国产精品亚洲精品日韩动图,国产又黄,青青青在线视频免费观看,日韩精品一区二区蜜桃

  • <td id="cz1jh"></td>

    <menuitem id="cz1jh"></menuitem>
  • <small id="cz1jh"></small>

      1.   n W(xu)У }Փ W(wng)У  طվ | Ϻ | |
         иԇW(wng)
         ԇYӍ  ָ    (jng)  xo(do)  }  ģM}   W(xu)Ȧ   ƷW(wng)Уn
             |  | x | ԇ   ºиƷn   h(hun)˼иTn   –|иW(wng)j(lu)n   и   иԇɅ^(q)

        20015TOEFL}

        ߣ l(f)rg2007-05-15 10:38:52 Դ
        • W(wng)Уn
        • Yd
        • TԒ}
        • Փ
        Section One: Listening Comprehension

        1. (A) He has just recovered from the flu.
        (B) He wont be able to go to the play.
        (C) He heard that the play isnt very good.
        (D) He has already seen the play.

        2. (A) Share the place hes renting.
        (B) Avoid living near the campus.
        (C) Apply for campus housing.
        (D) Find an apartment soon.

        3. (A) He wants to meet the woman after his Spanish class.
        (B) The woman should borrow someone elses workbook.
        (C) He can take the woman to her class.
        (D) The woman needs to return the workbook before the class.

        4. (A) She didnt know Dr. Turners lecture would be so interesting.
        (B) She didnt expect to have a quiz today.
        (C) Dr. Turner often gives quizzes.
        (D) The man should have prepared for the class.

        5. (A) There are different kinds of folders.
        (B) This decision requires careful thought.
        (C) It doesnt matter which color she uses.
        (D) The color should suggest the content.

        6. (A) She prepares her students well.
        (B) She used to teach graduate courses.
        (C) She isnt qualified to teach organic chemistry.
        (D) Her students rarely attend graduate school.

        7. (A) He decided not to sell the piano.
        (B) Hes looking for a place to store the piano.
        (C) No one has bought the piano.
        (D) He hasnt been able to find an inexpensive piano yet.

        8. (A) Tennis players often injure their backs.
        (B) She hadnt heard about the mans problem.
        (C) The man should have seen the doctor.
        (D) Shell check the mans schedule as soon as possible.



        9. (A) He already knew about the problem.
        (B) Someone has started fixing the washing machine.
        (C) No one complained about the washing machine today.
        (D) Theres nothing wrong with the washing machine.

        10. (A) It wont take long to get to the station.
        (B) Itll be easy for him to give the woman a ride to the station.
        (C) Hell ride on the train with the woman.
        (D) Hes picking someone up from the station.

        11. (A) Ill out an application from.
        (B) Apply for a different position.
        (C) File the papers in the cabinet.
        (D) Show her the advertisement from the newspaper.

        12. (A) Go with her to the airport.
        (B) Talk to her for a short time.
        (C) Find out when the plane is leaving.
        (D) Make the phone call now.

        13. (A) He can give the woman directions to Chicago.
        (B) He can drive the woman to Chicago.
        (C) He can get a map for the woman.
        (D) He can take the woman to the bookstore.

        14. (A) He didnt show his paintings at the exhibit.
        (B) He didnt see the paintings.
        (C) He doesnt understand Teds art.
        (D) The exhibit was canceled.

        15. (A) She has canceled her trip to lowa.
        (B) The snowstorm is getting weaker.
        (C) The mans information isnt accurate.
        (D) They also may get a lot of snow.

        16. (A) She needs more time to get ready for the dinner.
        (B) She thought the dinner was at another time.
        (C) She forgot about the plans she made for dinner.
        (D) She wont be able to go to dinner.

        17. (A) Take the class this semester.
        (B) Get permission to take the class.
        (C) Take the class over again.
        (D) Register for the class next semester.

        18. (A) He doesnt like his new eyeglass frames.
        (B) He didnt get a haircut.
        (C) He got his eyeglasses a long time ago.
        (D) Several people have asked him about his new eyeglass frames.

        19. (A) The grades have been calculated correctly.
        (B) The woman will get the grade she deserves.
        (C) The woman received one of the highest grades.
        (D) The womans grade cant be changed.

        20. (A) She left the lecture for a few minutes.
        (B) She was reading doing the lecture.
        (C) She may have fallen asleep.
        (D) She misunderstood the speakers last points.

        21. (A) The man hasnt seen Joan recently.
        (B) The man plans to call Joan soon.
        (C) Joan doesnt know what happened to the book.
        (D) Joan gave the book to the man.

