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1、大家論壇-2023年職稱英語(yǔ)考試?yán)砉級(jí)真題及答案2023年職稱英語(yǔ)考試?yán)砉級(jí)真題及答案答案有疑問請(qǐng)參考: HYPERLINK /thread-2822598-1-1.html t _blank 2023職稱英語(yǔ)考試?yán)眍怌級(jí)參考答案大家網(wǎng)芒果老師版第一局部:詞匯選項(xiàng)第115題,每題1分,共15分下面每個(gè)句子中均有1個(gè)詞或者短語(yǔ)有括號(hào),請(qǐng)為每處括號(hào)局部確定1個(gè)意義最為接近的選項(xiàng)。1、The storm caused severe damage.AphysicalBaccidentalCseriousDenvironmental2、Many forms of cancer can be cure
2、d if detected earlyAselected Boperated Cdeveloped Ddiscovered3、The story was published with the sole purpose of selling newspapersAreal Bmain Conly Dpractical4、A large crowd assembled outside the American embassyAgathered Bwatched Cshouted Dwalked5、He kept in constant contact with his family while h
3、e was in AustraliaAgradual Bregular Cdirest Doccasional6、On the table was a vase filled with artificial flowersAwild Bfresh Clovely Dfalse7、We had trouble finding a pure water supplyAtypical Bcomplete Cclean Dclear8、“What do you mean by thatPaul asked sharplyAcritically Bhelplessy Cpolitely Dquickly
4、9、She only needs a minute amount of moneyAcertain Bfair Cfull Dsmall10、Keep your passport in a secure placeAspecial Bgood Csafe Ddifferent11、He inspired many young people to take up the sportAencouraged Ballowed Ccalled Dadvised12、Did she accept his research proposal?Ainvitation Bplan Coffer Dview13
5、、The city centre was wiped out by the bombAcovered Bdestroyed Creduced Dmoved14、Id like to withdraw 500 from my current accountAleave Bpay Cput Ddraw15、The contempt he felt for his fellow students was obviousAhate Bneed Clove Dpity第二局部:閱讀判斷第1622題,每題1分,共7分 下面的短文后列出了7個(gè)句子,請(qǐng)根據(jù)短文的內(nèi)容對(duì)每個(gè)句子做出判斷;如果該句提供的是正確信息
6、,請(qǐng)選擇A;如果該句提供的是錯(cuò)誤信息,請(qǐng)選擇B;如果該句的信息文中沒有提及,請(qǐng)選擇C。 Eastern Quakes Can Trigger Big ShakesIn the first week of November 2023, people in central Oklahoma experienced more than two dozen earthquakes. The largest, a magnitude 5.6 quake, shook thousands of fans in a college football stadium, caused cracks in a f
7、ew buildings and rattled the nerves of many people who had never felt a quake before. Oklahoma is not an area of the country famous for its quakes. If you watch the news on TV, you see reports about all sorts of natural disasters hurricanes, tornadoes, flooding and wildfires, to name a few. But the
8、most dangerous type of natural disaster, and also the most unpredictable, is the earthquake.Researchers at the U.S. Geological Survey estimate that several million earthquakes rattle the globe each year. That may sound scary, but people dont feel many of the tremors because they happen in remote and
9、 unpopulated regions. Many quakes happen under the ocean, and others have a very small magnitude, or shaking intensity.A magnitude 5.8 earthquake that struck central Virginia the afternoon of August 23, 2023, was felt from central Georgia to southeastern Canada. In many urban areas, including Washin
10、gton, D.C., and New York City (Wall Street shown), people crowded the streets while engineers inspected buildings. Credit: Wikimedia/Alex TabakScientists know about small, remote quakes only because of very sensitive electronic devices called seismometers. These devices detect and measure the size o
11、f ground vibrations produced by earthquakes. Altogether, USGS researchers use seismometers to identify and locate about 20,000 earthquakes each year.Although earthquakes can happen anywhere in the world, really big quakes occur only in certain areas. The largest ones register a magnitude 8 or higher
12、 and happen, on average, only once each year. Such big ones typically occur along the edges of Earths tectonic plates.Tectonic plates are huge pieces of Earths crust, sometimes many kilometers thick. These plates cover our planets surface like a jigsaw puzzle. Often, jagged edges of these plates tem
13、porarily lock together. When plates jostle and scrape past each other earthquakes occur. On average, tectonic plates move very slowly about the same speed as your fingernails grow.But sometimes earthquakes rumble through portions of the landscape far from a plates edges. Although less expected, thes
14、e “mid-plate tremors can do substantial damage. Some of the biggest known examples rattled the eastern half of the United States two centuries ago. Today, scientists are still puzzling over why the quakes occurred and when similar ones might occur.16. Oklahoma is an area often experiencing natural d
15、isasters. A. Right B. Wrong C. Not mentioned 17. The earthquake is the most unpredictable natural disaster. A. Right B. Wrong C. Not mentioned 18. Few earthquakes happen without peoples awareness. A. Right B. Wrong C. Not mentioned 19. Seismometers can identify and locate most of the earthquakes in
