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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章列举了英国正面临的一些问题,并且详细说明了住房成本问题。
1 . Directions: In this section, there is one passages with 10 blanks. You are required to select one word for each blank from a list of choices given in a word bank following the passage. Read the passage through carefully before making your choices. Each choice in the bank is identified by a letter. Please mark the corresponding letter for each item with a single line through the centre. You may not use any of the words in the bank more than once.
A. suburbs             B. ratio                      C. resign                    D. ageing                      E. grappling          
F. inequity             G. mortgage          H. commutes        I. outlandishly        J. departure

On every side, Britain’s politicians are     1     with problems of immense scale and nightmarish complexity. How to manage the     2     from the European Union? How to help a crumbling health service cope with an     3    , weakening population? How to deal with persistent regional deprivation? Yet one national scourge that holds back the economy and poisons politics is readily solvable — politicians just need to be brave enough to act.

That scourge is the cost of housing. The     4     of median house prices to earnings in England hit 7.7 in 2016, its highest recorded level. In the past four decades house prices have grown by more in Britain than in any other G7 country. Home ownership has been falling for more than a decade, after rising for most of the past century. In London housing is     5     dear: before the Brexit vote sent the pound tumbling, it was the priciest city in the world for renters. The cost of housing has knock-on effects across the economy. As people are forced out to the     6    , cities become less dynamic. Workers waste time on marathon, energy-sapping     7    . People from the regions cannot afford to move to cities where they might find work. Businesses cannot clear land to build. It is perhaps no coincidence that Britain’s growing housing mess has coincided with stagnant productivity. All this has fostered a growing sense of     8    . Britons over the age of 65, a fifth of the population, own over 40% of the housing wealth held by owner-occupiers. Youngsters with rich parents can buy their first house thanks to the “Bank of Mum and Dad”. Everyone else must     9     themselves to renting small properties for life, or to continuing to pay off their     10     long after retirement.

2022-04-21更新 | 47次组卷 | 1卷引用:2022届北京大学博雅计划模拟考试英语试题
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A novel way of making computer memories, using bacteria FOR half a century, the       1     of progress in the computer industry has been to do more with less. Moore’s law famously observes that the number of transistors which can be crammed into a given space     2     every 18 months. The amount of data that can be stored has grown at a similar rate. Yet as     3     get smaller, making them gets harder and more expensive. On May 10th Paul Otellini, the boss of Intel, a big American chipmaker, put the price of a new chip factory at around $10 billion. Happily for those that lack Intel’s resources, there may be a cheaper option—namely to mimic Mother Nature, who has been building tiny     4    , in the form of living cells and their components, for billions of years, and has thus got rather good at it. A paper published in Small, a nanotechnology journal, sets out the latest example of the       5    . In it, a group of researchers led by Sarah Staniland at the University of Leeds, in Britain, describe using naturally occurring proteins to make arrays of tiny magnets, similar to those employed to store information in disk drives. The researchers took their     6     from Magnetospirillum magneticum, a bacterium that is sensitive to the Earth’s magnetic field thanks to the presence within its cells of flecks of magnetite, a form of iron oxide. Previous work has isolated the protein that makes these miniature compasses. Using genetic engineering, the team managed to persuade a different bacterium—Escherichia coli, a ubiquitous critter that is a workhorse of biotechnology—to     7     this protein in bulk. Next, they imprinted a block of gold with a microscopic chessboard pattern of chemicals. Half the squares contained anchoring points for the protein. The other half were left untreated as controls. They then dipped the gold into a solution containing the protein, allowing it to bind to the treated squares, and dunked the whole lot into a heated     8     of iron salts. After that, they examined the results with an electron microscope. Sure enough, groups of magnetite grains had materialised on the treated squares, shepherded into place by the bacterial protein. In principle, each of these magnetic domains could store the one or the zero of a bit of information, according to how it was polarised. Getting from there to a real computer memory would be a long road. For a start, the grains of magnetite are not strong enough magnets to make a useful memory, and the size of each domain is huge by modern computing     9    . But Dr Staniland reckons that, with enough tweaking, both of these objections could be dealt with. The     10     of this approach is that it might not be so capital-intensive as building a fab. Growing things does not need as much kit as making them. If the tweaking could be done, therefore, the result might give the word biotechnology a whole new meaning.

2018-12-17更新 | 54次组卷 | 1卷引用:2018北京大学自主招生英语部分试题
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