公共英语五级-212
(总分80, 做题时间90分钟)
Section Ⅰ Use of English
There are several things about motorcycling that the average citizen dislikes. A cyclist"s 1 has something to do with this dislike. Motorcylists frequently look dirty, in fact, they are dirty. On the road there is little to 2 them from mud, crushed insects, and bird droppings. For practical reasons they often 3 in old clothing which looks much less 4 than the clothing of people who ride in cars. For the same reason motorcyclists usually wear 5 colors. Perhaps this helps to explain why they are sometimes 6 of having evil natures. In old 7 of long ago, evil characters usually wear black. In 8 movies the "bad guys" usually wear black hats 9 the "good guys" wear lighter colors.
Something else about their appearance makes an 10 impression. In their practical, protective clothing they very much like the men 11 military motorcycles in the movies of World War Two-cruel enemies who reared into 12 villages 13 people"s hearts with fear. Probably 14 machine itself also produces anger and fear. Motorcycles are noisy, though some big trucks are even noisier. But trucks are big and carry heavy 15 . They are accepted (If not really welcomed) because they perform a 16 service, making America move. Motorcycles, on the 17 hand, make an unpleasant noise just to give their riders 18 . That is what is commonly thought. In the woods motorcycles frighten animals. 19 along quiet streets, they disturb 20 families and make babies cry.
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Section Ⅱ Reading Comprehension
Part A
Text 1
On the heels of its recent decision to criminalize consumers who rip songs from albums they have purchased to their computers (or iPods), the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) has now gone one step further and declared that "remembering songs" using your brain is criminal copyright infringement. "The brain is a recording device," explained RIAA president Cary Sherman. "The act of listening is an unauthorized act of copying music to that recording device, and the act of recalling or remembering a song is unauthorized playback."
The RIAA also said it would begin sending letters to tens of millions of consumers thought to be illegally remembering songs, threatening them with lawsuits if they do not settle with the RIAA by paying monetary damages.
In order to avoid engaging in unauthorized copyright infringement, consumers will now be required to immediately forget everything they have just heard—a skill already mastered by the former US President George Bush. To aid in these memory wiping efforts, the RIAA is teaming up with Big Pharma to include free psychotropic prescription drugs with the purchase of new music albums. Consumers are advised to swallow the pills before listening to the music. The pills block normal cognitive function, allowing consumers to enjoy the music in a more detached state without the risk of accidentally remembering any songs (and thereby violating copyright law).
Consumers caught humming their favorite songs will be charged with a more serious crime: The public performance of a copyrighted song, for which the fines can reach over $250,000 per incident. "Humming, singing and whistling songs will not be tolerated," said Sherman.
Consumers attempting to circumvent the RIAA"s new memory-wiping technology by actually remembering songs will be charged with felony crimes under provisions of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. The Act, passed in 1998, makes it a felony crime to circumvent copyright protection technologies. The RIAA"s position is that consumers who actually use their brains while listening to music are violating the DMCA.
With this decision, the RIAA now considers approximately 72% of the adult U.S. population to be criminals. Putting them all in prison for copyright infringement would cost US taxpayers an estimated $683 billion per year—an amount that would have to be shouldered by the remaining 28% who are not imprisoned. The RIAA believes it could cover the $683 billion tab through royalties on music sales. The problem with that—the 28% remaining adults not in prison do not buy music albums. That means album sales would plummet to nearly zero, and the US government (which is already deep in debt) would have to borrow money to pay for all the prisons.
When asked whether he really wants 72% of the US population to be imprisoned for ripping music CDs to their own brains, Sherman shot back, "You don"t support criminal behavior, do you? Every person who illegally remembers a song is a criminal. We can"t have criminals running free on the streets of America. It"s an issue of national security."
1. 
What does the phrase "copying music to that recording device" (para. 1, line 6) mean?
A Ripping music to their PCs.
B Recalling or remembering a song.
C Unauthorized playback of a song.
D Criminal copyright violation.
2. 
Which of the following best summarizes Paragraph 3?
A The absurdity of the RIAA"s memory-wiping efforts.
B The possibility of cooperation between the RIAA and Big Pharma.
C The effectiveness of the new prescription pills.
D The necessity to take measures against the violation of copyright law.
3. 
The following will be criminal acts EXCEPT
A humming a song in public.
B going to the public performance of a song.
C using your brain while listening to a song.
D accidentally remembering a copyrighted song.
4. 
What will the RIAA"s decision lead to?
A Crime rates in the US will rise sharply.
