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2016年4月全国英语阅读(一)自考真题

  • 试卷类型:在线模考

    参考人数:267

    试卷总分:100.0分

    答题时间:150分钟

    上传时间:2019-04-15

试卷简介

本套试卷集合了考试编委会的理论成果。专家们为考生提供了题目的答案,并逐题进行了讲解和分析。每道题在给出答案的同时,也给出了详尽透彻的解析,帮助考生进行知识点的巩固和记忆,让考生知其然,也知其所以然,从而能够把知识灵活自如地运用到实际中去。

试卷预览

1.

Passage 1

Questions 1 to 5 are based on the following passage.

     I was bom in a pleasant old colonial house built near 1750, and bought by my grandfather sixty or seventy years ago. He joined a group of acquaintances who were engaged in the flourishing West Indian trade of that time. For many years he kept and extended his interests in shipping, building ships and buying large quantities of timber, and sending it down the river and then to the sea. The business was still in existence in my early childhood, so I came in contact with the up-country people who sold timber as well as with the sailors and shipmasters of the other side of the business. I used to linger about the busy country stores, and listen to the lively country talk.

In my grandfather’s business household,my father had taken to his book,as old people said, and gone to college and begun that devotion to the study of medicine which only ended with his life. He gave me my first and best knowledge of books by his own delight and dependence upon them, and ruled my early attempts at writing by his good taste. "Don't try to write about people and things, tell them just as they are!" How often my young ears heard these words without comprehending them! But while I was too young and thoughtless to share in an enthusiasm for Sterne or Fielding, and Smollett or Don Quixote, my mother and grandmother were leading me into the pleasant ways of Pride and Prejudice, and The Scenes of Clerical Life, and the delightful stories of Mrs. Oliphant.

When the time came that my own world of imagination was more real to me than any other, I was sometimes perplexed at my father's directing my attention to certain points of interest in the character or surroundings of our acquaintances. I cannot help believing that he recognized, long before I did myself, in what direction the current of purpose in my life was setting. Now, as I write my sketches of country life, I remember again and again the wise things he said, and the sights he made me see. I may have inherited something of my father’s knowledge of human nature, but my father never lost a chance of trying to teach me to observe. I owe a great deal to his patience with a little girl given far more to dreams than to accuracy, and with perhaps too little natural sympathy for the dreams of others.

(1)Which statement is true of the author’s grandfather?A.He built the old colonial house around 1750.,B.He was employed by the busy country stores.,C.He took great interest in neighborhood affairs.,D.He made money by buying and selling timber.
(2)In Paragraph 1, "the other side of the business" refers to____.A.building ships,B.sailing ships,C.buying timber,D.selling timber
(3)What the author cherishes most about her father is his____.A.devotion to medicine,B.advice on writing,C.enthusiasm for literature,D.interest in business
(4)As far as writing is concerned, the author's father emphasized the importance of____.A.country settings,B.plentiful patience,C. wild imagination,D.accurate observation
(5)The author is probably known for her writings about.A.country life,B.modem business,C.colonial history,D.old-time seafaring
2.

Passage 2

Questions 6 to 10 are based on the following passage.

   Educating girls quite possibly yields a higher rate of return than any other investment available in the developing world. Women’s education may be unusual territory for economists,but enhancing women’s contribution to development is actually as much an economic as a social issue. And economics, with its emphasis on incentives (激励),provides an explanation for why so many girls are deprived of an education.

Parents in low-income countries fail to invest in their daughters because they do not expect them to make an economic contribution to the family; girls grow up only to marry into somebody else's family and bear children. Girls are thus seen as less valuable than boys and are kept at home to do housework while their brothers are sent to school—the prophecy (预言)becomes self-fulfilling,trapping women in a vicious circle (恶性循环)of neglect.

An educated mother, on the other hand, earns more and faces an entirely different set of choices. She is likely to have fewer but healthier children and insist on the development of all her children, ensuring that her daughters are given a fair chance. The education of her daughters then makes it much more likely that the next generation of girls, as well as of boys, will be educated and healthy. The vicious circle is thus transformed into a virtuous circle.

Few will dispute that educating women has great social benefits, but it has enormous economic advantages as well. Most obviously, there is the direct effect of education on the wages of female workers. Wages rise by 10 to 20 percent for each additional year of schooling. Such big returns are impressive by the standard of other available investments, but they are just the beginning.

