寄托天下GRE模考活动系列(1010G第三辑_9604) 问题讨论、交流贴
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The quickest way to end a war is to lose it. ----George Orwell
Faith must trample under foot all reason, sense, and understanding.
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Ready? Go!
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SECTION 3Time–30 minutes 38Questions
1.It is assumed that scientists will avoid making ----
claims about the results of theirexperiments because
of the likelihood that they willbe exposed when
other researchers cannot ----their findings.
(A) hypothetical.. evaluate
(B) fraudulent.. duplicate
(C) verifiable.. contradict
(D) radical.. contest
(E) extravagant.. dispute
2.As long as the nuclear family is ---- a larger kinship
group through contiguousresidence on undivided
land, the pressure to ---- andthus to get along with
relatives is strong.
(A) nurtured among.. abstain
(B) excluded from.. compromise
(C) embedded in .. share
(D) scattered throughout.. reject
(E) accepted by .. lead
3.In contrast to the substantial muscular activity
required for inhalation,exhalation is usually a ----
process.
(A) slow
(B) passive
(C) precise
(D) complex
(E) conscious
4.The documentary film about high school life was so
realistic and ---- that feelingsof nostalgia flooded
over the college-age audience.
(A) logical
(B) pitiful
(C) evocative
(D) critical
(E) clinical
5.Although Georgia O'Keeffe is best known for her
affinity with the desertlandscape, her paintings of
urban subjects ---- her longtimeresidency in New
York City.
(A) condemn
(B) obfuscate
(C) attest to
(D) conflict with
(E) contend with
6.Even though the survey was designated as an inter-
disciplinary course, it involvedno real ---- of
subject matter.
(A) encapsulation
(B) organization
(C) synthesis
(D) discussion
(E) verification
7.The failure of many psychotherapists to ---- the
results of pioneering researchcould be due in part to
the specialized nature of such findings:even ----
findings may not be useful.
(A) understand.. baffling
(B) envision.. accessible
(C) utilize.. momentous
(D) reproduce.. duplicated
(E) affirm.. controversial
8.EARPLUG: NOISE::
(A) saw: wood
(B) detonation: explosion
(C) clothes: covering
(D) liquid: flask
(E) shield: impact
9.REVISE: MANUSCRIPT::
(A) retouch: picture
(B) replicate: experiment
(C) repair: hammer
(D) replace: book
(E) restore: masterpiece
10. DAREDEVIL: AUDACITY::
(A) malcontent: dissatisfaction
(B) perfectionist: patience
(C) cynic: indiscretion
(D) melancholic: bitterness
(E) hedonist: ambition
11.CALCIUM: MINERAL::
(A) sugar: carbohydrate
(B) salt: solution
(C) enzyme: food
(D) milk: cheese
(E) calorie: diet
12.DIRGE: GRIEF::
(A) diatribe: uneasiness
(B) parody: cruelty
(C) paean: praise
(D) testimonial: veracity
(E) anthem: seriousness
13.ABANDON: INHIBITION::
(A) ascendancy: effort
(B) prickliness: sensation
(C) surrender: resignation
(D) reversal: instigation
(E) tranquillity: agitation
14.INAUGURATION: OFFICIAL::
(A) instruction: lecturer
(B) election: politician
(C) pilgrimage: devotee
(D) dispute: arbitrator
(E) matriculation: student
15.SCORN: REJECT::
(A) adulate: flatter
(B) conjecture: forecast
(C) pledge: renege
(D) allege: declare
(E) disparage: ignore
16.PROFLIGATE: SOLVENT::
(A) mercurial: committed
(B) caustic: rational
(C) indecisive: confused
(D) cautious: uncertain
(E) practical: seemly
Aspeople age, their cells become less efficient and
less able toreplace damaged components. At the same
time theirtissues stiffen. For example, the lungs and the
heart muscle expand less successfully, the blood vessels
(5) become increasingly rigid, and the ligaments andtendons
tighten.
Few investigatorswould attribute such diverse effects
to a singlecause. Nevertheless, researchers have discov-
ered that aprocess long known to discolor and toughen
(10)foods may also contribute to age- related impairmentof
both cellsand tissues. That process is nonenzymatic
glycosylation,whereby glucose becomes attached to pro-
teinswithout the aid of enzymes. When enzymes attach
glucose toproteins (enzymatic glycosylation), they do so
(15)at a specific site on a specific protein molecule fora
specificpurpose. In contrast, the nonenzymatic process
adds glucosehaphazardly to any of several sites along
anyavailable peptide chain within a protein molecule.
