1、 2012 年大学生英语竞赛(NECCS)C 类决赛真题试卷Part Vocabulary and Structure31 The presidents education speeches contained_the tongue leading to public confusion over education policy.Aa slide of Ba slip of Ca skip of Da glide of 32 The word “right“ , in most languages, is usually connected _ the meaning of “correct
2、“ , whereas the words associate_“left“ , generally have negative meanings.Ato: with Bwith: to Cto: to Dwith: with 33 Gas prices rose 4% in April, a_rise but the smallest since January.AMighty BSevere CSteep Dmassive 34 It seems a very simple thing to tell the truth, but beyond all question, there is
3、 nothing _lying.Ahalf so easy as Bso half easy as Chalf easy as Dso easy as half 35 _until recently, people who are left-handed have been considered abnormal.AUp BUnless CDown DNot36 Sorry about the loss. But itll give you some relief if your house is_against fire.AAssured BEnsured CInsured Dpledged
4、 37 When_in a downpour without an umbrella or a raincoat, most people would pick up their pace.ASunk B Caught CPlunged Dgrabbed 38 In 1993, V. S. Naipaul was awarded the David Cohen British Literature Prize in_of his lifetimes achievement.AIdentification BAcquaintance CRecognition Dperspective39 Man
5、y linguists_that our highly evolved brain provides us with innate language ability not found in lower organisms.ASuggest BClaim CPromise Dconvince 40 Im in a slightly_position in that he is not arriving until 12: 00 which is 3 hours late.ATight BWeird C Awesome Dawkward 41 Tactless she may be, but u
6、ngrateful_think her.Ashould not you Bshould you not Cnot should you D you should not 42 More than 30 people died in the train accident, most of_children.AWhich B Them CWhom Dthat 43 He admits that his team really_him to play a role of responsibility.Alook forward to Blook down on Clook up to Dlook o
7、n 44 Do you know the students have been protesting against the increased tuition? Ive heard about the protest, but_AIve joined in it to support the students. BI dont see any good it will do. CI do know the reason for it. DI think itll be a great success.45 I hear youre a journalist now, Paul. That m
8、ust be exciting._most of the time. But like all jobs, it has its disadvantages.AIts boring BIts a piece of cake CIt has drawbacks DIts a buzzPart ClozeThere is a phenomenon that sociologists call reference anxietyor, more popularly, keeping up with the【C1】Jo_. According to that thinking, most people
9、 judge their possessions in comparison with others. People tend not to ask themselves, “Does my house meet my needs?“ 【C2】Ins_they ask, “Is my house nicer than my neighbors?“ If your two-bedroom house is surrounded by three-and four-bedroom houses, with some【C3 】ar_the corner doing a tear-down to bu
10、ild a McMansion, your reference anxiety may rise. Suddenly that two-bedroom houseone that your grandparents might have considered quite nice, even luxuriousdoesnt seem enough. And so the money you spent on it stops【C4】_(provide)you with a sense of well-being.Americans soaring reference anxiety is a
11、product of the widening gap in income【C5 】 _(distribute). In other words, the rich are getting richer faster, and the rest of the population are none too happy about it. During much of the U. S. history, the【C6】_(major) lived in small towns or urban areas where conditions for most people were approx
12、imately the same-hence, low【C7 】_anxiety. Also, most people knew relatively little about those who were living higher on the hog.But in the past few【C8】de_, new economic forces have changed all that. Rapid growth in income for the top 5 percent of households has brought【C9】ab_a substantial cohort of
13、 people who live notably better than the middle class does, amplifying our reference anxiety. That wealthier minority is occupying ever-larger homes and spending more on each change of clothes when the middle is doing O. K. In nations with【C10 】h_levels of income equality like the Scandinavian count
14、ries, well-being tends to be higher than in nations with unequal wealth distribution such as the United States.Part Reading ComperhensionSection ASeveral research groups in the United States are conducting genetic research aimed at retarding aging. If the breakthroughs of recent years are anything t
15、o go by, it is likely that we will see several-fold longevity increases in mice within the next decade or so. Already such genetic manipulation has increased by almost 50% the life span of flies. Results are also promising in mammals: scientists have extended longevity in mice by 50% through genetic
16、 interventions. Achieving similar results in humans will be harder. Scientists have already identified genes that appear to accelerate human aging, but they have yet to find genes with the opposite effect. But with the sequencing of the human genome, we are now in a better position to find out more