B Much will be gained through royalties on music sales.
C The US government will get even deeper in debt.
D Only 28% of the total music albums could be sold out.
5. 
What category does this essay fall into?
A News report.
B Satire.
C Review.
D Humour.
Text 2
Throughout history there have been many unusual taxes levied on such things as hats,beds,baths,marriages,and funerals.At one time England levied a tax on sunlight by collection from every household with six or more windows.And according to legend,there was a Turkish ruler who collected a tax each time he dined with one of his subjects.Why?To pay for the wear and tear on his teeth!
Different kinds of taxes help to spread the tax burden.Anyone who pays a tax is said to“bear the burden”of the tax.The burden of a tax may fall more heavily on some persons than on others.That is why the three levels of government in this country use several kinds of taxes.This spreads the burden of taxes among more people.From the standpoint of their use,the most important taxes are income taxes,property taxes,sales taxes,and estate,inheritance,and gift taxes.Some are used by only one level of government;others by two or even all three levels.Together these different taxes make up what is called our tax system.
Income taxes are the main source of federal revenues.The federal government gets more than three-fourths of its revenue from income taxes.As its name indicated,an income tax is a tax on earnings.Both individuals and business corporations pay a federal income tax.
The oldest tax in the United States today is the property tax.It provides most of the income for local governments.It provides at least a part of the income for all but a few states.It is not used by the federal government.
A sales tax is a tax levied on purchases.Most people living in the United States know about sales taxes since they are used in all but four states.Actually there are several kinds of sales taxes,but only three of them are important.They are general sales taxes,excise taxes,and import taxes.
Other three closely related taxes are estate,inheritance,and gift taxes.Everything a person owns,including both real and personal property,makes up his or her estate.When someone dies,ownership of his or her property or estate passes on to one or more individuals or organizations.Before the property is transferred,however,it is subject to an estate tax if its value exceeds a certain amount.
1. 
The reason that the Turkish ruler collected a dining tax is to pay for_______.
A the inconvenience for him to put on and take off clothes
B the damage that eating did to his teeth
C his efforts to cut the food into pieces
D the decay of his teeth because of sugar
2. 
The government levies different kinds of taxes so that______.
A the rich have to pay more and the poor less
B a wider range of taxpayers can be included
C each of three levels of government could get tax money
D the burden of taxes falls evenly on everybody
3. 
The federal government gets most of their income from______.
A property tax
B income tax
C sales tax
D estate tax
4. 
How many states levy import taxes in the U.S.A.?
A 4.
B 50.
C 46.
D 54.
5. 
Which of the following statements is NOT true?
A Any form of property is subject to an estate tax when transferred.
B Property tax provides a part of income for local government.
C There are a few kinds of sales taxes.
D Individuals and corporations both pay income taxes.
Text 3
Steve Courtney wrote historical novels. Not, he was quick to explain, over-colourful love stories of the kind that made so much money for so many women writers, but novels set, and correctly set, in historical periods. Whatever difference he saw in his own books, his readers did not seem to notice it, and his readers were nearly all women. He had studied in university, but he had been a particularly good student, and he had never afterwards let any academic knowledge he had achieved interfere with his writing.
Helen, his wife, who did not have a very high opinion of her husband" s ability as a novelist, had been careful to say when she married him she was not historically minded.
Above all, Helen was doubtful whether her relationship with Steve would work at all in the village of Stretton, to which they had just moved. It was Steve who had wanted to move to the country, and she had been glad of the change, in principle, whatever doubts she was now having about Stretton as a choice. But she wondered whether Steve would, before long, want to live in London again, and what she would do if he did. The Stretton house was not a weekend cottage. They had moved into it and given up the London flat altogether, partly at least, she suspected, because that was Steve" s idea of what a successful author ought to do. However, she thought he was not going to feel like a successful author half as much in Stretton as he had in London. On the other hand, she supposed he might just start dashing up to London for the day to see his agent or have dinner with his publisher, leaving her behind in Stretton, and she thought on the whole she would like that.
1. 
What was Steve" s attitude towards women who wrote love stories?
A He would have liked to earn as much money as they did.
B He was afraid of being compared unfavourably with them.
C He did not think he could write about the same subjects.
D He had a low opinion of the kind of books they wrote.
2. 
What did Helen have to be careful to hide?
A Her lack of interest in history.
B Her low opinion of her husband" s writing.
C Her dislike of her husband" s admirers.
D Her inability to understand his books.
3. 
What were Helen"s feelings about the move from London to Stretton?
