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2021年6月大学英语六级阅读真题以及答案(一)

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2024年09月25日

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英语六级阅读真题,不仅强化词汇与句型理解,更提升阅读速度与综合分析能力。实战演练,让考生熟悉题型变化,掌握解题技巧,是冲刺六级高分不可或缺的宝贵资源。今天,小编将分享2021年6月大学英语六级阅读真题以及答案(卷一)相关内容,希望能为大家提供帮助!

Section A

Directions: In this section,there is a passage wih ten blanks.You are required to select one word for each blank from a list of choices given in a word bank following the passage.Read the passage through carefully before making your choices.Each choice in the bank is identifed 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.

A new study has drawn a bleak picture of cultural inclusiveness reflected in the children's literature available in Australia.Dr.Helen Adam from Edith Cowan University's School of Education  26  the cultural diversity of children's books.She examined the books  27  in the kindergarten rooms of four day-care centers in Western Australia.Just 18 percent of 2,413 books in the total collection contained any  28  of non-white people.Minority cultures were often featured in stereotypical or tokenistic ways,for example,by  29  Asian culture with chopsticks and traditional dress.Characters that did represent a minority culture usuallyhad  30 roles in the books.The main characters were mostly Caucasian.This causes concern as it can lead to an impression that whiteness is of greater value. 

Dr.Adam said children formed impressions about“difference”and identity from a very young age.Evidence has shown they develop own-race  31  from as young as three months of age.The books we share with young children can be a valuable opportunity to develop children's understanding of themselves and others.Books can also allow children to see diversity.They discover both similaritiesand differences between themselves and others.This can help develop understanding, acceptance and  32  of diversity.

Census data has shown Australians come from more than 200 countries.They speak over 300 languages at home.Additionally,Australians belong to more than 100 different religious groups.They also work in more than 1,000 different occupations.“Australia is a multicultural society.The current  33  promotion of white  middle-class ideas and lifestyles risks  34  children from minority groups.This can give white middle-class children a sense of  35  or privilege,”Dr.Adam said.

A)alienating

B)appreciation

C)bias

D)fraud

E)housed

F)investigated

G)overwhelming 

H)portraying

I)representation

J)safeguarded

K)secondary

L)superiority

M)temperament

N)tentative

O)threshold

Section B

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

How Marconi Gave Us the Wireless World

A)A hundred years before iconic figureslike Bill Gates and Steve Jobs permeated our lives,an Irish- Italian inventor laid the foundation of the communication explosion of the 21st century.Guglielmo Marconi was arguably the first truly global figure in modern communication.Not only was he the first to communicate globally,he was the first to think globally about communication.Marconi may not have been the greatest inventor of his time,but more than anyone else,he brought about a fundamental shift in the way we communicate.

B)Today's globally networked media and communication system has its origins in the 19th century, when,for the first time,messages were sent electronically across great distances.The telegraph,the telephone,and radio were the obvious predecessors of the Internet,iPods,and mobile phones. What made the link from then to now was the development of wireless communication.Marconi was the first to develop and perfect this system,using the recently-discovered“air waves”that make up the electromagnetic spectrum.

C)Between 1896,when he applied for his first patent in England at the age of 22,and his death in Italy in 1937,Marconi was at the center of every major innovation in electronic communication. He was also a skilled and sophisticated organizer,an entrepreneurial innovator,who mastered the use of corporate strategy,media relations,government lobbying,international diplomacy,patents,and prosecution.Marconi was really interested in only one thing:the extension of mobile, personal,long-distance communication to the ends of the earth(and beyond,if we can believe some reports).Some like to refer to him as a genius,but if there was any genius to Marconi it was this vision.

D)In 1901 he succeeded in signaling across the Atlantic,from the west coast of England to Newfoundland in the USA,despite the claims of science that it could not be done.In 1924 he convinced the British government to encircle theworld with a chain ofwireless stations using the latest technology that he had devised,shortwave radio.There are some who say Marconi lost his edge when commercial broadcasting came along;he didn't see that radio could or should be used to frivolous(无聊的)ends.In one of his last public speeches,a radio broadcast to the United States in March 1937,he deplored that broadcasting had become a one-way means of communication and foresaw it moving in another direction,toward communication as a means of exchange.That was visionary genius.

