2018 年 12 月英语四级真题及答案第三套
Part I Writing (30 minutes)
Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a short essay on the
challenges of
starting a career after graduation. You should write at least 120 words but no more
than 180 words.
Part Ⅱ Listening Comprehension (25 minutes)
特别说明:由于四级考试全国共考了两套听力,本套真题听力与前两套内容相同,只是选项
顺序不同,故不再重复给出。
Part Ⅲ Reading Comprehension
(40 minutes)
Section A
Directions: In this section, there is a passage with ten blanks. You are required
to select one word for each blank from a list of choices given in a word bank following
the passage. Read the passage through carefully before making your choices. Each
choice in the bank is identified by a letter. Please mark the corresponding letter
for each item on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre. You may not
use any of the words in the bank more than once.
A few months ago, I was down with a terrible cold which ended in a persistent bad
cough. No matter how many different26I tried, I still couldn’t get rid of the cough.
Not only did it 27 my teaching but also my life as a whole. Then one day after class,
a student came up to me and 28
traditional Chinese medicine. From her description, Chinese medicine sounded as if
it had magic power that worked wonders. I was 29
because I knew so little
about it and have never tried it before. Eventually, my cough got so much 30 that
I couldn’t sleep at night, so I decided to give it a try. The Chinese doctor took
my pulse and asked to see my tongue, both of which were new 31 to me because they
are both non-existent in Western medicine. Then the doctor gave me a scraping (刮)
treatment known as ‘Gua Sha’. I was a little
32at first because he used a
smooth edged tool to scrape the skin on my neck and shoulders. A few minutes later,
the 33 strokes started to produce a relieving effect and my body and mind began to
34 deeper into relaxation. I didn’t feel any improvement in my condition in the
first couple of days, but after a few more regular visits to the doctor, my cough
started to
35
. Then, within a matter of weeks, it was completely gone!
A) deepen
B) experiences
C) hesitant
D)
inconvenience
E) lessen
F) licenses
G) pressured
H) recommended
I) remedies
J) scared
K) sensitive
L) sink
M) temporary
N) tremble
O) worse
Section B
Directions: In this section, you are going to read a passage with ten statements
attached to it. Each statement contains information given in one of the paragraphs.
Identify the paragraph from which the information is derived. You may choose a
paragraph more than once. Each paragraph is marked with a letter. Answer the
questions by marking the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2.
Is it really OK to eat food that’s fallen on the floor?
A)
When you drop a piece of food on the floor, is it really OK to eat if you pick
it up within five seconds? An urban food myth contends that if food spends just a
few seconds on the floor, dirt and germs won’t have much of a chance to contaminate
it. Research in my lab has focused on how food becomes contaminated, and we’ve done
some work on this particular piece of wisdom.
While the “five-second rule” might not seem like the most pressing issue for
B)
food scientists to get
to the bottom of, it’s still worth investigating food myths like this one because
they shape our beliefs about when food is safe to eat.
C) So is five seconds on the floor the critical threshold (门槛) that separates a
piece of eatable food from a case of food poisoning? It’s a bit more complicated
than that. It depends on just how many bacteria can make it from floor to food in
a few seconds and just how dirty the floor is.
D)
Wondering if food is still OK to eat after it’s dropped on the floor is a pretty
common experience. And it’s probably not a new one either. A well-known, but
inaccurate, story about Julia Child may have contributed to this food myth. Some
viewers of her cooking show, The French Chef, insist they saw Child drop lamb on
the floor and pick it up, with the advice that if they were alone in the kitchen,
their guests would never know.
E)
In fact it was a potato pancake, and it fell on the stovetop, not on the floor.
Child put it back in the pan, saying, “But you can always pick it up and if you’re
alone in the kitchen, who’s going to see it?” But the misremembered story persists.
It’s harder to pin down the origins of the oft-quoted five-second rule, but a 2003
study reported that 70% of women and 56% of men surveyed were familiar with the
five-second rule and that women were more likely than men to eat food that had dropped
on the floor.
