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2020年12月大學(xué)英語(yǔ)六級(jí)閱讀真題以及答案(二)

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tingliketang

2024年09月12日

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英語(yǔ)六級(jí)閱讀真題,不僅強(qiáng)化詞匯與句型理解,更提升閱讀速度與綜合分析能力。實(shí)戰(zhàn)演練,讓考生熟悉題型變化,掌握解題技巧,是沖刺六級(jí)高分不可或缺的寶貴資源。今天,小編將分享2020年12月大學(xué)英語(yǔ)六級(jí)閱讀真題以及答案(卷二)相關(guān)內(nèi)容,希望能為大家提供幫助!

Section A

Directions: In this section,there is apassage woith ten blanks.You are required to select onetord for each blank from a list ofchoices given in a tord bank follooing the passage.Read the passage through carefully before making yourchoices.Each choice in the bank is identifed bya leter.Please mark the coresponding leter for each item on AnswerSheet 2 with a single line through the centre.You may not use any of thewords in the bank more than once.

Virtually every activity that entails or facilitates in-person human interaction seems to be in the midst of a total meltdown as the coronavirus(冠狀病毒)outbreak erases Americans'desire to travel. Amtak says bookings are down 50 percent and cancelations are up 300 percent.Hotels in San Francisco are experiencing  26  rates between 70 and 80 percent.Broadway goes dark on Thursday night.Universities,now emptying their campuses,have never tried online learning on this  27  .White-collar companies like Amazon,Apple,and the New York Times are asking employees to work from home for the  28  future.

But what happens after the coronavirus?

In some ways,the answer is:All the old normal stuff.The pandemic(大流行病)will take lives,  29  economies and destroy routines,but it will pass.Americans will never stop going to basketball games.They won't stop going on vacation.Theyll meet to do business.No decentralizing technology so far—not telephones,not television,and not the intermet—has dented that human desire to shake hands,despite technologists'  30  to the contrary.

Yet there are real reasons to think that things will not return to the way they were last week.Small  31  create small societal shifts;big ones change things forgood.The New York transit strike of 1980 is  32  with prompting several long-term changes in the city,including bus and bike lanes,and women wearing sports shoes to work,The Spanish flu pandemic of 1918 prompted the development of national health care in Europe.

Here and now,this might not even be a question of  33  .It'snot clear that the cruise industry will  34  .Or that public transit won't go broke without  35  assistance.The infrastructure might not even be in place to do what we were doing in 2019.

A)credentials

B)credited

C)cumulative

D)disruptions

E)federal

F)foreseeable

G)predictions 

H)preference

I)scale

J)strangle

K)subtle

L)summoned

M)survive

N)vacancy

O)wedge

Section B

Directions: In thissection,you are going to read a passage with ten statements attached to it.Each statement contains informationgiven in one of theparagraphs.Identif the paragraph from which the information is derived.You may choose a paragraph more than once.Each paragraph is marked with a leter.Ansver the questions by marking the correspondingletter on Answer Sheet 2.

Slow Hope

A)Our world is full of—mostly untold—stories of slow hope,driven by the idea that change is possible.They are'slow'in their unfolding,and they are slow because they come with setbacks.

B)At the beginning of time—so goes the myth—humans suffered,shivering in the cold and dark until the titan(巨人)Prometheus stolefire from the gods.Justas in the myth,technology—first fire and stone tools,and later farming,the steam engine and industry,fossil fuels,chemicals and nuclear power—has allowed us to alter and control the natural world.The myth also reminds us that theseadvances have come at a price:asa punishment for Prometheus'crime,the gods created Pandora,and they gave hera box filled with evils and curses.When Pandora's boxwas opened,it unleashed swarms of diseases and disasters upon humankind.

C)Today we can no longer ignore the ecological curses that we have released in our search for warmth and comfort.In engineering and exploiting and transforming our habitat,we have opened tens of thousands of Pandora's boxes.In recent decades,environmental threats have expanded beyond regional boundaries to have global reach and,mosthauntingly,are multiplying at a dizzying rate.On a regularbasis,we arereminded thatwe are running outof time.Year after year, faster andfaster,consumption outpaces the biological capacity of our planet.Stories ofaccelerated catastrophe multiply.We fear the breakdown of the electric grid,the end of non-renewable  resources,the expansion of deserts,the loss of islands,and the pollution of our air and water.

