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2017年6月大学英语六级考试真题(第一套)
Part III Reading
Comprehension (40 minutes)
Section A
Questions 36 to 45 are based on the following
passage.
put this 36____ into practice.
Now technology has become the new field for the
age-old battle
between adults and their
freedom-seeking kids.
Locked indoors, unable
to get on their bicycles and hang out with their
friends, teens have
turned to social media and
their mobile phones to socialize with their peers.
What they do online
often 37____ what they
might otherwise do if their mobility weren't so
heavily 38____ in the age
of helicopter
parenting. Social media and smart-phone apps have
become so popular in recent
years because
teens need a place to call their own. They want
the freedom to 39____ their identity
and the
world around them. Instead of 40____ out, they
jump online.
As teens have moved online,
parents have projected their fears onto the
Internet, imagining
all the 41____ dangers
that youth might face 一from 42____ strangers to
cruel peers to pictures
or words that could
haunt them on Google for the rest of their lives.
Rather than helping teens develop strategies
for negotiating public life and the risks of 43
____with others, fear-full parents have
focused on tracking, monitoring and blocking.
These
tactics(策略)don't help teens develop the
skills they need to manage complex social
situations,
44____ risks and get help when
they're in trouble.
do, but it 45____ the
learning that teens need to do as they come of age
in a technology-soaked
world.
A) assess
B) constrained C) contains D) explore
E)
influence F) interacting G) interpretation H)
magnified
I) mirrors J) philosophy K)
potential L) sneaking
M) sticking N)
undermines O) violent
Section B
Inequality Is Not Inevitable
[A] A
dangerous trend has developed over this past third
of a century. A country that experienced
shared growth after World War II began to tear
apart, so much so that when the Great Recession
hit in late 2007, one could no longer ignore
the division that had come to define the American
economic landscape. How did this
greatest
level of inequality?
[B] Over the past year
and a half, The Great divide, a series in The New
York Times, has
presented
a wide range of
examples that undermine the notion that there are
any truly fundamental laws of
capitalism. The
dynamics of the imperial capitalism of the 19th
century needn't apply in the
democracies of
the 21st. we don't need to have this much
inequality in America.
[C] Our current brand
of capitalism is a fake capitalism. For proof of
this go back to our response
to the Great
Recession, where we socialized losses, even as we
privatized gains. Perfect
competition should
drive profits to zero, at least theoretically, but
we have monopolies making
persistently high
profits. C.E.O.s enjoy incomes that are on average
295 times that of the typical
worker, a much
higher ratio than in the past, without any
evidence of a proportionate increase in
productivity.
[D] If it is not the
cruel laws of economics that have led to America's
great divide, what is it? The
straightforward
answer: our policies and our politics. People get
tired of hearing about
Scandinavian success
stories, but the fact of the matter is that
Sweden, Finland and Norway have
all succeeded
in having about as much or faster growth in per
capita(人均的)incomes than the
United States and
with far greater equality.
[E] So why has
America chosen these inequality-enhancing
policies? Part of the answer is that as
World
War II faded into memory, so too did the
solidarity it had created. As America triumphed
in
the Cold War, there didn't seem to be a
real competitor to our economic model. Without
this
international competition, we no longer
had to show that our system could deliver for most
of our
citizens.
[F] Ideology and
interests combine viciously. Some drew the wrong
lesson from the collapse of
the Soviet system
in 1991. The pendulum swung from much too much
government there to much
too little here.
Corporate interests argued for getting rid of
regulations, even when those
regulations had
done so much to protect and improve our
environment, our safety, our health and
the
economy itself.
[G] But this ideology was
hypocritical(虚伪的). The bankers, among the
strongest advocates of
laissez-
faire(自由放任的)economics, were only too willing to
accept hundreds of billions of
dollars from
the government in the aid programs that have been
a recurring feature of the global
economy
since the beginning of the Thatcher-Reagan era of
[H] The American political system is overrun
by money. Economic inequality translates into
political in-equality, and political
inequality yields increasing economic inequality.
So corporate
welfare increases as we reduce
welfare for the poor. Congress maintains subsidies
for rich farmers
as we cut back on nutritional
support for the needy. Drug companies have been
given hundreds of
billions of dollars as we
limit Medicaid benefits. The banks that brought on
the global financial
crisis got billions while
a tiny bit went to the homeowners and victims of
the same banks'
predatory(掠夺性的)lending
practices. This last decision was particularly
foolish. There were
alternatives to throwing
money at the banks and hoping it would circulate
through increased
lending.
[I] Our
divisions are deep. Economic and geographic
segregation has immunized those at the top
from the problems of those down below. Like
the kings of ancient times' they have come to
perceive their privileged positions
essentially as a natural right.
[J] Our
economy, our democracy and our society have paid
for these gross inequalities. The true
test of
an economy is not how much wealth its princes can
accumulate in tax havens(庇护所), but
how well
off the typical citizen is. But average incomes
are lower than they were a quarter-century
ago. Growth has gone to the very, very top,
whose share has almost increased four times since
1980. Money that was meant to have
trickled(流淌)down has instead evaporated in the
agreeable
climate of the Cayman Islands.
