文档视界 最新最全的文档下载
当前位置:文档视界 › 2020年英语六级长篇阅读匹配练习题(1)

2020年英语六级长篇阅读匹配练习题(1)

2020年英语六级长篇阅读匹配练习题(1)
2020年英语六级长篇阅读匹配练习题(1)

2020年英语六级长篇阅读匹配练习题(1)

10 Ways Obama Could Fight Climate Change

[A] One of the biggest surprises of President Barack Obama's inaugural address,on Monday was how much he focused

on fighting climate change, spending more time on that issue than any other. "We will respond to the threat of climate change, knowing that the failure to do so would betray our children and future generations," Obama said. The President pointed out that recent severe weather supplied an urgent impetus for energy innovation and staked the nation's

economic future on responding to a changing climate. "We cannot cede to other nations the technology that will power new jobs and new industries--we must claim its promise," Obama said. '" That's how we will maintain our economic

vitality and our national treasure--our forests and waterways; our croplands and snowcapped (山顶积雪的) peaks. That is how we will preserve our planet, commanded to our care by God. "

so what could the President reasonably do to deliver on that vow? Here are ten of their suggestions:

Sunset coal with new incentives and regulations.

[B] "Provide incentives to phase out the oldest, most polluting power plants," said Robert Jackson, a climate scientist at Duke University. It's already happening, to some degree, as more of the nation transitions to natural gas.

Earth scientist Bill Chameides, dean of Duke's Nicholas

School of the Environment and a former chief scientist at the Environmental Defense Fund, urges the administration to use

its Clean, Air Act authority to promulgate (颁布 )carbon

regulations for existing power plants like it has for new ones: "Doing that will force fuel switching from coal to natural gas. "Invest federal stimulus money in nuclear power.

[C] It's hardly a perfect fuel, as accidents like Japan's Fukushima fallout have shown, but with safety precautions new nuclear plants can meaningfully offset dirtier types of energy, supporters say."Nuclear is the only short-to medium-term way to really get away from fossil fuels," said Peter Raven. President emeritus of the Missouri Botanical Garden. He said the damage done by relentless global warming will far exceed the damage done by faults in the nuclear system.

Kill the Keystone pipeline.

[D] The controversial Keystone XL oil pipeline is up for review again by the White House this year. "The font thing he should do to set the tone to a lower carbon economy is to reject the Keystone pipeline, “said Raymond Pierrehum Bert, a geophysical scientist at the University of Chicago. The pipeline was never going to be a major driver of global emissions, but Pierre humbert and some other environmentalists say that by killing it the President would send a clear message about America's intent to ramp down fossil fuels.

Protect the oceans by executive order.

[E] Land use is complicated, but large swaths of oceans can be protected by executive order. Just as President George W. Bush designated the world's largest marine monument northwest of Hawaii in 2006. Obama could single-handedly protect other areas. National Geographic Explorer-in-

Residence Sylvia Earle said the President should focus on

parts of the Arctic that are under U. S. control, putting

them off limits to energy production, commercial fishing, and mineral exploration. Marine sanctuaries (禁捕区) won't stop climate change, but they can give marine species a better chance of adapting to it by reducing the other man-made

threats the animals face.

Experiment with capturing carbon.

[F] Huge untapped reserves of natural gas and oil make it unlikely that the U. S. will transition away from fossil

fuels in the immediate future. Instead, said Wallace Broecker, geology professor at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty

Earth Observatory, we should attack the atmosphere's carbon surplus directly. "Obama could make available funds to build and test prototype air capture units" to capture and store

CO2, said Broecker. Removing some carbon from the atmosphere could buy valuable time as policy makers and scientists

explore more permanent solutions.

Grow government research for new energy sources.

