2010年黑龙江成人英语三级考试真题答案
Part I. Vocabulary and Structure (10 points; 15 minutes)
Directions: Each of the following sentences is provided with four choices. Choose  the one that best completes the sentence. Then blacken the
corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet.
1. As preparations were not completed in time, the conference had to be __________ till the next Tuesday.
A. put away
B. cancelled
C. put aside
D. postponed
2. ___________ with the size of the whole earth, the highest mountain does not seem  high at all.
A. When compared
B. Compare
C. While comparing
D. Comparing
3. It’s only a short way to the station, so we might as __________ walk.
A. good
B. now
C. quick
D. well
4. Liquids are like solids __________ they have a definite volume.
A. in that
B. for that
C. with that
D. at that
5. Since she can speak Japanese fluently, she has an advantage __________ other job
applicants.
A. to
B. in
C. over
D. against
6. Yesterday’s English examination looked simple, but it turned out to be __________
easy.
A. nothing but
B. everything but
C. something but
D. anything but
7. It was raining hard, but by the time class was over, the rain __________.
A. stopped
B. would stop
C. had stopped
D. might have stopped
8. “Perhaps you should go home now.”“No, I __________ on staying here for a while  longer.”
A. persist
B. stick
C. sit
D. insist
9. Hardly __________ to the bus stop when the bus suddenly pulled away.
A. did they get
B. they had got
C. they got
D. had they got
10. It is necessary that the plan __________ before Thursday.
A. were fulfilled
B. was fulfilled
C. be fulfilled
D. would be fulfilled
11. Not only __________ our money, but we were also in danger of losing our lives.
A. we lost
B. lost we
C. did we lose
D. we did lose
12. I __________ a doctor now, if I had studied medical science in my youth.
A. were
B. should be
C. had been
D. should have been
13. I knocked at the door several times __________ an elderly lady came to answer
it.
A. before
B. after
C. unless
D. then
14. He seemed very young, but __________ he was older than all of us.
A. in nature
B. in reality
C. by nature
D. in origin
15. You may not have played very well today, but at least you’
ve got through to the
next round and __________.
A. tomorrow never comes
B. tomorrow is another day
C. never put off till tomorrow
D. there is no tomorrow
16. It has been said that in no country __________ Britain can one experience four
seasons in the course of a single day.
A. other than
B. more than
C. better than
D. rather than
17. __________ you are familiar with the author’s ideas, try to read all the sections
as quickly as you possibly can.
A. Now that
B. Ever since
C. So that
D. As long as
18. —Tom is so worried about the test that he said he was going to study all night.
—Tell him he should quit __________ and get some help.
A. to have worried
B. to worry
C. worrying
D. from worrying
19. The trees __________ in the storm have been moved off the road.
A. being blown down
B. blown down
C. blowing down
D. to blow down
20. The boy the teachers considered __________ failed in the final exam, __________
surprised them very much.
A. to be the best; which
B. as the best student; that
C. to have been studying well; it
D. such as a good student; which
Part II. Cloze Test (10 points;20 minutes)
Directions: Read the passage through. Then, go back and choose one suitable word
or phrase marked A, B, C, or D for each blank in the passage. Blacken
the corresponding letter of the word or phrase you have chosen on the
Answer Sheet.
As it came near the corner, the taxi stopped suddenly. The driver got out looking very  21  . A big lorry which had been  22  the taxi stopped too. The taxi driver was now standing at the corner looking up at the sky  23  the lorry driver went to  24  him. A number of cars behind were  25  to stop as well and soo
n a large crowd of people  26  gathered at the corner.
The  27  of all this trouble was a very strange  28  . It sounded as if thousands and thousands of  29  were singing together. The noise was quite  30  and many people looked disturbed. The most extraordinary thing was that, apart from one or two pigeons,  31  was not a bird in sight. No one was able to solve the mystery  32  two policemen arrived. They noticed a large advertisement  33  a film high up on a wall nearby.  34  the noise seemed to be coming  35  this direction, they climbed up and found that a tape-recorder had been hidden  36  the advertisement. The noise made by birds singing was being broadcast over powerful loudspeakers so as to  37  the attention of passers-by. The police asked the  38  to take the recorder away because the advertisement had attracted  39  much attention that it was  40  for a great many cars and buses to move freely in the street.