[K] With almost a quarter of American children
younger than 5 living in poverty, and with
America doing so little for its poor, the
deprivations of one generation are being visited
upon the
next. Of course, no country has ever
come close to providing complete equality of
opportunity.
But why is America one of the
advanced countries where the life prospects of the
young are most
sharply determined by the
income and education of their parents?
[L] Among the most bitter stories in
The Great Divide were those that portrayed the
frustrations of
the young, who long to enter
our shrinking middle class. Soaring tuitions and
declining incomes
have resulted in larger debt
burdens. Those with only a high school diploma
have seen their
incomes decline by 13 percent
over the past 35 years.
[M] Where justice is
concerned, there is also a huge divide. In the
eyes of the rest of the world and
a
significant part of its own population, mass
imprisonment has come to define America—a
country, it bears repeating, with about 5
percent of the world's population but around a
fourth of
the world 's prisoners.
[N]
Justice has become a commodity, affordable to only
a few. While Wall Street executives used
their
expensive lawyers to ensure that their ranks were
not held accountable for the misdeeds that
the
crisis in 2008 so graphically revealed, the banks
abused our legal system to foreclose(取消赎
回权)on
mortgages and eject tenants, some of whom did not
even owe money.
[O] More than a half-century
ago, America led the way in advocating for the
Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, adopted
by the United Nations in 1948. Today, access to
health care
is among the most universally
accepted rights, at least in the advanced
countries. America, despite
the implementation
of the Affordable Care Act, is the exception. In
the relief that many felt when
the Supreme
Court did not overturn the Affordable Care Act,
the implications of the decision for
Medicaid
were not fully appreciated. Obamacare's objective
一to ensure that all Americans have
access to
health care — has been blocked: 24 states have not
implemented the expanded Medicaid
program,
which was the means by which Obamacare was
supposed to deliver on its promise to
some of
the poorest.
[P] We need not just a new war on
poverty but a war to protect the middle class.
Solutions to these
problems do not have to be
novel. Far from it. Making markets act like
markets would be a good
place to start. We
must end the rent-seeking society we have
gravitated toward, in which the
wealthy obtain
profits by manipulating the system.
[Q] The
problem of inequality is not so much a matter of
technical economics. It's really a
problem of
practical politics. Inequality is not just about
the top marginal tax rate but also about
our
children's access to food and the right to justice
for all. If we spent more on education, health
and infrastructure(基础设施), we would strengthen
our economy, now and in the future.
46. In
theory, free competition is supposed to reduce the
margin of profits to the minimum.
47. The
United States is now characterized by a great
division between the rich and the poor.
48.
America lacked the incentive to care for the
majority of its citizens as it found no rival for
its
economic model.
49. The wealthy top
have come to take privileges for granted.
50.
Many examples show the basic laws of imperial
capitalism no longer apply in present-day
America.
51. The author suggests a return
to the true spirit of the market.
52. A
quarter of the world's prisoner population is in
America.
53. Government regulation in America
went from one extreme to the other in the past two
decades.
54. Justice has become so
expensive that only a small number of people like
corporate executives
can afford it.
55. No
country in the world so far has been able to
provide completely equal opportunities for all.
Section C
Passage One
Questions
56 to 60 are based on the following passage.
I'll admit I've never quite understood the
obsession(难以破除的成见)surrounding
genetically
modified (GM) crops. To environmentalist
opponents, GM foods are simply evil, an
understudied, possibly harmful tool used by
big agricultural businesses to control global seed
markets and crush local farmers. They argue
that GM foods have never delivered on their
supposed promise, that money spent on GM crops
would be better channeled to organic farming
and that consumers should be protected with
warning labels on any products that contain
genetically modified ingredients. To
supporters, GM crops are a key part of the effort
to
sustainably provide food to meet a growing
global population. But more than that, supporters
see
the GM opposition of many
environmentalists as fundamentally anti-science,
no different than
those who question the
basics of man-made climate change.
For both
sides, GM foods seem to act as a symbol: you're
pro-agricultural business or
anti-science. But
science is exactly what we need more of when it
comes to GM foods, which is
why I was happy to
see Nature devote a special series of articles to
the GM food controversy. The
conclusion: while
GM crops haven't yet realized their initial
promise and have been dominated by
agricultural businesses, there is reason to
continue to use and develop them to help meet the
enormous challenge of sustainably feeding a
growing planet.
That doesn't mean GM crops are
perfect, or a one-size-fits-all solution to global
agriculture
problems. But anything that can
increase farming efficiency 一the amount of crops
we can
produce per acre of land 一will be
extremely useful. GM crops can and almost
certainly will be
part of that suite of tools'
but so will traditional plant breeding, improved
soil and crop
management 一and perhaps most
important of all, better storage and transport
infrastructure(基
础设施), especially in the
developing world. (It doesn't do much good for
farmers in places like
sub-Saharan Africa to
produce more food if they can't get it to hungry
consumers.) I'd like to see
more non-industry
research done on GM crops—not just because we'd
worry less about bias, but
also because seed
companies like Monsanto and Pioneer shouldn't be
the only entities working to
harness genetic
modification. I'd like to see GM research on less
commercial crops, like com. I
don't think it's
vital to label GM ingredients in food, but I also
wouldn't be against it 一and
industry would be
smart to go along with labeling, just as a way of
removing fears about the
technology.