[G] The Department of Energy has a nimble program that's tasked with innovative energy research—the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy. The ARPA-E funds research in biofuels, transmission,and battery storage, with an annual budget of

$ 275 million. Last year, DOE officials requested at least

$ 75 million more. Increasing funding for ARPA-E, said Rare Pomerance, former deputy assistant secretary of state for environment and development and currently an environmental consultant, "you get new technologies that undercut coal, oil,

and gas. " Plus, he said, yon get a competitive advantage if American researchers uncover the next big idea in new energy.

Tax carbon.

[H] Congress would have to agree, but many climate experts say that the most meaningful way to tackle emissions is to set a price on carbon. "We should be asking people to pay the cost of putting carbon into the atmosphere as they buy the fuel," said Josh Willis, climate scientist and oceanographer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. To gain political support for the idea, Obama would probably have to show that the tax wonld help accelerate technology, grow new industries, and pay down the deficit.

Dial back the federal government's energy use.

[I] With more than I. 8 million employees, $ 500 billion in annual purchasing power, and 500,000 buildings to operate, the federal government has been a leader in reducing energy use since Obama signed a 2009 executive order to cut waste. "I would urge him to keep using the power of government to promote energy conservation," said Syndonia Bret-Harte, an Arctic biologist who studies climate change at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks.

Build a scientific clearinghouse for climate information.

[J] "I advocate for building a better information system on what is happening and why," said Kevin Tren berth, head of the Climate Analysis Section at the U. S. National Center for Atmospheric Research. That involves compiling observations related to climate change from around the world and using the data to refine climate modeling. Think of it as a one-stop,

user-friendly website that clearly demonstrates how weather data from around the globe are influenced by broader shifts

in the planet's climate.

Keep talking. Despite a consensus among top scientists, the world still needs some convincing on climate change.

[K] A CNN poll last week found that just 49 percent of Americans agree that global warming is real and is due to human activities. "The most important thing the President can do is to build on his inaugural comments to heighten the sense of urgency about rapid climate destabilization and clarify its connection to virtually every other issue on the national agenda," said David Orr, environmental studies professor at Oberlin College. That means using the bully clergymen to show how a more volatile climate affects everything from agriculture to transportation to 21st-century warfare.

46. The urge to promulgate carbon regulations is aimed at pushing power plants to replace coal by natural gas.

47. Marine sanctuaries should be preserved because they help sea species adapt to climate alteration.

48. The government should take the responsibility to

raise Americans' awareness about climate change.

49. Many climate experts believe that the most effective way to lower emission is to tax on carbon.

50. Nuclear supporters argue that nuclear system failures are less challenging than global warming.

51. Recent extreme weather made President Obama feel it

is urgent to address climate change.

52. Keystone pipeline should be rejected because it is a signal to reduce fossil fuels.

53. Since Obama signed a 2009 executive order to cut waste, the federal government has taken the lead in saving energy.

54. Lower carbon emission will be most likely to happen

if research in new energy resources succeeds.

55. Compared with turning to new energy, America prefers carbon capture and store as a temporary measure.

46. The urge to promulgate carbon regulations is aimed at pushing power plants to replace coal by natural gas.

译文推动颁布碳法规的目的在于迫使燃料从煤炭转向天然气。

定位由关键词promulgate carbon regulations,coal,natural gas定位到原文划线句。

47. Marine sanctuaries should be preserved because they help sea species adapt to climate alteration.

译文秘海洋禁捕区应予以保留,因为它们能够让海洋生物更好地适合气候变化。

定位关键词 Marine sanctuaries,sea species定位到原文划线句。

48. The government should take the responsibility to

raise Americans' awareness about climate change.

译文秘政府应该承担起责任,增强美国民众对气候变化的理解。

定位由关键词Americans’awareness定位到原文划线句。

49. Many climate experts believe that the most effective way to lower emission is to tax on carbon.

译文气候专家认为解决碳排放问题最有效的方法就是征税。

定位关键词Many climate experts定位到原文划线句。

50. Nuclear supporters argue that nuclear system failures are less challenging than global warming.

译文核能支持者认为核能事故的危害比起世界变暖的危害要小。

定位由关键词Nuclear supporters,less challenging,global warming定位到原文划线句。

51. Recent extreme weather made President Obama feel it

is urgent to address climate change.

