文档内容
大学英语六级考试绝密押题试卷(
五)
Part Ⅰ Writing (30
minutes) Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write
an essay to express your views on the phenomenon of keeping pets in
dormitories. You should 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 mu,st choose the best answer from the four choices m)a,rk)ed, A)B
) C and D
. Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 1 with a single line
through the centre. Questions 1 to 4 are based on the conversation you
have just heard.
1. A) The specialty of an applied linguist.
B) The definition of second language acquisition.
C) The causes of second language learning difficulty.
D) The language competence of children and adults.
2. A) Because they are not highly motivated.
B) Because they are not quite curious.
C) Because they are not rightly encouraged.
D) Because they are not fully confident.
3. A) They differ greatly with regard to vocabulary.
B) They cause no language learning problems.
C) They are similar in terms of grammar.
D) They are both complicated and analytic.
4. A) They should be effective in most situations.
B) They should be used to teach different languages.
C) They should be based on translation and grammar.
D ) T h ey
Que s tio n s 5
s h o uld b e a d a p te d a c c or d in g to d i f f e re n t
t o 8 ar e b a s e d o n t h e c o n ve rs a t i o n y o
co n d it io n s .
u h a v e j u s t heard.
5. A) It should be close to a city with colorful nightlife.
B) It should make your life convenient and meaningful.
C) It should enable a person to enjoy nightclubs and discos.
D) It should match with the buyer’ s character.
6. A) City outskirts. C) The rural area.
B) The downtown. D) The coastal city.
7. A) They are more expensive than those in cities.
B) They might be cheaper than those in cities.
2024年英语六级考试绝密押题试卷(五) 第1 淘宝:谈辰图书企业C) They are surprisingly low in price.
D) They are especially large in size.
2024年英语六级考试绝密押题试卷(五) 第2 淘宝:谈辰图书企业8. A) A house should be away from a busy street or main road.
B) A house should be close to famous schools.
C) The number of children of a family decides where to live.
D) A family affects the size of a house.
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 11 are based on the passage you have just heard.
9. A) Asking him or her the same question repeatedly.
B) Looking into his or her eyes when questioning.
C) Analyzing his or her verbal expression.
D) Observing his or her body language.
10. A) Giving him or her a cigarette.
B) Talking with him or her.
C) Investigating him or her in advance.
D) Letting him or her chat to others.
11. A) Using facial expressions is the most common way.
B) Chatting is the most widely used way.
C) Using body language only works by accident.
D) Talking is the easiest way to use.
Questions 12 to 15 are based on the passage you have just heard.
12. A) Telling them to look both ways for
cars.
B) Telling them to follow other
pedestrians.
C) Telling them not to look around.
D) Telling them not to race against time.
13. A) $15 to $24. C) $24 to $99.
B) $15 to $99. D) $15 to $19.
14. A) To establish a friendly traffic system.
B) To raise public awareness of safety.
C) To build a more civilized city.
D) To reduce the casualties of road accidents.
15. A) It is strict with the seniors.
B) It includes most of the electronic devices.
C) It is now welcomed by all the states.
D) It permits an exception in an emergency.
2024年英语六级考试绝密押题试卷(五) 第3 淘宝:谈辰图书企业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) To make sure that they have a clear goal.
B) To assist them in choosing a suitable college.
C) To identify whether they should go to college to study further.
D) To help them decide whether to go to college and what to study.
17. A) Take some form of standardized test.
B) Get a certificate of their language level.
C) Apply for a visa in advance.
D) Send in their resume and a cover letter.
18. A) The adaptation process. C) The tuition fees.
B) The difficult courses. D) The study-life balance.
Questions 19 to 22 are based on the passage you have just heard.
19. A) It sells fresh vegetables and fruits to city dwellers.
B) It endeavors to reduce Nigeria’ s dependence on food imports.
C) It focuses on growing healthy and green vegetables.
D) It aims at health conscious people all over the country.
20. A) Measuring water consumption. C) Collecting household waste.
B) Measuring energy use. D) Reading bar codes.
21. A) It is experiencing a recession. C) It depends on technology.
B) It is now rather stable. D) It supports state-owned business.
22. A) They can be as successful as him. C) They are rather promising.
B) They are rather energetic. D) They need support from the world.
Questions 23 to 25 are based on the recording you have just heard.
23. A) Workers must obey the growing order
of plants.
B) Workers can control the plants’ growing
speed.
C) Plants are grown in sand.
D) Plants are grown indoors.
24. A) It grows crops at the same rate throughout the year.
B) It is a newly established indoor-farming company.
C) It is now growing 250 kinds of greens and herbs.
