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北师大07考博英语真题

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智力服务于中国,提高企业与个人整体竞争力 第22 页 5=p<"*zJ  
北京师范大学2007 年博士生入学考试英语试题 B1E:P`t  
I. Listening Comprehension (15 points) `v<S  
Section A IuAu_`,Ndi  
Directions: There are five statements in this section. Each statement will be spoken T3"'` Sd9;  
only' once. When you hear a statement, read the four choices given and choose the 9xw"NcL  
one which is closest in meaning to the statement you have heard by marking the 0]MD ?6-  
corresponding letter A, B, C, or D on the ANSVER SHEET with a single line through ./0wt+  
the center. 8 *{jxN'M  
1. opN4@a7l  
A. He is in a drug store. S# baOO  
B. He is at a department store. U#iW1jPE2  
C. He is at home. p8YOow7)  
D. He is at his doctor's office. NRT]dYf"z  
2. `Je1$)%  
A. I missed in3' train because you stopped me. !?+0O]`}  
B. You made me forget what I was saving _!Tjb^  
C. You looked so deep in thought that I didn't want to bother you. 3K/ tB1  
D. You told me never to interrupt you. S'ms>ZENC  
3. di9OQ*6a7  
A Sally drove back and forth to work twice today vZ$E [EG}  
B. Sally took long time to do her work. UhkL=+PD  
C. Sally took her lunch with her to work. v+79#qWK|n  
D. Sally usually gets to work in much less time. ~@X3qja  
4. hm0A%Js  
A. If you audit a course, you don't have to take the tests. =Bm|9A1  
B. You have to take a test if you want to add another course. `jTB9A"  
C. Of course you need to buy some textbooks. 6d/v%-3  
D. It is not necessary to order a textbook. A<TYt M  
5. x FM^-`7  
A. The speaker's salary is $250. R)*l)bpZ#  
B. The speaker's salary is $1000. QUvSeNS p  
C. The speaker's salary is $1100. &N6[*7  
D. The speaker's salary is $ 275. XIZN9/;  
Section B 1-PlRQs.1  
Directions: In this section, you will hear five short conversations. At the end of #G`K<%{?f  
each conversation, a question will be asked about what was said. Both the conversation jrz.n 4Y`  
and the question will be spoken only once. After each question there will be a pause. *!*%~h8V  
During the pause, you must read the four choices marked A, B, C and D, and decide cjO %X  
7I&o  
智力服务于中国,提高企业与个人整体竞争力 第23 页 bqA`oRb\  
which is the best answer. Then mark the corresponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET with `#8kJt  
a single line through the center. `^'fS@VA  
6. " Y^ 9g/  
A. Clean up her room ]o0]i<:  
B. Get her report back. )rAJ>;  
C. Not wait for him past noon. !~R<Il|B  
D. Not worry about her raincoat. wF%RM$  
7. 5$Kj#9g-#  
A. It was probably Mr. Brown's phone number that the woman wrote down. N!wuBRWR  
B. it was just an hour ago that the man met Mr. Brown. /EP zT7  
C. The woman forgot to write down the phone number. 9% NobT  
D. The woman needed a sheet of paper to put down the number. *x]*%  
8. "M /Cl|z  
A. Someone who is in charge of hunting.  zy"k b  
B. A boss of a company. )1Y?S;  
C. A job-seeking advisor. !vpXXI4  
D. Someone who is in charge of looking for talents for a company. + WMXd.iN,  
9. |#< z\u }  
A. The woman is not careful at all this time. u7RlxA:  
B. No matter how careful one can be, it is not enough ZS( %!+M  
C. The woman is most careful this time. iDl#foXa`  
D. The woman has never been careful. /VufL+q1  
10. ry=8Oq&[~  
A. Ton: stayed in a room on the second floor for an hour. _ A# lyp  
B. Nobody but the woman noticed that Tom was absent. GK1nGdT]  
C. Tom was absent when the discussion was held. "~ rTVv6:L  
D. Tom stayed in Room 302 for an hour. E0fMFG^P  
Section C 6m(? (6+;K  
Directions: In this section, you will hear an interview. Look at the five statements a@|H6:|  
for this part on your test paper and decide if you think each statement is true or uYg Q?*Z  
false while you are listening to the interview. If you think the answer is true, mark /!?Tv8TPp  
A, if you think the answer is false, mark B on the e\NS\VER SHEET with a single line ]cS(2hP7  
through the center. 5Ww,vSCV)  
11. Xiang zhen has lived in the United States since she was ten years old. fmQif]J;;  
12. In Korea, the American gesture for "come" is used :o call dogs. -=gI_wLbM  
13. When talking to an older person or someone with a higher social position. >bQOpGy}l  
Koreans traditionally look at the person's feet. Jj=N+,km  
)uo".n|n~B  
智力服务于中国,提高企业与个人整体竞争力 第24 页 l1]{r2g  
14. Between males and females, direct eye contact is a sign of attraction, 4[]*=  
15. After many years in the United States. Xiangzhen's body language is still p!=8Pq.  
completely Korean. @ %L  
" ' Z]TQ+9t  
II. Reading Comprehension (30 points) %5KK#w "  
Directions: Read the following passages carefully end then select the best answer N}7b^0k  
from the four choices marked A, B, C, and D by marking the corresponding letter on 5WRqeSGh  
the Answer Sheet with a single line through the center. t g-(e=S4P  
1 vf<Dqy<M.  