D)Acceleration is the signature ofour time.Populations and economic activity grew slowly for much of human history.For thousands of years and well into early modern times,world economies saw no growth at all,but from around the mid-19th century and again,in particular,since the mid-20th,the real GDP has increased at an enormous speed,and so has human consumption.In the Middle Ages,households in Central Europe might have owned fewer than 30 objects on average;in 1900,this number had increased to 400,and in 2020 to 15,000.The acceleration of human  production,consumption and travel has changed the animate and inanimate spheres.It has echoed through natural processes on which humansdepend.Species extinction,deforestation,damming of rivers,occurrence of floods,the depletion of ozone,thedegradation of ocean systems and many other areas are all experiencing acceleration.If represented graphically,the curve for all these  changes looksrather like that well-known hockey stick:with litte changeover millennia(數(shù)千年) and a dramatic upswing over the past decades.

E)Some of today's narratives about the future seem to suggest that we too,like Prometheus,will be saved by a new Hercules,a divine engineer,someone who will mastermind,manoeuvre and manipulate our planet.They suggest that geoengineering,cold fusion or faster-than-light spaceships might transcend once and for all the terrestrial constraints of rising temperatures,lack of energy,scarcity of food,lack of space,mountains of waste,polluted water—you name it.

F)Yet,if we envisage our salvation to come from a deus ex machina(解圖之神),from a divine engineer or a tech solutionist who will miraculously conjure up a new source of energy or another cure-all with revolutionary potency,we might be looking in the wrong place.The fact that we now imagine our planet as a whole does not mean that the ?rescue'of our planet will come with one big global stroke of genius and technology.It will more likely come by many small acts. Global heating and environmental degradation are not technological problems.They are highly political issues that are informedby powerful interests.Moreover,if history is a guide,then we can  assume that any major transformations will once again be followed by a huge set of unintended consequences.So what do we do?

G)This much is clear:we need to find ways that help us flatten the hockey-stick curves that reflect our ever-faster pace of ecological destruction and social acceleration.If we acknowledge that human manipulationof the Earth has been a destructive force,we can also imagine that human endeavours can help us builda lessdestructive world in the centuries to come.We might keep  making mistakes.But we will also keep leaning from our mistakes.

H)To counter the fears of disaster,we need to identify stories,visions and actions that work quietly towards a more hopeful future.Instead of one big narrative,a story of unexpected rescue by a larger-than-life hero,we need multiple stories:we need stories,not only of what Rob Nixon of Princeton University has called the?slow violence'of environmental degradation(that is,the damage that is often invisible at first and develops slowly and gradually),but also stories of what I call‘slow hope'.

I)We needan acknowledgement of our present ecological plight but also a language of positive change,visions  of a better future.In The Principleof Hope(1954-1959),Emst Bloch,one of the leading philosophers of the  future,wrote that‘the most tragic form of loss..is the loss of the capacity to imagine that things could bedifferent’.We need to identify visions and paths that wil helpus imagine a different,more just and more ecological world.Hope,for Bloch,has its starting point in fear,in uncertainty,and in crisis:it is a creative force that goes hand in hand with utopian (烏托邦的)‘wishful images'.It can be found in cultural products of the past—in fairy tales,in fiction,in architecture,in music,in the movies—in products of the human mind that contain'the outlines of a better world'.What makes us‘a(chǎn)uthentic’as humans are visions of our*potential".In other words:living in hope makes us human.

J)The power of small,grassroots movements to make changes that spread beyond their place of origincan be seen with the Slow Food movement,which began in Italy in the 1980s.The rise of fast-food restaurants after the Second World War produced a society full of cheap,industrially made foodstuffs.Under the leadershipof Carlo Petrini,the Slow Food movement began in Piedmont,a region of ltaly with a long history of poverty,violence and resistance to oppression.The movement transformed it into a region hospitable to traditional food cultures—based on native plants and breeds of animals.Today,Slow Food operates in more than 160 countries,poor and rich.It has given rise to thousands of projects around the globe,representing democratic politics,food sovereignty,biodiversity and sustainable agriculture.

K)The unscrupulous(無(wú)所顧忌的)commodification of food and the destruction of foodstuffs will continue to  devastate soils,livelihoods and ecologies.Slow Food cannot undo the irresistible developments of the global food economy,but it can upset its theorists,it can*speak differently', and it can allow people andtheir local food traditions and environments to flourish.Even in the United States—the fast-food nation—small farms and urban gardens are on the rise.The US Department of Agriculture provides an Urban Agriculture Toolkit and,according to a recent report,American millennials(千禧一代) are changing their diets.In 2017,6 per cent of US consumers claimed to be strictly vegetarian,up from I per cent in 2014.As more people realise that'eating is an agricultural act',as the US poet and environmental activist Wendell Berry put it in 1989,slow hope advances.

