[考研类试卷]考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷179及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷 179 及答案与解析Part ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points)0 Kalvero Oberg describes four stages that people go through when they experience situations that are very different from those to which they are accustom
2、ed. Stage one is a honeymoon phase, during which the new experience is perceived to be interesting, picturesque, entertaining, and charming. You may notice several superficial differences such as music, food, and clothing, and the fresh appeal of the new experience keeps you feeling interested and p
3、ositive.When you stay in a new environment for a while, you move to stage twothe crisis stagein which the shine wears off and day-to-day realities sink in. In a relationship, you notice annoying habits; in a new country, you find barriers to establishing connections or to learning the language beyon
4、d a few polite phrases. Suddenly, your new major includes a class or a professor you dislike. The difficulties and unpleasantness of reality replace the charming and picturesque “honeymoon“. However, if you stick with the experience and try to deal with it realistically, you will probably move to th
5、e third phase of culture shock: recovery.In recovery, you learn the systems, procedures, language, or nonverbal behaviors of the new environment so that you can cope with it on the basis of some mastery, competence, and comfort. After about two weeks in London, I began to feel familiar with travelin
6、g by “tube“, paying in the correct currency, and using some phrases that are unique to English people. I had the advantage of speaking the same basic language and of sharing a great deal with the English in some broad, cultural aspects. In a country that was very different from my own, it would prob
7、ably have taken me longer to move into the recovery phase.Finally, the fourth, or adjustment, phase occurs when you feel that you function well and almost automatically in the new culture. You no longer need to make mental conversions of the countrys money and it is relatively easy for you to adjust
8、 to social customs. A greater enjoyment of the new experience is now possible, and you may regain some of the initial positive regard you had in the honeymoon stage. If you stay long enough on a visit from a big city to a small town, or, the other way round, you may become so well adapted to the new
9、 environment that when you return to your original home, you will again experience culture shock.1 According to Oberg, people go through four stages when(A)their new experience is interesting and entertaining.(B) they have to adapt to new and unfamiliar situations.(C) the customs of the new situatio
10、n are negative.(D)their new spouse is very different from their perception.2 Which of the following is true about the crisis stage?(A)The sunshine wears off and the relationship breaks.(B) The annoying realities remove the happiness of honeymoon stage.(C) The difficult situations make the newcomers
11、go back to home countries.(D)Its hard to learn the language for a few polite phrases.3 People may not move to the third phase, recovery, if they(A)are not capable of changing their unsuitable personalities.(B) give up and cannot view the situation from a realistic viewpoint.(C) cannot grasp the nonv
12、erbal behaviors of the new environment.(D)stick with the unhappiness and deal with it realistically.4 If a person returns to his home country after a long enough visit to a host country, he may(A)obtain better abilities to adapt to a new environment.(B) regain some of the initial positive regard.(C)
13、 no longer live in small towns.(D)go through the four stages of cultural shock again.5 It can be inferred from the text that when one moves to a new environment, his adaptation process is(A)happy, sad, familiar, and enjoying.(B) positive, comfortable, happy and enthusiastic.(C) happy, upset, unique,
14、 and advocating.(D)unhappy, upset, comfortable and positive.5 He changed the future without ever winning a vote or commanding an army. All Albert Einstein did was having an idea. Its not a particularly easy one to grasp in all its ramifications, but the basic insight he expressed in his 1905 paper o
15、n special relativity is almost childlike in its simplicity. And yet it ushered in a new golden age of physics and did much to shape the course of the 20th century.It also transformed the way the future is made: not with wars and revolutions but with scientific insights. That much is still true. But
16、it is history that science precedes at the hands of the occasional lone genius. These days, vast networks of laboratories sponsored by governments are all pushing to find the new thing. Discovery and invention, in the developed countries at least, have become regularized. The insights of individuals
17、 are still important, of course, but the overall effort relies less on any one genius. “In the late 19th century, you had predominantly the private inventor,“ says Yale historian Daniel Kevles. “Now you have the organized inventor. Scientific fields are crowded with geniuses. Everybodys working at t
18、he big problems all the time. “This shift in the methodology of discovery has complicated matters. It is chiefly responsible for the complexity of machines, but also for the growing complexity of the act of inventing and building. The Pentagon awards a contract for a new jet fighter to a prime contr
19、actor, which passed the various systems and subsystems and components down through layers of subcontractors. “Henry Ford could understand every piece of his assembly line,“ says Don Kash, a technology expert at George Mason University in Washington D. C., “Nobody can do that at Toyota. “Whats differ
20、ent now, though, is how comfortable weve become with such complexity.Innovation is part of our lives in a way it hasnt been for previous generations. In 1970, Alvin Toffler argued in Future Shock that technology was changing society so quickly that a person in the span of a single lifetime would fin
21、d himself a stranger in his own culture. Tofflers book struck home because many people felt that new technologies were bringing about change at a pace that was disorienting and not a little disturbing. These days weve learned how to ride the rocket of innovation. “My father thought the world would b
22、e the same,“ says Kash. “My children wake up every day thinking the world will be different. “6 The word “ramifications“(Line 3, Paragraph 1)most probably means(A)radioactivity.(B) modification.(C) branches.(D)command.7 According to the passage, Einstein represents the people who(A)change the future
23、 of the world through individual insights.(B) write simple essays to make abstract theories understandable.(C) end wars without using forces.(D)make breakthroughs to shape the course of history.8 The act of invention would become less complex if(A)the means of discovery changed.(B) capable people pl
24、ayed the leading role.(C) the act could be done by fewer people.(D)scientific fields were not crowed with geniuses.9 According to the text, what is peoples attitude towards innovation nowadays?(A)Scared.(B) Comfortable.(C) Disturbing.(D)Indifferent.10 We can draw the conclusion from the text that th
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