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GRE逻辑阅读暗示类infer题型思路技巧讲解

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GRE逻辑阅读暗示类infer题型思路技巧讲解,快来一起学习一下吧,下面小编就和大家分享,来欣赏一下吧。

GRE逻辑阅读暗示类infer题型思路技巧讲解

GRE阅读推理题infer介绍

首先小编从GRE阅读Infer题的出题形式和频率角度来为大家做简单介绍:

1. 推理Infer题提问方式汇总

Infer题的常见出题形式有以下三种,分别是:

It can be inferred from the passage that...

The passage/author suggests that...

The passage/author implies that...

2. Infer题是高频题吗?

Infer题作为GRE逻辑阅读的主力题型,其出现频率还是相当高的,根据相关统计,在近几年的GRE逻辑阅读题目中,至少有30%的题目为Infer题,是逻辑推理中的高频常见题型。考虑到GRE逻辑阅读在每次考试中至少会出现2-3篇,因此Infer题可以说是几乎每场考试都必然会出现的老面孔。

GRE阅读推理infer题怎么做?

既然Infer题出现频率这么高,考生自然就需要掌握一些迅速有效答题的解题思路和应对技巧。小编为大家总结了3个最为实用的思路技巧,分别是:

1. 以绝对事实为第一判断标准

对于GRE阅读Infer题来说,解题最关键的步骤就是要找到文章中的绝对事实。所谓绝对事实,就是根据文章本身内容可以得出的不容置疑辩驳的信息。这部分信息本身没有任何漏洞和问题,可以说是文章中逻辑成立的基础所在。这里要特别提醒考生的一点就是,切忌脑补,千万不要根据文章内容自己想当然的加上一些结论。哪怕这些结论看似再正确,只要不是文章里提到的内容,那么就很有可能是错误的。GRE阅读错误选项的一个常见形式就是未提及无关选项。

举例来说,假设一篇文章讲的是作者最喜欢的宠物是猫。那么最喜欢猫就是绝对事实。根据这个事实,大家可能会得出作者养了一只猫,或者很喜欢和猫玩,又或者如果要在猫和其它宠物之间做选择,作者肯定会选猫。而实际上,这些结论都是大家自己根据事实脑补出来的,文章中并没有提到。在解答GRE逻辑阅读的Infer题时,这些建立在常识性推理而非事实之上的结论往往就是错误的。

2. 不要牵涉个人主观看法和认知

对大部分考生来说,GRE文章中最难理解的往往是涉及科学技术等学术类内容的文章。缺乏专业背景或者关注度的考生很容易被这些高大上的内容绕晕,尝试着去理解其含义却反而更加看不懂题目。实际上,我们始终都需要明确的一点是,我们是在做逻辑题,而不是来学科学知识。因此,只要能推论出A到B,B到C这样的逻辑关系,就足够我们解决题目了,至于那些复杂晦涩的科学原理和知识,大家只要做最低限度的阅读即可,不需要浪费太多时间去搞懂和理解。

3. 从动词谓语部分理清逻辑关系

GRE语文部分,无论是填空、阅读还是逻辑,都会在题目中使用许多结构复杂语法高深的长难句式。这些句式本身就是为了干扰大家阅读和理解题目而存在的。逻辑阅读中同样存在大量长难句。这给本身就需要消耗大量脑力的逻辑题更增添了额外难度。因此,考生在面对Infer题时,首先要做的就是整理逻辑链,而应对长难句最直接的做法是先找到句子主谓语,明确文章的基本含义,然后再把那些额外的句子成分加上去逐步理解。否则一句话要读好几遍才能看懂,无形中就会浪费掉大量的思考和解题时间。更不用说去考虑逻辑关系了。

以上就是关于GRE阅读高频难点题型暗示推理题的简单介绍和应对技巧分享。大家如果还对这类题目觉得缺乏做对的自信,那么不妨从本文开始学习解题思路技巧,希望能够给大家提供一些参考和帮助。

GRE阅读练习每日一篇

Hydrogeology is a science dealing with the properties, distribution, and circulation of water on the surface of the land, in the soil and underlying rocks, and in the atmosphere. The hydrologic cycle, a major topic in this science, is the complete cycle of phenomena through which water passes, beginning as atmospheric water vapor, passing into liquid and solid form as precipitation, thence along and into the ground surface, and finally again returning to the form of atmospheric water vapor by means of evaporation and transpiration.

