2007年同济大学博士研究生入学考试试题
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2007年同济大学博士入学考试
弹性力学
1、已知应力分量和截面的方向,求截面上的F στn 、、
2、已知应变分量,问其是否为弹性变形可能的情况
3、梁上受力如图所示,用瑞利-里兹法求梁上最大挠度max ω
q
4、告诉应力函数的形式,问是否可以作为薄板的解,并画出板上荷载的情况
x
5、已知开孔板上应力分量,(12cos2)q θσθ=-、0r σ=、0r θτ= 求圆孔边界上最大应力、最小应力
q
q
x
6、推导柱形杆扭转应力解法的公式,并解椭圆受扭
7、已知一点的应力情况为012111210⎡⎤
⎢⎥⎢⎥
⎢⎥⎣⎦
,求主应力、主应变、及相应的方向
8、用瑞利-里兹法解板,(已知挠度ω的表达式) 求挠度ω表达式中的系数11c
9、推导平面应力、平面应变问题的应变能密度并比较大小
10、简述艾里应力函数的涵义。
同济大学2007年博士生入学考试结构动力学
一、简答题(每题4分,共20分)
1. 结构自由度
2. 达朗贝尔原理
3. 用半幅值法推导
0.11
m
ς=。
4. 比较周期大小,三栋楼房A、B、C,每栋八层,其中在A座第四层和C座第八层分别放置相同质量,由大到小排列T A,T B,T C。
5. 写出单自由度系统欠阻尼的响应表达式。
二、计算题
1. 求自振周期。
图1
2. 悬臂梁,M1和M2由电磁吸引,去除电磁力使M2下落,求M1的振幅。
图2
3. 两层框架结构如图3所示,已知m1=m2=1kg,K1=2000,K2=4000,阻尼都为0.05。
1)求所有振型及自振频率;
2)求线性阻尼;
3)广义质量、广义刚度、广义阻尼;
4)用振型叠加法求稳态响应。
图3
4. 如图4所示,位移为3.038时自由释放,t=0.64s时再次达到最大,此时振幅为2.1844,质量M=90800kg,求刚度、阻尼和阻尼比。
图4
5. 求液体黏度系数u。
板重W,面积A。
在空气中自由振动,不计空气阻力,测得振幅为T1;放入液体中后,测得振幅T2,已知液体阻力F=πuAv(v为相对速度),求u。
图6
6. 推导悬臂梁横向振动的正交性。
(10分)
7. 求简支梁的振动频率。
(5分)。
考试科目:地球物理测井原理共1页第1页博士学位研究生入学考试试题考试科目:地球物理测井原理____________________________________________________________________________1.写出测井中常用的深、中、浅电测井仪器组合,并简要说明应用条件。
(10分)2.说明阿尔奇公式的意义,并简要述评其对测井发展的基础作用。
(10分)3.试对比分析感应测井和侧向测井,说明测井方法研究的基本问题和特点。
(10分)4. 对称声源在充液裸眼井中激发起哪些波动模式?各有何特点?(10分)5. 试分析声波在传播过程中幅度变化的原因。
(10分)6. 试写出声波测井时间平均公式,说明其各个符号的意义和应用条件。
(10分)7.岩性密度测井是当前勘探测井中重要的核测井方法,试回答以下问题:(10分)(1)岩性密度测井采用什么核素作为伽马放射源?主要是基于什么考虑?(2)简述岩石的(质量)光电吸收截面Pe与体积光电吸收截面U的概念和相互关系,并作典型的Pe区不同U值时的伽马能谱示意图。
8.碳氧比能谱测井(C/O)是一种重要的剩余油测井方法,试回答以下问题:(10分)(1)C/O测井中,有哪些非(n,n’)反应对测井产生干扰?如何消除?(2)C/O测井的数据处理方法有哪几种?各自的特点是什么?9.选作题(从下列题目中任选二题)(20分)(1)简述阵列感应测井的基本原理和主要特征。
(10分)(2)在充液井眼中,井壁上的声学边界条件是什么?(10分)(3)试说明用常规声波测井仪器在软地层中没法获得S波的信息的原因。
(10分)(4)自然伽马能谱测井是重要的核测井方法之一,试回答以下问题:(10分)①自然伽马能谱测井仪主要由哪几部分组成?简述各部分的作用。
仪器一般采用什么方法稳谱?②自然伽马能谱测井的测井成果曲线有哪些?。
博士考试由3门课程,英语、规划原理和规划分析。
1、英语一定要去上补习班,要不就复印听课资料,考试会送20-30分的题目。
2、原理考试,多看最近三年的规划杂志。
要作到言之有物,辩之有据。
3、规划分析由多个老师轮换着出题,我那年的考试方向大变,基本上是道路交通和GIS内容的。
所以大家要多看书。
2004年的考题,博士3课中,英语、规划原理都满50就行了, 规划分析要60分。
2008年11月规划博士考题城市规划原理1.从你所在学科(可以是城市规划或其它相关学科)的视角,论述中国城市化进程的基本特征和主要挑战。
2.结合你的硕士学位论文或一个研究项目,论述研究方法论的应用。
(以下为四选二)3.从资源节约和环境友好的视角,论述中国城市可持续发展的主要策略。
4.从城市规划作为公共政策的视角,论述中国城市规划变革面临的主要议题。
5.论述经济全球化对于城市和区域发展的影响。
6.论述你所在学科(可以是城市规划或其它相关学科)中与城市相关的主要研究议题及其最新发展趋势。
城市规划设计与分析现在控规的制定中常常附带总平面设计,但往往缺乏整体设计观点、和对于整体空间把握的深度。
请结合案例分析。
江南某省会城市临近铁路站场的居住区,面积150公顷,被主干道分割,地铁从地块右侧经过并设站,铁路位于地块西南侧。
城市公园位于地块东北角,两条河流从基地内穿过。
现给出该地块的控规和总平面意向方案,请分析其特点并给出优化调整意见,要求图文结合。
文字不超过1500字。
主要可以从以下三个方面入手:1.对原方案的解读,要求文图结合(文20分,图15分)2.对原方案进行评价(20分)3.提出优化调整方案,要求图文结合(图25分,文20分)2007年11月规划博士考题城市规划原理回忆版本1.从你所在的学科(可以是城市规划或其它学科)谈中国城市可持续发展的主要议题及其相关对策。
2.就你所做的一项研究,谈谈研究中方法论的应用。
(以下为四选二)3.论述城市中效率与公平的看法。
同济大学 博士入学考试试题 高级管理学2007
一、在公司里员工往往缺乏开放的心态来接受领导的负面反馈,对来自领导的负
面的反馈也往往较为抵触与生气,领导与往往为了避免这样的冲突而在沟通的方法上事先精心准备,不过越是这样越是达不到沟通的效果。
试评价上下级的沟通,如何才能做到有效的上下级沟通?
二、什么是管理?管理的目的是什么?并对他们作出评述。
三、控制的定义是什么?控制的意义是什么?控制定义有哪三个要素?
四、对于企业的社会责任有两种不同的观点:(1)纯经济的观点认为企业就是
追求利润的最大化,除此以外没有任何其他的目的与任务(2)社会经济的观点认为企业除了追求利润以外还应该承担社会责任。
试讨论这两种观点。
五、目前国际上许多大企业纷纷降服务业务外包,中国是其中的一个大的市场,
国家也出台政策鼓励积极建立许多外包基地,试用Fayol 在管理的14 条原则中的分工原则分析外包的必要性,企业为什么要外包?。
同济大学博士研究生入学英语考试样题I V ocabulary (10%)For each of the following sentences there are four choices. Choose the best one to complete the sentence.1. The directions were so ____ that it was impossible to complete the assignment.A) ingenious B) ambitious C) notorious D) ambiguous2. Our ________ host always enjoys having friends to share his Lucullan suppers.A) cursive B)martial C) fractious D) convivial3. Recently a number of cases have been reported of young children ____a violent act previously seen on television.A) modifying B) stimulating C) accelerating D) duplicating4. This kind of material can _____heat and moisture.A) delete B) compel C) repel D) constrain5. The damage to his car was ____; therefore, he could repair it himself.A) considerable B) appreciable C) negligible D) invisible6. The ____of a cultural phenomenon is usually a logical consequence of some physical aspect in the life style of the people.A) implementation B) expedition C) demonstration D) manifestation7. One of the responsibilities of the Coast guard is to make sure that all ships _______ follow traffic rules in busy harbors.A) cautiously B) dutifully C) faithfully D) skillfully8. The Eskimo is perhaps one of the most trusting and considerate of all Indians but seems to be _______ the welfare of his animals.A) critical about B) indignant at C) indifferent to D) subject to9. The chairman of the board _______ on me the unpleasant job of dismissing good workers the firm can no longer afford to employ.A) compelled B) posed C) pressed D) tempted10. Using extremely different decorating schemes in adjoining rooms may result in _______ and lack of unity in style.A) conflict B) confrontation C) disturbance D) disharmony11. Corrupt politicians who condone the activities of the gamblers are equally _______.A) cryptic