21. A. puzzled    B. unhappy    C. tired    D. guilty
22. A. pushing          B. leading          C. following    D. guiding
23. A. but              B. yet              C. and              D. so
24. A. share            B. connect          C. join              D. charge
25. A. agreed          B. determined        C. forced        D. persuaded
26. A. having          B. has              C. have            D. had
27. A. result            B. point            C. effect        D. cause
28. A. case            B. noise            C. thing            D. picture
29. A. cocks            B. children          C. birds      D. tape-recorders
30. A. exciting          B. interesting      C. convincing    D. frightening
31. A. there              B. here              C. it                D. that
32. A. before            B. until            C. when            D.
after
33. A. for                B. in                C. to            D. by
34. A. When            B. Before            C. After            D. As
35. A. in                B. to                C. into        D. from
36. A. behind            B. over              C. above        D. on
37. A. pay            B. give              C. attract          D. attack
38. A. managers          B. advertisers      C. drivers    D. passers-by
39. A. too                B. this              C. such            D. so
40. A. impassable        B. impossible    C. improper D. unnecessary
Part III. Reading Comprehension (40 points; 55 minutes)
Section 1
成人英语三级
Directions: Each of the following three passages is followed by some questions. For
each question there are four choices. Choose the best answer to each
question. Then blacken the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet. Passage One
Questions 41 to 45 are based on the following passage.
For the past twenty years, poll-takers (民意测验者) have told us that the vast majority of Americans report that they are “satisfied” or “very satisfied” with their jobs. But, when the surveys pose a slightly different question—“If you had to do it over, would you choose the same line of work?”—sixty percent of working Americans say they would choose another occupation. This seems to tell us that Americans feel that they are supposed to like their jobs but, in reality, they don’t. Most of us are stuck in jobs we’d prefer not to have. And some of us actually hate what we do.
How does this happen in a land where citizens are presumably free to do, and become, anything they want? First of all, some of us didn’t deliberately choose our jobs but simply fell into them. Later, there was never time to find out what we really wanted to do.
Another reason people dislike their jobs is the result of a change in the American economy. A hundred years ago most Americans worked for themselves on farms or in small stores and workshops. Now, less than 10 percent of us are self-employed. Many of us work as cogs (轮牙) in the wheels of giant corporations. We don’t make a finished product with our own hands, and we feel that we are totally replaceable parts in the machine. Social scientists say that the happiest workers are the ones who are
their own bosses—business owners, executives, and professionals. Working for a big company often results in a sense of powerlessness and malaise. Finally, being a member of the baby boom generation increases the chances of job dissatisfaction. In the struggle for careers among the members of this large population “bulge”, many people are losing out in the competition. These individuals may never achieve the standard of living their parents achieved, or go as far up the success ladder as they had hoped. The result is bitterness, and a feeling of being trapped in a “nowhere” job.
41. The best title for this selection is __________.
A. Job Satisfaction
B. Why People Hate Their Jobs
C. Nowhere Jobs
D. A Change in the Workplace
42. Which sentence best expresses the main idea of the selection? __________.
A. Job burnout is a growing problem
B. Large companies provide many benefits for workers
C. Workers are unhappy because they no longer work with their hands
D. There are several reasons why workers are unhappy with their jobs
43. According to the passage, the majority of Americans __________.
A. would choose another occupation if they could begin again
B. are self-employed
C. feel that they are supposed to dislike their jobs
D. work in factories
44. The author implies that __________.
A. job dissatisfaction is a sign of laziness
B. the baby-boomers despise their parents
C. polls can be misleading
D. working for a corporation is very satisfying
45. The word “malaise” (Line7, Para. 3) means __________.
A. depression
B. fulfillment
C. contentment
D. significance
Passage Two
Questions 46 to 50 are based on the following passage.
Most forest fires are caused by human carelessness or ignorance. Forest fire prevention, therefore, is mainly a problem of creating better understanding of the importance of forests, an awareness of the danger of fire in the woods, and a sense of personal responsibility to safeguard the forests from dange
r. This is not an easy job.
Careless smokers are responsible for thousands of forest fires each year. Many of these are started when cigarette butts (烟蒂) and matches are thrown from automobiles. Others are caused by hunters, hikers (徒步旅行者), fishermen, or woods workers who are careless in disposing of their smoking materials. The Forest Service has posted rules in many of the National Forests that prohibit smoking except in certain designated areas. Many of the states have laws against throwing lighted materials from automobiles. The prevention of smoker-caused fires, however, depends upon changing the attitudes and behavior of millions of people who smoke in hazardous areas.
The most important natural cause of fire is lightning (闪电). This accounts for 11 percent of forest fires on protected land for the entire nation. In the Western States, lightning causes a much higher percentage of fires than it does in the East.
Advances in knowledge of fire weather are helping forest protection forces to know when to be alert to lightning-caused fires. Adequate and well-equipped forces can control them quickly and hold the damage to a minimum. Experiments in “seeding”thunder clouds to prevent or control the lightning itself have been in process for many years, but new breakthroughs are needed for any significant reduction in the fires lightning starts.
46. This passage is chiefly about __________.
A. smoking in forests
B. changing the attitudes and behavior of millions of people
C. the chief causes of forest fires and their prevention