[考研类试卷]考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷89及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷 89 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 No matter how large or notable the U.S. travel industry is or may become, it will always be a member of a broader world society. The charge facing all of
2、 us is to appropriately engage poverty. Poverty is certainly not new but the means at our disposal to address poverty are improving by the day. Fortunately, the $3.3 trillion world travel industry is uniquely suited to address poverty in regions where it is most entrenched. In the course of making a
3、 case for harnessing travel and tourism for poverty reduction, the travel and tourism industry already exists in every region of the globe and is a proven job producer and sustainer of native culture.That travel and tourism creates good jobs is indisputable. In the U.S., the Industrial Age economy i
4、s in transition to a service economy, and travel and tourism is responsible for one in every seven workers in the U.S. civilian workforce, directly or indirectly. But by no means is this phenomenon limited to the U.S. The World Travel and Tourism Council reports tourism employs almost 200 million pe
5、ople worldwide1 in every 13 jobs worldwide today.There are many important differences between building an industrial based economy and one that relies largely on tourism. One of the historical barriers to industrialization has been a shortage of capital to build an industrial infrastructure or a lac
6、k of industrial-specific facilities such as deep-water ports. But we dont need to build factories for tourism. Nor do we need the traditional resources of the Industrial Age to build new tourism economies. The essential raw materials for our industry include rich cultures, unique natural environment
7、s and willing hosts. And those raw materials exist already in abundance in every nation.Only travel brings us face to face with people from different cities, different nations, and different outlooks. CNN can take us on a virtual world tour. We can be touched by images we see in the media but it is
8、only when we shake hands with people from other nations and other cultures that we learn how things really are. And despite the many wonders of technology, we only truly touch one another when we travel and embrace one anothers culture, stature, and dreams.1 From the first paragraph we learn that th
9、e travel industry_.(A)is going to give money to aid poverty(B) has improved its revenue(C) is financially healthier than ever(D)is better able to help reduce poverty than ever2 The reason tourism benefits a country even more than traditional industries is that it_.(A)has more of a cultural benefit(B
10、) has more potential to lead to other industries(C) requires much less capital(D)uses less resources which harm the environment3 By saying “. those raw materials exist already in abundance in every nation“, the author is referring to_.(A)people, the environment and culture(B) the capital used to bui
11、ld the tourism industry(C) the environmental resources to build up tourism(D)hosts and staff to welcome visitors4 Why does the author assert that only through travel we “truly touch one another“?(A)He wants to emphasize tourisms powerful effect on combating social problems.(B) He believes tourism ma
12、kes it possible for people to help one another.(C) He believes travel is the only way cultures can learn about each other.(D)He thinks that sincere learning of a culture is only possible by travel.5 From the text we can infer that the author writes this text to_.(A)argue that travel is an important
13、industry(B) encourage people in the tourism industry to do more for poverty(C) point out that the travel industry has social, cultural as well as economic value(D)show travel industrys important role in nation building5 Very soon, unimaginably powerful technologies will remake our lives. This could
14、have dangerous consequences, especially because we may not even understand the basic science underlying them. Theres a growing gap between our technological capability and our underlying scientific understanding. We can do very clever things with the technology of the future without necessarily unde
15、rstanding some of the science underneath, and that is very dangerous.The technologies that are particularly dangerous over the next hundred years are nanotechnology, artificial intelligence and biotechnology. The benefits they will bring are beyond doubt but they are potentially very dangerous. In t
16、he field of artificial intelligence there are prototype designs for something that might be 50,000 million times smarter than the human brain by the year 2010. The only thing not feasible in the film Terminator is that the people win. If youre fighting against technology that is that much smarter th
17、an you, you probably will not win. Weve all heard of the grey goo problem that self-replicating nanotech devices might keep on replicating until the world has been reduced to sticky goo, and certainly in biotechnology, weve really got a big problem because its converging with nanotechnology. Once yo
18、u start mixing nanotech with organisms and you start feeding nanotech-enabled bacteria, we can go much further than the Borg in Star Trek, and those superhuman organisms might not like us very much.We are in a world now where science and commerce are increasingly bedfellows. The development of techn
19、ology is happening in the context of global free trade regimes which see technological diffusion embedded with commerce as intrinsically a good. We should prepare for new and unfamiliar forms of argument around emerging technologies.6 From the text, we know that the authors greatest worry is_.(A)our
20、 lack of technological understanding of the process involved(B) our lack of technological capability(C) creating technology without really understanding the issues(D)our refusal to face the consequences of the technology we create7 It can be inferred from the text that the author_.(A)thinks people o
21、verestimate the capabilities of technology(B) is not optimistic that artificial intelligence will always be used positively(C) thinks that we should take science fiction movies more seriously(D)believes artificial intelligence is the greatest threat we face technologically8 Why does the author say i
22、t is not feasible in the film Terminator that the humans win?(A)Because the power of the technology was exaggerated.(B) Because the strength of the machines would be much greater.(C) Because machines with that much intelligence would not allow it.(D)Because even heroic humans would achieve nothing f
23、rom such a battle.9 The mixing of nanotech with organisms may_.(A)produce dangerous viruses capable of killing many people(B) produce creatures that are unfriendly to humans(C) upset our balance of nature(D)reduce the world to sticky glue10 The authors attitude toward the emerging technologies is_.(
24、A)critical(B) skeptical(C) provocative(D)indifferent10 The close relationship between poetry and music scarcely needs to be argued. Both are aural modes which employ rhythm, rime, and pitch as major devices; to these the one adds linguistic meaning, connotation, and various traditional figures, and
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