36.It seems some people today dream that a cutting-edge new technology might save them from the present ecological disaster.

37.According to one great thinker,it is most unfortunate if we lose the ability to think differently.

38.Urgent attention should be paid to the ecological problems we have created in our pursuit of a comfortable life.

39.Even in the fast-food nation America,the number of vegetarians ison the rise.

40.The deterioration of the ecological system is acceleratingbecause of the dramatic increase of human production and consumption.

41.It is obvious that solutions must be found to curb the fast worsening environment and social acceleration.

42.Many people believe changing the world is possible,though it may take time and involve setbacks.

43.It might be wrong to expect that our world would be saved at one stroke with somemiraculous technology.

44.It is human nature to cherish hopes for a better world.

45.Technology has givenus humans the power to change the natural world,but we have paid a price for the change.

Section C

Directions: There are 2 passages in this section.Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements.For each of them there are four choices marhed A),B),C)and D).You should decide on the best choice and mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2 with a single linethrough the centre.

Passage One

Questions 46 to 50 are based on the following passage.

Vegetarians would prefer not to becompelled to eat meat.Yet the reverse compulsion(強(qiáng)迫)is hidden in the proposals for a new plant-based “planetary diet.”Nowhere is this more visible than in India.

Earlier this year,theEAT-Lancet Commission released its global report onnutrition and called for a global shift to a more plant-based diet and for“substantiallyreducing consumption of animal source foods.”In countries like India,that call could become a tool to aggravate an already tense political situation and stress already undernourished populations.

The EAT report presumes that“traditional diets”in countries like India include litle red meat, which might be consumed only on special occasions or as minor ingredients in mixed dishes.

In India,however,there is a vast difference between what people would wish to consume and what they have to consume because of innumerable barriers around class,religion,culture,cost, geography,etc.Policymakers in India have traditionally pushed for a cereal-heavy "vegetariandiet" on a meat-eating population as a wayof providing the cheapest sources of food.

Currently,under an aggressive Hindu nationalist government,Muslims,Christians,disadvantaged classes and indigenous communities are being compelled to give up their traditional foods.

None of these concerns seem to have been appreciated by the EAT-Lancet Commission's representative,Brent Loken,who said“India has got such a great example”in sourcing protein from plants.

But how much of a model for the world is India's vegetarianism?In the Global Hunger Index 2019,the country ranks 102nd out of 117.Data from the National Family Health Survey indicate that only 10 percent of infants of 6 to 23 months are adequately fed.

Which is why calls for a plant-based diet modeled on India risk offering another whip with which to beat already vulnerable communities in developing countries.

A diet directed at the affluent West fails to recognize that in low-income countries undermourished children are known to benefit fromthe consumption of milk and otheranimal source foods,improving cognitive functions,while reducing the prevalence of nutritional deficiencies as well as mortality.

EAT-Lancet claimedits intention was to“spark conversations”among all Indian stakeholders. Yet vocal critics of the food processing industry and food fortification strategies have been left out of the debate.But the most conspicuous omission may well be the absence of India'sfarmers.

The government,however,seems to have given the report a thumps-up.Rather than addressing chronic húnger and malnutrition through an improved access towholesome and nutrient-dense foods, the government is opening the door for company-dependent solutions,ignoring the environmental and economic cost,which wll destroy local food  systems.It's a model full of danger for future generations.

46.What ismore visible in India than anywhere else according to the passage?

A)People's positive views on the proposals for a“planetary diet.”

B)People's reluctance to be compelled to eat plant-based food.

C)People's preferences for the kind of food they consume.

D)People's unwillingness to give up their eating habits.

47.What would the EAT-Lancet Commission's report doto many people in countries like India?

A)Radically change their dietary habits.

B)Keep them further away from politics.

C)Make them even more undernourished.

D)Substantiallyreduce their food choices.

48.What dowe learn from the passage about food consumption in India? 

A)People's diet will not change due to the EAT-Lancet report.

B)Many people simply do not have access to foods they prefer.

C)There isa growing popularity of a cereal-heavy vegetarian diet.

D)Policymakers help remove the barriers to people's choice of food.

49.What does the passage say about a plant-based diet modeled on India? 

A)It may benefit populations whose traditional diet is meat-based.

B)It may beanother blow to the economy in developing countries.

C)It may help narrow the gap between the rich and poor countries.

D)It may worsen the nourishment problem in low-income countries.

50.How does the Indian government respond to the EAT-Lancet Commission's proposals?

A)It accepts them at the expense of the long-term interests ofits people.

