



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、英语部分练专项练习(五PartIPassageQuestions1to5arebasedonthe followingThere are three basic ways in which individual economic eract with another. They are the market system, the administered system, and the traditional In 英语部分练专项练习(五PartIPassageQuestions1to5arebasedonthe followingThere are three basic ways in
2、which individual economic eract with another. They are the market system, the administered system, and the traditional In a market system, individual economic units are free eract among each other the market place. Tran bartereconomy,realgoodions may takeplace throughbarter or moneyexchange.In a ch
3、as automobiles, shoes, and pizzas are traded each other. Obviously, finding somebody who wants to trade an old car in for a sailboat may not always be an easy task. Hence roduction of money as mediumof exchangeeasesions ternative to the market system is administered control by some agency over ions.
4、 This agency will e laws ds as to how much each and hould be produced, exchanged, and consumed by each economic Central planning may ay of administering such an economy.The central drawn up by ernment shows the amount of each commodity produced by variousfirmsanddistributedtodifferenthouseholdsforIn
5、 atraditional society,productionand consumptionpatterns erned by s place with the economic system is fixed by parentage, religion, custom. ions take place on the basis of tradition, too. elonging to certain group or caste may have an obligation to care for ersons, provide with food and shelter, care
6、 for their nd provide for their education. Clearly, asystemwhereeverydeci difficult to achieve.1.What isthemain is made on the basis of tradition alone progress may e ofthehe science of B)Tooutline types of economic Toargueforthesuperiorityofoneeconomicsystem. To compare barter and money exchange ma
7、rkets.he second paragraph, by which of the following could the word real best A)High B) C)D) 3.Accordingtothepassage, abarter economycan lead A)speedofB) C) D)difficultiesforthe4.According to the passage who has the greatest degree of control on an administered A) Individual households.B) Small busi
8、nesses.C) Major companies.D) The 5.Whichofthefollowing ementsisA)Thecentralplandrawnupbythe e as a whole.ernment is mainlybased on theneeds ofTheeconomic system inChinaisbasedonthe traditionalInamarketsystem, ionsare controlled byInatraditionalsociety,economydevelopsveryPassageQuestions6to10arebased
9、5.Whichofthefollowing ementsisA)Thecentralplandrawnupbythe e as a whole.ernment is mainlybased on theneeds ofTheeconomic system inChinaisbasedonthe traditionalInamarketsystem, ionsare controlled byInatraditionalsociety,economydevelopsveryPassageQuestions6to10arebasedonthe followingheatmosphere, carb
10、on dioxide )acts rather likeay the he roof of a greenhouse which allows the suns rays to enter prevents the heat from .According to a weather experts prediction, atmosphere will be 3 he year n it is today, if man continues burnfuelsat thepresentrate. If thiswarmingupplace, the ice he poles would o m
11、elt, thus raising sea level metres and severely flooding coastal cities, Also, the increase in atmospheric temperature would lead to great he climate of the northern siblyresultingterationofearths-chieffood-growinghe past, concern about a man-made warming of the earth has concentrated on the Arctic
12、because theAntarctic is much colder and has a much thicker heet. But weather experts are ying more attention to West Antarctic, ay affected by only a few degrees of warming: in other words, by a warming on the t sibly take he next fifty years from the burning of fuels. pictures t large areas ofAntar
13、ctic ice are already disappearing. The available t a warming has taken place. This fits the t dioxidewarmstheHowever, most of the fuel is he northern hemisphere,where seem to be falling. Scientists t up to now natural theweather have exceeded thosecaused byman.The questionis:Whichnatural cause has m
14、ost effect on the weather?sibility is the ehavior of the sun. Astronomers at one ionhave studied the hot spots tis,the relatively less spots)on the sun.As the sun es, every 27.5 days, itpresents hotterto the earth, and different aspects to different parts of the earth. This to have a considerable ef
15、fect on the distribution of the earths atmospheric and consequently on wind circulation. The sun is also variable over a long term: its heat output goes up and down in cycles, the latest trend being downward.Scientists are now finding mutual relations n s or solar-eractions and the actual climate ov
16、er many thousand of years, including the last Age.The problem t the s are t the world should be entering new IceAge and it is ay of solving this theoretical difficulty is to me delay of thousands of years while the solar e the inertia of the s climate. If this is right, the warming effect of carbon
17、dioxide might thus be serving as a useful counter-balance to the suns diminishing heat.6. It can be concluded t a concentration of carbon .he preventthesunsrays from reachingthemeanawarming heaccountreathehenorthern raisethetemperatureofthe7.Thearticlewas writtento.6. It can be concluded t a concent
18、ration of carbon .he preventthesunsrays from reachingthemeanawarming heaccountreathehenorthern raisethetemperatureofthe7.Thearticlewas writtento.A)thegreenhouse B)thesolareffects ontheC) thesof D)thecauses affectinghe northern hemisphere, .8.Although the fuel consumption is greater there seem to be
