2013年职称英语综合类C级模拟题 1-08

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2013年职称英语《综合类C级》模拟试题及答案

2013职称英语综合类C级模拟试卷及答案

  第1部分:词汇选项 (115题,每题1分,共15)

  下面共有15个句子,每个句子中均有1个词或短语划有底横线,请从每个句子后面所给的4个选项中选择1个与划线部分意义最相近的词或短语。答案一律涂在答题卡相应的位置上。

  1 The nursery is bright and cheerful.

  A pleasant B clean

  C peaceful D large

  2 This kind of material was seldom used in building houses during the Middle Ages.

  A never B rarely

  C often D only

  3 People from many places were drawn to the city by its growing economy.

  A fetched B carried

  C attractedD pushed

  4 The soldier displayed remarkable courage in the battle.

  A placedB showed

  C pointed D decided

  5 How do you account for your absence from the class last Thursday?

  A explain B examine

  C chooseD expand

  6 About one quarter of the workers in the country are employed in factories

  A third B fourth

  C tenth D fifteenth

  7 She was grateful to him for being so good to her.

  A careful B hateful

  C beautifulD thankful

  8 There are only five minutes left, but the outcome of the match is still in doubt.

  A resultB judgement

  C estimation D event

  9 He is certain that the dictionary is just what I want.

  A sure B angry

  C doubtful D worried

  10 The last few weeks have been enjoyable.

  A close B near

  C past D several

  11 What were the consequences of the decision she had made?

  A reasonsB results

  C causes D bases

  12 They didn't realize how serious the problem was

  A knowB forget

  C doubt D remember

  13 We shall keep the money in a secure place

  A clean B secret

  C distant D safe

  14 The great changes of the city astonished every visitor to that city.

  A attacked B surprised

  C attractedD interested

  15 The city has decided to do away with all the old buildings in its centre

  A get rid of B set up

  C repair D paint

2部分:阅读判断(1622题,每题1分,共7)

  阅读下面这篇短文,短文后列出了7个句子,请根据短文的内容对每个句子做出判断。如果该句提供的是正确信息,请在答题卡上把A涂黑;如果该句提供的是错误信息,请在答题卡上把B涂黑;如果该句的信息文章中没有提及,请在答题卡上把C涂黑。

  The Industrial Age and Employment

  The industrial age has been the only period of human history in which most people's work has taken the form of jobs. The industrial age may now be coming to an end, and some of the changes in work patterns which it brought may have to be reversed. This seems a daunting thought. But, in fact, it could offer the prospect of a better future for work. Universal employment, as its history shows, has not meant economic freedom.

  Employment became widespread when the enclosures of the 17th and 18th centuries made many people dependent on paid work by depriving them of the use of the land, and thus of the means to provide a living for themselves. Then the factory system destroyed the cottage industries and removed work from people's homes. Later, as transport improved, first by rail and then by road, people commuted longer distances to their places of employment until, eventually, many people's work lost all connection with their home lives and the places in which they lived.

  Meanwhile, employment put women at a disadvantage. In pre-industrial times, men and women had shared the productive work of the household and village community. Now it became customary for the husband to go out to paid employment, leaving the unpaid work of the home and families to his wife. Tax and benefit regulations still assume this norm today, and restrict more flexible sharing of work roles between the sexes.

  It was not only women whose work status suffered. As employment became the dominant form of work, young people and old people were excluded-a problem now, as more teenagers become frustrated at school and more retired people want to live active lives.

  All this may now have to change. The time has certainly come to switch some effort and resources away from the idealist goal of creating jobs for all, to the urgent practical task of helping many people to manage without full-time jobs.

