2014年12月大學(xué)英語六級模擬試卷及答案

字號:

作文預(yù)測范文:
    網(wǎng)上免費(fèi)下載歌曲
    Should Free Music Downloads Be Banned?
    1. 越來越多的人開始在網(wǎng)上免費(fèi)下載歌曲
    2. 有人認(rèn)為這會嚴(yán)重影響唱片業(yè)發(fā)展,應(yīng)予以禁止,有些人則不以為然
    3. 我的看法
    參考范文
    With the development of technology, more and more people are making use of the Internet and are enjoying downloading all types of materials. Some are especially fond of downloading free music. They argue that free music downloads not only enrich their lives, but also are good for the music industry because they help increase the popularity of music.
    However, from my point of view, it is not advisable to allow free music downloads. For one thing, this practice violates the intellectual property rights of musicians. For another, this will exert a negative impact on the sales of musical products such as CDs, which may do harm to the whole music industry. Without good returns, who would like to invest in the music industry?
    In order that the music industry will develop healthily, we had better ban free music downloads. Let’s all start to do so ourselves.
    閱讀1
    The first way we can approach language is as a phenomenon of the individual person. It is concerned with describing and explaining language as a matter of human behavior. People speak and write; they also evidently read and understand what they hear. They are not born doing so; they have to acquire these skills. Not everybody seems to develop them to the same degree. People may suffer accidents or diseases, which impair their performance. Language is thus seen as part of human psychology, a particular sort of behavior, the behavior, which has as its principal, function that of communication.
    The trouble with the term “behavior” is that it is often taken to refer only to more or less overt, and describable, physical movements and acts. Yet part of language behavior-that of understanding spoken or written language, for example-has little or no physically observable signs. It is true we can sometimes infer that understanding has taken place by the changes that take place in the other person’s behavior. When someone has been prohibited from doing something, we may infer that he has understood the prohibition by observing that thereafter he never behaves in that way. We cannot, of course, be absolutely sure that his subsequent behavior is a result of his understanding; it might be due to a loss of interest or inclination. So behavior must be taken to include unobservable activity, often only to be inferred from other observable behavior.
    Once we admit that the study of language behavior involves describing and explaining the unobservable, the situation becomes much more complicated, because we have to postulate some set of processes, some internal mechanism, which operates when we speak and understand. We have to postulate something we can call a mind. The study of language from this point of view can then be seen as a study of the specific properties, processes and states of the mind whose outward manifestations are observable behavior; what we have to know in order to perform linguistically.This approach to language, as a phenomenon of the individual, is thus principally concerned with explaining how we acquire language, and its relation to general human cognitive systems, and with the psychological mechanisms underlying the comprehension and production of speech; much less with the problem of what language is for, that is, its function as communication, since this necessarily involves more than a single individual.
    1.What is the best title for this passage?
    A) Language as Means of Communication.
    B) Language and Psychology.
    C) Language and the Individual.
    D) Language as a Social Phenomenon.
    2.According to the passage, which of the following statements is NOT true?
    A) Language is often regarded as part of human psychology.
    B) People develop language skills of different degrees as a result of different personal experiences.
    C) Language is a special kind of psychological behavior that is born with an individual.
    D) People learn to speak and write through imitation and training.
    3.What does the term “behavior” in the second paragraph especially refer to in this passage?
    A) It refers to observable and physical movements and acts.
    B) It refers to the part of language behavior that involves understanding or interpretation.
    C) It refers to both the overt and the unobservable language behaviors in communicating.
    D) It refers to acts of speaking and writing.
    4.What does “internal mechanism”(Line 3, Para. 3) mean?
    A) Secret machine. B) Mental processes. C) Overt system. D) Mechanic operation.
    5.What can you infer from the passage?
    A) Its individualistic approach to language is meant to study the psychological processes of language acquisition.
    B) The individualistic approach to language is mainly concerned with how language functions in society.
    C) The study of language is sure to involve more than a single individual.
    D) Psychological approach to language is concerned with the comprehension and production of speech.
