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2000-2002年德语专业四级真题及详解【圣才出品】2000年德语专业四级真题及详解Ⅰ. Diktat (10P) (15Minuten)Sie h?ren den Text drei mal. Zuerst h?ren Sie den ganzen Text einmal an. Dann schreiben Sie den Text Satz für Satz. Die l? ngeren S?tze werden in Teilen vorgelesen. Zuletzt h?ren Sie den ganzen Text noch einmal. Nun fangen wir an.【答案】Warum nieht auf dem Land leben?Es hat manchcn Vortcil, auf dem Land zu leben: Die Luft ist bcsscr. Jeder kennt jeden. Oft wohnen mehrere Generationen unter einem Dach. Früher war das Leben in der Stadt und auf dem Land kaum vergleichbar. Heute haben sich die Unterschiede verringert, aber sie sind immer noch sichtbar. Von vielen wird das Leben in D?rfern und kleinen Orten positiv bewertet. Vor einigen Jahrzchnten wurde es noch als grof?er Nachteil gesehen.Das Landleben hat doch Nachteile. Man verdient weniger Geld. ?rztliche Behandlung, Krankenh?user und Altersheime sind schlechter als in der Stadt. Viele Berufsgruppen k?nnen auf dem Land keine geeignete Arbeit finden. Das kulturelle Angebot ist vicl geringer. Wet das nicht kann, ist für das Landleben nicht geboren.Ⅱ. H?rverstehen(20P) (20Minuten)Teil1 AlltagssituationenSie h?ren im folgenden 6 Dialoge nur einmal. Makieren Sie die L?sungen auf dem Antwortbogen.1. a. Um 4 Uhr nachmittagsb. Um 2 Uhr nachmittagsc. Vor 14 Uhr【答案】b【解析】对话⼈B说现在是中午休息时间,到下午两点才能修鞋。
SectionⅠUse of English1.A2.B3.D4.A5.D6.D7.A8.B9.C10.DSectionⅡReading of EnglishPart AText111.C12.D13.D14.CText215.A16.B17.B18.AText319.C20.D21.A22.AText423.B24.C25.D26.CText527.B28.B29.D30.CPart B31.更为重要的是,这是科学家们能够观测到的最遥远的过去的景象,因为他们看到的是150亿年前宇宙云的形状和结构。
32.巨大的宇宙云的存在,实际上是20年代首创的大爆炸论得以保持其宇宙起源论的主导地位不可缺少的。
33.天体物理学家使用南极陆基探测器和球载仪器,正在越来越近地观测这些云系,也许不久会报告他们的观测结果。
34.假如这些小热点看上去同预计的一致,那就意味着又一种科学论说的胜利,这种论说即更完美的大爆炸论,亦称宇宙膨胀说。
35.宇宙膨胀说虽然听似奇特,但是它是基本粒子物理学中一些公认的理论产生的在科学上看来似乎可信的结论,许多天体的物理学家近十年来一直确信这一轮说是正确的。
SectionⅢWriting(见分析)SectionⅠUse of English1.D2.A3.B4.A5.B6.C7.D8.C9.A10.DSectionⅡReading of EnglishPart AText111.B12.C13.A14.DText215.A16.C17.D18.BText319.B20.D21.C22.AText423.B24.C25.D26.AText527.A28.B29.D30.APart B31.几乎每个历史学家对史学都有自己的界定,但是现代史学家的实践最趋于认为历史学试图重现过去的重大史实并对其做出解释。
32.人们之所以关注历史研究的方法论,主要是因为史学界内部意见不一,其次是因为外界并不认为历史是一门学问。
sqlite数据库varchar字段SQLite数据库的varchar字段是一种用于存储字符串类型数据的数据类型。
它可以存储任意字符集的字符串,包括中文。
由于中文字符占据的空间比英文字符多,因此在定义varchar字段时需要考虑字符串长度。
VARCHAR是Variable Character,即可变长度字符串类型,根据实际存储的字符数来确定长度。
在SQLite数据库中,varchar字段定义如下:varchar [ (n) ]其中n是该字段的长度,单位是字符。
如果不指定n,则默认长度是255个字符。
对于中文字符,一个字符占据2个字节的存储空间。
因此,如果需要存储1000个中文字符的字符串,需要定义varchar字段长度为2000。
下面是创建一个可以存储中文字符串的表的SQL语句:CREATE TABLE chinese_text (id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,text VARCHAR(2000));以上SQL语句创建了一个名为“chinese_text”的表,其中包含两个字段:id和text。
id字段是主键,text字段是可存储2000个字符的varchar类型。
如果要插入一条中文字符串数据,可以使用以下SQL语句:INSERT INTO chinese_text (id, text) VALUES (1, '我爱中国,中国加油!');以上SQL语句将一条包含中文字符的字符串插入到chinese_text表中。
在SQLite中,varchar字段支持各种字符串操作,例如字符串连接、截取等。
例如,下面是一个在varchar字段上进行字符串拼接的SQL语句:以上SQL语句将取出id为1的记录的text字段,并在其后面加上一个逗号和“万岁!”,并将结果命名为“full_text”。
总之,SQLite数据库中的varchar字段可以很好地支持中文字符串的存储和操作,只需要合理设置长度即可。
TEXT BBut if language habits do not represent classes, a social stratification in to something as bygone as “aristocracy” and “commons”, they do still of cour se s erve to identify social groups. This is something that seems fundamental in the use of language. As we see in relation to political and national movements, lang uage is used as a badge or a barrier depending on which way we look at it. The n ew boy at school feels out of it at first because he does not know the fight wor ds for things, and awe-inspiring pundits of six or seven look