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1、硕士研究生入学考试“考试虫”英语8套模拟试卷(六)Section Use of EnglishDirections:Read the following text. Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark A, B, C or D on ANSWER SHEET 1. When lab rats sleep, their brains revisit the maze they navigated during the day, according to a new study (1) yesterday, offeri
2、ng some of the strongest evidence (2) that animals do indeed dream. Experiments with sleeping rats found that cells in the animals brains fire in a distinctive pattern (3) the pattern that occurs when they are (4) and trying to learn their way around a maze. Based on the results, the researchers con
3、cluded the rats were dreaming about the maze, (5) reviewing what they had learned while awake to (6) the memories. Researchers have long known that animals go (7) the same types of sleep phases that people do, including rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep, which is when people dream. But (8) the occasion
4、al twitching, growling or barking that any dog owner has (9) in his or her sleeping pet, theres been (10) direct evidence that animals (11) . If animals dream, it suggests they might have more (12) mental functions than had been (13) . We have as humans felt that this (14) of memoryour ability to re
5、call sequences of experienceswas something that was (15) human, Wilson said. The fact that we see this in rodents (16) suggest they can evaluate their experience in a significant way. Animals may be (17) about more than we had previously considered. The findings also provide new support for a leadin
6、g theory for (18) humans sleepto solidify new learning. People are now really nailing down the fact that the brain during sleep is (19) its activity at least for the time immediately before sleep and almost undoubtedly using that review to (20) or integrate those memories into more usable forms, sai
7、d an assistant professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School.1. A related B retained C released D relieved2. A as yet B still C however D by then3. A intersecting B paralleling C resembling D differing4. A sleeping B dreaming C awake D aware5. A in circles B in accord C in case D in essence6. A
8、erase B consolidate C discipline D improve7. A for B by C through D in8. A instead of B as well as C apart from D except for9. A guaranteed B encountered C confirmed D witnessed10. A little B some C much D enough11. A cry B memorize C dream D sleep12. A complex B confused C vigorous D instantaneous1
9、3. A validated B recognized C calculated D evaluated14. A remainder B acquisition C property D accuracy15. A mainly B uniquely C approximately D respectively16. A did B does C would D will17. A displaying B thinking C performing D behaving18. A why B when C how D where19. A reviewing B analyzing C d
10、ecoding D stressing20. A consolidate B transform C reorganize D renovateSection Reading ComprehensionPart ADirections:Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.Text 1 Car makers have long used sex to sell their p
11、roducts. Recently, however, both BMW and Renault have based their latest European marketing campaigns around the icon of modern biology. BMWs campaign, which launches its new 3-series sports saloon in Britain and Ireland, shows the new creation and four of its earlier versions zigzagging around a la
12、ndscape made up of giant DNA sequences, with a brief explanation that DNA is the molecule responsible for the inheritance of such features as strength, power and intelligence. The Renault offering, which promotes its existing Laguna model, employs evolutionary theory even more explicitly. The compan
13、ys television commercials intersperse clips of the car with scenes from a lecture by Steve Jones, a professor of genetics at University of London. BMWs campaign is intended to convey the idea of development allied to heritage. The latest product, in other words, should be viewed as the new and impro
14、ved scion of a long line of good cars. Renaults message is more subtle. It is that evolution works by gradual improvements rather than sudden leaps (in this, Renault is aligning itself with biological orthodoxy). So, although the new car in the advertisement may look like the old one, the external f
15、orm conceals a number of significant changes to the engine. While these alterations are almost invisible to the average driver, Renault hopes they will improve the cars performance, and ultimately its survival in the marketplace. Whether they actually do so will depend, in part, on whether marketers
16、 have read the public mood correctly. For, even if genetics really does offer a useful metaphor for automobiles, employing it in advertising is not without its dangers. That is because DNAs public image is ambiguous. In one context, people may see it as the cornerstone of modern medical progress. In
17、 another, it will bring to mind such controversial issues as abortion, genetically modified foodstuffs, and the sinister subject of eugenics. Car makers are probably standing on safer ground than biologists. But even they call make mistakes. Though it would not be obvious to the casual observer, som
18、e of the DNA which features in BMWs ads for its nice, new car once belonged to a woolly mammotha beast that has been extinct for 10,000 years. Not, presumably, quite the message that the marketing department was trying to convey.21. The campaign staged by both BMW and Renault are to market A cars ba
19、sed on the old ones. B cars modeled on DNA technology. C cars produced with most advanced technology. D cars face-lifted only but little genuinely changed.22. The difference between BMWs and Renaults campaign is that A BMWs emphasizes technological revolution more explicitly. B Renaults proves to be
20、 more successful. C Renaults provides more delicate messages than BMWs. D BMWs employs the metaphor of DNA while Renaults doesnt.23. It can be inferred that biological orthodoxy favors A no change. B step-by-step change. C all-of-a-sudden change. D radical change.24. According to the author, the suc
21、cess of the campaigns may depend on A perceived product quality. B public perceptions of DNA. C efforts made by the organizers. D explicitness in explaining DNA to buyers.25. The author thinks that unfortunately BMWs campaign has conveyed the idea of A poverty, B extinction. C revolution. D evolutio
22、n.Text 2 We know today that the traditions of tribal art are more complex and less primitive than its discoverers believed; we have even seen that the imitation of nature is by no means excluded from its aims. But the style of these ritualistic objects could still serve as a common focus for that se
