2023年全國碩士研究生考試考研英語一試題真題(含答案詳解+作文范文)_第1頁
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1、see the Misty cloud that rose from the great Niagara Falls, which is on the south side of the lake. The water flows into the Niagara River and over the falls on its way to the sea. They saw the covered stadium, home of s

2、everal famous basketball teams. As they walked north from the harbour area, Li Daiyu said, “Lin Fang, one of my mother’s old schoolmates, lives here. I should phone her from a telephone booth.” They met Lin Fei around du

3、sk in downtown Chinatown, one of the three in Toronto. Over dinner at a restaurant called The Pink Pearl, the cousins chatted with Lin Fei, who had moved to Canada many years earlier. “We can get good Cantonese food here

4、,” Lin Feitold them, “ because most of the Chinese people here come from South China, especially Hong Kong. It’s too bad you can’t go as far as Ottawa, Canada’s capital. It’s approximately four hundred kilometers northea

5、st of Toronto, so it would take too long.” The train left late that night and arrived in Montreal at dawn the next morning. At the station, people everywhere were speaking French. There were sighs and ads in French, but

6、some of them had English words in smaller letters. “We don't leave until this evening,” said Liu Qian. “Let’s go downtown. Old Montreal is close to the water.” They spent the afternoon in lovely shops and visiting ar

7、tists in their workplaces beside the water. As they sat in a Buffet restaurant looking over the broad St Lawrence River, a young man sat down with them. “Hello, my name is Henri. I’m a student at the university nearby,”

8、he said,” and I was wondering where you are from.” The girls told him they were on a trp across Canada and that they had only on day in Montreal. “That's too bad,” he said. “Montreal is a city with wonderful restaura

9、nts and clubs. Most of us speak both English and French, but the city has French culture and traditions. We love good coffee, good bread and good music.” That night as the transfer was speeding along the St Lawrence Rive

10、r toward the Gulf of St Lawrence and down to the distant east coast, the cousins dreamed of French restaurants and red maple leaves. Iqaluit – the frozen town The reporter, Beth Allen, arrived in a northern community ca

11、lled Iqaluit in Nunavut. Nunavut was created in 1999 as a special area for Inuit people. Its name means “Our Land” in their language. It is in the farthest northeastern area of Canada, north or the Arctic Circle, and is

12、very cold – the average witer temperature in Nunavut is 35 degrees below zero. Beth said, “ I knew it would be could in January, but not this cold! Maybe there is a dog sled that can take me into town.” The quiet man who

13、 had been on the plane with her said, “I’ll take you into town, but I don’t hace a dog sled. Most people only use the dogs for competitions, why are you visiting Iqaluit?” Beth answered, “ I’m writing a story for my news

14、paper about Iqaluit – we’d like to advertise it as a holiday place, but I think it’s too cold.” The man laughed. “My name is Simon and I am Inuit,” he said. “I think it’s too far north here for holidays but more and more

15、 tourists are coming. They like ice fishing and photographing polar bears. I star as far away from polar bears as possible. I like my warm office and my warm house.” “I’m business man. My grandfather would live in ice ho

16、uses when he hunted in winter, but not so many people do that now. the old men used to make one in a few hours. They used to live in skin tents in summer – the tents were easy to move so the people could follow the anima

17、ls.” A few minutes later they arrived in Iqaluit, a town with a population of 6000, on Simon’s snowmobile. It was two o’clock in the afternoon, but it was already dark, and all the houses shone with bright lights. Beth s

18、aid, “ Why is it so dark? It’s the middle of the day!” Simon replied, “It’s dark in the day because we are so far north. You should come in June. The sun shines all night in the north then. That's why it’s called ‘Th

19、e Land of the Midnight Sun’.” There were people on the streets and snowmobiles everywhere. There were even a few dog teams. 必修四 必修四 Unit 1 A STUDENT OF AFRICAN WILDLIFE It is 5:45 am and the sun is just rising over Gombe

20、 National park in east Africa.Following Jane’s way of studying chimps,our group are all going to visit them in the forest.Jane has studied these families of chimps for many years and helped people understand how much the

21、y behave like humans. Watching a familyof chimps waking up is our first activity of the day. This means going back to the place where we left the family sleeping in a tree the night before.Everybody sits and waits in th

22、e shade of the trees while the family begins to wake up and move off.Then we follow as they wonder into the forest.Most of the time,chimps either feed or clean each other as a way of showing love in their family.Jane wor