        22. (A) Why she should tell her students about her plans.
        (B) What he plans to do when hes on sabbatical.
        (C) Why she cant take a sabbatical next semester.
        (D) Why her students probably werent surprised by her announcement.

        23. (A) Put a little more pepper in the stew.
        (B) Taste the stew to see if it needs paper.
        (C) Check the recipe to see if they followed it correctly.
        (D) Serve the stew as it is.

        24. (A) She wants to know where Tom heard th stories.
        (B) Shes surprised Tom was so serious last night.
        (C) Tom doesnt usually tell funny stories.
        (D) The stories probably werent true.

        25. (A) He plans to sell the books to a collector.
        (B) He wont sell the books until he has read them.
        (C) The books probably arent worth a lot of money.
        (D) The woman can borrow any of the books if she wants to.

        26. (A) Leave with the man.
        (B) Get ready to leave for the weekend.
        (C) Stay where she is for the weekend.
        (D) Meet the man later.

        27. (A) The man is upset that the wasnt invited to the party.
        (B) The man and the woman live in different buildings.
        (C) The womans friends were louder than she expected they would be.
        (D) The woman hadnt intended to serve food and beverages at the party.

        28. (A) Mary hadnt planned to attend the seminar.
        (B) Mary has been ill for several weeks.
        (C) Mary forgot about the seminar.
        (D) Mary wasnt able to attend the seminar.

        29. (A) Do more research before they meet.
        (B) Meet several days before the presentation.
        (C) Change the day of the presentation.
        (D) Try to solve the problems before they meet.

        30. (A) Shell talk to Judy about the problem.
        (B) She may not be available later to help the man.
        (C) She isnt sure if Judy can solve the problem.
        (D) The man will be able to solve the problem himself.

        31. (A) Places the man has visited.
        (B) A paper the woman is writing for a class.
        (C) School activities they enjoy.
        (D) The womans plans for the summer.

        32. (A) She has never been to Gettysburg.
        (B) She took a political science course.
        (C) Her family still goes on vacation together.
        (D) Shes interested in the United States Civil War.

        33. (A) Why her parents wanted to go to Gettysburg.
        (B) Why her familys vacation plans changed ten years ago.
        (C) Where her family went for a vacation ten years ago.
        (D) When her family went on their last vacation.

        34. (A) Its far from where she lives.
        (B) Her family went there without her.
        (C) She doesnt know a lot about it.
        (D) Shes excited about going there.

        35. (A) A catalog mailed to the man.
        (B) The womans catalog order.
        (C) The history of mail-order catalogs.
        (D) A comparison of two kinds of catalogs.

        36. (A) She wants to learn about Richard Sears.
        (B) She is helping the man with his assignment.
        (C) She needs to buy a filing cabinet.
        (D) She wants to order some textbooks.

        37. (A) Teachers.
        (B) Farmers.
        (C) Students.
        (D) Laborers.

        38. (A) As textbooks.
        (B) As fuel.
        (C) As newspapers.
        (D) As art.

        39. (A) Taxes on factory goods rose.
        (B) Some people lost their farms.
        (C) Shipping prices rose.
        (D) some families lost their businesses.

        40. (A) Problems with pesticides.
        (B) Characteristics of one type of falcon.
        (C) Migratory patterns of birds.
        (D) Tracking systems for animals.

        41. (A) It flying speed.
        (B) Its keen hearing.
        (C) It size.
        (D) Its aggressiveness.

        42. (A) By radar.
        (B) By airplane.
        (C) By direct observation.
        (D) By satellite.

        43. (A) The types of instruments used in bebo music.
        (B) The social setting in which bebop music developed.
        (C) How two styles of jazz music influenced each other
        (D) The influence of bebop music on the United States economy during the 1940s.

        44. (A) They didnt use singers.
        (B) They gave free concerts.
        (C) They performed in small nightclubs.
        (D) They shortened the length of their performances.

        45. (A) To discuss one way it impacted jazz music.
        (B) To explain why the government reduced some taxes.
        (C) To describe a common theme in jazz music.
        (D) To discuss the popularity of certain jazz bands.

        46. (A) The music contained strong political messages.
        (B) The music had a steady beat that people could dance to.
        (C) The music included sad melodies.
        (D) The music contained irregular types of rhythms.

        47. (A) The increase in beachfront property value.
        (B) An experimental engineering project.
        (C) The erosion of coastal areas
        (D) How to build seawalls.

