加入VIP 上传考博资料 您的流量 增加流量 考博报班 每日签到
   
主题 : 英语试题
级别: 初级博友
显示用户信息 
楼主  发表于: 2011-06-27   
来源于 考博试题 分类

英语试题

English Entrance Examination N], A&}30  
8 kd  
 For Non-English Major Doctoral Candidates zL)m!:_  
Paper One ULQ*cW&;?  
Part I  Listening Comprehension (15 points, 20 minutes) ^pZ(^  
Section  A                       Dc BTW+  
Directions: In this section you will hear several short conversations. At the end of each conversation, a question will be asked about what was said. Each conversation and question will be spoken only once. After each question there will be a pause. During the pause, you must read the four suggested answers marked (A), B), C) and D), and decide which is the best answer. Then blacken the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet.     6 D~b9 e  
1. A) To cancel his trip                B) To go to bed early. &XgB-}^:  
  C) To catch a later flight             D) To ask for a wake-up call })T_D\2M  
2. A) They have different opinions as to what to do next. 5=Gq d4&*  
B)  They have to pay for the house by installments. P9Rq'u  
C) They will fix a telephone in the bathroom. M}M.  
  D) The man's attitude is more sensible than the woman's. xPsuDi8u  
3. A) She will save the stamps for the man's sister. =%$ _)=}J  
  B) She will no longer get letters from Canada. $IB@|n  
C)     She can't give the stamps to the man's sister. F(@|p]3*  
  D) She has given the stamps to the man's roommates. #7gOtP#{  
4. A) Visiting the Brownings          B) Writing. wIi(p5*  
  C) Looking for a postcard.          D) Filling in a form. 0W]Wu[k  
5. A) The man should work with somebody else yUEUIPL  
  B) The man should meet his partner's needs. PO |p53  
  C) They should come to a compromise. 4*m\Zoq>  
  D) They should find a better lab for the project. `\O[9.B  
6. A) She can't finish her assignment, either. i3#]_ p{  
  B) She can't afford a computer right now. n6ud;jN|  
  C) The man can use her computer. @@!t$dD  
  D) The man should buy a computer right away. I uhyBo  
7. A) The visiting economist has given several lectures.           zif()i   
  B) The guest lecturer's opinion is different from Dr.Johnson's. -41L^Di\  
  C) Dr. Johnson and the guest  speaker were schoolmates.   ;k!Ej-(  
  D) Dr. Johnson invited the economist to visit their college. NaAq^F U  
8. A) She's never watched a better game. 0/-[k  
  B) Football is her favorite pastime. jsk<N  
  C) The game has been canceled EY> %#0  
  D) Their team played very badly. 9)H~I/ 9Y  
Section B !f_Kq$.{  
Directions: In this section, you will hear three short passage. At the end of each passage, there will be two or three questions. Both the passage and the questions will be read to you only once. After each question, there will be a pause. During the pause, you must choose the best answer from the four choices given by marking the corresponding letter A, B, C or D on your Answer Sheet. @bD,^3U  
%H%>6z x  
Passage 1 Vf O0 z5&  
UW)k]@ L  
9. A) He sold fast food. _gw~A {O  
  B) He raised dogs. .5_w^4`b  
  C) He was a cook. 1/ j}VC  
  D) He was a cartoonist. INcJXlv  
10. A) Because the Americans found they were from Germany. ' 71D:%p  
   B) Because people thought they contained dog meat. |A0kbC.  
   C) Because people had to get used to their taste. KA%tVBl  
   D) Because it was too hot to eat right away. ]TD]    
Passage 2 O+z-6:`  
cl14FrpYu  
11. A) They give out faint cries.      s)&"g a  
   B) They make noises to drive away insects. QeU>%qKT  
   C) They extend their water pipes. |p3]9H  
   D) They become elastic like rubber bands. Ne ey myW  
12. A) They could drive the insects away                    rd. "mG.  
   B) They could keep the plants well watered. qdO^)uJJ  
   C) They could make the plants grow faster 9u"im+=:  
   D) They could build devices to trap insects. /C3=-Hp  
Passage 3 SE%i@}  
Z1OX9]##r  
13  A) To look for a different lifestyle.         B) To enjoy themselves (Tc ~  
C) For adventure.                      D) For education 6n;ewl}  
14       A) It is a city of contrasts \/{qE hP  
B) It possesses many historical sites. kD"dZQx  
C) It is an important industrial center. z?FZu,h}  
D) It has many big and beautiful parks. AE^&hH0^  
15. A) It helps develop our personalities. .DCp)&m l;  
   B) It enables us to acquire first-hand knowledge. x"_f$,:!  
   C) It makes our life more interesting. j+Wgjf  
   D) It brings about changes in our lifestyle. o3}12i S  
  zgVpl p  
I>G)wRpfR'  
Part II  Reading Comprehension (30 points, 45 minutes) WV?iYX!  
