SAT模拟考试试题2(含答案).pdf
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1、SAT Practice Test#2IMPORTANT REMINDERS:t tA No.2 pencil is requiredfor the test.Do not use amechanical pencil or pen.Sharing any questionswithanyonelsa violationof the SAT ProgramsTest Security andFairness policies andmay result in your scoresbeing canceled.Requests to cancelscores must be receivedi
2、n writing by theWednesday followingthe test date.(This cover is representative of what youll see on test day.)THISTESTBOOKMUSTNOTBETAKENFROMTHE ROOM.UNAUTHORIZEDREPRODUCTION OR USEOFANY PARTOFTHISTEST BOOK IS PROHIBITED.2015 The College Board.College Board,SAT,and the acorn logo are registered trade
3、marks of the College Board.Test begins on the next page.Reading Test65 MINUTES,52 QUESTIONSTurn to Section 1 of your answer sheet to answer the questions in this section.DIRECTIONSEach passage or pair of passages below is followed by a number of questions.After readingeach passage or pair,choose the
4、 best answer to each question based on what is stated orimplied in the passage or passages and in any accompanying graphics(such as a table orgraph).Questions 1-10 are based on the followingpassage.The following passage is an excerpt from the autobiographyNarrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass.
5、First publishedin 1845,the passage discusses a young Douglasss earlyconsiderations on slavery.I was now about twelve years old,and the thoughtof being a slave for life began to bear heavily uponmy heart.Just about this time,I got hold of a bookline entitled“The Columbian Orator.Every opportunity5 I
6、got,I used to read this book.Among much of otherinteresting matter,I found in it a dialogue betweena master andhis slave.The slave was represented ashaving run away from his master three times.Thedialogue represented the conversation which took placeio between them,when the slave was retaken the thi
7、rdtime.In this dialogue,the whole argument in behalf ofslavery wasbrought forward by the master,all of whichwas disposed ofby the slave.The slave was made to saysome very smart as well as impressive things in reply15 to his masterthings which had the desired thoughunexpected effect;for the conversat
8、ion resulted in thevoluntary emancipation ofthe slave on the part of themaster.In the same book,I met with one of Sheridans20 mighty speeches on and in behalf of Catholicemancipation.These were choice documents to me.Iread them over and over again with unabated interest.They gave tongue to interesti
9、ng thoughts ofmy ownsoul,which had frequently flashed through my mind,25 and died away for wantofutterance.The moral whichI gained from the dialogue was the power of truthover the conscience of even a slaveholder.What I gotfrom Sheridan was a bold denunciation of slavery,anda powerful vindication of
10、human rights.The reading30 of these documents enabled me to utter my thoughtsand to meet the arguments brought forward to sustainslavery;but while they relieved me of one difficulty,they brought on another even more painful than theone of which I was relieved.35 The more I read,the more I was led to
11、 abhor anddetest my enslavers.I could regard them in no otherlight than a band of successful robbers,who had lefttheir homes,and gone to Africa,and stolen us fromour homes,and in a strange land reduced us to slavery.40 I loathed them as being the meanest as well as themost wicked ofmen.As I read and
12、 contemplated thesubject,behold!that very discontentment which MasterHugh had predicted would follow my learning to readhad already come,to torment and sting my sou 1 to45 unutterable anguish.As I writhed under it,I would attimes feel that learning to read had been a curse ratherthan a blessing.It h
13、ad given me a view of my wretchedcondition,without theremedy.lt opened my eyes to thehorrible pit,but to no ladder upon which to get out.Inso moments of agony,I envied my fellow-slaves for theirstupidity.I have often wished myself a beast.I preferredthe condition ofthe meanest reptile to my own.Anyt
14、hing,no matter what,to get rid of thinking!It was this everlasting thinking of my condition55 that tormented me.There was no getting rid of it.Itwas pressed upon me by every object within sight orhearing,animate or inanimate.The silver trump offreedom had roused my soul to eternal wakefulness.Freedo
15、m now appeared,to disappear no more forever.60 It was heard in every sound,and seen in every thing.Unauthorized copying or reuse of any part of this page is illegal.CONTINUEIt was ever present to torment me with a sense of mywretched condition.!saw nothing without seeing it,I heard nothing without h
16、earing it,and felt nothingwithout feeling it.It looked from every star,it smiled65 in every calm,breathed in every wind,and moved inevery storm.The passage can be best summarized asA)a boy trying to escape after finally realizing hisidentity as a slave.B)a boy lamenting his hopeless situation becaus
17、e hiscondition is worse than that of other slaves.C)a boy discovering the realities ofhis condition aswell as his yearning for freedom.D)a boy searching for wisdom and comfort in books.The narrator recollects his reading of/zThe ColumbianOrator in the first paragraph primarily in order toA)discuss t
18、he dialogue between a master and hisslave.B)support his belief that slavery is opposed to humanrights.C)illustrate the slaves persistence in running away.D)explain how Sheridans speeches are concernedwith slavery.Which choice provides the best evidence for the answerto the previous question?A)Lines
19、5-7(/z Among much.and his slave)B)Lines 7-11(The slave was.the third time)C)Lines 19-21(zzIn the same.documents to me,/)D)Lines 25-29(The moral which.of human rights)Unauthorized copying or reuse of any part of this page is illegal.CONTINUEThroughout the course of the passage,the narratorsperspectiv
20、e changes fromA)fierce condemnation to painful self-loathing.B)liberating realization to helpless anger.C)confident interest to increased sadness.D)sudden surprise to heated repulsion.Which choice provides the best evidence for the answerto the previous question?A)Lines 36-39(Z ZI could regard.us to
21、 slavery)B)Lines 41-45(As I read.unutterable anguish)C)Lines45-47(/z As I writhed.than a blessing)D)Lines 47-48(Ithad given.without the remedy)5In line 16 unexpected most nearly meansA)surprising.B)abrupt.C)unintended.D)abnormal.The narrator refers to Sheridans speeches as“choicedocuments in line 21
22、 primarily in order toA)show his decision-making abilities in choosingarticles that discussslavery.B)explain why he referenced these speeches tosupport his argument.C)demonstrate the speeches impact on his awarenessof slavery.D)suggest that the speeches were specifically chosenfor the topic athand.7
23、In lines 33-34,the other,more painful difficulty refers toA)the narrators secret of learning to read against hismasters will.B)the narratof s discovery of how the slavemasterscaptured the slaves from Africa.C)the narratof s realization that there is not a readysolution for ending slavery.D)thenarrat
24、orssenseof isolation because hecouldnot discuss his pain with other slaves.In the third paragraph,the narrator makes a contrastbetweenA)slaves and their enslavers.B)himself and other slaves.C)himself and his master.D)slaves and reptiles.The narrators circumstances in the passage is mostanalogous toA
25、)an employee who discovers that his companysemployees have been exploited,yet they have noway to seek justice.B)a girl who finds out that her best friend hasbeen spreading vicious rumors about her whilepretending to be her friend.C)an endangered animal which has been forcefullycaptured by humans and
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