社区应用 最新帖子 精华区 社区服务 会员列表 统计排行 银行
主题 : 华中科技大学2010年考博英语试题
camera 离线
级别: 论坛版主
显示用户信息 
楼主  发表于: 2012-02-15   

华中科技大学2010年考博英语试题

华中科技大学 a^Zn }R r  
2010年招收博士研究生入学考试试题 vGm;en   
考试科目:           英语            ?A62VV51CN  
#"i}wS  
适合专业:          各专业           )E6m}? H5  
Qt>yRt  
Part I Cloze (0.5x20=10%) oVC~RKA*  
#B+2qD>E  
Directions: In this part you are asked to choose the best word for each blank inthe passage. Write your answers on the answer sheet. 8(Z*Vz uu  
;'gzR C  
  Who won the World Cup 1994 football game? What happened at the .United Nations? How mhlJzGr*q  
B>?. Nr  
did the critics like the new play?  1   en event takes place, newspapers are on the street   2  >-)i_C2  
0dIJgKanGP  
the details.  3  anything happens in the world, reporters are on the spot to gather the news. a |z{B b  
Lk3@E u)  
  Newspapers have one basic   4  , to get the news as quickly as possible from its source, Yj0Ss{Ep  
Q3oVl^q  
from those who make it to those who want to   5   it. [IV8  
ND21;  
  Radio, telegraph, television, and   6   inventions brought competition for newspapers. So lZ_i~;u4@v  
GhpH7% s  
did the development of magazines and other means of communication.  7  , this competitionmerely spurred the newspapers on. They quickly made use of the newer and faster means of communication to improve the   8   and thus the efficiency of their own operations. Today more newspapers are   9  and read than ever before. Competition also led newspapers to E}1[&  
]Ff&zBJ  
10  out into many other fields. Besides keeping readers informed of the latest news, today's newspapers entertain and influence readers about politics and other important and serious 11 Newspapers influence readers' economic choices   12   advertising. Most newspapers depend on advertising for their very  13    Newspapers are sold at a price that   14  even a small fraction of the cost of production. pOS.`rSK  
1Z`<HW"  
The main   15   of income for most newspapers is commercial advertising. The  16   in  selling advertising depends newspaper's value to advertisers. This    17   in terms of circulation. How many people read the newspaper? % ;6e@U}  
M:C*?;K:  
  Circulation depends   18   on the work of the circulation department and on the services )cOm\^ ,  
@+xkd(RfN  
0c:CA>F  
or entertainment   19   in a newspaper's pages. But for the most part, circulation depends on a NO9Jre  
O[`n{Vl/  
newspaper's value to readers as a source of information  20  the community, city, county, state, nation and world……and even outer space. 6dg[   
1~5={eI  
1. A. Just when            B. While            C. Soon after         D, Before # <&=ZLN  
y4envjl 0  
2. A. to give              B. giving            C. given             D. being given uO BpMAJ  
ICV67(Ui  
3. A. Wherever            B. Whatever          C. However          D. Whichever <y`yKXzBUV  
q:nYUW o   
4. A. reason              B. cause             C. problem           D. purpose m0\(a_0V  
Vwv O@G7A  
5. A. make               B. publish           C. know             D. write  '5[L []A  
Iem* 'r  
6. A. another             B. other             C. one another        D. the other J.O;c5wL  
Hj2P|;2S  
7. A. However            B. And              C. Therefore          D. So R\X= Vg  
"w_(p|cm=  
8. A. value                B. ratio              C. rate               D. speed -G *u2i_*  
!TG"AW  
9. A. spread               B. passed            C. printed            D. completed ZY][LU~l8  
}*0%wP  
10. A. provoke            B. jump              C. step               D. branch g\6(ezUF*  
9`vse>,-hg  
11. A. matters            B. affairs            C. things            D. events Y3-15:-  
a_Xh(d$  
12. A. on                B. through           C. with              D. of -8TJ~t%w4  
-|ee=BV  
