还剩10页未读,继续阅读
本资源只提供10页预览,全部文档请下载后查看!喜欢就下载吧,查找使用更方便
文本内容:
年贵阳市开阳县考研《英语一》点睛提分卷2023Section IUse ofEnglishDirections:Read the following text.Choose the best wordsfor eachnumbered blankand markA,B,C orD onthe ANSWER SHEET.10pointsI wasreally nervousthis yearbecause I was in a newclass.It[me thatI didnt know anyonein theclass,But2I didn*tknowanyone.I hadthe3to dosomething Ilove-people watching.The girlsitting behindme was always laughingand talkinghappily.She wasone of the veryfew peoplewho made any4toacknowledge me.At theend of the year,we were5to doa bigopen-ended projectwhere the6were basicallyto readsomething,then watchsomethingrelated toit,and then7a presentationbased onwhat we learned.On thepresentation day,that girl8in frontof theclass,and toldeveryone howshe hadread abouteating disorders,because sheherselfhad9with one.As itwas toodifficult forher to talk aboutit10she hadmadeamovie,where she had11some peopleabout theireatingdisorders and how theyhad feltand12them eventually.After thepresentation,almost13was intears.Several peoplecommented onhow14she was to standup andtalk aboutit,and howstrong she wastohave gotover thedisorder.I never15she wouldhave aproblem likethat becauseshe alwaysseemed16,Her couragetotalkaboutsomething so17in publicand herstrength to get throughher difficultieshave18me.Ive alsolearned howdifficult itis to19people.You neverknow whattype ofperson someoneis justby20for aterm.、1A.pleased B.confused C.interested D.scared、2A.since B.if C.before D.unless、3A.honor B.right C.chance D.duty、4A.discovery B.progress C.remark D.attempt、5A.forced B.required C.allowed D.reminded、6A.instructions B.purposes C.catalogues D.references、7A.try outfor B.make useof C.come upwith D.look forwardto、8A.turned awayB.got upC.looked downD.came back、9A.stayed B.begun C.struggled D.mixed、10A.directly B.swiftly C.randomly D.seriously、11A.informed B.consulted C.supported D.interviewed、12A.ignored B.overcome C.improved D.developed、13A.somebody B.anybody C.everybody D.nobodyB.Plan your trip to avoid peaktravel times.C.Luckily,with a little planning,these situationscan be avoided.D.Book airlinetickets.E.Each year,millions ofpeople loadup thefamily carand setout on a holidaytrip,F.For traveling by air,the number of bags that youtake is a muchbigger concern.G.Consider yourstarting pointand desireddestination,and investigateseveral possibleroutes.参考答案Section IUse ofEnglish、
11.D
2.A
3.C
4.D
5.B
6.A
7.C
8.B
9.C
10.A
11.D
12.B
13.C
14.B
15.A
16.A
17.D
18.B
19.C
20.DSection IIReading Comprehension、
21.D
2.C
3.B
4.B、
31.C
2.D
3.A
4.D、
41.D
2.B
3.B
4.B、
51.C
2.C
3.B
4.B
5.C
6.D、
61.whom
2.To reach
3.scolded
4.but
5.repeating
6.From
7.that
8..without
9.it
10.the、
71.affects
2.birth
4.where
5..most common/commonest
6.known
7.merely
8.colours
9.of
10.speakingSection IIITranslation、
81.C
2.B
3.D
4.F
5.A、
91.E
2.C
3.G
4.D
5.F、14A.reliable
15、A.expected B.admitted C.suspected D.concluded
16、A.cheerful B.honest C.curious D.independentB.brave C.patient D.generous、17A.specific B.professional C.complex D.personal、18A.comforted B.inspired C.persuaded D.relaxed、19A.amuse B.impress C.judge D.satisfy20A.thinking B.listening C.communicating D.observingSection IIReading ComprehensionPartADirections:Read the following fourtexts.Answer the questions beloweach textby choosingA,B,C orD.Mark youranswers on()the ANSWERSHEET.40pointsText1(发声的)Most birdsproduce short,simple calls,but songbirdsalso have the abilityof manycomplex vocalpatterns that help(领土也),them attractmates,defend territoryand strengthen their socialbonds.Each songbirdspecies has its ownunique songpatterns,some withcharacteristic regionaldialects.Experienced listenerscan evendistinguish individualbirds bytheir unique songs.A lot of whatscientists knowabout birdsong comesfrom studyingzebra finches.A babymale zebrafinch typicallylearns to singfrom itsfather orother males,starting whileits stilla babybird in the nest.First comesthe sensorylearning stage,when the baby finchhearsthe songs sung aroundit andcommits themto memory.The birdstarts tovocalize during the motorlearning stage,practicing untilit can matchthe songit memorized.As thebird leams,hearing thetutors songover andover againis helpful-up