D) It needs more water to grow crops.
25. A) The number of calories.C) The different
flavors.
B) The nutrition levels. D) The cooking methods.
2024年英语六级考试绝密押题试卷(五) 第4 淘宝:谈辰图书企业Part Reading Comprehension 40
Ⅲ ( )
minutes Section A
Directions In this section there is a passage with ten blanks. You are
required :to select o,ne 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.
A new study from researchers in Europe claims that the average IQ in
Western nations dropped by a staggering 14. 1 points over the past century.
“ We tested the 26 that the Victorians were cleverer than modern populations
using high- quality instruments, namely measures of simple visual reaction
time in a meta-analytic study,” the researchers wrote in the study,
which was published online in the journal Intelligence on Thursday. “
Simple reaction time measures correlate 27 with measures of general
intelligence and are considered elementary measures of 2 8 . ”
The results might surprise some. Especially if the researchers were simply
measuring visual response time. After all, in a digital world constantly
29 for our attention, it would seem people generally respond more
quickly to visual stimuli. However, the results appear to indicate
something different.
The Victorian era ran roughly from 1837 to 1901, 3 0 with the
reign of England’ s Queen Victoria. Some have credited the Reform Act of
1832 with sparking an era of previously 31 peace and prosperity in the U. K.
The results were measured using data from 1889 to 2004 and were analyzed by
Michael A. Woodley in Brussels.
So why has there been such a 32 drop? As UPI notes, previous
research studies have found that women of higher intelligence tend to
have fewer children on average, meaning that population growth may be
driven by those with a lower IQ. And over time, the abundance of less
intelligent 33 would affect the overall IQ average. On average, the
general intelligence of those populations measured
34 by 1. 23 points per decade. “ These findings strongly indicate that with
35 to general intelligence the Victorians were substantially cleverer than modern
Western populations,” the study says.
A) aspect I) insignificantly
B) climbed J) offspring
C) cognitio K) respect
n L) sharp
D) coincidi M) steady
ng
N) substantially
E) competin
O) unprecedented
g
Section
F) completi
B
ng
: ,
G) dropped
H) hypothes
is
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
2024年英语六级考试绝密押题试卷(五) 第5 淘宝:谈辰图书企业letter. Answer the questions by marking the corresponding letter on Answer
Sheet 2.
2024年英语六级考试绝密押题试卷(五) 第6 淘宝:谈辰图书企业Is Nutritious Food Really Pricier, and, If so, Is That Really
the Problem?
A) Nobody disagrees: We Americans eat badly. We eat too many
calories, too much highly processed food and not nearly enough vegetables.
Why is that? Ask the question, and you get a lot of answers, which is
appropriate for a lot of answers, which is appropriate for a matter as
complex as a country’ s diet. But one of the answers that bubbles to the top
almost every time is that nutritious food just costs more. Does it? There are
two relevant questions here. The first is empirical: Is healthful food more
expensive? The second is behavioral: Is cost what stands between people and a
better diet?
B) By one very straightforward measure, healthful eating does indeed cost
more. If you look at the cost of per calorie, nutrient-dense vegetables
and fruits cost far more on average, than the ubiquitous( 无所不在
的), nutrition-sparse sources of calories: refined grains( 精制谷物),
sugar and vegetable oil.
C) The fact that vegetables are, on average, more expensive than, say,
Doritos doesn’ t mean you have to abandon the idea of healthful eating and
head for the snack food aisle. Sugar snap peas and asparagus may bring up
the average price of produce, but there are inexpensive calories in the
category, too. Think sweet potatoes.
D) An ordinary supermarket offers a variety of affordably priced calories
to meet the daunting challenge of making your daily menu come in at under
$4 per person, the average benefit under the Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program, informally referred to as food stamps. Similarly, there
was a frozen burrito ( 玉 米 煎 饼 ) for 14 cents, canned beef ravioli for
17 cents and hot dogs for 10 cents. But the rock-bottom cheapest meal
option was instant ramen, at 6 cents, a price point so irresistible
that I almost bought some. As inexpensive as it is, ramen isn’ t the
cheapest source of calories at the grocery store. That honor belongs to
all-purpose flour and vegetable oil, both of which cost all of 2 cents per
100 calories.
E) No matter how cheap the processed foods are, the raw materials
that go into them are even cheaper. And, if those raw materials are so very
cheap for us, imagine how cheap they are for Kraft. So cheap that the company
can manufacture a food out of them, box it, ship it and market it, and still
sell it for pennies. Even so, you almost always do better, cost-wise, when
you buy the ingredients and cook them yourself, which is one of the
reasons that upgrading to a decent may cost less than you think. A
2013 review of studies quantifying the price of a healthful vs. unhealthful
diet found that the healthful version cost $1. 48 more per person, per day.
