2005年1月大学英语六级考试试题及参考答案

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综合题,请根据题目给出的内容,来回答下面给出的试题。

Part II                               Reading

Comprehension                         (35 minutes)

Directions:    There are 4 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 mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a single line through the centre.

 

Passage One

 

Questions 21 to 25 are based on the following passage.

       I had an experience some years ago which taught me something about the ways in which people make a bad situation worse by blaming themselves. One January, I had to officiate at two funerals on successive days for two elderly women in my community. Both had died “full of years,” as the Bible would say; both yielded to the normal wearing out of the body after a long and full life. Their homes happened to be near each other, so I paid condolence (吊唁) calls on the two families on the same afternoon.

 

       At the first home, the son of the deceased (已故的) woman said to me, “If only I had sent my mother to Florida and gotten her out of this cold and snow, she would be alive today. It’s my fault that she died.” At the second home, the son of the other deceased woman said, “If only I hadn’t insisted on my mother’s going to Florida, she would be alive today. That long airplane ride, the abrupt change of climate, was more than she could take. It’s my fault that she’s dead.”

 

       When things don’t turn out as we would like them to, it is very tempting to assume that had we done things differently, the story would have had a happier ending. Priests know that any time there is a death, the survivors will feel guilty. Because the course of action they took turned out badly, they believe that the opposite course – keeping Mother at home, postponing the operation – would have turned out better. After all, how could it have turned out any worse?

 

       There seem to be two elements involved in our readiness to feel guilt. The first is our pressing need to believe that the world makes sense, that there is a cause for every effect and a reason for everything that happens. That leads us to find patterns and connections both where they really exist and where they exist only in our minds.

 

      The second element is the notion that we are the cause of what happens, especially the bad things that happen. It seems to be a short step from believing that every event has a cause to believing that every disaster is our fault. The roots of this feeling may lie in our childhood. Psychologists speak of the infantile myth of omnipotence (万能). A baby comes to think that the world exists to meet his needs, and that he makes everything happen in it. He wakes up in the morning and summons the rest of the world to its tasks. He cries, and someone comes to attend to him. When he is hungry, people feed him, and when he is wet, people change him. Very often, we do not completely outgrow that infantile notion that our wishes cause things to happen.


请根据上面给出的内容,来回答下面的单项选择题(下列每小题备选答案中,只有一个符合题意的正确答案。每小题0分,共5题。)

21.  What is said about the two deceased elderly women?

 

 


A :They lived out a natural life
B :They died of exhaustion after the long plane ride.
C :They weren’t accustomed to the change in weather.
D :They died due to lack of care by family members.
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22.  The author had to conduct the two women’s funerals probably because ________.

  


A :he wanted to console the two families
B :he was an official from the community
C :he had great sympathy for the deceased
D :he was priest of the local church
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23.  People feel guilty for the deaths of their loved ones because ________.

 


A :they couldn’t find a better way to express their grief
B :they believe that they were responsible
C :they had neglected the natural course of events
D :they didn’t know things often turn out in the opposite direction
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24.  In the context of the passage, “... the world makes sense” (Line 2, Para, 4) probably means that ________.

 


A :everything in the world is predetermined
B :the world can be interpreted in different ways
C :there’s an explanation for everything in the world
D :we have to be sensible in order to understand the world
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25.  People have been made to believe since infancy that ________.

   


A :everybody is at their command
B :life and death is an unsolved mystery
C :every story should have a happy ending
D :their wishes are the cause of everything that happens
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Passage Two

 

Questions 26 to 30 are based on the following passage.

       Frustrated with delays in Sacramento

, Bay Area officials said Thursday they planned to take matters into their own hands to regulate the region’s growing pile of electronic trash.

 

       A San Jose councilwoman and a San Francisco

supervisor said they would propose local initiatives aimed at controlling electronic waste if the California law-making body fails to act on two bills stalled in the Assembly. They are among a growing number of California cities and counties that have expressed the same intention.

