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北京市安全局2014年12月大学英语六级考试真题及答案(第二套)

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2020-12-12 04:41
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过生日唱什么歌-雷雨简介

2020年12月12日发(作者:邢绍孔)
2014年12月大学英语六级考试真题二
Writing (30 minutes)
Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write an essay based on the picture
below. You should start your essay with a brief description of the picture and then discuss whether
there is a shortcut to learning. You should give sound arguments to support your views and write
at least 150 words but no more than 200 words.


Studying’ is over there in the fiction section.
Listening Comprehension (30 minutes)
Section A
1. A) The man should get a pair of new shoes. B) The man’s tennis racket is good enough.
C) The man spent too much on his tennis shoes. D) The man is out of shape.
2. A) The woman doesn’t want to assist the man.
B) The woman will ask Kathy to assist the man.
C) Kathy is very pleased to attend the lecture by Dr. Smith.
D) The woman will skip Dr. Smith’s lecture to help the man.
3. A) The speakers and Steve used to be classmates.
B) Steve invited his classmates to visit his big cottage.
C) Steve became rich soon after graduation from college.
D) The woman asked the man to accompany her to the party.
4. A) In a bus. B) In a boat.
C) In a clinic. D) In a plane.
5. A) 9:10. B) 9:40.
C) 9:50. D) 10:10.
6. A) John has got many admirers. B) She does not like John at all.
C) John has just got a bachelor’s degree. D) She does not think John is handsome.
7. A) He has been bumping along for hours. B) He is trapped in a terrible traffic jam.
C) He is involved in a serious accident. D) He has got a sharp pain in the neck.
8. A) She cannot go without a washing machine. B) She should improve her physical fitness.
C) She is a professional mechanic. D) She is good at repairing things.
9. A) The accused was found guilty of murder. B) The accused was found innocent.
C) The accused was found guilty of stealing. D) The accused was sentenced to death.
10. A) He was unemployed. B) He was out of his mind.
C) His children were sick. D) His wife deserted him.
11. A) He had committed the same sort of crime. B) He was unlikely to get employed.
C) He was unworthy of sympathy. D) He had been in jail before.
12. A) Irresponsible. B) Aggressive.
C) Conservative. D) Unsatisfactory.
13. A) Public relations. B) Product design.
C) Internal communication. D) Distribution of brochures.
14. A) Placing advertisements in the trade press.
B) Drawing sketches for advertisements.
C) Making television commercials.
D) Advertising in the national press.
15. A) She has the motivation to do the job.
B) She knows the tricks of advertising.
C) She is not suitable for the position.
D) She is not so easy to get along with.
Section B
Passage One
16. A) The cozy communal life. B) The beautiful environment.
C) The variety of culture. D) The richness of resources.
17. A) It ensures their physical and mental health. B) It helps them soak up the surrounding
culture.
C) It is as important as their learning experience. D) It is very beneficial to their academic
progress.
18. A) It has the world’s best-known military academies.
B) It offers the most challenging academic programs.
C) It draws faculty from all around the world.
D) It provides numerous options for students.
19. A) They are responsible merely to their Ministry of Education.
B) They try to give students opportunities for experimentation.
C) They strive to develop every student’s academic potential.
D) They ensure that all students get roughly equal attention.
Passage Two
20. A) It is leaving Folkestone in about five minutes.
B) It is now about half way to the French coast.
C) It crosses the English Channel twice a day.
D) It will arrive at Boulogne at half past two.
21. A) Next to the duty-free shop. B) Opposite the ship’s office.
C) In the front of A deck. D) At the rear of B deck.
22. A) It is much more spacious than the lounge on C deck.
B) It is for the sole use of passengers travelling with cars.
C) It is for the use of passengers travelling with children.
D) It is for senior passengers and people with VIP cards.
Passage Three
23. A) It was named after one of its painters. B) It was named after a cave art expert.
C) It was named after its discoverer. D) It was named after its location.
24. A) Deer were worshiped by the ancient Cro- Magnon people.
B) Animal painting was part of the spiritual life of the time.
C) Cro-Magnon people painted animals they hunted and ate.
D) They were believed to keep evils away from cave dwellers.
25. A) They have misinterpreted the meaning of the cave paintings.
B) They are unable to draw such interesting and fine paintings.
C) They have difficulty telling when the paintings were done.
D) They know little about why the paintings were created.
Section C
If you are attending a local college, especially one without residence halls, you’ll probably
live at home and commute to classes. This arrangement has a lot of (26)__________ . It’s cheaper.
It provides a comfortable and familiar setting, and it means you'll get the kind of home cooking
you're used to instead of the monotony(单调)that (27)________ even the best institutional food.