 13. A. forms              B. existence          C. contents           D. purpose Rhr]ML  
OO\UF6MCU  
14. A. tries to cover        B. manages to cover   C. fails to cover       D. succeeds in                                                                       l?#([(WM  
{qh`8  
15. A. source             B. origin             C.course             D. finance }*+ca>K  
;Hm\?n)a  
16. A. way               B. means            C. chance            D. success c.d*DM}W  
=P2T&Gb  
17. A. measures           B. measured          C. is measured        D. was measured Fv(zql  
 ^mG-O  
 18. A. somewhat           B. little              C. much             D. something BeplS  
," *[T\u  
 19. A. offering            B. offered           C. which offered      D. to be offered Bv/v4(G5g  
R=PjLH&)  
20. A. by                B. with             C. at               D. about b}k`'++2,  
a*vi&$@`Z1  
Part II Reading comprehension (20x2=40%) b/<n:*$   
|ukEnjI`u  
Directions: There are four passages in this part. After each passage, there are five questions.  You are to choose the best answer for each question. Write your answers on the answer sheet. 9#pl BtQ**  
q?\3m3 GM  
 Passage One ~9x$tb x-  
tohYwXN  
   Early in the sixteenth century, Francis Bacon proposed that science consisted in the elevation -KO E2f  
Q%KS$nP 9  
 of the authority of experiment and observation over that of reason, intuition, and convention. wn|Sdp  
M|76,2u   
 Bacon thought that as more and more reliable and precise particular facts, accumulate, they can "z7.i{   
+vZ-o{}.jO  
 be classified and generalized, resulting in an ever-expanding hierarchy of useful “ axioms”. This z`{Ld9W  
}JvyjE  
 is what he meant by" induction". /|hKZTZJdN  
8]+hfB/  
   Although many people today continue to regard the collection of facts and their arrangement h.G/HHz  
6(X(f;MEl  
 by induction into theories as the heart of scientific method, Bacon's conception of what facts and s6!aGZ  
>5)$Qtz#  
 theories are and of the relationship between them was hopelessly unrealistic even in his own LLV:E{`p  
J`V7FlM  
 time. The most important early scientific discoveries …… such as those made by Galileo about LXfDXXF  
>a@-OJ.yOk  
 the movement of the earth, by Keppler about the elliptical shape of planetary orbits, and later by 6uR :/PTG  
o{nBtxZ"  
JtvAi\52$  
Newton about the" force" of gravity  ……  could never have been made if Bacon's rules had ^%*%=LJm  
qp'HRh@P2:  
prevailed. s#64NG  
H8rDG/>^  
  Determined to avoid all premature speculations, Bacon proposed that data gathering be carried 7n}J}8Y*U2  
"J3@Z,qW  
out by illiterate assistants with no interest in whether an experiment turned out one way or d#Ql>Pr Y  
3zv_q&+8b  
another. Plain facts, properly arranged, would automatically lead to certain knowledge of the ~ex1,J*}t  
>>F E?@  
universe. Nothing could be more misrepresentative of the actual problem-solving techniques of p.gi8%f`  
/vBOf;L  
the scientific method. That plain facts do not speak for themselves is evident from Bacon's own .G4 (Ryh  
#4DEb<D  
acceptance of the errors contained in what appeared to be the most "obvious" of facts. For #1&w fI$  
ns uK{8}@  
Bacon, that the earth did not move was a fact because it could be seen not to move; and for %F]4)XeW-+  
r` HtN{ 6r  
Bacon it was a-fact that life was being spontaneously generated because maggots always >5'C<jc C  
6"/cz~h  
developed in putrid flesh and frogs appeared after every rain. oZQ% P  
*[9FPya  
   What is clear is that the great breakthroughs of Newton, Darwin, or Marx could never have +pkX$yz  
XcAx@CY9c  
been achieved solely on the basis of Baconian fact gathering. Facts are always unreliable without 6f v{?0|  
5k)/SAU0  
theories which guide their collection and which distinguish between superficial and significant [:&4Tp*C  
