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大学英语复习提纲

大学英语复习提纲-CAL-FENGHAI.-(YICAI)-Company One1《大学英语》复习提纲Part 1 Vocabulary1. We can do without carpets. I prefer _________ wooden floors throughout the house.DA) empty B)bare C) lean D) primitiveA) representatives B) statistics C) victims D) circumstances3. He was ashamed. That feeling __________ , and he was never comfortable in church after that.DA) lingered B) stalked C) saturated D) flourishedwe can catch up with them.CA) growing into B) whipping up C) gaining on D) heading for5. I made _________ use of my spare time, mixing with a lot of different people and practicingmy English.CA) mobile B) fierce C) profitable D) swift6. Certainly in our society teachers don't enjoy the respect that is ___________ to doctors and lawyers. BA) rewarded B) accorded C) designated D) transferred7. The changes our city in the past few years are little short of miraculous. BA) catalogued B) underwent C) inherited D) furnished8. Their heavy commitments do not allow themselves ________ current affairs as fully as theymight wish.AA) put through B) immerse in C) switch on D) settle in9. The woman is a offender and has been arrested five times this year for shoplifting.AA) persistent B) inevitable C) blunt D) dreary10. Any excitement you have at starting a new job is always ____ with a certain amount of fear. AA) mingled B) dotted C) joined D) scarred11.My trip to the small village under the control of the enemy fire was full of delays and difficulties, but I eventually _____________ .DA) got by B) turned it over C) hit the sack D) made it12. For traditional Chinese painters, fame and fortune come late, and it is _________ f or artiststo hold their first exhibitions when they are over seventy years old. CA) hardly common B) less frequent C) not unheard of D) just usual13. When energy is converted from one form to another, some energy is always lost as heat., no energy conversion is ever 100% efficient. BA) In other terms B) In other words C) In another way D) In some way14. While freshmen are considered part of the academic elite, some of them appear to lack common sense ____________ following traffic regulations. CA) coming to B) when coming to C) when it comes to D) when they come to15. A man who is good enough to shed his blood for his country is good enough _______ a fairdeal afterwards. DA) being given B) been given C) given D) to be given16. Because of the mad cow disease, the European Union __________ a worldwide ban on Britishbeef and beef product exports.A) challenged B) charged C) forged D) imposed17. The exhibition at the Shanghai Science and Technology Center __________ s uchendangered animals as the giant panda and the Siberian tiger and describes the work being done to protect them.A) detects B) exploits C) features D)demonstrates18. A computer file is a collection of __________ data, used to organize the storage andprocessing of data by computer.A) electrical B) artificial C) electronic D) genuine19. To protect the environment, scientists and engineers are researching ways to __________electricity more cheaply from such renewable energy sources as the wind and sun.A) generate B) manufacture C) construct D) transform20. In social dancing, the participants dance for their own pleasure rather than for the __________of an audience.A) appreciation B) entertainment C) leisure D) temptation Part 2 Reading ComprehensionPassage 1In the early 1600's, a group known as the Separatists lived in England. They were peoplewho wanted to worship God, study the Bible and pray, but the English laws did not allow them to worship as they desired. They were hunted down, beaten, and locked up.Eventually, they heard about freedom of religion in Holland, and planned to escape. Aftermuch hardship, they were allowed to leave England.Now called Pilgrims, they lived in Holland for 12 years, but left because they couldn't standthe hard life, and couldn't work their own trades. They wanted to find a Kingdom of God for their posterity to practice religion freely. So they hired the Speedwell and the Mayflower to carry them across the Atlantic to a new land in America.The Speedwell had many leaks and had to turn back. The Mayflower took in their passengers, making a total of over 100. They sailed two months and three days, cramped and hungry.On November 11,1620, the Mayflower spotted land. They landed in Province town, Massachusetts. For over a month, they sent men to find the perfect place for them to build their colony. When they finally found a place, they called it Plymouth.Right away they started building homes, knowing winter was near.Unfortunately, a violent storm hit when the houses were not yet finished. The Pilgrims were forced to stay on the cramped Mayflower for their first winter in the new world. When