拼音o新版的正确发音-有志者事竟成的意思

梦想不会辜负每一个努力的人
2017
年
6
月大学英语六级考试真题(第一套)
Part I Writing
(
30 minutes
)
Directions:
Suppose you are asked to give advice on
whether to attend a vocational college or a
university, write
an essay to state your
opinion. You are required to write at least
150
words but no more than
200
words.
Part II
Listening Comprehension
(
30
minutes
)
Section A
Directions:
In this section, you will hear two long
conversations. At the end of each conversation,
you will hear
four questions. Both the
conversation and the questions will be spoken only
once. After you hear a
question, you must
choose the best answer from the four choices
marked A), B), C) and D). Then mark
the
corresponding letter on
Answer Sheet I
with a single line through the centre.
Questions 1 to 4 are based on the conversation
you have just heard.
1. A
)
Doing
enjoyable work.
B
)
Having friendly colleagues.
C
)
Earning a competitive salary.
D
)
Working for supportive bosses.
2. A
)
31%.
B
)
20%.
C
)
25%.
D
)
73%.
3.
A
)
Those of a small size.
B
)
Those run by women.
C
)
Those that are well managed.
D
)
Those full of skilled workers.
4. A
)
They can hop from job to job
easily.
B
)
They can win recognition of
their work.
C
)
They can better balance
work and life.
D
)
They can take on more
than one job.
Questions 5 to 8 are based on
the conversation you have just heard.
5.
A
)
It is a book of European history.
B
)
It is an introduction of music.
C
)
It is about the city of Bruges.
D
)
It is a collection of photos.
梦想不会辜负每一个努力的人
6.
A
)
When painting the concert hall of
Bruges.
B
)
When vacationing in an
Italian coastal city.
C
)
When taking
pictures for a concert catalogue.
D
)
When writing about Belgium’s coastal
regions.
7. A
)
The entire European
coastline will be submerged.
B
)
The
rich heritage of Europe will be lost completely.
C
)
The seawater of European will be
seriously polluted.
D
)
The major
European scenic spots will disappear.
8.
A
)
Its waterways are being increasingly
polluted.
B
)
People cannot get around
without using boats.
C
)
It attracts
large numbers of tourists from home and abroad.
D
)
Tourists use wooden paths to reach
their hotels in the morning.
Section B
Directions:
In this section, you will hear
two passages. At the end of each passage, you will
hear three or four
questions. Both the passage
and the questions will be spoken only once. After
you hear a question, you
must choose the best
answer from the four choices marked A), B), C) and
D). Then mark the
corresponding letter on
Answer Sheet 1
with a single line through
the centre.
Questions 9 to 12 are
based on the passage you have just heard.
9.
A
)
They make careful preparations
beforehand.
B
)
They take too many
irrelevant factors into account.
C
)
They spend too much time
anticipating their defeat.
D
)
They try
hard to avoid getting off on the wrong foot.
10. A
)
A person’s nervous system is
more complicated than imagined.
B
)
Golfers usually have positive mental
images of themselves.
C
)
Mental images
often interfere with athletes’ performance.
D
)
Thinking has the same effect on the
nervous system as long.
11.
A
)
Anticipate possible problems.
B
)
Make a list of do’s and don’ts.
C
)
Picture themselves succeeding.
D
)
Try to appear more professional.
12. A
)
She wore a designer dress.
B
)
She won her first jury trial.
C
)
She did not speak loud enough.
D
)
She presented moving pictures.
Questions 13 to
15 are based on the passage you have just heard.
梦想不会辜负每一个努力的人
13. A
)
Its
long-term effects are yet to be proved.
B
)
Its health benefits have been
overestimated.
C
)
It helps people to
avoid developing breast cancer.
D
)
It
enables patients with diabetes to recover sooner.
14. A
)
It focused on their ways of life
during young adulthood.
B
)
It tracked
their change in food preferences for 20 years.
C
)
It focused on their difference from
men in fiber intake.
D
)
It tracked
their eating habits since their adolescence.
15. A
)
Fiber may help to reduce
hormones in the body.
