1991年1月大学英语六级(CET-6)真题试卷.doc

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1、1991年1月大学英语六级(CET-6)真题试卷16 / 18声明:本资料由 考试吧(E) 收集整理,转载请注明出自 http:/ 服务:面向较高学历人群,提供计算机类,外语类,学历类,资格类,会计类,工程类,医学类等七大类考试的全套考试信息服务及考前培训.1991年1月大学英语六级(CET-6)真题试卷Part I Listening Comprehension (20 minutes)Section A1.A) Excited.B) Pleased.C) Moved.D) Disappointed.(D)2.A) She hasnt been well lately.B) She want

2、s a technician to repair it.C) She feels unhappy without the TV set.D) She wants him to fix it at once.(C)3.A) He often complains about his job.B) He is not interested in office work.C) He likes his job very much.D) He does mind all the overtime.(A)4.A) Her mother did her hair.B) She inherited it.C)

3、 Her mother designed.D) Her hair is modeled.(A)5.A) Allen does twice as much work as the rest.B) Allen will do the assignment in two hours.C) Allen is very careless with his homework.D) Allen works twice as fast as the rest.(B)6.A) The man is looking for a book.B) The woman is a librarian.C) The boo

4、k was of little help to the man.D) The book was of great help to the man.(A)7.A) 6.B) 15.C) 14.D) 29.(D)8.A) Maybe the invitation was too late.B) The mans wife didnt invite Margaret.C) Margaret promised to come, but later she changed her mind.D) Margaret will come any moment.(B)9.A) To go to bed.B)

5、To check her family expenses.C) To stay upstairs.D) To rest for a while.(D)10.A) John is usually late.B) John will not show up.C) John will be there at eight-thirty.D) John is usually on time.(C)Section BPassage One11.A) Some piano pieces.B) Songs sung by African singers.C) A new kind of music.D) Mu

6、sic from different parts of the world.(D)12.A) Tenderness.B) Happiness.C) Love.D) Sadness.(A)13.A) How much people like sad music.B) Why music is an important form of art.C) How music expresses peoples feelings.D) In what way classic music differs from pop music.(D)Passage Two14.A) The way you pursu

7、e it.B) The interest you have.C) The time you can afford.D) The money you spend on it.(B)15.A) Playing tennis.B) Playing cards.C) Collecting coins.D) Collecting stamps.(C)16.A) One can always find time to pursue a hobby.B) A hobby is of particular importance to a political figure.C) The correct choi

8、ce of a hobby depends on ones racial position.D) Everyone should learn how to choose a hobby from Winston Churchill.(B)Passage Three17.A) To train students to be successful scholars.B) To teach students to be good citizens.C) To teach students to work hard.D) To train students to be social workers.(

9、A)18.A) To do better in math and science.B) To compete with each other.C) To obey the teacher.D) To help each other.(C)19.A) Relaxing.B) Boring.C) Tense.D) Serious.(B)20.A) Low scores of the students.B) Teachers impatience.C) Bad behavior among children.D) Heavy course load.(C)Part II Reading Compre

10、hension (35 minutes)Passage OneMerchant and passenger ships are generally required to have a life preserver for every person aboard and, in many cases, a certain percentage of smaller sizes for children. According to United States Coast Guard requirements, life preservers must be simple in design, r

11、eversible, capable of being quickly adjusted to fit the uninitiated individual, and must be so designed as to support the wearer in the water in an upright or slightly backward position.Sufficient buoyancy (浮力) to support the wearer should be retained by the life preserver after 48 hour in the water

12、, and it should be reliable even after long period of storage. Thus it should be made of materials resistant to sunlight, gasoline, and oils, and it should be not easily set on fire.The position in which the life preserver will support a person who jumps or falls into the water is most important, as

13、 is its tendency to turn the wearer in the water from a face-down position to an upright or slightly backward position, with his face clear of the water, even when the wearer is exhausted or unconscious.The method of adjustment to the body should be simple, and self-evident to uninitiated persons ev

14、en in the dark under the confused conditions which follow a disaster. Thus, the life preserver should be reversible, so that it is nearly impossible to set it on wrong. Catches, straps, and ties should be kept to a minimum. In addition, the life preserver must be adjustable to the wide variety of sh

