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1、2021年河南专升本考试考试真题卷(8)本卷共分为1大题50小题,作答时间为180分钟,总分100分,60分及格。一、单项选择题(共50题,每题2分。每题的备选项中,只有一个最符合题意) 1.When a student, I was a member of the collegiate basketball team. It was mainly composed of bookish students. Only one could be counted as natural athlete, another half-qualified. Thats why we were defeat
2、ed nine out of ten games. Our spirits, however, had never dampened, for we were a cheerful team. None would strive to get into the spotlight when we were gaining the upper hand; nor would we blame each other when we were losing. Thus a cordial relationship between members prevailed in our team. Most
3、 recommendable of all was our morale which never lowered. Our sportsmanship also remained good. We persisted in carrying on to the last when suffering great loss. We knew we had done our best, showing no regret at failure. To the rest of the students our team was a good one though it lost the game.
4、They kept encouraging us and none of them was disappointed. Recently I have avoided watching games, not even at a TV live coverage, still less to the match in person. Thats because I know I couldnt control myself. When watching a match, Ill inevitably take sides and be emotionally involved, strongly
5、 wishing for the triumph of the side over its opponent. As I often side with the weaker in a match, watching it will only spell worry and misery for me. Not long ago when I accompanied my wife to a super world tennis match my horizons broadened as regards sports competition. It seemed to me that win
6、s and losses were relative and transient. What mattered was the ever-higher level achieved through contest. Victory was a result of all the efforts made by both sides. As one of the audience, I should applaud the energetic performance of both to the neglect of the result. Why should I regard the con
7、test as a life-and-death struggle, the winner as survival and the loser as deadWhat does spell in the last sentence of the second paragraph most probably meanAWrite outBA period of timeCA curseDLead to 2.Visitors from space may have landed on our planet dozens, even hundreds of times during the long
8、, empty ages while Man was still a dream of the distant future. Indeed, they could have landed on 90 percent of the earth as recently as two or three hundred years ago, and we could never have heard of it. If one searches through old newspapers and local records, one can find many reports of strange
9、 incidents that could be interpreted as visits from outer space. A stimulating writer, Charles Fort, has made a collection of UFO sighting in his book! One is tempted to believe them more than any modern reports, for the simple reason that they happened long before anyone had ever thought of space t
10、ravel. Yet at the same time, one cant take them too seriously, for before scientific education was widespread, even sightings of meteors, comets, auroras, and so on, gave rise to the most incredible stories, as they still do today.The author implies that the space age has _.Aweakened the reliability
11、 of reported sightingsBincreased the number of UFO sightingsCallowed more scientific study of UFOsDsolved the age-old mystery of UFOs 3.I can clearly remember the first time I met Mr. Andrews, my old headmaster, 21 that was over twenty years ago. During the war, I was at school in the north of Engla
12、nd. As soon as it ended, my family returned to London. There were not enough schools left for children to go to and my father had to go from one school to another, asking them to 22 me as a pupil. I used to go with him but he had such a 23 time trying to persuade people even to see him that I seldom
13、 had to do any tests. We had been to all the schools near we lived, but the more my father argued, the more 24 it became. In the end, we went to a school about five miles away from home. The headmaster kept us waiting for 25 an hour. While we were waiting, I 26 around at the school building, which w
14、as one of those old Victorian structures, completely out of date but still standing. I could hear the boys playing in the playground outside when the headmaster’s secretary finally 27 us into his office. Mr. Andrews spoke to me first. Why do you want to come here he asked. I had been thinking
15、of saying something about studying but I couldn’t 28 remembering the boys outside. I don’t know anyone in London, I said. I like to play with the other boys. I like to read a lot of books too. I 29 . All right, Mr. Andrews said. We have one place 30 , in fact.My two years at that school
