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全国高等教育自学考试英语阅读(一)标准预测试卷(一) _自考_第一范文网
全国高等教育自学考试英语阅读(一)标准预测试卷(一)
全国高等教育自学考试英语阅读(一)标准预测试卷(一)(考试时间150分钟)
PART ONE&Ⅰ. TEXT COMPREHENSIONEach of the following comprehension questions, based on the texts you have learned, is provided with four possible answers marked A, B, C and D. Choose the best answer to each question and blacken the corresponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET. ( 20 points, 1 point for each )
1. Today Hollywood is mostly used as ____. (a)
A. the base of the world's motion picture industryB. one of the American tourism resortsC. the center for shooting American TV advertisementsD. the center of American TV entertainment & &&&
2. The lower level courses are mainly provided ____.(a)
A. in a widely differing set of institutionsB. in Colleges of Further Education and Technical CollegesC. in vocationally orientated types of institutionsD. in Colleges of Technology & &&
3. In recent years there has been a rapid increase in the number of people seeking higher education partly because ____. (a)
A. the people' s standard of living has greatly improvedB. women have been liberated since the mid-sixtiesC. the universities must adapt themselves to meeting the demands of a new ageD. a number of polytechnics have been created & &&
4. ____ was going to bring their marriage to an end.(a)
A. Living in the countryB. Listening to a lot of musicC. Liking almost the same thingsD. Having something missing between them & &&
5. The first Olympic Games took place ____.(a)
A. in the seventh century A. D.B. certainly before 700 B. C.C. over three thousand years agoD. a thousand years ago & &&
6. The main idea of the 1st paragraph is that ____.(a)
A. several soldiers survived the First World War and returned to their home villageB. most of the veterans from the First World War returned to their native place and could work and live wellC. Francois Lebeau, a survivor of the First World War, suffered from the loss of ability to work and thus lived in povertyD. Francois Lebeau was such a proud person that he would not live on charity & &&
7. The slippers were useless to the little match girl because ____.(a)
A. she preferred to be walking bare-footedB. the slippers were too oldC. the slippers were too big to herD. one of the slippers was lost & &&
8. The description of the four seasons in the imagined town is intended to demonstrate ____.(a)
A. the beauty of the townB. the harvest in every seasonC. why the places of beauty attracted the travelers' interestD. that all life in the town seemed in peace with its surroundings & &&
9. In the United States, a young person's choice of husband or wife is usually made by ____.(a)
A. the person's parentsB. himself or herselfC. certain computer companiesD. the matchmaker & &&
10. An FBI agent has the right to ____.(a)
A. wear police uniformsB. provide domestic intelligence to the PresidentC. cross State borders if they need toD. issue orders to the city police & &&
11. How many people are covered by public Health insurance?(a)
A. One-sixth of the populationB. 35,000,000 personsC. More than a half of the populationD. Don't know it & &&
12. The author of “What is Happening”is ____.(a)
A. an IndianB. a ChineseC. an easternerD. a westerner & &&
13. Every item of American Constitution is ____. (a)
A. not numberedB. not written downC. clearly written down and numberedD. challenged by a 2/3 majority of Congress & &&
14. United Nations Day is celebrated on ____.(a)
A. October 24B. October 26C. April 24D. June 26 & &&
15. On the seventh day God ____. (a)
A. created the heavens and the earthB. created the paradiseC. rested from his workD. made man and woman & &&
16. The two men in “The Wrong House”managed to find the name of the host from ____.(a)
A. the sign board on the doorB. some of the host's booksC. the telephone directoryD. the automobile dealer & &&
17. The job of the CIA is to ____.(a)
A. keep a record of all crimesB. tell the Government about foreign agents and hostile powersC. work for those countries who are friendly to the USAD. make sure the promise of aid is made & &&
18. The boy got worried mainly because ____.(a)
A. he was feverishB. his father didn't understand himC. he couldn't go to school tomorrowD. he thought he was dying & &&
19. The countryside was well known for ____. (a)
A. its place of beautyB. the see-heads of the dried plantsC. the snow in winterD. its rich variety of bird life & &&
20. Why was the author late to arrive at Liverpool street station? (a)
A. He got up lateB. There was a traffic jamC. For a typical London fogD. He meant to do so &&Ⅱ. READING COMPREHENSIONIn this part there are four reading passages followed by 20 questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four answers marked A, B, C and D. You should decide on the best one and blacken the corresponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET. ( 40 points, 2 points for each )   Passage 1  Although job forecasting is admittedly a risky venture, most experts predict that the major new areas of growth will be in the fields of information and conservation. Information includes jobs in computers, robotics, biotechnology, and transmission technologies. Conservation includes jobs in both human and ecological fields, ranging from health care to solar energy and waste disposal. As Americans live longer and become more health-oriented, experts anticipate appreciable growth in such areas as occupational and physical therapy and speech pathology. But more conventional jobs will also abound. Even though robots may replace people on the assembly line, machines are unlikely to eliminate such basic service jobs as janitors, sales clerks, and waiters. And people with administrative and managerial skill will still be needed.  In assessing career opportunities, young people would be well advised to keep in mind a point emphasized by James O'Toole, a professor of management in the University of Southern California's Graduate School of Business Administration. He notes that in addition to appraising the general opportunities likely to be available, individuals should consider two other factors in mapping their work futures: what they enjoy doing and what they are good at. O'Toole observes that even a job as a blacksmith is not out of the question if a person is willing to go where there are horses. If people are willing to devote themselves single-mindedly to a field, and if they demonstrate convincing evidence of their talent, they can often secure a job.
