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[推荐]朱泰祺2007年考研英语强化训练讲座(四)

发布者: 冈仁波齐 | 发布时间: 2006-5-10 18:01| 查看数: 8864| 评论数: 0|

<FONT size=3><STRONG>I. Use of English (Cloze)</STRONG> </FONT>
<FONT size=3>Business and government leaders also consider the inflation rate to be an important general indicator. Inflation is a period of increased 1 that causes rapid rises in prices. When your money buys 2 goods so that you get less for the same amount of money 3 before, inflation is the problem. There is a general rise 4 the price of goods and services. Your money buys less. Sometimes people 5 inflation as a time when “a dollar is not worth a dollar any more.”</FONT>
<FONT size=3>Inflation is a problem for all consumers. People who live on a fixed income are 6 the most. Retired people, for instance, cannot 7 on an increase in income as prices rise. Elderly people who don’t work face serious problems in stretching their incomes to 8 their needs in time of inflation. 9 income or any fixed income usually does not rise as fast as prices. Many retired people must cut their spending to 10 rising prices. In many 11 they must stop buying some necessary items, such as food and clothing.</FONT>
<FONT size=3>Even for working people whose incomes are going up, inflation can be a problem 12 the cost of living rises, too. People who work must have even more money to 13 their standard of living. Just buying the things they need 14 more. When incomes do not keep pace with rising prices, the standard of living goes down. People may be earning the same 15 of money, but they are not living as well because they are not able to buy 16 many goods and services.</FONT>
<FONT size=3>Government units 17 information about prices in our economy and publish it as price indexes from which the rate of change can be determined. A price index 18 changes in prices using the price for a given year as the base. The base price is set 19 100, and the other prices are 20 as a percentage of the base price. (321 words)</FONT>
<FONT size=3>1. A. demanding B. spending C. consuming D. borrowing</FONT>
<FONT size=3>2. A. a few B. more C. fewer D. a little</FONT>
<FONT size=3>3. A. than B. like C. since D. as</FONT>
<FONT size=3>4. A. in B. for C. at D. to</FONT>
<FONT size=3>5. A. render B. depict C. describe D. assume</FONT>
<FONT size=3>6. A. hurt B. undermined C. damaged D. spoiled</FONT>
<FONT size=3>7. A. depend B. rest C. rely D. count</FONT>
<FONT size=3>8. A. acquire B. obtain C. meet D. suit</FONT>
<FONT size=3>9. A. Government B. Development C. Retirement D. Employment</FONT>
<FONT size=3>10. A. put up with B. keep up with C. fall in with D. get on with</FONT>
<FONT size=3>11. A. occasions B. cases C. positions D. situations</FONT>
<FONT size=3>12. A. although B. if C. when D. because</FONT>
<FONT size=3>13. A. keep up B. keep to C. reckon on D. reckon with</FONT>
<FONT size=3>14. A. spends B. costs C. consumes D. wastes</FONT>
<FONT size=3>15. A. number B. portion C. amount D. sum</FONT>
<FONT size=3>16. A. so B. too C. that D. as</FONT>
<FONT size=3>17. A. accept B. attain C. utilize D. gather</FONT>
<FONT size=3>18. A. measures B. estimates C. assesses D. evaluates</FONT>
<FONT size=3>19. A. against B. at C. by D. on</FONT>
<FONT size=3>20. A. reported B. designated C. decided D. publicized</FONT>
<STRONG><FONT size=3>II. 选择搭配题</FONT></STRONG>
<FONT size=3>Directions:</FONT>
<FONT size=3>The following paragraphs are given in a wrong order. For Questions 41—45, you are required to reorganize these paragraphs into a coherent article by choosing from the list A—E to fill in each numbered box. The first and the last paragraphs have been placed for you in Boxes. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1. (10 points)</FONT>
<FONT size=3>[A] “I just don’t know how to motivate them to do a better job. We’re in a budget crunch and I have absolutely no financial rewards at my disposal. In fact, we’ll probably have to lay some people off in the near future. It’s hard for me to make the job interesting and challenging because it isn’t — it’s boring, routine paperwork, and there isn’t much you can do about it.</FONT>
<FONT size=3>[B] “Finally, I can’t say to them that their promotions will hinge on the excellence of their paperwork. First of all, they know it’s not true. If their performance is adequate, most are more likely to get promoted just by staying on the force a certain number of years than for some specific outstanding act. Second, they were trained to do the job they do out in the streets, not to fill out forms. All through their career it is the arrests and interventions that get noticed.</FONT>
<FONT size=3>[C] “I’ve got a real problem with my officers. They come on the force as young, inexperienced men, and we send them out on the street, either in cars or on a beat. They seem to like the contact they have with the public, the action involved in crime prevention, and the apprehension of criminals. They also like helping people out at fires, accidents, and other emergencies.</FONT>