F) Although $1. 48 doesn’ t sound like enough to make much difference
in the quality of your diet, it can buy a variety of cheap, nutritious
staples: peanut butter, whole-grain pasta, whole-wheat flour, eggs,
rolled oats, pearled barley, corn flour, brown rice, dried black
beans and unpopped popcorn.
G) In that list, we find the crux of the issue. The healthful meals you
can make at a price point that competes with ramen are anchored by rice,
beans and whole grains. And, if you have time and skill, you can
combine those with foods that cost a more, such as chicken thighs( 13
cents), sweet potatoes( 38 cents), carrots ( 30 cents), frozen corn ( 25
cents), walnuts ( 30 cents), yogurt ( 36 cents) or frozen broccoli(63
2024年英语六级考试绝密押题试卷(五) 第7 淘宝:谈辰图书企业cents), and eat pretty well for under $4 per day.
H) Before we go on, let’ s spend a moment on subsidies. Although farm
subsidies have certainly had an impact on the price of staples, that impact is
dwarfed by the inherent costs of growing crops as
2024年英语六级考试绝密押题试卷(五) 第8 淘宝:谈辰图书企业different as corn and broccoli. In that particular case, broccoli costs 50
times what corn does to grow. It’ s also important to note that the same
commodity programs that affect corn and soy subsidize rolled oats, pearled
barley, lentils, peanut butter and whole-wheat bread. Although I’ m in
favor of revamping( 修改) those programs, they can’ t shoulder all the blame
for ramen.
I) Back to our dinner of chicken, carrots and black beans, and to the
single parent on a very limited budget, who has the challenge of trying to
carve out the time to make it, only to have her kids complain that what
they really want is instant ramen.
J) Adam Drewnowski, director of the University of Washington’ s
Center, tells me in an email, “ Obesity is almost entirely an economic
issue, and the higher cost of healthier foods is the main problem,” but he
acknowledges that factors other than money come into play. He mentions
two in particular: skill and time, which can feed you well if money is in
short supply.
K) So, sure, it’ s possible to make a healthful dinner on a SNAP budget,
but the other resources required—time and skill—may be in short supply as
well. Tonja Nansel, a senior investigator at the Eunice Kennedy Shriver
National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, points out that, if
cost were the major barrier, we’ d expect higher-income groups to eat
much better than lower-income groups. “ The difference in diet quality isn’
t that big,” says Nansel, although it’ s hard to determine exactly what
the difference is because of the limitations of data based on people’ s
ability to remember what they ate yesterday. A 2013 study that attempted to
quantify that difference found that the lowest- income group did indeed eat
less-nutritious diets than the wealthiest group, but if you compare the
lowest with the next group up, the diets are extremely similar. It’ s not
until you get to five times the poverty level that diets improve, and even
then it’ s not a big jump. If cost were the primary driver of poor
diets, we’ d expect a significant income boost to correspond to a
significant improvement in diet, particularly since a meaningful improvement
can be had for $1. 48 per day.
L) Nobody I ’ ve talked to disputes that cost is an issue.
Likewise, nobody disputes that
convenience and preference are also issues. But it’ s hard to say what’ s most
important. “ Most people prefer the taste of ramen to brown rice. They
prefer chips to kale,” says Nansel. “ The fact that we would rather not
have to look at some of those other reasons is part of reason cost gets so much
traction. ” Food isn’ t just nutrition. Food is pleasure, something very-low-
income people have very few sources of, says Nansel. That doesn’ t mean we
shouldn’ t tackle cost at a policy level, she adds. “ If we can make
healthful food more affordable and accessible, we ought to. ”
M) Looking at cost as a barrier to eating well is much more comfortable than
looking at preference, which smacks of blaming the victim. The idea that our
lousy diet was perpetrated on us, with the poor as the most vulnerable, gets
around that problem. But until we acknowledge that we—rich and poor— are
complicit in our food supply, that we help shape it every time we buy food
we want to eat, we’ re unlikely to improve it.
36. A study indicates that no significant price differences were seen between
nutritious diet and unwholesome one.
37. According to one expert, the differences in diet quality between the
2024年英语六级考试绝密押题试卷(五) 第9 淘宝:谈辰图书企业rich and the poor are not as obvious as expected.
38. Compared with the farm subsidies, the built-in costs of growing crops have
a bigger impact on the price of staples.
