2021-2022年黑龙江省齐齐哈尔市大学英语6级大学英语六级真题(含答案)
学校:________ 班级:________ 姓名:________ 考号:________
一、2.Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning)(20题)
1.
When will Kelly contact you once you have registered for work and offered all your details?
A.When you cha Kelly to ask about your job.
B.When the right job comes up.
西番莲果C.After you give Kelly a private email address.
D.When an employer is interested in your CV.
2.
If the estimates of the U.S. Energy Information Administration about oil rerve in the derts in western Iraq are true, the deposit of oil in Iraq will amount to______ .
3.
China's most famous rearch universities hire mostly tho who received their graduate education in U.K. and U.S. in the recent years.
A.Y B.N C.NG
4.
Rearchers claim that as little as five minutes exposure to common domestic electrical appliance will impair ______.
5.矜羯罗
Canadian media often cite excessive fishing by overas fleets, primarily becau of ______.
6.
If you have a fever, you must stay in bed.
A.Y B.N C.NG
7.
Mitali Dayal thinks the last generation's belief on how to get love ______.
8.Lawrence Bragg, the Cavendish Professor of Experimental Physics, once wrote: "I will try to define what I believe to be lacking in our prent cours for undergraduates. They do not learn to write clearly and briefly, marshalling their Points in due and aesthetically satisfying order, and eliminating inesntials. They are inept at tho turns of phra or happy analogy which throw a flying bridge across a chasm of misunderstanding and make contact between mind and mind. They do not know how to talk to people who have a very different training from them, and how to carry conviction when plans for action of vital importance to them are made." Perhaps this would not matter too much if physical sc
ience students were destined only for the backrooms of scientific laboratories. But recent trends indicate that many science graduates end up in careers far from their initial training. Many a physics graduate is to be found predicting the future market in the Square Mile; many a chemist is hyping it up in public relations. One of the main complaints of tho graduates who leave science is that their cour concentrated on producing students equipped to follow a rearch career, and that the underlying assumption was that such rearch would be carried out in an academic environment. Tho who eventually find themlves elwhere, whether as scientific rearchers or in another capacity, often feel ill equipped for the environment of commerce and industry. The young people often have to write off their last three years' training. At most, all they got from their BSc was a grounding in scientific logic and numeracy. The factual content of their subject was just so much excess baggage.
The academic scientific community which supplied the excess baggage can be heard loudly bemoaning the "loss" of talented young scientists. Yet academic scientists also complain about scientific illiteracy in exactly tho non-science professions, which are no
w welcoming science students.
Perhaps if there were less moaning and greater acceptance of this intellectual osmosis(渗透), the exodus could be turned to everyone's advantage. The refugee graduates ought to be able to think of their scientific knowledge and training as a bonus. It ought to make a positive, constructive contribution to their working lives, and be a source of insight for their colleagues. At the same time, the scientific community should be reaping the benefit of this broad and influential distribution of people who are sympathetic to science.
The reason why this is not the ca is that science graduates are often unable to share their science with their nonscientific colleagues. They are unable to communicate. Instead of building Bragg's "flying bridge" they find themlves erecting barriers whenever called upon to explain scientific concepts in everyday terms. Attitudes in the scientific community are changing. In 1985, the Royal Society published a report on the public understanding of science in Britain. Its conclusions took many members of the scientific community by surpri.
护士图片大全The report advocated incread cooperation with the media, more training in communication skills for scientists and wider science education. It also recommended that communication skills be an integral part of every undergraduate science cour. The respon in British universities has been patchy, to say the least, the reasons are not clear. It may be that nothing more than straightforward inertia is responsible. Being more charitable, academic scientists may simply feel their job is to teach science and that any attempts to delve into the art of communication will be ill received by both students and the outside world. However, there is evidence to suggest the fears are ill founded. For example, the departments of chemical and electrical engineering at Imperial College, London, have for many years offered their students tuition in giving talks. The
A.Y B.N C.NG
9.
Often students are quite ______ that they are moving their heads while reading.
10. We are advid to leave some cash at home to ______.
A.feed the ATMs around our neighborhood regularly
B.pay for the utility and grocery bills
C.cope with sudden and rious situations
D.prove we have the ability to pay for necessities
红楼梦第二回读书笔记11.
生理期丰胸的方法While Sutter is a______, he says his peers may be put off by the price tag.
12.
What is very important in the long-distance training of dogs?
A.To urge dogs run for 2 000 to 3 000 miles every day.
给对象的留言
B.To train the dogs for at least one year.
C.To train the dogs to pull vehicles on dry land.
D.To get the dogs accustomed to running long distances.
13.
eBay is famous mostly for it is a big auction web site, with all kinds of things for bidding:
A.Y B.N C.NG
14.
In paragraph 10 the phra "fill in" is clost in meaning to"______"
袁宏