19、falling. This ismainlybecause thelevels ofcarbondioxideare siblybecausetheice hepoles are exclusivelyduetotheeffect oftheinertia oftheearthspartlydue tohe output of solar energy s,scientistsareoftheopinion9.On thebasis oftheir t.A)theclimateof theworldshould ing B)it willtake thousandsof years fro t
20、he inertiaof theearthsclimate to take the manmadewarmingeffecthelpstoincreasethesolareffect the new IceAge will be delayed by the greenhouse effecta.aA)thebestway ethecoolingeffect wouldbetoburnmoreB)icewouldsooncover thenorthern C)theincreasedlevelsofcarbondioxide even more quicklyheatmosphere coul
21、d warm up the D)thegreenhouseeffectcouldwork totheadvantageofthePassageQuestions11to15arebasedonthefollowingBefore the 1850s the United Ses had a number of small colleges, most of them dating from colonial days. They were small,church-connected institutions primaryconcern wastothemoralcharacterofthe
22、irThroughout Europe, institutions of higher learning had developed, bearing the ancient name of university. In Germany a different kind of university had developed. The German university was concerned primarily with creating and knowledge,not morals. n midcentury of the 1800s, nnine thousand young A
23、mericans, dissatisfied their training at home, Germany for advanced study. Some of them returned es venerable()collegesHarvard,Yale, Columbiaandtransform o modern universities The s broke all ties with the churches brought in a new kind culty. Professors were hired for their knowledge of subject, no
24、t because they were of the proper fai disciplining students. The new principle wasnd had a strong arm for a university was to tknowledge as well as passsubject, not because they were of the proper fai disciplining students. The new principle wasnd had a strong arm for a university was to tknowledge
25、as well as pass it on,and this called for a faculty ed of scholars. Drilling and learning by rote (死记硬背 ) were replaced by theGerman method of lecturing, in which the professors own research was presented in Graduate training leading to the Ph. D, highest level of advanced scholarly establishment of
26、 the seminar yze,and conducttheirown At the same time, the new university an ancient degree signifying the roduced. With the learned to graduate y expanded in size and course breaking y out of the old, constricted curriculum of mathematics, rhetoric, and music.of Harvard pioneered the elective syste
27、m, by students were able to choose their own courses of study.The notion of major fields of study emerged. The new goal was to make the university relevant to the real pursuits of the world. Paying close heed to the practical needs of society, the new universities trained men and women to work at it
28、s tasks, with engineering students being the most characteristic of the new regime. Students were also trained as economists, architects, agriculturalists, so l welfare workers, and teachers.11.Thewordthis (sentence 8,Para. 2)refers towhichoftheCreatingand passingonknowledge. B)Drillingandlearning b
29、yDiscipliningD)moral .discussmoralB)studytheclassics,rhetoric, and studyoverseasD)workmore 13. It can be inferred from the passage CharacteristicofhighereducationEXCEPTA)theelective systemB)t before 1850, all of the following .C)strictdisciplineD)14. Those who favored the new university would be lik
30、ely to agree with which of the following sLearningisbestachievedthroughdisciplineandthemoral character ofstudentsshouldbetheprimary Highereducationshouldpreparestudentstocontributetosociety. Teachers should select their students courses.15.Whymany studentsdecided tostudy A)BecausethousandsofyoungAme
31、ricanswanted togo toGermanytoB)BecauseyoungAmericanswerenotsatisfiedwiththeirschoolsystem C)BecauseAmerican professors were not as good as those abroad.D)BecauseEuropeanuniversitieswere notconnected withhePassageQuestions16to20arebasedonthe followingThe nuclear age in which the human race is living,
32、 and may soon be dying, began teral public with the of an atom bomb on Hiroshima on 6 1945. But for nuclear scientists and for certain American authorities, d knownforsome tsuch aweapon An atom consists of a tiny core called the nucleus ectrons round it.The hydrogen atom, which is the simplestand li
33、ghtest, has onlyone Heavier atoms have more and more as they go up teral public with the of an atom bomb on Hiroshima on 6 1945. But for nuclear scientists and for certain American authorities, d knownforsome tsuch aweapon An atom consists of a tiny core called the nucleus ectrons round it.The hydro
34、gen atom, which is the simplestand lightest, has onlyone Heavier atoms have more and more as they go up the scale. thad to do with what goes on in nuclei was radioactivity, which is caused by being shot out of the nucleus. It was t a great deal of energy is locked up the nucleus, but until just befo
35、re the outbreak of the Second World War, there was way of releasing this energy in any ty.Arevolutionary discovery in certain , mass can be o energy in accordance Einsteins formula which t the energy generated is equal to the mass dby thesquare ofthe velocityofTheA-bomb, however, used a different s,
