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1、 華南師范大學高等教育自學考試2016年1月委考課程高級英語(一)模擬題A卷(課程代碼:07374 )注意:1本試卷共六大題,滿分100分,考試時間150分鐘;2所有答案必須寫在答卷的規(guī)定位置上;3. 必須用黑色墨水的鋼筆或圓珠筆填寫,不能使用涂改液;4. 考試形式:閉卷。題 號IIIIIIIVVVI總 分得 分I. Reading Comprehension (20%)(1) Reading the following passage carefully and then choose one from the given choices to answer each question. 1

2、) Barbie, a twelve-inch plastic teen-ager, is the best-known and best-selling doll in history. Since its introduction in 1959, the Barbie doll population of the world has grown to 12,000.000 - more than the human population of Los Angeles or London or Paris. Little girls adore Barbie because she is

3、highly realistic and eminently dress-upable. Mattel, Inc., maker of Barbie, also sells a complete wardrobe for her, including clothes for ordinary daytime wear, clothes for formal party wear, clothes for swimming and skiing.2) Recently Mattel announced a new improved Barbie doll. The new version has

4、 a slimmer figure, real eyelashes, and a twist-and-turn waist that makes her more humanoid than ever. Moreover, Mattel announced that, for the first time, any young lady wishing to purchase a new Barbie would receive a trade-in allowance for her old one.3) What Mattel did not announce was that by tr

5、ading in her old doll for a technologically improved model, the little girl of today, citizen of tomorrows super-industrial world, would learn a fundamental lesson about the new society: that mans relationships with things are increasingly temporary.4) The ocean of man-made physical objects that sur

6、rounds us is set within a larger ocean of natural objects. But increasingly, it is the technologically produced environment that matters for the individual. The texture of plastic or concrete, the 3iridescent glisten of an automobile under a streetlight, the staggering vision of a cityscape seen fro

7、m the window of a jet - these are the intimate realities of his existence. Man-made things enter into and color his consciousness. Their number is expanding with explosive force, both absolutely and relative to the natural environment. This will be even more true in super-industrial society than it

8、is today.5) Anti-materialists tend to deride the importance of things. Yet things are highly significant, not merely because of their functional utility, but also because of their psychological impact. We develop relationships with things. Things affect our sense of continuity or discontinuity. They

9、 play a role in the structure of situations and the foreshortening of our relationships with things accelerates the pace of life.6) Moreover, our attitudes toward things reflect basic value judgments. Nothing could be more dramatic than the difference between the new breed of little girls who cheerf

10、ully turn in their Barbies for the new improved model and those who, like their mothers and grandmothers before them, clutch lingeringly and lovingly to the same doll until it disintegrates from sheer age. In this difference lies the contrast between past and future, between societies based on perma

11、nence, and the new, fast-forming society based on transience.7) That man-thing relationships are growing more and more temporary may be i1lustrated by examining the culture surrounding the little girl who trades in her doll. This child soon learns that Barbie dolls are by no means the only physical

12、objects that pass into and out of her young life at a rapid clip. Diapers, bibs, paper napkins, Kleenex, towels, non-returnable soda bottles - all are used up quickly in her home and ruthlessly eliminated. Corn muffins come in baking tins that are thrown away after one use. Spinach is encased in pla

13、stic sacks that can be dropped into a pan of boiling water for heating, and then thrown away. TV dinners are cooked and often served on throw- away trays. Her home is a large processing machine through which objects flow, entering and leaving, at a faster and faster rate of speed. From birth on, she

14、 is inextricably embedded in a throwaway culture.8) The idea of using a product once or for a brief period and then replacing it, runs counter to the grain of societies or individuals steeped in a heritage of poverty. Not long ago Uriel Rone, a market researcher for the French advertising agency Pub

15、licis, told me: The French housewife is not used to disposable products. She likes to keep things, even old things, rather than throw them away. We represented one company that wanted to introduce a kind of plastic throw- away curtain. We did a marketing study for them and found the resistance too s

16、trong. This resistance, however, is dying all over the developed world.9) Thus a writer, Edward Maze, has pointed out that many Americans visiting Sweden in the early 1950s were astounded by its cleanliness. We were almost awed by the fact that there were no beer and soft drink bottles by the roadsi

17、des, as, much to our shame, there were in America. But by the 1960s, lo and behold, bottles were suddenly blooming along Swedish highways - What happened? Sweden had become a buy, use and throw-away society, following the American pattern. In Japan today throwaway tissues are so universal that cloth

18、 handkerchiefs are regarded as old fashioned, not to say unsanitary. In England for sixpence one may buy a Dentamatic throw-away toothbrush which comes already coated with toothpaste for its one-time use. And even in France, disposable cigarette lighters are commonplace. From cardboard milk containe

19、rs to the rockets that power space vehicles, products created for short-term or one-time use are becoming more numerous and crucial to our way of life.1. The function of the Barbie doll example at the beginning of the essay is _.A.to encourage people to buy these dollsB. to introduce the popularity

