大工《大学英语3》模拟试卷A 下载本文

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2009年3月份《大学英语 3》课程考试 模拟题一 考试形式:闭卷 试卷类型:(A) Part I Vocabulary & Structure(本大题共25小题,每小题1分,共25分) Section A

Directions: Choose the ONE that is closest in meaning to the underlined part in the sentence. 1. He claimed that he could create live fish out of chemicals. A

A.asserted A.rewarded A.go with you A.pretended

B.demanded C.argued

D.announced

D.refused

2. The best students are awarded special scholarship. B

B.given C.compensated

3. She said to her newly-married husband, “If you want to go to the front, I’ll not stand in your way.” D

B.stay behind C.go my own way

D.not prevent you from going

D.granted

4. Jack came to the party with a young woman, whom I assumed to be his girl friend. B

B.supposed C.resumed

5. He passed me by as though he had never in his life seen me before. C

A.went past me A.strange to

B.avoided me C.ignored me B.odd to C.characteristic of

D.went away from me D.particular about

6. That way of speaking is peculiar to people in this part of the country. C

7. Our time is running out and I think we ought to say something about the ending of the novel. B

A.We have enough time

B.We have almost used up our time D.Our time is limited

D.continued

D.coincided

C.We haven’t enough time A.started A.recognized

8. The search was called off when the fog got thicker. B

B.canceled C.postponed B.found out C.discovered

9. Mrs. Jones identified the suspect by the scar on his face. A

10. If you associate with such people, I’m afraid you are heading for serious trouble. B

A.are making B.are going to have C.are avoiding 11. The young girl took the cheese and commenced to eat. A

A.started A.no good A.doubted A.often

B.commended C.renounced B.discouraged C.encouraged B.believed C.guessed

D.commented

12. Smoking is prohibited in the office. D

D.not allowed

13. The judge suspected the truth of the evidence provided by the witness. A

D.realized

D.once in a while D.reluctantly

14. They occasionally stop by to see us. D

B.seldom C.usually

15. We waited more than half an hour for Beth but eventually we had to leave without her. B

A.at last Section B

Directions: Identify the one that needs correction.

1. Jack has set his mind to go to college next year even though he hasn’t saved up enough money to pay his B

A B C D tuition.

2. Never before he had felt himself so powerfully attracted to the scientific ideal. B A B C D

3. Leading scientists are often the kinds of person who have enjoyed intellectual challenges all their lives. B A B C D 4. With the price of oil goes up, the economy of oil-producing countries is expanding at a high a rate. A A B C D 5. He wasn’t keen on buy a used car, but we talked him into it. B

B.in the end C.afterwards

D.are creating

A B C D 6. As people approach to old age, their energy may diminish. B A B C D

7. In order to attain our objective, it is essential that we will make the best use of the limited resources available. C A B C D 8. If you take a ten- or fifteen-minutes vacation into the realm of imagination each day, you may add much to the A A B C D excitement and enjoyment of your life.

9. The doctor said that although the child had a very bad case of influenza, but there would be no danger if he B A B C avoided pneumonia. D

10. Let’s not waste time on matters of no important. We have other vital problems to deal with. B A B C D Part II Reading Comprehension (本大题共20小题,每小题2分,共40分)

Directions: Read the following passages carefully and choose the best answer from the four choices marked A, B, C and D. Passage 1

Is breakfast the most important meal of the day? My generation certainly grew up hearing and believing in this statement, which doesn’t stop most of us from rushing out in the morning with only a cup of coffee and a piece of toast. However, in an estimated 40 percent of American families there isn’t even an adult present in the kitchen to urge children to finish their breakfast. So, more children avoid breakfast than any other meal.

While no one has proven that breakfast is the most important meal of the day, it’s at least of equal importance with lunch and dinner. Experts warn that your body burns the energy from food within four hours. Although you may use up less energy while you sleep, it’s a long time until morning and you still wake up with the need for lots more fuel.

Some studies have shown that children who avoid breakfast don’t do as well in school. Besides lack of energy, we all know how tough it is to focus when your stomach’s making noises and you're counting hours until lunch.

In addition, a recent Canadian study suggests that avoiding breakfast may increase the chance of a heart attack. It's been known that the incidence of heart attacks is highest in the first few hours after waking.

So, there’s no doubt the importance of breakfast is more than just an old wives’ tale. The problem comes in following the advice. How do you find time to make a proper meal and then make time to eat it?