The term “geohydrology” is sometimes erroneously used as a synonym for “hydrogeology.” Geohydrology is concerned with underground water. There are many formations that contain water but are not part of the hydrologic cycle because of geologic changes that have isolated them underground. These systems are properly termed geohydrologic but not hydrogeologic. Only when a system possesses natural or artificial boundaries that associate the water within it with the hydrologic cycle may the entire system properly be termed hydrogeologic.

17. The author’s primary purpose is most probably to

(A) present a hypothesis

(B) refute an argument

(C) correct a misconception

(D) predict an occurrence

(E) describe an enigma

18. It can be inferred that which of the following is most likely to be the subject of study by a geohydrologist?

(A) Soft, porous rock being worn away by a waterfall

(B) Water depositing minerals on the banks of a gorge through which the water runs

(C) The trapping of water in a sealed underground rock cavern through the action of an earthquake

(D) Water becoming unfit to drink through the release of pollutants into it from a manufacturing plant

(E) The changing course of a river channel as the action of the water wears away the rocks past which the river flows

19. The author refers to “many formations” (line 16) primarily in order to

(A) clarify a distinction

(B) introduce a subject

(C) draw an analogy

(D) emphasize a similarity

(E) resolve a conflict

The historian Frederick J. Turner wrote in the 1890’s that the agrarian discontent that had been developing steadily in the United States since about 1870 had been precipitated by the closing of the internal frontier—that is, the depletion of available new land needed for further expansion of the American farming system. Not only was Turner’s thesis influential at the time, it was later adopted and elaborated by other scholars, such as John D. Hicks in The Populist Revolt (1931). Actually, however, new lands were taken up for farming in the United States throughout and beyond the nineteenth century. In the 1890’s, when agrarian discontent had become most acute, 1,100,000 new farms were settled, which was 500,000 more than had been settled during the previous decade. After 1890, under the terms of the Homestead Act and its successors, more new land was taken up for farming than had been taken up for this purpose in the United States up until that time. It is true that a high proportion of the newly farmed land was suitable only for grazing and dry farming, but agricultural practices had become sufficiently advanced to make it possible to increase the profitability of farming by utilizing even these relatively barren lands.

The emphasis given by both scholars and statesmen to the presumed disappearance of the American frontier helped to obscure the great importance of changes in the conditions and consequences of international trade that occurred during the second half of the nineteenth century. In 1869 the Suez Canal was opened and the first transcontinental railroad in the United States was completed. An extensive network of telegraph and telephone communications was spun: Europe was connected by submarine cable with the United States in 1866 and with South America in 1874. By about 1870 improvements in agricultural technology made possible the full exploitation of areas that were most suitable for extensive farming (extensive farming: 粗放农作) on a mechanized basis. Huge tracts of land were being settled and farmed in Argentina, Australia, Canada, and in the American West, and these areas were joined with one another and with the countries of Europe into an interdependent market system. As a consequence, agrarian depressions no longer were local or national in scope, and they struck several nations whose internal frontiers had not vanished or were not about to vanish. Between the early 1870’s and the 1890’s, the mounting agrarian discontent in America paralleled the almost uninterrupted decline in the prices of American agricultural products on foreign markets. Those staple-growing farmers in the United States who exhibited the greatest discontent were those who had become most dependent on foreign markets for the sale of their products. Insofar as (to the extent or degree that) Americans had been deterred from taking up new land for farming, it was because market conditions had made this period a perilous time in which to do so.

20. The author is primarily concerned with

(A) showing that a certain interpretation is better supported by the evidence than is an alternative explanation

(B) developing an alternative interpretation by using sources of evidence that formerly had been unavailable

(C) questioning the accuracy of the evidence that most scholars have used to counter the author’s own interpretation

(D) reviewing the evidence that formerly had been thought to obscure a valid interpretation

(E) presenting evidence in support of a controversial version of an earlier interpretation

21. According to the author, changes in the conditions of international trade resulted in an

(A) underestimation of the amount of new land that was being famed in the United States

(B) underutilization of relatively small but rich plots of land

(C) overexpansion of the world transportation network for shipping agricultural products

(D) extension of agrarian depressions beyond national boundaries

(E) emphasis on the importance of market forces in determining the prices of agricultural products

22. The author implies that the change in the state of the American farmer’s morale during the latter part of the nineteenth century was traceable to the American farmer’s increasing perception that the

(A) costs of cultivating the land were prohibitive within the United States

(B) development of the first transcontinental railroad in the United States occurred at the expense of the American farmer

(C) American farming system was about to run out of the new farmland that was required for its expansion

(D) prices of American agricultural products were deteriorating especially rapidly on domestic markets

(E) proceeds from the sales of American agricultural products on foreign markets were unsatisfactory

23. According to the passage, which of the following occurred prior to 1890?

(A) Frederick J. Turner’s thesis regarding the American frontier became influential.

