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1、2022河南公共英语考试真题卷(5)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.Changcha has changed a lot. Who can tell () it would be like in () five years.Ahow . otherBwhat. moreChow. anotherDwhat . another2.She took off her boots and()on the floor near the door.AdroppedBfenCpushedD
2、threw3.Thompson was once accused()being involved in a murder ease.AwithBonCofDabout4.They didnt want to look().They liked looking the same.AdifferenceBdifferentCdifferentlyDbeing different5.We must find a solution () this problem by the end of this month.AforBatCtoDwith6.My brother and I really have
3、 no idea as to () about this sudden change of the situation.Awhat to doBto do whatChow to doDhow can I do7.The knee is the joint () the thigh bone meets the large bone of the lower leg.AwhenBwhereCwhyDwhich8.Time was when a visit to a museum included shopping for a postcard or an exhibition catalogu
4、e. Nowadays, most art institutions have expanded their wares to include home furnishings, jewelry, clothing, toys and books. While it might enhance the museum experience, selling all those products can become a distraction for administrators, taking away time and money from their primary business: e
5、xhibiting works of art. If that weren’t trouble enough, retail operations, intended to supplement museum admissions, don’t always end up in the black.Last year, to try to solve the problem of doing art and commerce profitably, the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston (MFA) became one of the fir
6、st museums in the country to spin off the management of its retail operations into a for-profit company, Museum Enterprise Partners Inc. (MEP). Owned by the MFA and senior management, MEP replaced the museum’s 30-year-old Enterprise division and the MFA became its first client. From its office
7、s in Boston’s South End, MEP operates both the main MFA store and an exhibition store inside the museum, two mall stores in downtown Boston at Copley Place and Faneuil Hall, the MFA catalogue and Web site, the catalogue outlet store on Cape Cod and a wholesale/corporate division. To handle dis
8、tribution and fulfillment, MEP has a state-of-the-art 100 O00-square-foot warehouse in Avon, Mass., which includes an 85-seat call center.This was that annoying day of the week when he had to get his kids to their gym class ().Afirst thing in the morningBthe first morningCat first in the morningDfor
9、 the first of the morning9.Proper street behavior in the United States requires a nice balance of attention and inattention. You are supposed to look at a (21) just enough to show that you’re (22) of his presence. If you look too little, you appear arrogant or furtive (鬼鬼祟祟的), too much, (23) y
10、ou’re inquisitive. Usually what happens is that people (24) each other until they are about eight feet (25) , at which point both cast down their eyes. Sociologist Dr. Erving Goffman (26) this as a kind of dimming of lights.Much of eye behavior is so (27) that we react to it only on the intuit
11、ive level. The next time you have a (28) with someone who makes you feel liked, notice what he does with his eyes. (29) are he looks at you more often than is usual with (30) a little longer than the normal. You interpret this as a sign of a polite one (31) he is interested in you as a person (32) j
12、ust in the topic of conversation. Probably you also feel that he is both (33) and sincere.All this has been demonstrated in elaborate (34) . Subjects sit and talk in the psychologist’s laboratory, (35) of the fact that their eye behavior is being (36) from a one-way vision screen. In one fairl
13、y typical experiment, (37) were induced to cheat while performing a task, then were (38) and observed. It was found that those who had (39) met the interviewer’s eyes less often than was (40) , an indication that shifty eyes to use the mystery writers’ stock phrase can actually be a tip-
14、off to an attempt to deceive or to feelings of guilt.21().AinducedBcheatedCdistractedDrealized10.Proper street behavior in the United States requires a nice balance of attention and inattention. You are supposed to look at a (21) just enough to show that you’re (22) of his presence. If you loo
15、k too little, you appear arrogant or furtive (鬼鬼祟祟的), too much, (23) you’re inquisitive. Usually what happens is that people (24) each other until they are about eight feet (25) , at which point both cast down their eyes. Sociologist Dr. Erving Goffman (26) this as a kind of dimming of lights.
