2022年成人高考学位英语真题预测(附答案)9
Part I. Situational Conversations (10%)
Directions: In this part, there are ten short incomplete dialogues between two speakers, each followed by four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that most appropriately suits the conversational context and best completes the dialogue. Mark your answer on the ANSWER SHEET with a single line through the center of the corresponding letter.
1. Vivian: Christina! I haven’t seen you for ages. How are you?
Christina: Fine. And you?
Vivian: Pretty good. How’s Christopher?
Christina: Oh, don’t you know? We got divorced two years ago.
Vivian: __________
A. Hope you’ll be better. B. It is really a problem.
C. What a pity! D. Oh, I’m sorry.
2. Richard: How much is it to rent an economy car?
Tina: $15.00 a day or $95.00 a week, unlimited mileage.
Richard: Could I have one for tomorrow morning?
Tina: ___________________________
Richard: Sure. Here it is.
Tina: Good. Now just complete this form, please.
A. Could you please show me your phone number, please?
B. Can you tell me your address, please?
C. Do you have your driver's license?
D. May I have your name, please?
3. Harry: _______?
Elizabeth: I’m an engineer.
Harry: Oh, are you?
Elizabeth: How about you?
Harry: I work for a trading company.
A. What are you doing B. How do you do
C. What do you do D. How are you doing
4. Johnson: Do you mind if I put some of my things in your room overnight?
Pamela: ______.
Johnson: That’s great.They are painting the walls in my room.
A.No, you are welcome. B.Sure, my pleasure.
C.Sure, you are always the best. D.No, not at all.
5. Customer: _________ if you’d serve me as quickly as possible as I’ve got an appointment at two fifteen.
Shopkeeper: I’ll do my best, Madam.
A. I’d be most grateful B. I’d be most delightful
C. It’ would be very helpful D. It would be very kind of you
6. Paul: Go down Main Street and turn left at the first corner. Then walk two blocks and you'll see the library just in front of you.
Janet: _____________________
Paul: That's right.
A. Main Street, first left, two blocks. Right? B. Is what you're saying right?
C. Do you think I can find the library easily? D. The library on the right?
7. Guest: _________.
Clerk: Certainly. Do you have a reservation?
Guest: Yes. The name is Green. Mr. and Mrs. Green.
Clerk: Here we are. For five nights. Could you fill in the registration card, please? And I’ll need your credit card.
A. I’d like to stay in, please B. I’d like to check in, please
C. I’d like to rent a room, please D. I’d like to rest here, please
8. Speaker A: Do you think your boss will expect you to work late again tonight?
Speaker B: ___________.
A. Such has never been the case with my boss.
B. Does the sun come up in the west?
C. How can we work late for our boss?
D. To work late again tonight? My boss has never done such a foolish thing.
9. Jack: I have a pair of tickets for a concert Sunday night. Would you like to go?
Wendy: I don’t think so. __________.
A. I’m not very anxious about concert B. I’m not very excited about concert
C. I’m not too interested about concert D. I’m not too wild about concert
10. Customer: Have you got Michel Jackson’s latest CD album?
Salesman: ______.
A. No. I don't care for singer's photographs. B. No. It has been sold out.
C. Yes. They don't have it anymore. D. Yes. I can't afford one
Part II Reading Comprehension (40%)
Section A
Directions: There are 3 passages in this part. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A), B), C) and D). You should decide on the best choice and write the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet.(30%)
Passage One
Questions 11 to 15 are based on the following passage:
Rising global carbon dioxide levels tied to global warming may not be as crucial in determining the composition of plant communities as other, localized climate changes.
“Nobody really knows what the increases in carbon dioxide are going to entail in terms of future changes in vegetation types,” said Mark Brenner, a University of Florida assistant professor of paleontology, the study of ancient lakes. “It looks like climate changes in different areas may be more important than carbon dioxide, at least carbon dioxide by itself,” he said.