F)
So what does science tell us about what a few moments on the floor means for
the safety of your food? The earliest research report on the five-second rule is
attributed to Jillian Clarke, a high school student participating in a research
project at the University of Illinois. Clarke and her colleagues introduced bacteria
to floor tiles (瓷砖) and then placed cookies on the tiles for varying
times. They reported bacteria were transferred from the tiles to the cookies within
five seconds, but didn’t report the specific amount of bacteria that made it from
the tiles to the food
G)
But how many bacteria actually transfer in five seconds? In 2007, my lab at
Clemson University published a study in the Journal of Applied Microbiology. We
wanted to know if the length of time food is in contact with a contaminated surface
affected the rate of transfer of bacteria to the food. To find out, we introduced
bacteria to squares of tile, carpet or wood. Five minutes after that, we placed either
bacon or bread on the surface for 5, 30 or 60 seconds, and then measured the number
of bacteria transferred to the food. We repeated this exact procedure after the
bacteria had been on the surface for 2, 4, 8 and 24 hours.
We found that the number of bacteria transferred to either kind of food didn’t
H)
depend much on how long the food was in contact with the contaminated surface –
whether for a few seconds or for a whole minute. The overall number of bacteria on
the surface mattered more, and this decreased over time after the initial
introduction. It looks like what’s at issue is less how long your food stays on
the floor and much more how contaminated with bacteria that patch of floor happens
to be.
I)
We also found that the kind of surface made a difference as well. Carpets, for
instance, seem to be slightly better places to drop your food than wood or tile.
When a carpet was contaminated, less than 1% of the bacteria were transferred. But
when the food was in contact with tile or wood, 48-70% of bacteria were.
Last year, a study from Aston University in the UK used nearly identical
J)
parameters (参数) to our
study and found similar results. They also reported that 87% of people asked either
would eat or had eaten food fallen on the floor.
K)
Should you eat food fallen on the floor then? From a food safety standpoint,
if you have millions or more bacteria on a surface, 0.1% is still enough to make
you sick. Also, certain types of bacteria are extremely harmful, and it takes only
a small number to make you sick. For example, 10 bacteria or less of an especially
deadly strain of bacteria can cause severe illness and death in people with
compromised immune systems. But the chance of these bacteria being on most surfaces
is very low.
L)
And it’ s not just dropping food on the floor that can lead to bacterial
contamination. Bacteria are carried by various ‘media’, which can include raw food,
moist surfaces where bacteria have been left, our hands or skin and from coughing
or sneezing (打喷嚏). Hands, foods and utensils (器皿)
can carry individual bacteria living in communities contained within a protective
film. These microscopic layers of deposits containing bacteria are known as biofilms
and they are found on most surfaces and objects. Biofilm communities can harbor
bacteria longer and are very difficult to clean. Bacteria in these communities also
have an enhanced resistance to sanitizers (清洁剂)
and antibiotics compared to bacteria living on their own.
M)
So the next time you consider eating fallen food, the odds are in your favor
that you can eat it without getting sick. But in the rare chance that there is a
micro-organism that can make you sick on the exact spot where the food dropped, you
can be fairly sure that the bug is on the food you are about to put in your mouth.
Research or common sense tells us that the best thing to do is keep your hands,
N)
utensils and other surfaces clean.
36. A research project found bacteria made their way to the food on the floor in
five seconds.
37. Whether food is contaminated depends much on the number of bacteria that get
onto it.
38. Food contamination may result from various factors other than food dropping on
the floor.
39. Males are less likely than females to cat food that may have been contaminated.
40. The author’s research centers around how food gets contaminated.
41. Keeping everything clean is the best way to stay healthy.
42. Chances are you will not fall sick because of eating food picked up from the
floor.
43. For a long time people have had the experience of deciding whether or not to
eat food picked up from the floor.
44. Some strains of bacteria are so harmful that a tiny few can have deadly
consequences.
45. Researchers found how many bacteria got onto the food did not have much to do
with how long the food stayed on a contaminated floor.
Section C
Directions: There are 2 passages in this section. Each passage is followed by some
questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked
A), B), C) and D). You should decide on the best choice and mark the corresponding
letter on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre.
Passage One
Questions 46 to 50 are based on the following passage.
The latest in cat research reveals that the lovely animal seems to have a basic grasp
on both the laws of physics and the ins and outs of case and effect.
According to a newly published study, cats seem to be able to predict the location
of hiding prey (猎物) using both their ears and an inborn (天生的) understanding
of how the physical world works.
In a recent experiment, Japanese researchers taped 30 domestic cats reacting to a
container that a team member shook. Some containers rattled (发出响声); others did
not. When the container was tipped over, sometimes an object fell out and sometimes
it didn’t.
It turns out that the cats were remarkably smart about what would happen when a
container was tipped over. When an object did not drop out of the bottom of a rattling
container, they looked at it for a longer time than they did when the container
behaved as expected.