Most
of all, though, I wish a tenth of the energy
that's spent endlessly debating GM crops was
focused on those more pressing challenges for
global agriculture. There are much bigger battles
to
fight.
56. How do environmentalist
opponents view GM foods according to the passage?
A) They will eventually ruin agriculture and
the environment.
B) They are used by big
businesses to monopolize agriculture.
C) They
have proved potentially harmful to consumers'
health.
D) They pose a tremendous threat to
current farming practice.
57. What does
the author say is vital to solving the controversy
between the two sides of the
debate?
A)
Breaking the GM food monopoly. B) More friendly
exchange of ideas.
C) Regulating GM food
production. D) More scientific research on GM
crops.
58. What is the main point
of the Nature articles?
A) Feeding the growing
population makes it imperative to develop GM
crops.
B) Popularizing GM technology will help
it to live up to its initial promises.
C)
Measures should be taken to ensure the safety of
GM foods.
D) Both supporters and opponents
should make compromises.
59. What is the
author's view on the solution to agricultural
problems?
A) It has to depend more and more on
GM technology.
B) It is vital to the
sustainable development of human society.
C)
GM crops should be allowed until better
alternatives are found.
D) Whatever is useful
to boost farming efficiency should be encouraged.
60. What does the author think of the
ongoing debate around GM crops?
A) It arises
out of ignorance of and prejudice against new
science.
B) It distracts the public attention
from other key issues of the world.
C) Efforts
spent on it should be turned to more urgent issues
of agriculture.
D) Neither side is likely to
give in until more convincing evidence is found.
Passage Two
Questions 61 to 65 are
based on the following passage.
Early decision
— you apply to one school, and admission is
binding — seems like a great
choice for
nervous applicants. Schools let in a higher
percentage of early-decision applicants,
which
arguably means that you have a better chance of
getting in. And if you do, you're done with
the whole agonizing process by December. But
what most students and parents don't realize is
that
schools have hidden motives for offering
early decision.
Early decision, since it's
binding, allows schools to fill their classes with
qualified students; it
allows ad-missions
committees to select the students that are in
particular demand for their college
and know
those students will come. It also gives schools a
higher yield rate, which is often used as
one
of the ways to measure college selectivity and
popularity.
The problem is that this process
effectively shortens the window of time students
have to
make one of the most important
decisions of their lives up to that point. Under
regular admissions,
seniors have until May 1
to choose which school to attend; early decision
effectively steals six
months from them,
months that could be used to visit more schools,
do more research, speak to
current students
and alumni(校友)and arguably make a more informed
decision.
There are, frankly, an astonishing
number of exceptional colleges in America, and for
any
given student, there are a number of
schools that are a great fit. When students become
too fixated
(专注)on a particular school early
in the admissions process, that fixation can lead
to severe
disappointment if they don't get in
or, if they do, the possibility that they are now
bound to go to a
school that, given time for
further reflection, may not actually be right for
them.
Insofar as early decision offers a
genuine admissions edge, that advantage goes
largely to
students who already have numerous
advantage. The students who use early decision
tend to be
those who have received higher-
quality college guidance, usually a result of
coming from a more
privileged background. In
this regard, there's an argument against early
decision, as students from
lower-income
families are far less likely to have the
admissions know-how to navigate the often
confusing early deadlines.
Students who
have done their research and are confident that
there's one school they would
be thrilled to
get into should, under the current system,
probably apply under early decision. But
for
students who haven't yet done enough research, or
who are still constantly changing their
minds
on favorite schools, the early-decision system
needlessly and prematurely narrows the field
of possibility just at a time when students
should be opening themselves to a whole range of
thrilling options.
61. What are students
obliged to do under early decision?
A) Look
into a lot of schools before they apply. B) Attend
the school once they are admitted.
C) Think
twice before they accept the offer. D) Consult the
current students and alumni.
62. Why do
schools offer early decision?
A) To make sure
they get qualified students.
B) To avoid
competition with other colleges.
C) To provide
more opportunities for applicants.
D) To save
students the agony of choosing a school.
63. What is said to be the problem with early
decision for students?
A) It makes their
application process more complicated.
B) It
places too high a demand on their research
ability.
C) It allows them little time to make
informed decisions.
D) It exerts much more
psychological pressure on them.
64. Why
are some people opposed to early decision?
A)
It interferes with students' learning in high
school.
B) It is biased against students at
ordinary high schools.
C) It causes
unnecessary confusion among college applicants.
D) It places students from lower-income
families at a disadvantage.
65. What does
the author advise college applicants to do?
A)
Refrain from competing with students from
privileged families.
B) Avoid choosing early
decision unless they are fully prepared.
C)
Find sufficient information about their favorite
schools.
D) Look beyond the few supposedly
thrilling options.
