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主题 : 02-General English Admission Test For Non-English Major
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02-General English Admission Test For Non-English Major

General English Admission Test For Non-English Major R<B7K?SxV~  
            Ph.D. program `/Y{ l  
(Harbin Institute of Technology) N},n `Yl.  
iNMx"F0r  
Passage One qJ0fQI\  
Questions 1-7 are based on the following passage: +F dB '  
According to a recent theory, Archean-age gold-quartz vein systems were formed over two billion years ago from magmatic fluids that originated from molten granitelike bodies deep beneath the surface of the Earth. This theory is contrary to the widely held view that the systems were deposited from metamorphic fluids, that is, from fluids that formed during the dehydration of wet sedimentary rocks. The recently developed theory has considerable practical importance. Most of the gold deposits discovered during the original gold rushes were exposed at the Earth’s surface and were found because they had shed trails of alluvial gold that were easily traced by simple prospecting methods. Although these same methods still leas to an occasional discovery, most deposits not yet discovered have gone undetected because they are buried and have no surface expression. *)+ut(x|#  
The challenge in exploration is therefore to unravel the subsurface geology of an area and pinpoint the position of buried minerals. Methods widely used today include analysis of aerial images that yield a broad geological overview, geophysical techniques that provide data on the magnetic, electrical, and mineralogical properties of the rocks being investigated, and sensitive chemical tests that are able to detect : the subtle chemical halos that often envelop mineralization. However, none of these high-technology methods are of any value if the sites to which they are applied have never mineralized, and to maximize the chances of discovery the explorer must therefore pay particular attention to selecting the ground formations most likely to be mineralized. Such ground selection relies to varying degrees on conceptual models, which take into account theoretical studies of relevant factors. m&|`x  
These models are constructed primarily from empirical observations of known mineral deposits and from theories of ore-forming processes. The explorer uses the models to identify those geological features that are critical to the formation of the mineralization being modeled, and then tries to select areas for exploration that exhibit as many of the critical features as possible. IIq1\khh  
1. The author is primarily concerned with     . &+G"k~%  
A. advocating a return to an older methodology. =y=cW1TG  
B. explaining the importance of a recent theory. =J1rlnaaEL  
C. enumerating differences between two widely used methods CKA ;.sh  
D. describing events leading to a discovery EI\9_}@,  
  2. According to passage, the widely held view of Archean-age gold-quartz vein systems is that such systems     `5H$IP1XhA  
A were formed from metamorphic fluids. ;E'"Ks[GH  
B originated in molten granitelike bodies 9{:O{nl  
C were formed from alluvial deposits $8a(veXd  
D generally have surface expression 2B,] -Mu)  
  3. The passage implies that which of the following steps would be the first performed by explorers who   wish to maximize their chances of discovering gold? ;'-olW~  
A Surveying several sites known to have been formed more than two billion years ago. xU%w=0z <  
B Limiting exploration to sites known to have been formed form metamorphic fluid. dg^L=  
C Using an appropriate conceptual model to select a site for further exploration. iDf,e Kk$'  
D Using geophysical methods to analyze rocks over a broad area. 5Ba[k[b^  
4. Which of the following statements about discoveries of gold deposits is supported by information in the passage? H{t_xL)k.  
A The number of gold discover made annually has increased between the time of the original gold rushes and the present t=xOQ 8  
B New discoveries of gold deposits are likely to be the result of exploration techniques designed to locate buried mineralization *28pRvY:b  
C It is unlikely that newly discovered gold deposits will ever yield as much as did those deposits discovered during the original gold rushes. $Y 7c  
D Modern explorers are divided on the question of the utility of simple prospecting methods as a source of new discoveries of gold deposits. &.Zb,r$Y  
5. It can be inferred from the passage that which of the following is easiest to detect? J!DF^ fLe  
A A gold-quartz vein system originating in magma tic fluids. e${)w-R/e  
B A gold-quartz vein system originating in metamorphic fluids. (!:cen~|[  
C A gold deposit that is mixed with granite. J/3_C6UZ  
D A gold deposit that has shed alluvial gold. Z y_V9j[n  
6. The theory mentioned in line I relates to the conceptual models discussed in the passage in which of the following ways? u<n Lag  
A It may furnish a valid account of ore-forming processes, and hence, can support conceptual models that have great practical significance. 2}W0 F2*  
B It suggests that certain geological formations, long believed to be mineralized, are in fact mineralized thus confirming current conceptual models. #0Tq=:AE>  
C. It suggests that there may not be enough similarity across Archean-age gold-quartz vein systems to warrant the formulation of conceptual models. Ye.r%i &  
D It corrects existing theories about the chemical halos of gold deposits, and thus provides a basis for correcting current conceptual models. &hk-1y9QS  
7. According to the passage methods of exploring for gold that are widely used today are based on which of the following facts? %8~3M75$  
A Most of the Earth’s remaining gold deposits are still molten. Vrvic4  
B Most of the Earth’s remaining gold deposits are exposed at the surface. pD&& l!i&[  
C Most of the Earth’s remaining gold deposits are buried and have no surface expression Zc?ppO  
D Only one type of gold deposit warrants exploration. since the other types of gold deposits are found in regions difficult to reach 3 zn W=  
*@TZ+{t  
              Passage Two t>H`X~SR?  
