2011年GRE备考资料:最析GRE练习60题(1)

  SECTION 1 Time -30 minutes

  38 Questions

  1.A computer program can provide information in ways

  that force students to —— learning instead of being

  merely —— of knowledge.

  (A) shore up …… reservoirs

  (B) accede to …… consumers

  (C) participate in …… recipients

  (D) compensate for…… custodians

  (E) profit from …… beneficiaries

  2. The form and physiology of leaves vary according to

  the —— in which they develop: for example, leaves

  display a wide range of adaptations to different

  degrees of light and moisture.

  (A) relationship

  (B) species

  (C) sequence

  (D) patterns

  (E) environment

  3. One theory about intelligence sees —— as the

  logical structure underlying thinking and insists that

  since animals are mute, they must be —— as well.

  (A) behavior…… inactive

  (B) instinct…… cooperative

  (C) heredity…… thoughtful

  (D) adaptation…… brutal

  (E) language…… mindless

  4. Though —— in her personal life, Edna St. Vincent

  Millay was nonetheless —— about her work, usually

  producing several pages of complicated rhyme in a

  day.

  (A) jaded…… feckless

  (B) verbose…… ascetic

  (C) vain…… humble

  (D) impulsive…… disciplined

  (E) self-assured…… sanguine

  5. The children‘s —— natures were in sharp contrast

  to the even-tempered dispositions of their parents.

  (A) mercurial

  (B) blithe

  (C) phlegmatic

  (D) introverted

  (E) artless

  6. By —— scientific rigor with a quantitative approach,

  researchers in the social sciences may often have ——

  their scope to those narrowly circumscribed topics that

  are well suited to quantitative methods.

  (A) undermining…… diminished

  (B) equating…… enlarged

  (C) vitiating…… expanded

  (D) identifying…… limited

  (E) imbuing…… broadened

  7. As early as the seventeenth century, philosophers

  called attention to the —— character of the issue,

  and their twentieth-century counterparts still approach

  it with ——。

  (A) absorbing…… indifference

  (B) unusual…… composure

  (C) complex…… antipathy

  (D) auspicious…… caution

  (E) problematic…… uneasiness

  8. TRIPOD: CAMERA::

  (A) scaffolding: ceiling

  (B) prop: set

  (C) easel: canvas

  (D) projector: film

  (E) frame: photograph

  9. AQUATIC: WATER::

  (A) cumulus: clouds

  (B) inorganic: elements

  (C) variegated: leaves

  (D) rural: soil

  (E) arboreal: trees

  10. EMOLLIENT: SUPPLENESS::

  (A) unguent: elasticity

  (B) precipitant: absorption

  (C) additive: fusion

  (D) desiccant: dryness

  (E) retardant: permeability

  11. DRAW: DOODLE::

  (A) talk: whisper

  (B) travel: ramble

  (C) run: walk

  (D) calculate: add

  (E) eat: gobble

  12. CONSPICUOUS: SEE:

  (A) repulsive: forget

  (B) prohibited: discount

  (C) deceptive: delude

  (D) impetuous: disregard

  (E) transparent: understand

  13. IMMATURE: DEVELOPED::

  (A) accessible: exposed

  (B) theoretical: conceived

  (C) tangible: identified

  (D) irregular: classified

  (E) incipient: realized

  14. PERSPICACITY: ACUTE::

  (A) adaptability: prescient

  (B) decorum: complacent

  (C) caprice: whimsical

  (D) discretion: literal

  (E) ignorance: pedantic

  15. PLAYFUL: BANTER::

  (A) animated: originality

  (B) exaggerated: hyperbole

  (C) insidious: effrontery

  (D) pompous: irrationality

  (E) taciturn: solemnity

  16. QUARANTINE: CONTAGION::

  (A) blockage: obstacle

  (B) strike: concession

  (C) embargo: commerce

  (D) vaccination: inoculation

  (E) prison: reform

  Influenced by the view of some twentieth-century

  feminists that women’s position within the family is

  one of the central factors determining women‘s social

  position, some historians have underestimated the signi-

  (5) ficance of the woman suffrage movement. These histor-

  ians contend that nineteenth-century suffragism was less

  radical and, hence, less important than, for example, the

  moral reform movement or domestic feminism-two

  nineteenth-century movements in which women strug-

  (10)gled for more power and autonomy within the family.

