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2011 年广东成人学士学位英语考试真题及答案
PartⅠ Vocabulary and Structure (25 points, 30 minutes)
Directions: There are 50 incomplete sentences in this part. For each sentence
there are four choices marked A), B), C) and D). Choose the ONE answer that
best completes the sentence. Then mark the corresponding letter on the
Answer Sheet with a single line through the center.
1. By 1929, Mickey Mouse was as popular ____ children as Coca Cola.
A) for
B) with
C) to
D) in
2. When you buy anything expensive, never forget to ask for the ____ from the
shop.
A) receipt
B) trust
C) render
D) tale
3. The financial support is decided not only according to your GRE score, but
also according to your ____ in college.
A) intelligence
B) policy
C) performance
D) statement
4. Professor Smith is also the ____ of the international program office. If you
have any problem when you study here, you may go to him for help.
A) detective
B) president
C) manager
D) director
5. We do not have a ____ school in our institute. The highest degree we
provide for the students is a B. A. and a B. S. .
A) graduate
B) high
C) grade
D) continue
6. Paper clips, drawing pins and safety-pins were ____ all over the floor.
A) separated
B) sprayed
C) spilled
D) scattered
7. I am writing ____ my mother to express her thanks for your gift.
A) in memory of B) on behalf of
C) with respect to
D) on account of
8. In considering men for jobs in our firm, we give ____ to those with some
experience.
A) privilege
B) advice
C) prize
D) preference
9. She is ____ a musician than her brother.
A) much of
B) much as
C) more of
D) more as
10.The assignments are too hard. I can't ____ the work.
A) keep up with
B) catch up with
C) come up with
D) put up with
11. Robert Spring, a 19th century forger, was so good at his profession that he
was able to make his living for 15 years by selling ____ signatures of famous
Americans.
A) artificial
B) genuine
C) false
D) natural
12.In 1890 there were many American cities and towns where part of a day's
school instruction was conducted in language ____ English.
A) more than
B) other than
C) except that
D) except for
13.The problem will be discussed at length in the ____ Chapter.
A) consequent
B) latter
C) late
D) subsequent
14.They are members of the club by ____ of their great wealth.
A) virtue
B) way
C) means
D) word
15.The value of the industrial ____ dropped from about 70 billion dollars to
slightly more than 31 billion.
A) outcome
B) outlook
C) output
D) outset
16.Scientists believe that color blindness is a(n) ____ defect, and there is no
cure for it.
A) retained
B) inherited
C) received
D) infected
17.She was glad that her success would ____ for the women who would follow.
A) be easier to make B) make it easier
C) be easier
D) make things
easier
18.Fred says that his present job does not provide him with enough ____ for
his organizing ability.
A) scope
B) space
C) capacity
D) extent
19.San Francisco is usually cool in the summer, but Los Angeles ____.
A) is rarely
B) hardly is
C) rarely is
D) is scarcelly
20.You've been overworking recently, and would find a holiday ____.
A) fortunate
B) essential
C) profitable
D) beneficial
21.____ you are familiar with the author's ideas, try reading all the sections as
quickly as you possibly can.
A) Ever since
B) Now that
C) So that
D) As long as
22.The people didn't trust Senator Maxwell , otherwise he ____.
A) would have re-elected
B) would have been re-elected
C) must have been re-elected
D) were to be re-elected
23.Go straight into the cave and find out what's in there, ____?
A) will you
B) don't you
C) do you
D) can you
24.The old man was shocked to learn that his illness could result in death if
____ untreated.
A) to leave
B) to be left
C) leaving
D) left
25.Our teacher recommend that we ____ as attentive as possible when we
visit the museum.
A) are
B) be
C) were
D) shall be
26.The old man came upstairs with great strength , his right hand ____ a stick
for support.
A) held
B) holding
C) being holding
D) was holding
27.My wife said in her letter that she would appreciate ____ from you
sometime.
A) hearing
B) to hear
C) having heard
D) to have heard
28.It ____ around nine o'clock when I drove back home because it was already
dark.
A) had to be
B) was to be
C) must be
D) must have been
29.If you act ____ the doctor's advice ,you won't get well again.
A) aside from
B) contrary to
C)capable of
D) prior to
30.Visitors coming for short periods of time do not always experience ____
intense emotions ____ visitors who live in foreign countries for longer terms.
A) the same … as
B) both … and
C) either... or
D) so … that
31.Urban mothers had difficulty ____ their children into child care facilities.
A) get
B) to get
C) in getting
D) for getting
32.If it ____ too much trouble, I'd love a cup of tea.
A) isn't
B) wasn't
C) weren't
D) hadn't been
33.The population of many Alaskan cities has ____ doubled in the past three
years.
A)larger than
B)as great as
C)more than
D)as many as
34.All that can be done ____.
A)have been done
B)have done
C)has done
D)has been done
35.A person beating a drum or blowing a trumpet causes vibrations in the air
____ sound waves.
A) calls
B) called
C) is called
D) are called
36.These national parks are very important for preserving many animals, who
would ____ run the risk of becoming extinct.
A) otherwise
B) nevertheless
C) therefore
D) instead
37.They had an accident on the road and didn't ____ at their hotel until after
midnight.
A) show off
B) check in
C) check out
D) drop out
38.After his leave Tom went back on duty to ____ his soldiers.
