本四[1]
- 格式:doc
- 大小:89.00 KB
- 文档页数:10
SHANDONG UNIVERSITY COLLEGE ENGLISH TEST FOR NON-ENGLISH MAJORS OF CONTINUING EDUCATION(本科第4册)I. Vocabulary and Structure (15%)There are 30 questions in this part. For each of the questions, there are 4 choices marked A, B, C, and D. Choose the ONE that best answers the question.1. Researchers have only succeeded in marking off fragmentary stretches of DNA.A. combinedB. singleC. connectedD. disconnected2. Companies now have an incentive to file more selective applications.A. motivationB. excitementC. amusementD. pressure3. The sloppy reasoning of the speaker disappointed his supporters.A. plainB. discontinuousC. inconsistentD. careless4. After three years of efforts, the scientists got _______ further than isolating a single genewith a single known function.A. noB. NeverC. seldomD. not5. There is still _______ about Lawrence’s novels.A. competitionB. controversyC. contentionD. contest6. Some films have a misleading _____ on children.A. effectB. affectC. faultD. deficiency7. Global warming is likely to _____ a series of unpleasant effects.A. doubleB. fastenC. triggerD. alleviate8. That young man still denies _______ the fire behind the store.A. startB. to startC. having starte dD. to have started9. ______ receiving financial support from family, community or the government is allowed,it is never admired.A. AsB. OnceC. AlthoughD. Lest10. I’d rather have a room of my own, however small it is, than _______ a room with someoneelse.A. shareB. to shareC. sharingD. to have shared11. American football and baseball are becoming known to the British public through televised_______ from the United States.A. transferB. deliveriesC. transportationD. transmissions12. Most broadcasters maintain that TV has been unfairly criticized and argue that the power ofthe medium is _______ .A. grantedB. impliedC. exaggeratedD. remedied13. Philip Roth was ______ as a major new author in 1960.A. publishedB. hailedC. guidedD. supposed14. A _____ number of books on this subject are in the library.A. littleB. limitedC. tinyD. low15. The river dried up during the hot _______.A. periodB. fitC. scorcherD. spell16. Daylight ______ long in the summer time.A. lingersB. staysC. hoversD. persists17. An electronic message snapped his concentration.A. caused to lose concentration suddenlyB. broke offC. ceasedD. stopped18. It is vital for parents to supervise teens as well as to teach them how to manage time.A. priorB. very importantC. fatalD. superior19. The solid partic les were filtered ____ ____ before the solution was used.A. outB. overC. offD. on20. I had a bizarre taste, which I acquired playing football games.A. oddB. unconventionalC. specialD. extra21. The result of the first game was catastrophic.A. gloomyB. prosperousC. valuelessD. of a total failure22. It dawned on us that we were engaged in a sport, not in play.A. It was clearB. We came to understandC. We were forced to believeD. We were convinced23. By making tapes for her children, Rebekah tried to cram a lifetime of love ______ a few precious hours.A. withB. inC. onD. into24. The terminal patient has to face and contend __ ___ death.A. toB. againstC. toD. with25. She breathed a ______ of relief when the expected disaster did not happen.A. sighB. breathC. airD. gas26. He had to contend ___ ___ many difficulties when he was a young man.A. withB. againstC. uponD. over27. Democracy and freedom in American families enable each family member to have a________ .A. speakB. tellC. sayD. talk28. Fred ________ the bag as his by telling what it contained.A. identifiedB. recognizedC. determinedD. admitted29. It was his _____ wish that we should go without him.A. aggressiveB. suggestingC. distinctD. express30. These surveys indicate that many crimes go _______ by the police, mainly because not all victims report them.A. unrecordedB. to be unrecordedC. unrecordingD. to have been unrecordedII. Cloze (10%)There are 20 blanks in the following passage. For each blank, there are four choices marked A, B, C, and D. Choose the ONE that best fits into the passage.It fascinates me to observe the way in __ (31)___ children so often react against their parents’ ideas, while at the same time _ _(32)___ their parents’ characteristics. That is to say, the children grow up to _ _(33)___ different views from their parents’, yet to have ___(34)___ personalities. There is a __ _(35)____ going on in the toy world at present over whether children should be ___(36)___ to havewar toys. I don’t believe in encouraging war toys, but I do not see any ___(37)___ in forbidding them when I think of the __ (38)___ of my friend Harry.Harry is the __ (39)___ of strict parents who were totally opposed to war. He was never allowed toy soldiers __ (40)___ a boy, never allowed toy guns. Harry grew up and went into the army, becoming a first-class soldier and ___(41)___ all sorts of military honors in a rather fierce unit. He became the opposite in __ (42)___ way of what his parents