Part IV Translation (30
minutes)
2011
年是中国城市化(urbanization)进程中的历史性时刻,其城市人口首次超过农村
人口。在未来20 年里,预计有3.5 亿农村人口将移居城市。如此规模的城市发展对城市交
通来说既是挑战,也是机遇。中国政府一直提倡“以人为本”的发展理念,强调人们以公交而
不是私家车出行。它还号召建设“资源节约和环境友好型”社会。有了这个明确的目标,中国
城市就可以更好地规划其发展,并把大量投资转向安全、清洁和经济型交通系统的发展上。
2015 年6 月大学英语六级考试真题(第二套)
Part
III Reading Comprehension (40 minutes)
Reading
comprehension
Section A
Innovation, the
elixir (灵丹妙药) of progress, has always cost people
their jobs. In the
Industrial Revolution hand
weavers were ___36___ aside by the mechanical
loom. Over the past
30 years the digital
revolution has ___37___ many of the mid-skill jobs
that underpinned
20th-century middle-class
life. Typists, ticket agents, bank tellers and
many production-line jobs
have been dispensed
with, just as the weavers were.
For those who
believe that technological progress has made the
world a better place, such
disruption is a
natural part of rising ___38___. Although
innovation kills some jobs, it creates new
and
better ones, as a more ___39___ society becomes
richer and its wealthier inhabitants demand
more goods and services. A hundred years ago
one in three American workers was ___40___ on a
farm. Today less than 2% of them produce far
more food. The millions freed from the land were
not rendered ___41___, but found better-paid
work as the economy grew more sophisticated.
Today the pool of secretaries has___42___, but
there are ever more computer programmers and
web designers.
Optimism remains the right
starting-point, but for workers the dislocating
effects of
technology may make themselves
evident faster than its ___43___. Even if new jobs
and
wonderful products emerge, in the short
term income gaps will widen, causing huge social
dislocation and perhaps even changing
politics. Technology's ___44___ will feel like a
tornado
(旋风), hitting the rich world first,
but ___45___ sweeping through poorer countries
too. No
government is prepared for it.
A)
benefits B) displaced C) employed D)
eventually
E) impact F) jobless G)
primarily H) productive
I) prosperity J)
responsive K) rhythm L) sentiments
M)
shrunk N) swept O) withdrawn
Section B
Why the Mona Lisa Stands Out
[A] Have you
ever fallen for a novel and been amazed not to
find it on lists of great books? Or
walked
around a sculpture renowned as a classic,
struggling to see what the fuss is about? If so,
you?ve probably pondered the question Cutting
asked himself that day: how does a work of art
come to be considered great?
[B] The
intuitive answer is that some works of art are
just great: of intrinsically superior quality.
The paintings that win prime spots in
galleries, get taught in classes and reproduced in
books are
the ones that have proved their
artistic value over time. If you can?t see they?re
superior, that?s
your problem. It?s an
intimidatingly neat explanation. But some social
scientists have been asking
awkward questions
of it, raising the possibility that artistic
canons are little more than fossilised
historical accidents.
[C] Cutting, a
professor at Cornell University, wondered if a
psychological mechanism known as
the “mere-
exposure effect” played a role in deciding which
paintings rise to the top of the cultural
league. Cutting designed an experiment to test
his hunch. Over a lecture course he regularly
showed undergraduates works of
impressionism for two seconds at a time. Some of
the paintings
were canonical, included in art-
history books. Others were lesser known but of
comparable
quality.
These were exposed
four times as often. Afterwards, the students
preferred them to the canonical
works, while a
control group of students liked the canonical ones
best. Cutting?s students had
grown to like
those paintings more simply because they had seen
them more.
[D] Cutting believes his experiment
offers a clue as to how canons are formed. He
points out that
the most reproduced works of
impressionism today tend to have been bought by
five or six
wealthy and influential collectors
in the late 19th century. The preferences of these
men bestowed
prestige on certain works, which
made the works more likely to be hung in galleries
and printed in
anthologies. The fame passed
down the years, gaining momentum from mere
exposure as it did so.
The more people were
exposed to, the more they liked it, and the more
they liked it, the more it
appeared in books,
on posters and in big exhibitions. Meanwhile,
academics and critics created
sophisticated
justifications for its pre-eminence. After all,
it?s not just the masses who tend to rate
what
they see more often more highly. As contemporary
artists like Warhol and Damien Hirst
have
grasped, critical acclaim is deeply entwined
with publicity. “Scholars”, Cutting argues, “are
no
different from the public in the effects of
mere exposure.”
[E] The process described by
Cutting evokes a principle that the sociologist
Duncan Watts calls
“cumulative advantage”:
once a thing becomes popular, it will tend to
become more popular still.
A few years ago,
Watts, who is employed by Microsoft to study the
dynamics of social networks,
had a similar
experience to Cutting in another Paris museum.
After queuing to see the “Mona
Lisa” in its
climate-controlled bulletproof box at the Louvre,
he came away puzzled: why was it
considered so
superior to the three other Leonardos in the
previous chamber, to which nobody
seemed to be
paying the slightest attention?
[F] When Watts
looked into the history of “the greatest painting
of all time”, he discovered that,
for most of
its life, the “Mona Lisa” remained in relative
obscurity. In the 1850s, Leonardo da
Vinci was
considered no match for giants of Renaissance art
like Titian and Raphael, whose works
were
worth almost ten times as much as the “Mona Lisa”.