Since the first brain scanner was constructed several years ago, computed u1u;aG  
tomography or computed medical imagery, has become fairly widely used. Its rapid .*oL@iX  
acceptance is due to the fact that it has overcome several of the drawbacks of g4Dck4^!4  
conventional X-ray technology. BxlhCu  
To begin with, conventional two-dimensional X-ray pictures cannot show all of piIz ff  
the information contained in a three-dimensional object. Things at different depths StTxga|  
aresuper imposed, causing confusion to the viewer. Computed tomography can give 4 Sk@ v  
three-dimensional information. The computer is able to reconstruct pictures of the 4f8XO"k7t=  
body's interior by measuring the varying intensities of X-ray beams passing through C Q iHk  
sections of the body from hundreds of different angles. Such pictures are based on lV 4TFt ,  
series of thin "'slices". E)jd>"  
In addition, conventional X-ray generally differentiates only between bone and dQ-g\]d|  
air, as in the chest and lungs. They cannot distinguish soft tissues or variations &Fuk+Cu{  
in tissues. The liver and pancreas are not discernible at all, and certain other organs g +gcH  
max only be rendered visible through the use of radio paque dye. Since computed }{ :}K<  
tomography is much more sensitive, the soft tissues of the kidneys or the liver can ]|w~{X!b4  
be seen and clearly differentiated. This technique can also accurately measure /@&o%I3h  
different degrees of X-ray absorption, facilitating the study of the nature of" b 1Wz  
tissue. Yqo@ g2g  
A third problem with conventional X-ray methods is their inability Io measure ,f,+)C$  
quantitatively the separate densities of the individual substances through which the <GQ=PrT|/  
X-ray has passed. Only the mean absorption of all the tissues is recorded. This is Xf7] +  
not a problem with computed tomography. It can accurately locate a tumor and mA, {E-T  
subsequently monitor the progress of radiation treatment, so that in addition to its ;WYz U`<g  
diagnostic capabilities, it can play a significant role in therapy. RX?!MDO  
16. Conventional X-rays mainly show the difference between z+wegF  
A. bone and air B. liver and pancreas A(`Mwh+  
C. muscle and other body tissues D. heart and lungs -:45Q{u/  
智力服务于中国,提高企业与个人整体竞争力 第25 页 :ntAU2)H  
17. What kind of view is made possible by contiguous cross sections of the body? 46\!W(O~y  
A. Two-dimensional. B. Three-dimensional. .Sa=VC?EZ  
C. Animated. D. Intensified. HEa7!h[a'  
18. It can be inferred form the passage that. compared to conventional X-ray 7!Im|7Ty  
techniques, computed tomography is more >z fx2wh\a  
A. compact B. rapid (0_zp`)  
C. economical D. informative FBouXu#  
19. what is the author's attitude toward this new technique? \{a5]G(4s  
A. Cautious. B. Tolerant. ".( G,TW  
C. Enthusiastic. D. Critical. IFa~`Gf[  
20. According to the passage, computed tomography can be used for all of the KZAF9   
following EXCEPT <)sL8G9Y  
A. monitoring a patient's disease B. diagnosing disorders r_tt~|s,>  
C. locating tumors D. reconstructing damaged tissues MMD=4;X  
Passage 2 6jm/y@|F!  
Because early man viewed illness as divine punishment and healing w r,+9uK  
as purification, medicine and religion were inextricably, linked for centuries. (./Iq#@S  
This notion is apparent in the origin of our word "pharmacy," which comes .i|nn[H &  
from the Greek pharmakon, meaning "purification through purging." D ZH2U+K  
By 3500 B.C., the Sumerians in the Tigris-Euphrates valley had Q:y'G9b  
developed virtually all of our modern methods of administering drugs. They H%Lln#  
used gargles inhalations, pills, lotions, ointments, and plasters. The first 8.IenU9  
drug catalog, or p harmacopoeia, was written at that time by an unknown 10m|?  