Directions: In this part there are several passages. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked (A), B), C) and D). You should decide on the best choice and mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet. /sJk[5!z  
rA{h/T"  
Passage 1  5F&i/8Ib  
I caIB)  
    Every year scientists open more doors that lead to the secrets of  ^<sX^V+{  
new beneficent drugs.                         (}] 74Lc  
     There is bacitracin, which was discovered by two scientists at ZOS{F_2.  
Columbia University's College of Physicians and Surgeons. These two LhV4 ^\+  
people, Dr. Frank Meleney and Miss Balbina Johnson, knowing that the 2Uu,Vv  
human body had some kind of action in itself with which it fights F)v+.5T1  
infections, began to search for the chemical that does this. In the F fl`;M  
hospital they examined badly infected wounds of people who had been yHT}rRS8  
hurt in accidents and made tests of the blood and the infected tissue. )?Jj#HtW  
     Finally, in the wound of a girl who had broken a leg bone, they 9DPf2`*$  
found the useful germs which seemed to be fighting the poisonous MY1 tYO  
infection. They took some of these into the laboratory and from them 9chiu%20  
developed cultures; that is, larger masses of the germs with which to ?V*>4A  
experiment. At last, after long and painstaking work, they were able +wT,dUin_<  
to draw from these germs a substance which is a germ destroyer. Dr. P`U5kNN  
Meleney and Miss Johnson named it bacitracin-baci because the germ is, x1A^QIuxO  
in scientific language, a bacillus and tracin for Margaret Tracy, MQ,$'Y5~H  
whose broken leg supplied the germ.                   \k;raQR4t*  
     Bacitracin at first was used only locally; later the drug was 1F[; )@  
developed into a solution that can be used to fight germ through the UP,0`fh(y  
blood stream.                              zhYE#hv2  
16.Today, the discovery of a new drug occurs          . xB9^DURr\  
V @d:n  
 A)very seldom.           B)once in a generation. {L<t6A  
 C)once every ten years.    D)frequently.                           xx/DD%IZ  
17. The  scientific  term for the action with which the human body vuw1ycy)  
 fights infection            . d@#=cvW  
 A)drug.                  B)biotic. !kmo% +  
 C)not mentioned.          D)both A and B.     o"'VI4  
18. Searching for the fighting chemical, the scientists examined         . 9';0vrFeM  
i<%(Z[9Lk  
 A)fresh wounds.              B)infected wounds. qn4Dm ^  
 C)only infected leg bones.      D)only a few wounds. 5!y3=.j  
19. Cultures, as used in this article, are           . ;{HxY98Q  
 A)masses of germs. vz@QGgQ9~2  
 B)blood tests. TXrC5AJx  
 C)masses of infected tissue. QW~o+N~~  
 D)poisonous germs.                         pRt )B`#  
20. Bacitracin           . FIG5]u  
 A)is poisonous.                B)destroys germs. 1X#`NUJ?2  
 C)restores broken bones.       D)develops germs.    `o:)PTQNg  
21. To say that a drug was used locally is to say that it was          . yChC&kX Z+  
 A)distributed through the whole system. eeL%Yp3+  
 B)used only in the area of infection. J!yc9 Q  
 C)used only at Columbia R@"N{ [9  
 D)used only in hospitals.                              ;>Z#1~8  
22. From reading this selection you can infer that q)@.f.  
 A)many scientific discoveries are due to chance. %81tVhg  
 B)every year scientists discover new beneficent drugs. {P = {)  
 C)behind medical discovery there may be a dramatic story. v,>q]! |a  
 D)culture are large masses of germs.                         <GoE2a4Va  
Passage 2 Ulktd^A\  
6j` waK  
     Our echo sounder located the wreck of a French submarine that had 4["}U 1sG  
foundered during the war in seventy-five feet of water outside Dakar 0Fi7|  
harbor. Dumas and I plunged down and found the vessel lying clean and w#JF7;  
upright, surrounded by such clouds of fish as we had rarely seen-small 59EAqz[:  
silver fingerlings and dark metals. As Dumas swam into the shadow of <(^-o4Cl  
the port propeller, he came face to face with a gigantic fish, grouper *b.>pY?2|  
variety, cousin to our familiar Mediterranean meroblast-fish. This ]v9<^!  