E)Marconi's career was devoted to making wireless communication happen cheaply,efficiently,smoothly, and with an elegance that would appear to be intuitive and uncomplicated to the user—user-friendly,if you will.There is a direct connection from Marconi to today's social media,search engines,and program streaming that can best be summed up by an admittedly provocative exclamation:the 20th century did not exist.In a sense,Marconi's vision jumped from his time to our own.

F)Marconi invented the idea of global communication—or,more straightforwardly,globally networked, mobile,wireless communication.Initially,this was wireless Morse code telegraphy(电报通讯),the principal communication technology of his day.Marconi was the first to develop a practical method for wireless telegraphy using radio waves.He borrowed technical details from many sources,but what set him apart was a self-confident vision of the power of communication technology on the one hand,and,on the other,of the steps that needed to be taken to consolidate his own position as a player in that field.Tracing Marconi's lifeline leads us into the story of modern communication itself.There were other important figures,but Marconi towered over them all in reach,power,and influence,as well as in the grip he had on the popular imagination of his time.Marconi was quite simply the central figure in the emergence of a moden understanding of communication

G)In his lifetime,Marconi foresaw the development of television and the fax machine,GPS,radar, and the portable hand-held telephone.Two months before he died,newspapers were reporting that he was working on a“death ray,"and that he had“killed a rat with an intricate device at a distance of three feet.”By then,anything Marconi said or did was newsworthy.Stock prices rose or sank according to his pronouncements.If Marconi said he thought it might rain,there was likely to be a run on umbrellas.

H)Marconi's biography is also a story about choices and the motivations behind them.At one level, Marconi could be fiercely autonomous and independent of the constraints of his own social class.On another scale,he was a perpetual outsider.Wherever he went,he was never“of”the group;he was always the “other,”considered foreign in Britain,British in Italy,and“not American”in the United States.At the same time,he also suffered tremendously from a need for acceptance that drove,and sometimesstained,every one of his relationships.

I)Marconi placed a permanent stamp on the way we live.He was the first person to imagine a practical application for the wireless spectrum,and to develop it successfully into a global communication system—in  both terms of the word;that is,worldwide and all-inclusive.He was able to do this because of a combination of factors—most important,timing and opportunity—but the single-mindedness and determination with which he carried out his self-imposed mission was fundamentally character-based;millions of Marconi's contemporaries had the same class,gender, race,and colonial privilege as he,but ony a handful did anything with it.Marconi needed  to achieve the goal that was set in his mind as an adolescent;by the time he reached adulthood,he understood,intuitively,that in order to have an impact he had to both develop an independent economic base and align himself with political power.Disciplined,uncritcal loyalty to political power becamehis compass for the  choices he had to make.

J)At the same time,Marconi was uncompromisingly independent intellectually.Shortly after Marconi's death,the nuclear physicist Enrico Fermi—soon to be the developer of the Manhattan Project—wrote that Marconi proved that theory and experimentation were complementary features of progress.“Experience can rarely,unless guided by a theoretical concept,arrive at results ofany great significance...on the other hand,an excessive trust in theoretical conviction would have prevented Marconi from persisting in experiments which were destined to bring about a revolution in the technique of radio-communications.”In other words,Marconi had the advantage of not being burdened by preconceived assumptions.

K)The most controversial aspect of Marconi's life—and the reason why there has been no satisfying biography of Marconi until now—was his uncritical embrace of Benito Mussolini.At first this was not problematic for him.But as the regressive(倒退的)nature of Mussolini's regime became clear, he began to suffer a crisis of conscience.However,after a lifetime of moving within the circles of power,he was unable to break with authority,and served Mussolini faithfully(as president of Italy's national research council and royal academy,as well as a member of the Fascist Grand Council)until the day he died—conveniently—in 1937,shortly before he would have had to take a stand in the conflict that consumed a world that he had,in part,created.

36.Marconi was centralto our present-day understanding of communication.

37.As an adult,Marconi had an intuition that he had to be loyal to politicians in order to be influential.

38.Marconi disapproved of the use of wireless communication for commercial broadcasting.

39.Marconi's example demonstrates that theoretical concepts and experimentscomplement each other in making progress in science and technology.

40.Marconi's real interest lay in the development of worldwide wireless communication.