36、 depending upon s, called , a heavier o two lighter atoms. In general, in onstant rate which is slow radioactive this occurring in nature are concerned. But there is one form of uranium U235which, when it ispure, sets up a chain reactionwhich spreads like fire, with enormously greater raity.Itisthi
37、twas akingthe The political background of the atomic scientists defeat the Nazis. It was heldI think rightlywork was the determination to t a Nazi victory would be appalling disaster. It was also held, in Western t German scientists be well advanced towards making an A-bomb, t if they succeeded befo
38、re West did they would probably he war.When the war was over,it was to the complete astonishment of merican and British t Germans were nowhere near s, and, as everybody knows, the Germans defeated before any nuclear weapon had been made. But I do not t scientists of theWest can be blamed for thinkin
39、gthe work urgent and ne Einstein favored it.sary.When, however, the German war was finished, the great majority of those who had collaborated towards making the A-bomb t it should not used against the ,who were already on the verge (边缘) of defeat and, any case,did not constitute such a menace to the
40、 world as Hitler. Many of them urgent ions to theernment t, instead of the bomb as a weapon of war, they should after a public announcement, explode it a desert, t future control of nuclear energy should be he hands of ernational authority. Seven of the most eminent of nuclear scientists drew up wha
41、t is known as The Franck Report which they presented to the Secretary of War June 1945. This is a very admirable and far-, and if d won assentofthe ns,none ofoursubsequent terrorswouldhave 16. We may A)itis a t the writer s attitude the A bomb .sary B)it isa terriblethreat tothewholeof C)itplayed av
42、italpart indefeatingthe17.Accordingtothepassage, an atomisheavy D)itwasa wonderful.A)s alargenucleusB)itisC)itsnucleushas manyelectronsD)its nucleusshootsoutmany 18. The American and British scientists were astonished of theC)itplayed avitalpart indefeatingthe17.Accordingtothepassage, an atomisheavy
43、 D)itwasa wonderful.A)s alargenucleusB)itisC)itsnucleushas manyelectronsD)its nucleusshootsoutmany 18. The American and British scientists were astonished of the WorldWaragainstGermany.A)the Germans had been defeated without the use of nuclear weapons B)theWesterncountrieshadwonbeforetheyhadinvented
44、nuclearweapons C) they thought the Germans would probably whe warD)theGermanshad madelittle progressinnuclear19. According to the writer, most scientists who had aking the A bomb A) it t.a dangerous B) its use the , C)itwas a very inhumanetheGermanwarwas .20.Itistthenuclear B)wouldhavedeveloped theb
45、ombeven withouttheNazi C)would have made the bomb, timeconditions, but only for the use ernationalD)developedthebombbecausehoughtitandPartII21.The British the right to a free copy of every new book published intheUnitedA)contains B) C)retains D)22.The secretary_ the foreign minister an erview he was
46、 to A) reminded of B) red ) consulted 23.Theway ehavetowards ushowourselves.conceiveofB) consistC)confront withD)conform 24. I sup e some people create an idea of who they want to be and, they workoverB)liveoutD) getWith the economy of the country growing strong, themood is one of optimism .presidin
47、gB)C)floatingD) 26. These technological advan in communication theway people A)revolted B)C)adoptedD) 27. The workers of the textile mill t trade union leaders be elected from workshopsA)urgedB)C)combatedD) 28.It isofourcompanytogiverefundsifgoodsarefaulty.A)policyB) C)D)29. friendshelpedhimtogetapp
48、oedambassadortoFrance A)EfficientB)C)ImpressiveD)30.Theirambitiousschemes formakingmoneyA)tookachance B) came to C)oD)got tothe31.She knew who wrote the letter, so without opening it tore o A)in B) inC)in D)in 32.He had always been the way Ruth looked, and had never compliment .once paid her A)obliv
49、iousA)policyB) C)D)29. friendshelpedhimtogetappoedambassadortoFrance A)EfficientB)C)ImpressiveD)30.Theirambitiousschemes formakingmoneyA)tookachance B) came to C)oD)got tothe31.She knew who wrote the letter, so without opening it tore o A)in B) inC)in D)in 32.He had always been the way Ruth looked,
50、and had never compliment .once paid her A)oblivioustoB) guilty C)wary ofD) subject33.Familarity wi them appropria like a native.wide range of idiomatic s, the ability to use d of are among the distinguishing marks ofA)incontextB) in C)inplaceD) in 34.Wearecantsituationwillt emoryB) insearch ofC)inco
51、ntrol D)in needA)creditB) ernment isa C)modifyD)tisnotoriouslyhard 36.Bill is rich. His house is full of such as expensive high-techandall thelatestcomputerequipment. A) luxuries B) C) s 37.Sheisquitecapable, but theproblem t sheA)consistentB) C)beneficentD)38.Based on t every business is now free t
52、o formulate its own strategy light of the changing market, I would predict a market improvementheefficiency of Chinas economy.A)guidanceB)C.premiseD) 39.Nursesshoulddoalltheycan tomake theirpatients A.onboardB) ateisureD)at 40.The accused was to have been the leader of the plot to overthrow A)reconc
53、iledB)C)alleged D)41. She theletter,putheenvelopeand handed ittoher A)folded B) C)rolledD) he last century, new drugs have improved healththroughout the A)inconsistentlyB) C)notedlyD)43.Nowap earth ratherr tanic he rock come mostly from onn bacteria on Mars. A) configuration B) constitution C) D)44.