20、of these dollsC.to introduce and illustrate the thesis at the end of paragraph 3D.to tell people how successful this doll company is2. What is the meaning of “trade-in allowance” in paragraph 2?A.Discounts given by a shop. B. A bargain sale. C. Profit of a shop.D. Money a shop deducts from the price

21、 of a new thing which a customer buys when she turns in to the shop an old thing.3.The topic sentence of paragraph 4 is _.A.sentence 1B. sentence 2C. sentence 3D. the last sentence 4.The first sentence in paragraph 4 means that there are _.A.more natural objects than man-made physical objects.B.more

22、 man-made physical objects than natural objectsC.the same quantity of natural objects and man-made physical objectsD.a small quantity of natural objects and man-made physical objects5.The phrase “intimate realities of his existence” in paragraph 4 means _.A. the window of a jet B. an automobile of a

23、 personC. things that are closest and most immediate to his lifeD. the texture of plastic or concrete6. In paragraph 5, which two functions of things does Toffler specify?A. Anti-materialism and functional utilityB.Anti-materialism and physiological impactC.Functional utility and physiological impac

24、tD.Continuity and discontinuity7. The subject of the first sentence of paragraph 7 is _.A.thatB.man-thing relationshipsC.that man-thing relationshipsD. that man-thing relationships are growing more and more temporary8.The main idea of paragraph 9 is _.A. the resistance of using disposable products i

25、s disappearing all over the developed worldB. products created for short-term or one-time use are becoming more numerousC. Americans were astounded by the cleanliness in other countriesD. many countries became a buy, use and throw-away society9.We can infer from the text that _.A.old people like thr

26、ow-away products more than young peopleB.our society needs more throw-away productsC.the throw-away products are convenient for peopleD.the throw-away products affect the man-thing relationships10. Which of the following is the best title for the passage?A. The Barbie doll B. Anti-materialism C. The

27、 Throw-away Products D. Things: The Throw-away Society(2) Read the following passage carefully and then judge whether the statements are true or false by writing T or F.Accent on Accent1 Bernard Shaws Pygmalion is about a professor of phonetics who wagers that, within six months, he will train a you

28、ng girl, Eliza, from a London slum, to acquire the manners and speech of a duchess. Early in the play the professor says: “This is an age of upstarts. Men begin in Kentish Town with 80 a year, and end in Park Lane with a hundred thousand. They want to drop Kentish Town; but they give themselves away

29、 every time they open their mouths”.2Geographical location is an important factor influencing the way we speak. A worker living in a busy capital city crowded with people will tend to have a quick, clipped, racy manner of speaking. The hustle and bustle of his daily life is reflected in his speech,

30、whether he be a cockney, an inhabitant of “Toity-toid (thirty-third) Street” in New York, or a taxi driver using “l(fā)e langage” of Paris. Likewise, the somewhat slower and steadier rhythm of the countryside with far less opportunity for social contact is revealed in the rolling accent of the farmer. T

31、he West Country dialect smacks as much of the farmyard as the patois of the French peasant, or the even more deliberate drawl of the Texan cattleman whose nearest neighbour may be 200 miles or more away. It is also worth noting that the languid, lazy, affected speech of some of the natives of Mayfai

32、r is just as much the product of a way of living as the harsh flat vowels of the Northern town dweller.3But not all people of particular town or country district speak in the same way. Education also counts. An educated person through his reading will have absorbed some of the more complex sentence

33、constructions and his vocabulary will be wide. A knowledge of foreign languages brings a greater awareness of ones own tongue. Learning also helps one to think clearly, a necessary condition for being able to speak clearly.4Individual personalities differ considerably, too. Cheerful or miserable, en

34、ergetic or lazy, happy-go-lucky or careworn, dignified or subservient, whatever the persons character, attitude or frame of mind it shows itself in the tone, pace and pitch of the voice. That is why we find some people pleasant and others boring to listen to.5The main point of the quotation from Sha

35、w, however, is that the difference between a Kentish Town and a Park Lane accent is not so much a geographical one as a social one, or as some would say, a class difference. Though these class divisions are not as well-defined and all-important as they were in 1914, when Pygmalion was written, a con

36、siderable amount of snobbery is attached to the way we speak. Many people from a lower social class are apt to feel inferior because of their dialect; they feel over-awed and ill-at-ease in the presence of those who speak, as Dylan Thomas put it, “as if they had the Elgin marbles in their mouths.” I

37、t is this that compels some people to cultivate a highly exaggerated “refined” manner of pronunciation. They, too, give themselves away every time they open their mouths.6That anyone should be made to feel less worthy of respect because of his dialect is deplorable in a country which professes to be

38、 democratic. It is also absurd, when one considers that the social stigma is not applied to Scotch, Welsh or Irish accents, forms of speech which have evolved in a similar way to provincial dialects. Human beings should be judged, if at all, by the sincerity and truth of what they have to say rather

39、 than by the way they pronounce it.7It would be reassuring to be able to say that it matters only in so far as you think it does, but this would be only partly true. There are some occupations which demand a more standardized form of English. We are also social beings engaged in the interchange of i

40、deas with speech as the most important means of communication. I remember how during the last war I shared a billet with a “Geordie”, a most amiable and generous individual, but for all I understood of what he had to say he might as well have been talking Hungarian. There we have the criterion; the

41、responsibility for making himself understood is on the shoulders of the speaker. In so far as dialect is a hindrance in this respect, it must be modified to suit the needs of the listener.8There is a particular satisfaction in doing whatever we have to do well, and the way we speak is no exception.