Sumerian physician. Preserved in cuneiform script on a single clay' tablet are ,TB$D]u8  
the names of dozens of drugs to treat ailments that still afflict us today. Au(oKs<  
The Egyptians added to the ancient medicine chest. The Ebers Papyrus. m$pRA0s2`  
a scroll d a t i n g f r o m 1 9 0 0 B . C . a n d n a m e d a f t e r t h e G e rman Egyptologist d:_;  
George Ebers. reveals the trial-and-error know-how acquired by early 4HGS  
Egyptian physicians. To relieve indigestion, a chew of peppermint leaves and H5UF r,t  
carbonates (known today. As antacids) was prescribed, and to numb the pain of a=9QwEZ  
tooth extraction, Egyptian doctors temporarily stupefied a patient with ethyl gMPp'^g]_  
alcohol. =WZ@{z9J  
The scroll also provides a rare glimpse into the hierarchy of ancient drug $ O[Y  
preparation. The "'chief of the preparers of drugs" was the equivalent of +~y>22 Zfg  
a head pharmacist, who supervised the "'collectors of drugs." field workers, Ra H1aS(  
who gathered essential minerals and herbs. The "'preparers" aides" (technicians) )24M?R@r  
智力服务于中国,提高企业与个人整体竞争力 第26 页 b8vZ^8tBV  
dried and pulverized ingredients, which were blended according to certain B/!/2x  
formulas by' the "'preparers." fWi/mK3c  
And the "conservator of drugs" oversaw the storehouse where local and SQx&4R.  
imported mineral, herb, and animal-organ ingredients were kept. tp&|*M3  
By the seventh century B.C.. the Greeks had adopted a sophisticated ~$"2,&  
mind-body view of medicine. They- believed that a physician must pursue the b&LAk-}[  
diagnosis and treatment of the physical causes of disease within a scientific g+<[1;[-  
framework, as well as cure the supernatural components involved. Thus, the {[L('MH2|  
early, Greek physician emphasized something of a holistic approach to health, /5j5\F:33  
even if the suspected "mental" causes of disease were not recognized as stress $p$p C/:%  
and depression but interpreted as curses from displeased deities. 8gt&*;'}*D  
The modern era of pharmacology began in the sixteenth century, ushered _u~0t`f~  
in by' the first major discoveries in chemistry. The understanding of how D&~%w!  
chemicals interact to produce certain effects within the body would HSAr6h  
eventually remove much of the guesswork and magic from medicine. g0B %3v  
Drugs had been launched on a scientific course, but centuries "would pass -%^'x&e  
before superstition was displaced by' scientific fact. One major reason was that X|ZAC!J5>  
physicians. unaware of the existence of disease-causing pathogens ..such as ;/JXn  
bacteria and viruses, continued to dream up imaginary causative evils .And' n5^57[(  
though new chemical compounds emerged, their effectiveness in treating b`^Q ':^A  
disease was still based largely on trial and error. 9 Qa_3+.B  
Many standard, common drugs in the medicine chest developed in this A=p'`]Yld  
trial-and-error environment. Such is the complexity of disease and human W-/V5=?   
biochemistry that even today, despite enormous strides in medical science, many of ]yZ%wU9!  
the latest sophisticate additions to our medicine chest shelves were accidental lmD [Cn  
finds. woBx609Aak  
21. The author cites the literal definition of the Greek word pharmakon in the first N0vECk  
paragraph in orderto Q[K)Yd  
A. show that ancient civilization had an advanced form of medical science Q>rr?L`  
B. point out that man}' of the beliefs of ancient civilizations are still held today  Y#~A":A  
C. illustrate that early man thought recovery from illness was linked to internal (K84J*;  
cleansing : T7(sf*!*  
D. emphasize the primitive nature of Greek medical science Qx8(w"k*  
22. According to the passage, the seventh-century Greeks' view of medicine differed h,]VWG   
from that of the Sumerians in that the Greeks kw]?/s`  
A. discovered more advanced chemical applications of drugs N fG9a~  
B. acknowledged both the mental and physical roots of illness TB+k[UxB  
智力服务于中国,提高企业与个人整体竞争力 第27 页 g=@d!]Z~[  
C. established a rigid hierarchy for the preparation of drugs zp<B,Ls  
D. attributed disease to psychological, rather than physical, causes NX.5 u8Pf  
23. In Paragraph 5, the word "holistic'" most nearly' means "*F`,I3  
A. integrated B. religious 5Pn.c!  
C. modern D. physiological Y|Gp\  
24. The passage indicates that advances in medical science during the modern era of PoPR34] ^J  
pharmacology may have been delayed by, 0gaHYqkA>}  
A. a lack of understanding of he origins of disease )OxcCV?5Z  
B. a shortage of chemical treatments for disease dpylJ2  
C. an inaccuracy in pharmaceutical preparation Dd pcov  
D. an overemphasis on the psychological causes of disease L~Peerby  
25. In the final paragraph, the author makes which of the following observations about JcmJq fR  
scientific discovery? 09jE7g @X}  
A. Human biochemistry is such a complex science that important discoveries are M\{\WyeX  
uncommon. -bHlFNRm  
B. Many cures for common diseases have yet to be discovered. [X!w@d= i  
C. Trial and error is the best avenue to scientific discovery. }^&f {   
D. Chance events have led to the discovery of many modem drugs. 111A e *U  
Passage 3 AguE)I&m  
When imaginative men turn their eyes towards space and wonder whether life exists rVoV@,P  
in any' part of it, they may cheer themselves by remembering that life need not lMvOYv  
resemble closely the life that exists on Earth. Mars looks like tile only planet where |. 0~'  
life like ours could exist, and even this is doubtful. But there may be miler kinds ~U"m"zpLP  
of life based on other kinds of chemistry and they may multiply on Venus us or Jupiter. b(;u2 8  
At leas we cannot prove at present that they do not. 4Zwbu  
Even more interesting is the possibility that life on their planets may be in *?HGi>]\ |  
a more advanced stage of ev0Iution. Present-day man is in a peculiar and probably fPUr O  
temporary stage. His individual units retain a strong sense of personality. They are, \?T9 v  
in fact, still capable under favorable circumstances of leading individual lives. qfE0J;e   
But man's societies are already sufficiently.' developed to have enormously more [B) !  