Questions 8-15 are based on the following passage: mRZ :ie  
In choosing a method for determining climatic conditions that existed in the past, paleoclimatologists invoke four principal criteria. First, the material—rocks, lakes, vegetation, etc.—on which the method relies must be widespread enough to provide plenty of information, since analysis of material that is rarely encountered will not permit correlation with other regions or with other periods of geological history. Second in the process of formation, the material must have received an environmental signal that reflects a change in climate and that can be deciphered by modern physical or chemical means. Third, at least some of the material must have retained the signal unaffected by subsequent changes in the environment. Fourth, it must be possible to determine the time at which the inferred climatic conditions held. This last criterion is more easily met in dating marine sediments, because dating of only a small number of layers in a marine sequence allows the age of other layers to be estimated fairly reliably by extrapolation and interpolation. By contrast, because sedimentation is much less continuous in continental regions, estimating the age of a continental bed from the known ages of beds above and below is more risky. V= 1Bo~  
One very old method used in the investigation of past climatic conditions involves the measurement of water levels in ancient lakes. In temperate regions, there are enough lakes for correlations between them to give us a tenable picture. In arid and semiarid regions, on the other hand, the small number of lakes and the great distances between them reduce the possibilities for correlation. Moreover, since lake levels are controlled by rates of evaporation as well as by precipitation, the interpretation of such levels is ambiguous. For instance, the fact that lake levels in the semiarid southwestern United States appear to have been higher during the last ice age than they are now was at one time attributed to increased precipitation. On the basis of snowline elevations, however, it has been concluded that the climate then was not necessarily wetter than it is now, but rather that both summers and winters were cooler, resulting in reduced evaporation R-P-i0 ~  
Another problematic method is to reconstruct former climates on the basis of pollen profiles. The type of vegetation in a specific region is determined by identifying and counting the various pollen grains found there. Although the relationship between vegetation and climate is not as direct as the relationship between climate and lake levels, the method often works well in the temperate zones. In arid and semiarid regions in which there is not much vegetation, however, small changes in one or a few plant types can change the picture traumatically, making accurate correlations between neighboring areas difficult to obtain. y7^{yS[,  
8. Which of the following statements about the difference between marine and continental sedimentation is supported by information in the passage? L dn8  
A.    Data provided by dating marine sedimentation is more consistent with researchers’ findings in other disciplines than is data provided by dating continental sedimentation. 5MSB dO  
B.    It is easier to estimate the age of a layer in a sequence of continental sedimentation than it is to estimate the age of a layer in a sequence of marine sedimentation. FW.$5*f='  
C.    Marine sedimentation is much less widespread than continental sedimentation x=#VX\5k:  
D.    Marine sedimentation is much more continuous than is continental sedimentation. l (3bW1{n  
9. Which of the following statements best describes the organization of the passage as a whole? #A8@CA^d  
A.    The author describes a method for determining past climatic conditions and then offers specific examples of situations in which it has been used. ^#0U  ?9  
B.    The author discusses the method of dating marine and continental sequences and then explains how dating is more difficult with lake levels than with pollen profiles. pc?>cs8  
C.    The author describes the common requirements of methods for determining past climatic conditions and then discusses examples of such methods. 4BwQA #zE  
D.    The author describes various ways of choosing a material for determining past climatic conditions and then discusses how two such methods have yielded contradictory data. MJ=)v]a  
  10. It can be inferred from the passage that paleoclimatologists have concluded which of the following on the basis of their study of snow-line elevations in the southwest6ern United States? P<fnLQ9  
A.    There is usually more precipitation during an ice age because of increased amounts of evaporation rhL"i^  
B.    There was less precipitation during the last ice age than there is today. i>_u _)-  
C.    Lake levels in the semiarid southwestern United States were lower during the last ice age than they are today.  RD tU43  
D.    The high lake levels during the last ice age may have been a result of less evapo9ration rather than more precipitation. `~X!Ll  
11. Which of the following would be the most likely topic for a paragraph that logically continues the passage? ,y%3mR_~  
A.    The kinds of plants normally found in arid regions. Iz[@^IUx=  
B.    The effect of variation in lake levels on pollen distribution. iH.$f /)N  
C.    The material best suited to preserving signal of climatic changes. g&n)fF  