译文近期的极端天气让奥巴马总统感到应对气候变化的任务越来越紧迫。

定位由关键词extreme weather,Obama,climate change定位

到原文划线句。

52. Keystone pipeline should be rejected because it is a signal to reduce fossil fuels.

译文重点输油管道项目应该被否决,因为这是减少化石燃料的信号。

定位由关键词Keystone pipeline定位到原文划线句。

53. Since Obama signed a 2009 executive order to cut waste, the federal government has taken the lead in saving energy.

译文自从奥巴马总统在2009年下令减少废气排放之后,联邦政府一直是节能方面的。

定位关键词0bama,2009 executive order,cut waste,lead 定位到原文划线句。

54. Lower carbon emission will be most likely to happen if research in new energy resources succeeds.

译文如果新能源研究成功,碳排放很有可能会獭少。

定位由关键词new energy定位到原文划线句。

55. F)Compared with turning to new energy, America prefers carbon capture and store as a temporary measure.

译文与新能源相比起来,美国更倾向于将碳获取与存储作为临时措施。

定位由关键词carbon capture and store定位到原文划线句。

大学英语六级历年真题阅读理解翻译(2010.6—2017.6)

2010 年6 月六级真题 Passage One 发达国家中只有两个国家不能保证提供用于照料新生儿的带薪休假。去年春天,这两个国家中的一个——澳大利亚——放弃了这种令人质疑的殊荣,建立了自2011 年起开始实施的带薪家庭休假制。在美国这并没有成为新闻,我并不感到意外——现在我们是唯一没有这项政策的富有国家。 美国确实有一个明确的家庭政策,这就是于1993 年通过的《家庭和医疗休假法》。它规定要照料新生儿或处理家庭医疗问题的工人有资格享受时间长达12 个星期的不带薪休假。尽管此法案带来的利益不明显,但当时商务部和其他一些商业团体都极力反对,称其为“政府负责的人事管理”和“危险的先例”。事实上,民主党领袖一直都致力于将能促进工作与家庭关系平衡的措施形成法律条文,但每一次的努力都遭到了商业团体的强烈反对。 正如耶鲁大学法学教授Anne Alstott 所辩解的那样,要肯定父母关爱的作用就要将家庭定义为一种社会商品,从某种意义上讲,社会要为此埋单。在她的书《无路可走:父母对孩子的亏欠以及社会对家长的亏欠》中,她认为父母在生活的多个方面都肩负重担:在谈到孩子的话题时,父母们“无路可走”:“社会希望也需要家长们能不间断地照看好他们的孩子,而且是人类用以开发智力、培养情感和树立道德的那种深度的、亲密无间的照看。社会还希望并需要父母们能坚守这一角色,18 年如一日,如有必要,甚至还可以更长。” 大部分父母出于爱都会照顾孩子,不照顾孩子的父母则会受到公众的处罚。换句话说,父母们所做的一切都是这个国家所密切关注的问题,原因很明显,照顾孩子不仅从道德上来说是迫切的而且对这个社会的未来至关重要。国家在大多数保障儿童福利的家庭法律中都认可了这一点,而父母们在履行社会所强加给他们的、会改变其命运的义务时得到的帮助却甚少。把养育孩子视为个人选择、集体没有责任的做法不仅仅忽视了良好家庭教育所产生的社会效益,而且会抹杀这部分社会效益,因为当今天的孩子成为明天的具有生产力的公民时这部分社会效益会属于整个社会。实际上,据估计父母对孩子投入的价值,包括时间和金钱的投入(包括失去的薪水)相当于国内生产总值的20%—30%。如果这些投入能够产生巨大的社会效益——很明显能产生——那么为家庭提供更多的社会支持所带来的效益将会更加显而易见。 Passage Two 塔夫茨大学公民学习和参与信息研究中心(CIRCLE)一份新的调查显示,现在有比以前更多的年轻人参与投票选举,美国发展中心2008 年的一份调查也表明越来越多的年轻选民和活动家开始支持传统的自由事业。但要看出这些调查数字在现实生活中的意义并非易事。在总统竞选期间,巴拉克·奥巴马以希望和改变为宣传口号组成了不同种族之间和不同意识形态之间人们的联盟。当新一届政府执政下的现实生活步入正轨的时候,有些支持者可能会大失所望。随着国家进一步走入奥巴马执政时代,参与政治的年轻人是会继续支持奥巴马及其施政议程还是会渐行渐远? “O(奥巴马的简称)一代”是《新闻周刊》新开的一个博客,致力于记录那些支持奥巴马的年轻人的生活。“O 一代”的作者们想就上面的问题做出回答。未来的三个月,Michelle Kremer 和其他11 位年龄从19 岁到34 岁不等的奥巴马支持者将会用博客来记录美国社会的主流生活,一个不同之处在于:通过将他们所有的观点和经历与新任总统及其领导下的政府紧密结合,这些博客作者试图开启一场对话,探讨在当今美国,年轻并且在政治方面活跃到底意味着什么。24 岁的Malena Amusa 是该博客的一位作者,也是来自圣路易斯的一位舞者,她将这一项目看做是即时记录历史的一种方式。Amusa 今年春天为了完成其著作前往印度,后来又去塞内加尔教授英语,她和她的朋友一直在谈论奥巴马当政会如何改变他们的日常生活,她希望把其中的一些观点和她的全球性视角写到帖子里。她很兴奋,要看清楚世界,“我不必等上15 年”,她这样解释说。 Henry Flores 是圣玛丽大学的政治学教授,他将年轻一代的政治力量归因于他们对科技的拥护。“网络使他们接触到更多的思想,”他说,“不同地区想法相同的人们就会聚到一起。”这正是“O 一代”博主们所期待的事情。结果可能会出现一群年轻人,就像他们在二战后生育高峰期出生的父母一样,伴随一种强烈的目的感而成长,他们也会改变此前从“X 一代”人身上所继承下来的冷漠形象。由一群普通但有抱负的年轻人来管理博客是个不小的挑战,但“O 一代”的成员能胜任这项任务。

