2021安徽同等学力人员申请硕士学位考试考试真题卷.docx
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1、2021安徽同等学力人员申请硕士学位考试考试真题卷本卷共分为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.The National Education Association claims. The school bus is a mirror of the community. They further add that, unfortunately, what appears on the exterior does not always reflect the reality of a cho
2、sen community. They are right-sometimes it reflects more! Just ask Liesl Denson. Riding the school bus has been more than a ride to school for Liesl. Bruce Hardy, school bus driver for Althouse BUS Company, has been Liesls bus driver since kindergarten. Last year when Liesls family moved to Parkesbu
3、rg, knowing her bus went by her new residence, she requested to ride the same bus. This year Liesl is a senior and will enjoy her last year, riding the bus. She says, Its been a great ride so far ! My bus driver is so cool and has always been a good friend and a good listener. Sometimes when youre a
4、 child adults do not think that what you have to say is important. Mr. Hardy always listens to what you have to say and makes you feel important. Her friends Ashley Batista and Amanda Wolfe agree. Bruce Hardy has been making Octorara students feel special since 1975. This year he will celebrate 30 y
5、ears working for Althouse Bus Company, Larry Althouso, president of the company, acknowledges Bruce Hardys outstanding record . You do not come by employees like Bruce these days. He has never missed a day of work and has a perfect driving record. He was recognized in 2000 by the Pennsylvania School
6、 Bus Association for driving 350 000 accident free miles. Hardys reputation is made further evident through the relationships he has made with the students that ride his bus. Althouse further adds, Althouse Bus Company was established 70 years ago and has been providing quality transportation ever s
7、ince. My grandfather started the business with one bus. Althouse Bus Company is delighted to have the opportunity to bring distinctive and safe service to our local school and community and looks forward to continuing to provide quality service for many more years to come. Three generations of busin
8、ess is not all the company has enjoyed. Thanks to drivers like Bruce Hardy, they have been building relationships through generations, Liesls mother Carol also enjoys fond memories of riding Bruce Hardys bus to the Octorara School District.The word mirror in the first line could be best replaced by
9、_.AvehicleBdeviceCneedDreflection 2.Despite not being terribly smart as individuals, wasp (黄蜂) colonies build and maintain a complex nest that lasts many generations. Just how these social wasps coordinate this task has always been a mystery. But now a mathematical model suggests that one key factor
10、 drives their behavior: the amount of water in the nest. Social wasps cannot learn from one anotherunlike bees, which use a complex dance to tell nest mates where sources of nectar (花蜜) are. Nor do they use pheromones (信息素) the way ants do to lead other ants to food. Robert Jeanne of the University
11、of Wisconsin-Madison proposed that wasps set up a demand-driven chain of information. At the end of the chain, builder wasps monitor the nest and when necessary, request pulp from pulp forager wasps. They in turn demand water from water foragers in order to make the pulp. But biologist Istvan Karsai
12、 of East Tennessee State University in Johnson City, Tennessee, and his team found that social wasps in Panama dont actually work that way. They removed either builders or pulp foragers from a colony of a species called Metapolybia aztecoides. Although that should break up the so-called information
13、chain, it did not significantly alter the amount of water being brought into the nest. They also found that the wasps could change roles, something that Jeanne didnt expert. For instance, when the researchers sprayed a surplus of water onto the nest, water foragers quickly became builders, and nest
14、building increased. Based on their observations, Karsais team developed a mathematical model that shows that wasps achieve their complex behaviour simply by monitoring the level of water in the nestwhat he calls thecommon stomach of the colony. He believes wasps infer what the level is when they exc
15、hange fluids on meeting each other, a behaviour called trophallaxis that is common in many social insects. To test the model, Karsai simulated changes in the model colony, for example by removing pulp foragers or builders. Whats interesting is that in every case the model responds like the actual co
16、lony in Panama, says Karsai.According to the passage wasps _.Aare very smart as individualsBare able to build and maintain complex nestsCdrink more water than scientists have expectedDcan learn from each other just like the bees 3.Have you ever felt your life go into slow motion as you realize somet
17、hing bad is happening You might have just knocked over a wine glass or noticed a car hurtling towards you, for example. Now scientists have measured exactly how much these attention-grabbing(引人注意的)events slow down our perception of the world around us. Another example of the world appearing to slow
18、down is when you are hanging on the phone waiting for someone to pick up at the other end. If your attention wanders while youre waiting, then suddenly switches back,you will probably hear what seems like a longer than usual silence before hearing the dialling tone again. For you, time will have mom
19、entarily slowed. To see how our perception of time changes when something new happens, Vincent Walsh and his colleagues put headphones on volunteers and played eight beeps to their right ears. The gap between each beep was exactly i second, except for the gap between the fourth and fifth beeps, whic
20、h the scientists could make shorter or longer. They altered the length of this gap until the volunteers estimated it was the same length as the other gaps. The researchers found that, on average, people judge a second slightly short, at 955 milliseconds. In the second part of the experiment, the fir
21、st four beeps were played to the subjects right ear, but the other four were then played to their left. Again, the volunteers were asked to estimate when the gap between the fourth and fifth beeps was the same as the others. This time they judged a second to be even shorter at 825 milliseconds long.
22、 Perceiving a second to be much shorter than it is makes you feel as though the world has gone into slow motion, since less happens in that slice of time. Walsh thinks the effect could have evolved to give us a fraction more time to react to potentially threatening events. Last year, Kielan Yarrow,
23、a British psychologist found a similar effect with vision. When you glance at a clock, the first second will seem longer than it really is. Yarrows results showed that time appeared to slow down by a similar amount as Walsh found. Previous studies have shown that cooling the body slows down our perc
24、eption of time while warming it up has the opposite effect.After you noticed a car hurtling towards you, you might feel that _.Athe world around you had slowed downBsomething bad was going to happenClife had suddenly become meaninglessDpeoples life was so fragile 4.A nocturnal(夜间活动的)moth has become
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