D.    A third method fro investigating past climatic conditions. BW,mwq  
12. the author discusses lake levels in the southwestern United States in order to     wd/< 8>2X  
A.    illustrate the mechanics of the relationship between lake level, evaporation, and precipitation &x > B  
B.    provide an example of the uncertainty involved in interpreting lake levels. q:<{% U$  
C.    Prove that there are not enough ancient lakes with which to make accurate correlations a5G/[[cwTV  
D.    Explain the effects of increased rates of evaporation on levels of precipitation. }(<%`G6N  
13. It can be inferred from the passage that an environmental signal found in geological material would no be useful to paleoclimatologists if it       . G7=p Bf  
A.    had to be interpreted by modern chemical means 9!><<7TS  
B.    reflected a change in climate rather than a long-term climatic condition 3z ]+uv+2J  
C.    was incorporated into a material as the material was forming 4tx|=;@0  
D.    also reflected subsequent environmental changes. )(7&X45,k  
14. According to the passage the material used to determine past climatic conditions must be widespread for which of the following reasons? IuZ) [*W  
  Ⅰ .Paleoclimatologists need to make comparisons between periods of geological history. >Yt/]ta4+  
  Ⅱ. Paleoclimatologists need to compare materials that have supported a wide variety of vegetation oBUxKisW  
  Ⅲ. Paleoclimatologists need to make comparisons with data collected in other regions. 2r%lA\,h$  
A.    I only vLxQ *50v$  
B.    Ⅱ only ,|88r=}  
C.    I and Ⅱ only Va$Pi19 O  
D.    I and Ⅲ only hva2o`  
15. Which of the following can be inferred from the passage about the study of past climates in arid and semiarid regions? ^;c16  
A.    It is sometimes more difficult to determine past climatic conditions in arid and semiarid regions than in temperate regions ?GTU=gp Q  
B.    Although in the past more research has been done on temperate regions, paleoclimatologists have recently turned their attention to arid and semiarid regions. 'q * Bdx  
C.    Although more information about past climates can be gathered in arid and semiarid than in temperate regions, dating this information is more difficult. $v8l0JA *  
D.    It is difficult to study the climatic history of arid and semiarid regions because their climates have tended to vary more than those of temperate regions. >]%8Zx[  
                Passage    Three [&*6_q"V  
Questions 16-22 are based on the following passage: '$ef+@y  
While there is no blueprint for transforming a largely government-controlled economy into a free one, the experience of the United Kingdom since 1979 clearly shows one approach that works: privatization, in which state-owned industries are sold to private companies. By 1979, the total borrowings and losses of state-owned industries were running at about £3 billion a year. By selling many of these industries, the government has decreased these borrowings and losses, gained over £34 billion from the sales, and now receives tax revenues from the newly privatized companies. Along with a dramatically improved overall economy, the government has been able to repay 12.5 percent of the net national debt over a two-year period. 0 'Vg6E]/  
In fact privatization has not only rescued individual industries and a whole economy headed for disaster, but has also raised the level of performance in every area. At British Airways and British Gas, for example, productivity per employee has risen by 20 percent. At associated British Ports. labor disruptions common in the 1970’s and early 1980’s have now virtually disappeared. At British Telecom, there is no longer a waiting list—as there always was before privatization—to have a telephone installed. ESoAz o,u  
Part of this improved productivity has come about because the employees of privatized industries were given the opportunity to buy shares in their own companies. They responded enthusiastically to the offer of shares; at British Aerospace 89 percent of the eligible work force bought shares; at Associated British Ports 90 percent; and at British Telecom 92 percent. When people have a personal stake in something, they think about it, care about it, work to make it prosper. At the National Freight Consortium, the new employee-owners grew so concerned about their company’s profits that during wage negotiations they actually pressed their union to lower its wage demands. Some economists have suggested that giving away free shares would provide a needed acceleration of the privatization process. Yet they miss Thomas Paine’s point that “what we obtain too cheap we esteem too lightly” In order for the far-ranging benefits of individual ownership to be achieved by owners, companies, and countries, employees and other individuals must make their own decisions to buy, and they must commit some of their own resources to the choice. 3zT_^;:L  
16. According to the passage all of the following were benefits of privatizing state owned industries in the United Kingdom EXCEPT     Db"DG(  
A.    Privatized industries paid taxes to the government hAj1{pA,  
B.    The government gained revenue from selling state-owned industries B-d(@7,1  
C.    The government repaid some of its national debt R4Rb73o  
D.    Profits from industries that were still state-owned increased V Yw%01#  
17. According to the passage, which of the following resulted in increased productivity in companies that have been privatized? FecktD=  
