英语听力汇总   |   2023年6月大学英语四级阅读真题以及答案(二)

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更新日期:2024-07-16浏览次数:1907次所属教程:英语四级阅读

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阅读真题

参考答案

英语四级阅读,作为大学英语能力的重要评估指标,不仅检验了学生对词汇、语法的掌握,更考察了其阅读理解和信息筛选的能力。在全球化背景下,提升这一能力对于拓宽视野、增进跨文化交流至关重要。今天,小编将分享2023年6月大学英语四级阅读真题以及答案(卷二),希望能为大家提供帮助!

Section A

Directions: In this section,there is a passage with ten blanks.You are required to select one word foreach blank from a list of choices given in a word bank following the passage.Read the passage through carefully beforemaking your choices.Each choice in the bank is identified by a letter.Please mark the corresponding letter for each item on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre.You may not use any of the words in the bank more than once.

Morocco is responding to increasing energy demandsby setting up one of the largest solar plants in the world.

The Noor solar power station is  26  in the city of Ouarzazate and,once completed,will generate 580 million watts of electricity.The World Bank estimates it will serve 1.1 million people.It's  27  to be completed soon.

Morocco's current energy comes  28  from imports.The nation hopes to get 50 percent of its energy from  renewable sources by 2030.With demand for energy  29  at an annual rate of 7 percent,the new solar plant could be a  30  part of that goal.

“This makes Morocco a big  31  in the field of solar energy in the Arab region and the African continent.It could also be a forerunner for many other countries in the world that  32  on foreign imports of energy,”said Ali Haji,a solar energy specialist and engineering professor.

Experts believe that the Middle East and North Africa have huge  33  for solar energyprojects. This is  partly because of adequate sunlight and partly because technology has become more  34  in the region.

“The last few years have seen a realization of  35  how competitive solar technologies can be,”said Michael Taylor,a senior analyst at the International Renewable Energy Agency.

A)affordable    I)mostly

B)ancestor     J)operating

C)crucial      K)perhaps

D)depend       L)pioneer

E)initia       M)potential

F)insist       N)rising

G)just        O)scheduled

H)located

Section B

Directions: In this section,you are going to read a pasage with ten statements attached to it.Each statement  contains information given in one of the paragraphs.Identify the panagraph from which the informationis  derived.You may choose a paragraph more than once.Each paragraph is marked with a letter.Answer the questions bymarkingthe corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2.

New Formula One Chief Hopes to Grab Amerlcans' Attention

A)For the past four decades,the leader of Formula Onecar racing,one of the bigest annual sporting series in the world,was Bernie Ecdestone,a former motorcycle parts dealer who built it into an international presence essentially on his own.

B)A skilled backroom operator who speaks without a filter,Ecclestone said often that in his opinion,the sportwas at itsbest whenhe was allowed to actas“a dictator.”

C)Yet now the dictatoris gone.After an American company,Liberty Media,acquired the Formula One competition recently,Chase Carey-a former executive with Fox Broadeasting Company and DirecTV who by his own admission is not a fierce racing fan—was named to replace Ecclestone and to try to renovate the organization's management,reach and ambition.

D)Among the goals,Carey said in an interview on Tuesday,is one that just about every global sport sems interested in chasing:increasing interest in the United States.“People have said we'e going to ‘Americanize³it,”Carey said.“And we're not going to do that totally.But realistically,there are some  elements of Americanization that the sport could use.”

E)While Formula One commands enormous audiences throughout much of the world,many American sports fans know it as that other motorsport,the one that is not Nascar(纳斯卡车赛) .Formula One teams racefar more  technologically advanced vehicles around tracksall over the world-in magnificent events in places like Malaysia,Monaco,Singapore and the United Arab Emirates,and on tradition rich tracks like Silverstone in England and Monza in Italy too.

F)Theseries has an annual race in Austin,Texas.But within“a few years,”Careysaid,he plans to bring another to a destination American city,like New York,Los Angeles,Miami or Las Vegas.Carey's ambitious plan is two fold:first,change the business model of Formula One,which he said was a “one-man show”under Eclestone that had a largely narrow vision when it came to negotating partnership deals;and second,alter the way fans experience the sport,both in person and remotely,so that connections between the audience and people within the series  are easier to make.

G)Increased digital access for fans,a more behind-the-scenesexperience for broadcast viewers and innovation in areaslike virtual reality—what is it like to speed around a track inside a Ferrari?—are among the possibilities.“The sport has clearly been underserved,"Carey said.“It doesn't do anything digitally.There's no marketing.It doesn't tell any stories.The goal in thisis to make the fans connect to the live experience as much as possible,and the tools you have to do that,we're not using at all.”