B)esoteric C)culpable D)occult12. I don’t know the details for I just gave your manuscript only a(n) _______ gl ance.A) cursory B)cumbrous C)onerous D)obscure13.the Red Cross society helped _________ families to survive the war in the Persian Gulf.A) demure B)destitute C)assiduous D)sedate14. the man felt ________ when the girl turned down his proposal of marriage.A) despondent B) fabulous C)dilapidated D)fortuitous15. the boy gave a ______ look at his classmate’s test paper when the teacher turned.A) frivolous B)furtive C)frenetic D)frigid16. Rubber boots are ___________ to water.A) imperious B)impetuous C)impervious D)impeccable17. Missiles were mounted at various points to _______ the enemy aircrafts.A) integrate B)jeopardize C)intercept D)interrogate18. Being careless, she had her arm _____ by the barbed wire.A) lacerated B)lamented C)juggled D)bemoaned19. The wrestler’s _______ maneuvers made it difficult for his opponent to obtain a hold.A) hermetic B)protean C)titanic D)procrustean20. Psychoanalysis can help a patient recall long-forgotten experiences lost in the ______ recess of his mind.A) labyrinthine B)chimerical C)iridescent D)mercurialII Reading Comprehension (50%)Passage 1There is widespread belief that the emergence of giant industries has been accomplished by an equivalent surge in industrial research. A recent study of important inventions made since the turn of the century reveals that more than half were the product of individual invent-ors working alone, independent of organized industrial research. While industrial laboratories contributed such important products as nylon and transistors, independent inventors developed air conditioning, the automatic transmission, the jet engine, the helicopterminsulin, and streptomycin. Still other inventions, such as stainless steel, television, silicons, and plexiglass were developed through the combined efforts of individuals and laboratory teams.Despite these findings, we are urged to support monopoly power on the grounds that such power creates an environment supportive of innovation. We are told that the independent inventor, along with the small firm, cannot afford to undertake the important research needed to improve our standard of living while protecting our diminishing resources; that only the prodigious assets of the giant corporation or conglomerate can afford the kind of expenditures that can produce the technological advances vital to economic progress. But when we examine expenditures for research, we find that of the more than $ 35 billion spent each year in this country, almost two-thirds is spent by the federal government. More than half of this government expenditure is funneled into military research and product development, accounting for the enormous increase in spending in such industries as nuclear energy, aircraft, missiles, and electronics. There are those who consider it questionable that these defense-linked research projects will account for an improvement in the standard of living or, alternately, do much to protect our diminishing resources. Recent history has demonstrated that we may have to alter our longstanding conception of the process actuated by competition. The price variable, once perceived as the dominant aspect of the competitive process is now subordinate to the competition of the new product, the new business structure, and the new technology. While it can be assumed that in a highly competitive industry not dominated by a single corporation, investment in innovation--a risky and expensive budget item--might meet resistance from management and stockholders who might be more concerned with cost-cutting, efficient organization, and large advertising budgets, it would be an egregious error to assume that the monopolistic producer should be equated with bountiful expenditures for research. Large-scale enterprises tend to operate more comfortably in stable and secure circumstances, and their managerial bureaucracies tend to promote the status quo and resist the threat implicit in change. Furthermore, the firm with a small share of the market will aggressively pursue new techniques and different products, since with little vested interest in capital equipment or plant it is not deterred from in-vestment in innovation. In some cases, where inter-industrycompetition is reduced or even entirely eliminated, the industrial giants may seek to avoid capital loss resulting from obsolescence by deliberately obstructing technological progress.The conglomerates are not, however, completely exempt from strong competitive pressures; there are instances in which they, too, must compete, as against another industrial Goliath, and then their weapons may include large expenditures for innovation.16. According to the passage, important inventions of the twentieth century ________.A. are