41.Marconi spent his whole life making wireless communication simple to use.

42.Because of his long-time connection with people in power,Marconiwas unable to cut himself off from the fascist regime in Italy.

43.In his later years,Marconi exerted a tremendous influence on all aspects of people's life

44.What connected the 19th century and our present time was the development of wireless communication.

45.Despite his autonomy,Marconi felt alienated and suffered from a lack of acceptance.

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 arefour choices marked A),B),C)and D).You should decide on the best choice and mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre.

Passage One

Questions 46 to 50 are based on the following passage.

Humans are fascinated by the source of their failings and virtues.This preoccupation inevitably leads to an old debate:whether nature or nurture moulds us more.A revolution in genetics has poised this as a modern political question about the character of our society:if personalities are hard-wired into our genes,what can governments do to help us?It feels morally questionable,yet claims of genetic selection by intelligence are making headlines.

This is down to “hereditarian”(遗传论的)science and a recent paper claimed“differences in exam performance between pupils attending selective and non-selective schools mirror the genetic differences between them”.With such an assertion,the work was predictably greeted by a lot of absurd claims about“genetics determining academic success”.What the research revealed was the rather less surprising result:the educational benefits of selective schools largely disappear once pupils'inborn ability and socio-economic background were taken into account.It is a glimpse of the blindingly obvious—and there's nothing to back strongly either a hereditary or environmental argument.

Yet the paper does say children are“unintentionally genetically selected”by the school system. Central to hereditarian science is a tall claim:that identifiable variations in genetic sequences can predict an individual's aptness to learn,reason and solve problems.This is problematic on many levels.A teacher could not seriously tell a parent their child has a low genetic tendency to study when external factors clearly exist.Unlike-minded academics say the inheritability of human traits is scientifically unsound.At best there is a weak statistical association and not a causal link between DNA and intelligence.Yet sophisticated statistics are used to create an intimidatory atmosphere of scientific certainty.

While there's an undoubted genetic basis to individual difference,it is wrong to think that socially defined groups can be genetically accounted for.The fixation on genes as destiny is surely false too.Medical predictability can rarely be based on DNA alone;the environment matters too.Something as complex as intellect is likely to be affected by many factors beyond genes.If hereditarians want to advance their causeit will require more balanced interpretation and not just acts of advocacy.

Genetic selection is a way of exerting influence overothers,“the ultimate collective control of human destinies,”as writer H.G.Wells put it.Knowledge becomes power and power requires a sense of responsibility.In understanding cognitive ability,we must not elevate discrimination to a science:allowing people to climb the ladder of life only as far as their cells might suggest.This will need a more sceptical eyeon the science.As technology progresses,we all have a dutyto make sure that we shape a future that we would want to find ourselves in.

46.What did a recent research paper claim?

A)The type of school students attend makes a difference to their future.

B)Genetic differences between students are far greater than supposed.

C)The advantages of selective schoolsare too obvious to ignore.

D)Students'academic performance is deermined by their genes.

47.What does the author think of the recent research?

A)Its result was questionable.

B)Its implication was positive.

C)Its influence was rather negligible.

D)Its conclusions were enlightening.

48.What does the author say aboutthe relationship between DNA and intelligence?

A)It is one of scientific certainty.

B)It is not one of causeand effect.

C)It is subject to interpretation of statistics.

D)It is not fully examined by gene scientists.

49.What do hereditarians need to do to make their claims convincing? 

A)Take all relevant factors into account in interpreting their data.

B)Conduct their research using more sophisticated technology.

C)Gather gene data from people of all social classes. 

D)Cooperate with social scientists inther research.

50.What does the author warm against in the passage?

A)Exaggerating the power of technology in shaping the world.

B)Losing sight of professional ethics in conducting research.

C)Misunderstanding the findings of human cognition research.

D)Promoting discrimination in the name of science.

Passage Two

Questions 51 to 55 are based on the following passage.

Nicola Sturgeon's speech last Tuesday setting out the Scottish governments legislative programme for the year ahead confirmed what was already pretty clear.Scottish councils are set to be the first in the UK with the power to levy charges on visitors,with Edinburgh likely to lead the way.

Tourist taxes are notnew.The Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan has a longstanding policy of charging visitors a daily fee.France's tax on overnight stayswas introduced to assist thermal spa(温泉)towns to develop,and around half of French local authorities use it today.