<FONT size=3>[D] “Some people have suggested a number of things like using conviction records as a performance criterion. However, we know that’s not fair — too many other things are involved. Bad paperwork increases the chance that you lose in court, but good paperwork doesn’t necessarily mean you’ll win. We tried setting up team competitions based on the excellence of the reports, but the guys caught on to that pretty quickly. No one was getting any type of reward for winning the competition, and they figured why should they labor when there was no payoff.</FONT>
<FONT size=3>[E] “The problem occurs when they get back to the station. They hate to do the paperwork, and because they dislike it, the job is frequently put off or done inadequately. This lack of attention hurts us later on when we get to court. We need clear, factual reports. They must be highly detailed and unambiguous. As soon as one part of a report is shown to be inadequate or incorrect, the rest of the report is suspect. Poor reporting probably causes us to lose more cases than any other factor.</FONT>
<FONT size=3>[F] “So I just don’t know what to do. I’ve been groping in the dark in a number of years. And I hope that this seminar will shed some light on this problem of mine and help me out in my future work.”</FONT>
<FONT size=3>[G] A large metropolitan city government was putting on a number of seminars for administrators, managers and/or executives of various departments throughout the city. At one of these sessions the topic to be discussed was motivation -- how we can get public servants motivated to do a good job. The difficulty of a police captain became the central focus of the discussion.</FONT>
<FONT size=3>Order:</FONT>
<FONT size=3></FONT>
<FONT size=3>G 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. F</FONT>
<FONT size=3>作业</FONT>
<FONT size=3>Directions:</FONT>
<FONT size=3>The following paragraphs are given in a wrong order. For Questions 1-5, you are required to reorganize these paragraphs</FONT>
<FONT size=3>into a coherent article by choosing from the list A-E to fill in each numbered box. The first and the last paragraphs have been</FONT>
<FONT size=3>placed for you in Boxes. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1. (10 points)</FONT>
<FONT size=3>[A] These silent, zero-emission gadgets have long been used in NASA spacecraft. They represent the great hope of many environmentalists to power the first mass-produced electric car.</FONT>
<FONT size=3>[B] Whether they are used to run cars and buses or to make electricity for other applications, fuel cells operate by converting hydrogen to electricity without combustion. They are akin to continuously-recharging batteries. Hydrogen and oxygen are fed into a stack of plates that create electricity, with harmless water vapor as the by-product.</FONT>
<FONT size=3>[C] While batteries alone haven’t supplied the performance most drivers want, proponents believe that fuel cells, probably combined with batteries, hold the promise of performance, range and better mileage compared with today’s internal combustion engines.</FONT>
<FONT size=3>[D] If they work, methanol fuel cells could be a major breakthrough in energy consumption and conservation. The brave new technology could drastically cut air pollution from auto emissions and other sources.</FONT>
<FONT size=3>[E] The size and weight of fuel cells have always been problems. New fuel-cell technology promises to solve those issues.</FONT>
<FONT size=3>[F] Fuel cells can use various sources of hydrogen, including a simple tank of compressed gas. But methanol, a liquid usually produced from natural gas, is a much more efficient way to store hydrogen. This is why the first wave of fuel cells in cars will likely use an indirect methanol fuel cell, in which the methanol passes through a mechanism called a “reformer”, which extracts the hydrogen.</FONT>
<FONT size=3>[G] A new, lightweight fuel cell that runs on methanol may one day power your electric car. Sooner still, the new cell may fuel smaller devices such as your lap-top computer or mobile phone.</FONT>
<FONT size=3>Order: </FONT>
<FONT size=3>G 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. F</FONT>
<FONT size=3>III. English-Chinese Translation</FONT>
<FONT size=3>1) It is the business of the scientist to accumulate knowledge about the universe and all that is in it, and to find, if he is able, common factors which underlie and account for the facts that he knows. He chooses, when he can, the method of the “controlled experiment”. If he wants to find out the effect of light on growing plants, he takes many plants, as alike as possible. Some he stands in the sun, some in the shade, some in the dark, all the time keeping all other conditions (temperature, moisture, nourishment) the same. In this way, by keeping other conditions constant, and by varying the light only, the effect of light on the plants can be clearly seen. 2) This method of using “controls” can be applied to a variety of situations, and can be used to find the answers to questions as widely different as “Must moisture be present if iron is to rust?” and “Which variety of beans gives the greatest yield in one season? ”</FONT>