        48. (A) To protect beachfront property.
        (B) To reduce the traffic on beach roads.
        (C) To provide privacy for homeowners.
        (D) To define property limits.

        49. (A) By sending water directly back to sea with  great force.
        (B) By reducing wave energy.
        (C) By reducing beach width.
        (D) By stabilizing beachfront construction.

        50. (A) Protect roads along the shore.
        (B) Build on beaches with seawalls.
        (C) Add sand to beaches with seawalls.
        (D) Stop building seawalls.

        Section Two: Structure and Written Expression

        1. The giant ragweed, or buffalo weed, grows ---.
        (A) 18 feet up to high
        (B) to high 18 feet up
        (C) up to 18 feet high
        (D) 18 feet high up to

        2. Neptune is --- any planet except Pluto.
        (A) to be far from the Sun
        (B) far from the Sun being
        (C) farther than the Sun is
        (D) farther from the Sun than

        3. Since prehistoric times, artists have arranged
        paint on surfaces in ways --- their ideas about
        people and the world.
        (A) express
        (B) that their expression of
        (C) which, expressing
        (D) that express

        4. Except for certain microorganisms, --- need oxygen to survive.
        (A) of all living things
        (B) all living things
        (C) all are living things
        (D) are all living things

        5. Dubbing is used in filmmaking --- a new sound track to a motion picture.
        (A) which to add
        (B) to add
        (C) is adding that
        (D) to add while

        6. --- of green lumber may come from moisture in the wood.
        (A) More weight than half
        (B) Of the weight, more than half
        (C) The weight is more than half
        (D) More than half of the weight

        7. Archaeologists study ---- to trace ancient trade
        routes because such tools are relatively rare, and
        each occurrence has a slightly different chemical composition.
        (A) which obsidian tools
        (B) obsidian tools
        (C) how obsidian tools
        (D) obsidian tools are

        8. ---- the hamsters basic diet is vegetarian, some hamsters also eat insects.
        (A) Despite
        (B) Although
        (C) Regardless of
        (D) Consequently

        9. The Navajo Indians of the southwestern United
        States --- for their sand painting, also called dry painting.
        (A) noted
        (B) are noted
        (C) to be noted
        (D) have noted

        10. In 1784, the leaders of what would later
        become the state of Virginia gave up --- to the
        territory that later became five different
        Midwestern states.
        (A) any claim
        (B) when the claim
        (C) to claim
        (D) would claim

        11. ---- one after another, parallel computers
         perform groups of operations at the same time.
        (A) Conventional computers, by handling tasks
        (B) Since tasks being handled by conventional  computers
        (C) Whereas conventional computers handle tasks
        (D) While tasks handled by conventional computers

        12. The Liberty Bell, formerly housed in
        Independence Hall, --- in Philadelphia, was
        moved to a separate glass pavilion in 1976.
        (A) which a historic building
        (B) a historic building which
        (C) was a historic building
        (D) a historic building

        13. Fossils, traces of dead organisms found in the
        rocks of Earths crust, reveal --- at the time the
        rocks were formed.
        (A) what was like
        (B) was like life
        (C) what life was like
        (D) life was like

        14. Although the huge ice masses ---- glaciers
        move slowly, they are a powerful erosive force in nature.
        (A) call them
        (B) are called
        (C) to call
        (D) called

        15. The soybean contains vitamins, essential
        minerals, --- high percentage of protein.
        (A) a
        (B) and a
        (C) since a
        (D) of which a



        16. A gene is a biological unit of information who directs the activity of a cell or organism during its
        A B C D
        lifetime.

        17. The flowering of African American talent in literature, music, and art in the 1920s in New York City
        A B C
        became to know as the Harlem Renaissance.
        D

        18. The symptoms of pneumonia, a lung infection, include high fever, chest pain, breathing difficult, and
        A B C D
        coughing.

        19. The rapid grow of Boston during the mid-nineteenth century coincided with a large influx of
        A B C
        European immigrants.D

        20. In 1908 Olive Campbell started writing down folk songs by rural people in the southern Appalachian
        A B C
        mountains near hers home.
        D

        21.The thirteen stripes of the United States flag represent the original thirteen states of the Union, which
        A B C
        they all were once colonies of Britain.
        D

        22. In 1860, more as 90 percent of the people of Indiana lived rural areas, with only a few cities having a
        A B C
        population exceeding 10,000.
        D

        23.Gravitation keeps the Moon in orbit around Earth and the planets other of the solar system in orbit
        A B C D
        around the Sun.

        24. Photograph was revolutionized in 1831 by the introduction of the collodion process for making glass
        A B C D
        negatives.