It was only in the 20th century that
Leonardo?s portrait of his patron?s wife
rocketed to the number-one spot. What propelled it
there
wasn?t a scholarly re-evaluation, but a
theft.
[G] In 1911 a maintenance worker at the
Louvre walked out of the museum with the “Mona
Lisa”
hidden under his smock. Parisians were
aghast at the theft of a painting to which, until
then, they
had paid little attention. When the
museum reopened, people queued to see the gap
where the
“Mona Lisa” had once hung in a way
they had never done for the painting itself. From
then on, the
“Mona Lisa” came to represent
Western culture itself.
[H] Although many have
tried, it does seem improbable that the painting?s
unique status can be
attributed entirely to
the quality of its brushstrokes. It has been said
that the subject?s eyes follow
the viewer
around the room. But as the painting?s biographer,
Donald Sassoon, dryly notes, “In
reality the
effect can be obtained from any portrait.” Duncan
Watts proposes that the “Mona Lisa”
is merely
an extreme example of a general rule. Paintings,
poems and pop songs are buoyed or
sunk by
random events or preferences that turn into waves
of influence, rippling down the
generations.
[I] “Saying that cultural objects have value,”
Brian Eno once wrote, “is like saying that
telephones
have conversations.” Nearly
all the cultural objects we consume arrive wrapped
in inherited
opinion; our preferences are
always, to some extent, someone else?s. Visitors
to the “Mona Lisa”
know they are about to
visit the greatest work of art ever and come away
appropriately
impressed—or let down. An
audience at a performance of “Hamlet” know it is
regarded as a work
of genius, so that is what
they mostly see. Watts even calls the pre-eminence
of Shakespeare a
“historical accident”.
[J] Although the rigid high-low distinction
fell apart in the 1960s, we still use culture as a
badge of
identity. Today?s fashion for
eclecticism—“I love Bach, Abba and Jay Z”—is,
Shamus Khan , a
Columbia University
psychologist, argues, a new way for the middle
class to distinguish
themselves from what they
perceive to be the narrow tastes of those beneath
them in the social
hierarchy.
[K] The
intrinsic quality of a work of art is starting to
seem like its least important attribute. But
perhaps it?s more significant than our social
scientists allow. First of all, a work needs a
certain
quality to be eligible to be swept to
the top of the pile. The “Mona Lisa” may not be a
worthy
world champion, but it was in the
Louvre in the first place, and not by accident.
Secondly, some
stuff is simply better than
other stuff. Read “Hamlet” after reading even the
greatest of
Shakespeare?s contemporaries, and
the difference may strike you as unarguable.
[L] A study in the British Journal of
Aesthetics suggests that the exposure effect
doesn?t work the
same way on everything, and
points to a different conclusion about how canons
are formed. The
social scientists are right to
say that we should be a little skeptical of
greatness, and that we
should always look in
the next room. Great art and mediocrity can get
confused, even by experts.
But that?s why we
need to see, and read, as much as we can. The more
we?re exposed to the good
and the bad, the
better we are at telling the difference. The
eclecticists have it.
46. According to Duncan
Watts, the superiority of the
resulted from
the cumulative advantage.
47. Some social
scientists have raised doubts about the intrinsic
value of certain works of art.
48. It is often
random events or preferences that determine the
fate of a piece of art.
49. In his experiment,
Cutting found that his subjects liked lesser known
works better than
canonical works because of
more exposure.
50. The author thinks the
greatness of an art work still lies in its
intrinsic value.
51. It is true of critics as
well as ordinary people that the popularity of
artistic works is closely
associated with
publicity.
52. We need to expose ourselves to
more art and literature in order to tell the
superior from the
inferior.
53. A study of
the history of the greatest paintings suggests
even a great work of art could
experience
years of neglect.
54. Culture is still used as
a mark to distinguish one social class from
another.
55. Opinions about and preferences
for cultural objects are often inheritable.
Section C
Passage One
Questions 56 to
60 are based on the following passage.
When
the right person is holding the right job at the
right moment, that person's influence is
greatly expanded. That is the position in
which Janet Yellen, who is expected to be
confirmed as
the next chair of the Federal
Reserve Bank (Fed) in January, now finds herself.
If you believe, as
many do, that
unemployment is the major economic and social
concern of our day, then it is no
stretch to
think Yellen is the most powerful person in the
world right now.
Throughout the 2008 financial
crisis and the recession and recovery that
followed, central
banks have taken on the role
of stimulators of last resort, holding up the
global economy with vast
amounts of money in
the form of asset buying. Yellen, previously a Fed
vice chair, was one of the
principal
architects of the Fed's $$3.8 trillion money dump.
A star economist known for her
groundbreaking
work on labor markets, Yeilen was a kind of
prophetess early on in the crisis for
her
warnings about the subprime(次级债)meltdown. Now it
will be her job to get the Fed and the
markets
out of the biggest and most unconventional
monetary program in history without derailing
the fragile recovery.
The good news is
that Yellen, 67, is particularly well suited to
meet these challenges. She has
a keen
understanding of financial markets, an
appreciation for their imperfections and a strong
belief that human suffering was more related
to unemployment than anything else.
