2021骞�4鏈堣嚜鑰冭嫳瑾烇紙浜岋級鑰冨墠妯℃摤椤�2
绶ㄨ集鎺ㄨ枽锛�2021骞�4鏈堝悇鐪佽嚜鑰冭嫳瑾炶€冭│鍫卞悕鏅傞枔銆佸叆鍙e尟绺�
灏忕法鎻愰啋锛�2021骞�4鏈堝悇鍦板崁(q奴)鑷€冭嫳瑾炶€冭│鏅傞枔宸茬稉(j墨ng)鍏竷锛岀偤閬垮厤鑰冪敓閷亷鑰冭│鏅傞枔锛岃€冪敓鍙~瀵� 鍏嶈不(f猫i)闋�(y霉)绱勭煭淇℃彁閱�鏈嶅嫏(w霉)锛屽眴鏅傛垜鍊戞渻鍙婃檪鎻愰啋2021骞�4鏈堝悇鐪佽€冭│鏅傞枔銆佹煡瑭㈡垚绺炬檪闁撶瓑閲嶈鏅傞枔绡€(ji茅)榛�(di菐n)閫氱煡銆�
Directions: In this part, there are 3 dialogues with 3 or 4 blanks, each followed by 4 choices markA, B, C and D. Fill in each blank with the choice that best suits the situation until the dialoguecomplete.With Dialogue One, all the choices will have to be used.With Dialogue Two and DialoThree, one choice will be left unused. Mark your answer on the ANSWER SHEET with a single b,through the centre of the letter that indicates your choice.
1銆佹牴鎿�(j霉)涓嬮潰灏嶈┍锛屽洖绛�1-10椤�銆�
Dialogue One
Liz: Geez! Your room is like an ice-box!
Terri:____ 1 ____It’s just comfortable.
Liz: Yeah, if you’re a penguin. Just look at me !____ 2____
Terri: But you don't have to stay here. I think you're exaggerating!
Liz: No, I’m not. Where’s the temperature control?
Terri :____ 3____
Liz: No wonder I'm cold This thing is set at 17C27!
Terri: Like I said--perfect !
Liz: If you live in Alaska. By the way, where's the shovel?
Terri:____ 4____
Liz: So I can dig us out when it starts. Snowing in here.
绗�1椤宊_________
A.Why do you need a shovel?
B.By the door, on the wall.
C.I’m shaking all over.
D.No, it’s not
2銆� 绗�2椤宊_________
A.Why do you need a shovel?
B.By the door, on the wall.
C.I’m shaking all over.
D.No, it’s not
3銆� 绗�3椤宊_________
A.Why do you need a shovel?
B.By the door, on the wall.
C.I’m shaking all over.
D.No, it’s not
4銆� 绗�4椤宊_________
A.Why do you need a shovel?
B.By the door, on the wall.
C.I’m shaking all over.
D.No, it’s not
5銆� Dialogue Two
Donald: Let’s eat out, shall we?
Debra:____ 5 ____I've gone through my paycheck for the week already.
Donald: Don't worry about it.____ 6____
Debra: You're sure? You're so generous!
Donald: And nice, too.
Debra: So,____ 7____
Donald: Some place you've never been before. Donald’s Kitchen.
绗�5椤宊_________
A.I’m broke.
B.Where are you taking me?
C.It's my treat.
D.You treated me last time.
6銆� 绗�6椤宊_________
A.I’m broke.
B.Where are you taking me?
C.It's my treat.
D.You treated me last time.
7銆� 绗�7椤宊_________
A.I’m broke.
B.Where are you taking me?
C.It's my treat.
D.You treated me last time.
8銆� Dialogue Three
Doctor: What has been bothering you?
Patient: I have a stuffy nose and a sore throat. Plus, I’ve been coughing a lot____.8____
Doctor: Any stomach pains?
Patient: Actually, yes. My stomach’s been upset for a few days.
Doctor:____ 9 ____It’s been going around lately.
Patient: Anything I can do for it?
Doctor: I’11 prescribe some medicines for you to take.____ 10____
Patient: Does that mean I shouldn’t go to work?
Doctor: Only when you feel up to it. You should stay home for at least a day or two.
绗�8椤宊_________
A.It sounds like a flu.
