《大學英語1》復習題及答案

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1、精品文檔,僅供學習與交流,如有侵權(quán)請聯(lián)系網(wǎng)站刪除 《大學英語1》復習題及答案 一 Translate the following Chinese into English: 1. 我不知道怎么去市中心。 I don’t know how to get to the city center. 2. 你工作越努力,收獲就越大。 The harder you work, the more you will get. 3. 她一到,我們就可以開始。 Once she arrives, we can start. 4. 她在巴黎時學會了法語。 She picked up French

2、 when she stayed in Paris. 5. 眾人患難,無須犯愁。 The troubles of many are half a comfort 6. 你現(xiàn)在準備得越充分,在考試中就越有信心。 The more preparations you make now, the more confidence you will have in the exam. 7. 他的工作與動物有關。 His work has something to do with animals. 8. 從她的口音判斷,她一定是個北方人。 Judging by her acc

3、ent, she must be from the North. 9. 如果你們要她來,就事先通知她。 If you need her to come, inform her in advance. 二 Translate the following English into Chinese: 1. A man should be judged by his deeds, not his words. 判斷一個人應根據(jù)他的行動,而不是他的言詞。 2. The study of words is not merely something that has to do wi

4、th literature. 詞匯學習不單單與文學有關。 3. There is no doubt whatsoever that she is an excellent nurse. 毫無疑問,她是一位優(yōu)秀的護士 4. Not only must you learn the vocabulary, but you must learn which words to choose in which situations. 你不僅要學習詞匯,而且要學會在什么情況下選擇什么詞匯。 5. Although we have been apart from each other for

5、 three years, we still keep our friendship going. 我們倆雖然分別了三年,但仍然保持著我們的友誼。 6. He turned the matter over in his mind. 他在心里反復考慮這件事。 7. No matter how cold or hot it is, I keep practicing every day. 不管天氣多冷或多熱,我每天堅持練習。 8. To achieve what you hope for, you should start working hard from today.

6、 為了取得你期望的一切,你應該從今天就開始努力。 三 Read the following passages and do the multiple-choice questions. Passage One Having returned from her round trip, the angry woman stood outside the ticket office, speaking to a young man working at the office. “You sold me a ticket for May 22nd, but there was no ship

7、 from Jersey that night. So my daughter and I had to stay in a hotel. It cost £12.” Harry was worried. He remembered selling the woman a return ticket. “Come into the office, Madam,” he said politely. “I’ll just check the Jersey timetable for May 22nd.” The woman and her little girl followed him i

8、nside. She was quite right, as Harry soon discovered there was no sailing on May 22nd. How could he have made such a careless mistake? He shouldn’t have sold her a ticket for that day. Wondering what to do, he smiled at the child. “You look sunburned,” he said to her. “Did you have a nice time in Je

9、rsey?” “Yes,” she answered shyly. “The beach was lovely. And I can swim, too!” “That’s fine,” said Harry. “My little girl can’t swim a bit yet. Of course, she’s only three.” “I’m four,” the child said proudly. “I’ll be four and a half.” Harry returned to the mother. “I remember your ticket, Mada

10、m,” he said. “But you didn’t get one for your daughter, did you?” “Er, well —” the woman looked at the child. “I mean…she hasn’t started school yet. She’s only four.” “A child like that must have a ticket, Madam. A child’s return ticket to Jersey costs… let me see.. £13.50. So if the railway pays

11、your hotel, you’ll owe £1.50. The law is the law, but since the fault was mine…” The woman stood up, took the child’s hand and left the office. 1. The woman was angry because _______. A. she couldn’t use the ticket for her round trip B. she had to return home a day earlier that she had planned

12、C. she spent more money than she had expected D. Harry had sold her ticket to Jersey where there was no sailing 2. Harry started talking to the little girl _______. A. because he was in difficulty and didn’t know what to do B. because he had a little girl about the same age as this girl C. when

13、 he suddenly realized that he could find a way out from the little girl D. because the little girl reminded him of his own daughter 3. When Harry said: “The law is the law, but the fault was mine…,” he meant that _________. A. they must follow it without other choice even though the fault was his

