考研英语一真题及答案.docx
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考研英语一真题及答案.docx
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考研英语一真题及答案
2002考研英语一真题及答案
SectionIIUseofEnglish
Directions:
Readthefollowingtext.Choosethebestword(s)foreachnumberedblankandmark[A],[B],[C]or[D]onANSWERSHEET1.(10points)
Comparisonsweredrawnbetweenthedevelopmentoftelevisioninthe20thcenturyandthediffusionofprintinginthe15thand16thcenturies.Yetmuchhadhappened___21___.Aswasdiscussedbefore,itwasnot___22___the19thcenturythatthenewspaperbecamethedominantpre-electronic___23___,followinginthewakeofthepamphletandthebookandinthe___24___oftheperiodical.Itwasduringthesametimethatthecommunicationsrevolution___25___up,beginningwithtransport,therailway,andleading___26___throughthetelegraph,thetelephone,radio,andmotionpictures___27___the20th-centuryworldofthemotorcarandtheairplane.Noteveryoneseesthatprocessin___28___.Itisimportanttodoso.
Itisgenerallyrecognized,___29___,thattheintroductionofthecomputerintheearly20thcentury,___30___bytheinventionoftheintegratedcircuitduringthe1960s,radicallychangedtheprocess,___31___itsimpactonthemediawasnotimmediately___32___.Astimewentby,computersbecamesmallerandmorepowerful,andtheybecame“personal”too,aswellas___33___,withdisplaybecomingsharperandstorage___34___increasing.Theywerethoughtof,likepeople,___35___generations,withthedistancebetweengenerationsmuch___36___.
Itwaswithinthecomputeragethattheterm“informationsociety”begantobewidelyusedtodescribethe___37___withinwhichwenowlive.Thecommunicationsrevolutionhas___38___bothworkandleisureandhowwethinkandfeelbothaboutplaceandtime,buttherehavebeen___39___viewsaboutitseconomic,political,socialandculturalimplications.“Benefits”havebeenweighed___40___“harmful”outcomes.Andgeneralizationshaveproveddifficult.
21.[A]between
[B]before
[C]since
[D]later
22.[A]after
[B]by
[C]during
[D]until
23.[A]means
[B]method
[C]medium
[D]measure
24.[A]process
[B]company
[C]light
[D]form
25.[A]gathered
[B]speeded
[C]worked
[D]picked
26.[A]on
[B]out
[C]over
[D]off
27.[A]of
[B]for
[C]beyond
[D]into
28.[A]concept
[B]dimension
[C]effect
[D]perspective
29.[A]indeed
[B]hence
[C]however
[D]therefore
30.[A]brought
[B]followed
[C]stimulated
[D]characterized
31.[A]unless
[B]since
[C]lest
[D]although
32.[A]apparent
[B]desirable
[C]negative
[D]plausible
33.[A]institutional
[B]universal
[C]fundamental
[D]instrumental
34.[A]ability
[B]capability
[C]capacity
[D]faculty
35.[A]bymeansof
[B]intermsof
[C]withregardto
[D]inlinewith
36.[A]deeper
[B]fewer
[C]nearer
[D]smaller
37.[A]context
[B]range
[C]scope
[D]territory
38.[A]regarded
[B]impressed
[C]influenced
[D]effected
39.[A]competitive
[B]controversial
[C]distracting
[D]irrational
40.[A]above
[B]upon
[C]against
[D]with
SectionIIIReadingComprehension
PartA
Directions:
Readthefollowingfourtexts.Answerthequestionsbeloweachtextbychoosing[A],[B],[C]or[D].MarkyouranswersonANSWERSHEET1.(40points)
Text1
Ifyouintendusinghumorinyourtalktomakepeoplesmile,youmustknowhowtoidentifysharedexperiencesandproblems.Yourhumormustberelevanttotheaudienceandshouldhelptoshowthemthatyouareoneofthemorthatyouunderstandtheirsituationandareinsympathywiththeirpointofview.Dependingonwhomyouareaddressing,theproblemswillbedifferent.Ifyouaretalkingtoagroupofmanagers,youmayrefertothedisorganizedmethodsoftheirsecretaries;alternativelyifyouareaddressingsecretaries,youmaywanttocommentontheirdisorganizedbosses.
Hereisanexample,whichIheardatanurses’convention,ofastorywhichworkswellbecausetheaudienceallsharedthesameviewofdoctors.AmanarrivesinheavenandisbeingshownaroundbySt.Peter.Heseeswonderfulaccommodations,beautifulgardens,sunnyweather,andsoon.Everyoneisverypeaceful,politeandfriendlyuntil,waitinginalineforlunch,thenewarrivalissuddenlypushedasidebyamaninawhitecoat,whorushestotheheadoftheline,grabshisfoodandstompsovertoatablebyhimself.“Whoisthat?
”thenewarrivalaskedSt.Peter.“Oh,that’sGod,”camethereply,“butsometimeshethinkshe’sadoctor.”
Ifyouarepartofthegroup,whichyouareaddressing,youwillbeinapositiontoknowtheexperiencesandproblemswhicharecommontoallofyouandit’llbeappropriateforyoutomakeapassingremarkabouttheinedib
lecanteenfoodorthechairman’snotoriousbadtasteinties.Withotheraudiencesyoumustn’tattempttocutinwithhumorastheywillresentanoutsidermakingdisparagingremarksabouttheircanteenortheirchairman.YouwillbeonsafergroundifyousticktoscapegoatslikethePostOfficeorthetelephonesystem.
