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6月英語(yǔ)六級(jí)考試預(yù)測(cè)題2

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2015年6月英語(yǔ)六級(jí)考試預(yù)測(cè)題(2)

  寫(xiě)作

2015年6月英語(yǔ)六級(jí)考試預(yù)測(cè)題(2)

  Part I Writing. Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a short essay entitled The Civil Servant Test Craze. Your essay should start with a brief description of the picture. You should write at least 150 words but no more than 200 words.

  1、The Civil Servant Test Craze.

  Your essay should start with a brief description of the picture. You should write at least 150 words but no more than200words.

  _____________________________________________________

  _________________________________________________________

  _______________________________________________________

  聽(tīng)力選擇題

  2、聽(tīng)音頻:

  2-26Directions: In this section, you will hear 8 short conversations and 2 long conversations. At the end of each conversation, one or more questions will be asked about what was said. Both the conversation and the questions will be spoken only once. After each question there will be a pause. During the pause, you must read the four choices marked A., B., C., and D ), and decide which is the best answer. Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 1 with a single line through the centre.

  第1題答案為

  A.She thinks the exercise is easy.

  B.She can't solve the exercise either.

  C.She can help the man with the exercise.

  D.She hasn't tried to solve the exercise yet.

  3、第2題答案為

  A.Buy a newspaper.

  B.Take a trip in the summer.

  C.Put an ad in a newspaper.

  D.Go to the interviewer's office.

  4、第3題答案為

  A.The man must be a very slow driver.

  B.She did a lot of walking in Florida.

  C.The man should have spent less time in Florida.

  D.She got to Florida long before the man did.

  5、第4題答案為

  A.Look for the umbrella in the theater.

  B.Ask the ticket seller about the umbrella.

  C.Buy another ticket for the show.

  D.Go back to her chair to get the umbrella.

  6、第5題答案為

  A.Both of the activities aren't very good.

  B.He has no interest in doing exercise.

  C.They should choose a different activity.

  D.It doesn't matter which activity to choose.

  7、第6題答案為

  A.Wash fewer clothes at a time.

  B.Use a different washing machine.

  C.Try to repair the washing machine first.

  D.Wash his clothes by hand.

  8、第7題答案為

  A.She is going to drop the class too.

  B.She doesn't know how to swim.

  C.It took her a long time to learn to swim.

  D.She teaches swimming.

  9、第8題答案為

  A.He'll give the man a few prescriptions right away.

  B.He'll be away from the office for one or two days.

  C.The woman doesn't need anything for her cough.

  D.The woman should continue taking the medicine.

  10、Questions 10-34 are based on the conversation you have just heard.

  第9題答案為

  A.Her apartment is too far from the campus.

  B.Her apartment needs a lot of repair work.

  C.She's having trouble with the owner of the apartment.

  D.Her roommate won't share expenses.

  11、第10題答案為

  A.Because the girls didn't pay their rent on time.

  B.Because she couldn't find anyone to repair the dishwasher.

  C.Because she had to buy a new dishwasher.

  D.Because paula had some repairs done without her permission.

  12、第11題答案為

  A.Because he has some knowledge of the law.

  B.Because he once had the same problem.

  C.Because he is a friend of the owner.

  D.Because he can bring a lawsuit against the owner.

  13、Questions13-37 are based on the conversation you have just heard.

  第12題答案為

  A.There aren't enough cabinets.

  B.There is too much noise.

  C.Office supplies are taking up space.

  D.Some teaching assistants don't have desks.

  14、第13題答案為

  A.To chat with him socially.

  B.To get help with the course.

  C.To hand in their assignments.

  D.To practise giving interviews.

  15、第14題答案為

  A.Give Jack a different office.

  B.Complain to the department head.

  C.Move the supplies to the storage room.

  D.Try to get a room to use for meetings.

  16、第15題答案為

  A.They'd have to get permission.

  B.Jack wouldn't like it.

  C.She thinks it might work.

  D.Other assistants should be consulted.

  17、Questions17-41 are based on the passage you have just heard.

  第16題答案為

  A.Because of its shape.