specimen was ten times the size of our old acquaintances: he weighed A:p0p^*  
at least four hundred pounds. The wide, flat head and tiny eyes _IgG8)k;  
advanced on Dumas; the ugly mouth yawned open, wide enough to admit F htf4  
him. Dumas knew that sedentary groupers have no teeth to speak of; it !N)oi $T%  
seemed, however, that this individual might wish to swallow him y ruN5  
unmasticated in the fashion of the mero type which swims agape(大张着嘴), ,xR^8G 8  
taking in whole octopuses(章鱼).                           u |f h!-  
     The cavernous mouth approached within two feet; Dumas sculled }4bwLO  
backward, watchfully keeping a modest interval as the monster ZZeqOu7^  
unhurriedly followed. The knowledge that the species was harmless gave moc_}(  
Dumas little comfort as he gazed into the fish's mouth; he and the f'#7i@Je  
grouper exchanged mutual stares of revulsion for a seemingly ^U`[P@T  
interminable period while Dumas was steadily pressed back. Then the g8vN^nQf[  
beast lost interest, turned aside, and returned to its dim home under B!8]\D  
the lost submarine. Dumas surfaced in a reflective mood: "Imagine J 0 s8vAs  
being swallowed by a lousy grouper."         QY{f=  
23. Dumas encountered the jewfish while           . Fa>Y]Y0r  
 A)trying to locate an old wreck. )@Bt[mfrVD  
 B)skin fishing in Dakar harbor. sA` bPhk  
 C)swimming near a foundered submarine. 52:oe1-8  
 D)attempting to salvage a submarine.                         6*]Kow?  
24. The gigantic fish was actually            . ]Mtb~^joG  
 A)an extraordinarily large pomfret. 0dnm/ 'L  
 C)a kind of grouper fish. #b{otc)  
 B)a mero. +\}]`uS:  
 D)both B and C.                           [bv.`  
25. This type of fish was supposed to be           . S"}FsS;k<?  
 A) dangerous if provoked.               B) vicious. SmtH2%yI  
 C) harmless.                          D) afraid of man.           ^ ]`<nO  
26. Dumas regarded the fish with              . os#j;C]l  
 A)tolerant amusement. `;i| %$TU  
 B)immediate terror. 3K54:  
 C)complete objectivity. rT"8e*LT  
 D)increasing suspicion.                          nYE_WXY3V  
27. It seemed to Dumas that the fish wished to               . wRLkO/Fw  
 A)drive him away from its home. /#Ew{RvW'  
 B)swallow him whole. .Sb|+[{  
 C)protect itself. Q}]Q0'X8  
 D)force him to surface.       .Yh-m  
28. Dumas' comment on surfacing expressed              . 2-{8+*_'  
A)terror at a near escape. (*hA0&n  
 B)shame at his reaction to the fish. Y`c\{&M6  
 C)the unreasonableness of the situation. kQ4%J, 7e4  
 D)revulsion for the fish.                                      5oORwOP  
29. Implied but not stated: The fish            . N*@bJ*0  
    A)intended to eat Dumas. } |sP;Rpu  
 B)acted out of simple curiosity. ) Oa"B;\j  
 C)lived under the submarine. 5"@<7/2qI  
 D)had been misidentified by Dumas.                            /i$&89yod  
Passage 3 Zso .3FR,  
>~XX'}  
Reruns of situation comedies from the fifties and early sixties dramatize the kinds of problems that parents used to have with their children. The Cleavers scold Beaver for not washing his hands before dinner, the Andersons punish Bud for not doing his homework; the Nelsons dock little Ricky’s allowance because he keeps forgetting to clean his room. But times have changed dramatically. Being a parent today is much more difficult than it was a generation ago. XFd[>U<X  
  Today’s parents must try, first of all, to control all the new distractions that tempt children away from schoolwork. At home, a child may have a room furnished with a stereo and television. Not many young people can resist the urge to listen to an album or watch MTV-especially if it is time to do schoolwork. Outside the home, the distractions are even more alluring, children no longer “hang out” on a neighborhood corner within earshot of Mom or Dad’s reminder to come in and do homework.. Instead,, they congregate in vast shopping malls, buzzing video arcades and gleaming fast-food restaurants. Parents and school assignments have obvious difficulty competing with such enticing alternatives. BHU(Hd  
     Besides dealing with these distractions, parents also have to shield their children from a flood of sexually explicit materials. Today, children can find sex magazines and pornographic paperbacks in the same corner store that once offered only comics and candy. Moreover, the movies young people attend often focus on highly sexual situations.  It is difficult to teach children traditional values when films show teachers seducing students and young people treating sex as a casual sport. An even more difficult matter for parents is the heavily sexual content of programs on television. ^hZwm8G  
     Most disturbing to parents today, however, is the increase in life-threatening dangers that face young people. When children are small, parents fear that their youngsters may be victims of violence. Every news program seems to carry a report about a mass murderer who preys on young girls, a deviant who has buried six boys in his cellar, or an organized child pornography ring that molests preschoolers. When children are older, parents begin to worry about their kids’ use of drugs. Peer pressure to experiment with drugs is often stronger than parents’ warnings. This pressure to experiment can be fatal if the drugs have been mixed with dangerous chemicals. \`4}h[  
     Within one generation, the world as a place to raise children has changed dramatically. One wonders how yesterday’s parents would have dealt with today’s problems. Could the Andersons have kept Bud away from MTV? Could the Nelsons have shielded little Ricky from sexually explicit material? Could the Cleavers have protected Beaver from drugs? Parents must be aware of all these distractions and dangers, yet be willing to give their children the freedom they need to become responsible adults. It is not an easy task.. EStHl(DUPq  
30. Parents today must protect their children from all of the following except_______ . Lu-owP7nB  
A)Drug abuse ]c$%;!ZE  
B)Life-threatening situations J!S3pS5j  
C)Drinking too much beverage }S%a]  
D)Sexually explicit materials xG<S2R2VQh  
31. Traditional values become more difficult for younger generation to accept because ________ . `&0?e-  
A)Teachers set bad examples for students  h2,A cM  
B) Bad side effects on children from TV and films outweigh the traditional education ,[~Ydth  
C) Parents failed in educating their children [i&z_e)  
D)The younger generation can not resist the temptation from all sorts of distractions R2M,VK?Wx  
32. According to the author, what the parents now most fear for about their children is ________. vy-{BH  
A) Physical dangers             B). Violent TV programs M: `FZ}&L  
C) Enticing alternatives          D). Sex magazines 4N#0w]_,>Y  
33. Which of the following words can best describe the author’s attitude towards being a responsible parent? y@hdN=-  
A) Frustrated.                  B) Pessimistic. F3wRHq  
C). Wait-and –see.              D) Positive *TMg.  