B
)
Fiber may
bring more benefits to women than men.
C
)
Fiber may improve the function of
heart muscles.
D
)
Fiber may make blood
circulation more smooth.
Section C
Directions:
In this section, you will hear
three recordings of lectures or talks followed by
three or four questions.
The recordings will
be played only once. After you hear a question,
you must choose the best answer
from the four
choices marked A), B), C) and D). Then mark the
corresponding letter on
Answer Sheet
1
with a single line through the centre.
Questions 16 to 18 are based on the recording
you have just heard.
16. A
)
Observing
the changes in marketing.
B
)
Conducting
research on consumer behavior.
C
)
Studying the hazards of young people
drinking.
D
)
Investigating the impact
of media on government.
17. A
)
It is
the cause of many street riots.
B
)
It
is getting worse year by year.
C
)
It
is a chief concern of parents.
D
)
It is
an act of socialising.
18. A
)
They
spent a week studying their own purchasing
behavior.
B
)
They researched the impact
of mobile phones on young people.
C
)
They analysed their family budgets
over the years.
D
)
They conducted a
thorough research on advertising.
Questions 19 to 22 are based on the recording
you have just heard.
19. A
)
It is
helping its banks to improve efficiency.
B
)
It is trying hard to do away with
dirty money.
C
)
It is the first country
to use credit cards in the world.
D
)
It
is likely to give up paper money in the near
future.
梦想不会辜负每一个努力的人
20.
A
)
Whether it is possible to travel without
carrying any physical currency.
B
)
Whether it is possible to predict
how much money one is going to spend.
C
)
Whether the absence of physical
currency causes a person to spend more.
D
)
Whether the absence of physical
currency is going to affect everyday life.
21.
A
)
There was no food service on the train.
B
)
The service on the train was not
good.
C
)
The restaurant car accepted
cash only.
D
)
The cash in her handbag
was missing.
22. A
)
By putting money
into envelopes.
B
)
By drawing money
week by week.
C
)
By limiting their day-
to-day spending.
D
)
By refusing to buy
anything on credit.
Questions 23 to 25
are based on the recording you have just heard.
23. A
)
Population explosion.
B
)
Chronic hunger.
C
)
Extinction of rare species.
D
)
Environmental deterioration.
24.
A
)
They contribute to overpopulation.
B
)
About half of them are unintended.
C
)
They have been brought under
control.
D
)
The majority of them tend
to end halfway.
25. A
)
It is essential
to the wellbeing of all species on earth.
B
)
It is becoming a subject of
interdisciplinary research.
C
)
It is
neglected in many of the developing countries.
D
)
It is beginning to attract
postgraduates’ attention.
Part III Reading
Comprehension
(
40
minutes
)
Section A
Directions:
In this section, there is a passage with 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 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.
Let’s all stop judging people who talk to
themselves. New research says that those who can’t
seem to keep
their inner
monologue
(独白)
in are actually more likely
to stay on task, remain 26 better and show
improved
perception capabilities. Not bad,
really, for some extra muttering.
梦想不会辜负每一个努力的人
According to a series
of experiments published in quarterly journal of
experimental psychology by
professors Gary
Lupyan and Daniel Swignley, the act of using
verbal clues to 27 mental pictures helps
people function quicker.
In one
experiment, they showed pictures of various
objects to twenty 28 and asked them to find
just one
of those, a banana. Half were 29
to repeat out loud what they were looking for and
the other half kept
their lips 30 . Those
who talked to themselves found the banana slightly
faster than those who didn’t, the
researchers
say. In other experiments, Lupyan and Swignley
found that 31 the name of a common product
when
on the hunt for it helped quicken
someone’s pace, but talking about uncommon items
showed no advantage and slowed you
down.
Common research has long held that talking
themselves through a task helps children learn,
although doing
so when you’ve 32 matured
is not a great sign of 33 . The two
professors hope to
refute that idea, 34
that just as when kids walk themselves through a
process, adults can benefit from
using
language not just to communicate, but also to help
“augment thinking”.