A.    A large number of employees chose to purchase shares in their companies. j6(?D*x  
B.    Free shares were widely distributed to individual shareholders. 1 qi@uYDug  
C.    The government ceased to regulate major industries. E VQ0l@K  
D.    Unions conducted wage negotiations fro employees. KS*oxZ  
18. It can be inferred from the passage that the author considers labor disruptions to be       YwcPX`eg  
A.    an inevitable problem in a weak national economy DF{OnF  
B.    a positive sign of employee concern about a company Npn=cLC&  
C.    a predictor of employee reactions to a company’s offer to sell shares to them (5^ZlOk3  
D.    a deterrence to high performance levels in an industry. ftBq^tC  
19. The passage supports which of the following statements about employees buying shares in their won companies? ;W:6{9m ze  
A.    At three different companies, approximately nine out ten of the workers were eligible to buy shares in their companies. o/o:2p.  
B.    Approximately 90%of the eligible workers at three different companies chose to buy shares in their     companies. zhB">j8j  
C.    The opportunity to buy shares was discouraged by at least some labor unions. D=RU`?L  
D.    Companies that demonstrated the highest productivity were the first to allow their employees the opportunity to buy shares. fE,9zUo  
20. Which of the following statements is most consistent with the principle described in L25-26? CVXytS?@x  
A.    A democratic government that decides it is inappropriate to own a particular industry has in no way abdicated its responsibilities as guardian of the public interest. R.s|j=  
B.    The ideal way for a government to protect employee interests is to force companies to maintain their share of a competitive market without government subsidies. %]p6Kn/>  
C.    The failure to harness the power of self-interest is an important reason that state-owned industries perform poorly hY<{t.ws  
D.    Governments that want to implement privatization programs must try to eliminate all resistance to the free-market system. N~ANjn/wL  
  21. Which of the following can be inferred from the passage about the privatization process in the United Kingdom? &@3m -Z  
A.    It depends to a potentially dangerous degree on individual ownership of shares. ( #&|Dp^'  
B.    It conforms in its most general outlines to Thomas Paine’s prescription for business ownership. .I$}KE)  
C.    It was originally conceived to include some giving away of free shares. F=)eLE{W  
D.    It is taking place more slowly than some economists suggest is necessary. 8cHE[I  
  22. The quotation in L32-33 is most probably used to       . Hoz56y  
A.    counter a position that the author of the passage believes is incorrect. P,bd'  
B.    State a solution to a problem described in the previous sentence. 8n4V cu  
C.    Show how opponents of the viewpoint of the author of the passage have supported their arguments. L(&}Wv  
D.    point out a paradox contained in a controversial viewpoint. oQ+61!5>  
                Passage Four Y@F  
Questions 23-30 are based on the following passage: h7qBp300  
Historians of women’s labor in the United States at first largely disregarded the story of female service workers—women earning wages in occupations such as salesclerk, domestic servant, and office secretary. These historians focused instead on factory work, primarily because it seemed so different from traditional, unpaid “women’s work ”in the home, and because the underlying economic forces of industrialism were presumed to be gender-blind and hence emancipation in effect. Unfortunately, emancipation has been less profound than expected, for not even industrial wage labor has escaped continued sex segregation in the workplace. !F!3Q4  
To explain this unfinished revolution in the status of women, historians have recently begun to emphasize the way a prevailing definition of femininity often determines the kinds of work allocated to women, even when such allocation is inappropriate to new conditions. For instance, early textile-mill entrepreneurs, in justifying women’s employment in wage labor, made much of the assumption that women were by nature skillful at detailed tasks and patient in carrying out repetitive chores; the mill owners thus imported into the new industrial order hoary stereotypes associated with the homemaking activities they presumed to have been the purview of women. Because women accepted the more unattractive new industrial tasks more readily than did men, such jobs came to be regarded as female jobs. And employers, who assumed that women’s “real” aspirations were for marriage and family life, declined to pay women wages commensurate with those of men. Thus many lower-skilled, lower-paid, less secure jobs came to be perceived as “female.” ZI ?W5ISdg  
More remarkable than the origin has been the persistence of such sex segregation in twentieth-century industry. Once an occupation came to be perceived as “female”, employers showed surprisingly little interest in changing that perception, even when higher profits beckoned. And despite the urgent need of the United States during the Second World War to mobilize its human resources fully, job segregation by sex characterized even he most important war industries. Moreover, once the war ended, employers quickly returned to men most of the “male” jobs that women had been permitted to master. 2H?d+6Pt3  