15、apes and sizes of wearers, since this greatly affects the position of floating and the self-righting qualities. A suitable life preserver should also be comfortable to wear at all times, in and out of the water, not so heavy as to encourage to take it off on shipboard while the ship is in danger, no

16、r so burdensome that it hinders a person in the water while trying to swim.21.The passage is mainly about _.A) the uses of life preserversB) the design of life preserversC) the materials for life preserversD) the buoyancy of life preservers(D)22.According to the passage, a life preserver should be f

17、irst of all, _.A) adjustableB) comfortableC) self-evidentD) self-righting(A)23.United States Coast Guard does NOT require the life preserver to the made _.A) with as few strings as possibleB) capable of being worn on both sidesC) according to each wearers sizeD) comfortable and light to wear(A)24.By

18、 “the uninitiated individual” (Para. 1, line 6) the author refers to the person _.A) who has not been instructed how to use a life preserverB) who has a little experience in using a life preserverC) who uses a life preserver without permissionD) who becomes nervous before a disaster(D)25.What would

19、happen if a person were supported by the life preserver in a wrong position?A) The waves would move him backwards.B) The water would choke him.C) He would immediately sink to the bottom.D) He would be exhausted or unconscious.(C)Passage TwoA hundred years ago it was assumed and scientifically “prove

20、d” by economists that the laws of society made it necessary to have a vast army of poor and jobless people in order to keep the economy going. Today, hardly anybody would dare to voice this principle. It is generally accepted that nobody should be excluded from the wealth Western industrialized coun

21、tries, a system of insurance has been introduced which guarantees everyone a minimum of subsistence (生活维持费) in case of unemployment, sickness and old age. I would go one step further and argue that, even if these conditions are not present, everyone has the right to receive the means to subsist (维持生

22、活), in other words, he can claim this subsistence minimum without having to have any “reason”. I would suggest, however, that it should be limited to a definite period of time, lets say two years, so as to avoid the encouraging of an abnormal attitude which refused any kind of social obligation.This

23、 may sound like a fantastic proposal, but so, I think, our insurance system would have sounded to people a hundred years ago. The main objection to such a scheme would be that if each person were entitled to receive minimum support, people would not work. This assumption rests on the fallacy of the

24、inherent laziness in human nature, actually, aside from abnormally lazy people, there would be very few who would not want to earn more than the minimum, and who would prefer to do nothing rather than work.However, the suspicions against a system of guaranteed subsistence minimum are not groundless,

25、 from the standpoint of those who want to use ownership of capital for the purpose of forcing others to accept the work conditions they offer. If nobody were forced to accept work in order not to starve, work would have to be sufficiently interesting and attractive to induce one to accept it. Freedo

26、m of contract is possible only if both parties are free to accept and reject it; in the present capitalist system this is not the case.But such a system would not only be the beginning of real freedom of contract between employers and employees, its principal advantage would be the improvement of fr

27、eedom in inter-personal relationships in every sphere of daily life.26.People used to think that poverty and unemployment were due to _.A) the slow development of the economyB) the poor and jobless peoples own faultsC) the lack of responsibility on the part of societyD) the large number of people wh

28、o were not well-educated(C)27.Now it is widely accepted that _.A) the present system of social insurance should be improvedB) everybody should be granted a minimum of subsistence without any “reason”C) everybody has the right to share in the wealth of the countryD) people have to change their attitu

29、de towards the poor(B)28.The writer argues that a system of social insurance should _.A) provide benefits for the sick, old and unemployedB) encourage people to take on more social obligationsC) guarantee everyone the right to be employedD) provide everyone with the right to a minimum subsistence fo

30、r a certain period(B)29.The word “fallacy” (Para. 2. L. 6) means _.A) doubtB) factC) strong argumentD) wrong belief(D)30.According to the writer, a system of guaranteed subsistence minimum _.A) demands too much from societyB) makes freedom of contract impossibleC) helps people take interest in their

31、 workD) helps bring about changes in the relationship among people(D)Passage ThreeQuestions 31 to 35 are based on the following passage.The newborn can see the difference between various shapes and patterns from birth. He prefers patterns to dull or bright solid colors and looks longer at stripes an