 

       Environmentalists and local governments are increasingly concerned about the toxic hazard posed by old electronic devices and the cost of safely recycling those products. An estimated 6 million televisions and computers are stocked in California

homes, and an additional 6,000 to 7,000 computers become outdated every day. The machines contain high levels of lead and other hazardous substances, and are already banned from California landfills (垃圾填埋场).

 

       Legislation by Senator Byron Sher would require consumers to pay a recycling fee of up to $30 on every new machine containing a cathode (阴极) ray tube. Used in almost all video monitors and televisions, those devices contain four to eight pounds of lead each. The fees would go toward setting up recycling programs, providing grants to non-profit agencies that reuse the tubes and rewarding manufacturers that encourage recycling.

 

       A separate bill by Los Angeles-area Senator Gloria Romero would require high-tech manufacturers to develop programs to recycle so-called e-waste.

 

       If passed, the measures would put California

at the forefront of national efforts to manage the refuse of the electronic age.

 

       But high-tech groups, including the Silicon Valley Manufacturing Group and the American Electronics Association, oppose the measures, arguing that fees of up to $30 will drive consumers to online, out-of-state retailers.

 

       “What really needs to occur is consumer education. Most consumers are unaware they’re not supposed to throw computers in the trash,” said Roxanne Gould, vice president of government relations for the electronics association.

 

       Computer recycling should be a local effort and part of residential waste collection programs, she added.

 

       Recycling electronic waste is a dangerous and specialized matter, and environmentalists maintain the state must support recycling efforts and ensure that the job isn’t contracted to unscrupulous (毫无顾忌的) junk dealers who send the toxic parts overseas.

 

      “The graveyard of the high-tech revolution is ending up in rural China

,” said Ted Smith, director of the Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition. His group is pushing for an amendment to Sher’s bill that would prevent the export of e-waste.
请根据上面给出的内容,来回答下面的单项选择题(下列每小题备选答案中,只有一个符合题意的正确答案。每小题0分,共5题。)

26.  What step were Bay Area officials going to take regarding e-waste disposal?

    


A :Exert pressure on manufacturers of electronic devices.
B :Lay down relevant local regulations themselves.
C :Lobby the lawmakers of the California Assembly.
D :Rally support to pass the stalled bills.
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27.  The two bills stalled in the California Assembly both concern ________.

 


A :regulations on dumping hazardous substances into landfills
B :the sale of used electronic devices to foreign countries
C :the funding of local initiatives to reuse electronic trash
D :the reprocessing of the huge amounts of electronic waste in the state
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28.  Consumers are not supposed to throw used computers in the trash because ________.

   


A :they contain large amounts of harmful substances
B :this is banned by the California government
C :some parts may be recycled for use elsewhere
D :unscrupulous dealers will retrieve them for profit
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29.  High-tech groups believe that if an extra $30 is charged on every TV or computer purchased in California

, consumers will _______.

 


A :abandon online shopping
B :buy them from other states
C :strongly protest against such a charge
D :hesitate to upgrade their computers
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30.  We learn from the passage that much of California

’s electronic waste has been _______.

 


A :collected by non-profit agencies
B :dumped into local landfills
C :exported to foreign countries
D :recycled by computer manufacturers
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Passage Three

 

Questions 31 to 35 are based on the following passage,

       Throughout the nation’s more than 15,000 school districts, widely differing approaches to teaching science and math have emerged. Though there can be strength in diversity, a new international analysis suggests that this variability has instead contributed to lackluster (平淡的) achievement scores by U.S. children relative to their peers in other developed countries.

 

       Indeed, concludes William H. Schmidt of Michigan State

University, who led the new analysis, “no single intellectually coherent vision dominates U.S. educational practice in math or science.’’ The reason, he said, “is because the system is deeply and fundamentally flawed.”

 

       The new analysis, released this week by the National Science Foundation in Arlington, Va.

