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2011 年 3 月公共英语三级考试真题及答案
SECTION 1 ListeningComprehension
(25 minutes)
1~25 略
SECTIONⅡ Use of English (15 minutes)
Directions:
Read the following text.Choosethe best word or phrase for each
numbered blank and markA,B,C,or D onANSWER SHEET 1.
What might thehouse of the future be like? Gracecan tell.More
formallyknown as the Microsoft Home,her high—tech devices,along with 26
indesign and construction,will change the 27 we think about our homes.
You enter thehouse,and Grace’s 28 ,coming from hidden
speakers,passes on your messages;Inthe kitchen,you set a bag of flour on
theintelligently 29 stone counter.Gracesees what you’re 30,and projects a
list of flour—based food on the counter. 31 you choose on,Gracerepeats
instructions tor cooking.She 32 knows what’S in the cupboard.
The day whenyour house、viii be likea family member is not that
faroff.This 33 0f seamless computing,in which technologyis everywhere yet
nowhere(34 when wewant it),is emphasizedin most future—home thinking.
Microsoft, 35 ,isn’t the only one exploring 36 technology can make our
homes more 37 andcomfortable.At theGeorgia Institute of
Technology,scientists are 38 systems that will allowolder people to continue
living 39.SoGrandma’s home can be intelligently wired to 40 her patterns of
wake,sleep and movement;family members would be 4l of any changesvia
computer.
Does spying on Grandma sound 42 ? Director Beth Mynatt says“A good bit
ofour 43 has been working on how to convey informationwithout 44
privacy.We also don’t want to
create 45 anxiety.Maybe she just took a quiet day to read,and the
system would have to recognizethat.”
26.
[A]promotions
[B]applications
[C]practices
[D]advances
27.
[A]way
[B]manner
[C]style
[D]scope
28
[A]image
[B]figure
[C]voice
[D]sound
29.
[A]disposed
[B]shaped
[C]engineered
[D]conditioned
30.
[A]saying
[B]feeling
[C]searching
[D]doing
32
[A]Before
[B]Once
[C]Since
[D]Unless
32.
[A]even
[B]thus
[C]yet
[D]only
33
[A]hope
[B]passion
[C]faith
[D]notion
34.
[A]perhaps
[B]except
[C]provided
[D]especially
35.
[A]therefore
[B]likewise
[C]however
[D]moreover
36.
[A]how
[B]whether
[C]what
[D]why
37.
[A]fashionable
[B]complicated
[C]efficient
[D]attractive
38.
[A]decorating
[B]designing
[C]delivering
[D]debating
39.
[A]independently
[B]enthusiastically
[C]colorfully
[D]satisfactorily
40.
[A]receive
[B]recognize
[C]represent
[D]review
41.
[A]warned
[B]relieved
[C]advised
[D]informed
42.
[A]interesting
[B]boring
[C]disturbing
[D]appealing
43.
[A]analysis
[B]research
[C]concern
[D]focus
44.
[A]sacrificing
[B]affecting
[C]preventing
[D]losing
45.
[A]unusual
[B]unfortunate
[C]uncertain
[D]unnecessary
SECTIONⅢ Reading Comprehension(40 minutes)
PartA
Directions:
Read the following three texts.Answerthe questions on each text by
choosing A,B,C
orD.Markyour answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.
Text 1
WheneverCatherine Brown, a 37-year.old journalist, and her
friends,professionals in their 30s and early 40s,meet at aLondon caf6,their
favorite topic ofconversation is relationships:men’sreluctance to commit,wo
men’s independence,andwhen to have children--or,increasingly,whether
to have them at all.“With the years passing my chances of having a child
godown,but I Won’t malty anyone just to have achild,”saysBrown.To
people like Brown,babiesare great_if the timing is right.Butthey’re certainly
not essential.
In much of the world,havingkids is no longer a given.“Neverbefore has
childlessness been
an understandable decision for women and men in so many societies,”
says Frank Hakim at the LondonSchool of Economics.Youngpeople are
extending their child—freeadulthood by postponing children until they are
well into their 30s.or even40s and beyond.
A growing share are ending up with nochildren at all.Lifetime
childlessness in westernGer-many has hit 30 percent among university—
educated women,and is rapidly rising among lower—class
men.InBritain,thenumber of women remaining childless has doubled in 20
years.
The latesttrend of childlessness does not follow historic patterns.For
centuries it was not unusual for a quarter of European women toremain
childless.Butin the past.childlessnesswas usually the product of poverty
ordisaster.of missingmen in times of war.Today the decision to have—or
not have——a child is theresult of a complex combination of
factors,includingrelationships,career
Opportunities,lifestyleand economics.
In some caseschildlessness among women can be seen as a quiet form
ofprotest.InJapan,supportfor working mothers hardly exists.Childcare is
expensive,men don’t help out,andsome companies strongly
discouragemothers from returning to work.“In Japan,it'scareer or
child,”says writer KaoriHaishi.It’s not justwomen who are deciding against
children;according to a re- cent study,Japanese men are even less inclined
to marry or want a child.Their motivations,though,may havemore to do
with economic factors.
46.CatherineBrown and her friends feel that having children is not
__________.
[A]totallywise
[B]ahuge problem
[C]arational choice
[D]absolutelynecessary
47.It Can beinferred that,formany women,havingbabies nowadays is
__________.
[A]ahard commitment
[B]helpfulto their career
[C]essentialfor happiness
[D]anunderstandable decision
48.In theold days。manywomen remained childless __________
[A]asa quiet form of protest
[B]becauseof lack of support
[C]becauseof unfortunate circumstances
[D]becausethey lacked social responsibility
49.We learnthat childlessness at present __________.
[A]affectsEurope more than it does Asia
[B]producesmore benefits than in the past
[C]ismore a woman’s decision than a man’s
[D]ismore complex in its cause than that in the past
50.According to the text,when a Japanese man decides not to have
children,he probably feels unable to __________.
[A]helpwith housework
[B]affordto have a child
[C]bea responsible father
[D]balancework and family
Text 2
Faced with amission.criticaldecision,who would you turn to for advice?
Someone you had great confidence in,surely.But several lines of research
show thatour instincts about where to mm to for counsel are often not
completely correct.
My research looksat prejudices that affect how people use
advice,including why theyoften blindly follow recommendations from people
who—as far as they know—are as knowledgeable as they are.In studies I
conducted with Don Moore of Carnegie MellonUniversity,for example,I
found matpeople tend to overvalue advice when the problem
they’readdressing is hard and to undervalue it when the problem iseasy.
In our experiments.subjects were asked to guess the weight of people in
various pictures,some of which werein focus and some of which were
unclear.For each picture,subjects guessed twice:the first time without
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