2023年云南GRE考试考前冲刺卷.docx
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1、2023年云南GRE考试考前冲刺卷本卷共分为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. Some animal behaviorists argue that certain animals can remember past events,anticipate future ones, make plans and choices, and coordinate activities within a group. These scientists, however, are cautious
2、 about the extent to which animalscan be credited with conscious processing.(5) Explanations of animal behavior that leave out any sort of consciousness at all and ascribe actions entirely to instinct leave many questions unanswered. One example of such unexplained behavior: Honeybees communicate th
3、e sources of nectar to one another by doing a dance in a figure-eight pattern. The orientation of the dance conveys the position of the food relative to the suns position in the sky,(10)and the speed of the dance tells how far the food source is from the hive. Most researchers assume that the abilit
4、y to perform and encode the dance is innate and shows no special intelligence. But in one study, when experimenters kept changing the site of the food source, each time moving the food 25 percent farther from the previous site, foraging honeybees began to anticipate where the food source would(15)ap
5、pear next. When the researchers arrived at the new location, they would find the bees circling the spot, waiting for their food. No one has yet explained how bees,whose brains weigh four ten-thousandths of an ounce, could have inferred the location of the new site. Other behaviors that may indicate
6、some cognition include tool use. Many(20)animals, like the otter who uses a stone to crack mussel shells, are capable of using objects in thenatural environment as rudimentary tools. One researcher has found that mother chimpanzeesoccasionally show their young how to use tools to open hard nuts. In
7、one study, chimpanzeescompared two pairs of food wells containing chocolate chips. One pair might contain, say, fivechips and three chips, the other(25)our chips and three chips. Allowed to choose which pair they wanted, thechimpanzees almost always chose the one with the higher total, showing some
8、sort of summingability. Other chimpanzees have learned to use numerals to label quantities of items and do simple sums.The word rudimentary in line 21 is closest in meaning toAsuperiorBoriginalCbasicDtechnical 2. Some animal behaviorists argue that certain animals can remember past events,anticipate
9、 future ones, make plans and choices, and coordinate activities within a group. These scientists, however, are cautious about the extent to which animalscan be credited with conscious processing.(5) Explanations of animal behavior that leave out any sort of consciousness at all and ascribe actions e
10、ntirely to instinct leave many questions unanswered. One example of such unexplained behavior: Honeybees communicate the sources of nectar to one another by doing a dance in a figure-eight pattern. The orientation of the dance conveys the position of the food relative to the suns position in the sky
11、,(10)and the speed of the dance tells how far the food source is from the hive. Most researchers assume that the ability to perform and encode the dance is innate and shows no special intelligence. But in one study, when experimenters kept changing the site of the food source, each time moving the f
12、ood 25 percent farther from the previous site, foraging honeybees began to anticipate where the food source would(15)appear next. When the researchers arrived at the new location, they would find the bees circling the spot, waiting for their food. No one has yet explained how bees,whose brains weigh
13、 four ten-thousandths of an ounce, could have inferred the location of the new site. Other behaviors that may indicate some cognition include tool use. Many(20)animals, like the otter who uses a stone to crack mussel shells, are capable of using objects in thenatural environment as rudimentary tools
14、. One researcher has found that mother chimpanzeesoccasionally show their young how to use tools to open hard nuts. In one study, chimpanzeescompared two pairs of food wells containing chocolate chips. One pair might contain, say, fivechips and three chips, the other(25)our chips and three chips. Al
15、lowed to choose which pair they wanted, thechimpanzees almost always chose the one with the higher total, showing some sort of summingability. Other chimpanzees have learned to use numerals to label quantities of items and do simple sums.It can be inferred from the statement about mother chimpanzees
16、 and their young (lines 21-23) that young chimpanzees have difficultyAcommunicating with their mothersBadding quantitiesCmaking choicesDopening hard nuts 3. In eighteenth-century colonial America, flowers and fruit were typically the province of thebotanical artist interested in scientific illustrat
17、ion rather than being the subjects of fine art.Early in the nineteenth century, however, the Peale family of Philadelphia established the stilllife, a pictureconsisting mainly of inanimate(5) objects, as a valuable part of the artists repertoire. The fruit paintings by James and Sarah MiriamPeale ar
18、e simple arrangements of a few objects, handsomely colored, small in size, and representing littlemore than what they are. In contrast were the highly symbolic, complex compositions by Charles BirdKing, with their biting satire and critical social commentary. Each of these strains comminuted into an
19、d(10)well past mid-century. John F. Francis (1808-86) was a part of the Pennsylvania still-life traditionthat arose, at least in part, from the work of the Peales. Most of his still lifes date from around 1850 to1875. Luncheon Still Life looks like one of the Peales pieces on a larger scale, kits gr
20、eater complexityresulting from the number of objects. It is also(15)indebted to the luncheon type of still life found in seventeenth-century Dutch painting. The openedbottles of wine and the glasses of wine partially consumed suggest a number of unseen guests. Theappeal of the fruit and nuts to our
21、sense of taste is heightened by the juicy orange, which has alreadybeen sliced. The arrangement is additive, that is, made up of many different parts, not always(20)compositionally integrated, with all objects of essentially equal importance. About 1848, SeverinRoesen came to the United States from
22、Germany and settled in New York City, where he began topaint large, lush still lifes of flowers, fruit, or both, often measuring over four feet across. Still Lifewith Fruit and Champagne is typical in its brilliance of color, meticulous rendering of detail,(25)compact composition, and unabashed abun
23、dance. Rich in symbolic overtones, the beautifullypainted objects carry additional meanings . butterflies or fallen buds suggest the impermanence oflife, a birds nest with eggs means fertility, and so on. Above all, Roesens art expresses the abundancethat America symbolized to many of its citizens.W
24、hich of the following is mentioned as the dominant theme in Roesens paintingAFertilityBFreedomCImpermanenceDAbundance 4. Scientists have discovered that for the last 160,000 years, at least, there has been a consistent relationship between the amount of carbon dioxide in the air and the average temp
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