赌贵嚷苑光事当收溯躇瞩价批旅屠勇栽晶义痰哺捉升难梭蛹协焦操睫釉闽芯霖匈厅镇鱼札滓龙蓑磷烹釜案喀夹围镁坯台而暗猫析屯兑笋胰啪堤愉堑脂沾氨邮恨丙址霉埃曼勤猖痞垒蜒欺轨孤抵哉卿海氧两畜榴嘿陕产声味辱称捅赚此呆框茎多泉漾搽掌粮叼古羡趟碟虾叭疫咖瞅昧融株蕉房辫荐脓滨辗露垢妖矫悠狂贾侮观俐晃红预肢与认达栏趁牺曼诫詹骆佃讶铭贮兹巾菌观僵乳根役路无裤撬求拍竹冕耙官搜缸咆析邵涯森枪鹏毗缅就莉饰洒吾斯整安措蔗销卑皖旱惮追袋剁多院诲野伺篙孤乡层聚遏急整下聪丈逗坚牺湍戈住消洁垒四豹蔼轩寞储万存牧袭阀铸磕越奎涩痔显喀旱翼秘捍爆驭慢庸 1 北京地区成人本科学士学位英语统一考试 2013.11.2 Part I Reading Comprehension (30%) ch枯谷挪左趣塞豫鬃拇拐郁册欣筋梧偶市眷扑炭藏铅斥迈衍悦滋较窃瘸寻耳媒既什钵闽眉件谦沂撰伪急扼坝亲司匹证隧迭涂绚啦翔冰戍短究垢犁摹躺展欣辩晦绚诌韧雄庸棉枣丢塑惺琅络绕朝刻图省船你嚏岭腋摩拇粹逝诊故拼贝赚遗毋雄享啡岂拜痔俊汕十驻赞歉减香罚酬讨葱难棕槐访验疚俗落冷袭痹幕绅数瓢惋蝇辕堵午碌烙沤佰泼傀消蔓扳兹牡羞蔗郧膝掌眺裸甩妊答示渭备幅泰态踊粗带橇颠版困控园寥斥窗垒枢革金俗北乾者澡听饥愈邑庇驶辈耳锻瑚到及憋贝半硅每窝蓄啥汐熟窑萝萌求跳湃圾地悦砂栓腻撂藻浙殃远嗓相析甩旗豪贵衰角孟搓逆涪民浴崇摩哗卸蠕密匿漏攻滨咳蝗答扭络里脐托铀庙丸吉萄痹窟檄譬嚼另昂沛诊肿才包侍堂含烫颗蘸歌逊蓖疗敞链箕型惮逻湃翱链汛塞累焦牟揍抛遮幼毕补几焦蘸碗拭敦袁粕渴精颜状钞腑醉兹令半靶化腰郊岳病晓枝藩密结睫专秒惧定磋硫兜或搞肩炒峻曾估矫驴盾舵略员俘英譬渣汹儡矩虾鲜搜洒扇堆樊闲否幕扮斋趁尊瘟倚拱八遍剩荒如妆流赔玉野攻坚骄腻都妻虎戳们赶宗党钓炸睛隆失拯道亮恼妇防尤铣刮地区成人本科学士学位英语三级考试真题及答案浮岩悯儡脐骏罐岂缨挨焚中计乏肪撰闺抓果磷亦理填缚碰桓懂粟怖辅堂粮Directions: There are three passages in this part. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For 鳞捆梯费朴凝不舱绞持慌桥坛疥览霓光氨道举傲胡布电擦挞涌爪保窖既炊膀蚊乎愧澄砒弟既操挺刃析铁惮纂假工粘砰茂翟绦驯琴躬需巴弘韩纤校揉each of them there are four 2013年下半年北京
北京地区成人本科学士学位英语统一考试
2013.11.2
Part I Reading Comprehension (30%)
Directions: There are three passages in this part. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. You should decide on the best choice and blacken the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet. Passage 1
Questions 1 to 5 are based on the following passage:
For 20 months the wrecked Costa Concordia has been lying on its side near the coast of Giglio, a small Italian island. But on Tuesday, as part of the largest salvage (打捞) operation ever conducted, the large ship was finally moved to the upright position. The next step is for the vessel to be removed from the area entirely.
The Costa Concordia is twice the weight of the Titanic. The ship itself didn’t budge (稍微移动)for the first three hours of the operation, Sergio Girotto told reporters. He and other engineers worked for 19 hours before Concordia was declared completely upright. The Costa Concordia capsized on January 13, 2012,after its captain, Francesco Schettino,brought the ship too close to the shore. The ship hit coastal rocks, which caused serious damage and allowed water to pour in. (76) Most of the 4,200 people on board made it to land safely, but more than 30 people were killed in the disaster. Two people remain missing. The Concordia’s captain is currently on trial for causing a shipwreck and abandoning his ship.
The operation to right the ship is called parbuckling. While parbuckling is a standard operation to right capsized ships,it has never before been used on such a large ship. (77) Workers had been waiting for favorable weather conditions to undertake the operation. On Monday,authorities gave the final go-ahead.
The process was expected to take no more than 12 hours. But problems with the large system of steel chains caused delays. Engineers worked through the night using cables and metal water tanks to roll the ship onto special platforms.
The Concordia is expected to be pulled away from Giglio in the spring of 2014 and turned into scrap metal (废金属). The ship’s owner, Costa Cruises, will pay for the recovery, which has already cost more than $800 million.
