第二部分:英语知识运用(共两节,满分45)

第一节: 单项填空(共15小题;每小题1分,满分15分)

从A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。

例:It is generally considered unwise to give a child _______ he or she wants.

A. however           B. whatever           C. whichever         D. whenever

答案是B。

21. The repairs cost a lot, but it’s money well _____.

A. to spend            B. spent                C. being spent        D. spending

22. When the old man _____ to walk back to his house, the sun itself behind the mountain _____.

A. started ;had already hidden              B. had started ;had already hidden

C. had started ;was hiding                  D. was starting; hid

23. He was hoping to go abroad but his parents _____ that they won’t support him unless he can borrow money from the bank.

A. were deciding    B. have decided      C. decided          D. will decide

24. To understand the grammar of the sentence, you must break it       into parts.

A. down                B. up                    C. off                   D. out

25. —Would you mind my coming over and having a look at your new garden?My little son’s curious about those roses you grow.

—_____. You’re welcome.

A. Yes, I do           B. Never mind       C. Yes, please        D. Not at all

26. _____ from other continents for millions of years, Australia has many plants and animals not

found in any other country in the world.

A. Being separated                              B. Having separated

C. Having been separated                    D. To be separated

27. First, it is important to recognize what kind of person you are and which special qualities make you different from_____.

A. everyone else     B. the other           C. someone else     D. the rest

28. What a table ! I’ve never seen such a thing before. It is _____ it is long.

A. half not as wide as                         B. wide not as half as

C. not half as wide as                         D. as wide as not half

29. Her sister has become a lawyer, _____ she wanted to be.

A. who                 B. that                   C. what                 D. which

30. He hasn’t slept at all for three days. _____ he is tired out.

A. There is no point                            B. There is no need

C. It is no wonder                              D. It is no way

31. They started off late and got to the airport with minutes to _____.

A. spare                B. catch                C. leave                 D. make

32. —Do you know where David is? I couldn’t find him anywhere.

—Well. He _____ have gone far—his coat’s still here.

A. shouldn’t          B. mustn’t             C. can’t                D. wouldn’t

33. If I _____ plan to do anything I wanted to, I’d like to go to Tibet and travel through as much of it as possible.

A. would      font-;         B. could                C. had to               D. ought to

34. —Father, you promised!

—Well, _____. But it was you who didn’t keep your word first.

A. so was I           B. so did I&nS sbsp;            C. so I was           D. so I did

35. This picture was taken a long time ago. I wonder if you can _____ my father.

A. find out             B. pick out            C. look out            D. speak out

第二节:完形填空(共20小题;每小题共1. 5分,满分30分)

阅读下面短文,从短文后所给各题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。

You are near the front line of a battle. Around you shells are exploding ;people are shooting from a house behind you. What are you doing there? You aren’t a soldier. You aren’t ___36___ carrying a gun. You’re standing in front of a ___37___ and you’re telling the TV ___38___ what is happening.

It’s all in a day’s work for a war reporter, and it can be very ___39___. In the first two years of the___40___in former Yugoslavia(前南斯拉夫), 28 reporters and photographers were killed. Hundreds more were ___41___. What kind of people put themselves in danger to___42___ pictures to our TV screens and ___43___ to our newspapers? Why do they do it?

“I think it’s every young journalist’s___44___ to be a foreign reporter,” says Michael Nicholson, “that’s___45___ you find the excitement. So when the first opportunity comes, you take it ___46___ it is a war. ”

“I think ,But there are moments of ___47___. Jeremy Bowen says, “Yes, when you’re lying on the ground and bullets (子弹)are flying ___48___ your ears, you think: ‘What am I doing here? I’m not going to do this again. ’ But that feeling___49___after a while and when the next war starts, you’ll be ___50___.”

“None of us believes that we’re going to ___51___,” adds Michael. But he always ___52___ a lucky charm(护身符) with him. It was given to him by his wife for his first war. It’s a card which says “Take care of yourself.” Does he ever think about dying? “Oh, ___53___, and every time it happens you look to the sky and say to God, ‘If you get me out of this, I___54___I’ll never do it again. ’ You can almost hear God ___55___, because you know he doesn’t believe you. ”

36. A. simply         B. really                C. merely              D. even

37. A. crowd         B. house                C. battlefield          D. camera

38. A. producers    B. viewers             C. directors           D. actors

39. A. dangerous    B. exciting             C. normal              D. disappointing

40. A. stay            B. fight                 C. war                  D. life

41. A. injured         B. buried               C. defeated            D. saved

42. A. bring           B. show                C. take                  D. make

43. A. scenes         B. passages           C. stories              D. contents

44. A. belief           B. dream               C. duty                 D. faith

45. A. why            B. what                 C. how                 D. where

46. A. even so       B. ever since          C. as if                  D. even if

47. A. fear             B. surprise             C. shame               D. sadness

48. A. into             B. around              C. past                  D. through

49. A. returns        B. goes                 C. continues          D. occurs

50. A. there           B. away                C. out                   D. home

51. A. leave           B. escape              C. die                    D. remain

52. A. hangs          B. wears               C. holds                D. carries

53. A. never          B. many times        C. some time         D. seldom

54. A. consider      B. accept               C. promise            D. guess

55. A. whispering   B. laughing            C. screaming         D. crying

第三部分:阅读理解(共20小题;每小题共2分,满分40分)

阅读下列短文,从每篇短文后所给各题的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。
A

Have you ever wondered why birds sing? Maybe you thought that they were just happy. After all, you probably sing or whistle when you are happy.

