[考研类试卷]考研英语(一)模拟试卷190及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(一)模拟试卷 190 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 The Earths daily clock, measured in a single revolution, is twenty-four hours. The human clock,【B1】_, is actually about twenty-fiv
2、e hours. Thats【B2 】 _scientists who study sleep have determined from human subjects who live for several weeks in observation chambers with no【B3】_of day or night. Sleep researchers have【B4】_other surprising discoveries as well.We spend about one-third of our lives asleep, a fact that suggests sleep
3、ing,【B5】_eating and breathing, is a fundamental life process. Yet some people almost never sleep, getting by on as【B6】_as fifteen minutes a day. And more than seventy years of【B7】_into sleep deprivation, in which people have been kept【B8】_for three to ten days, has【B9】_only one certain finding: Slee
4、p loss makes a person sleepy and thats about all; it causes no lasting ill【 B10】_. Too much sleep, however, may be【B11】_for you.These findings【B12】_some long-held views of sleep, and they【B13】_questions about its fundamental purpose in our lives. In【B14】_, scientists dont know just why sleep is nece
5、ssary.Some scientists think sleep is more the result of evolutionary habit than【B15】_actual need, Animals sleep for some parts of the day perhaps because it is the【B16】_thing for them to do: it keeps them【B17】_and hidden from predators; its a survival tactic. Before the advent of electricity, humans
6、 had to spend at least some of each day in【B18】_and had little reason to question the reason or need for【B19】_. But the development of the electroencephalograph and the resulting discovery in 1937 of dramatic【B20】_in brain activity between sleep and wakefulness opened the way for scientific inquiry
7、in the subject.1 【B1 】(A)however(B) otherwise(C) likewise(D)therefore2 【B2 】(A)the(B) what(C) because(D)many3 【B3 】(A)idea(B) feeling(C) sense(D)judgment4 【B4 】(A)come up against(B) come down to(C) come up with(D)come up to5 【B5 】(A)with(B) like(C) unlike(D)as6 【B6 】(A)little(B) much(C) few(D)long7
8、【B7 】(A)probe(B) investigation(C) research(D)examination8 【B8 】(A)asleep(B) sleepy(C) active(D)awake9 【B9 】(A)ignored(B) yielded(C) recognized(D)excluded10 【B10 】(A)effects(B) affections(C) influences(D)impacts11 【B11 】(A)useful(B) good(C) bad(D)harmful12 【B12 】(A)challenge(B) deny(C) doubt(D)disput
9、e13 【B13 】(A)evade(B) settle(C) raise(D)release14 【B14 】(A)addition(B) fact(C) line(D)short15 【B15 】(A)from(B) an(C) the(D)of16 【B16 】(A)worst(B) best(C) only(D)natural17 【B17 】(A)comfortable(B) calm(C) quiet(D)excited18 【B18 】(A)coldness(B) warmth(C) darkness(D)shade19 【B19 】(A)sleep(B) work(C) foo
10、d(D)clothes20 【B20 】(A)differences(B) similarities(C) resemblance(D)oppositesPart ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points)20 At a party for Ms. magazine s 40th birthday, the Canadian writer Ann Dowsett Johnston waited for
11、an audience with Gloria Steinem, hoping to cull wisdom for her research on women and alcohol. “Alcohol?“ Steinem said to Johnston, looking “dismissive.“ “Alcohol is not a womens issue.“Steinem may have been hasty. We know that many women report drinking more often in recent decades, that they are dr
12、inking more when they do, and that the physiological impact and social meaning of it all is different for women than for men. Women are the engine of growth for the American wine market and are being arrested for drunken driving more often than before. How much alarm should be invested in those obse
13、rvations is up for debate in both Johnstons book, Drink: The Intimate Relationship Between Women and Alcohol, and Her Best-Kept Secret: Why Women Drinkand How They Can Regain Control, by the American journalist Gabrielle Glaser, the second of which makes the more pointed case.Johnston turns in part
14、to gauzy memory to make the case that female alcohol consumption is the negative byproduct of modern complexities and the pressure for women to be “perfect.“ “I dont remember my grandmothers suffering from this syndrome,“ she asserts. “Women who raised families during the Depression, who baked and g
15、ardened and read well; who were fundamentally happy, and felt no pressure to look like stick figures.“ Well. Depression-era womens lives were more circumscribed and less weighted with the pretext of “choice,“ sure. But were these women, all in all, “fundamentally happy“? And were they less eager for
16、 a fix when they could get it?A temptation for many trend journalists and headline writers is to see women s higher rates of alcohol abuse and dependency as the uneasy consequence of female liberation. Glaser acknowledges that alcohol provides a form of self-medication during a time of dizzying chan
17、ges in womens lives, but she is skeptical of the notion that alcohol abuse is the price of too much liberation. Her concise assessment: “Women are drinking more because they can.“ Indeed, whereas Johnston often casts women as the victims of institutions, Glaser seems more interested in asking why in
18、stitutions arent serving womens needs better. Either way, whats at stake is how we respond to the byproducts of equality that fit less comfortably on a placard.21 What can we infer from the first sentence in Paragraph 2?(A)Steinem is right.(B) Steinem is swift.(C) Women drink too fast.(D)Women relat
19、e to alcohol.22 According to Paragraph 2, which of the following is NOT true of women?(A)They are punished for drunken driving more often.(B) They drink more both in quantity and in frequency.(C) They have different influences on physiology and society.(D)They effectively promote sales of American w
20、ine market.23 Johnston believes that women are drinking NOT because of(A)side effects from it.(B) desire for perfection.(C) stress from more demands.(D)the complexity of the society.24 The author s attitude towards Johnston s opinion about why women drink is(A)convinced.(B) doubtful.(C) impartial.(D
21、)defensive.25 We may learn from the last paragraph that Glaser(A)believes that women are heavy drinkers.(B) sees alcohol abuse as the result of liberation.(C) thinks that institutions are dangerous to women.(D)regards alcohol as the engine of huge changes of the times.25 Yawning can be a problem at
22、the office for Lindsay Eierman, which makes her embarrassed. “I ve explained, Im sorry, I didn t get much sleep last night.“ says Ms Eierman, a 26-year-old social worker from Durham, North Carolina. But a lack of sleep may not be the problem.Researchers are starting to unravel the mystery surroundin
23、g the yawn, one of the most common and often embarrassing behaviours. Yawning, they have discovered, is much more complicated than previously thought. Although all yawns look the same, they appear to have many different causes and to serve a variety of functions.Yawning is believed to be a means to
24、keep our brains alert in times of stress. Contagious yawning appears to have evolved in many animal species as a way to protect family and friends, by keeping everyone in the group vigilant. Changes in brain chemistry trigger yawns, which typically last about six seconds and often occur in clusters.
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