34. It can be inferred from the passage that parents today ________. `D#l(gZ  
A)Must pay much more attention to their children’s behavior FRfMtxvU  
B)Have to strengthen the education on traditional values 0<i~XN0g  
C)Have to strike a balance between their need to provide limitations and their children’s need for freedom  eKu&_q  
D)Must prevent their children from all kinds of seductions of the society # &M  
35.The author develops her main idea by _________. Ppx*  
A)Complaining about some social influences on children Fs&m'g  
B)Comparing education of yesterday with that of today vTB*J,6.  
C)Explaining parents’ worries today -j<UhW  
D)Stating her own points with vivid examples 40@KL$B=  
Passage 4 8YYY *>  
4+ 4? 0R  
     Very old people do raise moral problems for almost everyone who comes & [3!Lk`.0  
%:oGyV7a  
 in contact with them. Their values--this can't be repeated too often--are "@ ox=  
PUlb(3p `  
 not necessarily our values. Physical comfort, cleanness and order are not sI^1c$sBN  
WG^D$L:  
 necessarily the most important things. The social services from time to otPEJ^W&  
~ 4&_$e!  
 time find themselves faced with a flat with decaying food covered by small />n0&~k[h  
33u7  
 worms, and an old person lying alone in bed, taking no notice of the worms. cBm3|@7  
|E?%Cj^W  
 But is it interfering with personal freedom to insist that they go to live Mz"kaO  
DPe`C%Oc1  
 with some of their relatives so that they might be taken better care of? %Z}dY~:  
:A 1,3g  
 Some social workers, the ones who clear up the worms, think we are in danger _wX'u,HrC  
I #A`fJ  
 of carrying this concept of personal freedom to the point where serious b,K1EEJ  
O&X-)g=  
 risks are being taken with the health and safety of the old. &7<~Q\XZbI  
B! - W765Y  
     Indeed, the old can be easily hurt or harmed. The body is like a car, wr#+q1 v  
61C&vm  
 it needs more mechanical maintenance as it gets older. You can carry this ?9PNCd3$d  
U O[p   
 comparison right through to the provision for spare parts. But never forget `[ne<F?e  
s ^}V  
 that such operations are painful experiences, however good the results. And Rdv"Aj:   
4H " *.l  
 at what point should you cease to treat the old body? Is it morally right to XBeHyQp  
|0 Zj/1<$  
 try to push off death by pursuing the development of drugs to excite the R'80{  
H?B.Hp|  
 forgetful old mind and to activate the old body, knowing that it is designed A&t}s #3  
O0Z'vbFG  
 to die? You cannot ask doctors or scientists to decide, because so long as Fm2t:,=  
@r .K>+1  
 they can see the technical opportunities, they will feel bound to give them ;aFQP:l/  
"+AeqrYYm5  
 a try, on the principle that while there's life, there's hope. R.RCa$  
> h:~*g  
     When you talk to the old people, however, you are forced to the conclusion that whether age is happy or unpleasant depends less on money or on health than it does on your ability to have fun. b0&dpMgh:  
mqE&phF,  
 36. It is implied in Paragraph 1 that ________ . nGuF, 0j  
`"D7XC0x  
     A) very old people enjoy living with their relatives N .Ssz Zh  
BE m%x 0y  
     B) social services have nothing to do with very old people hxtu^E/  
ciXAyT cG  
     C) very old people would like to live alone so that they can have more [` i;gx[^  
)@sz\yI%U  
        personal freedom fY6&PuDf.  