power and effectiveness than the individuals have. /u4RZ|&as  
It is no1 likely that this transitional situation wit! continue very tong or the ?1JY6v]h4  
evolutionary time scale. Fifty thousand ,years from now man's societies may have :1j8!R5  
become so close-knit that the individuals retain no sense of separate personality. :!oJmvy  
Then little distinction will remain between the organic parts of the multiple organism n*wQgC'vw  
and the inorganic parts (machines) that have been constructed by it. A million years kP&I}RY  
智力服务于中国,提高企业与个人整体竞争力 第28 页 @`4T6eL5  
further on man and his machines may' have merged as closely as the muscles of the Y_:jc{?  
human body and the nerve cells that set them in motion. rtJER?A  
The explorers~ of space should be prepared for some such situation. If they. Nbd4>M<  
Arrive on a foreign planet that has reached an advanced stage (and this is by' no nZ(]WPIN"  
means impossible), they' may find it being inhabited by a single large organism fOH bgnL>  
composed of many closely cooperating units. 0@-4.IHl  
The units may be "'secondary,'" machines created millions of years ago by a Intuda7e1  
previous form of life and given the will and ability' to survive and reproduce. They -!1=S: S  
may be built entirely of metals and other durable materials, if this is the case, D:U6r^c  
they may be much more tolerant of their environment multiplying under conditions that H@ 1'El\9  
would destroy immediately any organism made of carbon compound and dependent on the x:MwM?  
familiar carbon cycle. I0 ~'z f  
Such creatures might be relics of a past age, many millions of years ago, when //2O#Fg{/  
their planet was favorable to the origin of life or they might be immigrants from ; um)JCXz  
a favored planet FAdTm#tgW]  
26 What does the word "cheer" (Para. 1, Line 2) imply? &S{r;N5u  
A. Imaginative men are sure of success in finding life on other planets. *gwlW/%Fz  
B. Imaginative men are delighted to find life on other planets. 8j#S+=l>  
C. Imaginative men are happy to find a different kind of life existing on other &Uam4'B6-  
planets. #kM|!U=  
D. imaginative mea can be pleased with the idea that there might exist different forms kJ5z['4?  
of life on other planets. E,Rj;?  
27. Humans on Earth are characterized by M/p9 I gp  
A their existence as free and separate beings prj(  
B. their capability of living under favorable conditions uMw6b=/U  
C. their great power and effectiveness [WR"#y  
D. their strong desire for living in a close-knit society ]M*`Y[5"  
28. According to this passage, some people believe that eventually __ ?4R%z([X7  
A. human societies will be much more cooperative -n 9&W  
B. man will live in a highly organized world \.mVLLtG  
C. machines will take control over man v@%4i~N  
D. living beings will disappear from Earth uM`i!7}  
29. Even most imaginative people have to admit that __ wH o}wp  
A. human societies are as advanced as those on some other planets JW[6 ^Rw  
B. planets other than Earth are not suitable for life like ours to stay, |iH MAo  
C. it is difficult to distinguish between organic parts and inorganic parts of the AaYH(2m-  
human body Q[#}Oh6 $  
智力服务于中国,提高企业与个人整体竞争力 第29 页 >*{k~Y-G  
D. organisms are more creative than machines x9 Z89Gwi  
30. It seems that the writer {nwoJ'-V  
A. is interested in the imaginary life forms jV}8VK*`+  
B. is eager to find a different form of life $$m0mK  
C. is certain of the existence of a new life form [o<hQ`&  
D. is critical of the imaginative people yIK pyyC9H  
Passage 4 CKn2ZL  
Education is one of the key, words of our time. A man without an education, many FB?~:7+'  
of us believe, is at: unfortunate victim of unfortunate circumstances deprived of ! eZls  
one of the greatest twentieth-century opportunities. Convinced of the importance of $~6MR_ Yq  
education, modern states ‘invest', in institutions of learning to get back LXo$\~M8G8  
"interest" in the form of a large group of enlightened young men and women who are [bHm-X]  
potential leaders. Education. with its cycles of instruction so care fully worked @\&j3A  
out, punctuated by text-books--those purchasable wells of wisdom--what would ikc1,o  
civilization be like without its benefits? ka CN^yQ  
So much is certain: that we would have doctors and preachers, lawyers and jl P*RX  
defendants, marriages and birth; but our spiritual outlook would be different. We _+B y=B.'  
