长安大学2013年非英语专业硕士研究生学位英语考试试题
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第一部分历年真题2013年硕士学位研究生入学资格考试GCT英语真题及详解第四部分:外语运用能力测试(英语)(50题,每小题2分,满分100分)Part I Vocabulary and StructureDirections: There are ten incomplete sentences in this part. For each sentence there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that bestcompletes the sentence. Mark your answer on the ANSWER SHEET with asingle line through the center.1. No ready technical data available, we managed to ______ them.A. go downB. go offC. go upD. go without2. The basic causes are unknown though certain conditions that may lead to cancer have been ______.A. identifiedB. guaranteedC. notifiedD. conveyed3. ______ is known to all, good friends add happiness and value to each other’s life.A. LikeB. SinceC. AsD. Though4. The actor and actress provided superb interpretations of their ______ roles.A. respectfulB. respectiveC. respectingD. respected5. Our family ______ not to exchange Christmas gifts this year.A. has agreedB. have agreedC. agreesD. had agreed6. We expected about 20 guests but there were ______ people there.A. anyB. otherC. someD. more7. Computers ______ 5%of the c ountry’s commercial electricity consumption.A. pay forB. stand forC. account forD. provide for8. The museum has been temporarily closed ______ the public.A. withB. toC. onD. for9. If I had not been enjoying the work, I ______ so much of it.A. would not doB. would not have doneC. should not doD. should not have done10. ______ may seem helpful behavior to you can be understood as interference by others.A. WhatB. ThatC. ItD. WhichPart II Reading ComprehensionDirections: In this part there are three passages and one advertisement, each followed questions or unfinished statements. For each of them, there arefour choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the best one and mark youranswer on the ANSWER SHEET with a single line though the center. Questions 11-15 are based on the following passage:In the past, degrees were very unusual in my family. I remember the day my uncle graduated. We had a huge party, and for many years my mother called him "the genius" and listened to his opinion. Today in comparison, five of my brothers and sisters have degrees, and two are studying for their masters'. However, some people think that this increased access to education is devaluing degrees.People have several arguments against the need for degrees. They say that having so many graduates devalues a degree. People lose respect for the degree holder. It is also claimed that education has become a rat race. Graduates have to compete for jobs even after years of studying. Another point is that studying for such a long time leads to learners becoming inflexible. They know a lot about one narrow subject, but are unable to apply their skills. Employers prefer more flexible and adaptable workers.However, I feel strongly that this move to having more qualifications is a positive development. In the past education was only for the rich: and powerful. Now it is available to everyone, and this will have many advantages for the country and the individual. First of all, it is impossible to be overeducated. The more people are educated, the better the world will be, because people will be able to discussand exchange ideas. A further point is that people with degrees have many more opportunities. They can take a wider variety of jobs and do what they enjoy doing, instead of being forced to take a job they dislike. Finally, a highly educated workforce is good for the economy of the country. It attracts foreign investment.In conclusion, although there are undoubtedly some problems with increased levels of education, I feel strongly that the country can only progress if all its people are educated to the maximum of their ability.11. What can we learn about the author's family?A. They used to disregard education.B. They are overeducated now.C. Few members were allowed to go to school in the past.D. There are now more educated members than in the past.12. The word “it” in the last sentence of Paragraph 3 refers to “______”A. educationB. workforceC. economyD. country13. The author believes that education ______A. reduces the value of degreesB. makes people inflexibleC. brings more job opportunitiesD. increases job competition14. What is the author's purpose of writing this passage?A. T o argue about a disputed issue.B. To explain a complicated idea.C. T o describe a social phenomenon.D. T o demonstrate a research result.15. Which of the following is probably the best title for the passage?A. Degree No Longer MattersB. Education is Still ValuableC. Graduation and JobsD. Problems with EducationQuestions 16-20 are based on the following passage:Ernest Hemingway wrote a short story called "The Capital of the World" In it he tells about a Spanish father who wants to reconcile (和解)with his son who has run away to Madrid. In order to locate the boy he takes out this ad in the newspaper: "Paco, meet me at Hotel Montana at noon on Tuesday. All is forgiven. Love, Papa."Paco is a common name in Spain, and when the father goes to the square he finds 800 young men named Paco waiting for their fathers.What drew them to the hotel? As Hemingway tells it, it was the words "All is forgiven. " The father did not say, "All WILL BE forgiven IF you do this or that." Not," All WILL BE forgiven WHEN you do such and such." He simply says," All is forgiven. " No strings attached.And that's the hard part-un-attaching the strings. The origin of the expression。
★启用前绝密★绝密20133年同等学力人员申请硕士学位201外国语水平全国统一考试英语试卷一AENGLISH QUALIFICATION TESTFOR MASTER-DEGREE APPLICANTSPart I Oral Communication(15minutes,10points)Part I I VocabularVocabulary y(10minutes,10points)Part II III I Reading Comprehension(45minutes,25points)Part I V Cloze(10minutes,10points)P art V Text Completion(20minutes,20points)Part V I Translation(20minutes,10points)Writing g(30minutes,15points)P art VII Writin考生须知1.本考试共150分钟。
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3.本试卷为A型试卷,请将答案用2B铅笔填涂在A型答题卡上,答在其它类型答题卡或试卷上的无效。
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[C][D]。
4.在答题卡上正确的填涂方法为:在答案所代表的字母上涂黑,如[A]Part I Oral Communication(10points)Section ADirections:In this section there are two incomplete dialogues and each dialogue has three blanks and three choices A,B and C,taken from the dialogue.Fill in each of the blanks with one of the choices to complete the dialogue and mark your answer on the Answer Sheet.Dialogue OneA.It sounds like a flu.B.I also advise resting for a couple of days.C.Boy,when it rains,it pours.Doctor:What has been bothering you?Patient:I have a stuffy nose and a sore throat.Plus,I’ve been coughing a lot.__1___Doctor:Any stomach pains?Patient:Actually,yes.My stomach”s been upset for a few days.Doctor:_2___It’s been going around lately.Patient:Anything I can do for it?Doctor:I’ll prescribe some medicines for you to take__3_____Patient:Docs that mean I shouldn’t go to work?Doctor:Only when you fool up to it.You should stay home for at least a day or two.Dialogue TwoA.So,what are you going to do with the money?B.You have lots of money.C.How much do I owe you?Joshua:Dad.Allowance day.Can I have my allowance?Father:Oh.I forgot about that.Joshua:You ALWAYS forget.Father:I guess I do___4____Joshua:Just$13.Father:Well,I’m not sure if I have that much.Joshua:Go to the bank____5______Father:Lots of money,uh?Uh,well,I think the bank is closed.Joshua:Then,what about your secret money jar under your bed?Father:Oh,I guess I could do that.___6____Joshua:I’m going to put some in saving,give some to the poor people,and use the rest to buy books.Father:Well,that sounds great,Joshua.Section BDirections:In this section there is one incomplete interview which has four blanks and four choices A,B,C,and D,taken from the interview.Fill in each of the blanks with one of the choices to complete the interview and mark your answer on the Answer Sheet.A.Nationalities stay in their own areas.B.People don’t queue like they do here in England.C.What I liked best was that I could work and still lead a normal life.D.Some supermarkets are open twenty-four hours a day.Interviewer:How long did you live in the States?Interviewee:I was there for two years,in New York,and I enjoyed it tremendously.__7____I mean,the shops are open till10:00p.m.Interviewer:All shops?Interviewee:Yes,everything.Food shops,chemists,and department stores.___8___And on public holidays,only the banks are shut.Interviewer:I see,emn...Do you think New York is as multinational as London?Interviewee:Oh,that’s for sure.But it’s not as mixed__9____like there’s Russian section,the German section and China Town.But I think the major difference between these two cities was the height of the place.Everything was up in the Big Apple.We lived on the thirty-fifth floor.And of course everything is faster and the New Yorks are much ruder.Interviewer:Oh!In what way?Interviewee:Well,pushing in the street,fights about getting on the bus,__10_____And of course the taxi drivers!New York taxi drivers must be the rudest in the world!Part II Vocabulary(10points)Directions:In this part there are ten sentences,each with one word or phrase underline.Choose the one from the four choices marked A,B,C and D that best keeps the meaning of the sentences.Mark your answer on the Answer Sheet.11.I read the newspaper every day so that I can stay informed about current events.A.importantB.internationaltestD.cultural12.After seven days in the desert,the explorer was relieved when he eventually found water.A.predictablyB.finallyC.luckilyD.accidentally13.When we gave the children ice cream,they immediately ceased crying.A.startedB.continuedC.resumedD.stopped14.The science teacher demonstrated the process of turning solid gold into liquid.A.showedB.elaboratedC.devisedD.simplified15.John’s application for admission to graduate studies in the School of Education has been approved.A.entranceB.acceptanceC.experienceD.allowance16.Most college students in the United States live away from home.A.apartB.downC.elsewhereD.along17.The pursuit of maximum profit often drives manufacturers to turn out things that can do harm to people’s beath.A.preserveB.promoteC.processD.produce18.Many different parts make up an airplane:the engine(s),the wings,the tail,and so on.poseB.decorateC.constructD.derive19.You make it sound as if I did it on purpose.A.carefullyB.unwillinglyC.incrediblyD.deliberately20.He could never have foreseen that one day his books would sell in millions.A.understoodB.explainedC.expectedD.believedPart III Reading Comprehension(25points)Section ADirections:In this section there are four passages followed by question or unfinished statements,each with four suggested answer A,B,C and D.Choose the best answer and mark your answer on the Answer Sheet.Passage OneFive or six years ago,I attended a lecture on the science of attention.A philosopher who conducts research in the medical school was talking about attention blindness,the basic feature of the human brain that,when we concentrate intensely on one task,causes us to miss just about everything else.Because we can’t see what we can’t see,our lecturer was determined to catch us in the act.He had us watch a video of six people tossing basketballs back and forth,three in which shirts and three in black,and our lask was to keep track only of the tosses among the people in which.The tape rolled,and everyone began counting.Everyone except me.I’m dyslexic,and the moment I saw that grainy tape with the confusing basketball tossers,I knew I wouldn’t be able to keep track of their movements,so I let my mind wander.My curiosity was aroused,though,when about30seconds into the tape,a gorilla came in among the players.She(we later learned a female student was in the gorilla suit)stared at the camera,thumped her chest,and then strode away while they continued passing the balls.When the tape stopped,the philosopher asked how many people had counted at least a dozen basketball tosses.Hands went up all over.He then asked who had counted13,14,and congratulated those who’d scored the perfect15.Then he asked,“And who saw the gorilla?”I raised my hand and was surprised to discover I was the only person at my table and one of only three or four in the large room to do so.IIe’d set us up,Itapping us in our own attention blindness.Yes,there had been a trick,but he wasn’t the one who had played it on us.By concentrating so hard on counting,we had managed to miss the gorilla in the midst.21.This passage describes_______A.a basketball matchB.An experimentC.a philosopherD.a gorilla22.“Allention blindness”refers to______A.the fact that one can’t see what one can’t seeB.Seeing one thing while missing all elseC.Keeping track of just about everyingD.The condition of being blind to details23.“Catch us in the act”(Para.1)is closest in meaning to“find us_______”A.doing something improperB.sleeping during the lectureC.counting the basketball tossesD.failing to notice something within sight24.How many people in the room saw the gorilla in the video?A.1B.3or4C.13or14D.1525.Whom does“he”(last paragraph)refer to?A.The authorB.The gorillaC.The lecturerD.The studentPassage TwoThere are few sadder sights than8pile of fan letters,lovingly decorated with hand drawings,suffering in a bin,The sparkly envelopes were addressed to Taylor Swift,a pop star much beloved by teenage and pre-teen girls.“Dear Taylor,”read one discarded message,”I love you so much!!You are the best!!And you are really beautiful and cute!!I’m really enjoying your songs.”This along with hundreds of other similor letters sent from around the world,was discovered in a Nashville recycling disposal unit by a local woman,Swift’s management was quick to reassure her admitery that they had been thouwn out accidentally.The response may come as a disappointment to any devotee who imagines,as they compose their letters,that Swift makes time to view each one personally.Dealing with piles of lars mail is,however,an administrative burden for most celebrities.While some celebrities do like to go through their mail personally,the majority simply do not have time.But the fate of their correspondence is something most commitred fans will not wish and well on,says Lynn Zubermis,an expect in the psychology of London at West Chester University.“There’s this little bit of every fan that thinks their will be the one that stands but---it’s not an expectation,but a hope that theirs will be seen by the celebrity.”While the relationship between the fan and the celebrity may exist only in the mind of the farmer,it’s stems from a sleeply-rooted human next for community and belonging,Zucrms believes.As a result,even receiving,amass-producexl letter of acknowledgement and a photo stumped with a reproduced signature can be a power experietice.“People have a tremendous need to connect with the person they are idolising(偶像化)”she says.“They can’t them up and say,”Can we have coffee?”It’s not about the autograph(签名).It’s about the moment of connection.”26.which of the following statements is true?A.The letters in the bin were exaggeratingB.Some letters to Swift were thrown away unread.C.A woman discovered the letters and discarded them.D.Poorly decorated letters were left unread.27.Swift’s manger ment claimed that______.A.Swift had read each one of lettersB.Fans could trust them with their lettersC.They were quick in response to the incidentD.They did not internal to thraw away the letters28.Most celebrities_________A.are too busy to read fan mail.B.Are afraid of receiving fan mail.C.Try their best to read fan mail themselvesD.Cute about the lute of fan mail29.According to Zubernis,fans want their letters to be read because they.A.hope to show their hand drawingsB.want the celebrities to see their talentC.desire to get connected with the starsD.dream of getting a photo of the stars30.Which of the following will fans cherish the most?A.The feeling of being related to their starsB.The sense of being similar to their starsC.The time spent with their starsD.The autograph of their starsPassage ThreeFacelift(紧肤术)followed by a week on a beach in Thailand?Hip surgery with a side of shopping in Singapore?Over the last10years,Asia’s rise on the medical tourism scene has been quick.Eastern nations dominate the global scene.Now Bali wants a slice of the action.The Indonesian island recently opened its first facility specifically targeting medical tourists with packages and services,Bali international Medical Centre(BIMC)Nusa Dua.BIMC already has an international hospital in Kuta,which opened in1998.The new internationally managed facility offers surgical and non-surgical cosmetic procedures and dental care.Unlike most of the region’s hospitals,BIMC is designed to feel more like a spa or resort(度假村)than a medical facility..The50-bed hospital has a24-hour medical emergency entrance and hotel-like lobby at the front of the building servicing the hospital’s medical,and dental centers.If you’re a celebrity who doesn’t want everyone to know you’re here for a bit of lipo(吸脂术),no worries. There’s a private entrance that leads to the CosMedic Centre,which offers views of a golf course.BIMC has even teamed up with the nearby Courtyard by Marriott Bali,which provides specific after-care services like tailor-made meals and wellness programs for patients.Latest technology and cool interiors are a start,but breaking into a regional industry that already has some of the worlds top international hospitals will be tough,says Josef-Woodman,CEO of U.S.