Some
experts worry that Yellen will be inclined to
chase unemployment to the neglect of inflation.
But with wages still relatively flat and the
economy increasingly divided between the well-off
and
the long-term unemployed' more people
worry about the opposite, deflation(通货紧缩)that
would
aggravate the economy's problems.
Either way, the incoming Fed chief will have
to walk a fine line in slowly ending the stimulus.
It must be steady enough to deflate
bubbles(去泡沫)and bring markets back down to earth
but not
so quick that it creates another
credit crisis.
Unlike many past Fed leaders,
Yellen is not one to buy into the finance
industry's argument
that it should be left
alone to regulate itself. She knows all along the
Fed has been too slack on
regulation of
finance.
Yellen is likely to address right
after she pushes unemployment below 6%, stabilizes
markets
and makes sure that the recovery is
more inclusive and robust. As Princeton Professor
Alan
Blinder says'
can persuade without
creating hostility.
new power player takes on
its most annoying problems.
56. What do many
people think is the biggest problem facing Janet
Yellen?
A) Lack of money. B) Subprime crisis.
C) Unemployment. D) Social instability.
57.
What did Yellen help the Fed do to tackle the 2008
financial crisis?
A) Take effective measures
to curb inflation.
B) Deflate the bubbles in
the American economy.
C) Formulate policies to
help financial institutions.
D) Pour money
into the market through asset buying.
58. What
is a greater concern of the general public?
A)
Recession. B) Deflation. C) Inequality. D) Income.
59. What is Yellen likely to do in her
position as the Fed chief?
A) Develop a new
monetary program. B) Restore public confidence.
C) Tighten financial regulation. D) Reform the
credit system.
60. How does Alan Blinder
portray Yellen?
A) She possesses strong
persuasive power.
B) She has confidence in
what she is doing.
C) She is one of the
world's greatest economists.
D) She is
the most powerful Fed chief in history.
Passage Two
Questions 61 to 65 are based
on the following passage.
Air pollution is
deteriorating in many places around the world. The
fact that public parks in
cities become
crowded as soon as the sun shines proves that
people long to breathe in green, open
spaces.
They do not all know what they are seeking but
they flock there, nevertheless. And, in
these
surroundings, they are generally both peaceful and
peaceable. It is rare to see people fighting
in a garden. Perhaps struggle unfolds first,
not at an economic or social level, but over the
appropriation of air, essential to life
itself. If human beings can breathe and share air,
they don't
need to struggle with one another.
Unfortunately, in our western tradition,
neither materialist nor idealist theoreticians
give
enough consideration to this basic
condition for life. As for politicians, despite
proposing curbs on
environmental pollution,
they have not yet called for it to be made a
crime. Wealthy countries are
even allowed to
pollute if they pay for it.
But is our life
worth anything other than money? The plant world
shows us in silence what
faithfulness to life
consists of. It also helps us to a new beginning,
urging us to care for our breath,
not only at
a vital but also at a spiritual level. The
interdependence to which we must pay the
closest attention is that which exists between
ourselves and the plant world. Often described as
releasing oxygen. But their capacity to
renew the air polluted by industry has long
reached its
limit.
If we lack the air
necessary for a healthy life, it is because we
have filled it with chemicals and
undercut the
ability of plants to regenerate it. As we know,
rapid deforestation combined with the
massive
burning of fossil fuels is an explosive recipe for
an irreversible disaster.
The fight over the
appropriation of resources will lead the entire
planet to hell unless humans
learn to share
life, both with each other and with plants. This
task is simultaneously ethical and
political
because it can be discharged only when each takes
it upon herself or himself and only
when it is
accomplished together with others. The lesson
taught by plants is that sharing life
expands
and enhances the sphere of the living, while
dividing life into so-called natural or human
resources diminishes it. We must come to view
the air, the plants and ourselves as the
contributors
to the preservation of life and
growth, rather than a web of quantifiable objects
or productive
potentialities at our disposal.
Perhaps then we would finally begin to live,
rather than being
concerned with bare
survival.
61. What does the author assume
might be the primary reason that people would
struggle with
each other?
A) To get their
share of clean air. B) To pursue a comfortable
life.
C) To gain a higher social status. D) To
seek economic benefits.
62. What does the
author accuse western politicians of?
A)
Depriving common people of the right to clean air.
B) Giving priority to theory rather than
practical action.
C) Offering preferential
treatment to wealthy countries.
D) Failing to
pass laws to curb environmental pollution.
63.
What does the author try to draw our closest
attention to?
A) The massive burning of fossil
fuels.
B) Our relationship to the plant
world.
C) The capacity of plants to renew
polluted air.
D) Large-scale deforestation
across the world.
64. How can human beings
accomplish the goal of protecting the planet
according to the author?
A) By showing respect
for plants. B) By preserving all forms of life.
C) By tapping all natural resources. D) By
pooling their efforts together.
65. What does
the author suggest we do in order not just to
survive?
A) Expand the sphere of living. B)
Develop nature's potentials.
C) Share life
with nature. D) Allocate the resources.