        25. After flax is washed, dry, beaten, and combed, fibers are obtained for use in making fabric.
        A B C D

        26. A fever is caused which blood cells release proteins called pyrogens, raising the bodys temperature.
        A B C D

        27. Because of various gift-giving holidays, most stores clothing in the United Sates do almost as much
        A B
        business in November and December as they do in the other ten months combined.
        C D

        28.The United States National Labor Relations Board is authorized to investigation allegations of unfair
        A B
        labor practices on the part of either employers or employees.
        C D

        29.The Great Potato Famine in Ireland in the 1840s caused an unprecedented numbers of people from
        A B C
        Ireland to immigrate to the United States.
        D

        30.The particles comprising a given cloud are continually changing, as new ones are added while others
        A B
        are taking away by moving air.
        C D

        31.Political parties in the United States help to coordinate the campaigns of their members and organizes A B C
        the statewide and national conventions that mark election years.
        D

        32.The lemur is an unusual animal belonging to the same order than monkeys and apes.
        A B C D

        33.Chese may be hard or soft, depending on the amount of water left into it and the character of
        A B C D
        the cuting.

        34.The carbon-are lamp, a very bright electric lamp used for spotlights, consists of two carbon
        A B
        electrodes with a high-current are passing between it.
        C D

        35. At first the poems of E.E. Cummings gained notoriety to their idiosyncratic punctuation and
        A B
        typography, but they have gradually been recognized for their lyric power as well.
        C D

        36.The mechanism of human thought and recall, a subject only partly understood by scientists, is
        A B C
        extraordinary complicated.
        D

        37.While the process of photosynthesis in green plants, light energy is captured and used
        A B
        to convert water, carbon dioxide, and minerals into oxygen and organic compounds.
        C D

        38.The globe artichoke was known as a delicacy at least 2,500 years ago, and records of its
        A B C
        cultivation date from fifteenth century.
        D

        39. Humans do not constitute the only species endowed with intelligence: the higher animals also
        A B C
        have considerably problem-solving abilities.
        D

        40. Many of species of milkweed are among the most dangerous of poisonous plants, while others
        A B C
        have little, if any, toxicity.
        D

        Questions 1-10
        In the early 1800s, over 80 percent of the United States labor force was engaged
        in agriculture. Sophisticated technology and machinery were virtually nonexistent.
        People who lived in the cities and were not directly involved in trade often participated
        Line in small cottage industries making handcrafted goods. Others cured meats, silversmiths, candle
        5) or otherwise produced needed goods and commodities. Blacksmiths, silversmiths, candle
        makers, and other artisans worked in their homes or barns, relying on help of family
        Perhaps no single phenomenon brought more widespread and lasting change to the
        United States society than the rise of industrialization. Industrial growth hinged on several
        10 economic factors. First, industry requires an abundance of natural resources, especially
        coal, iron ore, water, petroleum, and timber-all readily available on the North American
        continent. Second, factories demand a large labor supply. Between the 1870s and the
        First World War (1914-1918), approximately 23 million immigrants streamed to the
        United States, settled in cities, and went to work in factories and mines. They also helped
        15build the vast network of canals and railroads that crisscrossed the continent and linked
        important trade centers essential to industrial growth.
        Factories also offered a reprieve from the backbreaking work and financial
        unpredictability associated with farming. Many adults, poor and disillusioned with
        farm life, were lured to the cities by promises of steady employment, regular paychecks,
        20) increased access to goods and services, and expanded social opportunities. Others were
        pushed there when new technologies made their labor cheap or expendable; inventions
        such as steel plows and mechanized harvesters allowed one farmhand to perform work
        that previously had required several, thus making farming capital-intensive rather than
        labor-intensive.
        25 The United States economy underwent a massive transition and the nature of work
        was permanently altered. Whereas cottage industries relied on a few highly skilled craft
        workers who slowly and carefully converted raw materials into finished products from
        start to finish, factories relied on specialization. While factory work was less creative and
        more monotonous, it was also more efficient and allowed mass production of goods at
        less expense.