(B) The Homestead Act led to an increase in the amount of newly farmed land in the United States.

(C) The manufacturers of technologically advanced agricultural machinery rapidly increased their marketing efforts.

(D) Direct lines of communication were constructed between the United States and South America.

(E) Technological advances made it fruitful to farm extensively on a mechanized basis.

24. The author implies that, after certain territories and countries had been joined into an interdependent market system in the nineteenth century, agrarian depressions within that system

(A) spread to several nations, excluding those in which the internal frontier remained open

(B) manifested themselves in several nations, including those in which new land remained available for farming

(C) slowed down the pace of new technological developments in international communications and transportation

(D) affected the local and national prices of the nonagricultural products of several nations

(E) encouraged several nations to sell more of their agricultural products on foreign markets

25. The author provides information concerning newly farmed lands in the United States (lines 11-27) as evidence in direct support of which of the following?

(A) A proposal by Frederick J. Turner that was later disputed by John D. Hicks

(B) An elaboration by John D. Hicks of a thesis that formerly had been questioned by Frederick J. Turner

(C) The established view that was disputed by those scholars who adopted the thesis of Frederick J. Turner

(D) The thesis that important changes occurred in the nature of international trade during the second half of the nineteenth century

(E) The view that the American frontier did not become closed during the nineteenth century or soon thereafter

26. The author implies that the cause of the agrarian discontent was

(A) masked by the vagueness of the official records on newly settled farms

(B) overshadowed by disputes on the reliability of the existing historical evidence

(C) misidentified as a result of influential but erroneous theorizing

(D) overlooked because of a preoccupation with market conditions

(E) undetected because visible indications of the cause occurred so gradually and sporadically

27. The author’s argument implies that, compared to the yearly price changes that actually occurred on foreign agricultural markets during the 1880’s, American farmers would have most preferred yearly price changes that were

(A) much smaller and in the same direction

(B) much smaller but in the opposite direction

(C) slightly smaller and in the same direction

(D) similar in size but in the opposite direction

(E) slightly greater and in the same direction

答案:17-27:CCAADEEBECD

新GRE阅读长难句中译英练习

61.But,for a small group of students, professional training might be the way to go since well-developed skills, all other factors being equal, can be the difference between having a job and not.

62. Declaring that he was opposed to using this unusual animal husbandry technique to clone humans, he ordered that federal funds not be used for such an experiment-although no one had proposed to do so--and asked an independent panel of experts chaired by Princeton President Harold Shapiro to report back to the White House in 90 days with recommendations for a national policy on human cloning.

63. In a draft preface to the recommendations, discussed at the 17 May meeting, Shapiro suggested that the panel had found a broad consensus that it would be "morally unacceptable to attempt to create a human child by adult nuclear cloning".

64. Because current federal law already forbids the use of federal funds to create embryos (the earliest stage of human offspring before birth) for research or to knowingly endanger an embryo's life, NBAC will remain silent on embryo research.

65. If experiments are planned and carried out according to plan as faithfully as the reports in the science journals indicate, then it is perfectly logical for management to expect research to produce results measurable in dollars and cents.

61.[参考译文]但是,对一个小部分学生来说,职业教育也是条可取的路径。因为在其他因素相同的情况下,技能的娴熟是得到工作与否的关键。

62.[参考译文]他宣布自己反对使用这种非同寻常的畜牧繁殖技术来克隆人类,并下令。不准联邦政府基金用于做此类试验--尽管还没有人建议这么做--他还请一个以普林斯顿大学校长哈罗得·夏皮罗为首的独立的专家组在90天内向白宫汇报关于制定有关克隆人的国家政策的建议。

63.参考译文]在5月17日的会议上所讨论的这份建议书的序言草案中,夏皮罗提出,专家组已经达成广泛共识,那就是“试图通过成人细胞核克隆来制造人类幼儿的做法在道德上是不可接受的。”

64.[参考译文]因为现今的联邦法律已经禁止使用联邦基金克隆胚胎(人类后裔在出生前的最早阶段)用于研究或者有意地威胁胚胎的生命,NBAC在胚胎研究上将保持沉默。

65.[参考译文]如果试验是像科学杂志上的报告所示的那样如实地根据计划规划和实施的话,那么对管理层来说,期待研究能够产生可以用金钱衡量的结果是完全合理的。

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