  B.Because of its skin.

  C.Because of its size.

  D.Because of its behavior.

  18、第17題答案為

  A.How sea animals manage to exist.

  B.How large sea animals can be.

  C.How frightening the squid is.

  D.How little is known about the sea,

  19、第18題答案為

  A.Why it is difficult to use aerial photographs in research.

  B.Why oceanic research is so limited.

  C.How oceanic research has helped land research.

  D.How fossil remains are obtained from deep sea.

  20、Questions 20-44are based on the passage you have just heard.

  第19題答案為

  A.New varieties of corn have been developed.

  B.The crops need less fertilizer.

  C.Farmers can now monitor crop growth.

  D.Crop yields are much greater.

  21、第20題答案為

  A.It's being drained from Nebraska to Texas.

  B.It's being pumped out.

  C.It's becoming contaminated with oil.

  D.It's becoming much wanner.

  22、第21題答案為

  A.It can be seen from an airplane.

  B.It's most likely polluted.

  C.It's usually a bright green color.

  D.The supply of it may be exhausted soon.

  23、Questions23-47are based on the passage you have just heard.

  第22題答案為

  A.To review what students know about volcanic activity.

  B.To demonstrate the use of a new measurement device,

  C.To explain the answer to an examination question.

  D.To provide background for the next reading assignment.

  24、第23題答案為

  A.They occur at regular intervals.

  B.They can withstand great heat.

  C.They travel through the Earth's interior.

  D.They can record the Earth's internal temperature.

  25、第24題答案為

  A.When the Earth was formed.

  B.The composition of the Earth's interior.

  C.Why molten rock is hot.

  D.How often a volcano is likely to erupt.

  26、第25題答案為

  A.How deep they are.

  B.Where earthquakes form.

  C.How hot they are.

  D.What purpose they serve.

  聽(tīng)力填空 Directions: In this section, you will hear a passage three times. When the passage is read for the first time, you should listen carefully for its general idea. When the passage is read for the second time, you are required to fill in the blanks with the exact words you have just heard. Finally, when the passage is read for the third time, you should check what you have written.

  27、根據(jù)材料,回答27-36題

  Teenagers will be told to "stand up for their elders" on public transport--or risk losing their right to free travel.

  London Mayor Boris Johnson will (26)__________ plans today to make youngsters sign a "(27 )__________pledge" to promise to behave in a (28)__________ manner when travelling in the capital.

  The three-point pledge states that they will give up their seats to the elderly, (29)__________and disabled;refrain from using (30) __________or threatening language; and be courteous and polite to fellow passengers and staff.

  Those who refuse, or are caught behaving in a rude manner, will have their free travel passes (31)__________.

  The plan--a key part of Mr. Johnson's re-election bid--will initially affect the 400,000 ll-to-15-year-olds in London who qualify for free travel cards, but Conservative sources believe the idea could be used across the country.

  A Conservative insider said,"The initiative (32)__________the push to create a Big Society. It is about changing culture and(33) __________around behavior to improve the atmosphere on buses and trains for everyone."

  Speaking before today's launch, Mr. Johnson said he(34)__________ tackle the anti-social behavior of a "minority of youngsters" on public transport.

  "When I was a boy, I was taught to stand up for those less able to," he said. "Youngsters enjoy the privilege of free travel, which is paid for by Londoners, but they have to understand that with that privilege comes responsibility."

  Anyone who abuses this privilege will have it taken away, and will have to earn that right back.

  Teenagers who are found (35)__________ violating the new behavior code will lose their travel passes. They will have to carry out unpaid community work to have them restored.

  26.__________

  27.__________

  28.__________

  29.__________

  30.__________

  31.__________

  32.__________

  33.__________

  34.__________

  35.__________

  選詞填空 Section A

  37、根據(jù)材料,回答37-46題

  Questions 36 to 45 are based on the following passage.

  Culture is the sum total of all the traditions, customs, beliefs, and ways of life of a given group of human beings. In this 36, every group has a culture, however savage, undeveloped, or uncivilized it may seem to us.

