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1、2019 年大学英语六级模拟题及答案 (六)Part Reading Comprehension (35 minutes)Directions : There are 4 passages in this part. Eachpassage is followed by some questions or unfinishedstatements. For each of them there are four choices marked A),B), C) and D). You should decide on the best choice and markthe correspond

2、ing letter on the Answer Sheet with a singleline through the centre.Passage 1Questions 21 to 25 are based on the following passage :According to Forrester Research, 8.6 million onlineshoppers access the Internet via a high-speed connection,compared to 12 million using dial-up. Taken alone, thosefind

3、ings are hardly groundbreaking. What s noteworthy is therest of the picture that emerges from that study : Thosebroadband users are younger, richer , and better informedthan their narrowband counterparts. They spend more time andmoney online and are more likely to buy customized productsand services

4、.So why hasnt the Internet become the focus forbroadband companies seeking to establish relationships with ademographic that has demonstrated a preference for theirproduct? Simply put, until recently, their attempts fell flat.Just over a year ago, our agency launched an onlineperformance-based e-mar

5、keting campaign to promote a broadbandservice. Despite engaging creative and a compelling offer, itmet with resounding silence. Six months later, the responsewas only marginally better. So we were only cautiouslyoptimistic two months later when we launched another campaignfor the same advertiser, us

6、ing the same offer. This time, itwas a success. Response rates tripled and the customeracquisition cost dropped from $300 to under $100.Clearly, the floodgates have opened and the most sought-after consumers are rushing through to broadband. And whilethe surge in response wasn t a complete surprise

7、given theemphasis placed on marketing broadband services, it wasenough to make us curious about what other factors were atplay. What we discovered was a scenario where so many peoplehave experienced broadband s superiority at work, school,and even in friends homes that they know what they remissing.

8、According to U.S. News & World Report, some 20 millionhouseholds nationwide now have broadband, with another100,000 signing up each week. That saturation has created amarket of increasingly discontent dial-up subscribers forbroadband companies to reach. Imagine the impact when - asdial-up users impa

9、tiently wait for Web pages to load - an adpops up promising lightning-fast access. Their responsestarts an on going relationship managed through newslettersand other e-mail communications designed to keep theminformed about value-added services, special promotions, etc.Not only is it a demographic p

10、re-disposed to online CRM, itis also one that is far from oversold. In fact, less thanone-third of U.S. households will subscribe to a broadbandservice by 2006. And as services designed specifically forbroadband increase and support for dial-up declines, the 42percent of Internet users who said they

11、 didn t needbroadband will become receptive to a well-focused CRM program.But it won t last forever. While the window of opportunityto reach broadband buyers online is open, it s not likely tostay that way. Broadband may be the current heir apparent forconnectivity, but wireless has given every indi

12、cation it willbe a sleeper hit, emerging from nowhere to take the top spot.In short, the time for broadband companies to establishonline customer relationships is now - before the windowslams shut.21. What is NOT mentioned as the result of ForresterResearch in the first paragraph?A) A lot of online

13、shoppers access the Internet bybroadband.B) Broadband users get more information than the dial-upusers.C) It is probable for broadband users to buy the productsspecially made for them.D) It is the first time for people to find out the numberof broadband and narrowband users.22. What did the online p

14、erformance-based e-marketingcampaign bring at first?A) The promotion of a broadband service.B) Cautious responses.C) No response at all.D) Some marginal responses.23. Why did another campaignbecome a success later?A) Because the agency has used a compelling offer.B) Because people have enjoyed the b

15、roadband sadvantages in their daily life.C) Because the agency has spent a lot of money on theadvertisements.D) Because people become curious about the broadband.24. It can be inferred from the passage that_.A) Few is likely to use dial-up in the future.B) Broadband companies should establish online

16、 customerrelationships now.C) About 20 million households nationwide now havebroadband.D) People design more services specially for broadband.25. What is the main idea of this passage?A) How Forrester Research got the valuable information.B) Why people want to use broadband.C) How broadband services

17、 find success in online CRM.D) Broadband services have great influence on people.Passage 2Questions 26 to 30 are based on the following passage :The following passage is an opening speech by LordWeidenfeld, founder of the Europaeum and Chairman, Weidenfeldand Nicolson Publishers I am very privileged

18、 and gratified totalk to you today. I think it is most appropriate to havethis meeting at the Humboldt University, Berlin, because ofthe impulse to the creation to the European network, to thesequence of events, and that great turning point of history,which is symbolised by the fall of the Berlin wa

19、ll. It wasthat particular impulse that started an enterprise to bringtogether teachers and students in, first of all, WesternEuropean Universities to offer resources to thoseuniversities which had only recently emerged in other partsof Europe. So we started the Europaeum network. Sixuniversities joi

20、ned us initially. We then approached theUniversity of Prague to join us for the beginning of anenlargement, which would also to include universitiespreviously behind the Iron Curtain. The group that weassembled around the Europaeum logo is by no means exclusiveand we would very much like to enlarge

21、it. Theterm variable geometry is very fashionable ininternational politics, but I think it also applies to ourintentions, we want it to expand and include otheruniversities either as full members or associates so freestanding research institutes.Thanks to the generosity of our German sponsorDaimlerC

