题目列表(包括答案和解析)
70.
The article mainly tells us about __________.
A. the
great inventors in the world
B. the
important inventions in the world
C. the
short history of household machines
D. the
importance of the machines used in the home
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IV.
PART FOUR WRITING
SECTION
A(10 points)
Directions:
Read the following passage. Complete the diagram/Fill in the numbered blanks by
using the information for the passage. Write NO MORE THAN 3 WORDS for each
answer.
As the
US wakes up to China’s rising status(地位)as an economic
and strategic competitor, US parents are urging their children to learn
Chinese, reports Julian Borger.
The US
is being swept by a rush to learn Mandarin(普通话)-- from wealthy
New York mothers hiring Chinese nannies(保姆)for their small
children to a defence department education project in Oregon.
The
forces driving Mandarin’s momentum(势头)are parental
ambition for children facing a future in which China is almost certain to be a
major player, and the government is worried about that America may get left
behind in that new world.
The
bottleneck is the supply of teachers. Mandarin instructors are difficult to
import and difficult to train. There are visa problems in bringing over
teachers from China
but the biggest barrier is cultural. Teaching in Asia is generally done by rote
and the change to western, interactive styles of instruction can be a large
leap(跳越).
On the
other hand, it requires enormous firmness for westerners to learn a language
like Chinese, with its thousands of written characters. According to the Asia
Society in New York, all of America’s teacher-training
institutions turn out only a couple of dozen homegrown Mandarin teachers.
One
way to ease the shortage is to find native Mandarin speakers and use fast-track
methods to train them. However, the majority of Chinese-Americans grew up
speaking Cantonese, the dialect(方言)spoken in Hong
Kong, where their parents came from. Many are themselves signing on as Mandarin
students at the private language schools springing up on the west coast.
Title: 71
in the USA
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SECTION
B(10 points)
Directions:
Read the following passage. Answer the questions according to the information
given in the passage and the required words limit.
Write
your answers on your answer sheet.
Lights
went out at tourism landmarks(地标)and homes across
the globe on Saturday for Earth Hour 2009, a global event aimed to highlight
the threat from climate change.
From
the Sydney Opera House and Harbour Bridge to the Eiffel
Tower in Paris and London's Houses of Parliament, lights were
turned off as part of a campaign to encourage people to cut energy use and
control greenhouse gas emissions from fuels.
Organizers
said the action showed millions of people wanted governments to work out a
strong new U. N. deal to fight global warming by the end of 2009, even though
the global economic crisis has raised worries about the costs.
"We
have been dreaming of a new climate deal for a long time," Kim Carstensen,
head of a global climate organization at the conservation group WWF, said in a
bar in the German city of Bonn, which hosts U. N. climate talks between March
29 and April 8.
"Now
we're no longer so alone with our dream. We're sharing it with all these people
switching off their lights," he said.
The UN
Climate Panel says greenhouse gas emissions are warming the planet and will
lead to more floods, droughts, rising sea levels and animal and plant
extinctions.
World
emissions have risen by about 70 percent since the 1970s.
Australia first
held Earth Hour in 2007 and it went global in 2008, attracting 50 million
people, organizers say. WWF, which started the event, is hoping one billion
people from nearly 90 countries will take part.
69.
The underlined word “crude” in the sentence “but it was crude by today’s
standards.” probably means __________.
A.
useless
B. ugly-looking C. rough
D. not skillfully made
68.
According to the article, modern inventors __________.
A.
followed the pattern of the first revolving drum but improve it much
B.
only imitated the first washing machine
C.
powered the first ever-made washing machine by electricity
D. had
to wait for the first spin-drier for a long time
67.
Whose sewing machine could do far more than the work that was done by five
skilled sewing women?
A.
Thomas Saint’s. B. Bartelemy
Thimonier’s. C. Elias
Howe’s. D. Isaac Singer’s.
66.
Inventors patent the inventions so as to __________ .
A.
produce more machines
B. avoid being copied by others
C.
make the inventions more popular
D. make more money
65.
By
studying the cave art, scientists know something about _________.
