2022年广东省清远市大学英语6级大学英语六级真题(含答案)

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1、2022年广东省清远市大学英语6级大学英语六级真题(含答案)学校:_ 班级:_ 姓名:_ 考号:_一、2.Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning)(20题)1.The writer proposes to use the same rate for all types of material and for all reading purposes.A.Y B.N C.NG2. According to Mr. de Wahl, why is Joost ignoring the two business models?A.All people

2、 are not fond of simply watching TV.B.They are irrelated with pleasures derived from watching TV.C.They are the same as the practices that TV has long been using.D.Joost wants an innovative business model different from YouTube.3.All the time Bob was thinking of blue jeans market in England and noth

3、ing else.A.Y B.N C.NG4.When is the best time to take the newer SAT IIs American history?A.After several years of study.B.Immediately when you finish the course,C.When you have a large information source.D.Right after a holiday when your mind is refreshed.5.If people want to spend their holidays clim

4、bing the mountains and taking a walk in Wales, they should go to _ .6.Part Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning)Directions: In this part, you will have 15 minutes to go over the passage quickly and answer the questions on Answer Sheet 1.For questions 1-4, markY (for YES) if the statement agr

5、ees with the information given in the passage;N (for NO) if the statement contradicts the information given in the passage;NG (for NOT GIVRN) if the information is not given in the passage.For questions 5-10, complete the sentences with the information given in the passage.Unity and DiversityMany ph

6、ysicists are engaged in the search for a theory of everything. Biologists, smugly, think they have found one already. Organisms that survive long enough to reproduce and are attractive enough to find a mate pass their genes on to the next generation. Those that do not are evolutionary cul-de-sacs. B

7、ut the detailshow you go on from the basic principles of evolution to explain large-scale patterns in biologyare more divisive. Scientific camps form. Their leaders step onto soap boxes. And only rarely do people concede that their own theories and those of their opponents are not always mutually ex

8、clusive.Since the early 1970s, the two grandest patterns of lifehow species are arranged in space and how they are arranged in timehave divided their opposing camps quite neatly. Those who squabble over space disagree about why there are more species in the tropics than anywhere else. To them, the t

9、ropics are either where species are more often born (cradles of diversity) or where they tend not to die (museums of diversity). By contrast, biologists concerned with patterns in time tenaciously debate whether new species come into being in a smooth and gradual manner, or whether the history of li

10、fe is actually a series of bursts of change that are interspersed with periods when nothing much happens.Two papers just published in Science have cast light on these questions, and their findings, if not necessarily resulting in compromise, do show the value of taking leaves out of other peoples bo

11、oks. The space biologists have looked into time, namely the fossil record over the past 11m years. Meanwhile the time biologists have looked at the here and now and found evidence in living species for periods of rapid evolution in their genes.Biological SpacetimeThe space biologists have the advant

12、age that they agree about the pattern they are trying to explain. Almost all groups of life that have been studiedbe they fungi, plants, vertebrates or invertebrates, and no matter whether they occur in forests, streams or seasseem to have more species the closer they are to the equator.To decide wh

13、ether the tropics are a cradle or a museum, though, involves picking this pattern apart with statistics. And statistics work best when you have more than one sample. That is the reason for reaching into the past.David Jablonski, of the University of Chicago, and his colleagues created their samples

14、by dividing the past 11m years into three periods. For simplicitys sake, they also chopped the Earths surface into two: tropical regions and everywhere else, which they called the extratropics.To avoid sampling bias, they restricted their analysis to one group of animalsthe bivalve molluscsthat foss

15、ilise well. This allowed them to follow 431 lineages of marine bivalve through the course of geological time. The vast majority of these lineages appear in the tropics and then spread into the extratropics, in other words, the tropics do, indeed, act as cradles of biodiversity.In fact, the pattern D

16、r Jablonski reports is probably more marked thanA.Y B.N C.NG7.Conflict is regarded as a marker of _ by collectivists while accepted as unavoidable by individualists.8. How is sustainable public space developed in Serenbe?A.People plant trees and make water flow in that space.B.Citizens can grow trees freely in

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