:&S6AP  
appearances.  <]2X~+v  
XJ^dX]4  
21. According to Bacon, facts        :* 4b,P  
vR[XbsNM  
      A. are determined by observations iO4Yfj#?  
k?zw4S  
      B. can only be understood through logical reasoning _lcx?IV  
outAZy=R;  
      C. have a hierarchy >> yK_yg  
cv})^E$x  
      D. are gathered by illiterate assistants 5?9K%x'b  
5 Sm9m*/  
 22. Data collection should be performed by illiterate assistants,        [CTE"@A  
qS1byqq78l  
       A. according to Bacon, as it led to speculation t@m!k+0  
VbLwhA2W}F  
       B. according to Bacon, to prevent theories from being formulated on insufficient data 9f1,E98w_  
$2I^ ;5r[  
       C. was a notion Bacon strongly opposed V9  Z  
}ADdKK-  
       D. was a notion rejected on the grounds that it !ed to premature speculations Y<0}z>^  
h]W PWa)M  
 23. According to Bacon, knowledge can be obtained        CNP!v\D  
m/TjXA8_  
      A. by subjecting theories to rigorous logical analysis noI>Fw<V  
.Y`;{)  
      B. not through political or religious dogmasbut through reason xb8S)zO]Q  
&}}UdJ`  
      C. by observation alone N(ov.l;  
wN}@%D-[v  
      D. through the inductive method dZMf5=tb  
 ZDn5d%  
 24.Spontaneous generation of life        <yNu/B.M  
9feVy\u  
      A. was a known fact in Bacon's time 4gKu8G  
ZRCm'p3  
      B. is verified by maggots in putrid flesh V7~tIhuJH  
E]@$,)nC  
      C. is more apparent than real *.F^`]yz  
WlJ=X$  
      D. is a speculation which has no basis in observation OS - Xh-:z  
]:"<if gp$  
 Passage Two |J:|56kVZq  
&d,!^9  
 Though one may question the degree to which the Civil War represents a milestone in PAYS~MnV@3  
F x 4s)(  
(g HCu  
women's pursuit of social, economic, and political equality, Leonard's recent study has excelled that of her predecessor Ginzberg in debunking persistent myths about women's primary relation to the war as weeping widows, self-sacrificing wives, patriotic fianc6es, and loyal daughters. Leonard asks if the wartime work of northern women influenced popular perceptions of women's abilities, and if home front production were seen as contributing to the readiness of soldiers. Finding in the affirmative, she argues that home front activities generated respect for women's organizational talents and opened up new work opportunities for women, while participation reinforced their self-reliance and self-esteem. L|hoA9/]  
Q%T[&A}3B  
In contrast to her predecessors, who saw the war as transforming the ideology of benevolence, Leonard finds that worfien's war work drew heavily upon the antebellum ideology of women's nature and sphere. It was once believed that wartime benevolence heightened changes emerging in the 1850s by replacing the antebellum ideology of gender difference and female moral superiority with a new_  ideology  of gender similarity and a more masculine ethos of discipline and efficiency. Leonard asserts instead that white, middle-class, Yankee, charitable women appropriated the antebellum moral definition of womanhood and, in particular, woman's unique moral responsibility for maintaining community and her natural selflessness and caretaking abilities, to expand the boundaries of woman's proper place. With determination and  courage, women brought forth positive changes in popular characterizations of middle-class  womanhood that opened new doors for women in the professions and in public life. Py72:;wn  
#];b+ T  
A weak point of Leonard's theory is her assessment of the themes of postwar histories of  women's wartime service. Leonard views these works as extolling women's self-sacrifice and,I  ability to cooperate men while downplaying women's demands for status and pay and ignoring  the scope of women's administrative genius. But other theorists, most notably Ginzberg, have  argued that these same works may also be viewed as praising the efficiency of the new  centralized and national charitable organizations, women's wage-earning capacity, and their  subordination of feminine feeling andenthusiasm to business-like and war-like routinization and  order. Two sets of values……older notions of benevolence and new demands of public  service……were at war in the North, a war that can be plotted through tensions about paying  wages, centralizing corporate functions of benevolence, relating benevolence to government, and _A/q bm  
_/c1b>kcso  
 using funds for administrative……as opposed to strictly charitable……purposes. It may  well be that wartime masculinization of the ideology of benevolence pushed women further from  both the symbolic and the real centers of power for social change and hastened instead a  class-based alliance for social welfare. But we can agree with Leonard that the war forced men  to yield ground, sharing and sometimes even surrendering territory, power, and status in the   public realm. #lDW?  
