[考研类试卷]考研英语二(阅读)模拟试卷15及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语二(阅读)模拟试卷 15 及答案与解析Part ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points)0 A young consultants life is tiring. A typical week starts before dawn on Monday, with a rush to the airport and a flight to wherever the client is based
2、. A typical brain-for-hire can expect to stay in hotels at least three nights a week, texting a distant lover. “ Its quite normal to spend a year living out of a suitcase,“ sighs one London-based consultant. An ex-McKinseyite in New York adds that 15 to 18-hour weekdays are normal and six to eight-h
3、our Saturdays and Sundays common. It can be draining, she admits.So the job appeals to “insecure over-achievers“a phrase widely used in the industry“who are always worried that they havent done enough work,“ jokes a former employee of Bain except enough sleep.1 McKinseyite is cited in the first para
4、graph to_.(A)prove the impossibility of being a qualified consultant(B) picture the tragic life of a young consultant(C) show the long working hours for the young consultant(D)describe the exhausting job of being a young consultant2 The underlined phrase “insecure over-achievers“(Para 2, Line 1)refe
5、rs to_.(A)those who feel insecure of their life and future(B) those who are unemployed but trying to find a job(C) those who are working very hard to get a more stable job(D)those who are very experienced and rich but feel insecure3 Which of the following is true according to Paragraph 3 ?(A)Young p
6、eople want to live in big cities.(B) The best-paid jobs can be found only in big cites.(C) The first-class consultants generally work in big cities.(D)Everything happens in London.4 The last two paragraphs tell us that_.(A)the present system is to some degree favorable to both firms and consultants(
7、B) consultancies outside big cities need clever people(C) consultants like travelling because they want to become successful(D)consultancies prefer to run their business in remote areas5 The best title of the passage could be_.(A)Young Consultants and Their Success(B) Young Consultants in Big Cities
8、(C) Young Consultants in Remote Areas(D)Young Consultants and Their Careers5 The human voice, like any sound produced by thrumming a stretched string, has a fundamental frequency. For voice, the centre of that frequency lies mostly below 300Hz depending on the speakers sex. Information is conveyed t
9、hrough simultaneous higher-frequency overtones(泛音)and additional components that can stretch up to 20,000 Hz(20kHz). Modern hearing aids are able to distinguish only a small part of that range, typically between 300Hz and 6kHz, reducing noise and amplifying those frequencies where the wearers hearin
10、g is the weakest.But differentiating elements of many common parts of speech occur in higher frequencies. This is the result both of harmonics(和声)that ripple out from the main tone, and from non-voiced elements used to utter consonants(辅音), which employ the tongue, teeth, cheeks and lips. Take the w
11、ords “sailing“ and “failing“. Cut off the higher frequencies and the two are indistinguishable. The problem is compounded on telephone calls, which do not transmit frequencies below 300Hz or above 3.3kHz.People with hearing aids experience this problem constantly, says Brian Moore of the University
12、of Cambridge. Typical hearing loss tends to be most acute at frequencies above 10kHz, which contain quieter sounds but where speech can still include important cues. Older hearing aids cut off at no higher than 6kHz, but much modern equipment stretches this range to 8-10kHz. However, a problem remai
13、ns, Dr Moore says, because bespoke hearing-aid calibrations for individual users, called “fittings“ , do not properly boost the gain of these higher frequencies. So Dr Moore and his colleagues have come up with a better method. Their approach can be applied to many existing devices, and is also bein
14、g built into some newer ones.A key step in any fitting involves testing an individuals ability to hear sounds in different frequency bands. Each hearing loss is unique, and for most users a standard profile would be too loud in some ranges and too soft in others. But current tests pay scant attentio
15、n to the higher frequencies that a devices tiny speaker can produce, regardless of whether the user needs a boost. Dr Moores new test, known as CAM2, which is both a set of specifications and an implementation in software, extends and modifies fittings to include frequencies as high as 10kHz. When t
16、he results are used to calibrate a modern hearing aid, the result is greater intelligibility(可懂度)of speech compared with existing alternatives. CAM2 also improves the experience of listening to music, which makes greater use of higher frequencies than speech does.6 Audiphones can help people with he
17、aring problem by_.(A)reducing noise and amplifying higher-frequency(B) cutting down noise and enhancing certain frequencies(C) stressing higher frequencies and impairing lower ones(D)weakening the frequency range between 300Hz and 6kHz7 Which of the following is true according to Paragraph 2?(A)Tele
18、phone can transmit a wide range of frequencies.(B) Higher frequencies are more important than lower ones.(C) People may use many parts of the mouth to utter consonants.(D)Cutting off higher frequencies will not influence understanding.8 We can infer from Paragraph 3 that_.(A)people with hearing loss
19、 can hear nothing at all(B) modern hearing aids help people hear everything(C) there are still shortcomings in modern hearing aids(D)Dr Moore and his team have invented new hearing devices9 According to the text, CAM2 can_.(A)boost higher frequencies(B) reach the highest frequency(C) make speech mor
20、e confusing(D)replace a modem hearing aid10 The text mainly focuses on modern hearing aids _.(A)drawbacks and problems(B) advantages and disadvantages(C) development and advancement(D)shortcomings and improvement10 In 1977, the year before I was born, a Senate committee led by George McGovem publish
21、ed its landmark “ Dietary Goals for the United States,“ urging Americans to eat less high-fat red meat, eggs and dairy and replace them with more calories from fruits, vegetables and especially carbohydrates.By 1980 that wisdom was codified. The US Department of Agriculture(USDA)issued its first die
22、tary guidelines, and one of the primary directives was to avoid cholesterol(胆固醇)and fat of all sorts. The National Institutes of Health(NIH)recommended that all Americans over the age of 2 cut fat consumption, and that same year the government announced the results of a $ 150 million study, which ha
23、d a clear message; Eat less fat and cholesterol to reduce your risk of a heart attack.The food industryand American eating habitsjumped in step. Grocery shelves filled with “light“ yogurts, low-fat microwave dinners, cheese-flavored crackers, cookies. Families like mine followed the advice; beef dis
24、appeared from the dinner plate, eggs were replaced at breakfast with cereal or yolk-free beaters, and whole milk almost wholly vanished. From 1977 to 2012, per capita consumption of those foods dropped while calories from supposedly healthy carbohydrates increasedno surprise, given that breads, cere
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- 考研 试卷 英语 阅读 模拟 15 答案 解析 DOC