  True, by emphasizing these struggles, such historians

  have broadened the conventional view of nineteenth-

  century feminism, but they do a historical disservice to

  suffragism. Nineteenth-century feminists and anti-

  (15)feminist alike perceived the suffragists’ demand for

  enfranchisement as the most radical element in women‘s

  protest, in part because suffragists were demanding

  power that was not based on the institution of the

  family, women’s traditional sphere. When evaluating

  (20)nineteenth-century feminism as a social force, contem-

  porary historians should consider the perceptions of

  actual participants in the historical events.

  17.The author asserts that the historians discussed in

  the passage have

  (A) influenced feminist theorists who concentrate on

  the family

  (B) honored the perceptions of the women who

  participated in the women suffrage movement

  (C) treated feminism as a social force rather than as

  an intellectual tradition

  (D) paid little attention to feminist movements

  (E) expanded the conventional view of nineteenth-

  century feminism

  18.The author of the passage asserts that some

  twentieth-century feminists have influenced some

  historians view of the

  (A) significance of the woman suffrage movement

  (B) importance to society of the family as an

  institution

  (C) degree to which feminism changed nineteenth-

  century society

  (D) philosophical traditions on which contemporary

  feminism is based

  (E) public response to domestic feminism in the

  nineteenth century

  19.The author of the passage suggests that which of the

  following was true of nineteenth-century feminists?

  (A) Those who participated in the moral reform

  movement were motivated primarily by a

  desire to reconcile their private lives with their

  public positions.

  (B) Those who advocated domestic feminism,

  although less visible than the suffragists, were

  in some ways the more radical of the two

  groups.

  (C) Those who participated in the woman suffrage

  movement sought social roles for women that

  were not defined by women‘s familial roles.

  (D) Those who advocated domestic feminism

  regarded the gaining of more autonomy within

  the family as a step toward more participation

  in public life.

  (E) Those who participated in the nineteenth-

  century moral reform movement stood midway

  between the positions of domestic feminism

  and suffragism.

  20.The author implies that which of the following is

  true of the historians discussed in the passage?

  (A) They argue that nineteenth-century feminism

  was not as significant a social force as

  twentieth-century feminism has been.

  (B) They rely too greatly on the perceptions of the

  actual participants in the events they study.

  (C)Their assessment of the relative success of

  nineteenth-century domestic feminism does

  not adequately take into account the effects of

  antifeminist rhetoric.

  (D)Their assessment of the significance of

  nineteenth-century suffragism differs

  considerably from that of nineteenth-century

  feminists.

  (E) They devote too much attention to nineteenth-

  century suffragism at the expense of more

  radical movements that emerged shortly after

  the turn of the century.

  Many objects in daily use have clearly been influenced

  by science, but their form and function, their dimensions

  and appearance, were determined by technologists

  artisans, designers, inventors, and engineers——using non-

  (5) scientific modes of thought. Many features and qualities

  of the objects that a technologist thinks about cannot be

  reduced to unambiguous verbal descriptions; they are

  dealt with in the mind by a visual, nonverbal process. In

  the development of Western technology, it has been non-

  (10)verbal thinking, by and large, that has fixed the outlines

  and filled in the details of our material surroundings.

  Pyramids, cathedrals, and rockets exist not because of

  geometry or thermodynamics, but because they were first

  a picture in the minds of those who built them.

  (15) The creative shaping process of a technologist’s mind

  can be seen in nearly every artifact that exists. For exam-

  ple, in designing a diesel engine, a technologist might

  impress individual ways of nonverbal thinking on the

  machine by continually using an intuitive sense of right-

  (20)ness and fitness. What would be the shape of the com-

  bustion chamber? Where should the valves be placed?

  Should it have a long or short piston? Such questions

  have a range of answers that are supplied by experience,

  by physical requirements, by limitations of available

  (25)space, and not least by a sense of form. Some decisions,

  such as wall thickness and pin diameter, may depend on

  scientific calculations, but the nonscientific component

  of design remains primary.

  Design courses, then, should be an essential element

  (30)in engineering curricula. Nonverbal thinking, a central

  mechanism in engineering design, involves perceptions,

  the stock-in-trade of the artist, not the scientist. Because

  perceptive processes are not assumed to entail “hard

  thinking,“ nonverbal thought is sometimes seen as a prim-

  (35)itive stage in the development of cognitive processes and

  inferior to verbal or mathematical thought. But it is para-

  doxical that when the staff of the Historic American

  Engineering Record wished to have drawings made of

  machines and isometric views of industrial processes for

  (40)its historical record of American engineering, the only

  college students with the requisite abilities were not engi-

  neering students, but rather students attending architec-

  tural schools.

