中国人民大学——英语2004年博士研究生入学考试试题 %oQj^r!Xd
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II. Vocabulary (10 points) Dbd5d]]n3
PartA (5 points) G3n7x?4m
Directions: Beneath each of the following sentences, there are four choices
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marked iL B, C arm 1). Choose the:one thatbest completes the s:{%1
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sentence and mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across U^I'X7`r
the square bracket on ANSWER SHEET 1. Fh;(1X75I
Example: ,y @3'~
She prefers foreign wine to that produced__
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A. previously B. vLrtually C. primarily D. domestically L|Iq#QX|
The sentence should read,; "She prefers foreign wine to that produce =lnz5H
domesticany." Therefore, you should choose D. ^W*/!q7H
Sample Answer *!kg@ _0K
[A] [B] [C] [D] ycN_<
1. International sport should create goodwill between the nations, but in the i)ctrdP-
present organization of the Olympics somehow encourages__ "-oC,;yq
patriotism. .[!
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A. obsolete B. aggressive C. harmonious D. amiable #</yX5!V
Z One call understand others much better by noting the immediate and y{<7OTA)
fleeting reactions of their eyes and __ to expressed thoughts. 9"e!0Q4 0
A. dilemmas B. countenances C. concessions D. junctions zc#`qa:0
3. People innately _____ for superiority over their peers although it
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sometimes takes the form of an exaggerated lust for power. qA42f83
A. strive B. ascertain C. justify D. adhere s.U p<Rw
4. Some scientists have suggested that Earth is a kind of, zoo or wildlife -JK+{<
for intelligent space beings, like the wilderness areas we have set ]cD!~nJ
up on earth to allow animals to develop naturally while we observe them. *!/9?M{p
A. conservation B. maintenance C. storage D. reserve G[mYx[BTz
5. According to the latest report, consumer confidence___ a breathtaking ME.LS2'n
15 points .last month, to its lowest level in 9 years. ?w+T_EH
A. soared B. mutated C. plummeted D. fluctuated Fpb1.Iz
6. Melissa is a computer___ that destroyed files in computers and U"Y$7~
frustrated thousands of users around the world. {!w]t?h
A. genius B. vires C. disease D. bacteria &1&*(oi]X
7. The emphasis:on examinations is iby far the. worst form of AG?oA328
competition in schools. @'QB rE
A. negligent B. edible C. fabulous D. disproportionate o7 kGZ
8. The boy seemed more _____ to their poverty, after seeing how his rr*IIG&.5
grandparents lived. \,WPFV
A. reconciled B. consolidated ??F{Gli"C`
C. deteriorated D. attributed y~\z_') <>
9. During his two-month stay, in China, Tom never____ a chance to ?^hC|IR$
practice his Chinese. tP\Utl-0
A. passed on B. passed up C. passed by D. passed out r`=d4dK-
10. When a person dies, his debts must be paid before his ____ can be '&`Zy pq
distributed. (efH>oY[
A. paradoxes B. legacies C. platitudes D. analogin |Bjb
Part B (5 points) xN5}y3
Directions: In each of the following sentences there is one word or phrase iZ{D_uxq
underlined. Below the sentence are four choices marked A, B, C, and A
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D. Choose the one that is closest in meaning to the underiined part. O_E[FE:+
Mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square `0L!F"W
bracket on ANSWER SHEET I. H*Yyo?