大学英语六级阅读理解专题训练

大学英语六级阅读理解专题训练 2016年下半年英语四六级迫在眉睫,同学们准备得如何了?下面是网提供给大家关于大学阅读理解专题训练,希望对大家的备考有所帮助。 What is it about Americans and food? We love to eat, but we feel 1 about it afterward. We say we want only the best, but we strangely enjoy junk food. We’re 2 with health and weight loss but face an unprecedented epidemic of obesity(肥胖). Perhaps the 3 to this ambivalence(矛盾情结) lies in our history. The first Europeans came to this continent searching for new spices but went in vain. The first cash crop(经济作物) wasn’t eaten but smoked. Then there was Prohibition, intended to prohibit drinking but actually encouraging more 4 ways of doing it. The immigrant experience, too, has been one of inharmony. Do as Romans do means eating what “real Americans” eat, but our nation’s food has come to be 5 by imports—pizza, say, or hot dogs. And some of the country’s most treasured cooking comes from people who arrived here in shackles. Perhaps it should come as no surprise then that food has been a medium for the nation’s defining struggles, whether at the Boston Tea Party or the sit ins at southern lunch counters. It is integral to our concepts of health and even morality whether one refrains from alcohol for religious reasons or evades meat for political 6 . But strong opinions have not brought 7 . Americans are ambivalent about what they put in their mouths. We have become 8 of our foods, especially as we learn more about what they contain. The 9 in food is still prosperous in the American consciousness. It’s no coincidence, then, that the first Thanksgiving holds the American imagination in such bondage(束缚). It’s w hat we eat—and how we 10 it with friends, family, and strangers—that help define America as a community today. A. answer I. creative B. result J. belief C. share K. suspicious D. guilty L. certainty E. constant M. obsessed F. defined N. identify