  To the professional anthropologist (人類學(xué)家), there is no intrinsic37of one culture over another, just as to the professional linguist there is no intrinsic hierarchy(等級(jí)制度) among languages.

  People once thought of the languages of backward groups as 38 and undeveloped forms of speech,consisting largely of grunts and groans. While it is possible that language in general began as a series of grunts and groans, it is a fact established by the study of "backward" languages that no spoken tongue answers that description today. Most languages of uncivilized groups are, by our most severe standards, extremely complex, delicate, and ingenious pieces of machinery for the39of ideas. They fall behind our Western languages not in their sound patterns or 40 structures, which usually are fully adequate for all language needs, but only in their vocabularies, which41the objects and activities known to their speakers. Even in this department, however,two things are to be noted: 1. All languages seem to42the machinery for vocabulary expansion, either by putting together words already in existence or by borrowing them from other languages and adapting them to their own system. 2. The objects and activities requiring names and distinctions in"backward" languages, while different from ours, are often surprisingly43and complicated.

  This study of language, in turn, 44a new light upon the claim of the anthropologists that all cultures are to be viewed45, and without ideas of rank or hierarchy.

  A. savage

  B. superiority

  C. conceive

  D. transfer

  E. identification

  F.grammatical

  G. reflect

  H. reveals

  I. numerous

  J . independently

  K. exclusive

  L. casts

  M. sense

  N. confidentially

  O. possess

  36.__________

  37.__________

  38.__________

  39.__________

  40.__________

  41.__________

  42.__________

  43.__________

  44.__________

  45.__________

  段落匹配 Section B

  Section B Directions: 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 paragraphs. 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.

  47、根據(jù)材料,回答47-56題

  What If You Could Learn Everything

  A. Imagine every student has a tireless personal tutor, an artificially intelligent and inexhaustible companion that knows everything, knows the student, and helps her learn what she needs to know. "'You guys sound like you're from the future,'" Jose Ferreira, the CEO of the education technology startup Knewton, says. "That's the most common reaction we get from others in the industry."

  B. Several million data points generated daily by each of 1 million students from elementary school through college, using Knewton's "adaptive learning" technology to study math, reading, and other fundamentals. Adaptive learning is an increasingly popular catchphrase denoting educational software that customizes its presentation of material from moment to moment based on the user's input. It's being hailed as a "revolution" by both venture capitalists and big, established education companies."

  C. Ferreira started Knewton in 2008 with more or less the same vision he believes in today: to enable digital technology to transform learning for everyone and to build the company that dominates that transformation. "Look at what other industries the Internet has transformed," he once said."It laid waste to media and is rebuilding it. But for whatever reason, people don't see it with education. It is blindingly obvious to me that it will happen with education. All the content behind education is going to move online in the next 10 years. It's a great shift. And that is what Knewton is going to power."

  D. The recommendation engine is a core technology of the Internet, and probably one you encounter every day. Google uses recommendations: other people who entered these search terms clicked on this page, so we'll show it to you first. Amazon uses them: other people who bought this book also bought that book. The more you use one of these websites, the more it knows about you--not just about your current behavior, but about all the other searches and clicks you've done. In theory, as you spend more time with a site its recommendations will become more personalized even as they also draw on everyone else's interactions within the platform.

  E. Knewton, at base, is a recommendation engine but for learning. Rather than the set of all Web pages or all movies, the learning data set is, more or less, the universe of all facts. For example, a single piece of data in the engine might be the math fact that a Pythagorean triangle has sides in the ratio 3-4-5, and you can multiply those numbers by any whole number to get a new set of side lengths for this type of triangle. Another might be the function of "adversatives" such as "but," "however," or "on the other hand" in changing the meaning of an English sentence.

  F.Ferreira calls these facts "atomic concepts," meaning that they're indivisible into smaller concepts--he clearly likes the physics reference.When a textbook publisher like Pearson loads its curriculum into Knewton's platform, each piece of content--it could be a video, a test question, or a paragraph of text--is tagged with the appropriate concept or concepts.