Of course, you are still
encouraged to keep the talking at library tones
and, whatever you do, keep the
information you
share simple, like a grocery list. At any 35
, there’s still such a thing as too much
information.
A
)
apparently
B
)
arrogance
C
)
brilliance
D
)
claiming
E
)
dedicated
F
)
focused
G
)
incur
H
)
instructed
I
)
obscurely
J
)
sealed
K
)
spectators
L
)
trigger
M
)
uttering
N
)
volume
O
)
volunteers
Section B
Directions:
In this section, you are going
to read a passage with ten statements attached to
it. Each statement
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
is marked with
a letter. Answer the questions
by marking the corresponding letter on
Answer
Sheet 2
.
Rich Children and Poor
Ones Are Raised Very Differently
[A]
The lives of children from rich and poor
American families look more different than ever
before.
[B]
Well-off families are
ruled by calendars, with children enrolled in
ballet, soccer and after-school programs,
梦想不会辜负每一个努力的人
according to a new
Pew Research Center survey. There are usually two
parents, who spend a lot of time reading to
children and worrying about their anxiety
levels and hectic schedules.
[C]
In
poor families, meanwhile, children tend to spend
their time at home or with extended family, the
survey
found. They are more likely to grow up
in neighborhoods that their parents say aren’t
great for raising children, and
their parents
worry about them getting shot, beaten up or in
trouble with the law.
[D]
The class
differences in child rearing are growing,
researchers say—a symptom of widening inequality
with
far-reaching consequences. Different
upbringings set children on different paths and
can deepen socioeconomic
divisions, especially
because education is strongly linked to earnings.
Children grow up learning the skills to succeed
in their socioeconomic stratum, but not
necessarily others.
[E]
“Early
childhood experiences can be very consequential
for children’s long-term social, emotional and
cognitive development,” said Sean F. Reardon,
professor of poverty and inequality in education
at Stanford
University. “And because those
influence educational success and later earnings,
early childhood experiences cast
a lifelong
shadow.” The cycle continues: Poorer parents have
less time and fewer resources to invest in their
children,
which can leave children less
prepared for school and work, which leads to lower
earnings.
[F
] American parents want
similar things for their children, the Pew report
and past research have found: for them
to be
healthy and happy, honest and ethical, caring and
compassionate. There is no best parenting style or
philosophy,
researchers say, and across income
groups, 92 percent of parents say they are doing a
good job at raising their
children. Yet they
are doing it quite differently. Middle-class and
higher-income parents see their children as
projects in need of careful cultivation, says
Annette Lareau, whose groundbreaking research on
the topic was
published in her book Unequal
Childhoods: Class, Race and Family Life. They try
to develop their skills through
close
supervision and organized activities, and teach
children to question authority figures and
navigate elite
institutions.
[G]
Working-class parents, meanwhile, believe
their children will naturally thrive, and give
them far greater
independence and time for
free play. They are taught to be compliant and
deferential to adults. There are benefits
to
both approaches. Working-class children are
happier, more independent, whine less and are
closer with family
members, Ms. Lareau found.
Higher-income children are more likely to declare
boredom and expect their parents
to solve
their problems. Yet later on, the more affluent
children end up in college and enroute to the
middle class,
while working-class children
tend to struggle. Children from higher-income
families are likely to have the skills to
navigate bureaucracies and succeed in schools
and workplaces, Ms. Lareau said.
[H]
“Do all parents want the most success for
their children? Absolutely,” she said. “Do some
strategies give
children more advantages than
others in institutions? Probably they do. Will
parents be damaging children if they
have one
fewer organized activity? No, I really doubt it.”
梦想不会辜负每一个努力的人
[I]
Social
scientists say the differences arise in part
because low-income parents have less money to
spend on music
class or preschool, and less
flexible schedules to take children to museums or
attend school events. Extracurricular
activities epitomize the differences in child
rearing in the Pew survey, which was of a
nationally representative
sample of 1,807
parents. Of families earning more than $$75,000 a
year, 84 percent say their children have
participated in organized sports over the past
year, 64 percent have done volunteer work and 62
percent have taken
lessons in music, dance or
art. Of families earning less than $$30,000, 59
percent of children have done sports, 37
percent have volunteered and 41 percent have
taken arts classes.
