2016年6月大学英语四级真题及答案解析.doc

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1、2016 年 6 月大学英语四级考试真题及参考答案Part Listening Comprehension(听力部分共有两套)四级第一套Section A1. C) Rising unemployment worldwide.2. A) Many countries have not taken measures to create enough jobs.3. B) Put calorie information on the menu.4. A) They will be fined.C) They will get a warning.5. D) Failure to integrate

2、 innovation into their business.6. B) It is the creation of something new.7. C) Its innovation culture.Section B8. D) He does not talk long on the phone.9. B) Talk at length.10. A) He thought it was cool.11. C) It is childish and unprofessional.12. B) He is unhappy with his department manager.13. A)

3、 His workload was much too heavy.14. C) His boss has a lot of trust in him.15. D) Talk to his boss in person first.Section C16. A) The importance of sleep to a healthy life.17. C) They get less and less sleep.18. D) Their blood pressure will rise.19. B) What course you are going to choose.20. D) The

4、 personal statement.21. C) Indicate they have reflected and thought about the subject.22. B) It was built in the late 19th century.23. D) They often broke down.24. A) They were produced on the assembly line.25. C) It marked a new era in motor travel.第 1 页四级第二套Section A1. C) Why sufficient sleep is i

5、mportant for college students.2. C) Making last-minute preparations for tests may be less effective than sleeping.3. B) Whether the British irports Authority should sell off some of its assets.4. D) Lack of runway and terminal capacity.5. D) Report the nicotine content of their cigarettes.6. A) The

6、biggest increase in nicotine content tended to be in brands young smokers like.7. B) They were not prepared to comment on the cigarette study.Section B8. A) Holland.9. D) Learning a language where it is not spoken.10. C) Trying to speak it as much as one can.11. A) It provides opportunities for lang

7、uage practice.12. B) Rules and regulations for driving.13.C) Make cars that are less powerful.14. D) They tend to drive responsibly.15. C) It is not useful.Section C16. D) The card reader failed to do the scanning.17. B) By covering the credit card with a layer of plastic.18. A) Produce many low-tec

8、h fixes for high-tech failures.19. A) They vary among different departments.20.D) By contacting the deparmental office.21. B) They specify the number of credits students must earn.22. C) Students in health classes.23. A) Its overemphasis on thinness.24. B) To explain how computer images can be misle

9、ading.25. C) To promote her own concept of beauty.Part Reading Comprehension四级第一套Section A26.O) tend第 2 页27.M) review28.L) performance29.K) particularly30.N) survive31.E) dropping32.J) mutually33.H) flow34.F) essential35.I) moodSection B36.E)“We thought we would see differences based on the housing

10、types,” said the lead authorof the study, Julie Robison, an associate professor of medicine at the university. A reasonableassumptiondont families struggle to avoid nursing homes and suffer real guilt if they cant?37.L)Of course, sons and daughters want to visit the facilities, talk to the administr

11、ators andresidents and other families, and do everything possible to fulfill their duties. But perhaps theydont have to turn themselves into private investigators or Congressional subcommittees.“Families can look a bit more for where the residents are going to be happy, ” Dr. Sloane said.And involvi

12、ng the future resident in the process can be very important.38.B)Does assisted living really mark a great improvement over a nursing home, or has theindustry simply hired better interior designers? Are nursing homes as bad as people fear, or isthat an out -moded stereotype (固定看法)? Can doing ones hom

13、ework really steer families tothe best places? It is genuinely hard to know.39.H)An elderly person who describes herself as in poor health, therefore, might be no lessdepressed in assisted living (even if her children preferred it) than in a nursing home. A personwho had input into where he would mo

14、ve and has had time to adapt to it might do as well in anursing home as in a small residential care home, other factors being equal. It is an interactionbetween the person and the place, not the sort of place in itself, that leads to better or worseexperiences. “You cant just say, Lets put this pers

15、on in a residential care home instead of anursing homeshe will be much better off,” Dr. Robison said. What matters, she added, “isa combination of what people bring in with them, and what they find there.”40.N)The daughter feared her mother would be ignored there, and so she decided to move herinto

16、a more welcoming facility. Based on what is emerging from some of this research, that mighthave been as rational a way as any to reach a decision.41.J)As I was considering all this, a press release from a respected research firm crossed mydesk, announcing that the five-star rating system that Medica

