成都信息工程学院考试试卷 .docx

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1、精品名师归纳总结成 都 信 息 工 程 学 院 考 试 试 卷2005 2006 学年 第 2 学期使用班级: 2005 级本科试卷一二三四五六七八九十总分得分Part I Listening Comprehension 1*20=20Section ADirections:In this section you willhear 10statements. Each statement willbe spoken only课程名称:高校英语 II Unit4 &Unit 5once. Then there will be a pause.During the pause, you must

2、read the four choices marked A,B,Cand D,and decide which one is closest in meaning to the sentence you have just heard. Then mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a single line through the center.1. A.The edge of the card catalog holds pencils.B. The edges of the card are sharp.C. T

3、he pencil can be found on the card catalog.D. There is a pencil sharpener at the end of the card catalog.2. A. The program won t go beyoennd.tB. There won t be more than ten people at the program.C. It will continue beyond the tent.DThe program will end after ten o clock.3. A. Bonnie and Paul messed

4、 up dinner.B. Both Bonnie and Paul long for dinner.C. Neither Bonnier nor Paul came to dinner.D. Bonnie and Paul used to be thinner.4. A. Mary was looking at the leaf.B. Mary was looking for the leaf.C. Mary looked under the microscope for the leaf.D. Mary wanted to examine the microscope.5. A. Plea

5、se open the window.B. Do you mind that the window isnt open.C. Do you have an open mind.D. I don t mind closed windows.6. A. I suspected they didn t know the answers.B. They didn t think I didn t know the answers.C. I was suspected because I knew the answers.可编辑资料 - - - 欢迎下载精品名师归纳总结D. They didn t su

6、spect me because I didn t know the answers.7. A. Jane is staring at her elder sister.B. Jane respects her elder sister.C. Jane s elder sister told her to look up the world.D. Jane is waiting for her elder sister.8. A. I m learning only a little bitEonf glish.B. I bit my tongue while speaking English

7、.C. The best way to learn English is to progress in little bits.D. My English is gradually improving.9. A. How thin are you.B. Have you ever been any heavier.C. Isn t Ben thin.D. Is it always made out of thin.10.A.My headache isn t getting better.B. It looks like my headache is stopping.C. When I go

8、 away I get headaches.D. I ve stopped headaches.Section BDirections:Inthissection,you llheartenshortconversations.Attheendofeach conversation,a question willbe asked aboutwhat was said. The conversation and the question willbe spoken only once. After each question, there willbe a pause. Duringthe pa

9、use, you must read four choices marked A, B,C, and D, and decide which is the best answer. Then mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a single line through the center.11. A. He left his notes in class.B. He borrowed the notes from his classmates.C. He needn t have the exam.D. A clas

10、smate borrowed his notes12.A. He has a better idea.B. It would be better if Mary could come with him.C. He thinks Mary s idea is the best.D. Mary should come up with a better idea.13.A. Finish the work.B. Wait until next morning.C. Go home.D. Have a rest there.14.A. They want to go downtown.B. They

11、want to go to a park.C. The man doesn t know where to park the car.D. The man wants to know where the park is.可编辑资料 - - - 欢迎下载精品名师归纳总结15.A. He wants to join the others.B. He is behind in his work.C. He missed work when he was ill.D. He will catch up with his friends later.16.A. She felt sleepy durin

12、g the lecture.B. She didn t like the lecture.C. She fell asleep also.D. She found the lecture interesting.17. A. The woman has chosen a doctor.B. The man doesn t care which colocrhiossen.C. The man is concerned about the color. D The man has chosen a different color.18. A. No one has a friend like T

13、om.B. Every is Tom s good friend.C. The man feels lucky to have Tom as a friend.D. The woman doesn t like oafntyhe man s friends.19. A. The man thinks the book is excellent.B. All the papers says that the book is good, too.C. The woman thinks the book is excellent.D. Reactions to the book are differ

14、ent.20. A. Relaxing just a bit.B. Enjoying sight-seeing.C. Getting the room back into shape.D. Exercising.Part II Reading Comprehension 2*20=40Directions: There are four passages in this part. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. Foreach of them are four choices marke

