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1、新 GRE 閱讀理解 36 套GRERC36 (2014.01)This page intentionally left blank. 目錄新 GRE 閱讀理解 36 套1提 示1Exercise 11Exercise 27Exercise 313Exercise 419Exercise 526Exercise 632Exercise 739Exercise 845Exercise 951Exercise 1057Exercise 1163Exercise 1269Exercise 1375Exercise 1482Exercise 1588Exercise 1694Exercise 1710

2、0Exercise 18106Exercise 19112Exercise 20119Exercise 21125Exercise 22131Exercise 23137Exercise 24144Exercise 25150Exercise 26156Exercise 27162Exercise 28169Exercise 29175Exercise 30181Exercise 31187Exercise 32194Exercise 33200Exercise 34207Exercise 35213Exercise 36219答案225提示1.文章篇幅、文章與題目難度、文字界面等均可能與正式

3、差別。使用本材料訓(xùn)練者請遵循風(fēng)險(xiǎn)自擔(dān)原則。但同時(shí),編者已經(jīng)盡可能使本材料符合最新的實(shí)際情況。2.機(jī)考的一個(gè)語文 Section 會(huì)有填空題和閱讀題各 10 道。10 道填空題中包含 3-4 道 6 選 2 的同義詞填空題和 6-7 道正常填空題(5 選 1 填空以及填空),10 道閱讀題中包含 1-2 道邏輯單題與 8-9道正常閱讀題。這里的每個(gè)練習(xí)(Exercise)僅反映一個(gè)語文 Section 的閱讀部分,并不包含其中的填空。為增加訓(xùn)練難度,本材料經(jīng)常連續(xù) 2 個(gè) Section 都出現(xiàn)長文章;近年每個(gè)語文 Section 都出現(xiàn)長文章的情況看來正在增多。每個(gè) section 或許會(huì)有同

4、義詞題 0-1 道;但考慮到同義詞題較容易,故減少出題率。時(shí)電腦界面或許出現(xiàn)句子或短語,本練習(xí)材料未能在形式上完全反映。以上或可能的差別,請考生留意。3.練習(xí) Exercise1-16 有 4-5 篇文章,12-13 道題,與筆試情況相符,可作為基礎(chǔ)訓(xùn)練材料。從練7開始,每個(gè)練習(xí)有 10 道題,涉及 4 篇文章(1 篇長文章 3 篇短文章、或 1 篇中篇文章 3 篇短文章、或 4 篇皆為短文章)和 1-2 個(gè)邏輯單題的短文章,與現(xiàn)有的機(jī)考情況相符,可作為模擬訓(xùn)練材料。4.訓(xùn)練可以多階段進(jìn)行,每 8-9 個(gè)練習(xí)為一個(gè)階段,每個(gè)階段約為 50-100 小時(shí);36 套練習(xí)可在 4-5 個(gè)階段完成,總

5、計(jì)用時(shí)約 300-350 小時(shí)。在剛開始的階段,一個(gè)練習(xí)的做題時(shí)間通常為 30-45 分鐘,正確率為 25%。第二階段,時(shí)間可在 25-27 分鐘/練習(xí),正確率接近 40%。第三階段,時(shí)間在 21-22 分鐘/練習(xí),正確率 50%-60%。第四階段,時(shí)間在 17-18 分鐘/練習(xí),正確率 70%以上。5.建議以 2-4 個(gè)練習(xí)為進(jìn)行循環(huán)訓(xùn)練,對這些練習(xí)從不同角度進(jìn)行多個(gè)步驟的訓(xùn)練。第一步,在計(jì)時(shí)狀態(tài)下連續(xù)做掉 2-4 個(gè)練習(xí)。每個(gè)練習(xí)的時(shí)間應(yīng)按訓(xùn)練階段逐步減少,最終達(dá)到要求的 17分鐘。第二步,在做完這些練習(xí)的同一天或第二天,分析這些文章的邏輯結(jié)構(gòu),弄懂所有句子之間的關(guān)系,也就是論點(diǎn)與論點(diǎn)的關(guān)