might have expected __ (43)___ their son. And yet there is a gentleness about Harry which shows a ___(44)____ personality. There is a sympathetic element about the man which I can see __ (45)____ have come from his family. In ___(46)___ of doing things differently from our parents, a lot of the spirits gets passed on.Parents in all conscience have to __(47)___ their children what they believe to be right; but it is not so much your ideas that the children _ (48)___ as your example. Perhaps the best __(49)__ to teach one’s child gentleness is not to forbid toy guns, but to be gentle in one’s __(50)___ every day life.31. A. what B. it C. which D. that32. A. holding B. attaining C. carrying D. keeping33. A. give B. have C. get D. grow34. A. similar B. i dentical C. common D. ordinary35. A. fighting B. struggle C. war D. quarrel36. A. dismissed B. encouraged C. misled D. ventured37. A. stain B. spot C. point D. dot38. A. experience B. advantage C. expense D. adventure39. A. niece B. son C. nephew D. daughter40. A. when B. for C. while D. as41. A. winning B. won C. having won D. did win42. A. each B. single C. individual D. every43. A. on B. at C. from D. against44. A. calm B. quiet C. silent D. serene45. A. must B. need C. want D. long46. A. case B. spite C. situation D. occasion47. A. put B. place C. teach D. give48. A. follow B. trace C. watch D. expect49. A. means B. route C. method D. way50. A. own B. individual C. private D. publicIII. Reading Comprehension (40%)There are 4 passages in this part. Each passage is followed by some True-False questions or Multiple-Choice questions. Choose among A, B, C, and D or between T and F to answer each question.Passage 1The bustle of the hospital was a welcome distraction as I opened my new patient’s chart and headed for her room. My son, Eric, had just brought home a disappointing report card, and mydaughter, Shannon, and I had argued again about her getting a driver’s license. For the next eight hours I wanted to throw myself into helping people who I knew had much more to worry about than I did.Rebekah was only 32, admitted for chemotherapy after breast-cancer surgery. When I entered her room it took me a moment to spot her amid the bouncing forms of three giggling little girls.I told Rebekah I would be her nurse and she introduced her husband, Warren; six-year-old Ruthie; four-year-old Hannah; and two-year-old Molly. Warren coaxed the girls away from their mother with a promise of ice cream and assured Rebekah they would return the next day.As I rubbed alcohol on her arm to prepare it for the intravenous line, Rebekah laughed nervously. “I have to tell you that I’m terrified of needles.” “It’ll be over before you know it,” I said. “I’ll give you a count of three.”Rebekah shut her eyes tightly and murmured a prayer until it was over. Then she smiled and squeezed my hand. “Before you go, could you get my Bible from the table?” I handed her the worn book. “Do you have a favorite Bible verse?” she asked.“Jesus wept. John 11:35.”“Such a sad one,” she said. “Why?”“It makes me feel closer to Jesus, knowing he also experienced human sorrow.”Rebekah nodded thoughtfully and started flipping through her Bible as I shut the door quietly behind me.During the following months I watched Rebekah struggle with the ravages of chemotherapy. Her hospital stays became frequent and she worried about her children. Meanwhile I continued to contend with raising my own kids. They always seemed either out or holed up in their rooms. I missed the days when they were as attached to me as Rebekah’s little girls were to her.For a time it h ad seemed Rebekah’s chemotherap y was working. Then doctors discovered another malignant lump. Two months later, a chest X-ray revealed the cancer had spread to her lungs. It was terminal. Help me to help her through this, I prayed.One day when I entered her room, I found her talking into a tape recorder. She picked up a yellow pad and held it out to me. “I’m making a tape for my daughters,” she said.I read the list on her pad: starting school, confirmation, turning 16, first date, graduation. While I worried about how to help her deal with death, she was planning for her children’s future.She usually waited until the early hours of the morning to record the tapes so she could be free from interruptions. She filled them with family stories and advice—trying to cram a lifetime of love into a few precious hours. Finally, every item in her notes had been checked off and she entrusted the tapes to her husband.I often wondered what I would say in her place. My kids joked that I was like an FBI agent, with my constant questions about where they’d been and who they had been with. Where, I thought, are my words of encouragement and love?It was three o’clock one afternoon when I got an urgent call from the hospital. Rebekah wanted me to come immediately with a blank tape. What topic has she forgotten? I wondered.She was blushed and breathing hard when I entered