  G. Let's say your school bought the Knewton-powered MyMathLab online system, using the specific curriculum, say, Lial's Basic College Mathematics Be. When a student logs on to the system, she first takes a simple placement test or pretest from the book, which has been tagged with the relevant "atomic concepts." As a student reads the text or watches the video and answers the questions, Knewton's system is "reading" the student as well--timing every second on task, tabulating (把…列成表格) every keystroke, and constructing a profile of learning style: hesitant or confident? Guessing blindly or taking her time?

  H. Based on the student's answers, and what she did before getting the answer, "we can tell you to the percentile, for each concept: how fast they learned it, how well they know it, how long they'll retain it, and how likely they are to learn other similar concepts that well," says Ferreira. By watching as a student interacts with it, the platform deduces.

  I.The platform forms a personalized study plan based on that information and decides what the student should work on next, feeding the student the appropriate new pieces of content and continuously checking the progress. A dashboard shows the student how many "mastery points" have been achieved and what to do next. Teachers, likewise, can see exactly which concepts the student is struggling with, and not only whether the homework problems have been done but also how many times each problem was attempted, how many hints were needed, and whether the student looked at the page or opened up the video with the relevant explanation. The more people use the system, the better it gets; and the more you use it, the better it gets for you.

  J.In a traditional class, a teacher moves a group of students through a predetermined sequence of material at a single pace. Reactions are delayed--you don't get homework or pop quizzes back for a day or two. Some students are bored; some are confused. You can miss a key idea, fall behind, and never catch up. Software- enabled adaptive learning flips all of this on its head. Students can move at their own speed. They can get hints and instant feedback. Teachers, meanwhile, can spend class time targeting their help to individuals or small groups based on need.

  K. Ferreira is able to work with competitors like Pearson and Wiley because his software can power anybody's educational content, the same way Amazon Web Services provides the servers for any website to be hosted in the cloud. But before it had any content partners, as a proof of concept, Knewton built its own remedial college math course using its software platform. Math Readiness was adopted starting in the summer of 2011 at Arizona State University; the University of Nevada, Las Vegas; and the University of Alabama.

  L.At ASU, students worked through the computer material in Knewton's Math Readiness program on their own or in small groups, with instructors spending face-to-face time working on problem solving, critical thinking, and troubleshooting specific concepts. After two semesters of use, course withdrawal rates dropped by 56 percent and pass rates went from 64 percent to 75 percent. At Alabama, pass rates rose from 70 percent to 87 percent, and at UNLV, where entering students were given the chance to take the course online in the summer before they started college, the percentage who then qualified for college algebra went from 30 percent to 41 percent.

  M. "Before this, I worked on the assumption that all students were at the same place. Now, because they progress at different rates, I meet them where they are," Irene Bloom, a math lecturer at ASU, told an education blog about the pilot program. "I have so much more information about what my students do (or don't do) outside of class. I can see where they are stuck, how fast they are progressing, and how much time and effort they are putting into leaming mathematics."

  N. The Knewton system uses its analytics to keep students motivated. If it notices that you seem to have a confidence problem, because you too often blow questions that should be easy based on previous results, it will start you off with a few questions you're likely to get right. If you're stuck, choosing the wrong answer again and again, it will throw out broader and broader hints before just showing you the right answer. It knows when to drill you on multiplication and when to give you a fun animated video to watch.

  O. It turns out that personalizing in this way can speed up learning. In the first year, 45 percent of ASU students in a 14-week course learned the material four weeks ahead of schedule. Better data is giving more options to the student who didn't succeed as well. Students may not yet know enough to pass the final exam, but a close read of their answers shows that they are making slow and steady progress. "In the past, those students would have dropped out of school," he says. In fact, the vast majority of students placed into remedial math at the nation's community colleges never get their degrees. "Instead, we were able to say, give them another semester and they'll get it. Their whole life has now changed."

  Under the help of the platform, a teacher knows thoroughly about a certain student's study and can see it in detail.

  48、 The result of the Knewton system is that learning can be stimulated by customizing a student's learning style.

  49、 Knewton was founded on the belief that it would lead the industry which helps everyone leam by digital techniques.