6、系、論點(diǎn)與論據(jù)的關(guān)系、論據(jù)與論據(jù)的關(guān)系,并寫出反映文章結(jié)構(gòu)的邏輯圖,包括每句話尤其是首句轉(zhuǎn)折句的 詞(core)、每句話的功能作用(function)。請注意,這一步不是重做題目,而是分析結(jié)構(gòu)。第三步,在做完邏輯結(jié)構(gòu)分析和寫出邏輯圖以后,進(jìn)行這些練習(xí)的題目分析,包括題干的、題目對應(yīng)原文的位置特點(diǎn)、正確選項(xiàng)與原文的文字對應(yīng)和邏輯改寫方式、選項(xiàng)出錯(cuò)的,以對出題點(diǎn)、正確寫法、錯(cuò)誤選項(xiàng)設(shè)置形成敏感。第四可選步驟,將這幾個(gè)練習(xí)的文章和題目重看一遍。這些步驟完成之后再轉(zhuǎn)向新的 2-4 練習(xí),依次下去。盡量避免一口氣做完所有練習(xí);連續(xù)做新題只能重復(fù)現(xiàn)有解題水平,只有重復(fù)分析文章和題目才能提高解題水平。6.

7、歡迎本材料使用者以各種方式就其內(nèi)容提出建議。7. 本材料私人學(xué)習(xí)交流使用,用作商業(yè)用途。8. 祝!終將獲得。Exercise 1Questions 1 to 3 are based on the following reading passage.Immediately relevant to game theory are the sex ratios in certain parasitic wasp species that have alarge excess of females. In these species, fertilized eggsLine develop into

8、females and unfertilized eggs into males.1. The author suggests that the work of Fisher and Hamilton was similar in that both scientists(A) conducted their research at approximately the same time(B) sought to manipulate the sex ratios of some of the animals they studied(C) sought an explanation of w

9、hy certain sex ratios exist and remain stable(D) studied game theory, thereby providing important groundwork for the later development of strategy theory(E) studied reproduction in the same animal speciesA female stores sperm and can determine the sex of each egg she lays by fertilizing it or leavin

10、g it unfertilized. By Fishers genetic argument that the sex5ratio will be favored whichzes the number ofdescendants an individual will have and hence the number of gene copies transmitted, it should pay a female to produce equal numbers of sons and daughters. Hamilton, noting that the eggs develop w

11、ithin their hostthe larva of another insectand that the newly emerged adult wasps mate immediately and disperse, offered a remarkably cogent analysis. Since only one female usually lays eggs in a given larva, it would pay her to produce one male only, because this one male could fertilize all his si

12、sters on emergence. Like Fisher, Hamilton looked for an evolutionarily stable strategy, but he went a step further in recognizing that he waslooking for a strategy.10For the following question, consider each of thechoices separately and select all that apply152. The passage contains information that

13、 would answer which of the following questions about wasps?A20How many eggs does the female wasp usually lay in a single host larva?Can some species of wasp determine sex ratios among their offspring?What is the approximate sex ratioamong the offspring of parasitic wasps?BC3. Which of the following

14、is NOT true of the species of parasitic wasps discussed in the passage?(A) Adult female wasps are capable of storing sperm.(B) Female wasps lay their eggs in the larvae of other insects.(C) The adult female wasp can be fertilized by a male that was hatched in the same larva as herself.(D) So few mal

15、e wasps are produced that extinction is almost certain.(E) Male wasps do not emerge from their hosts until they reach sexual maturity.1Questions 4 to 5 are based on the following reading passage.Tocqueville, apparently, was wrong. Jacksonian America was not a fluid, egalitarian society where individ

16、ual wealth and poverty were ephemeralLine conditions. At least to argues E. Pessen in his4. According to the passage, Pessen indicates that all of the following were true of the very wealthy in the UnitedStates between 1825 and 1850 EXCEPT:5iconoclastic study of the very rich in the United States be

17、tween 1825 and 1850.Pessen does present a quantity of examples, together with some refreshingly intelligible statistics, to establish the existence of an inordinately wealthy class. Though active in commerce or the professions, most of the wealthy were not self-made, but had inherited family fortune

18、s. In no sense mercurial, these great fortunes survived the financial panics that destroyed lesser ones., in several cities the wealthiest one percentconstantly increased its share until by 1850 it owned(A) They formed a distinct upper class.(B) Many of them were able to increase their holdings. (C)

19、Some of them worked as professionals or inbusiness.(D) Most of them accumulated their own fortunes.(E) Many of them retained their wealth in spite of financial upheavals.105. Which of the following best states the authorsmain point?(A) Pessens study has overturned the previously established view of

20、the social and economic structure of early nineteenth-century America.(B) Tocquevilles analysis of the United Statesin the Jacksonian era remains the definitive account of this period.(C) Pessens study is valuable primarily because it shows the continuity of the social system in the United States th

21、roughout the nineteenth century.(D) The social patterns and political power of the extremely wealthy in the United States between 1825 and 1850 are well documented.(E) Pessen challenges a view of the social and economic system in the United States from 1825 to 1850, but he drawss that are incorrect.

