题目内容

Part A
Directions: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D . Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.
With the development of science and technology, we know much of glaciers. For all their great diversity of shapes and sizes, glaciers consist of two essential types: valley glaciers, which flow downhill from mountains and are shaped by the constraints of topography, and ice sheets, which flow outward in all directions from domelike centers of accumulated ice to cover vast expanses of terrain. Whatever their types, most glaciers are remnants of great shrouds of ice that covered the earth eons ago. In a few of these glaciers the oldest ice is very ancient indeed: the age of parts of tile Antarctic sheet may be over 500,000 years.
Glaciers are born in rocky wombs above the snow line, where there is sufficient winter snowfall and summer cold for snow to survive the annual melting. The long gestation period of a glacier begins with the accumulation and gradual transformation of snowflakes. Soon after they come to the ground, complex snowflakes are reduced to compact, roughly spherical ice crystals, the basic components of a glacier. As new layer of snow and firn, snow that survives the melting of the previous summer, accumulate, they squeeze out most of the air bubbles trapped within and between the crystals below. This process of recrystallization continues throughout the life of the glacier.
The length of time required for the formation of glacier ice depends mainly upon the temperature and the rate of snowfall. In Iceland, where snowfall is heavy and summer temperature is high enough to produce plenty of melt water, glacier ice may come into being in a relatively short time—for example, ten years. In parts of Antarctica, where snowfall is scant and the ice remains well below its melting temperature year-round, the process may require hundreds of years.
The ice does not become a glacier until it moves under its own weight, and it can not move significantly until it reaches a critical thickness—the point at which the weight of the piled-up layers overcomes the internal strength of the ice and the friction between the ice and the ground. This critical thickness is about 60 feet. The fastest moving glaciers have been gauged at not much more than two and a half-mile per year, and some cover less than 1/100 inch in that same amount of time. But no matter how infinitely small the flow, movement is what distinguishes a glacier from a mere mass of ice.
Which will be the best title for the passage?

A. How Glaciers Come into Being.
B. How Glaciers Move Around.
C. The Classification of Glaciers.
D. The Volume and Shape of Glaciers.

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I am very interested in people, in meeting them and 【28】______ about them. Some of the most 【29】______ people I've met existed only in a writer's imagination, then 【30】______ the pages of his book, and then, again, in my imagination. I've found in books new friends, new societies, new words.
If I am interested in people, others are interested not so much in who 【31】______ in how. Who in the books includes everybody from science-fiction superman two hundered centuries in the future all the way back to the first 【32】______ in history; how 【33】______ everything from the ingenious explanations of Sherlock Folmes 【34】______ the discoveries of science and ways of teaching manners to children.
Reading can make our minds feel pleased , 【35】______ means that it is a little like a sport: your eagerness and knowledge and quickness 【36】______ you a good reader. Reading is 【37】______ , not because the writer is telling you something, 【38】______ because it makes your mind work. Your own imagination works together with the 【39】______ or even goes beyond his. Your experience, 【40】______ his, brings you to the same or different conclusions, and your ideas develop as you understand his.
【21】

A. useful
B. new
C. readable
D. available

听力原文: The Olympic Games are the greatest festival of sport in the world. Every four years, a hundred or more countries send their best sportsmen to compete for the highest honors in sport. More than 6,000 people take part in over 20 sports. For the winners, there are gold medals and glory. But there is honor, too, for all who compete, win or lose. That is the spirit of the Olympics: to take part in is what matters.
The Olympic Games always start in a bright color and action. The teams of all the nations parade in the opening ceremony and march round the track. The custom is for the Greek team to march in first. For it was in Greece that the Olympics began. The team of the country where the Games are being held, i. e. the host country, marches in last.
The runner with the Olympic torch then enters the stadium and lights the flame. A sportsman from the host country takes the Olympic oath on behalf of all the competitors. The judges and officials also take an oath. After the sportsmen march out of the stadium, the host country puts on a wonderful display.
The competitions begin the next day. There are usually more than twenty sports in the Games. The rule is that there must be at least fifteen. The main events are in track and field, but there are a few days before these sports start. Everyday the competitors take part in a different sport: riding, shooting, swimming, and cross-country running. Points are gained for each event. Medals are awarded for the individual winners and for national teams.
More and more women are participating in the games. They first competed in 1900 ,in tennis and golf, which are no longer held in the Olympics. Women's swimming events were introduced in 1912. But it was not until 1928 that there were any track and field events for women. Now, they compete in all but half a dozen of the sports. In horse tiding, shooting, and boat racing, they may compete in the same events as the men.
What is the basic honor in taking part in the Olympic Games?

A. To win medals.
B. To break world record.
C. To win first places.
D. To take pan in the Games.

Why are British employers so afraid of unofficial strikes?

A. Such strikes are against the British law.
B. Such strikes are unpredictable.
C. Such strikes are more difficult to control.
D. Such strikes are very common these days.

What conclusion can be drawn from this passage?

A. Trade unions in Britain are becoming more popular.
B. Most strikes in Britain are against the British law.
C. Unofficial strikes in Britain are easier to deal with now.
D. Employer— worker relations in Britain have become tenser.

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