this winter was over, over half of them had died.The Pilgrims eventually made a good friend who helped them. His name was Squanto. He showed them where fish swam, how to hunt deer, and how to plant corn.Squanto was a Native American who was kidnapped earlier in his life and taken to England. This is why he was able to communicate with the Pilgrims.With the help of the Native Americans, there was plenty for everyone to eat that first summer, and also plenty to last for the next winter.The Pilgrims had so much to be thankful for. They gave thanks for good friends, new homes, freedom of religion, and plenty of food in a three-day celebration with their Native American friends.Today we continue the celebration of the Pilgrims and the Native Americans, and call it Thanksgiving.21. The Separatists left England in pursuit of ___________A)wealthB)adventureC)an easier lifeD)religious freedom22. The Pilgrims spend their first winter __________A) in their newly finished housesB)on the ship that carried them across the AtlanticC)celebrating their newly-won freedomD)making friends with the native people23.The Pilgrims learnt to adapt to the new environment _________A) with the help of the nativesB)by imitating the Native AmericansC)by trial and errorD)by learning from their earlier experience in Holland24. How did the Pilgrims get along with the Native Americans?A)They were hostile to each other.B)They kept a distance from each other.C)They were very friendly to each other.D)They learned from each other.25. What is the central idea of this passage?A)The origin of Thanksgiving.B)Religious Freedom.C)Early English settlements in America.D)Hardships experienced by the Pilgrims.Passage 2Recently, one of my best friends Jennie, with whom I have shared just about everything since the first day of kindergarten, spent the weekend with me. Since I moved to a new town several years ago, we have both always looked forward to the few times a year when we can see each other.Over the weekend, we spent hours and hours, staying up late into the night, talking about the people she was hanging around with. She started telling me stories about her new boy friend, about how he experimented with drugs and was into other self-destructive behavior. I was blown away! She told me how she had been lying to her parents about where she was going and even stealing out to see this guy because they didn't want her around him. No matter how hard I tried to tell her that she deserved better, she didn't believe me. Her self-respect seemed to have disappeared.I tried to convince her that she was ruining her future and heading for big trouble. I felt like I was getting nowhere. I just couldn't believe that she really thought it was acceptable to hang with a bunch of losers, especially her boy friend.By the time she left, I was really worried about her and exhausted by the experience. It had been so frustrating that I had come close to telling her several times during the weekend that maybe we had just grown too far apart to continue our friendship, but I didn't. I put the power of friendship to the ultimate test. We'd been friends for far too long. I had to hope that she valued me enough to know that I was trying to save her from hurting herself. I wanted to believe that our friendship could conquer anything.A few days later, she called to say that she had thought long and hard about our conversation, and then she told me that she had broken up with her boy friend. I just listened on the other end of the phone with tears of joy running down my face. It was one of the truly rewarding moments in my life. Never had I been so proud of a friend.26. What word best sums up Jennie's boy friend?A)A drug user.B)A loser.C)A trouble maker.D)A criminal.27. What was the attitude of Jennie's parents towards her relationship with her boy friend?A)They were rather tolerant.B)They were indifferent to it.C)They thought their daughter deserved a better friend.D)They did not allow her to continue it.28. How did the author react to Jennie's relationship with her boy friend?A)She tried her best to dissuade Jennie from continuing it.B)She threatened to break up with Jennie if her advice was ignored.C)She was overcome with pride that Jennie told her about her boy friend.D)She was very angry with Jennie for choosing such a friend29. How did the author feel when Jennie told her she had broken with her boy friend?A)She felt relieved.B)She felt happy and proud.C)She felt frustrated and angry.D)She felt exhausted.30. What message does the author try to convey in this passage?A) The power of true friendship can conquer anything.B) Young people should be careful in choosing their friends.C) Parents should take good care of their children.D) Drugs can destroy innocent young people.Passage 3For Roy Johnson, a