自制GRE模考题1.doc

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1、1. Geologists suggest that as the most productive oil reservoirs begin to dry up, the expensive cost and high risk of drilling in the marginal area become less _ and more acceptable.A. onerousB. efficaciousC. auspiciousD. benignE. natural2. Evidence suggest that populations of migratory birds in bot

2、h the New and Old Worlds have(i)_, a (ii)_ that carries the potential for significant ecological damage far beyond the shrinking numbers of the birds themselves.A. scattered D. dispersalB. stabilized E. declineC. plummeted F. displacement3. Even though companys CEO professes to be (i)_ and urges the

3、 deal forward, its investors are unlikely to be so (ii)_ about its prospect. Many were uncomfortable at the way the corporation was forced to spend much of last year expansion, and this new venture is potentially even more risky.A. apprehensive D. indifferentB. apathetic E. sanguineC. confident F. a

4、nxious4. Among the most popular Currier&levs lithographic prints in nineteenth-century America were birds-eye views of great cities such as New York, Chicago, and San Francisco. These were edited into books, and the cities (i)_ meant that new views were (ii)_ for successive editions.A. tremendous pr

5、oductivity D. hard to obtainB. extraneous growth E. rendered superfluousC. unparalleled activity F. regularly required5. Dirac may have (i)_ the company of other theoretical physicals, but he often (ii)_,rarely (iii)_ group discussions and almost never collaborating with others in his own work. A. a

6、ppreciated D. kept them at a distance G. cutting offB. analyzed E. welcomed their company H. contributing toC. spurned F. pondered their insights I. shrinking from6. Environmental modelsmathematical representations designed to stimulate natural systemsare regularly used by litigants in legal dispute

7、s over environmental issues. Unfortunately, the(i)_ scientific model is (ii)_ in environmental tort litigation. Because of the adversarial nature of litigation, models are often used by one side to (iii)_ empirical evidence presented by the other. And because modeling is a particularly technical fie

8、ld, the task of asserting a given models relevance and reliability may exceed the abilities of judge and juries.A. evidentiary value of D. avoided G. adduceB. uncertainty inherent in E. predictive H. obfuscateC. increasing reliance on F. exacerbated I. replicateFor years, the leading theory for what

9、 caused the Younger Dryas (a dramatic reversal, about 12,900 years ago, in a global warming trend) was a release of water from Glacial Lake Agassiz. The theory posited that this meltwater flooded into the North Atlantic, lowering the salinity and intensity of surface waters enough to prevent them fr

10、om sinking. Ocean currents were changed in such a way that northward transport of heat in the ocean diminished, and the North Atlantic regions plunged back into near-glacial conditions. However, evidence has emerged that the Younger Dryas began long before freshwater flooded the North Atlantic. Addi

11、tionally, the temperature changes induced by a shutdown in the North Atlantic heat conveyor system are too small to explain the Younger Dryas.7. The author of the passage implies which of the following about the release of water from glacial Lake Agassiz?A.The notion that the release occurred has be

12、en challenged by more recent findings.B.The release probably occurred much earlier than scientists have generally assumed.C.The release would not have been sufficient to cause any temperature change in the North Atlantic.D.The timing of the release is such that it probably did not trigger the onset

13、of the Younger Dryas. E. The release was probably unrelated to the global warming trend that was taking place.8. The passage is primarily concerned withA.presenting evidence that undermines an explanationB.explaining the nature of a climatological phenomenonC.questioning the timing of a particular e

14、ventD.discussing a new explanation for a phenomenonE.suggesting revisions to a popular theoryIn 1995 the Galileo spacecraft captured data about Jupiters atmospherenamely, the absence of most of the predicted atmospheric waterthat challenged prevailing theories about Jupiters structure. The unexpecte

15、dness of this finding fits a larger pattern in which theories about planetary composition and dynamics have failed to predict the realities discovered through space exploration. Instead of normal planets whose composition could be predicted by theory, the planets populating our solar system are uniq