Thisnonenzymatic glycosylation of certain proteins
(20)has been understood by food chemists for decades,
although fewbiologists recognized until recently that the
same stepscould take place in the body. Nonenzymatic
glycosylationbegins when an aldehyde group (CHO) of
glucose andan amino group (NH2) of a protein are
(25)attracted to each other. The molecules combine,forming
what iscalled a Schiff base within the protein. This com-
bination isunstable and quickly rearranges itself into a
stabler, butstill reversible, substance known as an
Amadoriproduct.
(30)
If a givenprotein persists in the body for months or
years, someof its Amadori products slowly dehydrate and
rearrangethemselves yet again, into new glucose-derived
structures.These can combine with various kinds of mol-
ecules toform irreversible structures named advanced
(35)glycosylation end products (AGE's). Most AGE's are
yellowishbrown and fluorescent and have specific spec-
trographicproperties. More important for the body, many
are alsoable to cross-link adjacent proteins, particularly
ones that givestructure to tissues and organs. Although
(40)no one has yet satisfactorily described the origin ofall
such bridgesbetween proteins, many investigators agree
thatextensive cross-linking of proteins probably contrib-
utes to thestiffening and loss of elasticity characteristic
of agingtissues.
(45)
In anattempt to link this process with the develop-
ment ofcataracts (the browning and clouding of the lens
of the eyeas people age), researchers studied the effect
of glucoseon solutions of purified crystallin, the major
protein inthe lens of the eye. Glucose-free solutions
(50) remained clear, but solutions with glucose causedthe
proteins toform clusters, suggesting that the molecules
had becomecross-linked. The clusters diffracted light,
making the solution opaque. Theresearchers also
discovered that the pigmentedcross-links in human
(55)cataractshave the brownish color and fluorescence
characteristic of AGE's. Thesedata suggest that
nonenzymatic glycosylation oflens crystallins may
contribute to cataract formation.
17.Withwhich of the following statements concerning
the stiffening of aging tissueswould the author most
likely agree?
(A) It is caused to a largedegree by an increased
rate of cell multiplication.
(B) It paradoxically both helpsand hinders the
longevity of proteins in thehuman body.
(C) It can be counteracted inpart by increased
ingestion of glucose-free foods.
(D) It is exacerbated byincreased enzymatic
glycosylation.
(E) It probably involves the nonenzymaticglycosyla-
tion of proteins.
18.According to the passage, which of the following
statements is true of the processthat discolors and
toughens foods?
(A) It takes place more slowlythan glycosylation in
the human body.
(B) It requires a higher ratio ofglucose to protein
than glycosylation requires inthe human
body.
(C) It does not require the aidof enzymes to attach
glucose to protein.
(D) It proceeds more quickly whenthe food
proteins have a molecularstructure similar to
that of crystallin proteins.
(E) Its effectiveness dependsheavily on the amount
of environmental moisture.
19.According to the passage, which of the following
is characteristic of enzymaticglycosylation of
proteins?
(A) AGE's are formed after aperiod of months or
years.
(B) Proteins affected by theprocess are made
unstable.
(C) Glucose attachment impairsand stiffens
tissues.
(D) Glucose is attached toproteins for specific
purposes.
(E) Amino groups combine withaldehyde groups
to form Schiff bases.
20.According to the passage, which of the following
statements is true of Amadoriproducts in proteins?
(A) They are more plentiful in adehydrated
environment.
(B) They are created throughenzymatic
glycosylation.
(C) They are composed entirely ofglucose
molecules.
(D) They are derived from Schiffbases.
(E) They are derived from AGE's
21.Which of the following best describes the function
of the third paragraph of thepassage (lines 19-29)?
(A) It offers evidence thatcontradicts the findings
described in the first twoparagraphs.
(B) It presents a specificexample of the process
discussed in the first twoparagraphs.
(C) It explains a problem thatthe researchers
mentionedin the second paragraph have yet to solve. (D) It evaluates the researchdiscoveries described
in the previous paragraph.
(E) It begins a detaileddescription of the process
introduced in the previous twoparagraphs.
22.The passage suggests that which of the following
would be LEAST important indetermining
whether nonenzymaticglycosylation is likely to
have taken place in the proteinsof a particular
tissue?