(1)According to the author, educating girls in developing countries may____.A.be more rewarding than expected,B. cause annoying problems and difficulties,C.bring to an end social and economic problems,D.bring a family into a financially difficult situation
(2)By saying “…the prophecy becomes self-fulfilling in Paragraph 2, the author means that girls will____.A.be found less valuable than boys,B.find their goals in life unreachable,C.be discontented with their life at home,D.be capable of realizing their own dreams
(3)In the author's opinion, a vicious circle can turn into a virtuous circle when_____.A.there are more daughters in a family,B.a family is rich enough to educate boys,C.a family has more but healthier children,D.mothers know the importance of educating girls
(4)What does the author say about womens education?A.It is the most important social issue.,B.It is now given top priority in developing countries.,C.It yields greater returns than other known investments.,D.It has aroused the interest of a growing number of economists.
(5)This passage mainly discusses______.A.the economic benefits of educating women,B.the social contributions of educated women,C.the political influence of well-educated women,D.the unfair treatment of girls in developing countries
3.

Passage 3

Questions 11 to 15 are based on the following passage.

   The history of the U.S. from Lincoln’s death to the wave of assassinations in the 1960s can be seen as a struggle to realize Lincoln’s vision of a society whose citizens are not held back by parentage or origin. The struggle to secure this chance for all Americans has been bitter and bloody, and it is far from over. After Lincoln's death, the Fourteenth Amendment promised that the Federal Union would guarantee the rights of all persons against violation by the states. However, this guarantee was exploited by business corporations while remaining a hollow promise to millions of actual persons. Women did not get the vote until five amendments later, and their legal rights were often lost in marriage. As for blacks, political equality remained mostly something unreal until the passage of the Voting Rights Act one hundred years after Lincoln’s death.

The struggle to realize Lincoln's ideal was undertaken not only by workers against capital but also by immigrants against the political system. In less than one human life span following the Civil War, the U.S. absorbed a great number of immigrants who formed the next wave of what Lincoln had called "prudent and penniless" beginners. They found that social services were forgotten by a political system that ran on graft (腐败). The risk of injury,disease,and early death were largely ignored, forcing millions to rely on themselves, on family, and on the charity of friends.

 To some who watched the immigrants pour in, it seemed that America would have to reorganize itself according to the multicultural principle that we hear so much about today. The term “multiculturalism” was popularized by Horace Kallen. He wrote in his book The Nation in 1915 that with the growth of large immigrant communities, the rate of mixed marriage would drop (he was wrong) and the likelihood of a new American race would decline. The U.S., he predicted, would turn into a democracy of nationalities in which "selfhood is ancestrally determined." To other observers,however,the country was simply sliding into disorder, as it seemed to Henry Adams in 1905 when he looked out of the club window on the turmoil of Fifth Avenue and felt himself in the disorderly Rome as witnessed by Emperor Diocletian.

(1)Lincoln imagined that the U.S. would be a society free from the influence of one’s____.A.wealth,B.education,C.heritage,D.personality
(2) The author points out that Lincoln’s dream of an ideal society____.A.is very unrealistic,B.has not come true,C.is harmful to women,D.ignores black Americans
(3)The immigrants who went to the U.S. after the Civil War were extremely dissatisfied with____.A. capitalists,B.social services,C. public facilities,D.charity organizations
(4)According to Horace Kallen,the increase in immigrant population would enable immigrants to____.A.marry into other races,B.keep their own cultures,C.gain economic equality,D.forget their homelands
(5)Which of the following statements is true?A.The blacks got the voting rights right after Lincoln died.,B.The immigrants who came after the Civil War were poor.,C.The rate of mixed marriage in the U.S. dropped after 1915.,D.Henry Adams agreed with Horace Kallen on his prediction.
4.

Passage 4

Questions 16 to 20 are based on the following passage.

   Some estimates are that as many as 8% of adolescents suffer from depression at some time during any one-year period, making it much more common than, for example, eating disorders, which seem to get more attention as a source of adolescent misery.

   Even among psychiatrists and other mental health care professionals, the extent of the disability caused by depression is vastly underestimated. The World Health Organization has found that major depression is the single greatest cause of disability in the world—more than twice as many people are disabled by depression as by the second leading cause of disability,iron-deficiency anemia (贫血症).Other diseases and disorders may get more press coverage or more research money, or more sympathy and concern from a well-meaning public, but major depression causes more long term human misery than any other single disease.