But such levies are on the rise.Moves by Barcelona and Venice to deal with the phenomenon of “over-tourism”through the use of charges have recently gained prominence.Japan and Greece are among the countries to have recently introduced tourist taxes.

That the UK lags behind is due to our weak,by international standards,local govemment,as well as the opposition to taxes and regulation of our aggressively pro-market ruling party.Some UK cities have lobbied without success for the power to levya charge on visitors.Such leviesare no universal remedy as the amounts raised would be tiny compared with what has been taken away by central government since 2010.Still,it is to be hoped that the Scottish government's bold move will prompt others to act.There is no reason why visitors to the UK,or domestic tourists on holiday in hotspots such as Cornwall,should be exempt from taxation—particularly when vital local services including waste collection,park maintenance and arts and culture spending are under unprecedented strain.

On the contrary,compellingtourists to make a financial contribution to the places they visit beyond their personal consumption should be part of a wider cultural shift.Westerners with disposable incomes have often behaved as if they have a right to go wherever they choose with little regard for the consequences.Just as the environmental harm caused by aviation and other transport must come under far greater scrutiny,the social cost of tourism must also beconfronted.This includes the impact of short-term lets on housing costs and quality of life for residents.Several European capitals,including Paris and Berlin,are leading a campaign for tougher regulation by the European Union.It also  includes the impactof overcrowding,litter and the kinds ofbehaviour associated with noisy parties.

There is no“one-size-fits-all”solution to this problem.The existence of new revenue streams for some but not all councils is complicated,and businesses are often opposed,fearing higher costs will make them uncompetitive.But those places that want them must be given the chance to make tourist taxes work.

51.What do we learn from Nicola Sturgeon's speech?

A)The UK is set to adjust its policy on taxation

B)Tourists will haveto pay a tax to visit Scotland

C)The UK will take new measures to boost tourism. 

D)Edinburgh contributes most to Scotland's tourism

52.How come the UK has been slow in imposing the touristtax?

A)Its government wants to attract more tourists.

B)The tax is unlikely to add much to its revenue.

C)Its ruling party is opposed to taxes and regulation.

D)It takes time for local governments to reach consensus.

53.Both international and domestic visitors in the UK should pay tourist tax so as to?

A)elevate its tourism to international standards

B)improve the welfare of its maintenance workers

C)promote its cultural exchange with other nations

D)ease its financial burden of providing local services

54.What does the authorsay about Western tourists?

A)They don't seem to care about the social cost of tourism.

B)They don't seem to mind paying for additional services.

C)They deem travel an important part of their life.

D)They subject the effects of tourism to scrutiny.

55.What are UK people's opinions about the levy of tourist tax?

A)Supportive

C)Skeptical.

B)Divided.

D)Unclear.

26.答案:F)investigated

解析:首段①句概述一项新研究的发现“澳大利亚儿童文学中所体现的文化包容性不足”。空格所在②句中,主语Dr.Helen Adam from...指向“某专家/研究者”;宾语the cultural diversity of children's books呼应首句cultural inclusiveness reflected in the children's literature,指向“研究内容”。可见,空格词应表示“调查/研究"等,以体现①②句间“研究结果”和“研究内容”的对应,以及“先开门见山,亮出研究结果—后具体论述,介绍研究内容”的开篇方式,F项正确。

27.答案:E)housed

解析:首两句已限定研究对象为“儿童文学/书籍(children's literature,children's books)”,空格句中inthe kindergarten rooms of four day-care centers(四家日托中心幼儿室)指向“儿量的活动场所”。可见空格词应表示“储藏/陈列/使用”等,以使the books_____...of four day-care centers指向“童书”,E项符合要求。

28.答案:I)representation

解析:空格句指出,在共计2413本藏书中,只有18%包含非白人的_____。由常识可知,澳大利亚社会中,白人为主流族裔,非白人为少数族裔。再结合上文易推知,空格句是在以具体数据阐释首句研究发现“澳大利亚儿童文学中所体现的文化包容性不足”,空格词应表示“描写/情节/事例”等,极少儿童书籍含有对少数族裔的描写=儿童文学的文化包容性不足,I项正确。