-based medical travel consumer guide Patients Beyond Borders(PBB).“As a newcomer,Bali faces stiff competition from nearby international healthcare providers.To compete,Bali will to demonstrate a quality level of care and promote its services to the region and the world.On the positive side,Bali is blessed as one of the region’s safest,most popular tourist destinations,with a built-in potential to attract medical travelers.”The lndonesian island could’t have picked a better time to get into the game,says PBB.”The world population is aging and becoming weather at rates that surpass the availability of quality healthcare resources,”says the company’s research.31.what does“medical tourism:(para1)probably mean?A.Trcating a disease during a tripB.Attracting patients with package tours.C.Cosmetic treatment and a tour in one.D.Turning hospitals into tourist attractions.32.How does BLMC differ from regular hospitals?A.It offers cosmctic surgery.B.It has better environment and services.C.It accepts international patients.D.It has more beds and longer service hours.33.BIMC wishes to attract celebrities with its__________.A.privacy measuresB.first-class designC.free golf courseD.tailor-made meals34.According to Woodman,BIMC___________.A.threatens its regional competilors.B.will soon take the led in the industry.C.needs further improvement.D.faces both challenges and opportunuties.35.What can be concluded from the last paragraph?A.The population is developing faster than medical resources.B.Healthcare is hardly available for the aging population.C.The world is in need of more quality medical care.D.The world population is becoming older and richer.Passage FourFor many of us,asking for help is it difficult concept.We may feel as if we are admitting a weakness that the world would not have known about,had we not asked for help.Ironically,it’s been my experience that people who are able to deliver well-positioned requests for help are seen as very strong individuals.When they demonstrate the humility(谦卑)to ask for help,they carn the respect of others.People who receive a heartfelt request for help are usually honored by the request.In turn we are strengthened by the very help that is provided.One of my clients(we’ll call her Kira)recently made a shift in how she was interacting with her boss. When asked to prepare presentations,she assumed that she was expected to go away,develop the content, deliver it at the required meeting and then wait for feedback from her boss.Her boss was highly regarded for the impact of his presentations,while Kira often felt that her presentations were lacking.When she took a hard look at how this approach was working for her.Kira recognized that she had not yet made use of her boss’s support. She could learn far more about creating attractive presentations by walking through a draft with her boss—focusing on the content plus her delivery—and obtaining feedback earlier in the process rather than at the back end.So she made the request for his support.The outcome?Her boss was delighted to coach Kira and was enthusiastic about the opportunity to put into use his own strength by teaching presentation skills more effectively to her.By taking the time to work together on preparation for a number of Kira’s key presentations,she benefited from her boss’s thought process and was able to distinguish the critical compoments to enhance her own presentations.Kira’s presentations now have punch!_________Some of us are uncomfortable asking for help because we believe that our request places burdens on the other person.Ironically,we may be missing an opportunity to show others how we value and respect them. People who know you and think well of you are often highly motivated to help.Furthermore,the more specific you can be about what you need from them,the easier it is for them to assist you.36.Many people are unwilling to ask for help because theyA.are confident of themselvesB.do not trust other peopleC.are ashamed of doing soD.do not think it necessary37.Which of the following may the author agree with?A.Asking for help means admitting weaknesses.B.Helping others is helping oneself.C.Well-positioned requests for help are welcomed.D.Weak people often need more help.38.Kira’s request for help________A.turned out rewardingB.was turned downC.led to her promotion C.benefited her boss in return39.“Kirs’s presentations now have punch”means her presentations are________A.ForcefulB.contriversialC.well receivedD.highly motivating40.The purpose of the passage is to________A.illustrate how to ask for helpB.show the importance of mutual helpC.call for attention to others’requestsD.encourage people to ask for helpSection BDirections:In this section,you are required to read one quoted blog and the comments on it.The blog and comments are followed by questions or unfinished statements,each with four suggested answers A,B,C and D. Choose the best answer and mark your answer on the Answer Sheet.A fascinating new study reveals that Americans are more likely to call their children“intelligent”.while European parents focus on happiness and balance.Here’s what one parent had to say about the intelligence of her3-year–old,which was apparent to her from the very first moments of her life.“I have this vivid memory,when she was born of them taking her to clean her off.And she was looking all around.She was alert from the very first second.I look her out when she was six weeks old to a shopping mall to have her picture taken people would stop me and say:“What an alert baby.”One guy stopped me and said,“Lady,she was on intelligent baby.”Not only are Americans far more likely to focus on their children’s intelligence and cognative skills,they are also far less likely to describe them as“happy”or“easy”children to parent.“The U.S.unhealthy interest in cognitive development in the early years overlooks so much else”the researchers told us.Comment1:Probably indicates more about difference in cultural attitudes towards humility and boasting than about parenting styles.Here in the Netherlands if someone called their child“intelligent”I’d be rolling my eyes,both because it’s probably biased and overstated and because it’s just a rotten thing to draw attention to,as if it’s all about whose child is“better”.Life isn’t than much of a damn contest to us.Comment2:Agreed!That would apply in Sweden too.Parenting is more focused on the child’s well-being than social competition(there may be pressures here too,but it is not socially acceptable to express those things). Comment3:I agree and I live in the U.S.Parents’opinions of their children’s intellect are definitely biased and overstated.It is the most annoying thing to listen to.Beijing“advanced”at a young age has little if anything to do with their ability to learn as they get older and EVERY child is a genius if you give them a chance and an ear to listen to them.The happier the kid is,the smarter they will be.Happy and healthy is key.41.The passage is mainly concerned with cultural differences inA.bringing up one’s childrenB.describing one’s childrenC.social contestD.choosing a place to live in42.The word“alert”(para.3)is closest in meaning to“_________”A.intelligentB.easy-goingC.quick at noticing thingsD.happy43.According to Comment1,in ten Netherlands,calling one’s own child“intelligent”isA.boastingB.acceptableC.encouragingD.reasonable44.What nationality is the writer of Comment2?A.DutchB.AmericanC.SwedishD.French45.All of the following are true of Comment3EXCEPT thatA.it agrees with all the other commentsB.being happy and healthy is importantC.being intelligent at a young makes no senseD.children’s intellect varies from person to personPart IV Cloze(10minutes,10points)Directions:In this part,t here is a passage with ten blanks.For each blank there are four choices marked A,B, C and D.Choose the best for each blank and mark your answer on the Answer Sheet.Riding a bike is good exercise and great fun.But what do you do with a bike after you outgrow it?Nicole Basil,12,has a terrific answer to this question.When she was8years old,she46Pedal Power.It is a charity that collects bikes that kids have outgrown and donates them to Chicago public schools.Since2008,Nicols has collected and donated more than1000bikes.47the bicycles,Pedal Power supplied riders with400helmets(头盔)last year.“It is important to ride48on a bike,and helmets are a big part of that,”Nicols says.The Wilmette Bicycle&Sport Shop helps to49that all donated bikes are safe to ride.Each bike receives a five-minute50by the shop’s employees.The bikes are given to students who have good grades and perfect attendance.Nicole says:”Some kids aren’t as lucky as others,51they still do well in school.I think they should be52for that.”Nicole has received e-mails and phone calls from parents and teachers that say test53are improving.“Bikes can take you far,”she says.“Good grades can take you even54”Barton Dassinger is the principal of Cesar E.Chavez school in Chicago.Students in his school have received bikes.“It’s been a great way to55students to do their best,”Dassinger says.“They work hard to make it happen.”46. A.joined B.created C.helped D.reformed47. A.In addition to B.In honor of C.In line with D.In exchange for48. A.safely B.happily C.freely D.quickly49. A.insist B.accept C.remember D.ensure50. A.look-out B.drop-out C.check-up D.line-up51. A.and B.so C.but D.or52. A.remembered B.rewarded C.repaid D.recommended53. A.papers B.scores C.conditions D.methods54. A.higher B.better C.further D.greater55. A.require B.exploit C.entitle D.motivatePart V Text Completion(20minutes,20points)Directions:In this part there are three short texts with20questions(Ranging from56to75).Above each text there are three or four phrases to be completed.First,use the choices provided in the box to complete thephrases.Second,use the completed phrases to fill in the blanks of the text.Note you should blacken the letters that indicate your answers on the Answer Sheet.Text OneA.optimistic aboutB.a needC.a thirdPhrases:A.they felt56forB.most were57the future for womenC.less than58of themIn a recent survey,55%of3000Japanese women polled said they weren’t being treated equally with men at work,and59said they expected women’s lives to improve over the next two decades.Yet,only26%of the women said60a strong and organized women’s movement.In a similar survey of American women, a much smaller29%believed they were treated unfairly at work,61and37%said a women’s movement was needed.Text TwoA.up toB.collectionsC.libraryPhrases:A.introduce you to our62facilitiesB.check out63five booksC.houses our humanities and map64Welcome to the university library.This tour will65.First of all,the library’s collection of books, reference materials,and other resources are found on levels one to four of this building.Level one66.On level two,you will find our circulation desk,current periodicals and journals,and our copy facilities.Our science and engineering sections can be found on level three.Finally,group study rooms and the multimedia center are located on level four.Undergraduate students can67for two weeks.Graduate students can check out fifteen books for two months.Books can be renewed up to two times.Text ThreeA.to understand themB.to think aboutC.not accent eliminationD.give them the most troublePhrases:A.identify which specific areas of pronunciation68B.give you some things69C.make it difficult for native speakers70D.focus on accent reduction,71Many ESL learners are concerned about climinating their accents,but before you run out and spend hundreds of dollars on the latest pronunciation course,let me72First,the main goal of any pronunciation course should be to73,which is virtually impossible Rather students should work on reducing areas of their pronunciation that affect comprehensibility,that is,areas of their accents that74Second,with this goal in mind students need to be able to75.Of course there are universal areas of pronunciation that affect specific language groups and reading up on these commonalities will help youPart VI translation(10points)Directions:translate the following passage into Chinese.Write your answer on the Answer sheet.Being unhappy is like an infectious disease.It causes people to shrink away from the sufferer.He soon finds himself alone and miserable.There is however a cure so simple as to seem,at first glance,ridiculous if you don’t feel happy,pretend to be!It works.Before long you will find that instesd of pushing people away,you attract them.You discover how deeply rewarding it is to be the center of wider and widr circles of good will.Then the make-believe becomes a reality.Being happy,once it is realized as a duty and established as a habit opens doors into unimaginable gardens filled with grateful friendsPart VII Writing(15points)Dircctions:write composition of at least150words about the topic:the possibity of using the mobile phone to study English(or any other subject)You should write according to the outline given below:1.我认为手机(不)可以用来学习英语或其他知识。
2013年同等学力人员申请硕士学位外国语水平全国统一考试英语试卷一Part 1 Oral Communication (10 points)Section ADirections: In this section there are two incomplete dialogues and each dialogue has three blanksand three choices A ,B and C, t aken from the dialogue. Fill in each of the blanks with taken from the dialogue. Fill in each of the blanks with one one of of of the the the choices choices choices to to to complete complete complete the the the dialogue dialogue dialogue and and and mark mark mark your your your answer answer answer on on on the the Answer Sheet.Dialogue OneA. It sounds like a flu. B. I also advise resting for a couple of days.C. Boy , when it rains, it pours.Doctor: What has been bothering you?Patient: I have a stuffy nose and a sore throat. Plus, I’ve been coughing a lot.1 Doctor: Any stomach pains?Patient: Actually, yes. My stomach’s been upset for a few days.Doctor: 2 It’s been going around lately.Patient: Anything I can do for it?Doctor: I’ll prescribe some medicines for you to take. 3 Patient: Does that mean I shouldn’t go to work?Doctor: Only when you feel up to it. You should stay home for at least a day or two.Dialogue TwoA. So, what are you going to do with the money?B. You have lots of money.C. How much do I owe you?Joshua: Dad. Allowance day. Can I have my allowance?Father: Oh. I forgot about that.Joshua: You ALWAYS forget.Father: I guess I do. 4 Joshua :Just $13.Father: Well, I’m not sure if I have that much.Joshua: Go to the bank. 5 Father: Lots of money, uh? Uh , well. I think the bank is closed. Joshua: Then, what about your secret money jar under your bed?Father: Oh, I guess I could do that. 6 7 8 Oh, that's for sure. But it’s not as mixed.9 10 Well, pushing in the street, fights about getting on the bus. 11. I read the newspaper every day so that I can stay informed about current events.12. After seven days in the desert, the explorer was relieved when he eventually found water.they immediately ceased crying.14. The science teacher demonstrated the process of turning solid gold into liquid.application for for for admission admission admission to 16. Most college students in the United States live away from home.17. The pursuit of maximum profit often drives manufacturers to turn out things that can do harm 18. Many different parts make up an airplane: the engine(s), the wings, the tail, and so on.ou make it sound as if I did it on purpose.20. He could never have foreseen that one day his books would sell in millions.everything else. Because we can’t see what we can’t see, our lecturer was determined to catch us in the act. He had us watch a video of six people tossing basketballs back and forth, three in white but he he wasn’t he e medical tourism scene has been shopping in Singapore? Over the last 10 years, Asia’s rise on thIf you’re a celebrity who doesn’t want everyone to know you’re here for a bit of lipo (吸脂术),no worries. There's a private entrance that leads to the CosMedic Centro, which offers views of a golf course. BIMC BIMC has has has even even even teamed teamed teamed up up up with with with the the the nearby nearby nearby Courtyard Courtyard Courtyard by by by Marriott Marriott Marriott Bali, Bali, Bali, which which which provides provides specific after-care services like tailor-made meals and wellness programs for patients.Latest Latest technology technology technology and and and cool cool cool interiors interiors interiors are are are a a a start, start, start, but but but breaking breaking breaking into into into a a a regional regional regional industry industry industry that that already has some of the world’s top internati onal hospitals will be tough, says Josef Woodman, CEO of U.S.