22、15half of the commus wealth. Although theseobservations are true, Pessen overestimates their importance by concluding from them that the undoubted progress toward inequality in the late eighteenth century continued in the Jacksonian period and that the UnitedStates was a class-ridden, plutocratic so

23、ciety even20before industrialization.(162 words)2Anaerobic glycolysis is a process in which energy is produced, without oxygen, through the breakdown of muscle glycogen into lactic acid and adenosine tri-Line phosphate (ATP), the energy provider. The amount5of energy that can be produced anaerobical

24、ly is a function of the amount of glycogen presentin all vertebrates about 0.5 percent of their muscles wet weight. Thus the anaerobic energy reserves of a verte- brate are proportional to the size of the animal. If, for10example, some predators had attacked a 100-ton dinosaur, normally torpid, the

25、dinosaur would have been able to generate almost instantaneously, via anaerobic glycolysis, the energy of 3,000 humans atum oxidative metabolic energy production.6. The passages suggestion that the total anaerobic energy reserves of a vertebrate are proportional to the vertebrates size is based on w

26、hich of the following assumption?(A) larger vertebrates conserve more energy than smaller vertebrates(B) larger vertebrates use less oxygen per unit weight than smaller vertebrates(C) the ability of a vertebrate to consume food is a function of its size(D) the amount of muscle tissue in a vertebrate

27、 is directly related to its size(E) the size of a vertebrate is proportional tothe quantity of energy it can utilize3study of his compositions reveals that Beethovenoverturned no fundamental rules. Rather, he was an 50 incomparable strategist who exploited limitstherules, forms, and conventions that

28、 he inherited from predecessors such as Haydn and Mozart, Handel and Bachin strikingly original ways.(466words)Extraordinary creative activity has been characterized as revolutionary, flying in the face of what is established and producing not what is acceptable but what willLine become accepted. Ac

29、cording to this formulation, highlycreative activity transcends the limits of an existing form and establishes a new principle of organization. How- ever, the idea that extraordinary creativity transcends established limits in misleading when it is applied to the arts, even though it may be valid fo

30、r the sciences.Difference between highly creative art and highly creative science arise in part from a difference in their goals. For the sciences, a new theory is the goal and end result of the creative act. Innovative science produces new propositions in terms of which diverse phenomena can be rel

31、ated to one another in more coherent ways. Such phenomena as a brilliant diamond or a nesting bird are relegated to the role of data, serving as the means for formulating or testing a new theory. The goal of highly creative art is very different: the phenomenon itself becomes the direct product of t

32、he creative act.Shakespeares Hamlet is not a tract about the behavior of indecisive princes or the uses of political power; nor is Picassos painting Guernica primarily a propositional statement about the Spanish Civil War or the evils of fascism. What highly creative artistic activity produces is no

33、t a new generalization that transcends established limits, but rather an aesthetic particular. Aesthetic particulars produced by the highly creative artist extend orexploit, in an innovative way, the limits of an existing form, rather than transcend that form.This is not to deny that a highly creati

34、ve artist some- times establishes a new principle of organization in the history of an artistic field; the composer Monteverdi, who created music of the highest aesthetic value, comes to mind. More generally, however, whether or not a composition establishes a new principle in the history of music h

35、as little bearing on its aesthetic worth. Because they embody a new principle of organization, some musical works, such as the operas of the Florentine Camerata, are of signal historical importance, but few listeners or musicologists would include these among the great works of music. On the other h

36、and, Mozarts The Marriage of Figaro is surely among the masterpieces of music even though its modest innovations are confined to extending existing means. It has been said of Beethoven that he toppled the rules and freed musicfrom the stifling confines of convention. But a close510152025303540454For

37、 the following question, consider each of thechoices separately and select all that apply9. The author implies that an innovative scientific contribution is one that(A) is cited with high frequency in the publications of other scientists(B) is accepted immediately by the scientific com- mu(C) does n

38、ot relegate particulars to the role of data(D) presents the discovery of a new scientific fact(E) introduces a new valid generalization7. The passage supplies information for answering which of the following questions?Has unusual creative activity been characterized as revolutionary?Did Beethoven wo

39、rk within a musical tradition that also included Handel and Bach?Who besides Monteverdi wrote music that the author would consider to embody new principlesof organization and to be of high aesthetic value?10. Which of the following statements would most logically concluded the last paragraph of the