Brenner’s research team based their conclusions on an analysis of sediment from two lake bottoms, one in northern Mexico and one in northern Guatemala. The researchers used new techniques that allowed them to analyze only the remains of land plants, specifically their leaf waxes. By measuring the composition of the leaf waxes, the researchers were able to distinguish two broad categories of plants living in these areas --- so-called C3 and C4 plants, which have different photosynthetic processes. Many C4 plants are tropical grasses, while most tropical trees are C3 plants. The researchers analyzed sediments deposited over the last 27,000 years, from the last ice age to the current geological period. Over this period, there was a worldwide, relatively uniform increase in atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations.
Brenner said that if carbon dioxide played the major role in determining plant composition, one would assume that analysis of the sediments would reveal very similar changes in relative abundance of C3 and C4 plants in the two places over the study period. But, in fact, the researchers found that trends in the two types of plants were different at the two locations. The changes were related not with carbon dioxide levels, but with shifts in rainfall. “The result appears to be that climate factors, especially moisture availability, determine whether C4 or C3 plants dominate in an area, not carbon dioxide,” Brenner said.
Many scientists believe global warming will cause major variation in local climates worldwide, with some wet areas becoming dry and dry areas becoming wet. If that happens, it could have more impact on relative C3 versus C4 plant distribution than the rising carbon dioxide levels.
11. What can be inferred in the first paragraph?
A). Climate changes are more important to the composition of plant communities than rising global carbon dioxide.
B). Localized climate shifts may not be as crucial as carbon dioxide.
C). Nobody knows which one is important.
D). Carbon dioxide levels is crucial to the global warming.
12. What is Mark Brenner?
A). He studies co-author’s opinion.
B). He is assisting the University of Florida.
C). He is an expert in the field of ancient lakes.
D). His research team composed of six geologists and geographers.
13. According to the third paragraph, which one is NOT true?
A). Tropical grasses are usually C4 plants.
B). C3 and C4 plants used to live in northern Mexico and Guatemala.
C). C3 and C4 plants don’t have the same processes.
D). Tropical trees are all C3 plants.
14. Why, in the 4th paragraph, the researchers found that trends in C3 and C4 plants were different at the two locations?
A). The assumption that carbon dioxide played the major role is wrong.
B). The carbon dioxide played an important role.
C). The moisture availability was different.
D). The carbon dioxide level was different.
15. What’s the main idea of the passage?
A). Climates factors determine the plant distribution and composition of plant communities.
B). Global warming will cause major variation.
C). How has Brenner’s research team proved a truth.
D). C3 and C4 plants are important plants in determining the composition of plant communities.
Passage Two
Questions 16 to 20 are based on the following passage:
Between about 1910 and 1930, new artistic movements in European art were making themselves felt in the United States. American artists became acquainted with the new art on their trips to Paris and at the exhibitions in the famous New York gallery "291" (named after its address on Fifth Avenue) of the photographer Alfred Stieglitz. But most important in the spread of the modern movements in the United States was the sensational Armory Show of 1913 held in New York, in which the works of many of the leading European artists were seen along with the works of a number of progressive American painters.
Several of the American modernists who were influenced by the Armory Show found the urban landscape, especially New York, an appealing subject. Compared with the works of the realist painters, the works of American modernists were much further removed from the actual appearance of the city; they were more interested in the "feel" of the city, more concerned with the meaning behind appearance. However, both the painters of the "Ash Can School" and the later realists were still tied to nineteenth century or earlier styles, while the early modernists shared in the international breakthroughs of the art of the twentieth century.
The greatest of these breakthroughs was Cubism, developed most fully in France between 1907 and 1914, which brought about a major revolution in Western painting. It overturned the rational tradition that had been built upon since the Renaissance (文化复兴)- In Cubism, natural forms were broken down analytically into geometric shapes. No longer was a clear differentiation made between the figure and the background of a painting: the objects represented and the surface on which they were painted became one. The Cubists abandoned the conventional single vantage (优越的地位) point of the viewer, and objects depicted from multiple viewpoints were shown at the same
16. With what topic is the passage primarily concerned?
A) The development of Cubism.
B) Modern art movements in the United States.
C) Contemporary artists in the United States.
D) The influence of photography on landscape painters.
17. It can be inferred from the passage that European art trends probably affected United States' art most during which of the following years?
A) 1901. B) 1908.
C) 1913. D) 1936.
