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职称英语理工类A级考试真题

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2015年职称英语理工类A级考试真题

  第一部分:词汇选项

2015年职称英语理工类A级考试真题

  1.I will not tolerate that sort of behavior in my class.

  A.control

  B.observe

  C.regulate

  D.accept

  答案:D

  2.She showed a natural aptitude hard to accept.

  A.sense

  B.talent

  C.flavor

  D.taste

  答案:B

  3.Most people find rejection hard to accept.

  A.excuse

  B.client

  C.destiny

  D.refusal

  答案:C

  4. The organization was bold enough to face the press.

  A.pleased

  B.powerful

  C.brave

  D.sensible

  答案:C

  5.They were locked in mortal cmbat.

  A.deadly

  B.open

  C.actual

  D.active

  答案:A

  6. We were attracted by the lure of quick money.

  A.amount

  B.supply

  C.sum

  D.temp

  答案:C

  7.The procedures were perceived as complex and less transparent.

  A.clear

  B.necessary

  C.special

  D.correct

  答案:A

  8.The Stock Exchange is in turmoil following a huge wave of selling.

  A.Service

  B.danger

  C.disorder

  D.threat

  答案:C

  9.He believes that Europe must change or it will perish.

  A.survice

  B.last

  C.die

  D.move

  答案:C

  10.There was a simultaneous trial taking place in the next build.

  A.fair

  B.full

  C.coexisting

  D.public

  答案:C

  11.They promote simulation of ethnic group into the main-streasm culture.

  A.policy

  B.value

  C.equality

  D.intergration

  答案:D

  12.A saleman’s cardinal rule is to satisfy customers.

  A.principal

  B.offical

  C.simple

  D.legal

  答案:A

  13.I must compliment you on your handling of a very difficult situation.

  A.silence

  B.praise

  C.assure

  D.complain

  答案:B

  14.We live for years in a perpetual state of fear.

  A.emotion

  B.nervous

  C.terribile

  D.Contimuous

  答案:D

  15.The starving children were a pathectic sight.

  A.common

  B.unexpected

  C.unforgettable

  D.pitiful

  答案:D

  第二部分:阅读判断

  Lackof Oxygen Delayed the Rise of Animals on Earth

  Scientistshave long speculated as to why animal species didn't flourish sooner,oncesufficient oxygen covered the Earth's surface.Animals began to prosper at theend of the Proterozoic period,about 800 million years ago — but what about thebillion-year stretch before that,when most researchers think there also wasplenty of oxygen?

  Well,it seems the air wasn't so great then,after all.

  Ina study published Oct.31 in Science,Yale researcher Noah Planavsky and hiscolleagues found that oxygen levels during the "boring billion"period wereonly 0.1% of what they are today.In other words,Earth's atmosphere couldn'thave supported a diversity of creatures,no matter what genetic advancementswere poised to occur.

  "There is no questionthat genetic and ecological innovation must ultimately be behind the rise ofanimals,but it is equally unavoidable that animals need a certain level ofoxygen,"said Planavsky,co-lead author of the research along with ChristopherReinhard of the Georgia Institute of Technology."We're providing the firstevidence that oxygen levels were low enough during this period to potentiallyprevent the rise of animals.”

  Thescientists found their evidence by analyzing chromium (Cr) isotopes in ancientsediments from China,Australia,Canada,and the United States.Chromium isfound in the Earth's continental crust,and chromium oxidation is directlylinked to the presence of free oxygen in the atmosphere.

  Specifically,the team studied samples deposited in shallow,iron-rich ocean areas,near theshore.They compared their data with other samples taken from younger localesknown to have higher levels of oxygen.

  Oxygen'srole in controlling the first appearance of animals has long vexed scientists."We were missing the right approach until now,"Planavsky said."Chromium gaveus the proxy."Previous estimates put the oxygen level at 40% of today'sconditions during pre-animal times,leaving open the possibility that oxygenwas already plentiful enough to support animal life.

  Inthe new study,the researchers acknowledged that oxygen levels were "highlydynamic"in the early atmosphere,with the potential for occasional spikes.However,they said,"It seems clear that there is a first-order difference inthe nature of Earth surface Cr cycling"before and after the rise of animals.

  "If we are right,ourresults will really change how people view the origins of animals and othercomplex life,and their relationships to the co-evolving environment,"saidco-author Tim Lyons of the University of California-Riverside."This could be agame changer.”

  Fundingsources for the research included the NASA Exobiology Program and the NationalScience Foundation's Earth-Life Transitions program,awarded to Planavsky,Reinhard,and Lyons.