, is based on data collected from about 50 nations as part of the Third International Mathematics and Science Study.

 

       Not only do approaches to teaching science and math vary among individual U.S.

communities, the report finds, but there appears to be little strategic focus within a school district’s curricula, its textbooks, or its teachers’ activities. This contrasts sharply with the coordinated national programs of most other countries.

 

       On average, U.S.

students study more topics within science and math than their international counterparts do. This creates an educational environment that “is a mile wide and an inch deep,” Schmidt notes.

 

       For instance, eighth graders in the United States cover about 33 topics in math versus just 19 in

Japan. Among science courses, the international gap is even wider. U.S. curricula for this age level resemble those of a small group of countries including Australia, Thailand, Iceland, and Bulgaria. Schmidt asks whether the United States wants to be classed with these nations, whose educational systems “share our pattern of splintered (支离破碎的) visions” but which are not economic leaders.

 

       The new report “couldn’t come at a better time,” says Gerald Wheeler, executive director of the National Science Teachers Association in Arlington

. “The new National Science Education Standards provide that focused vision,” including the call “to do less, but in greater depth.”

 

       Implementing the new science standards and their math counterparts will be the challenge, he and Schmidt agree, because the decentralized responsibility for education in the United States requires that any reforms be tailored and instituted one community at a time.

 

      In fact, Schmidt argues, reforms such as these proposed national standards “face an almost impossible task, because even though they are intellectually coherent, each becomes only one more voice in the babble (嘈杂声).”


请根据上面给出的内容,来回答下面的单项选择题(下列每小题备选答案中,只有一个符合题意的正确答案。每小题0分,共5题。)

31.  According to the passage, the teaching of science and math in America

is ________.

      


A :focused on tapping students’ potential
B :characterized by its diversity
C :losing its vitality gradually
D :going downhill in recent years
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32.  The fundamental flaw of American school education is that ________.

 


A :it lacks a coordinated national program
B :it sets a very low academic standard for students
C :it relies heavily on the initiative of individual teachers
D :it attaches too much importance to intensive study of school subjects
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33.  By saying that the U.S. educational environment is “a mile wide and an inch deep” (Line 2, Para. 5), the author means U.S.

educational practice ________.

 


A :lays stress on quality at the expense of quantity
B :offers an environment for comprehensive education
C :encourages learning both in depth and in scope
D :scratches the surface of a wide range of topics
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34.  The new National Science Education Standards are good news in that they will ________.

 


A :provide depth to school science education
B :solve most of the problems in school teaching
C :be able to meet the demands of the community
D :quickly dominate U.S. educational practice
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35.  Putting the new science and math standards into practice will prove difficult because ________.

    


A :there is always controversy in educational circles
B :not enough educators have realized the necessity for doing so
C :school districts are responsible for making their own decisions
D :many schoolteachers challenge the acceptability of these standards
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Passage Four

Questions 36 to 40 are based on the following passage.

 

       “I’ve never met a human worth cloning,” says cloning expert Mark Westhusin from his lab at Texas A&M

University. “It’s a stupid endeavor.” That’s an interesting choice of adjective, coming from a man who has spent millions of dollars trying to clone a 13-year-old dog named Missy. So far, he and his team have not succeeded, though they have cloned two cows and expect to clone a cat soon. They just might succeed in cloning Missy this spring – or perhaps not for another 5 years. It seems the reproductive system of man’s best friend is one of the mysteries of modern science.

 

       Westhusin’s experience with cloning animals leaves him upset by all this talk of human cloning. In three years of work on the Missy project, using hundreds upon hundreds of dog’s eggs, the A&M team has produced only a dozen or so embryos (胚胎) carrying Missy’s DNA. None have survived the transfer to a surrogate (代孕的) mother. The wastage of eggs and the many spontaneously aborted fetuses () may be acceptable when you’re dealing with cats or bulls, he argues, but not with humans. “Cloning is incredibly inefficient, and also dangerous,” he says.

