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2014考研英语模拟测试题二

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发表于 2016-7-25 11:38:06 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
  Section I Use of English
  Directions:
  Read the following text. Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark A, B, C or D on
  ANSWER SHEET 1. (10 points)
  Millions of dollars often depend on the choice of which commercial to use in launching a new product. So
  you show the commercials to a 1 of typical consumers and ask their opinion. The answers you get can
  sometimes lead you into a big 2 . Respondents may lie just to be polite.
  Now some companies and major advertising 3 have been hiring voice detectives who test your normal
  voice and then record you on tape 4 commenting on a product. A computer analyzes the degree and
  direction of change 5 normal. One kind of divergence of pitch means the subject 6 . Another kind
  means he was really enthusiastic. In a testing of two commercials 7 children, they were, vocally, about
  equally 8 of both, but the computer reported their emotional 9 in the two was totally different.
  Most major commercials are sent for testing to theaters 10 with various electronic measuring devices.
  People regarded as 11 are brought in off the street. Viewers can push buttons to 12 whether they are
  interested or bored.
  Newspaper and magazine groups became intensely interested in testing their ads for a product 13 TV
  ads for the same product. They were interested because the main 14 of evidence shows that people 15
  a lot more mental activity when they read 16 when they sit in front of the TV set. TV began to be 17
  “a low-involvement” 18 . It is contended that low involvement means that there is less 19 that the ad
  message will be 20 . (257 words)
  Notes: commercial 广告。pitch音调。
  1. [A] pack [B] flock [C] multiple [D] bulk
  2. [A] loss [B] panic [C] benefit [D] surprise
  3. [A] hosts [B] advocates [C] agencies [D] opponents
  4. [A] as [B] if [C] though [D] while
  5. [A] toward [B] into [C] from [D] to
  6. [A] aggravated [B] lied [C] boasted [D] misunderstood
  7. [A] with [B] about [C] on [D] of
  8. [A] conforming [B] agreeing [C] conceiving [D] approving
  9. [A] involvement [B] response [C] reflection [D] mood
  10. [A] fed [B] supplied [C] provided [D] equipped
  11. [A] independent [B] ordinary [C] typical [D] average
  12. [A] demonstrate [B] designate [C] debate [D] indicate
  13. [A] as with [B] against [C] as to [D] under
  14. [A] number [B] series [C] body [D] proportion
  15. [A] exhibit [B] extend [C] expand [D] exert
  16. [A] or [B] than [C] and [D] versus
  17. [A] regarded [B] labeled [C] assumed [D] recognized
  18. [A] means [B] method [C] medium [D] measure
  19. [A] opportunity [B] scope [C] chance [D] capacity
  20. [A] rejected [B] reviewed [C] revived [D] remembered
  Section II Reading Comprehension
  Part A
  Directions:
  Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D.
  Text 1
  In a democratic society citizens are encouraged to form their own opinions on candidates for public office,
  taxes, constitutional amendments, environmental concerns, foreign policy, and other issues. The opinions held by
  any population are shaped and manipulated by several factors: individual circumstances, the mass media, special
  interest groups, and opinion leaders.
  Wealthy people tend to think differently on social issues from poor people. Factory workers probably do
  not share the same views as white collar, nonunion workers. Women employed outside their homes sometimes
  have perspectives different from those of full time homemakers. In these and other ways individual status shapes
  one’s view of current events.
  The mass media, especially television, are powerful influences on the way people think and act. Government
  officials note how mail from the public tends to “follow the headlines”. Whatever is featured in newspapers and
  magazines and on television attracts enough attention that people begin to inform themselves and to express
  opinions.
  The mass media have also created larger audiences for government and a wider range of public issues than
  before. Prior to television and the national editions of newspapers, issues and candidates tended to remain
  localized. In Great Britain and West Germany, for example, elections to the national legislatures were usually
  viewed by voters as local contests. Today’s elections are seen as struggles between party leaders and programs.
  In the United States radio and television have been beneficial to the presidency. Since the days of Franklin
  D.Roosevelt and his “fireside chats”, presidents have appealed directly to a national audience over the heads of
  Congress to advocate their programs.