54、 When he went to the airport for the ticket, Tom t d for half a year.A) abolished B) C) amended 45.Sincetheinformationwas , we found A) C)sible46.There is no known cure for SARS, but doctors are ways to sufferers it.A)retardB)eliminateC)dispenseD)47. She washerbrainstorememberthemanstime,but46.There
55、 is no known cure for SARS, but doctors are ways to sufferers it.A)retardB)eliminateC)dispenseD)47. She washerbrainstorememberthemanstime,buther A)hittingB) C)racking D)bad memory 48. Many apartments have doors security window tone outsideandobserve visitorswithoutbeingseen.A)peer B) C)peelD) 49.Fre
56、nchcarsaremoreelegantlyn theirA)arts B) C)onesD) 50.Afterfailinghisdrivingtestfourtimes,hetryingtoA)gave upB) gave C)gaveoffD)gave part :1. B)见,B)为正。2. B)第二段第二句说明了物物交换的经济形式(barter economy。可见,real 的是“实体的,具体的”。选项 B)全然的”;“重要的”。另三词的含义分别为“高质量”;“3.物物交换会给商人带来麻烦。D)正确4. D) 计划来管理控制一切的业务由此推知,在管理经济体制中5. A)具有最大限
57、度的控制权。D)正确拟定计划显示了由不同公司生产的商计划是根据整个国家的需求来拟定的选项 A)正确。选项 B)与 D)文章未提及。选项 C)6. D)文章第一段讲在大气中就像温室的玻璃屋顶一样吸热的流失,文章第三段最后一句话又再次提D能使地球变热的理论。因此,正确7. D)A,B,C)全文的主旨,只有 D)是比较全面的8. D)文章第四段提及这一现象时讲到,科学家们认为: 最呢? 的不断变动。选项 D)9. A) 与天气之间的相互作用,并试图找出与数千年来真正的气候之间的相互关系。此段第二句讲到一个新的冰河时代。所以,选项 A)。10. D)光能延缓新冰河那热。选项 热的流失,文章第三段最后一句话又再次提D能使地球变热的理论。因此,正确7. D)A,B,C)全文的主旨,只有 D)是比较全面的8. D)文章第四段提及这一现象时讲到,科学家们认为: 最呢? 的不断变动。选项 D)9. A) 与天气之间的相
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。
最新文档
- 健康技能活动方案
- 健康活动大课间活动方案
- 健康科普脱口秀活动方案
- 健康设计活动方案
- 健身会员开业活动方案
- 健身房周年活动方案
- 健身气功走基层活动方案
- 健身课程活动方案
- 2025年南充机电一体化实训考核试题
- 理论力学第十章 质心运动定理、动量定理
- 员工宿舍公约
- 2024年江西省高考地理真题(原卷版)
- 木工技能竞赛理论考试题库500题(含答案)
- 担任学生干部证明
- 2023-2024年福建高中物理会考试卷(福建会考卷)
- 抢救药品课件教学课件
- 2024年自考《14269数字影像设计与制作》考试复习题库(含答案)
- 六下第14课《扩音系统的优化》教案 浙教版(2023)信息科技
- 新疆乌鲁木齐市天山区2023-2024学年六年级下学期期末英语试卷
- 停车场监控方案
- 院科两级医疗质量管理制度
评论
0/150
提交评论