2014年6月大学英语六级模拟试题及答案(第五套)

发布时间:2019-02-01 07:05:14

写作

1)目前社会上有许多人喜欢购买彩票 2)分析产生这种现象的原因 3)提出你的建议

【思路点拨】

本题属于提纲式文字命题。提纲第1点指出一种现象,提纲第2点要求分析产生这种现象的原因,提纲第3点要求“我”针对该现象给出建议,由此可判断本文应为现象解释型作文。

根据所给提纲,本文应包含以下内容:描述当前社会上人们热衷于购买彩票的现象;分析导致人们购买彩票的原因;针对购买彩票提出一至两点“我”的建议。

【参考范文】

  Why Do People Like to Buy Lotteries?

Nowadays, there exist all kinds of lotteries in our society, such as welfare lottery, sports lottery, computer lottery, and so forth. Anyone, whether men or women, the young or the old, may buy lottery tickets. But why do so many people like buying them?

The following reasons can account for the popularity of lotteries. First of all, most people are trying their luck on lottery tickets. They have a long-cherished dream of making big money overnight. In addition, there are some people who want to make donation to public welfare by buying lottery tickets. Besides, some people buy them just for fun.

As far as I am concerned, there are some risks in buying lotteries. People never should count on making big money by buying lotteries. Furthermore, lotteries to some extent are similar to gambling, so people should not spend too much money and energy on them. In a word, people should keep a clear head when buying lotteries.

 

 Compound Dictation Exercises

Around the world young people are spending (1) ___________ sums of money to listen to rock music. Forbes Magazine (2) ____________ that at least fifty rock stars have (3) ____________ of between two million and six million dollars (4) ____________ year.

“It doesn’t make much sense,” says Johnny Mathis, one of the (5) ____________ music millionaires, who made a million dollars a year when he was most popular, in the 1950s. “Performers aren’t (6) ____________ this kind of money. In fact, nobody is.”

But the rock stars’ admirers seem to (7) ____________ . Those who love rock music spend about two billion dollars a year for records. They pay 150 million to see rock stars in person.

Some (8) ____________ think the customers are buying more than music. According to one theory, _ rock music has a special appeal because no (9)______ training is needed to produce it There is no gulf between the audience and the performer. Every boy and girl in the audience thinks, “I could sing like that.” So rock has become a new kind of religion, a new form of _ (10) ____. Young people are glad to pay to worship a rock star because it is a way of worshipping themselves.

Luck is a key word for explaining the success of many. In 1972 one of the luckiest was Don McLean, who wrote and sang “American Pie.” McLean earned more than a million dollars from recordings of “American Pie.” Then, too, like most(11) ________, McLean writes his own music, so he earns an additional two cents on every single record of the song.

Keys Compound Dictation Exercises

(1) unbelievable

(2) claims

(3) incomes

(4) per

(5) older

6) worth

(7) disagree.

(8) observers

(9) real.

(10) worship.

(11) performers

  Reading

  01

There was on shop in the town of Mufulira, which was notorious for its color bar. It was a drugstore. While Europeans were served at the counter, a long line of Africans queued at the window and often not only were kept waiting but, when their turn came to be served, were rudely treated by the shop assistants. One day I was determined to make a public protest against this kind of thing, and many of the schoolboys in my class followed me to the store and waited outside to see what would happen when I went in.

I simply went into the shop and asked the manager politely for some medicine. As soon as he saw me standing in the place where only European customers were allowed to stand he shouted at me in a bastard language that is only used by an employed when speaking to his servants. I stood at the counter and politely requested in English that I should be served. The manager became

exasperated and said to me in English, “If you stand there till Christmas I will never serve you.” I went to the District commissioner’s office. Fortunately the District Commissioner was out, for he was one of the old school; however, I saw a young District Officer who was a friend of mine. He was very concerned to hear my story and told me that if ever I wanted anything more from the drugstore all I had to do was come to him personally and he would buy my medicine for me. I protested that that was not good enough. I asked him to accompany me back to the store and to make a protest to the manager. This he did, and I well remember him saying to the manager, “Here is Mr. Kaunda who is a responsible member of the Urban Advisory Council, and you treat him like a common servant.” The manager of the drugstore apologized and said, “If only he had introduced himself and explained who he was, then, of course I should have given him proper service.”

