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2012年职称英语考试试题与答案 理工类B
第1部分 词汇题
1、Joe came to the window as the crowd chanted,‖joe,joe,joe!‖ A、jumped B.repeated C.maintained D.approached 2、What puzzles me is why his books are so popular. A.confuses B.shocks C.influences D.concerns 3.The storm caused severe damage. A.physical B.accidental C.environmental D.serious
4.Our aim was to update the health service, and we succeeded. A.offer B.modernize C.provide D.fund
5.Her comments about men are utterly ridiculous. A.slightly B.partly C.faintly D.completely
6.A large crowd assembled outside the American embassy. A.watched B.gathered C.shouted D.walked
7.The contempt he felt for his fellow students was obvious. A . need B.hate C.love D.pity
8.All the flats in the building had the same layout. A.color B.arrangement C.size D.function
9.The weather was crisp and clear and you could see the mountains fifty miles away. A.hot B.heavy C.fresh D.windy
10.He inspired many young people to take up the sport. A.allowed B.called C.advised D.encouraged
11.I think £7 for a drink is a bit steep,don’t you? A.tight B.high C.low D.cheap
12.Most babies can take in a wide range of food easily. A.bring B.keep C.serve D.digest
13.The city centre was wiped out by the bomb. A.destoryed B.covered C.reduced D.moved
14.The walls are made of hollow concrete blocks. A.empty B.big C.long D.new
15.Do we have to wear these name tags? A.lists B.labels C.forms D.codes 第2部分 阅读判断
Eastern Quakes Can Trigger Big Shakes
In the first week of November 2011,people in central Oklahoma experienced more than two dozen earthquakes. The largest, a magnitude(量)5.6 quake, shook thousands of fans in a college football stadium, caused cracks in a few buildings and scared many people who had never felt a quake before. Oklahoma is not an area of the country famous for its quakes. If you watch the news on TV, you see reports about all sorts of natural disasters. But the most dangerous type of natural disaster, and also the most unpredictable, is the earthquake.
Researchers at the US Geological Survey(USGS)estimate that several million earthquakes occur
globally each year. That may sound scary, but people don’t feel many of them because they happen in remote and unpopulated regions. Many quakes happen under the ocean, and others have a very small magnitude.
Scientists know about small, remote quakes only because of very sensitive electronic devices called seismometers(地震仪). These devices detect and measure the size of ground vibrations(震颤)produced by earthquakes. Altogether, USGS researchers use seismometers to identify and locate about 20000 earthquakes each year.
Although earthquakes can happen anywhere in the world, really big quakes occur only in certain areas. The largest ones register a magnitude 8 or higher and happen, on average, only once each year. Such big ones typically occur along the edges of Earth’s tectonic plates(构造板块).
Thctonic plates are huge pieces of Earth’s crust(外壳), sometimes many kilometers thick. Often, edges of these plates temporarily lock together. When plates push and scrape(擦)past each other earthquakes occur. On average, tectonic plates move very slowly--bout the same speed as your fingernails grow.
But sometimes earthquakes rumble(轰轰作响)through portions of the landscape far from a plate’s edges. Although less expected, these ―mid-plate‖ small earthquakes can be stantial damage. Some of the biggest known examples hit the eastern half of the United States two centuries ago. Today, scientists are still puzzling over why the quakes occurred and when similar ones might occur. 16. Oklahoma is an area often experiencing natural disasters. A. Right B.Wrong C. Not mentioned
17. The earthquake is the most unpredictable natural disaster. A. Right B.Wrong C. Not mentioned
18. Few earthquakes happen without people’s awareness. A. Right B.Wrong C. Not mentioned
19. Seismometers can identify and locate most of the earthquakes in China. A. Right B.Wrong C. Not mentioned
20. Big earthquakes of a magnitude 8 or higher seldom happen far from the edges of tectonic plates.
A. Right B.Wrong C. Not mentioned
21. Whenever tectonic plates move, earthquakes happen. A. Right B.Wrong C. Not mentioned
22. The earthquake that hit the eastern half of the United States two centuries ago is the biggest‖mid-plate‖ one in history.
