[考研类试卷]考研英语模拟试卷304(无答案).doc
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1、考研英语模拟试卷 304(无答案)一、Section I Use of EnglishDirections: Read the following text. Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark A, B, C or D. (10 points) 0 American suffers from an overdose of work.【1】who they are or what they do, they spend【2】time at work than at any time since World War.
2、In 1950, the US had fewer working hours than any other【3】country. Today, it【4】every country but Japan, where industrial employees log 2,155 hours a year compared【5】1,951 in the US and 1,603【6 】West employees. Between 1969 and 1989, employed American【7】an average of 138 hours to their yearly work sch
3、edules. The work-week【8】at about 40 hours, but people are working more weeks each year.【9】, paid time off holidays, vacations, sick leave 【10 】15 percent in the 1990s.As Corporations have【 11】stiffer competition and slower growth in productivity, they would【12】employees to work longer. Cost-cutting
4、layoffs in the 1980s【13】the professional and managerial ranks, leaving fewer people to get the job done. In lower-paid occupations,【14】wages have been reduced, workers have added hours【15】overtime or extra jobs to【16】their living standard. The Government estimates that more than seven million people
5、 hold a second job.For the first time, large【17】of people say they want to cut【18】on working hours, even if it means earning less money. But most employers are【19】to let them do so. The government which has stepped back from its traditional【20】as a regulator of work time, should take steps to make s
6、horter hours possible.(A)As regards to(B) Regardless of(C) With regard to(D)In regard to (A)much less(B) abundant(C) a lot more(D)surplus (A)advanced(B) industrialized(C) developed(D)mechanized (A)exceeds(B) outnumbers(C) overtakes(D)outstrips (A)with(B) to(C) in(D)on (A)in the former(B) of the past
7、(C) in the early(D)in the earlier (A)added(B) increased(C) brought(D)totaled (A)arrived(B) stopped(C) set(D)remained (A)However(B) Nevertheless(C) Moreover(D)And (A)lessened to(B) shrank by(C) deduced(D)restrained in (A)suffered(B) experienced(C) undertaken(D)endured (A)squash(B) squeeze(C) urge(D)o
8、blige (A)minimized(B) reduced(C) lessened(D)relieved (A)because(B) though(C) as(D)where (A)by(B) for(C) to(D)in (A)preserve(B) conserve(C) improve(D)protect (A)numbers(B) amounts(C) figures(D)quantities (A)off(B) out(C) back(D)down (A)discouraged(B) unwilling(C) forbidden(D)inclined (A)position(B) f
9、unction(C) task(D)role Part ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points)20 For my proposed journey, the first priority was clearly to start learning Arabic. I have never been a linguist. Though I had traveled widely as a journ
10、alist, I had never managed to pick up more than a smattering of phrases in any tongue other than French, and even my French, was laborious for want of lengthy practice. The prospect of tackling one of the notoriously difficult languages at the age of forty, and trying to speak it well, both deterred
11、 and excited me. It was perhaps expecting a little too much of a curiously unreceptive part of myself, yet the possibility that I might gain access to a completely alien culture and tradition by this means was enormously pleasing.I enrolled as a pupil in a small school in the center of the city. It
12、was run by a Mr Beheit, of dapper appearance and explosive temperament, who assured me that after three months of his special treatment I would speak Arabic fluently. Whereupon he drew from his desk a postcard which an old pupil had sent him from somewhere in the Middle East, expressing great gratit
13、ude and reporting the astonishment of local Arabs that he could converse with them like a native. It was written in English. Mr Beheit himself spent most of his time coaching businessmen in French, and through the thin, partitioned walls of his school one could hear him bellowing in exasperation at
14、some confused entrepreneur: “Non, M. Jones. Jane suis pas francais. Pas, Pas, Pas!“ (No Mr. Jones, Im NOT French, Im not, not, NOT!). I was gratified that my own tutor, whose name was Ahmed, was infinitely softer and less public in approach.For a couple of hours every morning we would face each othe
15、r across a small table, while we discussed in meticulous detail the colour scheme of the tiny cubicle, the events in the street below and, once a week, the hair-raising progress of a window-cleaner across the wall of the building opposite. In between, hearing in mind the particular interest I had in
16、 acquiring Arabic, I would inquire the way to some imaginary oasis, anxiously demand fodder and water for my camels, wonder politely whether the sheikh was prepared to grant me audience now. It was all hard going. I frequently despaired of ever becoming anything like a fluent speaker, though Ahmed a
17、ssured me that my pronunciation was above average for a Westemer. This, I suspected, was partly flattery, for there are a couple of Arabic sounds which not even a gift for mimicry allowed me to grasp for ages. There were, moreover, vast distinctions of meaning conveyed by subtle sound shifts rarely
18、employed in English. And for me the problem was increased by the need to assimilate a vocabulary, that would vary from place to place across five essentially Arabic-speaking countries that practiced vernaculars of their own: so that the word for “people“, for instance, might be nais, sah ab or sooke
19、n.Each day I was mentally exhausted by the strain of a morning in school, followed by an afternoon struggling at home with a tape recorder. Yet there was relief in the most elementary forms of understanding and progress. When merely got the drift of a torrent which Ahmed had just released, I was chi
20、ldishly elated. When I managed to roll a complete sentence off my tongue without apparently thinking what I was saying, and it came out right, I beamed like an idiot. And the enjoyment of reading and writing the flowing Arabic script was something that did not leave me once I had mastered it. By the
21、 end of June, no-one could have described me as anything like a fluent speaker of Arabic. I was approximately in the position of a fifteen-year old who, equipped with a modicum of schoolroom French, nervously awaits his first trip to Paris. But this was something I could reprove upon in my own time.
22、 I bade farewell to Mr Beheit, still struggling to drive the French negative into the still confused mind of Mr Jones.21 Which of the following is not characteristic of Mr Beheit?(A)He had a neat and clean appearance.(B) He was volatile and highly emotional(C) He was very modest about his success in
23、 teaching.(D)He sometimes lost his temper and shouted loudly when teaching. 22 It is known from the passage that the writer_.(A)had a good command of French(B) couldnt make sounds properly when learning Arabic(C) spoke highly of Mr Beheits achievements in language teaching(D)didnt like Ahmeds style
24、of teaching 23 It can be inferred from the passage that Ahmed was_.(A)a fast speaker(B) a boring speaker(C) a laconic speaker(D)an interesting speaker 24 The word “modicum“ in the last paragraph can be replaced by_.(A)competence(B) excellence(C) mimicry(D)smattering 25 Which of the following stateme
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