42. His grandfather ____________. $':JI#
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D. loved German best because it made him think of home D/cg7
43. His grandmother did not want her husband to buy and read newspapers in German, because________. m[W/j/$A+x
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A. it was war time and Germans were their enemy %uj[ `
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B. the neighbors would mistake them as pro-German *!i,?vn
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D. nobody else read newspapers in German during the war time s:3aRQ%
44. The narrator’s mother wanted her brother to go to fight in the war, because________. 7:z>+AM[r
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B. she hated the war and the Germans very much akMJ4EF/
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C. all her friends had relatives in war and she wanted to be like them 0T(O'v}.
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D. she liked to have a brother she could think of as a hero bAN 10U
Passage Two h>~jQ&\M
Waking Up from the American Dream K*TnUQ
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There has been much talk recently about the phenomenon of “Wal-Martization” of America, which refers to the attempt of America’s giant Wal-Mart chain store company to keep its cost at rock-bottom levels. For years, many American companies have embraced Wal-Mart-like stratagems to control labor costs, such as hiring temps (temporary workers) and part-timers, fighting unions, dismantling internal career ladders and outsourcing to lower paying contractors at home and abroad. m\_+)eI|
While these tactics have the admirable outcome of holding down consumer prices, they’re costly in other ways. More than a quarter of the labor force, about 34 million workers, is trapped in low-wage, often dead-end jobs. Many middle-income and high-skilled employees face fewer opportunities, too, as companies shift work to subcontractors and temps agencies and move white-collar jobs to China and India. BO[+E'2
The result has been an erosion of one of America’s most cherished value: giving its people the ability to move up the economic ladder over their lifetimes. Historically, most Americans, even low-skilled ones, were able to find poorly paid janitorial or factory jobs, then gradually climbed into the middle class as they gained experience and moved up the wage curve. But the number of workers progressing upward began to slip in 1970s. Upward mobility diminished even more in the 1980s as globalization and technology slammed blue-collar wages. 1]"D%U=
Restoring American mobility is less a question of knowing what to do than of making it happen. Experts have decried schools’ inadequacy for years, but fixing them is a long, arduous struggle. Similarly, there have been plenty of warnings about declining college access, but finding funds was difficult even in eras of large surpluses. _L8Mpx*E
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45. The American dream in this passage mainly refers to ____________. <_=JMA5
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A. there are always possibilities offered to people to develop themselves in the society @
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B. Americans can always move up the pay ladder , - QR
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C. American young people can have access to college, even they are poor DxE(9j
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D. the labor force is not trapped in low-wage and dead-end jobs mYntU^4f
46. Wal-Mart strategy, according to this passage, is to ___________. W/b"a? wE{
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A. hire temps and part-timers to reduce its cost sGXp}{E9
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B. outsource its contracts to lower price agencies at home and abroad Rbx97(wK
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C. hold down its consumer price by controlling its labor costs _Syre6k
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D. dismantle the career ladder and stop people’s mobility upward GwTT+
47. Which of the following statements is NOT TRUE? xR\D(FLVS
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A. Wal-Martization has been successful in keeping costs at rock-bottom levels. !Sh^LYqn
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B. Upward mobility for low-skilled workers has become impossible in the U.S. TX<e_[$\
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C. More business opportunities are given to low-cost agencies in China and India. ~5lKL5w
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D. Although people know how to restore American mobility, it’s difficult to change the present situation.
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Passage Three kWzuz#
Seniors and the City
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Tens of thousands of retirees are pulling up stakes in suburban areas and fashioning their own retirement communities in the heart of the bustling city. They are looking for what most older people want: a home with no stairs and low crime rates. And they are willing to exchange regular weekly golf time for rich cultural offerings, young neighbors and plenty of good restaurants. Spying an opportunity, major real-estate developers have broken ground on urban sites they intended to market to suburban retirees. These seniors are already changing the face of big cities. One developer, Fran McCarthy asks: “Who ever thought that suburban flight would be round trip?” Dj-\))L
The trickle of older folks returning to the city has grown into a steady stream. While some cities, especially those with few cultural offerings, have seen an exodus of seniors, urban planners say others have become retirees magnets. Between 1999 and 2000, the population of 64-to-75-year-olds in downtown Chicago rose 17 percent. Austin, New Orleans, and Los Angeles have seen double-digit increases as well. There may be hidden health benefits to city living. A study reveals that moving from suburbs to the city can ward off the byproduct of aging---social isolation. In the next six years, downtowns are expected to grow even grayer. For affluent retirees, city life is an increasingly popular option. 6Cz7A
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48. Retired seniors are moving back into the city because ____________. tQNk=}VR7r
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A. they find there are too many crimes in the suburbs b&\3ps
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C. they are no longer interested in playing golf tIn7(C
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D. in the city, they have more social and cultural life against loneliness W0+gfg
49. From the passage we can infer that _________. 7\7 Brw4
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A. the real-estate developers have broken their original contracts of construction with senior retirees <7_ |Q
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B. a life in the downtown city is expensive, and most of those retirees who moved back into the city are very well-off `^ieT#(O
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C. with more older people living in the city, the city will become gray and less beautiful VxUvvJ{-v
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D. very soon the American suburban areas will face their low population crisis 1kB'sc3N!