  Theother members of the research team included Xiangli Wang,a postdoctoral fellowat Yale; Thomas Johnson,of the University of Illinois; Danielle Thomson,ofCarleton University; Peter McGoldrick,of the University of Tasmania; andWoodward Fischer,of the California Institute of Technology.

  16.The study discovered the rise of animals occurred earlier than the Proterozoicperiod.

  A.Right B.Wrong C.Not mentioned

  17.Many researchers believe the oxygen level was high during pre-animal times.

  A.Right B.Wrong C.Not mentioned

  18.The team was funded by several research institutes.

  A.Right B.Wrong C.Not mentioned

  19.Genetic advancements triggered the rise of animals.

  A.Right B.Wrong C.Not mentioned

  20.The samples studied in the research were collected in ocean areas.

  A.Right B.Wrong C.Not mentioned

  21.The study revealed that chromium found in Earth's continental crust remained stablebefore and after the rise of animals.

  A.Right B.Wrong C.Not mentioned

  22.Tim Lyons liked to play computer games in his spare time.

  A.Right B.Wrong C.Not mentioned

  答案:BACBABC

  第三部分:概括大意与完成句子

  FirstImage-recognition Software

  1.Dartmouth researchers and their colleagues have created an artificial 1,software that uses photos to locate documents on the Internet with far gre jthan ever before.

  2.The new system,which was tested on photos and is now being applied to,Ishows for the first time that a machine learning algorithm (运算法则)or,ma9e I recognition and retrieval is accurate and efficient enough toimprove large seaie,document searches online. The system uses pixel (像素)data in images and potentia y video — rather than just text — to locatedocuments. It learns to recognize the pixels associated with a search phrase bystudying the results from text-based image search engines. The knowledge gleaned (收集) from those results can then beapplied to other photos without tags or captions making for more accuratedocument search results.

  3."Over the last 30 years,"says Associate Professor Lorenzo Torresani,a co-author of the study,"the Web has evolved from a small collection of mostly text documents to a modern,massive,fast-growing multimedia data set,where nearly every page includes multiple pictures or videos. When a person looks at a Web page,he immediately gets the gist (主旨)of it by looking at the pictures in it. Yet,surprisingly,all existing popularsearch engines,such as Google or Bing,strip away the information contained inthe photos and use exclusively the text of Web pages to perform the documentretrieval. Our study is the first to show that modern machine vision systemsare accurate and efficient enough to make effective use of the informationcontained in image pixels to improve document search."

  4.The researchers designed and tested a machine vision system — a type ofartificial intelligence that allows computers to learn without being explicitlyprogrammed — that extracts semantic (语义的) information from thepixels of photos in Web pages. This information is used to enrich thedescription of the HTML page used by search engines for document retrieval. Theresearchers tested their approach using more than 600 search queries (查询)on a database of 50 million Web pages. They selected the text-retheval searchengine with the best performance and modified it to make use of the additionalsemantic information extracted by their method from the pictures of the Webpages. They found that this produced a 30 percent improvement in precision overthe original search engine purely based on text.

  23. Paragraph 1 __D__

  24. Paragraph 2 __C__

  25. Paragraph 3 __E__

  26. Paragraph 4 __F__

  A.Popularity of the new system

  B.Publication of the new discovery

  C.Function of the new system

  D.Artificial intelligence software created

  E.Problems of the existing search engines

  F.Improvement in document retrieval

  27. The new system does document retrieval by __C__.

  28. The new system is expected toimprove precision in __E__.

  29. When performing document retrieval the existing search engines ignore __A__

  30. The new system was found more effective in document search than the __B__

  A.information in images

  B.current popular search engines

  C.using photos

  D.machine vision systems

  E.document search

  F.description of the HTML page

  第四部分:阅读理解

  第一篇:Better Solar Energy Systems: More Heat,More Light

  Solar photovoltaic thermal energy systems,or PVTs,generate both heat and electricity,but until now they haven't been very good at the heat-generating part compared to a stand-alone solar thermal collector.That's because they operate at low temperatures to cool crystalline silicon solar cells,which lets the silicon generate more electricity but isn'ta very efficient way to gather heat.

  That's a problem of economics.Good solar hot-water systems can harvest much more energy than a solar-electric system at a substantially lower cost.And it's also a space problem: photovoltaic cells can take up all the space on the roof,leaving little room for thermal applications.

  In a pair of studies,Joshua Pearce,anassociate professor of materials science and engineering,has devised a solution in the form of a better PVT made with a different kind of silicon.His research collaborators are Kunal Girotra from Thin Silicon in California and Michael Pathak and Stephen Harrison from Queen's University,Canada.