21. What is the main topic of the passage?A. How to assess career opportunitiesB. How to get information and conserve natural resourcesC. How to improve one's managerial skillsD. How to map one's futures of work22. It is anticipated that major new areas of growth include all of the following except ____.A. biotechnologyB. transportation improvementC. solar energyD. technology transfer23. According to the passage, there may be growth in speech pathology because ____.A. more and more people become richerB. it is difficult for some people to keep fitC. more and more have difficulty in speakingD. it is difficult for people to find jobs24. It can be inferred from the passage that robots can replace people in ____.A. working on an assembly lineB. waiting on peopleC. performing administrative workD. selling goods25. According to the passage, one can get a job when ____.A. dedicating himself whole-heartedly to a jobB. appraising the general opportunities of work thoroughlyC. considering there are enough horsesD. keeping in mind that he is willing to take the risk
&& &   21. A  22. B  23. C  24. A  25. A& &
  Passage 2  Aging is the process of growing old. It occurs eventually in every living thing provided, of course, that an illness or accident does not kill it prematurely. The most familiar outward signs of aging may be seen in old people, such as the greying of the hair and the wrinkling of the skin. Signs of aging in a pet dog or cat include loss of playfulness and energy, a decline in hearing and eyesight, or even a slight greying of the coat. Plants age too, but the signs are much harder to detect.  Most body parts grow bigger and stronger, and function more efficiently during childhood. They reach their peak at the time of maturity, of early adulthood. After that, they begin to decline. Bones, for example, gradually become lighter and more brittle. In the aged, the joints between the bones also become rigid and more inflexible. This can make moving very painful.  All the major organs of the body show signs of aging. The brain, for example, works less efficiently, and even gets smaller in size. Thinking processes of all sorts are slowed down. Old people often have trouble in remembering recent events.  One of the most serious changes of old age occurs in the arteries, the blood vessels that lead from the heart. They become thickened and constricted, allowing less blood to flow to the rest of the body. This condition accounts, directly or indirectly, for many of the diseases of the aged. It may, for example, result in heart attack.  Aging is not a uniform process. Different parts of the body wear out at different rates. There are great differences among people in their rate of aging. Even the cells of the body differ in the way they age. The majority of cells are capable of reproducing themselves many times during the course of a lifetime. Nerve cells and muscle fibres can never be replaced once they wear out.  Gerontologists scientists who study the process of aging believe the wearing out of the body is controlled by a built-in biological time-clock. They are trying to discover how this clock works so that they can slow down the process. This could give man a longer life and a great number of productive years.