29.答案:H)portraying

解析:由句中for example可知,by...是在对主干部分Minority cultures...ways进行举例说明。主干部分指出,少数族裔文化往往以模式化或象征性的方式呈现。by...中,Asian culture在澳大利亚属于少数族裔文化,是Minority cultures中的一种:chopsticks and traditional dress是亚洲文化的标志性元素,对应stereotypical or tokenistic ways,可知空格词应与featured(以……为特色)近义,表示“描绘/表现”等,H项正确。注:此时,空28的答案也完全敲定,28、29两空答案分别为:I)representation,H)portraying(二者虽基本含义相同,但语法功能不同)。

30.答案:K)secondary

解析:空格句指出,那些的确代表着(“do+动词原形”为强调结构)少数族裔文化的人物通常在书中_____角色。联系随后一句“主角(main characters)大都是白人”可知_____roles应意为“配角;次要角色”,K项正确,secondary role为固定搭配,表示“配角;次要角色”。

31.答案:C)bias

解析:第二段①句指出,孩子从很小的时候起便会形成对“差异”和身份的认识。②句指出,已有证据表明,仅三个月大的孩子就开始生成本族_____。联系两句可知,②句是对①句的例证,own-race_____应与impressionsabout “difference”and identity属同一个层面,空格词应与impressions属同一范畴,表示“观念;认识”等。再浏览后文(③至⑤句并未设空、末句空格不影响整体理解)可发现,作者提出观点“借助图书可让孩子消除种族偏见,了解其他种族、接受多样性”。综上可知空格所在句的深层内涵:人们从小便会形成对本族文化的偏向/对外族文化的排斥,即形成种族偏见(但图书有助于消除这种偏见)。C项符合文意。

32.答案:B)appreciation

解析:空格句指出,这(This指⑤句“儿童发现自己与他人的共同点和不同点”)有助于培养对多样性的理解、接受以及_____。空格词应与“理解”“接受”语义同向且进一步升华,故空格词应表“欣赏/重视/宣传”等,B项符合要求,“理解→接受→欣赏”体现对多样性认可度的逐步提升。

33.答案:G)overwhelming

解析:空格句指出,当前对白人中产阶级思想观念及生活方式的_____宣传(The currentpromotion of white middle-class ideas and lifestyles)会造成某种风险,显然promotion of white middle-classdeas and lifestyles应是对前文内容的概括。回看本段前半部分(未设空,语义完整)发现主要从人口、语言、宗教、职业等方面凸显澳大利亚的文化多样性,无法与空格所在句的主语对应。这时可认识到空格句主语应是在概述全文关注问题“儿童文学大都以白种人为主角,对少数族裔文化的描写严重不足”,而上文的Just 18 percent of 2,413 books、The main characters were mostly Caucasian等凸显了问题的严重性——对白人文化的宣传十分强势/铺天盖地,G项符合文意。

34.答案:A)alienating

解析:空格句指出,当前对白人中产阶级思想观念及生活方式的大肆宣传会造成_____少数族裔儿童的风险。空格词若为children的修饰限定成分,则应体现使具有什么特征的少数族裔儿童遭受危险;空格词若构成risks doing sth结构,则应说明对少数族裔儿童造成什么样的危害,为带有消极色彩的-ing分词,备选项中只有A项符合第二种可能,为正确项。注:由“上下文中并未提及少数族裔的特征或对少数族裔进行分类”可排除第一种可能,从而聚焦risks doing sth结构。

35.答案:L)superiority

解析:空格所在句指出,这(This指⑥句“过度宣传白人文化、孤立少数族裔儿童”)会给予白人中产子弟一种_____或特权感。首先,a sense of_____应是一种与“特权感(a sense of privilege)”相近的感觉;其次,首段末句提到,儿童文学以描写白人为主会导向“白人更重要”的印象(an impression that whiteness is of greater value),空格词应与of greater value近义;最后,根据常识可知,对白人文化的宣传势必助长白人的优越感。综上三条线索,空格词应表“优越/尊贵/特殊”等,L项符合文意。

36.答案:F 

解析:F段末句总结指出马可尼对于通信的现代化理解的重要作用:堪称这一现代化理解过程中的中心人物。试题是对该句的同义改写,其中was central to“对……极为重要”是对句中强调式表达wasquite simply the central figure的同义改述,present-day则同义改写modern。

