武汉大学真题2006年
(总分100, 考试时间90分钟)
Part
Ⅰ Reading Comprehension
<lPG=Xt x,-75 Directions: There are 5 reading passages inthis 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 shoulddecide on the best choice and mark your answer on the ANSWER SHEET byblackening the corresponding letter in the brackets.
ITBE|b F>l]
9!P|m Tides are created mainly by the pull of the moon on the earth. Themoon's pull causes water in the oceans to be a little deeper at a point closestto the moon and also at a point farthest from the moon, on the opposite side ofthe earth. These two tidal "waves" follow the apparent movement ofthe moon around the earth strike nearly every coastline at intervals of abouttwelve hours and twenty-five minutes. After reaching a high point, the water level goes down gradually for a little more thansix hours and then begins to rise toward a new high point. Hence, most coastlines have twotides a day, and the tides occur fifty minutes later each day. Differences inthe coastline and in channels in the ocean bottom may change the time that thetidal wave reaches different points along the same coastline. The difference inwater level between high and low tide varies from day to day according to therelative positions of the sun and the moon because the sun also exerts a pullon the earth, although it is only about half as strong as the pull of the moon.When the sun and the moon are pulling along the same line, the tides risehigher, and when they pull at right angles to one another, the tide is lower.The formation of the coastline and variations in the weather are additionalfactors which can affect the height of tides. Some sections of the coast areshaped in such a way as to cause much higher tides than are experienced inother areas. A strong wind blowing toward the shore may also cause tides to behigher.
/~?*=}c^m LL!
Dx%JZ 1.Which of the following may be concluded from the information presented in thepassage?
%$L{R A Some coastlines do not have two tides eachday.
)10+@d B Tides usually rise to the same level dayafter day.
o.!Dq7R C Tides are not affected by the shape of acoastline.
?`ZUR&
20 D The sun has as much effect on tides asdoes the moon.
HV|,}Wks6s
Otuf]B^s 2. The time that high tide occurs at aparticular place is affected by all of the following EXCEPT ______.
`^&OF uee A tone position of the moon
0h_|t-9j B the direction of the wind
i.m^/0! C channels in the sea bottom
,O(hMI85] D variations in the coastline
jLluj 8 Z~EwY* 3. Which of the following is an accuratestatement about the pull of the sun on the earth?
$&td=OK A It determines the time of high tide.
L,!?Nt\ B It is about twice the pull of the moon.
#6= C It determines the time of low tide.
7.oM
J D It is about half the pull of the moon.
y6a3tG (9a^$C* 4. If the pull of the sun equaled the pullof the moon, tides would ______.
XL^GZ A sometimes be higher than they are now
2+XAX:YD B be the same height they are now
JZx[W&]zT C no longer be affected by the wind
&D<y X~ D be of equal height all the time
~"!fP3"e George Mason must rank with John Adams and James Madison as one of thethree Founding Fathers who left their personal imprint on the fundamental lawof the United States.He was the principal author of the Virginia Declaration of Rights, whichbecause of its early formation greatly influenced other state constitutionsframed during the Revolution and, through them, the Federal Bill of Rights of1791.
z24q3 3O Yet Mason was essentially a private person with very little inclinationfor public office or the ordinary operation of politics beyond the countrylevel. His appearances in the Virginiacolonial and state legislatures were relatively brief, and not until 1787 didhe consent to represent his state at a continental or national congress orconvention. Polities was never more than a means for Mason. He was at all timesa man of public spirit, but politics was never a way of life, never for longhis central concern. It took a revolution to pry him away from home and familyat Gunston Hall, mobilize his skill and energy for constitutional construction,and transform him, in one brief moment of brilliant leadership, into astatesman whose work would endure to influence the lives and fortunes of those"millions yet unborn" of whom he and his generation of Americansspoke so frequently and thought so constantly.
i
ct]) 'w aaw_>b 5. The author ascribes importance to theVirginia Declaration of Rights primarily because ______.
:2`e(+Uz A Mason was its principal author
8s@3hXD& B it was later adopted as the Federal Billof Rights
!N^@4* C through wide circulation it influencedthe writing of other state constitutions during the Revolution
~}
~4
D through other state constitutions iteventually influenced the writing of the Federal Bill of Rights
%cn<ych
G DEgXQ[ 6. The passage indicates that, for Mason,political activities were ______.
u ga_T A undertaken only when absolutely necessary
Mtx 4'WZ B a fundamental and lifelong preoccupation
X?Q4} Y C something he successfully avoidedthroughout his life
53h0UL D something to which he always wished todevote more time and attention
:`sUt1Fw. x+]" 7. The author indicates that Mason'sbrilliant leadership ability ______.
0jfuBj5! A was exercised throughout his life
4qa.1j(R/ B has been recognized only by thegenerations that followed him
M6TD"
- C was less important historically than hisbrilliance as a lawyer
pgo$61 D emerged powerfully, but for a brief timeonly
8P`"M#fI ar,7S&s