  16 The established work patterns may be changed with the closing of the industrial age.

  A Right B Wrong C Not mentioned

  17 Universal employment has brought about economic freedom.

  A Right B Wrong C Not mentioned

  18 Many people depended on the land for a living before the 17th century.

  A Right B Wrong C Not mentioned

  19 Improved transport enabled people to travel longer distances to their work places.

  A Right B Wrong C Not mentioned

  20 Employed women of equal qualifications are paid less than men.

  A Right B Wrong C Not mentioned

  21 A large number of teenagers will quit school next year.

  A Right B Wrong C Not mentioned

  22 Now is the time to handle the issue of employment in a practical manner.

  A Right B Wrong C Not mentioned

3部分:概括大意与完成句子(2330题,每题1分,共8)

  阅读下面这篇短文,短文后有2项测试任务:(1)2326题要求从所给的6个选项中为第25段每段选择1个正确的小标题;(2)2730题要求从所给的6个选项中选择4个正确选项,分别完成每个句子。请将答案涂在答题卡相应的位置上.

  Searching for Smiles

  1 Ask most people anywhere in the world what they want out of life and the reply will probably be: "to be happy." Ed Deiner, an American psychology professor, has spent his whole professional life studying what makes people happy, comparing levels of happiness between cultures and trying to find out exactly why we enjoy ourselves.

  2 Many people would say that this question does not need an answer. But Professor Deiner has one anyway. "If you're a cheerful, happy person, your marriage is more likely to last, and you're more likely to make money and be successful at your job. On average, happy people have stronger immune (免疫的) systems, and there is some evidence that they live longer."

  3 So who are the world's happiest people? It depends on how the word is defined. There is individual happiness, the sense of joy we get when we do something we like. But there is also the feeling of satisfaction we get when we know that others respect us and approve of how we behave. According to Professor Deiner, the Western world pursues individual happiness while Asia prefers mutual satisfaction.

  4 "In the West, the individualistic (个人主义的) culture means that your mood matters much more than it does in the East. People ask themselves, what can I do that's fun or interesting? They become unhappy when they can't do any of these things. If you ask people from Japan or China if they are happy, they tend to look at what has gone wrong in their lives. If not much has gone wrong, then they are satisfied."

  5 People from Spain and other Spanish-speaking countries had the happiest culture, Professor Deiner found. "The biggest cultural difference is to do with pride and shame. Hispanic (西班牙语言的) cultures report much more pride and much less shame than others."

  6 Income also made a big difference to people's happiness, but only at the lowest levels. Average income earners in the US were much happier than people in poverty. But millionaires were only a little bit happier than people on average incomes. It seems that money makes us happy when we have enough to feel secure.

  7 But can we be too happy? "You get people who are actually happy, but they think happiness is so important that they try to be even happier. This desire to be always happy is a product of individualism, where the emphasis is on you individually, your emotions and feeling good. People can end up feeling unhappy because ordinary happiness is not good enough for them."

  1 Paragraph 2__________ .

  2 Paragraph 3__________ .

  3 Paragraph 4__________ .

  4 Paragraph 5__________ .

  A Happiest Culture

  B An Unhappy Person

  C Definition of Happiness

  D Cultural Differences in Happiness

  E Reasons to Be Happy

  F Individual and Ordinary Happiness

  5 Professor Deiner has spent many years studying__________ in happiness.

  6 Professor Deiner believes that a happy person is less prone (易患) to__________ .

  7 Once we have got enough to feel safe, money does not make __________ difference to our happiness.

  8 According to Professor Deiner, some people feel unhappy because they cannot appreciate__________ .

  A a question

  B ordinary happiness

  C individualism

  D cultural differences

  E much

  F illnesses

4部分:阅读理解(3145题,每题3分,共45)

  下面有3篇短文,每篇短文后有5道题,每道题后面都有4个选项。请仔细阅读短文并根据短文回答其后面的问题,从4个选项中选择1个最佳答案涂在答题卡相应的位置上。

  第一篇

  Sleep Necessary for Memories

  Burning the midnight oil before an exam or interview does harm to the performance according to a recent research which found that sleep is necessary for memories to be taken back into the brain. A good night's sleep within 30 hours of trying to remember a new task is a required condition of having good recall in the weeks ahead, scientists have found.