23. According to the passage, job segregation by sex in the United States was     . wX1ig  
A.    greatly diminlated by labor mobilization during the Second World War. l54|Q  
B.    perpetuated by those textile-mill owners who argued in favor of women’s employment in wage labor Sav`%0q?7a  
C.    one means by which women achieved greater job security . gZZCf&?  
D.    reluctantly challenged by employers except when the economic advantages were obvious u}H$-$ jE  
  24. According to the passage, historians of women’s labor focused on factory work as a more promising area of research than service-sector work because factory work     ecH/Wz1  
A.    involved the payment of higher wages F@YV]u>N  
B.    required skill in detailed tasks s ?l%L!  
C.    was assumed to be less characterized by sex segregation B!aK  
D.    was more readily accepted by women than by men :\V,k~asl  
  25. It can be inferred from the passage the early historians of women’s labor in the United States paid little attention to women’s employment in the service sector of the economy because     m[2'd  
A.    fewer women found employment in the service sector than in factory work Na!za'qk[o  
B.    the wages paid to workers in the service sector were much more short-term than in factory work 0|)19LR  
C.    women’s employment in the service sector tended to be much more short-term than in factory work |LYK c.xo  
D.    employment in the service sector seemed to have much in common with the unpaid work associated with homemaking 9Yw]Y5l   
  26. The passage supports which of the following statements about the early mill owners mentioned in the second paragraph? DacJ,in_I{  
A.    They hoped that by creating relatively unattractive “female” jobs they would discourage women from losing interest in marriage and family life. jv}=&d  
B.    They sought to increase the size of the available labor force as a means to keep men’s wages low. u39FN?<^  
C.    They argued that women were inherently suited to do well in particular kinds of factory work ?=|kC*$/G  
D.    They felt guilty about disturbing the traditional division of labor in family. ? J|4l[x  
  27.It can be inferred from the passage that the “unfinished revolution” the author mentions in L11 refers to the       + Oobb-v  
A.    entry of women into the industrial labor market. c>Z*/>~  
B.    Development of a new definition of femininity unrelated to the economic forces of industrialism +*EKR  
C.    Introduction of equal pay for equal work in all professions , Fytk34  
D.    Emancipation of women wage earners from gender-determined job allocation NoW!xLI  
28. The passage supports which of the following statements about hiring policies in the United States? 3;BvnD7  
A.    After a crisis many formerly “male ”jobs are reclassified as “female” jobs. YQ,tt<CQ  
B.    Industrial employers generally prefer to hire women with previous experience as homemakers ]O@"\_}  
C.    Post-Second World War hiring policies caused women to lose many of their wartime gains in employment opportunity. Hql5oA  
D.    Even war industries during the Second World War were reluctant to hire women for factory work. tjb/[RQ  
29. Which of the following words best expresses the opinion of the author of the passage concerning the notion that women are more skillful than men in carrying out details tasks? .Dv=p B,u  
A.    “patient” (line17) VJ1* |r,  
B.    “repetitive” (line18) dF2@q@\.+  
C.    “hoary” (line19) vo b$iS`>=  
D.    “homemaking” (line19) iB{xvyR  
  30. Which of the following best describes the relationship of the final paragraph to the passage as a whole? $HRed|*.C  
A.    The central idea is reinforced by the citation of evidence drawn from twentieth-century history. 4_< nQ9K  
B.    The central idea is restated in such a way as to form a transition to a new topic for discussion <P pYl  
C.    The central idea is restated and juxtaposed with evidence that might appear to contradict it. 9A*rE.B+W  
D.    A partial exception to the generalizations of the central idea is dismissed unimportant. Q eK{ MF  
Passage Five o4'v> b  
Questions 31-36 are based on the following passage: 9[f%;WaS  
