2023年广西同等学力人员申请硕士学位考试考试考前冲刺卷(8).docx

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1、2023年广西同等学力人员申请硕士学位考试考试考前冲刺卷(8)本卷共分为2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38题,每题2分。每题的备选项中,只有一个最符合题意) 1.Passage Three The wandering ship was a dramatic symbol for a problem plaguing our age. In 1987, the ship, loaded with thousands of tons of New York garbage, spent weeks wandering from one port

2、to another in search of a dump before finally returning home, mission unaccomplished. New York, like other communities throughout the world is running out of space to put its trash. As throwaway societies, the US and other industrialized countries expect their garbage to be picked up by trucks that

3、magically transported the refuse to some out-of-sight incinerator(焚化炉) or dump. But in the developing counties of Asia, Africa and Latin America, thousands of tons of trash collected daily are thrown into open dumps, where it feeds huge populations of rats that swarm through poor neighborhoods. The

4、world is literally swimming in garbage, says a scientist, Communities worldwide are being forced to confront the problem. Green Peace spokesman Bryan Bence adds, The crisis in garbage stems in part from the fact that weve ignored long-term disposal problem in favor of cheap quick fixes. The garbage

5、glut (过选剩) has inspired many communities in the U.S., Japan and Western Europe to start recycling programs. Once considered a curious counter culture activity recycling has moved firmly into the mainstream. Recycling involves separating usable products from trash, processing them so they can be subs

6、tituted for more expensive raw materials and returning them to the marketplace as parts of new products. Many countries now have mandatory recycling programs, and others plan to follow the trend soon. Most notably, Japan has stood out as a model and leader of the waste management trend, recycling an

7、 estimated 65 percent of its waste. Thats what we should do, to the garbage crisis, says David Antonioli, a staff member with the New York Public Interest Research Corp. The earth is not a dump!According to the passage, which procedure is NOT involved in garbage recycling ASeparating usable products

8、 from trash.BProcessing them so that they can be used to replace more expensive materials.CReturning them to markets as new products.DSplitting them into three categories: hazardous items, combustible waste and non-combustible waste. 2.Passage Two When I was home in Britain on holiday last summer, I

9、 spent an evening looking at photos my father had taken when he stayed with us in Beijing in the spring of 1966. Of all these interesting scenes of the past, the one I exclaimed at was a photo of Chang An Jie at Tiananmen. The photo showed one car and two bicycles! This made me reflect on the change

10、s that have transformed Beijing since I came to the city 37 years ago. In those days, the bicycle was king. What sheer joy it was to cycle along with the hundreds (not thousands) of fellow pedallers (骑车人), never in fear of life and limb as one is now. I bought my first bike in 1963. It cost me 150 y

11、uan-in those days three or four months salary for the average city dweller. Such changes! Good or bad Today, cycling is hazardous but bikes are easily affordable. Gone are the old wooden houses I remember in south Beijing and fast disappearing are the small, overcrowded courtyard houses lacking runn

12、ing water, central heating and bathroom. Very many Beijingers now live in more convenient, better-equipped flats in high-rises. But these very high-rises are swallowing up the unique character of the old city of narrow hutongs, age-old siheyuan and close-knit communities. I loved years ago to cycle

13、to Beihai to visit my friends (I then taught at China Foreign Affairs University). In spring I rode through the blue-green wheat fields, in summer through fields of tall maize (玉米). Further west; beyond Beijing Foreign Studies University there were the vegetable fields of the Evergreen Commune (四季青公

14、社) and the rice paddies glistening in the summer sun. But now, as Beijing stretches out further and further, west, east, north, south, theres decent housing for families, busy offices for employment and large department stores and supermarkets where, if you have the money, theres little you cannot b

15、uy.Which of the following statements is NOT true according the passage AThe author has worked in China for 37 years.BCycling is not as safe as it was in the 1960s.CThe unique character of the old Beijing is disappearing.DYou cannot buy anything you like though you have money. 3.Passage Four Birds ar

16、e literally half-asleep-with one brain hemisphere alert and the other sleeping, according to a new study of sleeping ducks. Earlier Studies have documented half-brain sleep in a wide range of birds. The brain hemispheres take turns sinking into the sleep stage characterized by slow brain waves. The