26. What is the main idea in the first paragraph?A. Signs of aging are easier to detect in animals than in plants.B. Aging occurs in every living thing after it has reached maturity.C. The outward signs of aging may be seen in old people.D. Not all signs of aging are visible.27. “The arteries”refers to ____.A. the paths along which blood flows to all parts of the bodyB. the tubes carrying blood back to the heartC. vessels that are thickened and constrictedD. such heart diseases as suffered by old people28. “Aging is not a uniform process”means that ____.A. old people do not have the same outward signs of agingB. not all people age at the same ageC. the process of aging is slowD. nerve cells and muscle fibres do not age simultaneously29. Which of the statements about aging is false?A. People vary in their rate of aging.B. The cells of the body age in different ways.C. The various parts of the body do not wear out at the same rate.D. All body cells once worn out can never be replaced.30. According to the passage, what is responsible for many of the diseases of the old?A. Their trouble in remembering recent events.B. The worn out nerve cells and muscle-fibres.C. The blood vessels that have become thickened and constricted.D. The rigid and inflexible joints between the bones.
& &   26. B  27. A  28. B  29. D  30. C& &
  Passage 3  It is easier to get divorced today than in times past, but it is no less painful. Studies have shown that both men and women suffer significant stress at two key points: before the decision to divorce and at the time of the final separation. Poor health, difficulty in sleeping and working, loneliness, depression, anxiety, lowered self-esteem, and impaired memory are all associated with the divorce process. In their study of 252 men and women currently undergoing a divorce, David A. Chiriboga and Loraine Cutler found that They found that men were more vulnerable to stress than women. At the same time, close to 50 percent of both men and women reported that they felt some relief as a result of having initiated the divorce process.  The children of a couple planning to divorce also share in the pain, especially immediately following the separation. In their study of family breakup, Judith S. Wallerstein and Joan B. Kelly found that parents rarely prepare their children for the coming crisis, nor do they privide them with the necessary assurances that they will be cared for. Preoccupied by their personal problems, the parents are often insensitive to their children's anger, fear or perplexity. When divorce necessitates that the mother go to work, the child may be placed in unfamiliar child care arrangements, and both mother and father become substantially less available. The first year following a divorce is typically the most stressful for the parents and for the child. In the long run, however, divorce is not necessarily psychologically damaging to children, particularly when both parents remain accessible and loving.  Whatever the pain that divorce inflicts, it does not seem to sour people on the institution of marriage. A fourth of the people who get divorced are remarried within the year, and 75 percent remarry within nine years of divorce. About five of every six divorced men and three of every four divorced women marry again. One reason that men are more likely to remarry than women is that men typically marry younger women. When we consider that by age twenty-seven women begin outnumbering men, we can see how middle-aged and older men have a larger pool of potential partners from which to choose than do women. In sum, while marriage may be difficult to sustain, it is certainly not going out of style.
31. According to the passage, women suffer significant stress when ____.A. they are forced to leave their childrenB. the property is dividedC. making up their mind to get a divorceD. going to a court32. According to the passage, one who is getting a divorce can suffer all the pains except ____.A. impaired memoryB. weight lostC. lowered self-esteemD. depression33. According to the passage, all have a share in the process of adivorce except ____.A. husbandB. wifeC. childD. grandparents34. The passage implies that in the first year after a divorce children may suffer ____.A. psychological stressB. physiological stressC. physical stressD. psychosis35. According to the passage, the percentage of remarrying man is higher than that of the women by ____.A. 25 %B. 75 %C. 8 %D. 27%
&& &   31. C  32. B  33. D  34. A  35. C& &
  Passage 4  The parent as teacher-counselor acts in accord with the developmental model of child rearing, in which the child is viewed as an extremely plastic organism with virtually unlimited potential for growth and development. The limits to this rich pretential are seen as encompassed in the limits of the parent to tap and encourage it. This model conceptualizes the parent(s) as almost omnipotent in guiding children's development. If they do the right things at the right time ,their children will more than likely be happy, intelligent, and successful.  Particularly during the 1960s and 1970s, authorities have stressed the ability of parents to influence their children's intellectual growth. Psychologists J. McVicker Hunt, for example, stated that he believes “you could raise a middle-class child's I. Q. by twenty points with what we know about child-rearing”.  The teacher-counselor approach has many features, and children do benefit from environment stimulation. Yet this parenting style also poses problems. First, it puts the needs of the child's above the parents' needs. It may be unrealistic for most parents to always be there, ready to stimulate the child's intellect or to act as a sounding board. Also, parents who respond as if each of their child's discoveries is wonderful may give the child the mistaken impression that he or she is the center of everyone's universe.  A second difficulty is that this approach expects parents to be experts -- an expectation that can easily produce guilt. Parents can never learn all that psychologists, sociologists, and specialized educators know. Yet if anything goes wrong, teacher-counselor parents are likely to reel they have only themselves to blame. Finally, contemporary research suggests more and more that this view greatly exaggerates the power of the parents and the passivity of children. Children also inherited intellectual capacities and needs. Recent observers point instead to an interactive perspective, which regards the influence between parents and the child as mutual and reciprocal, not just a “one-way street”.