2019年12月英语六级阅读理解100篇:旅游休闲

2019年12月英语六级阅读理解100篇:旅 游休闲 People traveling long distances frequently have to decide whether they would prefer to go by land. sea, orair. Hardly can anyone positively enjoy sitting in a train for mort than a few hours. Train compartments soon get cramped and stuffy. Reading is only a partial solution. for the monotonous rhythm of the wheels clicking on the rails soon lulls you to sleep. During the day, sleep comes in snatches. At night when you really wish to go to sleep you rarely manage to do so. Inevitably you arrive at your destination almost exhausted. Long car journey are even less pleasant. for it is quite impossible even to read. On motorways you can. at least, travel fairly safely at high speeds, but more often than not, the greater pan of the journey is spent on narrow. bumpy roads which are crowded wich traffic. By comparison, trips by sea offer a great variety of civilized comforts. You can stretch your legs on the spacious decks, play games, swim, meet interesting people and enjoy good food-always assuming, of course, that the sea is calm. If it is not and you are likely to get seasick; no form of transport could be worse. Even if you travel in ideal weather, sea journeys

2015大学英语六级阅读模拟试题及答案

大学英语六级阅读模拟试题及答案 第一篇 A scientific panel convened by the World Health Organization recommended guidelines on Friday for doctors conducting clinical studies of SARS patients. The panel urged doctors to apply the guidelines in analyzing the masses of potentially useful information about various therapies that were collected in this year’s epidemic. Much of that information has not been published or analyzed. “It is a matter of urgency to get better analysis and review,” said Dr. Simon Mardel, a WHO official who led the two-day meeting that ended on Friday. He said thousands of potential therapies and compounds had been tested so far as researchers try to determine treatments for SARS, or severe acute respiratory syndrome. “We recognize that having no treatment for SARS is hindering our ability to control an epidemic in so many ways.” He said. In the epidemic earlier this year, various treatments, like drugs to fight the virus or strengthen the immune system, as well as traditional Chinese medicine, were delivered under emergency conditions, in widely different settings and countries to patients suffering from varying stages of the illness. Those conditions—generally without standardized measurements or controlled situations—have made it hard to interpret results. Standard supportive therapy like nursing, and in severe cases the use of mechanical respirators(呼吸器)to help patients breathe, is the mainstay(主要支持)of SARS care, and helped many patients survive. But doctors still do not know how best to treat SARS patients who have breathing difficulties. Dr. Mardel said. One method is invasive ventilation. A second method involves blowing oxygen into the lungs through a mask. Both carry the risk of transmitting the virus to hospital employees. Without proper analysis, the panel was unable to say definitively which treatment worked best, or which caused the most harm. “There is a lack of shared information,” Dr. Mardel said, noting that a lot of data have not been published. The panel also agreed on guidelines that would allow doctors to conduct quick and safe clinical trials, a process that generally takes years to complete. The world Health Organization, a United Nations agency did not release the guidelines. Dr. Mardel said they were flexible because no one knew where, when and in what setting SARS would return. Experts in many countries have already listed the treatments they want to test, and the health agency is leaving these decisions to individual nations. 1. Guidelines recommended by the scientific panel can be used for _____. A. gathering potentially useful information about various therapies collected B. conducting clinical studies of SARS patients C. determining treatment for SARS D. publishing all the information about SARS