18. Which of the following is NOT mentioned as a means through which American artists learned about new movements?
A) Lessons from successful artists.
B) The exhibitions at the gallery "291".
C) Trips to Europe.
D) The Armory Show of 1913.
19. Why does the author mention Alfred Stieglitz?
A) To demonstrate that photography was the major influence in modern art.
B) To compare him with other artists of the time.
C)To point out that many artists learned their craft by studying with him.
D) To give an example of someone who had an influence on modern art.
20. According to the author, which of the following was a favorite subject for American modernists?
A) Portraits of famous people. B) Country scenes.
C) Pictures of buildings' interiors. D) City landscapes.
Passage Three
Questions 21 to 25 are based on the following passage:
What are the zebra stripes on the tomato soup cans and potato chip bags? They are special black and white vertical lines. These black and white stripes can be read by an optical scanner, or computer. The "scanner", which reads the lines of code, is a small laser beam of light. When the light ray is broken by the black stripes, the computer "reads" the information about the product.
The code is called the Universal Product Code (UPC). It is designed to add speed and efficiency to stores by using computers. It can do this in several ways. First, it is not necessary for workers to put individual prices on items. Errors in prices are eliminated, or done away with. Also, the time spent checking out is reduced. UPC gives an itemized receipt to the customer with all the items, prices, and totals. The store clerk does not need to spend time checking the price on the item and punching it into cash register. This UPC computerized system will probably save as much as 45 percent of the checkout clerk's time.
What do the stripes mean? How does the computer interpret the stripes? The number printed below the vertical bars identifies the manufacturer and the manufacturer's item. As many as 10 trillion individual machine-readable numbers can be used with this system. In the example, the 0 on the left side means that it is a grocery item. The numbers 51000 indicate the manufacturer. In this case it is the Campell Soup Company. The last five digits, 00011, mean it is a can of tomato soup. The light rays from the light beam read these lines, and the message is sent directly to the computer. The computer then finds the information about this product (price, inventory data) and sends it instantly back to the terminal at the checkout counter. At the same time, it keeps an inventory for the store manager. Many products have labels with these stripes.
21. The Universal Product Code _____.
A) makes grocery shopping easier
B) makes grocery shopping complicated
C) cuts down on efficiency
D) will never be practical
22. Codes are scanned by _____.
A) the checkout clerk B) a laser beam of light
C) the customers themselves D) the cash register
23. Computers are beneficial because they _____.
A) eliminate price errors
B) give itemized printout to the customer
C) save time in the checkout lane and help control inventory
D) all of the above
24. What information CANNOT be obtained from the UPC?
A) Manufacturer. B) Grocery store name.
C) Item. D) Price.
25. A possible title for this article could be _____.
A) Animals and Food
B) The Benefits of the Universal Product Code
C) Production Made Easy
D) Stripes in Food Advertising
Section B
Directions: In this section, there is one passage followed by 5 questions or unfinished statements. Read the passage carefully, then write your answers on the Answer Sheet.(10%)
Motorways are, no doubt, the safest roads in the country. Mile for mile, vehicle for vehicle, you are much less likely to be killed or seriously injured than on an ordinary road. On the other hand, if you do have a serious accident on a motorway, fatalities are much more likely to occur than in a comparable accident elsewhere on the roads.
Motorways have no sharp bends, no roundabouts or traffic lights and thus speeds are much greater than on other roads. Though the 70 m. p. h. limit is still in force, it is often treated with the contempt that most drivers have for the 30 m. p. h. limit applying in built up areas in Britain. Added to this is the fact that motorway drivers seem to like travelling in convoys with perhaps barely ten metres between each vehicle. The resulting horrific pileups (involving maybe a hundred vehicles) when one vehicle stops for some reason -- mechanical failure, driver error and so on -- have become all too familiar through pictures in newspapers or on television. How many of these drivers realize that it takes a car about one hundred metres to brake to a stop from 70 m.p.h.? Drivers also seem to think that motorway driving gives them complete immunity (免疫) from the caprices (反复无常) of the weather. However wet the road is, whatever the visibility in mist or fog, on they plough (继续向前) at ludicrous (荒唐的) speeds oblivious of (不在意的) police warnings or speed restrictions until their journey comes to a premature conclusion.