16、China. A. Right B. Wrong C. Not mentioned 20. Big earthquakes of a magnitude 8 0r higher seldom happen far from the edges of tectonic plates. A. Right B. Wrong C. Not mentioned 21. Whenever tectonic plates move, earthquakes happen. A. Right B. Wrong C. Not mentioned 22. The earthquake that hit the e
17、astern half of the United States two centuries ago is the biggest mid-plate one in history. A. Right B. Wrong C. Not mentioned 第三局部:概括大意和完成句子第2330題,每題1分,共8分 下面的短文后有2項(xiàng)測(cè)試任務(wù):1第2326題要求從所給的6個(gè)選項(xiàng)中為指定段落每段選擇1個(gè)小標(biāo)題;2第2730題要求從所給的6個(gè)選項(xiàng)中為每個(gè)句子確定一個(gè)最正確選項(xiàng)。 Learn about Light1Ancient civilizations were amazed by the exi
18、stence of light for thousands of years. The Greek philosophers believed that light was made up of countless, tiny particles that enter the human eye and create what we call vision. However, Empedocles and a Dutch scientist named Christian Huygens believed that light was like a wave. According to the
19、m, light spread out and travelled like a straight line. This theory was accepted during the 19th century. 2ln 1905, Albert Einstein published a research paper in which he explained what is referred to as the photoelectric effect. This theory explains that particles make up light. The particles Einst
20、ein was referring to are weightless bundles束of electromagnetic電磁energy called photons光子. Today, scientists agree that light has a dual二重 nature it is part particle and part wave. It is a form of energy that allows us to see things around us. 3Things that give off light are known as sources of light.
21、 During the day, the primary source of light is the sun. Other sources of light include stars, flames, flashlights, street lamps and glowing gases in glass tube. 4When we draw the way light travels we always use straight lines. This is because normally light rays travel in a straight line. However,
22、there are some instances that can change the path and even the nature of light. They are reflection, absorption, interference 干擾, etc. 5Physicists have attempted to measure the speed of light since the early times. In 1849, Hippolyte Fizeau conducted an experiment by directing a beam of light to a m
23、irror located kilometers away and placed a rotating cogwheel旋轉(zhuǎn)齒輪between the beam and the mirror. From the rate of rotation of the wheel, number of wheels teeth and distance of the mirror, he was able to calculate that the speed of light is 313 million meters per second. In a vacuum真空,however, the sp
24、eed of light is 299,792,458 meters per second. This is about a million times faster than the speed of an airplane. 23. Paragraph 2 _ _ 24. Paragraph 3 _ _ 25. Paragraph 4 _ _ 26. Paragraph 5 _ _ A. How is the nature of light explained today? B. What are sources of light? C. How did physicists measur
25、e the speed of light? D. How does light travel? E. How did people think of light years ago? F. What causes a shadow? 27. Objects are visible to the human eye as light is _ _ 28. Stars, flames, flashlights are some examples of _ _ 29. Some instances such as reflection and absorption can change _ _ 30
26、. Hippolyte Fizeau conducted an experiment to measure _ _ A. sources of light B. the speed of light C. the path of light D. a straight line E. a beam of light F. a form of energy第四局部:閱讀理解第3145題,每題3分,共45分下面有3篇短文,每篇短文后有5道題。請(qǐng)根據(jù)短文內(nèi)容,為每題確定1個(gè)最正確選項(xiàng)。第一篇Graphenes SuperstrengthBig technology comes in tiny pac
27、kages. New cell phones and personal computers get smaller every year, which means these electronics require even smaller components on the inside. Engineers are looking for creative ways to build these components, and theyve turned their eyes to graphene, a superthin material, made of carbon, that c
28、ould change the future of electronics. This years Nobel Prize for Physics has been awarded to Andre Geim and Kostya Novoselov from the University of Manchester, UK. for the discovery of graphene. Graphene isnt just small, its the thinnest possible material in this world. says Novoselov. He calls it
29、a wonder material. Its so thin that you would need to stack about 25,000 sheets just to make a pile as thick as a piece of ordinary white paper. If you were to hold a sheet of graphene in your fingers, youd have no idea because you wouldnt be able to see it. Carbon is one of the most abundant elemen
30、ts in the universe. Every known kind of life contains carbon. Graphene is a sheet of carbon, but only one atom thick. You dont have to look far to find grapheneits all around you. If you want this high-tech wonderstuff, all you need is a pencil, paper and a little adhesive tape. Use the pencil to sh