The American Health Association recommends that breakfast should supply at least one-fourth of the daily food needs. And it’s important to include a variety of foods to supply energy until the next meal. Foods like bread can be digested (消化) in as little as 30 minutes; however, foods like eggs, milk, meat, and cheese last longer, and can help you make it to lunchtime. 1. Today the saying “Breakfast is the most important meal of the day” is ___ A __.

A. paid less attention to B. totally out of date C. no longer a truth D. of no value 2. According to the passage breakfast is ____C_______ lunch and dinner.

A. better than B. less important than C. as important as D. more important than 3. The passage mentions that not having breakfast can cause children to have trouble ___B___. A. listening B. focusing C. exercising D. waiting 4. People who do not have breakfast may be more likely to ___D___.

A. get more work done B. have frequent headaches C. lose too much weight D. suffer from heart disease 5. Having various foods for breakfast ____B____.

A. means you can eat less for lunch B. can supply you with energy until lunch C. may make you successful in the day D. will give you warmth the whole day Passage 2

A person may have an idea about himself that will prevent him from doing good work.

He may have the idea that he is not capable of it. It is easy to get such an idea even though there is not a good reason for it. A child may think he is stupid because he does not understand how to make the most of his mental skills, or he may accept another person’s

mistaken estimate of his ability.

A person who believes that he is incapable will not make a real effort, because he feels that it would be useless. He is therefore likely to fail, and the failure will add to his belief about his incompetence.

Alfred Adler, a famous psychiatrist, had an experience which illustrates this. When he was a small boy he got off to a poor start in arithmetic. His teacher got the idea that he had no ability in arithmetic, and told his parents what she thought. In this way, they too developed the idea. He accepted their mistaken estimate of his ability, felt that it was useless to try, and was very poor at arithmetic, just as they expected.

One day he became very angry at the teacher and the other students because they laughed when he said he saw how to do a problem which none of the other students had been able to solve.

When Adler succeeded in solving the problem, he rejected the idea that he couldn’t do arithmetic and was determined to show them that he could. His anger and his new found confidence stimulated him to go at arithmetic problems with a new spirit. He now worked with interest, determination, and purpose, and he soon became very good at arithmetic.

This experience made him realize that many people have more ability than they think they have, and that lack of success is as often the result of lack of knowledge of how to apply one’s ability, lack of confidence, and lack of determination as it is the result of lack of ability.

1. What’s the main idea of the passage? A

A. A wrong self-image may prevent one from reaching his full potential. B. It's easy for a person to believe in his own incompetence.

C. Never take to heart what others think of you. D. Lack of success is often the result of lack of ability. 2. Why a person’s mistaken notion often results in failure? C

A. He believes he’ll succeed one day. B. He feels that he’s not good enough. C. He believes he’ll fail anyway. D. He doesn’t need to make any effort. 3. What’s the function of Alfred Adler’s example in the whole passage? B A. Alfred Adler’s experience illustrates his poor start in math. B. Alfred Adler’s story exemplifies the author’s conclusion. C. Alfred Adler’s example shows his real ability in arithmetic. D. Alfred Adler’s example teaches us the value of self-confidence.

4. According to the author, what’s the reason of a child for thinking he is stupid? D

A. There’s not a good reason for this kind of thinking. B. Because the people around him tell him it. C. Because he never thinks that he can also be smart.

D. Because he does not know how to make full use of his mental powers.

5. According to the author, many people’s mental pictures about themselves are ______C____. A. correct B. in focus C. out of focus D. accurate Passage 3

There were days in which Danny could forget that he had graduated from Boston University. After 17 years of education in the finest schools in America, he couldn’t repair a burnt connection in his car or locate a carburetor (化油器).

Danny is an educated man. He is a master of writing papers, taking tests, talking, and filling out forms. He can discuss Freud from a Marxian viewpoint and he can discuss Marx from a Freudian viewpoint.

In short, Danny is a worker without skills, and he has a sociology degree to prove it. He is of very little use to American industry. This is nothing new. Colleges have been turning out workers of this sort for decades. Until five years ago, most of these workers took their degrees in sociology, philosophy, political science, or history, and marched right into the American middle class. Some found work in business and government but many, if not most, went into education, which is the only thing they knew anything about. Once there, they taught another generation the skills necessary to take tests and write papers.

But the cycle broke down. There are too many teachers these days, college applications are down, plumbers are making $12 an hour, and graduates with degrees in fields like sociology are faced with a choice: graduate school or drive a taxi.

Danny chose the taxi because driving was about the only skill he had that he could make money with. Danny refers to his job as “Real World 101”. He has been beaten and shot at. But he has also acquired some practical skills: he can get his tickets fixed; he knows how to cheat the company out of a few extra dollars a week; he found his carburetor, and he can fix it.