50. Fran McCarthy’s question means: nobody ever thought that __________. "e1{V8
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A. people who moved out of the city decades ago now would move back `^XRrVX<
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B. suburban dwellers when moving back into the city must take round trip Z^/z
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C. suburban flight years ago would go in circles hYP6z^
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D. senior people’s moving back into the city would take place all over the United States jQ.>2-;H9
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Directions: Read the following passage carefully and then explain in your own English the exact meaning of the numbered and underlined parts. Put your answers on ANSWER SHEET (2) 15% [M7iJcwt
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(51)Being angry increases the risk of injury, especially among men, new research says. }$&T
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The researchers gathered data on more than 2,400 accident victims at three Missouri hospitals. They interviewed each subject to determine the patient’s emotional state just before the injury and 24 hours earlier, gathering data on whether the patients felt irritable, angry or hostile, and to what degree. Then they compared the results with a control group of uninjured people. xWenKY,
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(52)Despite widespread belief in “road rage,” anger did not correlate with injuries from traffic accidents. dUsJv
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(53)Not surprisingly, anger was strongly associated with injuries inflicted deliberately. But other injuries – those neither intentionally inflicted nor from falls or traffic accidents – also showed strong associations with anger. #K<=xP
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(54)The correlations were significantly weaker for women than for men, but there were no differences by race. The authors acknowledge that their data depend on self-reports, which are not always reliable. VV0EgfJ
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(55)Why anger correlates with injury is not known. “I can speculate that the anger may have prompted some behavior that led to the injury, or may have simply distracted the person, leading indirectly to the injury,” said the study’s lead author. +H)!uLvaB
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Part Four: Cloze Test 10% k$$S!qi#
Directions: Read the following passage carefully and then fill in each numbered blank with ONE suitable word to complete the passage. Put your answers on ANSWER SHEET (2). 8r`VbgI&
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Last year French drivers killed (56) _______ than 5,000 people on the roads for the first time in decades. Credit goes largely (57) ________ the 1,000 automated radar cameras planted on the nation’s highways since 2003, which experts reckon (58) _______ 3,000 lives last year. Success, of course breeds success: the government plans to install 500 (59) ______ radar devices this year. ,z0~mN
So it goes with surveillance these days. Europeans used to look at the security cameras posted in British cities, subways and buses (60) _______ the seeds of an Orwellian world that was largely unacceptable in Continental Europe. But last year’s London bombing, in which video cameras (61) ________ a key role in identifying the perpetrators, have helped spur a sea change. A month (62)_______ the London attacks, half of Germans supported EU-wide plans to require Internet providers and telecoms to store all e-mail, Internet and phone data for “anti-terror” (63)______. In a British poll, 73 percent of respondents said they were (64) _______ to give up some civil liberty to improve (65) ________. np'
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Part Five: Proofreading 10% -tK;RQYax
Directions: In the following passage, there are altogether 10 mistakes, ONE in each numbered and underlined part. You may have to change a word, add a word, or just delete a word. If you change a word, cross it with a slash (/) and write the correct word beside it. If you add a word, write the missing word between the words (in brackets) immediately before and after it. If you delete a word, cross it out with a slash (/). Put your answer on ANSWER SHEET (2). 5fvUv"m
Examples: NR;S3-Iq(
eg. 1 (66) The meeting begun 2 hours ago. hIzPy3
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eg. 2 (67) Scarcely they settled themselves in their seats in the theatre when the curtain went up. cOZajC<G
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Correction put on the ANSWER SHEET (2): (67) (Scarcely) had (they) X."h Tha5
eg. 3 (68) Never will I not do it again. c~0VNuN
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Correction put on the ANSWER SHEET (2): (68) not
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(66) Application files are piled highly this month in colleges across the country. (67) Admissions officers are poring essays and recommendation letters, scouring transcripts and standardized test scores. Tl/Dq(8JH
(68) But anything is missing from many applications: a class ranking, once a major component in admissions decisions. *]>OCGsr
In the cat-and-mouse maneuvering over admission to prestigious colleges and universities, (69) thousands of high schools have simply stopped providing that information, concluding it could harm the chances of their very better, but not best, students. g*w-"%"O
(70) Canny college officials, in turn, have found a tactical way to response. (71) Using broad data that high schools often provide, like a distribution of grade averages for entire senior class, they essentially recreate an applicant’s class rank. *NwKD:o
(72) The process has left them exasperating. zOu$H[
(73) “If we’re looking at your son or daughter and you want us to know that they are among the best in their school, with a rank we don’t necessarily know that,” said Jim Bock, dean of admissions and financial aid at Swarthmore College. j_ywG{Jk
(74) Admissions directors say strategy can backfire. When high schools do not provide enough general information to recreate the class rank calculation, (75) many admissions directors say they have little choice and to do something virtually no one wants them to do: give more weight to scores on the SAT and other standardized exams. G.q^Zd#.T
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Part Six: Writing 15% a,0o{*(u$
Directions: Write a short composition of about 250 to 300 words on the topic given below. Write it neatly on ANSWER SHEET (2). 1Z$99
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Recently, a newspaper carried an article entitled: “We Should No Longer Force Gong Li and Zhang Yimou to Take Part in National Politics”. The article argued that some artists and film stars are unwilling or unqualified to represent the people in the People’s Congress or the People’s Political Consultative Conference, and they should not be forced to do so. What do you think?