2020年7月全国自考英语科技文选试题及答案解析


2023年12月23日发(作者:msk船公司)

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全国自考2018年7月英语科技文选试题

课程代码:00836

PART A:VOCABULARY

I.Directions: Add the affix to each word according to the given Chinese, making changes

when necessary. (8%)

1.consciously 意识 1.______________

2.variant 不变量 2.______________

3.guarantee 保证人 3.______________

4.play 相互作用 4.______________

5.scan 扫描仪 5.______________

6.diversify 变化;不同之处 6.______________

7.nourished 营养不良的 7.______________

8.rhythm 有节奏地 8.______________

II.Directions: Fill in the blanks, each using one of the given words or phrases below in its

proper form. (12%)

after all expose to

run for

contribute to a spectrum of in relation to

a shower of delve into

response to

shake up (with) emanate from in

comparison

9.More people than ever before are _________ the city council.

10.The whole world today is so much _________ the word “biotechnology” that it has

become a strong belief that this is “the field” which will give solution to our “any” problem.

11.The money he had been ordered to pay was minimal _________ his salary.

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12.The law was passed by the town council in_________ complaints from local residents.

13.He should do well at college; _________, he is a very smart boy.

14.Pollution _________ these sites and the movement of diseases across ecosystems have

turned some environments off aquaculture.

15._________, photographs are recorded images of the intensity of ordinary, incoherent

light.

16.Everyone on the team _________ winning the game last Saturday.

17.There’s _________ opinion on this question.

18.A0620-00 was discovered in 1975, when it emitted _________ light and X rays.

19.Kate _________ new ideas when she went to college.

20.Mary said she was tired of journalists’ digging and _________ her private life.

III. Directions: Fill in each blank with a suitable word given below. (10%)

true to called contain exclusively animals live diet fit eat

A carnivore is an animal that eats a diet consisting mainly of meat, whether it comes from

21 animals or dead ones (scavenging). Some 22 are considered carnivores even

if their diets 23 very little meat (e.g., predatory arthropods such as spiders or mantids

that may rarely consume small vertebrate prey). Animals that subsist on a 24 consisting

only of meat are referred to as obligate carnivores. The word also refers 25 the

mammals of the Order Carnivora, many (but not all) of which 26 the first definition.

Bears are an example of members of Carnivora that are not 27 carnivores. Carnivores

that 28 insects primarily or exclusively are 29 insectivores, while those that eat

fish primarily or 30 are called piscivores.

PART B:TRANSLATION

IV.Directions: Translate the following sentences into English, each using one of the given

words or phrases below. (10%)

cater for analytical draw on do justice to sth./sb. arbitrary

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31.她要做的事太多,因此没有好好上课。

32.他没有跟别人商量就随意决定关闭这个剧场。

33.一种化学分析方法被用来鉴定这种物质。

34.我希望新建的实验中心能适应你们的特殊要求。

35.作者运用自己的想象力和经验写成了这部巨著。

V.Directions: Translate the following paragraph into Chinese. (15%)

36.The prediction process is aided by the fact that the artificial is generally simpler than the

natural. The role of a bowling ball down an alley, for instance, is easier to predict than the

motion of an irregular stone tumbling down a rough hillside. It is likely that the artificial will

increasingly save us from the unpredictable. It may be easier to move gradually toward a

completely enclosed earth whose climate could be artificially controlled than to learn to

predict the natural weather.

PART C: READING COMPREHENSION

VI.Directions: Read through the following passages. Choose the best answer and put the

letter in the bracket. (20%)

(A)

The transition from apes to humans may have been partially triggered by the need to stand on

two legs, in order to safely carry heavier babies. This theory of species evolution presented by

Lia Amaral from the University of São Paulo in Brazil has just been published.

For safety, all nonhuman primates carry their young clinging to their fur from birth, and

species survival depends on it. The carrying pattern changes as the infant grows. Newborns

are carried clinging to their mother’s stomach, often with additional support. Months later,

infants are carried over the adult body usually on the mother’s back, and this carrying pattern

lasts for years in apes. However, this necessity to carry infants safely imposes limits on the

weight of the infants.

Through a detailed mechanical analysis of how different types of apes-gibbons, orangutans

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and gorillas-carry their young, looking at the properties of ape hair, infant grip, adult hair

density and carrying position, Amaral demonstrates a relationship between infant weight, hair

friction and body angle which ensures ape infants are carried safely.

Amaral also shows how the usual pattern of primate carrying heavy infants is incompatible

with bipedalism. African apes have to persist with knuckle-walking on all fours, or

“quadruped” position, in order to stop their young from slipping off their backs.

The author goes on to suggest that the fall in body hair in primates could have brought on

bipedality as a necessary consequence, through the strong selective pressure of safe infant

carrying, as infants were no longer able to cling to their mother’s body hairs. In the author’s

opinion, safe carrying of heavy infants justified the emergence of the biped form of

movement. Although an adult gorilla is much heavier than an adult human, its offspring is

only half the weight of a human baby.

Amaral concludes that this evolution to bipedality has important consequences for the female

of the species. Indeed, it frees the arms and hands of males and juveniles, but females have

their arms and hands occupied with their young. This restriction of movement placed limits

on food gathering for biped females carrying their infants, and may have been at the origin of

group cooperation.

37.What is the passage mainly concerned with?( )

A. The transition from apes to humans.

B. Bipedality and safe carrying of heavy infants.

C. The ape infant carrying pattern.

D. The theory of species evolution.

38.According to Amaral, what is responsible for safe ape infant carrying?( )

A. Infant weight.

B. Adult weight.

C. The biped form of movement.

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D. Infant hair density.

