2003
@uxg;dyI~ part = 2 \* ROMAN II
qqYQ/4Ajw 31.Sometimes you can get quite _____ when you are tryingto communicate with someone in English.
l 9rN!Q| A.frustrated B.depressed C.approved D.distracted
W70BRXe04D 32.The company has ____ itself to a policyof equal opportunity for all.
GO#eI]>/r A.promised B.committed C.attributed D.converted
R;/LB^X] 33.I haven’t met anyone ____ the new taxplan.
gcM(K.n A.in honor of B.in searchof C.in place of D.in favor of
IgF#f%|Q 34.Salk won ____ as the scientist whodeveloped the world’s first effective vaccine against polio.
ijNI6_eU A.accomplishment B.qualification C.eminence D.patent
8/9YR(H3H 35.This software can be ____ to the needsof each customer.
RoD9 A.tailored B.administrated C.entailed D.accustomed
B<!wh 36.The average commercial business can shut down in suchan emergemcy but a hospital doesn’t dare, for lives are____
xl,?Hh%# A.in circulation B.underconsideration C.on hand D.at stake
JZNvuP D 37.As we need plain, ____food for the body, so we must have seriousreading for the mind.
G>^ _&(c@2 A.wholesome B.diet C.tasteful D.edible
X`}4=> 38.He never gave much thought to theadditional kilorams he had ____ lately.
b@1";+(27 A.shown up B.piled up C.put on D.taken on
~qW"v^< 39.The teacher tried hard to read ____handwriting in her students’s test papers.
?rwHkPJ{* A.irregular B.illiterate C.illegible D.irrational
"8yDqm 40.A coronary disease is the widely-usedterm____ insufficiency of blood supply to the heart.
-F-,Gcos A.denoting B.donating C.relating D.resorting
w>#.id[k 41.Humans are using up the world’s naturalriches at an
alarming rate.
m3
b?f B A.appalling B.appealing C.alert D.abnormal
FiN B$A 42.Dring water in many areas of thedeveloping world is
contaminated with bacteria.
^t)alNGos A.purified B.multiplied
C.tainted D.blended
[
%7oq;^J 43.One of the most noticeable features ofU.S society is the
diversity of its people.
}D#[yE,=\ A.liberty B.democracy C.vatiety D.origin
fL R.2vJ 44.The
controversy about abortionhas been going on in the United States for mor than twenty years.
k
v3V| A.resentment B.consensus C.notion D.dispute
{&Sr<d5 45.As human settlement advance ,the tropical forests are
retreating and becoming smaller every year.
y
+c 3# A.retrieving B.sprawling C.consuming D.withdrawing
g(zoN0
~ 46.The war’s impact on the population ofthe country was
catastrophic. ,G(bwE9~ A.influential B.dis
astrous C.apparent D.criticala
X1~ B 47.His physican told him that not to takemuch of the drug because it was very
potent. *6*/kV?F A.bitter B.irritant C.effective D.powerful
/H[ !v:U 48.Certain drugs can cause
transientside effects ,such as sleepiness.
v/DWy(CC A.permanent B.residual C.irreversible D.fleeting
fxk6 q$' 49.Nervous illness may
stem from beingtreated inconsiderately in childhood.
oQ8If$a} A.complain B. give rise to C.originate in D.dominate over
Q|J$R 50.Both a person’s heredity and hissurroundings help to
shape his chacter.
be{t yV
A.form B.correct C.modify D.improve
naKB2y]l Part = 3 \* ROMAN III Cloze(10%)
There were red faces at one of Britain’s biggest banks recently.They had accepted a telephone order to buy
$100,000 worth of shares from a fifteen-old schoolboy (they thoughthe was twenty-one). The shares fell in value and the schoolboy was unable to
51 . The bank lost
$20,000 on the
52 that itcannot get back because ,for one thing, this young speculator does not have themoney and , for another,
53 undereighteen, he is not legally liable forhis debts. If the shares had risen in value by the same amount that they fell,he would have pocketed
$20,000
54 . Not bad for afifteen-yeat-old. It certainly is better than
55the morning newspaper. In another recent case, a boy of fourteen found , in hisgrandfather’s house , a suitcase full of foreign banknotes .The clean, crispbanknotes looked very
56 but they werenow not used in their country of origin or anywhere else. This young boy
57 straight to the nearest bank with his pocketsfilled with notes. The cashers did not realize that the country in
58 had reduced the value of its currincy by 90%,they exchanged the notes at their face value at the current exchange rate.Inthree days, before he was found out, he took
$20,000 from nine different banks.
59,he had already spend more than half of this on taxi-rides, restraurant meal ,concert tickets and presents for his many new girlfriends( at least he wasgenerous! ) before the police caught up with him. Because he is also undereighteen the bank shave
60 a lot of money,and several cashiers have lost jobs. n*fsdo~ 51.A.pay off B.pay up
C.pay for D.pay out
~w9ZSSb4 52.A.principle B.criterion C.custom D.deal
o5 eFLJ6 53.A.to be B.having been C.being D.is
#EdsB 54.A.profit B.advantage C.benefit D.commission
T8rf+B/.L 55.A.sending B.transmitting C.delivering D.dispatching
>T~duwS 56.A.convincing B.valuable C.unusual D.priceless
' fm}&0 57.A.came B.pull C.headed D.pushed
x?B 8b-* 58.A.problem B.question C.talk D.saying
oVSq#I4 59.A.Interestingly B.Unfortunately C.Particularly D.Amazingly
@z)_m!yV1 60.A.kissed goodbye to B. got rid of C.lived up to D.made for
%@Ty,d:;= Part = 4 \* ROMAN IV(30%)
v'zf*]9 Passage 1
T&`H )o Ina society where all aspects of our lives are dictated by scientific advances intechnology, science is the essence of our existence.Without the vast advancesmade by chemists ,physicists, biologist , geologist, and other diligentscientists, our standards of living would decline, our flourishing., wealthynation might come to an economic depression, and our people would suffer fromdisease that could not be cured. As a society we ignorantly take advantage of
the amenities
provided by science, yet our lives would be alteredinterminablywithout them.
"ewB4F[ Health care, one of the aspects of our societythat separates us from our archaic ancestors, is founded exclusively onscientific discoveries and advances. Without the caccines created by doctors, diseasesuch as polio , measles,hepatitis, and the flu would pose a threat to ourcitizens, for although some of these disease may not be deadly, their sideeffects can be a vast detriment to an individual affected with the disease.
7EAkY`Op In addition , science has developed perhapsthe most awe-inspiring, vital invention in the history of the world, thecomputer. Without the presence of this machine,our world could exist, but theconvenience brought into life by the computer are unparalleled.
7o]p0iLej Despite the greatness of present-day innovators and scientists and theirrevelations,it is requisite to examine the amenities of science that ourculture so blatantly disregards. For instance,the light bulb,electricity,thetelephone, running water, and the automobile are present-day staples of oursociety;however,they were not present until scientists discovered them.
R\wG3Oxol Because of the contribution of scientist, our world is evermetamorphosing,and this metamorphosis economically and personally comprise oursociety, whether our society is cognizant of
认识到 this or not.
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