36. If the potential for growth and development is limited, there must be something wrong with ____.A. the parents' ability to tap and encourage itB. the problem of the plastic organismC. the authorityD. the child's IQ37. A child may regard himself as the focus of attention if ____.A. he is extremely cleverB. he always finds that he could show his intellectC. his every discovery receives extremely positive responseD. his I. Q. has increased by 20 points38. According to the passage, the influence between parents and the child can be best described as ____.A. one-way streetB. omnipotentC. reciprocalD. retentive39. Which of the following could be used as the title of the passage?A. How to rear an intelligent child by the parenting styleB. Conceptualization of a responsible parentsC. Introspection on contemporary teaching methodD. Parents as teacher-counselor40. We can infer from the passage that the author's attitude toward the parents as teacher-counselor is ____.A. biasedB. fair and justC. subjectiveD. emotional
Ⅲ. SKIMMING AND SCANNINGIn this part there are three reading passages followed by 10 questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four answers marked A, B, C and D. Skim or scan the passages, decide on the best answer and blacken the corresponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET. (10 points, 1 point for each)
  Passage 1  The great advance in rocket theory 40 years ago shows that liquid-fuel rocket with its weak solid fuel, the only kind of rocket then known. However, during the last decade, large solid-fuel rockets with solid fuels about as powerful as liquid fuels have made their appearance, and it is a favourite layman's question to inmight as well ask whether a gasoline or a diesel engine is “better”. It all depends on the purpose. A liquid-fuel rocket is complicated, but has the advantage that it can be controlled beautifully. The burning of the rocket engine can b it can be ignited when desired. In addition, the thrust can be made to vary by adjusting the speed of the fuel pumps. A solid-fuel rocket, on the other hand, is rather simple in construction, though hard to build when a really large size desired. But once you have a solid-fuel rocket, it is ready for action at very short notice. A liquid-fuel rocket has to be fueled first and cannot be held in readiness for very long after it has been fueled. However, once a solid-fuel rocket has been ignited, it will keep burning. It cannot be stopped and ignited whenever desired (it could conceivably be stopped and ignited after a precalculated time of burning has elapsed) and its thrust cannot be varied. Because a solid-fuel rocket can be kept ready for a long time, most military missiles employ solid-fuels, but manned space flight needs the fine adjustments that can only be provided by liquid fuels. It may be added that a liquid-fuel rocket is a large solid-fuel rocket is, by comparison, cheap. But the solid-fuel, pound by pound, costs about 10 times as much as the liquid-fuel. So you have, on the one hand, an expensive rocket with a cheap fuel and on the other hand a comparatively cheap rocket with an expensive fuel.
41. A comparison of liquid-fuel and solid-fuel rockets shows that ____.A. neither type is very economicalB. the liquid-fuel rocket is betterC. each type has certain advantagesD. the solid-fuel rocker is better42. The most important consideration for manned space flight is that the rocket should be ____.A. inexpensive to constructB. capable of lifting heavy spacecraft into orbitC. easily controlledD. inexpensive to operate43. Solid-fuel rockets are expensive to operate because of their ____.A. sizeB. fuelC. buring timeD. complicated engines44. Which of the following statements is not characteristic of liquid-fuel rockets?A. The fuel is cheap.B. They can be stopped and ignited.C. They are cheap to build.D. They must be used soon after fueling.