However, commuting students need to (28)_____________ to become involved in the life of their
college and to take special steps to meet their fellow students. Often, this means a certain amount
of initiative on your part in (29)________ and talking to people in your classes whom you think
you might like.
One problem that commuting students sometimes face is their parents' unwillingness to
recognize that they're adults. The (30)____________ from high school to college is a big one,
and if you live at home you need to develop the same kind of independence you’d have if you were
living away. Home rules that might have been (31)________ when you were in high school don’t
apply. If your parents are (32)________________ to renegotiate, you can speed the process along
by letting your behavior show that you have the responsibility that goes with maturity. Parents
are more willing to (33)__________ their children as adults when they behave like adults. If,
however, there’s so much friction at home that it (34)_________ your academic work, you might
want to consider sharing an apartment with one or more friends. Sometimes this is a happy solution
when family (35)____________ make everyone miserable.
Reading Comprehension (40 minutes)
Section A
Children are natural-born scientists. They have 36 minds, and they aren’t afraid to admit
they don’t know something. Most of them, 37, lose this as they get older. They become self- conscious
and don’t want to appear stupid. Instead of finding things out for themselves they make 38 that
often turn out to be wrong.
So it’s not a case of getting kids interested in science. You just have to avoid killing
the 39 for learning that they were born with. It’s no coincidence that kids start deserting science
once it becomes formalised. Children naturally have a blurred approach to 40 knowledge. They see
learning about science or biology or cooking as all part of the same act—it’s all learning.
It’s only because of the practicalities of education that you have to start breaking down the
curriculum into specialist subjects. You need to have specialist teachers who 41 what they know.
Thus once they enter school, children begin to define subjects and erect boundaries that needn’
t otherwise exist.
Dividing subjects into science, maths, English, etc. is something we do for 42. In the end
it’s all learning, but many children today 43 themselves from a scientific education. They think
science is for scientists, not for them.
Of course we need to specialise 44. Each of us has only so much time on Earth, so we can’
t study everything. At 5 years old, our field of knowledge and 45 is broad, covering anything
from learning to walk to learning to count. Gradually it narrows down so that by the time we are
45, it might be one tiny little comer within science.
A) accidentally
B) acquiring
C) assumptions
D) convenience
E) eventually
F) exclude
G) exertion
H) exploration
I) formulas
J) ignite
K) impart
L) inquiring
M) passion
N) provoking
O) unfortunately
参考答案:LOCMJ KDFEH
Section B
Meaning Is Healthier Than Happiness
[A] For at least the last decade, the happiness craze has been building. In the last three
months alone, over 1,000 books on happiness were released on Amazon, including Happy Money,
Happy- People-Pills For All, and, for those just starting out, Happiness for Beginners.
[B] One of the consistent claims of books like these is that happiness is associated with
all sorts of good life outcomes, including—most promisingly—good health. Many studies have noted
the connection between a happy mind and a healthy body—the happier we are, the better health
outcomes we seem to have. In an overview of 150 studies on this topic, researchers put it like
this: “Inductions of well-being lead to healthy functioning, and inductions of ill-being lead
to compromised health.”
[C] But a new study, just published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
(PNAS) challenges the rosy picture. Happiness may not be as good for the body as researchers thought.
It might even be bad.
[D] Of course, it’s important to first define happiness. A few months ago, I wrote a piece
called “There’s More to Life Than Being Happy” about a psychology study that dug into what
happiness really means to people. It specifically explored the difference between a meaningful
life and a happy life.
[E] It seems strange that there would be a difference at all. But the researchers, who looked
at a large sample of people over a month-long period, found that happiness is associated with
selfish “taking” behavior and that having a sense of meaning in life is associated with selfless
“giving” behavior.
[F] “Happiness without meaning characterizes a relatively shallow, self-absorbed or even
selfish life, in which things go well, needs and desires are easily satisfied, and complicated
relationships are avoided,” the authors of the study wrote. “If anything, pure happiness is
linked to not helping others in need.” While being happy is about feeling good, meaning is derived
from contributing to others or to society in a bigger way. As Roy Baumeister, one of the researchers,
