[考研类试卷]考研英语(二)模拟试卷8(无答案).doc
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1、考研英语(二)模拟试卷 8(无答案)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 At the moment the second plane was slamming into the south tower, President Bush was (1)_ to the second-graders of Emma E. Booker Elem
2、entary in Sarasota FTA. When he arrived at the school he had been whisked (2)_ a holding room: National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice needed to (3)_ to him. But he soon appeared in the classroom and listened (4)_ as the children went through their reading drill. As he was getting ready to pose (
3、5)_ pictures with the teachers and kids, chief of staff Andy Card entered the room, walked (6)_ to the President and whispered in Ms right ear. The Presidents face became (7)_ tense and serious. (8)_ nodded, Card left and for several minutes the President seemed distracted and somber but then he (9)
4、_ his interaction with the class. “Really good readers, whew!“ he told (10)_ “These must be six-graders!“Meanwhile, in the room (11)_ Bush was scheduled to give his remarks, about 200,people, (12)_ local officials, school personnel and students, waited under the hot lights., Word of the crash began
5、to (13)_ reporters called their editors, but details were sparse until someone (14)_ there was a TV in a nearby office. The President finally entered, about 35 minutes later, and (15)_ his brief comments. “This is a (16)_ time for America,“ he began. He ordered a massive (17)_ to “hunt down the folk
6、s (18)_ committed this act.“ Meanwhile the bomb dogs took a few extra passes through Air Force One, and an extra fighter escort was added. (19)_ the President too was going to have trouble (20)_ home.(A)to introduce(B) introduced(C) introducing(D)being introduced(A)into(B) for(C) in(D)at(A)talk(B) s
7、peak(C) say(D)discuss(A)appreciatively(B) attentively.(C) happily(D)absent-mindedly(A)to(B) from(C) at(D)for(A)over(B) forward(C) backward(D)soon(A)visually(B) visibly(C) virtually(D)vitally(A)Card(B) She(C) He(D)They(A)assumed(B) resumed(C) consumed(D)assured(A)the teachers(B) them(C) the kids(D)bo
8、th(A)that(B) when(C) where(D)in that(A)in addition(B) including(C) excluding(D)except(A)circulate(B) speak(C) appear(D)keep(A)traced back(B) remembered(C) memorized(D)conceived(A)presented(B) took(C) had(D)made(A)horrible(B) terrible(C) difficult(D)frightening(A)experiment(B) research(C) examination
9、(D)investigation(A)and(B) who(C) that(D)what(A)But(B) Instead(C) Furthermore(D)Despite(A)to help(B) getting(C) to get(D)helpingPart ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points)21 Today business cards are distributed by working
10、 people of all social classes, illustrating not only the uniquity of commercial interests but also the fluidity of the world of trade. Whether one is buttonholing potential clients for a carpentry service, announcing ones latest academic appointment, or “networking“ with fellow executives, it is per
11、missible to advertise ones talents and availability by an outstretched hand and the statement “Heres my card.“ As Robert Louis Stevenson once observed, everybody makes his living by selling something. Business cards facilitate this endeavor.It has not always been this way. The cards that we use toda
12、y for commercial purposes are a vulgarization of the nineteenth-century social calling cards, an artifact with a quite different purpose. In the Gilded Age, possessing a calling card indicated not that you were interested in forming business relationships, but that your money was so old that you had
13、 no need to make a living. For the calling-card class, life was a continual round of social visits, and the protocol(礼遇) governing these visits was inextricably linked to the proper use of cards. Pick up any etiquette manual predating World War I, and you will find whole chapters devoted to such que
14、stions as whether a single gentleman may leave a card for a lady; when a lady must, and must not, turn down the edges of a card; and whether an unmarried girl of between fourteen and seventeen may carry more than six or less than thirteen cards in her purse in months beginning with a “J“. The callin
15、g card system was especially cherished by those who made no distinction between manners and mere form, and its preciousness was well defined by Mrs. John Sherwood. Her 1887 manual called the card “the field mark and device“ of civilization.The business version of the calling card came in around the
16、mm of the century, when the formerly, well defined borders between the commercial and the personal realms were used widely, society mavens(内行) considered it unforgivable to fuse the two realms. Emily Posts contemporary Lilian Eichler called it very poor taste to use business cards for social purpose
17、s, and as late as 1967 Amy Vanderbilt counseled that the merchants marker “may never double for social purposes“.21 Business cards are usually used to_(A)announce ones latest academic appointment(B) establish business relationships(C) make a living(D)illustrate the fluidity of the world of trade22 T
18、he statement which has not been mentioned in the passage is_(A)business, cards are a vulgarization of the nineteenthcentury social calling card(B) The calling card system was especially cherished by these who made no distinction between manners and mere form(C) most people thought it improper to use
19、 business cards for social purposes(D)everyone makes his living by selling something23 The sentence that “your money was so old“ in the second paragraph means_(A)you have an old pound note(B) your money was useless(C) you have a lot of money(D)you inherited a fortune from your ancestors_24 Business
20、cards are likely to have appeared(A)at the beginning of nineteenth century(B) at the beginning of twentieth century(C) before the nineteenth century(D)after World War I25 In the Gilded Age, people who possessed a calling card_(A)had to make their living(B) were interested in forming business relatio
21、nships(C) boasted of their wealth(D)advertised their talents and availability26 President Bushs re-election already has resulted in more funds for one of the elections pivotal “moral values“ issuesabstinence education.Congress last weekend included more than $131 million for abstinence programs in i
22、ts $388 billion spending bill.This represents an increase of $30 million for programs that teach middle-and high-school youths that sexual abstinence until marriage is the best choice.The new funding is far less than the $100 million Mr. Bush requested, but it marks a “record level of funding“, said
23、 leaders of the National Abstinence Clearinghouse in Sioux Falls, S. D.Public debates about the merits of teaching abstinence-until-marriage versus abstinence-plus-contraception are likely to continue: A national evaluation of abstinence-until-marriage programs has been delayed, with a final report
24、not expected until 2006, said a spokesman for the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).The Bush administration has fueled this debate by steadily increasing federal funds for abstinence education, which has been outmatched for decades by funding for family planning, HIV/AIDS and other sex e
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