Example: j,~h:MT
The secretary is Very competent; she can finish all these letters within one )T^hyi$
.. ;.,ca, ODe |2mEowAd
bour. !Ed';yfz\(
A. careful B. industrious C. clever D. capable NK#f Gz*,(
In this sentence, "competent" is closest -;n m e:zting to "capable". Therefore Ij"`pdp
you should choose D. 8 }-"&-X
Sample Answer 8^O|Aa$IF:
[A] [B] [C] [DD] "]sr4Jg=
11. He claims that advertising today tends to portray women in traditional U:_&aY_
roles such as cooking or taking care of the baby. =|H/[",gg
A. depict B. advocate D; criticize D. analyze !dZC-U~
12,. They achieved more than they had eyer dreamed, lending a magic tO their Nl1&na)K}
family story that no tale or ordinary life could possibly rival. =>4,/g3
A.confirm B. achieve C.match D exaggerate
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13. The most urgent thing is to find a dump. for those toxic____ industrial wastes. 3^8%/5$v
A. imminent B. recyclable C. smelly D. poisonous `a]
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i4. British Prime Minister Tony Blair promised the electorate that guns would
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nor be fired without an attempt to win a further U.N.sanction. m,'u_yK
A. allies B. delegates C. voters D. juries syMB~g
15. The analysis suggests that the tradeoff between our :children's college and d]CRvzW
our own retirement security is ,chilling. A07FjT5w8
A. frightening B. promising C. freezing D. revealing z[l17+v
16. Their signing of the treaty was regarded as a conspiracy against the British 41$7P[M;
Crown. [5>0om5
A. secret plan B. bold attack C. clever design D. joint effort ^ygN/a>rr
17. Evidence, reference, and foomotes by the thousand testify to a scrupulous {,,w5/k^
researcher who does considerable justice to a full range of different uS3J^=>@(a
beorefical and political positions. Drc\$<9c@
A. trustworthy B. intelligent C. diligent D. meticulous }]kzj0m
18. Despite their spartan, isolated lifestyle, them are no stories of women ^,@Rd\q
being raped or wanton violence against civilians in the region. 2UA h^i-^
A. intriguing B. exasperating: C. demonstrative D. unprovoked V9][a
19. The gang derived their nickname from their dark clothing and blacked up /=i^Bgh4
faces for .nocturnal raids in the forest. [T.kwQf4$
A. illegal B. night-time C, brutal D. abusive .(ki(8Z N
20. Though sometimes too lazy to work as hard as her sisters, Linda has a u9_ Fjm}&
more avid fondness for the limelight, u+kXJ
A. mercurial B, gallant C. ardent D. frugal U8;k6WT|
III. Cloze (10 points) xbSix:R=Z
Directions : Read the following passage. Choose the best word for each hVd%
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numbered blank and mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the [YLaRr
square bracket on Answer Sheet I. 0PjWfM8%
Like many other aspects of the computer age, Yahoo began as an idea, c\065#f!
___ 21 ___ into a hobby and Iately has ____22 ____ into a full- time passion. The
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two developers of Yahoo, David Filo and Jerry Yang, Ph. D candidates ez@`&cJ7
___ 23 _ Electrical Engineering at Stanford University, started theirguide in ?Bno?\
April 1994 as a way to keep 24 of their personal interest on the Intemet. g/)mbL>=
Before long they ___25 ___ that their home,brewed lists were becoming too (3C::B=
long and ____ 26____ Gradually they began to spend more andmore time on nn5tOV}QE
Yahoo. <j+D
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During 1994, they ____ 27____ yahoo into a customized database designed
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to____28_____ the needs of the thousands of users____29____ began to use the 40w,:$
service through the closely ___ 30____ Intemet community. They developed .y\j .p
customized software to help them___ 31 ___ locate, identify and edit material W1dpKv