23、ns us that our grou is going tobe very tired and dirty by the afternoon and she is right.However,the evening makes it all worthwhile.We watch the mother chimpand her babies play in the tree.Then we see them go to sleep t

24、ogether in their nest for the night.We realize that the bond between members of a chimp family is as strong as in a human family. Nobody before Jane fully understood chimp behaviour.She spent years observing and recor

25、ding their daily activities.Since her childhood she had wanted to work with animals in their own environment.However,this was not easy.When she first arrived in Gombe in 1960,it was unusual for a woman to live in a fores

26、t.Only after her mother came to helpher for the first few months was she allowed to begin her project.Her work changed the way people think of chimps.For example,one important thing she discovered was that chimps hunt an

27、d eat meat.Until then every thought chimps only eat fruit and nuts.She also discovered how chimps communicate with each other,and her study of their body language helped her work out their social system. For forty yea

28、rs Jane Goodall has beenoutspoken about making the rest of the world understand and respect the life of these animals.She has argued that animals should be left in the wild and not used for entertainment or advertisement

29、s.She has helped to set up special places where the can live safely.She is leading a busy life but she says: “Once I stop,it all comes crowding in and I remember the chimps in laboratories.It’s terrible.It affacts me wh

30、en I watch the wild chimps.I say to myself,’Aren’t they lucky?’And then I think about small chimps in cages though they have done nothing wrong.Once you have seen that you can never forget…“ She has achieved everything

31、 she wanted to do:working with animals in their own environment,gaining a doctor’s degree and showing that women can live in the forest as men can.She inspires those who want to cheer the achievements of women. WHY

32、see the Misty cloud that rose from the great Niagara Falls, which is on the south side of the lake. The water flows into the Niagara River and over the falls on its way to the sea. They saw the covered stadium, home of s

33、everal famous basketball teams. As they walked north from the harbour area, Li Daiyu said, “Lin Fang, one of my mother’s old schoolmates, lives here. I should phone her from a telephone booth.” They met Lin Fei around du

34、sk in downtown Chinatown, one of the three in Toronto. Over dinner at a restaurant called The Pink Pearl, the cousins chatted with Lin Fei, who had moved to Canada many years earlier. “We can get good Cantonese food here

35、,” Lin Feitold them, “ because most of the Chinese people here come from South China, especially Hong Kong. It’s too bad you can’t go as far as Ottawa, Canada’s capital. It’s approximately four hundred kilometers northea

36、st of Toronto, so it would take too long.” The train left late that night and arrived in Montreal at dawn the next morning. At the station, people everywhere were speaking French. There were sighs and ads in French, but

37、some of them had English words in smaller letters. “We don't leave until this evening,” said Liu Qian. “Let’s go downtown. Old Montreal is close to the water.” They spent the afternoon in lovely shops and visiting ar

38、tists in their workplaces beside the water. As they sat in a Buffet restaurant looking over the broad St Lawrence River, a young man sat down with them. “Hello, my name is Henri. I’m a student at the university nearby,”

39、he said,” and I was wondering where you are from.” The girls told him they were on a trp across Canada and that they had only on day in Montreal. “That's too bad,” he said. “Montreal is a city with wonderful restaura

40、nts and clubs. Most of us speak both English and French, but the city has French culture and traditions. We love good coffee, good bread and good music.” That night as the transfer was speeding along the St Lawrence Rive

41、r toward the Gulf of St Lawrence and down to the distant east coast, the cousins dreamed of French restaurants and red maple leaves. Iqaluit – the frozen town The reporter, Beth Allen, arrived in a northern community ca

42、lled Iqaluit in Nunavut. Nunavut was created in 1999 as a special area for Inuit people. Its name means “Our Land” in their language. It is in the farthest northeastern area of Canada, north or the Arctic Circle, and is

43、very cold – the average witer temperature in Nunavut is 35 degrees below zero. Beth said, “ I knew it would be could in January, but not this cold! Maybe there is a dog sled that can take me into town.” The quiet man who

44、 had been on the plane with her said, “I’ll take you into town, but I don’t hace a dog sled. Most people only use the dogs for competitions, why are you visiting Iqaluit?” Beth answered, “ I’m writing a story for my news

45、paper about Iqaluit – we’d like to advertise it as a holiday place, but I think it’s too cold.” The man laughed. “My name is Simon and I am Inuit,” he said. “I think it’s too far north here for holidays but more and more