B)It intends them to spark conversations among all Indian stakeholders.

C)It gives them approval regardless of opposition from nutrition experts.

D)It welcomes them as a tool to address chronic hunger and malnutrition.

Passage Two

Questions 51 to 55 are based on the following passage.

Back in 1964,in his book Games People Play,psychiatrist Eric Beme described a pattern of conversation he called"Why Don't You—Yes But",which remains one of the mostirritating aspects of everyday social life.The person adopting the strategy is usually a chronic complainer.Something is terrible about their relationship,job,or other situation,and they moan about it ceaselessly,but find some excuse to dismiss any solution that's proposed.The reason,of course,is that on some level they don't want a solution;they want to be validated in their position that the world is out to get them.If they can"win"the game—dismissing every suggestion until their interlocutor(對(duì)話(huà)者)gives up in annoyance—they get to feel pleasurably righteous(正當(dāng)?shù)?in their resentments and excused from any obligation to change.

Part of the trouble here is the so-called responsibility/fault fallacy(謬誤) .When you're feeling hard done by—taken for granted by your partner,say,or obliged to work for a half-witted boss—it's casy to become attached to the position that it's not your job to address the matter,and that doing so wouldbe an admission of fault.But there's a confusion here.For example,if I were to discover a newbormat my front door,it wouldn't bemy fault,but it most certainly would be my responsibility. There would be choices to make,and no possibility of avoiding them,since trying to ignore the matter would be a choice.The point is that what goes for the baby on the doorstep is true in all cases: even if the other person is 100% in the wrong,there's nothing to be gained,long-term,from using this as a justification to evade responsibility.

Should you find yourself on the receiving end of this kind of complaining,there's an ingenious way to shut it down—which is to agreewith it,ardently.Psychotherapist Lori Gotlieb describes this as“over-validation”.For one thing,you'll be spared further moaning,since the other person's motivation was to confirm her beliefs,and now you're confirming them.But for another,as Gottlieb notes,people confronted with over-validation often hear their complaints afresh and start arguing back.The notion that they're utterly powerless suddenly seems unrealistic—not to mention rather annoying—so they're prompted instead to generate ideas about how they might change things.

“And then,sometimes,something magical might happen,”Gottlieb writes.The other person “might realise she's not as trapped as you are saying she is,or as she feels.”Which illustrates the irony of the responsibility/fault fallacy:evading responsibility feels comfortable,but turns out to be a prison;whereas assuming responsibility feels unpleasant,but ends up being freeing.

51.What is characteristic of a chronic complainer,according to psychiatrist Eric Berne? 

A)Theyonly feel angry about their ll treatment and resent whoevertries to help

B)They are chronically unhappy and ceaselessly find fault with people around them

C)They constantly dismis others'proposals while taking no responsibility for tackling the problem.

D)They lack the knowledge and basic skills required for sucessful conversations with their interlocutors.

52.What does the author try to illustrate with the example of the newbom on one's doorstep? 

A)People tend to think that one should not be heldresponsible for others'mistakes.

B)It is easy to become attached to the position of overlookingone's own fault. 

C)People are often at a loss when confronted with a number of choices.

D)A distinction should be drawn between responsibility and fault.

53.What does the author advise people to do to chronic complainers? 

A)Stop them from going further by agreeing with them.

B)Listen to their complaimts ardently and sympathetically.

C)Ask them to validate their beliefs with further evidence.

D)Persuade them to clarify the confusion they havecaused.

54.What happens when chronic complainers receive over validation?

A)They are motivated to find ingenious ways to persuade their interlocutor.

B)They are prompted to come up with ideas for making possible changes.

C)They are stimulated to make more complaimts.

D)They are encouraged to start arguing back.

55.How can one stop being a chronic complainer according to the author?

A)Analysing the so-called responsibility/fault fallacy. 

B)Avoiding hazardous traps in everyday social life.   

C)Assuming responsibility to freeoneself.

D)Awaiting something magical to happen.