  Special groups spend vast sums annually trying to influence public opinion. Public utilities, for instance,
  tried to sway public opinion in favor of nuclear power plants. Opposed to them were citizens’ organizations that
  lobbied to halt the use of nuclear power. During the 1960s the American Medical Association conducted an
  unsuccessful advertising campaign designed to prevent the passage of Medicare.
  Opinion leaders are usually such prominent public figures as politicians, show business personalities, and
  celebrity athletes. The opinions of these individuals, whether informed and intelligent or not, carry weight with
  some segments of the population. Some individuals, such as Nobel prizewinners, are suddenly thrust into public
  view by the media. By quickly reaching a large audience, their views gain a hearing and are perhaps influential in
  shaping views on complex issues.
  21. The second paragraph is mainly about the influence of .
  [A] gender on people’s view [B] people’s status on their view
  [C] living standard on people’s view [D] different ranks on people’s view
  22. The expression “follow the headlines” (Line 2, Para. 3) shows .
  [A] people seldom have time to read newspaper articles
  [B] people think the headlines contain the most important information
  [C] people often get their opinions from newspapers or television
  [D] most people look on newspapers or TV as misleading
  23. Which of the following suggests the role of TV in the shaping of public opinion?
  [A] TV programs have a strong influence on governmental policy.
  [B] Chats on televisions are chief means for running for presidency.
  [C] More and more people show interest in politics because of TV.
  [D] Before the use of TV, people showed little interest in politics.
  24. It is obvious that the opinions of famous people .
  [A] is often ignored by the public [B] is seldom expressed to the point
  [C] is often imposed on the public [D] has a strong influence on people
  25. According to the passage, which of the following is true?
  [A] The viewpoints of people in different circumstances are totally different.
  [B] The mass media is the most important means that influences people’s opinions.
  [C] Some interest groups sometimes are not on the behalf of common people.
  [D] The views of the public are influence by famous public figures because their opinions are more
  reasonable.
  Text 2
  For the generation that grew up during the feminist revolution and the rapid social change of the 1960s and
  1970s, it at first seemed achievement enough just to “make it” in a man’s world. But coupled with their ambition,
  today’s women have developed a fierce determination to find new options for being both parent and professional
  without sacrificing too much to either role or burning themselves out beyond redemption.
  Women have done all of the accommodating in terms of time, energy and personal sacrifice that is humanly
  possible, and still they have not reached true integration in the workplace. For a complicated set of
  reasons---many beyond their control---they feel conflict between their careers and their children. All but a rare
  few quickly dispel the myth that superwoman ever existed.
  For many women, profession and family are pitted against one another on a high-stakes collision of their
  professions. In the home, men and women struggle to figure out how dual-career marriages should work. Role
  conflict for women reaches far beyond the fundamental work/family dilemma to encompass a whole
  constellation of fiercely competing priorities. Women today find themselves in an intense battle with a society
  that cannot let go of a narrowly defined work ethic that is supported by a family structure that has not existed for
  decades. The unspoken assumption persists that there is still a woman at home to raise the children and manage
  the household. But the economic reality is that most people, whether in two-parent or single-parent families, need
  to work throughout their adult lives. As a consequence, the majority of today’s mothers are in the labor market.
  The first full-fledged generation of women in the professions did not talk about their overbooked agenda or
  the toll it took on them and their families. They knew that their position in the office was shaky at best. With
  virtually no choice in the matter, they bought into the traditional notion of success in the workplace—usually
  attained at the high cost of giving up an involved family life. If they suffered self-doubt or frustration about how
  hollow professional success felt without complementary rewards from the home, they blamed themselves---either
  for expecting too much or for doing too little. And they asked themselves questions that held no easy answers:
  Am I expecting too much? Is it me? Am I alone in this dilemma? Do other women truly have it all?
  Until now, this has been a private dilemma, unshared, as each woman was left to forge her own unique
  solution to merging her dual loyalties to work and family. Too often she felt that alone had failed to achieve a
  comfortable balance between the two.
  26. According to the passage, today’s women .
  [A] want to achieve a balance between her loyalties to work and family
  [B] are stronger advocates of gender equality than the older generation
  [C] do not want to sacrifice anything at all for the desired liberation
  [D] are getting no nearer to achieving their ambition
  27. The myth held by some “superwomen” is that they can .
  [A] reconcile their careers with parental responsibilities.