<FONT size=3>In the course of his inquiries the scientist may find what he thinks is one common explanation for an increasing number of facts. The explanation, if it seems consistently to fit the various facts, is called a hypothesis. If a hypothesis continues to stand the test of numerous experiments and remains unshaken, it becomes a law.</FONT>
<FONT size=3>3) The scientist is always most gratified to find that an underlying “explanation” of many phenomena suggests in its turn the possibility of proving its own accuracy or falsity by a suitably arranged critical experiment. He is also gratified when his “explanation”, if true, points to a new series of experiments designed to answer a new set of questions. For the curiosity of the scientist is never satisfied.</FONT>
<FONT size=3>The evidence as to the vastness of the universe and the complexity of its arrangements continues to grow at an amazing rate. The gap between what we know and all that can be known seems not to diminish, but rather to increase with every new discovery. Fresh unexplored regions are forever opening out.</FONT>
<FONT size=3>4) The rapidity of the increase of scientific knowledge, in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, is apt to give students and teachers the impression that no sooner is a problem stated than the answer is forthcoming. A more detailed study of the history of science corrects the impression that fundamental discoveries are made with dramatic suddenness. Even in our present age no less than fifty years separate the discovery of radioactivity from the explosion of the first atomic bomb. Much of the fundamental information which now enables us to control the onset and duration of disease was known a century ago.</FONT>
<FONT size=3>5) The teacher, giving his brief accounts of scientific discovery, is liable to forget the long periods of misunderstanding, of false hypotheses and general uncertainty, which almost invariably precede the clear statement of scientific truth. (486 words)</FONT>
<STRONG><FONT size=3>IV. Writing Practice</FONT></STRONG>
<FONT size=3>Directions:</FONT>
<FONT size=3>Your are preparing for an English test and are in need of some reference books. Write a letter to the sales department of a bookstore to ask for:</FONT>
<FONT size=3>1) detailed information about the books you want,</FONT>
<FONT size=3>2) methods of payment,</FONT>
<FONT size=3>3) time and way of delivery.</FONT>
<FONT size=3>Sample:</FONT>
<FONT size=3>Dear Sir / Madam,</FONT>
<FONT size=3>Allow me to introduce myself. My name is Li Ming. At present I’m preparing for a national English test. Therefore, I badly need a good dictionary. 能否请您告诉我一些有关词典的情况。 您的书店里现在有些什么词典?哪一本最符合我的需要?Besides, I also want to know how I will pay for it. 请您告诉我是用现金还是支票支付书款。By the way, if everything goes smoothly, when can I get the dictionary? 您用什么方式把书转给我呢?</FONT>
<FONT size=3>Thank you very much for your time. I’m looking forward to hearing from you soon.</FONT>
<FONT size=3>Yours faithfully,</FONT>
<FONT size=3>Li Ming</FONT>
<FONT size=3>作业:1. 复习本单元内容,配合“复习指导”迅速浏览其中的语法词汇,为完形、英译汉打好基础。</FONT>
<FONT size=3>2. 做“复习指导”中相关 “完形”和“英译汉”练习。</FONT>
<FONT size=3>3. 背记本单元应用文。</FONT>
<FONT size=3>赠言:有志者事竟成。(Where there is a will there is a way.)</FONT>
<STRONG><FONT size=3>选择搭配题参考译文 (课外练习)</FONT></STRONG>
<FONT size=3>也许有一天你的电动小轿车会用一种新型的、以甲醇为燃料的轻型燃料电池作动力。 这种新电池可能不久后还可以为你的便携式电脑或移动电话等小型设备提供燃料。</FONT>
<FONT size=3>一旦投入使用,甲醇燃料电池可能是在能源消耗和能源储存方面的一个重大突破。这种引人注目的新技术能极大地减少汽车尾气和其它原因造成的空气污染。</FONT>
<FONT size=3>燃料电池无论是用来驱动小轿车和公共汽车,还是用作其它设备的电源, 工作时都不需燃料就把氢转化为电。它类似于在连续充电的电池, 氢和氧被输入一堆发电的多层板片装置, 同时排出无害的水蒸气作为副产品。</FONT>
<FONT size=3>这种低噪音、无排放物的小玩意儿早就在美国航空航天局的航天器上派上了用场。很多环保主义者对它寄予厚望, 期待它能为首批大量生产的电动小轿车提供动力。</FONT>
<FONT size=3>尽管仅靠蓄电池不能满足大多数驾驶员对车子工作性能的需要, 但倡导者们认为,燃料电池, 也许加上蓄电池,在车子性能、行驶路程、耗油量等方面有望胜过现在使用的内燃机。</FONT>
<FONT size=3>燃料电池的大小和重量一直是没有解决的问题。新的燃料电池技术可望解决这些问题。</FONT>
<FONT size=3>燃料电池能使用各种来源的氢气,包括一种简单的压缩气储罐。 但通常从天然气中产生的一种液体─—甲醇─—能跟有效地储存氢。这就是为什麽在小轿车中首批使用的很可能是一种间接的甲醇燃料电池。在该电池中, 甲醇里的氢通过一个叫做“重整器”的机械装置被提取出来。</FONT>
<FONT size=3>帮助你学习记忆单词的有效方法 -- 同根词解析</FONT>
<FONT size=3>lat [拉丁语词根] 带有,产生,进行</FONT>
<FONT size=3>*relate [re回 + lat带 + e] vi. (to) 有关联 vt. 1.使互相关联 2.叙述,讲述 *relation n. 1. 关系,联系 2. 亲属,亲戚 *relationship n. 关系,联系 *relative a. 相对的,比较的 n. 亲属,亲戚 *relativity n. 相对论,相关性 *relevant a. 相关的 *irrelevant a. 不着边际的 *correlate [cor=con 共同 + relate关联] vt. 使相互关联 v. (to, with) 和 … 相关 *correlation n. 相互关系,相关(性)</FONT>
<FONT size=3>*translate [trans转移 + lat产生 + e ---- 换一种语言说出来] v. 翻译 *translation n. 1. 翻译,译 2. 译文,译本</FONT>

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