  The research, published in the December issue of Nature Neuroscience, showed that it was the act of sleep, rather than the simple passage of time, that was critical for long-term memory formation.

  "We think that getting that first night's sleep starts the process of memory consolidation (巩固)," said Robert Stickgold, a sleep researcher at Harvard Medical School who conducted the latest study.

  "It seems that memories normally wash out of the brain unless some process nails them down. My suspicion is that sleep is one of those things that does the flailing down," Professor Stickgold said.

  With about one in five people claiming that they are so chronically short of sleep that it affects their daily activities, the latest work emphasizes the less well-understood side effect- serious memory impairment (损害).

  Volunteers in an experiment found it easier to remember a memory task if they were allowed to sleep that night. But for those kept awake, no amount of subsequent sleep made up for the initial loss.

  Professor Stickgold's team trained 24 people to identify the direction of three diagonal (斜线形的) bars flashed for a sixtieth of a second on a computer screen full of horizontal (水平的) stripes.

  Half of the subjects were kept awake that night, while the others slept. Both groups were allowed to sleep for the second and third nights to make up for any differences in tiredness between the volunteers.

  Those who slept the first night were significantly and consistently better at remembering the task while the second group showed no improvement despite enjoying two nights of catch-up sleep.

  1 The research published in Nature Neuroscience showed that what was essential to the formation of long-term memory was

  A intelligence.

  B time.

  C food.

  D sleep.

  2 Which of the following statements about the research is NOT true?

  A It was done within 30 hours.

  B It was headed by Professor Stickgold.

  C It focused on long-term memory formation.

  D There were altogether 24 subjects in the experiment.

  3 Stickgold's research focused on the side effect produced by

  A memory impairment.

  B lack of sleep.

  C low work efficiency.

  D memory recall.

  4 In Stickgold's experiment, those who were kept awake on the first night

  A could very well remember the direction of the diagonal bars.

  B didn't do any better after two nights' sleep.

  C were as tired as those who were not.

  D could recall the direction of more bars than those who were not.

  5 Those who slept the first night

  A couldn't remember the task.

  B could not sleep the second and third nights.

  C performed slightly better than those who did not

  D did much better than those who did not.

  第二篇

  The Cherokee Nation

  Long before the white man came to America, the land belonged to the American Indian nations. The nation of the Cherokees lived in what is now the southeastern part of the United States.

  After the white man came, the Cherokees copied many of their ways. One Cherokee named Sequoyah saw how important reading and writing were to the white man. He decided to invent a way to write down the spoken Cherokee language. He began by making word pictures…… For each word he drew a picture. But that proved impossible - there were just too many words. Then he took the 85 sounds that made up the language. Using his own imagination and an English spelling book, Sequoyah invented a sign for each sound. His alphabet proved amazingly easy to learn. Before long, many Cherokees knew how to read and write in their own language. By 1828, they were even printing their own newspaper.

  In 1830, the U.S. Congress passed a law. It allowed the government to remove Indians from their lands. The Cherokees refused to go. They had lived on their lands for centuries. It belonged to them. Why should they go to a strange land far beyond the Mississippi River?

  The army was sent to drive the Cherokees out. Soldiers surrounded their villages and marched them at gunpoint (在枪口的威胁下) into the western territory. The sick, the old and the small children went in carts, along with their belongings, The rest of the people marched on foot or rode on horseback. It was November, yet many of them still wore their summer clothes. Cold and hungry, the Cherokees were quickly exhausted by the hardships of the journey. Many dropped dead and were buried by the roadside. When the last group arrived in their new home in March 1839, more than 4,000 had died. It was indeed a march of death.

  6 The Cherokees used to live

  A by the roadside.

  B in the southeastern part of the US.

  C beyond the Mississippi River.

  D in the western territory.

