[专升本类试卷]2006年北京高职升本(英语)真题试卷及答案与解析.doc
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1、2006 年北京高职升本(英语)真题试卷及答案与解析一、Vocabulary and Structure1 The new technique will_us to double our production.(A)suggest(B) enable(C) permit(D)make2 Three days later, Gary was behaving as though nothing_.(A)happens(B) happened(C) has happened(D)had happened3 _the numbers of such developments are relative
2、ly small, the potential market is large(A)When(B) While(C) Since(D)As4 Wre sent a telegram yesterday as we_any letter from him for a long time.(A)havent received(B) didnt receive(C) hadnt received(D)would not receive5 In the letter, she didnt tell me whether he was still_.(A)alive(B) lived(C) lively
3、(D)live6 Its believed that a man is innocent until_guilty.(A)to prove(B) proved(C) having been proved(D)to have proved7 Id rather you_make any comment on the issue for the time being.(A)wont(B) dont(C) wouldnt(D)didnt8 _is left over may be put into the refrigerator, where it will keep for 2-3 weeks.
4、(A)Whatever(B) Anything(C) Something(D)Whichever9 They have planted trees for years in this area, yet the tops of some hills are still_.(A)blank(B) bare(C) empty(D)vacant10 I didnt buy the car yesterday for the simple reason_it was too expensive.(A)why(B) which(C) since(D)that11 Not until the mid-12
5、th century_as a nation with its own culture and language.(A)Portugal emerged(B) Portugal had emerged(C) did Portugal emerge(D)had Portugal emerged12 They started off at about 5 oclock in the morning. They_there by now.(A)have arrived(B) should arrive(C) should be arriving(D)should have arrived13 _a
6、diary is a good way to improve your English.(A)Having(B) Keeping(C) Taking(D)Writing14 At least 150 people are believed_in the air crash.(A)to die(B) dying(C) to have died(D)having died15 It is already 9 oclock, but she still did not_.(A)come out(B) come up(C) show up(D)turn out15 Ever heard the one
7、 about the doctor who gave his patient six months to live? When the man couldnt pay his bill, the doctor gave him another six months.Go ahead, laugh. Its strong medicine, researchers are learning. Even the physical act is good for you, says William Fry, pioneer in laughter research. It increases blo
8、od flow and contracts abdominal (腹部 的) muscles. A hundred loud and deep laughs is equivalent to a very active exercise of ten minutes on a rowing machine, according to Frv.But the benefits go beyond an exercise. The most astonishing evidence of laughters power comes from a 1997 study of 48 heart-att
9、ack patients. Half of them watched funny shows for 30 minutes even-day: the rest served as controls. After a year, ten patients in the control group had suffered repeat heart attacks, compared with only two in the group that watched the shows.Can a good laugh help patients get well? In a landmark ex
10、periment at the University of California at Los Angeles, called Rx Laughter, scientists plan to test the effect of laughter in children with serious illnesses, including cancer. Early results suggest that humorous videos help kids handle uncomfortable or painful procedures.Justin Black, 13 years old
11、, already knows that. He was in considerable pain when he woke up from surgery until Bill Marx, a volunteer (志愿者) for Rx Laughter, appeared at his bedside. Marx told jokes, made faces and pranced (欣喜地跳跃) around the hospital room. “Having something to laugh at took my mind off the pain,“ says Justin.
12、 “When youre laughing, you cant help but feel better.“16 What is this passage mainly about?(A)The benefits that laughter can bring to people.(B) A landmark experiment that is called Rx Laughter.(C) How Justin Black felt when a volunteer appeared in the hospital room.(D)Why Bill Marx became a member
13、of the experiment team to test the effect of laughter.17 From the passage we learn that in 1997 the study of 48 heart-attack patients_.(A)found most of the patients had suffered repeat heart attacks(B) took the scientists about two years to draw their conclusion(C) produced newly found evidence abou
14、t heart attacks(D)made surprising findings about laughters power18 Why did the scientists at the University of California make the experiment?(A)To help children in hospital recover from their illness.(B) To look for the evidence of laughters power in women patients.(C) To test the effect of laughte
15、r on children who were seriously ill.(D)To see whether laughter could replace some active exercises.19 The early results of the landmark experiment, called Rx Laughter, show that the humorous videos_.(A)replace medication that children take(B) really help children handle their pains(C) do no good to
16、 childrens uncomfortable procedures(D)have some side effect on childrens painful procedures20 From what Justin said at the end of the passage we learn that he_.(A)enjoyed the time with the scientists(B) soon recovered from his illness(C) often made fun of Marx(D)almost forgot his pain20 How well do
17、you know your dog? The answer is, not nearly as well as your dog knows you. Given the right motivation, humans can certainly be perceptive (有洞察力的)enough. But most dog lovers discover, sooner or later, that dogs are sensitive to the behavioral signs of their owners that humans rarely equal. And thats
18、 nothing. Scientists have recently discovered that dogs can distinguish, with amazing accuracy, between breath samples from people with lung cancer and from people without. The dogs have to be trained to do it, of course. But the fact that they can do it at all is remarkable. There arent enough bisc
19、uits in the world to teach a human to smell at such an extraordinary level of subtlety (细微之处).This news will give pause to almost anyone who lives with a dog. Just what a dog “knows“ is hard to say, because the human idea of “knowing“ is so closely related to the ability to express what you know. Ev
20、en trained cancer-sniffing dogs express their knowledge their distinction between samples only by sitting or not sitting. But this is what always happens. We tend to forget the extraordinary powers of the animals we live with simply because we live with them. We tend to humanize them, which means, i
21、f nothing else, that we tend to reduce them in terms of their sensory powers to our muddling (糊涂 ) level. We can barely take in the fact that when a dog comes up and sniffs us, it is really giving us a check-up.Not that this will change the dynamic of our relations with mans best friend. For a while
22、 remembering the cancer-sniffing dogs some of us will wonder when we see our pets cock their heads, “What are you looking at?“ But time will pass, and humans will be humans, and we will forget that the beast we are walking with may already know things about us that we will discover only too late.21
23、According to the first paragraph, we can find that clogs_.(A)are more sensitive to human behavior than man is to theirs(B) will develop some behaviors like their owners(C) know almost everything about man(D)are as emotional as their owners22 One of the surprising facts about dogs is that_.(A)they do
24、 better than humans in curing cancer patients when well trained(B) they are able to tell healthy people from unhealthy ones by smelling(C) they eat less biscuits than man to discover cancer patients(D)they can smell whether their owners are happy or not23 The passage tells us that people tend to for
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