[J]
Especially in
affluent families, children start young. Nearly
half of high-earning, college-graduate parents
enrolled their children in arts classes before
they were 5, compared with one-fifth of low-
income, less-educated
parents. Nonetheless, 20
percent of well-off parents say their children’s
schedules are too hectic, compared with 8
percent of poorer parents.
[K]
Another example is reading aloud, which
studies have shown gives children bigger
vocabularies and better
reading comprehension
in school. Seventy-one percent of parents with a
college degree say they do it every day,
compared with 33 percent of those with a high
school diploma or less, Pew found. White parents
are more likely
than others to read to their
children daily, as are married parents. Most
affluent parents enroll their children in
preschool or day care, while low-income
parents are more likely to depend on family
members. Discipline
techniques vary by
education level: 8 percent of those with a
postgraduate degree say they often spank their
children,
compared with 22 percent of those
with a high school degree or less.
[L]
The
survey also probed attitudes and anxieties.
Interestingly, parents’ attitudes toward education
do not seem
to reflect their own educational
background as much as a belief in the importance
of education for upward mobility.
Most
American parents say they are not concerned about
their children’s grades as long as they work hard.
But 50
percent of poor parents say it is
extremely important to them that their children
earn a college degree, compared
with 39
percent of wealthier parents.
[M]
Less-educated parents, and poorer and black
and Latino parents are more likely to believe that
there is no such
thing as too much involvement
in a child’s education. Parents who are white,
wealthy or college-educated say too
much
involvement can be bad. Parental anxieties reflect
their circumstances. High-earning parents are much
more
likely to say they live in a good
neighborhood for raising children. While bullying
is parents’ greatest concern over
all, nearly
half of low-income parents worry their child will
get shot, compared with one-fifth of high-income
parents. They are more worried about their
children being depressed or anxious.
[N]
In the Pew survey, middle-class
families earning between $$30,000 and $$75,000 a
year fell right between
working-class and
high-earning parents on issues like the quality of
their neighborhood for raising children,
participation in extracurricular activities
and involvement in their children’s education.
梦想不会辜负每一个努力的人
[O]
Children
were not always raised so differently. The
achievement gap between children from high- and
low-
income families is 30 percent to 40
percent larger among children born in 2001 than
those born 25 years earlier,
according to Mr.
Reardon’s research. People used to live near
people of different income levels; neighborhoods
are
now more segregated by income. More than a
quarter of children live in single-parent
households—a historic high,
according to
Pew—and these children are three times as likely
to live in poverty as those who live with married
parents. Meanwhile, growing income inequality
has coincided with the increasing importance of a
college degree
for earning a middle-class
wage.
[P]
Yet there are recent signs
that the gap could be starting to shrink. In the
past decade, even as income inequality
has
grown, some of the socioeconomic differences in
parenting, like reading to children and going to
libraries, have
narrowed.
[Q]
Public policies aimed at young children have
helped, he said, including public preschool
programs and reading
initiatives. Addressing
disparities in the earliest years, it seems, could
reduce inequality in the next generation
36. Working-class parents teach their children
to be obedient and show respect to adults.
37.
American parents, whether rich or poor, have
similar expectations of their children despite
different ways of parenting.
38. While rich
parents are more concerned with their children’s
psychological well-being, poor parents are more
worried about their children’s safety.
39.
The increasing differences in child rearing
between rich and poor families reflect growing
social inequality.
40. Parenting approaches of
working-class and affluent families both have
advantages.
41. Higher-income families and
working-class families tend to live in different
neighborhoods.
42. Physical punishment is used
much less by well-educated parents.
43. Ms.
Lareau doesn’t believe participating in fewer
after-class activities will negatively affect
children’s
development.
44. Wealthy
parents are concerned about their children’s
mental health and busy schedules.
45. Some
socioeconomic differences in child rearing have
shrunk in the past ten years.
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 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.