not necessarily produced as a result of governmental support for military weapons research and development.B. came primarily from the huge laboratories of monopoly industries.C. were produced at least as frequently by independent inventors as by research teams.D. have greater impact on smaller firms than on conglomerates.17. It is the author"s belief, as expressed or implied in the passage, that________.A. monopoly power creates an environment supportive of innovation.B. governmental protection for military research will do much to protect our dwindling resources.C. industrial giants, with their managerial bureaucracies, respond more quickly to technological change.D. firms with a small share of the market will aggressively pursue innovations because they are not locked into old capital equipment.18. Management and stockholders might be deeply concerned with cost cutting rather than innovation if _______.A. their company is faced with strong competition in a field not dominated by one of the industrial giants.B. they are very stable and secure and hold a monopoly position in their industry.C. they are part of the military-industrial complex and are the recipients of federal funds for product development.D. they have produced some of the important inventions of this century.19. Which of the following statements is neither expressed nor implied in the passage?A. Important inventions have been produced, in the past, by individuals as well as by corporate teams.B. The federal government"s research funds are funneled into pure research as well as military research.C. The development of the automatic transmission is not credited to organized industrial research.D. Industrial giants may deliberately suppress innovations to avoid capital loss resulting from obsolescence.20. The author"s purpose in this passage is to____.A. advocate an increase in governmental support of organized industrial research.B. point out a common misconception about the relationship between the extent of industrial research and the growth of monopolistic power in industry.C. describe the inadequacies of small firms in dealing with the important matter of research and innovation.D. show that America"s strength depends upon individual ingenuity and resourcefulness.III Translation from English into Chinese (20%)Three passions, simple but overwhelmingly strong, have governed my life: the longing for love, the search for knowledge, and unbearable pity for the suffering of mankind. These passions, like great winds, have blown me hither and thither, in a wayward course, over a deep ocean of anguish, reaching to the verge of despair.I have sought love, first, because it brings ecstasy---ecstasy so great that I would often have sacrificed all the rest of life for a few hours of this joy. I have sought it, next, because it relieves loneliness that terrible loneliness in which one shivering consciousness looks over the rim of the world into the cold unfathomable lifeless abyss. I have sought it, finally, because in the union of love I have seen, in a mystic miniature, the prefiguring vision of the heaven that saints and poets have imagined. This is what I sought, and though it might seem too good for human life, this is what at last I have found.With equal passion I have sought knowledge. I have wished to understand the hearts of men. I have wished to know why the stars shine. A little of this, but not much, I have achieved.Love and knowledge, so far as they were possible, led upward reward the heavens(这句话似乎不完整). But always pity brought me back to earth. Echoes of cries of pain reverberated in my heart. Children in famine, victims tortured by oppressors, helpless old people a haled burden to their sons, and the whole world of loneliness, poverty, and pain make a mockery of what human life should be. I long to alleviate the evil, but I cannot, and I too suffer.This has been my life. I have found it worth living, and I would gladly live it again if the chance were offered to me.有三种简单却强烈的情感支配着我的生活,它们分别是:对爱的渴望,对知识的探求,以及对人类的苦难不可抑制的怜悯。
2007年博士研究生入学考试课程名称:专业综合课材料科学基础(每题20分,选做5题)1.简述有色金属材料退火热处理制度的种类及其在材料加工过程中的应用。
2.简述超塑性变形的基本原理、实现超塑性变形的工艺条件及超塑性成型的应用。
3.简述两种获得纳米材料的制备技术与工艺特点。
4.按增强体形貌金属基复合材料可以分为哪几类?简述它们的制备方法。
5.简述1-2种你熟悉的材料设计与材料组织演变模拟方法。
6.常用的材料连接方法有哪些?它们各有什么工艺特点与使用范围?7.晶体缺陷的种类有哪些?它们对材料的性能有什么影响?8.细化晶粒是提高材料强度与韧性的重要手段,实现晶粒晶粒细化的途径有哪些?试结合一种具体材料加以讨论。
9.快速凝固方法的工艺特点是什么?该方法对合金的组织性能有什么影响?10.试列举1-2种新型电子信息材料,简要介绍其研究开发现状及实际应用过程中需要解决的关键问题。
11.谈谈获得非晶态物质的途径(20分)。
2008年材料学综合试题(任选5题每题20分)1.试举1-2例计算机模拟与计算方法在材料科学与工程中的具体应用和基本原理。
2.在不改变金属材料化学组成的前提下,可以通过多种制备技术改变材料的组织与性能,试举两例说明之。
3.简述材料表面科学技术发展对未来材料的影响。
4.简要介绍1-2种新型功能材料的研究开发现状及实际应用过程中需要解决的关键问题。
5.从人类社会可持续发展的角度,论述新材料与新技术的发展趋势。
6.金相显微镜、扫描电镜、透射电镜都能用来观察和分析材料的微观结构,它们所依据的原理和方法是什么?举例说明。
7.简述1-2种纳米材料的性能特征与应用及其制备技术。
8.结合本人的研究和工作实践,简述一种新型材料的主要性能特点、用途与制备方法。