(A) The likelihood that thetissue has been
exposed to free glucose
(B) The color and spectrographicproperties of
structures within the tissue.
(C) The amount of time that theproteins in the
tissue have persisted in the body
(D) The number of amino groupswithin the
proteins in the tissue
(E) The degree of elasticity thatthe tissue exhibits
23.If the hypothesis stated in lines 56-58 is true, it
can be inferred that thecrystallin proteins in the
lenses of people with cataracts
(A) have increased elasticity
(B) do not respond to enzymaticglycosylation
(C) are more susceptible tostiffening than are
other proteins
(D) are at least several monthsold
(E) respond more acutely thanother proteins to
changes in moisture levels
Writing of the Iroquois nation, Smith hasargued that
throughthe chiefs' council, tribal chiefs traditionally maintainedcomplete control over the political affairs of boththe Iroquois tribal league and the individual tribes (5)
belonging to the league, whereas the solejurisdiction overreligious affairs resided with the shamans. Accordingto Smith, this division was maintained until thelate nineteenth century, when the dissolution of the chiefs'council and the consequent diminishment of the (10) chiefs'political power fostered their increasing involve- mentin religious affairs. However,Smith fails to recognize that this division of powerbetween the tribal chiefs and shamans was not actuallyrooted in Iroquois tradition; rather, it resulted (15) fromthe Iroquois' resettlement on reservations early in thenineteenth century. Prior to resettlement, the chiefs' councilcontrolled only the broad policy of the tribal league;individual tribes had institutions― most impor- tant,the longhouse― to govern their own affairs. In the (20) longhouse,the tribe's chief influenced both political and religious affairs.
24.Theprimary purpose of the passage is to
(A) question the publishedconclusions of a scholar
concerning the history of theIroquois nation
(B) establish the relationshipbetween an earlier
scholar's work and new anthropological
research
(C) summarize scholarlycontroversy concerning an
incident from Iroquois history.
(D) trace two generations ofscholarly opinion
concerning Iroquois socialinstitutions
(E) differentiate betweenIroquois political practices
and Iroquois religious practices
25.It can be inferred that the author of the passage
regards Smith's argument as
(A) provocative and potentiallyuseful, but flawed
by poor organization
(B) eloquently presented, butneedlessly inflam-
matory
(C) accurate in some of itsparticulars, but inac-
curate with regard to animportant point.
(D) historically sound, butoverly detailed and
redundant
(E) persuasive in its time, butnow largely outdated
26.The author of the passage implies that which of the
following occurred after theIroquois were resettled
on reservations early in thenineteenth century?
(A) Chiefs became more involvedin their tribes'
religious affairs.
(B) The authority of the chiefs'council over the
affairs of individual tribesincreased.
(C) The political influence ofthe Iroquois shamans
was diminished.
(D) individual tribes coalescedinto the Iroquois
tribal league.
(E) The longhouse because apolitical rather than a
religious institution.
27.Which of the following best expresses an opinion
presented by the author of thepassage?
(A) Smith has overstated theimportance of the
political role played by Iroquoistribal chiefs
in the nineteenth century.
(B) Smith has overlooked the factthat the Iroquois
rarely allowed their shamans toexercise
political authority.
(C) Smith has failed to explainwhy the chiefs'
council was dissolved late in thenineteenth
century.
(D) Smith has failed toacknowledge the role prior
to the nineteenth century of theIroquois tribal
chiefs in religious affairs.
(E) Smith has failed to recognizethat the very
structure of Iroquois socialinstitutions reflects
religious beliefs.
28.DRONE:
(A) behave bestially
(B) decide deliberately
(C) err intentionally
(D) speak animatedly
(E) plan inefficiently
29.CERTAINTY:
(A) obstinacy
(B) impetuosity
(C) recklessness
(D) indecision
(E) indifference
30.MORIBUND:
(A) fully extended
(B) automatically controlled
(C) loosely connected
(D) completely dispersed
(E) increasingly vital
31.PROFANE:
(A) approach expectantly
(B) punish mildly
(C) appease fully
(D) treat reverently
(E) admonish sternly
32.PERSONABLE:
(A) unrefined
(B) unselfish
(C) unattractive
(D) uncommitted
(E) undistinguished
33.MIRE:
(A) straighten
(B) fracture
(C) extricate
(D) elevate
(E) augment
34.CONCEPTUAL:
(A) proven
(B) effective
(C) manageable
(D) concrete
(E) punctilious
35.SURFEIT:
(A) precise length
(B) delayed increment
(C) obtainable quantity
(D) unascertained limit
(E) insufficient supply
36.TENACITY:
(A) vacillation
(B) servility
(C) temerity
(D) perversity
(E) diversity
37. APPOSITE:
(A) irrelevant
(B) nameless
(C) tentative
(D) disfavored
(E) lavish
38.STYMIE:
(A) ponder
(B) predict
(C) divulge
(D) abet
(E) explain
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STOP 模考的时候别跨区
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SECTION 7Time–30 minutes 38Questions
1.In the nineteenth century, novelists and unsympathetic
travelers portrayed the AmericanWest as a land of
---- adversity, whereas promotersand idealists
created ---- image of a land ofinfinite promise.
