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2020江苏专升本英语真题及答案解析

 2022-12-13 11:50:03   爱真题   942 

词汇语法

1.Students were required to do_________while staying at home because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

(A)much on-line homework

(B)many on-line homework

(C)a few on-line homework

(D)few on-line homework

2.I was told to take two pills_________eight hours

(A)other

(B)every

(C)others

(D)the other

3.It is accepted that children need friends of their age_________.

(A)to play

(B)to be played with

(C)to be played

(D)to play with

4.Mary is an able and responsible woman. That's why she was asked to _________ the company.

(A)hand over

(B)take over

(C)turn over

(D)come over

5.Before classes, some teachers would ask their students to hand in their mobile phones to prevent them from_________.

(A)being distracted

(B)being attracted

(C)distracting

(D)attracting

6.The audience were_________because Mr. Smith's presentation was_________.

(A)confused; confusing

(B)confusing; confused

(C)confused; more confused

(D)confusing; more confusing

7.—What do you think of the popular actor? —I've never seen a man with_________sense of humor.

(A)the better

(B)the best

(C)a good

(D)a better

8.Jackson_________ a book about China last year, but I have not read it yet.

(A)has written

(B)writes

(C)wrote

(D)would write

9.It _________ that Chinese economy has done well in shifting from high-speed development to quality growth.

(A)has been widely agreed

(B)has been widely agreeing

(C)agreed widely

(D)agrees widely

10.We were wondering whether you_________come and have lunch with us on Sunday.

(A)could

(B)should

(C)shall

(D)had better

11.If I had started out earlier, I_________the flight to Beijing.

(A)caught

(B)would catch

(C)had caught

(D)would have caught

12.He made another wonderful discovery, _________is of great importance to science.

(A)which

(B)where

(C)in which

(D)that

13.Whether he could finish his task depends on how well prepared_________.

(A)he is

(B)is he

(C)can he

(D)he can

14.I don't think_________easy for students to master a foreign language within two years.

(A)that

(B)it

(C)which

(D)what

15.No one is permitted to enter the museum without_________his/her ID card.

(A)having to show

(B)being shown

(C)showing

(D)having shown

16.The fire fighters made all their efforts_________the big fire.

(A)to put out

(B)to have put out

(C)having put out

(D)being put out

17._________ late frequently will do harm to your health.

(A)Stay up

(B)Staying up

(C)To have stayed

(D)Having stayed

18.Only when you have obtained sufficient data_________come to a sound conclusion.

(A)you can

(B)can you

(C)do you

(D)would you

19.Yesterday I went to see her, _________that she had gone abroad a week before.

(A)find

(B)found

(C)only to find

(D)to have found

20.Mary was the only one of the girls who_________praised in our class last week.

(A)is

(B)are

(C)was

(D)were

21.Some African countries have taken measures to solve the electricity problem, but it may be some time_________the situation gets improved.

(A)since

(B)when

(C)unless

(D)before

22.I am in a meeting at the moment. Would you please call me_________?

(A)latter

(B)later

(C)last

(D)latest

23.Over 70 per cent Chinese business have adopted _________ working arrangements, giving rise to at least 30 million people working at home.

(A)flexible

(B)available

(C)encouraging

(D)competitive

24.For miles around there was nothing but a desert, without a single tree_________.

(A)in shape

(B)on earth

(C)at a distance

(D)in sight

25.Wearing masks in public places is thought to be one of the most _________ ways to protect you from getting infected.

(A)effective

(B)efficient

(C)sufficient

(D)infectious

26.It is reported that China has _________ plenty of medical supplies many countries to fight against the pandemic.

(A)devoted

(B)donated

(C)spend

(D)cost

27.The prices of fruits may_________greatly from time to time, from store to store.

(A)vary

(B)transform

(C)distinguish

(D)alter

28.Many of us hope for a chance to contribute something_________to the world.

(A)admirable

(B)typical

(C)worthwhile

(D)variable

29.I would like to live in the countryside because the_________of life there is slow.

(A)pace

(B)speed

(C)rate

(D)circle

30.They found that Mary and Tom had a lot _________.

(A)in part

(B)in order

(C)in use

(D)in commor

31.Both of them followed the family_________and became doctors.

(A)habit

(B)tradition

(C)custom

(D)setting

32.The report has been_________as it is inaccurate and incomplete.