  It courses in design, which in a strongly analytical

  (45)engineering curriculum provide the background required

  for practical problem- solving, are not provided, we can

  expect to encounter silly but costly errors occurring in

  advanced engineering systems. For example, early models

  of high-speed railroad cars loaded with sophisticated

  (50)controls were unable to operate in a snowstorm because

  a fan sucked snow into the electrical system. Absurd ran-

  dom failures that plague automatic control systems are

  not merely trivial aberrations; they are a reflection of the

  chaos that results when design is assumed to be primarily

  a problem in mathematics.

  21.In the passage, the author is primarily concerned

  with

  (A) identifying the kinds of thinking that are used

  by technologists

  (B) stressing the importance of nonverbal thinking

  in engineering design

  (C) proposing a new role for nonscientific thinking

  in the development of technology

  (D) contrasting the goals of engineers with those of

  technologists

  (E) criticizing engineering schools for emphasizing

  science in engineering curricula

  22.It can be inferred that the author thinks engineering

  curricula are

  (A) strengthened when they include courses in

  design

  (B) weakened by the substitution of physical

  science courses for courses designed to

  develop mathematical skills

  (C) strong because nonverbal thinking is still

  emphasized by most of the courses

  (D) strong despite the errors that graduates of such

  curricula have made in the development of

  automatic control systems

  (E) strong despite the absence of nonscientific

  modes of thinking

  23.Which of the following statements best illustrates

  the main point of lines 1-28 of the passage?

  (A) When a machine like a rotary engine mal-

  functions, it is the technologist who is best

  equipped to repair it.

  (B) Each component of an automobile-for

  example, the engine or the fuel tank-has a

  shape that has been scientifically determined

  to be best suited to that component‘s function

  (C) A telephone is a complex instrument designed

  by technologists using only nonverbal thought

  (D) The designer of a new refrigerator should

  consider the designs of other refrigerators

  before deciding on its final form.

  (E) The distinctive features of a suspension bridge

  reflect its designer’s conceptualization as well

  as the physical requirements of its site.

  24.Which of the following statements would best serve

  as an introduction to the passage?

  (A) The assumption that the knowledge incorpor-

  ated in technological developments must be

  derived from science ignores the many non-

  scientific decisions made by technologists.

  (B) Analytical thought is no longer a vital com-

  ponent in the success of technological

  development.

  (C) As knowledge of technology has increased, the

  tendency has been to lose sight of the impor-

  tant role played by scientific thought in

  making decisions about form, arrangement,

  and texture.

  (D) A movement in engineering colleges toward

  a technician‘s degree reflects a demand for

  graduates who have the nonverbal reasoning

  ability that was once common among engineers.

  (E) A technologist thinking about a machine,

  reasoning through the successive steps in a

  dynamic process, can actually turn the

  machine over mentally.

  25.The author calls the predicament faced by the

  Historic American Engineering Record “para-

  doxical“ (lines 36-37) most probably because

  (A) the publication needed drawings that its own

  staff could not make

  (B) architectural schools offered but did not require

  engineering design courses for their students

  (C) college students were qualified to make the

  drawings while practicing engineers were not

  (D) the drawings needed were so complicated that

  even students in architectural schools had

  difficulty making them.

  (E) engineering students were not trained to make

  the type of drawings needed to record the

  development of their own discipline

  26.According to the passage, random failures in

  automatic control systems are “not merely trivial

  aberrations“ (lines53) because

  (A) automatic control systems are designed by

  engineers who have little practical experience

  in the field

  (B) the failures are characteristic of systems

  designed by engineers relying too heavily on

  concepts in mathematics

  (C) the failures occur too often to be taken lightly

  (D) designers of automatic control systems have too

  little training in the analysis of mechanical

  difficulties

  (E) designers of automatic control systems need

  more help from scientists who have a better

  understanding of the analytical problems to be

  solved before such systems can work efficiently

  27.The author uses the example of the early models of

  high-speed railroad cars primarily to

  (A) weaken the argument that modern engineering

  systems have major defects because of an

  absence of design courses in engineering

  curricula

  (B) support the thesis that the number of errors in

  modern engineering systems is likely to

  increase

  (C) illustrate the idea that courses in design are the

  most effective means for reducing the cost of

  designing engineering systems

  (D) support the contention that a lack of attention to

  the nonscientific aspects of design results in

  poor conceptualization by engineers

  (E) weaken the proposition that mathematics is a

  necessary part of the study of design

  28.IGNITE:

  (A) amplify

  (B) douse

  (C) obscure

  (D) blemish

  (E) replicate

  29.MUTATE:

  (A) recede

  (B) grow larger

  (C) link together

  (D) remain the same

  (E) decrease in speed

  24.Which of the following statements would best serve

  as an introduction to the passage?