22、hrysler, particularly the Davies Group of theorganization, Dr Klaus Mangold and Dr Bensel, we are nowengaging in a study of the roles of the universities in thefuture. We have a number of ideas regarding how to set aboutanswering these three major questions : What is the futurerole of the university

23、? If we have established what it is,how do we equip it to produce the resources and do its joband what role does it play in our society? We hope to have anumber of ongoing conferences and exchanges of views on thesubject thanks to the friendly and co-operation of HumboldtUniversity.We are now in a n

24、ew era since 11 September. I think thatone day we will regard that approximate decade from the fallof the wall in Berlin and the destruction of the World TradeCentre in New York. Here it is important that we play ourrole. In what we now see in the plateau of Central SoutheastAsia, a holy alliance of

25、 barbarism, fanaticism and high techproduct of the information society. The University, by havingas a component an important dosage of humanism, makes all thedifference between a Robespierre like revolution or acontinuation of the human spirit with the new resources andtools, carefully husbanded, mo

26、nitored and controlled.Thanks to President of Humboldt University, ProfessorMichael Kreile, Professor Pera, Paul Flather and colleagues.26. What is the attitude of the speaker toward thedevelopment of Europaeum?A) Europaeum is open to almost all universities.B) Europaeum is exclusive to some enterpr

27、ises.C) Europaeum is open only to research institutes.D) Europaeum is exclusive to any other universities.27. What can be concluded about the Europaeum logo fromthe first paragraph?A) Being no exclusive.B) Bringing together teachers and students in WesternEuropean Universities.C) Enlarging Europaeum

28、.D) Having variable geometry.28. What is the subject ofthis conference?A) How to equip a university to produce the resources.B) How to enlarge a university to some extent.C) How to cooperate with other universities.D) A study of the roles of the universities in the future.29. What kind of organizati

29、on does the speaker hope tohave?A) An organization in which they play an important role.B) An organization full of humanism.C) An organization of revolution.D) An organization full of information.30. What is the purpose of the organization?A) To continue and develop human spirit with newresources an

30、d tools.B) To exchange views with different universities.C) To unite universities and enterprises.D) To create the European network to continue humanism.Passage 3Questions 31 to 35 are based on the following passage :When a heart-lung machine was invented that could takeover the job of the heart, pu

31、t oxygen into the blood and keepthe circulation going during surgery, surgeons could stop theheart while they were cutting and suturing. Recently, incertain cases, some surgeons have begun operating without thepump while the heart continues to beat.“The benefits of off -pump surgery are tremendous f

32、orpatients who meet the criteria for this procedure, ” says Dr.Jim Zellner with the Alliance of Cardiac, Thoracic andVascular Surgeons. “There is less need for blood products,less chance of complications during and after surgery,earlier recovery and earlier return to regular activity. ”Seawood Murra

33、y feels he was led by God to find Dr.Zellner and Memorial Hospital and to have off-pump surgery.A veteran of the United States Navy as a nuclear weaponssecurity officer and commanding officer of a mine assemblygroup for more than 31 years, Seawood has never complainedabout stress or pain. He saw thr

34、ee tours of duty off thecoast of Vietnam.However, after suffering from chest pain for almost ayear and being misdiagnosed with chronic heartburn, Seawoodknew something was seriously w rong. At the Veteran shospital in Murfreesboro, he learned he had heart disease andwas told to come back in six week

35、s.“I didn t want to wait that long and asked for areferral to The Chattanooga Heart Institute, ” Seawood says.“Dr. Noel Hunt found tha t 40% of my heart was not gettingthe amount of blood it needed to operate properly. ” Fourdays later, Seawood was undergoing off-pump triple bypasssurgery at Memoria

36、l Hospital under the hand of Dr. Zellner.“I was sitting up that evening, walking around the secondday and feeling good enough to go home the third day, but Istayed till the fourth morning, ” Seawood says. “Two otherswho had on-pump bypass surgery the same day I had mine off-pump were barely walking

37、when I left. ”31. How do surgeons usually operate on a heart-attackeraccording to the passage?A) They operate without a pump.B) They operate with a heart-lung machine.C) They operate by stopping the heart.D) They operate with nothing but cutting and suturing.32. Which of the following statements is

38、NOT the benefitof off-pump surgery?A) The heart-attack patients will be recovered in one day.B) There are fewer chances for heart-attack patients tosuffer from other new diseases during the course of hearattack.C) Off-pump surgery needs fewer blood products.D) The heart-attack patients will be well

39、again earlier.33. What s wrong with Seawood Murray?A) He suffered from chronic heartburn.B) He suffered from heart attack.C) He had three tours of duty off the coast of Vietnam.D) His heart couldn t get blood it needed to operate.34. What did Dr. Zellner do for Seawood Murray s disease?A) Dr. Zellne

40、r gave him a surgery with a heart-lungmachine.B) Dr. Zellner diagnosed his disease as chronic heartburn.C) Dr. Zellner gave him an off-pump triple bypass surgery.D) Dr. Zellner referred him to another hospital.35. What can we learn from the last paragraph?A) Seawood Murray could hardly walk four day

