2015 年 9 月公共英语四级考试真题及答案
1-20 略
Part A
Directions:
Read the following text and fill each of the numbered spaces with ONE suitable
word. Write your answers on the ANSWER SHEET.
In the years after World War II, Americans typically assumed the full
responsibilities of adulthood by their late teens or early 20s. Most young men had
(21 )__ school and were working full-time, and most young women were (22)__ and
raising children. People who grew (23) __in this era of growing affluence were
economically serf-sufficient and able to take care of others by the time they had
weathered adolescence. Today, adulthood no longer (24) __ when adolescence ends.
Social scientists are beginning to recognize a new phase of life: early
adulthood. Some features of this stage resemble coming of age (25) __ the late 19th
and early 20th centuries,(26)__ youth fingered in a state of semi-autonomy, waiting
(27)__ they were sufficiently well-off to marry, have children and establish an
independent (28) __ However, there are important differences (29)__ how young people
today define and achieve adulthood from those of both the recent and the more distant
past.
This new stage is not merely an extension of adolescence, (30) __ has been
maintained in the mass media. Young adults are physically mature and often (31)
__ impressive intellectual,
social and psychological skills. Nor are young people today reluctant to accept
adult responsibilities. Instead, they are busy (32) __ up their educational
credentials and practical skills in an ever more demanding labor market. Yet, many
have not become fully adult, (33) __ they are not ready, or perhaps not permitted,
to do (34) __ . For a growing number, this will not happen until their late 20s
or even early 30s. In (35) __, American society will have to revise upward the
“normal” age of full adulthood, and develop ways to assist young people through
the ever-lengthening transition.
【答案解析】
21.completed/finished
【精析】本题考查句意推断。由上下文以及人生成长阶段的常识可知,此句要表达的
意思是大多数年轻男性在二十岁左右已经完成学业,开始工作了,故填 completed/
finished 均可。
22.married
【精析】本题考查句意推断。由后文的 raising children 可知,此句要表达的是多数
年轻女性已结婚生子,故填 married。
23.up
【精析】本题考查动词词组的搭配及用法。根据句意不难理解,此句的主语是在这个
黄金发展时代成长起来的人们,grow up 意为“成长,长大”,故填 up。
24.begins/tarts/commences
【精析】本题考查前后文的结构对照。句中将“成年期”与“青年期”对照,后半句
说的是青年期的结束,由推测可知,前半句应为成年期的开始。整句表达的是,成年期并
不随着青春期的结束而开始,故填 begins/starts/commences 均可。
25.in
【精析】本题考查介词的用法。在十九世纪末二十世纪初,用介词 in,故填 in。
26.when
【精析】本题考查关系副词的用法。此句为 when 引导的非限制性定语从句,修饰前面
表示时间的先行词“十九世纪末二十世纪初”,故:填 when。
27.until/till
【精析】本题考查句意推断及连词的用法。由上下文得知,此句表达 的是年轻人要等
到足够富有了才结婚生子,故填 until/till 均可。
28.family/household/home
【精析】本题考查句意推断。由上下文可推断,此处要表达的意思是建立一个独立的
家庭,故填 family/household/home 均可。
29.in
【精析】本题考查句意理解及介词的用法。此句要表达的是如今的 青年人在定义与实
现成年期问题上与过去的人有很大不同。表达“在…方面”应用介词 in,故填 in。
30.which
【精析】本题考查非限制性定语从句。前面主句中的“an extension of adolescence”
为先行词。此句意为“这个新阶段并不像大众媒体所坚持认为的那样是青少年时期的延伸”,
故填 which。
31.have/own/possess
【精析】本题考查句意理解及句型结构。此句由 and 连接两个并列谓语,意为“年轻
的成年人生理发育成熟,常常拥有惊人的智慧、社交技能和心理承受技能”,故填 have/
own/possess 均可。 I 32.building/strengthening
【精析】本题考查动词短语的搭配及用法。整句句意为“年轻人忙于加强他们的教育
背景,提升实践技能”。building/strengthening 意为 “建立,增进,加强”,又因为
be busy(in)doin9 的固定搭配,故填 building/strengthening 均可。
33.because/for/since
【精析】本题考查逻辑关系。此句意为“很多年轻人还没有完全成年是因为他们还没
有准备好”,故填 because/for/since 均可。
34.so/this
【精析】本题考查句意理解。很多年轻人没有完全成年因为他们还没有准备好这样做。
so/this 指代前面的“become fully adult”,故填 so /this 均可。
35.fact/reality
【精析】本题考查介词短语:in fact/in reality“事实上,实际上”,故填 fact
/reality 均可。
Part B
Directions:
Read the following three texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing
A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on the ANSWER SHEET.
