrelevant ( A) rally ( B) debate ( C) esti
9、mate ( D) revision ( A) but ( B) except ( C) only ( D) besides ( A) with ( B) at ( C) to ( D) from ( A) preach ( B) defeat ( C) return ( D) triumph ( A) fashion ( B) swing ( C) motion ( D) image ( A) than ( B) that ( C) which ( D) as ( A) like ( B) such as ( C) excluding ( D) aside from ( A) hence (
10、 B) however ( C) therefore ( D) somewhat ( A) agonies ( B) grievances ( C) passions ( D) anxieties ( A) popularity ( B) assignment ( C) promotion ( D) transfer ( A) in short ( B) for example ( C) in effect ( D) in a sense Part A Directions: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below e
11、ach text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points) 21 It is the staff of dreams and nightmares. Where Tony Blairs attempts to make Britain love the euro have fallen on deaf ears, its incarnation as notes and coins will succeed. These will be used not just in the euro area but in Britain. As the British
12、become accustomed to the euro as a cash currency, they will warm to it paving the way for a yes note in a referendum. The idea of euro creep appeals to both sides of the euro argument. According to the pros, as Britons become familiar with the euro, membership will start to look inevitable, so those
13、 in favor are bound to win. According to the antis, as Britons become familiar with the euro, membership will start to look inevitable, so those opposed must mobilize for the fight. Dream or nightmare, euro creep envisages the single currency worming its way first into the British economy and then i
14、nto the affections of voters. British tourists will come back from their European holidays laden with euros, which they will spend not just at airports but in high street shops. So, too, will foreign visitors. As the euro becomes a parallel currency, those who make up the current two-to-one majority
15、 will change their minds. From there, it will be a short step to decide to dispense with the pound. Nell Kinnock, a European commissioner and former leader of the Labor Party, predicts that the euro will soon become Britains second currency. Hans Eichel, the German finance minister, also says that i
16、t will become a parallel currency in countries like Switzerland and Britain. Peter Hain, the European minister who is acting as a cheerleader for membership, says the euro will become “a practical day-to-day reality and that will enable people to make a sensible decision about it“. As many as a thir
17、d of Britains biggest retailers, such as Marks and Spencer, have said they will take euros in some of their shops. BP has also announced that it will accept euros at some of its garages. But there is less to this than meet the eyes. British tourists can now withdraw money from cashpoint from Europea
18、n holiday destinations, so they are less likely than in the past to end up with excess foreign money. Even if they do, they generally get rid of it at the end of their holidays, says David Southwell, a spokesman for the British Retail Consortium(BRC). 21 The writer seems _. ( A) to be over-enthusias
19、tic about the success of the euro. ( B) to launch a vigorous campaign against the euro creep. ( C) to take a matter-of-fact attitude towards the issue. ( D) to hold a hostile attitude towards euro expansions. 22 Towards euros creep into British economy, the views of Neil Kinnock and David Southwell
20、are _. ( A) homogeneous. ( B) similar. ( C) overlapping. ( D) opposite. 23 What does the writer intend to illustrate with Marks and Spencer? ( A) British affections for euro. ( B) The success of euro in Britain. ( C) Europes support for euro. ( D) The great influence of retailers. 24 The word “cheer
21、leader“ (Paragraph 4) can best be replaced by _. ( A) voter. ( B) advocator. ( C) critic. ( D) prophet. 25 It can be inferred from the text that in Britain euro has been accepted _. ( A) gradually and substantially. ( B) noticeably and spiritually. ( C) inevitably and sensibly. ( D) verbally and mom
22、entarily. 26 Science Fiction can provide students interested in the future with a basic introduction to the concept of thinking about possible futures in a serious way, a sense of the emotional forces in their own cultures that are affecting the shape the future may take, and a multitude of predicti
23、ons regarding the results of present trends. Although SF seems to take as its future social settings nothing more ambiguous than the current status quo or its totally evil variant, SF is actually a more important vehicle for speculative visions about macroscopic social change. At this level, it is h
24、ard to deal with any precision as to when general value changes or evolving social institutions might appear, but it is most important to think about the kinds of societies that could result from the rise of new forms of interaction, even if one cannot predict exactly when they might occur. In perfo
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- 考研 试卷 英语 模拟 31 答案 解析 DOC