  [B] devote themselves to their career without regard for their children
  [C] resist the temptation of their ambition to make great achievements
  [D] resolve the conflicts between their careers and children without any sacrifice
  28. In what way do women today find themselves in an intense battle with the society?
  [A] The society regards women as less able to perform social tasks.
  [B] Women do too much about their career and too little about their families.
  [C] The society still holds the traditional image about a family.
  [D] Women no longer regard the family as a basic unit of the society.
  29. When women fail to achieve a balance between work and children, they .
  [A] let things go their own courses [B] admit that they are not superwomen
  [C] usually choose to give up their work [D] often blame themselves for it
  30. The author’s attitude towards women’s dilemma seems to be one of .
  [A] suspicion [B] indifference [C] irony [D] sympathy
  Text 3
  One of the earliest changes experienced by newly modernizing countries is the reduction of infectious
  disease through the diffusion of public health technology. Public health technology lowers the death rate,
  especially among infants and children, causing rapid population growth. Since most of the people of less
  developed nations live in rural areas that cannot absorb the increased population, unemployment presses people
  off the land. They tend to migrate into urban areas where newly developing industry and commerce and modern
  consumer goods and services offer hope for employment and a better life. Unfortunately, the opportunities are
  more apparent than real; and often the transition is more painful than pleasant.
  In the course of the transition from agrarian life to modern urban living, the family undergoes major changes
  in function, structure, relations, and style. Functionally, the family changes from a production unit to a
  consumption unit. No longer is there need for a large multi-worker household to operate the family’s farm
  interests, and the extended family household changes to the one containing only a core nuclear family. In the city
  children become economic liabilities rather than economic assets, and eventually families have fewer of them.
  Wives lose their functions as producers and maintainers of the labor force and become free to pursue extra
  household activities.
  The modern economy forces work outside the home away from kinfolk. Not the father but also the mother is
  forced into the marketplace or factory to obtain enough money for the family to survive in a pecuniary economy.
  Without the extended family household, no one remains at home to supervise children, so they are left on their
  own. They may be sent into the streets to earn money. Daily life becomes filled with more secondary than
  primary relations. There is an erosion of family control over individual members.
  Scarce urban housing forces overcrowding in both dwelling and neighborhood. Dense structures with
  common halls, stairways, and utilities cause more intensive contact with neighbors than in rural villages. Loss of
  rural courtyards, oven rooms, and large family areas drives group activities such as cooking, eating, and sitting
  into small rooms or city streets. More positively, household furnishings change as families are able to acquire the
  high-status accoutrements of modern living such as kerosene burners for cooking(replacing dung cakes)and beds
  (instead of mats).
  31. The spread of public health technology .
  [A] lowered the birthrate [B] decreased infectious disease
  [C] created more employment opportunities [D] eradicated the infectious disease
  32. By “wives lose their functions as producers and maintainers of the labor force”, the author means
  that .
  [A] many women are no longer able to join the labor force
  [B] many women become too weak to work
  [C] many women refuse to have children
  [D] the major job for women is no longer to give birth to and bring up children
  33. The first sentence of Paragraph 3, “The modern economy forces work outside the home away from
  kinfolk” means that .
  [A] the forces of modern economy operate beyond the influence of the family
  [B] the forces of modern economy are going out of the family
  [C] modern economy forces work to go out of the family
  [D] modern economy forces work which is outside the home to move away from family members
  34. Which of the following statements is true according to the passage?
  [A] In today’s city life, nobody is willing to stay home to supervise children.
  [B] Today’s city family has very weak control over its members.
  [C] Extended families from the countryside survive only in mutual activities.
  [D] All immigrants from abroad need help from relatives to become independent.
  35. According to the author, it is good that .
  [A] neighbors in cities have more intensive contact with one another than rural people.
  [B] group activities such as cooking, eating, and sitting take place in small rooms or city streets
  [C] families are able to acquire the high-status accoutrements of modern living
  [D] there is a cultural lag in the U.S.
  Text 4
  Before a big exam, a sound night’s sleep will do you more good than poring over textbooks. That, at least,
  is the folk wisdom. And science, in the form of behavioral psychology, supports that wisdom. But such
  behavioral studies cannot distinguish between two competing theories of why sleep is good for the memory. One
  says that sleep is when permanent memories form. The other says that they are actually formed during the day,
  but then “edited” at night, to flush away what is superfluous.