A. Right B.Wrong C. Not mentioned 第3部分
Learn about Noble Gases(惰性气体)
1 Have you ever ridden on a balloon? Many tourist spots offer balloon rides in order for people to see the beauty of a place from above. A balloon contains a noble gas called hellum(氦). Formerly, balloons contained hydrogen but hydrogen is very flammable and dangerous when uncontrolled. Therefore, people shifted to helium, which is safer. Helium is safe because it has the properties of the noble gases.
2 People once belleved that noble gases couldn’t chemically react at all. For this reason, they were called inert gases(惰性气体). They were also listed under Group 0 in the old periodic table because scientists believed that the gases have zero valence(价)electrons in their outer shell. This
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was later proven to be untrue when some noble gas compounds were discovered.
3 The gases are elements, which share similar properties. These properties include being monoatomic, colorless, odorless, being able to conduct electricity, and having low chemical reactivity. Noble gases include Helium, Neon, Argon, Krypton, Xenon and Radon. These are all found in Group 18, in the rightmost column of the periodic table. If you look at the periodic table, you will notice that these elements are the only ones, which do not have a charge. Helium has the lowest molecular(分子的)weight while Radon is the heaviest.
4 Remember that chemical reactions occur because atoms have valence electrons, which are electrons in their outer shell. When the outer shell is ―unfilled‖ or the required number of electrons is not yet complete, the atom is more reactive. Noble gases have a full outer shell, meaning that they have complete electrons in their outer shell. This complete number varies. For instance, the outer shell of Helium has 2 valence electrons while the outer shell of Xenon has 8 electrons. Nowadays, there remains to be a few noble gases because of the low chemical reactivity of these said gases.
5 because of their properties, noble gases have many important applications. They are widely used in medicine and industries. For instance, liquid Helium is used for superconducting magnets(磁体). These magnets are very important in physics and medicine. When a doctor suspects that a person’s brain has been damaged, he might request for Magnetic Resonance Imaging(MRI). MRI allows the doctor to ―see‖ the brain, without operating on the patient. 23. paragraph 2 24. paragraph 3 25. paragraph 4 26. paragraph 5
A. How were noble gases discovered? B. what is the periodic table?
C. what are the applications of noble gases?
D. How were noble gases understood in the past?
E.What causes the low chemical reactivity of noble gases? F. What are noble gases?
27. Noble gases are not very chemically .
28. Among the elements of noble gases Helium is the .
29. The required number of electrons in noble gases’outer shell is . 30. MRI may make operating on the patient . A. complete B. reactive C.unnecessary D. flammable E. important F. lightest 第4部分 阅读理解
第一篇 Gross National Happiness
In the last century, new technology improved the lives of many people in many countries. However, one country resisted these changes. High in the Himalayan mountains of Asia, the kingdom of Bhutan remained separate. Its people and Buddhist(佛教)culture had not been affected for almost a thousand years. Bhutan, however, was a poor country. People died at a young age. Most of its people could not read, and they did not know much about the outside world. Then, in 1972, a new ruler named King Jigme Singye Wangchuck decided to help Bhutan to become modern, but without losing its traditions.
King Wangchuck looked at other countries for ideas. He saw that most countries measured their
progress by their Gross Natonal Product(GNP). The GNP measures products and money. When the number of products sold increases, people say the country is making progress. King Wangchuck had a different idea for Bhutan. He wanted to measure his country’s progress by people’s happiness. If the people’s happiness increased, the king could say that Bhutan was making progress. To decide if people were happier, he created a measure called Gross National Happiness(GNH).
GNH is based on certain principles that create happiness. People are happier if they have health care, education, and jobs. They are happier when they live in a healthy, protected environment. They are happier when they can keep their traditional culture and customs. Finally, people are happier when they have a good, stable government.