T[7- 3[w<)  
     D) very old people are able to keep their rooms very clean ME7JU|@Z  
1 8&^k|  
 37. Some social workers think that ________ . &-{4JSII  
?vk &k(FT  
     A) health and safety are more important than personal freedom RLIugz{IH  
O!|:ZMjF  
     B) personal freedom is more important than health and safety Lu<'A4Q1  
L1J"_.=P  
     C) old people should keep their rooms clean / AW]12_  
;,F}!R  
     D) one should not take the risk of dealing with old people )v'DQAL  
`zTVup&  
 38. In the author's opinion, ________ . YoahqXR`  
Z3Vi il:  
     A) the human body can't be compared to a car u 9?85  
Iw48+krm>  
     B) the older a person, the more care he needs Qn6&M  
{o;J'yjre1  
     C) too much emphasis has been put on old people's values ~s !+9\Fi  
]xFd_OHdb  
     D) it is easy to provide spare parts for old people 2avSsN{^  
5Rc 5/m  
 39. The word 'it' in the last paragraph refers to __________ . yA6"8f r  
fRq2sK;+  
     A) the conclusion you have made xeZ,}YP)  
!d^5mati)T  
     B) your talk to the old people 0Y[mh@(  
8Kv=Zp,?`  
     C) whether age is happy or unpleasant )5p0fw  
RW%e%  
     D) one's money or one's health S_1R]n1/  
8/]5h%  
 40. The author thinks that __________ . ,US]  
bluhiiATd  
     A) medical decisions for old people should be left to the doctors !,|yrB&`S  
L`3 g5)V  
     B) old people can enjoy a happy life only if they are very rich "Bn!<h}mg  
>f74]J=V  
     C) the opinion that we should try every means possible to save old people 7H9&\ur9+  
qVE6ROSh  
        is doubtful T =_Hd  
?%#3p[  
     D) it is always morally right to treat old people and push off death a%V6RyT4qW  
evz{@;.R  
Passage 5 4h|sbB"t  
#] cO] I  
     Let children learn to judge their own work. A child who learns to talk does not learn by being corrected all time: if corrected too much, he will stop talking. He notices a thousand times a day the difference between the language he uses and the language those around him use. Bit by bit, he makes the necessary changes to make his language like other people's. In the same way, when children learn to do all the other things they learn to do without being taught--to work, run, climb, whistle, ride a bicycle--compare those performances with those of more skilled people, and slowly make the needed changes. But in school we never give a child a chance to find out his own mistakes for himself, let alone correct them. We do it all for him. We act as if we thought that he would never notice a mistake unless it was pointed out to him, or correct it unless he was made to. Soon he becomes dependent on the teacher. Let him do it himself. Let him work out, with the help of other children if he wants it, what this word says, what answer is to that problem, whether this is a good way of saying or doing this or not. 6XKiVP;h%  
     If it is a matter of right answers, as it may be in mathematics or science, give him the answer book. Let him correct his own papers. Why should we teachers waste time on such routine work? Our job should be to help the child when he tells us that he can't find a way to get the right answer. Let's end this nonsense of grades, exams, marks. Let us throw them all out, and let the children learn what all educated persons must some day learn, how to measure their own understanding, how to know what they know or do not know. Y{6y.F*Q#  
    Let them get on with this job in the way that seems most sensible to them, with our help as school teachers if they ask for it. The idea that there is a body of knowledge to be learnt at school and used for the rest of one's life is nonsense in a world as complicated and rapidly changing as ours. Anxious parents and teachers say, "But suppose they fail to learn something essential, something they will need to get in the world? Don't worry! If it is essential, they will go out into the world and learn it." #J# x,BLI  
41. What does the author think is the best way for children to learn things? =0 mf   
A)by copying what other people do NirG99kyo  
B)by making mistakes and having them corrected &,JrhMr\  
C)by listening to explanations from skilled people h3[^uY e  
D)by asking a great many questions L9W'TvTwo  
42. What does the author think teachers do which they should not do? . =yF  
A)They give children correct answers.  dtTQY  
B)They point out children's mistakes to them. o'+p,_y9Y@  
C)They allow children to make their own work. oG{0 {%*@  
D)They encourage children to copy from one another. 6&xpS9  
43. The passage suggests that learning to speak and learning to ride a bicycle are _____. EX@wenR  
A)not really important skills. rr~O6Db  
B)more important than other skills. $`;1][OD  
C)basically different from learning adult skills. ?V&# nA  
D)basically the same as learning other skills. GO4IAUA  
44. Exams, grades, and marks should be abolished because children's progress should only be estimated by _____. 2PZ#w(An&  
A)educated persons.               B)the children themselves. O2N7qV3 U,  
C)teachers.                      D)parents. >L4q> S^v  
45. The author fears that children will grow up into adults who are _____. ` ES-LLhVf  
A)too independent of others. c6-~PKJ L  
B)too critical of themselves. f(S9>c2  
C)unable to think for themselves. q8 &\;GK|  
D)unable to use basic skills. ]8 vsr$E#  
Part III Vocabulary and Structure ( 15 points, 20 minutes) \0 j-p   
Directions: There are 30 incomplete sentences in this part. For each sentence there are four choices marked A),B),C) and D). Choose the ONE that best completes the sentence. Then mark your corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet. tW-wO[2  
"zE>+zRl  
46.His heart was filled with           for the accident. Nhf@Y}Cu  
?*AhGza/  
A)composure                B)compassion t4d^DZDh!  