37.答案:I

解析:I段④⑤句指出,成年后的马可尼直觉上感知到,要想让自己有影响力(以实现少年时期立下的全球通信目标),就得有独立的经济基础以及雄厚的政治支持,要与政治权力结盟,并无条件地忠诚于政治权势。试题是对此两句的核心语义“忠于政治权势(以获得雄厚政治支持)是获得影响力的前提条件”的同义改写,其中be loyal to politicians是④句align himself with political power、⑤句Disciplined,uncriticalloyalty to political power所展示的语义场的概括。

38.答案:D 

解析:D段③句指出一些人的看法;马可尼因商业广播的出现而失去了优势,因为他没有意识到无线电广播可适用于或应该运用于一些无聊的商业活动中。④向进而介绍马可尼对商业广播的强烈谴责态度:仅进行单向沟通,而双向沟通才是应有之势。试题是对两句的提炼总括,其中disapproved是对文中didn't see...should、deplored所传递的“不赞成;谴责”之意的综合概括。

39.答案:J 

解析:J段②③句援引核物理学家Enrico Fermi之言指出,马可尼(一生的研究事例)证实了理论和实验是进步的两大互补特征,他一生的研究工作践行了“理论与实践相结合,才能推动科技进步”这一原则。试题是对该内容的概括,其中demonstrates契合②句中proved所体现的“印证;说明;证实”之意。

40.答案:C 

解析:C段③句介绍马可尼唯一真正感兴趣的事情:将移动通信、个人通信、远距离通信延伸至地球尽头。试题是对该句的浓缩提炼,其中mobile,personal,long-distance communication的内涵即为wireless communication,the extension of...to the endsof the earth对应worldwide,故马尔尼真正的兴趣可提炼为“发展全球无线通信”。

41.答案:E 

解析:E段首句介绍马可尼的终身追求“让无线通信变得廉价、高效、顺畅,让用户感到简单易懂、好操作”。试题是对后半部分的提炼概括,其中spent his whole life making..恰当传递was devoted to 的“倾力奉献、全情投入”之意,simple to use恰当概括了intuitive...the user、user-friendly的内在含义。

42.答案:K 

解析:K段④句指出马可尼对墨索里尼法西斯政权的最终选择“无法割舍,继续效忠”,并说明原因“长期陷于权力圈之中”。试题是对该内容的同义改写,Because of是对原文after...he was unableto...暗含的因果关联的明确。

43.答案:G 

解析:G段③句指出,马可尼晚年所说或所做的事情均具有新闻价值(也即影响力),④⑤句以“股票涨落”和“雨伞哄抢”展现马可尼对人们生活不同方面的影响。试题是对此三句信息的概括。

44.答案:B 

解析:B段首两句指出如今的全球网络媒体和通信系统起源于19世纪,③句进一步指出连接起那时(then回指19th century)和当下的就是无线通信的发展。试题是对③句的同义改写。

45.答案:H 

解析:H段②至④句表明,马可尼虽拥有不受社会阶层限制的自主权,却总不被群体接纳。⑤句进一步指出“不被接纳”带给马可尼的痛苦。试题是对此四句大意的概括,alienated是对文中a perpetualoutsider,never “of"the group,the “other”内涵的准确概括。

46.[定位]本题考查论文观点。由题干a recentresearch paper定位至第二段①向(a recent paper claimed...)。

[答案解析]D。该段①句指出论文观点“学生的考试成绩差异反映出他们的基因差异”,②句进而描述其引发的类似言论“遗传特征决定学业成功”,可见D项正确。该项是对②句genetics determining academicsuccess的同义转述,明确了①句mirror(反映)一词传达的“考试成绩”与“基因”之间的对应关系。

47.[定位]本题考查作者对新近研究的看法。由题干中What...the author think定位至第二段②③④句(the rather less surprising result、greetedby a lot of absurd claims、aglimpse of the blindingly obvious、there's nothing to back strongly...a hereditary...argument)。