31、ade a small area on the paper, and then apply a small piece of adhesive tape over the area. When you pull up the tape, you11 see that it pulls up a thin layer of some of the shading from your pencil. That layer is called graphite, one of the softest minerals in the world. Now stick the same piece of
32、 tape on another sheet of paper and pull the tape up-there should be an even thinner layer, this time left on the paper. Now imagine that you do this over and over, until you get the thinnest possible layer of material on the paper. This layer would be only one atom thick, and you wouldnt be able to
33、 see it. Graphite is made of layers of graphene. So when you get to the thinnest possible layer, youve found graphene. 31. What would change the future of electronics according to engineers? A. Personal computer. B. Big technology. C. Graphene. D. Creative ways. 32. Which of the following statements
34、 about graphene is true ? A. It is visible to the human eye. B. It is possibly the thinnest material in the world. C. It can be used to make paper. D. Finding it demands time and money. 33. The word “apply in paragraph 4 could be used to replaced by ? A. push. B. find. C. collect. D. put. 34. What d
35、oes the writer tell in the last two paragraph ? A. An easy way to find graphene. B. Significance of the discovery of graphene. C. Development of high-tech wonders. D. Possible applications of graphene. 35. Graphenes super strength lies in the fact that. A. It is the thinnest material in the world. B
36、. It is made of the most abundant elements in the world. C. It can help to make electronic components smaller. D. It helps engineers to produce more sensitive electronic products. 第二篇Puerto Rican Cuisine菜肴Puerto Rico, a Caribbean (加勒比海區(qū)) island rich in history and remarkable natural beauty, has a cu
37、isine all its own. Immigration移民 to the island has helped to shape its cuisine, with people from all over the world making various contributions to it. However, before the arrival of these immigrants, the Taino people lived on the island of Puerto Rico. Taino cuisine included such foods as rodents (
38、嚙齒動(dòng)物), fresh shellfish and fish fried in corn oil.Many aspects of Taino cuisine continue today in Puerto Rican cooking, but it has been heavily influenced by the Spanish, who invaded Puerto Rico in 1508, and Africans, who were initially brought to Puerto Rico to work as slaves. Taino cooking styles
39、were mixed with ideas brought by the Spanish and Africans to create new dishes. The Spanish extended food choices by bringing cattle, pigs, goats, and sheep to the island. Africans also added to the islands food culture by introducing powerful, contrasting tastes in dishes. In fact, much of the food
40、 Puerto Rico is now famous for - coffee, coconuts, and oranges - was actually imported by foreigners to the island.A common assumption many people make about Puerto Rican food is that it is very spicy(辛辣的). lts true that chili peppers are popular; aij caballero in particular is a very hot chili pepp
41、er that Puerto Ricans enjoy. However, milder(微辣的) tastes are popular too, such as sofrito. As the base of many Puerto Rican dishes, sofrito is a sauce made from chopped onions, green bell peppers, sweet chili peppers, and a handful of other spices. It is fried in oil and then added to other dishes.3
42、6、who lived in Puerto Rico firstAthe AfricansBthe SpanishCthe AmericansDthe Taino people37、In the first paragraph the word “it refers toAimmigrationBCaribbean historyCthe islands natural beautyDPuerto Rican cuisine38、what is the main idea of the second paragraph?ATaino dishes are important in Puerto
43、 Rican cookingBFood imported by foreigners isnt really Puerto RicanCPuerto Rican cooking has many outside influencesDAfrican foods have probably had the most influence39、How is sofrito used?AIt is eaten before mealsBIt is added to other dishesCIt is used where foods are too spicyDIt is eaten as a ma
44、in dish40、which of the following is NOT true?Asoftito is a type of extremely spicy food BMany people think Puerto Rican food is spicyCPuerto Rican cuisine uses a lot of chili peppersDAij caballero is a type of chile pepper第三篇Archive Gallery: The Best of Bionics 仿生學(xué)Humans might be the most highly-evo
45、lved species on the planet, but most animals possess skills we can only dream of having. Imagine how much electricity we could save if we could see in the dark the way cats do. Imagine leaping from tree to tree like a monkey. Giraffes長(zhǎng)頸鹿, which are otherwise calm and good-natured, sleep only 4.6 hou