0q6xXNAX  
C)altruism                 D)discretion 9z#z9|hj)3  
~v>3lEGn*  
47.The           mechanisms of government seemed awesome to the visitors. Yj"{aFK#u@  
(l+0*o,(  
A)intricate                  B)subtle P(xgIMc H  
lJvfgP-j  
C)interesting                 D)new (&i c3/-  
u u$Jwn!S  
48.Registration is          in order to vote in elections. Bv xLbl}  
Nr"gj$v  
A)urgent             B)fated oL U!x  
:JXGgl<y  
C)compulsory         D)irresistible U! $/'Xi9  
Cy\ o{6  
49          your requests, we regret that we are unable to assist you in this matter. Nt,:`o |  
De ([fC  
A)By virtue of           B)In view of rL,kDSLs  
S&F[\4w5]  
C)On account of          D)With respect to bjBXs;zr@\  
6 \?GY  
50.A child's          often changes in the presence of strangers. R$x(3eyx  
B{K_?ae!  
A)personality            B)behavior >r>pM(h  
;w;+< Rd  
C)comprehension          D)attitude T"DG$R,Aj  
j9/hZqo  
51.The motorist was            by the conflicting road signs and was at a loss about which direction to take. 4N)45@jk[  
FI@kE19  
A)angry             B)bewildered +^q- v-  
 c`}YL4  
C)happy             D)sorrowful Jq:Wt+a  
! KtP> `8  
52.The food was divided ______ according to the age and size of the children. p#N2K{E  
.7HEI;4  
A)equally L*6>S_l[  
4|hfzCjMI  
B)proportionately * Na8w'Q  
-+0!Fkt@,  
C)sufficiently }}LjEOvL=  
g6h=Q3@  
D)adequately $e%m=@ga  
h$d`Jmaq  
53.To undergraduate students, the doctoral degree is a distant ______. r@CbhD  
[M?&JA_$}  
A) prospect                 B)aspect g{Hb3id9  
,Qt 2?  
C)respect                   D)concept vv D515i  
+ 7nA; C  
54.You will have to ______ this skyscraper as you have not complied with the town planning regulations. ~"cqFdnO  
<%"CQT6g %  
A)hold up               B) put up U3pMv|b  
RCMO?CBe  
C) pull down            D)set aside bKQ-PM&I/t  
w"!zLB&9[  
55. Unlike a writer, an artist often uses exaggeration to ______. CMfR&G,)  
Px`z$~*B:  
A)send his message over N lB%Qu  
4K!@9+Mz  
B)put down his message `3vt.b  
JjG>$z  
C)put forward his message AA K}t6  
^S^7 u  
D)put his message across .*L_*}tno  
(C hL$!x  
56.I ______ with the Browns during my stay in New York City. +w+qTZyky  
I< Rai"  
A) put up              B) lived up #zKF/H|_R  
3qq 6X?y*  
C) lived at            D) put in 5OX5\#Ux  
H_7X%TvXb  
57. If someone is frowning, we _____ that she or he is sad or angry. >=ng?  
A) Infer                 B) claim S)*!jI  
C) anticipate             D) acknowledge O\zGN/!  
58. The new apartment built few months ago is large enough to _____ over two hundred people. lof}isOz  
A) locate               B) reside q/t~`pH3  
C) settle                D) accommodate QP4`r#,  
59. In order to strengthen his arguments, Toffler _____ respectable social scientists who agree with him. GA@Zfcg  
A) recites              B) confirms I)F3sS45}  
C) quotes              D) convinces vq*)2.  
60. The decline of Rome _____ the disappearance of classical drama 1R"ymWg"  
A) restrained           B) withheld R(F+Xg je  
C) restored            D) witnessed r!J?Lc])8  
61. In one scene of Modern Time, Charlie Chaplin was shown trying _____ to keep in time with a rapid assembly line. i:,37INMt  
A) aimlessly          B) violently -( +/u .  