        1.What aspect of life in the United States does the passage mainly discuss?
        (A) The transition from an agricultural to an industrial economy
        (B) The inventions that transformed life in the nineteenth century
        (C) The problems associated with the earliest factories
        (D) The difficulty of farm life in the nineteenth century
        2. Blacksmiths, silversmiths, and candle makers are mentioned in lines 5-6 as examples of
        artisans who
        (A) maintained their businesses at home
        (B) were eventually able to use sophisticated technology
        (C) produced unusual goods and commodities
        (D) would employ only family members

        3. The phrase hinged on in line 9 is closest in meaning to
        (A) recovered from
        (B) depended on
        (C) started on
        (D) contributed to

        4. Which of the following is mentioned in the passage as a reason for the industrial growth that occurred in the United States before 1914?
        (A)The availability of natural resources found only in the United States
        (B) The decrease in number of farms resulting from technological advances
        (C) The replacement of canals and railroads by other forms of transportation
        (D) The availability of a large immigrant work force

        5. The word l(f)ured in line 19 is closest in meaning to
        (A) attracted
        (B) assigned
        (C) restricted
        (D) attached

        6. The word Others in line 20 refers to other
        (A) adults
        (B) promises
        (C) goods and services
        (D) social opportunities

        7.The word expendable in line 21 is closest in meaning to
        (A) nonproductive
        (B) unacceptable
        (C) nonessential
        (D) unprofitable

        8. It can be inferred from the passage that
        industrialization affected farming in that industrialization
        (A) increased the price of farm products
        (B) limited the need for new farm machinery
        (C) created new and interesting jobs on farms
        (D) reduced the number of people willing to do farm work

        9.What does the author mean when stating that certain inventions made farming capital-intensive rather than labor-intensive(lines 23-24)?
        (A) Workers had to be trained to operate the new machines.
        (B) Mechanized farming required more capital and fewer laborers.
        (C) The new inventions were not helpful for all farming activities.
        (D) Human labor could still accomplish as much work as the first machines.

        10. According to the passage, factory workers differed from craft workers in that factory workers
        (A) were required to be more creative
        (B) worked extensively with raw materials
        (C) changed jobs frequently
        (D) specialized in one aspect of the finished product only

        Question 11-20
        Molting is one of the most involved processes of a birds annual life cycle.
        Notwithstanding preening and constant care, the marvelously intricate structure of a birds
        Feather inevitably wears out. All adult birds molt their feathers at least once a year, and
        Line upon close observation, one can recognize the frayed, ragged appearance of feathers that
        5) are nearing the end of their useful life. Two distinct processes are involved in molting.
        The first step is when the old, worn feather is dropped, or shed. The second is when a new
        feather grows in its place. When each feather has been shed and replaced, then the molt
        can be said to be complete. This, however, is an abstraction that often does not happen:
        incomplete, overlapping, and arrested molts are quite common.
        10) Molt requires that a bird find and process enough protein to rebuild approximately
        one-third of its body weight. It is not surprising that a bird in heavy molt often seems
        listless and unwell. But far from being random, molt is controlled by strong evolutionary
        forces that have established an optimal time and duration. Generally, molt occurs at the
        time of least stress on the bird. Many songbirds, for instance, molt in late summer, when
        15) the hard work of breeding is done but the weather is still warm and food still plentiful.
        This is why the woods in late summer often seem so quiet, when compared with the
        Exuberant choruses of spring.
        Molt of the flight feathers is the most highly organized part of the process. Some species,
        for example, begin by dropping the outermost primary feathers on each side (to retain
        20) balance in the air) and wait until the replacement feathers are about one-third grown before
        shedding the next outermost, and so on. Others always start with the innermost primary
        feathers and work outward. Yet other species begin in the middle and work outward on both
        weeks while the replacement feathers grow.


        11.The passage mainly discusses how
        (A) birds prepare for breeding
        (B) bird feathers differ from species
        (C) birds shed and replace their feathers
        (D) birds are affected by seasonal changes

        12.The word Notwithstanding in line 2 is closest in meaning to
        (A) despite
        (B) because of
        (C) instead of
        (D) regarding

        13.The word intricate in line 2 is closest in meaning to
        (A) regular
        (B) complex
        (C) interesting
        (D) important

        14.The word random in line 12 is closest in meaning to
        (A) unfortunate
        (B) unusual
        (C) unobservable
        (D) unpredictable

        15.The word optimal in line 13 is closest in meaning to
        (A) slow
        (B) frequent
        (C) best
        (D) early

        16.Which of the following is NOT mentioned as a reason that songbirds molt in the late summer?
        (A) Fewer predators are in the woods.
        (B) The weathers is still warm.
        (C) The songbirds have finished breeding.
        (D) Food is still available.