    答案:CCCBA
    閱讀2
    The orange towers of the Golden Gate Bridge--probably the most beautiful,certainly the most photographed bridge in the world--are visible from almost every point of elevation in San Francisco. The only crack in Northern California's 600-mile continental wall,for years this mile-wide strait was considered unbridgeable. As much an architectural as an engineering feat, the Golden Gate took only 52 months to design and build, and was opened in 1937. Designed by Joseph Strauss, it was the first really massive suspension bridge,with a span of 4,200ft, and until 1959 ranked as the world's longest. It connects the city at its northwesterly point on the peninsula to Marin County and Northern California, rendering the hitherto essential ferry crossing redundant, and was designed to withstand winds of up to a hundred miles an hour and to swing as much as 27 ft. Handsome on a clear day, the bridge takes on an eerie(神秘的) quality when the thick white fogs pour in and hide it almost completely.
    You can either drive or walk across. The drive is the more thrilling of the two options as you race under the bridge's towers, but the half-hour walk across it really gives you time to take in its enormous size and absorb the views of the city behind you and the headlands of Northern California straight ahead. Pause at the midway point and consider the seven or so suicides a month who choose this spot,260 ft up, as their jumping-off spot. Monitors of such events speculate that victims always face the city before they leap.In 1995, when the suicide toll from the bridge had reached almost 1,000,police kept the figures quiet to avoid a rush of would-be suicides going for the dubious distinction of being the thousandth person to leap.
    Perhaps the best loved symbol of San Francisco, in 1987 the Golden Gate proved an auspicious place(風(fēng)水寶地) for a sunrise party when crowds gathered to celebrate its fiftieth anniversary. Some quarter of a million people turned up (a third of the city's entire population); the winds were strong and huge numbers caused the bridge to buckle(使彎曲), but fortunately not to break.
    1. What is TURE of the Golden Gate Bridge?
    A. It is certainly the world's most beautiful bridge. B. It is far from San Francisco.
    C. It is a feat neither architecturally nor engineeringly before 1960.  D.It was the world longest bridge.
    2. What do you know further about the Golden Gate Bridge?
    A. It is over a strait where no bridge could have been built before the 1930s.
    B. It is the first massive bridge designed by Joseph Strauss.
    C. It appears while in the thick white fogs.  D. It connects Marin Country with Northern California.
    3. Of the two exercises, the drive over the bridge is more _________.
    A. interesting B. fascinating   C. inviting D. exciting
    4. Those who attempt to suicide often jump from the midway point of the bridge probably because_________.
    A. they want to die quietly   B. they want to die quickly
    C. they want to take a glance at the bridge's towers   D. they want to take a glance at San Francisco
    5. What would be the best title for the text?
    A. The World's Most Beautiful Bridge   B. The World's Most Photographed Bridge
    C. The World's First Suspension Bridge   D.The Golden Gate Bridge
    答案:DADDD
    閱讀3
    Children are getting so fat they may be the first generation to die before their parents, an expert claimed yesterday. Today’s youngsters are already falling prey to potential killers such as diabetes(糖尿病) because of their weight. Fatty fast- food diets combined with sedentary(長坐的) lifestyles dominated by televisions and computers could mean kids will die tragically young, says Professor Andrew Prentice, from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
    At the same time, the shape of the human body is going through a huge evolutionary shift because adults are getting so fat. Here in Britain, latest research shows that the average waist size for a man is 36-38in, and may be 42-44, by 2032. This compares with only 32.6in. in 1972.Women’s waists have grown from an average of 22in. in 1920 to 24in. in the Fifties and 30in. now. One of the major reasons why children now are at greater risk is that we are getting fatter younger.
    In the UK alone, more than one million under- 16s are classed as overweight or obese(過度肥胖的)— double the number in the mid Eighties. One in ten four-year- olds are also medically classified as obese.
    The obesity(肥胖癥) pandemic(流行病)—an extensive epidemic— which started in the US, has now spread to Europe, Australasia, Central America and the Middle East. Many nations now record more than 20 per cent of their population as clinically obese and well over half the population as overweight.
    Prof. Prentice said the change in our shape has been caused by an oversupply of easily available high-energy foods combined with a dramatic drop in the energy we use as a result of technology developments.