“ Cats use a causal-logical understanding of noise or sounds to predict the
appearance of invisible objects,” lead researcher Saho Takagi says in a press
release. The researchers conclude that cats’ hunting style may have developed based
on their common-sense abilities to infer where prey is, using their hearing.
Scientists have explored this idea with other endearing creatures: babies. Like cats,
babies appear to engage in what’s called “preferential looking” – looking longer
at things that are interesting or unusual than things they perceive as normal.
When babies’ expectations are violated in experiments like the ones performed with
the cats, they react much like their animal friends. Psychologists have shown that
babies apparently expect their world to comply with the laws of physics and cause
and effect as early as two months of age.
Does the study mean that cats will soon grasp the ins and outs of cause and effect?
Maybe. Okay, so cats may not be the next physics faculty members at America’s most
important research universities. But by demonstrating their common sense, they’ve
shown that the divide between cats and humans may not be that great after all.
46. What do we learn from a newly published study about cats?
A)
They can be trained to understand the physical world.
B)
C)
They know what kind of prey might be easier to hunt.
They have a natural ability to locate animals they hunt.
D)
They are capable of telling which way their prey flees.
47. What may account for the cats’ response to the noise from the containers?
A) Their inborn sensitivity to noise.
C) Their special ability to perceive.
B) Their unusual sense of direction.
D) Their mastery of cause and effect.
48. What is characteristic of the way cats hunt, according to the Japanese
researchers?
A) They depend on their instincts.
C) They wait some time before attack.
B) They rely mainly on their hearing.
D) They use both their ears and eyes.
49. In what way do babies behave like cats?
A) They focus on what appears odd.
C) They do what they prefer to do.
B) They view the world as normal.
D) They are curious about everything.
50. What can we conclude about cats from the passage?
A)
They have higher intelligence than many other animals.
B)
They interact with the physical world much like humans.
C)
They display extraordinarily high intelligence in hunting.
D)
They can aid physics professors in their research work.
Passage Two
Questions 51 to 55 are based on the following passage.
Imagine you enter a car with no steering wheel, no brake or accelerator pedals (踏
板). Under a voice-activated command, you say an address. “The fastest route will
take us 15.3 minutes. Should I take it?” You say “yes” and you are on your way.
The car responds and starts moving by itself. All you have to do is sit back and
relax.
How weird would it be if, one day in the future, everyone had such a car? No crazy
driving, no insults, no cutting in; traffic laws would be respected and driving much
safer. On the other hand, imagine the cost savings for local police enforcement and
town budgets without all those speeding and parking tickets.
A new technology has the potential to change modern society in radical ways. There’s
no question that self-driving vehicles could be an enormous benefit. The potential
for safer cars means accident statistics would drop: some 94% of road accidents in
the U.S. involve human error. Older drivers and visually- or physically -impaired
people would gain a new level of freedom. Maintaining safe speeds and being electric,
self-driving cars would drastically reduce pollution levels and dependency on
non-renewable fuels. Roads would be quieter, people safer.
But we must also consider the impact of the new technology on those who now depend
on driving for their livelihoods. According to the U.S. Department of Labor, in May
2015 there were 505,560 registered school bus drivers. The American Trucking
Association lists approximately 3.5 million professional truck drivers in the U.S.
The companies developing self-driving vehicles should be partnering with state and
federal authorities to offer retraining for this massive workforce, many of whom
will be displaced by the new technology. This is similar to what’s happening in
the coal and oil industries, a situation that fuels much of the current political
discontent in this country.
New technologies will, and should, be developed. This is how society moves forward.
However, progress can’t be one-sided. It is necessary for the companies and state
agencies involved to consider the ethical consequences of these potential changes
to build a better future for all.
51. What would be the impact of the extensive use of driverless cars?
A)
People would be driving in a more civilized way.
B)
It would save local governments a lot of money
C)
More policemen would be patrolling the streets.
D)
Traffic regulations would be a thing of the past.
52. How would the elderly and the disabled benefit from driverless cars?
A) They could enjoy greater mobility.
C) They would have no trouble driving.
B) They would suffer no road accidents. D) They could go anywhere they want.
53. What would be the negative impact of driverless cars?
A) The conflict between labor and management would intensify.
B)
The gap between various sectors of society would be widened.
C)
Professional drivers would have a hard time adapting to new road conditions.
D)
Numerous professional drivers would have to find new ways of earning a living.
54. What is the result of the introduction of new technologies in energy industries?
A) Political dissatisfaction.
C) Fossil fuel conservation.
B) Retraining of employees. D) Business restructuring.