I had to explain once again that he had missed my point. Why should I have to introduce myself every time I went into a store…any more than I should have to buy my medicine by going to a European friend? I want to prove that any man of any color, whatever his position, should have the right to go into any shop and buy what he wanted.

1.“Color bar” in the first paragraph comes closest in meaning to ___.

A .a bar which is painted in different colors.

B. the fact that white and black customers are served separately.

C. a bar of chocolate having different colors.

D. a counter where people of different colors are served with beer.

2.The writer was, at the time of the story, ___.

A. a black school teacher

B .an African servant

C. a black, but a friend of Europeans

D a rich black

3.The manager of the drugstore shouted at the writer in a bastard language because ___.

A. he hadn’t learned to speak polite English. B. he thought the writer wouldn’t understand English.

C. that was the usual language used by Europeans when speaking to Africans.

D. that was the only language he could speak when he was angry.

4.In the third paragraph,“he was one of the old school” means ___.

A he believed in the age-old practice of racial discrimination.

B. he was a very old man

C. he graduated from an old,conservative school.

D. he was in charge of an old school.

5.Why didn’t the writer wait at the window of the drugstore like other black African?

A. Because he thought he was educated and should be treated differently.

B. Because he thought,being an important person,he should not be kept waiting

C. Because he thought his white friends would help him out.

D. Because he wanted to protest against racial discrimination.

02

Look at the keyboard of any standard typewriter or computer. "Q," "W," "E," "R," "T" and "Y" are the first six letters. Who decided on this arrangement of the letters? And why?

People tried for centuries to invent the typewriter. In 1714 in England, Henry Mill filed a patent for a machine called An Artificial Machine or Method for the Impressing or Transcribing of Letters, Singly or Progressively one after another, as in Writing, whereby

all Writing whatsoever may be Engrossed in Paper or Parchment so Neat and Exact as not to be distinguished from Print. That machine probably didn’ t sell because no one could remember its name!

The first practical typewriter was patented in the United States in 1868 by Christopher Latham Sholes. His machine was known as the type-writer. It had a movable carriage, a lever for turning paper from line to line, and a keyboard on which the letters were arranged in alphabetical order.

But Sholes had a problem. On his first model, his "ABC" key arrangement caused the keys to jam when the typist worked quickly. Sholes didn’ t know how to keep the keys from sticking, so his solution was to keep the typist from typing too fast.Sholes asked his brother-in-law to rearrange the keyboard so that the commonest letters were not so close together and the type bars would come from opposite directions. Thus they would not clash together and jam the machine.The new arrangement was the QWERTY arrangement typists use today. Of course, Sholes claimed that the new arrangement was scientific and would add speed and efficiency. The only efficiency it added was to slow the typist down, since almost any word in the English language required the typist’ s fingers to cover more distance on the keyboard.

The advantages of the typewriter outweighed the disadvantages of the keyboard. Typists memorized the crazy letter arrangement, and the typewriter became a huge success. By the time typists had memorized the new arrangement of letters and built their speed, typewriter technology had improved, and the keys didn’ t stick as badly as they had at first.

1.We know from the passage that the inventor of the first practical typewriter is_____.

A.Henry Mill

B.Christopher Latham Sholes

C.Sholes’brother-in-law

D.Allbert Einstein

2.The author thinks the machine invented by Henry Mill could not be sold because_____.

A.it was difficult for people to accept new things

B.there were great disadvantages of the keyboard

C.the machine could not be distinguished from print

D.the name of the machine was too long

3.Sholes decided the QWERTY arrangement of the keyboard in order to_____.

A.arrange the letters in alphabetical order

B.cause the keys to jam when the typist worked quickly

C.solve the problem of the keys jamming

D.compete with "ABC" key arrangement

4.It is inferred that the QWERTY arrangement of the keyboard__.

A.is the most scientific arrangement

B.adds speed and efficiency of typists

C.keeps the typist from typing too fast D.is easy for typists to memorize

5.Which of the following can be the best title of the passage?

