基础英语Ⅱ下册模拟试题(第二套)_第1页
基础英语Ⅱ下册模拟试题(第二套)_第2页
基础英语Ⅱ下册模拟试题(第二套)_第3页
基础英语Ⅱ下册模拟试题(第二套)_第4页
全文预览已结束

下载本文档

版权说明:本文档由用户提供并上传,收益归属内容提供方,若内容存在侵权,请进行举报或认领

文档简介

1、基础英语下册模拟试题(第二套)I. Word explanation. Directions: Choose the best explanation for the italicized expression in each sentence from the explanations offered. 1. the same solemn oath our forebears prescribed nearly a century and three-quarters ago2. and it is still sightly 3. are you going steady4. The c

2、onversation was on wings 5. as the Jews live in a self-contained community A. pleasant to the sightB. metaphor,comparing conversation to a bird flying and soaringIt means the conversation soon became spirited and excitingC. set down or imposeD. selfsufficient;having within oneself or itself all that

3、 is necessaryE. (American colloquialism)date someone of the opposite sex regularly and exclusively:be sweethearts II. Understanding cultural information. Directions: There are 5 sentences in this part, and for each sentence, there is a bracket. Beneath each sentence, there are four choices marked A,

4、 B, C, D. Choose the best answer according to the background information concerning the textbook. 1. The Lady of the Camellias was written by a famous French writer called_ .A. James Joyce B. Oscar Wilde C. AlexandreDumas fils D. Evelyn Herald2. King Lear was written by_ .A. Oscar WildeB. Shakespear

5、eC. Alexandre DumasD. W. H. Auden3. What's the religious belief of John F. Kennedy ?A. BuddhismB. ChristianityC. Protestant D. Roman Catholic4. John F. Kennedy was assassinated in_ .A. New YorkB. BrooklynC. DallasD Los Angeles5. Adam's apple is an allusion in_ . A. Greek mythologyB. Animal F

6、airC. Profiles in courageD. BibleIII. Paraphrase the following sentences. 1. People with brown skins are next door to invisible.2. But this peaceful revolution of hope cannot become the prey of hostile powers.3. They rise out of the earth, they sweat and starve for a few years, and then they sink ba

7、ck into the nameless mounds of the graveyard.4. Boy and man, I had been through it often before.5. I think we'd better call it night.IV. Try to figure out the rhetorical device used in each sentence. 1. The wind sounded like the roar of a train passing a few yards away. 2. And so, my fellow Amer

8、icans, ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country.3. Still, a white skin is always fairly conspicuous. 4. I have an unending love affair with dictionaries5. the conquered in the end conquering the conqueror.VCloze. Directions: Choose the best answer for each blank

9、 in the Answer Sheet. Max lives in an upper middle-class housing estate. His neighbours are mostly bank managers, business executives, airline pilots and the 1 , but Max's seven-bedroom house worth $ 80,000 is the largest in the area. 2 outside the house are Max's $ 7000 sports car and his w

10、ife's Morris Mini. Indoors is a 150 colour TV set and the family's pride a circular bath with gold-plated taps. There are also many laboursaving 3 and luxury furniture. How can a plasterer 4 all this? The answer, says Max, is hard work. In partnership with another plasterer, Max does contrac

11、t plastering jobs for a firm. The owner of the firm 5 them as human machines, the best and quickest in the trade, who can do as much in two days as any two-man team can in two weeks.How do they 6 it? Not by working overtime. They work a normal eight-hour day, five days a week. The secret 7 in Max

12、9;s hod in which he carries the plaster to the site of the job. Max's is a superhod it contains double the usual quantity of plaster, and Max, a strong fellow, runs when he carries it. More time is thus 8 to get on with the plastering. Besides, neither man wastes time smoking, and they 9 their l