toa point.If it hears(模仿)the songtoo manytimes,the imitationbecomes worse—and thesource matters.If the song isplayed througha loudspeaker,he cantpick itup aseasily.But hidethe sameloudspeaker insidea toypainted to look likea zebrafinch,and hislearning improves.What ifthebabynever hearsanother zebrafinchs songInterestingly enough,itll singanyway.Isolated finchesstill producewhat are calledinnate songsor isolate songs.A specifictune mightbe taught,but theinstinct tosing seemsto existin asongbirds brain.Innate songssound differentfrom the cultured”songs learnedfrom otherfinches-at first.If isolatezebra finchesstart a new colony,the youngbirds pickup the isolatesongfrom theirfathers.But thesong changesfrom generationto generation.And aftera fewgenerations,the melodyactually startsto resembletheculturedsongssung by zebrafinches in the wild.、1What can be learnedfrom the first paragraphA.Songbirds dontmake short,simple calls.B,Each songbirdhasitsuniquesongpatterns.C.Some songbirdscan speakhuman regionaldialects.D.Songbirds promoterelations withothers bysinging.、2Which of the followingis trueabout ababy zebrafinchs learningprocessA.It beginsto learntosingfrom itsparents,B.The moreithearsthesong,the betterit sings.C.Before practicing,it hasto rememberthe songs.D.A loudspeakeris goodenough to beagood teacher.、3The underlinedwords innatesongs inparagraph3refer to.A.the songssungbyonly onebird itselfB.the songsthat abird producesnaturally withoutlearningC,the songsthat aretaught byparentsD.thesongsalways differentfrom thoseof thesame species、4Whafs thebest titleof thistextA.What CanSongbirds Dowith SingingB,How DoSongbirds Learnto SingC.Why AreBird SongsDifferentD.What Isa ZebraFinchText2(听诊器)When I was5,my fatherworked thenight shiftas anurse in a hospital.He was always carryinghis stethoscopesonaturally,so Icalled him“Dr.Saldivar“while Ipressed hisstethoscope againsthis chest.But myfather,asahumble man,was alwayscorrectingme:“I amnot adoctor,son,but you can beone.I grewup feelinglike I had nolimits because of momentslike this,whichhas helpedme takerisks personallyand professionallyin spiteof thehardships I had toendure.Being bornto Mexicanimmigrants meantthat myparents had to workvery hardto providefor myfamily and Ihad to learntostruggle throughschool paperworkon myown,because myparents*English waslimited and they couldntalways be there motivatingusthrough theprocess.If I wanted tosucceed academically,my perseverance,and strengthwould betested.Perseverance,strength andgood educationare thegateway tosuccess.And thisis especiallytrue whenyou look at theobstacles(辍学)that Latinoshave toovercome tosucceed inpublic schools.For instance,while thenational highschool dropoutrate hasdecreasedsignificantly,we stillhave thehighest dropoutrate in the country.We aremore likelyto livein povertyand attendraciallyseparated schools.These issuescreate manyother problemsfor Latinos.To helprelieve myfamily burden,I foundmy firstjob when I was14at alocal hotel.Despite thelong hourson mynew job,Iworked hard.Meanwhile,I continuallystressed theimportance ofgetting arespectable educationand dideverything possibletogetonestep closerto makingmy dreama reality.Nearly adecade later,I became the firstin myfamily tograduate from the Universityof SouthernCalifornia.Knowing thesocial,economic,and politicalstruggles that a communityfaces,1began topursue journalismto givethe disadvantagedminorities avoice.、1What inspiredthe authorwhen hewas achildA.His curiosityabout thestethoscope.B.A nursein his fathers hospital.C.The encouragingwords fromhisfather.D.The hardshipshe suffered.