  50、 Theoretically speaking, the more a person uses a site, the more individualized recommendations the site can give.

  51、 Adaptive learning casts away the single-paced traditional teaching schedule and help students personalize their study pace.

  52、 According to Ferreira, some facts are too small to be divided into smaller concepts.

  53、 When students are asked to do a placement test or a pretest, Knewton's sysem will analyze them and evaluate their study.

  54、 The Knewton system can analyze students well and thus know how to push them forward.

  55、 Before beginning their study in UNLV, more than 40% of students reached the necessary standard of college algebra by using Knewton's system.

  56、 The novelty of adaptive learning educational software lies in that the materials it presents to users vary according to their input.

  仔細(xì)閱讀 Section C

  Section C Directions: There are 2 passages in this section. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A), B), C) and D ). You should decide on the best choice and mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre.

  57、Questions 57-66are based on the following passage.

  Opinion polls are now beginning to show a reluctant consensus that, whoever is to blame and whatever happens from now on, high unemployment is probably here to stay. This means we shall have to find ways of sharing the available employment more widely. But we need to go further. We must ask some fundamental questions about the future of work. Should we continue to treat employment as the norm? Should we not rather encourage many other ways for self-respecting people to work? Should we not create conditions in which many of us can work for ourselves, rather than for an employer? Should we not aim to revive the household and the neighborhood, as well as the factory and the office, as centers of production and work?

  The industrial age has been the only period of human history in which most people's work has taken the form of jobs. The industrial age may now be coming to an end, and some of the changes in work patterns which it brought may have to be reversed. This seems a daunting thought. But, in fact, it could offer the prospect of a better future for work. Universal employment, as its history shows, has not meant economic freedom.

  Employment became widespread when the enclosures of the 17th and 18th centuries made many people dependent on paid work by depriving them of the use of the land, and thus of the means to provide a living for themselves. Then the factory system destroyed the cottage industries and removed work from people's homes.

  Later, as transport improved, first by rail and then by road, people commuted longer distances to their places of employment until, eventually, many people's work lost all connection with their home lives and the places in which they lived.

  Meanwhile, employment put women at a disadvantage. In pre-industrial times, men and women had shared the productive work of the household and village community. Now it became customary for the husband to go out

  to paid employment, leaving the unpaid work of the home and the family to his wife. Tax and benefit regulations still assume this norm today, and restrict more flexible sharing of work roles between the sexes.

  It was not only women whose work status suffered. As employment became the dominant form of work,young people and old eople were excluded--a problem now, as more teenagers become frustrated at school and more retired people want to live active lives.

  All this may now have to change. The time has certainly come to switch some effort and resources away from the utopian goal of creating jobs for all, to the urgent practical task of helping many people to manage without full-time jobs.

  According to the author, the universal employment has__________.

  A.turned out not to be the best form of jobs

  B.created an alternative form of jobs

  C.built tbe foundation of an economic leap

  D.failed to produce job opportunities for most people

  58、 Modern forms of transportation have greatly encouraged__________.

  A.the phenomenon of deprivation of employees' leisure time

  B.the disconnection between people's work and their family life

  C.the commutation between the working places and employees' homes

  D.people's desire to work far away from where they were born

  59、 It can be inferred from the passage that __________ .

  A.women could have been more productive than men in a proper job system

  B.work in pre-industrial times has been distributed evenly between men and women

  C.paid employment has aroused serious social problems in current society

  D.women have been treated unfairly under the employment system of industrial age

  60、 What is the problem for the young under the employment system?

  A.They are less likely to compete with the aged.

  B.They are much worried about the generation gap.

  C.They axe more likely to suffer from unemployment.

  D.Their academic performances seem useless for job hunting.

  61、 What is the possible change of job forms?

  A.Full-time employment will not be the dominant form of work.

  B.Most people can work at home and for themselves.

  C.The differences between men and women will disappear.

  D.All people get equal job opportunities and equal pay:

  62、Questions62-71 are based on the following passage.