cfZ$V^xM  
25.Which of the following is the most appropriate title for the passage? wJAJ /  
;udV"7C  
A. The Influence of Elizabeth Leonard on Historians of Feminism in the Civil War GZt L-   
, 'Sj:l  
B. Leonard's Explanation of How the Civil War Improved the Plight of Women =F<bAZ  
p!Xn iY  
C{<H)?]*BF  
C. Feminism in the Civil War: New Controversy About an Old Subject 3 BQZ[%0@  
|L<p90  
D. The Heritage of Benevolence: The Civil War's Contribution to Women's Charitable         Organizations "p@EY|Zv%I  
4 \Ig<C9  
26. According to the passage, Leonard asserts that women's activities during the Civil War had     all of the following positive effects EXCEPT J`[v u4  
e0:[,aF`  
A. They were praised as aiding the war cause. % B^BN|r  
DD fw& y  
B. They improved women's economic situation. ss0`9:z  
:B7dxE9[r  
C. They were considered proof of women's abilities to organize themselves. w!|jL $5L  
=1r!'<"h  
 D. They created new occupational opportunities for women. 8= "01  
Ly P Cc|  
27. It can be inferred,from the passage that Leonard would agree with which of the following     statements regarding the status of women during the Civil War? K41Gn  
ty\F~]Oo  
I. Antebellum values were expanded, not replaced, in order to develop new definitions of          womanhood. wx*03(|j;  
-{z<+(K!$  
Il. Historians have paid insufficient attention to demands for higher status women made        during the war. =/e$Rp  
U ATF}x   
 
camera 离线
级别: 论坛版主
显示用户信息 
沙发  发表于: 2012-02-15   
III. On the whole, the war was detrimental to the perception of women. \0n<6^y  
cD t|v~  
A. I only 4rLc] >  
M#k$[w}=  
B. II only lhX4 MB"  
jqlfypU  
C. I and II only VC zb[.  
3 MCV?"0  
D. I, II, and III hkOFPt&  
g:s|D hE[  
28.It can be inferred that Leonard would most likely consider which of the following   hypothetical cases of Civil War women the LEAST supportive of her thesis? \]0#jI/:  
+; ,X?E]g  
A. A widow who patriotically refused to remarry, even after her soldier husband was killed        in battle hU3sEOm>  
m.FN ttkM  
B. A woman who shifted from working as a seamstress to running an army uniform factory 9iV9q]($0  
A ^t _"J  
C. A woman who dressed as a Southern soldier in order to cross enemy lines as a spy E`Br#"/Bl  
:31?Z(fQ  
D. A woman who established a charity in order to collect money for prostheses for war         amputees D&x.io  
y@SI)&D  
29.Which of the following best describes the organization of the passage? i91k0q*di  
>)HKruSW.  
A. The author compares and contrasts the work of several historians and then discusses          areas for possible new research. T 0qM "  
\]g51U!'  
