2021天津公共英语考试考前冲刺卷(3).docx
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1、2021天津公共英语考试考前冲刺卷(3)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.A lot of students are having all kinds of sports on the sports field. A ball game is going on right now (41) Class 3 and Class 4. Can you (42) me which team is winning Do you see many people over there So
2、me students of Class 1 are practicing the (43) jump. One of them is the best high jumper in the school. He practices (44) every day. He wants to (45) the school record at the sports meeting next spring. Not far away, some girls are getting ready (46) a race. Now on the corner of the field, you can s
3、ee another group of students. Their teacher is telling them (47) to throw discus. We students love sports. Sports (48) to keep people healthy. They help people to live happily, and to know each other (49) playing games on the sports field, It can (50) people become good friends.AbeforeBafterCwhen 2.
4、A lot of students are having all kinds of sports on the sports field. A ball game is going on right now (41) Class 3 and Class 4. Can you (42) me which team is winning Do you see many people over there Some students of Class 1 are practicing the (43) jump. One of them is the best high jumper in the
5、school. He practices (44) every day. He wants to (45) the school record at the sports meeting next spring. Not far away, some girls are getting ready (46) a race. Now on the corner of the field, you can see another group of students. Their teacher is telling them (47) to throw discus. We students lo
6、ve sports. Sports (48) to keep people healthy. They help people to live happily, and to know each other (49) playing games on the sports field, It can (50) people become good friends.AmakeBenjoyCget 3.W: Welcome to the 9 o’clock news of CDB, I’m Susan Morphy. A tornado hit the northweste
7、rn parts of Mexico, and caused severe casualties. Though there had been warnings beforehand, as the tornado went slightly away from the predicted route, many people failed to escape from its fatal sweeps. According to the first estimate, at least 200 people were killed and about 30 000 became homele
8、ss. Let’s now connect to Tim Hudson, our correspondent there, for some more details. Hi, Tim. Can you give us a report about the tornado there M: Hi, Susan. As you all know, the tornado has caused great losses. There had been some warnings about the tornado before it arrived. But it came sligh
9、tly away from the predicted route, and, moreover, it came to the densely populated area about 2 AM, when most people were in sound sleep. A lot of buildings have become topless, and many large trees have been rooted up. W: What about the casualties M: There has been no exact report about it so far.
10、According to some reliable estimate, there were no less than 200 of them As a heavy rain went with tornado, some parts of the city where I’m standing have been cut off and isolated by the flood. We don’t know what had exactly happened to those parts. W: How about the rescue work M: As a
11、matter of fact, the local government wasted no time. Just about 20 minutes after the tornado had passed, the local TV and broadcast started to give instructions on the locations of emergency centers in different districts of the city. Early this morning, a team from the Mexican government has arrive
12、d. Actually, I’m just back from the airport. W: Thank you, Tim. Now let’s move on to other news.What was the main cause of the severe casualties ()AThe tornado came ahead of time.BThere was no warning beforehand.CThe prediction was not accurate.DThe preventions were not effective.4.M: Yo
13、u’re going to wear out that typewriter. W: Oh, hi. What are you doing here at fills time of night M: I should ask you that question. Do you have any idea what time it is W: About ten or ten-thirty M: It’s nearly midnight. W: Really I didn’t have any idea it was so late. M: Don&rsqu
14、o;t you have an early class tomorrow morning W: Yes, at seven o’clock. My spare-time class, the students who go to work right after their lesson. M: Then you ought to go to bed. What are you writing, anyway W: An article I hope I can sell. M: Oh, another of your newspaper Nieces What’s t
15、his one about W: Do you remember that trip I took last month M: The one up to the Amazon W: Well, that’s what I’m writing about - the new highway and the changes it’s made in the Amazon Valley. M: It should be interesting. W: It is. I guess that’s why I forgot all about the t
16、ime. M: How many articles have you sold now W: About a dozen so far. M: What kind of newspapers buy them W: The papers that carry a lot of foreign news. They usually appear in the big Sunday editions where they need a lot of background stories to help fill up the space between the ads. M: Is there a
17、ny future in it W: I hope so. As a matter of fact, there’s a chance that I may sell this article to a news service. M: Then your story would be published in several papers, wouldn’t it W: That’s the idea. And I might even be able to do other stories on a regular basis. M: That woul
18、d be great. But you’d better quit for the night now. Remember your spare-time class students W: All right. I’ll stop, just as soon as I finish this paragraph.When did the conversation take place ()AAt 10:00 AM.BAt 2:00 AM.CAt 12:00 PM.DAt 10:00 PM.5.There are no fossil remains of Stone A
19、ge hang gliders or trading records from pre-Columbian stock exchanges, but risk-taking behavior is as old as the sabertooth. Yet what compels modern adventurers to do such foolhardy things as jumping off dizzying cliffs or speculating in Internet stocks Amateur analysts once psychobabbled about a de
20、ath risk - an old Freudian cliché that said risk takers were really driven by subconscious feelings of guilt. Nowadays scientists say the real roots of such behavior are as likely to be found in the convoluted chemistry of the genes as in the id or the superego.Long before genes were discover
21、ed, Darwin suspected that behavior was at least partly inherited. But only recently have scientists working in the burgeoning field of behavioral genetics begun to link specific stretches of DNA with personality traits. Studying the DNA of subjects who were identified as curious and excitable - two
22、of the common characteristics of those who look for novelty and thrills - Israeli scientists found that these people had longer versions of a gene known as D4DR than did subjects who were typed as laid-hack and reflective. It quickly became known as the novelty-or thrill-seeking gene. Shortly therea
23、fter, an American team found a second gene, on a different chromosome, that appears to regulate anxiety.Scientists have yet to figure out how such genes might work, other than to control the flow of certain chemicals in the bratty. The thrill-seeking gene, for example, seems to facilitate absorption
24、 by nerve cells of dopamine, one of the brain’s chemical messengers and a key modulator of pleasure and emotion. Similarly, the anxiety gene appears to work by affecting levels of serotonin, a mood chemical linked with feelings of satisfaction. But can such genes actually determine behavior Mo
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