2021四川大学英语考试模拟卷(5).docx
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1、2021四川大学英语考试模拟卷(5)本卷共分为1大题50小题,作答时间为180分钟,总分100分,60分及格。一、单项选择题(共50题,每题2分。每题的备选项中,只有一个最符合题意) 1.Passage TwoQuestions 29 to 31 are based on the passage you have just heard.A. The program received great support from the public. B. The students have more interest in and responsibility for their learning.
2、 C. Philadelphia saved a lot of money through the program. D. The students have a heavier load of homework to do every day. 2.Passage ThreeQuestions 32 to 35 are based on the passage you have just heard.A) Useful skills. C) Finding a job. B) Applied courses. D) Working close with the teachers. 3.Bet
3、ween the two world wars, serious novelists and playwrights(剧作家) were read and appreciated mainly by people from middle and upperclass backgrounds, for these people had money and this gave them opportunities for education and leisure which were beyond the reach of the poorer classes. For the same rea
4、son, the writers tended to come from the same kind of background, although there were many exceptions. The novelist, D. H. Lawrence, for example, was the son of a miner. But Lawrences books were bought and read by middle-class readers, and the language which he used was literary, rather than popular
5、. Lawrence, like other writers of the 1920s and 1930sAldous Huxley, H. G. Wells, and the older men, George Bernard Shaw and John Galsworthywas presenting his public with his own view of life. He was hoping to persuade his readers. to think like himself. Many of the serious writers of the period were
6、 concerned with social and political problems. Their plays and novels were full of arguments in favor of social reforms. They made amusing and often bitter comments on the injustices and absurdities (荒唐) of lifeespecially middle-class life. Some novelists gave horrible warnings about the kind of fut
7、ure that mankind might have to face. Huxleys amusing Brave New World and Orwells frightening Nineteen Eight- y-four (written in the 1940s) are still taken very seriously by many young people today. Other writers, like Virginia Woolf and the Irishman, James Joyce, were more interested in thoughts and
8、 feelings than in social life, and they expressed their thoughts in a language which was sometimes extremely difficult to understand. At the same time there were plenty of novelists and playwrights whose only aim was to excite, to amuse and to move to tears! Not surprisingly, people tended to divide
9、 writers into two kindsserious, or intellectual, and light, or non-intellectual.Between the two world wars, the writers were mainly from _.A. lower class B. middle and upper-class C. upper class alone D. work force 4.Since 1066 the blood of many other races has been added to the original English mix
10、ture. Not only have Welsh, Scots and Irishmen made their homes in England, but also Jews, Russians, Germanspeople from almost every country in Europeas well as many West Indians, Indians: and others from the Commonwealth (英联邦). As the English are such a mixed people, local customs and accents in Eng
11、land vary a great deal and local pride. is still strong in some parts of the country. Both Leonard Townsend and Herbert Perkins al- ways think of themselves as Northerners, although they have moved to the south. Leonard is as proud of being a Yorkshire man as Iran Macdonald is of being a Scot (苏格兰人)
12、. The closer one gets to London, the less one notices such differences, for London is a melting-pot. People from all over Britain and from all over the world pour into the giant city. London tends to melt down and smooth out strong accents and local customs. Every year the influence of London spread
13、s fur-her and further into the country, north, south, east and west, but particularly into the south and south- east. In an effort to stop London from spreading any more, new overspill towns are being built forty to filly miles outside London. London from are encouraged to move to a new town, or at
14、least to open new branches there instead of in another part of London. This policy is now beginning to have results. Until recently the greater London region had a population of twelve million, but this figure is starting to drop.The underlined word overspill means _.A. something spreading into surr
15、ounding areasB. excessive pills C. fall over D. thin strip of wood5.Questions 11 to 18 are based on the conversation you have just heard.A) Be hostile to Nancy. C) Talk to Nancy herself. B) Ask Nancy to come out. D) Write a letter to Nancy. 6.Between the two world wars, serious novelists and playwri
16、ghts(剧作家) were read and appreciated mainly by people from middle and upperclass backgrounds, for these people had money and this gave them opportunities for education and leisure which were beyond the reach of the poorer classes. For the same reason, the writers tended to come from the same kind of
17、background, although there were many exceptions. The novelist, D. H. Lawrence, for example, was the son of a miner. But Lawrences books were bought and read by middle-class readers, and the language which he used was literary, rather than popular. Lawrence, like other writers of the 1920s and 1930sA
18、ldous Huxley, H. G. Wells, and the older men, George Bernard Shaw and John Galsworthywas presenting his public with his own view of life. He was hoping to persuade his readers. to think like himself. Many of the serious writers of the period were concerned with social and political problems. Their p
19、lays and novels were full of arguments in favor of social reforms. They made amusing and often bitter comments on the injustices and absurdities (荒唐) of lifeespecially middle-class life. Some novelists gave horrible warnings about the kind of future that mankind might have to face. Huxleys amusing B
20、rave New World and Orwells frightening Nineteen Eight- y-four (written in the 1940s) are still taken very seriously by many young people today. Other writers, like Virginia Woolf and the Irishman, James Joyce, were more interested in thoughts and feelings than in social life, and they expressed thei
21、r thoughts in a language which was sometimes extremely difficult to understand. At the same time there were plenty of novelists and playwrights whose only aim was to excite, to amuse and to move to tears! Not surprisingly, people tended to divide writers into two kindsserious, or intellectual, and l
22、ight, or non-intellectual.Which of the following is NOT true A. The language in Lawrences books was not appropriate for middle-class readers. B. In his books, Bernard Shaw revealed his own view of life. C. Serious writers advocated social reforms. D. Nowadays many young people still appreciate some
23、of the novels between 1920s and 1940s. 7.Since 1066 the blood of many other races has been added to the original English mixture. Not only have Welsh, Scots and Irishmen made their homes in England, but also Jews, Russians, Germanspeople from almost every country in Europeas well as many West Indian
24、s, Indians: and others from the Commonwealth (英联邦). As the English are such a mixed people, local customs and accents in England vary a great deal and local pride. is still strong in some parts of the country. Both Leonard Townsend and Herbert Perkins al- ways think of themselves as Northerners, alt
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