B.I also advise resting for a couple of days.
C.Boy, when it rains, it pours.
D.How long have you been like this?
9銆� 绗�9椤宊_________
A.It sounds like a flu.
B.I also advise resting for a couple of days.
C.Boy, when it rains, it pours.
D.How long have you been like this?
10銆� 绗�10椤宊_________
A.It sounds like a flu.
B.I also advise resting for a couple of days.
C.Boy, when it rains, it pours.
D.How long have you been like this?
Directions: There are 4 passages in this part. Each of the passages is followed by 5 questions or unfin-ished statements. For each of them there are 4 choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the best one andmark your answer on the ANSWER SHEET with a single line through the centre.
11銆� 闁辫畝鏉愭枡锛屽洖绛�11-30椤�銆�
We all know that DNA has the ability to identify individuals but, because it is inherited, there are also regions of the DNA strand which can relate an individual to his or her family ( immediate and extended), tribal group and even an entire population. Molecular Genealogy(瀹楄瓬瀛�(xu茅)) can use this unique identification provided by the genetic markers to link people together into family trees. Pedigrees(瀹惰瓬) based on such genetic markers can mean a breakthrough for family trees where information is incomplete or missing due to adoption, illegitimacy or lack of records. There are many communities and populations which have lost precious records due to tragic events such as the fire in the Irish courts during Civil War in 1921 or American slaves for whom many records were never kept in the first place.
The main objective of the Molecular Genealogy Research Group is to build a database containing over 100,000 DNA samples from individuals all over the world. These individuals will have provided a pedigree chart of at least four generations and a small blood sample. Once the database has enough samples to represent the world genetic make-up, it will eventually help in solving many issues regarding genealogies that could not be done by relying only on traditional written records. Theoretically, any individual will someday be able to trace his or her family origins through this database.
In the meantime, as the database is being created, molecular genealogy can already verify possible or suspected relationships between individuals. "For example, if two men sharing the same last name believe that they are related, but no written record proves this relationship, we can verify this possibility by collecting a sample of DNA from both and looking for common markers( in this case we can look primarily at the Y chromosome(鏌撹壊楂�)) ," explains Ugo Perego a member of the BYU Molecular Genealogy research team.
People in a large area may possess the same DNA thread because __________.
A.DNA is characteristic of a region
B.they are beyond doubt of common ancestry
C.DNA strand has the ability to identify individuals
D.their unique identification can be provided via DNA
12銆� The possible research of family trees is based on the fact that __________.
A.genetics has achieved a breakthrough
B.genetic information contained in DNA can be revealed now
C.each individual carries a unique record of who he is and how he is related to others
D.we can use DNA to prove how distant an individual is to a family, a group or a population
13銆� The Molecular Genealogy Research Group is building a database for the purpose of __________.
A.offering assistance in working out genealogy-related problems
B.solving many issues without relying on traditional written records
C.providing a pedigree chart of at least four generations in the world
D.confirming the assumption that all individuals are of the same origin
14銆� If two men suspected for some reason they have a common ancestor, __________.
A.we can decide according to their family tree
B.we can find the truth from their genetic markers
C.we can compare the differences in their Y chromosome
D.we can look for written records to prove their relationship
15銆� Which of the following CANNOT be inferred from the passage?
A.We are a walking, living, breathing record of our ancestors.
B.Many American slaves did not know who their ancestors were.
C.An adopted child generally lacks enough information to prove his identity.
D.Molecular Genealogy can be used to prove a relationship between individuals.
16銆� 闁辫畝鏉愭枡锛屽洖绛�16-35椤�銆�
Harriet Beecher Stowe had poured her heart into her anti-slavery book," Uncle Tom's Cabin". But neither she nor her first publisher thought it would be a big success. The publisher was so doubtful that he wanted her to split the publishing costs with him, and all she hoped was that it would make enough money for her to buy a new silk dress.
But when the first 5,000 copies were printed in 1602, they sold out in two days. In a year the book had sold 300,000 copies in the United States and 150,000 in England. For a while it outsold(閵风殑姣�...澶�) every book in the world, except the Bible.
Within six months of its release, a play was made from the book which ran 350 performances in New York and remained America's most popular play for 55 years.