&& &   41. C  42. C  43. B  44. C& &
  Passage 2  Homelessness among women has become increasingly visible in our society in recent years, and with this visibility has come a general alarm that “something should be done”. The further fact that homeless women are considered deviant leads one to ask what it is about their homelessness that qualifies it as deviance. One answer to this question is that women are generally seen to belong in homes -- and within our culture, the “home”implies private property and family. Within patriarchy, it has been difficult for women to have a home without being either the daughter or the wife of a man who takes the role of the breadwinner or provider. A recent study of homeless women revealed that most of those who stayed in a hostel for homeless women had in fact been “domestically fixed”at one time, and become homeless when their ties to family and property were severed.  The feminization of poverty can be poignantly understood when one looks at what happens to such women when ecomomic support is removed from their lives. Suddenly they are without income, and it is the rare homemaker who will have enough support to continue to make mortgage payments and keep up a house. The descent to poverty is a rapid downward spiral, facilitated by the stigma attached to being a female line parent. Child care for preschool children is expensive and subsidized places are limited. Paid employment is hard to find if one is unskilled and has been out of the workforce for a number of years. Even women who have careers find it next to impossible to sustain the same standard of living on one income. Social services are inadequate and often shelters are overcrowded. Affordable housing is limited. The “Catch-22”of the welfare system -- one must have a fixed address to receive welfare payments, and consequently one must have enough money to cover the first and last months' rent and other related expenses such as moving costs -- means that many women cannot make use of affordable housing even if it is available to them. Welfare payments may provide for a subsistence life-style, but certainly do little to help a woman “get back on her feet”. Literally on the street, without a fixed address, without an income, and unable to acquire housing, there women join the ranks of the homeless. One woman poignantly expressed her experience of rapid loss in status and income when her husband died: “I remember waking up one morning and realizing, 'Oh God, I'm on the skids. '”
45. It is indicated in the first paragraph that ____.A. many women tend to leave home when they feel dissatisfied.B. it is wrong for men to be blind to the problem of homeless womenC. many women are dependent on men to have a homeD. women should not be entirely dependent on men in our society46. At the end of the passage , by quoting the woman's words, the author tries to tell us that ____.A. poverty can befall a woman suddenly when her husband diesB. women are most worried about their kidsC. a widow may turn to good for help when in difficultyD. no women will ever forget the day when their husbands died47. In the author's opinion, homelessness among women is a consequence of ____.A. a man controlled social systemB. galloping inflationC. long-term unemploymentD. other people's indifference towards them
& &   45. C  46. A  47. A& &  Passage 3  For a long time Chester Carlson carried around his little black box -- the invention over which he had worked and struggled for years. He showed it to the directors of twenty-one large American corporations, such as “General Electric, International Business Machines ( IBM ) ,  Lockheed , and RCA”.  Nobody wanted it.  Nobody wanted to invest a penny in it.  It must be painful for those directors to think of Chester Carlson now. For the little black box is the heart of the multi- billion- dollar Xerox Corporation. Carlson is the inventor of “xerography”( from two Greek words meaning “dry priting”), the dry-printing process used in thousands and thousands of offices, businesses, industries, universities, shops, and government agencies around the world. Thanks to Carlson, it now takes minutes to copy a document which, twenty years ago, would have kept a secretary busy for a whole day. And for a few pennies anyone can have a copy of anything from cooking recipes to Greek poetry. More than thirty billion such copies are made each year.  When Chester Carlson went to work in a patent office in 1930, the copying methods were slow, dirty, and expensive. In his job, Carlson had to make many copies of patents for inventions. One night, after working late and painfully, he decided that somebody had better find an easier way to do it. He went to work in the kitchen of his apartment with measuring cups and cooking pots. By 1937, having developed a simple form of xerography, he applied for his first patent on the process.  Then he began Carlson's famous unsuccessful search for investors. Only in 1944 did the Battelle Memorial Institute of Columbus, Ohio, agree to spend $ 3,000 for research on Carlson's invention. According to the agreement, Carlson was to receive 25 pe his share would rise to 40 percent if he could repay Battelle the $ 3,000 within five years. This part of the agreement later brought millions of dollars to Carlson who, by borrowing from his family, had managed to repay his debt in time.Even with Battelle's help, it took another year to find a company willing to buy Carlson's process. In 1945, Dr. John H. Dessauer, director of research of the Haloid Company (maker of copying machines) , decided to adopt and market the process, which was then named “Xerox”. Three years later, the Haloid Company had changed its own name to become the Xerox Corporation. It is now the thirty-ninth largest corporation in the United States, with sales of over four billion dollars a year.
48. At first nobody wanted this little black box because ____.A. it was considered to be of no valueB. very little was known about itC. people thought it was not a worthwhile investmentD. all of the above49. After a long and painful search for investors, Carlson finallyA. received $ 3,000 for further research on his inventionB. sold his machine for $ 3,000C. received $ 3,000 from an institute for his patentD. agreed to promote sales of the drying-printing process50. In 1948 the Haloid Company changed its own name to become the Xerox Corporation. How would you account for this?A. The new name sounds more impressive.B. The “Xerox”is the heart of the corporation.C. The company provided no other machines than Xerox machines.D. This change could bring large profits to the company.