26.答案:N)vacaney

【解析】空格句指出,舊金山酒店正在經(jīng)歷70%~80%的_____率。結(jié)合上文“疫情暴發(fā)澆滅了美國(guó)人的旅行愿望”“美鐵訂票量下降/退票量上升”可知,空格句應(yīng)意在說(shuō)明“旅游業(yè)蕭條導(dǎo)致酒店經(jīng)營(yíng)慘淡”,再結(jié)合70 and 80 percent這一較高占比可知空格詞應(yīng)傳遞“空房/退訂/下滑/虧損”等負(fù)面語(yǔ)義,故N正確。

27.答案:I)scale

【解析】空格句指出,大學(xué)正在清校,開(kāi)始嘗試此前從未嘗試過(guò)的_____在線(xiàn)學(xué)習(xí)。由上下文“人際互動(dòng)活動(dòng)徹底崩潰”“員工居家辦公”可知,空格句意在說(shuō)明疫情使大學(xué)被迫清空校園,全面開(kāi)啟在線(xiàn)學(xué)習(xí),“on this_____”應(yīng)凸顯線(xiàn)上學(xué)習(xí)“規(guī)模之大/范圍之廣/參與人數(shù)之多”等,故空格詞應(yīng)表示“范圍/規(guī)模/程度”等意,I正確。

28.答案:F)foreseeable

【解析】空格句指出,白領(lǐng)公司要求員工在未來(lái)居家辦公。可見(jiàn),“for the_____future”限定居家辦公的持續(xù)時(shí)間,結(jié)合上文“新冠病毒肆虐,人際互動(dòng)崩塌”可知,在疫情影響下,“居家辦公”這一新型工作模式會(huì)在未來(lái)一段時(shí)間內(nèi)一直持續(xù),空格詞應(yīng)傳遞出這種可預(yù)見(jiàn)性、可預(yù)估性。for the foreseeable future 為固定搭配,表示“(在)可預(yù)見(jiàn)的將來(lái)”,結(jié)合語(yǔ)境即“在受疫情影響的未來(lái)一段時(shí)間內(nèi)”,故F正確。

29.答案:J)strangle

【解析】空格句指出,這場(chǎng)大流行病會(huì)奪去生命、 _____經(jīng)濟(jì)、壞破日常生活,但它終將過(guò)去??梢?jiàn),“_____經(jīng)濟(jì)”應(yīng)與“奪去生命”“壞破生活”為并列關(guān)系,空格詞應(yīng)指向?qū)?jīng)濟(jì)的“抑制/破壞/阻礙”等作用,J正確。

30.答案:G)predictions

【解析】空格句指出,迄今為止,沒(méi)有哪項(xiàng)分散性的技術(shù)削弱了人們握手的欲望,盡管技術(shù)專(zhuān)家們的_____與之相反?!癲e-(否定詞綴)+centralizing(集中的)”暗示這些技術(shù)的設(shè)計(jì)初衷/理念應(yīng)該是使人們分散化(降低人們面對(duì)面交流/握手的欲望),故讓步狀語(yǔ)despite technologists'_____ to the contrary應(yīng)指向技術(shù)專(zhuān)家與前述事實(shí)“分散性技術(shù)未能讓人們停止握手”相反的看法/觀點(diǎn)/預(yù)測(cè)等,G正確。H)preference具有一定干擾性,填入句中看似能夠形成human desire與technologists'preference的對(duì)比(despite/to the contrary),但是句內(nèi)對(duì)比雙方實(shí)為“技術(shù)專(zhuān)家的 ”與“分散技術(shù)并未降低人們握手的欲望這一現(xiàn)實(shí)情況”,即存在理想與現(xiàn)實(shí)之間的差異。

31.答案:D)disruptions 

【解析】第四段②句指出,小的  31  帶來(lái)小的社會(huì)轉(zhuǎn)變;大的  31  (ones回指空31)則導(dǎo)致永久性改變。③句指出,紐約交通系統(tǒng)大罷工  32  促進(jìn)長(zhǎng)遠(yuǎn)變革。④句則具體介紹了1918年西班牙大流感對(duì)歐洲各國(guó)醫(yī)療保健系統(tǒng)發(fā)展的巨大促進(jìn)作用??梢?jiàn),③④句意在以“紐約交通系統(tǒng)大罷工、西班牙大流感”為例說(shuō)明②句后半句“大的  31  則導(dǎo)致永久性改變”這一觀點(diǎn),空31應(yīng)傳遞“社會(huì)重大危機(jī)/問(wèn)題/破壞”等含義,D正確。

32.答案:B)credited

【解析】is  32  with應(yīng)體現(xiàn)“交通大罷工”與“促進(jìn)長(zhǎng)遠(yuǎn)變革”之間的關(guān)系,結(jié)合上文觀點(diǎn)“破壞導(dǎo)致社會(huì)變革”可知,“交通大罷工”為“因”,“促進(jìn)長(zhǎng)遠(yuǎn)變革”為“果”,故is_____with應(yīng)體現(xiàn)因果邏輯,B符合文意,A be credited with B表示“把B歸功于A”。