H)The larger question,though,is afamiliar one:Is thereroom for Formula One in the ever-crowded sports  landscape of the United States?Opinions vary,particularly because viewing habits among consumerscontinue to  evolve.John Bloom,a professor at Shippensburg University who has studied American sports history,said the biggest challenge for any sport trying to increase its presence in the United States was framing itself in a way that had lasting appeal.“Sports generally become popular in some way because they establisha narrative,”Bloom said.“When I think of motorsports in the U.S.,what we all think of is Nascar,and the narrative of Nascar is sort of rural,white,working-class Americans,mostly in the South,connectingwith the atmosphere of those  races.That's the narrative. When I think of the narrative of Formula One,it's a very different kind of audience.”

I)That difference,Carey said,is significant.While some might immediately link Formula One to Nascar in terms of American growth,Carey saidFormula One's brand research had indicated there was very little crossover;rather,Formula One fans generally cite other so-called elite events,like Wimbledon or the RyderCup,as competitions they enjoy.“Other than they're both cars,the Nascar fan base is a very different fan base,”Carey said.“It's a very regional fan base.Formula One is aglobal,famous brand of stars.These are machines thatshock and awe you.”

J)Carey's background is in deal making and innovation.AtFox Broadcasting Company,he was a top advisor for years,known for his skill in helping to lead the launch of the company into sports,as well as the start of FoxNews Channel.After going to DirecTV,he positioned the satellite provider as a mainstream option in millions of households.

K)Now,after Liberty Media paid $4.4 billion to acquire Formula One,he is charged with making the investment  pay off.“I think they can build Formula One in the U.S.,”said Patrick Crakes,an executive at InVivo Media Group who spent 25 years at Fox Broadcasting Company before leaving in 2016 as a senior manager at Fox Sports.“People don't work on their cars anymore.They don't want that connection anymore.It's about technology and  pushing the limits.It's about speed,danger and risk.And Formula One has that more than any other racing series."

L)That is what hooked Carey,and he said he thought his experience was not unusual.He recalled attending Formula One's Monaco race last year and being overwhelmed by the ceremonyleading up to the event,the way the race  charmed the city for days ahead of the start.In his mind,it felt like a Super Bowl(超级碗橄榄球赛).

M)Then,on race day,he watched as the carsrocketed out ofa tunnel and went screaming toward a tight turn with the city's harbor and the Mediterranean Sea in the background framing the scene.He was fascinated.“You can't help but be awed,"hesaid,“and I think thatfeelingcan be translated to the viewer.”

N)He added:“The broader sport is a lttle too inward-looking,and we need tobe more open.In some ways,I'm glad tobe coming fromthe outside.The guyswhoare in thesport forever are gsiting there saying:'We can't do that.We can't do that because it's never been done that way.”

36.Chase Carey believes greater use should be made of digital technology to make Formula One more accessible to its fans.

37.Chase Carey wasdeeply impressed by the ceremony preceding last year's Monaco race 

38.One of Chase Carey's goals is to make Formula One more appealing to Americans.

39.A former motorbike parts dealerled Formula One for the past forty years.

40.ChaseCareythought the audience ofFormula One could be made to share his feeling about the race. 

41.Chase Carey used to serve asa top advisor for a major broadcasting company.

42.Chase Carey intends to make conections easier between the audience and the Formula One racers. 

43.The new leader of Formula One admitted he was not super interested in car racing.

44.People's opinions differ as towhether Formula One can be promoted in the U.S.

45.Comparedwith otherracing series,Formula One focuses more onspeed and involves more danger.

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 marked A),B),C)and D).You should decide on the best choiceand mark thecorresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2 witha single line through the centre.

Passage One

Questions 46 to 50 are based on the following passage.

Supermarkets have long been suffering as one of the thinnest-margined businesses in existence and one of the  least-looked-forward-to places to work or visit.For more than a decade,they have been under attack from e-commerce giants,blamed for making Americans fat,and accused of contributing to climate change.

Supermarkets can technically be defined as giants housing 15,000 to 60,000 different products.The revolutionary ideaof a self-service grocery,where people could hunt and gather food from aisles rather than asking a clerk  to fetch items from behind a counter,first came about in America.There is some debate about which was the very first,but over the years a consensus has built around King Kullen Supermarket,founded in New York in 1930.

For some 300 years,Americans had fed themselves from small stores and public markets.Shopping for food involved mud,noisy chickens,clouds of flies,nasty smells,bargaining,and geting short changed.The supermarket imitated the Fordist factory,with its emphasis on eficiency and standardization,and reimagined it as a place to buy food.Supermarkets may not feel cutting-edge now,but they werea revolution in distribution at the time.They were such strange marvels that,on her first official state visit to the United States in 1957,Queen Elizabeth I insisted on an impromptu(即兴的)tour of a suburban-Maryland Giant Food.

