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华中科技大学2010年考博英语试题
华中科技大学 40u7fojg2
2010年招收博士研究生入学考试试题 iUTU*El>
考试科目: 英语 H;QA@tF>5 _B3zRO 适合专业: 各专业 33 :@* "Kq>#I'%W Part I Cloze (0.5x20=10%) 4^[
/=J} o,1Dqg4P3 Directions: In this part you are asked to choose the best word for each blank inthe passage. Write your answers on the answer sheet. \%TyrY+`K n}JPYu Who won the World Cup 1994 football game? What happened at the .United Nations? How {rDq_^ P6.!3%y did the critics like the new play? 1 en event takes place, newspapers are on the street 2 -%,"iaO et` 0Je the details. 3 anything happens in the world, reporters are on the spot to gather the news. \x(^]/@ Bd&`Xfebj Newspapers have one basic 4 , to get the news as quickly as possible from its source, cI:-Z{M7z t"|DWC* from those who make it to those who want to 5 it. Zj!Abji=O cDIBDC Radio, telegraph, television, and 6 inventions brought competition for newspapers. So @^&7$#jq% YG`?o 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 Xb,T{.3@ Da_()e[9p 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. 2khh4?|\ S)7/0N79A 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? )R &,'`\ .Y\EE;8% Circulation depends 18 on the work of the circulation department and on the services 0` 5e '3Q3lM'lh >{nH v) or entertainment 19 in a newspaper's pages. But for the most part, circulation depends on a -[heV| $; UQPU"F7. newspaper's value to readers as a source of information 20 the community, city, county, state, nation and world……and even outer space. J'Sm0 |`0n"x7 1. A. Just when B. While C. Soon after D, Before o35fifM` ,b|-rU\ 2. A. to give B. giving C. given D. being given kO_5|6 U>Gg0`> 3. A. Wherever B. Whatever C. However D. Whichever !Zjq9{t\" 3CZS) 4. A. reason B. cause C. problem D. purpose
#fDs[ {HrZ4xQnpV 5. A. make B. publish C. know D. write iqPBsIW K{=PQ XSU 6. A. another B. other C. one another D. the other -LWK*q[J;* <]d
LX}C) 7. A. However B. And C. Therefore D. So +ts0^;QO2{ 0xMj=3'] 8. A. value B. ratio C. rate D. speed L:R<e#kgS ~ ?^/u8 9. A. spread B. passed C. printed D. completed $>q@SJ1q Nneo{j 10. A. provoke B. jump C. step D. branch /'wF2UR bF-"tm
11. A. matters B. affairs C. things D. events 0. ;}]v JL^2l$up 12. A. on B. through C. with D. of ]
d?x$> GbZ;#^S 13. A. forms B. existence C. contents D. purpose 8P: spD0 N4!<Xj 14. A. tries to cover B. manages to cover C. fails to cover D. succeeds in I 3$dVls} h<l1U'Bn7 15. A. source B. origin C.course D. finance )"<8K}%! 0L-!!
c3 16. A. way B. means C. chance D. success 01@t~v3!Z Jjm|9|C, 17. A. measures B. measured C. is measured D. was measured xge7r3i U5r}6D!) 18. A. somewhat B. little C. much D. something CA s>AXbs zJN7<sv 19. A. offering B. offered C. which offered D. to be offered 7jG(<!, (p)!Mq
"^ 20. A. by B. with C. at D. about aaW]JmRb ,<Kx{+ [h Part II Reading comprehension (20x2=40%) LlYTv%I zGo
|JF 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. Bi%x`4Lf Y3U9:VB
Passage One D-p.kA3MJ 7(a2L&k^ Early in the sixteenth century, Francis Bacon proposed that science consisted in the elevation 0y#Ih {L *f+: <=i of the authority of experiment and observation over that of reason, intuition, and convention. *C| ]+Ixi o Bacon thought that as more and more reliable and precise particular facts, accumulate, they can o*S"KX$ R{hf9R , be classified and generalized, resulting in an ever-expanding hierarchy of useful “ axioms”. This _=XX~^I, 3251Vq % is what he meant by" induction". tln37vq |UUdz_i!: Although many people today continue to regard the collection of facts and their arrangement fz_nsVD n~IVNB* by induction into theories as the heart of scientific method, Bacon's conception of what facts and rSXzBi{ es:2M |#O theories are and of the relationship between them was hopelessly unrealistic even in his own a*dQ
_ |AZW9 time. The most important early scientific discoveries …… such as those made by Galileo about & |