西南大学博士入学考试英语试题(2012) G[a&r
Part I Vocabulary (10 points) p JM&R<i:
Directions: In this part there are 20 incomplete sentences. For each sentence there bt0Q6v5
are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that best completes the XjU/7Q
following sentences. Then blacken the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet G
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1. A broadcasting station will sometimes to its listeners a programme which .%x%(olf
it has received from another station. Y]:Ch (Q
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A. rely B. relay C. relate D. reside ) 0|X];sD
2. The United Nations Conference on Drug Abuse, which took place earlier this year 2~)r,.,
in Vienna, was a very meeting. ]seOc],4
A. productive B. overwhelming C. compulsory D. protective "|<U`3y6
3. A person who studies ___ learns how to express numbers approximately and RKO}
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how to calculate ratios and averages. "aJfW
A. static B. statistic C. statistics D. status 0{!+N6MiR
4. If you ______ someone, you form a fixed general idea or image of them so that L_Lhmtm}m
you assume that they will behave in a particular way. \??20iz
A. assimilate B. simulate C. stereotype D. subordinate UA(&_-C\
5. Reading ______ the mind only with materials of knowledge, it is thinking that Gq0`VHAn
makes what we read ours. _j}jh[M
A. rectifies B. prolongs C. furnishes D. minimizes %>!$eCX
6. Satellite communications are so up-to-date that even when _____ in the middle 4)NbQ[
of the Pacific, businessman can contact their offices as if they were next door. S)=3%toS>
A. gliding B. cruising C. piloting D. patrolling
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7. Now a paper in Science argues that organic chemicals in the rock come mostly
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from _______ on earth rather than bacteria on Mars. w>TTu:
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A. configuration B. constitution C. condemnation D. contamination }5]7lGR
8. Scientists, who are now aware of how nautiluses regulate their buoyancy, have >h{)7Hv
been able to dispel ideas about these creatures. D2 X~tl5<
A. erroneous B. misdemeanors C. misgivings D. misdirection _Z_R\
9. History has demonstrated that countries with different social systems and I T?~`vi
ideologies can join hands in meeting the common challenges to human _____ and fHiS'R
development. bO+]1nZ.
A. evolution B. survival C. rivalry D. dignity QyD(@MFxb
10. To avoid an oil shortage, we should advocate that more machines must _____ of L-[A1#n
life in a short time, and this made others astonished. eNu]K,rT
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A. accelerate B. operate C. generate D. utilize ky@ZEp=
11. Japanese leaders aboard the U. S. battleship Missouri and signed the ____ {iYrC m[_
surrender, which ended World War Two in 1945. x,LYfy"0
A. conditional B. infinite C. everlasting D. unconditional vE&K!k`
12. It is a _____ that in such a rich country there should be so many poor people who ,Rdw]O
could hardly keep their body and soul together. e5#?@}?
A. hypothesis B. paradox C. conflict D. dispute
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13. The _____ effects of many illnesses made him a weak man and he still didn’t ?.^n,
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want to do sports every day. 9xaieR
A. cumulative B. formidable C. eternal D. prospective ;L[N.ZY!
14. The robbers broke into the bank, _____ the clerics with revolvers and forced them k|`Qk!tr
to give money just as they were about to knock off. jx14/E+^
A. shot B. frightened C. amused D. menaced SA%uGkm:e
15. This pair of boots cost much less than yours for I bought them when the OM?FpRVU8
department store made a _____ of the stored goods. yb!/DaCd
A. clearance B. reduction C. fortune D. deal WOi
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16. Technology has _____ the sharing information and the storage and delivery of & tjL*/
information, thus making more information available to more people. ^~^=$fz
A. formulated B. facilitated C. furnished D. functioned N"s"^}M\
17. Language, culture and personality may be considered _____ of each other I thought, Dg*'n
but they are inseparable in fact. W:hTRq
A. indistinctly B. separately C. irrelevantly D. independently j937tn!Q
18. More than 85 percent of French Canada’s population speaks French as a mother Hi nJ}MF
tongue and _____ to the Roman Catholic faith. Rk#p zD
A. caters B. adheres C. ascribes D. subscribes z}F^HQ1
19. There are not many teachers who are strong _____ of traditional methods in ndu$N$7+
English teaching. %E[ $np>
A. sponsors B. contributors C. advocates D. performers o)+C4f[G4
20. The ______ of the scientific attitude is that the human mind can succeed in |h&
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understanding the universe. }Z)YK
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A. essence B. content C. texture D. threshold
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Part II Reading Comprehension (30 points) dF7`V J2
Directions: @H}{?-XyA
Questions 21 to 25 are based on the following passage. jT`u!CwdT
There are 6 reading passages in this part. Each passage is followed by +mN8uU~(kx
some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices ;H9 W:_ahE
marked A, B, C and D. you should decide on the best choice and mark your answer on -Gjz+cRns
the Answer Sheet. LI>Bl
Spread across the United States are about 500,000 doctors, cheeked by jowl, in the :XOjS[wB
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big cities and thin on the ground in isolated small towns. In June 1986, the secretary {4*5Z[
of health and human services, Dr. Otis Bowen, passed on a view of his experts: 5%-15% *;T'=u_lR
of America’s 500,000 doctors should be candidates for disciplinary action, many of DABV}@ K"
them because of drug taking or alcoholism. Others give their patients poor care {vk%&{D0)
because they are senile, incompetent, guilty of misconduct or out of touch with ,YRBYK:
developments in medicine. 3xgU=@!;
The granting, or withdrawal, of licenses to practice is in the hands of state medical AoY!f'Z
boards, but they are overwhelmed with complaints and lack the money to handle even rNICK2Ah
a fraction of them. Recently, however, things have been changing. In 1985, 406 "]W,,A-
doctors lost their licenses (compared with 255 in 1984), nearly 500 were placed on u Yc}eMb
probation and nearly 1,000 received reprimands or had their right to practice curtailed.
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The federal inspector general demanded, and won the right far the states and the 2InM(p7j~K
federal government, which provide health care for the elderly and for the poor under c*i,z
the Medicare and Medicaid programme, to refuse payment to the doctors considered J!">L+Zcx
unsatisfactory. ?v`24p3PC
Yet putting these powers into practice is proving to be far from easy. O f the 35
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doctors so far denied reimbursement from Medicare, almost all work in lightly 93=?^
populated rural areas. O n March 27th, their indignation and that of their patients were /N,\ st
a sympathetic hearing by the Senate Finance Committee. Rural doctors may not be as k1SD{BL
up to date as those in the big towns, but they are often the only source of medical help 'j!n
for miles around and their patients are loyal to them. Members of the review boards, A\v53AT
which are paid by the government, insist, however, that elderly and poor people (EH}lh}%
should not be forced to receive (and the state to pay for) inferior care. L uW""P/
An innovation is on the horizon in Texas, the most under-doctored state in the 2`A[<