17、re developed in 2008 to helpfamilies compare nursing home quality also has little relationship to how satisfied its residents ortheir family members are. As a matter of fact, consumers expressed higher satisfaction with the第 3 页one-star facilities, the lowest rated, than with the five -star ones.(Mo

18、re on this study and the starratings will appear in a subsequent post.)42.F)In the initial results, assisted living residents did paint the most positive picture. They wereless likely to report symptoms of depression than those in the other facilities, for instance, andless likely to be bored or lon

19、ely. They scored higher on social interaction.43.C)I am about to make things more complicated by suggesting that what kind of facility anolder person lives in may matter less than we have assumed. And that the characteristics adultchildren look for when they begin the search are not necessarily the

20、things that make adifference to the people who are going to move in. I am not talking about the quality of care, letme hastily add. Nobody flourishes in a gloomy environment with irresponsible staff and a poorsafety record. But an accumulating body of research indicates that some distinctions betwee

21、none type of elder care and another have little real bearing on how well residents do.44.I)Such findings, which run counter to common sense, have surfaced before. In a multi -statestudy of assisted living, for instance, University of North Carolina researchers found that a host ofvariablesthe facili

22、tys type, size or age; whether a chain owned it; how attractive theneighborhood washad no significant relationship to how the residents fared in terms of illness,mental decline, hospitalizations or mortality. What mattered most was the residents physicalhealth and mental status. What people were lik

23、e when they came in had greater consequencethan what happened once they were there.45.G)But when the researchers plugged in a number of other variables, such differencesdisappeared. It is not the housing type, they found, that creates differences in residentsresponses. “It is the characteristics of

24、the specific environment they are in, combined with theirown personal characteristicshow healthy they feel they are, their age and marital status,” Dr.Robison explained. Whether residents felt involved in the decision to move and how long theyhad lived there also proved significant.Section C46. C) I

25、t can be avoided if human values are translated into their language.47.D) They are ill-bred.48. C) By picking up patterns from massive data on human behavior.49. B) Stop to seek advice from a human being.50. A) Determine what is moral and ethical.51. A) to see whether peoples personality affects the

26、ir life span52. D) They are more likely to get over hardship.53. C) Such personality characteristics as self-discipline have no effect on longevity.54. D) Mothers negative personality characteristics may affect their childrens life span.55. B) Longevity results from a combination of mental and physi

27、cal health.第 4 页四级第二套Section A26.G) growing27.A) dependent28.C) fast29.F) give30.H) launch31.N) successful32.I) policyl33.B) designed34.O) treatments35.E) gainedSection B36.D)As we begin to examine our life, Soupios says, we come to Rule No. 2: Worry only aboutthings that you can control. “The indiv

28、idual who promoted this idea was a Stoic philosopher. Hisname is Epictetus,” he says. “And what the Stoics say in general is simply this: There is a largerplan in life. You are not really going to be able to understand all of the dimensions of this plan.You are not going to be able to control the di

29、mensions of this plan”.37.B)The wisdom of the ancient Greek philosophers is timeless, says Soupios. The philosophyprofessor says it is as relevant today as when it was first written many centuries ago. “There isno expiration (失效) date on wisdom, ” he says. “There is no shelf life on intelligence. I

30、thinkthat things have become very gloomy these days, lots of misunderstanding, misleading cues, a lotof what the ancients would have called sophistry (诡辩). The nice thing about ancient philosophyas offered by the Greeks is that they tended to see life clear and whole, in a way that we tend notto see

31、 life today.”38.F)To have a meaningful, happy life we need friends. But according to Aristotle a student ofPlato and teacher of Alexander the Great most relationships dont qualify as true friendships.“Just because I have a business relationship with an individual and I can profit from thatrelationsh

32、ip, it does not necessarily mean that this person is my friend, ” Soupios says. “Realfriendship is when two individuals share the same soul. It is a beautiful and uncharacteristicallypoetic image that Aristotle offers.”39.A) Is it possible to enjoy a peaceful life in a world that is increasingly cha