  7 Which of the following statements about Sequoyah is NOT true?

  A He was imaginative.

  B He was an Indian.

  C He was a white man.

  D He wrote down the spoken Cherokee language.

  8 A law was passed in 1830 to

  A allow the Cherokees to stay where they were.

  B stop the Cherokees using their own language.

  C force the Cherokees to move westward.

  D forbid the Cherokees to print their own newspaper.

  9 The Cherokees went to their new lands

  A in carts.

  B on horseback.

  C on foot.

  D all of the above.

  10 The word "exhausted' in the last paragraph could be best replaced by

  A worn out.

  B ended up.

  C run out.

  D finished up.

  第三篇

  Knitting

  My mother knew how to knit (纺织), but she never taught me. She assumed, as did many women of her generation, that knitting was no longer a skill worth passing down from mother to daughter. A combination of feminism (女权主义) and consumerism (消费主义) made many women feel that such homely accomplishments were now out of date. My Grandmother still knitted, though, and every Christmas she made a pair of socks for my brother and me, of red wool (毛线). They were the ones we wore under our ice skates (冰鞋), when it was really important to have warm feet.

  Knitting is a nervous habit that happens to be productive. It helped me quit smoking by giving my hands something else to do. It is wonderful for depression because no matter what else happens, you are creating something beautiful. Time spent in front of the television or just sitting is no longer time wasted.

  I love breathing life into the patterns. It's true magic, finding a neglected, dog-eared (翻旧了的) old book with the perfect snowflake design, buying the same Germantown wool my grandmother used, in the exact blue to match my daughter's eyes, taking it on the train with me every day for two months, working enthusiastically to get it done by Christmas, staying up late after the stockings are filled to sew in the sleeves and weave in the ends.

  Knitting has taught me patience. I know that if I just keep going, even if it takes months, there will be a reward. When I make a mistake, I know that anger will not fix it, and that I just have to go back and start over again.

  People often ask if I would do it for money, and the answer is always a definite no. In the first place, you could not pay me enough for the hours I put into a sweater. But more important, this is an activity I keep separate from such considerations. I knit to cover my children and other people I love in warmth and color. I knit to give them something earthly that money could never buy.

  Knitting gives my life an alternative rhythm to the daily deadline. By day I can write about Northern Ireland or the New York City Police Department and get paid for it, but on the train home, surrounded by people with laptops, I stage my little rebellion. I take out my old knitting bag and join the centuries of women who have knitted for love.

  11 Why did many women feel that knitting was out of date?

  A Because their mothers had not taught them.

  B Because they were influenced by feminism and consumerism

  C Because they were feminists.

  D Because they were consumerists.

  12 The author wore the red socks her grandmother had knitted for her

  A when she went to school.

  B when she went hiking.

  C when she celebrated Christmas.

  D when she went skating.

  13 The word "quit' in paragraph 2 is closest in meaning to

  A give up.

  B speed up.

  C slow down,

  D build up.

  14 According to the passage, which of the following statements is NOT true?

  A Knitting helps one get rid of bad habits.

  B Knitting helps one get free from a bad mood.

  C Knitting requires patience.

  D Knitting is a profit-making business.

  15 Which of the following is NOT the writer's purpose of knitting?

  A To save money.

  B To save time

  C To enrich her life,

  D To show her love for the family.

5部分:补全短文(4650题,每题2分,共10)

  阅读下面的短文,文章中有5处空白,文章后面有6组文字,请根据文章的内容选择5组文字,将其分别放回文章原有位置,以恢复文章原貌。请将答案涂在答题卡相应的位置上。

  Garlic

  From early times man has used garlic (大蒜). The Bible speaks of it. The Israelites (古以色列人) were once far from home. They cried out to Moses, their leader, for the foods they loved: leeks (韭菜), onions, and garlic. The Romans, like the Israelites, loved to eat garlic. And they hung bags of garlic around their necks. _____(1) They also thought it would keep them from getting sick.

