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考研英语一2023年高陵县预测试卷Section I Use of EnglishDirections:Read the following text. Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark A, B, C or D on the ANSWER SHEET. (10 points)The Sweetest ThingWhen I was ten, I was crazy about candy. Whenever in our small-town 1 with my mom, I would run my fingers through my favorite candy on the shelf. Once there, thinking about all things sweet, I noticed a man a few feet away pushing buttons on the ATM machine. Dressed in a suit, he seemed to be late for something, 2 waiting for his cash to appear. The machine made a noise, and he immediately 3 a pile of bills and headed out. Curiously, I walked over to the ATM, where I started pressing the buttons as if knowing the 4 . Then I looked into the bottom of the machine. There I saw it: a beautiful, crisp $20 bill! 5 I wanted to believe my magic made the cash appear, I knew the man in the suit must have left it behind.I held the money in my hand, staring at the number “20” and feeling 6 than I ever had. I thought about slipping the money into my pocket. No one would know, but it didnt feel 7 . I knew it didnt belong to me. I had to find its owner and give it back! So I told my mom what had happened. “Well look for him.” she said kindly. We rushed out and found him stepping into his car in the parking lot! We 8 him and asked whether he had left money at the cash machine. “Let me 9 ,” he said, pulling out his wallet and bills. “Twenty, forty, eightyOh! Youre right,” he said with surprise, “Im 10 a $20 bill.”“Here you go,” I said, smiling with pride, as if I was a(n) 11 who had solved a mystery. “Thank you so much,” he said, bending down and shaking my hand. My heart 12 . Before saying goodbye, he asked my mom for my name and 13 . “I want to send your daughter a thank-you card,” he said. On my way home, my 14 was racing. Twenty dollars. What could I have done with it? I bet I could have bought a puppy or every single candy bar in town! But now 15 of that would happen. Yet I knew I had done the right thing. A few weeks later, I got a box with a note. I ripped it open to find packages of candy. “Dear Felice, Thank you very much for 16 my $20. You are a great girl, and I appreciate your 17 . I hope you enjoy this candy. Best Wishes, Tom.” Tom included his business card. It turned out he was vice-president for the candy company. The candy tasted sweet, each 18 reminding me that what I had done mattered. Although my honesty wouldnt always be 19 with candy, it would make a difference to someone. And that was the 20 part of all.1、Aschool Bchurch Cstore Dbank2、Aangrily Bexcitedly Chopefully Danxiously3、Acovered Bseized Chanded Dposted4、Amachine Bassistant Cman Dpassword5、AThough BSince COnce DUntil6、Asmarter Bstronger Cprettier Dricher7、Aright Bgood Cfair Deasy8、Acaught Bapproached Cguided Dsearched9、Atry Bthink Ccheck Dguess10、Asparing Bseeking Cmissing Dchanging11、Aengineer Bdetective Cmanager Ddesigner12、Ahurt Bsank Cswelled Djumped13、Aaddress Bage Chabit Dbirthday14、Acar Bmemory Ctime Dmind15、Aboth Bnone Csome Deither16、Areturning Bremembering Ckeeping Dlending17、Aloyalty Bdevotion Chonesty Dbravery18、Adollar Bbite Cproduct Dchoice19、Amarked Breplaced Cshared Drewarded20、Asweetest Bhardest Cfreshest DheaviestSection II Reading ComprehensionPart ADirections:Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on the ANSWER SHEET. (40 points)Text 1Microsoft has developed a new smartphone app that interprets eye signals and translates them into letters, allowing people with ALS(渐冻症)to communicate with others from a phone.The GazeSpeak app combines a smartphones camera with artificial intelligence to recognize eye movements in real time and convert them into letters, words and sentences.For people suffering from ALS also known as motor neurone(神经元)disease, eye movement can be the only way to communicate. “Current eye-tracking input systems for people with ALS or other motor disabilities are expensive, not constant under sunlight, and require frequent readjustment and considerable, relatively fixed systems,” said Xiaoyi Zhang, a researcher at Microsoft who developed the technology.“To reduce the drawbackswe created GazeSpeak, an eye-gesture communication system running on a smartphone, and is designed to be low-cost, constant, portable and easy to learn.”The app is used by the listener by pointing their smartphone at the speaker. A chart stuck to the back of the smartphone is then used by the speaker to determine w
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