33、llenged by threats anduncertainties from wars, terrorism, economic crises and a widespread outbreak of infectiousdiseases? The answer is yes, according to a new book The 10 Golden Rules: Ancient Wisdom fromthe Greek Philosophers on Living a Good Life. The book is co-authored by Long Island Universit

34、ysphilosophy professor Michael Soupios and economics professor Panos Mourdoukoutas.第 5 页40.L)“This is Aesop, the fabulist ( 寓言家), the man of these charming little tales, often told interms of animals and animal relationships,” he says. “I think what Aesop was suggesting is thatwhen you offer a good

35、turn to another human being, one can hope that that good deed willcome back and sort of pay a profit to you, the doer of the good deed. Even if there is no concretebenefit paid in response to your good deed, at the very least, the doer of the good deed has theopportunity to enjoy a kind of spiritual

36、ly enlightened moment.”41.H)“This was the highest and most desirable form of pleasure and happiness for the ancientEpicureans,” Soupios says. “This is something that is very much well worth considering here inthe modern era. I do not think that we spend nearly enough time trying to concentrate onach

37、ieving a sort of calmness, a sort of contentment in a mental and spiritual way, which wasidentified by these people as the highest form of happiness and pleasure.”42.C)Soupios, along with his co-author Panos Mourdoukoutas, developed their 10 golden rules byturning to the men behind that philosophyAr

38、istotle, Socrates, Epictetus and Pythagoras,among others. The first rule examine your lifeis the common thread that runs through theentire book. Soupios says that it is based on Platos observation that the unexamined life is notworth living. “The Greeks are always concerned about boxing themselves i

39、n, in terms ofconvictions (信念),” he says. “So take a step back, switch off the automatic pilot and actuallystop and reflect about things like our priorities, our values, and our relationships.”43.K)Instead, Soupios says, ancient wisdom urges us to do good. Golden Rule No. 10 for a goodlife is that k

40、indness toward others tends to be rewarded.44.B)The wisdom of the ancient Greek philosophers is timeless, says Soupios. The philosophyprofessor says it is as relevant today as when it was first written many centuries ago. “There isno expiration (失效) date on wisdom, ” he says. “There is no shelf life

41、 on intelligence. I thinkthat things have become very gloomy these days, lots of misunderstanding, misleading cues, a lotof what the ancients would have called sophistry (诡辩). The nice thing about ancient philosophyas offered by the Greeks is that they tended to see life clear and whole, in a way th

42、at we tend notto see life today.”45.J)“This is Hesiod, of course, a younger contemporary poet, we believe, with Homer”, Soupiossays. “Hesiod offers an ideawhich you very often find in some of the worlds great religions, inthe Judeo-Christian tradition and in Islam and othersthat in some sense, when

43、you hurtanother human being, you hurt yourself. That damaging other people in your community and inyour life, trashing relationships, results in a kind of self-inflicted (自己招致的) spiritual wound.”Section C46. D) It usually draws different reactions from different age groups.47. A) It does not seem to

44、 create a generational divide.48. B) It helps with their mobility.49. A) The location of their residence.第 6 页50. C) The wealthy.51. C) Their daily routine followed the rhythm of the natural cycle.52. B) It brought family members closer to each other.53. D) Pace of life.54. B) It is varied, abundant

45、 and nutritious.55. A) They enjoyed cooking as well as eating.四级第三套Section A26.M) provide27.A) abandoned28.I) frequent29.L) merely30.C) biased31.G) dependent32.F) dampens33.E) commitment34.N) understandably35.O) unrealisticallySection B36.FIn contrast, the recent surge in world grain prices is trend

46、-driven, making it unlikely toreverse without a reversal in the trends themselves. On the demand side, those trends includethe ongoing addition of more than 70 million people a year, a growing number of people wantingto move up the food chain to consume highly grain-intensive meat products, and the

47、massivediversion (转向) of U.S. grain to the production of bio-fuel.37.KIn response to those restrictions, grain-importing countries are trying to nail downlong-term trade agreements that would lock up future grain supplies. Food-import anxiety is evenleading to new efforts by food-importing countries

48、 to buy or lease farmland in other countries. Inspite of such temporary measures, soaring food prices and spreading hunger in many othercountries are beginning to break down the social order.38.CAs demand for food rises faster than supplies are growing, the resulting food -priceinflation puts severe stress on the governments of many countries. Unable to buy grain

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