46、rs a day.We realized a long, long time ago that nature provides the best blueprint藍(lán)圖 for invention. Weve borrowed canals from beavers河貍 and reflectors from cats eyes. Although the words bionics became popular only after the 1960s, history shows that nature has always provided ideas on solving everyd
47、ay problems. Our archives檔案 dont go back to the time of Leonardo da Vinci and his bird-like flying machines, but we can take you to the late 19th century, where we applied those same principles for building our first practical airplanes.To prepare for their flight at Kitty Hawk, the Wright brothers
48、studied the movements of pigeons to figure out how they stayed high up when they were heavier than air. Their success inspired scores of successors to improve on the airplane by studying various aspects of nature. One of Orville Wrights pupils caught and stuffed seagulls to examine their wingspan. M
49、eanwhile, two French inventors examined spinning sycamore (梧桐) seeds in an effort to apply those same motions, reversed, to a helicopter.Some examples are more obvious than others. The outside of the airplane designed by the Wright brothers looks like a minimalistic簡(jiǎn)單抽象藝術(shù) structure. On the other han
50、d, Barney Connetts fish submarine潛水艇 actually looks like a fish.Some bio-inspired concepts have yet to be invented. In the 1960s, the US Army commissioned several university professors to conduct research on the motor skills of animals in hope of applying those same abilities to tanks. Tanks that ru
51、n like horses or jump like grasshoppers螞蚱- sounds shocking, doesnt it? But imagine how life would change if we could achieve that.41. Cats, monkeys and giraffes mentioned in paragraph 1 are examples to illustrateA. they are highly-evolved species as humans.B. animals have skills that humans do not p
52、ossess.C. humans can learn animals skills.D. they are skillful in different ways.42. Which of the following can be found in the archive gallery?A. First practical airplanes built in the late 19th century.B. History books.C. The Wright brothers sculpture.D. Leonardo da Vincis bird-like flying machine
53、s.43. What happened after the Wright brothers success?A. People carried out a systematic study on pigeons.B. People could fly their airplane for fun.C. People kept their airplane at a French gallery.D. People studied more animals and plants to develop the airplane.44. Which of the following is true
54、about the research carried out by the US Army?A. It has changed our life.B. It has cost a large sum of money.C. It has improved the abilities of tanks.D. It has not succeeded yet.45. What does the writer want to tell in the passage?A. Some animals possess unique skills.B. Many inventions get ideas f
55、rom nature.C. People should protect nature.D. Bionics is far from perfect.第5局部:補(bǔ)全短文第4650題,每題2分,共10分 下面的短文有5處空白,短文后有6個(gè)句子,其中5個(gè)取自短文,請(qǐng)根據(jù)短文內(nèi)容將其分別放回原有位置,以恢復(fù)文章面貌。Forests for CitiesYou are standing in a beautiful forest in Japan. The air is clean and smells like plants and flowers. There are 175 different k
56、inds of trees, and 60 kinds of birds live here. _ _ (46) You are downtown in the city of Nara, Japan, in Kasugayama Forest, the oldest urban forest in the world. It was started more than a thousand years ago, and today its very popular with tourists and artists.Cities around the world are working to
57、 protect their urban forests. Some urban forests are parks, and some are just streets with a lot of trees. But all urban forests have many good effects on the environment. _ (47) They also stop the noise from heavy traffic. They even make the weather better because they make the air 3-5 degrees cool
58、er, and they stop strong winds.Urban forests also have many good effects on people. They make the city more beautiful. In a crowded area, they give people a place to relax and spend time in nature. _ _(48)In some countries, people are starting new urban forests. In England, there are now 1.3 million
59、 trees in an urban forest called Thames Chase, east of London. It was started in 1990, and it has grown very fast. Walking and bicycle clubs use the forest, and there are programs for children and artists. _ _ (49)Some older cities dont have space for a big urban forest, but planting trees on the st
60、reets makes the city better. Scientists found that commuters (通勤人員) feel more relaxed when they can see trees. Trees are even good for business. _ _ (50) In the future, urban forests will become even more important as our cities grow bigger. In the megacities(超大城市) of tomorrow, people will need more
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