17、about aging in humans as well as animals.For those who cannot wait, there is one method available today that might delay human aging, caloric restriction. This means simply a diet with few calories. Experiments have shown longevity increases of more than 50% in certain mammals that follow such diets
18、. Most people, however, feel that the secondary effects of this outweigh the benefits. After all, what is the point of living longer if you cannot enjoy life? If science is to extend human longevity, it will have to do so by extending the duration of human life in age-related disability. The extra y
19、ears of life must allow future grandparents to enjoy life, not just live.Although some scientists argue that aging will never be cured and our grandparents will continue to fit our stereotypes, many others remain confident that we will soon learn how to modulate the human aging process. “ I believe
20、our generation is the first to be able to map a possible route to individual immortality,“ says William Haseltine, CEO of Human Genome Sciences Inc. in Rockville, Maryland. If a therapy could slow human aging by 50% , for instance, we could have 30 or 40 more years of life. In that time, new discove
21、ries could be made that would allow us to live even longer, and the cycle could continue until a cure for aging is discovered. “Its possible that some people a-live now may still be alive 400 years from now,“ claims gerontologist S. Michal Jazwinski of Louisiana State of University Health Sciences C
22、enter. But what would be consequences of extending human longevity or finding a real cure for aging?Researchers have achieved success in【A1】_the aging of flies. But similar results in humans are not encouraging. Other than finding genes that slow down human aging, scientists have identified genes th
23、at appear to【A2 】_it. However, there might be one way of delaying aging, i. e. caloric【A3】_which means following certain diets with few calories. Meanwhile, it is necessary to think about the significance of living longer and how to【A4】_the aging process. Some optimistic people believe that it is po
24、ssible to extend human longevity while others are quite concerned about the【 A5】_of it.Section BNo matter how carefully you plan a trip with a friend, or family member, there will probably be conflicts along the way. Even after the dates, destination, and length of the trip are decided, theres still
25、 the chance that problems could happen on the trip.Here are a few tips to help you solve problems that may come up between you and your travel companion:Plan the trip together: Sometimes one person takes the lead and plans the trip to fit his or her interests. Planning together allows for a more div
26、erse and balanced vacation. Some people want to walk: some people would rather use public transportation. So its important to find out how compatible you are in terms of everything concerned.Find out about lifestyle: Differences in lifestyle can be challenging if they havent been discussed in advanc
27、e. Theres nothing worse than being in the room and awake at 6: 00 a. m. when your companion wants to sleep until noon. Sleep patterns can be very disruptive to people that dont have the same pattern. The same can be said for dietary and other restrictions. Knowing those differences in advance helps
28、people adapt to each other more quickly.Be aware of coping strategies: Ask questions and use your understanding of your companions coping strategieshow they may respond to stressful situations. You can ask your travel companion about his/her best and worst trips. What happened? How did that person r
29、espond? Knowing a little about how your companion deals with difficult situations can be helpful.Compromise: Try to compromise in order to have a good time. Agree to disagree. Do you really want to use your energy feeling anger on your vacation when you should be relaxing and enjoying it? Buy travel
30、 journals for yourself and your travel partners. Writing in journals can be a way to reflect on the trip to relieve some of the frustration that may come up.Take a break: Split up when tensions are high and your interests are different. Be sure to set a time and meeting place and have a backup meeti
31、ng set in case of an unforeseen delay. People tend to feel like they have to stick together when they are together on a trip. But anybody with someone 24 hours a day needs a break from the other person. 61 This passage aims to help travelers solve problems between them and their travel partners.ATUR
32、E BFALSE 62 Lifestyle differences can cause travel problems because all people enjoy sleeping till noon when on vacation.ATURE BFALSE 63 Even though your travel interests are different, you must always stay together with your travel partners.ATURE BFALSE 64 Why do people have to ask their travel com
