考研《英语一》甘肃省金昌市永昌县2023年高分冲刺试卷含解析
考研英语一甘肃省金昌市永昌县2023年高分冲刺试卷Section I Use of EnglishDirections:Read the following text. Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark A, B, C or D on the ANSWER SHEET. (10 points)It was lunchtime and I walked into a small branch office on the West Side. I had come to 1 a checking account. The only officer on 2 was a fortyish black man, standing 3 a small counter from a young white boy who was wearing a V-necked sweater. I think I was especially 4 of the boy because he looked more like a kid from a prep school than a 5 in a West Side bank.The boy continued to 6 my attention because of what happened next. He was holding an open savings-account book and 7 an expression of disappointment. “But I dont understand. I opened the account myself, so why cant I 8 any money?” the boy said, his voice breaking.“I know it is, but those are the rules. Ive already explained to you that a fourteen-year-old is not 9 to withdraw money without a letter from his parents,” the officer explained patiently.Suddenly I noticed the account had a series of small deposits and withdraws. Then I questioned the officer, “How do you 10 that? Why did you let him withdraw money before, but not now?” He looked 11 “Because the tellers were not aware of his age before and now they are. Its really very 12 ” I turned to the boy with a shrug. “Youre really getting 13 ,” I said. “You ought to get your parents to come in here and 14 ” The boy looked destroyed. 15 , he put his savings book in a rear-pocket and walked out of the bank.The officer turned to me. “You know,” he said, “you really shouldnt have got 16 ” I couldnt believe what this idiot was saying. “We were 17 this morning that some neighborhood bully has been shaking down (敲诈) this boy for more than a month. The other guy was 18 him to take money out every week and hand it over. The poor kid was 19 too scared to tell anyone. Anyway, the police are on the case and theyll probably make a(n) 20 today."“You mean there is no rule about being too young to withdraw money from a savings account?”“Not that I ever heard of. Now, sir, what can we do for you?”1、AmakeBopenCbuyDchoose2、AdutyBboardCdisplayDshow3、AonBafterCoverDacross4、AsureBproudCawareDafraid5、AguardBcustomerCclerkDmanager6、AattractBpayCattachDcontrol7、AputtingBwritingCsayingDwearing8、AborrowBdepositCwithdrawDuse9、AtoldBinspiredCencouragedDallowed10、AargueBexplainCanswerDdeclare11、AannoyedBdisappointedCexcitedDamused12、AeasyBamazingCfantasticDsimple13、AarrangedBconvincedCcheatedDcaught14、AprotestBpromiseCprohibitDprepare15、AExcitedlyBSilentlyCCheerfullyDNervously16、AinteractedBinterruptedCinvolvedDinfected17、AaskedBdiscoveredCsuggestedDinformed18、ArushingBforcingCrequestingDbegging19、AhardlyBunwillinglyCapparentlyDeagerly20、AarrestBsentenceCapologyDdifferenceSection II Reading ComprehensionPart ADirections:Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on the ANSWER SHEET. (40 points)Text 1Dormitory management officials in universities say that lately they are noticing something different: students seem to lack the will and skill to address their ordinary conflicts. “We have students who are mad at each other and they text each other in the same room,” says a teacher. “So many of our roommate conflicts are because kids dont know how to negotiate.”And as many psychologists will tell you, bottled emotions lead to silent unhappiness that can boil over into frustration and anger. “At Florida University, emotional outbreaks occur about once a week,” the dormitory director says. “It used to be: Lets sit down and talk about it,” he says. “Recently, roommate conflicts have increased. The students dont have the person-to-person discussions and they dont know how to handle them.” The problem is most impressive among freshmen; dormitory officials say some students even never seem to catch on till graduation, and they worry about how such students will deal with conflicts after college.Administrators suppose that relying on cell phones and the Internet may have made it easier for young people to avoid uncomfortable meetings. Why express anger in person when you can do it in a text? Facebook makes the situation worse as complaints go public. “Things are posted on someones wall on Facebook: Oh, my roommate kept me up all night studying,” says Dana Pysz, an assistant director in the housing office at California University. “Its a different way to express their conflicts to each other.” In recent group discussions at North Carolina State University, students said they would not even accuse the noisy neighbors on their floor face to face.Administrators also point to par