(A) lurid.. a mundane
(B) incredible.. an underplayed
(C) dispiriting.. an identical
(D) intriguing.. a luxuriant
(E) unremitting.. a compelling
2.Honeybees tend to be more ---- than earth bees:
the former, unlike the latter,search for food together
and signal their individualfindings to one another.
(A) insular
(B) aggressive
(C) differentiated
(D) mobile
(E) social
3.Joe spoke of superfluous and ---- matters with
exactly the same degree ofintensity, as though for
him serious issues matteredneither more nor less
than did ----.
(A) vital.. trivialities
(B) redundant.. superficialities
(C) important.. necessities
(D) impractical.. outcomes
(E) humdrum.. essentials
4.The value of Davis' sociological research is com-
promised by his unscrupuloustendency to use
materials---- in order tosubstantiate his own
claims, while ---- informationthat points to other
possible conclusions.
(A) haphazardly.. deploying
(B) selectively.. disregarding
(C) cleverly.. weighing
(D) modestly.. refuting
(E) arbitrarily.. emphasizing
5.Once Renaissance painters discovered how to ----
volume and depth, they were ableto replace the
medieval convention of symbolic,two-dimensional
space with the more ---- illusionof actual space.
(A) reverse.. conventional
(B) portray.. abstract
(C) deny.. concrete
(D) adumbrate.. fragmented
(E) render.. realistic
6.He had expected gratitude for his disclosure, but
instead he encountered ----bordering on hostility.
(A) patience
(B) discretion
(C) openness
(D) ineptitude
(E) indifference
7.The diplomat, selected for her demonstrated patience
and skill in conducting suchdelicate negotiations,
---- to make a decision duringthe talks because any
sudden commitment at that timewould have been ----.
(A) resolved.. detrimental
(B) refused.. apropos
(C) declined.. inopportune
(D) struggled.. unconscionable
(E) hesitated.. warranted
8.CONDUCTOR: INSTRUMENTALIST::
(A) director: actor
(B) sculptor: painter
(C) choreographer: composer
(D) virtuoso: amateur
(E) poet: listener
9.QUARRY: ROCK
(A) silt: gravel
(B) sky: rain
(C) cold: ice
(D) mine: ore
(E) jewel: diamond
10.STICKLER: EXACTING::
(A) charlatan: forthright
(B) malcontent: solicitous
(C) misanthrope: expressive
(D) defeatist: resigned
(E) braggart: unassuming
11.WALK: AMBLE::
(A) dream: imagine
(B) talk: chat
(C) swim: float
(D) look: stare
(E) speak: whisper
12.JAZZ: MUSIC::
(A) act: play
(B) variety: vaudeville
(C) portraiture: painting
(D) menu: restaurant
(E) species: biology
13.REPATRIATE: EMIGRATION::
(A) reinstate: election
(B) recall: impeachment
(C) appropriate: taxation
(D) repeal: ratification
(E) appeal: adjudication
14.PLACEBO: INNOCUOUS::
(A) antibiotic: viral
(B) vapor: opaque
(C) salve: unctuous
(D) anesthetic: astringent
(E) vitamin: synthetic
15.DISSEMINATE: INFORMATION::
(A) amend: testimony
(B) analyze: evidence
(C) investigate: crime
(D) prevaricate: confirmation
(E) foment: discontentment
16.VOICE: QUAVER::
(A) pace: quicken
(B) cheeks: dimple
(C) concentration: focus
(D) hand: tremble
(E) eye: blink
MaryBarton, particularly in its early chapters, is a
movingresponse to the suffering of the industrial worker inthe England of the 1840's. What is most impressive about the book is the intense and painstaking effortmade
(5) by theauthor, Elizabeth Gaskell, to convey the experi- enceof everyday life in working-class homes. Her method ispartly documentary in nature: the novel includes such featuresas a carefully annotated reproduction of dialect, theexact details of food prices in an account of a tea (10)party,an itemized description of the furniture of the Bartons'living room, and a transcription (again anno- tated)of the ballad "The Oldham Weaver." The interest ofthis record is considerable, even though the method hasa slightly distancing effect. (15)
As a member of the middle class, Gaskellcould hardlyhelp approaching working-class life as an outside observerand a reporter, and the reader of the novel is alwaysconscious of this fact. But there is genuine imag- inativere-creation in her accounts of the walk in Green (20)HeysFields, of tea at the Bartons' house, and of John Bartonand his friend's discovery of the starving family inthe cellar in the chapter "Poverty and Death." Indeed, fora similarly convincing re-creation of such families' emotionsand responses (which are more crucial than the (25)materialdetails on which the mere reporter is apt to con- centrate),the English novel had to wait 60 years for the earlywriting of D. H. Lawrence. If Gaskell never quite conveys the sense of fullparticipation that would
completelyauthenticate this aspect of Mary Barton,she
(30)stillbrings to these scenes an intuitive recognition of
feelings that has its ownsufficient conviction.