___32___ on the Intemet. The name Yahoo is ____ 33____ to stand for "Yet R?Vs8?
Another Hierarchical Officious Oracle". but Filo and Yang insist they selected *<c, x8\s9
the ___34 ___ because they considered themselves yahoos. Yahoo? itself first jdqVS @SD
___ 35 ___ on Yang's workstation, "akebono", while the search engine was 2~h! ouleY
___ 36 ___ on Filo's computer, "Konishiki". c07'mgsU
In early 1995 Marc Andreessen, co-founder of Netscape Communication DO`
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in Mountain View, California, invited Filo and Yang to move their files P/
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___ 37___ to larger computers ___38____ at Netscape. As a result Stanford's q~ ]S5
computer network returned to ___ 39___ , and both parties benefiasc. Today, lI~T>Lel2
Yahoo___ 40 ___ organized information on tens of thousands of computers 7}>Zq`]~
linked to the web. C,r[H5G#
1. A. became B. grew C. mm D. intend ,<Zu4bww
2. A. made B. saw C. looked D. turned #}Y$+FtO
3. A. in B. on C. about D. fer oM\b>*
4. A. touch ?. contact C. n-ack D. record Mm7;'Zbg
5. A. founded E. found C. argued D. reported {BPNb{dBKr
6. A. unwieldy B. tough C. tamable D invaluable w*#B_6bG
7. A. exchanged B. shank C. sold D. converted $23*:)&J4
8. A. explain B. serve C. discover D. evaluate Sp/t[\,'
9. A. which B. that C. actually D. eagerly cBcfGNTJ~
10. A. relative B. interactive C.bound D. contacted a4{~.Mp
11. A. fluently B. efficiently C.exactly D. actually E0HXB1"
12. A. transmitted B. purchased C. sold D. -7-r~zmr
13. A. about B. bound C. going D. supposed Rn?Yz^
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I4. A. fable B. model C. name D. brand E&>3 {uZI
15. A. supported B. resided C. lived D. launched d ? Uj3G
16. A. connected B. lodged C. introduced D. linked 5\!t!FL_
17. A. over B, away C. inside D. beneath w8veh[%3n
18. A. housed B. caught C. hosed D. bidden
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19. A. average B. normal C. ordinary D. equal <9f;\+zA
20. A. attains B.detains C. maintains D. contains }SD*@w
IV. Reading Comprehension (20 points) skaPC#u
Directions: Read the following passages, decideon the best one of the choices mv1g2f+
marked A, B, C, and D for each question or unfinished statement and then mark xD.Uh}:J
the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square bracket on the Z01BzIsR
ANSWER SHEET. 4C:-1gu7
Passage 1 Bu
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Guthrie's contiguity principle offers practical suggestions for how to break W0-KFo.'
babies. wmV7g7t6
One application of the thrcshoM method involves the time young children kz!CxI (
spend on academic activities. Young children have short attention spans, so the +4
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length of time they can sustain work on one activity is limited. Most activities qQN|\u+co
are scheduled to last no longer than 30 to 40 minutes. However, at the start of |(eR
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the school year, attention spans quickly wane and behavior problems often !&(^R<-id
result. To apply Gutiarie's theory, a teacher might, at the start of the year, limit |7CFm
activities to 15 to 20 minutes. Over the next few weeks the teacher could f[ 'uka.U
gredually increase the time students spend working on a single activity. 57|RE5]|!
The threshold methoci also can be applied to teaching printing abd D`4>Wh/H
handwriting. When children first learn to form letters, their movements 0 k(su
awkward and they lack free motor coordination. The distances between lines on QJ4=*tX)
a page are purposely wide so children can fit the letters into the space. If paper / biB*Z
with narrow lines is initially introduced, students' letters would spill over the Dve+ #H6N
borders and students might become frustrated. Once students can form letters 0FAe5
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within the larger borders, they can use paper with smaller borders to help them w;p~|!
refine their skills. >OxSrc@A
The fatigue method can be applied when disciplining disruptive students OF1fS\P<>
who build paper airplanes and sail them across the room. The teacher can 1F,>siuh ,
remove the students from the classroom, We them a large stack of paper, and `b:yW.#w3l
tell them to start making paper airplanes. After the students have made several 7Zw.m
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airplanes, the activity should lose its attraction and paper will become a cue for KD =W(\
not building airplanes. =O
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Some students continually race around the gym when they first enter their '$0
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physical education class. To employ the fatigue method, theteacher might I xk+y?