2009年博士研究生入学考试课程名称:材料计算科学与虚拟工程综合(每题20分,选做5题)a)简述金属塑性变形-组织结构-性能间的相互关系。
b)简述形变热处理提高材料性能的原理,介绍1-2种有色金属材料的具体形变热处理工艺。
本资料属个人考试后回忆内容,翔实可靠,但错误在所难免,望广大学友指正土木工程学院结构工程专业攻读博士学位入学考试专业课试题及若干注意事项(结构动力学和地震工程学版)结构工程是这样一种艺术;使用材料这些材料属性只能估算建立真实的结构这些真实的结构只能近似分析来承受外力这些力不能准确得知以满足我们对公众安全职责的要求爱德华·L·威尔逊目录土木工程学院结构工程专业攻读博士学位入学考试专业课试题及若干注意事项 (1)目 录 (1)同济大学及其土木工程学院简介 (2)若干注意事项 (4)同济大学2005年博士生入学考试《地震工程学》真题 (6)1.名词解释 (6)2.填空题 (6)3.简答题 (6)4.计算题 (6)同济大学2003年博士生入学考试《地震工程学》真题 (7)1.名词解释 (7)2.填空 (7)3.简答题 (7)4.讨论分析 (7)同济大学2007年博士生入学考试《地震工程学》真题 (8)1.名词解释(每题4分,共20分) (8)2.填空(每空3分,共24分) (8)3.简答(共44分) (8)4.分析讨论(共12分) (8)同济大学2007年博士生入学考试《结构动力学》真题 (9)1.简答(每题4分,共20分) (9)2.计算题 (9)同济大学2003年博士生入学考试《结构动力学》真题 (12)1.名词解释(10分) (12)2.计算题 (12)同济大学2005年博士生入学考试《结构动力学》真题 (14)1.简答题 (14)2.计算题 (14)同济大学及其土木工程学院简介同济大学是教育部直属重点大学。
她创建于1907年,早期为德国医生在上海创办的德文医学堂,取名"同济"意蕴合作共济。
1912年增设工学堂,1923年被批准改名为大学,1927年正式定为国立同济大学。
抗战期间曾内迁经浙、赣、滇入川,1946年回迁上海并发展为以拥有理、工、医、文、法五大学院著称海内外的综合性大学。
标准答案(要点)一、1、由于含氢指数低,天然气层中天然气对快中子的减速能力低于骨架,导致中子测井结果明显低于实际的孔隙度的一种物理现象。
2、传统的声速测井往往采用阈值检测法来判断首波的到达。
如果地层对声波的衰减太大,以至于使首波的幅度小于所设置的阈值,则不能检测到首波,而只能检测到后续波,这会使所测量的声波旅行时间变大,这种现象叫“周波跳跃”。
周波跳跃一般都发生在远波,使时差t 变大。
周波跳跃现象的产生导致时间测量误差为首波的若干个周期。
3、淡水泥浆滤液侵入条件下,含高矿化度地层水轻质油气层中的油气相对渗透率大于水相相对渗透率,导致在侵入带前缘形成的以原生高矿化度地层水相对富集的环带。
4、核磁测井三种横向弛豫机制之一。
发生在岩石孔隙中固体与流体界面。
表面弛豫取决于岩石孔隙表面弛豫率和孔隙比表面。
5、在给定的地区地质条件下,为了完成预定的勘探、开发或工程任务而选用的一套经济实用的综合测井方法。
岩性、物性、流体性质。
6、饱和多相流体孔隙介质中一相流体有效渗透率与绝对(空气)渗透率的比值。
二、1、根据岩石物理体积模型,采用反演理论进行解释的一种方法。
以经过环境校正后的测井值(向量)为基础,根据适当的解释模型和测井响应方程,计算理论测井值(向量),并与实际测井值(向量)对比,按非线性加权最小二乘原理建立目标函数,用最优化方法不断调整未知储层参数,使目标函数达到极小值(能结合公式叙述最佳)。
2、是油藏描述和多井评价中的一项技术。
选择有系统连续取心、测试和较全测井系列等资料齐全的井,建立可以应用于整个油藏(田)其他井的测井解释模型、参数。
3、测井资料综合分析的一种直观图形手段。
如中子—密度测井重叠图可以直观反映地层岩性类型以及孔隙度高低;视地层水电阻率曲线与深探测电阻率曲线可以帮助判断储层流体性质等。
三、1、低电阻率油气层指与同等物性、岩性和水性的水层,电阻增大率小于2-3的油气层,主要类型有:具有高—极高地层水矿化度的低电阻率油气层,引起这类油气层呈低电阻率的原因是矿化度极高的地层水在孔隙中形成密布的导电网络,使油气层电阻率明显降低;微孔隙发育的低电阻率油气层,这类油气层低电阻率的原因是岩石的颗粒较细(细粉砂和粘土矿物),导致地层中微孔隙十分发育,微孔隙和渗流孔隙并存,再加上地层水矿化度的影响,其电阻率值可能极低;富含泥质的低电阻率油气层,这类地层往往是淡水泥质砂岩地层,这时泥质的附加导电性表现十分突出,成为引起电阻率下降的原因;粒间孔隙与裂缝并存引起的低电阻率油气层,由于裂缝发育,在钻井过程中有相当的泥浆滤液侵入,驱赶并代替了裂缝中的油气,而使油气层的电阻率明显下降; 表面和骨架导电引起的低电阻率油气层 2、(1)岩石体积模型方法的基本要点是:按物理性质的差别,将岩石分成几个组成部分,而且岩石的总体积等于各部分体积之和;根据测井方法的物理意义,表达出宏观物理量与测量的物理量(单位物理量)的表达式;对表达式简化得到体积模型方程。
同济大学2007年博士研究生入学考试试题编号:101 考试科目:英语答题要求:答案一律写在答题纸上。
1. Vocabulary(10%)Directions:For each of the following sentences there are four choices. Choose the best one to complete the sentence. Mark your choices on the answer sheet.1.The man had a good disguise, but as soon as he spoke he ______himself.A.exposed B.revealed C.betrayed D.disclosed2. The leaders of the two countries feel it desirable to ______funds from armaments to health and education.A.derive B.deprive C. dispatch D.divert3.Democratic government is a phrase that is notoriously hard to ________.A.credit B.defy C.modify D.define4. I reject absolutely the _____that privatization is now inevitable in our industry.A. perception B.notion C.impression D.concept5. With the economy of the county going strong,the ______mood is one of optimism.A.presiding B,circulating C.floating D. prevailing6. The panel will consider whether or not Mr.Wilson has been ________serious professional misconduct.A.wary of B.guilty of C.confronted with D.reduced to7. It is a ____of our company to give refunds if goods are faulty.A.policy B.discipline C.decision D.determination8. He had always been _______ the way Ruth looked, and had never once paid her a complimentA.unaware of B.cautious about C.oblivious to D. subject to9.Since a circle has no beginning or end,the wedding ring is a symbol of _______love.A.constant B.infinite C.prolonged D.eternal10.Dick,who had failed the math test,was sitting.on a bench in the corner, ______over his disappointment.A.brooding B.mediating C.apologizing D.complaining11. Last week the seamen's strike led to the _______closure of the whole vast dock area.A.actual B.virtual C.factual D.local12.In the garden bees moved from _________flowers to purple ones.A.colorful B.prosperous C.scarlet D.brilliant13.Professor Smith has already retired but his teachings still _____a strong influence on his students.A.perform B.exhibit C.exert D. execute14.When they asked him about it,he said it was no ______ of theirs and wouldn't tell them anything.A.concern B.relation C. connection D.relevance15.The hunter knows quite well that wild animals go seeking the their _______ in the jungle.afterdark.A.victim B.favorite C.prey D.sacrifice16.I have absolutely no ______of ever meeting him before.A.reminiscence B.reminder C.recall D.recollection17. They agreed to take their disputes before the committee and ______ by its decisions.abideobserve C.D.precedeA.standB.18. Every weekend when I came back from school, Mother prepared meals ______ enough for a Sahara-bound camel and made me eat them up.A. adequateB. deliciousC. proficientD. substantial19. As the fat man sat down, the folding chair ______ under him, with a loud noise