    He is not alone in his concern. Only last week one medical journal revealed how obesity was fuelling a rise in cancer cases. Obesity also increases the risk factor for strokes and heart disease as well as diabetes. An averagely obese person’s lifespan is shortened by around nine years while a severely obese person by many more.
    Prof. Prentice said: ”So will parents outlive their children, as claimed recently by an American obesity specialist? The answer is yes and no. Yes, when the offspring become grossly obese. This is now becoming an alarmingly common occurrence in the US. Such children and adolescents have a greatly reduced quality of life in terms of both their physical and psychosocial health.”
    So say” No” to that doughnut and burger.
    1. Prof. Andrew Prentice said that the life of an extremely fat child________
    A. might be shorter B. might be longer C. shorter than his father, but longer than his mother
    D. might be longer than his father, but shorter than his mother
    2. The word “prey”(Line 3, Para.1) means________
    A. victim B. vitamin   C. food   D. fool
    3. Which of the following fails to refer to an obese child?
    A. An extremely weighty child. B. An extremely fat child. C. An extremely fatty child. D. An over weight child.
    4. According to the passage, obesity is an extensive epidemic starting in __________
    A. Asia   B. North America   C. Europe   D. Central America
    5. Which of the following disease is NOT mentioned in the passage?
    A. pneumonia   B. diabetes   C. heart disease   D. stroke
    答案AAABA
    閱讀4
    Proxemics(空間關(guān)系學(xué)) is the study of what governs how closely one person stands to another. People who feel close will be close, though the actual distances will vary between cultures. For Amreicans we can discern four main categories of distance: intimate, personal, social and public. Intimate ranges from direct contact to about 45 centimeters. This is for the closest relationships such as those between husband and wife. Beyond this comes personal distance. This stands at between 45 and 80 centimeters. It is the most usual distance maintained for conversations between friends and relatives. Social distance covers people who work together or are meeting at social gatherings. Distances here tend to be kept between 1.30 to 2 meters. Beyond this comes public distance, such as that between a lecturer and his audience.
    All cultures draw lines between what is an appropriate and what is an inappropriate social distance for different types of relationship. They differ, however, in where they draw these lines. Look at an international reception withrepresentatives from the US and Arabic countries conversing and you will see the Americans pirouetting(快速旋轉(zhuǎn)) backwards around the hall pursued by their Arab partners. The Americans will be trying to keep the distance between themselves and their partners which they have grown used to regarding as “normal”. They probably will not even notice themselves trying to adjust the distance between themselves and their partners, though they may have vague feeling that their Arab neighbors are being a bit “pushy”. The Arab, on the other hand, coming from a culture where much closer distance is the norm, may be feeling that the Americans are being “stand-offish”. Finding themselves happier standing close to and even touching those they are in conversation with they will persistently pursue the Americans round the room trying to close the distance between them.
    The appropriateness of physical contact varies between different cultures too. One study of the number of times people conversing in coffee shops over a one hour period showed the following interesting variations: London, 0; Florida, 2; Paris, 10; and Puerto Rico 180. Not only dose it vary between societies, however, it also varies between different subcultures within one society. Young people in Britain, for example, are more likely to touch and hug friends than are the older generation. This may be partly a matter of growing older, but it also reflects the fact that the older generation grew up at a time when touching was less common for all age groups. Forty years ago, for example, footballers would never hug and kiss one another on the field after a goal as they do today.
    1.In proxemics, ____governs the standing space between two persons.
    A. distance  B. culture   C. conversation   D. relationship
    2.The word “stand-offish”(Line 14, Para. 2) could best be replaced by_________.
    A. cold and distant in behaviour   B. ungentlemanlike in behaviour C. inhuman in behaviour   D. polite in behaviour
    3. In conversation with an American partner at an international reception, an Arab deems that close distant is _________.
    A. appropriate  B. inappropriate   C. rash  D. impetuous
    4. We can infer from the third paragragh that the appropriateness of physical contact also varies with_________.
    A. time   B. city   C. country   D. people
    5. The best title for the passage would be __________.
    A. Proxemics  B. Appropriateness of Social Distance
    C. Appropriateness Relationships Between Two Persons D. Appropriateness Physical Contact Between Two Persons
    答案DAAAA