[专升本类试卷]专升本英语(阅读)模拟试卷9及答案与解析.doc
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1、专升本英语(阅读)模拟试卷 9 及答案与解析一、Part III Reading ComprehensionDirections: In this part there are four passages. Each passage is followed by a number of comprehension questions. Read the passages and choose the best answer to each question. Then, mark your answer by blackening the corresponding letter on the
2、 Answer Sheet.1 Smith considered himself to have been very fortunate in life. From his father he had inherited, at the age of seventeen, an easy-going disposition(性情), five hundred pounds in cash from a life insurance policy, and a good mathematical brain. The first legacy had enabled him to endure
3、without resentment(怨恨)the supervision of a reluctant and ill-tempered guardian(监护人 ); the second had enabled him to use the scholarship he had won to a university; the third resulted in his gaining a science doctorate in his middle twenties. By the time he was thirty he was in the employ of a large
4、engineering concern and running one of the experimental departments, a little surprised that he should be financially so well rewarded for pursuing his personal interests.At the age of thirty-two he had made his first trip abroad. It had been a success. To their delight, his employers discovered tha
5、t, in addition to technical ability which earned the respect of all those whom he dealt with, he had the faculty(才能)of making himself popular, which was rare in a man of his particular qualifications. And so, in the years that followed, occasional trips abroad had become part of his working life. Th
6、e excitement he felt on arriving in strange cities never dulled. He enjoyed meeting men of other nationalities and learning some knowledge of their languages, especially the former. It did not take him long to appreciate that all men were individuals and that none could truly be called “typical“ of
7、his nation.It is suggested in the passage that men of Smith s qualifications_.(A)earned respect easily(B) were always successful in their careers(C) traveled abroad quite often(D)were not usually popular socially1 Electricity is such a part of our everyday lives and so much taken for granted nowaday
8、s that we rarely think twice when we switch on the light or turn on the radio. At night, roads are brightly lit, enabling people and traffic to move freely. Neon lighting used in advertising has become part of the character of every modern city. In the home, many labor-saving devices are powered by
9、electricity. Even when we turn off the bedside lamp and are fast asleep, electricity is working for us, driving our refrigerators, heating our water, or keeping our rooms air-conditioned. Every day, trains, trolley-buses, and trams take us to and from work. We rarely bother to consider why and how t
10、hey rununtil something goes wrong.In the summer of 1959, something did go wrong with the power-plant that provides New York with electricity. For a great many hours, life came almost to a standstill. Trains refused to move and the people in them sat in the dark, powerless to do anything; lift stoppe
11、d working, so that even if you were lucky enough not to be trapped between two floors, you had the unpleasant task of finding your way down hundreds of flights of stairs. Famous streets like Broadway and Fifth Avenue in an instant became as gloomy and uninviting as the most remote back streets. Peop
12、le were afraid to leave their houses, for although the police had been ordered to stand by in case of emergency, they were just as confused and helpless as anybody else.Meanwhile, similar disorder prevailed in the home. New York can be stifling in the summer and this year was no exception. Cool, air
13、-conditioned apartments became furnaces. Food went bad in refrigerators. Cakes and joints of meat remained uncooked in cooling ovens, and people sat impatient and frightened in the dark as if an unseen enemy had landed from Mars. When the lights came on again, hardly a person in the city can have tu
14、rned on a switch without reflecting how great a servant he had at his finger-tips.2 The passage suggests that most large modern cities_.(A)would be better off without electricity(B) are completely dependent on electricity(C) need air-conditioned buildings(D)are terrible places to live in3 After the
15、night without electricity, _.(A)people would no longer buy air-conditioners(B) people would design something replaces air-conditioners(C) people would pay more attention to the electricity(D)people would think the disadvantages of the electricity3 The development of Jamestown in Virginia during the
16、second half of the seventeenth century was closely related to the making and using of bricks. There were several practical reasons why bricks became important to the colony. Although the forests could initially supply sufficient timber, the process of lumbering was extremely difficult, particularly
17、because of the lack of roads. Later, when the timber on the peninsula had been depleted, wood had to be brought from some distance. Building stone were also in short supply. However, as clay was plentiful, it was inevitable that the colonists would turn to brick-making.In addition to practical reaso
18、ns for using brick as the principal construction material, there was also an ideological reason. Brick represented durability and permanence. The Virginia Company of London instructed the colonists to build hospitals and new residences out of brick. In 1662, the Town Act of the Virginia Assembly pro
19、vided for the construction of thirty-two brick buildings and prohibited the use of wood as a construction material. Had this law ever been successfully enforced, Jamestown would have been a model city. Instead, the residents failed to comply fully with the law. By 1699, Jamestown had collapsed into
20、a pile of rubble with only three or four habitable houses.4 What is the subject of this passage?(A)The reasons for brick-making in Jamestown.(B) The cause of the failure of Jamestown.(C) The laws of the Virginia colonists.(D)The problems of the early American colonies.5 Which of the following was NO
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