told me, “Partly what we do as human beings is to take care of others and contribute to others.
This makes life meaningful but it does not necessarily make us happy.”
[G] The new PNAS study also sheds light on the difference between meaning and happiness, but
on the biological level. Barbara Fredrickson, a psychological researcher at the University of
North Carolina-Chapel Hill, and Steve Cole, a genetics and psychiatry(精神病学)researcher at
UCLA, examined the self-reported levels of happiness and meaning in 80 research subjects.
[H] Happiness was defined, as in the earlier study, by feeling good. The researchers measured
happiness by asking subjects questions like “How often did you feel happy?’’, “How often did
you feel interested in life?” and “How often did you feel satisfied?” The more strongly people
endorsed these measures of “hedonic(享乐主义的)well-being,” or pleasure, the higher they scored
on happiness.
[I]Meaning was defined as an orientation to something bigger than the self. They measured
meaning by asking questions like “How often did you feel that your life has a sense of direction
or meaning to it?” and “How often did you feel that you had something to contribute to society?”
The more people endorsed these measures of “eudaimonic(幸福论的)well-being” —or, simply put,
virtue—the more meaning they felt in life.
[J] After noting the sense of meaning and happiness that each subject had, Fredrickson and
Cole, with their research colleagues, looked at the ways certain genes expressed themselves in
each of the participants. Like neuroscientists who use JMRI(功能磁共振成像)scanning to determine
how regions in the brain respond to different stimuli, Cole and Fredrickson are interested in
how the body, at the genetic level, responds to feelings of happiness and meaning.
[K] Cole’s past work has linked various kinds of chronic adversity to a particular gene
expression pattern. When people feel lonely, are grieving the loss of a loved one, or are struggling
to make ends meet, their bodies go into threat mode. This triggers the activation of a
stress-related gene pattern that has two features: an increase in the activity of pro- inflammatory
(促炎症的)genes and a decrease in the activity of genes involved in anti-viral responses.
[L] Cole and Fredrickson found that people who are happy but have little or no sense of meaning
in their lives have the same gene expression patterns as people who are responding to and enduring
chronic adversity. That is, the bodies of these happy people are preparing them for bacterial
threats by activating the pro- inflammatory response. Chronic inflammation is, of course,
associated with major illnesses like heart disease and various cancers.
[M] “Empty positive emotions” —like the kind people experience during manic(狂喜的)
episodes or artificially induced euphoria(欣快)from alcohol and drugs—“are about as good for
you as adversity,” says Fredrickson.
[N] It’s important to understand that for many people, a sense of meaning and happiness in
life overlap; many people score jointly high (or jointly low) on the happiness and meaning measures
in the study. But for many others, there is a dissonance(不一致)they feel that they are low
on happiness and high on meaning or that their lives are very high in happiness, but low in meaning.
This last group, which has the gene expression pattern associated with adversity, formed 75 percent
of study participants. Only one quarter of the study participants had what the researchers call
“eudaimonic predominance” —that is, their sense of meaning outpaced their feelings of happiness.
[O] This is too bad given the more beneficial gene expression pattern associated with
meaningfulness. People whose levels of happiness and meaning line up, and people who have a strong
sense of meaning but are not necessarily happy, showed a de-activation of the adversity stress
response. Their bodies were not preparing them for the bacterial infections that we get when we
are alone or in trouble, but for the viral infections we get when surrounded by a lot of other
people.
[P] Fredrickson’s past research, described in her two books, Positivity and Love 2.0, has
mapped the benefits of positive emotions in individuals. She has found that positive emotions
broaden a person’s perspective and help protect people against adversity. So it was surprising
to her that hedonic well-being, which is associated with positive emotions and pleasure, did so
badly in this study compared with eudaimonic well-being.
[Q] “It’s not the amount of hedonic happiness that’s a problem,” Fredrickson tells me,
“It’s that it’s not matched by eudaimonic well-being. It’s great when both are in step. But
if you have more hedonic well-being than would be expected, that’s when this [gene] pattern that’
s similar to adversity emerged.”
[R] The terms hedonism and eudaimonism bring to mind the great philosophical debate, which
has shaped Western civilization for over 2,000 years, about the nature of the good life. Does
happiness lie in feeling good, as hedonists think, or in doing and being good, as Aristotle and
his intellectual descendants, the virtue ethicists(伦理学家), think? From the evidence of this
study, it seems that feeling good is not enough. People need meaning to thrive. In the words of