2014年12月大学英语六级长篇阅读匹配1

2014年12月大学英语六级长篇阅读匹配1 It's Time to Pay Attention to Sleep A. After being diagnosed with brain and lung cancer in 2011, Lynn Mitchell, 68, was averaging about an hour of solid sleep a night. Stressed about her treatments, she was paying for it in hours of lost sleep. B. The brain cancer was already affecting her mobility--Mitchell was often dizzy and would lose her balance--but the lack of sleep made things worse. Even walking became increasingly difficult. Exhausted in the mornings, she was practically incoherent (精神恍惚). When her doctors recommend she see a sleep therapist, Mitchell was relieved at how benign it sounded in comparison to the chemotherapy (化学疗法)she had undergone and the gene therapy trial she was undergoing, which had side effects like nausea and fatigue. C. For about nine weeks, Mitchell worked with the sleep therapist to adjust her sleep habits. She went to bed only when she was extremely fired. She quit watching TV in bed. She stopped drinking caffeinated (含咖啡因的) coffee in the evening. She also learned breathing exercises to relax and help her fall asleep. It was all quite simple and common sense, and most importantly, noninvasive and didn't require taking any pills. D. "It's common knowledge that sleep is needed for day to day function," says Dr. David Rapoport, director of the Sleep Medicine Program at NYU School of Medicine. "What isn't common knowledge is that it really matters--it's not just cosmetic." Rapoport has long seen people seek sleep therapy because they're chronically fired or suffering from insomnia, but an increasing number of patients are being referred to his center for common diseases, disorders, and mental health. E. Researchers have known for some time that sleep is critical for weight maintenance and hormone balance. And too little sleep is linked to everything from diabetes (糖尿病) to heart disease to depression. Recently, mounting evidence indicates that sleep plays a role in nearly every aspect of health. Beyond chronic illnesses, a child's behavioral problems at school could be rooted in mild sleep apnea (呼吸暂停). And studies have shown children with ADHD (注意力缺陷多动症) are more likely to get insufficient sleep. A recent study published in the journal SLEEP found a link between older men with poor sleep quality and cognitive decline. Another study shows sleep is essential in early childhood for development, learning, and the formation and retention of memories. F. But to many of us, sleep is easily sacrificed, especially since lack of it isn't seen as life threatening.Over time, sleep deprivation can have serious consequences, but we mostly sacrifice a night of sleep here and there, and always say that we'll "catch up." Luckily, it is possible to make up for sleep debt (though it can take a very long time), but most Americans are still chronically sleep deprived.

大学英语六级阅读理解及答案

Reading Comprehension for CET 6 Passage 1 In the 1962 movie Lawrence of Arabia,one scene shows an American newspaper reporter eagerly snapping photos of men looting a sabotaged train.One of the looters,Chief Auda abu Tayi of the Howeitat clan,suddenly notices the camera and snatches it.Am I in this?he asks,before smashing it open.To the dismayed reporter,Lawrence explains,He thinks these things will steal his virtue.He thinks you're a kind of thief. As soon as colonizers and explorers began taking cameras into distant lands,stories began circulating about how indigenous peoples saw them as tools for black magic.The ignorant natives may have had a point.When photography first became available,scientists welcomed it as a more objective way of recording faraway societies than early travelers' exaggerated accounts.But in some ways,anthropological photographs reveal more about the culture that holds the camera than the one that stares back.Up into the 1950s and 1960s,many ethnographers sought pure pictures of primitive cultures,routinely deleting modern accoutrements such as clocks and Western dress.They paid men and women to re-enact rituals or to pose as members of war or hunting parties,often with little regard for veracity.Edward Curtis,the legendary photographer of North American Indians,for example,got one Makah man to pose as a whaler with a spear in 1915--even though the Makah had not hunted whales in a generation. These photographs reinforced widely accepted stereotypes that indigenous cultures were isolated,primitive,and unchanging.For instance,National Geographic magazine's photographs have taught millions of Americans about other cultures.As Catherine Lutz and Jane Collins point out in their 1993 book Reading National Geographic,the magazine since its founding in 1888 has kept a tradition of presenting beautiful photos that don't challenge white,middle-class American conventions.While dark-skinned women can be shown without tops,for example,white women's breasts are taboo.Photos that could unsettle or disturb,such as areas of the world torn asunder by war or famine,are discarded in favor of those that reassure,to conform with the society's stated pledge to present only kindly visions of foreign societies.The result,Lutz and Collins say,is the depiction of an idealized and exotic world relatively free of pain or class conflict. Lutz actually likes National Geographic a lot.She read the magazine as a child,and its lush imagery influenced her eventual choice of anthropology as a career.She just thinks that as people look at the photographs of other cultures,they should be alert to the choice of composition and images. 1.The main idea of the passage is______________. [A]Photographs taken by Western explorers reflect more Westerners’ perception of the indigenous cultures and the Western values. [B]There is a complicated relationship between the Western explorers and the primitive peoples. [C]Popular magazines such as National Geographic should show pictures of the exotic and idealized worlds to maintain high sales. [D]Anthropologists ask the natives to pose for their pictures,compromising the truthfulness of their pictures. 2.We can infer from the passage that early travelers to the native lands often_________. [A]took pictures with the natives [B]gave exaggerated accounts of the native lands

