1、自考学士学位英语考试模拟试题内附答案3自考学士学位英语考试模拟试题(内附答案)Paper One 试卷(90 minutes)Part I Dialogue Completion (15 points)Directions: There are 15 short incomplete dialogues in this part , each followed by 4 choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the best one to complete the dialogue and mark your“answer on the ANSWER SHE
2、ET with a singLe line through the center.1. A: You look a bit dull today. Whats wrong with you?B: Well, my mum lost her job yesterday.A: B A. I regret asking about itB. Im sorry to hear thatC. Im not very glad to hear itD. Im sorry to trouble you2. Mike: You look a bit dull today. A ?Susan: I have s
3、ome bad news. I got fired.Mike: Oh, nol You must be kidding. How come?Susan: Its a long story.A. Whats upB. Whats onC. What thenD. What of it3. Operator: A Caller: Toronto. Id like the number of Ms. Amanda Rhodes.Operator: How do you spell the last name, please?Caller: Its R-H-O-D-E-S.Operator: Than
4、k you.A. Directory Assistance. What city, please?B. Speaking. What can I do for you?C. Who is speaking over there, please?D. Hold on a moment, please.4. Greg: Hi, Karen. I have tickets to a concert at Carnegie Hall. It starts at 8:00.Karen: Hmmm D A. Sure, but I have to prepare for the examB. Thank
5、you all the sameC. Leave it to me, I assure youD. Im afraid I cant make it by then5. Classmate A; Damn it. My mailbox got packed with loads of junks._Classmate B: You can use Active Email Monitor, a Spam filter, to create any num-ber of filters and so cut down on the amount of junk emails you re-cei
6、ve.Classmate A: Thank you. You really help me a lot.Classmate B: A A. Its my pleasureB. Its my dutyC. Its my jobD. Its my fault6. Keith: B , do you know where the police station is?Woman: No, Im sorry. I dont. Im not from around here.A. Im sorryB. Excuse meC. PardonD. Attention7. Anna: Hi, Keith. Ho
7、ws it going?Keith: B , I lost my wallet, and it had all my ID and credit cards in it.A. Not too badB. Not too goodC. Not very wellD. Not at all8. Keith: So, how do I get to the police station from here?Anna: Its easy. Go up Main Street about three bocks. And then, turn left. Itsright beside the post
8、 office. A A. You cant miss itB. You can find it, no problemC. Here you areD. There you go again9. Tom: Hey, Ellen. Look at this! We can stay in a big hotel or we can stay in a little cabin by the beach.Ellen: You know, I really dont like those big hotels.Tom: B _ Lets stay in a cabin ItII be much n
9、icer right beside the ocean.A. Me, tooB. Neither do I C. Nor am ID. Im not, either10. Kenji: Hi, a bunch of us are going to Bangkok for dinner tomorrow night. Howabout coming with us?Debbie : D A. Great. Talk to you thenB. No big dealC. Yes, pleaseD. Sure. Id love to11. Marta: I like the red shirt t
10、han the black one.Allen: Reallv? A ? I kind of like the black one.Marta: The red one is longer and a little looser so it will be more comfortable.A. How comeB. Why notC. How muchD. So what12. David: Lets go picnicking. Its Sunday, a day for fun and relaxation.Susan: But you know I must go to churDav
11、id: Oh, no. D What a pleasant day. Come on.Susan: Actually, it brings me peace of mind, and its somewhat a kind of relaxa-tion to me.A. Never mind.B. Thats all right.C. You said it.D. Forget it!13. John: Kathy! How are you? Its been ages! What are you doing these days?Kathy: I just opened my own res
12、taurant. Im also head chef.John: A Youve always hated cooking.Kathy: Well, I used to hate cooking, but now I love it.A. Youre kiddinglB. What should I say of youlC. You are telling me!D. Its very kind of you.14. Tom: I went to a car exhibition. The hydrogen car impressed me most._A_Mud: Hydrogen car
13、? You mean the car will burn hydrogen?Tom : .A. Yes, you got itB. Yes, you made itC. Come and get itD. Forget it15. Student A: We are holding a party tonight. Do come over to have some fun. Student B: Thanks for asking. But I get a test tomorrow. So I have to stay up to- night.Student A: Oh, no! You
14、 poor guy _ B A. Take careB. Take it easy .C. Mind youD. Between you and mePart II Reading Comprehension (40 points)Directions: There are 4 passages in this part. Each of the passages is followed by 5questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are 4 choices marked A, B, C and D. Choos
15、e the best one and mark your answer on the ANSWER SHEET with a single line through the center.Passage OneIn March, Monster. com CEO Jeff Taylor water-skied 3. 3 miles across Floridas St.Andrews Bay, pulled by the companys blimp hovering 20 feet above the water. His mis-sion was to beat British dared
16、evil and Virgin CEO Richard Bransons record of l. 5 milesdoing the same stunt. But while Taylor earned the bragging rights, the online job sitesmarketing team probably pegged themselves the true winner.Taylors gimmick is one example of how dot-coms in a crowded space-in this casejob sites, of which