23、arch for expressiveness, structure, and simplicity that the new movements had inherited from the experiments of the three lonely rebels: Van Gogh, Cezanne, and Gauguin. The experiments of Expressionism are, perhaps, the easiest to explain in words. The term itself may not be happily chosen, for we k
24、now that we are all expressing ourselves in everything we do or leave undone, but the word became a convenient label because of its easily remembered contrast to Impressionism, and as a label it is quite useful. In one of his letters, Van Gogh had explained how he set about painting the portrait of
25、a friend who was very dear to him, The conventional likeness was only the first stage. Having painted a correct portrait, he proceeded to change the colors and the setting. Van Gogh was right in saying that the method he had chosen could be compared to that of the cartoonist. Cartoon had always been
26、 expressionist, for the cartoonist plays with the likeness of his victim, and distorts it to express just what he feels about his fellow man. As long as these distortions of nature sailed under the flag of humor nobody seemed to find them difficult to understand. Humorous art was a field in which ev
27、erything was permitted, because people did not approach it with prejudices. Yet there is nothing inconsistent about it. It is true that our feelings about things do color the way in which we see them and, even more, the forms which we remember. Everyone must have experienced how different the same p
28、lace may look when we are happy and when we are sad. What upset the public about the Expressionist art was, perhaps, not so much the fact that nature had been distorted as that the result led away from beauty. For the Expressionists felt so strongly about human suffering, poverty, violence and passi
29、on, that they were inclined to think that the insistence on harmony and beauty were only born out of a refusal to be honest. The art of the classical masters, of a Raphael or Correggio, seemed to them insincere and hypocritical. They wanted to face the bare facts of our existence, and to express the
30、ir compassion fur the disinherited and the ugly.26. Expressionism is a(n) A artistic style expressing the artists inner experiences objectively. B marked trend characteristic of insisting on harmony and beauty. C new movement based on expressive style. D fundamental revolution in arts.27. The Van Go
31、ghs letter (Para. 2) was mentioned to A afford evidence of the origin of Expressionism. B solve the mystery of Van Goghs drawings. C show the difference between Van Gogh and a cartoonist. D exhibit the unique feature of the Expressionists art.28. Which one of the following is the Expressionist posit
32、ion concerning harmony and beauty in art? A It emerged from conformity and fear of change. B It is a misconception of social life. C It originated from untruthfulness. D It is essential that no such thing as true beauty exists.29. In the authors opinion, the art of Raphael and Correggio A makes the
33、public suspect their true motives. B displayed too much of the dark side of the human society. C was characteristic of an insistence on harmony and beauty. D reflected the objective world insincerely.30. It can be inferred from the passage that the Expressionists were A lonely people frequently feel
34、ing unhappy at being alone. B motivated by a desire to change for the sake of changing. C not immediately acknowledged by the masses. D appreciative of the effect of cartoons on their work.Text 3 Research is commonly divided into applied and pure. This classification is arbitrary and loose, but what
35、 is usually meant is that applied research is a deliberate investigation of a problem of practical importance, in contradistinction to pure research done to gain knowledge for its own sake. The pure scientist may be said to accept as an act of faith that any scientific knowledge is worth pursuing fo
36、r its own sake, and, if pressed, he usually claims that in most instances it is eventually found to be useful. Most of the greatest discoveries, such as the discovery of electricity, X-rays, radium and atomic energy, originated from pure research, which allows the worker to follow unexpected, intere
37、sting clues without the intention of achieving results of practical value. In applied research it is the project which is given support, whereas in pure research it is the man. However, often the distinction between pure and applied research is a superficial one as it may merely depend on whether or
38、 not the subject investigated is one of practical importance, For example, the investigation of the life cycle of a protozoon in a pond is pure research, but if the protozoon studied is a parasite of man or domestic animal the research would be termed applied. A more fundamental differentiation, whi
39、ch corresponds only very roughly with the applied and pure classification is (a) that in which the objective is given and the means of obtaining it are sought, and (b) that in which the discovery is first made and then a use for it is sought. There exists in some circles a certain amount of intellec
40、tual snobbery and tendency to look contemptuously, on applied investigation. This attitude is based on the following two false ideas: that new knowledge is only discovered by pure research while applied research merely seeks to apply knowledge already available, and that pure research is a higher in
41、tellectual activity because it requires greater scientific ability and is more difficult. Both these ideas are quite wrong. Important new knowledge has frequently arisen from applied investigation; for instance, the science of bacteriology originated largely from Pasteurs investigations of practical
42、 problem in the beer, wine and silkworm industries. Usually it is more difficult to get results in applied research than in pure research, because the worker has to stick to and solve a given problem instead of following any promising clue that may turn up. Also in applied research most fields have
43、already been well worked over and many of the easy and obvious things have been done. Applied research should not be confused with the routine practice of some branch of science where only the application of existing knowledge is attempted. There is need for both pure and applied research for they t
44、end to be complementary.31. It is generally believed that in applied investigation A research workers follow unexpected, interesting clues. B scientists make a discovery first, and then try to use it. C it is the man rather than the project who is given support. D results of practical value are to be achieved.32. According to the author, A the investigation of the life cycle of a protozoon is pure research. B applied investigation is looked down upon in modern society. C the discovery of X-rays was made in applied research.