15、d A, B, C and D. You should decide which is the best choice and mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a single line through the center.Passage 1Questions 21to 25 are based on the followingpassage.Are some people born clever and others born stupid. Or is intelligence developed by our

16、 environment and our experience. Strangely enough, the answer to these questions is yes. To some extent our intelligence is given to us at birth, and no amount of special education can make a genius out of a child born with low intelligence. On the other hand, a child who livesin a boring environmen

17、t willdevelop his intelligenceless than one who lives in rich and varied surroundings. Thus the limits of persons intelligence are fixed at birth, whether or not he reaches those limits will depend on his environment. This view, now held by most experts,可编辑资料 - - - 欢迎下载精品名师归纳总结can be supported in a

18、number of ways.It is easy to show that intelligence is to some extent something we are born with. The closer the blood relationship between two people, the closer they are likelyto be in intelligence. Thus if we take two unrelated people at random from the population, it is likelythat their degree o

19、f intelligence will be completely different. If, on the other hand,we take two identical twins,they willverylikelybe as intelligentas each other. Relationslikebrothers and sisters,parents and children, usually have similar intelligence, and this clearly suggests that intelligence depends on birth.Im

20、agine now that we take two identical twins and put them in different environments. We might send one, for example, to a university and the other to a factory where the working is boring. We wouldsoon find differences in intelligencedeveloping, and this indicates that environment as well as birth pla

21、ys a part. This conclusion is also suggested by the fact that people who live in close contact with each other, but who are not related at all are likely tohave similar degree of intelligence.21. The writer is in favor of the view that mans intelligence is given to him .A. at birthB. through educati

22、onC. both at birth and through educationD. neither at birth nor through education22. If a child is born with low intelligence, he can.A. become a geniusB. still become a genius if he should be given special educationC. exceed his intelligence limits in rich surroundingsD. not reach his intelligence

23、in his life23. In the second paragraph “if we take two unrelated people at random from the population”means if we.A. pick any two personsB. take out two different personsC. choose two persons who are relativeD. choose two persons with different intelligence24. Theexampleofthetwinsgoingtoauniversitya

24、ndtoafactoryseparately shows.A. the importance of their intelligenceB. the role of environment on intelligenceC. the importance of their positionsD. the part that birth plays25. The best title of this passage can be.A. SurroundingsB. Intelligence可编辑资料 - - - 欢迎下载精品名师归纳总结C. Dependence on EnvironmentD.

25、 Effect of EducationPassage 2Questions 26 to 30 are based on the following passage.Time to RelaxLeisure plays an important part in British life. There are four main reasons for this.First of all, people spend less time workingnow than they used to, mostly due to the introduction of new technology in

26、 industry. The normal British working week is Monday to Friday,9.00am to 5.00pm,although some people regularly work a few hours overtime each week. Secondly, all workingpeople get a minimumof two weekspaid holiday a year. In addition, there are six or more bank holidays a year when all banks and bus

27、inesses are closed. In some cases the dates of these national holidays change from year to year and in different parts of Britain.Another reason is that, thanks to modern medicine and higher living standards, people live longer now. This meansthat after retirement, people have quite a few years of l

28、eisure left. Nowadays a much higher proportion of the population is over sixty, but in this group there are more women than men.Finally,fewer babies are born each year and the average familyin Britainhas two children. This is one result of changing social attitudes. For example many more married wom

29、en now go out to work. The more they earn influences their leisure time. Even married women who do not go out to work have more time for interestinghobbies. Most British homes have washing machines, vacuum cleaners and other labor-saving gadgets.26. “Time to relax ”means “time for ”.A. refreshmentsB

30、. enjoymentC. amusementD. rest27. “A paid holiday ”means working people .A. have to pay for their holidayB. have no pay when they are on holidayC. get usual pay when they are on holidayD. get less pay when they are on holiday28. Among the old people, there are.A. as many men as women B more women th

31、an men C more men than womenD much more women than men29. In Britain, married women have more leisure hours because they have.可编辑资料 - - - 欢迎下载精品名师归纳总结A. work with a good payB. a lot of timeC. fewer children and more labor-saving gadgetsD. washing-machines and vacuum cleaners30. Which of the followin