13、unch break to a total of an hour a day. Now Max earns over $ 800 a week which is four times the average weekly pay in Britaintoday, and if he gets as 10 as $ 15, it's a disaster.1. A likeB kindC class D same2. A StoppedB StoppingC ParkedD Parking3. A objectsB devicesC articlesD materials4. A buy

14、B useC affordD provide5. A tellsB saysC comparesD describes6. A manageB getC doD finish7. A isB liesC hidesD falls8. A leftB neededC spentD kept9. A haveB cutC missD spend10. A muchB littleC moreD lessVI. Reading comprehension. Passage oneNo one should be forced to wear a uniform under any circumsta

15、nce. Uniforms are demanding to the human spirit and totally unnecessary in a democratic society. Uniforms tell the world that the person who wears one has no value as an individual but only lives to function as a part of a whole. The individual in a uniform loses all self-worth. There are those who

16、say that wearing a uniform gives a person a sense of identification with a larger, more important concept. What could be more important than the individual himself? If an organization is so weak that it must rely on cloth and buttons to inspire its members, that organization has no right to continue

17、 its existence. Others say that the practice of making persons wear uniforms, say in a school, eliminates all envy and competition in the matter of dress, such that a poor person who cannot afford good-quality clothing is not to be belittled by a wealthy person who wears expensive quality clothing.

18、Those persons conveniently ignore such critical concepts as freedom of choice, motivation, and individuality. If all persons were to wear the same clothing, why would anyone strive to be better? It is only a short step from forcing everyone to drive the same car, have the same type of foods. When th

19、is happens, all incentive to improve ones life is removed. Why would parents bother to work hard so that their children could have a better life than they had when they know that their children are going to be forced to have exactly the same life that they had? Uniforms also hurt the economy. Right

20、now, billions of dollars are spent on the fashion industry yearly. Thousands of persons are employed in designing, creating and marketing different types of clothing. If everyone were forced to wear uniforms, artistic personnel would be unnecessary. Sales persons would be superfluous as well; why bo

21、ther to sell the only items that are available? The wearing of uniforms would destroy the fashion industry, which in turn would have a ripple effect on such industries as advertising and promotion. Without advertising, newspapers, magazines, and television would not be able to remain in business. On

22、e entire information and entertainment industry would collapse. 1. The authors primary purpose in writing this passage was to _. A. plead for the abolishment of uniformsB. show that uniforms are not possible in a democratic societyC. advocate stronger governmental controls on the wearing of uniforms

23、D. convince the reader that uniforms have more disadvantages than advantages 2. Why does the author discuss forcing everyone to buy the same car or eat the same food? A. To show that freedom of choice is absolute.B. To show that the government has interfered too much in the lives of individual.C. To

24、 suggest what would happen if uniforms became compulsory.D. To predict the way the society will be in the next few generations. 3. Which of the following statements is NOT true according to the author? A. The person who wears a uniform has no self-worth.B. Wearing a uniform gives a person a sense of

25、 identification with a larger concept.C. Uniforms will hurt one entire information and entertainment industry.D. Envy and competition are incentive to improve ones life. 4. The word “superfluous” (Para. 3) most probably means _. A. indispensable B. available C. surplus D. supplementary 5. The next p

26、aragraph in this passage might discuss_.A. the positive effects of wearing uniformsB. more negative effects of wearing uniformsC. alternative to wearing uniformsD. the legal rights of those not wishing to wear uniformsPassage twoWestern airliner manufacturers seem to be tripping over themselves in t

27、heir eagerness to sign collaborative agreements with Asian partners as a low-cost route to developing new airliners. Their potential Asian partners seem to be tripping over themselves to sign such agreements, as a low-cost route to acquiring new airliner technology. If they are not careful the two s

28、ides will end up tripping over each other: the one by selling its birth-right for short-term gain, the other by trying to break into a market which isnt big enough to sustain it. Technology transfer works in a growing market, where the aspirations of the new entrant receiving that technology can be