Two modes of argumentation have been used on behalf of women’s emancipation in Western societies. Arguments in what could be called the “relational” feminist tradition maintain the doctrine of “equality in difference”, or equity as distinct for equality. They posit that biological distinctions between the sexes result in a necessary sexual division of labor in the family and throughout society and that women’s procreative labor is currently undervalued by society, to the disadvantage of women. By contrast, the individualist feminist tradition emphasizes individual human rights and celebrates women’s quest for personal autonomy, while downplaying the importance of gender roles and minimizing discussion of childbearing and its attendant responsibilities. /Su)|[/'  
Before the late nineteenth century, these views coexisted within the feminist movement, often within the writings of the same individual. Between 1890and 1920, however, relational feminism, which had been the dominant strain in feminist thought, and which still predominates among European and non-western feminists, lost ground in England and the United States. Because the concept of individual rights was already well established in the Anglo-Saxon legal and political tradition, individualist feminism came to predominate in England-speaking countries. At the same time, the goals of the two approaches began to seem increasingly irreconcilable. Individualist feminists began to advocate a totally gender-blind system with equal educational and economic opportunities outside the home should be available for all women, continued to emphasize women’s special contributions to society as homemakers and mothers; they demanded special treatment including protective legislation for women workers. State-sponsored maternity benefits, and paid compensation for housework. #J~Xv:LgD  
Relational arguments have a major pitfall: because they underline women’s physiological and psychological distinctiveness, they are often appropriated by political adversaries and used to endorse male privilege. But the individualist approach, by attacking gender roles, denying the significance of physiological difference, and condemning existing familial institutions as hopelessly patriarchal, has often simply treated as irrelevant the family roles important to many women. If the individualist framework, with its claim for women’s autonomy, could be harmonized with the family-oriented concerns of relational feminists, a more fruitful model for contemporary feminist politics could emerge. #O6 EP#B  
  31. The author of the passage alludes to the well-established nature of the concept of individual rights in the Anglo-Saxon legal and political tradition in order to     C >kmIw'  
A.    illustrate the influence of individualist feminist thought on more general intellectual trends in English history. fv5C! > t  
B.    Argue that feminism was already a part of the larger Anglo-Saxon intellectual tradition, even though this has often gone unnoticed by critics of women’s emancipation WJcVQM s  
C.    Explain the decline in individualist thinking among feminists in non-English-speaking countries. afy/K'~  
D.    Help account for an increasing shift toward individualist feminism among feminists in English-speaking countries. }MjQP R  
32. The passage suggests that the author of the passage believes which of the following? /yt7#!tm+  
A.    The predominance of individualist feminism in English-speaking countries is a historical phenomenon, the causes of which have not yet been investigated. ,]U[W  
B.    The individualist and relational feminist views are irreconcilable, given their theoretical differences concerning the foundations of society. Ge~,[If+  
C.    A consensus concerning the direction of future feminist politics will probably soon emerge, given the awareness among feminists of the need for cooperation among women. 7%tR&F -u  
D.    Political adversaries of feminism often misuse arguments predicated on differences between the sexes to argue that the existing social system should be maintained. Dpj-{q7C  
33. It can be inferred from the passage that the individualist feminist tradition denies the validity of which of the following causal statements? #ZF>WoC@e?  