A. how
ancient people crossed the North Sea
B. why
some of the animals have died out
C. how
humans spread out across the world
D.
what kind of animals people hunt at that time
(D)
Machines
in the home have a short history. Sewing machines, washing machines and tumble
dries are common enough today, but a hundred years ago few people could even
imagine such things. However, inventors have designed and built a wide range of
household machines since then. In most cases the inventor tried to patent(申请专利)his machine, to
stop anyone copying it. Then he tried to produce a lot of them. If the machine
became popular, the inventor could make a lot of money.
In
1790 the first sewing machine was patented. The inventor was an Englishman
called Thomas Saint. There was nothing to match his machine for forty years,
and then someone built a similar device. He was a Frenchman, Bartelemy
Thimonier. Neither of these early machines worked very well, however. It wasn’t
until 1846 that an inventor came up with a really efficient sewing machine. He
was an American, Elias Howe and his machine was good enough to beat five
skilled sewing women. He didn’t make much money from it, however. The first
commercially successful sewing machine was patented by Isaac Singer five years
later.
Today,
we take washing machines for granted, but there was none before 1869. The
revolving drum(旋转桶)of that first
machine set a pattern for the future, but it was crude by today’s
standards. The drum was turned by hand, and needed a lot of effort. Eight years
passed before someone produced an electric washing machine. The world had to
wait even longer for a machine to dry clothes. The first spin-drier was another
American invention, patented in 1924; but it was 20 years before such machines
were widely used.
It was
yet another American, called Bissell, who introduced the carpet sweeper. He
patented the original machine back in 1876. It didn’t pick up dirt very well,
but it was quicker than a dustpan and brush. Thirty-six years later, even the
carpet sweeper was old-fashioned: modern homes now have a vacuum cleaner with
an electric motor to suck the dust.
64.
Why do scientists say the art is quite old?
A. The
art was carved into stone with stone tools.
B. The
animals carved in the stone are beautiful.
C. The
cave is one of the farthest point in the world.
D.
Some pictures were covered by stalagmites more than 10,000 years old.
63.
The underlined word “archaeologists” in this passage probably means people
________.
A. who
study things left behind by people in the past
B. who
have rich experience in painting
C. who
are interested in wild animals
D. who
are good at using stone tools
62.
Which of the following can be used as the best title of the passage?
A.
Cave Art About Animals Is Most Beautiful
B.
Cave Art Found in an Unusual Way
C.
Cave Art Turns Out to Be Britain’s Oldest
D.
Cave Art in Britain
61.
Of
these two advertisements, which one doesn’t provide the address?
A. The
first one. B.
The second one C. Neither
one D. We have no
idea.
(C)
Scientists
recently discovered that pictures on cave walls at Creswell Crags are the
oldest known in Great Britain.
But they didn’t find out in the usual way.
Archaeologists
often date cave art with a process called radiocarbon dating. The technique can
measure the age of carbon found in charcoal(木炭)drawings or
painted pictures. Carbon is an element found in many things, including charcoal
and even people. But in this case, there was no paint or charcoal to test.
People carved the pictures of animals and figures into the rock using stone
tools. The scientists had an “aha!” moment when they noticed small rocks stuck
to the top of the drawings. The small rocks must have formed after the drawings
were made.
“It is
rare to be able to scientifically date rock art,” said Alistair Pike, an
archaeological scientist at Britain’s
University of Bristol. “We were very fortunate that some
of the engravings were covered by stalagmites(石笋).
When a
test proved that the stalagmites formed 12,800 years ago, the scientists knew
the art underneath them had to be at least that old. And some of the animals
shown, like the European bison, are now extinct--another tip-off that the art
is quite old.
The
artists came to Creswell Crags, This place is one of the farthest points north
reached by our ancient ancestors during the Ice Age. At that time, much of the North Sea was dry, so people could move about more easily.
Some
tools and bones found there are 13,000 to 15,000 years old. They show that the
travelers hunted horses, reindeer, and arctic hare. Their artwork is similar to
art in France and Germany.
It tells scientists that the Creswell Crags artists must have had a close
connection to peoples several thousand kilometers away-another important clue to understanding how humans spread out
across the world.
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