her room. I slipped the tape into the recorder and held the microphone to her lips. “Ruthie, Hannah, Molly—this is the most important tape.” She held my hand and closed her eyes. “Someday your daddy will bring home a new mommy. Please make her feel special. Show her how to take care of you. Ruthie, honey, help her get your B rownie uniform ready each Tuesday. Hannah, tell her you don’t want meat sauce on your spaghetti.She won’t know you like it separate. Molly, don’t get mad if there is no apple juice. Drink something else. It’s okay to be sad, sweeties. Jesus cried too. He knows about sadness and will help you to be happy again. Remember, I’ll always love you.”I shut off the recorder and Rebekah sighed deeply. “Thank you, Nan,” she said with a we ak smile. “Y ou’ll give this one to them, won’t you?” she murmured as she slid into sleep.A time would come when the tape would be played for Rebekah’s children, but right then, after I smoothed Rebekah’s blanket, I got in my car and I hurried home. I thought of how my Shannon also liked her sauce on the side and suddenly that quirk, which had annoyed me so many times, seemed to make her so much more pre cious. That night the kids didn’t go out; they sat with me long after the spaghetti sauce had dried into the dishes. And we talked—without interrogations, without complaints—late into the night.51. According to the first paragraph of the passage, the nurse was not happy because D .A.she was disappointed with her sonB. she had an argument with her daughterC. she did not want to work in the hospitalD. she was dissatisfied with her children52. According to the nurse, Rebekah was most concerned with D .A. the progress of chemotherapyB. the tape that would let the children remember herC. the happy and healthy growth of her children at their different stages of lifeD. the relationship between her children and their future step-mother53. The words in italics in the fifteenth paragraph of the passage refer to A .A. what the nurse thought about in her own mindB. questions the nurse asked her childrenC. the fact that the nurse blamed herself for not taking good care of the patientD. questions the nurse asked Rebakah C54. Words on the last tape do not support which of the following statements?A. Rebekah respected her children when they had some different habits.B. Rebekah was lenient and amiable thinking of the step-mother her children would have in thefuture.C. Rebekah was very strict with her children and she forced them to change.D. Rebekah cared for her children so much that she looked into great details of their growth.55. It can be inferred from the passage that the nurse and her children would C .A.remain alienated from each otherB.talk with interrogations and complaintsC.be as attached to each other as Rebekah and her childrenD.contend with each otherPassage 2There are a few ineluctable facts about buildings. They are expensive, time consuming and labor intensive to make. They are strongest if built from the sturdiest materials. Well, no, on all accounts.Japanese architect Shigeru Ban first turned to paper tubes because they were cheap but then discovered they had other qualities too: strength, recyclability and, most importantly, beauty. Hehas built homes, pavilions and churches, some of them permanent, using little more than cardboard tubes. “I was interested in weak materials,”says Ban, 42. “Whene ver we invent a new material or new structural system, a new architecture comes out of it.” Ironically, Ban may be closer to the old modernist ideals than many who build today in glass and steel. He wants beauty to be attainable by the masses, even the poorest.Ban first began to use the tubes in the 80’s, in exhibitions. Impressed by the material’s load-bearing capacity (he calls cardboard “improved wood”), he thought of them again in 1995, after the Kobe earthquake, and used donated 34-ply tubes to build a community hall and houses. Working with the United Nations, Ban has shaped paper log houses to Turkey and Rwanda. “Refugee shelter has to be beautiful,” he says. “Psychologically, refugees are damaged. They have to stay in nice places.”But it’s not all about utility. Ban has managed to turn ugly-duckling cardboard into some gorge ous swans.. The Japanese pavilion he created for this year’s EXPO 2000 in Hanover, Germany, is a huge undulating grid of paper tubes enclosed, like a covered wagon, with a paper canopy. An eight-ton, 27-m-long lattice arch of tubes currently swoops over the garden at the Museum of Modern Art in New Y ork City, casting a thatch of ever changing shadows.Ban’s designs touch the earth lightly in more ways than one. After EXPO 2000, hi s pavilion will be shipped to a recycling center to be returned to the pulp from whence it came. Just try that with bricks.56. According to the first paragraph, the author suggests that C .A.buildings should be made out of sturdiest materialsB.buildings are always strong if they are built from the