[考研类试卷]考研英语模拟试卷82及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语模拟试卷 82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 Some time between digesting Christmas dinner and putting your head back down to work, spare a thought or two for the cranberry. It i
2、s, of course, a (1)_ of Christmas: merry bright red, bittersweetly delicious with turkey and the very devil to get out of the tablecloth (2)_ spilled. But the cranberry is also a symbol of the modern food industry and in the tale of its (3)_ from colonial curiosity to business-school case study (4)_
3、 a deeper understanding of the opportunities and (5)_ of modern eating. The fastest growing part of todays cranberry market is for cranberries that do not taste like cranberries. Ocean Sprays “flavoured fruit pieces“ (FFPS, to the trade) taste like orange, cherry, raspberry or any (6)_ of other frui
4、ts. They are in fact cranberries. Why make a cranberry taste like an orange? Mostly because it is a (7)_ little fruit: FF PS have a shelf-life of two years. Better (8)_, they keep a chewy texture (9)_ baked, unlike the fruits whose flavours they mimic, which turn to (10)_. The dynamic that has broug
5、ht the cranberry to this point is (11)_ to the dynamic behind most mass-produced goods. Growing (12)_ provided the (13)_ to create cheaper and more reliable supply. Cheaper and more reliable supply, (14)_, created incentives to find new markets, which increased demand. Thus was the (15)_ kept churni
6、ng. The cranberry is one of only three fruits native (16)_ North America, growing wild from Maine to North Carolina. (The others are the Concord grape and the blueberry.) The American Indians had several names for cranberries, many (17)_ the words for “bitter“ or, more (18)_, “noisy“. They ate the b
7、erries mostly (19)_ pemmican, but also used them for dye and medicine. And they introduced them to the white settlers at the first Thanksgiving dinner in 1621, it is said. The settlers promptly renamed this delicacy the “crane berry“, (20)_ the pointy pink blossoms of the cranberry look a bit like t
8、he head of the Sandhill crane. ( A) sign ( B) trail ( C) symbol ( D) mark ( A) while ( B) if only ( C) long before ( D) if ( A) progress ( B) proposition ( C) prophet ( D) proportion ( A) obtain ( B) mould ( C) assimilate ( D) lies ( A) dilemmas ( B) remedy ( C) ingredient ( D) remains ( A) member (
9、 B) number ( C) kind ( D) flavor ( A) delicious ( B) dubious ( C) durable ( D) deliberate ( A) off ( B) than ( C) itself ( D) still ( A) when ( B) whether ( C) albeit ( D) whereas ( A) mercury ( B) mush ( C) muscle ( D) mess ( A) similar ( B) feasible ( C) inferior ( D) incredible ( A) command ( B)
10、yield ( C) demand ( D) quantity ( A) immensity ( B) inadequacy ( C) immunity ( D) incentive ( A) at every turn ( B) in turn ( C) to a turn ( D) by turns ( A) cycle ( B) miracle ( C) mission ( D) carnival ( A) from ( B) to ( C) off ( D) beyond ( A) qualifying ( B) incorporating ( C) denoting ( D) coi
11、ning ( A) intrinsically ( B) marginally ( C) intuitively ( D) mysteriously ( A) in ( B) for ( C) by ( D) through ( A) although ( B) only if ( C) because ( D) as though Part A Directions: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points) 21 Ther
12、es one thing above all wrong with the new British postal codes: not everyone has that sort of memory. Some of us, of course, forget even h6use numbers and the present postal districts, but that matters less when there is a human being at every stage to spot the mistake. When all the sorting is done
13、in one operation by a man sitting at a machine, typing special marks onto an envelope, one slip on your part could send your letter way outside the area where the local postman or a friendly neighbor knows your name. Otherwise the new codes are all the Post Offices claims. They are the most carefull
14、y designed in the world, ideal for computers. A confusion of letters and numbers, they have two parts separated by the gap in the middle. Together they classify a letter not only the city where it is going but right down to the round of the particular postman who is to carry it, and even to a group
15、of houses or a single big building. In the long run this will speed the mail and cut costs. The long run is 10 years away, though. In fact there are only 12 Post Offices in the country which have the right machines fully working, and the system cannot work at full efficiency until it is nationwide.
16、Yet the Post Office wants us to start using the codes now, so that we shall be trained when the machines are ready. But will we? A businessman I met, praising the virtues of the new system, explained that large companies like his could have codes of their own. What was his code? “Oh, dear me. Now yo
17、uve got me. Awfully sorry. Hold on a minute while I find a sheet of my headed notepaper.“ Then he read painfully, as if spelling out a word in a foreign language, “W-I-X-6A-B“. 21 According to the passage, what matters most in letter delivery in Britain is that_ ( A) the new postal codes must be mem
18、orized ( B) house numbers must not be forgotten ( C) present postal districts must be borne in mind ( D) special marks on an envelope must be accurate 22 The British Post Office praises the codes as_ ( A) giving an efficient service ( B) being new and improved ( C) being suitable to be processed by
19、computers ( D) being free from confusion 23 The British codes are described as being_. ( A) letters spaced out ( B) numbers in order ( C) sets of letters and numbers ( D) letters and numbers separately 24 Only when_ can the postal code system achieve its full efficiency. ( A) all the post offices in
20、 the country have the fight machines ( B) all the post offices have trained staff ( C) most post offices have the right machines ( D) most post offices have trained staff 25 The businessman found that his postal code was difficult_. ( A) to find out ( B) to remember ( C) to write ( D) to spell 26 Wh
21、at we know of prenatal development makes all this attempt made by a mother to mold the character of her unborn child by studying poetry, art or mathematics during pregnancy seem utterly impossible. How could such extremely complex influences pass from the mother to the child? There is no connection
22、between their nervous systems. Even the blood vessels of mother and child do not join directly. An emotional shock to the mother will affect her child, because it changes the activity of her glands and so the chemistry of her blood. Any chemical change in the mothers blood will affect the child for
23、better or worse. But we can not see how a liking for mathematics or poetic genius can be dissolved in blood and produce a similar liking or genius in the child. In our discussion of instincts we saw that there was reason to believe that whatever we inherit must be of some very simple sort rather tha
24、n any complicated or very definite kind of behavior. It is certain that no one inherits a knowledge of mathematics. It may be, however, that children inherit more or less of a rather, general ability that we may call intelligence. If very intelligent children become deeply interested in mathematics,
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- 考研 试卷 英语 模拟 82 答案 解析 DOC