decide to have these students continue to run a few more laps after the class has nj4G8/U-q
begun. I]iTD
The incompatible response method can be used with students who talk and O<>cuW(l
misbehave in the media center. Reading is incompatible with talking. The $6DA<v^=z
media center teacher might ask the students'to find interesting books and read 78UE?) X"
them while in the center. Assuming that the studentS find the books enjoyable, E[a|.lnV
the media center will, over time, become a cue for selecting and reading books Qq{>]5<
rather than for talking with other students. &UxI62[k
In a social studies class some students regularly fall asleep. The teacher a,ZmDkzuv
realized that using the board and overhead projector while lecturing was very ?,z/+/:
boring. Soon the teacher began to incorporate other elements into each lesson, Oe)B.{;Ph
such as experiments, videotapes, and debates, in an attempt to involvs students 61pJVOe
and raise their interest in the course. > }fw7 X
41. The purpose of this passage is to___ _^MkC}8
A. inform B. persuade C. debate D. narrate ?B['8ju
42. Guthrie identified three methods for__
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A. educating students B. altering bad habits TfnBPO
C. avoiding undesired action D. forming good hobbies dxi5p!^^9
43. Which of the following is not the example of applying the threshold tDQuimYu7
method? $I|6v
A. Parents introduce spinach in small bites or mixed with a food than the (RU\a]Ry
child enjoys over time so that the child will not refuse to eat it. BN%;AQV
B. Teachers introduce academic content in short blocks of time for young EPiZe-
children and gradually increase session length but not to where students 3R&
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become frustrated or bored. B&rw R/d
C. Paper with wider lines is first used and then paper with narrow lines is $!v:@vNMs
introduced step by step to help children learn printing and handwriting. 7'zXf)!
D. A child might be made to throw toys until it is no longer fan by his <44A*ux
parents in order to change his behavior of repeatedly throwing toys. @8eQ|.q]Q
44. To stop snacking while watching television, people should keep their hands 2+=:pc^
busy by sewing, painting, working crossword puzzles, and so forth. Over y
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time. watching TV becomes a cue for engaging in an activity other than \'CA:9V}
snac 'king. What method is used in this example? .D{He9
A. The threshold method. B. The fatigue method. EECuJ+T
C. The incompatible response method. D. The punishment method. ?k$'po*Eq
45. We can draw the conclusion from the passage that YR-Ge
A. The incompatible response method is to force child to make unwanted @0 #JY:"
response repeatedly in presence of stimulus until he or she becomes mlix^P
exhausted y$y!{R@
B. The threshold method refers to introducing undesired behavior with a 7m4*dBTr
response incompatible with the undesired response so they can not be :5[1Iepdn
performed simultaneously e+<'=_x {
C. The fatigue method means that engaging in the behavior is transformde 7q(A&
into avoiding it by introducing the stimulus at full strength so it becomes 5@_kGoqd
a cue for not performing it Q.,2G7[ <
D. The fatigue method is that in presence of stimulus teachers have child T#GTNk!v
make response incompatible with unwanted response Q 6n!u;
Passage 2 7yQw$zG,Iz
The increase in global trade means that international companies cannot x|$|~6f=n
afford to make costly advertising mistakes if they want to be competitive. mtmTlGp6Lc
Understanding the language and culture of target markets in foreign 4 '5|YGQj
countries is one of the keys to successful international marketing. Too many ~L4L|q 7
companies, however, have jumped into foreign markets with embarrassing g.pR4Mf=Z
wralts . l5/gM[0_
7
Translation mistakes are at the heart of many blunders in international *WfQi8
advertising. $wC'qV
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General Motors, the US auto manufacturer, got a costly lesson when it &%`WXe-`R
introduced its Chevrole Nova to the Puerto Rican market. "Nova" is Latin for
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new (star)" and means "star" in many languages, but in spoken Spanish it can M
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sound like "no va", meaning "it doesn't go". Few people wanted to buy a car H128T8?r[
with that cursed meaning. When GM changed the name to Caribe, sales Bo$dIn2_
picked up" dramatically. c~+KrWbZ~
Marketing blunders have also been made by food and beverage companies. G#fF("Ndu`
3ne American food company's friendly "Jolly Green Giant" (for advertising DTlId~Dy
q
,egetables) became something quite different when it was translated into ,KCxNdg^#-
Arabic as "Intimidating Green Ogre". Zs4NN2~
When translated into German Pepsi's popular slogan, "Come Alive with k [LV^oEg
Pepsi" came out implying "Come Alive from the Grave". No wonder customers U!(es0rX
in Germany didn't rush out to buy Pepsi. '<s5
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Successful international marketing doesn't stop with good \ CX6~
ranslafions--,-other aspects of culture must be researched and understood ff W{c
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aarketers are to avoid blunders. )<lQJ#L86a
When marketers do not understand and appreciate the values, tastes, ,m8mh)K?0>
geography, climate, superstitions, religion, or economy of a culture, they fail to R?IRE91 :
capture their target market. l0U23i
For example, an American designer tried to introduce a new pentare ihto "8R
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the Latin American market but the product aroused little interest. The mail fW[ .Q0
reason was that the camellia used in it was traditionally used for funerals in D^gS.X ^
many South American countries. s94*uZ(C/
Having awakened to the special nature of foreign advertising, companies ia(`3r
are becoming much more conscientious in their translations and more sensitive #; f50j!r
to cultural distinctions. rzs-c ?