A) put in charge of
B) be charged with
C) be taken in charge by D)
take charge of
39.The three rows at the front are ____ for guests.
A) conserved
B) deposited
C) reserved
D) stored
40.One thing it's safe to say about robots is that anything you can write about
them will already be ____ by the time it's read. That's how fast robot
technology is developing.
A) out of order
B) out of date
C) out of control
D) out of sight
41.The autumn air felt ____ so he went to fetch a coat.
A) cool
B) severe
C) harsh
D) chilly
42.A managing director cannot expect to have much time to ____ to purely
personal matters.
A) reserve
B) spare
C) concentrate
D) devote
43.His enthusiasm for the plan seems to have ____, for he never speaks about
it any more.
A) worn off
B) got down
C) fallen out
D) used up
44.With the spring here you can ____ these ski boots till you need them again
next winter.
A)put away
B)get rid of
C) give away
D)do away with
45.No artistic creation can achieve greatness if ____ from life.
A) resulted
B) escaped
C) divorced
D) shielded
46.The Petersons have a very ____ daughter. She is always running and
jumping.
A) quiet
B) vigorous
C) naughty
D) mischievous
47.If you like a large print of your photograph we can blow it ____ for you.
A) up
B) through
C) out
D) over
48.The speaker agreed to ____ from the position that he had just stated.
A) return
B) jump
C) withdraw
D) retreat
49.Some hobbies can only be ____ by rich people.
A) taken in
B) taken on
C) taken up
D) taken over
50.I think it is only by a ____ of imagination that you say you have seen a
ghost.
A) pinch
B) lack
C) shortage
D) stretch
PartⅡ Reading Comprehension (45 points, 50 minutes)
Directions: There are 6 passages in this 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 should decide on the best choice and
mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a single line through
the centre.
Passage 1
Question 51 to 55 are based on the following passage:
Censorship (审查制度) is for the good of society as a whole. Imagine what
chaos there would be if we lived in a society without laws. Like the law,
censorship contributes to the common good.
Some people think that it is disgraceful that a censor should interfere with
works of art. Who is this person, they say, to ban this great book or cut that
great film? No one can set himself up as a superior being. But we must
remember two things. Firstly, where genuine works of art are concerned,
modern censors are extremely liberal in their views----often far more liberal
than a large section of the public. Artistic merit is something which censors
clearly recognize. And secondly, we must bear in mind that the great
proportion of books, plays and films which come before the censor are very
far from being "works of art".
When discussing censorship, therefore, we should not confine our attention to
great masterpieces, but should consider the vast numbers of publications and
films which make up the bulk (大部分) of the entertainment industry. When
censorship laws are relaxed, dishonest people are given a licence to produce
virtually anything in the name of "art". There is an increasing tendency to
equate "artistic" with "pornographic" (色情的).So one of the great things that
censorship does is to prevent certain people from making fat profits by
corrupting the minds of others. Society would really be poorer if it deprived
itself of the wise counsel and the restraining influence which a censor
provides.
51.A censor's duty is ____.
A) to see there is no filthy content in publications or films
B) to ban books and cut films
C) to distinguish works of art from others
D) to make sure that no licence is given to dishonest people
52.Some people are against censorship for the reason that ____.
A) censorship is not consistent with the ideals of democracy
B) censors prevent people from making profits
C) censors are conservative and cannot appreciate artistic merit
D) censorship limits the way people feel and think
53.When the writer says "to equate 'artistic' which 'pornographic', he means
____.
A) there is no clear distinction between what is artistic and what is
pornographic
B) masterpieces are sometimes offensive to decency
C) many pornographic works will be published in the name of art
D) artistic works and pornographic works have the same market value
54.According to the writer, a society free from censorship ____.
A) would be poor materially
B) would expose its people to dangers of being corrupted
C) could not develop its entertainment industry
D) would allow only a small section of people to make profits
55.All the following are the writer's views except that ____.
A) censors are fully qualified for their job
B) masterpieces even with pornographic content are still
masterpieces
C) society will not do without censorship
D) many books, plays and films are not works of art
Passage 2
Question 56 to 60 are based on the following passage:
A few weeks ago I was talking to a school inspector in one of the more
fashionable districts of Paris. She astonished me by saying that if she had
young children today, she'd probably send them to a private school. She had
devoted 25 years of her life to the ideal of free public education, she said, but
the truth was the state system was in a mess.
There are two main problems: State schools in France have to accept
whatever teachers are assigned to them by the Ministry of Education. As my
school inspector friend put it, "one year a school may be excellent; three or
four years later, half the teachers may be incapable!" That is not very
reassuring if you're a parent. Private schools can choose their own teachers.
The other problem is discipline or, rather, the lack of it. Not long ago a school
in Birmingham made headlines in Britainbecause the teachers were being
terrorized by their pupils. In the desolate suburbs of low-cost apartment
blocks, thrown together in the 1960s on the outskirts of most big French
cities, such stories are commonplace. Vandalism(破坏他人财产的行为), drugtaking and extortion aren't limited to schools in poor areas either. A recent
poll found that 88 per cent of French children rate as the biggest problem of
their school lives the prevalence (流行, 猖獗)of factions and gangs which spend
all their time fighting one another. Small wonder, then, that the private
schools, with their emphasis on traditional values, are undergoing a new
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