B. The author presentshis thesis, draws on the work of several historians for evidence to         support his thesis, and concludes by reiterating his thesis. O^q~dda  
%)Z,?DzZ  
C. The author describes some features of a historical study and then uses those features to          put forth his own argument. yMD3h$w3a  
4aKppj  
D. The author presents the general argument of a historical study, describes the study in          more detail, and concludes with a brief judgment of the study's value VUOe7c=  
`dWnu3r;  
30. With which of the following criticisms of Leonard's theory would the author of the passage 2Da0*xn{  
w}s5=>QG%  
!K+hXQE1  
be most likely to agree? ,J=lHj  
&- !$qUli  
A. It lays too much importance upon the antebellum ideology of women's nature and sphere. fQ1Dp  
pWn]$HaoG  
B. It fails to acknowledge that masculinization of war-time efforts may have been         detrimental to the feminist cause. S; u.Ds&  
T`,G57-5  
C. It tends to overemphasize the role of women in shifting their status over the course of the v2a(yH  
"Pu917_P  
war. \T!,Z;zK  
lANi$ :aE  
D. It bases its thesis too exclusively on white, Yankee, middle-class women, ignoring every ;$8ptB.  
]o8yZ x  
other social and racial class. }{kn/m/  
C,%Dp0  
NJmx(!Xsh  
|`pBI0Sjo  
Passage Three bSn={O"M  
rP,|  
  Our next task is to consider the policies and principles a ruler ought to follow in dealing with his subjects or with his friends. Since I know many people have written on this subject, I am concerned it may be thought presumptuous for me to write on I as well, especially since what I have to say, as regards this question in particular, will differ greatly from the recommendations of others. But my hope is to write a book that will be useful, at least to those who read it intelligently, and so I thought it sensible to go straight to a discussion of how things are in real life and not waste time with discussion of an imaginary world. For many authors have constructed imaginary republics and principalities that have never existed in practice and never could; for the gap between how people actually behave and how they ought to behave is so great that anyone who ignores everyday reality in order to live up to an ideal will soon discover he has been taught how to destroy himself, not how to preserve himself. For anyone who wants to act the part of a good man in all circumstances will bring about his own ruin, for those he has to deal with will not all be good. So it is necessary for a ruler, if he wants to hold on to power, to learn how not to be good, and to know when it is and when it is not necessary to use this knowledge. ,\i,2<hz.  
,7 m33Pv*  
Let us leave to one side, then, all discussion of imaginary rulers and talk about practical realities. I maintain that all men, when people talk about them, and especially rulers, because they hold positions of authority, are described in terms of qualities that are inextricably linked to censure or to praise. So one man is described as generous, another as a miser; one is called open-handed, another tight-fisted; one man is cruel, another gentle; one untrustworthy, another self-important; one promiscuous, another monogamous; one straightforward, another duplicitous; one tough, another easy-going; one serious, another cheerful; one religious, another atheistical; and so on. 6)W8HX~+  
I Wm@pfC+g  
Now I know everyone will agree that if a ruler could have all the good qualities I have listed and none of the bad ones, then this would be an excellent state of affairs. But one cannot have all the good qualities, nor always act in a praiseworthy fashion, for we do not live in an ideal world. You have to be canny enough to avoid being thought to have those evil qualities that would make it impossible for you to retain power; as for those that are compatible with holding on to power, you should avoid them ifyou can; but ifyou cannot, then you should not worry too :'xZF2  
4^k8| # c  
V|F/ynJfA  
much if people say you have them. Above all, do not be upset if you are supposed to have those vices a ruler needs if he is going to stay securely in power, for, if you think about it, you will realize there are some ways of behaving that are supposed to be virtuous, but would lead to your downfall, and others that are supposed to be wicked, but will lead to your welfare and peace of mind. T XT<6(  
u\ /TR#b  
31 .The word "presumptuous" in the first paragraph probably means _     _   $=#Lf[|f=  