Now these is some evidence of increased GNH in Bhutan. People are healthier and are living longer. More people are educated and employed. Teenty-five percent of the land has become national parks, and the country has almost no pollution. The Bhutanese continue to wear their traditional clothing and follow their ancient Buddhist customs. Bhutan has also become a democracy. In 2008, King Wangchuck gave his power to his son. Although the country still had a king, it held its first democratic elections that year. Bhutan had political parties and political candidates for the first time. Finally, Bhutan has connected to the rest of the world through television and internet.
Bhutan is a symbol for social progress. Many countries are now interested in Bhutan’s GNH. These countries are investigating their own ways to measure happiness. They want to create new policies that take care of their people, cultures, and land.
Brazil may be the nest country to use the principles of GNH. Brazilian leaders see the principles of GNH as a source of inspiration. Brazil is a large country with a diverse population. If happiness works as a measure of progress in Brazil, perhaps the rest of the world will follow. 31. Who was Jigme Singye Wangchuck?
A. A king. B . A president. C. A Buddhist priest. D. A general.
32. Apart from modernizing Bhutan, what else did Wangchuck want to do for Bhutan? A. To make its population grow.
B. To keep its traditions and customs. C. To keep it separate from the world. D. To encourage its people to get rich.
33. A country shows its progress with GNP by A. spending more money. B. spending less money. C. providing more jobs. D. selling more products.
34. According to GNH, people are happier if they A. have new technology. B. can change their religion.
C. have a good, stable government. D. have more money.
35. Today many countries are
A. using the principles of GNH to measure their progress.
B. working together to develop a common scale to measure GNH.
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C. taking both Bhutan and Brazil as symbols for social progress. D. trying to find their own ways to measure happiness. 第二篇 Archive Gallery: The Best of Bionics(仿生学)
Humans might be the most highly-evolved species on the planet, but most animals possess skills we can only dream of having. Imagine how much electricity we could save if we could see in the dark the way cats do. Imagine leaping from tree to tree like a monkey. Giraffes(长颈鹿), which are otherwise calm and good-natured, sleep only 4.6 hours a day.
We realized a long, long time ago that nature provides the best blueprint(蓝图)for invention. We’ve borrowed canals from beavers(河狸)and reflectors from cat’s eyes. Although the words ―bionics‖ became popular only after the 1960s, history shows that nature has always provided ideas on solving everyday problems. Our archives(档案)don’t go back to the time of Leonardo da Vinci and his bird-like flying machines, but we can take you to the late 19th century, where we applied those same principles for building our first practical airplanes.
To prepare for their flight at Kitty Hawk, the Wright brothers studied the movements of pigeons to figure out how they stayed high up when they were heavier than air. Their success inspired scores of successors to improve on the airplane by studying various aspects of nature. One of Orville Wright’s pupils caught and stuffed seagulls to examine their wingspan. Meanwhile, two French inventors examined spinning sycamore(梧桐) seeds in an effort to apply those same motions, reversed, to a helicopter.
Some examples are more obvious than others. The outside of the airplane designed by the Wright brothers looks like a minimalistic (简单抽象艺术) structure. On the other hand, Barney Connett’s fish submarine (潜水艇) actually looks like a fish.
Some bio-inspired concepts have yet to be invented. In the 1960s, the US Army commissioned several university professors to conduct research on the motor skills animals in hope of applying those same abilities to tanks. Tanks that run like horses or jump like grasshoppers(蚂蚱)-sounds shocking, doesn’t it? But imagine how life would change if we could achieve that.
36. ―cats‖,‖monkeys‖ and ―giraffes‖ mentioned in paragraph 1 are examples to illustrate A. they are highly-evolved species as humans. B. humans can learn animals’skills. C. they are skillful in different ways.
D. animals have skills that humans do not possess.
37. Which of the following can be found in the archive gallery? A. History books.
B. The Wright brothers’sculpture.
C. First practical airplanes built in the late 19th century. D. Leonardo da vinci’s bird-like flying machines. 38. What happened after the Wright brothers’success? A. People carried out a systematic study on pigeons.
B. People studied more animals and plants to develop the airplane. C. People cound fly their airplane for fun.
D. People kept their airplane at a French gallery.
39. Which of the following in true about the research carried out by the US Army? A. It has changed our life.
B. It has cost a large sum of money.