游戏测试笔试试题(共2篇)
1.游戏测试笔试试题 篇一
Questions 1—5 The purpose of the American court system is to protect the rights of the people.According to American law,if someone is accused of a crime,he or she is considered innocent until the court proves that the person is guilty.In other words,it is the responsibility of the court to prove that a person is guilty.It is not the responsibility of the person to prove that he or she is innocent.In order to arrest a person,the police have to be reasonably sure that a crime has been committed.The police must give the suspect the reasons why they are arresting him and tell him his rights under the law.Then the police take the suspect to the police station to “book” him.“Booking means that the name of the person and the charges against him are formally listed at the police station.The next step is for the suspect to go before a judge.The judge decides whether the suspect should be kept in jail or released.If the suspect has no previous criminal record and the judge feels that he will return to court rather than run away—for example,because he owns a house and has a family—he can go free.Otherwise,the suspect must put up bail.At this time,too,the judge will appoint a court layer to defend the suspect if he can’t afford one.The suspect returns to court a week or two later.A lawyer from the district attorney’s office presents a case against the suspect.This is called a hearing.The attorney may present evidence as well as witnesses.The judge at the hearing then decides whether there is enough reason to hold a trial.If the judge decides that there is sufficient evidence to call for a trial,he or she sets a date for the suspect to appear in court to formally plead guilty or not guilty.At the trial,a jury of 12 people listens to the evidence from both attorneys and hears the testimony of the witnesses.Then the jury goes into a private room to consider the evidence and decide whether the defendant is guilty of the crime.If the jury decides that the defendant is innocent,he goes free.However,if he is convicted,the judge sets a date for the defendant to appear in court again for sentencing.At this time,the judge tells the convicted person what his punishment will be.The judge may sentence him to prison,order him to pay a fine,or place him on probation.The American justice system is very complex and sometimes operates slowly.However,every step is designed to protect the rights of the people.These individual rights are the basis,or foundation,of the American government.1.What is the main idea of the passage?
(A)The American court system requires that a suspect prove that he or she is innocent.(B)The US court system is designed to protect the rights of the people.(C)Under the American court system,judge decides if a suspect is innocent or guilty.(D)The US court system is designed to help the police present a case against the suspect.2.What follows ‘in other words’(para.1)?(A)An example of the previous sentence.(B)A new idea about the court system.(C)An item of evidence to call for a trial.(D)A restatement of the previous sentence.3.According to the passage,‘he can go free’(para.3)means _________.(A)the suspect is free to choose a lawyer to defend him(B)the suspect does not have to go to trial because the judge has decided he is innocent(C)the suspect will be informed by mail whether he is innocent or not(D)the suspect does not have to wait in jail or pay money until he goes to trial 4.What is the purpose of having the suspect pay bail?(A)To pay for the judge and the trial.(B)To pay for a court lawyer to defend the suspect.(C)To ensure that the suspect will return to court.(D)To ensure that the suspect will appear in prison.5.According to the passage,which of the following statements is true?
(A)The American justice system sometimes operates slowly.(B)The police can arrest a suspect without giving any reasons.(C)It is the responsibility of the suspect to prove he is innocent.(D)The jury considers the evidence in the court room.Questions 6—10
So you’ve got an invention—you and around 39,000 others each year,according to 2002 statistics!
The 64,000-dollar question,if you have come up with a device which you believe to be the answer to the energy crisis or you’ve invented a lawnmower which cuts grass with a jet of water(not so daft,someone has invented one),is how to ensure you’re the one to reap the rewards of your ingenuity.How will all you garden shed boffins out there keep others from capitalizing on your ideas and lining their pockets at your expense?
One of the first steps to protect your interest is to patent your invention.That can keep it out of the grasp of the pirates for at least the next 20 years.And for this reason inventors in their droves beat a constant trail from all over the country to the doors of an anonymous grey-fronted building just behind London’s Holborn to try and patent their devices.The first ‘letters patent’ were granted as long ago as 1449 to a Flemish craftsman by the name of John Utynam.The letters,written in Latin,are still on file at the office.They were granted by King Henry VI and entitled Utynam to ‘import into this country’ his knowledge of making stained glass windows in order to install such windows at Eton College.Present-day patents procedure is a more sophisticated affair than getting a go-ahead note from the monarch.These days the strict procedures governing whether you get a patent for your revolutionary mouse-trap or solar-powered back-scratcher have been reduced to a pretty exact science.From start to finish it will take around two and a half years and cost £165 for the inventor to gain patent protection for his brainchild.That’s if he’s lucky.By no means all who apply to the Patent Office,which is a branch of the Department of Trade,get a patent.A key man at the Patent Office is Bernard Partridge,Principal Examiner(Administration),who boils down to one word the vital ingredient any inventor needs before he can hope to overcome the many hurdles in the complex procedure of obtaining a patent—‘ingenuity’。6.People take out a patent because they want to __________.(A)keep their ideas from being stolen(B)reap the rewards of somebody else’s ingenuity(C)visit the patent office building(D)come up with more new devices 7.The phrase ‘the brain-children of inventors’(para.5)means _________.(A)the children with high intelligence(B)the inventions that people come up with(C)a device that a child believes to be the answer to the energy crisis(D)a lawnmower that an individual has invented to cut grass 8.What have the 1600’s machine gun and the present-day laser in common?