&Ⅳ. WORD FORMComplete each of the following sentences with the proper form of the word in the brackets. Write the word on the ANSWER SHEET. (10 points, 1 point for each )
51. Now he is relieved of his ____. (anxious)52. As Christmas drew near, the children were filled with ____. (anticipate)53. The ____ Minister of Foreign Affairs is coming to our school to give us a lecture. (act)54. Though they didn't like the idea, they finally agreed ____. ( willing)55. It is obvious that he is drunk because he moves ____ and unsteadily. (hesitate)56. I was annoyed because I felt praised ____ by the letter. (sincere)57. She had the reputation of being ____ about other people's affairs. (inquire)58. It is very ____ to intrude during someone's conversation. (courtesy)59. A ____ buyer purchases fruits and vegetables in season. (thrift)60. Because Bob had stopped reading his technical jurnals, he was ____ of new development in his field. (ignore)
Ⅴ. ANSWER THE QUESTIONSThere are three simple questions in this part, which are based on the texts you have learned. Give a brief answer to each of the questions. Your answers must be to the point and grammatically correct. Write your answers on the ANSWER SHEET. (10 Points )
61. How do most millionaires cultivate good advice? (3 points)(From How to Live like a Millionaire)
&& &   The best wealth-builders pay careful attention to their money and seek professional advice. Those who spend heavily on cars, boats and houses, I've found, tend to skimp on investment advice. Those who skimp on luxuries are usually more willing to pay top dollar for good legal and financial advice.  They are also always looking for new investment possibilities. The most mysterious part of wealth accumulation may be this six sense that some millionaires develop for hidden opportunities.  One of the finest examples I've come across was a doctor in Tennessee. He was renown for buying in a parcel of land just before a shopping mall located across the street, and stock in a new bank just as it was taking off.  Where did he get his information? From his patients. While rendering care, he learned of investment opportunities before they were common knowledge. And he was shrewd enough to separate the good tips from the bad. &&
62. Describe Mme. Loisel's time at the ball. (3 points)(From The Necklace)
&& &   The day of the ball arrived. Mme. Loisel was a great success. She was prettier than them all, elegant, gracious, smiling, and crazy with joy. All the men looked at her and asked her name, wanting to be introduced. All the attaches of the Cabinet wanted to waltz with her, even the minister himself .  She danced with passion, made drunk by pleasure, forgetting all the triumph of her beauty, in the glory of her success, in a sort of cloud of happiness composed of all this admiration, of all these awakened desires, and of that sense of complete victory which was so sweet to her heart. This was her ultimate moment.
63. What are the leading principles and leading provisions of American Constitution? (4 points)(From The Constitution of the United States)
Ⅵ. TRANSLATIONIn this part you are given two paragraphs selected from the texts you have learned. Translate the underlined part in each of the paragraphs into Chinese and write the Chinese versions on the ANSWER SHEET. (10 points, 5 points for each) 64. I do not know what it is to see into the heart of a friend through that “window of the soul” , the eye. I can only “see” through my fingertips the outline of a face. I can detect laughter, sorrow, and many other obvious emotions. I know my friends from the feel of their faces. But I cannot really picture their personalities by touch. I know their personalities, of course, through other means, through the thoughts they express to me, through whatever of their actions are revealed to me. But I am denied that deeper understanding of them which I am sure would come through sight of them, through watching their reactions to various expressed thoughts and circumstances, through noting the immediate and fleeting reactions of their eyes and countenance.(From Three Days to See)
&& &   但是我无法对他们有更深的了解,因为我清楚地知道,要做到这一点,一定要亲眼看到他们,观察他们对各种表达明了的思想和情况所做出的反应,留意他们眼睛里和面部表情中那种稍纵即逝的反应。& &
65.The man was brought aboard the Bedford, given food, and cared for by a doctor. In a few days he was able to sit up in his bunk. With tears streaming down his cheeks, he told how he had almost lost his life in the wilds. Then he began to talk strangely of his family in sunny southern California, and of a home among the orange trees and the flowers.(From Love of Life)
全国高等教育自学考试英语阅读(一)标准预测试卷(一)
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