大学英语六级阅读理解练习及答案

大学英语六级阅读理解练习及答案 导读:我根据大家的需要整理了一份关于《大学英语六级阅读理解练习及答案》的内容,具体内容:下面是我给大家整理的,希望对大家有帮助。Laziness is a sin(罪), everyone knows that. We have probably all had ... 下面是我给大家整理的,希望对大家有帮助。 Laziness is a sin(罪), everyone knows that. We have probably all had lectures pointing out that laziness is immoral, that it is wasteful, and that lazy people will never amount to anything in life. But laziness can be more harmful than that, and it is often caused by more complex reasons rather than simple wish to avoid work. Some people who appear to be lazy are suffering from much more serious problems. They may be so distrustful of their fellow workers that they are unable to join in any group task for fear of ridicule or of having their idea stolen. These people who seem lazy may be ruined by a fear of failure that prevents fruitful work. Or other sorts of fantasies (幻想) may prevent work; some people are so busy planning, sometimes planning great deals of fantastic achievements that they are unable to deal with whatever "lesser" work is on hand. Still other people are not avoiding work; strictly speaking, they are merely procrastinating rescheduling their day.

大学英语六级阅读理解的分数组成

大学英语六级阅读理解的分数组成大学英语六级阅读理解的分数组成 分值占整套试卷的35%满分248.5分考试时间:40分钟 说明: 1、选词填空5% 2、长篇阅读10% 3、仔细阅读20% 妙招之一,我们要扫读全文,确定文章的大概结构。 如何扫读全文呢重点去读文章的第一段,如果各部分有小标题,还要读一下各部分的小标题,如果无小标题,则扫读每段的首句,这样做的目的就是为了把握文章的大意和总体结构,同时也能快速的得出后面主旨题的答案。 妙招之二,要将考查题目与原文相对应。 六级考试与考研英语一样,在题目的设置上呈现出出题顺序与行文顺序一致的规律。最后一题的答案定位信息点一般不可能在第一段或前面几段出现。所以我们按顺序把每一道题目题干中的定位词先划出来,再按段落顺序依次去定位。 那么,何为定位词呢?通常分为两类:第一类是表时间、数字及首字母大写的人名地名等专有名词;第二类是比较长,比较复杂的名词;这里切记,不能用表达中心思想的主题词去定位,因为文章通篇讲的都是它。由于问题顺序和文章行文顺序一致,所以先做第一小题,然后做第二小题,看一道,做一道。千万不要把文章全部看完后再做题,或者全部题目看完后再读文章。

在将题目和文章比对的同时,要善于学会精读重点信息。比如,文中举例处,引语及多个名词并列而不是完整句子的内容,均可略读。此外,要多关注文中的逻辑关系词,对于这些词的把握,有助 于我们精确把握重要信息。通常要注意下面三种逻辑关系: (1)并列、递进关系:and,or,besides,furthermore, what’smore,then,inaddition,moreover,inotherwords; (2)因果关系:asaresultof,onaccountof,asaresult,thanksto,therefore,hence,consequently,because,for,dueto,owingto; (3)转折关系:whereas,however,but,nevertheless,yet,infact; 最后,要学会运用特殊的标点符号,比如冒号,破折号,小括号。这些标点符号的出现就是对前面的内容作进一步的说明。所以,在 阅读文章时,可以跳读这些标点符号后面的信息,从而帮助我们节 省更多宝贵的时间并且更加快速地把握文章的主旨。 妙招之三,精炼原文,学会概括。 1、扩充词汇量 2、学会对六级不同考试题目的理解