17、eye controlled by the sleeping hemisphere keeps shut, while the wakeful hemispheres eye stays open and alert. Birds also can sleep with both hemispheres resting at once. Decades of studies of bird flocks led researchers to predict extra alertness in the more vulnerable, end-of-the-row sleepers. Sure

18、 enough, the end birds tended to watch carefully on the side away from their companions. Ducks in the inner spots showed no preference for gaze direction. Also, birds dozing (打盹) at the end of the line resorted to single-hemisphere sleep, rather than total relaxation, more often than inner ducks did

19、. Rotating 16 birds through the positions in a four-duck row, the researchers found outer birds half-asleep during 32 percent of dozing time versus about 12 percent for birds in internal spots. We believe this is the first evidence for an animal behaviorally controlling sleep and wakefulness simulta

20、neously in different regions of the brain, the researchers say. The results provide the best evidence for a long-standing supposition that single- hemisphere sleep evolved as creatures scanned for enemies. The preference for opening an eye on the. lockout side could be widespread, he predicts. Hes s

21、een it in a pair of birds dozing side-by-side in the zoo and in a single pet bird sleeping by a mirror. The mirror-side eye closed as if the reflection were a companion and the other eye stayed open. Useful as half-sleeping might be, its only been found in birds and such water mammals (哺乳动物) as dolp

22、hins, whales, and seals. Perhaps keeping one side of the brain awake allows a sleeping animal to surface occasionally to avoid drowning. Studies of birds may offer unique insights into sleep. Jerome M. Siegel of the UCLA says he wonders if birds half-brain sleep is just the tip of the iceberg (冰山) .

23、 He speculates that more examples may turn up when we take a closer look at other species.While sleeping, some water mammals tend to keep half-awake in order to _ Aalert themselves to the approaching enemyBemerge from water now and then to breatheCbe sensitive to the ever-changing environmentDavoid

24、being swept away by rapid currents 4. One of the most widely discussed subjects these days is. energy crisis. Automobile drivers cannot get gasoline; homeowners may not get enough heating oil; factories are (56) by a fuel shortage. The crisis has (57) questions about the large oil companies and wind

25、fall (58) . Critics of the oil industry charge that the major companies are getting richer because of the oil shortage. Shortage, of course, drives prices up. As oil prices rise, the critics say, the oil companies will make more money (windfall profits) without doing a thing to (59) the extra cash.

26、Windfall profits are sudden unearned profits-profits made (60) luck, or some special turn of events. The word itself tells what windfall means-something blown down by the wind, such as trees, or fruit (61) from trees. But the word has taken on a special meaning. This meaning (getting something unear

27、ned) was first used in medieval England. This is (62) it started: at that time much of the land was in the hands of (63) barons. The rest of the people, commoners, lived and worked on their vast estates. They planted the seed, cared for the farm animals and harvested the crops. Not all the land, how

28、ever, was used for farming. Every baron kept a large private forest for (64) deer and wild bear. When hungry, the people sometimes would kill the animals in the lords forest for food. And there were times (65) they might cut down trees for fuel. So, strong laws were passed to protect the forests, an

29、d the animals. Violations were severely (66) . But there was one way people could get wood from the forest. If they found trees blown down by the wind (windfall) they were free to take them for use as fuel in their homes. And that is the meaning that has come down to us-something good gotten by luck

30、 or (67) . The common people of old England, often hungry and cold, must often have prayed for a good strong wind. Critics today (68) that the oil industry has also been praying for something just like it -some political or military (69) that might produce a windfall-a rise in oil prices and profits

31、. The oil companies deny that this is so. In Congress, critics of the oil companies have proposed a (70) on such profits. The debate on rising oil price will go on for some time, and most likely we will hear more and more about windfall profits. AwasteBpurchaseCearnDomit 5.Passage Three The wanderin

32、g ship was a dramatic symbol for a problem plaguing our age. In 1987, the ship, loaded with thousands of tons of New York garbage, spent weeks wandering from one port to another in search of a dump before finally returning home, mission unaccomplished. New York, like other communities throughout the