The typical supermarket layout has barely changed over the past 90 years.Most stores open with flowers,fruit  and vegetables at the front as a breath of freshness to arouse our appetite.Meanwhile,they keep themilk,egs,and other daily basics all he way back so you'travel through asmuch of the store as possible,and be tempted along the way.

In the early days,as the supermarket multiplied,so did our suspicion of it.We have long feared that this“revolution in distribution”uses corporate black magic on our appetite.The book The Hiden

Persuaders,published in 1957,warned that supermarkets were putting women in a“bypnoidal trance (催眠恍惚状态),”causing them to wander aisles bumping into boxes and“picking things off shelves at random.”

46.What problem have supermarkets been facing?

A)They areactually on the way to bankruptcy

B)They have been losing customers and profits.

C)They are forced to use e-commerce strategies.

D)Theyhave difficulty adapting to climate change.

47.What does the passage say about the idea of a self-service grocery?

A)It was put forward by King Kullen.                           

B)It originated in the United States.                            

C)It hasbeen under constant debate.

D)It proves revolutionary even today.

48.What did supermarketsdo by adopting the Fordist factory approach?

A)They modernized traditional groceries in many ways.

B)They introduced cutting-edge layout of their stores.

C)They improved the quality of the food they sold.

D)They revolutionized the distribution of goods.

49.What is the typical supermarketlayout intended to do?

A)Arouse customers'appetite to buy flowers,fruit and vegetables.

B)Provide customers easy access to items they want to buy.

C)Induce customers to make more unplanned purchases.

D)Enable customers to have a more enjoyable shopping experience.

50.What have people long feared about sipermarkets?

A)They use tricky strategies to promote theisbusiness.

B)They are going to replace the local groceries entirely.

C)They apply corporate black magic to the goods on display.

D)They take advantage of the weaknessesof women shoppers.

Passage Two

Questions 51 to 55 are based on the following passage

The traditional school year,with three months of vacation every swmmer,was first implemented when America was an agricultural society and the summer months were needed for farm work.Since then,we've completely changed as a nation.Students no longer spend summers farming,but they aren't in school,either.The averageAmerican student receives 13 weeks off from schooleach calendar year—with about 1l of those during the summer.Few other countries have more than seven weeksoff in a school calendar.

With theU.S.lagging behind other countries in academics,it's time to consider year-round schooling.One benefit of this change is that students will not fall victim to the“summer slide,”or the well documented phenomenon where students forget some of the knowledge they have acquired when too much time is taken off from school.Decades of researchshows that it can take from 8 to 13 weeks at the beginning of every school year for students to get back to where they were before the summer holiday.

But year-round schooling isn't just about academics.Teachers and students experience a closer relationship in year-round schools than they do in traditional schools and,in the absence of any long-term break,students do not feel detached from the school environment.These closer bonds and greater attachment pay off.Research shows  that students in year-round schools are more self-confident and feel more positive about their schooling  experience.

But don't kids need time to relax?Some childhood development experts believe that time off from school is vital to healthy development as kids are not designed to spend so much of their time inside classrooms and the    summer break provides a perfect opportunity to get outside.The problem with this argument is that most    children aren't playing outside or even spending time with other kids.While some children visit summer camps,moststay at home,watching TV or playing games on electronic devices,which hardly benefits them.

The US.has changed from a farming economy to a knowledge-and innovation-based economy,so it makes sense for the school year to change as well.

51.Why did America's traditional school year have a three-month summer vacation?

A)Students needed to help with farm work.

B)Students needed time to learn necessary farming skills.

C)The agricultural society then attached less importance to academics.

D)America lagged behind other countries in making a scientific school calendar.

52.What benefit will year-round schooling bring students in addition to improving their learning?

A)It will help them get back to where their lessons started.

B)It will enable them to absorb what they have learned.

C)It will familiarize them with the school environment.

D)It will strengthen their relationship with teachers.

53.What do some childhood development experts believe about the long summer vacation?

A)It meets students'need to study on their own.

B)It enables students to learn about the outside world.

C)It satisfies students' desireto staylonger at home.

D)It contributes to students' healthy growth.

54.What is the argument against the experts'idea of a long summer vacation?

A)It does little good to most students.

B)It benefits few students playing outside.

C)It leads students to neglect their studies.

D)It makes students addicted to computer games.

55.What does the author think of the traditional school year in the U.S.today?

A)Well-grounded.

B)Culture-bound.

C)Outdaed.

D)Welcomed.