-based medical travel consumer guide Patients Beyond Borders (PBB). “As a newcomer, Bali faces stiff competition from nearby international healthcare providers. To compete ,Bali will need to demonstrate a quality level of care and promote its services to the region region and and and the the the world. world. world. On On On the the the positive positive positive side, side, side, Bali Bali Bali is is is blessed blessed blessed as as as one one one of of of the the the region's region's region's safest safest ,most popular tourist destinations, with a built-in potential to attract medical travelers.”The The Indonesian Indonesian Indonesian island island island couldn’t couldn’t couldn’t have have have picked picked picked a a a better better better time time time to to to get get get into into into the the the game, game, game, says says says PBB. PBB. “The “The world world world population population population is is is aging aging aging and and and becoming becoming becoming wealthier wealthier wealthier at at at rates rates rates that that that surpass surpass surpass the the the availability availability availability of of quality healthcare resources,” says the company's research .31. What does "medical tourism” (Para. 1) probably mean?A. Treating a disease during a trip.B. Attracting patients with package tours.C. Cosmetic treatment and a tour in one :D. Turning hospitals into tourist attractions.32. How does BIMC differ from regular hospitals?A. It offers cosmetic surgery.B. It has better environment and services.C. It accepts international patients.D. It has more beds and longer service hours.33. BIMC wishes to attract celebrities with its_______.A. privacy measures B. first-class designC. free golf course D. tailor-made meals34. According to Woodman, BIMC_______.A. threatens its regional competitorsB. will soon take the load in the industryC. needs further improvementD. faces both challenges and opportunities35. What can be concluded from the last paragraph?A. The population is developing faster than medical resources.B. Healthcare is hardly available for the aging population.C. The world is in need of more quality medical care.D. The world population is becoming older and richer.Passage FourFor many of us ,asking for help is a difficult concept. We may feel as if we are admitting a weakness that the world would not have known about ,had we not asked for help.Ironically, Ironically, it’s it’s it’s been been been my my my experience experience experience that that that people people people who who who are are are able able able to to to deliver deliver deliver well well well-positioned -positioned requests for help are seen as very strong individuals. When they demonstrate the humility (谦卑)to ask for help, they earn the respect of others. People who receive a heartfelt request for help are usually honored by the request. In turn, we are strengthened by the very help that is provided.One of my clients (we’11 call her Kira) recently made a shift in how she was interacting w ith her boss. When asked to prepare presentations, she assumed that she was expected to go away, develop the content, deliver it at the required meeting and then wait for feedback from her boss. Her boss was highly regarded for the impact of his presentations, while Kira often felt that her presentations were lacking. When she took a hard look at how this approach was working for her, Kira Kira recognized recognized recognized that that that she she she had had had not not not yet yet yet made made made use use use of of of her boss’s her boss’s support. She could could learn learn learn far far far more more about creating attractive presentations by walking through a draft with her boss-focusing on the content plus her delivery----and obtaining feedback earlier in the process rather than at the back end. So she made the request for his support.The The outcome? outcome? outcome? Her Her Her boss boss boss was was was delighted delighted delighted to to to coach coach coach Kira Kira Kira and and and was was was enthusiastic enthusiastic enthusiastic about about about the the opportunity to put into use his own strength by teaching presentation skills more effectively to her. By taking the time to work together on preparation for a number of Kira’s key presentations, she benefited from her boss's thought process and was able to distinguish the critical components to enhance her own presentations. Kira’s presentations now have punch!Some Some of of of us us us are are are uncomfortable uncomfortable uncomfortable asking asking asking for for for help help help because because because we we we believe believe believe that that that our our our request request request places places burdens on the other person. Ironically, we may be missing an opportunity to show others how we value and respect them. People who know you and think well of you are often highly motivated to help. Furthermore, the more specific you can be about what you need from them, the easier it is for them, to assist you.36. Many people are unwilling to ask for help because they _______.A. are confident of themselves B. do not trust other peopleC. arc ashamed of doing so D. do not think it necessary37. Which of the following may the author agree with?A. Asking for help means admitting weaknesses.B. Helping others is helping oneselfC. Well-positioned: requests for help are welcomed.D. Weak people often need more help.38. Kira’s request for help_____.A. turned out rewarding B. was turned downC. led to her promotion D. benefited her boss in return39. “Kira’s presentations now have punch” means her presentations are_____.A. forceful B. controversialC. well received D. highly motivating40. The purpose of the passage is to_____.A. illustrate how to ask for helpB. show the importance of mutual helpC. call for attention to others’ requestsD. encourage people to ask for kelpSection BDirections: In t his section, you are required to read one quoted blogand t he comments on it. The biog and com m e me n t s arc followed by questions or unfinished statements, eachw ith was looking all around... She was alert from the very fishe 46 Pedalbikes. 47 the48 onSport Shop helps t o 49 that all donated bikes are safe to ride. Each bike receives a five-minute 50 by the shop’s employees. 51 they still do well in school. I think they should be 52 for “Some kids aren’t as lucky as others,-mails and phone calls from parents and teachers that say test 53 are 54.e says. “Good grades can take you evento 55 studentsway toA.optimistic aboutB. a needC. a thirdB. most were 57 57 the future for womeless than 58 of them only 26% of the women said60 a 29% believed they were treated unfairly at work, 61 29% believed they were treated unfairly at work, 61 ,,A. up toB. collectionsC. librar yA. introduce you to our 62 facilitiesB. check out 63 five booksC. houses our humanities and map 64Welcome to the university library. This tour will 65 . First of all, the students can 67 for two weeks. GraduA. to understand themB. to think aboutC. not acc e nt e liminationD. give them the most troubleidentify which specific areas of pronunciation68B. give you some things 69C. make it difficult for native speakers70D. focus on accent reduction, 7172 . First, the main goal of any course should be to 73 , which 74 . to 75 ,年同等学力人员申请硕士学位外国语水平全国统一考试英语试卷一ⅠDialogue One 1.C 2.A 3.B Dialogue Two 4.C 5.B 6.A Dialogue Three 7.C 8.D 9.A 10.B 11. C 12. B 13. 13. D D 14. A 15. A 16. A 17. D 18. 18. A A 19. D 20. C ⅢPassage One 21. B 22. B 23. D 24.B 25. C Passage Two 26. B 27. D28. A29. C30. C Passage Three 31. C 32. B 33. A 34.D 35. B Passage Four 36. C 37. C 38. A 39.A 40.D Passage Five 41. B 42. C 43. A 44. C 45.D Ⅳ46. A 47. A 48.A 49. D 50. C 51. C 52. B 53.B 54. C 55. D ⅤText One 56. B 57. A 58. C 59. C 60. A 61. B Text Two 62. C 63. A 64. B 65. A 66.C 67. B Text Three 68. D 69. B 70. A 71. C 72. B 73.D 74. C 75.A Ⅴ不快乐就像传染病,它使得人们都躲避不快乐的人。
北京化工大学2013——2014学年第二学期2013级《硕士英语一外》考试试卷I. Choose the best item to complete the sentence (10 minutes, 20 points):1.Making their own decision increases children’s sense of control and boosts their .A. self-centerB. self-esteemC. self-consciousD. self-defence2.They ended up getting divorced for their personalities.A. inevitableB. unrivalledC. incompatibleD. inaccessible3. True wealth does not what we have, but in what we are.A. consist inB. persist inC. insist onD. assist in4.The government attaches great importance to the political stability and social .A. harmonyB. destinyC. strategyD. treaty5.David his company’s success to the unity of all the staff and their persevering hard work.A. consolidatedB. attributedC. contributedD. distributed6.The two parties have become so similar in this regard that it is difficult to Republican from Democrats.A. depriveB. discloseC. differentiateD. deplete7.The corrupted official has too much money and power at his without a monitoring mechanism working effectively.A. proposalB. disposalC. diagnosisD. duplicate8.It is difficult to find high yield investments, but the stock market is a high-risk and high- _____one.A. strengthB. advantageC. profitD. profile9.Whereas tangible resources such as equipment have actual physical existence, resources such as corporate images, brands and other intellectual property exist in abstraction.A. incorporateB. insecureC. insensitiveD. intangible10. The release of the suspect who has been accused of the two brutal murders the outrage in the whole country.A. insulatesB. provokesC. prohibitsD. displays11.The rainfall for growing rubber is about 100 inches a year.A. optimisticB. opticalC. optimalD. optional12. The damage human being has done to the earth is.A. irregularB. irrationalC. irrelevantD. irreversible13.The study that cigarette advertising does encourage children to smoke.A. denouncesB. demonstratesC. displacesD. disapprove14. Health and safety rules and ask everyone wear hard hats when entering this workplace.A. regulationsB. moralityC. manifestationD. municipality15. Students should give to studies rather than campus romance.A. priorityB. understandingC. attitudeD. discipline16.Museums in the developing world often have fewer security measures, and thus remain more _____ to thefts.A. desperateB. superiorC. inferiorD. vulnerableA. equipmentB. incentiveC. employmentD. amateur18. The old gentleman was a very Nobel Prize winner, with gray hair and gold spectacles.A. respectableB. respectfulC. respectiveD. retrospect19.With his SATs scoring 1590, Bill Gates was into Harvard in the fall of 1973 intending to get a pre-law degree.A. adoptedB. adjustedC. adaptedD. admitted20.In the presence of God, our family and friends, I offer you my solemn to be your faithful partner.A. honestyB. customC. justiceD. vowII Reading Comprehension (10 minutes, 10 points)The rise of the corporate blogger1 Bob Lutz, the vice chairman of General Motors, does it. So does Jonathan Schwartz, chief operating officer of computer maker Sun Microsystems. A handful of executives at Hewlett-Packard and Boeing are also getting in on the act.2 Welcome to the blogosphere -- home to those informal, frequently updated online journals that people create to share their thoughts and opinions. Web logs, or blogs, have for the most part remained the domain of millions of independent bloggers who want to trade tech ideas, share their daily lives – or criticize corporations. Now those same corporations are trying to figure out how they can take advantage of this new medium to attract attention, cultivate customer relationships, respond to criticism – and perhaps sell a few more computers, cars or aircraft along the way.3 One way for a company to enter the blogosphere is to establish a system on the corporate intranet, where web logs can be used as an internal communications tool. IBM, for example, says thousands of its employees blog on the company’s internal network, where they trade idle gossip and discuss corporate business strategy.4 Much more visible are web logs targeting customers and the general public, such as GM’s FastLane and Boeing’s blog written by Randy Baseler, the group’s vice president for commercial aircraft marketing.5 There are a few key rules that a successful corporate blogger must follow: they must write in a chatty informal tone, tell the truth, update their blogs on a regular basis and be willing to accept any criticism. The blogosphere is regarded as a source of unpredictable and often irreverent commentary and any dry, dull blog that smacks of corporate PR and legalese will quickly draw criticism from readers.6 Blogging can pose legal risks however –so there are often company guidelines stipulating what can and cannot be posted on a corporate blog. Yahoo, for example, says that employees are not allowed to mention anything that has not been made public and bloggers are also asked to notify the corporate PR department if they receive queries from journalists.7 Given the potential damage that a disgruntled or careless employee could cause, why would a company allow its workers to spout off in cyberspace? With so much downside, what is the upside?8 Well, blogging is transforming the way companies communicate and, for a customer, direct contact with an employee is so much more preferable than dealing with a huge faceless corporation. Robert Scoble, a Microsoft marketing executive specifically hired to blog about the company, has emerged as one of the blogosphere’s most popular citizens because he pulls no punches when it comes to his employer. He argues that Microsoft’s tolerance of employee blogs has helped shift perceptions of the software giant from strongly negative to surprisingly positive. And if blogging can help Microsoft soften its image, imagine what it could do for any other company. From the Financial Times21. What do Bob Lutz, Jonathan Schwartz and a handful of executives at Hewlett-Packard and Boeing all do?A. They all write web blogs.B. They purchase tech ideas.C. They compete with each other.D. They get on well.22. Several large corporations are trying to take advantage of web blogs for all the following purposes EXCEPT _____?A. attracting public attentionB. developing customer relationshipsC. selling more productsD. posting criticizing commentary23. What do many IBM employees NOT do on the company’s intranet according to this passage?A. They exchange small talk.B. They circulate blogs on their internal network.C. They communicate with customers and the general public.D. They talk about the company’s long-term business plan.24. To keep his corporate blog alive, what must an employee do?A. To speak ill of his company and boss.B. To write about only what has been made public.C. To spout off what he is not satisfied.D. To accept an interview by a journalist.25. Which of the following is FALSE?A. Robert Scoble believes that Microsoft is tolerant about its employees’ blogs.B. Robert Scoble was employed by Microsoft to say good things about his company on the Internet.C. Robert Scoble is happy with the way that blogging has changed the way people think about his company.D. Customers prefer to deal directly with an employee who works for a very large, powerful organization ratherthan writing to or telephoning the organization itself.III.Translate the following paragraph from English to Chinese (20 minutes, 20 points) The discovery that our brains are physically changed by the experience of reading is something many of us will understand instinctively when we think back to how an extraordinary book had a transformative effect on the way we viewed the world. This transformation only takes place when we lose ourselves in a book, abandoning the emotional and mental buzz of the real world. That's why studies have found this kind of deep reading makes us more empathetic, or as Nicholas Carr, an American writer, puts it in his essay, The Dreams of Readers, "more alert to the inner lives of others". Reading is also the foundation stone of all education, and therefore an essential underpinning of the knowledge economy. If reading were to decline significantly, it would change the very nature of our species. If we, in the future, are no longer wired for solitary reflection and creative thought, we will be diminished. (empathetic: 移情的;有同感的;能产生共鸣的)IV. Translate the following paragraph from Chinese to English (20 minutes, 20 points) 如果你有机会到北京来旅游,转上几天就会使你爱上这座城市。
2002年1月Regrettably for many in Silicon Valley, the ability to make accurate forecasts can depend on how well-established a company’s products are. Young industries on steep growth curves are almost always surprised by how well their products do in the first few y ears, and then they’re at a loss when demand falls. Says a Stanford University business strategy professor, “In a highly dynamic and unpredictable market people are going to make mistakes. It’s inherent in the type of business.”In many corners of Silicon Valley----and elsewhere ----unpredictability is inevitable. One solution: keep innovating but develop sound service businesses to sell with products. Building a “very strong service business”, a company president says, smoothes out the rough spots between innovations.对于一个公司产品的准确预测取决于该公司产品的知名度。