When I was a resident in psychiatry,we believed that true depression was rare among teenagers, or that insofar as it existed, it was just a normal phase of adolescent development with no lasting consequences. It didn’t take long after I began treating troubled kids to see that this couldn't possibly be true. Research over recent decades has confirmed my impression. These beliefs, if any still holds them, are false and dangerous. In fact, early onset of depression is not normal, and can predict numerous unhappy life events for youngsters, including school failure, teenage pregnancy, and suicide attempts.

Although depression is increasingly common today, it is among the oldest diseases recorded in the history of medicine. As early as the fourth century, the symptoms of “melancholia” were well known. In other words,depression was first thought of as an exclusively physical illness-the loss of appetite, sleeplessness,irritability,and general depression was believed to have a physical,not a psychological cause. It wasn’t until the nineteenth century-when the term depression was invented to substitute for melancholia-that a psychological understanding of the illness began to develop. Eventually this psychological explanation of depression would become the only one, although today it no longer is. We now know that depression has both psychological and physical symptoms, and that both psychological and medical treatments can help to alleviate them.

(1)The World Health Organization has found that.A.depression results in iron-deficiency anemia,B.depression gets more press attention worldwide,C.more people are disabled by depression than by anemia,D.iron-deficiency anemia is the greatest cause of disability
(2)In the 4th century, depression was regarded as a_____.A.physical disorder,B.psychological problem,C.psychological disease caused by physical disorders,D.physical disease induced by psychological disorders
(3)After the 19th century people began to realize that depression could result from____.A. anemia,B. iron deficiency,C. physical illness,D. psychological problems
(4)The word “alleviate” in Paragraph 4 is closest in meaning to_____.A. cure,B. diagnose,C. prevent,D. ease
(5)The passage mainly deals with depression by informing the reader of_____.A. future developments,B. new discoveries,C. people’s misunderstandings,D. serious consequences
5.

Passage 5

Questions 21 to 25 are based on the following passage.

   People in the developed countries are living longer. In 2005 in the U.S. the average lifespan was 77.6 years, as against 54 years in 1920 and just 34 years in 1780. By 2050 it is estimated that the average lifespan will be in the mid 80's. By 2025 in the developed countries the share of the population over 60 will be 26 percent.

This increasing longevity is starting to impact on public finances, economic growth and general living standards. This impact is greater in countries with low employment rates, such as countries in the European Union, of which Italy is a good example. In addition, as baby boomers (those bom from 1946 to 1960) reach retirement age, there is increasing pressure on social security systems and public funds for retirement and health care expenses. Economists are increasingly questioning the sustainability of the European social model with its current high welfare standards.

“Active aging” is now being advanced by policy experts. The current division of life into three cycles—education, employment and retirement—should be changed. According to these experts, governments need to remove barriers that prevent older people from continuing to work and should extend the average working life. Schemes for lifelong learning need to be established to keep the aging workforce equipped with up-to-date job skills.

The U.S. agricultural firm Monsanto is encouraging the government to allow it to introduce “phased retirement” for its workforce. Back in 1991 the company set up a Resource Re-entry Centre (RRC). Monsanto found it difficult to hire qualified temporary administrative assistants. Through the RRC it began to offer this work to retired administrative workers. The centre now sources human resources amongst its retired workforce for a diverse range of projects. In so doing, the company retains the skills, knowledge and social networks of its workers. Much of the work is project-based and highly flexible. Over 60 percent of the projects are given to workers over 60. A key feature of the scheme is workers' access to cost-effective computer-based training to maintain and update job skills. The centre strives to educate company managers regarding the cost efficiency and quality of the work achieved by the service.

(1)From 1780 to 2005, the average lifespan in the U.S. ____.A. had more than doubled,B. had more than tripled,C. increased by 26 percent,D. increased to 80 years
(2)Italy has seen the great impact of the increasing longevity because of its____.A.high welfare standards,B.early retirement age,C.low employment rates,D.large number of baby boomers
(3)Which of the following is related to active aging?A.The old people should retire early.,B.The three cycles of life should be retained.,C.The old people should overcome work barriers.,D.Lifelong learning schemes should be established.
(4)According to the passage,RRC is a(n) ____.A.government office,B.information office,C.human resource center,D.project management center
(5)The author uses Monsanto's example to show that____.A. workers should enjoy their retirement life,B.retired workers should expand their social networks,C.“active aging” has been encouraged by the government,D.there are solutions to problems caused by increasing longevity

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