The chapter "Old Alice's History "brilliantly drama-
tizesthe situation of that early generation of workers brought from the villages and thecountryside to the
(35)urban industrial centers. The account of Job Legh,the
weaver and naturalist who isdevoted to the study of
biology,vividly embodies one kind of response to an
urban industrial environment: anaffinity for living
things thathardens, by its very contrast with its environ-
(40)ment,intoa kind of crankiness. The early chapters―
aboutfactory workers walking out in spring into Green
Heys Fields;about Alice Wilson, remembering in her
cellar thetwig- gathering for brooms in the native village
that shewill never again see; about Job Legh, intent on
(45)his impaled insects― capture the characteristicresponses
of ageneration to the new and crushing experience of
industrialism.The other early chapters eloquently por-
tray thedevelopment of the instinctive cooperation with
each other that was alreadybecoming an important
tradition among workers.
17.Whichof the following best describes the author's
attitude toward Gaskell's use ofthe method of
documentary record in Mary Barton?
(A) Uncritical enthusiasm
(B) Unresolved ambivalence
(C) Qualified approval
(D) Resigned acceptance
(E) Mild irritation
18.According to the passage, Mary Bartonand the
early novels of D. H. Lawrenceshare which of the
following?
(A) Depiction of the feelings of working-class families
(B) Documentary objectivity aboutworking-class
circumstances
(C) Richly detailed descriptionof working-class
adjustment to urban life
(D) Imaginatively structuredplots about working-
class characters
(E) Experimental prose stylebased on working-
class dialect
19.Which of the following is most closely analogous to
Job Legh in Mary Barton, as that character is
described in the passage?
(A) An entomologist who collectedbutterflies as a
child
(B) A small-town attorney whosehobby is nature
photography
(C) A young man who leaves hisfamily's dairy
farm to start his own business
(D) A city dweller who raisesexotic plants on the
roof of his apartment building
(E) A union organizer who worksin a textile mill
under dangerous conditions
20.It can be inferred from examples given in the last
paragraph of the passage thatwhich of the following
was part of "the new andcrushing experience of
industrialism" (lines 46-47)for many members of
the English working class in thenineteenth century?
(A) Extortionate food prices
(B) Geographical displacement
(C) Hazardous working conditions
(D) Alienation from fellowworkers
(E) Dissolution of family ties
21.It can be inferred that the author of the passage
believes that Mary Barton might have been an
even better novel if Gaskell had
(A) concentrated on the emotionsof a single
character
(B) made no attempt to re-createexperiences of
which she had no firsthandknowledge
(C) made no attempt to reproduceworking-class
dialects
(D) grown up in an industrialcity
(E) managed to transcend herposition as an outsider
22.Which of the following phrases could best be
substituted for the phrase"this aspect of Mary
Barton" in line 29without changing the meaning
of the passage as a whole?
(A) the material details in anurban working-class
environment
(B) the influence of Mary Barton on lawrence's
early work
(C) the place of Mary Barton in the development
of the English novel
(D) the extent of the poverty andphysical
suffering among England'sindustrial
workers in the 1840's.