(A)praised

(B)handled

(C)criticized

(D)described

33.She was invited to _________ a speech on China's higher education system abroad last year.

(A)advise

(B)deliver

(C)claim

(D)declare

34.Cycling is highly_________to health and the environment.

(A)beneficial

(B)controversial

(C)adequate

(D)artificial

35.She suffered a serious hearing_________in her eighties.

(A)lost

(B)loose

(C)lose

(D)loss

36.The latest statistics show that Chinese economy is beginning to show obvious_________ of recovery.

(A)images

(B)design

(C)signs

(D)experiences

37.We all, _________, remember the good times and forget the bad.

(A)to some extent

(B)on some degree

(C)in the end

(D)to the end

38.It was very_________of you to let us know you were going to be late.

(A)considerable

(B)considerate

(C)considering

(D)consider

39._________warming has gained more and more attention from all over the world.

(A)Globalization

(B)Globalized

(C)Globe

(D)Global

40.At least 25 crew members on the cruise ship have tested _________ for virus, with 10 cases announced on Sunday and 15 more on Monday.

(A)positive

(B)passive

(C)aggression

(D)active

常规阅读

When Beverly Goodman was in elementary school, she gave a series of presentations on her favorite topic: disasters. She told her classmates about some disasters in history, for instance, the Titanic. Today, at 45, she's a marine geoarchaeologist (地理考古学家) who explores coastlines for clues to erosion, past tsunamis (海啸), and other disasters. 'It's funny now that I'm a disaster scientist, basically," she says. "It all came together."

Human settlements have long been built around access to water. Goodman studies how coastal change affected our ancestors: Were people forced to leave? Did they find innovative ways to adapt to the changes? This knowledge, she says, can help us "prepare responsibly for what this landscape is going to look like in the future." That was the case when Goodman and her team of scientists proved tsunamis had struck the coast of what is now Israel over the course of thousands of years. Partly as a result of their research, the country in 2014 developed its first tsunami preparedness plan.

Humans are manipulating coastlines more dramatically than ever, says Goodman. To learn what effect this will have, "we need to be working faster, and we need more people working on it."She believes ancient clues buried underwater can save lives, particularly in places without written records.

41.When Goodman was a little girl, she might be interested in_________.

(A)landscapes

(B)art and literature

(C)science and technology

(D)disasters in history

42.According to the passage, her present job_________.

(A)is a disaster for her

(B)is well-known to ordinary people

(C)is closely related to her childhood interest

(D)has nothing to do with her childhood hobbies

43.It can be learned from Paragraph Two that_________.

(A)where there is water, there are human beings

(B)people usually settled down along waters

(C)people prefer to live in muontains areas

(D)people prefer to live along grasslands

44.According to Goodman, which of the following in true?

(A)People need to pay more attention to coastline research.

(B)People show little interest in coastlines.

(C)People have no knowledge about coastlines.

(D)People have no written records about coastlines.

45.The best title of this passage could be"_________".

(A)The Changes of the World

(B)The Coastal Landscape

(C)Life Style of Ancient Ancestors

(D)Goodman's Underwater Research

One of the most common reasons why people don't succeed at introducing a permanent exercise habit in their lives is because their workouts are boring. They do the same things over and over again, and even if they work in the beginning, the body quickly adapts to them and stops responding to them in the same way as in the beginning.

When the effectiveness drops down and a person gets tired of doing the same thing, the outcome is predictable: you no longer want to work out any more.

That's why I'm so strongly against any kind of structured fitness classes at the gym that you attend because you think it's the only way to exercise.

Seek something enjoyable and exciting that won't feel like dreadful exercise, if you can't find it, keep looking until you do. Ultimately, it's the only way to successfully maintain an exercise habit in your life.

However, please note that even if you're doing something exciting, no matter how fantastic it is in the beginning, if you don't change your routine every now and then, it also might get boring. Mixing it up every now and then by focusing on a different aspect of the activity, doing it in a different place, with different intensity or with different people will boost your excitement, shock your body, and ensure that you'll stick to physical activity for the long haul.

47.Why do people fail to develop a good exercise habit? Because_________.

(A)people usually get bored of the same exercise

(B)the exercises are tough to perform

(C)people are too busy with their work

(D)there are lots of interesting exercises

48.What might happen if people do the same exercise too many times?

(A)They might get excited.

(B)They might stop doing it.

(C)They might easily get hungry.

(D)They might lose their temper.