would lay less stress on "facts and figures" and more on a good memory, on applied h]s6)tI I  
psychology,, and on the capacity of a man to get along with his fellow-citizens. If ] x)>q  
our educational system were fashioned after its bookless past we would have the most {KHI(*r;  
democratic form of "college" imaginable. Among the people whom we like to call savages /iO"4%v  
all knowledge inherited by tradition is shared by all; it is taught to every member IVh5SS  
of the tribe sc that in this respect everybody is equally, equipped for life. UH>~Y N  
It is the ideal condition of the "equal start" which only our most progressive et+lL"&  
Forms of modern education try, to regain. In primitive cultures the obligation to `'s_5Ek  
seek and to receive the traditional instruction is binding to all. There are no F&6#j  
"illiterates"—if the term can be, applied to peoples without a script while our v<v;ZR)  
own compulsory school attendance became law in necessary in 1642, in France in h7+"*fN  
1806, and in England in, 1976, and is still non-existent in a number of "civilized" .rk5u4yK  
nations. This shows how long it was before we deemed it necessary to make sure thin &5-1Cd E  
all on knowledge accumulated by the "happy few" during the past centuries. Hy3J2p9.  
Education in the wilderness is not a matter of monetary means. All are entitled 7N 0Bj!  
to an equal start. There is none of the hurry which, in our society, often hampers fsjLD|?|:  
the full development of a growing personality. There, a child grows up under the q#3T L<  
ever-present attention of his parents; therefore the jungles and the savages know @LI;q  
of no "juvenile delinquency". No necessity of making a living away from home results Q(f0S  
in neglect of children, and no father is confronted with his inability to "buy" an /}@F q  
education for his child. 2B$dT=G  
智力服务于中国,提高企业与个人整体竞争力 第30 页 T@ESMPeU:X  
31. The best title for this passage is __ "^z%|uXkf  
A. The Significance of Education  s;bGg  
B. Educational Investment and Its Returns /)TeG]Xg  
C. Education: A Comparison of Its Past and Its Present <2]h$53y!  
D. Education in the Wilderness c{Z "'t7  
32. The word "interest" in paragraph one means __ }T.>p#z  
A. capital profit got back from the investment a&G{3#l  
B. the things young people are interested in S=P}Jpq?Y;  
C. the well-educated and successful young men and women sP^:*B0  
D. the well-educated young people with leadership potential kKF=%J?X  
33. The author seems s7yKx g+`{  
A. against the education in the very early historic times fwt+$`n  
B. positive about our present educational instruction ]7<$1ta  
C. in favor of the educational practice in primitive cultures qGag{E5!  
D. quite happy to see an equal start for everyone F MCA~N  
34. The passage implies that __ gtH^'vFZ  
A. some families now can hardly afford to send their children to school WY|~E%k  
B. everyone today' has an equal opportunity in education mIf)=RW  
C. every, country invests heavily in education m>Wt'Cc  
D. we are not very certain whether preachers are necessary or not 7|=SZ+g  
35. According to the passage, which of the following statement is true? P\ P=1NM  
A. One without education today has no opportunities. z}J~X%}e  
B. We have not yet decided on our education models. XC6|<pru  
C. Compulsory schooling is legal obligation in several countries now. 1 sza\pR<  
D. Our spiritual outlook is better now than before. $o+@}B0)  
Passage 5 )xc1Lsrr9  
Many, zoos in the United States have undergone radical changes in the R{brf6,  
philosophy and design. All possible care is taken to reduce the stress of living in Z]LP18m9kl  
captivity. Cages and grounds are landscaped to make gorillas feel immersed in v89tV9O)  
vegetation, as they would be in a Congo jungle. Zebras gaze across vistas arranged sifj mNP  
to appear (to zoos visitors, at least) nearly as broad as an African plain. (~\HizSl  
Yet, strolling past animals in zoo after zoo. I have noticed the signs xM)P=y_!M+  
of hobbled energy that has found no release--large cats pacing in a repetitive 85"Szc-#  
pattern, primates rocking for hours in one corner of a cage. These truncated -"yma_  
movements are known as cage stereotypes, and usually these movements bring eY Rd#w  
about no obvious physical or emotional effects in the captive animal. Many animal vKoQ!7g  
specialists believe they, are more xPF.c,6b4=  
智力服务于中国,提高企业与个人整体竞争力 第31 页  1^hG}#6_  
troubling to the people who watch than to the animals themselves. Such rr1,Ijh{D  
restlessness is an unpleasant reminder that--despite the careful interior 7zQGuGo(  
decoration and clever optical illusions--zoo animals are prisoners, being kept in Tw/7P~*  
elaborate cells. #?M[Q:  
The rationale for breeding endangered animals in zoos is nevertheless hHEn  
compelling. Once a species falls below a certain number, it is beset by )@ B !  
inbreeding and other processes that nudge it closer and closer to extinction. @B+8' b$9  
If the animal also faces the whole-scale 1(aib^!B  
destruction of its habitat, its one hope for survival lies in being ak}k e  
transplanted to some haven of safely, usually a cage. In serving as trusts for rare !Y^B{bh  
fauna. zoos have committed millions of dollars to caring for animals. Many *Q [%r  
zoo managers have given great consideration to the psychological health of the IH=%%AS  
animals in their care. Yet the more I learned about animals bred in enclosures, a#Z#-y!  