Some scientists believe that birds do sing some of the time just because they are happy. However, they sing most of the time for a very different reason. Their singing is actually a warning to other birds to stay out of their territory.

Do you know what a “territory” is? A territory is an area that an animal, usually the male, claims(声称)as its own. Only he and ms(物种)are welcome. Your yard and house are your territory where only your family and friends are welcome. If a stranger should enter your territory and threaten you, you might shout. Probably this would be enough to frighten him away.

If so, you have actually scared the stranger away without having to fight him. A bird does the same thing. But he expects an outsider almost any time, especially at nesting(筑巢)season. So he is screaming all the time, whether he can see an outsider or not. This screaming is what we call a bird’s song, and it is usually enough to keep an outsider away.

Birds sing loudest in the spring when they are trying to attract a mate and warn others not to enter the territory of theirs.

You can see that birds have a language all their own. Most of it has to do with attracting mates and setting up territories.

56. Some scientists believe that most of the time birds’ singing is actually_______.

A. an expression of happiness              B. a way of warning

C. an expression of anger                  D. a way of greeting

57. What is a bird’s “territory”?

A. A place where families of other species are not accepted.

B. A place where a bird may shout at the top of its voice.

C. An area for which birds fight against each other.

D. An area which a bird considers to be its own.

58. Why do birds keep on singing at nesting season?

A. Because they want to invite more friends.

B. Because their singing helps frighten outsiders away.

C. Because they want to find outsiders around.

D. Because their singing helps get rid of their fears.

56. How does the writer explain birds’ singing?

A. By comparing birds with human beings.

B. By reporting experiment results.

C. By describing birds’ daily life.

D. By telling a bird’s story.

B

At one time no one could travel on an English road faster than four miles an hour. That was the law until 1896. A man had to walk in front of a car which could not go faster than the man. At night the man had to carry a red lamp.

Once Charles Rolls brought a car from France to England, but he wanted to drive faster than four miles an hour. In order to have no trouble with the police, he had a talk with some of the police officers, who ordered their policemen to look the other way when the car came along the road. This was a good plan in the country, but not so easy to follow in the busy streets of London.

One night Rolls and some friends started from London on their journey to Cambridge. One of the men walked in front with the red lamp, but he walked as fast as he could. The police became very interested in walls and shop-fronts when they heard the car, and not one of them saw it.

They reached a hill ;but what a waste of time it was to drive down the hill at four miles an hour! Rolls was getting ready to jump into the car; but then he noticed a policeman who was not looking the other way. The slow car reached him.

“Good evening,” said the policeman, looking at the car.

“Good evening,” said Rolls, holding the lamp.

“One of these horseless things,” said the poliLINE-Hceman, looking at it with interest.

“Yes,” said Rolls, and waited.

“I’ve often wanted a ride in one; but of course policemen can’t buy things like that. ” He turned and looked hopefully in Rolls’s face.

“Jump in,” said Rolls.

“Thanks,” said the policeman, and did so. “Now,” he said, sitting down, “you can let it go just as you like down this hill. There isn’t another policeman on this road for a mile and a half. ”

The policemen were told “to look the other way” (the underlined part in Paragraph 2) so that.

A. they could watch the car coming from the other direction

B. the car could go faster than four miles an hour

C. they could make sure no one was in the way

D. the car would not hit them on the road

61. In what way did the policemen carry out the order from their officers?

A. They greeted Rolls when the car came along.

B. They walked in front of the car with a red lamp.

C. They pretended to be attracted by something else.

D. They stood on duty every 1. 5 miles along the road.

62. The policeman who said “Good evening” to Rolls wanted to ______.

A. teach Rolls a lesson                       B. take a free ride home

C. have a talk with Rolls                     D. have a car ride experience

63. After the policeman jumped into the car, Rolls ______.

A. dared not drive the car faster than he was allowed to

B. could drive as fast as he wished within a certain distance

C. could drive on any road he liked for the rest of the journey

D. drove his car as fast as he could down the hill to Cambridge

C

Goods must be of proper quality, must be as described on the package and must be fit for any particular purpose made known by the seller.

There are also rules which deal with the standard of services you get—from, say, travel agents, shoe repairers, hairdressers and builders. These tell you what you should expect from any service you pay for.

A person providing a service must do so:

—With reasonable care and skill. You should expect a proper standard of workmanship(工艺). A new house should have straight walls and the roof must not leak.

—Within a reasonable timt; TEXTe. A shop should not take three months to repair your TV. You can always agree upon a completion time with the supplier of the service.

You, the customer, must pay:

—A reasonable charge for a service, where no price has been fixed in advance. A trader can not expect a large payment for a small job.