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The best way to prevent errors is to hire professional translators who yO}5.
understand the target language and its idiomatic usage, or to use a technique C T\@>!'f
called "back translation" to reduce the possibility of blunders. 91]sO%3
The process uses one person to translate a message into the target R1*4
language and another to translate it back. Effective translators aim to capture i4]oE&G
the, overall message of an advertisement because a word-for-word duplication U
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of the original rarely conveys the intended meaning and often causes <#RVA{
misunderstandings. Kk*8
In designing advertisements for other countries, messages need to be shot tJ
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and simple. tbWfm5
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They should also avoid jokes, since what is considered funny in one part Ij$C@hH
of the world may not be so humorous in another. yYaoA/0
46. The best title of this passage might be __ . Mc<u?H
A. Culture Is Very Important ia Advertishag WN<g _8QR
B. Avoid Cultural Misunderstanding between Nations ,uAp;"YJeV
C. Overcome Cultural Shock in Different Countries <N1wET-
D. Advertisements Reflect Various Life Styles yIrJaS-
47. What does the word "blunder" mean in this passage? I/%v`[
A. hesitation B. mistake C. stutter D. default ~MBPN4r
48. Which of the following statements can be used to summarize the gist from R(`:~@3\6
Paragraph 3 to Paragraph 6? p[(I5p:L
A. Cultural shocks B. Faulty translations wD=]U@t`,
C. Avoid cultural oversights D. Prevent blunders ZZ7qSyBs?
49. We can learn from the context in Paragraph 9 that the word "ca " most m1U:&{:^
probably mean____ An$2='=/
A. an animal used in perfume for its smell ~Ix2O
B. a piece of fabric used both in perfume and at funerals o87kF!x
C. a flower used in perfume for its fragrance and used for funerals nuXL{tg6
D. an nrnament used in prefume and at funerals D%abBE1
50. One way to prevent errors in advertising in different countries is to___ j/z=<jA
A.fire the translators who don't know the target language. 68Gywk3]=u
B.use the technique called "literal translation" to reduce the possibility of C/IF~<B
blunders viG,z4Zf
C. avoid cultural oversights and avoid certain jokes ,-4NSli
D. explain in details when designing advertisement for other countries d=PX}o^
Passage 3 80Dn!9j*
It is not unusual for chief executives to collect millions of dollars a year in l! F$V;R
pay, stock options, and bonuses. In the last fifteen years, while executive RZzHlZ
remuneration rose, taxes in the highest income bracket went down. Millionaires ch8a
are now commonplace. A~2)ZdAN
Amiability is not a prerequisite for rising to the top, and there are a XP:A"WK"
number of chief executive officers with legendary bad tempers. It is not the N2v/<
boss's job to worry about the well-being of his subordinates although the man IT1YF.i
with many enemies wi!! be swept out more quickly in hard times; it is the .9rYBy
company he worries about . His business savvy is supposed to be based on @ph!3<(In,
intimate knowledge of .his company and the industry .so he goes home nightly #$I@V4O;#
with a full briefcase. At the very top - and on the way up - executives are .|Huzk+
exceedingly dedicated. @up,5`
The American executive must be capable of enough small talk to get him q(?+01
through the social part of his schedule, but he is probably not a highly cultured m&:&z7^p
individual or an intellectual. Although his wife may be on the board of the {>
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symphony or opera, he himself has little time for such pursuits. His reading eQuu\/z*H
may largely concern business and management, despite interests in other fields. Vxh39eW
Golf provides him with a sportive outlet that combines with some useful >fH0>W+!