Carl Jung, “The least of things with a meaning is worth more in life than the greatest of things
without it.” Jung’s wisdom certainly seems to apply to our bodies, if not also to our hearts
and our minds.
46. The author’s recent article examined how a meaningful life is different from a happy
life.
47. It should be noted that many people feel their life is both happy and meaningful.
48. According to one survey, there is a close relationship between hedonic well-being measures
and high scores on happiness.
49. According to one of the authors of a new study, what makes life meaningful may not make
people happy.
50. Experiments were carried out to determine our body’s genetic expression of feelings of
happiness and meaning.
51. A new study claims happiness may not contribute to health.
52. According to the researchers, taking makes for happiness while giving adds meaning to
life.
53. Evidence from research shows that it takes meaning for people to thrive.
54. With regard to gene expression patterns, happy people with little or no sense of meaning
in life are found to be similar to those suffering from chronic adversity.
55. Most books on happiness today assert that happiness is beneficial to health.
参考答案:DNHKJ CERLB
Section C
Passage One
Nothing succeeds in business books like the study of success. The current business-book boom
was launched in 1982 by Tom Peters and Robert Waterman with In Search of Excellence. The trend
has continued with a succession of experts and would- be experts who promise to distil the essence
of excellence into three (or five or seven) simple rules.
The Three Rules is a self- conscious contribution to this type of writing; it even includes
a bibliography of “success studies”. Michael Raynor and Mumtaz Ahmed work for a consultancy,
Deloitte, that is determined to turn itself into more of a thought-leader and less a corporate
repairman. They employ all the tricks of the success books. They insist that their conclusions
are “measurable and actionable” —guides to behaviour rather than analysis for its own sake.
Success authors usually serve up vivid stories about how exceptional businesspeople stamped their
personalities on a company or rescued it from a life-threatening crisis. Messrs Raynor and Ahmed
are happier chewing the numbers: they provide detailed appendices on “calculating the elements
of advantage” and “detailed analysis”.
The authors spent five years studying the behaviour of their 344 “exceptional companies,”
only to come up at first with nothing. Every hunch(直觉)led to a blind alley and every hypothesis
to a dead end. It was only when they shifted their attention from how companies behave to how
they think that they began to make sense of their voluminous material.
Management is all about making difficult tradeoffs in conditions that are always uncertain
and often fast- changing. But exceptional companies approach these tradeoffs with two simple rules
in mind, sometimes consciously, sometimes unconsciously. First: better before cheaper. Companies
are more likely to succeed in the long run if they compete on quality or performance than on price.
Second: revenue before cost. Companies have more to gain in the long run from driving up revenue
than by driving down costs.
Most success studies suffer from two faults. There is “the halo(光环)effect”, whereby
good performance leads commentators to attribute all manner of virtues to anything and everything
the company does. These virtues then suddenly become vices when the company fails. Messrs Raynor
and Ahmed work hard to avoid these mistakes by studying large bodies of data over several decades.
But they end up embracing a different error: stating the obvious. Most businesspeople will not
be surprised to learn that it is better to find a profitable niche(隙缝市场)and focus on boosting
your revenues than to compete on price and cut your way to success. The difficult question is
how to find that profitable niche and protect it. There, The Three Rules is less useful.
56. What kind of business books are most likely to sell well?
A) Books on excellence. B) Guides to management.
C) Books on business rules. D) Analyses of market trends.
57. What does the author imply about books on success so far?
A) They help businessmen one way or another. B) They are written by well- recognised experts.
C) They more or less fall into the same stereotype. D) They are based on analyses of corporate
leaders.
58. How does The Three Rules differ from other success books according to the passage?
A) It focuses on the behaviour of exceptional businessmen.
B) It bases its detailed analysis on large amounts of data.
C) It offers practicable advice to businessmen.
D) It draws conclusions from vivid examples.
59. What does the passage say contributes to the success of exceptional companies?
A) Focus on quality and revenue. B) Management and sales promotion.
C) Lower production costs and competitive prices. D) Emphasis on after-sale service and
maintenance.
60. What is the author’s comment on The Three Rules?
A) It can help to locate profitable niches. B) It has little to offer to businesspeople.
C) It is noted for its detailed data analysis. D) It fails to identify the keys to success.