16、were the happiest of my life.23()ApleasantBhardCgoodDbad4.I can clearly remember the first time I met Mr. Andrews, my old headmaster, 21 that was over twenty years ago. During the war, I was at school in the north of England. As soon as it ended, my family returned to London. There were not enough s
17、chools left for children to go to and my father had to go from one school to another, asking them to 22 me as a pupil. I used to go with him but he had such a 23 time trying to persuade people even to see him that I seldom had to do any tests. We had been to all the schools near we lived, but the mo
18、re my father argued, the more 24 it became. In the end, we went to a school about five miles away from home. The headmaster kept us waiting for 25 an hour. While we were waiting, I 26 around at the school building, which was one of those old Victorian structures, completely out of date but still sta
19、nding. I could hear the boys playing in the playground outside when the headmaster’s secretary finally 27 us into his office. Mr. Andrews spoke to me first. Why do you want to come here he asked. I had been thinking of saying something about studying but I couldn’t 28 remembering the boy
20、s outside. I don’t know anyone in London, I said. I like to play with the other boys. I like to read a lot of books too. I 29 . All right, Mr. Andrews said. We have one place 30 , in fact.My two years at that school were the happiest of my life.24()AhopefulBbeneficialCcomplicatedDimpossible5.M
21、rs. Luth Li was a Chinese woman living in Singapore. She named her baby girl Patsy Li. This name in Chinese means white plum blossom. When Patsy Li was six years old, the Japanese attacked Singapore. Mrs. Li and Patsy Li escaped on a ship which was sunk. Mrs. Li placed Patsy Li on a bit of floating
22、wreckage. Later Mrs. Li was saved, but the little girl could not be found. Many months after, four thousand miles away, a group of United States Marines found a little Chinese girl. No one could tell how she had got there. She refused to talk or give her name. The captain who spoke Chinese named her
23、 Patsy Lee because he thought she looked like a white plum blossom. When the New York Times told about the finding of Patsy Lee, Mrs. Lis sister saw the news and wrote to her sister about it. Could Patsy Lee be the lost child Patsy Li The mother made the long voyage to find out. The little white plu
24、m blossom was indeed her own Pasty Li.Who found Patsy Li firstAThe Marines.BThe sailors.CThe soldiers.DMrs. L 6.Tom Smith was a writer. He wrote detective stories for magazines. One evening he could not find an end for a story. He sat with his typewriter in front of him, but he had no ideas. So he d
25、ecided to go to the cinema. When he came back, he found that he had had a visitor. Someone had broken into his flat. The man had had a drink, smoked several of Toms cigarettes-and had read his story. The visitor left Tom a note. I have read your story and I dont think much of it. Please read my sugg
26、estions and then you can finish it. By the way, I am a burglar, I am not going to steal anything tonight. But if you become a successful writer, I will return! Tom read the burglars suggestions. Then he sat down and wrote the rest of the story. He is still not a successful writer, and he is waiting
27、for his burglar to return. Before he goes out in the evening, he always leaves a half-finished story near his typewriter.What did the man do in his flatADrank a cup of tea.BLeft Tom some advice.CPaid for his cigarettes.DLeft tom some money. 7.When a student, I was a member of the collegiate basketba
28、ll team. It was mainly composed of bookish students. Only one could be counted as natural athlete, another half-qualified. Thats why we were defeated nine out of ten games. Our spirits, however, had never dampened, for we were a cheerful team. None would strive to get into the spotlight when we were
29、 gaining the upper hand; nor would we blame each other when we were losing. Thus a cordial relationship between members prevailed in our team. Most recommendable of all was our morale which never lowered. Our sportsmanship also remained good. We persisted in carrying on to the last when suffering gr
30、eat loss. We knew we had done our best, showing no regret at failure. To the rest of the students our team was a good one though it lost the game. They kept encouraging us and none of them was disappointed. Recently I have avoided watching games, not even at a TV live coverage, still less to the mat
31、ch in person. Thats because I know I couldnt control myself. When watching a match, Ill inevitably take sides and be emotionally involved, strongly wishing for the triumph of the side over its opponent. As I often side with the weaker in a match, watching it will only spell worry and misery for me.