41、s after thesurgery.B) Seawood Murray got recovered more slowly than otherpatients.C) Seawood Murray felt well and went home the third dayafter the surgery.D) Seawood Murray went home the fourth day after thesurgery.Passage 4Questions 36 to 40 are based on the following passage :The key element to su

42、ccessful interviewing is not yourexperience, your grades,what classes you took, yourextracurricular activities, or any of the other basicnecessities. Those skills are what got you the interview. Thekey element to uccessful interviewing can be summed up in oneword: attitude. If you want to rise above

43、 others with betterexperience, better grades, or better anything, you will needto work on developing a highly positive work attitude.Your attitude determines whether you will “make the cut ”or be discarded. Remember, there are plenty of competitorswith the ability to do almost any given job- especia

44、lly atthe entry level. The way most employers differentiate at theentry level is by candidates attitudes towa rd the job. Yourattitude is often what recruiters will remember when the dusthas settled after reviewing ten, twenty, or even one hundredcandidates-the one who was sincerely willing to put f

45、orthhis very best effort. If you have the attitude of wanting todo your very best for the company, of being focused on thecompanys needs, of putting yourself forth as the person whowill be committed and dedicated to fulfilling their needs,you will likely be the one chosen.Why is attitude so importan

46、t? Because most companiesalready have their full share of multi-talented superstarswho care about no one but themselves. Ask any manager who themost valuable member of his team is, and he will point not tothe overrated superstar, but to the person who has the “cand o” attitude, the person who can be

47、 counted on in anysituation, the person who truly strives for excellence. Giveme a team player who is achieving at 99% and I will take herover a flashy superstar who is running at 50% efficiency anyday of the week. And so will 99% of all hiring managers.So dont worry if you are not “superstar ” qual

48、ity. Ifyou can show me, in your words and actions, that you areready to put forth your very best effort toward achievingexcellence, you will be chosen over the superstar. You canshow your winning attitude in the way you present yourself.Incorporate the actual words “positive attitude, ”“excellence,

49、” and “striving to be my best ” into yourinterview language. Then show by your stories and exampleshow these words positively affect your life. Show me when andwhere and how you have put forth extra effort above andbeyond the call of duty. Show me how you beat a deadline, howyou excelled in a projec

50、t, or how you made a difference bygoing the extra mile. If you can show me, by words andexamples, your “can do ” attitude, it is you I will hire,while all of the superstars will receive polite rejectionletters to add to their growing collections.36. What is the key element to successful interviewing

51、according to this passage?A) Courses taken before.B) A varied experience.C) A positive work attitude.D) Interviewees capability.37. Which of the following statement is correct in theauthor s opinion?A) There are inadequate competitors with the ability todo almost any given job especially at the entr

52、y level.B) Most interviewers generally depend on the candidates attitudes toward the job to choose the employees.C) Most employers tell the difference between candidatesby their entry level.D) Better experience and better grades become the mostimportant elements to be chosen. 38. Who is the mostvalu

53、able member of his team to a manager?A) The multi-talented superstar.B) The person who tries his best for excellence.C) The person who counts on himself and does notcooperate with others.D) The flashy star who makes the company famous.39. In an interview, what makes you leave a goodimpression on the

54、 interviewer?A) Your boasting words.B) The words such as positive attitude, excellence, andstriving to be my best.C) Your own stories.D) Words and examples to show your positive attitude.40. What is the best title for this passage?A) Your Attitude Determines Whether You Will “Make TheCut” or Be Disc

55、arded.B) How to Find a Good Job.C) The Most Important Aspect of Interviewing.D) A Successful Interviewing.答案部分Part Passage One短文大意本文讨论的是宽带服务是如何通过在线 CRM中获得成功的。文章提到了通过调查他们发现很多人利用因特网在网上购物,他们发动了一场基于网络的网上购物运动,目的是为了扩展宽带网业务,结果没有得到任何的回应。但当人们体会到宽带网的优越性之后,很多人放弃了拨号上网的方式成为宽带网用户。宽带网 是当前青睐的上网方式。21. 答案:D。【参考译文】第一段

56、的 Forrester 调查结果中没有提到的是什么 ?【试题分析】判断推理题。【详细解答】 A)很多网上购物者是通过宽带上网的。 B)宽带网用户比拨号上网用户得到信息更多, C)宽带网用户更可能使用定做的产品,这些都在文章的第一段被提到,故不是答案。22. 答案:C。【参考译文】基于网络的网上购物运动首先没有得到的是什么 ?【试题分析】细节推理题。【详细解答】 A)改善了宽带网业务, B)小心的回应, D)一些无关紧要的回应,这些都不是基于网络的网上购物运动首先获得的结果,故不是答案。23. 答案:B。【参考译文】 后来另一次运动之所以成功的原因是什么。【试题分析】判断推理题。【详细解答】从 4、5、6 段中可得知 A)、C)、D)中的内容与原文不符。24. 答案:A。【参考译文】这段文章能够推论出 _。【试题分析】判断推理题。【详细解答】 B)、C)、D)中的信息能够直接在文章中找到不属于推

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