of tearing canvas.sustainedA.distorted D.yielded B.collapsed C.20. Modern artists often need financial support but they have difficulty in finding wealthy ______.millionaires D.patrons C.volunteersA.admirers B.II. Reading Comprehension (50%)Direction: For each of the following passages there are five questions or unfinished is followed by five statements. For each of them there are four choices, choose the best one to answer the question or complete the statement.Passage 1In managing information resources, the medium may be the key to an effective system. The medium is a vehicle, a tool, or a container for holding information; the information itself is the thing of value.There popular categories of information media are paper, film, and electronic system. The media choice must not be viewed as a choice among these three, however, it must be viewed as an opportunity to select from a multitude of media possibilities in combinations, that build effective systems. In many instances the person responsible for information-resource management is not the person who determines the medium in which information will be created. In such a case, the manager of a firm's information resources faces a challenge in making a significant contribution to the organization's objectives.For effective management of information resources, media conversion may be necessary. examples include keying or scanning paper documents to convert them to electronic media. Other processes convert electronic media from one format to another. For example, disk files created on one system may not be compatible with another system. Various hardware and software combinations can be used to convert files to formats that equipment will accept. For information generated within organizations, this necessity of making systems compatible may be eliminated by cooperative planning. However, very little control can be exercised over the media used to generate information that comes to your organization from the outside.The medium for information may be selected to satisfy. a need that excite when information is created and communicated. For example, a paper record may be created because of its portability and because no special equipment is necessary for later references to that information; electronic transmission may be selected because it is the fastest means of communicating information. A firm may use electronic mail because a network already exists for on-line computercommunication. The additional application may cost less than postage to mail paper memos.21. Which of the following can best sum up the passage?A. Media Selection in Managing Information Resources.B. The Importance and Necessity of Media ConversionC. Three Categories of Information Media.D. Various Means of Communicating Information22. The first paragraph aims telling the reader ______.A. the importance of information resources managementB. the relationship between the medium and informationC. the great variety of media for holding informationD. the numerous resources of information23. According to the author, ______.A. paper is the best storage deviceB. people have three choices in selecting information mediaC. it is better to let the person responsible for information-resource management determine the mediumD. the manager should build an effective system by selecting a good combination of different media24. For effective management of information resources, the manager should ______.A. convert all paper documents to electronic mediaB. make media conversion when necessaryC. control the media used to generate information both inside and outside his organizationD. use one format in processing information25. The main idea of the last paragraph is ______.A. paper record is the most convenient medium for later referenceB. electronic mail costs less than postage to mail paper memosC. different media for information may be selected for different purposesD. by using different media, a firm can create various in formation for its objectives Passage 2"digital, digital, digital" continues to grow in volume worldwide. Digital ofchantThecameras, digital video camcorders, video CD players, DVD, cellular phones, and a host of computer peripherals are moving the trend along at a breathtaking rate. For the average person, it may seem like a remote and puzzling phenomenon meant only for the technologically adept.Virtually every aspect of our lives could be affected by the digital revolution. Here is a hypothetical scenario to show the possibilities: A real estate agent in Seattle uses a digital still camera to take some pictures of a house she's trying to sell., She transfers them to her computer, digitally retouches and enhances them, and posts them on her company's Internet Web site. In Singapore, a buyer sees the pictures and asks via electronic mail