33.答案:H)preference 

【解析】第五段首句指出,“疫情過(guò)后會(huì)發(fā)生什么,疫情過(guò)后還能不能恢復(fù)到過(guò)去那樣(this所指代內(nèi)容)”甚至可能不是一個(gè)  33  問(wèn)題。②③句則并列指出,不確定郵輪業(yè)會(huì)(不會(huì))  34  ,也不確定公共交通 (會(huì))不會(huì)破產(chǎn)。并列連詞Or提示②③句應(yīng)傳遞相似語(yǔ)義,故空34應(yīng)傳遞“衰敗/消失/存活”等意,M正確。 

34.答案:M)survive

【解析】②③句對(duì)“郵輪業(yè)是否幸存,公共交通是否破產(chǎn)”的探討實(shí)際意在說(shuō)明①句“疫情后的變化(還能不能回到過(guò)去)”不是由人們的主觀意愿決定,而是客觀實(shí)際所向,這不是一道選擇題,空33應(yīng)傳遞“取舍/偏好/意愿”等意,H正確。

35.答案E)federal

【解析】空格句指出,(目前尚不清楚)沒(méi)有_____援助,公共交通會(huì)不會(huì)破產(chǎn)??崭裣戮渲赋?,基礎(chǔ)設(shè)施無(wú)法就位來(lái)做2019年能做的事。結(jié)合常識(shí)“公共交通、基礎(chǔ)設(shè)施均隸屬?lài)?guó)家/政府機(jī)構(gòu),主要仰仗政府財(cái)政補(bǔ)貼”推測(cè)空格詞應(yīng)表“國(guó)家/政府/聯(lián)邦”等意,E正確。

36.[答案]E 

[精析]E段介紹當(dāng)下某些人的技術(shù)(工程師)拯救論“地球工程、超光速飛船等技術(shù)能拯救人類(lèi),助其擺脫全球變暖、能源緊缺等種種問(wèn)題”。試題是對(duì)該段內(nèi)容的同義概述,其中ecological disaster是對(duì) rising temperatures、mountains of waste、polluted water等生態(tài)問(wèn)題的高度概括。

37. [答案]I 

[精析]I段②句指出。未來(lái)哲學(xué)的領(lǐng)軍人物之一布洛赫在《希望的原理》中寫(xiě)道。“最可悲的一種損失……莫過(guò)于想象未來(lái)存在不同可能性的能力的喪失”。試題是對(duì)此的同義轉(zhuǎn)述。其中Acording to one great thinker是對(duì)句中Ernst Bloch,one of the leadingphilosophers of the future,wrote的同義改寫(xiě)。

38.[答案]C 

[精析]C段①句指出“不能再忽視我們?cè)谧非鬁嘏褪孢m過(guò)程中引發(fā)的生態(tài)問(wèn)題”。試題同義轉(zhuǎn)述該句,其中the ecological problems we have created是對(duì)the ecological curscs that we have released這 一比喻性表達(dá)的具象化解釋(由上文B段內(nèi)容可知curses即技術(shù)這個(gè)潘多拉之盒里裝著的災(zāi)難)。

39.[答案]K 

[精析]首先,K段③句以同位語(yǔ)的形式明確“美國(guó)”即是“快餐國(guó)家”,隨后⑤句指出,2017年6%的美國(guó)消費(fèi)者稱(chēng)自己是嚴(yán)格的素食主義者,而2014年這一比例僅為1%??芍囶}是對(duì)上述兩條信息的合理概括,其中the number...is on the rise是對(duì)⑤句6 per cent...up from l per cent的概述性表達(dá)。

40.[答案]D 

[精析]D段⑤至⑧句指出人類(lèi)生產(chǎn)和消耗急劇加速的后果“改變了生物界和非生物界,在整個(gè)自然界引發(fā)反響,使得各種災(zāi)難沿著同樣的曲線(xiàn)加速暴發(fā)”。試題是對(duì)此句群的合理概括,其中 deterioration of the ecological system概括包括Species extinction、deforestation、the degradation of ocean systems在內(nèi)的種種現(xiàn)象,because of正確解讀changed、echoed蘊(yùn)含的因果關(guān)聯(lián)。

41.[答案]G 

[精析]G段①句針對(duì)上段末設(shè)問(wèn)“我們?cè)撊绾问呛谩弊鞒龌卮穑猴@然,我們要找到幫助我們拉平那些反映著我們?nèi)找婕涌斓纳鷳B(tài)破壞與社會(huì)加速步伐的曲棍球曲線(xiàn)的方法。試題是對(duì)該句內(nèi)容的同義轉(zhuǎn)述,其中It isobvious that契合句中This much is clear傳遞出的“顯而易見(jiàn)”之意,curb the fast worsening environment and social acceleration明確句中flatten the hockey-stick curves這一比喻性表達(dá)的具體所指。