It might appear that" Uncle Tom's Cabin" was universally popular, but this was certainly not true. Many people during those pre-civil War days-particularly defenders of the slavery system-condemned it as false propaganda and poorly written melodrama(鍌冲鍔囦綔鍝�).
Harriet did have strong religious views against slavery ( When asked how she came to write the book, she replied," God wrote it."), and she tried to convince people slavery was wrong, so perhaps the book could be considered propaganda. But if so, it was true propaganda, because it accurately described the evils of slavery.
Though she was born in Connecticut, 1582, as a young woman she moved to Cincinnati, Ohio, when her father accepted the presidency of newly founded Lane Theological Seminary(绁炲(xu茅)闄�). Ohio was a free state, but just across the Ohio River in Kentucky, Harriet saw slavery in action. She lived 18 years in Cincinnati, marrying Calvin Stowe, professor of a college. In 1601, Harriet Beecher Stowe began her book.
Its vast influence strengthened the anti-slavery movement and angered defenders of the slave system. Today some historians(姝峰彶瀛�(xu茅)瀹�) think that it helped bring on the American Civil War.
In fact, when Abraham Lincoln met Harriet at the White House during the Civil War, he said,
"So, this is the little lady who started this big war."
Before the publication of the book "Uncle Tom's Cabin" __________.
A.Harriet knew that it would be a great success
B.the publisher wanted Harriet to publish it at her own expense
C.nobody knew that it would become a very popular book
D.no publisher wanted to publish this anti-slavery book
17銆� Some people did not like "Uncle Tom's Cabin" chiefly because__________.
A.the author was merely an unknown little lady
B.they thought it was mere propaganda
C.the book was poorly written
D.the book might lead to a terrible war
18銆� Harriet Beecher Stowe was able to describe the evils of slavery because __________.
A.she had lived for 18 years in a state where slavery was legal
B.she had suffered quite a lot under the slavery system
C.she had witnessed what happened under the slavery system
D.she had read a lot about the slavery system
19銆� When Abraham Lincoln called Harriet "the little lady who started this big war", he __________.
A.thought that she was almost a war criminal
B.was talking about the great influence her book had produced
C.was blaming her for the miseries the people had suffered during the war
D.was praising her for the contributions she had made during the war
20銆� The writer wrote the passage in order to __________.
A.expose the evils of the slavery system
B.condemn all kinds of war
C.describe people' s life in Harriet' s time
D.tell us how Harriet wrote her famous book
21銆� 闁辫畝鏉愭枡锛屽洖绛�21-40椤屻€�
No one knows how man learned to make words. Perhaps he began by making sounds like those made by animals. Perhaps he grunted like a pig when he lifted something heavy. Perhaps he made sounds like those he heard all round him-water splashing, bees humming, a stone falling to the ground. Somehow he learned to make words. As the centuries went by, he made more and more new words. This is what we mean by language.
People living in different countries made different kinds of words. Today there are about fifteen hundred different languages in the world. Each contains many thousands of words. A very large English dictionary, for example, contains four or five hundred thousand words. But we do not need all these. Only a few thousand words are used in everyday life.
The words you know are called your vocabulary. You should try to make your vocabulary bigger. Read as many books as you can. There are plenty of books written in easy English for you to read. You will enjoy them. When you meet a new word, find it in your dictionary. Your dictionary is your most useful book.
From this passage, we know that________
A.man never made sounds
B.man made animal sounds
C.man used to be like animals to make sounds
D.man learned from the animals to make sounds
22銆� The number of different languages spoken is about________
A.150
B.1,500
C.5,000
D.4,000
23銆� People from different countries________
A.made same words
B.made different kinds of words
C.had a same language
D.used some sounds
24銆� Man to make sounds.________
A.used words
B.followed many things in nature
C.lifted heavy things
D.grunted like a pig
25銆� You can enlarge your vocabulary by________
A.reading more books
B.finding new words in dictionaries
C.writing more
D.using the words in everyday life
26銆� 闁辫畝鏉愭枡锛屽洖绛�26-45椤屻€�
Spending 50 minutes with a cell phone close to your ear is enough to change brain cell activity in the part of the brain closest to the antenna (澶╃窔 ). But whether that causes any harm is not clear, scientists at the National Institute of Health said at a conference last month, adding that the study will not likely settle concerns of a link between cell phones and brain cancer. "What we showed is glucose(钁¤悇绯杕etabolism(浠h瑵)( a sign of brain activity) increases in the brain in people who were exposed to a cell phone in the area closest to the antenna," said Dr. Nora Volkow of the NIH, whose study was published in the Journal of the American Medical Association. The study was meant to examine how the brain reacts to electromagnetic fields caused by wireless phone signals.