9V~hz (^  
A. showing dishonesty      B. showing rebellion OoRg:"9{#  
J_j4Zb% K  
C. showing submission      D. showing disrespect LNrM`3%2-  
t-n'I/^5  
32. Ifa ruler follows other authors' suggestion, he might       __ v-^<,|vm2f  
?R4u>AHS@  
A. try his best to be a good egg all the time 2^75|Q  
Tr4\ `a-i  
B. understand the important of an authoritative statement tUW^dGo.  
MtgY `p  
C. try to gain great fame and high prestige fZS'e{V  
ew~uOG+  
D. know when to be kind and when to be cruel F&^&"(H}  
I2NMn5>  
33. In the book, the author's discussion most likely focuses on __     EZVgTySd  
t$p%UyVE  
A. presenting a real world to his readers 53.jx38xS  
O<mA+yk  
B. describing an ideal society to his readers nB[B FVkU  
%F$ ]v  
C. explaining how to construct a perfect system 3h%Nd &_9  
#Aj#C>  
D. illustrating what a wise ruler should do x%T^:R   
iAPGP -<6  
34. Ifa ruler wants to secure the power in his own hands, he needs _     _ 9x(t"VPuS  
5p-vSWr !  
A. wicked cruelty     B. immoral qualities q1 BpE8  
[Z;H= `  
C. cunning subjects    D. disreputable rivals Jvj* z6/a  
9KT85t1#  
35. A suitable title for the passage would be _    _ {}gL*2:EW$  
$RHw6*COG  
A. On Virtues             B. On Wisdom VG$%Vs  
lQ t,(@7]  
C. On Praise and Censure   D. On Power p_fsEY  
=+<DNW@%  
Passage Four M0)ZJti  
\[8uE,=|  
Finally the dirt road in Maine was leading home. The tire touched the first profanity of pavement, and subtly my vacation began slipping away.  j~cG#t]  
Ly1t'{"7  
By the first Finally the dirt road in Maine was leading home. The tire touched the first pro- fanity of pavement,  tollbooth my state of mind had shifted from neutral to first gear. By the time I had passed all my favorite landmarks, the sign to Biddeford, the bridge labeled Cat Mousam Road … I had slowly and reluctantly begun to relocate my sense of place, my sense of values. bHTTxZ-%  
i\4dd)p-  
I was going back, to lists and alarm clocks and stockings and school lunches and all the external pressures of the life known as civilization. I was going back to things I had to do.   5twG2p8  
f,3K;S-he:  
This time even the skies divided these two halves of my life. Along Route 95, a curtain of almost impenetrable rain separated one world from the other. The day before, this rain on the roof of the house would have been a comforting boundary to the day, a prediction of reading and 1pN8,[hyR7  
MQy,[y7I  
B7%m7GM  
fires. Now, the rain on the windshield of the car was a hassle, a challenge to overcome. YPw=iF]  
)o&}i3~Q  
I turned up the radio, so I could hear the final installment of Jane Eyre over the pelting rain, and thought about these different rhythms that mark my own life, mark of our lives. Left behind was a world in which I simply lived ...according to its patterns. Ahead of me was the world of agendas and problems that I was expected to encounter and resolve. ws,VO*4  
'X_%m~}N  
Was it country versus city? Leisure versus work? Nature versus human environment? Both and neither. Vacation is a state of mind as much as a state of union. I Vw'YtZ  
<c [X^8   
For two and half weeks in Main I watched the sky, the cove, the cormorants and a seagull with the gall to steal chicken off our barbecue. I am told that I became an accomplished mud watcher, sitting-on the porch, watching the bottom of the cove of low tide for hours. I prided myself on developing a hobby rarely listed in Who's Who. I became a fine stick-in-the-mud.      To me, an urban woman who lives much of her life according to other people's deadlines and demands, this was a chance to literally vacate the world of schedules and struggles. -9s&OKo`({  
nQfSQM g  
I did not, do not, use my vacation to climb mountains, shoot rapids or fulfill itineraries of some travel agent. I preferred to drift along ray inclination down through the circle of goals to the mud of acceptance. >k~3W> D  
SK ,UW6h  
I was content with the harmony we call doing nothing. There was a sense of letting go, being at ease with time rather than at odds with it. I wallowed in the under-standing that there was nothing that had to be done beyond watching the clothes dry and casting for mackerel. &iJvkt  