46、 tourists are coming. They like ice fishing and photographing polar bears. I star as far away from polar bears as possible. I like my warm office and my warm house.” “I’m business man. My grandfather would live in ice ho

47、uses when he hunted in winter, but not so many people do that now. the old men used to make one in a few hours. They used to live in skin tents in summer – the tents were easy to move so the people could follow the anima

48、ls.” A few minutes later they arrived in Iqaluit, a town with a population of 6000, on Simon’s snowmobile. It was two o’clock in the afternoon, but it was already dark, and all the houses shone with bright lights. Beth s

49、aid, “ Why is it so dark? It’s the middle of the day!” Simon replied, “It’s dark in the day because we are so far north. You should come in June. The sun shines all night in the north then. That's why it’s called ‘Th

50、e Land of the Midnight Sun’.” There were people on the streets and snowmobiles everywhere. There were even a few dog teams. 必修四 必修四 Unit 1 A STUDENT OF AFRICAN WILDLIFE It is 5:45 am and the sun is just rising over Gombe

51、 National park in east Africa.Following Jane’s way of studying chimps,our group are all going to visit them in the forest.Jane has studied these families of chimps for many years and helped people understand how much the

52、y behave like humans. Watching a familyof chimps waking up is our first activity of the day. This means going back to the place where we left the family sleeping in a tree the night before.Everybody sits and waits in th

53、e shade of the trees while the family begins to wake up and move off.Then we follow as they wonder into the forest.Most of the time,chimps either feed or clean each other as a way of showing love in their family.Jane wor

54、ns us that our grou is going tobe very tired and dirty by the afternoon and she is right.However,the evening makes it all worthwhile.We watch the mother chimpand her babies play in the tree.Then we see them go to sleep t

55、ogether in their nest for the night.We realize that the bond between members of a chimp family is as strong as in a human family. Nobody before Jane fully understood chimp behaviour.She spent years observing and recor

56、ding their daily activities.Since her childhood she had wanted to work with animals in their own environment.However,this was not easy.When she first arrived in Gombe in 1960,it was unusual for a woman to live in a fores

57、t.Only after her mother came to helpher for the first few months was she allowed to begin her project.Her work changed the way people think of chimps.For example,one important thing she discovered was that chimps hunt an

58、d eat meat.Until then every thought chimps only eat fruit and nuts.She also discovered how chimps communicate with each other,and her study of their body language helped her work out their social system. For forty yea

59、rs Jane Goodall has beenoutspoken about making the rest of the world understand and respect the life of these animals.She has argued that animals should be left in the wild and not used for entertainment or advertisement

60、s.She has helped to set up special places where the can live safely.She is leading a busy life but she says: “Once I stop,it all comes crowding in and I remember the chimps in laboratories.It’s terrible.It affacts me wh

61、en I watch the wild chimps.I say to myself,’Aren’t they lucky?’And then I think about small chimps in cages though they have done nothing wrong.Once you have seen that you can never forget…“ She has achieved everything

62、 she wanted to do:working with animals in their own environment,gaining a doctor’s degree and showing that women can live in the forest as men can.She inspires those who want to cheer the achievements of women. WHY

63、北京市再生資源回收利用項目 北京市再生資源回收利用項目可行性研究報告 可行性研究報告北京市華京源再生資源回收市場有限公司 北京市華京源再生資源回收市場有限公司2010 2010 年 2see the Misty cloud that rose from the great Niagara Falls, which is on the south side of the lake. The water flows into the Nia

64、gara River and over the falls on its way to the sea. They saw the covered stadium, home of several famous basketball teams. As they walked north from the harbour area, Li Daiyu said, “Lin Fang, one of my mother’s old sch

65、oolmates, lives here. I should phone her from a telephone booth.” They met Lin Fei around dusk in downtown Chinatown, one of the three in Toronto. Over dinner at a restaurant called The Pink Pearl, the cousins chatted wi

66、th Lin Fei, who had moved to Canada many years earlier. “We can get good Cantonese food here,” Lin Feitold them, “ because most of the Chinese people here come from South China, especially Hong Kong. It’s too bad you can

67、’t go as far as Ottawa, Canada’s capital. It’s approximately four hundred kilometers northeast of Toronto, so it would take too long.” The train left late that night and arrived in Montreal at dawn the next morning. At t

68、he station, people everywhere were speaking French. There were sighs and ads in French, but some of them had English words in smaller letters. “We don't leave until this evening,” said Liu Qian. “Let’s go downtown. O

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