senior magazine editor, the latest indignity came after a recent dinner at a fancy restaurant in the wealthy New York City suburb where he and his family live. First the parking valet handed him the keys to his Jaguar instead of fetching the car. Then an elderly white couple came out and handed him the keys to their black Mercedes-Benz. "It took them a while to realize that I was not a valet," says Johnson. "It didn't matter that I was dressed for dinner and had paid a handsome price for the meal, just as he had. What mattered was that I didn't fit his idea of someone who could be equal to him."Such incidents, which are depressingly familiar to African-Americans of all ages, incomes and social classes, help explain why black and white attitudes often differ so completely. A recent survey found that 68 percent of blacks believe racism is still a major problem in America. Only 38 percent of whites agreed.Many Americans find the gulf between blacks and whites bewildering. After all, official segre-gation is a bad memory and 40 years of laws, policies and court decisions have helped African-Americans make significant progress toward equal opportunity. Indeed, a black man born in Harlem could be the nation's next president.But racism persists, unmistakable to every black but largely invisible to many whites. (S2) It is evident in the everyday encounters African-Americans have with racial prejudice and discrimination, like the valet parking incident. Such encounters often strike whites as trivial misunderstandings. But they remind blacks that they We often dismissed as less intelligent, less industrious, less honest and less likely to succeed. Some insults are patently racist; others may be evidence of insensitivity or bad manners rather than racial prejudice. But the accumulation of insults feeds anger."What is amazing to me is the number of whites who express surprise that any of this happens," observes Mary Frances Berry, chairperson of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, who says she has been watched at shopping malls.31. The word "valet" in the first paragraph most probably means _______A)a restaurant ownerB)a driver of expensive carsC)a wealthy-looking gentlemanD)a restaurant employee taking care of the cars of the diners32. Roy Johnson was unfairly treated because _________A)his car was inferior in qualityB)he forgot to wear proper clothesC)he failed to express himself clearlyD)he is black33. From the passage we can learn that _________A)both blacks and whites are bewildered by racismB)examples of racism are common in the USC)some government officials have very bad memoriesD)a black man born in Harlem will be the next US president34. It is implied in the passage that many white people deny the presence of racism in the US becauseA) they tend to regard instances of racism as trivial misunderstandingB)they have never seen any instance of racism in their countryC)they believe that black people are inherently less intelligent and less industriousD)they have always treated black people as their equals35. Judging from the context, the most possible explanation for Mary Frances Berry's beingwatchedat shopping malls is that .A)she was a national celebrityB)she didn't fit people's idea of an Afro-American womanC)many people nowadays are insensitive and rudeD)she is blackPassage 4Add Littleton, Colorado, to the list of cities dazed with grief after a school slaughter. Two students shot and killed 12 other students and a teacher before taking their own lives. The massacre was the largest in the history of this nation. This type of crime didn't exist 10 years ago.Americans should stop acting surprised that these shootings happen in "nicer" neighborhoods. That's the only place they happen. None of the recent school massacres took place at an inner-city campus; they all occurred in smaller towns or suburbs. (S3) These killers haven't been from impoverished or extremely violent families. They don't appear to have been picked on any worse than kids have been for generations. They chose alienation and destruction, and they found the tools to carry out their hate-filled plan.Do not blame schools for these massacres. Schools simply take what they are sent. Question the killers' parents. The parents are supposed to teach their children respect and empathy for others' lives. Parents should help their offspring learn to handle taunt or conflict without resorting to violence.All concerned adults should take a youth's threat to shoot someone as seriously as airport security guards take jokes about bombs. Students must be encouraged to tell teachers if a classmate threatens or jokes about violence. Administrators at schools around the country need to emphasize they will take such reports seriously, and that they will not identify any student