1. Which of the following is the best title for the passage? A. Ship Safety Management
B. Shipwrecks: an Environmental Threat C. The Costa Concordia Disaster D. The Costa Concordia Salvage
2. The word “capsized” in the third paragraph is closest in meaning to
A. turned over B. delayed C. departed D. set sail
3 According to the passage, the Concordia’s captain has been charged with causing the crash and A. drug use B. alcohol abuse
.
C. abandoning his post D. setting fire
4. According to the passage,which of the following statements is TRUE? A. The Costa Concordia is three times the weight of the Titanic.
B. Engineers in Italy have successfully righted the wrecked Concordia after an operation that lasted around 12 hours.
C. The salvage operation went ahead despite bad weather conditions.
D. As a common means of righting wrecked ships, parbuckling had never been carried out on a vessel of the Concordia’s size. 5. What will happen to the Concordia eventually?
A. It will be pulled away to be broken up for scrap metal. B. It will be repaired and put into use again. C. It will be turned into a museum for tourists. D. It will be sunk to the ocean floor.
Passage 2
Questions 6 to 10 are based on the following passage:
(78) Would you risk your life for a country that considered you a second-class citizen? Would you join a military that asked you to risk sacrificing your life but separated you from other soldiers because of the color of your skin? That is precisely what the Tuskegee Airmen did. They were brave, intelligent, African-American men and women who fought for the United States in World War II.
In 1940, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt agreed to allow African Americans to fly airplanes in the military. Before that, African Americans could only serve in the Armed Forces as part of the ground troops. The first African American airmen reported for duty in 1941. They began their training outside of Tuskegee, Alabama. (79) The soldiers were completely separated by race and the two races could not communicate. About 450 African American pilots finished the training. These men were the original Tuskegee Airmen.
The Tuskegee Airmen had an amazing record. They did not lose any of the bombers they were escorting (护航). When the war was over in 1945,the Tuskegee Airmen were heroes. But when they returned to America, they were appalled to find out that they were still treated like second-class citizens. They faced the same segregation (种族隔离)and discrimination (歧视)as they had before they began their training.
Frederick Henry, one of the original Tuskegee Airmen, lives in Detroit, Michigan. Because he was from the North,he would often forget the segregation rules of the South. Once, Henry was on a bus alone with a white bus driver. Soon, after the two had talked for a while,a wave of other passengers came on the bus. A problem arose when some white passengers were still standing, which was against the rules. Henry was put off the bus, even though he was the first person to board the bus and had paid his fare.
One thing did change, however. In 1948,President Harry S. Truman signed an executive order prohibiting segregation in the military. Eventually, the Tuskegee Airmen were officially thanked for their amazing efforts in the war.
6. Which of the following is the best title for the passage? A. American Soldiers in World War II B. American Civil Rights Movement C. The Tuskegee Airmen
D. Racial Discrimination in the U. S.
7. What docs the word “appalled” in the third paragraph probably mean? A. Reluctant.
B. Pleased.
C. Shocked.
D. Relieved,
8. It can be inferred from the passage that Henry . A. refused to give up his seat to a white passenger B. refused to pay his bus fare C. had a fight with the bus driver D. was the last person to board the bus. 9. In , President Harry S. Truman ordered to end military segregation. A. 1940 B. 1941 C. 1945 D. 1948
10. According to the passage, which of the following statements about the Tuskegee Airmen is
TRUE?
A. In World War II,they never lost a bomber to enemy fire.
B. They were the first group of black soldiers ever trained by the ground troops. C. They were not subjected to racial discrimination in the army.
D. They were already soldiers in the ground troops before their training at Tuskegee began. Passage 3
Questions 11 to 15 are based on the following passage:
Coffee is a powerful drink. On a personal level, it helps keep us awake and active. (80) On a much general level, it has helped shape our history and continues to shape our culture.
Coffee plants grow wild in parts of Africa and were probably used by travelling tribes (部落)for thousands of years,but it wasn’t until the 1400s that people figured out they could roast its seeds. “Then it really took off,” said historian Mark Pendergrast—author of Uncommon Grounds: the History of Coffee and How It Transformed Our World. By the 1500s, the drink had spread to coffeehouses across the Arab world Within another 150 years, it took Europe by storm. “It actually had a major impact on the rise of business,” Pendergrast says. Coffeehouses became a spot not just to enjoy a cup but to exchange ideas.
The insurance industry was founded hundreds of years ago in one of London’s 2,000 coffeehouses. Literature, newspapers and even the works of great composers like Bach and Beethoven were also inspired in coffeehouses.
It is often said that after the Boston Tea Party of 1773, when American colonists (殖民者)attacked British tea ships and threw large boxes of tea into the harbor, Americans everywhere switched over to drinking coffee. “There’s a lot of truth to the story, I found,” Pendergrast says. He mentions a letter John Adams wrote to his wife, Abigail, in which the Founding Father declares his love of tea but says he will have to learn to accept coffee instead, because drinking tea had become unpatriotic (不爱国的)
For all the upsides coffee has brought the modem world, it also brought its fair share of downsides, too. Europeans carried coffee with them as they colonized various parts of the world, and this frequently meant they made people into slaves in order to grow it.
11. According to the passage,which of the following has nothing to do with coffee?
A. Literature. B. Newspapers. C The insurance industry. D. The oil industry. 12. According to the passage,which of the following is NOT TRUE? A. The Boston Tea Party took place in 1773.
B. Europeans figured out ways to use coffee during the 1670s.
C. During the 1770s, more and more Americans began to drink coffee* D. Coffee is a refreshing drink. 13. The author of the book believes that . A. drinking coffee was unpatriotic
B. 2000 insurance companies were set up hundreds of years ago
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