32、d angles than at circular patterns. Within three weeks, however, his preference shifts dramatically to the human face.Why should a baby with so little visual experience attend more to a human face than to any other kind of pattern? Some scientists think this preference represents a built in advantag

33、e for the human species. The object of prime importance to the physically helpless infant is a human being. Babies seem to have a natural tendency to the human face as potentially rewarding. Researchers also point out that the newborn wisely relies more on pattern than on outline, size, or color. Pa

34、ttern remains stable, while outline changes with point of view; size, with distance from an object; and brightness and color, with lighting.Mothers have always claimed that they could see their newborns looking at them as they held them, despite what they have been told. The experts who thought that

35、 perception (知觉) had to await physical development and the consequence of action were wrong for several reasons. Earlier research techniques were less sophisticated than they are today. Physical skills were once used to indicate perception of objects-skills like visual tracking and reaching for an o

36、bject, both of which the newborn does poorly. Then, too, assumptions that the newborns eye and brain were too immature for anything as sophisticated as pattern recognition caused opposing data to be thrown away. Since perception of form was widely believed to follow perception of more “basic” qualit

37、ies such as color and brightness, the possibility of its presence from birth was rejected.31.What does a newborn baby like to see most?A) Bright colors.B) Circular patterns.C) Stripes and angles.D) Various shapes.(B)32.The newborn pays more attention to a human face than any other kind of objects be

38、cause _.A) he sees a human face more often than any other kind of patternB) he has an inherent ability to regard a human being as helpfulC) a human face is the most complex pattern he can seeD) a human face is often accompanied by a pleasant voice(A)33.Contrary to what they believe, mothers have bee

39、n told that newborns _.A) care little about a human faceB) cant track their movementsC) cant see their facesD) can easily perceive brightness(C)34.In earlier researches on the newborns perception, scientists _.A) ignored evidence contrary to their assumptionsB) believed that perception of form comes

40、 before perception of color and brightnessC) opposed throwing away effective dataD) proved that physical skills come after visual perception(C)35.The main idea of the passage is that _.A) research techniques are of vital importance scientific investigationB) the findings of earlier scientific resear

41、chers often prove wrongC) newborns can perceive forms from birthD) more often than not the claims of mothers are reliable(A)Passage FourQuestions 36 to 40 are based on the following passage.Albert Einstein recalled his learning problems philosophically: “My intellectual (智力的) development was slow, a

42、s a result of which I began to wonder about space and time only when I had already grown up. Naturally, I could go deeper into the problem than a child.” And so, 11 years after dismissal from school, young Albert Einstein published the theory of relativity that changed our understanding of the unive

43、rse.No one in this century has been more widely recognized as a genius than Einstein. Yet his problems with early intellectual development and his peculiar gifts cast great doubt on all our conventional ideas about genius, intelligence or “I.Q.” (智商). On the one hand, Einstein showed early defects i

44、n abilities that our mental tests value; on the other hand, his special intellectual faculties went far beyond most definitions of intelligence. Moreover, their growth appears peculiarly gradual, contradicting the popular conception of intelligence as something inborn and fixed. His resolute persist

45、ence and his skills in playing games with ideas were apparently as decisive to his genius as any cutting edge of intellect (智能).These powerful aspects of intelligence that conventional definitions overlook are getting close attention in a new wave of research. This comes after years of earlier studi

46、es which exposed the narrowness of our usual measures of mental ability. Intelligence, it turns out, is multifaceted and marvelous; it includes personal characteristics, creativity skills and intellectual capabilities that show up on no test. What is most exciting is that some of these iii-defined a

47、bilities are possessed by many people. Just knowing about such neglected skills will help us discover and develop untapped (未开发的) potential-in ourselves and in our children.36.This passage is about _.A) the development of Einsteins intellectB) the wide recognition of Einstein as a geniusC) conventio

48、nal ideas concerning geniusD) an insight to the complexity of human intelligence(D)37.According to the passage, when Einstein was at school, he _.A) fell behind other pupilsB) was fond of studying philosophical problemsC) was proud of his own diligenceD) thought more deeply about the problems of space

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