zWF[cf>'  
But I was also returning. Returning to the energy, the structure, the demands, the pressure. I  also chose engagement. o'YK\L!p  
8ROZ]Xh,x  
There are, I suppose, these two sides to all of us. The side that wallows like any riser  organism in the world, and the other side that seeks some purpose "above" that. The side that  feels most content in nature, and the other side that feels more energized "on top of the world." }. V!|R,  
QKt{XB6Y  
I am aware of this duality, the urge to watch the mud, the urge to build something out of it.   Our peculiar human creativity doesn't'  come from harmony but from wrestling with chaos as I well. Every poem and every building was wrested out of material by people who refused to  accept things as they were. &>}f\ch/  
Y1{*AV6ev6  
Too often we work by clocks instead of sunsets and become more attuned to air  conditioning than the condition of the air. But there is also in all this the challenge and energy  and pleasure of accomplishment. ] ; B`'Ia  
l<s6Uu"  
At one time, I thought these worlds were at odds, that we had to choose engagement or  disengagement, accepting or accomplishment, watching the mud or building with it. 9t&m\J >8;  
 ;W@  
But traveling this kind of road again and again, I realized that they are just two destinations,  points along a path of dirt and pavement. Now it is the tension that intrigues me. The search for a  balance between comfort and purposefulness, between accepting things and struggling with  them. &^B;1ZMHD  
=UZQ` {  
Driving home, I was reluctant to leave one for the other, reluctant to put on my city clothes x J\>;$CY  
D<bH RtP  
/nNrvMt v  
of purpose and structure. But I knew that I was lucky to be a commuter. Tpp?(lT7r  
.:SY: v r  
36. In the first few paragraphs the author {6;S= 9E\  
mX@!O[f%9e  
A. reflected on her vacation I@I-QiI  
5 r&n  
B. mentally switched vacation to city life JZoH -  
CVGQ<,KVW  
C. marveled at what city life could offer cdD?QnZ  
s-T#- raE  
D. reconciled country life with city life j55OG~)  
WC wM+D  
37.  Which of the following best describes the way the author spends her vacation? UiN6-{v<2  
- ] U2G:  
A. Hastily.   B. Creatively.     C. Restlessly.  D. Relaxedly. 4+B OS ~  
`SG8w_  
38.  All of the following signify the author's two different worlds EXCEPT Kq zQLu  
70T{tB  
A. the final installment of Jane Eyre and the pelting rain (para.5) G"F:68  
ITBa ^P  
B. feeling content in nature and feeling more energized "on top of the world" (para. 12) >VB*Xt\C&  
{3|h^h_R  
C. peculiar human creativity and wrestling with chaos (para. 13) h0zv @, u  
unAu8k^  
D. comfort and purposefulness (para. 16) >1NE6T  
"uG@gV  
39. We can infer from ihe passage that. `(lD]o{,s  
)~ghb"K  
A. the author often takes vacation B. the author's hometown is in Maine 5HW'nhE  
U6LENY+Ja  
C. the author hates skyscrapers   D. the author hates traveling on a rainy day "D7wtpJ  
i 5Dq'wp  
40. What does the author most probably mean when she says she was lucky to be a commuter? *QP+p,L*  
iJ!p9E*(  
A. She was able to choose engagement or disengagement. -=a,FDeR  
Xx e07J~  
B. She was able to move her home to Maine in the future. [^ eQGv[S  
raB', Vp  
C. She was able to strike a balance between natural life and human life. T<K/bzB3z  
N7mYE  
D. She was able to choose one life over the other. .[C@p`DZ  
p\ _&  
Part III Translation (30%) 8m 5T  
HAdDr!/`  
Section A  From Chinese into English (15%) J @^Ypq  
9 1ndr@*|  
Directions: Translate the following three underlined parts from Chinese into English and write your translation on the answer sheet. F8d:7`lO@/  
_tR?WmNH=  
1.上周四,世界观察研究学会一年一度的“地球健康体检”报告出炉。2005年,地 v&8s>~i`K  
pRGag~h|E  
球的森林砍伐量创历史新高,这是该报告强调的众多环境问题征兆之一。 U~q2j#pJ  
ZFNg+H/k  
该驻华盛顿智囊机构在一份题为“地球生命征兆2007-2008”的报告中指出,从肉类消费量的不断增长到亚洲经济发展等各种全球性态势与气候变化这一显著问题都有关系。 B2l5}"{ `  
o3( :R0  
“地球声明征兆2007-2008”项目的负责人说,“我认为气候变化是人类有史以来所面  临的最严峻的挑战”。 !YENJJ  
Df.eb|[{  
在报告公布前,阿萨多利安在接受记者的电话采访时说,2.“我们可以看到气候变化中出现的众多趋势,比如,粮食生产受到洪涝灾害的影响;以及肉类生产,据统计, s%i \z }/  
jAak,[~;  
v?(z4oOD/>  
家禽饲养过程中所产生的温室气体占温室气体总排放量的20%”。 +D d !  