64. The underlined word “these” in Paragraph 2 refers to “     ”.

A. the services       B. the workers       C. the goods          D. the rules

65. What should the supplier do when offering a service?

A. He should determine the completion time himself.

B. He should provide free repairs within three months.

C. He should make sure the service meets proper standards.

D. He should reach an agreement on the payment with his workers.

66. The passage is trying to_______.

A. ask the customer to buy goods and services of high quality

B. advise the buyer how to pay a reasonable price for a service

C. tell the customer what rights he has once he pays for something

D. warn the seller what he sells must meet the buyer’s requirements

D

Thirteen vehicles lined up last March to race across the Mojave Desert, seeking a million in prize money. To win, they had to finish the 142-mile race in less than 10 hours. Teams and watchers knew there might be no winner at all, because these vehicles were missing a key part drivers.

DARPA, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, organized the race as part of a push to develop robotic vehicles for future battlefields. But the Grand Challenge, as it was called, just proved how difficult it is to get a car to speed across an unfamiliar desert without human guidance. One had its brake lock up in the starting area. Another began by throwing itself onto a wall. Another got tied up by bushes near the road after 1. 9 miles.

One turned upside down. One took off in entirely the wrong direction and had to be disabled by remote (远距离的) control. One went a little more than a mile and rushed into a fence ; another managed to go for six miles but stuck on a rock. The “winner,” if there was any, reached 7. 8 miles before it ran into a long, narrow hole, and the front wheels caught on fire.

“You get a lot of respect for natural abilities of the living things,” says Reinhold Behringer, who helped design two of the car-size vehicles for a company called Sci-Autonics. “Even ants (蚂蚁) can do all these tasks effortlessly. It’s very hard for us to put these abilities into our machines. ”

The robotic vehicles, though with necessary modern equipment such as advanced computers and GPS guidance, had trouble figuring out fast enough the blocks ahead that a two-year-old human recognizes immediately, Sure, that very young child, who has just only learned to walk, may not think to wipe apple juice off her face, but she already knows that when therce, had trouble fe’s a cookie in the kitchen she has to climb up the table, and that when she gets to the cookie it will taste good. She is more advanced, even months old, than any machine humans have designed.

67. Watchers doubted if any of the vehicles could finish the race because _______.

A. they did not have any human guidance

B. the road was not familiar to the drivers

C. the distance was too long for the vehicles

D. the prize money was unattractive to the drivers

68. DARPA organized the race in order to _______.

A. raise money for producing more robotic vehicles

B. push the development of vehicle industry

C. train more people to drive in the desert

D. improve the vehicles for future wars

69. From the passage we know “robotic vehicles” are a kind of machines that _______.

A. can do effortlessly whatever tasks living thing can

B. can take part in a race across 142 miles with a time limit

C. can show off their ability to turn themselves upside down

D. can move from place to place without being driven by human beings

70. In the race, the greatest distance one robotic vehicle covered was _______.

A. about eight miles                            B. six miles

C. almost two miles                            D. about one mile

71. In the last paragraph, the writer implies that there is a long way to go _______.

A. for a robotic vehicle to finish a 142-mile race without any difficulties

B. for a little child who has just learned to walk to reach the cookie on the table

C. for a robotic vehicle to deal with a simple problem that a little child can solve

D. for a little child to understand the importance of wiping apple juice off its face

E

From the moment that an animal is born it has to make decisions. It has to decide which of the things around it are for eating, and which are to .From the moment that an animal is born it has to mae avoided ; when to attack and when to run away. The animal is, in fact, playing a very dangerous game with its environment, a game in which it must make decision—a matter of life or death.

Animals’ ability to act reasonably is believed to come partly from what we may call “genetic (遗传性的)learning”, which is different from the individual (个体的) learning that an animal does in the course of its own lifetime. Genetic learning is learning by a species —animals of the same kind—as a whole, and it is achieved by selection of those members of each generation that happen to act in the right way. However, the role of genetic learning depends upon how similar the future environment is to the past. The more important individual experience is likely to be, the less important is genetic learning as a means of getting over the problems of the survival game. Because most animals live in ever changing environments from one generation to the next, it is not surprising to find that very few species indeed depend wholly upon genetic learning.

In the great majority of animals, their particular ways of acting in a new environment are a compound (复合体) of individual experience added to the action patterns animals are born with. That is why animals can survive.

72. The animal’s life will come to an end _______.

A. if the animal makes a wrong decision                          

B. if the animal plays a dangerous game

C. when the animal attacks its enemy  

D. when the animal runs too slowly

73. Very few species depend entirely on genetic learning because_______.

A. each generation has its own way of learning

B. their environments change all the time

C. they can act reasonably on their own

D. it takes their whole life to learn

74. When the environment doesn’t change much,_______.

A. animals cannot act in a right way

B. genetic learning is less important for animals

C. individual learning plays a less important role

D. animals cannot get over problems on their on their own

75. Animals’ living on generation after generation depends on _______.

A. their natural action pattern with their own experience

B. the lessons they have learnt during their lifetime

C. their experience in particular environments

D. the knowledge passed on by their parents