考研英语阅读理解精选试题及答案解析
Unit1
Part A
Directions: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1. (40 points)
Text 1
It’s plain common n? D the more happiness you feel, the less unhappiness you experience. It’s plain common n, but it’s not true. Recent rearch reveals that happiness and unhappiness are not really two sides of the same emotion. They are two distinct feelings that, coexisting, ri and fall independently.
People might think that the higher a person’s level of unhappiness, the lower their level of happiness and vice versa. But when rearchers measure people’s average levels of happiness and unhappiness, they often find little relationship between the two.
The recognition that feelings of happiness and unhappiness can co-exist much like love and hate in a clo relationship may offer valuable clues on how to lead a happier life. It suggests, for example, that changing or avoiding things that make you mirable may well make you less mirable, but probably won’t make you any happier. That advice is backed up by an extraordinary ries of studies which indicate that a genetic predisposition for unhappiness may run in certain families. On the other hand, rearchers have found happiness doesn’t appear to be anyone’s heritage. The capacity for joy is a talent you develop largely for yourlf.
Psychologists have ttled on a working definition of the feeling ?D happiness is a n of subjective well-being. They have also begun to find out who’s happy, who isn’t and why. To date, the rearch hasn’t found a simple formula for a happy life, but it has discovered some of the actions and attitudes that em to bring people clor to that most desired of feelings.
Why is unhappiness less influenced by environment? When we are happy, we are more
responsive to people and keep up connections better than when we are feeling sad. This doesn’t mean, however, that some people are born to be sad and that’s that. Genes may predispo one to unhappiness, but disposition can be influenced by personal choice. You can increa your happiness through your own actions.
1. According to the text, it is true that
[A] unhappiness is more inherited than affected by environment.
[B] happiness and unhappiness are mutually conditional.
[C] unhappiness is subject to external more than internal factors.
[D] happiness is an uncontrollable subjective feeling.
2. The author argues that one can achieve happiness by
[A] maintaining it at an average level.
[B] escaping mirable occurrences in life.
[C] pursuing it with one’s painstaking effort.
[D] realizing its coexistence with unhappiness.
3. The phra “To date” (Par.4) can be best replaced by
[A] As a result.[B] In addition.[C] At prent.[D] Until now.
4. What do you think the author believes about happiness and unhappiness?
[A] One feels unhappy owing to his mirable origin.
[B] They are independent but existing concurrently
[C] One feels happy by participating in more activities.
[D] They are actions and attitudes taken by human beings.
5. The ntence “That’s that” (Par. 5) probably means: Some people are born to be sad
[A] and the situation cannot be altered.
[B] and happiness remains inaccessible.
[C] but they don’t think much about it.
[D] but they remain unconscious of it.
Text 2
The legal limit for driving after drinking alcohol is 80 milligrams of alcohol in 100 millilitres of blood, when tested. But there is no sure way of telling how much you can drink before you reach this limit. It varies with each person depending on your weight, your x, if you’ve just eaten and what sort of drinks you’ve had. Some people might reach their limit after only about three standard drinks.
In fact, your driving ability can be affected by just one or two drinks. Even if you’re below the legal limit, you could still be taken to court if a police officer thinks your driving has been affected by alcohol.
It takes about an hour for the body to get rid of the alcohol in one standard drink. So, if you have a heavy drinking in the evening you might find that your driving ability is still affected the next morning, or you could even find that you’re still over the legal limit. In addition, if you’ve had a few drinks at lunchtime, another one or two drinks in the early evening may well put you over the legal limit.
In a test with professional drivers, the more alcoholic drinks they had had, the more certain they were that they could drive a test cour through a t of and the less able they were to do it!
So the only way to be sure you’re safe is not to drink at all.
Alcohol is a major cau of road traffic accidents. One in three of the drivers killed in road accidents have levels of alcohol which are over the legal limit, and road accidents after drinking are the biggest cau of death among young men. More than half of the people stopped by the police to take a breath test have a blood alcohol concentration of more than twice the legal limit.