A She wanted to remain in the country.
B She had been unwilling to leave London.
C She thought it was time to return to London.
D She would have preferred a weekend house in the country.
4. 
Helen thought Steve might not be content of Stretton because ______.
A he would not be able to write so well in the country
B he would not feel so important in Strettan
C his relationship with Helen was changing
D he would not be lonely without all his London friends
5. 
The passage as a whole suggests that Steve" s novels were ______.
A popular but unimportant
B serious literary works
C admired for their historical truth
D written with women readers in mind
Part B
But in preserving the balance we have to be clear where the problem actually lies. Of the total carbon dioxide emissions caused by burning fossil fuels, only 20 percent comes from transportation. 80 percent comes from static Uses of energy -- the energy used in our homes, in industry and in power generation of the total, 43 percent comes from petroleum.
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On top of that, a further one megaton is produced by our chemical operations. If you add to that the carbon produced by the consumption of the products we produce -- the total goes up to around 95 megatons. That is just 1 percent of the total carbon dioxide emissions which come from all human activity.
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Only a fraction of the total emissions come from the transportation sector -- so the problem is not just caused by vehicles. Any response which is going to have a real impact has to look at all the sources. That means ensuring our own house is in order. It also means contributing to the wider analysis of the problem -- through research, technology and through engagement in the search for the best public policy mechanisms -- the actions which can produce the right solutions for the long term common interest. We have a responsibility to act, and I hope that through our actions we can contribute to the much wider process which is desirable and necessary. First we will monitor and control our own carbon dioxide emissions. This follows the commitment we"ve made in relation to other environmental issues. Our overall goal is to do no harm or damage to the natural environment. That"s an ambitious goal which we approach systematically.
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Now, as well as continuing our efforts in relation to the other greenhouse gases, it is time to establish a similar process for carbon dioxide. Our carbon dioxide emissions result from burning hydrocarbon fuels to produce heat and power, from flaring feed and product gases, and directly from the process of separation or transformation. So far our approach to carbon dioxide has been indirect and has mainly come through improvements in the energy efficiency of our production processes. Over the last decade, efficiency in our major manufacturing activities has improved by 20 percent.
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It is a learning process -- just as it has been with the other emissions we"ve targeted but the learning is cumulative and I think it will have a substantial impact. Other steps will require investment to make existing facilities more energy efficient. For instance, we"re researching ways in which we can remove the carbon dioxide from large compressors and reinject it to improve oil recovery. That would bring a double benefit -- a cut in emissions and an improvement in production efficiency.
The task is particularly challenging in the refining sector where the production of cleaner products re quires more extensive processing and a higher energy demand for each unit of output. That means that to make gasoline cleaner, with lower sulphur levels, takes more energy at the manufacturing stage. That"s the trade off. In each case our aim will be to establish a database, including benchmark data; to create a monitoring process, and then to develop targets for improvement through operational line management.
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We will increase our support for that work. That support will be focused on finding solutions and will be directed to work of high quality which we believe can address the key outstanding questions.
A. Let me put that another way -- to be clear. Human activity accounts for a small part of the total volume of emissions of carbon -- but it is that part which could cause disequilibrium.
B. As I said a few moments ago, there are still areas of significant uncertainty around the subject of climate change. Those who tell you they know all the answers are fools or knaves. More research is needed -- on the detail of cause and effect, on the consequences of what appears to be happening, and on the effectiveness of the various actions which can be taken.
C. Monitoring and controlling emissions is one step. The second is to increase the level of support we give to the continuing scientific work which is necessary.
D. Now we want to go further. We have to continue to improve the efficiency with which we use energy. And in addition we need a better understanding of how our own emissions of carbon can be monitored and controlled, using a variety of measures including sequestration. It is a very simple business lesson that what gets measured gets managed.
E. Our method has been to focus on one item at a time, to identify what can be delivered, to establish monitoring processes and targets as part of our internal management system and to put in place an external confirmation of delivery. In most cases the approach has meant that we"ve been able to go well beyond the regulatory requirements.
F. We"ve looked carefully, using the best available data, at the precise impact of our own activities. Our operations -- in exploration and in refining -- produce around eight megatons of carbon.
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Part C
A = Benjamin Franklin B = Washington Irving
C = James Fenimore Cooper D = Philip Freneau
Who...