the more I wondered how their sensibilities differed from those of animals raised xjDaA U,  
to roam free. B&3@b  
In the wild, animals exist in a world of which we have little understanding. tPJU,e)  
They may communicate with their kind through "language" that are 0r DQJCm  
indecipherable by h u m a n s . A f e w s t u d i e s s u g g e s t t h a t s o m e s p ec i es p erceive yaC_r-%U&  
l a n d s c a p e s m u c h differently than people do; for example, they max: be keenly XX1Iw {o9:  
attuned to movement on the faces of mountains or across the broad span of grassy \ o?  
plains. Also, their social ]x_14$rk  
structures may be complex and integral to their well-being. %me scientists Qmv8T ^+  
believe they may even develop cultural traditions that are key to the survival of d$D3iv^hyx  
populations. DQ6pe)E|  
But when an animal is confined, it lives within a vacuum. If it is (aq^\#9btO  
accustomed to covering long distances in its searches for food, it grows lazy or / vzwokH  
bored. It can make no decisions for itself; its intelligence and wild skills t-hN4WKH_A  
atrophy from lack of use. becomes, in a sense, one of society's charges, Y,%G5X@S<  
completely dependent on humans for' nourishment and care. V,3$>4x  
How might an animal species be changed--subtly, imperceptibly--by m,]h7xx  
spending several generations in a per:? I posed that question to the curator of W-"FRTI4  
birds at the San Diego Wild Animal Park, which is a breeding center for the ;fY)7 '  
endangered California condor. "I always have to chuckle when someone asks me t7 $2/C  
that," the curator replied. x6~`{N1N M  
"Evolution has shaped the behavior of the condor for hundreds of years. If you }15ooe%  
think I can change it in a couple of generations, you're giving me a lot of credit." #kEa&Se  
Recently the condor was reintroduced into the California desert---only a /aMeKM[L`  
moment after its capture, in evolutionary terms. Perhaps the curator was right; ]?2&d[  
perhaps the wild nature of the birds would emerge unscathed, although I was not CbRl/ 68HY  
convinced. But what of species that will spend decades or centuries in gcs8Gl2  
confinement before they are released? !*|`-w oE  
36. The primary purpose of the passage is to sJ/?R:  
智力服务于中国,提高企业与个人整体竞争力 第32 页 R<-(  
A. highlight the improvements in the conditions of American zoos -Z%B9ql'  
B. examine behavioral traits of animals living in zoos !xh.S#B  
C. raise concerns about the confinement of wild animals in zoos t[cZ|+^]  
D. suggest alternative ways of protecting endangered species A ptzBs/  
37. The primary function of the second paragraph is to show that T#sKld  
A. wild animals adapt to their cages by modifying their movements G8oOFBQD  
B. confined animals are not being seriously harmed U.QjB0;  
C. zoos are designed with the reactions of spectators in mind t@EHhiBz  
D. people are overly sensitive to seeing animals in captivity cO !2|v8i  
38. In the fourth paragraph, the author's most important point is that animals in 6<<ihm+  
the wild u=h/l!lR  
A. perceive landscapes differently than do animals in captivity %t^-Guz  
B. have modes of communicating that are very similar to those of humans GoNX\^A  
C. are likely to live longer than animals kept in zoos miZ&9m  
D. depend on the care and support of others of their species 9n"D/NZB  
39. Which of the following best describes the relationship between the fourth \{[Gdj`  
paragraph and the fifth paragraph? @(:M?AO9S.  