、2The examplein thethird paragraphgiven bythe authorsuggests.A.more Latinosare receivinghigher educationin AmericaB.racial separationhas longbeen forbiddenin AmericaC.American educationsystem isbetter constructedD.Latino immigrantsare stillfacing manyproblems、3The authorchose tobecome ajournalist,hoping to.A.speak for the disadvantagedLatinos B.enjoy adifferent lifeC.show hissuccess asa LatinoD.repay thesacrifice hisparents made、4What canwe learn from the authors experienceA.Immigration is an approachto personalsuccess.B・American Dreamis difficultfor theLatinos toachieve.C.Disadvantaged Latinosare stillfacing manychallenges.D.Good educationisaway tosuccessful life.Text3Ride-hailing appsand robotcars promiseto changehow weget aroundand theeffects arealready beingfelt.Traffic inNewYork isslowing down.Jams arecommon in Manhattan,especially inits businessdistricts.Daytime trafficinthebusiest areasnowmoves almost20%more slowlythan itdid fiveyears ago.It seemsa placeripe forwide useof ride-hailing appsthat,you mightthink,would reducesome ofthe jams.However,those appsappeartobemaking thingsworse astraffic hasslowed inline withthe growingpopularity of apps suchas Uberand Lyft,a studybytransport expertBruce Schallersuggests.Over thefour yearsofthestudy,the numberof carsinManhattanseeking ride-hailing faresincreased by81%.There arenowabout68,000ride-sharing driversacross NewYork.Thafs aboutfive timesthe numberoftheyellow cabslicensed tooperate there,hefound.There areso manydrivers,his worksuggests,who spendabout45%of theirspare timejust touringfor fares.That isa lotofunused carsblocking alotofbusy streets.Simple physicsexplains whyride-sharing vehiclesare causing,not curingjams,said JarrettWalker,a public transport policyexpertwho hasadvised hundredsof citiesabout moving people.“Lots ofpeople aredeciding that,9Oh,publictransportis justtoo muchtrouble thismorning/or whenever,which causesa shiftfromit/he toldthe BBC.That meansmovingpeoplefrom largervehicles intosmaller ones,which meansmore vehiclesto movethesame people.Therefore,more traffic.(塞车),Data gatheredabout ride-sharing driversillustrates howthey contributeto congestionsaid Prof.Christo Wilson,acomputer scientistat NortheasternUniversity whohas studiedthe services.You canlook at the trafficpattern for the Ubervehiclesand itperfectly matchesthe peaksfor therush hourand thepeak timeofaday,“he said.They areout therein forceat theworst possibletimes.1What canwe knowabout thecabs inNew YorkA.More cabsare neededto meetthe demand.B.They oftentour aroundthe cityseeking users.C.Their faresincreased greatlyover thefour years.D.The numberof themis farless thanride-sharing cars.、2What isChristo Wilsonsattitude towardride-sharing practiceA.Neutral B.NegativeC.Indifferent D.Supportive、3Which ofthefollowingbest replacesit underlinedin Paragraph
5.A.A jam.B.Public transportC.A car.D.A ride-sharing vehicle.、4What is thebest title forthe textA.Worse RoadJams.B.App MakesTerrible Jams.C.Efforts Neededfor Traffic.D.Technology Countsin Future.Text4When CharlesLee handedmethesmall rednotebook in1974,he changedmy life.While youare traveling,you shouldkeepnotes ofthings yousee anddo Jhe explained.I was20years old,a junior in college,spending aterm atthe Universityof London.Charles wasa retiredtraveling salesman.Iwas stayingwith himin hiscottage inKendal,located inthe LakeDistrict ofnorthern England.It wasa one-week homestaytheuniversity arrangedfor usbefore classesbegan.I took his advice.I wrote inthe notebook everyday duringthe homestay.Back in London,I recordedweekend tripsto Wales,Yorkshire,France,and Spain.I commentedon myclasses,professors,and classmates.I contrastedmy lifeat asmallcollege inthe USwith mywandering throughthe streetsof London,my introductionto lifeinabig city,and myinitial travelsoutsidethe US.I trackedideas Ihad aboutmy lifeand myfuture.When Iwroteinthe notebook,I struggledwith asense ofmy audienceand purpose.Who wouldread thisWere thesewritings(提示)just forme,or didIwantothers toread themWas Irecording events and ideasjust asa promptto memory,or wasthere somelargerpurpose forthis dailyexerciseI knewIwasrecording events,thoughts,words thatwere importantto my life.T imagineda future me sittingdown toread thepages.I wonderedwhat itwould feellike toread thosewords later.I wonderedwhere Iwould beand whatmy lifewould belike.I filledthenotebookCharles gaveme.I boughtanewone andfilled it.Then anotherand another.I continuedwriting innotebooksfor fourdecades.By thattime,they filledtwo boxesin mygarage.Ihadreread someofthejournals.Specific volumeshad providedme withthe backgroundI neededfor dozensof articles formagazines.But Ihad neverread themall.Recently,I decidedto bringmy collectionof notebooksinto myoffice andreplay mylife.AsI openedthe firstbox,I suddenlybecame nervouswould Ilike the former medescribed onthose pagesThere wasa riskin openingthatfirst notebook.I didit anyway.Charles hadbeen right.I rememberedthe bigeventsandthe centralhappenings,but oneach pagewere manydetails I hadnt(保留).retainedThe pagesrevealed highlightsfrom collegeclasses andstories aboutroommates andfriends.I readanxious commentsId writtenasTd launchedmy teachingcareer,learned to write lessonplants,assigned gradesfor studentwork,and solveddiscipline problems.Ireflected onmy comingmarriage,thenthewedding,and eventuallythe proudmoments whenI heldeach ofmy threegirls asa father.