C) hardly             D) desperately ;&G8e* bM2  
62.When writing about controversial topics, some authors try to be _____ without favouring either side. ,-{ 2ai_  
A) impressive            B) reflective 3re|=_ Hy  
C) objective             D) persuasive kQMALS@R  
63. When people have their basic needs satisfied,they begin to think of other things to fulfil their life _____ . l/w<R  
A) necessities               B) requirements OA3* "d*  
C) appreciation             D) expectations O8% Y .SK  
64. ______ are said to be the world's best watch makers. 2u|} gZts  
Qs.g%  
A)Swisses                   B)The Swisses 0 SeDBs  
?Em*yc@WD  
C)The Swiss                 D)Some Swiss ^UAL5}CQt  
xl~%hwBd  
65.Even as a child, Kate had admired her aunt Syb, especially ______ she bore the sacrifices her profession demanded. YaDr.?  
#]!0$z|Z  
A)in the way              B)by the way |_J[n !~f7  
+ B#3!  
C)the way                 D)any way Q@-7{3  
n(#159pZ  
66.Human groups that practice horticulture have greater control than ______ only hunt and gather. UldG0+1d  
k~st;FO  
A)those who               B)who *M_Gu{xc  
t<6`?\Gk  
C)those that              D)those ^"h`U'YC  
\=yx~c_$L  
67.It's true that the old road is less direct and a bit longer. We won't take the new one, ______, because we don't feel as safe on it. Tv& -n  
Ta38/v;S  
A)somehow                 B)though pA*cF!tq 7  
FSqS]6b3  
C)therefore               D)otherwise $#dPM *E  
?[\(i)]  
68.The ancient Romans applied their knowledge ______ the construction of bridges, roads, and public buildings. %jK-}0Tu  
hY.zwotH  
A)in                        B)to aD~3C/?aW  
mlR*S<Z  
C)for                       D)through l("Dw8 H  
n:GK0wu.s  
69 As word of the cloud of poison began to spread, hundreds, then thousands, took ______ the road in flight from the fumes. aZYa<28?L%  
g(\FG  
A)to                        B)off k=<,A'y-/  
+'H_sMmi{  
C)on                        D)for $-$^r;  
{|%N  
70.The students expected there ______ more reviewing classes before the final exams. J 21D/#v  
;f7(d\=y  
A)is                         B)being Z@=1-l  
M* (]hu0!  
C)have been                  D)to be m<wng2`NTv  
E0^~i:M k  
71. We left the manager a note ______ he wanted to know where we were. h5&l#> 8&  
     A) if             B) in case       C) so that         D) unless ?9_<LE q  
72. ______, work songs often exhibit the song culture of a ?k~(E`ZE3  
     people in a fundamental form. N %-Cp)  
     A) wherever occurring              B) They occur wherever 7z"xjA  
     C) Where they occur                D) Where do they occur =yiRB?  
73. The sea is very beautiful and _____________. -cCujDM#T  
     A) the mountains are so too          B) the mountains are too &}S#6|[i  
     C) so are the mountains              D) also are the mountains +$_W4lf|E2  
74. _________ the very cold winter, we have run out of coal earlier than we had expected. b w!;ZRK  
     A) By reason of                      B) For the sake of ja}_u}:  
     C) At the risk of                    D) At the mercy of 6)m}e?D>  
75. I am pleased with what you have given me and ______ you have told me. !Ac<A.  
     A) that        B) all that        C) which        D) all what V<AT"vU[  
Part IV  Cloze ( 10 points, 15 minutes)                                                   -:`$8/A|  
Directions:  There are 20 blanks in the following passages. For each blank there are four choices marked  (A), B), C) and D) . You should choose the ONE that best fits into the passages. Then mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with  a single line through the centre.  ~k?7XF I  
)_OKw?Zi  
    After sunset on our[ 76 ]day at the ranch I walked out into the rG1l:Z)  
yHl1:cf(y  
desert. In this, he first pleasant moment for a walk after the long hot wp`a:QZ8N  
\5 IB/ *  
hours, I thought I was the only thing[ 77 ]. Abruptly I [ 78 ].On v!T%xUb0  
R z 1&(_Ps  
the ground in front of me, a rattlesnake lay rigid. Its head was not 2J =K\ L  
1u7Kc'.xc  
yet drawn back to strike, but merely turned a little to watch what I 9S@PY_ms  
+M!f}=H  
[ 79 ].Many snakes will flee at the sight of a man but this rattle F6R+E;"4R'  
R>U0W{1NO  
snake felt[ 80 ]to[ 81 ].He[ 82 ]in calm watchfulness, waiting for I.TdYSB  
qz"di~7  