A.    A division of labor in a social group can result in increased efficiency with regard to the performance of group tasks. -XLo0  
B.    A division of labor in a social group causes in the distribution of opportunities and benefits among group members. w #<^RKk  
C.    A division of labor on the basis of gender in a social group is necessitated by the existence of sex-linked biological differences between male and female members of the group. 1 Xa+%n 9  
D.    Culturally determined distinctions based on gender in a social group foster the existence of differing attitudes and opinions among group members. CnQg*+  
34. According to the passage, relational feminists and individualist feminists agree that     a G@nErdW  
A.    individual human rights take precedence over most other social claims 5R"2Wd  
B.    the gender-based division of labor in society should be eliminated bu&;-Ynb  
C.    laws guaranteeing equal treatment for all citizens regardless of gender should be passed /Bm#`?(ia  
D.    the same educational and economic opportunities should be available to both sexes. w=5   
    35. According to the author, which of the following was true of feminist thought in Western societies before 1890? e|~C?Ow'J  
A.    Individualist feminist arguments were not found in the thought or writing of non-English-speaking feminists. "]w!`^'_  
B.    Individualist feminism was a strain in feminist thought, but another strain, relational feminism, predominated. |""=)-5N  
C.    Relational and individualist approaches were equally prevalent in feminist thought and writing. U ~CdU  
D.    The predominant view among feminists held that the welfare of women was ultimately less important than the welfare of children. Q;Q%SI`yT  
    36. The author implies that which of the following was true of most feminist thinkers in England and the United States after 1920? PM8Ks?P#u  
A.    They were less concerned with politics than with intellectual issues. ^pN 5NwC5  
B.    They began to reach a broader audience and their programs began to be adopted by mainstream political parties. @kz!{g]Sn  
C.    They called repeatedly for international cooperation among women’s groups to achieve their goals. d4% `e&K]'  
D.    They did not attempt to unite the two different feminist approaches in their thought. b h*^{  
                Passage Six w LpkUa  
Questions 37-40 are based on the following passage: k06xz#pL  
    A history of long and effortless success can be a dreadful handicap, but, if properly handled, it may become a driving force. When the United States entered just such a glowing period after the end of the Second World War, it had a market eight times larger than any competitor, giving its industries unparalleled economies of scale. Its scientists were the world’s best, its workers the most skied. America and Americans were prosperous beyond the dreams of the Europeans and Asians whose economies the war had destroyed. B(8mH  
It was inevitable that this primacy should have narrowed as other countries grew richer. Just as inevitably, the retreat from predominance proved painful. By the mid-1980s Americans had found themselves at a loss over their fading industrial competitiveness. Some huge American industries, such as consumer electronics, had shrunk or vanished in the face of foreign competition. By 1987 there was only one American television maker left, Zenith. (Now there is none: Zenith was bought by South Korea’s LG Electronics in July.) Foreign-made cars and textiles were sweeping into the domestic market. America’s machine-tool industry was on the ropes. For a while it looked as though the making of semiconductors, which America had invented and which sat at the heart of the new computer age, was going to be the next casualty. YsZ {1W  
All of this caused a crisis of confidence. Americans stopped taking prosperity for granted. They began to believe that their way of doing business was failing, and that their incomes would therefore shortly begin to fall as well. The mid-1980s brought one inquiry after another into the causes of America’s industrial decline. Their sometimes sensational findings were filled with warnings about the growing competition from overseas. 2+,5p  
How things have changed ! In 1995 the United States can look back on five years of solid growth while Japan has been struggling. Few Americans attribute this solely to such obvious causes as a devalued dollar or the turning of the business cycle. Self-doubt has yielded to blind pride. “American industry has changed its structure, has gone on a diet, has learnt to be more quick-witted,” according to Richard Cavanagh, executive dean of Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, “It makes me proud to be an American just to see how our businesses are improving their productivity,” says Stephen Moore of the Cato Institute, a think-tank in Washington, DC. And William Sahlman of the Harvard Business School believes that people will look back on this period as “a golden age of business management in the United States.” Yg[ v/[]  
  37. The U.S. achieved it s predominance after World War Ⅱbecause       . |.Em_*V G  
A.    it had made painstaking efforts towards this goal abL/Y23 "  
B.    its domestic market was eight times larger than before 2YE7 23H=Z  
C.    the war and destroyed the economies of most potential competitors C1KfXC*|L  
D.    the unparalleled size of its workforce had given an impetus to its economy. 8W;xi:CC  
  38. The loss of U.S. predominance in the world economy in the 1980s is manifested in the fact that the American       Y~:}l9Qs  