C zb: nyRj  
阿萨多利安说,3.这份报告的主题是,二氧化碳排放及其它生态灾难引志气候变化,“不可持续”的消费模式才是气候变化的罪魁祸首, g<g$c<sm  
;C,t`(  
SectionB FromEnglishintoChinese(15%) tX~ *.W:  
C_S2a 0?  
Directions:Translatethe followingthree underlined pans from English into Chinese andwrite Q)2i{\GPVn  
k c /"  
yourtranslationllontheanswersheet.hasnoty:become,amainstreamactivityintheUK’the iCtS<"@Yx  
]]XXcQ,A  
enablesviewerstOwatchtheirfavouriteshowsOntheircomputers, d9q`IZqee  
O'h f8w  
1、Butsomecritics.includinRsomeinternetserviceproviders.havewarnedthatthe ;e0-FF+  
)>,ndKT~  
internetwillcollapseunderthestrainOfmillionsOfpeopledownloadingprogrammes W5Vh+'3  
Q%x-BZb~  
at the same time 6k`O  
qyzH*#d=Cf  
Overthenextfouryears,it is thou ght tthatthenumberOfvideoswatchedovertheintemet ?D;7ut$~  
m ;yIFO  
willquadruple,withpeoplemovingfromshortclipstOhour-longprogrammes. 6'Q*SO;1gh  
QXEz  
2.Broadbandcomoaniesclaimthattheservicewillcause”trafficiams",whichwill HT7I ~]W  
)zkr[;j~`  
costmillionsOfpoundstOsortout. X3'd~!a)  
Q7-'5s   
ButMrCerfdismissedthewarningsas”scaretactics",sayingthatcriticshad;redicted20 BvP++,a&Sa  
U#:N/ts*(  
yearsagothatthenetwouldcollapsewhenpeopleallaroundtheworldstartedtOuse¨en >dXB)yl  
80K"u [  
masse pgPm0+N  
pZKK7   
  3.”Intheintervenin~30yearsit'sincreasedamilliontimes...We'nfarfrom. 2=,d.1E3d  
Cz6bD$5  
  exhaustingthecapacity,”hesaid.”It'sanunderstandableworrywhentheyseehuffe /9o6R:B  
w|f@sB>j  
  amountsOfinformationbein~movedaroundonline.” 1BSn#Dnj  
0{/'[o7  
  PartⅡVEssayWr“ing(20%) `+i/rc1.  
Ld 0j!II(  
  DifectiOns:YouarerequiredtOwriteabout200wordsOnthefollowingtopic:“Greedinessis #'. '|z  
NR"C@3kD]o  
  therootOfallevil”. 1n[wk'}qf4  
'p)DJUwt  
ra8AUj~RX  
Fb ~h{  
描述
快速回复

批量上传需要先选择文件,再选择上传
验证问题:
3+5=? 正确答案:8
按"Ctrl+Enter"直接提交