[考研类试卷]考研英语(一)模拟试卷98及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(一)模拟试卷 98 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 Advertising is a form of selling. For thousands of years there have been individuals who have tried to (1)_ others to buy the food
2、they have produced or the goods they have made or the services they can (2)_.But in the 19th century the mass production of goods (3)_ the Industrial Revolution made person-to-person selling inefficient. The mass distribution of goods that (4)_ the development of the highway made person-to-person se
3、lling (5)_ slow and expensive. At the same time, mass communication, first newspapers and magazines, (6)_ radio and television, made mass selling through (7)_ possible.The objective of any advertisement is to convince people that it is in their best (8)_ to take the action the advertiser is recommen
4、ding. The action (9)_ be to purchase a product, use a service, vote for a political candidate, or (10)_ to join the Army.Advertising as a (11)_ developed first and most rapidly in the United States, the country that uses it to the greatest (12)_. In 1980 advertising expenditure in the U.S. exceeded
5、55 billion dollars, or (13)_ 2 percent of the gross national product. Canada spent about 1.2 percent of its gross national product (14)_ advertising.(15)_ advertising brings the economies of mass selling to the manufacturer, it (16)_ benefits for the consumer (17)_. Some of those economies are passe
6、d along to the purchaser so that the cost of a product sold primarily through advertising is usually far (18)_ than one sold through personal salespeople. Advertising (19)_ people immediate news about products that have just come on the market. Finally, advertising (20)_ for the programs on commerci
7、al television and radio and for about two thirds of the cost of publishing magazines and newspapers.(A)request(B) oblige(C) affect(D)persuade(A)transfer(B) secure(C) enjoy(D)perform(A)resulting from(B) dealing with(C) leading to(D)going for(A)followed(B) preceded(C) achieved(D)induced(A)so(B) too(C)
8、 very(D)more(A)second(B) and(C) then(D)later(A)marketing(B) advertising(C) salespeople(D)agents(A)profits(B) benefits(C) interests(D)gains(A)should(B) would(C) may(D)will(A)though(B) otherwise(C) still(D)even(A)business(B) service(C) product(D)profession(A)amount(B) extent(C) possibility(D)utility(A
9、)similarly(B) supposedly(C) approximately(D)accountably(A)with(B) at(C) into(D)on(A)While(B) Therefore(C) But(D)If(A)induces(B) reduces(C) produces(D)introduces(A)as well(B) as usual(C) as a result(D)as a rule(A)more(B) less(C) cheaper(D)dearer(A)takes(B) brings(C) gives(D)delivers(A)works(B) calls(
10、C) looks(D)paysGrammar21 We_ our breakfast when an old man came to the door.(A)just have had(B) have just had(C) just had(D)had just had22 I meant_the matter with you, but I had some guests then.(A)discuss(B) discussing(C) having discussed(D)to have discussed23 Nowhere in nature is aluminum found fr
11、ee, owing to its always_with other elements, most commonly with oxygen.(A)combine(B) combined(C) being combined(D)having combined24 You_Jim anything about it. It was none of his business.(A)neednt have told(B) neednt tell(C) mustnt have told(D)mustnt tell25 His remarks were _annoy everybody at the m
12、eeting.(A)so as to(B) such as to(C) such to(D)as much as to26 “Who are the visitors?“They are all_ I think. “(A)mathematics student(B) mathematics students(C) mathematics students(D)student of the mathematics27 I_ the party much more if there hadnt been quite such a crowd of people there.(A)would en
13、joy(B) will have enjoyed(C) would have enjoyed(D)will be enjoying28 Although a teenager, Fred could resist_what to do and what not to do.(A)being told(B) telling(C) to be told(D)to tell29 The new big factory is reported_within two years.(A)to have completed(B) to complete(C) having been completed(D)
14、to have been completed30 _hes been learning English for no more than a year, he speaks it very well.(A)Assuming(B) Considering(C) Supposing(D)Now thatPart ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points)30 For years, digital news
15、conformed to one section of the 1984 prophecy of the technology guru Stewart Brand that “information wants to be free because the cost of getting it out is getting lower. “ Now, it is relying on his other, lesser-known maxim that “information wants to be expensive because its so valuable. The right
16、information in the right place just changes your life. “As paywalls go up, and advertising yields continue to fall, publishers have pinned their hopes on subscriptions. Some suggest that it is a breach of publishers moral obligation to make news freely accessible because it is a public good.I dont s
17、ee why publishers have an ethical duty not to charge for the content they originate. Free news is a recent phenomenon. Newspaper publishers always charged readers, albeit a small amount compared with the cost of newsgathering. Furthermore, nothing will change the fact that people have access to far
18、more information than before the internet. News cannot be patented - once information is uncovered, it spreads rapidly across Twitter and Facebook, and is repeated by rivals and aggregators.Yet the trend is clear. Most of the top US newspapers have a paywall in place, or are planning one. The financ
19、ial model for print newspapers that most revenues came from advertising, with subscriptions and news-stand prices making up the rest does not work online. The double-digit increase in online advertising revenues in the early 2000s has slowed to the low single figures, as growing traffic is mostly of
20、fset by falling advertising yields. With hindsight, it is blindingly obvious that when the space for advertising expands as it did hugely with the shift from print to online prices fall. For a long time, this evaded news publishers, who lived in the vain hope that they could rely more on advertising
21、 in the online world, rather than less. Papers such as the FT and the New York Times have reversed that tactic the NYTs circulation revenues now exceed those from advertising. Thus, news is increasingly being paid for by affluent individuals the average household income of NYT subscribers is about $
22、100, 000 or produced as part of a corporate service, such as Bloomberg News and Thomson Reuters.Should we be worried? The risk is that news will become slanted in the interests of corporations and the wealthy. So far, there isnt much sign of that. The news organisations best placed to prosper from t
23、he shift Bloomberg, Reuters, the FT, the Wall Street Journal, The Economist have high standards. Indeed, the shift towards subscriptions could raise editorial standards, rather than lowering them. Free sites that need to boost page views to gain advertising have an incentive to go downmarket with mo
24、re gossip and celebrity news; the ones that rely more on subscriptions have the reverse incentive.But the fading era of advertising-subsidised newspapers and free-to-air television was at least democratic. At relatively low cost, everyone could be well informed. In the future, the information superh
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