me to show my intentions. My first instinct was to [ 83 ]him; I had 5 G cdz  
R)d1]k8  
never killed anything I [ 84 ] to kill. But I remembered that there MZ o\1tU-i  
%4Cs c  
were children, dogs and horses; my duty,[ 85] was to kill these snake. DcA{E8Y  
hIu;\dfwk  
I went back to the ranch and returned with a stick. The rattlesnake 6=s!~  
"2q}G16K  
[ 86 ].He lay like[ 87 ]wire but when he saw the stick his tail g-"@%ps  
|oPCmsO3R{  
twitched and he drew back his head. I raised my stick but before I z^+f3-Z  
;rYL\`6L  
could strike he shot into a dense bush and[ 88]his rattling, warning ec+&K?T  
p/L|;c  
me by this that I had made an un-provoked attack and that if I  0(A`Ia  
@igr~hJ  
persisted he would[  89  ] but[ 90 ]if he could. For a moment I S Yd4 3P A  
OjTb2[Q  
listened to this ominous sound and then I struck into the bush with my esU9  
p A7&  
stick and, hacking about, dragged him out of it with his back broken.  |`[0U  
TELN4*  
He stuck passionately [ 91 ] at the stick but a moment later his neck 8&<C.n KP  
wm~35cF(  
was broken and he was soon dead. Nevertheless, when I picked him up by yXP+$oox9  
^k6 A,Ak  
the tail,his jaws snapped once more,[ 92 ] proving what I had once )(yD"]co  
3gtQS3$4s  
been told but had[ 93 ]believed:a newly dead rattlesnake may still Pj(Dl C7G,  
j=b?WNK  
bite. I dropped the body into the green bush and,as I did so,I saw him h=h4`uA9  
&iR3]FNI  
in my mind's[ 94 ],gliding over the twilight stands as he might have Ug(;\*yg  
W jLy7&  
done [ 95 ] I had let him go.                    2$ m#)*\  
]e`&py E  
76. A)starting       B)camping        C)last         D)tiring             -yyim;Nj  
ZYRZ$87jZ  
77. A)out of doors              B)without companies b7-M'-Km0_  
[0vgA#6I  
    C)under the open air        D)being threatened N,kPR  
9~3;upWu!  
78.A)gasped                     B)screamed         K9-;-{qb  
2S%[YR>>  
   C)was breathless             D)came to a halt h&5bMW  
aE aU_f /  
79.A)am doing                B)would do }-`N^  
Qc4r?7S<  
   C)were to do              D)might to do  rK` x<  
4)Jtc2z7Z\  
80.A)no hurry           B)no necessity hSAdD!  
XotiKCk|Aq  
   C)no danger          D)no sense       D;?cf+6$  
VrQg n9L  
81.A)attack             B)bite I:|<};m m  
%<dvd IB  
   C)move               D)slide             L i g7Ac,  
/$[9-G?  
82.A)stayed where he was            B)moved quickly 8NF93tqD6  
=Ff _)k  
   C)curled his head up             D)rattled his tail    Fal##6B  
,|}}Ml  
83. A)scare          B)catch        C)poke          D)ignore M iK -W  
% _.kd"  
84. A)disliked                    B)was fond of rtSG- _[i  
EjA3hHJ  
    C)was not obliged             D)had no mercy    kJ'rtz4QO  
kuq&8f~!  
85. A)doubtless             B)obviously     nmo<t]  
Vb @lK~  
    C)reluctantly           D)cruelly        vZiuElxKi  
mAM:Q*a'  
86. A)had already fled      B)was about to move $,.XPK5Q u  
Xi~7pH  
    C)did not move          D)was dying slowly                 oNEjl V*  
u<['9U  
87. A)an alive          B)a living       En9>onJ  
=vs]Kmm  
    C)a live            D)a lively eF"k"Ckt'  
ZX8 AB  
88. A)twisted           B)set up         C+ L_f_6]  
[C#H _y(  
    C)dragged           D)withdrew          F$j?}  
,W|cyQ  
89. A)not avoid choosing            B)decide ,<(0T$o E[  
*B)J(^M!q  
    C)not give in                   D)have no choice        HfPu~P  
p:; `X!  
90.       A)to take my life              B)to take my life away tfCK^{  
N mA6L+  
    C)to challenge me               D)to killing me        P:>]a$Is  
~f:"Q(f+  
91.       A)once more                    B)the second time +QEP:#qZw  
nN2huNTf:  
    C)once a while                  D)from time to time   1)#dgsa  
#OlPnP2  
92.       A)and thus                 B)in this way  +~V)&6Vn  
|s,y/svp  
     C)thereafter               D)meanwhile      (]` rri*^  
?IG[W+M8  
93.       A)faintly                  B)nearly 6Nws>(Ij  
P]O=K  
     C)only half                D)never before          P  Ij  
r&+w)U~  
94. A)opinion           B)view        "Hk7s+%  
Jflm-Hhsf  
    C)point             D)eye + {#L,0t  
Q-7L,2TL  
95. A)unless            B)although    V`8\)FFG  
PQ{5*}$N  
    C)in case           D)if     
评价一下你浏览此帖子的感受

精彩

感动

搞笑

开心

愤怒

无聊

灌水

  
描述
快速回复

验证问题:
免费考博论坛网址是什么? 正确答案:freekaobo.com
按"Ctrl+Enter"直接提交