32、g ideas is not suggested in the passage.A. Some married women have more time for reading.B. Some married women have interesting hobbies.C. Some married women go out to work.D. Some married women stay at home.Passage 3Questions 31 to 35 are based on the following passage.Museums are places where coll

33、ections of objects are preserved and displayed. The objects may be anything found in nature or made by man. There are museums devoted to art, science, history, industry, andtechnology. But museums are no longer just storehouses for collections.Today nearly all museums, large or small, carry on educa

34、tion programs . Museums offersguided tours, lectures, films, music recitals 独奏 , art lessons, and other attractions.Museums work constantly to improve their collections and ways of displaying them.All museums are always on the watch for new additions to their collections. Works of art are bought fro

35、m art dealers and private collectors or at auction拍卖 sales. Museums also accepts gifts and bequests(遗物) ,but the large museums no longer accept everything that is offered to them. They accept only objects or collections that meet their high standards.What is to be gained from visiting museums. Museu

36、m exhibits can teach us about the world in which we live the materials it is made of, the trees and plants that covers it, and the animals that have lived on it since its beginning.We can learn about the activities of man hishistory and developments and his accomplishments in arts and crafts.31. The

37、 first paragraph deals with.A. what museums preservesB. what kind of objects museums displayC. where museums obtain their objectsD. how museums function32. Which statement is not true.A. Museums are not only storehouses for collections.B. Museums are places where you can learn something.C. Museums p

38、reserve and display only things found in nature.D. Museums carry on educational and research programs.33. Where do objects at museums usually come from.A. From auction sales.B. From art dealers and private collections可编辑资料 - - - 欢迎下载精品名师归纳总结C. From gifts and bequests.D. All the above.34. The large m

39、useums accept.A. everything offered to themB. all the gifts and bequestsC. only objects that meet their high standardsD. only things that small museums do not have35. The last paragraph is about.A. the knowledge one gets from visiting museumsB. the things one can see in museumsC. the world and the p

40、eople living in itD. museums collections from other landsPassage 4 Questions 36 to 40 are based on the following passage.International electronic mail systems are no longer the plaything of hackers and bug- eyed computer enthusiasts. They are emerging as credible business tools that enable individua

41、ls and companies to communicate cheaply and efficiently around the globe.Like the in-house electronic mail networks that have become a fact of business life in many companies, these systems provide a means ofsending and receiving messages via personal computers or computer terminals. With global ele

42、ctronic mail services, however, messages can be sent across the world or across town.For evidence of the rising popularityof electronic mail, a look at the business cards collected from clients or contacts lately should be enough. The chances are that some of them include electronic mail“addresses”a

43、long with telephone and fax numbers.The advantages of electronic mail are numerous. It can eliminate hours of frustrating “telephone tag” and enable people tocommunicateacross time-zoneswithease.It also substitutes for busy fax machines that print out piles of paper which are often misplaced or misd

44、irected. Withelectronicmail, the message appears upon the computer screen of the individual being contacted.The biggest roadblock to the success of electronic mail in the past has been the lack of sufficient users. Although dozens of personal computer electronic mail services are available, until re

45、cently they were not linked. This meant that to reach somebody it wasnecessary to subscribe to the same electronic messaging system.Over the past couple of years, however, many electronicmailsystems have started “talking ”to one another. The mechanism for this is“Internet” a low cost and efficient l

46、ink between electronic mail services worldwide.Internet links an estimated1.5 million computers over 10,000 networks in 50 countries, serving about six million users. Internet resembles a computer network cooperative. There is no central authority that oversees it, and rules are largely informal.可编辑

47、资料 - - - 欢迎下载精品名师归纳总结Over the past 20 years it has mushroomed to include regional, corporate and publicnetworks, including commercial electronic mail systems. “People conduct their love life over Internet, their hobbies and their interests. They argue politics and engage in all kindson-line world.of business.”says Mr. Mitch Kapor, co-founder of Electronic Frontier Fountain of Cambridge.Massachusetts, which promotes awareness of the“Internet is dou

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