2016年12月大学英语六级阅读理解习题

2016年12月大学英语六级阅读理解习题 四六级阅读是一个考验理解能力的部分,但是又是最容易涨分的一个部分,只要童鞋们平时多做练习就可以取得高分。下面是网提供给大家关于大学阅读理解习题,希望大家好好练习。 It is estimated that some seven hundred million people - about half the world's population - are unable to read and write, and there are probably tow hundred and fifty million more whose level of attainment is so slight that it barely qualifies a literacy. Recently the attack on illiteracy has been stepped up. A world plan has been drawn up by a committee of UNESCO experts in Paris, as part of the UNESCO Nations Development Decade, and an international conference on the subject has also been held. UNESCO stresses that functional literacy is the aim. People must learn the basic skills of responsible citizenship: the ability to read notices, newpapers, timetables, letters, pricelists, to keep simple records and accounts, to sort out the significance of the information gathered, and to fill in forms. The major areas of illiteracy are in Asia, Africa, and Central and South America there are at least one hundred million illiterates, comprising eighty to eighty-five per cent of the total population. In Europe the figure is about twenty-four million, most of them in Southern Europe, with Spain, Italy, Portugal, and Yugoslavia heading the list (the United Kingdom has bout seven hundred thousand). 1. The figure of world illiteracy was obtained by ________. a. an committee of UNESCO b. experts in Paris c. an international organization d. none of these 2. Studying carefully the clues in the passage, we learn that the total population of Africa is ________. a. approximately seven hundred million b. approximately one hundred and twenty-five million c. approximately eight or eight point five thousand million d. exactly twenty-four million

英语六级阅读理解训练

英语六级阅读理解训练 18. Australia1 An island country, a whole continent, Australia has a remarkably cohesive personality and onewhich, much to our surprise, is markedly foreign. It is no longer the infant colony, peopled byBritish convicts2 and pioneers, but a maturing, perhaps still somewhat adolescent individual,ruggedly steering a vital new course in life. Australia is a sprawl of rock and desert, fringed with lush valleys, snow fields, coralspectaculars, storm-stabbed cliffs and rolling beaches, a land rich in minerals, colors, curiousflora 3, 230 species of mammals4 , 700 of birds, 400 of reptiles, 70 of amphibia, 2, 200 of fishand 50 , 000 species of insects — and seemingly infinite space . Australia is becoming therichest country in the world, materially. Total area of the continent is about half as big as Europe, or 25 times the size of Britain andIreland. Population is bunched mainly in coastal cities, the biggest of which are capitals of thecountry’s states and the federal capital Canberra5 . Canberra is a model of a planned gardencity and is the seat of a major university. It is smallish in size , but big in importance. Sydney isthe largest city, and commercial capital of the country. Throughout the country, the basic accommodation unit is the motel, a flat prefabricated6sprawl of bedrooms. But prices are reasonable and, most important, the rooms are excellentand equipped usually with air-conditioning, a refrigerator and tea and coffee making facilities.Bath tubs are rare, as Australians prefer the convenience and hygiene of a shower. Porterageand other services are rare , as Australians don’t like doing a job which smacks of7 servility.After all, this is the land of equality and opportunity. 阅读自测 Ⅰ. Are the sesta tements True or False according to the article? 1. Australia is as big as Europe , or 25 times the size of Britain and Ireland. 2. Canberra is notonly the capital but also the biggest city of

相关文档
相关文档 最新文档