Part
IV Translation (30 minutes)
中国传统的待客之道要求饭菜丰富多样,让客人吃不完。中国宴席上典型的菜单包括开
席的一套凉菜及其后的热菜,例如:肉类,鸡鸭,蔬菜等。大多数宴席上,全鱼被认为是必
不可少的,除非已经上过各式海鲜。如今,中国人喜欢把西方特色菜与传统中式菜肴溶于一
席,因此牛排上桌也不少见。沙拉也已流行起来,尽管传统上中国人一般不吃任何未经烹饪
的菜肴。宴席通常至少有一道汤,可以最先或最后上桌。甜点和水果通常标志宴席的结束。
2015 年6 月大学英语六级考试真题(第三套)
Part III
Section A
Questions 36 to 45 are based on
the following passage.
Travel websites have
been around since the 1990s, when Expedia,
Travelocity, and other
holiday booking sites
were launched, allowing travelers to compare
flight and hotel prices with the
click of a
mouse. With information no longer 36____ by travel
agents or hidden in business
networks, the
travel industry was revolutionized, as greater
transparency helped 37____ prices.
Today, the
industry is going through a new revolution—this
time transforming service quality.
Online
rating platforms—38____ in hotels, restaurants,
apartments, and taxis—allow travelers to
exchange reviews and experiences for all to
see.
Hospitality businesses are now ranked,
analyzed, and compared not by industry 39____, but
by the very people for whom the service is
intended—the customer. This has 40____ a new
relationship between buyer and seller.
Customers have always voted with their feet; they
can now
explain their decision to anyone who
is interested. As a result, businesses are much
more 41____,
often in very specific ways,
which creates powerful 42____ to improve service.
Although some readers might not care for
gossipy reports of unfriendly bellboys(行李员)in
Berlin or malfunctioning hotel hairdryers in
Houston, the true power of online reviews lies not
just
in the individual stories, but in the
websites' 43____ to aggregate a large volume of
ratings.
The impact cannot be 44____.
Businesses that attract top ratings can enjoy
rapid growth, as
new customers are attracted
by good reviews and 45____ provide yet more
positive feedback. So
great is the influence
of online ratings that many companies now hire
digital reputation managers
to ensure a
favorable online identity.
A) accountable B)
capacity C) controlled D) entail
E) forged
F) incentives G) occasionally H) overstated
I) persisting J) pessimistic K)
professionals L) slash
M) specializing N)
spectators O) subsequently
Section B
Plastic Surgery
A better credit
card is the solution to ever larger hack attacks
[A] A thin magnetic stripe (magstripe) is all
that stands between your credit-card information
and
the bad guys. And they've been working
hard to break in. That's why 2014 is shaping up as
a
major showdown: banks, law enforcement and
technology companies are all trying to stop a
network of hackers who are succeeding in
stealing account numbers, names, email addresses
and
other crucial data used in identity theft.
More than 100 million accounts at Target, Neiman
Marcus
and Michaels stores were affected in
some way during the most recent attacks, starting
last
November.
[B] Swipe(刷卡)is the
operative word: cards are increasingly vulnerable
to attacks when you
make purchases in a store.
In several recent incidents, hackers have been
able to obtain massive
information of credit-,
debit-(借记)or prepaid-card numbers using malware,
i.e. malicious
software, inserted secretly
into the retailers' point-of-sale system—the
checkout registers. Hackers
then sold the data
to a second group of criminals operating in
shadowy comers of the web. Not
long after, the
stolen data was showing up on fake cards and being
used for online purchases.
[C] The solution
could cost as little as $$2 extra for every piece
of plastic issued. The fix is a
security
technology used heavily outside the U.S. While
American credit cards use the 40-year-old
magstripe technology to process transactions,
much of the rest of the world uses smarter cards
with a technology called EMV (short for
Europay, MasterCard, Visa) that employs a chip
embedded in the card plus a customer PIN
(personal identification number) to
authenticate(验证)
every transaction on the
spot. If a purchaser fails to punch in the correct
PIN at the checkout, the
transaction gets
rejected. (Online purchases can be made by setting
up a separate transaction
code.)
[D] Why
haven't big banks adopted the more secure
technology? When it comes to mailing out
new
credit cards, it's all about relative costs, says
David Robertson, who runs the Nihon Report, an
industry newsletter:
expiration date,
embossing(凸印)it, the small envelop—all put
together, you are in the dollar
range.
chips. (Once large issuers convert
together, the chip costs should drop.)
[E]
Multiply $$3 by the more than 5 billion magstripe
credit and prepaid cards in circulation in the
U.S. Then consider that there's an estimated
$$12.4 billion in card fraud on a global basis'
says
Robertson. With 44% of that in the U.S.,
American credit-card fraud amounts to about $$5.5
billion
annually. Card issuers have so far
calculated that absorbing the liability for even
big hacks like the
Target one is still cheaper
than replacing all that plastic.
[F] That
leaves American retailers pretty much alone the
world over in relying on magstripe
technology
to charge purchases—and leaves consumers
vulnerable. Each magstripe has three
tracks of
information, explains payments security expert
Jeremy Gumbley, the chief technology
officer
of CreditCall, an electronic-payments company. The
first and third are used by the bank or
card
issuer. Your vital account information lives on
the second track, which hackers try to capture.
text file that gets stolen.