2011-2012 硕士研究生英语A卷阅读理解答案41至46:DABDB46至50:DBADA51至55:ABCBD56至60:ADBCB61至65:CCDCC英译汉:1.由于全球经济衰退的负面影响,西方的雇员,无论银行家还是工厂职工,都面临着失业的惨淡前景,而对于东方“同仁”们来说,可能只是减薪而已。
人力资源专家讲这种差别归因于文化差异。
在经济困难时期,亚洲公司会更加努力地保留职位,这不仅可以减少失业,还能帮助该地区经济在出口放缓的情况下保持平稳。
2010-201136至40:BCDAC41至45:DBCCB46至50:ABCBD51至55:BCCCC2009-201061至65:BDABD66至70:BCDAC71至75:DACDB76至80:BACCA81至85:DACBA最后一篇阅读理解答案解析:无学习能力的现象非常普遍。
它影响了10%的儿童。
无学习能力的男孩的数量是女孩的四倍。
大约从1970年以来,新的研究已经帮助脑科学家更好地探讨了这一问题。
科学家现在了解到:有很多不同种类的无学习能力,它们由许多不同的原因引起。
可以肯定的是:所有的无学习能力都是由大脑组合在一起的不同方式导致的。
你不可能看一眼某个儿童就说他或她有无无学习能力症,这种疾病没有外在表现。
因此,一些研究人员开始研究大脑本身,以便了解哪个部位出了什么问题。
在一项研究中,研究人员检查了一个死于意外事故的无学习能力者的大脑。
他们发现了两件不寻常的事情。
一件是与大脑左半部的细胞有关的,这些细胞控制语言,这些细胞在正常情况下是白色的。
然而,这个无学习能力者的细胞却是灰色的。
研究人员还发现,许多神经细胞并没有按照它们应该的方式排成一条直线,而是交织在一起。
这项研究是在诺尔曼·盖茨维德的指导下进行的,他是一个早期研究无学习能力的专家。
盖茨维德医生指出,无学习能力主要是由于大脑左半部出现问题造成的。
他认为,大脑的这半部分没有正常发育。
GENERAL ENGLISH QUALIFYING TESTFOR NON-ENGLISH MAJOR GRADUATE STUDENTS(GETJUN1613)考试注童事项一、本考试由两份试卷组成:试卷一(Paper O ne)包括听力理解、词汇、完形填空与阅读理解四部分,共80题,按顺序统一编号;试卷二(PaperTwo)包括翻译与写作两部分,共3题。
二、试卷一(题号1-80)为客观评分题(听力Section C部分除外),答案一律用2B铅笔做在机读答题纸上,在对应题号下所选的字母中间划黑道,如[A][B]杩[Dh三、试卷二为主观评分题,答案做在ANSWER SHEET I I上。
答题前^请仔细阅读试卷二的注意事项。
四、试卷一、试卷二上均不得作任何记号(听力Section C部分除外),答案一律写在答题纸上,否则无效<>五、本考试全部时间为150分钟,釆用试卷一与试卷二分卷计时的办法。
试卷一考试时间为90分钟,听力理解部分以放完录音带为准,大约25分钟;其余部 分共计时65分钟,每部分所占时间均标在试卷上,考生可自行掌握。
试卷二共计时60分钟f每部分所占时间均标在试卷上,考生可自行掌握。
六、试卷一与试卷二采取分别收卷的办法。
每次终了时间一到,考生一律停笔,等候监考教师收点试卷及答题纸。
全部考试结束后,须待监考教师将全部试卷及答题纸收点无 误并宣布本考试结束,方可离开考场。
PAPER ONEPARTI LISTENING COMPREHENSION (25 minutes, 20 points)Section A (1 point each)Directions: In this section, you will hear nine short conversations between two speakers. At the end 讨 each conversation a question will be asked about what was said. Theconversations and the questions will be read only once. Choose the best anmerfromthef°ur choices S>ven by marking the corresponding letter with a single bar acrossthe sqmre brackets on your machine-scored Answer Sheet.1 ‘ A, The manager will ask Jack to leave,B. The manager will make Jack work overnight.C The m eager will make things difficult for Jack.D. The manager will dismiss Jack from his position.2. A. He serves as a good example for his son.B. He depends on his son for a living.C. He is quite interested in fashion.D. He is very strict with his son.3. A. She will go if it doesn’t rain.B. She will go regardless of the weatherC. She will go if she has enough money,D. She will go if she has time.4‘ A. The author of the book is a great thinker,B. The author s point of view is ambiguous.C. The woman should read the book again and again.D. The woman didn t understand the book correctly,5. A. It reminds him of someone with that name.B. That name sounds familiar.C_ The girl used to be his best friend.D. He has never heard that name before.6. A. It is too early to worry about it.B. It will be the best result ever.C. It is no use worrying about it.D. It is too late to worry about it,7. A. Stock trading is highly risky,B. Stock trading is very interesting.C. Stock trading is easy if you know how,D. Stock trading is not so easy as the man thinks.8. A. He never liked the committee,B, He was fired by his boss.C He was in a difficult situation.D. He didn’t resign from the committee at all9. A. The man’s feelings are not reliable.B. The man doesn’t have sufficient evidence.C. Mike didn’t say anything bad about the man.D. Mike has said something bad about the man.Section B (1 point e ach)Directions:In this section you will hear two mini-talks. At the end of e ach talk, there will be som e questions. Both the talks and the questions will be read to you only once. After eachquestion, there will be a pause' During the pause, you must choose the best answerfrom the four choices given by marking the corresponding letter with a single baracross the square brackets on your machine-scored Answer SheelMini-talk on e10- A. Lack of basic education in many developing countries.B. Effective methods of teaching in developing countries.C Important skills to be learned in developing countries.D. Causes of poverty in many developing countries.11. A, One in two.B. One in four.C. One in five.D. One in eight.12. A. Going to boarding schools.B. Going to schools far from home.C- Receiving education in cities,D. Learning through TV or computers. Mini-talk T w o13. A. It was optimistic,C. It was startling,B. It was pessimistic. D* It was worrisome.14. A. It was hard to estimate.C. It was on the decline.B, It remained unchanged. D, It was on the rise.15. A. 20 % of all deaths.C. Almost one million.B. 25 % of all deaths, D, Nearly 12million.Section C (1 point e ach)Directions: In this section you will hear a short lecture. Listen to the recording and complete the notes about the lecture‘ Y o u will hear the recording twice. After the recording you areasked to write down your answers on the Answer Sheet. Y o u now have 25 seconds toread the notes below,(请在录音结束后把16-20题的答案抄写在答题纸上)16. The aim of the IB programs is to help the students develop the skills to live, learn and work ina_____________(two words) world,17‘ High school students have to ^.(three words), pass exams and write a twenty-page paper to earn an IB diploma.18. These IB diploma students can also attend.■ (two words).19. The conference was meant as a way for students not only to learn about the environment,butalso to develop______________(two words).20. The 17-year-old student said they had to _conference..(three words) to present to thePART II VOCABULARY (10 minutes, 10 points)Section A (0.5 point each)Directions: Them are ten questions in this section. Each question is a sentence with one word or phrase underlined Below the sentence are four words or phrases marked A, B, C andD, Choose the word or phrase that is closest in meaning to the underlined one. Markthe corresponding letter with a single bar across the square brackets on yourmachine-scored Answer Sheet.21. New European legislation will come into effect shortly regarding the equal treatment of men andwomen in insurance,A. soonB. closely C, briefly D, abruptly21 Those who are motivated tend to have clear goals and persist in the face of defeat or failure.A. for the sake ofB. by means ofC. in spite ofD. on account of23. Once these people seize power, they will abuse it,casting aside their beliefs and brutalizing theirfellow citizens.A. advocatingB. discardingC. innovating D, reinforcing24. What I did for Mother that day was small, but it helped deepen the special bond between us.A. barrierB. rivalryC. tieD. collaboration25. The analyst warns investors that an appealing idea does not necessarily make for a good fund.A. attractive B, acute C. abundant D. apparent26. Smith and I studied under the same supervisor, worked together, and forged a lifelong friendship.A. pledgedB. produced C, assessed D. dispersed27. Psychologists have stated that negative thinldng can consume your life and cause problems,A. patriotismB. heroismC. optimismD. pessimism28. When George H,W. Bush graduated from Yale in 1948, most assumed he would head to WallStreet.A. make forB. excel inC. dispose of D, compete against29. It is extremely difficult or even impossible to work out the risk of occasional passive smoking.A, eliminate B. convert C. exercise D, calculate30. The levels of PM2.5 in Beijing are by far the worst since the government began releasing figureson PM2.5 particles.A. over a large areaB. according to most peopleC. by a considerable marginD. until the present momentSection B (0.5 point e a c h)Directions: T h e re are te n questions in this section. Each question is a sentence with something missing. Below each sentence are f our w ords or p hrases marked A, B’ C and D.Choose one word or phrase that best com pletes the se n te n c e, Mark the correspondingletter with a single bar across th e square brackets on your m achine-scored A nsw erS h e e t.31. Although a man of______birth, Abraham Lincoln managed to be one of the greatest presidentsin American history.A. feebleB. nobleC. edibleD. humble32. Concerned about the future of the country, the new president had a clear______of where to leadit,A. visionB. recollectionC. fantasyD. image33. Doctors and researchers have to keep themselves______c m the latest developments in theirsphere of study.A. convincedB. humiliated C, updated D. isolated34. Heavy______to environmental tobacco smoke at work has been shown to double the risk oflung cancer.A* contact B. touch C, exposure D. encounter35. PM2.5 particles are thought particularly damaging to health because they can______deep intothe lungs.A, dig B. penetrate C. elevate D. dive36. It seems that countries with the highest regular chocolate intake per person have a______greater number of Nobel Prize winners,A, previously B. proportionally C. psychologically D, purposefully 37. Pets are______providing not only companionship to humans, but health benefits to many aswell.A. credited with B, prohibited from C, accused of D. ascribed to38. If you’re making a conscious effort to______lies, experts suggest seeking like-minded, honest folkA. get down toB. be crazy aboutC. cut back onD. look up to39. The Bush administration lifted sanctions on Pakistan and helped fund counter-terrorism operations______her cooperation.A. in regard to B* in comparison with C. in the eyes of D. in return for40. The plot of some TV series focusing on military intelligence collection is______complicated______almost defy belief.Directions: T h ere are 10 questions in this part of the te s t. Read the passage through. T h en, go back m d choose咖suitabk word or phrase marked A, B, C, or Dfor each blank inthe paSSage- Mark the responding letter of the won! or phrase you have chosenwith a Sin^le bar卯腿加 square brackets on your machine-scored Answer S heet.Ttoe are two primary causes of traffic accidents, those that are caused by the driver and those that are environmental and outside toe driver's control. —41— environmental issues like weather or poor road maintenance may cause an accident, statistically these are far less likely to do so. Driver ―郎 prove to be the main cause of accidents. The most —42— distractions are looking at traffic, crashes and roadside incidents. While it is widely believed that cell phones are a greater cause, C e l1 ph°neS °nly —43— skth m list. J4—, laws to limit cell phone use while driving do not decrease accidents. Hands-free phones are —45— than hand-held devices.Alcoho] was a factor in at least 41 percent of all fatal crashes. Alcohol —46— affects vision, reaCti0n time md attention of the and decreases overall driving performance. Fatigues —47— 100,000 vehicle crashes per year, killing _48— 1,500 people and injuring 71,000 people. Accidents caused by fatigue are particularly —49— for truck drivers and others taking long-haul driving trips. Speeding is another major cause of traffic accidents, particularly for younger or newer drivp.r« TWtlu ctra mnra1U,一__J ... .i...PART n i CLOZE TEST (10 minutes, 10 points, 1 point each)41. A. However42. A, instructive43. A. come about44. A. In fact45. A. more safer46. A. adversely47. A. stands for48. A, as soon as49. A* rare50. A, situated in were speeding at the time of the crash.Bt Because C. If D. WhileB. disruptiveC. descriptiveD. constructive B. come across C. come on D ‘ come inB- For example C. Even so D, By contrast B. not so safe C. no more safe D. no longer safeB. scarcely C’ favorablyD. affectionately B* compensates for C. runs for D. accounts for B- as long as C. as many as D. as much as B, necessary C. populous D, prevalentB- involved in C. indulged inD. engaged inPART ^READING COMPREHENSION (45 minutes, 30 points, 1 point e a c h)D— ln thisPart °flhe啤thm arefive short passages. Read each passage carefully, and ^en加Questions that f ollow. Choose the best answerfrom the four choices givenand mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square brackets onyour machine-scored Answer Sheet.P a ssa g e OneEveryone knows about straight-A students. They get high grades, all right, but only by becoming dull and diligent students, their noses always stuck in a book. How, then, do we account for Paul Melendres? Melendres, now a freshman at the University of New Mexico, was 伽ient-body president at Valley High School in Albuquerque. Hejoined the soccer and basketball teams of his school, exhibited at the science fair, was chosen for the National Honor Society and he achieved straight A’s in all his classes.How do super-achievers like Melendres do it? Brains aren’t the only 咖wer. “Top grades don’t always go to the brightest students;1 declares Herbert Walberg, professor of education at the University of Illinois at Chicago, who has conducted major studies of super-achieving students.“Knowing how to make the most of your innate abilities counts for more. Infinitely more."Hard work isn’t the whole story, either. “It’s not how long you sit there with the books open,”said one of the many A students we interviewed. “It’s what you do while you're sitting” Indeed, some of these students actually put in fewer hours of homework time than their lower-scoring classmates.The kids at the top of the class get there by mastering a few basic techniques that others can readily learn.Set priorities. Ibp students brook no intrusions on study time. Once the books are open or the computer is booted up,phone calls go unanswered,TV shows unwatched, snacks ignored. Study is business; business comes before recreation,Study anywhere-or everywhere. A cross-country runner who worked out every day used the time to memorize biology terms. Another student posted a vocabulary list by the medicine cabinet and learned a new word every day while brushing his teeth.Get organized. In high school, McCray ran track, played rugby and was in the band and orchestra. “I was so busy, I couldn't waste time looking for a pencil or missing paper. I kept everything right where I could put my hands on it,” he says.Among the students we interviewed, study times were strictly a matter of personal preference. Some worked Jate at night when the house was quiet. Others awoke early. Still others studied as soon as they came home from school when the work was fresh in their minds. All agreed, however, on the need for consistency,5L Which of the following statements might Herbert Walberg agree with?A. High IQ alone may not be the guarantee of top grades.B. A super-achiever has to devote all his spare time to study.C. Innate abilities do not make much difference to your grades.D. The brighter the students, the greater their chances of success.52. In Paragraph Three, the author stresses the importance of_______A. PracfceB. disciplineC. efficiency D, carefulness53‘Top students brook no intrusions on study time" (Para, 5) means that they_____A. never ask any questions while studyingB, don’t want other people to tell them how to studyC‘ consider study more important than anything elseD. don’t allow other things to interrupt their study54. What tips might McCray offer to other students?A. Join a school organization.B. Put things in their right places*C‘ Study anywhere at any timeD. Learn as much as you can.55. What can we learn about study times from the last paragraph?A. Study times can be adjusted every day.B. Study times vary from person to person.C. There are no best study times for a student.D_ Study times are crucial for academic excellence.56. What is the topic of the passage?A. Grades and education.B. Hard work in high schools.C‘ Balancing study and play, D. Secrets of top students‘Passage TwoCleaning clothes usually requires soap and water to remove stains and smells, and a tumble 丨n the dryer or an afternoon on the clothesline to dry. The time and energy needed to turn a heap of dirty laundry into a pile of clean clothes might make people wish for clothes that just clean themselves.That wish is a step closer to coming true. Recent experiments show that cotton fabric coated with the right mixture of chemicals can dissolve stains and remove odors after only a few hours in the sun. “The technology can be applied to all kinds of fabrics and their related products,” says materials scientist Mingce Long. He helped develop the treated cotton with his colleague Deyong Wu.The handy fabric gets its self-cleaning abilities from a chemical mixture that coats the cotton threads. The coating includes substances known as photocatalysts, which trigger chemical reactions in light. One of those photocatalysts, called titanium dioxide (二氧化钛),helps sunscreen block the sun. Another, called silver iodide (破化银),is used for developing photographs.Researchers have previously shown that titanium dioxide mixtures could remove stains in clothes — but with exposure to ultraviolet, not visible, light. (The waves of ultraviolet light are more energetic and shorter than those of visible light) Other studies have demonstrated that silver iodide can speed up chemical reactions in sunlight*“We knew that self-cleaning cotton fabrics with