  To tell the difference, it is necessary to look into the brain of a sleeping person, and that is hard. But after a
  decade of painstaking work, a team led by Pierre Maquet at Liege University in Belgium has managed to do it.
  The particular stage of sleep in which the Belgian group is interested in is rapid eye movement(REM) sleep,
  when brain and body are active, heart rate and blood pressure increase, the eyes move back and forth behind the
  eyelids as if watching a movie, and brainwave traces resemble those of wakefulness. It is during this period of
  sleep that people are most likely to relive events of the previous day in dreams.
  Dr. Maquet used an electronic device called PET to study the brains of people as they practiced a task during
  the day, and as they slept during the following night. The task required them to press a button as fast as possible,
  in response to a light coming on in one of six positions. As they learnt how to do this, their response times got
  faster. What they did not know was that the appearance of the lights sometimes followed a pattern---what is
  referred to as “artificial grammar”. Yet the reductions in response time showed that they learnt faster when the
  pattern was present than when there was not.
  What is more, those with more to learn (i.e., the” grammar”, as well as the mechanical task of pushing the
  button) have more active brains. The “editing” theory would not predict that, since the number of irrelevant
  stimuli would be the same in each case. And to eliminate any doubts that the experimental subjects were learning
  as opposed to unlearning, their response times when they woke up were even quicker than when they went to
  sleep.
  The team, therefore, concluded that the nerve connections involved in memory are reinforced through
  reactivation during REM sleep, particularly if the brain detects an inherent structure in the material being learnt.
  So now, on the eve of that crucial test, maths students can sleep soundly in the knowledge that what they will
  remember the next day are the basic rules of algebra and not the incoherent talk from the radio next door.
  36. The phrase “poring over” in the first sentence of the text may be best interpreted as .
  [A] memorizing with great effort [B] studying with close attention
  [C] learning earnestly from [D] going thoroughly through
  37. The reason why sleep is good for the memory .
  [A] is to be clarified by behavioral psychology
  [B] is rooted in its function of relaxing the brain
  [C] lies in its contribution to the formation of lasting memories
  [D] stems from its compiling memories and ridding things unwanted
  38. During REM sleep, which of the following will happen?
  [A] An increase in brain activities. [B] A drop in blood pressure.
  [C] The slowing down of the heartbeat [D] The review of the day’s experiences.
  39. The experimenters found that their subjects .
  [A] learnt quickly how to respond to the light stimuli
  [B] pushed the button faster in the absence of the light pattern
  [C] increased their response time as they learnt the artificial grammar
  [D] picked up the artificial grammar during their REM sleep
  40. The Belgian group reached the conclusion that .
  [A] the second theory failed to cover all the brain responses during sleep
  [B] REM sleep reactivates the connections between the nerves and the memory
  [C] it’s beyond doubt that the subjects were learning in contrast with unlearning
  [D] the brain works more efficiently by knowing a set pattern of things to be learnt
  Part B
  Directions:
  The following paragraphs are given in a wrong order. For questions 41you’re you are required to
  reorganize the paragraphs into a coherent text by choosing from the list [A]~[G] to fill in each numbered
  box. The first and last paragraphs have been placed for you in Boxes. Mark your answers on Answer
  Sheet 1. (10 points)
  [A] One cannot think of any public statement of hers that was especially brilliant or witty. She was more
  innocent than clever; even her confession of an affair to a reporter sounded girlish. If pressed, few could say
  exactly what it was that made her so important, especially to people outside England, except for the fact that
  one could not take one’s eyes off the woman.
  [B] Her life never seemed as tragic as it was often made out---just sad, and a little off. She married the wrong
  man. Her in-laws could be vindictive. For every photographer eager to capture a picture of her in one of those
  astonishing evening gowns or hats, another was skulking in the bushes ready to bring her down.
  [C] The sudden death of an admired public person always seems an impossibility. People ascribe invulnerability,
  near immortality to our centers of attention. John Kennedy dies, and it could not happen. John Lennon dies,
  and it could not happen. Elvis, and Grace Kelly, and shock after shock. And now this death of a young
  woman by whom the world had remained transfixed from the moment she first appeared before it, whose
  name contained the shadow of her end: Princess Di.