33、 world is running out of space to put its trash. As throwaway societies, the US and other industrialized countries expect their garbage to be picked up by trucks that magically transported the refuse to some out-of-sight incinerator(焚化炉) or dump. But in the developing counties of Asia, Africa and La

34、tin America, thousands of tons of trash collected daily are thrown into open dumps, where it feeds huge populations of rats that swarm through poor neighborhoods. The world is literally swimming in garbage, says a scientist, Communities worldwide are being forced to confront the problem. Green Peace

35、 spokesman Bryan Bence adds, The crisis in garbage stems in part from the fact that weve ignored long-term disposal problem in favor of cheap quick fixes. The garbage glut (过选剩) has inspired many communities in the U.S., Japan and Western Europe to start recycling programs. Once considered a curious

36、 counter culture activity recycling has moved firmly into the mainstream. Recycling involves separating usable products from trash, processing them so they can be substituted for more expensive raw materials and returning them to the marketplace as parts of new products. Many countries now have mand

37、atory recycling programs, and others plan to follow the trend soon. Most notably, Japan has stood out as a model and leader of the waste management trend, recycling an estimated 65 percent of its waste. Thats what we should do, to the garbage crisis, says David Antonioli, a staff member with the New

38、 York Public Interest Research Corp. The earth is not a dump!Which country is most successful in garbage management AJapanBAmericaCIndiaDBangladesh 6.Passage Five One of the most strikingly apparent instances of extrasensory perception is the precognitive experience, when a person has a compelling p

39、erception of a coming disaster, news of death of a loved one, or a communication from a long-lost friend, and the predicted event then happens. Many who have had such experiences report that the emotional intensity of the precognition and its subsequent verification provide an overpowering sense of

40、contact with another realm of reality. I have had such an experience myself. Many years ago, I awoke in the middle of night in a cold sweat, with a certain knowledge that a close relative had suddenly died. I was so gripped with the haunting intensity of the experience that I was afraid to place a l

41、ong-distance phone call, (for fear that the relative would trip over the telephone cord or something and make the experience a self-fulfilling prediction). In fact, the relative is alive and well, and whatever psychological roots the experience may have, it was not a reflection of an imminent event

42、in the real world. However, suppose the relative had in fact died that night. You would have had a difficult time convincing me that it was merely coincidence. But it is easy to calculate that if each American has such a premonitory experience a few times in his lifetime, the actual statistics alone

43、 will produce a few apparent precognitive events somewhere in America each year. We can calculate that this must occur fairly frequently, but to the rare person who dreams of disaster, followed rapidly by its realization, it is uncanny and awesome. Such a coincidence must happen to someone every few

44、 months. But those who experience a correct precognition understandably resist its explanation by coincidence. After my experience I did not write a letter to an institute of psychology relating a compelling predictive dream that was not borne out by reality. That is not a memorable letter. But had

45、the death I dreamt actually occurred, such a letter would have been marked down as evidence for precognition. The hits are recorded; the misses are not. Thus human nature unconsciously conspires to produce a biased reporting of the frequency of such events.The author _ Atries to criticize the false

46、belief in precognitive experiencesBis puzzled by the mysteriousness of precognitive experiencesCprovides proof for precognitive experiencesDis haunted by precognitive experiences 7. One of the most widely discussed subjects these days is. energy crisis. Automobile drivers cannot get gasoline; homeow

47、ners may not get enough heating oil; factories are (56) by a fuel shortage. The crisis has (57) questions about the large oil companies and windfall (58) . Critics of the oil industry charge that the major companies are getting richer because of the oil shortage. Shortage, of course, drives prices u

48、p. As oil prices rise, the critics say, the oil companies will make more money (windfall profits) without doing a thing to (59) the extra cash. Windfall profits are sudden unearned profits-profits made (60) luck, or some special turn of events. The word itself tells what windfall means-something blown down by the wind, such as trees, or fruit (61) from trees. But the word has taken on a special meaning. This meaning (getting something unearned) was first used in medieval England. This is (62) it started: at that time much of the l

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