16、ue individuals whose chemical and tectonic identities were created through numerous contingent events. One implication of this is that although the universe undoubtedly holds other planetary systems, the duplication of the sequence that produced our solar system and the development of life on Earth

17、is highly unlikely.Recently planetary scientists have suggested that the external preconditions for thedevelopment of Earths biosphere probably included four paramount contingencies. First, a climate conducive to life on Earth depends upon the extraordinarily narrow orbital parameters that define a

18、continuously habitable zone where water can exist in a liquid state. If Earths orbit were only 5 percent smaller than it is, temperatures during the early stages of Earths history would have been high enough to vaporize the oceans. If the Earth-Sun distance were as little as 1 percent larger, runawa

19、y glaciation on Earth about 2 billion years ago would have caused the oceans to freeze and remain frozen to this day. Second, Jupiters enormous mass prevents most Sun-bound comets from penetrating the inner solar system. It has been estimated thatwithout this shield, Earth would have experienced bom

20、bardment by comet-sized impactors a thousand times more frequently than has actually been recorded during geological time. Even if Earths surface were not actually sterilized by this bombardment, it is unlikely that any but the most primitive life-forms could have survived. This suggests that only p

21、lanetary systems containing both terrestrial planets like Earth and gas giants like Jupiter might be capable of sustaining complex life-forms.Third, the gravitational shield of the giant outer planets, while highly efficient, mustoccasionally fail to protect Earth. Paradoxically, while the temperatu

22、res required for liquid water exist only in the inner solar system, the key building blocks of life, including water itself, occur primarily beyond the asteroid belt. Thus the evolution of life has depended on a frequency of cometary impacts sufficient to convey water, as well as carbon and nitrogen

23、, from these distant regions of the solar system to Earth while stopping short of an impact magnitude that would destroy the atmosphere and oceans.Finally, Earths unique and massive satellite, the Moon, plays a crucial role in stabilizing the obliquity of Earths rotational axis, this obliquity creat

24、es the terrestrial seasonality so important to the evolution and diversity of life. Mars, in contrast, has a wildly oscillating tilt and chaotic seasonality, while Venus, rotating slowly backward, has virtually no seasonality at all.9 The passage is primarily concerned withA. enumerating conditions

25、that may have been necessary for a particular developmentB. outlining the conditions under which scientists may be able to predict certain eventsC. explaining how a particular finding affected scientists understanding of a phenomenonD. suggesting reasons why a particular outcome was more likely to o

26、ccur than other possibleoutcomesE. assessing the relative significance of factors that contributed to a particular occurrence10. It can be inferred from the passage that the planetary scientists would be most likely to agree with which of the following statements concerning the development of comple

27、x life forms on Earth?A. It might have occurred earlier in Earths history if cometary impacts had been less frequent than they were.B. It could have occurred if Earths orbit were 1 percent larger than it is but not if Earths orbit were 5 percent smallerC. It probably follows a pattern common on othe

28、r terrestrial planets that occupy planetary systems containing gas giants.D. Its dependence on the effect that Jupiters gravitational shield has on Earth was difficult to recognize prior to 1995.E. It has been contingent on conditions elsewhere in Earths solar system as well as on conditions on Eart

29、h itself.11. The author of the passage most likely mentions Mars oscillating tilt primarily in order toA. provide evidence for a proposition about the potential effects of cometary impactsB. emphasize the absence from our solar system of normal planetsC. contrast the rotational axis of Mars with tha

30、t of VenusD. characterize the role of other planets in the solar system in earths developmentE. emphasize the importance of the Moon to the development of life on Earth12. The passage suggests each of the following about water on Earth EXCEPT:A. It was conveyed to Earth by comets.B. It appeared on E

31、arth earlier than did carbon and nitrogen.C. Its existence in a liquid state is contingent on Earths orbital parameters.D. Much of it came from a part of the solar system where water cannot exist in a liquid state.E. It is unlikely that there would be much of it available to support life if the grav