Perhaps one remedy for this motorway madness would be better driver education. At present, learner drivers are barred from motorways and are thus, as far as this kind of driving is concerned, thrown in at the deep end. However, much more efficient policy is required, for it is the duty of the police not only to enforce the law but also to protect the general public from its own folly.
26. What are the general ideas of para.1 and para.. 2 ?
27. At which speed can the drivers drive on the motorways?
28. The resulting horrific pileups are __________
29. What does the sentence "Drivers also seem to ... of the weather" mean?
30. How to remedy the madness of this motorway?
Part III Error Correction (10%)
Directions: In this part there is one passage. In the passage there are altogether 10 mistakes, one in each numbered line. You may have to change a word, add a word or delete(删去) a word. If you change a word, cross it out and write the correct word in the corresponding blank. If you add a word, put an insertion mark (∧) in the right place and write the missing word in the blank. If you delete a word, cross it out and put a slash (/) in the blank. Write your answer on the ANSWER SHEET.
A multicultural person is someone who is deeply
concerned that all culture are equally good, 31._______
enjoys learning the rich variety of cultures in the world,
or most likely has been exposed to more than one 32._______
culture in his or her lifetime. You cannot motivate
anyone, especially someone of the other culture, 33. _______
until that person has accepted you. A multilingual
person can explain the advantages of a product with 34. ________
other languages, but a multicultural salesperson can
motivate foreigners to buy it. That’s a critic difference. 35. _________
No one likes foreigners who are arrogant about their
own culture. Customers are turned off by mono-cultural
salespeople. The trouble is, most people are arrogant 36. ________
mono-cultural without being aware of it. And even those
who are aware of it cannot hide. Foreigners sense 37. ________
mono-cultural arrogance at once and set up their culture 38. _________
barriers, effectively block any attempt by the 39. _________
mono-cultural person to motivate them. Multiculturalism
is a requirement that has neglected too often 40. _________
in hiring managements for international positions.
And this neglect is affecting every industry.
Part IV Translation (25%)
Section A
Directions: In this part there are ten incomplete sentences. Complete the sentences on the Answer Sheet by translating into English the Chinese given in the brackets.(15%)
41.I’ve been sorting through these old papers to see what can be thrown away (看看能把哪些扔掉) .
42. How can you talk to her/him like that (你怎么能这样对他说话)? She is the one who brought you up and helped you finish school .
43.It’s advisable for people in these groups to have a yearly blood test (每年做一次血液捡查) .
44.We see ourselves as preparing our students for a way of life (一种生活方式) .
45.The novelist instantly rose to fame (一举成名)in 1950 with the publication of Good-bye, My Dear .
46.Because of the leg injury, the athlete decided to quit the match (决定退出比赛) .
47.I would prefer shopping in a department store because it is more convinient and time-saving (它更加方便和省时) .
48.Nowhere in the city will you find a man to help you (能找到人帮你) .
49.He finished the job at the expense of his health (以健康为代价) .
50.According to my personal experience, smile has done us a lot good (微笑带给我们很多好处)
Section B
Directions: Translate the following passage into Chinese. Remember to write the answer on the Answer Sheet.(10%)
We know that there is air all around the world. We could not breathe without air. Airplanes could not fly without air. They need air to lift their wings. Airplanes cannot fly very high because as they go higher the air gets thinner. If we go far enough away from the earth, we find there is no air. What is the sky? The sky is space. In this space there is nothing except the sun, the moon and all the stars. Scientists have always wanted to know more about other worlds in the space. They have looked at them through telescopes and in this way they have found out a great deal.
Part V Writing (15%)
Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a composition entitled “Are School Buses Necessary for a University?” You should write at least 150 words following the outline given below in English. Write your composition on the ANSWER SHEET.
Outline:
1. Nowadays, it’s common for a university to have school buses.
2. Is it really necessary?
3. Draw a conclusion.
答案:
11-25. ACDCA BCADD ABDBB
26. The safest roads and speeds are much greater than on other roads.
27. More than 70 m.p.h.
28. mechanical failure, driver error
29. Motoways driving gives them safety from the changeable weather.
30. Better driver education
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