2006年职称英语考试理工类(C级)试题及答案
第5部分:补全短文(第46~50题,每题2分,共10分) 下面的短文有5处空白,短文后有6个句子,其中5个取自短文,请根据短文内容将其分别放回原有位置,以恢复文章原貌。 Mind Those Manners on the Subway So, there you are, just sitting there in the subway car, enjoying that book you just bought (46) Or, the person sitting next to you takes out a nail clipper (指甲刀) and begins cutting his or her nails. Annoying? Many of us have to spend some time every day on public transportation (47) So, to make the trip more pleasant, we suggest the following: Let passengers get off the bus or subway car before you can get on 48) Stand away from the doors when they are closing Don't talk loudly on a bus or subway. Chatting loudly with your friends can be annoying to others. (49) Don't think your bags and suitcases (手提箱) deserve a seat of their own. Use a tissue whenever you cough or sneeze (打喷嚏)。 An uncovered sneeze can spread germs (细菌), especially in crowded places. Don't cut your nails or pick your nose on public transportation. Don't read over other people's shoulder (50) It can make people uncomfortable. They might think you're too stingy (小气的) even to buy a newspaper. Or they might think you're judging their behavior A.Don't eat food in your car. 第6部分:完形填空(第51~65题,每题1分,共15分) 下面的短文有15处空白,请根据短文内容为每处空白确定1个最佳选项。 Vibrating Rubber Cellphones Vibrating rubber cellphones could be the next big thing in mobile communications. They allow people to press the phone 1:o transmit vibrations along with their (51) words. According to a research team at the MIT Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the idea will make (52) more fun. Many mobile phones can already vibrate instead of ringing (53) you do not want people to know you are getting a call. But these (54) are too simple for subtle (敏感的) communication, (55) Angela Chang of the lab's Tangible Media Group. “They're either on or off,” she says. But when you hold Chang's rubber cellphone, your fingers and thumb wrap around five (56) speakers. They vibrate (57) your skin around 250 times per second. Beneath these speakers sit pressure sensors (传感器), so you can transmit vibration as well as (58) it. When you squeeze with a finger, a vibration signal is transmitted (59) your caller's corresponding finger, its speed (60) on how hard you squeeze. Chang says that within a few minutes of being given the phones, students were using the vibration feature to (61) emphasis to what they were saying. Over time, people even began to transmit their own kind of ad hoc (特别的)“Morse code”, which they would repeat back to show they were (62) what the other person was saying. Chang thinks “vibralanguages” could function for the same (63) as texting: sometimes people want to communicate (64) without everyone nearby knowing what they're saying. “And (65) actually being able to shake someone's hand when you close a business deal,” she says. 51 A.taken B.mixed C.spoken D.broken 52 A.phoning B.touching C.working D.asking 53 A.since B.where C.though D.when 54 A.vibrations B.instructions C.texts D.callings 55 A.answers B.says C.interrupts D.tells 56 A.loud B.native C.tiny D.large 57 A.on B.above C.over D.against 58 A.using B.turning C.receiving D.sending 59 A.for B.to C.from D.with 60 A.depends B.bases C.puts D.focuses 61 A.change B.add C.switch D.shift 62 A.controlling B.asking C.discussing D.following 63 A.fact B.plan C.reason D.trip 64 A.something B.anything C.nothing D.thing 65 A.look B.imagine C.suppose D.assume |
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