(E) the portrayal of theparticular feelings and
responses of working-classcharacters
23.The author of the passage describes MaryBarton
as each of the following EXCEPT
(A) insightful
(B) meticulous
(C) vivid
(D) poignant
(E) lyrical
As of the late 1980's. neither theorists norlarge-
scale computer climate models could accuratelypredict
whether cloudsystems would help or hurt a warming
globe. Somestudies suggested that a four percent
(5)increase in stratocumulus clouds overthe ocean could
compensate for a doubling in atmospheric carbondiox-
ide, preventing a potentially disastrousplanetwide temp-
erature increase. On the other hand, an increasein cirrus
clouds couldincrease global warming.
(10)
That clouds represented the weakest elementin cli-
mate models was illustrated by a study of fourteensuch
models. Comparing climate forecasts for a worldwith
double the current amount of carbon dioxide,researchers
found that the models agreed quite well if cloudswere
(15)notincluded. But when clouds were incorporated, a wide
range of forecasts was produced. With such discrepancies
plaguing the models, scientists could not easilypredict
how quickly the world's climate would change, norcould
they tell whichregions would face dustier droughts or
deadliermonsoons.
24.Theauthor of the passage is primarily concerned
with
(A) confirming a theory
(B) supporting a statement
(C) presenting new information
(D) predicting future discoveries
(E) reconciling discrepantfindings
25. It can be inferred that one reason the fourteenmodels
described in the passage failedto agree was that
(A) they failed to incorporatethe most up-to-date
information about the effect ofclouds on
climate
(B) they were based on faultyinformation about
factors other than clouds thataffect climate.
(C) they were based on differentassumptions about
the overall effects of clouds onclimate
(D) their originators disagreedabout the kinds of
forecasts the models shouldprovide
(E) their originators disagreedabout the factors
other than clouds that should beincluded in
the models
26.It can be inferred that the primary purpose of the
models included in the studydiscussed in the second
paragraph of the passage was to
(A) predict future changes in theworld's climate
(B) predict the effects of cloudsystems on the
world's climate
(C) find a way to prevent adisastrous planetwide
temperature increase
(D) assess the percentage of theEarth's surface
covered by cloud systems
(E) estimate by how much theamount of carbon
dioxide in the Earth's atmospherewill
increase
27.The information in the passage suggests that sci-
entists would have to answerwhich of the following
questions in order to predict theeffect of clouds on
the warming of the globe?
(A) What kinds of cloud systemswill form over the
Earth?
(B) How can cloud systems beencouraged to form
over the ocean?
(C) What are the causes of theprojected planetwide
temperature increase?
(D) What proportion of cloudsystems are currently
composed of cirrus of clouds?
(E) What proportion of the cloudsin the atmosphere
form over land masses?
28.SUSPEND:
(A) force
(B) split
(C) tilt
(D) slide down
(E) let fall
29.CREDULITY:
(A) originality
(B) skepticism
(C) diligence
(D) animation
(E) stoicism
30.MILD:
(A) toxic
(B) uniform
(C) maximal
(D) asymptomatic
(E) acute
31.IMPLEMENT:
(A) distort
(B) foil
(C) overlook
(D) aggravate
(E) misinterpret
32.DIFFIDENCE::
(A) trustworthiness
(B) assertiveness
(C) lack of preparation
(D) resistance to change
(E) willingness to blame
33.BYZANTINE:
(A) symmetrical
(B) variegated
(C) discordant
(D) straightforward
(E) unblemished
34.PROCLIVITY:
(A) confusion
(B) deprivation
(C) obstruction
(D) aversion
(E) hardship
35.PROTRACT:
(A) treat fairly
(B) request hesitantly
(C) take back
(D) cut short
(E) make accurate
36.VAUNTING:
(A) plucky
(B) meek
(C) chaste
(D) cowardly
(E) ardent
37.HALE:
(A) unenthusiastic
(B) staid
(C) odious
(D) infirm
(E) uncharacteristic
38.SEMINAL:
(A) derivative
(B) substantiated
(C) reductive
(D) ambiguous
(E) extremist
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* 模考答案
* SECTION 2. CDAAB BBABD AACCA DDBCC CAEBE AADAE (Q)
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* SECTION 5. BADBA DDACA BCBDD CACDA BBDEA CEEDE (Q)
* SECTION 7. EEABE ECADD BCDCE DCADB EEEBC AAEBE BBDDD BDA (V)
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This is only the 3rd part of our simulate test and,
if you are going through hell, keep going! |