2024年英语六级考试绝密押题试卷(五) 第10 淘宝:谈辰图书企业39. For the poor, food can bring satisfaction and a sense of pleasure in
addition to nutrition.
40. It’ s easier to blame on costs and other external factors than on our own
preference for food for our unhealthy diet.
41. It’ s generally thought that the main reason for the American’ s
unhealthy eating habits is the cost of nutritious food.
42. No food is cheaper than all-purpose flour and vegetable oil as sources
of calories in a common supermarket.
43. One expert claimed that higher cost of healthier foods was the leading
reason of obesity, but it can be compensated by skill and time.
44. When taking time to cook despite a busy schedule, a single mom probably
will find her kids would rather eat instant ramen.
4 5 . H avi ng time and cooking skill, one could enjoy a wholesome
S ec ti on C
meal on a very limited budget. 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.
The night of December 16, 1773, dozens of Massachusetts colonists quietly
boarded three ships and dumped what would now be close to $1 million worth of
British tea into Boston Harbor.
The Sons of Liberty painted their faces and dressed like Native Americans.
They barely spoke, to avoid revealing their identities. “ There appeared to be
an understanding that each individual should volunteer his services, keep
his own secret, and risk the consequence for himself,” one of them
wrote. It worked. Only a single person was caught.
What if the British had access to modern surveillance technology? What
if they’ d had access to face recognition?
From the Boston Tea Party to the printing of Common Sense, the ability
to dissent—and to do it anonymously—was central to the founding of the
United States. Anonymity was no luxury: It was a crime to advocate
separation from the British Crown. It was a crime to dump British tea into Boston
Harbor. This trend persists. Our history is replete( 充满) with moments when
it was a “ crime” to do the right thing, and legal to inflict injustice.
The latest crime-fighting tools, however, may eliminate people ’ s
ability to be anonymous. Historically, surveillance technology has
tracked our technology: our cars, our computers, our phones.
Face recognition technology tracks our bodies. And unlike fingerprinting or DNA
analysis, face recognition is designed to identify us from far away and in
secret.
Face recognition is not just about finding terrorists. It’ s about
finding citizens. As a result of simply having a driver’ s license,
over half of all American adults are enrolled in a criminal face
recognition network. While the details are murky, it appears that
Baltimore County police used face recognition to identify people protesting
the death of Freddie Gray.
As law enforcement develops increasingly powerful surveillance tools, we
need to ask ourselves:
2024年英语六级考试绝密押题试卷(五) 第11 淘宝:谈辰图书企业Are we building a world where no dissent is anonymous? A world where the Sons of
Liberty are each arraigned( 传 讯 ) as British tea still floats in Boston Harbor?
The answer to these questions has to be “ no”. In the midst of a
heated debate about encryption and the need for privacy and security in our
communications, it’ s tempting to think that the solutions to these problems
will originate in Silicon Valley. They won’ t. You can encrypt your hard drive.
You can encrypt your emails and texts. You cannot encrypt your face.
There may be technical means to avoid face recognition.
Coincidentally, one of them echoes the face paint worn by the Sons of
Liberty. But face recognition’ s threat to freedom will not be addressed
through a simple change in default settings. It will be addressed only
through hard conversations, and legislation, in Congress and state
legislatures.
“ Writing and talk do not prove me,” wrote Walt Whitman in his Song
of Myself. “ I carry the plenum( 充 分 ) of proof and everything else in my
face. ” We have grown accustomed to the monitoring of our technology and
communications. There is something different, something intractable
and ominous, about the tracking of our bodies.
46. What can be inferred from the event of Boston Tea Party?
A) Massachusetts natives sneaked onto the ships loaded with British
tea.
B) The value of the tea thrown into water was nearly $1 million then.
C) The participants took great pains to conceal their identities.
D) The people involved in it were all brought to justice.
47. What’ s the author’ s main purpose in writing the fourth paragraph?
A) To show the importance of anonymity.
B) To evaluate two historical events.
C) To introduce an ongoing trend.
D) To criticize the injustice in history.
48. Which of the following tools is likely to deprive people of the ability
to be anonymous?
A) Traditional monitoring technology.
B) Face recognition technology.
C) Fingerprint recognition technology.
D) DNA analysis.
49. By citing the example of Baltimore County police, the author intends to
show .
A) the tool used by authorities to pursue terrorists
B) the adoption of face recognition for tracking citizens
C) the number of criminals registered online
D) the way to search for Freddie Gray’ s killer
50. The threat that face recognition poses to humanity can only be solved
through .