 

       Even so, dog cloning is a commercial opportunity, with a nice research payoff. Ever since Dolly the sheep was cloned in 1997, Westhusin’s phone has been ringing with people calling in hopes of duplicating their cats and dogs, cattle and horses. “A lot of people want to clone pets, especially if the price is right,” says Westhusin. Cost is no obstacle for Missy’s mysterious billionaire owner; he’s put up $3.7 million so far to fund A&M’s research.

 

       Contrary to some media reports, Missy is not dead. The owner wants a twin to carry on Missy’s fine qualities after she does die. The prototype is, by all accounts, athletic, good-natured and supersmart. Missy’s master does not expect an exact copy of her. He knows her clone may not have her temperament. In a statement of purpose, Missy’s owner and the A&M team say they are “both looking forward to studying the ways that her clones differ from Missy.”

 

       Besides cloning a great dog, the project may contribute insight into the old question of nature vs. nurture. It could also lead to the cloning of special rescue dogs and many endangered animals.

 

      However, Westhusin is cautious about his work. He knows that even if he gets a dog pregnant, the offspring, should they survive, will face the problems shown at birth by other cloned animals: abnormalities like immature lungs and heart and weight problems. “Why would you ever want to clone humans,” Westhusin asks, “when we’re not even close to getting it worked out in animals yet?”


请根据上面给出的内容,来回答下面的单项选择题(下列每小题备选答案中,只有一个符合题意的正确答案。每小题0分,共5题。)

36.  By “stupid endeavor” (Line 2, Para. 1), Westhusin means to say that ________.

 


A :animal cloning is not worth the effort at all
B :animal cloning is absolutely impractical
C :human cloning should be done selectively
D :human cloning is a foolish undertaking
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37.  What does the first paragraph tell us about Westhusin’s dog cloning project?

      A)       B)

      C)

      D)


A :Its success is already in sight.
B :Its outcome remains uncertain.
C :It is doomed to utter failure.
D :It is progressing smoothly.
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38.  By cloning Missy, Mark Westhusin hopes to ________.

 


A :study the possibility of cloning humans
B :search for ways to modify its temperament
C :examine the reproductive system of the dog species
D :find out the differences between Missy and its clones
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39.  We learn from the passage that animal clones are likely to have ________.

 


A :a bad temper
B :immune deficiency
C :defective organs
D :an abnormal shape
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40.  It can be seen that present cloning techniques ________.

   


A :still have a long way to go before reaching maturity
B :have been widely used in saving endangered species
C :provide insight into the question of nature vs. nurture
D :have proved quite adequate for the cloning of humans
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Part III                                                                                               Vocabulary     (20 minutes)

 

Directions:     There are 30 incomplete sentences in this part. For each sentence there are four choices marked A), B), C) and D). Choose the ONE answer that best completes the sentence. Then mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a single line through the centre.


请根据上面给出的内容,来回答下面的单项选择题(下列每小题备选答案中,只有一个符合题意的正确答案。每小题0分,共30题。)
41.  My grandfather, a retired worker, often ________ the past with a feeling of longing and respect.      
A :considers
B :contrives
C :contemplates
D :contacts
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42.  Medical students are advised that the wearing of a white coat ________ the acceptance of a professional code of conduct expected of the medical profession.     
A :supplements
B :signifies
C :simulates
D :swears
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43.  The doctors ________ the newly approved drug into the patient when he was critically ill.  
A :injected
B :projected
C :ejected
D :subjected
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44.  Apart from philosophical and legal reasons for respecting patients’ wishes, there are several practical reasons why doctors should ________ to involve patients in their own medical care decisions.    
A :enforce
B :endow
C :endeavor
D :enhance
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45.  This is a long ________ – roughly 13 miles down a beautiful valley to the little church below.  
A :terrain
B :descent
C :degeneration
D :tumble
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46.  She was deeply ________ by the amount of criticism her play received.  
A :deported
B :deprived
C :involved
D :frustrated
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47.  Some scientists are dubious of the claim that organisms ________ with age as an inevitable outcome of living.  
A :depress
B :default
C :deteriorate
D :degrade
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48.  Many manufacturers were accused of concentrating too heavily on cost reduction, often at the ________ of the quality of their products.  
A :expense
B :exposure
C :expansion
D :expectation
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49.  One witness ________ that he’d seen the suspect run out of the bank after it had been robbed.