Text 1
In the last 30 years, science and technology have had a truly dramatic impact
on sports. There are three major reasons for this. First, new artificial materials
have appeared and been used in
many sports--sometimes to revolutionary effect. Second, our design expertise
has improved, partly through the development of computers and other technical tools.
We know more and can plan and predict more accurately in many critical areas. The
third reason why science and technology have had an increasing impact is that there
is now the money and the motivation for them to do so. In a variety of ways, sport
has become very big business, and in the matter of winning or losing, very large
amounts of money may be at stake.
Technology has influenced specific sports in many ways. Wherever a commercial
mass market is involved, technical change may be promoted largely for the sake of
change, to make this season's product seem different from that of last season. An
example of this trend is in the endless search for the perfect sports shoe.
Anatomically precise support for the heel and ankle, air sacs for extra spring and
comfort each year bring apparent new refinements. Even in retirement, basketball's
Michael Jordan remains one of sport's biggest earners because of the deal he signed
endorsing the Air Jordan shoe; and one of the richest sportspeople of all, though
his winnings these days are minimal, is the veteran golfer Arnold Palmer, thanks
to his endorsements of the latest in golf technology.
More significant still in modem sports have been more general effects of
technological advance. It has provided the means for timing athletes to thousandths
of a second--and the means of replaying an event to check who won or to see if a
break-rule occurred. It has put sport on television, so millions can watch without
moving from their own homes. It has provided the means for testing for illegal drugs.
It has also, for better or worse, given sportsmen and women a new attitude towards
their own bodies encouraged also by the high stakes, the sponsorship and the fevered
media attention. Technology helps them plan the best diet and exercise regimes;
it has created heart and lung monitors that measure stress and oxygen intake; and
it allows athletes to keep a constant check on their own physical problems and
progress. In terms of nutrition (fuel) and training (maintenance), the modem
sportsperson is treated--and treats himself or herself--like a machine.
36. According to the author, sport has become very big business in the sense
that
A it needs high-tech materials.
B it requires business management.
C it involves the wide use of computers.
D it seems a matter of big money.
37. The example of sports shoes suggests that the technological advances in
modem sports are
A encouraged by commercial interests.
B supported by famous sportspeople.
C attributed to basketball performance.
D subjected to computer technology.
38. The text suggests that some of the rich sportsmen
A cooperate with companies to develop high-tech sports products.
B are interested in promoting the development of science and technology.
C are selfishly earning money by promoting new sports products.
D play a positive role in promoting high-tech sports products.
39. By saying “the modern sportsperson is...like a machine”, the author
emphasizes the sense of
A rigidity.
B inhumanity.
C preciseness.
D automation.
40. The statement that best summarizes the text is
A sportspeople seek high-tech products for better performance.
B science and technology have played a significant role in sports.
C science and technology have helped improve the sports environment.
D some sportspeople have benefited financially from new technology.
Text 2
Most of us Americans have a vague, uneasy sense of wicked wastefulness. We throw
out the never-opened pack of food that's past its sell-by date before answering
a call on the fourth mobile phone we have had in five years. We gaze around our
living space groaning at the sheer quantity of little-used clothing, blocking it
up like a blood clot in an arterial vein.
Our despair is genuine at the way we are running out of the earth's resources
and at the fact that we have so much when two-thirds of the world's population only
just get enough to eat and drink. Yet we feel completely powerless to do anything
about it, too busy, irritable and tired to focus on practical steps.
For the problem goes even deeper than material wastefulness: We know we are
wasting our time, our being, our lives. We have compromised in our choice of career,
lovers, friends ; we put on a face to meet the faces that we meet. Trapped in marketing
characters, not only in our office politics but in our intimate relationships, too,
we play too many games.
Deep down, we know that it's time to "get a life", to stop being distracted
by pointless consumerism, unreal relationships, and "Affluenza-infected" career
ambitions.
The first step to salvation is to understand how much it is not your fault.