42.[答案]A 

[精析]A段先介紹當(dāng)下十分普遍的一種觀念“慢希望”,隨后說(shuō)明其特點(diǎn)“受‘改變是有可能’的這一信念的驅(qū)使,進(jìn)展緩慢,充滿(mǎn)挫折”。試題是對(duì)“慢希望”觀念的同義轉(zhuǎn)述,其中Many people believe契 合①句Our world is full of(表明觀念的普遍性),take time and involve setbacks則是對(duì)*slow'in their unfolding、slow because they come with setbacks所體現(xiàn)的“費(fèi)時(shí)、曲折”的高度概括。

43.[答案]F 

[精析]F段①②句指出技術(shù)(專(zhuān)家/工程師)拯救論不切實(shí)際“不能指望科學(xué)家去創(chuàng)造技術(shù)奇跡來(lái)拯救我們,單憑天才和技術(shù)設(shè)計(jì)出的一個(gè)宏大計(jì)劃難以拯救我們的星球”。試題是對(duì)上述觀點(diǎn)的合理概括,其中It might be wrong to expect對(duì)應(yīng)if we envisage...we might be looking in the wrong place。

44.[答案]I 

[精析]I段⑤句先指出“人類(lèi)心靈產(chǎn)物中蘊(yùn)藏著一個(gè)更美好的世界的輪廓”,⑥⑦句隨后指出 “憧憬自身潛力、生活在希望中,這些使得我們?nèi)说靡猿蔀槿恕?可見(jiàn),三句意在說(shuō)明“懷揣對(duì)美好世界的向往是人之本性”,試題是對(duì)此三句的合理歸納與概括。

45.[答案]B 

[精析]B段②句指出技術(shù)的正面作用“讓人類(lèi)得以改造和控制自然界”,③句轉(zhuǎn)而暗示其負(fù)面效果“使人類(lèi)為此付出代價(jià)”。試題是對(duì)兩句內(nèi)容的歸納概括,其中the change契合③句中these advances的真實(shí)所指“技術(shù)帶來(lái)的對(duì)自然界的改造和控制”。

46.[定位]本題考查印度相比其他國(guó)家的突出之處。由題干關(guān)鍵信息more visible in India定位至首段末句。

[答案]B。首段末句指出:這一點(diǎn)(this)在印度最為明顯。this回指前一句中the reverse compulsion,即與首句“強(qiáng)迫素食者吃肉”相反的“強(qiáng)迫肉食者吃素”??梢?jiàn),印度的突出之處在于人們(概指食肉的人)不愿被迫吃素(即食用植物性食品),故B正確。

47.[定位]本題考查EAT-Lancet委員會(huì)報(bào)告對(duì)印度等國(guó)的民眾的影響。由題干關(guān)鍵詞the EAT- Lancet Commission's report定位至其首次出現(xiàn)的第二段。

[答案]C。第二段①句介紹EAT-Lancct委員會(huì)報(bào)告所呼吁的內(nèi)容,②句指出該呼吁對(duì)印度等國(guó)的影響:使本已緊張的政治局勢(shì)惡化,給本就營(yíng)養(yǎng)不良的人群加壓。C符合后一影響,即加劇人們營(yíng)養(yǎng)不良的問(wèn)題。

48.[定位]本題考查印度的食物攝取狀況。根據(jù)題干關(guān)鍵詞food consumption in India及題目順序定位至第四段(In India...they have to consume...)。

[答案]B。第四段①句指出,由于受階層、宗教、文化等差異的影響,人們想要食用的食物與不得不食用的食物存在巨大差別??梢?jiàn),印度人根本沒(méi)有辦法按照自己意愿選擇自己所喜歡的食物,故B正確。

49.[定位]本題考查“效仿印度的植物性飲食”相關(guān)信息,由關(guān)鍵詞aplant-based diet modeled on India初步定位至第七、八段(a model for the world is India's vegetarianism、a plant-based diet modeledon India)。

[答案]D。第七段首句設(shè)問(wèn)“印度素食主義的典范作用有多大?”,②③句說(shuō)明印度的饑餓問(wèn)題與嬰兒溫飽問(wèn)題嚴(yán)峻。第八段繼而明確效仿印度植物性飲食的危害:進(jìn)一步打擊發(fā)展中國(guó)家本已脆弱的社會(huì)群體。 綜合可知,植物性飲食會(huì)使發(fā)展中國(guó)家的營(yíng)養(yǎng)問(wèn)題惡化,D正確。

