[考研类试卷]考研英语(二)模拟试卷28及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(二)模拟试卷 28 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 Everyone complains that corporate America is【 C1】_to hire additional workers. Far【C2】_attention has been paid to the flip side of t
2、he jobless recovery: the【C3 】_improvement in American productivity.When the economy【C4】_in 2008, there was little of the fall in labor productivity that normally【C5】_a recession, and this was not just a one-off “batting average“ effect (in which average productivity rises because the worst performer
3、s are fired). Rather, it was a productivity boost that has continued【C6】_expert predictions that workers can only be【C7】_so hard for a short while.In the third quarter of 2011, American labor productivity was 2.3% higher than in the same period a year earlier. Manufacturing productivity in that quar
4、ter rose by 2. 9% compared with a year earlier. Americas productivity growth has been more【C8 】_than most other rich countriesa feat【C9】_to its flexible labor market and a culture of enterprise.Two things could keep productivity rising. First, workers are terrified of losing their jobs. This makes i
5、t easier to persuade them to put in extra hours or【C10】_new tasks. Second, tough times are forcing firms to【C11 】_every brain cell to become more efficient. Sealed Air, for example, has made numerous incremental tweaks, such as【C12】_a machine that makes absorbent pads for supermarket meat trays so t
6、hat its output increased from 400 units per hour three years ago to 550with the same number of workers.The【C13 】_of firms to invest in such enhancements has varied【 C14】_. Some would rather hoard cash or buy back their own shares【C15 】 _spend it on more efficient machinery or information technology.
7、 Yet there are【C16】_that leading industrial firms are starting to increase their capital spending, says Jeff Sprague of Vertical Research Partners, a research outfit. In particular, he has noticed firms investing in “debottlenecking“ which,【C17 】_its name suggests, means removing hold-ups in product
8、ion processes, sometimes with an additional production line.【C18 】_short, the recession has forced American firms to become more muscular. This should help them【C19】_when the good times return. It should also give them an edge【C20】_foreign rivals.1 【C1 】(A)reluctant(B) responsible(C) required(D)reso
9、lute2 【C2 】(A)much(B) less(C) fewer(D)more3 【C3 】(A)negligible(B) subtle(C) marked(D)slow4 【C4 】(A)slumped(B) stopped(C) soared(D)skyrocketed5 【C5 】(A)accompanies(B) allies(C) adheres(D)attaches6 【C6 】(A)despite(B) regardless(C) though(D)defiance7 【C7 】(A)smashed(B) crashed(C) squeezed(D)spoiled8 【C
10、8 】(A)robust(B) ferocious(C) violent(D)vital9 【C9 】(A)subscribe(B) ascribe(C) inscribe(D)describe10 【C10 】(A)upload(B) underscore(C) shoulder(D)charge11 【C11 】(A)expand(B) broaden(C) strain(D)extend12 【C12 】(A)upgrading(B) repairing(C) reusing(D)recovering13 【C13 】(A)efficiency(B) strength(C) abilit
11、y(D)willingness14 【C14 】(A)differently(B) enormously(C) completely(D)impressively15 【C15 】(A)except(B) but(C) then(D)than16 【C16 】(A)symbols(B) signs(C) marks(D)prints17 【C17 】(A)what(B) that(C) which(D)as18 【C18 】(A)In(B) By(C) On(D)Of19 【C19 】(A)maintain(B) thrive(C) survive(D)renew20 【C20 】(A)in(
12、B) above(C) beyond(D)overPart ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points)20 Of all the cuts to public services, few have provoked such loud protests as proposals to close libraries. Petitions and curses have been followed by
13、legal challenges. On November 16th a judge in London ruled against plans to close 21 libraries in Gloucestershire and Somerset. Campaigners in Brent, in north-west London, have taken their fight against closures to the Court of Appeal.Local politicians are startled. Keith Mitchell, leader of Oxfords
14、hire county council, which was forced by public pressure to abandon plans to close many libraries, complained that protesters seemed much less upset by cuts to social care and rubbish collection. Visits to libraries have declined by 6. 7% in the past five years, according to the Chartered Institute
15、of Public Finance and Accountancy (CIPFA).But this is to underestimate the symbolic role libraries play as a visible public good. A 2010 poll found that 69% of people had been to a library in the past year. More than 80% view libraries as “ essential“ or “ very important“.Yet savings have to be made
16、 somewhere. If library closures cause protests, cuts must be done stealthily. In the 2010-11 fiscal year libraries acquired 7. 4% fewer adult fiction books and 13. 7% fewer non-fiction books than they had the year before. An older, less appealing stock could speed the decline in library visits.Yet h
17、ard times are also forcing innovations that may help libraries in the long run. In a quiet success for David Camerons “Big Society“ , the number of volunteer librarians has risen from 12,708 to 21,642 in the past five years. That trend has its critics, especially among professional librarians. But s
18、taff account for at least half the cost of running a library. Other savings could probably be made by consolidating Englands 151 library authorities, and by making better use of technology. “London has 32 library authorities but just one police authority,“ marvels Desmond Clarke, a library campaigne
19、r.An entirely different option is to pour money into a single edifice in the hope that it will have a benign effect on the neighborhood. Englands most popular library is the Norfolk many people love lotteries. In using lotteries to motivate it is important to get the details right. Participants are
20、likely to find a lottery more enticing if they find out that they would have won. The Dutch government uses this principle very effectively. One of its state lotteries is based on postal codes. If your postal code is announced as the winner, you know that you would have won had you only bought a tic
21、ket. The idea is to play on peoples feelings of regret.Lotteries are just one way to provide positive reinforcement. Their power comes from the fact that the chance of winning the prize is overvalued. Of course you can simply pay people for doing the right thing, but if the payment is small, it coul
22、d well backfire. (If the total non-speeding-prize money had been divided up evenly among all those who drove within speed limit, I estimate that the price paid would have been about 25 cents per driver. Would anyone bother for that?)An alternative to lotteries is a trequent-flyer-type reward program
23、, where the points can be (redeemed for something fun. A free goodie can be a better inducement than cash since it offers that rarest of commodities, a guilt-free pleasure. This sort of reward system has been successfully used in England to encourage recycling. In the Royal Borough of Windsor and Ma
24、idenhead outside of London, citizens could sign up for a rewards program in which they earned points depending on the weight of the material they recycled. The points were good for discounts at merchants in the area. Recycling increased by 35 percent. The moral here is simple. If governments want to
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