A.    TV industry had withdrawn to its domestic market 9LH=3Qt  
B.    Semiconductor industry had been taken over by foreign enterprises 1B6C<cL:sU  
C.    Machine-tool industry had collapsed after suicidal actions  d3Y(SPO  
D.    Auto industry had lost part of its domestic market. r|*:9|y{"/  
39. What can be inferred from the passage? |MR%{ZC^i  
A.    It is human nature to shift between self-doubt and blind pride. qZXyi'(d  
B.    Intense competition may contribute to economic progress. P`p6J8}4  
C.    The revival of the economy depends on international cooperation. `0Yt1Z&  
D.    A long history of success may pave the way for further development. sS-W~u|C  
40. the author seems to believe the revival of the U.S. economy in the 1990s can be attributed to the   6`_! ?u7  
    nDyvX1]  
A.    turning of the business cycle "!xvpsy  
B.    restructuring of industry UHr {  
C.    improved business management m{vT_ei  
D.    success in education ri"?, }(  
wu;7NatHx  
Part II qo6 1O\qm  
Translate the following passages into Chinese: {-o7w0d_  
                  Passage One ^uC"dfH  
The technology now being used by the autoworkers on the assembly lines is nothing short of revolutionary. Today’s workers now use smart, microprocessor controlled tools that perform with a precision unheard of a decade ago. The tools operate to the exact inch-pound of torque required, and even have the ability to stop the line if their performance deteriorates. The intelligent tools and assembly systems being used by the U.S. auto industry reflect the challenges the industry has faced and conquered over the past 100 years. h0T< :X   
Passage Two NR ;q`Xe-  
    In each generation for thousands of years a few individuals have had the perception, the curiosity, and the imagination to do more than just look at the physical processes taking place in the atmosphere. These individuals have asked “Why?” about such things as these: the blue of the sky; the splendor of the rainbow; the infinite variety and marvelous detail of snowflakes; the changes of temperature from season to season; the short life of a cloud as it forms, grows, decays, and disappears on a summer afternoon. 2_Pz^L  
                    Passage Three !O~}, pp  
    A European industrialist learned by chance that the United States was singing contracts with scientists in other countries, calling for research into such matters as the function of the frog’s eyes and the learning ability of the octopus. It seemed to him that such studies could not possibly have any practical value. He seriously believed that the United States was employing the foreign scientists to do meaningless work and occupy their time, while American scientists were busy in the really important areas of science. He was unaware of the fact that the United States was spending much more money at home than abroad fro similar studies. M_qP!+ Y  
Passage Four o,g6JTh  
That many contemporary scientists make room for God in their understanding of the cosmos should hardly be surprising. For most of history, religion and science have been siblings—feeding off and sparring with each other –rather than outright adversaries in the common human quest for understanding. Only in the West, and only after the French Enlightenment in the 18th century, did the votaries of science and religions drift into separate ideological camps. And only in the 19th century, after Darwin, was supposed irreconcilability between “God” and “science ” elevated to the status of cultural myth. History tell a different, more complicated story. }/_('q@s\  
              Passage Five sVE>=0TVP  
For decades, science-fiction writers have envisioned a world in which speech is the most commonly used interface between humans and machines. This is partly a result of our strong desire to make computers behave like human beings. But it is more than that. Speech is natural—we know how to speak before we know how to read and write. Speech is also efficient—most people can speak about five times faster than they can type and probably 10 times faster than they can write. And speech is flexible—we do not have to touch or see anything to carry on a conversation. %|# P&`  
              Passage Six ''$` ;?t>  
His fear was that the business of engineering, defined as the synthesis of invention and innovation fro the extension of man’s capabilities, was being subverted by a lack of creative design courses in U. S. engineering schools. He expressed alarm that Ph. D. candidates often focused on science, not on likely uses for their work. This situation was, he felt, the fallout of a shift in the philosophy of academia. Though engineering schools still taught the fundamentals well, he said, they had failed their students—and society as whole—by emphasizing the “knowledge and skills of analysis to the virtual exclusion of all else.” <dq,y>  
  h |s*i  
Translate the following into English: 0\V\qAk  
Paragraph One Sja "(sJ  
  有些计算机科学家正在研究蚂蚁。 他们说, 蚂蚁这种低级昆虫预示软件设计革命的到来。 模仿蚂蚁行为的软件系统不是依赖复杂性的集中式逻辑, 而是利用短小的、自治的软件代理。 这些代理各自根据最简单的规则行事, 但它们集合在一起,可以从整体上看极为复杂的问题。 在上一层,即“蚁群”这一层, 智能从那些简单的规则中, 以常规编程可能难于实现的方式浮现出来。 \7|s$ XQ\  
Paragraph Two Iu)L3_+  
  退回到大约二十年前。你在联欢会 上谈论着书籍和电影。有人提出, 将来有一天世界上数百万人会用“。com” 结束他们的谈话。你会小声嘀咕并发问, 人怎么可能会在英语或其他语言中把“。com” 放在一起用呢?那究竟是什么意思呢?于是你开始去谈论体育运动或闲聊其他题。但是现在,“。com”在交谈中已司空见惯,以至于我们感觉它似乎已经在我们耳边许多年了。 " 7l jc  
D /,|pC  
Ⅱ、真题答案 6&g!ZE'G  
1-5 DCADC   6-10 ACAAC 11-15 BBCDD 16-20 CDDCC 21-25 AADAD K~7'@\2 ?  
26-30 CACDB 30-35 BBAAD 36-40 DCABD
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