who comes forward with such a report.More gun regulations probably won't stop these shootings, but gun owners and sellers must take more responsibility for keeping weapons away from young people. Gun owners should keep their guns unloaded, locked up and hidden away. Most car owners don't leave their keys in the careven when they park in their own garage; gun owners should be at least as careful with weapons.The federal government can't solve this problem. Schools alone can't solve it. More guns won't solve it. Americans must consciously create a culture that makes violence unacceptable. Parents need to stop allowing their children's minds to be polluted with violence. News media need to show more restraint and thought about how and what they report.The Colorado massacre is a national tragedy. More's the pity if Americans do not stop, reflect and vow to make it the last school massacre.36. One common feature of all the recent school massacres is that _________ .A)they have all been carefully planned by hateful youngstersB)the killers have all failed to passed their examsC)they all occur in places that appear to be all rightD)the killers are all from disadvantaged families37. Children are less likely to become killers if ___________ .A)their parents succeed in teaching them respect and empathy for others' livesB)they study hard in school and get high scoresC)teachers stop telling meaningless jokes in classD)they follow the rules set by administrators at schools around the country38. Who does the author think should take the main responsibility for campus shootings?A)School authorities.B)The federal government.C)News media.D)The killers' parents.39. What is the most effective way to prevent school massacre from happening again?A)Reinforcing stricter laws and regulations.B)Introducing security guards onto campus.C)Creating a culture that makes violence unacceptable.D)Keeping weapons away from young people.40. From the passage we can infer that _________ .A)there were a lot of school massacres in inner-cities 10 years agoB)many people turn a blind eye to school massacreC)a youth’s joke about violence is often ignored by other peopleD)Most gun owners like to leave their guns in their carsPart 3 Short Answer QuestionsWe come by business naturally in our family. Each of the seven children in our family worked in our father's store. We started working by doing odd jobs like dusting, arranging shelves and wrapping, and later graduated to serving customers. As we worked and watched, we learned that work was about more than survival and making a sale.One lesson stands out in my mind. It was shortly before Christmas. I was in the eighth grade and was working evenings, straightening the toy section. A little boy, five or six years old, came in. He was wearing a worn-out brown coat. His shoes were dirty and his one shoelace was torn. The little boy looked poor to me — too poor to afford anything. He looked around the toy section, picked up this item and that, and then carefully put them back in their place.Dad came down the stairs and walked over to the boy. His steel blue eyes smiled as he asked the boy what he could do for him. The boy said he was looking for a Christmas present to buy his brother. I was impressed that Dad treated him with the same respect as any adult. Dad told him to take his time and look around. He did.After about 20 minutes, the little boy carefully picked up a toy plane, walked up to my dad and said, "How much for this, Mister""How much you got" Dad asked.The little boy held out his hand and opened it. His hand was creased with wet lines of dirt from clutching his money. In his hand lay two dimes, a nickel and two pennies — 27 cents. The price on the toy plane he'd picked out was $3.98."That'll just about do it," Dad said as he closed the sale. Dad's reply still rings in my ears.I thought about what I had seen as I wrapped the present. When the little boy walked out ofthe store, I didn't notice the worn coat or the single torn shoelace. What I saw was a radiant child with a treasure.41. What did the boy try to do with the little money he had?42. How did Dad in the story treat the little boy?43. How did the boy feel when he left the store?44. What did the author learn from his father's act?45. What did Winston Churchill mean by saying "You make a living by what you get, but you makea life by what you give"Part 4 WritingMy Views on Campus Security (about 130 words)参考答案:Part 1 Vocabulary 16-20 DCCABPart 2 Reading Comprehension21-25 DBACA26-30 BDABA31-35 CADCC36-40 DBCCAPart 3 Short Answer Questions41 To buy a Christmas present for his brother42 With the same respect as he did an adult43 very happy44 One doesn’t work merely for money45 Giving makes your life meaningful。

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