16、Much of eye behavior is so (27) that we react to it only on the intuitive level. The next time you have a (28) with someone who makes you feel liked, notice what he does with his eyes. (29) are he looks at you more often than is usual with (30) a little longer than the normal. You interpret this as
17、a sign of a polite one (31) he is interested in you as a person (32) just in the topic of conversation. Probably you also feel that he is both (33) and sincere.All this has been demonstrated in elaborate (34) . Subjects sit and talk in the psychologist’s laboratory, (35) of the fact that their
18、 eye behavior is being (36) from a one-way vision screen. In one fairly typical experiment, (37) were induced to cheat while performing a task, then were (38) and observed. It was found that those who had (39) met the interviewer’s eyes less often than was (40) , an indication that shifty eyes
19、 to use the mystery writers’ stock phrase can actually be a tip-off to an attempt to deceive or to feelings of guilt.22().AdemonstratesBdescribesCdeducesDnarrates11.Proper street behavior in the United States requires a nice balance of attention and inattention. You are supposed to look at a (
20、21) just enough to show that you’re (22) of his presence. If you look too little, you appear arrogant or furtive (鬼鬼祟祟的), too much, (23) you’re inquisitive. Usually what happens is that people (24) each other until they are about eight feet (25) , at which point both cast down their eyes
21、. Sociologist Dr. Erving Goffman (26) this as a kind of dimming of lights.Much of eye behavior is so (27) that we react to it only on the intuitive level. The next time you have a (28) with someone who makes you feel liked, notice what he does with his eyes. (29) are he looks at you more often than
22、is usual with (30) a little longer than the normal. You interpret this as a sign of a polite one (31) he is interested in you as a person (32) just in the topic of conversation. Probably you also feel that he is both (33) and sincere.All this has been demonstrated in elaborate (34) . Subjects sit an
23、d talk in the psychologist’s laboratory, (35) of the fact that their eye behavior is being (36) from a one-way vision screen. In one fairly typical experiment, (37) were induced to cheat while performing a task, then were (38) and observed. It was found that those who had (39) met the intervie
24、wer’s eyes less often than was (40) , an indication that shifty eyes to use the mystery writers’ stock phrase can actually be a tip-off to an attempt to deceive or to feelings of guilt.24().AnoticedBanalyzedCinterpretedDobserved12.Proper street behavior in the United States requires a ni
25、ce balance of attention and inattention. You are supposed to look at a (21) just enough to show that you’re (22) of his presence. If you look too little, you appear arrogant or furtive (鬼鬼祟祟的), too much, (23) you’re inquisitive. Usually what happens is that people (24) each other until t
26、hey are about eight feet (25) , at which point both cast down their eyes. Sociologist Dr. Erving Goffman (26) this as a kind of dimming of lights.Much of eye behavior is so (27) that we react to it only on the intuitive level. The next time you have a (28) with someone who makes you feel liked, noti
27、ce what he does with his eyes. (29) are he looks at you more often than is usual with (30) a little longer than the normal. You interpret this as a sign of a polite one (31) he is interested in you as a person (32) just in the topic of conversation. Probably you also feel that he is both (33) and si
28、ncere.All this has been demonstrated in elaborate (34) . Subjects sit and talk in the psychologist’s laboratory, (35) of the fact that their eye behavior is being (36) from a one-way vision screen. In one fairly typical experiment, (37) were induced to cheat while performing a task, then were
29、(38) and observed. It was found that those who had (39) met the interviewer’s eyes less often than was (40) , an indication that shifty eyes to use the mystery writers’ stock phrase can actually be a tip-off to an attempt to deceive or to feelings of guilt.25().AsoBorCandDbut13.Proper st
30、reet behavior in the United States requires a nice balance of attention and inattention. You are supposed to look at a (21) just enough to show that you’re (22) of his presence. If you look too little, you appear arrogant or furtive (鬼鬼祟祟的), too much, (23) you’re inquisitive. Usually wha
31、t happens is that people (24) each other until they are about eight feet (25) , at which point both cast down their eyes. Sociologist Dr. Erving Goffman (26) this as a kind of dimming of lights.Much of eye behavior is so (27) that we react to it only on the intuitive level. The next time you have a
32、(28) with someone who makes you feel liked, notice what he does with his eyes. (29) are he looks at you more often than is usual with (30) a little longer than the normal. You interpret this as a sign of a polite one (31) he is interested in you as a person (32) just in the topic of conversation. Pr