[G] Chip-
and-PIN cards, by contrast, make fake cards or
skimming impossible because the
information
that gets scanned is encrypted(加密). The historical
reason the U.S. has stuck with
magstripe,
ironically enough, is once superior technology.
Our cheap, ultra-reliable wired
networks made credit-card
authentication over the phone frictionless. In
France, card companies
created EMV in part
because the telephone monopoly was so maddeningly
inefficient and
expensive. The EMV solution
allowed transactions to be verified locally and
securely.
[H] Some big banks, like Wells
Fargo, are now offering to convert your magstripe
card to a
chip-and-PIN model. (It's actually a
hybrid(混合体)that will still have a magstripe, since
most
U.S. merchants don't have EMV terminals.)
Should you take them up on it? If you travel
internationally, the answer is yes.
[I]
Keep in mind, too, that credit cards typically
have better liability protection than debit cards.
If
someone uses your credit card
fraudulently(欺诈性地)it's the issuer or merchant, not
you, that
takes the hit. Debit cards have
different liability limits depending on the bank
and the events
surrounding any fraud.
bank,
over debit cards because of liability
issues.
[J] Retailers and banks stand to
benefit from the lower fraud levels of chip-and-
PIN cards but have
been reluctant for years to
invest in the new infrastructure(基础设施)needed for
the technology,
especially if consumers don't
have access to it. It's a chicken-and-egg problem;
no one wants to
spend the money on upgraded
point- of-sale systems that can read the chip
cards if shoppers aren't
carrying them 一yet
there's little point in consumers' carrying the
fancy plastic if stores aren't
equipped to use
them. (An earlier effort by Target to move to chip
and PIN never gained
progress.)
According
to Gumbley, there's a (僵局)has to be broken.
[K]
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon recently expressed
his willingness to do so, noting that
banks
and merchants have spent the past decade suing
each other over interchange fees—the
percentage of the transaction price they keep-
rather than deal with the growing hacking problem.
Chase offers a chip-enabled card under its own
brand and several others for travel-related
companies such as British Airways and Ritz-
Carlton.
[L] The Target and Neiman hacks have
also changed the cost calculation: although
retailers have
been reluctant to spend the
$$6.75 billion that Capgemini consultants estimate
it will take to
convert all their registers to
be chip-and-PIN-compatible, the potential
liability they now face is
dramatically
greater. Target has been hit with class actions
from hacked consumers.
ultimate
nightmare,
[M] The card-payment companies
MasterCard and Visa are pushing hard for change.
The two
firms have warned all parties in the
transaction chain 一merchant, network, bank 一that
if they
don't become EMV-compliant by October
2015, the party that is least compliant will bear
the
fraud risk.
[N] In the meantime, app-
equipped smartphones and digital wallets—all of
which can use EMV
technology—are beginning to
make inroads(侵袭)on cards and cash. PayPal, for
instance, is
testing an app that lets you use
your mobile phone to pay on the fly at local
merchants—without
surrendering any card
information to them. And further down the road is
biometric authentication,
which could be
encrypted with, say, a fingerprint.
[O] Credit
and debit cards, though, are going to be with us
for the foreseeable future, and so are
hackers, if we stick with magstripe
technology.
English,
That's why it may be
up to consumers to move the needle on chip and
PIN. Says Robertson:
??When you get the
consumer into a position of worry and
inconvenience, that's where the rubber
hits
the road.
46. It's best to use an EMV card for
international travel.
47. Personal information
on credit and debit cards is increasingly
vulnerable to hacking.
48. The French card
companies adopted EMV technology partly because of
inefficient telephone
service.
49. While
many countries use the smarter EMV cards, the U.S.
still clings to its old magstripe
technology.
50. Attempts are being made to prevent hackers
from carrying out identity theft.
51. Credit
cards are much safer to use than debit cards.
52. Big banks have been reluctant to switch to
more secure technology because of the higher costs
involved.
53. The potential liability for
retailers using magstripe is far more costly than
upgrading their
registers.
54. The use of
magstripe cards by American retailers leaves
consumers exposed to the risks of
losing
account information.
55. Consumers will be a
driving force behind the conversion from magstripe
to EMV technology.
仔细阅读实际只考了两套
Part
IV Translation
汉朝是中国历史上最重要的朝代之一。汉朝统治期间有很多显著的成就。它最先向其他
文化敞开大门,对外贸易兴旺。汉朝开拓的丝網之路通向了中西亚乃至罗马。各类艺术一派
繁荣,涌现了很多文学、历史、哲学巨著。公元100 年中国第一部字典编撰完成,收入9000
个字,提供释义并列举不同的写法。其间,科技方面也取得了很大进步,发明了纸张、水钟、
日暴(sundials)以及测量地震的仪器。汉朝历经400
年,但统治者的腐败最终导致了它的灭
亡。
__
我爱韩语-等英文
考研英语满分多少-二年级应用题
六年级阅读理解100篇-敬上
breakfast是什么意思-褴褛的拼音
初中语文教案模板-注射死刑是什么
understand-昆明理工大学研究生
二年级的数学题-颜色搭配学
上海基础口译-玻璃釉电阻器
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