32、itational shield of the outer planets did not limit the frequency with which comets strike Earth.13. Williams finds the appearance of Whitmans Leaves of Grass in 1855 nearly _ given the immense disparity between Whitmans earlier published works, which Williams finds dismal, and the consummate master

33、y of Leaves.A. oracularB. propheticC. inevitableD. inexplicableE. inauspiciousF. incomprehensible14. Carr insists that the so-called information society might be more accurately described as the interruption society: it _ attention, the scarcest of all resources, and stuffs the mind trivia.A. guards

34、B. protectsC. divertsD. destroysE. annihilatesF. transcends15. Of all the singers works, this album is the most dependent on the musical conventions of her day; it was both the least _ of her albums and the most commercially successful.A. personalB. well-knownC. experimentalD. innovativeE. acclaimed

35、F. recognizable16. The environmental advocacy group pushed for a single, overarching wetlands management plan that would _ the existing efforts of various entities, resulting in a focused blueprint for saving the areas wetlands.A. combineB. meldC. undermineD. spearheadE. supportF. subvertCuts that n

36、eed to be held closed in order to heal properly have generally been held closed with stitches. However, pressure to reduce medical costs is mounting. Consequently, it is likely that a newly developed adhesive will become the routine method of holding most types of cuts closed. The new adhesive holds

37、 most types of cuts closed as well as stitches do, and the cost of applying it is comparable to that of closing cuts with stitches. But whereas stitches must generally be removed by medical personnel after the cut has healed, the adhesive simply wears off. Thus, for any cut that the adhesive can hol

38、d closed as well as stitches can, it is more economical to use the adhesive.17.In the argument given, the two highlighted portions play which of the following roles?A.The first is a claim that the argument disputes; the second provides evidence against that disputed claim.B.The first is a claim that

39、 is used as supporting evidence for the main conclusion of the argument; the second is that main conclusion.C.The first is a claim that is used as supporting evidence for the main conclusion of the argument; the second is a conclusion that is drawn in order to support that main conclusion.D.The firs

40、t introduces a practice about which the argument makes a prediction, the second is a conclusion based on that prediction.E.The first introduces a practice about which the argument makes a prediction; the second is an assessment that is used to support that prediction.The relevance of the literary pe

41、rsonalitya writers distinctive attitudes, concerns, and artistic choicesto the analysis of a literary work is being scrutinized by various schools of contemporary criticism. Deconstructionists view the literary personality, like the writers biographical personality, as irrelevant. The proper focus o

42、f literary analysis, they argue, is a works intertextuality( interrelationship with other texts), subtexts (unspoken, concealed, or repressed discourses), and metatexts (self-referential aspects), not a perception of a writers verbal and aesthetic “fingerprints.” New historicists also devalue the li

43、terary personality, since, in their emphasis on a works historical contexts, they credit a writer with only those insights and ideas that were generally available when the writer lived. However, to readers interested in literary detective work-say scholars of classical( Greek and Roman) literature w

44、ho wish to reconstruct damaged texts or deduce a works authorshipthe literary personality sometimes provides vital clues.1. The passage is primarily concerned withA.discussing attitudes toward a particular focus for literary analysisB.describing the limitations of two contemporary approaches to lite

45、rary analysisC.pointing out the similarities among seemingly contrasting approaches to literary analysisD.defending the resurgence of a particular focus for literary analysisE.defining a set of related terms employed in literary criticism2. It can be inferred from the passage that on the issue of ho

46、w to analyze a literary work, the new historicists would most likely agree with the deconstructionists thatA.The writers insights and ideas should be understood in terms of the writers historical context.B.The writers literary personality has little or no relevance.C.The critic should primarily focus on intertextuality, subtexts and metatexts.3. In the context in which it appears, “credit writer with” most nearly meansA.trust a writer withB.applaud a writer forC.believe a writer createdD.presume a writer hadE.accept a writer for

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