  (A) The assumption that the knowledge incorpor-

  ated in technological developments must be

  derived from science ignores the many non-

  scientific decisions made by technologists.

  (B) Analytical thought is no longer a vital com-

  ponent in the success of technological

  development.

  (C) As knowledge of technology has increased, the

  tendency has been to lose sight of the impor-

  tant role played by scientific thought in

  making decisions about form, arrangement,

  and texture.

  (D) A movement in engineering colleges toward

  a technician’s degree reflects a demand for

  graduates who have the nonverbal reasoning

  ability that was once common among engineers.

  (E) A technologist thinking about a machine,

  reasoning through the successive steps in a

  dynamic process, can actually turn the

  machine over mentally.

  25.The author calls the predicament faced by the

  Historic American Engineering Record “para-

  doxical“ (lines 36-37) most probably because

  (A) the publication needed drawings that its own

  staff could not make

  (B) architectural schools offered but did not require

  engineering design courses for their students

  (C) college students were qualified to make the

  drawings while practicing engineers were not

  (D) the drawings needed were so complicated that

  even students in architectural schools had

  difficulty making them.

  (E) engineering students were not trained to make

  the type of drawings needed to record the

  development of their own discipline

  26.According to the passage, random failures in

  automatic control systems are “not merely trivial

  aberrations“ (lines53) because

  (A) automatic control systems are designed by

  engineers who have little practical experience

  in the field

  (B) the failures are characteristic of systems

  designed by engineers relying too heavily on

  concepts in mathematics

  (C) the failures occur too often to be taken lightly

  (D) designers of automatic control systems have too

  little training in the analysis of mechanical

  difficulties

  (E) designers of automatic control systems need

  more help from scientists who have a better

  understanding of the analytical problems to be

  solved before such systems can work efficiently

  27.The author uses the example of the early models of

  high-speed railroad cars primarily to

  (A) weaken the argument that modern engineering

  systems have major defects because of an

  absence of design courses in engineering

  curricula

  (B) support the thesis that the number of errors in

  modern engineering systems is likely to

  increase

  (C) illustrate the idea that courses in design are the

  most effective means for reducing the cost of

  designing engineering systems

  (D) support the contention that a lack of attention to

  the nonscientific aspects of design results in

  poor conceptualization by engineers

  (E) weaken the proposition that mathematics is a

  necessary part of the study of design

  28.IGNITE:

  (A) amplify

  (B) douse

  (C) obscure

  (D) blemish

  (E) replicate

  29.MUTATE:

  (A) recede

  (B) grow larger

  (C) link together

  (D) remain the same

  (E) decrease in speed

  30.FRAGMENT:  (A) ensue

  (B) revive

  (C) coalesce

  (D) balance

  (E) accommodate

  31.OSTENSIBLE:

  (A) gargantuan

  (B) inauspicious

  (C) intermittent

  (D) perpetual

  (E) inapparent

  32.PROLIXITY:

  (A) ceremoniousness

  (B) flamboyance

  (C) succinctness

  (D) inventiveness

  (E) lamentation

  33.CONCERTED:

  (A) meant to obstruct

  (B) not intended to last

  (C) enthusiastically supported

  (D) run by volunteers

  (E) individually devised

  34.FORBEARANCE:

  (A) fragility

  (B) impatience

  (C) freedom

  (D) nervousness

  (E) tactlessness

  35.COSSETED:

  (A) unspoiled

  (B) irrepressible

  (C) serviceable

  (D) prone to change

  (E) free from prejudice

  36.PROBITY:

  (A) timidity

  (B) sagacity

  (C) impertinence

  (D) uncertainty

  (E) unscrupulousness

  37.ESCHEW:

  (A) habitually indulge in

  (B) take without authorization

  (C) leave unsaid

  (D) boast about

  (E) handle carefully

  38.REDOUBTABLE:

  (A) trustworthy

  (B) unschooled

  (C) credulous

  (D) not formidable

  (E) not certain

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[2011年GRE备考资料:最析GRE练习60题(1)] 文章生成时间为:2014-10-14 06:56:27

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