  Blood vessels running all through the lungs carry blood to each air sac (囊), or alveolus(肺泡 ), and then back again to the heart. Only the thin wall of the air sac and the thin wall of a capillary (毛細(xì)血管) are between the air and the blood. So oxygen easily diffuses from the air sacs through the walls into the blood, while carbon dioxide easily diffuses from the blood through the walls into the air sacs.

  When blood is sent to the lungs by the heart, it has come back from the cells in the rest of the body. So the blood that goes into the wall of an air sac contains much dissolved carbon dioxide but very little oxygen. At the same time, the air that goes into the air sac contains much oxygen but very little carbon dioxide. You have learned that dissolved materials always diffuse from where there is more of them to where there is less. Oxygen from the air dissolves in the moisture on the lining of the air sac and diffuses through the lining into the blood. Meanwhile,carbon dioxide diffuses from the blood into the air sac. The blood then flows from the lungs back to the heart,which sends it out to all other parts of the body.

  Soon after air goes into an air sac, it gives up some of its oxygen and takes in some carbon dioxide from the blood. To keep diffusion going as it should, this carbon dioxide must be gotten rid of. Breathing, which is caused by movements of the chest, forces the used air out of the air sacs in your lungs and brings in fresh air. The breathing muscles are controlled automatically so that you breathe at the proper rate to keep your air sacs supplied with fresh air. Ordinarily, you breathe about twenty-two times a minute. Of course, you breathe faster when you are exercising and slower when you are resting. Fresh air is brought into your lungs when you breathe in, or inhale (吸入), while used air is forced out of your lungs when you breathe out, or exhale.

  Some people think that all the oxygen is taken out of the air in the lungs and that what "we breathe out is pure carbon dioxide. But these ideas are not correct. Air is a mixture of gases that is mostly nitrogen ( 氮 ). This gas is not used in the body. So the amount of nitrogen does not change as air is breathed in and out. But while air is in the lungs, it is changed in three ways: ( 1 ) About one-fifth of the oxygen in the air goes into the blood. (2) An almost equal amount of carbon dioxide comes out of the blood into the air. (3) Moisture from the linings of the air

  passages and air sacs evaporates until the air is almost saturated.

  It can be inferred from the passage that oxygen and carbon dioxide __________.

  A.produce energy for breathing

  B.diffuse immediately in the blood

  C.penetrate slowly into the air sacs

  D.travel in opposite ways in the lungs

  63、 When blood travels back to the lungs by the heart,__________.

  A.more oxygen was contained in blood

  B.more carbon dioxide was contained in the blood

  C.less carbon dioxide was contained in an air sac

  D.less oxygen was contained in an air sac

  64、 The movement of breathing can effectively__________.

  A.help the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide in the lungs

  B.prevent the inhaling of excessive carbon dioxide

  C.keep the regular circulation of blood

  D.strengthen the function of breathing muscles

  65、 When we breathe out, the amount of nitrogen__________.

  A.increases a bit because of the exchange of air

  B.reduces a bit because of the exchange of air

  C.remains the same as we breathe it in

  D.keeps the same as that needed in lungs

  66、 The air in the lungs changes through __________.

  A.inhaling some amount of oxygen

  B.the evaporation of moisture

  C.exhaling some amount of carbon dioxide

  D.generating a passage for evaporation

  漢譯英

  Part VI Translation (30 minutes) Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to translate a passage from Chinese into English. You should write your answer on Answer Sheet 2.

  67、香港是僅次于紐約和倫敦的全球第三大金融中心。香港實(shí)行“一國(guó)兩制(one country,two systems)”,以良好的治安、自由的經(jīng)濟(jì)體系及完善的法制聞名于世。作為一個(gè)多元文化中心,香港是全球最富裕、最繁榮、最安全及人均壽命最長(zhǎng)的地區(qū)之一。香港也是世界上重要的經(jīng)濟(jì)中心和航運(yùn)樞紐,有“東方之珠”的美譽(yù)。同時(shí),香港還是全球最受歡迎的旅游勝地之一,旅游業(yè)是香港四大支柱產(chǎn)業(yè)之一,很多知名景點(diǎn)都深受旅客歡迎。

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