Open data shares are still in the minority in
many fields. Although many researchers broadly
agree that public
access to raw data would
accelerate science, most are reluctant to post the
result of their own labors online.
梦想不会辜负每一个努力的人
Some communities have
agreed to share online—geneticists, for example,
post DNA sequences at the
GenBnak
repository
(库)
, and astronomers are
accustomed to accessing images of galaxies and
stars from, say, the
Sloan Digital Sky Survey,
a telescope that has observed some 500 million
objects—but these remain the
exception, not
the rule. Historically, scientists have objected
to sharing for many reasons: It is a lot of work;
until
recently, good databases did not exist;
grant funders were not pushing for sharing; it has
been difficult to agree on
standard for
formatting data; and there is no agreed way to
assign credit for data.
But the barriers are
disappearing, in part because journals and funding
agencies worldwide are encouraging
scientists
to make their data public. Last year, the Royal
Society in London said in its report that
scientist need to “shift
away from a research
culture where data is views as a private
preserve”. Funding agencies note that data paid
for with
public money should be public
information, and the scientific community is
recognizing that data can now be shared
digitally in ways that were not possible
before. To match the growing demand, services are
springing up to make it
easier to publish
research product online and enable other
researchers to discover and cite them.
Although calls to share data often concentrate
on the moral advantage of sharing, the practice is
not purely
altruistic
(利他的)
.
Researchers who share plenty of personal benefit,
including more connections with colleagues,
improved visibility and increased citations.
The most successful sharers—those whose data are
downloaded and
cited the most often—get
noticed, and their work gets used. For example,
one of the most popular data sets on
multidisciplinary repository Dryad is about
wood density around the world; it has been
downloaded 5,700 times,
Co-author Amy Zanne
thinks that users probably range from climate-
change researchers wanting to estimate how
much carbon is stored in biomass, to foresters
looking for information on different grades of
timber, “I’d much
prefer to have my data used
by the maximum number of people to ask their own
questions,” she says. “It’s important
to allow
readers and reviewers to see exactly how you
arrive at your results. Publishing data and code
allows your
science to be reproducible.”
46. What do many researchers generally accept?
A
)
It is imperative to protect
scientists’ patents.
B
)
Repositories
are essential to scientific research.
C
)
Open data sharing is most important
to medical science.
D
)
Open data
sharing is conductive to scientific advancement.
47. What is the attitude of most researchers
towards making their own data public?
A
)
Opposed.
B
)
Ambiguous.
C
)
Liberal.
D
)
Neutral.
48. According to the passage, what might
hinder open data sharing?
A
)
The fear
of massive copying.
B
)
The lack of a
research culture.
C
)
The belief that
research data is private intellectual property.
D
)
The concern that certain agencies
may make a profit out of it.
梦想不会辜负每一个努力的人
49. What helps lift
some of the barriers to open data sharing?
A
)
The ever-growing demand for big
data.
B
)
The advancement of digital
technology.
C
)
The changing attitude of
journals and funders.
D
)
The trends of
social and economic development.
50. Dryad
serves as an example to show how open data sharing
.
A
)
is becoming increasingly popular
B
)
benefits sharers and users alike
C
)
make researchers successful
D
)
save both to money and labor
Passage Two
Questions 51 to 55
are based on the following passage.
Beginning in the late sixteenth century, it
became fashionable for young aristocrats to visit
Paris, Venice,
Florence, and above all, Rome,
as the culmination
(终极)
of their classical
education. Thus was born the idea of
the Grand
Tour, a practice which introduced Englishmen,
Germans, Scandinavians, and also Americans to the
art
and culture of France and Italy for the
next 300 years. Travel was arduous and costly
throughout the period,
possible only for a
privileged class—the same that produced gentlemen
scientists, author, antique experts, and
patrons of the arts.
The Grand Tourist was
typically a young man with a through grounding in
Greek and Latin literature as well
as some
leisure time, some means, and some interests in
art. The German traveler Johann Winckelmann
pioneered
the field of art history with his
comprehensive study of Greek and Roman sculpture;
he was portrayed by his friend
Anton Raphael
Mengs at the beginning of his long residence in
Rome. Most Grand Tourists, however, stayed for
briefer periods and set out with less
scholarly intensions, accompanied by a teacher or
guardian, and expected to
return home with
souvenirs of their travels as well as an
understanding of art and architecture formed by
exposure
to great masterpieces.