39.What probably remains unchanged as the ape infant grows?( )

A. When it is carried, it clings to its mother’s stomach.

B. It is carried on its mother’s back.

C. It has to learn to stand on two legs.

D. When it is carried, it holds tightly its mother’s body hairs.

40.All of the following could account for bipedality EXCEPT _______. ( )

A. safe carrying of heavy infants

B. the fall in body hair

C. the weight of the infant

D. the weight of the adult

41.Which of the following is NOT true according to the passage?( )

A. Primates must be two-footed so as to safely carry their heavy infants.

B. Ape evolution to humans is somewhat attributed to the need to stand on two legs.

C. Group cooperation among biped species was probably due to the fact the females carrying

their infants in arms had difficulty in food gathering.

D. It seems the male apes seldom carry their babies.

(B)

The scientific establishment is playing a key role in research and development of genetic

engineering biotechnology and in actively defending the industry under the banner of “sound

science” and “scientific progress”. Scientific advice to the government is heavily biased in

favor of the industry. Lord Sainsbury, current Minister for Science, was formerly chairman of

the Sainsbury family’s supermarket chain, closely involved with the development of GE

foods. Another prominent scientist, Derek Burke, advisor to the Parliamentary Committee on

Science and Technology and formerly chairman of the Advisory Committee on Novel Food

Products, was a key participant in the UK Government’s Technology Foresight exercise, and

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in a follow-up group that determined the pro-biotech funding policy of the BBSRC. Derek

Burke is an outspoken and staunch defender of the industry. The public are being informed

uncritically by scientists like Burke and others, consciously or unconsciously serving

commercial interests, and legitimate concerns about safety are caricatured as irrational fear

arising out of ignorance.

The credibility of science and scientists has been steadily diminishing over the years as

science has become more and more absorbed into the commercial sector. Science education at

every level is being subverted to corporate aims: its chief purpose is to provide skilled but

uncritical workers for industry. The UK Government has even run a competition for science

students on how to commercially exploit scientific research. There has been no major open

debate on genetic engineering within academic institutions, that has been organized by the

academic staff. With very few exceptions, students are not encouraged to ask questions about

the ethics or the hazards of genetic engineering on either side of the Atlantic.

Scientific evidence of actual and potential hazards, which has been steadily building up over

the past ten years, is being ignored and dismissed. More seriously, independent scientists

reporting findings damaging to the industry are gagged and victimized. Within the UK, Dr.

Arpad Pusztai, senior scientist of the publicly-funded Rowett Institute, and his collaborators

were awarded a 1.6 million pound grant to carry out systematic safety testing of GE food.

They found that the GE potato lines tested were toxic to young rats, and Pusztai informed the

public in a brief interview which was part of a TV documentary. A few days later, he was

removed from his job, denied access to his data, and forbidden to speak on the subject.

The suppression of scientific findings is nothing new; it has been happening more and more

within the past decade. Since the 1970s, scientific fraud has been increasing, as has the

proportion of peer-reviewed scientific papers retracted. We have moved far away form the

traditional ideals of science as science loses innocence and independence.

42.What is the author’s attitude toward the role the scientific establishment is playing? 6

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( )

A. Critical. B. Approving.

C. Tolerant. D. Apprehensive.

43.What can be inferred from the first paragraph?( )

A. BBSRC is not in favor of GE biotechnology.

B. Lord Sainsbury is a well-known scientist himself.

C. Most supermarkets in Britain sell GE foods.

D. Burke is not aware of public ignorance about GE foods.

44.According to the passage, the goal of college education should be to develop in students

the

ability to __________.( )

A. find commercial applications for scientific research

B. set up informed goals before doing any scientific research

C. think critically and independently about how research is applied

D. adapt readily to the scientific development in the commercial sector

45.What can be said about what happened to Arpad Pusztai?( )

A. The public is ignorant of the potential risks in GE food.

B. TV plays an important role in publicizing scientific research.

C. Independent science is faced with threat.

D. Scientific findings are important to scientific research.

46.It is clear that the findings of Dr. Arpad Pusztai __________.( )

A. come in conflict with the government’s GE food policies

B. provide strong support for Derek Burke’s argument

C. justify the suppression of the different voices concerning GE food

D. resolve the genetic engineering debate once for all

VII.Directions: Read the following passage, and then fill in the table with the information

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based on the passage.(10%)

Stone tools found on an Eritrean fossil reef in eastern Africa suggest that early humans lived

in coastal environments as far back as 125,000 years ago. Professor Mario Gagnon of

anthropology studied tools discovered by an international team on a fossil reef terrace near

the village of Abdur on Eritrea’s Red Sea coast. Radiometric dating of the tools shows they

are roughly 10,000 years older than the estimated age of tools found in South Africa-up until

now the oldest known coastal site in Africa containing fossil remains of early human

implements. “The stone tools from Abdur signal a new, widespread adaptive strategy in early

human behavior which spread from one end of Africa to the other between 115,000 and

125,000 years ago,” Gagnon says.

The geographic origin of modern humans is the subject of an intense, on-going debate among

anthropologists. These Eritrean tools may help in solving the mystery. The discovery of these

implements in a fossil reef-humanity’s “first oyster bar”-is unusual, Gagnon says. “The

tool-bearing reef has a rich population of marine organisms such as clams, scallops, snails

and oysters and the tools were used to harvest and eat these mollusks and crustaceans.”.

Stone Tools from Abdur

Discoverer

47

PART D:WRITING

VIII.Directions: Write a passage (150-200 words) in English on the following title. Develop

the ideas according to the Chinese outline given below. (15%)

52.My Opinion on Self-employment

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Earlier

estimated age

48

Newly discovered

age

49

Place to find the Use of the Stone

Stone Tools

50

Tools

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(1)许多人大学毕业后选择了自我创业。

(2)自我创业的利弊。

(3)你会选择自我创业吗?为什么?

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