17、there are no fewer than 50-are scrambling to differentiate themselves.Not every online career company CEO needs to risk life and limb to stand out, but itsworth doing something to grab market share : According to Forrester Research, the marketis estimated to be $1 billion this year, and as much as $
18、 7 billion by 2005.It wont be easy to make it. The 50-odd career sites are trying to generate revenuethree ways: charging job seekers to look at postings, collecting fees from recruiters whopost jobs, and posting on-site advertisements. Forrester predicts that the main source ofrevenue for job sites
19、 will come from advertising-nearly 55 percent by 2005. Sites need toincrease traffic to attract online advertisers, and one of the main ways to increase traffic is offline advertising.The field is thinning fast-the top 10 job sites capture 70 percent of the online recrui- ting revenue, according to
20、current statistics. But even that number may be too many forconsumers to remember.Marissa Gluck, an Internet analyst with Jupiter Communications, notes that few inthe category have the kind of brand recognition that counts, and none have much time to build one. The Jolly Green Giant and Toucan Sam w
21、ere built over decades, she says.You cant franchise a brand overnight. Adds Randall Rothenberg, editor in chief ofBooz-Allen &- Hamiltons business publication strategy + business, Its part of the over-all branding problem on the Web, where you have several apparent commodity productsgoing into the a
22、d marketplace at exactly the same time-all with pretty similar messages. Itbecomes a wash, and the advertising cancels each other out. So with the heat turned up, we evaluated the marketing efforts of three job sites. Our mission:to see if their ad strategies are doing a good job at differentiation
23、and branding, or whether any are heading for the unemployment heap.16. The real purpose of Jeff Taylors water-skiing acting was C .A. to create a new water-skiing recordB. to defeat Virgin CEO Richard BransonC. to attract the pubtlics attention and improve Monster. coms popularityD. to show that he
24、was brave enough to risk his life17. According to Forresters report, the main source of revenue for job sites will come from all the following EXCEPT A in the near future.A. charging online visitorsB. collecting fees from companies which announce job advertisementsC. charging job seekersD. charging
25、business advertisements18. According to current report, which of the following statement is NOT true?D_D_A. There are more than 50 dot-com companies that deal with advertising jobs.B. The job market will be more and more promising.C. Job seekers and recruiters find it difficult to remember all thejo
26、b sites even the top tens.D. The 70 percent of the job dot-coms take up most of the online recruiting reve-nues.19. According to many researchers, the main problem on the Web many dot-coms face IS B A. no apparent commodity productsB. lack of brand recognitionC. too many similar messagesD. short of
27、recruiting revenues20. From this passage, we can conclude that job sites are to exert themselves to grab the market share by D A. developing effective ad strategies at differentiation and brandingB. focusing on the unemployment peopleC. multiplying the sources of their revenuesD. all of the abovePas
28、sage TwoPlacing a human being behind the wheel of an automobile often has the same curiouseffect as cutting certain fibers in the brain. The result in either case is more primitive be-havior. Hostile feelings are apt to be expressed in an aggressive way.The same man who will step aside for a strange
29、r at a doorway will, when behind thewheel, risk an accident trying to beat another motorist through an intersection. The im-portance of emotional factors in automobile accidents is gaining recognition. Doctors andother scientists have concluded that the highway death toll resembles an epidemic andsh
30、ould be investigated as such.Dr. Ross A. McFarland, Associate Professor of Industrial Hygiene at the HarvardUniversity School of Public Health, said that accidents now constitute a greater threatto the safety of large segments of the population than diseases do.Accidents are the leading cause of dea
31、th between the ages of l and 35. About one thirdof all accidental deaths and one seventh of all accidental injuries are caused by motor vehi-cles.Based on the present rate of vehicle registration, unless the accident rate is cut in half,one of every 10 persons in the country will be killed or injure
32、d in a traffic accident in thenext 15 years.Research to find the underlying causes of accidents and to develop ways to detect driv-ers who are apt to cause them is being conducted at universities and medical centers. Hereare some of their findings so far.A man drives as he lives. If he is often in trouble with colle
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