London was
a frequent starting point for Grand Tourists, and
Paris a compulsory destination; many traveled
to the Netherlands, some to Switzerland and
Germany, and a very few adventurers to Spain,
Greece, or Turkey. The
essential place to
visit, however, was Italy. The British traveler
Charles Thompson spoke for many Grand Tourists
when in 1744 he described himself as “being
impatiently desirous of viewing a country so
famous in history, a
country which one gave
laws to the world, and which is at present the
greatest school of music and painting, contains
the noblest productions of sculpture and
architecture, and is filled with cabinets of
rarities, and collections of all
kinds of
historical relic.” Within Italy, the great focus
was Rome, whose ancient ruins and more recent
achievements
were shown to every Grand
Tourist. Panini’s Ancient Rome and Modern Rome
represent the sights most prized,
including
celebrated Greco-Roman statues and views of famous
ruins, fountains, and churches. Since there were
few museums anywhere in Europe before the
close of the eighteenth century, Grand Tourists
often saw paintings
and sculptures by gaining
admission to private collections, and many were
eager to acquire examples of Greco-
Roman and
Italian art for their own collections. In England,
where architecture was increasingly seen as an
梦想不会辜负每一个努力的人
aristocratic pursuit,
noblemen often applied what they learned from the
villas of Palladio in the Veneto and the
evocative
(唤起回忆的)
ruins of Rome to their
own country houses and gardens.
51. What
is said about the Grand Tour?
A
)
It was
fashionable among young people of the time.
B
)
It was unaffordable for ordinary
people.
C
)
It produced some famous
European artists.
D
)
It made a
compulsory part of college education.
52. What
did Grand Tourists have in common?
A
)
They have much geographic knowledge.
B
)
They were courageous and
venturesome.
C
)
They were versed in
literature and interested in art.
D
)
They had enough travel and outdoor-
life experience.
53. How did Grand Tourists
benefit from their travel?
A
)
They
found inspiration in the world’s greatest
masterpieces.
B
)
They got a better
understanding of early human civilization.
C
)
They developed an interest in the
origin of modern art forms.
D
)
They
gained some knowledge of classical art and
architecture.
54. Why did many Grand Tourists
visit the private collections?
A
)
They
could buy unique souvenirs there to take back
home.
B
)
Europe hardly had any museums
before the 19th century.
C
)
They found
the antiques there more valuable.
D
)
Private collections were of greater
variety.
55. How did the Grand Tourists
influence the architecture in England?
A
)
There appeared more and more Roman-
style buildings.
B
)
Many aristocrats
began to move into Roman-style villas.
C
)
Aristocrats’ country houses all had
Roman-style gardens.
D
)
Italian
architects were hired to design houses and
gardens.
Part VI
Translation
(
3
0
minutes
)
Directions:
For this
part, you are allowed 30 minutes to translate a
passage from Chinese into English. You should
write your answer on
Answer Sheet
2
.
宋朝始于
960
年,一直延续到
1279
年。这一时期,中国经济大幅增长,成为世界上最先进的经济体,科
学、技术、哲学和数学蓬勃
发展,宋代中国是世界历史上首先发行纸币的国家。宋朝还最早使用火药并发
明了活字(
mov
able-type
)印刷。人口增长迅速,越来越多的人住进城市,那里有热闹的娱乐场所。社会生<
br>活多种多样。人们聚集在一起观看和交易珍贵艺术品。宋朝的政府体制在当时也是先进的。政府官员通过<
/p>
梦想不会辜负每一个努力的人
竞争性考试选拔任用。
催泪瓦斯-一开始
大叶海减肥茶-红超巨星
cabbages怎么读-特产英语
神色是什么意思-英文12月缩写
佛系心态什么意思-smoother
热爱的拼音-背部的英文
招架的意思-picture
柠檬英语-昨儿
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