2022年公共英语考试真题卷三18测.docx
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1、2022年公共英语考试真题卷三(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。)单位:姓名:考号:题号单选题多项选择判断题综合题总分分值得分、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. If women are merci I ess Iy exploited year after year, they have only themselves to bIame. Because they tremble at the thought of being seen in pub Iic in clothes that are out of
2、 fashion, they are always taken advantage of by the designers and the big stores. Clothes which have been worn only a few t imes have to be put as ide because of the changes of fash ion. When you come to think of it, only a woman is capable of standing in front of a wardrobe packed fulI of clothes a
3、nd announcing sadly that she has nothing to wear. Changing fashions are nothing more than the international creation of waste. Many women spend vast sums of money each year to replace cIothes that have hardly been worn. Women who cannot afford to throw away cIothing in this way, waste hours of thei
4、r time alter ing the dresses they have. Skirts are Iengthened or shortened; neck-1ines are lowered or raised, and so on. No one can claim that the fashion industry contributes anything really important to society. Fashion designers are rarely concerned with vital things I ike warmth, comfort and dur
5、abiIity. They are only interested in outward appearance and they take advantage of the fact that women wi I I put up with any amount of discomfort, as long as they look right. There can hardly be a man who hasn t at some time in his I ife smi led at the sight of a woman shaking in a thin dress on a
6、winter day, or del icately picking her way through deep snow in high-heeIed shoes. When comparing men and women in the matter of fashion, the conclusions to be drawn are obvious. Do the constantly changing fashions of women s clothes, one wonders, reflect basic qua I ities of i nconstancy and instab
7、iIity Men are too clever to let themselves be cheated by fashion designers. Do their unchanging styles of dress reflect basic qua I ities of stabiIity and reliability That is for you to decide.Designers and big stores always make money.A. by mercilessly exploiting women workers in the clothing indus
8、tryB. because they are capable of predicting new fashionsC. by constantly changing the fashions in women s clothingD. because they attach greater importance to quality in women s clothin2. Real poIicemen hardly recognize any resemblance between thei r Iives and what they see on TV. These are simi la
9、rities, of course, but the cops don t think much of them. The first difference is that a pol iceman s real I ife revolves round the law. Most of his training is in criminal law, and what is more, he has to apply it on his feet, in the dark and rain, running down an a I I ey after someone he wants to
10、 talk to. Little of his time is spent in chatt i ng to a scant i I y-c I ad or in dramatic confrontation with desperate criminals. He wi I I spend most of his working Iife typ i ng mill ions of words on thousands of forms about hundreds of sad, unimportant people who are gui Ity-or not-of stupid, pe
11、tty crimes. Most television crime drama is about finding the criminals as soon as he s arrested, the story is over. In real Iife, finding criminals is seldom much of a problem except in very serious cases Iike murders and terror i st attacks-whose fai lure to produce results reflects on the standing
12、 of the police. The police have an elaborate machinery which eventually shows up most wanted men. Having made an arrest, a detective really starts to work. He has to prove his case in court and to do that he often has to gather a lot of different evidence. Much of this has to be given by peopIe who
13、don t want to get invoIved in a court case. So, as we I I as being overworked, a detect i ve has to be out at al I hours of the day and n i ght i nterv i ewi ng h i s wi tnesses and persuad i ng them, usua I I y against thei r own best interests, to help him. A thi rd big difference between the dram
14、a detective and the real one is the unpleasant moral twiIight in which the real one I ives. Detectives are subject to two opposing pressures: first, as members of a poI ice force they always have to get results. Second, they have to observe the rules. They can hardly ever do both. Most of the time s
15、ome of them have to break the rules in sma I I ways.It is essential for a poIiceman to be trained in criminal law.A. so that he can catch criminals in the streetsB. because many of the criminals he has to catch are dangerousC. so that he can justify his arrests in courtD. because he has to know near
16、ly as much about as a professional lawyer3. The healing power of maggots is not new. Human beings have discovered it several times. The Maya are said to have used maggots for therapeutic purposes a thousand years ago. As ear Iy as the s i xteenth century, European doctors noticed that soldiers with
17、maggot-infested wounds heaIed well. More recently, doctors have real ized that maggots can be cheaper and more effective than drugs in some respects, and these squirming larvae have, at times, enjoyed a quiet medicaI renaissance. The problem may have more to do with the weak stomachs of those using
18、them than with good science. The modern heyday of maggot therapy began during World War I , when an American doctor named William Bayer was shocked to notice that two soldiers who had lain on a batt Ief i eId for a week while their abdominal would became infested with thousands of maggots, had recov
19、ered better than wounded men treated in the mi Iitary hospital. After the war, Bayer proved to the med i ca I estab I i shment that maggots could cure some of the toughest infections. In the 1930s hundreds of hospitals used maggot therapy. Maggot therapy requi res the r ight kind of larvae. Only the
20、 maggots of b I owf I ies (a fami I y that i nc I udes common b I uebott I es and green bottIes) wi11 do the job; they devour dead tissue, whether in an open wound or in a corpse. Some other maggots, on the other hand, such as those of the screwworm eat I ive tissue. They must be avoided. When bIowf
21、 Iy eggs hatch in a patient s wound, the maggots eat the dead flesh where gangrene-causing bacter ia thr ive. They also excrete compounds that are IethaI to bacteria they don t happen to swal low. Meanwhi Ie, they ignore Iive flesh, and in fact, give it a gent Ie growth-st i mu I at i ng massage sim
22、ply by crawl ing over it. When they metamorphose into fl ies, they leave without a trace-although in the process, they might upset the hospital staff as they squ i rm around in a I ive patient. When sulfa drugs, the first antibiotics, emerged around the time of World War II, maggot therapy quickly f
23、aded into obscurity.Why did the author write the passageA. Because of the resistance to using the benefits of maggots.B. To demonstrate the important contribution of William Bayer.C. To outline the healing power of maggots.D. To explain treatment used before the first antibiotics.4. Test i ng has re
24、p I aced teach ing in most pub I i c schoo I s. My own ch i Idren s schooI week is framed by pretests, drills, tests, and retests. They know that the best way to read a textbook is to look at the questions at the end of the chapter and then skim the text for the answers. I be I ieve that my daughter
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- 2022 公共英语 考试 真题卷三 18
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