If you read Vance Packard's 1958 book about the advertising industry, The Hidden
Persuaders, it proves that long ago retailers were devising ways to deliberately
deceive us into confusing mixed wants with true needs in order to keep the
consumption bandwagon rolling. In recent years, manufacturers have intention- ally
speeded up the rate at which electronic goods become obsolescent and instead of
the proper re- pair customer services that used to exist, there are merely expensive
help-lines, When your toaster or printer or MP3 music device breaks down after only
a year, it is no accident that there is no one who will repair them--" it'd cost
more than buying a new one, love".
So this is a selfish capitalist system which is designed to maximize profits
through rapid turn- over of "newer, better" goods that break down sooner and are
designed to be irreparable. It's not your fault !
What you can do is withdraw as much as possible from the consumption game. Every
time you are about to buy something ask yourself, "do I need this, or do I just
want it.'?"
41. Most Americans, according to the author, feel uneasy about
A depending too much on modern technology.
B failing to solve problems in their lives.
C having too little living space.
D wasting too many resources.
42. By saying "we play too many games", the author wants to show
A we are wasting our lives.
B we make too many mistakes.
C we do not take our life seriously.
D I we are too busy enjoying ourselves.
43. To make ourselves feel better, we should first
A figure out whom to blame for our excessive consumption.
B avoid making unnecessary purchases in our daily life.
C pick out misleading messages in the advertisement.
D exercise caution when making a big purchase.
44. We learn from Paragraph 5 that
A the quality of goods is getting worse recently.
B customers are more often misled nowadays.
C we are deceived into making a purchase.
D advertisers have become very clever.
45. The author advises us to buy
A more than we need.
B only what we want.
C more than we want.
D only what we need.
Text 3
Susan Baroness Greenfield is a British institution. In a country that perceives
its scientists as white-coated eccentrics, and probably male, Lady Greenfield is
fashionable, extravagant, and female. At least, that is the image she has sought
to project as a populariser of science. She is accused, though, of bringing another
British institution, the Royal Institution (RI), to the verge of bankruptcy. The
RI, of which she was director from 1998 until last Friday (January 8th), has made
her job redundant. She says she plans to respond with a suit for sexual
discrimination.
Lady Greenfield, a neuroscientist at Oxford University, was recruited to shake
up the two century old institution because she had made a name for herself,
particularly on television, as one of the popular faces of science. The RI is, in
part, a members' club famous for its Christmas lectures "adapted to a juvenile
audience", which are broadcast on television every year, and its Friday evening
discourses (black ties, please, gentlemen), in which prominent scientists chat
about their work for precisely an hour--no more and no less--before everyone is
served tea and chocolate cake. But it is also a serious research laboratory (one
of the longest-established in the world), looking into things like the medical
applications of nanotechnology.
Lady Greenfield's offence, if offence it be, was to modernize the RI's
headquarters in May- fair, one of the most stylish parts of London, without proper
cost control. The redecoration included a high-class bar and restaurant that are
open to the general public. Sadly, these opened for business in October 2008--the
least favorable moment imaginable for such a venture.
The redecoration, which cost ——22m, much of which was raised by selling the
institution's shares of property, has left the RI —— 3m in debt, and the trustees
have decided that one way to cut costs is to cut the job of director. Lady Greenfield,
the first female director in a line that stretches back through Michael Faraday
to Humphry Davy, seems to suspect that financial considerations were not the only
ones when this decision was made.
Instead of a director, the RI is to be led by a newly-invented chief executive
officer, in the person of Chris Rofe. Mr. Rofe, who was appointed in April 2009,
has a degree in business administration, not science. Given the debt, though,
perhaps an alchemist, a person who devotes himself to turning ordinary metals into
gold, would be the most appropriate person for the job.
46. By saying Lady Greenfield is "a British institution", the author means
A she is well-known in Britain.
B she owns a British association.
C she is suing a British institution.
D she is accused by a British institution.
47. Which of the following is true of the RI?
A It provides one-hour-long club activities for famous scientists.
B It offers special annual Christmas lectures for young people.
C It enjoys a long history of scientific research in medicine.
D It makes a name for popularizing science on television.
48. Lady Greenfield was blamed for
A misunderstanding the significance of the RI's modernization.
B misjudging the RI's business opportunities in London.
C mismanaging the costs for the RI's redecoration.
D mistiming the opening of the redecorated RI.
49. It can be learned from Paragraph 4 that
A the RI has sold all its property for redecoration.
B the redecoration has undermined the RI's reputation.
