2014年12月四级真题第3套.doc
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1、2014年12月大学英语四级考试真题(第三套)Part I Writing (30 minutes)Directions: For this part, .you are allowed 30 minutes to write a short essay about a campus activity that has benefited you most. You should write at least 120 words but No more than 180 words.Part II Listening Comprehension (30 minutes)(说明:由于2014年1
2、2月六级考试全国共考了2套听力,本套真题听力与前2套内容完全一样,只是顺序不一样,因此在本套真题中不再重复出现)Part III Reading Comprehension (40 minutes)Section ADirections: In this section, there is a passage with ten blanks. You are required to select one word for each blank from a list of choices given in a word bank following the passage: Read the
3、passage through carefully before making your choices. Each choice in the bank is identified by a letter. Please mark the corresponding letter for each item on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre. You may not use any of the words in the bank more than once.Questions 36 to 45 are base
4、d on the following passage. For decades, Americans have taken for granted the United States leadership position in the development of new technologies. The innovations (创新) that resulted from research and development during World War II and afterwards were 36 to the prosperity of the nation in the s
5、econd half of the 20th century. Those innovations, upon which virtually all aspects of 37 society now depend, were possible because the United States then 38 the world in mathematics and science education. Today, however, despite increasing demand for workers with strong skills in mathematics and sc
6、ience, the 39 of degrees awarded in science, math, and engineering are decreasing. The decline in degree production in what are called the STEM disciplines (science, technology, engineering, and math) seems to be 40 related to the comparatively weak performance by U.S. schoolchildren on internationa
7、l assessments of math and science. Many students entering college have weak skills in mathematics. According to the 2005 report of the Business-Higher Education Forum, 22 percent of college freshmen must take remedial (补习的) math 41 , and less than half of the students who plan to major in science or
8、 engineering 42 complete a major in those fields. The result has been a decrease in the number of American college graduates who have the skills, 43 in mathematics, to power a workforce that can keep the country at the forefront (前沿) of innovation and maintain its standard of living. With the 44 per
9、formance of American students in math and science has come increased competition from students from other countries that have strongly supported education in these areas. Many more students earn 45 in the STEM disciplines in developing countries than in the United States.A) acceleratingB) actuallyC)
10、 closelyD) contemporaryE) coursesF) criticalG) decliningH) degreesI) especiallyJ) futureK) ledL) metM) proceduresN) proportionsO) spheresSection BDirections: In this section, you are going to read a passage with ten statements attached to it. Each statement contains information given in one of the p
11、aragraphs. Identify the paragraph from which the information is derived. You may choose a paragraph more than once. Each paragraph is marked with a letter. Answer the questions by marking the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2.Ban Sugary DrinksThat Will Add Fuel to the Obesity WarA On a train la
12、st Thursday, I sat opposite a man who was so fat he filled more than one seat. He was pale and disfigured and looked sick to death, which he probably was: obesity (肥胖症) leads to many nasty ways of dying. Looking around the carriage, I saw quite a few people like him, including a couple of fatty chil
13、dren with swollen cheeks pressing against their eyes. These people are part of what is without exaggeration an epidemic (流行病) of obesity.B But it is quite unnecessary: there is a simple ideafar from newthat could spare millions of such people a lifetime of chronic (长期病) ill health, and at the same t
14、ime save the National Health Service (NHS) at least 14 billion a year in England and Wales. There would, you might think, be considerable public interest in it. This simple idea is that sugar is as goodor as badas poison and should be avoided. It is pure, white and deadly, as Professor John Yudkin d
15、escribed it 40 years ago in a revolutionary book of that name. The subtitle was How Sugar Is Killing Us.C In its countless hidden forms, in ready meals, junk food and sweet drinks, sugar leads to addiction (瘾), to hormonal upsets to the appetite, to metabolic (新陈代谢的) malfunctions and obesity and fro
16、m there to type 2 diabetes (糖尿病) and its many horrible complications. If people really grasped that, they would try to kick the habit, particularly as Britain is the “fat man of Europe”. They might even feel driven to support government measures to prevent people from consuming this deadly stuff. Ye
17、t so far this idea has met little but resistance.D It is not difficult to imagine the vested interests (既得利益集团) lined up against any sugar controlall the food and drink manufacturers, processors, promoters and retailers who make such easy pickings out of the magic powers of sugar. Then there are the
18、 liberals, with whom I would normally side, who protest that government regulation would be yet another instance of interference in our lives.E That is true, but people should realise that you cannot have a welfare state without a nanny state (保姆国家), to some degree. If we are all to be responsible f
19、or one anothers health insurance, through socialised medicine, then we are all closely involved in one anothers health, including everyones eating and drinking. That has already been admitted, finally, with smoking. But it has yet to be admitted with overeating, even though one in four adults in thi
20、s country is obese and that number is predicted to double by the year 2050. Quite apart from anything else, obesity will cripple the NHS.F Recently, though, there have been signs that the medical establishment is trying to sound the alarm. Last month the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges (AMRC) publ
21、ished a report saying that obesity is the greatest public health issue affecting the UK and urging government to do something.G The report offers 10 recommendations, of which the first is imposing a tax of 20 percent on sugary drinks for at least a year, on top of the existing 20 percent value-added
22、 tax. That at least would be an excellent start. The amounts of sugar in soft drinks are horrifying, and turn straight to fat. As Professor Terence Stephenson, head of the AMRC, has said, sugary soft drinks are “the ultimate bad food. You are just consuming neat sugar. Your body didnt evolve to hand
23、le this kind of thing.”H Precisely. The risks of eating too much fat or salt (which are very different) pale into insignificance compared with the harm done by sugar. And it is everywhere.I It is difficult to buy anything in a supermarket, other than plain, unprepared meat, fish or vegetables, that
24、doesnt have a large amount of sugar in it. This has come about because the prevailing scientific views of the 1960s and 1970s ignored the evidence about sugar, and instead saw fat as the really serious risk, both to the heart and other organs, as well as the cause of obesity.J The fashion was to avo
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