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1、2022广东大学英语考试模拟卷(7)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. Questions 23 to 25 are based on the conversation you have just heard. ABecause it has so many information that children will feel confused.BBecause children sometimes question some of the information.CBeca
2、use children can not tell what is right and wrong on the Internet.DBecause children will become addicted to it which is really bad. 2.BSection A/BIn this section,you will hear 8 short conversations and 2 long conversatios. At the end of each conversation, one or more questions will be asked about wh
3、at was said. Both the conversation and the questions will be spoken only once. After each question the there will be a pause. During the pause you must read the four choices marked A,B,C and D,and decide which is the best answer.AShe has finished her dissertation.BThe man became the chair of the dep
4、artment.CThere is something about their school and people.DA special day is coming over. 3.In this part you will have 15 minutes to go over the passage quickly . For questions 1-7, choose the best answer from the four choices marked A、. B. ,C、and D. For questions 8-10,complete the sentences with the
5、 information given in the passage. Sound Effects Snorers(打鼾的人) have always been made jokes. In cartoons,their nasal roar 1ifts the roof off houses. In situation comedies,theres the wife who rolls her eves at her snoring bedmate. But in reality,its not all that funny. In fact,snoring can be a nightma
6、re for snorers and their troubled partners. who may wake up several times a night to poke,and maybe hoist loved ones onto their sides for a 1ittle relief. Risks of Snoring Problems But the nightly racket is more than a potential relationship strain. According to the latest research, an increasingly
7、older and heavier population may make this condition an even greater health risk than we previously thought. For Maggie Moss-Tucker. successful treatment for a longtime snoring problem came almost by accident. One fall morning in 2005,she saw a sign at her local gym seeking snorers as volunteers for
8、 a study at Bostons Brigham &Womens Hospital. Moss-Tucker, now 56, was intrigued. She had started snoring nearly a decade earlier. “Id tried everything to stop. ”she says. from sleeping upright to using nose strips or a mouth guard. But to her and her husbands dismay. nothing worked. When she signed
9、 up for the study and spent a night at a suburban Boston sleep lab, she found out why. After reviewing her sleep patterns and oxygen levels, researchers told her that her snoring was actually an indication of something worse. She suffered from a sleep apnea(呼吸暂停),a condition in which patients stop b
10、reathing repeatedly as they sleep and can wake up as many as 100 times a nightoften without remembering it. That kind of revelation has led to doctors re-evaluating a condition once treated as little more than a nuisance. “In the past. snoring has been treated like a joking matter:you never talked a
11、bout it with your doctor,”says Dr. David Rapoport, medical director of the Sleep Disorders Center at New York University Medical Center (NYC. . “But when it becomes very prominent or such that it wakes you up OF interferes with brea-thing,it can be a problem. ” Sleep apnea,in which the airway become
12、s blocked of. 1ess often. the brain fails to properly control breathing during sleeping. can be viewed as one extreme of the snoring spectrum. Soft snoring. which is not generally considered a health hazard. would be at the other end. As the sound and persistence of a patients snoring grows,so do th
13、e health concerns. A study published in the March I issue of the journal Sleep found that loud snorers had a 40 percent greater risk than non-snorers of suffering from high blood pressure, 34 percent greater odds of having a heart attack and a 67 percent greater chance of having a stroke. Thats a pr
14、oblem given the number of noisy sleepers out there. In a recent poll by the National Sleep Foundation, about one third of US working adults reported snoring at least a few nights in the previous month. Snoring generally worsens with age so the rate is even higher among the elderly. And,contrary to c
15、ommon perceptions,its nearly as common in women as men. Menopause(更年期) appears to be a factor,as is weight. Being overweight can cause thickness in the airway tube, holding back the flow of oxygen. Treatment of Snoring Problems Yet many who regularly snore dont realize that it could be bad for their
16、 health. The research linking hypertension, cardiac problems and loud snoring is relatively new. And though awareness of sleep apnea is growing, specialists say the condition is still vastly undertreated. Primary-care physicians dont routinely ask patients about the quality of their sleepthough that
17、 is beginning to change and few patients think to tell their doctors that theyre snoring, unless it becomes hazardous to their partner. Sleep specialists estimate that between 12 million and 18 million Americans have some form of sleep apnea but many of them, like Moss-Tucker,remain undiagnosed for