29、met through expansion. The airliner market is not such a device. Even the most optimistic projections of airliner sales for the next 20 years show that airliner manufacture can only be profitable if a small number of aircraft builders share the available sales. It follows that if new manufacturers c

30、ome into the market and take sales, their sales must come from substitution, not expansion. Given the complexity of todays airliners, it is unlikely that any new entrant will have both the financial and technical resources to come into the market without the involvement of an established manufacture

31、r. In the short term, such involvement may not be to the exclusive benefit of the new entrant: most of the established manufacturers are searching for ways to reduce costs of manufacture. In the short term, it can be of benefit to an established Western manufacturer to have either components of comp

32、lete air frames made or assembled in lower-wage economics such a China, Taiwan or Korea, while retaining the design, development and marketing of aircraft for itself. It would be a very unwise Western manufacturer which did not heed the fact that these developing economies are acquiring skills ( lik

33、e computing ) at least as quickly as they are acquiring skills in metallbashing. The danger comes when the new entrant no longer needs the established Western partner because it has acquired the technical and intellectual ability to design and build its own aircraft. An Asian partner may well find i

34、tself in the happy position of having the low-cost labour base, the high-cost technology base and the vital financial base to build a new airliner. 6. The authors attitude towards Western/eastern collaboration can be depicted as _. A. positive B. progressive C. conservative D. negative 7. “The airli

35、ner market is not such a device ” means that the airliner market _. A. does not encourage technology transfer B. is too limited to offer chances of success C. requires hi-tech rather than unaccepted devices D. is full of competitions even for new entrants 8. Established manufacturers search for part

36、ners in order to _. A. save the cost of the airframe B. improve some aircraft components C. save the cost of labour D. develop new technology 9. According to the author,a wise established manufacturer should _. A. try to benefit from both financial and technical resources B. break up his partnership

37、 with the East once profits are made C. keep a tight told over hi-tech development and marketing of airliners D. collaborate with Asian partners for a short time 10. The word “base” in the last paragraph represents_. A. a production place B. the initial operation of building aircraft C. a research i

38、nstitute D. a position where to start building VII. Translation. A. Directions: Translate the following Chinese sentences into English.1. 但他最为痛恨的还是他自己,因为他眼见着自己的有生之年,除了赢利而带来一时陶醉之外,都在毫无意义地白白流逝。 2. 当然,这种对他人、对自己以及对自己的产品所怀有的憎恨和轻蔑,多半是无意识的,只是偶尔上升到意识中来,但也因憎怒过甚而一闪而过。 3. 人只要不剥削他人,就得靠劳动来求生存。不论其劳动方式是多么原始,多么简单,仅凭从事生产性劳动这一事实,就足以使人超出动物界。把人定义为“从事生产的动物”是很有道理的。4. 离异正在改变美国儿童的生活。第二次世界大战后的一代人中,百分之八十以上的儿童都在亲生父母身边长大。今天只有半数是如此。

温馨提示

  • 1. 本站所有资源如无特殊说明,都需要本地电脑安装OFFICE2007和PDF阅读器。图纸软件为CAD,CAXA,PROE,UG,SolidWorks等.压缩文件请下载最新的WinRAR软件解压。
  • 2. 本站的文档不包含任何第三方提供的附件图纸等,如果需要附件,请联系上传者。文件的所有权益归上传用户所有。
  • 3. 本站RAR压缩包中若带图纸,网页内容里面会有图纸预览,若没有图纸预览就没有图纸。
  • 4. 未经权益所有人同意不得将文件中的内容挪作商业或盈利用途。
  • 5. 人人文库网仅提供信息存储空间,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对用户上传分享的文档内容本身不做任何修改或编辑,并不能对任何下载内容负责。
  • 6. 下载文件中如有侵权或不适当内容,请与我们联系,我们立即纠正。
  • 7. 本站不保证下载资源的准确性、安全性和完整性, 同时也不承担用户因使用这些下载资源对自己和他人造成任何形式的伤害或损失。

评论

0/150

提交评论