33、panion about his/her best and worst trips?65 Which way might help relieve the frustration that may come up?Section CKnowing that Mrs. Mallard was afflicted with a heart trouble, great care was taken to break to her as gently as possible the news of her husbands death.She did not hear the story as ma
34、ny women have heard the same, with a paralyzed inability to accept its significance. She wept at once, with sudden, wild abandonment, in her sisters arms. When the storm of grief had passed she went away to her room alone. She refused to have anyone follow her.There stood, facing the open window, a
35、comfortable, roomy armchair. Into this she sank, pressed down by a physical exhaustion that filled her body and seemed to reach into her soul.She sat with her head thrown back upon the cushion of the chair, quite motionless, except when a sob came up into her throat and shook her, as a child who has
36、 cried itself to sleep continues to sob in its dreams.She was young, with a fair, calm face, whose lines indicated repression and even a certain strength. But now there was a dull stare in her eyes, whose gaze was fixed away off in the distance on a patch of blue sky. It was not a glance of reflecti
37、on, but rather indicated a suspension of intelligent thought.There was something coming to her and she was waiting for it, fearfully. What was it? She did not know: it was too subtle and elusive to name. But she felt it, creeping out of the sky, reaching toward her through the wounds, the scents, th
38、e color that filled the air.Now her bosom rose and fell with excitement. She was beginning to recognize this thing that was approaching to possess her, and she was struggling to beat it back with her will, as powerless as her two white slender hands would have been.When she abandoned herself a littl
39、e whispered word escaped her slightly parted lips. She said it over and over under her breath, “ free, free, free! “ The empty stare and the look of terror that had followed it went from her eyes. They stayed sharp and bright. Her pulses beat fast, and the coursing blood warmed and relaxed every inc
40、h of her body.She did not stop to ask if it were or were not a monstrous joy that held her. A clear and exalted perception enabled her to dismiss the suggestion as of little importance.She knew that she would weep again when she saw the kind, tender hands folded in death: the face that had never loo
41、ked except with love upon her, fixed and gray and dead. But she saw beyond that bitter moment a long procession of years to come that would belong to her absolutely. And she opened and spread her arms out to them in welcome.66 Most women were shocked into a_on hearing the news of their husbands deat
42、h, but Mrs. Mallard was not.67 When returning to her room, Mrs. Mallard was pressed down by_both physically and mentally.68 Mrs. Mallards dull stare indicated a_of deep thinking rather than a sign of contemplation. 69 What was Mrs. Mallards first reaction on hearing her husbands death?AShe pulled he
43、rself together with the help of her sister. BShe stayed in her room and refused to meet anyone. C She abandoned herself into grief for a while. DShe couldnt stop weeping and crying. 70 How did Mrs. Mallard feel towards her husbands death at the end?ABitter but relieved. BFearful but relaxed. CDull a
44、nd desperate. DCalm and suspicious. Section DNo Creatures can stride as human beings. They are not physically designed to support and balance a vertical body balanced on two long lower limbs, propelled forward by a foot engineered exclusively for body support and forward propulsion and to do so with
45、 a stride at high-speed locomotion. While other bipeds walk in a similar fashion, human walk is unique. Bipedalism by itself offers no comparison with the distinctive human gait form. And, significantly, no other biped can actually cover more than a tiny fraction of the walking distance that can be
46、sustained by humans.Striding requires a special design of hip, knee, and ankle joints, plus an arched foot, plus long lower-limb bones. These “finishing touches“ demanded extended evolutionary time. Striding provided numerous advantages over the simple stepping gait. For example, the ability to cove
47、r twice the distance with the same number of steps is a definite survival advantage. It also added much speed to running, more height to jumping.None of this would have been possible without, first, a foot equipped to support and balance an erect body and to produce the leverage necessary to propel
48、the body forward in locomotion. The ape foot was not suited for this. A new kind of foot was essential if those hominids were to become full-scale bipeds. Indeed a pair of human feet has one-fourth of all the bodys 206 bones and 244 joints. Why this extraordinary number of bones and joints concentrated in such a small part of the body?(74)Because the intricate network of the many different parts required not only for supporting and balancing a heavy superstructure but to enable