        17. Some birds that are molting maintain balance during flight by
        (A) constantly preening and caring for their remaining feathers
        (B) dropping flight feathers on both sides at the same time
        (C) adjusting the angle of their flight to compensate for lost feathers
        (D) only losing one-third of their feathers

        18.The word Others in line 21 refers to
        (A) ducks
        (B) sides
        (C) species
        (D) flight feathers

        19.The author discusses ducks in order to provide an example of birds that
        (A) grow replacement feathers that are very long
        (B) shed all their wing feathers at one time
        (C) keep their innermost feathers
        (D) shed their outermost feathers first

        20. It can inferred from the discussion about ducks that the molting of their flight feathers takes.
        (A) a year
        (B) a season
        (C) several months
        (D) a few weeks


        Question 21-30
        The Harlem Renaissance, a movement of the 1920s, marked the twentieth centurys
        first period of intense activity by African Americans in the field of literature, art, and
        music in the United States. The philosophy of the movement combined realism, ethnic
        Line consciousness, and Americanism. Encouraged by the example of certain Americans
        5) of European descent such as Thomas Eakins, Robert Henri, and George Luks, who had
        included persons of African descent in their paintings as serious studies rather than as
        trivial or sentimental stereotypes, African American artists of this period set about
        creating a new portrayal of themselves and their lives in the United States. As they began
        to strive for social and cultural independence. Their attitudes toward themselves changed,
        10) and, to some extent, other segments of American society began to change their attitudes
        toward them. Thus, thought the Harlem Renaissance was a short-lived movement, its
        impact on American art and culture continues to the present.
        The district in New York City know as Harlem was the capital of the movement.
        In 1925 an issue of Survey Graphic magazine devoted exclusively to Harlem and edited
        15) by philosopher Alain Locke became the manifesto of the African American artistic
        movement. Locke strongly suggested that individuals, while accepting their Americanism,
        take pride in their African ancestral arts and urged artists to look to Africa for substance
        and inspiration. Far from advocating a withdrawal from American culture, as did some of
        his contemporaries, Locke recommended a cultural pluralism through which artists could
        20) enrich the culture of America. African Americans were urged by Locke to be collaborators
        and participators with other Americans in art, literature, and music; and at the same time
        to preserve, enhance, and promote their own cultural heritage.
        Artists and intellectuals from many parts of the United States and the Caribbean had
        Been attracted to Harlem by the pulse and beat of its unique and dynamic culture. From
        25) this unity created by the convergence of artists from various social and geographical
        backgrounds came a new spirit, which, particularly in densely populated Harlem, was
        to result in greater group awareness and self-determination. African American graphic
        artists took their place beside the poets and writers of the Harlem Renaissance and
        carried on efforts to increase and promote the visual arts.

        21.What does the passage mainly discuss?
        (A) African American paintings in the 1920s
        (B) An arts movement of the 1920s
        (C) The influence of Alain Locke on African American art
        (D) Some ways in which African culture inspired American literature, art and music

        22. According to the passage, Tomas Eakins, Robert Henri, and George Luks were important because of
        (A) the philosophical contributions they made to the Harlem Renaissance
        (B) their development of a new style of African American art
        (C) they way in which they depicted African Americans in their paintings
        (D) their independence from European artistic traditions

        23. The word them in line 11 refers to
        (A) Americans of European descent
        (B) paintings
        (C) African American artists
        (D) attitudes

        24. According to the passage, African American artists of the 1920s differed from earlier African American artists in terms of their feelings about
        (A) themselves
        (B) other artists
        (C) their impact on American art
        (D) stereotypes

        25.The word urged in line 17 is closest in meaning to
        (A) prepared
        (B) defined
        (C) permitted
        (D) encouraged

        26. Alain Locke believed all of the following to be important to the African American artistic movement EXCEPT
        (A) pride in African art
        (B) cultural pluralism
        (C) collaboration with other artists
        (D) withdrawal from American culture

        27. In mentioning the pulse and beat (line24) of Harlem during the 1920s, the author is characterizing the district as one that
        (A) depended greatly on its interaction with other parts of the city
        (B) grew economically in a short period of time
        (C) was an exciting place to be
        (D) was in danger of losing population

        28.The word convergence in line 25 is closest in meaning to
        (A) gathering
        (B) promotion
        (C) expression
        (D) influence

        29. According to the passage, all of the following were true of Harlem in the 1920s EXCEPT:
        (A) Some Caribbean artists and intellectuals lived there.
        (B) It attracted people from various regions of United States.
        (C) It was one of the most expensive neighborhoods in New York City.
        (D) It was a unique cultural center.