※ is the first important writer to be critical of his country. 1
※ advocated old beliefs in some eases. 2
※ lived 76 years. 3
※ unfolded an epic account of a frontiersman in his novels. 4
※ is remembered more for his poetry than his prose. 5
※ uses many long words, often from Latin, in his book. 6
was once a sailor. 7
※ wrote a novel in 1826 as the second in the series. 8
※ got the idea for his most famous story from a German 9
legend.
※ in his short stories, the incidents anti descriptive details 10
usually have symbolic significance.
Benjamin Franklin
Franklin(1706-1790) was a universal genius who did not realize that his Autobiography would eventually become a classic of its kind. The part of it given here shows the beginnings of his personal, civic, anti political success, yet the account is uncolored by vanity. Franklin shows us that he is a human being as well as a successful man.
Though his style of writing was clear anti even plain in his time, we now find it a bit hard to read. It has many long words, often from the Latin language, anti long sentences. But we must remember that he was writing two centuries ago.
It is true that Franklin"s style is formal. The organization of much of what he says if not how he says it is informal, however. In his famous Autobiography, in particular, he talks first about one thing and then another with little attempt at connecting them.
Of course, not all of his ideas were new. In some cases he simply became the most prominent advocate of old ones, especially the beliefs that we should work hard and that we should save our money. These principles had been current since Puritan times but Franklin spread them widely by putting them into a popular almanac or calendar called Poor Richard"s Almanac, which he himself printed.
Washington Irving
Irving (1783—1859) was America"s first man of letters, devoting much of Iris career to literature. In his short stories, he usually starts with standard characters-the lazy husbands, for instance, and the termagant wife. He is able, however, in his better stories to place them in a home-like situation and in surroundings that give the stories a kind of vitality. Irving"s choice of incidents and descriptive details adds a note of symbolism to the basic themes, creating an almost Gothic atmosphere.
Irving got the idea for his most famous story, "Rip Van Winkle," from a German legend about a sleeping emperor, which he points out in a mock-scholarly note added at the end of the story. According to the note, the tale originated with Diedrich Knickerbocker, an old Dutch gentleman of New York, who is really a fictional character created by Irving. (The old gentleman"s name was later adopted by a group of New York writers of the period, among whom Irving, James Fenimore Cooper, and William Cullen Bryant were the foremost Knickerbockers.) "Rip Van Winkle" is found in Irving"s longer work, The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent. , published serially in the United States from 1819 to 1820.
James Fenimore Cooper
Cooper (1789—1851 ) wrote both novels and social criticism. It is his fiction which has become famous, but it is worth remembering that he also wrote books criticizing the shortcomings of democracy in his own country. He is the first important writer to be critical of the United States but he will by no means be the last. His fiction is much more memorable, however.
The Last of the Mohicans, written in 1826, is the second novel in Cooper"s Leatherstocking Series. Consisting of five novels, the series gets it title from one of the names applied to its frontiersman hero, Natty Bumppo, who is also called Deerslayer, Hawkeye, Pathfinder, and l,eatherstocking. Tile five novels tell the story of Bumppo from youth to old age.
The creation of the character of Natty Bumppo is probably the most significant thing that happened in American literature during the first 50 years of its history. Like Sir Walter Scott and other romantic writers who dealt with historical or legendary characters, Cooper, in his tales about Bumppo, unfolded an epic account. Bumppo, a frontiersman whose actions were shaped by the forest in which he lived, seems to be related in some way to the deepest meaning of the American experience itself.
Philip Freneau
PHILIP FRENEAU was an ardent patriot who is still remembered as the "Poet of the American Revolution." While in college, he had already determined to become a poet. After his experience as a sailor in the Revolutionary War, he turned to newspaper and pamphlet writing. Today, however, Freneau is remembered more for is poetry than his prose. Two of his poems are reprinted below.
The first, "The Wild Honey Suckle" was virtually unread in the poet"s lifetime, yet it deserves a place among major English and American works of poetry of that time. Much of the beauty of the poem lies in the sounds of the words and the effects created through changes in rhythm.
The idea for the second poem, "The Indian Burying Ground, "was suggested by the fact that some Indian tribes buried their dead in a sitting, instead of a lying position. This poem, too, is marked by a regularity of rhythm and meter and by the use of "Reason" as an abstraction which is personified.
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Section Ⅲ Writing
1. 
You have read an article in a magazine which states, "By law, cigarette advertisements are strictly prohibited on the media. Some people think there should also be a ban on the advertising of alcohol."
Write an article for the same magazine to clarify your own points of view towards this issue. You should use your own ideas, knowledge or experience to generate support for your argument.
You should write no less than 250 words.