  Most solar panels are made with crystalline silicon,but you can also make solar cells out of amorphous silicon,commonly known as thin-film silicon.They don't create as much electricity,but they are lighter,flexible,and cheaper.And,because they require much less silicon,they have a greener footprint.Unfortunately,thin-film silicon solar cells are vulnerable to some bad-news physics in the form of the Staebler-Wronski effect.

  "That means that their efficiency drops when you expose them to light— pretty much the worst possible effect for a solar cell,"Pearce explains,which is one of the reasons thin-film solar panels make up only a small fraction of the market.

  However,Pearce and his team found a way to engineer around the Staebler-Wronski effect by incorporating thin-film siliconin a new type of PVT.You don't have to cool down thin-film silicon to make it work.In fact,Pearce's group discovered that by heating it to solar-thermal operating temperatures,near the boiling point of water,they could make thicker cells that largely overcame the Staebler-Wronski effect.When they applied the thin-film silicon directly to a solar thermal energy collector,they also found that by baking the cell once a day,they boosted the solar cell's electrical efficiency by over 10 percent.

  31.PVTs are not efficient in C

  A.creating electricity.

  B.cooling silicon solar cells.

  C.generating heat.

  D.powering solar thermal collectors.

  32.One of the problems PVTs have is that D

  A.their thermala pplications are costly.

  B.they are too expensive to afford.

  C.it is hard to fix them on the roof.

  D.they occupy too much space.

  33.Which of the following is NOT mentioned as an advantage of thin-film silicon solar cells? C

  A.They are flexible.

  B.They are less expensive.

  C.They are electrically efficient.

  D.They are environment friendly.

  34.Thin-film solar panels do not sell well on market because A

  A.they do not work well if exposed to light.

  B.their advantages are not well-recognized.

  C.they need improving in appearance.

  D.they are not advertised.

  35 Which of the following statements is true? C

  A.New techniques have been developed to produce thin-film silicon.

  B Thin-film silicon works efficiently at low temperature.

  C Thin-film silicon's electrical efficiency improves when heated up.

  D Anew material enlarging the Staebler-WronsKi effect has been created.

  第二篇:Face Masks May Not Protect from Super-Flu

  1 If a super-flu strikes, face masks may not protect you. Whether widespread use of masks will help, or harm, during the next worldwide flu outbreak is a question that researchers are studying furiously. No results have come from their mask research yet. However, the government says people should consider wearing them in certain situations anyway, just in case1.

  2 But it's a question the public keeps asking while the government are making preparations for the next flu pandemic. So the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) came up with2preliminary guidelines. "We don't want people wearing them everywhere," said the CDC. "The overall recommendation really is to avoid exposure."

  3 When that's not possible3, the guidelines say to consider wearing a simple surgical mask if you are in one of the three following situations. First, you're healthy and can't avoid going to a crowded place. Second, you're sick and think you may have close contact with the healthy, such as a family member checking on you4. Third, you live with someone who's sick and thus might be in the early stages of infection, but still need to go out.

  4 Influenza pandemics can strike when the easy-to-mutate flu virus shifts to a strain that people never have experienced. Scientists cannot predict when the next pandemic will arrive, although concern is rising that the Asian bird flu might trigger one if it starts spreading easily from person to person.

  5 During the flu pandemic, you should protect yourself. Avoid crowds, and avoid close contact with the sick unless you must care for someone. Why aren't masks added to this self-protection list? Because they can help trap virus-laden droplets flying through the air with a cough or sneeze. Simple surgical masks only filter the larger droplets. Besides, the CDC is afraid masks may create a false sense of security. Perhaps someone who should have stayed home would don an ill-fitting mask and hop on the subway5 instead.

  6 Nor does flu only spread through the air6. Say7 someone covers a sneeze with his or her hand, then touches a doorknob or subway pole8. If you touch that spot next and then put germy hands on your nose or mouth, you've been exposed. It's harder to rub your nose while wearing a mask and so your face may get pretty sweaty under masks. You reach under to wipe that sweat, and may transfer germs caught on the outside of the mask straight to the nose. These are the problems face masks may create for their users.

  7 Whether people should or should not use face masks still remains a question. The general public has to wait patiently for the results of the mask research scientists are still doing.

  36.What is the passage mainly about?

  A.Widespread use of face masks.

  B.Possibility of a worldwide flu outbreak.

  C.New discoveries of a face mask research.

  D.Effectiveness of wearing face masks.

  答案:D

  37.The CDCsuggests that people

  A.stay alone when being sick.

  B.wear face masks when going to a crowded place.

  C.wear face masks wherever possible.

