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黑龙江学位英语考试强化训练题

[10-16 11:23:24]   来源:http://www.xuehuiba.com  学位英语   阅读:8676
概要: Part III. Reading Comprehension (40 points; 55 minutes) Section 1 Directions: Each of the following three passages is followed by some questions. For each question there are four choices. Choose the best answer to each question. Then blacken the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet. Passage One Questions 41 to 45 are based on the following passage. Banks are ordinarily prepared to pay out all accounts; they rely on depositors not to
黑龙江学位英语考试强化训练题,标签:学位英语考试网:学位英语成绩查询与学位英语报名时间,http://www.xuehuiba.com

    Part III. Reading Comprehension (40 points; 55 minutes)

    Section 1

    Directions: Each of the following three passages is followed by some questions. For each question there are four choices. Choose the best answer to each question. Then blacken the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet.

    Passage One

    Questions 41 to 45 are based on the following passage.

    Banks are ordinarily prepared to pay out all accounts; they rely on depositors not to demand payment all at the same time. If depositors should come to fear that a bank is not sound, that it cannot pay off its depositors, then that fear might cause all the depositors to appear on the same day. If they did, the bank could not pay all the accounts. However, if they did not all appear at once, then there would always be funds to pay those who wanted their money when they wanted it. Mrs. Elsie Vaught has told us of a terrifying bank run that she experienced. One day in December of 1925 several banks failed to open in a city where Mrs. Vaught lived. The other banks anticipated a run the next day, and so the officers of the bank in which Mrs. Vaught worked as a teller had enough funds in hand to pay off as many depositors as might apply. The officers simply instructed the tellers to pay on demand. Next morning a crowd gathered in the bank and on the sidewalk outside. The length of the line convinced many that the bank could not possibly pay off everyone. People began to push and then to fight for places near the tellers' windows. Clothing was torn and limbs were broken, but the jam continued for hours. The power of the panic atmosphere is evident in the fact that two tellers, though they knew that the bank was sound and could pay out all depositors, nevertheless withdrew the funds in their own accounts. Mrs. Vaught says that she had difficulty restraining herself from doing the same.

    41. A bank run occurs when __________.
    A. a bank is closed for one or more days
    B. too many depositors attempt to draw out their money at one time
    C. there is not enough money to pay all of its depositors at one time
    D. employees of a bank take their own funds out of the bank

    42. The tellers in Mrs. Vaught's bank were told to __________.
    A. explain why they could not pay out all deposits
    B. pay out deposits as requested
    C. assure customers that the bank was sound
    D. pay out money as slowly as possible

    43. The essential cause of a run on a bank is __________.
    A. loss of confidence   B. lack of sufficient funds
    C. crowds of people    D. inefficient tellers

    44. Which of the following did Mrs. Vaught say?
    A. She knew that the bank was not sound.
    B. She feared that too many withdrawals would close the bank.
    C. She was not able to draw out her money.
    D. She was tempted to draw out her money.

    45. According to the passage, the actions of the customers of Mrs. Vaught's bank were influenced chiefly by the __________.
    A. ease with which they could obtain their money
    B. confidence demonstrated by other customers of the bank
    C. confidence that Mrs. Vaught demonstrated
    D. failure of several other banks to open

    Passage Two

    Questions 46 to 50 are based on the following passage.

    Gravity holds us so dose to the Earth's surface that nobody can jump more than a few feet into the air without the force of gravity pulling him down. It takes a powerful engine to keep an airplane up in the air. If you throw a ball upwards as hard as you can, you will notice that it travels in a curved path before it comes back to the ground. If the Earth had no gravity, the ball, instead of traveling in a curve, would move away in a straight line; in fact, it would never come back to the ground. If the Earth were to lose its pull of gravity, we should all fly off it as it spins round in space. The Earth has a strong pull, but modem rockets going out into space are able to escape from the gravity, because they travel so quickly. With the ball thrown into the air, the height reached by the ball depends upon how hard it is thrown. The greater the starting-speed, the higher the ball will go. If it could be thrown so that it traveled fast enough, the ball would escape into space and never come back. Nobody can throw a ball as fast at this, but powerful rocket engines can send spaceships away from the Earth at such a speed that the Earth's gravity is not able to pull them back. This is how we can now send rockets to the Moon.

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