down on him for no t being aware that racksy means “dilapidated”, or hairy “out first ball”. Th e mi ner takes a certain pride in being “one up on the visitor or novice who calls t h e cage a “lift” or who thinks that men working in a warm seam are in their “u nde rpants” when anyone ought to know that the garments are called hoggers. The “i ns ider” is seldom displeased that his language distinguishes him from the “outsi der”.Quite apart from specialized terms of this kind in groups, trades and profe ssions, there are all kinds of standards of correctness at which mast of us feel more or less obliged to aim, because we know that certain kinds of English invi te irritation or downright condemnation. On the other hand, we know that other k inds convey some kind of prestige and bear a welcome cachet.In relation to the social aspects of language, it may well be suggested tha t English speakers fall into three categories: the assured, the anxious and the in different. At one end of this scale, we have the people who have “position” an d “status”, and who therefore do not feel they need worry much about their use o f English. Their education and occupation make them confident of speaking an uni mpeachable form of English: no fear of being criticized or corrected is likely t o cross their minds, and this gives their speech that characteristically unself c onscious and easy flow which is often envied.At the other end of the scale, we have an equally imperturbable band, speak ing with a similar degree of careless ease, because even if they are aware that their English is condemned by others, they are supremely indifferent to the fact . The Mrs Mops of this world have active and efficient tongues in their heads, a nd if we happened not to like the/r ways of saying things, well, we “can lump i t ”. That is their attitude. Curiously enough, writers are inclined to represent t he speech of both these extreme parties with -in’ for ing. On the one hand, “w e’re goin’ huntin’, my dear sir”; on the other, “we’re goin’ racin’ , ma te.”In between, according to this view, we have a far less fortunate group, th e anxious. These actively try to suppress what they believe to be bad English an d assiduously cultivate what they hope to be good English. They live their lives in some degree of nervousness over their grammar, their pronunciation, and thei r choice of words: sensitive, and fearful of betraying themselves. Keeping up wi th the Joneses is measured not only in houses, furniture, refrigerators, cars, a nd clothes, but also in speech.And the misfortune of the “anxious” does not end with their inner anxiet y. Their lot is also the open or veiled contempt of the “assured” on one side of them and of the “indifferent” on the otherIt is all too easy to raise an unworthy laugh at the anxious. The people t hus uncomfortably stilted on linguistic high heels so often form part of what is, in many ways, the most admirable section of any society: the ambitious, tense, inner-driven people, who are bent on“ going places and doing things”. The grea te r the pity, then, if a disproportionate amount of their energy goes into what Mr Sharpless called“ this shabby obsession” with variant forms of English— espe ci ally if the net result is(as so often)merely to sound affected and ridiculous. “ Here”, according to Bacon, “is the first distemper of learning, when men study w ords and not matter …. It seems to me that Pygmalion’ s frenzy is a good emble m …of this vanity: for words axe but the images of matter; and except they have l ife of reason and invention, to fall in love