18、years. Research from the National Sleep Foundation indicates that only half of those with sleep apnea are being treated. Since it is a progressive condition,says Michael Twery,director of the National Institutes of Healths National Center on Sleep Disorders Research,“The person whos affected is usua
19、lly not aware of how severe the condition is. ” Moss-Tucker remembers being drowsy during the day sometimes,but she blamed it on her busy life. When researchers at the sleep lab asked if she had ever fallen asleep while driving,she laughed initially. But then she recalled long drives Afailing to wak
20、e up in the morningBstopping breathing repeatedlyCfailing to concentrate on his thinkingDstaying awake all the night 4.In this section,you will hear 3 short passages. At the end of each passage,you will hear some questions. Both the passage and the questions will be spoken only once. After you hear
21、a question, you must choose the best answer from the four choices marked A,B. C and D. Passage One Questions 26 to 29 are based on the passage you have just heard. ANegative.BSupportive.CNeutral.DCritical. 5. Questions 19 to 22 are based on the conversation you have just heard. AThere are so many re
22、staurants in London.BThere are so many delicious foods in London.CThe life in London is diverse and colorful.DThe people here are very friendly. 6.BSection A/BIn this section,you will hear 8 short conversations and 2 long conversatios. At the end of each conversation, one or more questions will be a
23、sked about what was said. Both the conversation and the questions will be spoken only once. After each question the there will be a pause. During the pause you must read the four choices marked A,B,C and D,and decide which is the best answer.AThe two old friends met on the street unexpectedly.BTheir
24、 cars knocked into each other.CThey quarreled with each other.DThey argued about how to drive on the road. 7.In this part you will have 15 minutes to go over the passage quickly . For questions 1-7, choose the best answer from the four choices marked A、. B. ,C、and D. For questions 8-10,complete the
25、sentences with the information given in the passage. Sound Effects Snorers(打鼾的人) have always been made jokes. In cartoons,their nasal roar 1ifts the roof off houses. In situation comedies,theres the wife who rolls her eves at her snoring bedmate. But in reality,its not all that funny. In fact,snorin
26、g can be a nightmare for snorers and their troubled partners. who may wake up several times a night to poke,and maybe hoist loved ones onto their sides for a 1ittle relief. Risks of Snoring Problems But the nightly racket is more than a potential relationship strain. According to the latest research
27、, an increasingly older and heavier population may make this condition an even greater health risk than we previously thought. For Maggie Moss-Tucker. successful treatment for a longtime snoring problem came almost by accident. One fall morning in 2005,she saw a sign at her local gym seeking snorers
28、 as volunteers for a study at Bostons Brigham &Womens Hospital. Moss-Tucker, now 56, was intrigued. She had started snoring nearly a decade earlier. “Id tried everything to stop. ”she says. from sleeping upright to using nose strips or a mouth guard. But to her and her husbands dismay. nothing worke
29、d. When she signed up for the study and spent a night at a suburban Boston sleep lab, she found out why. After reviewing her sleep patterns and oxygen levels, researchers told her that her snoring was actually an indication of something worse. She suffered from a sleep apnea(呼吸暂停),a condition in whi
30、ch patients stop breathing repeatedly as they sleep and can wake up as many as 100 times a nightoften without remembering it. That kind of revelation has led to doctors re-evaluating a condition once treated as little more than a nuisance. “In the past. snoring has been treated like a joking matter:
31、you never talked about it with your doctor,”says Dr. David Rapoport, medical director of the Sleep Disorders Center at New York University Medical Center (NYC. . “But when it becomes very prominent or such that it wakes you up OF interferes with brea-thing,it can be a problem. ” Sleep apnea,in which
32、 the airway becomes blocked of. 1ess often. the brain fails to properly control breathing during sleeping. can be viewed as one extreme of the snoring spectrum. Soft snoring. which is not generally considered a health hazard. would be at the other end. As the sound and persistence of a patients snor
33、ing grows,so do the health concerns. A study published in the March I issue of the journal Sleep found that loud snorers had a 40 percent greater risk than non-snorers of suffering from high blood pressure, 34 percent greater odds of having a heart attack and a 67 percent greater chance of having a
34、stroke. Thats a problem given the number of noisy sleepers out there. In a recent poll by the National Sleep Foundation, about one third of US working adults reported snoring at least a few nights in the previous month. Snoring generally worsens with age so the rate is even higher among the elderly.