        30.The phrase carried on in line 29 is closest in meaning to
        (A) continued
        (B) praised
        (C) transformed
        (D) connected

        Questions 31-40
        Ethology is concerned with the study of adaptive, or survival,value of behavior and its
        Evolutionary history. Ethological theory began to be applied to research on children in the
        1960s but has become even more influential today. The origins of ethology can be traced
        Line to the work of Darwin. Its modern foundations were laid by two European zoologists,
        5) Konrad Lorenz and Niko Tinbergen.
        Watching the behaviors diverse animal species in their natural habitats, Lorenz, and
        Tinbergen observed behavior patterns that promote survival. The most well-known of these
        is imprinting, the carly following behavior of certain baby birds that ensures that the young
        will stay close to their mother and be fed and protected from danger. Imprinting takes place
        10) during an early, restricted time period of development. If the mother goose is not present
        during this time, but an object resembling her in important features is, young goslings may
        imprint on it instead.
        Observations of imprinting led to major concept that has been applied in child
        Development the critical period. It refers to a limited times span during which the child is
        15) biologically prepared to acquire certain adaptive behaviors but needs the support of suitably
        stimulating environment. Many researchers have conducted studies to find out whether
        complex congnitive and social behaviors must be learned during restricted time periods.
        for example, if children are deprived of adequate food or physical and social stimulation
        during the early years of life, will their intelligence be permanently impaired? If language
        20) is not mastered during the preschool years, is the childs capacity to acquire it reduced?
        Inspired by observations of imprinting, in 1969 the British psychoanalyst John Bowlby
        applied ethological theory to the understanding of the relationship between an infant and
        its parents. He argued that attach ment behaviors of babies, such as smiling, babbling,
        grasping, and crying, are built-in social signals that encourage the parents to approach,
        25) care for, and interact with the baby. By keeping a parent near, these behaviors help ensure
        that the baby will be fed, protected from danger, and provided with the stimulation and
        affection necessary for healthy growth. The development of attachment in human infants
        is a lengthy process involving changes in psychological structures that lead to a deep
        affectional tie between parent and baby.

        31.What was Darwins contribution to ethology?
        (A) Darwin improved on the original principles of ethology.
        (B) Darwin was the professor who taught Lorenz and Tinbergen.
        (C) Darwins work provided the basis for ethology.
        (D) Darwin was the first person to apply ethological theory to children.

        32.The word diverse in line 6 is closest in meaning to
        (A) small
        (B) varied
        (C) wild
        (D) particular

        33.The word ensures in line 8 is closest in meaning to
        (A) guarantees
        (B) proves
        (C) teaches
        (D) assumes

        34. According to the passage, if a mother goose is not present during the time period when
        imprinting takes place, which of the following will most likely occur?
        (A) The gosling will not imprint on any object.
        (B) The gosling may not find a mate when it matures.
        (C) The mother will later imprint on the gosling.
        (D) The gosling may imprint on another object.

        35.The word it in line 12 refers to
        (A) development
        (B) goose
        (C) time
        (D) object

        36.The word suitably in line 15 is closest in meaning to
        (A) willingly
        (B) moderately
        (C) appropriately
        (D) emotionally

        37.The author mentions all of the following as attachment behaviors of human infants EXCEPT
        (A) grasping
        (B) crying
        (C) eating
        (D) smiling

        38.According to the passage, attachment behaviors of infants are intended to
        (A) get the physical, emotional and social needs of the infant met
        (B) allow the infant to become imprinted on objects that resemble the parent
        (C) provide the infant with a means of self-stimulation
        (D) prepare the infant to cope with separation

        39.The phrase affectional tie in line 29 is closest in meaning to
        (A) cognitive development
        (B) emotional attachment
        (C) psychological need
        (D) behavioral change

        40. It can be inferred from the passage that ethological theory assumes that
        (A) to learn about human behavior only human subjects should be studied
        (B) failure to imprint has no influence on inteligence
        (C) the notion of critical periods applies only to animals
        (D) there are similarities between animal and human behavior