C the RI fired Lady Greenfield to cut redecoration costs.
D Lady Greenfield thought her dismissal unfair.
50. How does the author feel about the prospects of the RI's getting out of
financial trouble?
A Confident.
B Suspicious.
38.D
42.A
37.A
40.B
39.C
C Optimistic.
D Cautious.
【参考答案】
Text 1
36.D
Text 2
41.D
Text 3
46.A
Part C
Directions:
In the following text, some sentences have been removed, For Questions 51 -55,
choose the most suitable one from the list A-G to fit into each of the numbered
blanks. There are two extra choices, which do not .fit in any of the blanks. Mark
your answers on the ANSWER SHEET.
43.A
44.B
45·D
47.B
48.C
49. D
50.B
The Internet and mobile phones have transformed our connections to people around
the world. This technology has also, however, led to a widening gender gap in poorer
countries. For it is largely men who control the information revolution that helps
to educate, inform and empower.
In low- and middle-income countries, a woman is 21 percent less likely than
a man to own a mobile phone, according to research done by GSMA. In Africa, women
are 23 percent less likely than a man to own a cell phone. In the Middle East the
figure is 21 percent and in South Asia, 37 percent.
The factors driving women's lack of connectivity vary from community to
community. But the end result is always the same: disempowerment. (51) __
This disturbing finding is highlighted by the United Nations/Overseas
Development Institute- led MY World survey, a major, inclusive global poll.
Respondents were asked to rank their priori- ties--including political freedoms,
better healthcare, protection from violence and crime--in making the world better.
They could vote paper, online or by mobile phone. (52) __
The survey has already gathered 1.5 million votes. Women are just as keen as
men to have their views heard engagement offline is a 50-50 split between women
and men, online women have voted more than men, with a 5248 split.
(53) __ Consider Yemen, where 121,000 people voted on their mobile phones. Of
those, 81,000 were men.
Overall, women respondents picked education, healthcare and better job
opportunities as their top priorities in making the world better. (54) __
Getting more mobile phones into the hands of women in low- and middle-income
countries will not be easy because the reasons behind their lack of ownership are
so varied. But there are some solutions.
In these countries there are typically three key barriers: Mobile phones are
too expensive, the monthly bills are too high or there is no urgent need to own
one. Governments should help lower these barriers. They should set up transparent
regulatory systems that would encourage more mobile phone providers to enter the
market. More competition means lower prices and more affordable plans.
(55) __ Governments should also subsidize computer and smartphone ownership
for low-income people.
A . A mobile phone can bring benefits to women, and many of these we in the
West take for granted: personal safety, reliable connection to friends and family
and access to commerce and job opportunities.
B . Most important for a world dominated by Facebook and Twitter and e-polls,
a mobile phone gives women a voice.
C . But mobile voting has told a different story. The difference in response
rates between the sexes is obvious. Of the roughly 380,000 respondents who took
the survey via mobile, only 25 percent were women.
D . But if you saw only the mobile vote, their views would have been diluted
because men dominated. If women owned mobile phones in equal numbers, their access
to education, healthcare and better jobs would indeed be improved.
E . Women are not just missing out on educational and economic opportunities
because they don't own mobile phones. They are losing a voice.
F . The results will help world leaders as they deliberate on the post-2015
global development agenda this week, during the conference of the U. N. Commission
on the Status of Women.
G . In addition, governments should ensure that women have access to
microfinance plans to help purchase phones. They should strive to make equal access
to mobile connectivity part of their development plans.
【参考答案】
51.E
52.F
53.C
54.D
55.G
Part D
Directions:
Read the following text carefully and then translate the underlined segments
into Chinese. Write your translation clearly on the ANSWER SHEET.
We have known the elephants, the greatest land mammal of them all--highly
sensitive, intelligent, family-oriented, big-toothed creatures--for a very long
time, and they have known us. It has been a tortuous relationship, and one that
is still evolving. (56) We have looked up to elephants as gods, but killed them
for their ivory, and captured and enslaved them to be our beasts of burden in work
and war, and for our entertainment.
Earlier this month, Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus announced that
it had decided to phase elephants out of its public spectacles, retiring its
remaining forty-three working elephants to a park it owns in Florida, where
twenty-nine elephants already live. (57) The decision follows years of pressure
from animal-rights groups, and is part of a trend that has been gathering strength
for years. Most other circuses in the United States and Western Europe have stopped