titanium dioxide coating had already been developed, but they cannot work, or they work weakly, under sunlight,” Long says. “If we want to use the fabrics in daily life, we must develop cotton that cleans itself under daylight." Long and Wu created just such a fabric, working for years to perfect the recipe for a liquid dip that left cotton coated with the titanium dioxide mixture. Then they added particles of silver iodide, which boosted the fabric’s self-cleaning ability in the sun. In laboratory tests, their creation was nearly seven times better at removing stains than titanium dioxide alone,The scientists can’t start selling their self-cleaning cotton just yet; they still need to make sure the coated cotton won’t harm those who wear it. Although titanium dioxide is used in some foods, recent experiments have shown that it can cause health problems if it gets in the lungs. So before the material can be worn, scientists need to find a way to make it safe,57. The materials developed by Mingce Long can clean themselves by_______.A. being soaked in a mixture of chemicalsB. being exposed only to ultraviolet lightC being exposed to sunlight for a few hoursD, being hung in high-temperature environments58* The research conducted by Long and his colleagues_______■A. is based on previous studiesB* has caused a debate among scientistsC. is pioneer work in a new fieldD. poses a challenge to other scientists59. Long’s major concern over the self-cleaning materials is whether________A. their cleaning ability can lastB. it is safe to wear themC‘ their cleaning effect is satisfactoryD. it is cost-effective to produce them60. We can learn from the laboratory tests that their research_______.A. has left much to be desiredB. has yet to produce convincing resultsC. will yield huge economic benefitsD. can be considered a success61. It can be learned from the last paragraph that self-cleaning clothes_______•A. prove to be better than expectedB. are still at the experimental stageC. will soon be put into the marketD. may produce more harms than benefits62. What is the major topic of the passage?A. The effectiveness of self-cleaning fabrics.B. The application of self-cleaning technology.C. The development of self-cleaning materials.D. The necessity of self-cleaning clothes.P a ssa g e T h re eTHE digital attack of e-books and Amazon-style e-tailers has put bookstores at risk. Digital books are expected to outsell print titles by 2015 in Britain and even sooner in America. With this change, physical bookstores appear to be on borrowed time. So, what is the future of the bookstore? This is a burning questicm on everyone's lips at a recent event at Foyles’s flagship bookshop in London.To remain successful, a bookstore must improve l*the experience of buying books’” says Alex Lifschutz, an architect, He suggests an array of approaches: “small, quiet spaces sheltered with books; larger spaces where one can dwell and read; other larger but still intimate spaces where one can hear talks from authors about books." Exteriors must buzz with activity, entrances must be full of eye-catching presentations. The trend for not only incorporating cafes in bookstores but also placing them on the top floor makes good sense. This draws shoppers upwards floor-by-floor, which is bound to encourage people to linger longer and spend more.There are plenty of ways to delight customers. The consensus is that bookstores need to becomecultural destinations where people are prepared to pay good money to hear a concert, see a film or attend a talk. The programming will have to be intelligent and the space comfortable. As shoppers often browse in shops only to buy online later, some wonder whether it makes sense to charge people for the privilege.A more attractive idea might be a membership scheme like (hose offered by museums and other cultural venues. Unlike reward cards, which offer discounts and other nominal benefits, a club membership could provide priority access to events and a private lounge where members can eat, drink and meet authors before events. Different memberships could tailor to the needs of children and students.To survive and thrive, bookstores should celebrate the book in all its forms: rare, second-hand, digital, self-printed and so on. Readers should have the option of buying e-books in-store, and budding authors should have access to self-printing book machines, an important source of revenue in America.The bookstore of the future will have to work hard. Service will be knowledgeable and personalized, (he inventory expertly selected, spaces well-designed and the cultural events appealing. Whether bookstores are up to the challenge is not clear. The fate of these stores is a cliff-hanger.63. The first paragraph implies that without effective countermeasures_______.A. books on physics will die out soonB. printed books will outnumber e-booksC. no bookstores can survive digitalizationD. traditional bookstores will be short-lived64. The main idea of the second paragraph is that_______.A. the layout and atmosphere will be vital for bookstoresB. future bookstores should provide quick servicesC. advertising is critical to sales at future bookstoresD. bookstores should provide drinks on each floor65. All of the following are approaches suggested to boost sales EXCEPT_______.A. widening the range of servicesB. adopting the membership schemeC. issuing reward cards to customersD. making bookstores recreational66* The underlined word “celebrate” as is used in this passage probably means ______.A. spendB. observe C, commemorate D. embrace67. The last paragraph of this passage is concerned with______fA. current difficulties facing bookstoresB. challenges facing bookstores of the futureC. great opportunities for various bookstoresD. the easily achievable goal of future bookstores68. This passage can be best entitled 一_____.A. E-Publish or PerishB. Never Too Old to ReadC. The Future of the BookstoreD. Lower Value of Physical BooksP a s sa g e FourLong before the iPhone made him the god of gadgets, Steve Jobs launched his tech career by hacldng land lines to make free long-distance calls. Bob Dylan’s band, the Golden Chords, lost a high-school talent competition to a tap dancing act. Behind every success story is an embarrassing first effort, a stumble, a setback or a radical change of direction. It’s these first clumsy steps on the road to fame and fortune that fascinate writer Seth Fiegerman, who edits the blog , a collection of case studies on the origins of famous careers.“When you see someone who's very successful, you almost imagine that it was an inevitable conclusion, that they’re a genius, that they were destined for great things,” says Fiegerman, who began the blog in 2009, after an early setback in his own career. “I think the big takeaway is failure and setbacks, far from being uncommon, are in many ways essential.,’After Fiegerman, now 26, graduated from New York University in 2008,he landed a first job as a research editor at Playboy magazine. But he had worked there for just half a year when management announced that most of the staff would soon be laid off. As unemployment loomed, Fiegerman felt adrift. He began to explore the Playboy archives, discovering a valuable wealth of interviews with celebrities ranging from Marlon Brando to Malcolm X. Many of these successful people shared tales of their less promising early days, and Fiegerman quickly became obsessed with these origin stories.He began reading biographies with great interest and requesting interviews with writers and musicians he admired, using the blog to document the fits and starts that began the careers of the famous and the infamous. Success, he learned, was less a matter of innate talent and more the product of perseverance, a willingness to stumble and stand up again and again.“You kind of assume that great geniuses [are] like Mozart," Fiegerman says. But few successful people were children of highly unusual talent and these children don’t necessarily find success, “Most people don’t stick to it ”Like his subjects, Fiegerman found that his own early setback wasn’t permanent. He landed a new job in journalism, and today he works at the tech news website Mashable, covering, appropriately enough, start-up businesses. While he has less time for the blog, he hopes his collection of origin stories will help other young people realize it’s OK to fail.69. Steve Jobs and Bob Dylan are mentioned to show that .A. success is hard to achieve for most ordinary peopleB. successful people share certain good qualitiesC a good beginning is important for a successful careerD. setbacks are nothing unusual in successful careers70- The underlined word “takeaway” (Para. 2) probably means “ ’,.A. a point to be rememberedB* a threat to your good healthC_ some food to be eaten elsewhereD. a barrier to a successful career71. Fiegerman became interested in the origin stories_______A. while he was working for a magazineB. after he was laid off by a magazineC. after he set up a news websiteD. when he was creating his blog72. According to Fiegerman, which of the following is critical to success?A. Patience.B. Intelligence.C. Persistence.D. Opportunity.73. Fiegerman’s purpose in creating the blog is to_______.A. introduce new strategies to deal with setbacksB. encourage people to see failure in perspectiveC. advise people on how to start new businessesD‘ share the success stories of famous people74. Which is probably the best title for the passage?A. Tips for A Successful CareerB. Success Is Not EverythingC. All Roads Lead to RomeD. Failure Is the Mother of SuccessP a s s a g e F iveThe scandal at Harvard University in which authorities are investigating whether nearly half of a class of 279 students cheated on a take-home final exam raises a number of questions, including this: Does everybody cheat?“ Dozens of Harvard University students may have wrongly shared answers on a final exam, an unprecedented" case of suspected academic dishonesty. Sanctions for students found guilty of cheating include leaving Harvard for a year.Harvard, like most U.S. colleges and universities, has never had an honor code, although the Associated Press reports that it is giving “renewed consideration" to the idea as a result of the scandal.So, does everybody cheat?Not quite, but studies show that most students cheat at one time or another.A survey of 40,000 high school students found that more than half of teenagers said they had cheated on a test m Ihe previous year, and 34 percent said they had done it more than twice. One-third of the students said that they had plagiarized an assignment with the help of the Internet.The consequences for the country may be significant. A 2009 study about the relationship between high school attitudes and behavior and later adult conduct found that people who cheated on exams in high school two or more times are more likely to be dishonest later in life than those who never cheated in high school.Meanwhile, we've seen successive scandals involving cheating by the adults in school 一 teachers and principals — as a result of the growing importance of standardized tests. As the stakes associated with the scores have risen — the tests are used to gauge not only student achievement, but also teacher effectiveness, school and district quality ~ more people have taken desperate measures to ensure better scores. Not an excuse, just an explanation.Modem technology makes cheating much easier. Cheating cases have been documented in 30 states over the past three academic years. Some students, including those at virtual schools, sometimes put entire quizzes on the Internet, and the same exams are used repeatedly by teachers.Back at Harvard, a culture of cheating persists, here's a lot of pressure internally and externally to succeed at Harvard, and when kids who are not used to failing feel these things, it can really bend their eliiics in ways I didn't expect to see,” author Eric Kester told ABC News,75. The word “unprecedented,,is used in Paragraph Two to emphasize that—____,A. the causes of these cases of cheating had remained a mysteryB. such large-scale cheating was something unheard of at HarvardC. there had never been any cheating at Harvard beforeD. such cases of cheating had been left unreported by the media。
Unit oneVocabularyI. choose the answer that best complete each sentence1. A number of ______works of art have been sold as genuine.A. falseB. beautifulC. famousD. forged2. To _____one’s power is commit a crime and eventuall y end up in jail.A. accuseB. abuseC. deduceD. excuse3. Seeing the speeding car, the policeman_____the driver to pull up at the curb.A. reckonedB. beckonedC.softenedD. stiffened4. Unfortunately he hit a traffic jam and missed the train_____ a few minutes.A. withB. byC. beforeD. for5. She gave a clear and______account of her plans for the company's future.A. lucidB. dullC. unclearD. ambiguous6. Isn't it rather_____to talk about how much money you earn?A. politeB. boringC. vulgarD. pleasant7. The books will he____free to local schools.A. contributedB. tributeC. attributedD. distributed8. The editor required him to____some details of the article.A. omitB. permitC. summitD. illuminate9. Few of us can be unmoved by the____of the Romanian orphans.A. lightB. mightC. plightD. moonlight10. I have to_____my reputation.A. detectB. protectC. intactD. preventII. Fill in the blanks with the words or phrases given below.Change the form where necessary.1. In the US, school superintendent is in charge of the schools in a particular area2. Thousands of people came out onto the streets to attest their support for the democratic opposition party3. The expensive purse is made of genuine leather4. Can you turn this article into English?5. She took a glance at her watch.6. I know why this happened. You don't have to find any excuse.7. He was evicted from the pub for drunken and violent behavior.8. This emperor is said to have paid many personal visits to various counties disguise as an ordinary citizen.9. Every year she makes a large donation to a worthy cause.10. Children often have very vivid imagination.Translation1. Most parental-excuse notes I received back in those days were Penned by my students. They’d been forgingexcuse notes since they learned to write, and if I were to, and if were to confront each forger I'd be busy 24 hours a day.我每天收到以父母名义写的请假条,很多是学生自己写的。
2013年1月研究生英语学位课统考真题AGENERAL ENGLISH QUALIFYING TEST FOR NON-ENGLISH MAJORGRADUATE STUDENTS(GETJUN2710)PAPER ONEPART ⅠLISTENING COMPREHENSIONSection ADirections: In this section, you will hear nine short conversations between two speakers. At the end of each conversation a question will be asked about what was said. The conversations and the questions will be read only once. Choose the best answer from the four choices given by marking the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square brackets on your machine-scoring Answer Sheet.1. A. He has better hearing than others.B. He doesn't care what the woman may say.C. He is eager to know the news.D. He doesn't believe what the woman said.2. A. She thinks the camera is the latest style.B. She thinks the camera is multi-functional.C. She thinks the camera is small and fashionable.D. She doesn't think there's anything new with the camera.3. A. She asks the man to postpone the invitation.B. She tells the man to take a raincoat with him.C. She refuses the invitation because it is raining hard.D. She wants the man to pay the dinner check.4. A. The manager will report to the company.B. The manager will make trouble for the man.C. The manager will get into trouble.D. The manager will fire the man.5. A. She's not courageous enough.B. She didn't have enough time.C. She was afraid of the monster.D. She didn't like the game.6. A. He's broke. B. He's sick.C. He's very tired.D. He has something to do at home.7. A. Stock trading is not profitable.B. The stock market is always unstable.C. Stock trading is easier than the man said.D. Stock trading is not as easy as the man thinks.8. A. James is warm-hearted.B. James is a car technician.C. James knows the woman's car very well.D. James is very skillful in car repairing.9. A. Jake would do stupid things like this.B. The man's conclusion is not based on facts.C. The man shouldn't be on a date with another girl.D. Jake didn't tell the man's girlfriend about his date.Section BDirections: In this section you will hear two mini-talks. At the end of each talk, there will be some questions. Both the talks and the questions will be read to you only once. After each question, there will be a pause. During the pause, you must choose the best answer from the four choices given by marking the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square brackets on your machine-scoring Answer Sheet.Mini-talk One10. A. In 1984. B. In 1986. C. In 1992. D. In 1996.11. A. Almost 25 billion dollars. B. Almost 2.5 billion dollars.C. Almost 25 million dollars.D. Almost 2.5 million dollars.12. A. Her family. B. Her mother. C. Her