for more information. The agent replies via e-mail and attaches the text and a digital video clip to her message. Later the buyer flies to Seattle, inspects the property, and seals the deal.One of the biggest marketing surprises of the current age is the digital still camera. Once prohibitively expensive, these cameras have radically dropped in price while gaining in resolutionand other features. Although they often resemble traditional cameras, they don't use film. Instead, they store images on either a small removable memory card or on the memory chip inside the camera.The beauty of digital photography is that while you'll spend relatively more for a digital camera, you'll save a lot on film processing costs, because there aren't any. You can also discard digital pictures and keep shooting. Better yet, you can use software to enhance or alter the image. In quality, the images consumer-level digital cameras produce do not compare to ones you'd get from a 35mm camera. For the most part, though, digital photos are meant to be viewed on a computer monitor, and so their resolution is more than acceptable. In a world where the speed at which you distribute information often means the difference between success and failure, and immediacy supersedes quality in importance, may people are finding a use for digital camera.26. From the first paragraph we know the average person thinks ____.A. the digital age is far awayB. digital is too complicated for himC. digital age is dreadfulD. both a and b27. In the second paragraph the writer used an example to show that _____.A. any real estate agent should use digital still cameraB. digital still camera should be used together with Internet WebC. digital age is gaining momentumD. house dealing can be made easier28. _____ could be the best summary of the last two paragraphs.A. Digital still camera and traditional cameraB. Pros and cons of digital still cameraC. Capturing the world digitallyD. The way to use digital still camera29. All the following are the advantages of digital still camera EXCEPT ______.A. no need of filmB. easy to carryC. the image can be changedD. high resolution30. Which of the following best summarizes the passage?A. New Digital Age of InteractivityB. Digital Still CameraC. One Application of ComputerD. Goodbye Analog, Hello DigitalPassage 3In the days immediately following hurricane Andrews deadly visit to South Florida, Allstate Insurance hastily dispatched more than 2,000 extra clang adjusters to the devastated area to assist the 200 stationed there. Many of the reserves rived in convoys of motor homes. Others flew in from as far away as Alaska and California. Since the storm had knocked out telephone lines, Allstate rushed to set up its own communications system. Allstate expects to pay out $1.2 billion to cover more than 121,000 damage claims as a result of Andrew.All told, U.S, property and casualty insurers have been hit with more than $8 billion in Andrew-related claims, making the hurricane the most costly single calamity to strike the industry since the San Francisco earthquake and fire in 1906 ( cost: $6 billion, after inflation). With claims continuing to pour in, Andrew threatens to take a painful toll on the already battered property-casualty insurance industry and its 100 million policy-holders. The final bill, analysts predict, is likely to top $10 billion. While most well-capitalized insurers are expected to weather the storm, less anchored firms are in danger of being blown away, leaving U.S. consumers stuck with the tab. Says Sean Mooney, senior researcher at the Insurance Information Institute: "It will take years before the industry digs itself out from the wreckage left by Andrew. Some (companies) will be buried by it?Hurricane Andrew is the latest in a string of mishaps to plague the American insurance industry this year. In April an over flowing Chicago River flooded the city's downtown district, costing insurers $300million in claims. A month later, Los Angles was rocked by the worst civilian riot in the U.S. since the Civil War. The insurance toll: $1 billion. Then came a series of major hailstorms in Texas. Florida and Kansas. They cost insurers a combined $700 million. And two weeks after Andrew, another lethal hurricane, Iniki, smashed into Hawaii, causing $ 1.4 billion in damages. In all, property and casualty insurers have paid out a record $13 billion in claims so far this year, far surpassing the previous high of $7.6 billion in 1989, the year of Hurricane Hugo and California's Bay Area earthquake. Just as in that year, when those catastrophes were followed by substantial increases in insurance premiums, insurers are already lobbying for rate relief.31. According to the passage. "Allstate Insurance"most likely refers to ____.A. one of the property and casualty insurers