Passage Two
Until recently, the University of Kent prided itself on its friendly image. Not any more.
Over the past few months it has been working hard, with the help of media consultants, to play
down its cosy reputation in favour of something more academic and serious.
Kent is not alone in considering an image revamp(翻新). Changes to next year’s funding
regime are forcing universities to justify charging students up to ?9,000 in fees.
Nowadays universities are putting much more of a focus on their brands and what their value
propositions are. While in the past universities have often focused on student social life and
attractions of the university town in recruitment campaigns, they are now concentrating on more
tangible(实在的)attractions, such as employment prospects, engagement with industry, and lecturer
contact hours, making clear exactly what students are going to get for their money.
The problem for universities is that if those benefits fail to materialise, students notice.
That worries Rob Behrens, who deals with student complaints. “Universities need to be extremely
careful in describing what’s going to happen to students,” he says. “As competition is going
to get greater for attracting gifted students, there is a danger that universities will go the
extra mile.”
One university told prospective engineering students they would be able to design a car and
race it at Brands Hatch, which never happened, he says. Others have promised use of sophisticated
equipment that turned out to be broken or unavailable. “If universities spent as much money on
handling complaints and appeals appropriately as they spend on marketing, they would do better
at keeping students, and in the National Student Survey returns,” he says.
Ongoing research tracking prospective 2012 students suggests that they are not only becoming
more sophisticated in thinking about what they want from a university, but are also spending more
time researching evidence to back up institutional claims.
Hence the growing importance of the student survey. From next September, all institutions
will also be expected to publish on their websites key information sets, allowing easier comparison
between institutions, between promises and reality, and the types of jobs and salaries graduates
go on to.
As a result, it is hardly surprising that universities are beginning to change the way they
market themselves. While the best form of marketing for institutions is to be good at what they
do, they also need to be clear about how they are different from others.
And it is vital that once an institution claims to be particularly good at something, it must
live up to it. The moment you position yourself, you become exposed, and if you fail in that you
are in trouble.
61. What was the University of Kent famous for?
A) Its comfortable campus life. B) Its up-to-date course offerings.
C) Its distinguished teaching staff. D) Its diverse academic programmes.
62. What are universities trying to do to attract students?
A) Improve their learning environment. B) Offer more scholarships to the gifted.
C) Upgrade their campus facilities. D) Present a better academic image.
63. What does Rob Behrens suggest universities do in marketing themselves?
A) Publicise the achievements of their graduates.
B) Go to extra lengths to cater to students’ needs.
C) Refrain from making promises they cannot honour.
D) Survey the expectations of their prospective students.
64. What is students’ chief consideration in choosing a university?
A) Whether it promises the best job prospects.
B) Whether it is able to deliver what they want.
C) Whether it ranks high among similar institutions.
D) Whether it offers opportunities for practical training.
65. What must universities show to win recruitment campaigns?
A) They are positioned to meet the future needs of society.
B) They are responsible to students for their growth.
C) They are ever ready to improve themselves.
D) They are unique one way or another.
参考答案:ACBAB AACBD
Translation (30 minutes)
自从1978年启动改革以来,中国已从计划经济转为以市场为基础的经济,经历了经济和社会的快速发
展。平均10%的GDP增长已使五亿多人脱贫。联合国的“千年(millennium)发展目标” 在中国均已达到或
即将达到。目前,中国的第十二个五年规划强调发展服务业和解决环境及社会不平衡的 问题。政府已设定
目标减少污染,提高能源效率,改善得到教育和医保的机会,并扩大社会保障。中国现 在7%的经济年增长
目标表明政府是在重视生活质量而不是增长速度。
参考译文:
Since the reform in 1978, with the rapid development of economy and society, Chinese economy
has transferred into market economy from command economy. The average 10% growth of GDP has lifted
more than 500 million people out of poverty. The Millennium Goal of the U.N. has been fully or
partially achieved throughout China. At present, the 12th Five-year Plan in China emphasizes the
development of service industry and the solution of imbalance of environment and society. The
government has set goals to reduce pollution, enhance energy efficiency, improve educational
opportunities and medical insurance and expand social security. The 7% growth annual goal
demonstrates that the government is concentrating on the quality of life rather than the speed
of growth.

中国最先进的战斗机-giorgioarmani


科技活动方案-房祖


费祎-今天农历是什么日子


毒品之王-合音量


徐永光-家讯


上海长江隧道-爱情城堡


半糖主义英文版-打屁股吧


大物师-温馨人家



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