        Questions 41-50

        There are only a few clues in the rock record about climate in the Proterozoic con.
        Much of our information about climate in the more recent periods of geologic history
        comes from the fossil record, because we have a reasonably good understanding of
        Line the types of environment in which many fossil organisms flourished. The scarce fossils
        5) of the Proterozoic, mostly single-celled bacteria, provide little evidence in this regard.
        However, the rocks themselves do include the earliest evidence for glaciation, probably
        a global ice age.
        The inference that some types of sedimentary rocks are the result of glacial activity
        is based on the principle of uniformitarianism, which posits that natural processes now
        10) at work on and within the Earth operated in the same manner in the distant past. The
        deposits associated with present-day glaciers have been well studied, and some of their characteristics are quite distinctive. In 2.3-billion-year-old rocks in Canada near Lake
        Huron (dating from the early part of the Proterozoic age), there are thin laminae of
        fine-grained sediments that resemble varves, the annual layers of sediment deposited in
        15) glacial lakes. Typically, present-day varves show two-layered annual cycle, one layer
        corresponding to the rapid ice melting and sediment transport of the summer season, and
        the other, finer-grained, layer corresponding to slower winter deposition. Although it is
        not easy to discern such details in the Proterozoic examples, they are almost certainly
        glacial varves. These fine-grained, layered sediments even contain occasional large
        20) pebbles or dropstones, a characteristic feature of glacial environments where coarse
        material is sometimes carried on floating ice and dropped far from its source, into
        otherwise very fine grained sediment. Glacial sediments of about the same age as those
        in Canada have been found in other parts of North America and in Africa, India, and
        Europe. This indicates that the glaciation was global, and that for a period of time in
        25) the early Proterozoic the Earth was gripped in an ice age.
        Following the early Proterozoic glaciation, however, the climate appears to have
        Been fairly benign for a very long time. There is no evidence for glaciation for the
        Next 1.5 billion years or so. Then, suddenly, the rock record indicates a series of
        Glacial episodes between about 850 and 600 million year ago, near the end of the
        Proterozoic con.


        41.Which of the following does the passage mainly discuss?
        (A) How patterns in rock layers have been used to construct theories about the climate of the Proterozoic age
        (B) What some rare fossils indicate about glacial conditions during the late Proterozoic age
        (C) The varying characteristics of Proterozoic glacial varves in different parts of the world
        (D) The number of glacial episodes that the Earth has experienced since the Proterozoic age

        42. According to the passage, the fossil record of the Proterozoic con is
        (A) highly regarded because it preserves the remains of many kinds of organisms
        (B) less informative than the fossil record of more recent periods
        (C) very difficult to interpret due to damage from bacteria
        (D) more useful to researchers than other aspects of the rock record

        43.The word scarce in line 4 is closest in meaning to
        (A) ancient
        (B) tiny
        (C) available
        (D) rare

        44. It can be inferred from the passage that the principle of uniformitarianism indicates that
        (A) similar conditions produce similar rock formations
        (B) rock layers in a given region remain undisturbed over time
        (C) different kinds of sedimentary rocks may
        (D) each continent has its own distinctive pattern of sediment layers

        45. The word resemble in line 14 is closest in meaning to
        (A) result from
        (B) penetrate
        (C) look like
        (D) replace have similar origins


        46. According to the passage, the layers in varves are primarily formed by
        (A) fossilized bacteria
        (B) pieces of ancient dropstones
        (C) a combination of ancient and recent sediments
        (D) annual cycles of sediment transport and deposition

        47. The phrase the other in line 17 refers to another
        (A) annual cycle
        (B) glacial lake
        (C) layer of sediment
        (D) season

        48. According to the passage, the presence of dropstones indicates that
        (A) the glacial environment has been unusually server
        (B) the fine-grained sediment has built up very slowly
        (C) there has been a global ice age
        (D) coarse rock material has been carried great distances

        49. Why does the author mention Canada, North America, Africa, India, and Europe in lines 23-24?
        (A) To demonstrate the global spread of dropstones
        (B) To explain the principles of varve formation
        (C) To provide evidence for the theory that there was a global ice age in the early Proterozoic eon
        (D) To illustrate the varied climatic changes of the Proterozoic con in different parts of the globe

        50. Which of the following terms is defined in the passage?
        (A) fossil record (line 3)
        (B) laminae (line 13)
        (C) varves (line14)
        (D) glacial episodes (line 29)
        nQ ώ nr ԇ  W(xu)M(fi)
        и(qing)Z ־ 20 ԇ  200Ԫ
        и(qing)x 18 ԇ  200Ԫ
        и(qing)  G 44 ԇ  200Ԫ
        и(qing) RH 16 ԇ  200Ԫ
        иA(ch) f Ѧ 25 ԇ  200Ԫ
        иA(ch)x 26 ԇ  200Ԫ
        иA(ch) Ҭ| 20 ԇ  200Ԫ
        и~R؂ ס 19 ԇ  200Ԫ
        TYd
        иԇՓN:
        ؟(z)ξ݋·݋  me
        иӖ(xn)ԃԒ010-51294614
        ֱͨ܇
         
        иԇrg2010626ա
        ԇ(ni)ݣx  Z
        n]