(A)Both were approved by the monarch.(B)Both were granted by King Henry VI.(C)Both were rejected by the Department of Trade.(D)Both were patented.9.Why is John Utynam still remembered?
(A)He is the first person to get a patent for his revolutionary mouse-trap.(B)He is the first person to be granted an official patent.(C)He is the first person to be an officer in the Patent Office.(D)He is the first person to have invented a lawnmower.10.According to the passage,how would you describe the complex procedure of obtaining a patent for an invention?(A)It is rather expensive.(B)It is an impossible task.(C)It is extremely difficult.(D)It is very tricky.Questions 11—15
All living cells on earth require moisture for their metabolism.Cereal grains when brought in from the field,although they may appear to be dry,may contain 20 per cent of moisture or more.If they are stored in a bin thus,there is sufficient moisture in them to support several varieties of insects.These insects will,therefore,live and breed and,as they grow and eat the grain,it provides them with biological energy for their life processes.This energy will,just as in man,become manifest as heat.Since the bulk of the grain acts as an insulator,the temperature surrounding the colony of insects will rise so that,not only is part of the grain spoiled by the direct attack of the insects but more may be damaged by the heat.Sometimes,the temperature may even rise to the point where the stored grain catches fire.For safe storage,grain must be dried until its moisture content is 13 per cent or less.Traditional arts of food preservation took advantage of this principle in a number of ways.The plant seeds,wheat,rye,rice,barley millet,maize,are themselves structures evolved by nature to provi-56We are moving inexorably into the age of automation.Our aim is not to devise a mechanism which can perform a thousand different actions of any individual man but,on the contrary,one which could by a single action replace a thousand men.Industrial automation has moved along three lines.First there is the conveyor belt system of continuous production whereby separate operations are linked into a single sequence.The goods produced by this well-established method are untouched by the worker,and the machine replaces both unskilled and semiskilled.Secondly,there is automation with feedback control of the quality of the product: here mechanisms are built into the system which can compare the output with a norm,that is,the actual product with what it is supposed to be,and then correct any shortcomings.The entire cycle of operations dispenses with human control except in so far as monitors are concerned.One or two examples of this type of automation will illustrate its immense possibilities.There is a factory in the U.S.A.which makes 1,000 million electric light bulbs a year,and the factory employs three hundred people.If the preautomation techniques were to be employed,the labour force required would leap to 25,000.A motor manufacturing company with 45,000 spare parts regulates their entire supply entirely by computer.Computers can be entrusted with most of the supervision of industrial installations,such as chemical plants or oil refineries.Thirdly,there is computer automation,for banks,accounting departments,insurance companies and the like.Here the essential features are the recording,storing,sorting and retrieval of information.The principal merit of modern computing machines is the achievement of their vastly greater speed of operation by comparison with unaided human effort;a task which otherwise might take years,if attempted at all,now takes days or hours.One of the most urgent problems of industrial societies rapidly introducing automation is how to fill the time that will be made free by the machines which will take over the tasks of the workers.The question is not simply of filling empty time but also of utilizing the surplus human energy that will be released.We are already seeing straws in the wind: destructive outbursts on the part of youth whose work no longer demands muscular strength.While automation will undoubtedly do away with a large number of tedious jobs,are we sure that it will not put others which are equally tedious in their place? For an enormous amount of sheer monitoring will be required.A man in an automated plant may have to sit for hours on and watching dials and taking decisive action when some signal informs him that all is not well.What meaning will his occupation bear for the worker? How will he devote his free time after a four or five hour stint of labor? Moreover,what,indeed,will be the significance for him of his leisure? If industry of the future could be purged of its monotony and meaninglessness,man would then be better equipped to use his leisure time constructively.16.The main purpose of automation is _________.(A)to devise the machine which could replace the semi-skilled(B)to process information as fast as possible(C)to develop an efficient labor-saving mechanism(D)to make an individual man perform many different actions 17.The chief benefit of computing machines is ________.(A)their greater speed of operation(B)their control of the product quality(C)their conveyor belt system of continuous production(D)their supervision of industrial installations 18.One of the problems brought about by automation in industrial societies is _________.(A)plenty of information(B)surplus human energy(C)destructive outbursts(D)less leisure time 19.Which of the following best explains the use of ‘stint’(para.4)?
(A)Effort.(B)Force.(C)Excess.(D)Period.20.According to the passage,which of the following statements is true?
