
考研英语二完形原题.doc
6页2010年完形填空:The outbreak of swine flu that was first detected in Mexico was declared a global epidemic on June 11, 2009. It is the first worldwide epidemic [1] by the World Health Organization in 41 years. The heightened alert [2] an emergency meeting with flu experts in Geneva that assembled after a sharp rise in cases in Australia, and rising [3] in Britain, Japan, Chile and elsewhere.But the epidemic is “ [4] ” in severity, according to Margaret Chan, the organization’s director general, [5] the overwhelming majority of patients experiencing only mild symptoms and a full recovery, often in the [6] of any medical treatment. The outbreak came to global [7] in late April 2009, when Mexican authorities noted an unusually large number of hospitalizations and deaths [8] healthy adults. As much of Mexico City shut down at the height of a panic, cases began to [9] in New York City, the southwestern United States and around the world. In the United States, new cases seemed to fade [10] warmer weather arrived. But in late September 2009, officials reported there was [11] flu activity in almost every state and that virtually all the [12] tested are the new swine flu, also known as (A) H1N1, not seasonal flu. In the U.S., it has [13] more than one million people, and caused more than 600 deaths and more than 6,000 hospitalizations. Federal health officials [14] Tamiflu for children from the national stockpile and began [15] orders from the states for the new swine flu vaccine. The new vaccine, which is different from the annual flu vaccine, is [16] ahead of expectations.More than three million doses were to be made available in early October 2009, though most of those [17] doses were of the FluMist nasal spray type, which is not [18] for pregnant women, people over 50 or those with breathing difficulties, heart disease or several other [19] . But it was still possible to vaccinate people in other high-risk groups: health care workers, people [20] infants and healthy young people.2011年完形填空:The Internet affords anonymity to its users, a blessing to privacy and freedom of speech. But that very anonymity is also behind the explosion of cyber-crime that has [1] across the Web. Can privacy be preserved [2] bringing safety and security to a world that seems increasingly [3]?Last month, Howard Schmidt, the nation’s cyber-czar, offered the federal government a [4] to make the Web a safer place—a “voluntary trusted identity” system [that would be the high-tech [5] of a physical key, a fingerprint and a photo ID card], all rolled [6] one. The system might use a smart identity card, or a digital credential [7] to a specific computer, and would authenticate users at a range of online services.The idea is to [8] a federation of private online identity systems. User could [9] which system to join, and only registered users whose identities have been authenticated could navigate those systems. The approach contrasts with one [that would require an Internet driver’s license [10] by the government.Google and Microsoft are among companies that already have these “single sign-on” systems that make it possible for users to [11] just once but use many different services. [12] the approach would create a “walled garden” in cyberspace, with safe “neighborhoods” and bright “streetlights” to establish a sense of a [13] community. Mr. Schmidt described it as a “voluntary ecosystem” in which “individuals and organizations can complete online transactions with [14], trusting the identities of each other and the identities of the infrastructure [15] which the transaction runs”.Still, the administration’s plan has [16] privacy rights activists. Some applaud the approach; others are concerned. It seems clear that such a scheme is an initiative push toward what would [17] be a compulsory Internet “driver’s license” mentality. The plan has also been greeted with [18] by some computer security experts, who worry that the “voluntary ecosystem” envisioned by Mr. Schmidt would still leave much of the Internet [19]. They argue that all Internet users should be [20] to register and identify themselves, in the same way that drivers must be licensed to drive on public roads. 2012年完形填空:Millions of Americans and foreigners see G. I. Joe as a mindless war toy, the symbol of American military adventurism, but that’s not how it used to be. To the men and women who [1] in World War II and the people they liberated, the G . I . was the [2] man [grown into hero, the poor farm kid torn away from his home, the guy who [3] all the burdens of battle, who slept in cold foxholes, who went without the [4] of food and shelter, who stuck it out and drove back the Nazi reign of murder. This was not a volunteer soldier, not someone well paid, [5] an average guy, up [6] the best trained, best equipped, fiercest, most brutal enemies seen in centuries.His name is not much. G. I. is just a military abbreviation [7] Government Issue, and it was on al。