42、Clarity of meaning and grace of delivery are vitally necessary for this purpose, but this need not mean the entire discarding of whatever local speech forms we have. The delightfully lazy, gentle slur of John Arlott, the cricket commentator, and the forthright bluntness of J. B. Priestleys Yordshire

43、 vowels help us to realize that dialect may be just as much an asset as a liability.11. According to the text, we should all try to speak standard language and try to hide our personal accent. F12. Personality plays an important role in deciding ones accent. T13. “Park Lane” in para. 1 stands for an

44、 area where the rich choose to live.T14. In order to improve our accent, we need to acquire more education.T15. According to the text, it is quite fashionable to assume Scotch, Welsh or Irish accents. F16. The author seems to be a socialist since he pay much attention to the class problem F17. The p

45、roblem “I” have in understanding arises from the fact “Geordie” speaks Hungarian rather than English. T18. According to the text, our different accents are the result of geographical location, personality and some other social factors like class.T19. For Shaw, difference between accents is more soci

46、al than geographical.T20. Although we dont necessarily speak standard language, we need to do well in these two aspects in communication: clarity of meaning and grace of delivery. TII. Multiple Choice (10%)Choose the word or phrase which best completes each of the following sentences.21.He was drivi

47、ng the car at such a tremendous _ that I could not even say hello to him.A) acceleration B) speedC) quicknessD) mileage 22.This text examines how Americans attachment to objects is increasingly _.A) permanent B) perishable C) temporaryD) momentary23.Tourists are _ to beware of pickpockets in the bus

48、.A) commanded B) notified C) informed D) advised 24.These mountaineers will have to _ severe cold and terrible winds.A) survive B) endureC) attain D) go through 25.We were asked to _ from smoking until the plane was airborne.A) resist B) restrainC) restrict D) refrain 26.The parents try their best t

49、o avoid _ their ideas on the children in the family education.A) surgingB) hangingC) imposingD) clinging 27.We worship founders, builders, chiefs - but _ do we read about or cheer those who gracefully and successfully turn their jobs over their successors. A) unusuallyB) barelyC) uncommonlyD) rarely

50、28.If you let me choose, I would _ a bunch of flowers _ Barbie Doll as my birthday gift.A) favorthanB) prefertoC) favortoD) preferthan29.An executive, not achieving what he hoped, often wants the opportunity to stay in the game. _ a graceful transition, the succession process can become a war.A) In

51、spite of B) Because of C) Rather thanD) As a result of 30.Why does fans self-esteem _ with victory and _ in defeat?A) soarlowerB) soarplummetC)raiseplummetD) heightendropIII. Cloze (10%):Complete each of the words with initial letters given in the brackets by referring to the missing parts of the fo

52、llowing passage with corresponding numbers.He was one of the greatest scientists the world has ever known, yet if I had to 31) convey the essence of Albert Einstein in a single word, I would choose 32) single. Perhaps an anecdote will help. Once, caught in a downpour, he took off his hat and held it

53、 under his coat. Asked why, he explained, 33) with admirable logic, that the rain would damage the hat, but his hair would be 34) none the worse for its wetting. This 35) knack for going instinctively to the heart of a matter was the secret of his major scientific discoveries-this and his extraordin

54、ary feeling for beauty. How shall I sum up what it 36) meant to have known Einstein and his works? Like the Nobel Prize winner who pointed helplessly at his watch, I can find no 37) adequate words. It was 38) akin to the revelation of great art that lets one see what was formerly hidden. And when, f

55、or example, I walk on the sand of a lonely beach, I am reminded 39) of his ceaseless search for cosmic simplicity - and the scene 40) takes on a deeper, sadder beauty.IV. Proofreading (10%)The following passage contains several errors, each line with a maximum of one error. And ATTENTION, some lines

56、 might be free from error. In each case only one word is involved. You should proofread the passage and correct the errors in the following way:For a wrong word,underline the wrong word and write the correct one in the blank provided at the end of the line.For a missing word,mark the position of the

57、 missing word with a “” sign and write the word you believe to be missing in the blank provided at the end of the line.For an unnecessary word,cross out the unnecessary word with a slash “” and put the word in the blank provided at the end of the line.For a correct line,place a tick “” in the blank provided at the end of the line.Quality-control instrument need maintenance; gauges go out of order; X rays and laser beams need adjustments. No matter how much advanced the technology, quality demands intellectual, m

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