14、 B. he had to be strict with the woman because of the law, though he didn’t want to C. the woman had to pay him £1.50, but the railway would pay the hotel D. she should pay £1.50, but as he had made the mistake, she could go without paying 4. The woman left the office without saying anything bec

15、ause she ______. A. wanted to go home and get money for the child’s ticket B. was so angry that she didn’t want to have anything more to do with the young man C. she was moved by Harry’s kindness D. knew she would have to pay the railway if she insisted 5. Harry made the mistake _______. A. be

16、cause he was a forgetful person B. because ship was cancelled suddenly C. because he didn’t check the timetable carefully D. on purpose Passage Two Accidents are cause: they don’t just happen. The reason may be easy to see: an overloaded tray, a shelf out of reach, a patch of

17、ice on the road. But more often than not there is a chain of events leading up to the misfortune — frustration, tiredness or just bad temper — that show what the accident really is, a sort of attack on oneself. Road accidents, for example, happen frequently after a family quarrel and we all know pe

18、ople who are accident-prone (易于…的), so often at odds with themselves and the world that they seem to cause accidents for themselves and others. By definition, and accident is something you cannot predict or avoid, and the idea which used to be current, that the majority of road accidents are caused

19、 by a minority of criminally careless drivers, is not supported by insurance statistics. These show that most accidents involve ordinary motorists in a moment of carelessness or thoughtlessness. It is not always clear, either, what sort of conditions make people more likely to have an accident. For

20、 instance, the law requires all factories to take safety precautions and most companies have safety committees to make sure the regulations are observed, but still, every day in Britain, some fifty thousand men and women are absent from work due to an accident. These accidents are largely the result

21、 of human error or misjudgment — noise and fatigue, boredom or worry are possible factors which contribute to this. Doctors who work in factories have found that those who drink too much, usually people who have a high anxiety level, run three times the normal risk of accidents at work. 6. This pas

22、sage might be taken from ________. A. a textbook B. a science fiction C. a popular magazine D. a report of a manufacturer 7. “Accident-prone” in Paragraph 2 means ______. A. liable to have accidents B. injured in accidents C. likely to die in accidents D. responsible f

23、or road accidents 8. The passage suggests that ________. A. accidents mostly result from slippery roads B. accidents are usually caused by psychological factors C. doctors run three times the normal risk of accidents in factories D. about 50 000 people lose their lives at work in Britain every

24、day 9. Which of the following is NOT mentioned as a factor of accidents in this passage? A. Mood B. Tiredness C. Carelessness D. Weather 10. Which do you think would be the best title for the passage? A. Accidents and Anxiety B. How Accidents Are Caused C. Human Factors

25、in Accidents D. How to Prevent Accidents on Roads and in Factories Passage Three The common cold is the most widely spread of all respiratory (呼吸的) diseases. The cause is a virus (病毒) which is very easily spread: and one property of the cold virus is that it may fail to produce an immunity so tha

26、t some persons suffer one cold after another. Medical science has yet to produce a method of preventing the common cold, although there are preventive injections (預防注射;預防針) which may be helpful for one person but have no effect on another. The symptoms (癥狀) of the common cold are familiar to us, fi

27、rst the inflammation (發(fā)炎) of the nose and the throat, then plenty of fluid discharge from the nose, and finally the thick discharge which occurs when the cold is coming to an end. The scientific name for the common cold is coryza. The word “coryza” can also simply mean “a discharge from the nose”.