(游猎)I recountedmore trips——returning toEurope,teaching inSouth America,going onsafari inAfrica,and exploringGreenland.I relivedmemories oftrails hit,rivers crossed,and mountainsclimbed.The writingsin thosejournals framedmylife.Ihadntwritten everyday.I oftenskipped afew daysor evenweeks,but Ialwayspicked upthe writingwhen itfelt important.Journals wentwith mewhenItraveled,andIoften wrotein themat schoolwhen myownstudents werewriting.(持续)It tookseveral longevenings toread throughthe notebooks,taking meon tourspanning42years.As Iread Icould recallsittingonabench inTrafalgar SquareinLondonorinour apartmentin Perutowriteto thefutureme.It wasthen thatI realized:I amnowthe personIwaswriting tothroughout thoseyears.、1What canwelearnabout CharlesLeeA.He wasan Englishmanthe authorcame across.B.He gavethe authora notebookas birthdaypresent.C・The authorgained valuableexperience oflife fromhim.D.The authoronce livedin hishouse asa collegegraduate.、2One reasonwhy the author keptwriting journalswas thathe wantedto.A.let othersread whathe wroteinthefutureB.live upto CharlesLees expectationfor himC.know whathis lifewould belike inthe futureD.leave somethingspecial tohis threedaughters、3How didtheauthorfeel whenhe openedthefirstbox filledwith hisjournalsA.Curious.B.Worried.C.Surprised.D.Disappointed.、4By mentioningthe highlightsin Paragraph10,theauthorintends totell us.A.the regretshehadabout hislifeB・the benefitsof keepingjournalsC.the bigevents thathappened tohimD.the themesof hisarticlesformagazines、5We canlearnfromthe passagethat theauthor.A,rarely wrotejournals atschoolB.keeps adaily journalof hislifeC.even wrotejournals whentravelingD.had keptwriting journalsfor fivedecades、6What wouldbe thebesttitleforthepassageA.Rereading myjournals B.My interestingexperience oflifeC,A rednotebook D.A giftto myfuture selfPartBDirections:Read thefollowing textand answerthequestionsby choosingthe mostsuitable subheadingfromthelist A-G foreachnumbered paragraph41—
45.There aretwo extrasubheadings whichyou donot need to use.Mark youranswerson the ANSWERSHEET.10pointsThere wasa farminasmall countryThe farmer^daughter hadto carryfresh milkto customersin variousvillages,one牧师」竹筏of1,wasapriest2reach hishouse,the milkmaidhadtocross astream Peoplecrossed itby raftOneday thepriest,finding itarrived verylate,3scold thepoor girl“What canI do”she said“I startedout earlyfrom myhouse,
4.1hadtowait along timefortheboatman tocome”Then thepriest said,“What!people haveeven walkedacross theocean by
5.repeat thename ofGod,but youcant crossthis littleriver“This milkmaidtookhiswords veryseriously准时地
6.then on,she broughtthe priesfsmilk punctuallyevery morningHe becamecurious aboutit andasked herhow itwas
7.shewasnever lateany more“I crossedthe riverrepeating thename ofGod Justas youhad toldme todo,8,waiting fbrthe raftJ shereplied Thepriest didntbelieveher,so theywent togetherto the water andthe milkmaidbegan towalk over9_Looking back,the milkmaidsaw thepriestJ踉跄floundering inthewater“Sir!”she cried“You areuttering thename ofGod,but alllO^while youare holdingup yourclothes fromgetting wetThat isnottrusting inGod^^People withcolour blindness cant seecolours ina normalway Colourblindness1^affect approximately1in12men and1in200women inthe worldThereare variouscauses of colour blindnessFor themajority of colour-blind people,the conditionis somethingthey havefrom
2.bear,although somepeople getit laterin lifebecauseofdiseases」Most colour-blind peoplecan seethings asclearly asother people,but3are unable to fullysee red,green orblue lightThere」are differenttypes ofcolour blindnessand thereare extremelyrare cases