  D.reamin at home if living with someone who’s sick

  答案:B

  38.The word ‘that’ in paragraph 3 refers to

  A.making preparatins.

  B.avoiding exposure.

  C.coming up with guidelines.

  D.wearing face masks everywhere.

  答案:B

  39.Which of following statements is true?

  A.Scientistswarn the next flu is coming soon.

  B.Asian bird flu is spreading easily from person to person.

  C.Masksprotect people because they keep viruses away.

  D.Masksare not effective if a flu strikes.

  答案:D

  40.One of the concerns the CDC has is tehat.

  A.masks may give people a wrong assumption of being safe.

  B.the sick may not wear and go out.

  C.fiuvims may spresd via public transportation.

  D.healthy people may not know how to protect themselves.

  答案:A

  第三篇: What's killing the Bats

  First it was bees.Now it is bats.Biologists in America are working hard to discover the cause of the mysterious deaths of tens of thousands of bats in the northeastern part of the country.Most of the bats affected are the common little brown bats (Myotis lucifugus,) but other species,such as the long-eared bat,the small-footed hat,the eastern pipistrelle,and the Indiana bat have also been affecte

  D.In some caves,more than 90 percent of the bat populations have died.

  One possibility is disease.A white fungus (真菌)known as fusarium has been found on the noses of both living and dead bats.However,scientists don't know If the fungus is the primary cause of death,a secondary cause of death,or not a cause at all,but the result of some other conditions.

  Another possible cause is a lack of foo

  D.For example,bats typically eat a large number of moths (蛾),and in some states such as New York,the number of moths has been declining in recent years.If bats can't eat enough food,they starve to death.

  Still other scientists believe that global warming is to blame.Warmer temperatures in recent years have been waking up hibernating (冬眠)bats earlier than usual.If bats break their hibernation at the wrong time,they might not find their expected food sources.The weather might also turn cold again and weaken or kill the bats.

  Scientists might not agree on the causes of the bat die-off,but they do agree on the consequences.Bats are an important predator of mosquitoes; a single brown bat can eat 1,000 or more insects in an hour.They also eat beetles and other insects that damage plant crops.If there aren't enough bats,damage will be great from the insects they eat While bats live a long time for their size 一 the little brown bat can live for more than 30 years 一 a female bat has only one baby per year,so bat populations grow slowly.Many bat species in the United States are already protected or endangered.

  How can you help? Do not disturb sleeping or nesting bats.If you discover bate that seem to be sick or that are dead,contact your local Fish& Wildlife Department with the details.However,be careful not to touch the animals.

  41.What is the main idea of this passage?

  A.All species of bats in North America are dying.

  B.Scientists already know the cause of the deaths of bats

  C.The bat deaths are a serious problem.

  D.There are many possible causes of the deaths of bats.

  答案: D

  42.What does the first sentence in Paragraph 1 mean?

  A.Bees have been dying mysteriously.

  B.The first article on the website is about bees.

  C.Bees usually die before bats.

  D.It was bees that caused the deaths of bats.

  答案: A

  43.The word"pipistrelle" in Paragraph 1 refers to

  A.a kind of fungus.

  B.an area in the U.S.

  C.a special cave.

  D.a kind of bat.

  答案: D

  44.The "moths" in Paragraph 3 are taken as an example of

  A.diseases that kill bats.

  B.Insects that bats eat.

  C.animals that have diseases.

  D.bat species that are starving to death.

  答案: D

  45.What is the purpose of the last paragraph? D

  A.To get people to stop killing bats.

  B.To hire workers for the Fish & Wildlife Department.

  C.To ask people not to touch dead bats.

  D.To tell the public how to help bats.

  第五部分:补全短文

  Gorillas have a word for it

  Kokois the first gorilla to have been taught sign language (a way of communicatingby using hands and fingers rather than speech).With a vocabulary of more than1000 words,she is the first to prove we share a world with other intelligentbeings who feel emotions,look forward to celebrations and also have a sense ofhumour.

  The30-year study of Koko has redefined science's concept of gorilla intelligence.According to some scientists,genetically there is only a 2% difference betweengorillas and humans: we share the same blood type,have the same number ofhairs per square inch and also the same temperament.But what had not beenrecognised by the scientific community was that gorillas have the ability tolearn a language and have complex emotions.

  Kokolives in the Santa Cruz mountains in North America,in a wooded spotoverlooking a valley.She has her own home,with curtains,and a nest ofblankets,which is her bed,in one corner.She has a barrel on which she likesto sit when talking to humans - gorillas feel more secure when they can lookdown on others - while her toys are spread everywhere.In addition she has anoutside enclosure where she spends her days when it is not raining.