35、 And,contrary to common perceptions,its nearly as common in women as men. Menopause(更年期) appears to be a factor,as is weight. Being overweight can cause thickness in the airway tube, holding back the flow of oxygen. Treatment of Snoring Problems Yet many who regularly snore dont realize that it coul
36、d be bad for their health. The research linking hypertension, cardiac problems and loud snoring is relatively new. And though awareness of sleep apnea is growing, specialists say the condition is still vastly undertreated. Primary-care physicians dont routinely ask patients about the quality of thei
37、r sleepthough that is beginning to change and few patients think to tell their doctors that theyre snoring, unless it becomes hazardous to their partner. Sleep specialists estimate that between 12 million and 18 million Americans have some form of sleep apnea but many of them, like Moss-Tucker,remai
38、n undiagnosed for years. Research from the National Sleep Foundation indicates that only half of those with sleep apnea are being treated. Since it is a progressive condition,says Michael Twery,director of the National Institutes of Healths National Center on Sleep Disorders Research,“The person who
39、s affected is usually not aware of how severe the condition is. ” Moss-Tucker remembers being drowsy during the day sometimes,but she blamed it on her busy life. When researchers at the sleep lab asked if she had ever fallen asleep while driving,she laughed initially. But then she recalled long driv
40、es Abreath problemBheart attackChigh blood pressureDstroke. 8.BSection A/BIn this section,you will hear 8 short conversations and 2 long conversatios. At the end of each conversation, one or more questions will be asked about what was said. Both the conversation and the questions will be spoken only
41、 once. After each question the there will be a pause. During the pause you must read the four choices marked A,B,C and D,and decide which is the best answer.AHe has just quitted his former job.BHe is still a school student.CHe is applying for a job.DHe is having an interview now. 9. Questions 57 to
42、61 are based on the following passage. Not long after the telephone was invented. I assume, a call was placed. The caller was a parent saying,“Your child is bullying my child, and I want it stopped!”The bullys parent replied,“You must have the wrong number. My child is a 1ittle angel. ” A trillion p
43、hone calls later. The conversation is the same. When children are teased or tyrannized(欺压),the parental impulse is to grab the phone and rant. But these days,as studies in the US show bullying on the rise and parental supervision on the decline,researchers who study bullying say that calling morns a
44、nd dads is more futile than ever. Such calls often lead to playground recriminations(指责)and dont really teach our kids any lessons about how to navigate the world and resolve conflicts. “When you call parents, you want them toextract the crueltyfrom their bullying children. ”says Laura Kavesh,a chil
45、d psychologist in Evanston,Illinois. “But many parents are blown away by the idea of their child being cruel. They wont believe it. ”In a recent police-department survey in Oak Harbor. Washington. 89 percent of local high school students said they had engaged in bullying behavior. Yet only 18 percen
46、t of parents thought their children would act as bullies. In a new US PIA survey, 5 percent of parents support contacting other parents to deal with bullying. But many educators warn that those conversations can be misinterpreted(误解), causing tempers to flare. Instead, they say,parents should get ob
47、jective outsiders,like principals,to mediate. Meanwhile, if you get a call from a parent who is angry about your childs bullying, listen without getting defensive. Thats what Laura McHugh of Castro Valley, California, did when a caller told her that her then 13-year-old son had spit in another boys
48、food. Her son had confessed,but the victims mom“wanted to make sure my son hadnt given her son a nasty disease,”says McHugh,who apologized and promised to get her son tested for AIDS and other diseases. She knew the chance of contracting any disease this way was remote,but her promise calmed the mother and showed McHughs son that his bad behavior was being taken seriou