sturdiest materialsC.some materials, seemingly weak, can build strong buildingsD.sturdiest materials can not build strongest buildings57. Whenever we invent a new material or new architectural system, a new architecture comes out of it. The underlined part means A .A. comes into beingB. gets out of itC. gets rid of itD. breaks away from it58. The author says Ban may be closer to the old modernist ideals because C .A.he doesn’t build in glass and steelB.paper tubes are not considered as modern materialsC.he gives the masses access to the beauty of architecture by using paper tubesD.even the poorest can afford houses made by paper tubes59. What is the most important factor that caused Ban to use the paper tubes in buildings? AA. Beauty.B. Load-bearing capacity.C. Rarity.D. Warmth brought about by the material.60. “Just try that with bricks.” By this sentence, the author suggests that A .A.ironically, it is impossible for other materials to be recycled as people do with paper tubesB.people should try different ways to recycle building materialsC.renovations should be made to recycle bricksD.it is possible for bricks to be recycled the same way as paper tubesPassage 3Living standards have soared during the twentieth century, and economists expect them to continue rising in the decades ahead. Does that mean that we humans can look forward to increasing happiness?Not necessarily, warns Richard A. Easterlin, an economist at the University of Southern California, in his new book, Growth Triumphant: the Twenty-first Century in Historical Perspective. Easterlin concedes that richer people are more likely to report themselves as being happy than poorer people are. But steady improvements in the American economy have not been accompanied by steady increases in people’s self-assessment of their own happiness. “There has been not improvement in average happiness in the United States over almost a half century—a period in which real GDP per capita more than doubled,” Easterlin reports.The explanation for this paradox may be that people become less satisfied over time with a given level of income. In Easterlin’s words: “As incomes rise, the aspiration level does too, and the effect of this increase in aspirations is to vitiate the expected growth in happiness due to higher income.”Money can buy happiness, Easterlin seems to be saying, but only if one’s accounts get bigger and other people aren’t getting more. His analysis helps to explain sociologist Lee Rainwater’s finding that American’s perception of the income “necessary to get along” rose between 1950 and 1986 in the same proportion as actual per capita income. We feel rich if we have more than our neighbors, poor if we have less, and feeling relatively well-off is equated with being happy.Easterlin’s findings challenge psychologist Abraham Maslow’s “hierarchy of wants” as a reliable guide to future human motivation. Maslow suggested that as people’s basic m aterial wants are satisfied they seek to achieve nonmaterial or spiritual goals. But Easterlin’s evidence points to the persistence of materialism.“Despite a general level of affluence never before realized in the history of the world,” Easterlin observes, “material concerns in the wealthiest nations today are as pressing as ever and the pursuit of material needs as intense.” The evidence suggests there is no evolution toward higher order goals. Rather, each step upward on the ladder of economic development merely stimulates new economic desires that lead the chase ever onward. Economists are accustomed to deflating the money value of national income by the average level of prices to obtain “real” income. The process here is similar—real income is being deflated by rising material aspiration, in this case to yield essentially constant subjective economic well-being. While it would be pleasant to envisage a world free from the pressure of material want, a more realist projection, based on the evidence, is of a world in which generation after generation thinks it needs only another 10% to 20% more income to be perfectly happy.Needs are limited, but not greed. Science has developed no cure for envy, so our wealth boosts our happiness only briefly while shrinking that of our neighbors. Thus the outlook for the future is gloomy in Easterlin’s view.