[考研类试卷]考研英语(一)模拟试卷156及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(一)模拟试卷 156 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) 0 Food and oxygen pass easily from mother to fetus(an unborn baby). Now it seems that fleeting sadness or happiness is also【B1】_to a
2、n unborn baby. Stress or depression in pregnancy can【B2】_a fetus, but less is known about the【B3】_of transient emotions. To【B4】_, Kazuyuki Shinohara and colleagues at Nagasaki University in Japan showed 10 pregnant volunteers a cheery 5-minute clip from the musical The Sound of Music. Another 14 wat
3、ched a tear-jerking 5 minutes from The Champ. Each clip was sandwiched between two “neutral“ samples【B5】_the team could【B6】_any changes in fetal movements against a baseline.The women listened to the films through headphones to【B7】_that only the effect of their【B8】_, not the sounds, were being measu
4、red. “Fetuses can hear by the last three months,“ says Shinohara. The team【B9】_the number of arm, leg and whole body movements【B10】_ultrasound and found that during the happy film clip the fetuses moved their arms【B11】_more than when the pregnant women watched a neutral clip.【B12 】_, the fetuses of
5、sad women moved their arms less.What makes the【B13】_of happy mothers wave isnt clear.【B14】_, such movement is a(n) 【B15】_of a working nervous and motor system, says Alexander Heazell at the University of Manchester, UK. He says the study offers us insights into how【B16】_influences affect fetuses. Sh
6、inohara suggests that sadness【B17】_more of the “fight or flight“ hormone, which redirects blood away from the uterus. The fetus diverts the reduced blood【B18】_to its brain and heart and away from its limbs.【B19】_its too early to use the study to【B20 】_women.1 【B1 】(A)transacted(B) transmitted(C) int
7、erpreted(D)imposed2 【B2 】(A)harm(B) provide(C) assist(D)generate3 【B3 】(A)profits(B) advantages(C) utilities(D)effects4 【B4 】(A)certificate(B) investigate(C) advertise(D)experience5 【B5 】(A)in that(B) as if(C) even if(D)so that6 【B6 】(A)calculate(B) prevent(C) measure(D)counter7 【B7 】(A)ensure(B) co
8、nfirm(C) realize(D)witness8 【B8 】(A)movements(B) emotions(C) hearings(D)boundaries9 【B9 】(A)demonstrated(B) indicated(C) counted(D)broadcasted10 【B10 】(A)like(B) as(C) on(D)via11 【B11 】(A)magnificently(B) significantly(C) ordinarily(D)generally12 【B12 】(A)Meanwhile(B) Thereby(C) Moreover(D)Hence13 【
9、B13 】(A)bodies(B) limbs(C) heads(D)fetuses14 【B14 】(A)On the contrary(B) In other words(C) However(D)Otherwise15 【B15 】(A)outcome(B) protection(C) indicator(D)favour16 【B16 】(A)tremendous(B) external(C) interior(D)faint17 【B17 】(A)assimilates(B) releases(C) enhances(D)diminishes18 【B18 】(A)demand(B)
10、 circulation(C) assignment(D)supply19 【B19 】(A)Furthermore(B) So(C) Even(D)But20 【B20 】(A)advise(B) distract(C) amuse(D)ridiculePart ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points)20 It is only natural for leaders to try to make
11、the most of their strengths. The theory of comparative advantage directs people, as well as countries and firms, to focus on what they are good at. Management experts have tended to concur: one of the bestselling business books of recent years is called Now Discover Your Strengths. When business sch
12、ools(and indeed business columnists)profile bosses, they often assume that more is better. But is this right? Three recent books express some doubts.In Fear Your Strengths, Robert Kaplan and Robert Kaiser argue, “what you are best at could be your biggest problem.“ Forcefulness can become bullying;
13、decisiveness can turn into pigheadedness; niceness can develop into indecision. In From Smart to Wise, Prasad Kaipa and Navi Radjou argue that the strengths that todays leaders are most likely to overuse are what Americans called “smarts“the sort of skills managers pick up studying at business schoo
14、l or working in consultancies. In Tipping Sacred Cows, Jake Breeden goes further, arguing that many so-called management virtues are just as likely to be vices in disguise.These three books are all valuable exercises in iconoclasmdeliberate destruction of icons. But the trouble with iconoclasm when
15、you apply it to the analysis of leadership is that you can go on forever. Many successful leaders are successful precisely because they push their strengths to the limit. Richard Branson has turned Virgin into a global brand by relentlessly exploiting his two biggest strengths: his ability to take o
16、n “big bad wolves“firms that are overcharging and underserving the publicand his talent for infusing Virgin with a counter-cultural personality.Leadership skills are context-dependent. Margaret Thatcher was undoubtedly a nightmare to work for. In 1981 her closest advisers were so angry with her that
17、 they produced a memo that criticized her for breaking “every rule of good man-management“, including bullying her weaker comrades, criticizing her colleagues in front of officials and refusing to give praise or credit. It warned her that she was “likely to become another failed Tory prime minister
18、sitting with Edward Heath“. But her abrasive style was exactly what Britain needed in the 1980s.The word that is too often missing from leadership studies is “judgment“. Everybody involved in the business is desperate to appear scientific: academics because they want to get research grants and consu
19、ltants because they want to prove that they are selling something more than just instinct. But judgment is what matters most, and it is hard to measure. It takes judgment to resist getting carried away with one quality(such as decisiveness)or one measure of success(such as the share price). It takes
20、 judgment to know when to modulate your virtues and when to pull out all the stops. Unfortunately judgment is in rather shorter supply than leadership versatility indices.21 The word “concur“(Line 3, Para. 1)most probably means(A)coincide.(B) agree.(C) doubt.(D)object.22 According to Jake Breeden,(A
21、)Americans tend to overuse their strengths.(B) there exist no such things as management virtues.(C) management virtues and vices are interchangeable.(D)management virtues should be closely examined.23 The story of Richard Branson shows that(A)there are many successful leaders like Branson.(B) iconoc
22、lasm is not applicable to successful leaders.(C) strengths have contributed to many leaders success.(D)Virgins success is mainly attributed to his strengths.24 In her advisers eyes, Margaret Thatcher was(A)a nightmare.(B) a poor leader.(C) a failure.(D)a savior.25 It is indicated in the last paragra
23、ph that(A)leadership studies should focus more on judgment.(B) businesspeople, leaders in particular, are versatile.(C) strengths can turn into weakness sometimes.(D)judgment is the most crucial measure of leadership.25 Three makes a trend. The Washington Post Co. Friday announced that it would look
24、 to sell its iconic headquarters building in downtown Washington, D.C. In January, the Detroit Free Press and The Detroit News announced they would put up for sale their headquarters. The same month, Frank Gannett said it will sell the building that houses the Rochester, N.Y., Democrat circulation r
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