A. The fourth paragraph presents a question that is answered in the fir'& paragraph. />z E$)'M  
B. The fourth paragraph contains an assertion that is evaluated in the fifth [,TuNd  
paragraph. cmv&!Egd  
C. The fifth paragraph describes a contrast to the situation presented in the fourth EsU-Ckb_2:  
paragraph. =FXZcP>h  
D. The fifth paragraph discusses the second part of the process described in the fourth OXuBtW*,z+  
paragraph. &i,xod6$  
40. In paragraph 5.’charges" most nearly means __ wBUn*L  
A. costs B. responsibilities C. demands D. attacks @exeHcW61  
Passage 6 X rVF %  
The importance and focus of the interview in the work of ~he print and broadcast J]A!>|Ic  
journalist is reflected in several books that have been written on the topic. Most ~4\J }Kn  
of these books, as well as several chapters, mainly in, but not limited to. journalist Oozt&* F  
and broadcasting handbooks and reporting texts, stress the "how to" aspects or p#UrZKR  
journalistic interviewing rather than the conceptual aspects of the interview, its l#_(suo64  
context, and implications. Much of the "how to" material is based on personal ZzNp#FrX"  
experiences and general Y9)uy 8c  
智力服务于中国,提高企业与个人整体竞争力 第33 页 lU0'5!3R,  
impressions. As we know, in journalism as in other fields, much can be. learned from Ccld;c&+  
the systematic study of professional practice. Such study brings together evidence .|Pq!uLvc  
from which broad generalized principles can be developed. p^~ AbU'6~  
There is, as has been suggested, a growling body of research literature in I5l5fx  
journalism and broadcasting, but very little significant attention has been devoted |^^'GZ%a  
to the study of the interview itself. On the other hand, many general texts as well HrH-e= j  
as numerous research articles on interviewing in fields other than journalism have ?CgqHmf\\(  
been written. Many of these books and articles present, the theoretical and empirical I'Dc9&2  
aspects of the interview as well as the training of the interviewers. Unhappily, this r%*,pN7O  
plentiful general literature about interviewing pays little attention to the owDp?Sy}E  
journalistic interview, The fact that the general literature on interviewing does 0drt,k  
not deal with the journalistic interview seems to be surprising for two reasons. First, ]o18oY(  
it seems likely that most people in modern Western societies are more familiar, at slC 38  
least in a positive manner, with journalistic interviewing than with any other form n.&z^&$w\)  
of interviewing. Most of us are probably somewhat familiar with the clinical interview, b*w@kLLN  
such as that conducted by physicians and psychologists. In these situations the [ZC{eg+D  
professional person or interviewer is interested in getting information necessary !2-f%x]tO  
for the diagnosis and ,@mr})s  
treatment of the person seeking help. Another familiar situation is the job interview. &M p??{ g  
However, very few of us have actually been interviewed personally by the mass media, f;AQw_{  
particularly by television. And yet, we have a vivid acquaintance with the J?]wA1  
journalistic interview by virtue of our roles as readers, listeners, and viewers. ^O#>LbM"x  
Even so, !6Sr*a*5  
true understanding of the journalistic interview, especially television interviews. )k)HQcfjD  
requires thoughtful analyses and even study, as this book indicates. cEI "  
41. The main idea of the first paragraph is that __ 6 V{Sf9V|  
A. generalized principles for journalistic interviews are the chief concern for !&'GWQY{(  
writers on journalism RLy(Wz3%  
B. concepts and contextual implications are of secondary importance to .journalistic k!?sHUAj  
interviewing  ;gS)o#v0  
C. importance should be attached to the systematic study of journalistic interviewing `fTH"l1zn  
D. personal experiences and general impressions should be excluded from -|K^!G  
journalistic interviews * 0vq+C  
42. Much research has been done on interviews in general X:N`x  
A. but journalistic interviewing as a specific field has unfortunately been neglected k }amSsE  
B. though the study of the interviewing techniques hasn't received much attention 4eF qD;  
C. so the training of journalistic interviewers has likewise been strengthened I+08tX O  
D. and there has also been a dramatic growth in the study of journalistic interviewing Q]/ZVcoqo  
智力服务于中国,提高企业与个人整体竞争力 第34 页 p **Sd[|  
43. Westerners are familiar with the journalistic interview. __ %y96]e1  
A. but most of them wish to stay away from it v2w|?26Lf  
B. and many of them hope to be interviewed some day' 4S%s=v w  
C. but most of them may not have been interviewed in person Q y4eDv5  
D. and many of them would like to acquire a true understanding of it azhilUD8  
44.Who is the interviewee in a clinic interview? ]|m?pt  
A. The psychologist. B. The physician. M `O=rH }  
C. The journalist. D. The patient. v2Ft=_*G|  
45. The passage is most likely a part of 7)RDu,fx  
A. a news article B. a preface 53X i)  
C. a research report D. a journalistic interview 1tZ7%0R\g]  
III. Translation and Writing (55 points) XE#a#  
Section A Translation (40%) Translate the following into Chinese: uSsP'qd  
1) Information processing is the acquisition, recording, organization, retrieval 4h*c{do  
( 检索 ), display, and dissemination of information. In recent years, the term has wZUZ"Y}9  
often been applied to computer-based operations specifically,. During the past few XWq`MwC9  
centuries great advances have been made in the human capability to record, store, &0*7]Wo*  
and reproduce information, beginning with the invention of printing from movable type ] /"!J6(e  
in 1450,  l;;,[xhq  
followed by the development of photography and telephony, and culminating in the */_$' /q V  