49.The author's attitude toward structured fitness classes is_________.

(A)supportive

(B)appreciative

(C)neutral

(D)negative

50.According to the passage, which of the following helps develop a lifetime exercise habit?

(A)Attending gym classes.

(B)Joining a sports club.

(C)Keeping notes of your exercises.

(D)Trying enjoyable and exciting exercises.

51.If you would like to keep a routine exercise lifelong, you'd better NOT____

(A)do it in a different place

(B)do it on a regular basis

(C)do it with different intensity

(D)do it with different people

Everyone knows that the average human body temperature is 37°C—but everyone is wrong. It turns out that the bodies of people in the US have been cooling since the 1860s.

Physicians studying body temperature have known for decades that 37°C was too high, says Julie Parsonnet at Stanford University in California, "But they've always thought that it was just measurement error in the past, not because temperature had actually dropped."

To find out what really happened, Parsonnet and her team combined three data sets. The first set covered nearly 24,000 UnionArmyveterans (老兵) from the American Civil War, whose temperatures were measured between 1860 and 1940. The other two ranged from 1971 to 1975 and from 2007 to 2017. In total, the team analyzed more than 677,000 temperature measurements.

On average, US body temperature has declined by 0. 03°C per decade. Body temperatures of men born in the early 19th century were 0.59°C higher than those of men today. Women's average temperature has dropped by 0.32°C compared with that of women born in the 1890s. That means average body temperature today is about 36.6°C , not 37 C as it is widely thought.

The change isn't simply the result of older thermometers(温度计)being unreliable. We know this because the cooling trend is visible within the more modern data sets, in which the thermometers were probably more accurate.

"The most likely explanation in my view is that, microbiologically, we're very different people than we were," says Parsonnet. People have fewer infections, thanks to vaccines and antibiotics, so our immune systems are less active and our body tissues less inflamed(发炎).

53.The average human body temperature has been_________ since the 1860s.

(A)rising

(B)dropping

(C)turning up

(D)narrowing down

54.The word "it" (Line 2, Para. 2) refers to the fact that_________.

(A)37°C was too high

(B)37°C was too low

(C)37°C was irregular

(D)37°C was regular

55.According to Parsonnet and her team's research, which of the following is NOT true?

(A)Body temperatures of men born in the early 19th century were 0.59°C higher than those men of today.

(B)Women's average temperature has fallen by 0.32°C compared with that of women born in the 1890s.

(C)US body temperature has declined by 0.03°C for decades on average.

(D)The average body temperature today is lower than 37°C.

56.It is less likely for people to get infected because of_________.

(A)climate changes

(B)environment pollution

(C)vaccines and antibiotics

(D)better thermometers

57.It could be concluded from the passage that_________.

(A)we are getting cooler as body temperature falls

(B)we are getting warmer as body temperature falls

(C)we are getting cooler as body temperature rises

(D)we are getting warmer as body temperature rises

Being a female tree is hard. A study of a species that can change sex has revealed that most striped maple trees die while female.

"We had a suspicion they were changing sex, which is relatively rare among plants." says Jemnifer Blake-Mahmud at Princeton University. Between 2014 and 2017, she and Lena Struwe at Rutgers University in New Jersey observed the life cycles of 457 striped maples in New Jersey, recording their health, diameter and whether they had female or male flowers each spring.

They found that 54 percent of the trees changed sex during that time, and one fourth of those did so at least twice. A model based on these findings showed that, contrary to previous suggestions, healthy trees were more likely to be male and a tree's size doesn't influence its sex.

The growth rate of trees that remained female for many years declined. Of the trees that died, 75 percent had recently produced female flowers. "It's remarkable," says Blake-Mahmud. "When I see a tree that's dead and I look back in my datasheet, it was almost always female the year before."

It isn't clear why this is the case. It could be that female trees need more nutrients because they produce seeds, and it may increase the death rate of female trees, she says.

But it could also be that dying trees become female as a last effort to create offspring and pass their genes on to the next generation.

"These populations have a lot more male trees than female trees in general, so just by luck, a female has a better chance of being a parent of the next generation than a male," says Blake-Mahmud. "If you're going to die anyway, then being female is the way to go. That would make more evolutionary sense."

59.Which factor mentioned in the passage does NOT influence the striped maple trees' sex?

(A)Health.

(B)Size.

(C)Season.

(D)Age.

60.The word "declined"(Line 1,Para.4) is closest in meaning to_________.