in the U.S.B. the only insurance company responsible for the damage claims by AndrewC. the insurance industry as a wholeD. the biggest insurance company in the U.S.32. As is stated in the second paragraph, the result of hurricane Andrew is likely to _______.A. lead to inflation throughout the U.S.B. make the largest insurers suffer the mostC. put the industry in South Florida out of actionD. cause insurers with insufficient funds to go bankrupt33. Using context clues, we may infer that "stuck with the tab"most probably means _____."caught in the hurricane"A."exposed to natural disasters"B."trapped in financial difficulties"C."extremely vulnerable to further damages"D.35. The main purpose of the passage is to _____.A. show the severe damages and heavy losses caused by Hurricane AndrewB. suggest that U.S. insurers are virtually unable to cover the damage claims any moreC. tell about the difficult situation faced by the insurers throughout the U.S.D. prove that disasters tend to cause ever worsening devastation as time goes on.Passage 4Steve Courtney wrote historical novels. Not, he was quick to explain, over colorful love stories of the kind that made so much money for so many women writer, but novels set, andcorrectly set, in historical periods. Whatever difference he saw in his own books, his readers didnot seem to notice it, and his readers were nearly all women. He had studied at university, but hehad not been a particularly good student, and he had never afterwards let any academic knowledgehe had gained interfere with his writing.Helen, his wife, who did not have a very high opinion of her husband's ability as a novelist,had been careful to say when she married him that she was not historically minded.Above all, Helen was doubtful whether her relationship with Steve would work at all in thevillage of Stretton, to which they had just moved. It was Steve who had wanted to move to thecountry, and she had been glad of the change, in principle, whatever doubts she was now havingabout Stretton as a choice. But she wondered whether Steve would not, before very long, wantto live in London again, and what she would do if he did. The Stretton house was not a weekendcottage. They had moved into it and given up the London flat altogether, partly at least, she suspected, because that she Steve's idea of what a successful author ought to do. However, she thought he was not going to feel like a successful author half as much in Stretton ashe had in London. On the other had, she supposed he might just start dashing up to London forthe day to see his agent or have lunch with his publisher, leaving her behind in Stretton, andshe thought on the whole she would like that.36. What was Steve's attitude towards women who wrote love stories?A. He would have liked to earn as much money as they did.B. He was afraid of being compared unfavorably with themC. He did not think he could write about the same subjectsD. He had a low opinion of the kind of books they wrote37. What did Helen have to be careful to hide?A. Her lack of interest in historyB. Her low opinion of her husband's writingC. Her dislike of her husband's writingD. Her inability to husband's admirers.38. What were Helen's feelings about the move from London to Stretton?A. She wanted to remain in the countryB. She had been unwilling to leave LondonC. She thought it was time to return to undon39. Helen thought Steve might not be content in Stretton because ______.A. he would not be able to write so well in the countryB. he would not feel so important in StrettonC. his relationship with Helen was changingD. he would not be lonely without all his London friends40. The passage as a whole suggests that Steve's novels were _____.A. popular but unimportantB. serious works of literatureC. admired for their historical truthD. written with women readers in mindPassage 5The sixties have been misunderstood. It was not a radical decade, as the term radical is commonly used in connection with those years. It was not a decade of the left ascendant. Rampant, perhaps but not ascendant. Rather, the decade was radical radicalizing, which, subsequent decades have shown, is different. Politically, the sixties invigorated the right more than the left. But of course politics is not everything. In fact, three decades down the road, the nation's political discourse may be driven by conservatives, but they, although by many measures triumphant, seem aggrieved because politics seems peripheral to, and largely impotent against, cultural forces and institutions permeated with what conservatives consider the sixties sensibilities.Treating a decade as a discrete entity obviously makes the assumption that history during that decade had an obliging tidiness, opening with a decisive and tone-setting episode and closing with a suitably climatic event. History