father. D. Herself.Mini-talk Two13. A. It covers an area of more than 430 hectares.B. It took more than 16 years to complete.C. The lakes and woodlands were all built by human labor.D. The two designers of the park were from Britain.14. A. 7 kilometers. B. 9 kilometers.C. 39 kilometers.D. 93 kilometers.15. A. Baseball, football and volleyball.B. Basketball, baseball and football.C. Basketball, football and hockey.D. Chess, baseball and table tennis.Section CDirections: In this section you will bear a short lecture. Listen to the recording and complete the notes about the lecture. You will hear the recording twice. After the recording you are asked to write down your answers on the Answer Sheet. You now have 25 seconds to read the notes below.16. The new exhibit is called " ______ ."17. The Family of Man show was designed to express the connections that ______.18. The new exhibit was held at ______.19. The new exhibit is divided into several parts:"Children of Man,""Family of Man,""Cities of Man,""Faith of Man", and"______"20. The theme that comes out is really the unity of mankind that ______.PART ⅡVOCABULARYSection ADirections: There are ten questions in this section. Each question is a sentence with one word or phrase underlined. Below the sentence are four words or phrases marked A, B, C and D. Choose the word or phrase that is closest in meaning to the underlined one. Mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square brackets on your machine-scoring Answer Sheet.21. If a country turned inward and insulated itself, the result would be a diminished standard of living.A. worshipedB. splitC. innovatedD. isolated22. The values and beliefs will dictate the direction of your pursuit as well as your life.A. ruleB. shapeC. alterD. complicate23. Studies have proved that smart people tend to be smart across different kinds of realms.A. realitiesB. fieldsC. occupationsD. courses24. Humans are beginning to realize that raising food animals contributes substantially to climate change.A. physicallyB. materiallyC. considerablyD. favorably25. This peer-reviewed journal has a specific emphasis on effective treatment of acute pain.A. urgentB. severeC. sternD. sensitive26. One way to maintain social stability is to crack down on crime while creating more jobs.A. clamp down onB. settle down toC. look down uponD. boil down to27. The city council decided to set up a school devoted exclusively to the needs of problem children.A. forcefullyB. externallyC. reluctantlyD. entirely28. City residents have a hard time trying to avoid contact with hazardous chemicals in daily life.A. dangerousB. prevalentC. novelD. invasive29. The most important aspect of maintaining a healthy diet is whether you can stick to it.A. insist onB. dwell onC. coincide withD. adhere to30. I tried to talk my daughter into dining out in a nearby restaurant that evening, but in vain.A. to my surpriseB. on her ownC. to no effectD. to some extentSection BDirections: There are ten questions in this section. Each question is a sentence with something missing. Below each sentence are four words or phrases marked A, B, C and D. Choose one word or phrase that best completes the sentence. Mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square brackets on your machine-scoring Answer Sheet.31. We won't have safe neighborhoods unless we're always ______ on drug criminals.A. toughB. roughC. thoroughD. enough32. The challenge for us is to ______ these new states in building a more prosperous future.A. participateB. engageC. commitD. contribute33. Forty-five years of conflict and ______ between East and West are now a thing of the past.A. convictionB. compatibilityC. collaborationD. confrontation34. Few people know the shape of the next century, for the genius of a free people______ prediction.A. deniesB. defiesC. repliesD. relies35. These countries are ______ concluding a free trade agreement to propel regional development.A. on the verge ofB. in the interest ofC. on the side ofD. at the expense of36. We'll continue along the road ______ by our presidents more than seventy years ago.A. given outB. made outC. wiped outD. mapped out37. When you win, your errors are ______; when you lose, your errors are magnified.A. expandedB. obscuredC. cultivatedD. exaggerated38. Although in her teens, the eldest daughter had to quit school to help ______ the family.A. provide forB. head forC. fall forD. go for39. Carbon ______ refers to the total set of greenhouse gases emissions caused by an organization.A. fingerprintB. footstepC. footprintD. blueprint40. There is no question that ours is a just cause and that good will ______.A. vanishB. wanderC. witherD. prevailPART ⅢCLOZE TESTDirections: There are 10 questions in this part of the test. Read the passage through. Then, go back and choose one suitable word or phrase marked A, B, C, or D for each blank in the passage. Mark the corresponding letter of the word or phrase you have chosen with a single bar across the square brackets on your machine-scoring Answer Sheet.When people search online, they leave a trail that remains stored on the central computers of firms such as Google, Yahoo and Microsoft. Analyzing what we're looking for on the Web can offer a remarkable (41) into our anxieties and enthusiasms. UK writer and Internet expert John Battelle wrote on his blog, "This can tell us (42) things about who we are and what we want as a (43) ." Google's experimental service Google Trends, for example, compares the numbers of people searching for different words and phrases from 2004 to the present. According to these graphs, sometimes people's interests are obviously (44) the news agenda: when the Spice Girls announce a reunion, there's an immediate (45) to find out more about them. Other results are strikingly seasonal: people go shopping online for coats in winter and short pants in summer.The most fascinating possibility is that search data might help (46) people's behavior. When we search online for a certain brand of stereo system, we are surely indicating we're more (47) to buy that brand.Perhaps we search for a political candidate's name when we are thinking about (48) him or her. Maybe we even search for "stock market crash" or "recession" just before we start (49) our investments. This information could clearly be useful to a smart marketer--it's already how Google decides which (50) to show on its search results pages--or to a political campaign manager.41. A. investigation B. insight C. consideration D. prospect42. A. extraordinary B. obvious C. mysterious D. sensitive43. A. culture B. nation C. person D. mass44. A. reduced to B. resulting in C. backed up by D. driven by45. A. rush B. push C. charge D. dash46. A. presume B. preoccupy C. predict D. preserve47. A. liking B. alike C. like D. likely48. A. fighting against B. voting forC. believing inD. running for49. A. withdrawing from B. depositing inC. turning downD. adding to50. A. notices B. papersC. advertisementsD. statementsPART ⅣREADING COMPREHENSIONDirections: In this part of the test, there are five short passages. Read each passage carefully, and then do the questions that follow. Choose the best answer from the four choices given and mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square brackets on your machine-scoring Answer Sheet.Passage OneNew York's WCBS puts it in a way that just can't be better expressed: "It was an accident waiting to happen."15-year-old Alexa Longueira was wandering along the street in Staten Island, obliviously tapping text messages into her phone as she walked. Distracted by her phone, she failed to notice the open manhole (下水道窨井) in her path, and plunged into it, taking an unprepared bath of raw sewage along with receiving moderate injuries. Longueira called the dive "really gross, shocking and scary."It's not all Longueira's fault. The manhole shouldn't have been left uncovered and unattended, and no warning signs or hazard cones had been set up near the work site.A worker with New York's Department of Environmental Protection (DEP), who was preparing to flush the sewage, helped her out, and the department later issued a formal apology for the incident.Nonetheless, observers are harshly divided over who is to blame here. The DEP is certainly at fault for failing to secure the manhole, but to what extent should the girl be held accountable for failure to be aware of her surroundings? If she had stepped into traffic and been hit by a car, would her reaction (that is: anger and a potential lawsuit) be any different?Detachment from one's environment due to electronic gadgets is a growing problem--and a hazardous one. The government is even trying to get involved, with multiple laws on the books across the country outlawing cell phone use and text messaging while operating a motor vehicle in the wake of serious accidents involving distracted drivers. New York Senator Kruger even tried to criminalize the use of handheld devices (including phones, music players, and game players) by pedestrians while they are crossing streets in major New York cities, due to concerns over the number of auto vs. pedestrian accidents.Following a substantial outcry, that legislation appears never to have been formally introduced. But did Kruger have a point?What interested me, at least, is the end of the stow above that Longueira lost a shoe in the sewage. But since other things are not reported as lost, I'm guessing she appears to have managed to keep her grip on her phone during the accident.51. By "It was an accident waiting to happen" , New York's WCBS meant that______.A. the accident should have been avoidableB. this kind of accidents happen frequentlyC. somebody was glad to see what would happenD. an open manhole is sure a trap for careless pedestrians52. When the girl fell into the open manhole, she ______.A. was seriously hurtB. was frightenedC. took a bath in the raw sewageD. cried help to the DEP worker53. According to the author, who was to blame for the accident?A. The girl herself.B. The DEP worker.C. Both of them.D. Nobody.54. According to the passage, which of the following is illegal in the U.S.?A. Talking on a cell phone while driving.B. Text messaging while walking across a street.C. Operating music players while driving.D. Operating game players while walking across a street.55. The phrase "in the wake of"(Para.5) is closest in meaning to "______".A. in view ofB. on condition ofC. as far asD. with regard to56. The author found it funny that the girl had ______.A. lost a shoe in the sewage in the accidentB. reported nothing lost after the accidentC. got a firm hold of her phone during the accidentD. managed to keep herself upright in the manholePassage TwoAccording to a study, intellectual activities make people eat more than when just resting. This has shed new light on brain food. This finding might also help explain the obesity epidemic of a society in which people often sit.Researchers split 14 university student volunteers into three groups for a 45-minute session of either relaxing in a sitting position, reading and summarizing a text, or completing a series of memory, attention, and alert tests on the computer. After the sessions, the participants were invited to eat as much as they pleased.Though the study involved a very small number of participants, the results were stark. The students who had done the computer tests downed 253 more calories or 29.4 percent more than the couch potatoes. Those who had summarized a text consumed 203 more calories than the resting group.Blood samples taken before, during, and after revealed that intellectual work causes much bigger fluctuations in glucose(葡萄糖) levels than rest periods, perhaps owing to the stress of thinking.The researchers figure the body reacts to these fluctuations by demanding food to restore glucose--the brain's fuel. Glucose is converted by the body from carbohydrates (碳水化合物) and is supplied to the brain via the bloodstream. The brain cannot make glucose and so needs a constant supply. Brain cells need twice as much energy as other cells in the body.Without exercise to balance the added intake, however, such "brain food" is probably not smart. Various studies in animals have shown that consuming fewer calories overall leads to sharper brains and longer life, and most researchers agree that the findings apply, in general, to humans.And, of course, eating more can make you fat."Caloric overcompensation following intellectual work, combined with the fact that we are less physically active when doing intellectual tasks, could contribute to the obesity epidemic currently observed in industrialized countries," said lead researcher Jean-Philippe Chaput at Laval University in Quebec City, Canada. "This is a factor that should not be ignored, considering that more and more people hold jobs of an intellectual nature," the researcher concluded.57. The passage mainly tells us that ______.A. consuming fewer calories can lead to sharper brainsB. thinking consumed more calories than restingC. resting more can make people fatD. brain cells need more energy than other cells in the body58. It is implied that to avoid obesity, people who have to sit long should ______.A. think more and eat lessB. increase the intake of vitaminsC. skip some mealsD. eat less potatoes59. The word "stark" in the 3rd paragraph is closest in meaning to "______".A. negativeB. obscureC. absoluteD. ambiguous60. According to the research, which of the following activities consumed the most calories?A. Relaxing in a sitting position.B. Reading professional books.C. Summarizing a text.D. Completing tests on the computer.61. According to the passage, eating less may make people ______.A. smarterB. less intelligentC. more emotionalD. live a shorter life62. One of the reasons for the obesity epidemic currently observed in industrialized countries is that in these countries ______.A. people take different exercisesB. fewer people watch their weightC. fewer people hold physical jobsD. foods are much cheaperPassage ThreeOne of the simple pleasures of a lazy summer day is to be able to enjoy a refreshing slice of watermelon either at the beach, at a picnic, or fresh from the farmer's market. Delicious and nutritious, watermelon is one of those guilt-free foods we can all enjoy: one cup of watermelon packs only about 50 calories! Watermelons are not only cooling treats for when the mercury starts to rise; they are also loaded with healthy nutrients such as vitamin A, vitamin C, lycopene (番茄红素 ), and etc. Vitamins A and C and lycopene are antioxidants, which are substances that work to help get rid of the harmful effects of substances.Research has suggested that a diet high in fruits and vegetables that have plenty of antioxidants can reduce the risk of heart disease, some cancers, and some other dangerous diseases. A cup of watermelon provides 25% of the recommended daily value of vitamin C and 6% of the recommended daily value of vitamin A. Additionally, researchers have found that lycopene, a nutrient most traditionally associated with tomatoes, is found in equal or greater quantities in watermelon. Watermelons also provide significant amounts of vitamin B6 and vitamin B1, both of which are necessary for energy production. In combination with the minerals and vitamins already described, these B vitamins add to the high nutrient richness of watermelon. Due to its high water content (watermelon is 92% water by weight) and low calorie count, watermelon is a good choice to satisfy your hunger while you try to eat a healthy diet. Think of them as nature's answer to the heavily marketed "vitamin water" craze.Besides the textured, watery flesh of the fruit, watermelon seeds are also widely eaten as a snack. They are rich in iron and protein and are often pressed for oil or roasted and seasoned.So if you are planning on dining outdoor this summer, or simply looking for a quick and convenient refreshment to serve to unexpected company or reckless children, reach for watermelon. The kids will enjoy its crisp taste and messy juices, the adults will enjoy its refreshing flavors, and everyone will benefit from its nutritious value.63. We don't feel guilt even if we eat more watermelon because ______.A. it is deliciousB. it is nutritiousC. it contains low caloriesD. it contains antioxidants64. The phrase "when the mercury starts to rise" (Para. 1) probably means "______".A. in summer eveningsB. on sunny daysC. when people are thirstyD. when it is getting hot65. How many cups of watermelon can satisfy the daily need for vitamin C?A. 1.B. 2.C. 3.D. 4.66. By saying "Think of them as nature's answer to the heavily marketed" vitamin water "craze", the author means ______.A. watermelon can take the place of vitaminsB. with watermelon, people don't have to buy vitamin waterC. natural foods are much better than the manufactured onesD. the vitamin water has been over-advertised67. Watermelon seeds are often ______.A. fried in oilB. stored for seasonsC. prepared with spiceD. pressed before being cooked68. The best title of the passage is ______.A. Watermelon--the Most Enjoyable RefreshmentB. The Wonders of WatermelonC. The Nutrients in WatermelonD. Watermelon--the Best Summer Food for ChildrenPassage FourInitial voyages into space introduced questions scientists had never before considered. Could an astronaut swallow food in zero gravity? To keep things simple, astronauts on the Project Mercury ate foods squeezed out of tubes. It was like serving them baby food in a toothpaste container.But these early tube meals were flavorless, and astronauts dropped too many pounds. "We know that astronauts have lost weight in every American and Russian manned flight," wrote NASA scientists Malcolm Smith in 1969. "We don't know why." Feeding people in space was not as easy as it looked.Floating around in space isn't as relaxing as it might sound. Astronauts expend a lot of energy and endure extreme stresses on their bodies. Their dietary requirements are therefore different from those of their gravity-bound counterparts on Earth. For example, they need extra calcium to compensate for bone loss. 