with them is to fall in love with a picture.”21. The attitude held by the assured towards language is ___.A. criticalB. anxiousC. self-consciousD. nonchalant22. The anxious are considered a less fortunate group because ___.A. they feel they are socially looked down uponB. they suffer from internal anxiety and external attackC. they are inherently nervous and anxious peopleD. they are unable to meet standards of correctness23. The author thinks that the efforts made by the anxious to cultivate w hat they believe is good English are ___.A. worthwhileB. meaninglessC. praiseworthyD. irrationalTEXT CFred Cooke of Salford turned 90 two days ago and the world has been beating a path to his door. If you haven’t noticed, the backstreet boy educated at Bla c kpool grammar styles himself more grandly as Alastair Cooke, broadcaster extraor dinaire. An honorable KBE, he would be Sir Alastair if he had not taken American citizenship more than half a century ago.If it sounds snobbish to draw attention to his humble origins, it should be reflected that the real snob is Cooke himself, who has spent a lifetime disguis ing them. But the fact that he opted to renounce his British passport in 1941 — just when his country needed all the wartime help it could get-is hardly a ma tter for congratulation.Cooke has made a fortune out of his love affair with America, entrancing l isteners with a weekly monologue that has won Radio 4 many devoted adherents. Pa rt of the pull is the developed drawl. This is the man who gave the world “mida tlantic”, the language of the disc jockey and public relations man.He sounds American to us and English to them, while in reality he has for decades belonged to neither. Cooke’s world is an America that exists largely in the imagination. He took ages to acknowledge the disaster that was Vietnam and e ven longer to wake up to Watergate. His politics have drifted to the right with age, and most of his opinions have been acquired on the golf course with fellow celebrities.He chased after stars on arrival in America, Fixing up an interview with Ch arlie Chaplin and briefly becoming his friend. He told Cooke he could turn him i nto a fine light comedian; instead he is an impressionist’s dream.Cooke liked the sound of his first wife’s name almost as much as he admir e d her good looks. But he found bringing up baby difficult and left her for the w ife of his landlord. Women listeners were unimpressed when, in 1996, he declared on air that th e fact that 4% of women in the American armed forces were raped showed remarkabl e self-restraint on the part of Uncle Sam’s soldiers. His arrogance in not allo w ing BBC editors to see his script in advance worked, not for the first time, to his detriment. His defenders said he could not help living with the 1930s values he had acquired and somewhat dubiously went on to cite “gallantry” as chief a mo ng them. Cooke’s raconteur style encouraged a whole generation of BBC men to th i nk of themselves as more important than the story. His treacly tones were the mo del for the regular World Service reports From Our Own Correspondent, known as F OOCs in the business. They may yet be his epitaph.24. At the beginning of the passage the writer sounds critical of ___.A. Cooke’s obscure originsB. Cooke’s broadcasting styleC. Cooke’s American citizenshipD. Cooke’s fondness of America25. The following adjectives can be suitably applied to Cooke EXCEPT ___.A. old-fashionedB. sincereC. arrogantD. popular26. The writer comments on Cooke’s life and career in a slightly ___ tone.A. ironicB. detachedC. scathingD. indifferent。