(A)got worse

(B)died away

(C)went down

(D)wore out

61.Female maple trees need more nutrients because_________.

(A)they create offspring

(B)they change their sex

(C)they are less healthy

(D)there are fewer female trees

62.What can be inferred from the last paragraph?

(A)Healthy maple trees are more likely to be female.

(B)Dying maple trees are more likely to be male.

(C)Female maple trees are less likely to be parents.

(D)Sex changing could be the natural life process of the maple trees.

63.What's the best title of the passage?

(A)Female Maple Trees More Likely to Die

(B)A Contrast of Female and Male Maple Trees

(C)Relationships between Female and Male Maple Trees

(D)Differences between Female and Male Maple Trees

完型填空

Many dog owners who talk to their dogs are convinced that their words are being understood. It【C1】________they may be right. A study at Emory University has found that dogs have a【C2】________understanding of words, are able to distinguish words they have heard【C3】________from those they haven't, and are【C4】________to try to understand what is being said to them.

Twelve dogs were【C5】________by their owners to take back two objects【C6】________the objects' names-one soft toy and one rubber toy. The dogs were then【C7】________into an FMRI scanner and had their brain【C8】________monitored while their owners said the names of each toy as they held【C9】________up. As a control, the owner then spoke gibberish words, 【C10】________"bobbu" and "bodmicke", then held up novel objects like a hat or a doll.

They found【C11】________there was more activation in the auditory (听觉的) regions of the dogs' brains when they reacted【C12】________the novel words, suggesting that they sensed that【C13】________owners wanted them to understand【C14】________they were saying, and were 【C15】________to do so.

"We expected to see that dogs neutrally discriminate【C16】________words that they know and words that they【C17】________,"said researcher Ashley Prichard, a PhD candidate in Emory University's department of psychology. "What's surprising is that the result is【C18】________ to that of research on humans—people【C19】________show greater neural activation for known words【C20】________novel words."

65.【C1】

(A)turns on

(B)turns up

(C)turns off

(D)turns out

66.【C2】

(A)basic

(B)bad

(C)clean

(D)major

67.【C3】

(A)behind

(B)beside

(C)before

(D)after

68.【C4】

(A)keen

(B)eager

(C)interested

(D)excited

69.【C5】

(A)trained

(B)training

(C)treating

(D)treated

70.【C6】

(A)tried on

(B)experimented on

(C)depended on

(D)based on

71.【C7】

(A)placed

(B)place

(C)placing

(D)to place

72.【C8】

(A)cooperation

(B)contact

(C)activity

(D)assignment

73.【C9】

(A)it

(B)them

(C)those

(D)these

74.【C10】

(A)so

(B)as

(C)such

(D)such as

75.【C11】

(A)that

(B)which

(C)what

(D)where

76.【C12】

(A)by

(B)with

(C)to

(D)on

77.【C13】

(A)his

(B)their

(C)your

(D)her

78.【C14】

(A)that

(B)this

(C)what

(D)which

79.【C15】

(A)trying

(B)try

(C)tried

(D)being tried

80.【C16】

(A)in

(B)for

(C)beside

(D)between

81.【C17】

(A)can

(B)can't

(C)do

(D)don't

82.【C18】

(A)opposite

(B)similar

(C)familiar

(D)different

83.【C19】

(A)simply

(B)painfully

(C)typically

(D)suddenly

84.【C20】

(A)than

(B)to

(C)for

(D)against

英译汉

86.Partly as a result of their research, the country in 2014 developed its first tsunami preparedness plan.

87.She believes ancient clues buried underwater can save lives, particularly in places without written records.

88.Ultimately, it's the only way to successfully maintain an exercise habit in your life.

89.To find out what really happened, Parsonnet and her team combined three data sets.

90.They found that 54 per cent of the trees changed sex during that time, and one fourth of those did so at least twice.

汉译英

91.遵循这些建议,你会做得更好。

92.你听到的并不都是真实的。

93.那是,他比以往任何时候都幸福。

94.一到校门口,我就看见许多人在那。

95.你可以免费借阅这些图书。

作文

96.

For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write an essay with the title My view on Travelling with Parents. You are required to write at least 120 words, following the outline given below:

1.有人愿意和父母去旅游,因为……

2.有人不愿意和父母去旅游,因为……

3.我的看法。

My view on Travelling with Parents

____________________________________________________________________________________

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