  Itis her conversations with her teacher,Dr Penny Patterson,that are inspiring.Penny explains:The reality of my discovery is that our abilities as humans,our skills,sensibilities and emotions are very similar to the great apes.Whatwe have learnt is that gorillas are more complex than we ever imagined.

  Whenshe began teaching Koko sign language,placing the little fingers of theone-year-old gorilla into the correct positions for drink,eat,more,andrewarding her with food,Dr Patterson had no idea how quickly Koko would learn.“At first,it seemed Koko was using sign language as a tool to get something,"says Patterson.'It became the kind of reward system that you could expect of acat or a dog.But early in her training,she began to combine signs that mademe think she was capable of more.Now Koko is so proficient in sign languagethat if she doesn't know a word she invents one.For example,she didn't knowthe word for ring,so she combined the signs for finger and bracelet toexpress it.

  DrPatterson continues:Koko loves babies and young people.And when she is askedwhat gorillas like best,she always says "Gorilla love eat,good".Oneof Patterson's favourite stories demonstrates Koko's sense of humour.When avisitor asked her to show him something scary,she held up a mirror to his face!

  WhenPatterson asked her what she would like for her 11th birthday,Koko signed thatshe wanted a cat.The story of Koko's cat enabled Patterson to learn more abouther student: the cat was hit by a car and Patterson had to break the news toKoko,who signed cry,sad,frown.Then,once alone,Patterson heard Koko makethe gorilla's distress call: a loud series of hoots.

  Fromthe age of three,Koko shared her accommodation with Michael who was intendedas a mate.However,

  Michaeldied suddenly two years ago of a heart attack.‘Koko went into a depressionfollowing Michael's death,says Patterson.‘She would sit for hours with herhead hung low looking upset.

  DrPatterson asked her if she was looking forward to moving to Hawaii,wherePatterson is raising money to build a gorilla refuge.Koko signed Yes,provided she could have curtains in her new home!

  第六部分:完形填空

  Robotic Highway Cones

  A University of Nebraska professor has developed robotic cones and barrels.These robotic cones and barrels can move out of the way,or into(51)____ from computer commands made miles away.They can even be programmed to move on their own1 at any particular part of the day,said Shane Fanitor,an assistant professor of mechanical engineering at Nebraska.

  For example,if workers arrived at 6 am,the cones could move from the side of the highway to(52)____ off the lane at that time.And they can return to the(53)____ place at the end of the day."It just seems likea very good application for robots," Farritor said."The robotic cones would also help(54)____ people from hazardous jobs on the highway putting barrels and cones into place," Fanitor said in a report oh his creation.

  Work on the idea began in 2002 using a National Academy of Sciences grant.The(55)____ allowed Farritor to work on the project with graduate students2 at Nebraska and his assistant Steve Goddard.

  The robots are placed at the bottomof the cones and barrels and are(56)____ enough not to greatly change the appearance of the construction aides."It would look exactly the same,"Farritor said."(57)____ there's a kind of rubbery,black base to them.Were place that(58)____ a robot.

  Farritor has talked with officials from the Nebraska Department of Roads about how the robots would be most(59)____to what they3 might need.

  The robots could come in handy4 following a slow-moving maintenance operation,like painting a stripe on a road or moving asphalt,(60)____ now the barrels have to be picked up and moved as the operation (61)____."That way you don't have to block off a 10-mile strip forthe operation,5" Fanitor said.

  (62)____prototypes have been made,they are not in use anywhere.Farritor said he has (63)____ for apatent and is considering what to do next.Heis thinking about starting a small business.He is also thinking about(64)____the robots to roads departments and others across the country who7 may (65)____from them.

  51.A. work B. place C. order D. a ction

  答案:B

  52.A. block B. cut C. set D. turn

  答案:A

  53.A .clean B. important C. entire D. original

  答案:D

  54.A.empty B.observe C.removeD.instruct

  答案:C

  55.A.ideaB.report C.demandD.fund

  答案:D

  56.A.helpfulB.beautiful C.smallD.huge

  答案:C

  57.A.kindlyB.NormallyC.GreatlyD.Strangely

  答案:B

  58.A.atB.onC.inD.with

  答案:D

  59.A.relatedB.typicalC.usefulD.visible

  答案:C

  60.A.whyB.whereC.whenD.what

  答案:B

  61.A.proceeds B.functionsC.finishesD.improves

  答案:A

  62.A.ifB.whileC.sinceD.because

  答案:B

  63.A.appliedB.askedC.calledD.argued

  答案:A

  64.A.savingB.marketingC.movingtD.devising

  答案:B

  65.A.benefitB.protectC.learnD.inspire

  答案:A

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