Volkow said she was surprised that the weak electromagnetic radiation (闆荤杓诲皠)from cellphones could affect brain activity, but she said the findings do not shed any light on whether cellphones cause cancer. "This study does not in any way indicate that. What the study does is to show the human brain is sensitive to electromagnetic radiation from cell phone exposures. " Use of the devices has increased dramatically since they were introduced in the early 1955s, with about 5billion cell phones now in use worldwide.
Some studies have linked cell phone exposure to an increased risk of brain cancers, but a large study by the World Health Organization did not offer a clear answer to this. Volkow’s team studied 47 people who had their brain examined while a cell phone was turned on for 50 minutes and another while the phone was turned off. While there was no complete change in brain metabolism, they found a 7 percent increase in brain metabolism in the region closest to the cell phone antenna when the phone was on.
Experts said the results were interesting, but urged that they be understood with great care. " Although the biological significance, if any, of increased glucose metabolism from too much cell phone exposure is unknown, the results require further investigation," Henry Lai of the University of Washington in the U. S. and Dr. Lennart Hardell of University Hospital in Sweden, wrote in an article in JAMA. "Much has to be done to further investigate and understand these effects." They wrote.
According to the passage, which of the following is TRUE?
A.Cell phone use is dangerous.
B.Cell phone use causes cancer.
C.The human brain is an electromagnetic field.
D.There are about 5 billion cell phone users in the world right now.
27銆� Doctor Volkow was astonished because_______
A.her research has shed light on her understanding of cell phone
B.she found that cell phone exposure is harmful to human brain
C.she found that using a cell phone for about 50 minutes could influence or change brain activity
D.human brain is not responsive to electromagnetic radiation
28銆� According to the passage, cell phones were launched_______
A.in the late 1970s
B.between 1955 and 1960
C.in the late 1955s
D.in the early 1990s
29銆� What does the word "that" stand for in the second paragraph?
A.Brain activity.
B.Her research findings.
C.The fact that cell phone use may cause cancer.
D.Her research progress.
30銆� Which of the following is an appropriate title for this passage?
A.Cell Phone Radiation: Is It Harmful?
B.Cell Phone Radiation: Is It Useful?
C.Cell Phone Radiation: Is It Healthy?
D.Cell Phone Radiation: Is It Weak?
Directions: In this part there are 20 incomplete sentences. For each sentence there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the ONE answer that best completes the sentence. Then mark the corre-sponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET with a single line through the centre.
31銆乀hey discussed the problem three or four times, but could come to no __________.
A.end
B.conclusion
C.result
D.judgment
32銆� _______you say, he won't listen to you.
A.No matter where
B.No matter what
C.However
D.Whichever
33銆� They built the wall especially high so that the little boy couldn' t__________it.
A.get on
B.get up
C.get to
D.get over
34銆� Eye contact is important because wrong contact may create a communication __________.
A.tragedy
B.vacuum
C.question
D.barrier
35銆丱ne car went too fast and ______ missed hitting another car.
A.completely
B.greatly
C.narrowly
D.little
36銆乢_________ student with a little common sense should be able to answer the question.
A.Each
B.Either
C.Any
D.One
37銆� Purchasing the new production line will be a __________ deal for the company.
A.profitable
B.tremendous
C.forceful
D.favorite
38銆� Young __________he is, he knows what is the right thing to do.
A.that
B.as
C.although
D.however
39銆� If you want to become a doctor, you ought to study________
A.medicine
B.the medicine
C.Literature
D.the literature
40銆� She could only see the ______ of the trees.
A.outline
B.general
C.edge
D.outlook
41銆� " Good-bye, Mr. Wang. I' m pleased________you. "
A.to meet
B.meeting
C.to have been meeting
D.to be met
42銆� Shortly after the accident, two ______ policemen came to the spot.