A) the research of Silicon Valley
B) the make-up of the Sons of Liberty
2024年英语六级考试绝密押题试卷(五) 第12 淘宝:谈辰图书企业C) the slight change on the face
D) dialogues and law-making in legislative body
Passage Two
Questions 51 to 55 are based on the following passage.
The 17 trillion gallons of rain, roughly 26m Olympic swimming
pools, dumped on Texas by Hurricane Harvey has set a new high for a
tropical system in the US, but it is unlikely to last long as rising
man-made emissions push global climate deeper into uncharted territory.
Images of flooded streets in Texas are mirrored by scenes of inundated( 洪
泛的) communities in India and Bangladesh, the recent mudslides in Sierra
Leone and last month’ s deadly overflow of a Yangtze tributary( 支流) in
China. In part, these calamities are seasonal. In part, the impact depends on
local factors. But scientists tell us such extremes are likely to become more
common and more devastating as a result of rising global temperatures and
increasingly intense rainfall.
Our planet is in an era of unwelcome records. For each of the past three
years, temperatures have hit peaks not seen since the birth of meteorology( 气
象 学 ), and probably not for more than 110,000 years. The amount of carbon
dioxide in the air is at its highest level in 4m years. This does not cause
storms like Harvey—there have always been storms and hurricanes at this time of
year along the Gulf of Mexico—but it makes them wetter and more powerful.
“ For large countries like the United States, we can expect further
rainfall records—and not just for hurricanes,” said Friederike Otto,
deputy director of the Environmental Change Institute at the
University of Oxford. This is part of a wider trend. “ For the globe, we’ ll
see heat and extreme rainfall records for the foreseeable future,” she
predicted. She cautioned that the situation is likely to be different
from country to country. Many factors are involved, but human impact
on the climate has added to the tendency for more severe droughts and fiercer
storms.
A key focus now is whether climate change is connected to the “
stalling” of storms. In the US, hurricanes usually move inland and
diminish in power as they get further from the sea. Harvey, however,
was stationary for several days— which is the main factor in its rainfall
record.
Scientists have said this may be the single biggest question posed by
Harvey. Researchers have recently identified a slowdown of atmospheric summer
circulation in the mid-latitudes as a result of strong warming in the Arctic.
But such studies of pressure patterns need more powerful analytical tools,
including supercomputers.
In the US, however, such research has become highly politicized.
President Donald Trump has announced that the US will pull out of the Paris
climate treaty and cut funding for related research. “ It shouldn’ t be a
political matter to try to understand how much more frequent events like
Harvey will become in the future,” said Tim Palmer, a professor at the
University of Oxford. “ It appalls me how basic science has become involved
in politics like this. ”
2024年英语六级考试绝密押题试卷(五) 第13 淘宝:谈辰图书企业51. What can we learn about Hurricane Harvey?
A) It destroyed about 26m Olympic swimming pools.
2024年英语六级考试绝密押题试卷(五) 第14 淘宝:谈辰图书企业B) It brought a record-breaking amount of rainfall.
C) It was soon put to an end by climate change.
D) It also brought unprecedented disasters to Asia.
52. The disasters mentioned in Para. 2 serve as examples to show that .
A) disasters in different areas share high similarity
B) most of the worldwide calamities are seasonal
C) extreme weathers are becoming more common
D) rising temperatures cause more intense rainfall
53. Which of the following statements may Otto agree with?
A) Storms and hurricanes have been getting stronger and wetter.
B) More extreme temperatures and rainfall may come in future.
C) It is not clear what factors may be involved in climate change.
D) Hurricanes in the US tend to come into being in inland areas.
54. It is suggested that the root cause of the “ stalling” of storms might
be .
A) varied pressure patterns C) improper human activities
B) warmer ocean currents D) slower atmospheric circulation
55. What is the scientific community’ s response to President Trump’ s
announcement?
A) Quite critical. C) Rather indifferent.
B) Pretty favorable. D) Slightly Skeptical.
Part Ⅳ Translation (30
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.
中国人的饭局讲究最多。 从座位的安排到上菜的顺序,从谁先动第一筷到什么时候可以离席,
都有明确的规定。 在中国人的饭局上,里面中间对着门的位置要给最重要的人坐,上菜时按照先
凉后热、先简后繁的顺序。 吃饭时,要等坐在正中间的人动第一筷后,其他人才能跟着开吃。中国人
的好客在酒席上发挥得最充分,人与人的感情往往在敬酒时变得深厚。 饭局开始时,主人通常要
讲上几句话,之后便开始敬酒。 主人先将自己杯中的酒一饮而尽,客人一般也要喝完。
2024年英语六级考试绝密押题试卷(五) 第15 淘宝:谈辰图书企业