2021年上海职称英语考试模拟卷(1).docx
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1、2021年上海职称英语考试模拟卷(1)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.第一篇Why Dont Babies Talk Like Adults Over the past half-century, scientists have settled on two reasonable theories related to baby talk. One states that a young childs brain needs time to master language,
2、in the same way that it does to master other abilities such as physical movement. The second theory states that a childs vocabulary level is the key factor. According to this theory, some key steps have to occur in a logical sequence before sentence formation occurs. Childrens mathematical knowledge
3、 develops in the same way.In 2007, researchers at Harvard University, who were studying the two theories, found a clever way to test them. More than 20,000 internationally adopted children enter the U.S. each year. Many of them no longer hear their birth language after they arrive, and they must lea
4、rn English more or less the same way infants do 一that is, by listening and by trial and error. International adoptees dont take classes or use a dictionary when they are learning their new tongue and most of them dont have a well-developed first language. All of these factors make them an ideal popu
5、lation in which to test these competing hypotheses about how language is learnedNeuroscientists Jesse Snedeker, Joy Geren and Carissa Shafto studied the language development of 27 children adopted from China between the ages of two and five years. These children began learning English at an older ag
6、e than US natives and had more mature brains with which to tackle the task. Even so, just as with American-born infants, their first English sentences consisted of single words and were largely bereft (缺乏的)of function words, word endings and verbs. The adoptees then went through the same stages as t
7、ypical American-born children, though at a faster clip. The adoptees and native children started combining words in sentences when their vocabulary reached the same sizes, further suggesting that what matters is not how old you are or how mature your brain is, but the number of words you know.This f
8、inding 一that having more mature brains did not help the adoptees avoid the toddle-talk stage 一suggests that babies speak in baby talk not because they have baby brains,but because they have only just started learning and need time to gain enough vocabulary to be able to expand their conversations. B
9、efore long, the one-word stage will give way to the two-word stage and so on. Learning how to chat like an adult is a gradual process.But this potential answer also raises an even older and more difficult question. Adult immigrants who learn a second language rarely achieve the same proficiency in a
10、 foreign language as the average child raised as a native speaker. Researchers have long suspected there is a critical period for language development, after which it cannot proceed with full success to fluency. Yet we still do not understand this critical period or know why it ends.When the writer
11、says critical period, he means a period whenAstudies produce useful results.Badults need to be taught like children.Clanguage learning takes place effectively.Dimmigrants want to learn another language. 2.Scientists Develop Ways of Detecting Heart AttackGerman researchers have come up with a new gen
12、eration of defibrillators (除颤器) and early-warning software aimed at offering heart patients greater_(51) from sudden death from cardiac arrest (心脏停搏).In Germany alone, around 100,000 people die annually_ (52) a result of cardiac arrest and many of these cases are caused by disruption to the hearts r
13、hythm. Those most at_ (53) are patients who have already suffered a heart attack, and for years the use of defibrillators has proved useful in _ (54) life-threatening disruptions to heart rhythms and correcting them automatically by intervening within seconds. These devices_(55) on a range of functi
14、ons, such as that of pacemaker(起搏器)Heart specialists at Freiburgs University Clinic have now achieved a breakthrough with an implanted defibrillator _ (56) of generating a six-channel electrocardiogram (ECG,心电图)within the body. This integrated systemallows _(57) diagnosis of severe blood-flow proble
15、ms and a pending (即将发生的)heart attack. It will. be implanted in _(58) for the first time this year. Meanwhile, researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Mathematics in Kaiserslautern have developed new computer software that_(59) the evaluation of ECG data more precise.The overwhelming majo
16、rity of patients at risk will not have an implanted defibrillator and must for this _ (60) undergo regular ECGs. Many of the current programs only take into_(61) a linear correlation of the data. We are, however, making use of a non-linear process_(62) reveals the chaotic patterns of heart beats as
17、an open and complex system, Hagen Knaf says. In this way changes in the heart_ (63) over time can be monitored and individual variations in patients taken into account. An old study of ECG data, based upon 600 patients who had to compare risks and to show that the new software evaluates the consider
18、ably better.AlastBallConceDrisk 3.Toads are Arthritic and in PainArthritis is an illness that can cause pain and swelling in your bones. Toads, a big problem in the north of Australia, are suffering from painful arthritis in their legs and backbone, a new study has shown. The toads that jump the fas
19、test are more likely to be larger and to have longer legs. 46.The large yellow toads, native to South and Central America, were introduced into the north-eastern Australian state of Queensland in 193S in an attempt to stop beetles and other insects from destroying sugarcane crops. Now up to 200 mill
20、ion of the poisonous toads exist in the country, and they are rapidly spreading through the state of Northern Territory at a rate of up to 60 km a year. The toads can now be found across more than one million square kilometers. 47. A Venezuelan poison virus was tried in the 1990s but had to be aband
21、oned after it was found to also kill native frog species.The toads have severely affected ecosystems in Australia. Animals, and sometimes pets, that eat the toads die immediately from their poison, and the toads themselves eat anything they can fit inside their mouth. 48.A co-author of the new study
22、, Rick Shine,a professor at the University of Sydney, says that little attention has been given to the problems that toads face. Rick and his colleagues studied nearly 500 toads from Queensland and the Northern Territory and found that those in the latter state were very different. They were active,
23、 sprinting down roads and breeding quickly.According to the results of the study, the fastest toads travel nearly one kilometre a night. 49. But speed and strength come at a price arthritis of the legs and backbone due to constant pressure placed on them.In laboratory tests, the researchers found th
24、at after about 15 minutes of hopping, arthritic toads would travel less distance with each hop. 50. These toads are so programmed to move, apparently, that even when in pain the toads travelled as fast and as far as the healthy ones, continuing their relentless march across the landscape.A. Toads wi
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