A.dozen of
B.dozens
C.dozen
D.dozens of
43銆� The birth rate in a city __________ to fall as its gross domestic product (GDP) rises steadily.
A.estimates
B.anticipates
C.assumes
D.tends
44銆� Don' t risk________the job which so many people want.
A.losing
B.to lose
C.Lost
D.your life to los.
45銆� __________your homework and make sure that you don' t any mistakes.
A.Do; do
B.Make; make
C.Make; do
D.Do; make
46銆丠e didn’t fear new ideas, __________ the future.
A.nor feared he
B.nor he did fear
C.nor did he fear
D.nor did fear he
47銆� Anyone breaking the rules will be asked to leave__________.
A.at the spot
B.on the spot
C.for the spot
D.in the spot
48銆� Hospital doctors don' t go out very often as their work __________all their time.
A.takes away
B.takes in
C.takes over
D.takes up
49銆� He never wrote to his father________he was in need of money.
A.Except
B.except when
C.except for
D.except that
50銆� It seems very difficult __________.
A.to stop the child to cry
B.restraining the child to cry
C.to stop the child from crying
D.holding the child's crying
Directions: There are 10 blanks in the following passage, and for each blank there are 4 choices marked A, B, C and D at the end of the passage. You should choose ONE answer that best fits into the passage. Then mark the corresponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET with a single line through the centre銆�
51銆侀柋璁€鏉愭枡锛屽洖绛�51-60椤�銆�
Do you know insurance (淇濋毆)?Buying insurance is a means by which people can protect themselves____51____large losses. Protection against fire is one kind of insurance. Large numbers of people pay____52____sums of money to an insurance company. Although thousands of people have paid for fire insurance, only____53____will lose their homes by fire. The insurance company will pay for these homes out of the sums of money it has collected.
The first modem fire insurance company was____54____in London, England, in 1666. A great fire had just____55____most of the city, and people wanted to protect against____56____losses. The fire company grew rapidly. Soon, other companies were founded in other areas.
Benjamin Franklin helped form the first fire insurance company in America in 1752. He also____57____a new kind of insurance for farmers. The new insurance would offer protection against the loss of crops by storm.
In 1759, Benjamin Franklin helped start____58____new insurance. This company, which offered life insurance, collected some money regularly from different men. Although a man died, his family was given a large sum of money. Today, this company is still in business.
Over the years, people have____59____from many new kinds of insurance when they have suffered from such accidents as car, plane crashes. Tomorrow, almost everyone has____60____kind of insurance.
______
A.against
B.to
C.from
D.on
52銆� ______
A.small
B.large
C.little
D.a lot of
53銆� ______
A.few
B.quite a few
C.a few
D.many
54銆� ______
A.recognized
B.found
C.come into being
D.formed
55銆� ______
A.injured
B.hurt
C.destroyed
D.harmed
56銆� ______
A.longer
B.farther
C.further
D.deeper
57銆� ______
A.insisted
B.suggested
C.advised
D.wanted
58銆� ______
A.other
B.the other
C.others
D.another
59銆� ______
A.heard
B.paid
C.benefited
D.offered
60銆� ______
A.certain
B.any
C.some
D.one
Directions: Translate the following passage into Chinese and put your translation on the ANSWERSHEET.
61銆乀hose who gain fame most often gain it as a result of possessing a single talent or skill: singing, dancing, painting, or writing, etc. The successful performer develops a style that is marketed aggressively and gains some popularity. And it is this popularity that usually convinces the performer to continue performing in the same style, since that is what the public seems to want and to enjoy. But in time, the performer becomes bored singing the same songs in the same way year after year, or the painter becomes bored painting similar scenes or portraits, or the actor is tired of playing the same character repeatedly.
62銆丏irections: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a composition on the topic "How I Finance My College Education". You should write in no less than 100 words, and base your composition on the outline given in Chinese below:
1.涓婂ぇ瀛�(xu茅)鐨勮不(f猫i)鐢�(tuition and fees)鍙互閫氶亷澶氱ó閫斿緫瑙f焙;
2.鍝ó閫斿緫閬╁悎浜庢垜(瑾槑鐞嗙敱)銆�
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