(A)There is no automation with feedback control of the quality of the product.(B)Computers are reliable in any supervision of industrial installations.(C)The essential features for banks are the recording and sorting of information.(D)Automation will undoubtedly eliminate numerous tedious jobs.Questions 21—25
The city water pipes in Rome were usually of baked clay or lead;copper was sometimes used and also hollowed stone.For the large supply conduits leading to the city the Romans used covered channels with free water surfaces,rather than pipes.Perhaps this choice was a matter of economics,for apparently they could make lead pipes up to 15 inches in diameter.While pipes can follow the profile of undulating ground,with the pressure increasing in the lower areas,channels cannot.They must slope continuously downwards,because water in channels does not normally flow uphill;and the grade must be flat,from 1 in 60 in small channels to perhaps 1 in 3,000 in large ones,to keep the water speed down to a few feet per second.Thus the main supply channels or aqueducts had long lengths of flat grade and where they crossed depressions or valleys they were carried on elevated stone bridges in the form of tiered arches.At the beginning of the Christian era there were over 30 miles of these raised aqueducts in the 250 miles of channels and tunnels bringing water to Rome.The channels were up to 6 feet wide and 5 to 8 feet high.Sometimes channels were later added on the tops of existing ones.The remains of some of these aqueducts still grace the skyline on the outskirts of Rome and elsewhere in Europe similar ruins are found.Brick and stone drains were constructed in various parts of Rome.The oldest existing one is the Cloaca Maxima which follows the course of an old stream.It dates back at least to the third century B.C.Late-101112(A)People believed that spacecraft would be destroyed in a black hole.(B)People believed that spacecraft would be misguided by missiles.(C)People believed that spacecraft would be collided with a star.(D)People believed that spacecraft would be damaged by meteorites.29.What is the greatest danger to life on Earth?(A)Collision with small high-speed missiles.(B)Collision with an astronomical body.(C)Collision with stones from the sky.(D)Collision with spacecrafts.30.According to the passage,which of the following statements is true?
(A)Our galaxy contains great interstellar dust clouds.(B)Near misses of bodies smaller than our own planet could be disastrous.(C)The probability of collision with a large astronomical body is very high.(D)The chances of anyone actually being hit by missiles are very high.SECTION 3: TRANSLATION TEST(30 minutes)
2.游戏测试笔试试题 篇二
(18道简答题+12道论述题,只能回忆起22道题,剩下的实在回忆不起了,忘见谅!)(我就不分简答和论述了,自己复习的时候都要当做论述题详细的复习,其实论述基本上回忆起来了,没想起的都是简答题)
1.平流沉淀池的水力指标有哪些,怎么改善这些指标?
2.给你数据,计算溢流井的溢流管的流量和排水管的流量。(理解掌握方法就没问题,这
道题我复习的时候没复习到,所以不会做,所以你复习的时候尽量全面点)
3.滤池滤料滤层的分布规律是什么,如何改善或有什么发展前景?
4.简述斜板沉淀池的浅池理论。
5.污泥的评价指标有哪些,有什么应用?(五十多个人只有两三个人做对,因为大家都没
时间了,这是最后一道题,看了题目就答题,都答成了活性污泥的评价指标了,看清了,一个是污泥,一个是活性污泥)
6.工业园废水有什么特点,它处理之后水质基本可以达到城市污水处理要求(工业废水处
理之后是还要送到污水厂和生活污水一起再处理的),说说在处理工业废水有什么新的前景技术?———其实主要答如何使提高工业废水的可生化性!答预处理和深度处理!
7.活性污泥法和生物膜法的各自优缺点,并且回答为什么大型的污水处理厂一般采用活性
污泥法,而中低浓度的工业废水一般采用生物膜法?
8.计算流量:取水构筑物,一级泵站,二级泵站,管网,水塔。(个人原本对这些流量计
算很熟悉的,但是它的题目出得难理解,求的流量让我不能理解,做的时候很不顺利!)
9.简述清水池的调节流量是怎么计算的?
10.水力停留时间对厌氧生物处理有什么影响?
11.求雨水管的设计流量。(记住公式)
12.强碱树脂与弱碱树脂有什么特性区别?
13.混凝受什么因素影响,有什么控制指标,实际控制指标是什么?
14.给你BOD数值,细菌数值,浊度值,设计一个自来水厂的工艺流程!
15.告诉你自来水中含有有机物,强酸离子,弱酸离子,先需要纯水,设计一个以树脂为核
心的,结合膜技术的处理工艺流程获得纯水!
16.工业废水中的气浮池有什么设计要求?
17.循环冷却水会产生什么样的污染,如何解决?
18.告诉你地形坡度,且坡度面向河流,问你污水管网的主干管和干管应该如何布置,且简
述理由?
19.什么是经济流速,具有什么工程实际意义?
20.雨水管中暴雨强度公式里面的集水时间如何计算?
21.什么是污泥膨胀,产生的原因,如何解决?
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