2011年1月全国自主考试综合英语(一)真题及答案
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别人说话时,请不要插嘴。
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你打算怎么处置这些书?
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女孩子们都想有好的身材是可以理解的。
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这事故导致150人丧生。
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苏州以美丽的园林而闻名于世。
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就这项服务他向我要了20元。
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你应该对你刚才的所作所为感到惭愧。
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你能把这句子译成(改变成)英语吗?
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以前他常走路去上班。
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坐公共汽车去那儿至少要花二个小时。
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The Emotional Bank Account is like a financial bank account in one way: ______, or you can make “withdrawals”.
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In "The Great Idea of Mr. Budd", after Mr. Budd helped the police to catch the murderer, many ladies came to his shop ______.
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According to the doctors, Louise Mallard in "The Story of An Hour" died of heart disease of ______ that kills.
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The writer of "The Trashman" says at the end of the article the society should respect both its economists and ______.
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When Song Strom asked the druggist to give him the poison, the druggist told him that he had given him the poison in ______.
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Special Agent X was assigned to get Cal Richards, who was ______.
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According to the author of "Happiness", it’s ______ that happiness will naturally follow when people become rich and successful.
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In Henry Dround’s funeral, every one had to ______ in order to get Henry’s money.
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In “The Time Message”, we’d better take Sunday as a good day to catch upon ______.
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In "Might Watch", the young Marine sat beside the bed of that old man by ______ all through the night.
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(69)
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(68)
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(70)
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(66)
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(65)
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(67)
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(63)
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(64)
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(62)
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B.根据课文的内容在每个空白处填入一个恰当的词。
It is important that you re-plan your time on a weekly (61) so that you can make certain (62) when necessary. For (63) , before mid-term or (64) exams, you will want to give more time to reviewing. A good plan must be a little flexible so that special projects can be done well. Some solid work each day is (65) than many study hours one day and (66) the next. (67) you work out your schedule, try to include at (68) two study hours each day. This will not only keep the study habit alive (69) also keep you (70) to date on your class assignments.
(61)
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(59)
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(60)
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(57)
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(58)
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(54)
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(55)
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(56)
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A. 从下列单词中选择恰当的词填空,每个词只能用一次。
It dreamed if complain except sunshine
Sooner tell fast before Than down
My old friend, Harrison, had lived in the Mediterranean for many years(51)he returned to England. He had often(52)of retiring in England and had planned to settle (53)in the country. He had no (54)returned (55) he bought a fine house and went to live there. Almost immediately he began to(56)about the weather, for even though it was still summer, it rained continually and it was often bitterly cold. After so many years of(57), Harrison got a shock. He acted as (58)he had never lived in England before. In the end,(59)was more than he could bear. He had hardly had time to settle down when he sold the house and left the country. The dream he had had for so many years ended there. Harrison had thought of everything (60)the weather.
(51)
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(52)
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(53)
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rush
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plight
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yes
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touched
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there
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tea
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through
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play
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pair
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skirt
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car
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noise
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where
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tank
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grow
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chuckle
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drive
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like
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offer
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out
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What is the most important idea in the third paragraph?
- A.Only a small proportion of patients are saved by human part exchangingoperations.
- B.The problem that there aren’t enough human parts for exchanging can never be solve
- C.
- D.Most of the patients in the United States suffer from lung troubles.
- E.Most of the patients died because they couldn’t exchange the needed parts.
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The greater demands for human parts are resulted from the fact that ______.
- A.the techniques of human parts exchanging operation have greatlydeveloped
- B.not only heart and kidneys, but also other parts can be exchanged
- C.the chances of success of such exchange operations are greater than before
- D.many people are rich enough to pay for exchanged parts
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If two patients need the same part, it will be very difficult to decide who should get it because ______.
- A.both the patient and the doctor want to make the final decision
- B.one of the patients families has made much effort in finding the part
- C.both the patients and their families have become desperate
- D.it is such a critical decision which saves one life while killing another
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Passage Two
When Christian Bemard, a South African doctor, performed the first human heart exchange in 1967, the result was a worldwide moral discussion on the rights and wrongs of exchanging parts of the body. Hearts were not the first human parts to be exchanged but, in this case, if someone gave his or her heart, he or she would obviously and necessarily die (or be dead). Kidney exchanges, which were already quite common in 1967, often involved the transfer of a single kidney from a close living relative. The chances of survival of this person were slightly lowered because he or she now had only one kidney and if that kidney became diseased there would not be a healthy kidney in reserve. Nevertheless, he or she would not certainly die.
Since that time, surgical techniques and techniques to help prevent the patient’s bodies from rejecting new parts have developed very quickly. Today, not only hearts and kidneys, but also other parts, which are even more delicate, are exchanged. These developments have led to a far higher proportion of successful operations and this, in turn, has led to a greater demand for exchanges.
- As a result of the heavy demand for new body parts, a new problem has appeared. For example, in the United States there are many people who would survive if lungs were available for exchange. In fact, about 80 percent of them die before lungs suitable for
- A.Because it is the first human heart exchange.