32、Not long ago when I accompanied my wife to a super world tennis match my horizons broadened as regards sports competition. It seemed to me that wins and losses were relative and transient. What mattered was the ever-higher level achieved through contest. Victory was a result of all the efforts made
33、by both sides. As one of the audience, I should applaud the energetic performance of both to the neglect of the result. Why should I regard the contest as a life-and-death struggle, the winner as survival and the loser as deadWhich of the following is most probably the best titleALose and WinBBasket
34、ball MatchCWinning a MatchDWatching a Match 8.This is supposed to be an enlightened age, but you wouldnt think so if you could hear what the average men think of the average women. Women won their independence years ago. After a long, biter struggle, they now enjoy the same educational opportunities
35、 as men in most parts of the world. They have proved repeatedly that they are equal and often superior to men in almost every field. The hard-fought battle for recognition has been won, but it is by no means over. It is men, not women who still carry on the sex war because their attitude remains bas
36、ically hostile. Even in the most progressive societies, women continue to be regarded as second-rate citizens. Hearing some men talk, youd think that women belong to a different species. On the surface, the comments made by men about womens abilities seem light-heartiness does not conceal the real c
37、ontempt (轻视) that men feel for women. However much men sneer at women, their claims to superiority are not borne out by statistics. We all know that women cause far fewer accidents than men. They are too careful and responsible to drive like menaces. But this is a minor quibble (双关语). Women have suc
38、ceeded in any job you care to name. As politicians, soldiers, doctors, bus-conductors, scientists and presidents of countries they have often put men to shame. And we must remember that they frequently succeed brilliantly in all these fields in addition to bearing and rearing children.What dose the
39、author probably doAA historian.BA government officer.CA sociologist.DAn Educator. 9.Visitors from space may have landed on our planet dozens, even hundreds of times during the long, empty ages while Man was still a dream of the distant future. Indeed, they could have landed on 90 percent of the eart
40、h as recently as two or three hundred years ago, and we could never have heard of it. If one searches through old newspapers and local records, one can find many reports of strange incidents that could be interpreted as visits from outer space. A stimulating writer, Charles Fort, has made a collecti
41、on of UFO sighting in his book! One is tempted to believe them more than any modern reports, for the simple reason that they happened long before anyone had ever thought of space travel. Yet at the same time, one cant take them too seriously, for before scientific education was widespread, even sigh
42、tings of meteors, comets, auroras, and so on, gave rise to the most incredible stories, as they still do today.According to the passage, _.AUFOs are only recent observationsBUFO sightings are not newCUFOs are just comets, and auroras etc.DUFOs are inventions by people who lack scientific knowledge 1
43、0.Tom Smith was a writer. He wrote detective stories for magazines. One evening he could not find an end for a story. He sat with his typewriter in front of him, but he had no ideas. So he decided to go to the cinema. When he came back, he found that he had had a visitor. Someone had broken into his
44、 flat. The man had had a drink, smoked several of Toms cigarettes-and had read his story. The visitor left Tom a note. I have read your story and I dont think much of it. Please read my suggestions and then you can finish it. By the way, I am a burglar, I am not going to steal anything tonight. But
45、if you become a successful writer, I will return! Tom read the burglars suggestions. Then he sat down and wrote the rest of the story. He is still not a successful writer, and he is waiting for his burglar to return. Before he goes out in the evening, he always leaves a half-finished story near his
46、typewriter.Tom is waiting for the thief to return _.Ato meet himBto get more ideas from himCto have stories stolenDto be robbed more often 11.I can clearly remember the first time I met Mr. Andrews, my old headmaster, 21 that was over twenty years ago. During the war, I was at school in the north of
47、 England. As soon as it ended, my family returned to London. There were not enough schools left for children to go to and my father had to go from one school to another, asking them to 22 me as a pupil. I used to go with him but he had such a 23 time trying to persuade people even to see him that I
48、seldom had to do any tests. We had been to all the schools near we lived, but the more my father argued, the more 24 it became. In the end, we went to a school about five miles away from home. The headmaster kept us waiting for 25 an hour. While we were waiting, I 26 around at the school building, which was one of those old Victorian structures, completely out of date but still standing. I could hear the boys playing in the playground outside when the headmaster’s secretary finally 27 us into his office. Mr. Andrews spoke to me first. Wh