40、passage?(A) Unlike Beethoven, however, even the greatest of modern composers, such as Stravinsky, didnot transcend existing musical forms.(B) In similar fashion, existing musical forms were even further exploited by the next generation of great European composers.(C) Thus, many of the great composer

41、s displayed the same combination of talents exhibited by Monteverdi.(D) By contrast, the view that creativity in the arts exploits but does not transcend limits is sup- ported in the field of literature.(E) Actually, Beethovens most original works werelargely unappreciated at the time that they were

42、 first performed.8. The author regards the idea that all highly creative artistic activity transcends limits with(A) deep skepticism(B) strong indignation(C) marked indifference(D) moderate amusement(E) sharp derision5CBAGreat comic art is never otherwordly, it does not seek to mystify us, and it do

43、es not deny ambiguity by branding as evil whatever differs from good. Great comic artists assume that truth may bear all lights, and thus they seek to accentuate contradictions in social action, not gloss over or transcend them by appeals to extrasocial symbols of divine ends, cosmic purpose, or law

44、s of nature. The moment of transcendence in great comic art is a social moment,born out of the conviction that we are human, even11. Select the sentence in the passage that suggests that great comic art can be characterized as optimistic aboutthe ability of humans to act rationally.Line512. It can b

45、e inferred from the passage that the author admires great comic artists primarily for their(A) ability to understand the frequently subtle differences between good and evil(B) ability to reconcile the contradictions in human behavior(C) ability to distinguish betweenrational and irrational behavior(

46、D) insistence on confronting the truth about the human condition(E) insistence on condemning human faults andweaknesses10though we try to be gods. The comic commuwhich artists address themselves is a commutoofreasoning, loving, joyful, compassionate beings, who are willing to assume the human risks

47、of acting rationally. Without invoking gods or demons, great comic art arouses courage in reason, courage which grows out of trust in what human beings can do ashumans.1513. Which of the following is the most accurate description of the organization of the passage?(A) A sequence of observations lead

48、ing to a prediction(B) A list of inferences drawn from facts stated at the beginning of the passage(C) A series of assertions related to one general subject(D) A statement of the major idea, followed by specific examples(E) A succession of ideas moving from specific togeneral6Exercise 2By 1950, the

49、results of attempts to relate brain processes to mental experience appeared rather discouraging. Herring suggested that different modes ofLine sensation, such as pain, taste, and color, might be2. The description of an experiment in which electric stimuli were applied to different sensory fields of

50、the cerebral cortex tends to support the theory that(A) the simple presence of different cortical areas cannot account for the diversity of mental experience(B) variation in spatiotemporal patterning of nerve impulses correlates with variation in subjective experience(C) nerve impulses are essential

51、ly homogeneous and are relatively unaffected as they travel through the nervous system(D) the mental experiences produced by sensory nerve impulses are determined by the cortical area activated(E) variation in neuron types affects the quality ofnerve impulsescorrelated with the discharge of specific

52、 kinds of nervous energy. However, subsequently developed methods of recording and analyzing nerve potentials failed to reveal any such qualitative diversity. Although qualitative variance among nerve energies was never rigidly disproved, the doctrine was generally abandoned in favor of the opposing

53、 view, namely, that nerve impulses are essentially homogeneous in quality and are transmitted ascommon currency throughout the nervous system. According to this theory, it is not the quality of the sensory nerve impulses that determines the diverse conscious sensations they produce, but rather the d

54、ifferent areas of the brain into which they discharge, and there is some evidence for this view. In one experiment, when an electric stimulus was applied to a given sensory field of the cerebral cortex of a conscious human subject, it produced a sensation of the appropriate modality for that particu

55、lar locus, that is, a visual sensation from the visual cortex, an auditory sensation from the auditory cortex, and so on. However, cortical locus, in itself, turned out tohave little explanatory value.510153. Which of the following best summarizes the authors opinion of the suggestion that different

56、 areas of the brain determine perceptions produced by sensory nerve impulses?(A) It is a plausible explanation, but it has not been completely proved.(B) It is the best explanation of brain processes currently available.(C) It is disproved by the fact that the various areas of the brain are physiolo

57、gically very similar.(D) There is some evidence to support it, but it fails to explain the diversity of mental experience.(E) There is experimental evidence that confirms itscorrectness.20251. The author mentions common currency in line 13 primarily in order to emphasize the(A) lack of differentiation among nerve impulses in human beings(B) similarity of the sensations that all human beings experience(C) similarities in the views of scientists who have studied the human ne

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