- B.Because he was a South African doctor.
- C.Because people began to discuss if it is humanly correct.
- D.Because many people did not agree to exchange parts of human body.
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As to the exchange of human parts, which of the following statements is not true?
- A.One would be certainly to die if he/she contributed his/her heart.
- B.One would not be much affected although he/she had lost one part ofhis/her body.
- C.One’s chances of survival would become smaller if he/she gave one ofhis/her kidneys.
- D.In 1967, the exchanged kidneys were usually taken from the patients’ relatives.
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None of the proposed solutions to the mystery is really satisfactory because ______.
- A.none of them explains Datchery’s identity
- B.the story is unlike Dickens’s other mysteries
- C.no one knows what Dickens intended
- D.Both B and C
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The article implies that we don’t even know for sure that ______ .
- A.Dickens wrote the novel
- B.Jasperwas Drood’s uncle
- C.Drood was murdered
- D.Chesterton was a writer
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The second paragraph of this article serves to ______.
- A.raise some unanswered questions about the novel
- B.introduce some of the novel’s central characters
- C.suggest some supposed motives for the crime
- D.Both A and B
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Passage One
Charles Dickens’s last novel and his only mystery, The Mystery of Edwin Drood, was left uncompleted when the novelist died, and its possible ending remains a mystery to this day.
Is there really a body hidden in the crypt of Cloisterham Cathedral near London? If so, is it the corpse of young engineering student Edwin Drood? Did John Jasper, Drood’s opium-smoking uncle, murder his nephew? Of what significance is the late appearance in the story of Dick Datchery, a mysterious figure who is evidently in disguise?
Various suggestions have been made as to how Dickens intended to conclude his mystery, and in 1914 there was even a mock trial with John Jasper as the accused. Writer G. K. Chesterton was the judge, and playwright George Bernard Shaw was the foreman of a jury composed of famous authors and lawyers. The jurors brought in a verdict of guilty and Chesterton promptly fined them all for contempt of court!
The most frustrating aspect of forecasting the tale’s conclusion is that it is impossible to prove that any given solution is the one Dickens intended. Even a consultation with the novelist himself might not solve the riddle. A medium once claimed to have contacted Dickens’s spirit and, upon asking him how he was occupying himself in the spirit world, received the disconcerting reply that he was still trying to solve the mystery of Edwin Drood!
The story of Edwin Drood was ______.
- A. written after Dickens’s other novels
- B. written sometime before 1914
- C. set near London
- D. All of the above
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The mystery remains a mystery because ______.
- A.Cloisterham Cathedral doesn’t exist
- B.the suspect died before being tried
- C.the trial was inconclusive
- D.Dickens never finished the story
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The tourists went ______ far that they got lost.
- A.too
- B.such
- C.very
- D.so
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Look, ______.
- A.there he goes
- B.there goes he
- C.he goes there
- D.he there goes
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I don’t mind ______ by bus, but I hate standing in queues.
- A.to travel
- B.traveling
- C.travel
- D.having traveled
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______ my parents could understand me !
- A.Not only
- B.As to
- C.As if
- D.If only
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______ busy he is, he always finds some time to read every day.
- A.No matter what
- B.No matter how
- C.No matter when
- D.No matter where
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There is something wrong with my computer. I’ll have it ______.
- A.repaired
- B.repair
- C.repairing
- D.repairs
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Don’t tell Lao Lin about it, ______ ?
- A.will you
- B.won’t you
- C.can you
- D.can’t you
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We’d better hurry ______ it’s getting dark.
- A.and
- B.but
- C.unless
- D.as
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He claimed ______ that mountain alon
- A.
- B.climbing
- C.to have climbed
- D.to climb
- E.climbed
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It’s unlikely ______ he will became boss in two years.
- A.what
- B.that
- C.which
- D.when
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Since you need the book badly, you might as well ______ a copy though it is expensive.
- A.buy
- B.to buy
- C.buying
- D.bought
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It’s wrong to set children ______ their own mother.
- A.against
- B.for
- C.to
- D.at
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Mary doesn’t like TV plays very much, she only ______ the news and sports programs.
- A.watches
- B.looks at
- C.sees
- D.notices
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I don’t know ______ it is true.
- A.what
- B.whether
- C.or
- D.as
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______ 11:30 yesterday they had already had lunch.
- A.On
- B.At
- C.By
- D.With
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When he ______ now and again, the man repeatedly called for his son.
- A.came with
- B.came to
- C.came up
- D.came down
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Compared ______ advanced countries, we still have a long way to go in this field.
- A.for
- B.at
- C.with
- D.on
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I haven’t got ______ money left.
- A.every
- B.each
- C.many
- D.much
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They ______ that shopping center when I ______ here last year.
- A.were building, was
- B.are building, was
- C.build, was
- D.have built, am
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He didn’t even turn his head when I shouted at him. He ______ a deaf man.
- A.is
- B.should be
- C.must be
- D.must have been