  [D] In a way, she was more royal than the royals. She had a higher station than the Queen of England; she was
  the titular young monarch of her own country and of every other place in the world. She was the sentimental
  favorite figurehead, who was authorized to sign no treaties, command no armies, make no wars. All she had
  was the way she looked and sounded and carried herself. No model or actress could hold a candle to her. She
  was the image every child has of a princess----the one who can feel the pea under the mattresses, who kisses
  the frog, who lets down her hair from the tower window.
  [E] But who would have believed it? People thought every thought that could be thought about Diana, but not
  death. She was beauty, death’s antithesis. Beauty is given not only a special place of honor in the world but
  also a kind of permanence, as if it were an example of tendency of nature to perfect itself, and therefore
  something that once achieved, lives forever.
  [F] Yet that was no small thing. Diana was someone one had to look at, and such a person comes along once in a
  blue moon. She had a soft heart; that was evident. She had a knack for helping people in distress. And all
  such qualities rose in a face that everyone was simply pleased to see.
  [G] Her marriage was gone long before her death. As the years went on, it is likely that there would have been
  other romances after Dodi al Fayed to titillate the throngs. Exactly how her life would have progressed is
  hard to imagine. She would have continued to be a good mother and a worker for the ill and the poor; she
  would have been pictured from time to time at a dinner party or on a boat. In older age she might have
  become the King’s mother, welcomed back into the royal family at a time of life that is automatically
  accorded stature. How would she have looked? The hair whiter, the skin a bit more lined, but the eyes would
  still have had that sweet mixture of kindness and longing. By then the story of her and Charles, the scandals
  and recriminations, might have been lost in smoke.
  [H] Yet if people now were asked how they will remember Diana, what picture among the thousands they will
  hold in their mind, it would not be Diana at an official ceremony, or with a boyfriend, or even with her
  children. It would be her on the day of her wedding, when all the world was glad to be her subject and when
  she gave everyone who looked at her the improbable idea that life was beautiful.

20140510110033941.jpg

20140510110033941.jpg

  Part C
  Directions:
  Read the following text carefully and then translate the underlined segments into Chinese.
  China has been through a wrenching series of changes and experiments. (46) It is not for me, or for others in
  America, to tell China what its economic system should be. What works best for China will be a system rooted in
  China itself-in Chinese customs and traditions and ways of doing things. (47) The proof of any system lies in its
  results: in the extent to which it provides for the people more of what those people want. What the people of
  China want will not be in all respects the same as what the people of the United States would want. But in some
  respects it will be the same. The bottom lines test of any economic system is whether it works. (48) An economic
  system that works is one that creates incentives to produce, and provides a fair distribution of what is produced.
  What incentives will work, what distribution is seen to be “fair”---these are questions that different cultures may
  answer differently, and that even the same culture may answer differently in different periods of history or at
  different stages of its development.
  Among the great nations, the United States’ economic system is the most successful in history in producing
  prosperity. The Chinese system is the most successful in history in producing equality. (49)The challenge we
  both face is to avoid forcing people to make a hard choice between a system at one extreme which provides
  equality but would perpetuate poverty and one at the other extreme which provides prosperity but would ignore
  poverty. Poverty is too high a price to pay for either equality or prosperity. China’s challenge is to support the
  principle of equality without destroying the productivity of the people. America’s challenge is to provide
  prosperity which gives all an opportunity to escape from poverty. (50) Our systems are profoundly different, but
  in long view our goal of a better life for all our people is the same.
  Section III Writing
  Part A
  51. Directions:
  An English summer camp is to be held for overseas students in America. You are applying for admission to
  it. Write a letter to
  1) introduce yourself,
  2) offer your reason(s) for application, and
  3) ask for an application form.
  Write your letter with no less than 100 words. Write it neatly on Answer Sheet 2.
  Do not sign your own name at the end of the letter, use “Li Ming” instead. You do not need to write the
  address. (10 points)
  Part B
  52. Directions:
  Study the following cartoon and write an essay in which you should
  1) describe the set of drawings, interpret its meaning, and
  2) point out possible reasons and suggestions.
  You should write about 200 words neatly on Answer Sheet 2.

20140510110137322.jpg

20140510110137322.jpg

  更多考研英语模拟测试题及答案,请点击:2014考研英语模拟测试题及答案汇总
  
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