50.[定位]本題考查印度政府對(duì)EAT-Lancet委員會(huì)提議的反應(yīng)。由Indian government,the EAT- Lancet Commission's proposals可定位至末段(The government...the report、the government is...It's...)。

[答案]A。末段先指出“印度政府似乎對(duì)EAT-Lancet委員會(huì)的提議贊賞有加”,后介紹這一態(tài)度的影響;政府對(duì)“依靠公司”的處理方案敞開(kāi)了大門(mén),忽視視經(jīng)濟(jì)和環(huán)境成本,破壞當(dāng)?shù)厥称废到y(tǒng),最終危害后代。 可見(jiàn),印度政府不顧提議對(duì)人民的深遠(yuǎn)危害而將其接受,A正確。

51.[定位]本題考查慣性抱怨者的特征,根據(jù)題干中人名Eric Berne以及關(guān)鍵詞characteristic of a chroniccomplainer定位至第一段②至⑤句(...a chronie complainer...)。

[答案]C。第一段②③句指出慣性抱怨者的行為特征:當(dāng)人際關(guān)系、工作或其他方面出現(xiàn)糟糕的事情時(shí),他們便會(huì)一邊喋喋不休地抱怒,一邊卻又找借口拒絕別人提出來(lái)的任何解決方案。⑤句進(jìn)一步指出他們的心理特征:自己的怨艾理所應(yīng)當(dāng),沒(méi)有任何責(zé)任/義務(wù)做出改變。故C正確,選項(xiàng)中dismiss others' proposals、taking no responsibility for tackling the problem同義替換原文dismiss any solution that's proposed、excused from any obligation to change。

52.[定位]本題考查事例的寫(xiě)作目的。由題干關(guān)鍵詞the newborn on one's doorstep定位至第二段④⑤ ⑥句(if I were to discover a newborn...what goes for the baby on the doorstep...)。

[答案]D。第二段①②③句先引出新概念“責(zé)任/過(guò)錯(cuò)謬誤”,即,將“責(zé)任”與“過(guò)錯(cuò)”混為一談,④⑤⑥句再以“家門(mén)口的新生兒”為例指出“責(zé)任”與“過(guò)錯(cuò)”并不對(duì)等,以“過(guò)錯(cuò)并不在我”作為逃避責(zé)任的借口并不可取。可見(jiàn)“新生兒”的事例旨在解釋“責(zé)任/過(guò)錯(cuò)謬誤”這一概念,即“責(zé)任不等于過(guò)錯(cuò)/二者應(yīng)當(dāng)有所區(qū)分”。

53.[定位]本題考查作者就應(yīng)對(duì)慣性抱怨者的建議,由advise...to do定位至第三段(there's an ingenious way to...)。

[答案]A。第三段①②句指出,針對(duì)慣性抱怨者,使其停止抱怨的方法是對(duì)其抱怨表示贊同,可見(jiàn)A正確,Stopthem from going further是對(duì)原文shu it down所含語(yǔ)義的明示。

54.[定位]本題考查慣性抱怨者被過(guò)度認(rèn)可后的反應(yīng)。由receive over-validation定位至第三段。

[答案]B。第三段③句指出慣性抱怨者受到過(guò)度認(rèn)可后的及應(yīng)一:停止抱怨。④⑤句指出反應(yīng)二: 重新審視并反駁這種抱怨,并開(kāi)始想辦法改變現(xiàn)狀。可見(jiàn)B正確,其中are prompted to come upwith ideas對(duì) 應(yīng)⑤句they're prompted..to generate ideas;making possible changes對(duì)應(yīng)how they might change things。

55.[定位]本題考查擺脫習(xí)慣性抱怨的方法,根據(jù)各選項(xiàng)關(guān)鍵詞“責(zé)任/過(guò)錯(cuò)謬誤”“困境”“神奇之事”以及試題命制順序原則可定位至末段。

[答案]C。末段首兩句先承上繼續(xù)說(shuō)明過(guò)度認(rèn)可給慣性抱怨者帶來(lái)的認(rèn)知改變:他們并非深陷困境、除了抱怨外無(wú)計(jì)可施,而是具備主動(dòng)權(quán)、有能力改變現(xiàn)狀。末句隨后揭示這一轉(zhuǎn)變的啟示:只有承擔(dān)責(zé)任才能獲得自由、解脫自我??梢?jiàn)C正確,其中Assuming responsibility to free oneself概括assuming responsibility feels unpleasant,but ends up being freeing暗含的應(yīng)有做法。

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