'A low-salt diet helps slow the process, but there are no refrigerators in space, and salt is often used to help preserve foods," says Vickie Kloeris of NASA. "We have to be very careful of that." By the Apollo missions, NASA had developed a nutritionally balanced menu with a wide variety of options. Of course, all the items were freeze-dried or heat- treated to kill bacteria, and they didn't look like regular food.Today, the most elaborate outer-space meals are consumed in the International Space Station (ISS), where astronauts enjoy everything from steak to chocolate cake. The ISS is a joint venture between the U.S. and Russia, and diplomatic guidelines dictate the percentage of food an astronaut must eat from each country. NASA's food laboratory has 185 different menu items, Russia offers around 100, and when Japan sent up its first crew member in 2008, about 30 dishes came with him. Due to dietary restrictions and storage issues, astronauts still can't eat whatever they want whenever they feel like it.In 2008, NASA astronaut and ISS crew member Sandra Magnus became the first person to try to cook a meal in space. It took her over an hour to cook onions and garlic in the space station's food warmer, but she managed to create a truly delicious dish: grilled tuna (金枪鱼) in a lemon-garlic-ginger sauce---eaten from a bag, of course.69. Which of the following is true about the early space meals?A. They had to be eaten from a bag.B. They tasted better than they looked.C. They could not make eating as easy as possible.D. They were not nutritious enough for astronauts.70. It seems that astronauts' weight loss ______.A. was an unusual problem among astronautsB. was what puzzled the early scientistsC. caused new problems in space flightsD. drew the attention of the general public71. According to Vickie Kloeris, serving a low-salt diet in space ______.A. is easier said than doneB. is not absolutely necessaryC. has worked as expectedD. will be the future trend72. In the International Space Station,______.A. there is enough space to store enough foods for astronautsB. there is a selection of flavored foods from a dozen countriesC. astronauts in general prefer foods from their own countriesD. astronauts' need to eat their favorite foods can't always be met73. It can be learned that Sandra Magnus' cooking in space ______.A. left much to be desiredB. wasn't worth the effortC. was quite satisfactoryD. has inspired the others74. The passage mainly introduces ______.A. the variety of food options in spaceB. the dietary need of astronauts in spaceC. the problems of living in the space stationD. the improvement of food offered in spacePassage FiveIs it possible to be both fat and fit--not just fit enough to exercise, but fit enough to live as long as someone a lot lighter? Not according to a 2004 study from the Harvard School of Public Health which looked at 115,000 nurses aged between 30 and 55. Compared with women who were both thin and active, obese (overweight) but active women had a mortality rate that was 91% higher. Though far better than the inactive obese (142% higher), they were still worse off than the inactive lean (5% higher). A similar picture emerged in 2008 after researchers examined 39,000 women with an average age of 54. Compared with active women of normal weight, the active but overweight were 54% more likely to develop heart disease.That's settled, then. Or is it? Steven Blair, a professor of exercise science at the University of South Carolina, describes the official focus on obesity as an "obsession ... and it's not grounded in solid data".Blair's most fascinating study, in the Journal of the American Medical Association in 2007, took 2,600 people aged 60 and above, of various degrees of fatness, and tested their fitness on the exercise device, rather than asking them to quantify it themselves. This is an unusually rigorous approach, he claims, since many rival surveys ask participants to assess their own fitness, or ignore it as a factor altogether."There is an 'association' between obesity and fitness," he agrees, "but it is not perfect. As you progress towards overweight, the percentage of individuals who are fit does go down. But here's a shock: among class Ⅱ obese individuals [with a body mass index between 35 and 39.9], about 40% or 45% are still fit. You simply cannot tell by looking whether someone is fit or not. When we look at these mortality rates in fatpeople who are fit, we see that the harmful effect of fat just disappears: their death rate during the next decade is half that of the normal weight people who are unfit." One day--probably about a hundred years from now--this fat-but-fit question will be answered without the shadow of a doubt. In the meantime, is there anything that all the experts agree on? Oh yes: however much your body weighs, you'll live longer if you move it around a bit.75. It can be learned that the 2008 research ______.A. posed a challenge to the 2004 studyB. confirmed the findings of the 2004 studyC. solved the problems left behind by the 2004 studyD. had a different way of thinking from the 2004 study76. Steven Blair probably describes the previous studies as ______.A. unreliableB. uncreativeC. unrealisticD. untraditional77. The major difference between Blair's study and the previous research is that______.A. Blair excluded the participants' fitness as a factorB. Blair guessed the participants' fitness after weighing themC. Blair required the participants to assess their own fitnessD. Blair evaluated the participants' fitness through physical tests78. Blair's study proves that ______.A. the weight problem should be taken seriouslyB. weight and fitness are strongly connectedC. it is possible to be both fat and fitD. fat people have a higher death rate79. It can be seen from the description of these studies that the author ______.A. shows no preference for any researcherB. finds no agreement between the researchersC. obviously favors the Blair studyD. obviously favors the Harvard study80. The purpose of writing this passage is to ______.A. call on people to pay attention to weight problemB. present the different findings of various weight studiesC. compare the strength and weakness of different studiesD. offer suggestions on how to remain fit and live longerPAPER TWOPART ⅤTRANSLATIONSection ADirections: Put the following paragraph into Chinese. Write your Chinese version in the proper space on Answer Sheet Ⅱ.The reason for not classifying carbon dioxide as a pollutant is that it is a natural component of the atmosphere and needed by plants to carry out biological synthesis. No one would argue that carbon dioxide is a necessary component of the atmosphere any more than one would argue the fact that Vitamin D is necessary in the human diet. However, excess intake of Vitamin D can be extremely toxic. Living systems, be they an ecosystem or an organism, require that a delicate balance be maintained between certain compounds in order for the system to function normally. When the excess presence of one substance threatens the wellbeing of an ecosystem, it becomes toxic despite the fact that it is required in small quantities.Section B。
长安大学2013年非英语专业硕士研究生学位英语考试试题(A卷)Non-English Major Graduate Student English Qualifying Test (GET)考生注意事项:一.本考试由两部分组成:试卷一(Paper One)包括词汇、完形填空与阅读理解三部分,共60题,按顺序统一编号;试卷二(Paper Two)包括翻译与写作两部分,共2题。
两份试卷合并装订成试题册。
二.试卷一(题号1-60)为客观评分题,答案一律用中性(HB)或者2B铅笔做在机读答题卡上,在对应题号下所选的字母中间划黑道,如【A】【B】【C】【D】。
三.试卷二为主观评分题,答案一律写在主观答题纸ANSWER SHEETⅡ上。
答题前,请仔细阅读试卷二前的注意事项。
四.答题卡和答题纸上须写清姓名和准考证号,答题纸上请务必写清任课教师姓名,考试结束时一并交回。
答题卡和答题卡上不得做任何记号,否则答案无效。
五.试卷一为70分钟,试卷二为50分钟。
考试结束时间一到,考生一律停笔,将试题、机读答题卡及主观答题纸留在座位上,待监考教师收点无误后,经主考教师宣布考试结束方可离开考场。
试卷一(Paper One)Part I VOCABULARY (10 minutes) (20 points)Section A (1 point each)Directions: There are ten sentences in this section. Each sentence has one word or a set of words underlined. Below the sentence are four words or phrases marked [A], [B], [C]and [D]. Choose the word or phrase that is closest in meaning to the underlined one. Mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square brackets on your Machine-scoring Answer Sheet.1. The police couldn’t control the turbulent demonstrations, so troops came to give them a hand.[A] prevalent[B] crowded[C] disorderly[D] impatient2. History was being catalogued here, the missed opportunities, blunders, and outright mistakes.[A] attempts [B] mistakes [C] insults [D] arguments3. As time goes on their work has been largely supplanted by the use of a computer program that fulfils the same function.[A] replay [B] supported [C] supplemented [D] replaced4. Helplessly she blinked up at him, feeling a slow lethargy creep through her whole body.[A] provision [B] cylinder [C] exhaustion [D] contradiction5. It’s useless, I can’t dragging my wayward brain back to the text.[A] way-back [B] confused [C] weary [D] self-willed6. May you have enough happiness to make you sweet, enough trials to make you strong, enough melancholy to keep you human, enough hope to make you happy.[A] melon [B] sorrow [C] meditation [D] virulently7. People give their respect to these monuments which are a vital part of the cultural heritage ofthe nation.[A] event [B] tradition[C] inheritance [D] motivation8. These results were based on 674 cancer deaths, so are unlikely to represent the kind of statistical oddity that can beset studies on cancer risks that sometimes create headlines[A] prevent [B] protect [C] puzzle [D] produce9. You must learn to keep your emotions in check, otherwise, you may put yourself in great trouble if you always act on your impulse.[A] examine [B] control [C] supervise [D] investigate10. The employer tried to bully his employees from staging strikes by threatening to close down the entire plant.[A] intimidate [B] integrate [C] ridicule [D] humiliateSection B (1 point each)Directions:There are ten sentences in this section. Each sentence has something omitted. Choose the word or words from the four choices given to best complete each sentence.11. The friend was exposed in the end to be a hidden rival who had been plotting against the company’s marketing in Hong Kong.[A] declared [B] exclaimed [C] professed [D] announced12. In U.S. the criminal courts possess a power to make compensation orders.[A] discreet [B] discriminatory[C] discrete[D] discretionary13. When I got back to our company the other day, I found a stranger ________ through the window into our manager’s office.[A] poring [B] peeping [C] peering [D] perceiving14. I had an uncle who died at a relatively young age in a workplace accident and I was asked to produce a newspaper article or verifying my claim.[A] obituary [B] literary [C] laundry [D] legendary15. The baby is learning to walk and he’s always over the floor.[A] stumble[B] rambling[C] mumbling[D] tumbling16. Crime and the fear of crime _______ the community, to which causes many sociologists and psychologists to attach importance.[A] limit [B] focus[C] preoccupy[D] influence17. There was no point ________about the possibility of them getting back together.[A] thinking [B] speculating [C] talking [D] worrying18. I got a new battery for my recorder only last week, but it seems to have already.[A] worn out [B] gone off [C] knocked off [D] run down19. Chinese often shake my hand and don't let go. They talk away contentedly, ______ of my discomfort and struggle to disengage my hand.[A] oblivious [B] patent [C] obvious [D] pernicious20. According to the witness’s ________, you were present when the crime was committed.[A] discovery [B] reaction [C] testimony [D] performance Part II CLOZE TEST (10 minutes, 10 points)Directions:Read the passage through. Then go back and choose one item of suitable word(s)marked [A], [B], [C] and [D] for each blank in the passage. Mark the correspondingletter of the word(s) you have chosen with a single bar across the square brackets onyour Machine-scoring Answer Sheet.Throughout the 19th century and into the 20th, citizens of the United States maintained a bias against big cities. Most lived on farms and in small towns and believed cities to be centers of 21 , crime, poverty and moral 22 . Their distrust was caused, 23 by a national ideology that 24 farming the greatest occupation and rural living 25 to urban living. This attitude 26 even as the number of urban dwellers increased and cities became an essential 27 of the national landscape. Gradually, economic reality overcame ideology. Thousands 28 the precarious (不稳定的) life on the farm for more secure and better paying jobs in the city. But when these people 29 from the countryside, they carried their fears and suspicions with them. These new urbanities, already convinced that cities were 30 with great problems, eagerly 31 the progressive reforms that promised to bring order out of the 32 of the city.One of many reforms came 33 the area of public utilities. Water and sewerage systems were usually operated by 34 governments, but the gas and electric networks were privately owned. Reformers feared that the privately owned utility companies would 35 exorbitant (过度的) rates for these essential services and 36 them only to people who could afford them. Some city and state governments responded by 37 the utility companies, but a number of cities began to supply these services themselves. 38 of these reforms argued that public ownership and regulation would 39 widespread access to these utilities and guarantee a 40 price.21. [A] eruption [B] corruption [C] interruption [D] provocation22 .[A] disgrace [B] deterioration [C] dishonor [D] degradation23. [A] by origin [B] in part [C] at all [D] at random24. [A] proclaimed [B] exclaimed [C] claimed [D] reclaimed25. [A] superb [B] super [C] exceptional [D] superior26. [A] predominated [B] dominated [C] prevailed [D] commanded27. [A] feature [B] peculiarity [C] quality [D] attribute28. [A] deserted [B] departed [C] abolished [D] abandoned29. [A] reallocated [B] migrated [C] replaced [D] substituted30. [A] overtaken [B] overflowed [C] overwhelmed [D] preoccupied31. [A] embraced [B] adopted [C] hugged [D] outbreaks32. [A] chaos [B] chores [C] chorus [D] outbreaks33. [A] at [B] by [C] out [D] in34. [A] public [B] municipal [C] republican [D] national35. [A] charge [B] take [C] cost [D] spend36. [A] distribute [B] deliver [C] transfer [D] transport37. [A] degenerating [B] generating [C] regenerating [D] regulating38. [A] Proponents [B] Opponents [C] Sponsors [D] Rivals39. [A] secure [B] ensure [C] reassure [D] incur40. [A] fair [B] just [C] square [D] objectivePart III READING COMPREHENSION (50 minutes, 40 points)Directions:In this part of the test, there are five short passages for you to read. Read each passage carefully, and then do the questions that follow. Choose the best answer [A],[B], [C] or [D], and mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across thesquare bracket on your Machine-scoring Answer Sheet.Passage OneThe term massage therapy (also called massage, for short; massage also refers to an individual treatment session) covers a group of practices and techniques. There are over 80 types of massage therapy. In all of them, therapists press, rub, and otherwise manipulate the muscles and other soft tissues of the body, often varying pressure and movement. They most often use their hands and fingers, but may use their forearms, elbows, or feet. Typically, the intent is to relax the soft tissues, increase delivery of blood and oxygen to the massaged areas, warm them, and decrease pain.Massage therapy dates back thousands of years. References to massage have been found in ancient writings from many cultures, including those of Ancient Greece, Ancient Rome, Japan, China, Egypt, and the Indian subcontinent. In the United States, massage therapy first became popular and was promoted for a variety of health purposes starting in the mid-1800s. In the 1930s and 1940s, however, massage fell out of favor, mostly because of scientific and technological advances in medical treatments. Interest in massage revived in the 1970s, especially among athletes.More recently, a 2002 national survey on Americans' use of CAM (published in 2004) found that 5 percent of the 31,000 participants had used massage therapy in the preceding 12 months, and 9.3 percent had ever used it. According to recent reviews, people use massage for a wide variety of health-related intents: for example, to relieve pain (often from musculoskeletal conditions, but from other conditions as well); rehabilitate sports injuries; reduce stress; increase relaxation; address feelings of anxiety and depression; and aid general wellness.Massage therapy appears to have few serious risks if appropriate cautions are followed. A very small number of serious injuries have been reported, and they appear to have occurred mostly because cautions were not followed or a massage was given by a person who was not properly trained. Health care providers recommend that patients not have massage therapy before they consult their doctors about their own health conditions.Scientists are studying massage to understand what effects massage therapy has on patients, how it has those effects, and why. Some aspects of this are better understood than others. There are many more aspects that are not yet known or well understood scientifically. More well-designed studies are needed to understand and confirm these theories and other scientific aspects of massage.41. Which one of the following statements about massage is NOT correct according to thepassage?