[考研类试卷]考研英语(一)模拟试卷106及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(一)模拟试卷 106 及答案与解析一、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) 1 Even plants can run a fever, especially when they are under attack by insects or disease. But (1)_ humans, plants can have their t
2、emperature (2)_ from 3,000 feet awaystraight up. A decade ago, (3)_ the infrared scanning technology developed for military purpose and other satellites, physicist Stephen Paley (4)_ a quick way to take the temperature of crops to determine (5)_ ones are under stress. The goal was to let farmer (6)_
3、 target pesticide spraying (7)_ rain poison on a whole field, which (8)_ include plants that dont have the pest problem.Even better, Paleys Remote Scanning Services Company could detect crop problem before they became (9)_ to the eye. Mounted on a plane flown at 3,000 fee (10)_, an infrared scanner
4、measured the heat emitted by crops. The data were (11)_ into a color-coded map showing (12)_ plants were running “fevers“. Farmers could then spot spray, using 50 to 70 percent less pesticide than they (13)_ would.The bad news is that Paleys company closed down in 1984, after only three years. Farme
5、rs (14)_ the new technology and long-term backers were hard (15)_. But with the renewed concern about pesticides on produce, and refinements in infrared scanning, Paley hopes to (16)_ into operation. Agriculture experts have no doubt about the technology works. “This technique can be used (17)_ 75 p
6、ercent of agricultural land in the United States“, says George Oerther of Texas AM. Ray Jackson, who recently retired from the Department of Agriculture, thinks (18)_ infrared crop scanning could be adopted by the end of the decade. But (19)_ Paley finds the financial backing (20)_ he failed to obta
7、in 10 years ago.(A)as(B) with(C) like(D)unlike(A)taken(B) take(C) took(D)taking(A)adopted(B) adopting(C) adapted(D)adapting(A)put up with(B) came up to(C) came up with(D)stood up to(A)whose(B) which(C) what(D)where(A)precisely(B) extraordinarily(C) exceedingly(D)extremely(A)more than(B) less than(C)
8、 rather than(D)other than(A)dominantly(B) deliberately(C) accidentally(D)invariably(A)seeming(B) clear(C) apparent(D)visible(A)at night(B) for the night(C) in night(D)over night(A)transmitted(B) transferred(C) transformed(D)transported(A)how(B) where(C) what(D)when(A)otherwise(B) still(C) thus(D)the
9、refore(A)persisted in(B) resisted(C) insisted on(D)assisted(A)to find out(B) to be found(C) to find(D)to be found on(A)get off(B) get out(C) get away(D)get back(A)of(B) in(C) for(D)on(A)remote(B) lonely(C) removed(D)desolate(A)even if(B) if only(C) only if(D)though(A)where(B) which(C) how(D)whenGram
10、mar21 Im sure he is up to the job_he would give his mind to it.(A)if only(B) in case(C) until(D)unless22 The doctors have tried_to save his life.(A)humanly possible everything(B) humanly everything possible(C) everything possible humanly(D)everything humanly possible23 _, he can now only watch it on
11、 TV at home.(A)Obtaining not a ticket for the match(B) Not obtaining a ticket for the match(C) Not having obtained a ticket for the match(D)Not obtained a ticket for the match24 He was_to tell the truth even to his closest friend.(A)too much of a coward(B) too much the coward(C) a coward enough(D)en
12、ough of a coward25 She did her work _her manager had instructed.(A)as(B) until(C) when(D)though26 _human problems that repeat themselves in_life repeat themselves in_ literature.(A)/, /, the(B) /, the, /(C) The, /, /(D)The, the, the27 The buttocks are _ most other parts in the body.(A)likely less to
13、 cause fatal damage than(B) likely less causing fatal damage to(C) less likely to cause fatal damage than(D)less likely to cause fatal damage to28 _his return from Japan, Professor Li went directly to his laboratory and started working with his colleagues.(A)Upon(B) At(C) Within(D)Over29 _hes alread
14、y heard the news.(A)Chances are(B) Chance is(C) Opportunities are(D)Opportunity is30 Id rather have a room of my own, however small it is, than _ a room with someone else.(A)to share(B) to have shared(C) share(D)sharingPart ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each
15、text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points)31 You might be forgiven for thinking that sleep researchers are a dozy bunch. Most of the other things people do regularlyeat, excrete, copulate and so onare biologically fairly straightforward: there is little mystery about how or why they are done. Sleep,
16、 on the other hand, which takes up more of most peoples time than all of the above, and which attracts plenty of study, is still fundamentally a mystery.The one view shared by all is that sleep matters. For evidence, look no further than the experiments led by Allan Rechtaschaffen and Bernard Bergma
17、nn at the University of Chicago in the 1980s. They kept experimental rats awake around the clock in an environment where control rats were allowed as much sleep as they wanted. The sleep-deprived rats all died within a month.Carol Everson worked with the Chicago team as a graduate student and now ha
18、s a job at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland. While repeating the Chicago experiments she was struck by the fact that, although the sleep-deprived rats showed no obvious symptoms of particular diseasesand no such signs were picked up in post-mortemstheir emaciation and generall
19、y sorry state was reminiscent of that which befalls many terminal cancer patients and AIDS patients, whose immune systems have packed up. While Dr. Everson does not claim to have hard and fast proof that sleep is needed for resistance to infection, her work does point that wayas does the re search o
20、f others around the world.Another approach is to look for chemicals that cause sleep; from these, you should be able to start telling a biological story which will eventually reveal the function of sleep. Peter Shiromani of Harvard Medical School has found a protein that builds up at high levels in
21、chronically sleep-deprived cats, but disappears within an hour if the animals are allowed 45 minutes of recovery sleep. Researchers at the University of Veron have found something similar. But no one chemical tells the whole story.So new ways of inducing sleep may soon be available; an understanding
22、 of its purpose, though, remains elusive. In this, sleep is like the other great biological commonplace that is still mysterious: consciousness, which is also easily altered chemically but not too well under stood. No one knows how Consciousness arises, or what, if anything, it is for(though there a
23、re a lot of theories). Almost the only thing that can be said about it for certain is that you lose it when you fall asleep. Solving the mystery of sleeping and waking might require new insights into the consciousness that is lost and regained in the process. Putting it this way makes the problem so
24、und rather grander, and the lack of progress so far look a bit less dozy.31 Why does the writer say “You might be forgiven for thinking that.“?(A)Solving the mystery of sleeping and waking requires new insights.(B) Most of the other things people do regularly are biologically straightforward.(C) The
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