  A similar idea is still held. Many people take garlic thinking it will prevent or cure disease. Most doctors say it does no such thing. _____(2) Its smell may force people to stay far apart. At least then they can't pass germs on to each other. _____(3) What if you're in a play, for instance? Actors have been known to forget their lines because they couldn't stand the garlic smell on a fellow actor's breath. Some have even made up new lines and actions that kept them far away from the one who had eaten garlic.

  Through the years man has tried to cope with the smell of garlic. _____(4) We now know why. It's been found that the oils of the garlic do not stick to the teeth, Garlic tongue, or gums (齿龈). They go into the lungs instead. From there they are breathed out. They pass out through the skin too.

  Strange as it seems, food may have a great deal of garlic in it without smelling or tasting strong. It all depends on how it is cooked. French cooks make a good soup with whole cloves () of garlic. They use more than thirty cloves in one bowl of soup. But they take care not to crush them. And they cook them whole. _____(5) And as the cloves cook they change in some strange way. The soup turns out to be delicious. It's not strong at all.

  A But no medicine, mouthwash, chewing gum, or toothpaste seems to help much

  B As a result, the strong oils stay in the cloves.

  C They say it may help in one way, though.

  D Many people eat garlic.

  E But keeping your distance can be hard at times.

  F They hoped it would keep away the evil eye.

6部分:完形填空(5165题,每题1分,共15)

  阅读下面的短文,文中有15处空白,每处空白给出了4个选项,请根据短文的内容从4个选项中选择1个最佳答案,涂在答题卡相应的位置上。

  Public and Private Schools in the United States

  Religious and private schools receive little or no support from public taxes in the United States, and, as a result, are usually somewhat expensive to _____(). The largest group of religious schools in America _____(2) by the Roman Catholic Church. While religious schools tend to be _____(3) expensive than private schools, there are usually some fees.来源:www.exam8.com

  When there is free education available to all children in the United States, why do people _____(4) money on private schools? Americans offer _____(5) great variety of reasons for doing so, including the desire of some parents to send their children to schools _____(6) classes tend to be smaller, or where religious instruction is included as part of the educational program, or because, _____(7) their opinion, the public schools in their area are not _____(8) high enough quality to meet their needs. Private schools in the United States _____(9) widely in size, quality, and in the kind of program that are offered to meet _____(10) of certain students.

  The degree _____(11) American parents are active in their children's schools is often _____(12) to people of other countries. Most schools have organizations _____(13) of both parents and teachers, usually called P.T.A. for Parent-Teacher Association. They meet together to _____(14) various matters concerning the school. Parents often give _____(15) time to help with classroom or after school activities.

  1 A go B attend C take part in D come

  2 A ran B run C is run D is running

  3 A less B very C rather D much

  4 A spend B give C cost D take

  5 A a B the C these D an

  6 A which B what C in that D where

  7 A to B in C on D for

  8 A for B in C of D on

  9 A differ B varies C extend D differs

  10 A the needs B necessity C needs D need

  11 A on which B to which C which D what

  12 A surprise B surprised C surprising D rising

  13 A consisting. B comprising C composing D making up

  14 A talk to B speak to C discuss D exchange

  15 A his B their C her D there

答案:

  1.A  2. B  3. C  4. B  5. A

  6. B  7. D  8. A  9. A  10. C

  11. B  12. A  13. D  14. B  15. A

  16. A  17. B  18. A  19. A 20. C

  21. C  22. A

  23. E 24. C 25. D 26. A 27. D

  28. F 29. E 30. B

  31. D  32. A  33. B  34. B  35. D

  36. B  37. C  38. C  39. D  40. A

  41. B  42. D  43. A  44. D  45. A

  46. F  47. C  48. E  49. A  50. B

  51. B  52. C  53. A  54. A  55. A

  56. D  57. B  58. C  59. A  60. A

  61. B  62. C  63. A  64. C  65. B

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