[答案解析]A。第二段①句首先指出新近研究的观点:基因决定学生成绩。②③④句分析作者对此的看法:招致了大量荒谬言论,所揭示的结果也并不出奇,透露的是极为明显的事实,遗传决定论并无有力证据支持。由此可见,作者认为这项新近研究的结果有问题。故A项正确,同时排除窜改语义色彩的D项。[排除干扰]B项对②句greeted by望文生义,但句中greeted取僻义“对(某事)做出反应”,并非褒义,而且其后a lot of absurd claims明确指出其不良影响“导致大量的荒谬言论出现”。C项由③句中rather less surprising “(研究结果)更不怎么出奇”主观臆断出“论文的影响很小”,但明显与②句“该论文引发了大量荒谬言论”不符。

48.[定位]本题考查作者对“DNA和智力的关系”的看法。结合试题命制顺序及题干关键词therelationship between DNA and intelligence可快速定位至第三段倒数第二句(association...link between DNAand intelligence)。注:上文多处出现DNA、intelligence相关词汇,但claims、a...claim提示这些论述均属他人观点,并非作者观点。

[答案解析]B。第三段倒数第二句指出“DNA和智力只有以统计数据表明的微弱关联,并无因果关系”,B项中cause and effect意为“原因和结果”,是对⑥句a causal link的同义改写,故正确。

49.[定位]本题考查遗传论者增强自身观点可信性的方法。由hereditarians、make their claims convincing 可定位至第四段末句(If hereditarians want to advance their cause)。

[答案解析]A。末句指出“遗传论者若想推进其事业,就要考量影响智力的各种因素,做出更为全面公正的解读,而不应利用统计数据一味鼓吹夸大基因的作用”。A项Take all relevant factors into account体现末句more balanced传递的“综合平衡各种因素,全面解读数据”之意。

50.[定位]本题考查作者反对的做法。由题干中warn against可定位至末段③句(we must not...)。

[答案解析]D。③向明确指出:切勿将歧视抬升为科学。言外之意即为,不要以科学为名助长歧视,D项是对句中elevate discrimination to a science的同义改写。

51.[定位]本题考查“妮古拉·斯特金的讲话内容”,根据题干关键词Nicola Sturgcon's specch定位至首段。

[答案解析]B。首段①句首先指出妮古拉·斯特金的讲话关乎苏格兰政府未来一年的立法计划,②句随即指出苏格兰政府将对游客征收税费,爱丁堡可能走在最前面。可见,到苏格兰旅游的游客将需要交税。B项同义改写Scottish councils are set to...to levy charges on visitors。

52.[定位]本题考查因果细节“英国迟迟不开征旅游税的原因”,由题干关键词the UK、slow in imposingthe tourist tax可定位到第四段(the UK lags behind is due to...as well as...)。

[答案解析]C。第四段①句指出,英国之所以在征收旅游税上落后于他国,一是因为其执政党反对征规与政府管控,二是因为地方政府相较软弱无力。C项同义替换文中the opposition to taxes and regulation ofour aggressively pro-market ruling party。

53.[定位]本题考查因果细节“英国为何应该开征旅游税”。由题干关键信息可定位至第四段末句(There is no reason why visitors to the UK,or domestie tourists...should be exempt from taxation)。

[答案解析]D。第四段末句指出,英国的国内外游客均没有理由免税,尤其是在至关重要的当地服务(包括垃圾收集、公园维护以及艺术与文化支出)面临前所未有的压力的情况下。换言之,如果对国内外游客征收旅游税,就可以减轻因提供当地服务而带来的财政负担,故D项正确。

54.[定位]本题考查“与西方游客相关的内容”。由题干Westerntourists定位至第五段②句(Westerners)。

[答案解析]A。第五段②句指出西方游客的表现:有权去任何想去的地方,却很少考虑因此造成的后果。联系①句“正如航空等交通方式所造成的环境危害必须受到正视一样,旅游业的社会成本(即社会环境危害等)也必须得到正视”可知,西方游客往往很少考虑旅游的社会成本,故A项正确。

55.[定位]本题考查人物态度“英国各界人士对征收旅游税的态度”。结合试题命制题文同序原则以及题干关键词UK people's opinions可定位至第六段(councils、businesses)。

[答案解析]B。第六段首句指出,对上述问题(是否征收旅游税)没有一刀切的解决办法。②③句详细说明首句,部分地方议会(政界人士)态度复杂,商界人士反对,部分地区需要/支持。可知,英国各界人士对征收旅游税的意见并不统一,存在巨大分歧,B项正确。

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