“The future, then, to which the epoch of modern economic growth is leading is one of never ending economic growth, a world in which ever growing abundance is matched by ever rising aspirations, a world in which cultural difference is leveled in the constant race to achieve the good life of the material plenty; it is a world founded on belief in science and the power of rational inquiry and in the ultimate capacity of humanity to shape its own destiny. The irony is that in this last respect the lesson of history appears to be otherwise: that there is no choice. In the end, the triumph ofeconomic growth is not a triumph of humanity over material wants; rather, it is the triumph of material wants over humanity.”61. The author claims that the higher living standard does not necessarily mean increasing happiness.T62. Steady improvement is always accompanied by steady increases in people’s happiness.F63. The higher the aspiration level is, the happier the people will be.F64. Easterlin’s findings can be used as evidence to support divergent views.F65. Economy can’t keep a sustained development because it is constantly deflated by the rising material aspiration.TPassage 4I love shopping, even if it is just window-shopping. Shopping in the States is always a pleasant experience. There are different types of shops that operate to cater to your different needs. To buy groceries, you can go to the convenience store, the supermarket or the mass merchandiser (such as Wal-Mart). To buy some clothes and big-ticket items, you can go to the mall or factory outlets. I go to two places most often, the supermarket and the mall.In almost every city or large town, you can find several big-chain supermarkets. They have more than a dozen checkouts and are one-stop shops since you can buy almost everything there: food, cosmetics, clothes, medicine, etc. Y ou name it. With the development of technology, some of these supermarkets have installed the automatic checkout lanes for customers. I was so thrilled the first time I used the automatic checkout lane. Most packaged goods have barcodes and you just scan them on the scanning machine when you checkout. Some items, such as produce (vegetables and fruits), do not have barcodes on them. Y ou need to input their label numbers, which can be found on the list glued to the scanning machine. These automatic checkout lanes help the stores reduce their labor cost and increase their efficiency. Every grocery store has promotions on different kinds of products every week. Usually you can find a store weekly newspaper with featured promotions for that particular week. I am a bargain hunter, forward-buying a lot of daily products if I feel I need them in the future. Once, I saw a featured promotion on Panteen 2-in-1 shampoo plus conditioner. Although I did not need it at that time, I felt it was a good deal. So I decided to buy two bottles. However, I couldn’t find any such Panteen on the shelf. I went to a sales clerk and asked if he could find any for me. He told me that the store was out of the stock and it would not have any in until the next week. The unfortunate thing was that by then the promotion would be over. However, the clerk told me that I could go to the customer service counter and I would be given a rain-check, which would guarantee the promotion price for me on that particular item. In the following week, with the rain-check, I bought the products at the last week’s promotion price.Another time, I bought two bags of salad at a grocery store. When I scanned them, the screen showed a different price from what the store advertised. Out of curiosity, I went to the customer service counter and asked why. The lady who helped me went to the shelf to double-check the price. When she came back, she apologized to me, saying that the store didn’t scan the price properly. According to the internal policy of the store, if the customer found out a scanning problem, he would get the product for free as an award for him or a penalty to the store. When I left the store with the two bags of free salad, I marveled at the honesty of the store clerk. If she had not told me, Iwould never have had any chance to know that the store had this internal policy.A shopping mall in the States is composed of many individual specialty shops and nation wide chain stores, such as Sears and JC Penny. What impresses me most when shopping in the mall is its return policy. No matter what you buy, shoes, pants or big-ticket items such as TV and VCR, if you find some problems with them or simply do not like them any longer, you can return them within 30 days. Y ou won’t be challenged at the customer service counter as long as you have your receipt. Of course there are some people who might take the advantage of this return policy, especially when they need something for a momentary use. That’s why you can always find a long line of people waiting to return their goods right after Christmas.Then the clichéthat “the customer is God” ring s true to me when I shop in the States. Sometimes I believe that at a certain corner of the world there is a god seeing to the benefits of the customer.66. All products can go through the automatic checkout lane though some of them don’t have barcodes.F67. The quality of products on promotion is not guaranteed. F68. Scanning problem will be corrected by the customer himself. F69. Customer will get some money as award for finding out errors. F70. Never has anyone taken the advantage of return policy. FIV. T ranslate the following sentences into English, using the words or expressions given in brackets. (10%)71.科学家们已成功分离出具有单项已知功能的单个而明显的基因。