4.people areunableto see anycolour atall The5common」form ofcolour blindnessis red/green colour blindness Although6know asred/green colour blindness,theformofcolourblindness、doesn*t meansufferers7mere mixup redand greenIt meansthey mixup all8colour thathave somered orgreen aspart ofthewhole colour中等的The effects
9.colourblindnesscan bemild,moderate orsevere Approximately40%ofcolourblind peopleare evenunawarethat theyrecolourblindStatistically1O^Cspeak,most peoplewith amoderate formof red/green colourblindnesscanonlyidentify5coloured pencilsfrom astandard boxof24pencil crayonsSectionIII TranslationDirections:Much meaningTranslatethefollowingtext intoChinese.Write yourtranslation ontheANSWERSHEET.15pointscan beconveyed clearlywith oureyes,so itis oftensaid thateyes canspeak.、Do youhave suchkind ofexperience1,but nottoo long.And ifhe issensing thatheisbeing staredat,he mayfeeluncomfortable.、2,If youare lookedat formore thannecessary,you willlook at yourself upand downtoseeif thereis anythingwrong withyou.If nothinggoes wrong,you willfeel angrytoward othersstare withyou thatway.Eyes dospeak,right、
3.But thingsare differentwhen itcomes tostaring atthe oppositesex.If aman glancesatawoman formore than10seconds,his intentionsare obvious,that is,he wishesto attracther attentionto makeher understandthatheis admiringher.In fact,continuouseye contactoccurs betweenlovers only,who willenjoy lookingat eachother tenderlyfor along timeto showaffection thatwordscannot express.However,the normaleye contactfor two people engagedin conversationis thatthe speakerwill onlylookatthe listenerfrom time、to time,in orderto makesure thatthe listeneris attentive.4,as ifhe triesto controlyou,you willfeeluncomfortable.A poorliar usuallyexposes himselfby lookingtoo long atthevictim,since hebelieves inthe falseidea thatto look、,straight inthe eyeisasign ofhonest communication.5Evidently,eye contactshould bedone accordingto therelationship betweentwopeopleandthespecific situation.A.Quite thecontraryB.The sameis indaily lifeC.In abus youmay lookatastrangerD.Looking toolongat someone mayseem tobe rudeE.This showsthe listeneris interestedin yourspeechF.If aspeaker looksatyoucontinuously whenspeakingG.Sometimes itdoesnt mattertolookatsomeonetoo longHowto Plana HolidayTrip、1Whether itsto grandmashouse,a familyreunion orsimply aholiday getaway,these yearlyroad tripscan oftenbethesourceof dreadand stress.The thoughtof beingtrapped inthe carwith restlesschildren orthe possibility of cartrouble alongthe wayis、enough tomake anyoneconsider stayinghome.2Plan outthe routefor yourcar trip.If you*re planningon drivingto yourholiday destination,alittleplanning can help makeyourtrip easyand uneventful.3_Remember,its likelythat youwont bethe onlyperson onthe roadduringthe holidays,and trafficisalways afactor.Alternate routesor shortcutscanhelpreduce timespent intraffic jamsand getyou toyour destinationsooner.Thisinformation canalso comein handyin caseof roadconstruction orother situationsthat mightblock yourprimary route.、4Although travelingby aircanbequick andconvenient,itcanalso bemuch moreexpensive.Start planningyour tripearly totakeadvantage ofadvance purchasediscounts andavoid soldout flights.Many airlinesbecome extremelybusy duringthe holidayssobooking inadvance canalso helpensure that you getthe flightsthatyouwant.High trafficdestinations suchas NewYork,Los AngelesorAtlanta canbe extremelycrowded duringtheholidays.If youhavetheoption,consider bookingyour flighttoanearby airportandrenting acar forthe shortdrive toyour destination.Consider yourluggage needs.If youretravelingbycar,the issueof luggageis onlyimportant withregards tothe amountof roomneeded.Before youbegin packing,think abouthow manypeople willbe inyour vehicleandhowmuch roomthey willneedtotravel、comfortably.This couldaffect thenumberofbagsthatyoucantake along.5Not onlyisthe possibilityoflost luggagean issue,butmost airlinesnow chargeextra forchecked baggage.For afamily offour,carrying afew bagseach couldresult inseveral hundreddollars worthof baggagefees duringyourtrip.Tryto packas lightlyas possible.A.As analternative todriving orflying,check intothepossibilityof travelingby train.。