A.The Arrangement of The Letters on Keyboard

B.The Story of Christopher Latham Sholes

C.How to Invent The Typewriter

D.The First Practical Typewriter

3

A scientific panel convened by the World Health Organization recommended guidelines on Friday for doctors conducting clinical studies of SARS patients. The panel urged doctors to apply the guidelines in analyzing the masses of potentially useful information about various therapies that were collected in this year’s epidemic. Much of that information has not been published or analyzed.

“It is a matter of urgency to get better analysis and review,” said Dr. Simon Mardel, a WHO official who led the two-day meeting that ended on Friday. He said thousands of potential therapies and compounds had been tested so far as researchers try to determine treatments for SARS, or severe acute respiratory syndrome. “We recognize that having no treatment for SARS is hindering our ability to control an epidemic in so many ways.” He said.

In the epidemic earlier this year, various treatments, like drugs to fight the virus or strengthen the immune system, as well as traditional Chinese medicine, were delivered under emergency conditions, in widely different settings and countries to patients suffering from varying stages of the illness. Those conditions—generally without standardized measurements or controlled situations—have made it hard to interpret results.

Standard supportive therapy like nursing, and in severe cases the use of mechanical

respirators(呼吸器)to help patients breathe, is the mainstay(主要支持)of SARS care, and helped many patients survive. But doctors still do not know how best to treat SARS patients who have breathing difficulties. Dr. Mardel said. One method is invasive ventilation. A second method involves blowing oxygen into the lungs through a mask. Both carry the risk of transmitting the virus to hospital employees. Without proper analysis, the panel was unable to say definitivelywhich treatment worked best, or which caused the most harm. “There is a lack of shared information,” Dr. Mardel said, noting that a lot of data have not been published.

The panel also agreed on guidelines that would allow doctors to conduct quick and safe clinical trials, a process that generally takes years to complete. The world Health Organization, a United Nations agency did not release the guidelines. Dr. Mardel said they were flexible because no one knew where, when and in what setting SARS would return. Experts in many countries have already listed the treatments they want to test, and the health agency is leaving these decisions to individual nations.

1. Guidelines recommended by the scientific panel can be used for _____.

A. gathering potentially useful information about various therapies collected

B. conducting clinical studies of SARS patients

C. determining treatment for SARS

D. publishing all the information about SARS

2. According to the passage, it is difficult to interpret the results of certain treatments for SARS because _____.

A. patients were in different countries

B. patients were given medicines in widely different settings

C. patients were at different stages of the illness

D. these conditions had no standardized measurements or controlled situations

3. According to doctors, the two methods to treat SARS patients who have breathing difficulties both _______.

A. carry the risk of infecting hospital employees

B. are effective in curing patients who have breathing difficulties

C. don’t run the risk of transmitting the virus to hospital employees

D. prove to work effectively and cause no harm

4. According to a WHO official, Dr. Mardel, the guidelines were flexible because _____.

A. SARS would reemerge in poor countries

B. no one knew where, when and in what setting SARS would return

C. SARS would not appear in developed countries

D. no one knew whether SARS would return or not

5. Which of the following can be the best title of the passage?

A. SARS, a Dreadful Disease

B. No Good Methods to Treat SARS

C. SARS Will Return One Day

D. Health Panel Recommends New Guidelines on SARS

 

  翻译

气蓬勃,充满活力,丰富多彩的上海是现代中国的缩影。虽然上海的文化遗迹不能与北京媲美,但是上海迷人的城市风貌,风格各异的万国建筑为这座城市注入了无限的魅力。今日之上海,已经成为享誉中外的国际大都市。

漫步在这座日新月异的现代大都市里,你会发现许多精彩的历史亮点,隐现在众多摩天大楼背后的是上海发展变化的轨迹。它们记述了上海自十九世纪末开埠以来,尤其是新中国成立以后,是如何迅猛发展的。

参考答案

01:BACAD

02:BDCCA

03: B D A B D

【参考译文】

Shanghai is a dynamic, diverse and stimulating city - the very epitome of modern China. Though Shanghai cannot rival Beijing in cultural heritage, its varied architectural styles and cosmopolitan feel give it a charm of its own. Today’s Shanghai has become a world-famous international metropolis.

A walk through this booming city reveals many glimpses of its colorful past. Hidden amongst the skyscrapers are remains of the original Shanghai. They keep on showing how Shanghai has been developing fast and enormously since its opening as a commercial port in the late 19th century, especially after the founding of new China.

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