Ifyoufeelawkwardbeinghumorous,youmustpracticesothatitbecomesmorenatural.Includeafewcasualandapparentlyoff-the-cuffremarkswhichyoucandeliverinarelaxedandunforcedmanner.Oftenit’sthedeliverywhichcausestheaudiencetosmile,sospeakslowlyandrememberthataraisedeyebroworanunbelievinglookmayhelptoshowthatyouaremakingalight-heartedremark.
Lookforthehumor.Itoftencomesfromtheunexpected.Atwistonafamiliarquote“Ifatfirstyoudon’tsucceed,giveup”oraplayonwordsoronasituation.Searchforexaggerationandunderstatements.Lookatyourtalkandpickoutafewwordsorsentenceswhichyoucanturnaboutandinjectwithhumor.
41.Tomakeyourhumorwork,youshould________________________.
[A]takeadvantageofdifferentkindsofaudience
[B]makefunofthedisorganizedpeople
[C]addressdifferentproblemstodifferentpeople
[D]showsympathyforyourlisteners
42.Thejokeaboutdoctorsimpliesthat,intheeyesofnurses,theyare________________________.
[A]impolitetonewarrivals
[B]veryconsciousoftheirgodlikerole
[C]entitledtosomeprivileges
[D]verybusyevenduringlunchhours
43.Itcanbeinferredfromthetextthatpublicservices________________________.
[A]havebenefitedmanypeople
[B]arethefocusofpublicattention
[C]areaninappropriatesubjectforhumor
[D]haveoftenbeenthelaughingstock
44.Toachievethedesiredresult,humorousstoriesshouldbedelivered________________________.
[A]inwell-wordedlanguage
[B]asawkwardlyaspossible
[C]inexaggeratedstatements
[D]ascasuallyaspossible
45.Thebesttitleforthetextmaybe________________________.
[A]UseHumorEffectively
[B]VariousKindsofHumor
[C]AddHumortoSpeech
[D]DifferentHumorStrategies
Text2
Sincethedawnofhumaningenuity,peoplehavedevisedevermorecunningtoolstocopewithworkthatisdangerous,boring,burdensome,orjustplainnasty.Thatcompulsionhasresultedinrobotics--thescienceofconferringvarioushumancapabilitiesonmachines.Andifscientistshaveyettocreatethemechanicalversionofsciencefiction,theyhavebeguntocomeclose.
Asaresult,themodernworldisincreasinglypopulatedbyintelligentgizmoswhosepresencewebarelynoticebutwhoseuniversalexistencehasremovedmuchhumanlabor.Ourfactorieshumtotherhythmofrobotassemblyarms.Ourbankingisdoneatautomatedtellerterminalsthatthankuswithmechanicalpolitenessforthetransaction.Oursubwaytrainsarecontrolledbytirelessrobot-drivers.Andthankstothecontinualminiaturizationofelectronicsandmicro-mechanics,therearealreadyrobotsystemsthatcanperformsomekindsofbrainandbonesurgerywithsubmillimeteraccuracy--fargreaterprecisionthanhighlyskilledphysicianscanachievewiththeirhandsalone.
Butifrobotsaretoreachthenextstageoflaborsavingutility,theywillhavetooperatewithlesshumansupervisionandbeabletomakeatleastafewdecisionsforthemselves--goalsthatposearealchallenge.“Whileweknowhowtotellarobottohandleaspecificerror,”saysDaveLavery,managerofaroboticsprogramatNASA,“wecan’tyetgivearobotenough‘commonsense’toreliablyinteractwithadynamicworld.”
Indeedthequestfortrueartificialintelligencehasproducedverymixedresults.Despiteaspellofinitialoptimisminthe1960sand1970swhenitappearedthattransistorcircuitsandmicroprocessorsmightbeabletocopytheactionofthehumanbrainbytheyear2010,researcherslatelyhavebeguntoextendthatforecastbydecadesifnotcenturies.
Whattheyfound,inattemptingtomodelthought,isthatthehumanbrain’sroughlyonehundredbillionnervecellsaremuchmoretalented--andhumanperceptionfarmorecomplicated--thanpreviouslyimagined.Theyhavebuiltrobotsthatcanrecognizetheerrorofamachinepanelbyafractionofamillimeterinacontrolledfactoryenvironment.Butthehumanmindcanglimpsearapidlychangingsceneandimmediatelydisregardthe98percentthatisirrelevant,instantaneouslyfocusingonthemonkeyatthesideofawindingforestroadorthesinglesuspiciousfaceinabigcrowd.ThemostadvancedcomputersystemsonEarthcan’tapproachthatkindofability,andneuroscientistsstilldon’tknowquitehowwedoit.
46.Humaningenuitywasinitiallydemonstratedin________________________.
[A]theuseofmachinestoproducesciencefiction
[B]thewideuseofmachinesinmanufacturingindustry
[C]theinventionoftoolsfordifficultanddangerouswork
[D]theelite’scunningtacklingofdangerousandboringwork
47.Theword“gizmos”(Line1,Paragraph2)mostprobablymeans________________________.
[A]programs
[B]experts
[C]devices
[D]creatures
48.Accordingtothetext,
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