   


A :convicted
B :conformed
C :retorted
D :testified
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50.  Nothing Helen says is ever ________. She always thinks carefully before she speaks.

     


A :simultaneous
B :homogenous
C :spontaneous
D :rigorous
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51.  She gave ________ directions about the way the rug should be cleaned.

    


A :explicit
B :brisk
C :transient
D :opaque
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52.  It took a lot of imagination to come up with such a(n) ________ plan.

      


A :inherent
B :ingenious
C :vigorous
D :exotic
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53.  A ________ official is one who is irresponsible in his work.

 


A :timid
B :tedious
C :suspicious
D :slack
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54.  Most mathematicians trust their ________ in solving problems and readily admit they would not be able to function without it.

 


A :conception
B :perception
C :intuition
D :cognition
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55.  He had an almost irresistible ________ to talk to the crowd when he entered Hyde Park.

  


A :impulse
B :instinct
C :stimulation
D :surge
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56.  Encouraged by their culture to voice their opinions freely, the Canadians are not afraid to go against the group ________, and will argue their viewpoints enthusiastically, though rarely aggressively.

      


A :consent
B :conscience
C :consensus
D :consciousness
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57.  He still ________ the memory of his carefree childhood spent in that small wooden house of his grandparents’.

   


A :nourishes
B :cherishes
C :fancies
D :scans
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58.  She expressed her strong determination that nothing could ________ her to give up her career as a teacher.

 


A :induce
B :deduce
C :reduce
D :attract
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59.  The microscope and telescope, with their capacity to enlarge, isolate and probe, demonstrate how details can be ________ and separated from the whole.

    


A :radiated
B :extended
C :prolonged
D :magnified
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60.  Lighting can be used not only to create an atmosphere, but also to ________ features of the house, such as ornaments or pictures.

     


A :highlight
B :underline
C :activate
D :upgrade
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61.  By turning this knob to the right you can ________ the sound from the radio.

  


A :intensify
B :amplify
C :enlarge
D :reinforce
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62.  One of the attractive features of the course was the way the practical work had been ________ with the theoretical aspects of the subject.

 


A :embedded
B :embraced
C :integrated
D :synthesized
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63.  They couldn’t see a ________ of hope that they would be saved by a passing ship.

      


A :grain
B :span
C :slice
D :gleam
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64.  The traditional markets retain their ________ for the many Chinese who still prefer fresh food like live fish, ducks, chickens over packaged or frozen goods.

 


A :appeal
B :pledge
C :image
D :survival
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65.  ________ efforts are needed in order to finish important but unpleasant tasks.

 


A :Consecutive
B :Condensed
C :Perpetual
D :Persistent
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66.  A number of students ________ in flats, and others live in the nearby holiday resorts, where there is a reasonable supply of competitively priced accommodation.

     


A :revive
B :gather
C :inhabit
D :reside
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67.  He bought his house on the________ plan, paying a certain amount of money each month.

  


A :division
B :premium
C :installment
D :fluctuation
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68.  He could not ________ ignorance as his excuse; he should have known what was happening in his department.

  


A :petition
B :plead
C :resort
D :reproach
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69.  Many ecologists believe that lots of major species in the world are on the________ of extinction.

 


A :margin
B :border
C :verge
D :fringe
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70.  Any salesperson who sells more than the weekly ________ will receive a bonus.

    


A :ratio
B :quota
C :allocation
D :portion
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综合题快速到达:12345