rarely accommodates that assumption. Such a treatment of a decade also makes the equally dubious assumption that the decade in question had a clearly dominant tone or profile. So the 1920s was the decade of jazz., flappers, the birth of the sports celebrity (Babe Ruth, Red Grange, Jack Dempsey), the Lost Generation, Sacco and Vanzetti and ...Warren Harding, Calvin Coolidge, and Herbert Hoover.Let us stipulate this, then: A decade, even one as intensely felt at the time and as hotly debated afterward as the sixties was and is, can come to seem, when recollected in tranquility, quite unlike the decade as it was felt at the time, and unlike the decade as it is portrayed by people with an emotional or political investment in portraying it a particular way.It is arguable that we should think of the sixties as beginning in November 1963 and ending in October 1973. That is, the years we connect with the tumultuousness associated with the phrase "the sixties" began with the assassination of a president and ended with the Yom Kippur War and the energy crisis. The assassination shattered (or at least many people say it did ) the nation's sunny postwar disposition; it supposedly "ended American innocence." It is unclear how innocent was this nation that had been made possible by Puritans, had been founded by such innocents as Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, and James Madison, had been born in the bloodshed of what actually was not only the American Revolution but also America's first civil war, had been preserved by the worst civil war the world had until then seen...you get the picture. The sixties as a decade of "lost innocence"? Please. The 1973 oil embargo, which produced a sense of national vulnerability and pervasive limits, did seem to bring down a curtain on something. But on what?41. What does the passage mainly discuss?A. A radical period in American historyB. Different events in the sixtiesC. The true picture of the sixtiesD. Real radicals in the sixties42. Which of the following features describes the sixties according to the passage?RadicalA.AscendantB.WithdrawingC.RampantD.43. Which of the following can be inferred from the passage?A. The sixties should not be judged separatelyB. It is impossible to make assumptions about any decadeC. People tend to misunderstand some events in historyD. History presents many confusing phenomena to people44. It can be inferred from the passage that people regard the sixties asdangerousA.peacefulB.chaoticC.unbearableD.45. It can be most safely concluded from the passage that the 1973 oil embargo _____.A.America's weaknessreflectedAmerica's great power in the worldB.showeddidn't affect America at allC.D.America's position in the worldchangedIII. Translation (20%)Direction: Translate the following passage in to Chinese. Write your translation on the answer sheet.It is not enough to know what is right and what is wrong. One must also be able to apply this knowledge to actual, concrete situations. For that, the virtue of prudence is essential.St Thomas Aquinas referred to prudence as the "rudder virtue" the one that "steers"the others. Without it, we are like someone adrift in a boat, tossedin this direction or that by the wind, the waves, and the current. Unfortunately, the virtue of prudence has too often been confused with caution. Thus, the "prudent"person is one who never "rocks the boat"and is especially careful to aroid is the wisest and most moral course of action to take.The word that actually come closest to fulletining as a synonym for prudence is "discernment". The prudent person is one who can "size Up a situation and decide. What is the, what is the wisest and most moral course of action to take.prudencedoesn't answer the question, "What is the right thing in principle to Accordingly,do? Rather, "What is the right thing for me (or for us) to do in this situation?"The prudent person fully examines a situation and seeks advice from others. (Reaching out to others for counsel before acting is one of the classic marks of a prudent person.) A judgment is made in the light of this examination and advice, and then a decision is made.IV. Writing (20%)Directions: Read the following sentences carefully and write a composition of 250-300words according to the requirement. Write your composition on the answer sheet.Do you agree or disagree with the following statement? Face-to-face communication is better than other types of communication, such as letters, e-mail, or telephone calls. Use specific reasons and details to support your answer.Key to Paper AI. Vocabulary (10%)1-10: C D D B D B A C D A11-20: B C C A C D C D B BII. Reading comprehension (50%)21-30: A B D B C D C C B A31-40: A D C A C D B D B A41-45: C D A C AIII. Translation (20%)只知道什么是对,什么是错,这还不够,还必须能把这一知识运用于实际的具体情况.为此,审慎这一美德便是必不可少的。