[A] Many different practices and techniques can all be called massage[B] Hands and fingers aide the only body parts that therapists use when practicing massage[C] Soft tissues of the body are usually the target of massage[D] Massage can do much more than just providing relaxation42. In the survey mentioned in paragraph 3, we know that 9.3 percent of the participants ________.[A] had used massage therapy at least once[B] used massage therapy in 2004[C] used massage therapy in 2002[D] used massage therapy in 200143. Paragraph 4 is mainly concerned about ________.[A] the training processes of a qualified therapists[B] safety of massage therapy[C] cautions that the therapists need to follow[D] side effects and risks of massage therapy44. From the passage, we know that the study of massage ________.[A] have not got started yet[B] can provide full explanations for therapy practice[C] cannot explain therapy practice at all[D] needs more research on therapy practicePassage TwoWhat most people don’t realize is that wealth isn’t the same as income. If you make $ 1 million a year and spend $ 1 millio n, you’re not getting wealthier, you’re just living high. Wealth is what you accumulate, not what you spend. The most successful accumulators of wealth spend far less than they can afford on houses, cars, vacations and entertainment. Why? Because these things offer little or no return. The wealthy would rather put their money into investments or their businesses. It’s an attitude. Millionaires understand that when you buy a luxury house, you buy a luxury life –style too. Your property taxes skyrocket, along with the cost of utilities and insurance, and the prices of nearby services, such as grocery stores, tend to be higher. The rich man’s attitude can also be seen in his car. Many drive old unpretentious sedans. Sam Walton, billionaire founder of the Wal–Mart Store, Inc., drove a pickup truck. Most millionaires measure success by net worth, not income. Instead of taking their money home, they plow as much as they can into their businesses, stock portfolios and other assets. Why? Because the government doesn’t tax wealth; it taxes income you bring home for consumption, the more the government taxes. The person who piles up net worth fastest tends to put every dollar he can into investments, not consumption. All the while, of course, he’s reinvesting his earnin gs from investments and watching his net worth soar. That’s the attitude as well. The best wealth-builders pay careful attention to their money and seek professional advice. Those who spend heavily on cars, boats and buses, I’ve found, tend to skimp on investment advice. Those who skimp on the luxuries are usually more willing to pay top dollar for good legal and financial advice. The self-made rich develop clear goals for their money.They may wish to retire early, or they may want to leave an estate to their children. The goals vary, but two things are consistent: they have a dollar figure in mind—the amount they want to save by age 50, perhaps – and they work unceasingly toward that goal. One thing may surprise you. If you make wealth – not just income –your goal, the luxury house you’ve been dreaming about won’t seem so alluring. You’ll have the attitude.45. Which of the following statements is true?[A]Wealth is judged according to the life style one has.[B] Inheritance builds an important part in one’s wealth.[C] Wealth is more of what one has made than anything else.[D] High income may make one live high and get rich the same time.46.by the author’s opinion, those who spend money on luxury houses and cars.[A] will not be taxed by the government[B] live high and have little saved[C] have accumulated wealth in another sense[D] can show that they are among the rich47.The rich put their money into business because .[A] that is the only way to spend money yet not to be taxed by the government[B] they are not interested in luxury houses and cars[C] their goal is to develop their company[D] they can get much in return to build their wealth48.To become wealthy, one should .[A] work hard unceasingly[B] seek as much income as he can[C] stick to the way he lives[D] save up his earningsPassage ThreeTaking charge of yourself involves putting to rest some very prevalent myths. At the top of the list is the notion that intelligence is measured by you’re a bility to solve complex problems; to read, write and compute at certain levels, and to resolve abstract equations quickly. This vision of intelligence asserts formal education and bookish excellence as the true measures of self-fulfillment. It encourages a kind of intellectual prejudice that has brought with it some discouraging results. We have come to believe that someone who has more educational merit badges, who is very good at some form of school discipline is ―intelligent.‖ Yet mental hospitals are filled with patients who have all of the properly lettered certificates. A truer indicator of intelligence is an effective, happy life lived each day and each present moment of every day.If you are happy, if you live each moment for everything with it’s worth, then you are an intelligent person. Problem solving is a useful help to your happiness, but if you know that given your inability to resolve a particular concern you can still choose happiness for yourself, or at aminimum refuse to choose unhappiness, then you are intelligent. You are intelligent because you have the ultimate weapon against the big N. B. D—Nervous Break Down.―Intelligent‖ people do not have N. B. D.’s because they are in charge of themselves. They know how to choose happiness over depression, because they know how to deal with the problems of their lives. You can begin to think of yourself as truly intelligent on the basis of how you choose to feel in the face of trying circumstances. The life struggles are pretty much the same for each of us. Everyone who is involved with other human beings in any social context has similar difficulties. Disagreements, conflicts and compromises are a part of what it means to be human. Similarly, money, growing old, sickness, deaths, natural disasters and accidents are all events which present problems to virtually all human beings. But some people are able to make it, to avoid immobilizing depression and unhappiness despite such occurrences, while others collapse or have an N. B. D. Those who recognize prob lems as a human condition and don’t measure happiness by an absence of problems are the most intelligent kind of humans we know; also, the most rare.49. According to the author, the conventional notion of intelligence measured i n terms of one’sability to read, write and compute .[A] will contribute to one’s self-fulfillment [B] will help eliminate intellectual prejudice[C] is the root of all mental distress [D] is a widely held but wrong concept50. It is implied in the passage that holding a university degree .[A] may result in one’s inability to solve complex real-life problems[B] does not mean that one is highly intelligent[C] may make one mentally sick and physically weak[D] does not indicate one’s ability to write properly worded documents51. The author thinks that an intelligent person knows .[A] how to avoid depression and make his life worthwhile[B] how to find the best way to achieve success in life[C] how to put up with some very prevalent myths[D] how to persuade others to compromise52. According to the passage, what kind of people are rare?[A] Those who are aware of difficulties in life but know how to avoid unhappiness.[B] Those who don’t emphasize bookish excellence in their pursuit of happiness.[C] Those who measure happiness by an absence of problems but seldom suffer form N. B. D.’s.[D] Those who are able to secure happiness though having to struggle against trying circumstances.Passage FourThose who welcomed the railway saw it as more than a rapid and comfortable means of passing. They actually saw it as a factor in world peace. They did not foresee that the railway would be just one more means for the rapid movement of aggressive armies. None of them foresaw that the more we are together-the more chances there are of war. Any boy or girl who is one of a large family knows that.Whenever any new invention is put forward, those for it and those against it can always find medical men to approve or condemn. The anti-railway group produced doctors who said that tunnels would be most dangerous to public health: they would produce colds, catarrhs (粘膜炎)and consumptions. The deafening noise and the glare of the engine fire, would have a bad effect on the nerves. Further, being moved through the air at a high speed would do grave injury to delicate lungs. In those with high blood-pressure, the movement of the train might produce apoplexy(中风). The sudden plunging of a train into the darkness of a tunnel, and the equally sudden rush into full daylight, would cause great damage to eyesight. But the pro-railway group was of course able to produce equally famous medical men to say just the opposite. They said that the speed and swing of the train would equalize the circulation, promote digestion, tranquilize the nerves, and ensure good sleep.The actual rolling-stock was anything but comfortable. If it was a test of endurance to sit for four hours outside a coach in rain, or inside in dirty air, the railway offered little more in the way of comfort. Certainly the first-class carriages had cushioned seats; but the second-class had only narrow bare boards, while the third-class had nothing at all; no seats and no roof; they were just open trucks. So that third-class passengers gained nothing from the few mode except speed. In the matter of comfort, indeed they lost; they did, on the coaches, have a seat, but now they had to stand all the way, which gave opportunities to the comic(滑稽的)press. This kind of thing: A man was seen yesterday buying a third-class ticket for the new London and Birmingham Railway. The state of his mind is being enquired into.A writer in the early days of railways wrote feelingly of both second-and third-class carriages. He made the suggestion that the directors of the railways must have sent all over the world to find the hardest possible wood. Of the open third-class trucks he said that they had the peculiar property of meeting the rain from whatever quarter it came. He described them as horizontal shower-baths, from whose searching power there was no escape.53. All boys and girls in large families know that ________.[A] a lot of people being together makes fights likely[B] people tend to be together more than they used to be[C] a boy and a girl usually fight when they are together[D] railway leads the world to peace54. According to those who welcomed the railway, the railway itself should include the followingexcept ________.[A] the railway enables people to travel fast[B] the railway brings comfort to people[C] the railway leads the world to war as well[D] the railway makes the world peaceful55. According to the anti-railway group, all the followings are true but ________.[A] tunnels are dangerous to the public health[B] to those with high blood-pressure, the rapid speed of the train causes them to die[C] the rapid speed through the air does damage to people’s lunges[D] the noise and glare of the engine fire may affect people’s nerves56. We may safely conclude that ________.[A] the author belongs to the for-railway group[B] the author belongs to the anti-railway group[C] the author speaks highly of the railway[D] the author may never take train because if its potential dangerPassage FiveResearch by the University of Exeter has revealed that ants have a big impact on their local environment as a result of their activity as ―ecosystem engineers‖ and predators(食肉动物). The study, published in the Journal of Animal Ecology, found that ants have two distinct(显著的)effects on their local environment.Firstly, through moving of soil by nest building activity and by collecting food they affect the level of nutrients(营养物)in the soil. This can indirectly impact the local populations of many animal groups, from decomposers(腐生物,分解体)to species much higher up the food chain.Secondly, they prey (捕食) on a wide range of other animals, including larger prey which can be attacked by vast numbers of ant workers.Dirk Sanders, an author of the study from the university’s Centre for Ecology and Conservation, said: ―Ants are very effective predators which thrive in huge numbers. They’re also very territorial and very aggressive, defending their resources and territory against other predators. All of this means they have a strong influence on their surrounding area‖―In this research, we studied for the first time how big this impact is and the subtleties(微妙) of it. What we found is that despite being predators, their presence can also lead to an increase in density and diversity of other animal groups. They genuinely play a key role in the local environment, having a big influence on the grassland food web,‖ Sanders said.The study, carried out in Germany, studied the impact of the presence of different combinations and densities of black garden ants and common red ants, both species which can be found across Europe, including in the UK. It found that a low density of ants in an area increased the diversity and density of other animals in the local area, particularly the density of herbivores(食草动物) and decomposers. At higher densities ants had no or the opposite effect, showing that predation is counteracting the positive influence.Dr Frank van Veen, another author on the study, said: ―What we find is that the impact of ants on soil nutrient levels has a positive effect on animal groups at low levels, but as the number of ants increases, their predatory impacts have the bigger effect — thereby counteracting the positive influence via ecosystem engineering.‖Ants are important components of ecosystems not only because they constitute a great part of the animal biomass (生物量) but also because they act as ecosystem engineers. Ant biodiversity (生物多样性)is incredibly high and these organisms are highly responsive(敏感的,易受影响的)to human impact, which obviously reduces its richness. However, it is not clear how such disturbance damages the maintenance of ant services to the ecosystem. Ants are important in below ground processes through the alteration of the physical and chemical environment and through their effects on plants, microorganisms, and other soil organisms.57. Why are ants compared to ecosystem engineers?[A] Because they build their own nests.[B] Because they collect food.[C] Because they are predators.[D] Because their activity affects the environment.58. As predators, ants ________.[A] prey on small as well as large animals.[B] collect nutritious food from the soil[C] collect food as decomposers[D] prey on species much higher up the food chain59. Dirk Sanders’ study centered on how ants ________.[A] can manage to thrive in huge numbers[B] produce such a big impact on the environment[C] attack those invading animals for survival[D] defend their resources and territory against other predators60. What does paragraph 6 tell us?[A] Ants bring about a negative influence to an area when their population is small.[B] Ants’ predation counteracts the positive influ ence they may have on an area.[C] Ants bring about a positive influence to an area when their population is small.[D] At higher density, ants produce a positive influence on an area.试卷二(Paper Two)译写答题注意事项:一、本试卷(Paper Two)答题一律写在主观答题纸(Answer Sheet II)上,草稿纸及试题测上的答案内容一律不予计分。