28、A discharge from the nose may be a symptom not only of the common cold; it may also be an important sign of more serious disease on the way. Influenza, or “flu”, is an acute (急性的) disease spread by touch, the character of which is an inflammation of the upper part of the respiratory system accompan

29、ied by aches and pains all over the body. It is caused by a virus and may spread even downward to the lungs. Inflammation of the upper branches of the lungs causes the cough typical of influenza, and the general infection brings about an extremely weakened condition of the victim. The great danger o

30、f influenza is its tendency to develop into a particular severe form of the inflammation of the lungs. In history influenza had broken out regularly and has caused millions of deaths. Though preventive injections have been developed, the immunity lasts only for a very short period of time. 11. Why

31、do some people often catch colds? A. Because the cold virus produces no immunity. B. Because no medicine can cure it. C. Because the cold virus reproduces too quickly. D. Because the cold virus travels too quickly. 12. What symptom appears at the later stage of a cold? A. Inflammation of the n

32、ose. B. A thick discharge. C. Plenty of fluid discharge D. Inflammation of the throat. 13. Which of the following statements about influenza is NOT true? A. Influenza may cause millions of people to die. B. No preventive injections can produce a long immunity effect. C. The influenza v

33、irus may go downward to the lungs. D. Influenza affects only the upper part of the respiratory system. 14. “Coryza” is a technical term for _______. A. influenza B. the common cold C. a discharge from the nose D. either B or C 15. What is typical of influenza? A. In

34、flammation of the branches of the lungs and sharp pain all over the body. B. General weakening of the body. C. serious inflammation of the lungs. D. Inflammation of the upper respiratory system and pain all over the body. Passage Four Bobby and his master, famous John Gray, were familiar sights

35、 in Edinburgh. Every Wednesday after a visit to market and exactly as the time-gun boomed one o’clock, the two would enter Traill’s Dining Room for their midday meal, a frugal lunch for Gray, and a bun for Bobby. Then in 1858, the schedule was interrupted. Farmer Gray died. Three days after the fun

36、eral exactly at one o’clock, Traill found himself looking into a pair of beseeching canine eyes. Bobby got his bun and disappeared. This was repeated for several days until Traill’s curiosity got the better of him. He followed the small terrier as he left and raced to his master’s grave. There he re

37、mained each day, fair or foul, despite the efforts of dog-loving townspeople to give him a new home. The graveyard caretaker, while sympathetic, was at first not so willing to let him in. But Bobby’s devotion and fidelity were so great that the caretaker provided Bobby with a shelter close to the gr

38、ave to protect him from bad weather. Then, after nine years, Bobby was arrested as a vagrant because he had no license. The restaurant keeper appeared in court with Bobby. He was released by merciful justice. But just to make sure the law could not touch him, Lord Provost William Chambers paid Bobb

39、y’s fee each year and presented him with a brass-plated collar inscribed “ Greyfriars, Bobby from The Lord Provost, 1876, License.” After that, Greyfriars’ Bobby was allowed to keep his lonely vigil undisturbed. He never varied his mealtime. Each day he left the graveyard as the gun roared one o’cl

40、ock to pick up his bun and take it back to eat at his master’s side. He must have been really hardy for he lived until 1872, having kept to his solitary post for forteen long years. He was buried in Greyfriars’, of course, in a flower bed near John Gray’s tombstone. 16. An appropriate title for the

41、 passage could be _______ . A. Traill’s Dining Room B. Farmer John Gray C. Bobby the Faithful D. Lord Provost William Chambers 17. The phrase “ familiar sights ” in the first sentence is nearest in meaning to ________ . A. people who are familiar with the surroundings B. people who enjoy sig

42、hting C. people who have very good eye-sights D. people or objects that are often seen around by others 18.The phrase “fair or soul” in the second paragraph is used to described _________ . A. the graveyard B. the weather C. Bobby D. Traill 19.Which of the following is NOT mentioned or impli

43、ed about Bobby? A. Bobby had refused to live in other people’s home. B. Bobby was devoted and faithful to his master. C. Bobby was once arrested because he did something wrong. D. Bobby was protected by Lord Provost William Chambers until his death. 20.From the passage, we know that Bobby was __________. A. John Gray’s servant B. a dog C. a vagrant D. John Gray’s son 1-5 CADDC 6-10 CABDC 11-15 ABDDD 16-20 CDBCB 四 Writing: 作文一:(答案略) 以My University Life(我的大學生活)為題,寫一篇文章,字數(shù)要求:120字 My University Life 【精品文檔】第 6 頁

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