2023年考研外语考前密押卷4.docx
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1、考研外语考前密押卷4一、Use of English1 The cellphone, a device we have lived with for more than a decade, offers a good example of a popular technology s unforeseen side effects. More than one billion are (1)use around the world, and when asked, their (2) say they love their phones for the safety and convenien
2、ce (3)provide. People also report that they are (4)in their use of their phones. One opinion survey (5)that 98 percent of Americans say they move away from (6)when talking on a wireless phone in public (7)86 percent say they never or rarely speak (8) wireless phones when conducting (9)with clerks or
3、 bank tellers. Clearly, there exists a (10) between our reported cellphone behavior, and our actual behavior.Cellphone users that is to say, most of us are (11) instigators and victims of this form, of conversational panhandling, and it (12) a cumulatively negative effect on social space. As the soc
4、iologist Erving Guttmann observed in another (13), there is something deeply disturbingtheme.A. there are dual messages for the psychological consequencesB. one should sacrifice himself for the interest of the commonwealthC. people would stay in an unhappy marriageD. the individual is glad to do unp
5、leasant work at low wagesWhich of the following is NOT true with the enjoy yourself” message?A. It is a different kind of personality from others.B. It is one that is self-centered.C. I like to do what makes me feel good.D. I live my dreams today, not tomorrow.From the last paragraph we may infer th
6、at.A. there is a fear of being sucked in and dragged down by our consumer cultureB. pleasure-seeking and blind acquisition is popular in our societyC. one should not default on ones billsD. American society is not as secure as people assume6、The 1920s was the decade of advertising. The advertisingme
7、n went wild: everything from salt to household coal was being nationally advertised. Of course, ads had been around for a long time. But something new was happening, in terms of both scale and strategy. For the first time, business began to use advertising as a psychological weapon against consumers
8、. Without their product, the consumer would be left unmarried, fall victim to a terrible disease, or be passed over for a promotion. N/Is developed an association between the product and one s very identity. Eventually they came to promise everything and anything-from self-esteem to status, friendsh
9、ip, and love.This psychological approach was a response to the economic dilemma business faced. Americans in the middle classes and above (to whom virtually all advertising was targeted) were no longer buying to satisfy basic needs-such as food, clothing and shelter. These had been met. Advertisers
10、had to persuade consumers to acquire things they most certainly did not need. In other words, production would have to create the wants it sought to satisfy”. This is exactly what manufacturers tried to do. The normally conservative telephone company attempted to transform, the plain telephone into
11、a luxury, urging families to buy all the telephones that they can convenientlyuse, rather than the smallest amount they can get along with”.One ad campaign targeted fifteen phones as the style, for a wealthy home.Business clearly understood the nature of the problem. According to one historian: Busi
12、ness had learned as never before the importance of the final consumer. Unless he or she could be persuaded to buy, and buy extravagantly, the whole stream of new cars, cigarettes, womens make-up, and electric refrigerators would be dammed up at its outlets.But would the consumer be equal to her/his
13、task as the foundation of private enterprise? A top executive of one American car manufacturer stated the matter bluntly: business needs to create a dissatisfied consumer; its mission is the organized creation of dissatisfaction”. This executive led the way by introducing annual model changes for hi
14、s companys cars, designed to make the consumer unhappy with what he or she already had. Other companies followed his lead. Economic success now depended on the promotion of qualities like waste and self-indulgence.The campaign to create new and unlimited wants did not go unchallenged. Trade unions a
15、nd those working for social reform, understood the long-term consequences of materialism for mostAmericans: it would keep them locked in capitalisms trap. The consumption of luxuries required long hours at work. Business was explicit in its resistance to increases in free time, preferring consumptio
16、n as the alternative to taking economic progress in the form, of leisure. In effect, business offered up the cycle of work-and-spend.The 1920s advertising men went wild.A. about salt and household coalB.over their ads scale and strategyC. about a psychological weaponD. to develop an association betw
17、een the product and the consumerA typical example of create the wants it sought to satisfy” is.A. acquiring things they most certainly did not needB. transforming the plain telephone into a luxuryC. fifteen phones as the style, for a wealthy homeD. buying all the telephones that they can convenientl
18、y use 8、The importance of the final consumer lies in.A. the potential buying powerB. the nature of the problemC. changing the products into capitalD. the demands for various merchandisesBusiness needs to create a dissatisfied consumer because it.A. promotes competitionB.helps improve productionC.put
19、s higher standard on the manufacturerD.pushes forward product renovationAccording to the passage, the term inaterialisnT refers to.A. a theory that physical matter is the only realityB. a doctrine that the only values lie in material well-beingC. a doctrine that economic or social change is material
20、ly causedD. a focus on material rather than intellectual or spiritual things9、 You may fall prey to a nonviolent but frightening and fast-growing crime: identity theft. It happens to at least 500, 000 new victims each year, according to government figures.And it happens very easily because every ide
21、ntification number you have Social Security, credit card, drivers license, telephone is a key that unlocks some storage of money or goods, says a fraud program manager of the US Postal Service. So if you throw away your credit card receipt and I get it and use the number on it, Im not becoming you,
22、but to the credit card company Ive become your account. One major problem, experts say, is that the Social Security Number (SSN)-originally meant only for retirement benefit and tax purposes一has become the universal way to identify people. It is used as identification by the military, colleges and i
23、n billions of commercial transactions.Yet a shrewd thief can easily snatch your SSN, not only by stealing your wallet, but also by taking mail from your box, going through your trash for discarded receipts and bills or asking for it over the phone on some pretext.Using your SSN, the thief applies fo
24、r a credit card in your name, asking that it be sent to a different address than yours, and uses it for multiple purchases. A couple of months later the credit card company, or its debt collection agency, presses you for payment.You dont have to pay the debt, but you must clean up yourdamaged credit
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