mass production of electronic digital computers in the latter half of the 20th century. awU! 3)B  
New technologies for preserving and transmitting aural and visual information have 7_9^nDU  
further enhanced information processing. q _INGCJ  
2) The entry of the Anglo-Saxon peoples into Britain, and their centuries-long Vg^yjP{sv  
successful struggle to establish Germanic kingdoms there, is among the most famous ventures of %zKTrsMZ  
the Age of Migrations, but like other historical events of the time it is obscure in much of its detail: &q7}HO/ @  
the identity and place of origin of the peoples taking part, the needs and desires that moved them to ]."t  
entry" and conquest, the lines of invasion, the duration of native resistance, the historicity of the H2S/!Q;K  
British Arthur (亚瑟王~ ) . ]>/oo=E  
Translate the following into English: ~v@.YJoZ4Z  
智力服务于中国,提高企业与个人整体竞争力 第35 页 csFLBP  
英语现在是60多个国家使用的官方或半官方语言。他是书包出版、科学技术,广告和通俗音 'u#c_m! 9  
乐、计算机信息存储所使用的主要国际语言。今天有4亿多以英语为母语,另外大约有4亿人 dDbH+kqO  
使用英语作为第二语言,至少还有五亿人把英语作为外语使用。 Section B Writing :bq$ {  
(15%) M?00n< vM  
Read the following passage carefully and then write a summary of it in English in hg7_ZjO  
about 150 words. 782 oXyD  
Meaning and Characteristics of the Italian Renaissance [Mk:Zz%  
The word Renaissance means "rebirth." A number of people who lived in Italy between 1350 ok1w4#%,  
and 1550 believed that they had witnessed a rebirth of antiquity or Greco-Roman civilization, vX?C9Fr2  
marking a new age. To them, the thousand or so years between the end of the Roman Empire and #z61 I"kU  
their own era was a middle period (hence the "Middle Ages"), characterized by darkness because of @rv)J[7Y&  
its lack of classical culture Historians of the nineteenth century later used similar terminology to pK"iTc#\X  
describe this period in Italy. The Swiss historian and art critic Jacob Burckhardt created the k5|GN Y6a  
modern concept of the Renaissance in his celebrated Civilization, o.fi/Te Renaissance in }t@,.  6o 1[fr  
published in 1860. He portrayed Italy in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries as the birthplace of zWrynJ}s  
the modern world (the Italians were "the firstborn among the sons of modern Europe") and saw the V$_.&S?(Y  
revival of antiquity, "the perfecting of the individual," and secularism as its distinguishing features. k]9y+WC2  
Burckhardt exaggerated the individuality and secularism of the Renaissance and failed to recognize Y 8-;eqH  
the depths of its religious sentiment; nevertheless, he established the framework for all modern ,*sKr)9)  
interpretations of the Renaissance. Although contemporary scholars do not believe that the ' ,1[rWyc  
Renaissance represents a sudden or dramatic cultural break with the Middle Ages, as Burckhardt OD~yIV  
argued--there was. after all, much continuity' in economic, political, and social life between the two kZ0z]Y  
periods--the Renaissance can still be viewed as a distinct period of European history that manifested sD9OV6^{?K  
itself first in Italy and then spread to the rest of Europe. dt Br#Te  
Renaissance Italy was largely an urban society. As a result of its commercial preeminence and zCS&w ~  
political evolution, northern Italy by the mid-fourteenth century was mostly a land of independent `NQ;|!  
cities that dominated the country districts around them. These city-states became the centers of  O[$XgPM  
Italian political, economic, and social life. Within this new urban society, a secular spirit emerged /vPr^Wv  
as increasing wealth created new possibilities for the enjoyment of worldly things. s w50lId  
Above all, the Renaissance ,a as an age of recovery from the "'calamitous fourteenth century.'" tlYB'8bJY  
Italy and Europe began a slow process of recuperation from the effects of the Black Death, political bduHYs+rq  
disorder, and economic recession. This recovery was accompanied by a rebirth of the culture of ky'G/ z  
智力服务于中国,提高企业与个人整体竞争力 第36 页 (/S6b  
classical antiquity. Increasingly aware of their own historical past, Italian intellectuals became vcZ"4%w  
intensely interested in the 4m%Yck{R  
Greco-Roman culture of the ancient Mediterranean world. This new revival of classical antiquity F5+!Gb En  
(the Middle Ages had in fact preserved much of ancient Latin culture) affected activities as diverse Knp}88DR^j  
as politics and art and led to new attempts to reconcile the pagan philosophy of the Greco-Roman J&L#^f*d  
world with Christian thought, as well as new ways of viewing human beings. ) >N=B2P  
A revived emphasis on individual ability became characteristic of the Italian Renaissance. As t1p[! 53(  
the fifteenth-century Florentine architect Leon Battista Alberti expressed it: "Man can do all 9Qq%Fw_  
things if they will." A high regard for human dignity and worth and a realization of individual aNgJm~K0P  
potentiality created a new social ideal of the well-rounded personality or universal person who was V$ho9gQ!l[  
capable of achievements in Gw#z:gX2  
many areas of life. L> rW S-  
These general features of the Italian Renaissance were not characteristic of all Italians but ]{AHKyA{:  
were primarily the preserve of the wealthy upper classes, who constituted a small percentage of the {DX1/49  
total population. The achievements of the Italian Renaissance were the product of an elite, rather <U}25AR  
than a mass, movement. Nevertheless, indirectly it did have some impact on ordinary people, +WvW#wpH  
especially in the cities, where so many of the intellectual and artistic accomplishments of the period 7U - ?Rd  
were most visible_
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沙发  发表于: 2009-02-27   
不全啊 望楼主继续发布
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板凳  发表于: 2009-02-27   
我也是刚刚才从网上找到的,没办法了,O(∩_∩)O~
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