[考研类试卷]考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷488及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷 488 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 Almost every year since the end of the financial crisis has started with rosy expectations among American forecasters, and this one is no different. Sto
2、ck markets are buoyant, consumer confidence is improving, and economic seers are raising their growth forecasts for 2014. Americas S before the mid-1970s it was closer to the Commonwealth than to continental Europe. That generation grew up doubtful about diversity. East European immigrants, who bega
3、n arriving in large numbers in the mid-2000s, doubly offend them. Bobby Duffy of Ipsos MORI, who has conducted focus groups with members of this generation, reports that the prospect of retirement makes people worry about their childrens chances.For Generation X, mass immigration, European integrati
4、on and multiculturalism are part of the furniture. They grew up in a more individualistic Britain; which, says Mr. Ford, explains their relative distaste for authority, homogeneity and flag-waving. This, like university attendance (more common among this group than their parents), tends to make peop
5、le more tolerant of different races and nationalities. Thus Generation Xs experiences are closer to those of Generation Y than to the baby boomersa fact reflected in Ipsos MORIs findings.11 We can infer from Paragraph 1 that _.(A)the U. K. has strict travel restrictions(B) all Britons support travel
6、 restrictions(C) most people like travelling to Britain(D)most developed countries dislike immigration12 Which generation seems to dislike immigrants most?(A)The younger generation.(B) Generation Y.(C) Generation X.(D)Baby boomers.13 Robert Ford found that _.(A)the views of the young and the old are
7、 converging in Germany(B) generation gap is larger in the U.K., compared with many others(C) Britain seems to be unique because people have different views(D)the gap between the old and the young in Germany is larger than in Britain14 Which one is NOT true about baby boomers?(A)They are dubious abou
8、t diversity.(B) They hate immigrants from Eastern Europe.(C) They worry about their own prospect when they retire.(D)They are concerned about their childrens opportunities.15 Which of the following are true about generation X except _.(A)mass immigration and cultural integration are the most importa
9、nt factors to them(B) individualism is their basic ideology(C) authority and homogeneity are not favored by them(D)their experiences are identical to Generation Ys15 Of all the goods and services traded in the market economy, pharmaceuticals are perhaps the most contentious. Though produced by priva
10、te companies, they constitute a public good, both because they can prevent epidemics and because healthy people function better as members of society than sick ones do. They carry a moral weight that most privately traded goods do not, for there is a widespread belief that people have a right to hea
11、lth care.Innovation accounts for most of the cost of production, so the price of drugs is much higher than their cost of manufacture, making them unaffordable to many poor people. Firms protect the intellectual property (IP) that drugs represent and sue those who try to manufacture and sell patented
12、 drugs cheaply. For all these reasons, pharmaceutical companies are widely regarded as vampires who exploit the sick and ignore the sufferings of the poor.These criticisms reached a summit more than a decade ago at the peak of the HIV plague. When South Africas government sought to legalise the impo
13、rt of cheap generic copies of patented AIDS drugs, pharmaceutical companies took it to court. The case earned the nickname “Big Pharma v Nelson Mandela“. It was a low point for the industry, which wisely backed down.Now arguments over drugs pricing are rising again. Activists are suing to block the
14、patenting in India of a new Hepatitis C drug that has just been approved by American regulators. Other clashes are breaking out, in countries from Brazil to Britain. But the main battlefield is the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), a proposed trade deal between countries in Asia and the Americas. The
15、 parties have yet to reach an agreement, partly because of the drug-pricing question.Under the Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights, a deal signed in 1994, governments can allow a generic drugmaker to produce a patented medicine. Americahome of most of the worlds big pharma, whose c
16、onsumers pay the worlds highest prices for drugswants to use the TPP to restrict such compulsory licences to infectious diseases, while emerging-market countries want to make it harder for drug firms to win patents.The reoccurrence of conflict over drug pricing is the result not of a sudden emergenc
17、y, but of broad, long-term changes. Rich countries want to slash health costs. In emerging markets, people are living longer and getting rich-country diseases. This is boosting demand for drugs for cancer, diabetes and other chronic diseases. In emerging markets, governments want to expand access to
18、 treatment, but drugs already account for a large share of health-care spending. Meanwhile, a wave of innovation is producing expensive new treatments.16 Pharmaceuticals are important because _.(A)they carry a moral weight(B) they can prevent and cure diseases(C) they can reflect a countrys economy(
19、D)they will make society function better17 According to Paragraph 2, we can learn that _.(A)innovation is the most important thing for production(B) poor people can hardly afford drugs(C) drugs cost more than their manufacturing(D)some companies are considered as exploiters18 The example of HIV plag
20、ue is to _.(A)illustrate how drug firms protect the price of the drug(B) demonstrate AIDS is an extremely hazardous disease(C) prove that government has nothing to do to cut down the price of the drug(D)show how the nickname “Big Pharma v Nelson Mandela“ was earned19 The main idea of Paragraph 4 is
21、_.(A)battles in medical field(B) cases of patented drugs(C) conflicts among countries(D)arguments over medicine price20 According to the last paragraph, which one is true about emerging markets?(A)Most people suffer from long-term diseases.(B) People get diseases much more easily than before.(C) Peo
22、ples lifespan has been greatly prolonged.(D)Imported drugs price has been greatly cut down.考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷 488 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)1 【正确答案】 C【试题解析】 选项 A、B、D 都是对第一段内容的表述,并有扭曲,第二段首句发生了转折“Yet amid t
23、he new-year cheer, it is worth remembering that almost every year since the financial crisis upbeat expectations have been disappointed.”选项 C 符合转折部分所表达的核心内容。2 【正确答案】 A【试题解析】 题干中的“predictors in America”相当于第一段第一句的“American forecasters”;“usually”相当于“almost every year”;“after economic crisis”相当于“since t
24、he end of the financial crisis”,故可以确定该题对应首段首句。该句为:Almost every year since the end of the financial crisis has started with rosy expectations among American forecasters, and this one is no different. (几乎每次经济危机结束后的第一年,美国预测员就开始了乐观预期,这一次也不例外。) 其中最有困扰性的是 rosy 一词,其意思为“玫瑰般的,美好的,乐观的”,因此可以判断选项 A 为答案。其中“hopef
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