33、obably you also feel that he is both (33) and sincere.All this has been demonstrated in elaborate (34) . Subjects sit and talk in the psychologist’s laboratory, (35) of the fact that their eye behavior is being (36) from a one-way vision screen. In one fairly typical experiment, (37) were indu
34、ced to cheat while performing a task, then were (38) and observed. It was found that those who had (39) met the interviewer’s eyes less often than was (40) , an indication that shifty eyes to use the mystery writers’ stock phrase can actually be a tip-off to an attempt to deceive or to f
35、eelings of guilt.26().AasideBapartCawayDahead14.Proper street behavior in the United States requires a nice balance of attention and inattention. You are supposed to look at a (21) just enough to show that you’re (22) of his presence. If you look too little, you appear arrogant or furtive (鬼鬼祟
36、祟的), too much, (23) you’re inquisitive. Usually what happens is that people (24) each other until they are about eight feet (25) , at which point both cast down their eyes. Sociologist Dr. Erving Goffman (26) this as a kind of dimming of lights.Much of eye behavior is so (27) that we react to
37、it only on the intuitive level. The next time you have a (28) with someone who makes you feel liked, notice what he does with his eyes. (29) are he looks at you more often than is usual with (30) a little longer than the normal. You interpret this as a sign of a polite one (31) he is interested in y
38、ou as a person (32) just in the topic of conversation. Probably you also feel that he is both (33) and sincere.All this has been demonstrated in elaborate (34) . Subjects sit and talk in the psychologist’s laboratory, (35) of the fact that their eye behavior is being (36) from a one-way vision
39、 screen. In one fairly typical experiment, (37) were induced to cheat while performing a task, then were (38) and observed. It was found that those who had (39) met the interviewer’s eyes less often than was (40) , an indication that shifty eyes to use the mystery writers’ stock phrase c
40、an actually be a tip-off to an attempt to deceive or to feelings of guilt.23().AvagueBobscureCsubtleDuncertain15.Proper street behavior in the United States requires a nice balance of attention and inattention. You are supposed to look at a (21) just enough to show that you’re (22) of his pres
41、ence. If you look too little, you appear arrogant or furtive (鬼鬼祟祟的), too much, (23) you’re inquisitive. Usually what happens is that people (24) each other until they are about eight feet (25) , at which point both cast down their eyes. Sociologist Dr. Erving Goffman (26) this as a kind of di
42、mming of lights.Much of eye behavior is so (27) that we react to it only on the intuitive level. The next time you have a (28) with someone who makes you feel liked, notice what he does with his eyes. (29) are he looks at you more often than is usual with (30) a little longer than the normal. You in
43、terpret this as a sign of a polite one (31) he is interested in you as a person (32) just in the topic of conversation. Probably you also feel that he is both (33) and sincere.All this has been demonstrated in elaborate (34) . Subjects sit and talk in the psychologist’s laboratory, (35) of the
44、 fact that their eye behavior is being (36) from a one-way vision screen. In one fairly typical experiment, (37) were induced to cheat while performing a task, then were (38) and observed. It was found that those who had (39) met the interviewer’s eyes less often than was (40) , an indication
45、that shifty eyes to use the mystery writers’ stock phrase can actually be a tip-off to an attempt to deceive or to feelings of guilt.27().AawareBcuriousCignorantDupset16.Proper street behavior in the United States requires a nice balance of attention and inattention. You are supposed to look a
46、t a (21) just enough to show that you’re (22) of his presence. If you look too little, you appear arrogant or furtive (鬼鬼祟祟的), too much, (23) you’re inquisitive. Usually what happens is that people (24) each other until they are about eight feet (25) , at which point both cast down their
47、 eyes. Sociologist Dr. Erving Goffman (26) this as a kind of dimming of lights.Much of eye behavior is so (27) that we react to it only on the intuitive level. The next time you have a (28) with someone who makes you feel liked, notice what he does with his eyes. (29) are he looks at you more often
48、than is usual with (30) a little longer than the normal. You interpret this as a sign of a polite one (31) he is interested in you as a person (32) just in the topic of conversation. Probably you also feel that he is both (33) and sincere.All this has been demonstrated in elaborate (34) . Subjects sit and talk in the psychologist’