socializing. 6ZqU:^3
These days, he probably attempts some form of aerobic exercise to "keep @>)VQf8s1
the old heart in shape" and for the same reason goes easy on butter and alcohol, _MBhwNBxZ
and substances thought to contribute to taking highly stressed executives out of )G/bP!^+(
the running. But his doctor's admonition to "take it easy" falls on deaf eyes. He m/KaWrw/)
likes to work. He knows there are younger men nipping at his heels. V\cbIx(Z^
Corporate head-hunting, carried on by "executive search fares," is a 3iCe5VF
growing industry. America has great faith in individual talent, and dynamic and 42NfD/"g+s
aggressive executives are so in demand that companies regularly raid each c/|{yp$Ga>
other's managerial ranks. i#[8I-OtN/
51. We can infer from the second paragraph that___ o,*m,Qc
A. promotion depends on amiability Qr.{_M
B. chief executives do not work hard enough at the top level l<v{8:,e #
C. it is the duty of the chief executive to look after the well-being of his C/k#gLF`
subordinates kE&R;T`Gb%
D. a chief executive is expected to know more about his company and the p<mL%3s0
industry cNWmaCLN$
52. The term "aerobic exercise" (fa'st line in second last paragraph) is a kind Of kR<sSLEb
____ aTvyzr1
A. hallucination exercise _Xf1FzF+a
B. physical exercise 1)X|?ZD]F
C. meditation exercise D!`[fjs6A
D. entertainment xV>
.]
53. From the last paragraph we can gather that ____ /!]K+6>u
A. there are too many aggressive executives mdc?~?? 8
B. individual talent is not essential for a company -H60T,o
C. the job of an "executive search rum" is corporate head-hunting ]Jswxw
D. it is not common for companies to undermine each other's managerial {"p ~M7
ranks d
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54. For executives, according to the article, a golf course is a pl where .x=abA$!9
________ -M{szH
A. they can conduct their business < se ~wR
B. they can indulge themselves u>'0Xo9R
C. they can cultivate their mind L1kn="5
D. they can exercise as well as socialize D1RQkAZS
55. What is NOT tree according to the article? dpW`e>o
A. Executives tend to ignore doctors' advice and warnings. Y1Ql_
B. Executives are sensitive to pressure from the younger generation. eE
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C. All chief executives can earn millions of dollars a year. w"v96%"Y
D. Executives are careful of what they eat. {L$$"r,
Passage 4 zTue(Kr
In November 1970 Yukio Mishima, together withsome of his fanatical 4zs0+d+
followers from the ultranationalistic Shield Society WhiCh. he had four, dod in u&*[
1966, broke into the headquarters of Japan's Eastern Defense Forces armed v}!lx)#
with swords and daggers, overpowered some aides, tied up the commanding gYt=_+-
general, and demanded that the troops be assembled to hear a speech. Mishima Ktk?(49
addressed the troops for ten minutes, inciting them to rebel against the P,8TO-e7
constitutional govemment imposed by the United States that had, in his words, i6bUJtL
"turned Japan spineless." Receiving only ridicule in response, he returned to the Csu9u'.V
general's office and there, before the general's unbelieving eyes, proceeded to Ifp8oL? S;
kill himself in strict accordance with the tradifonal samurai ritual of seppuku. 5]G%MB/|$
After Mishima had driven a dagger deep into his left abdomen, one of his aides ,L%]}8EL"
severed his head with a sword. The aide likewise 'killed himself and was ~JRq :
5eheaded; the others surrendered. %Ja0:e
In 1936 there had been a similar revolt and, though equally unsuccessful, 2?qT,pN
it had foreshadowed the repressive re,me of General Tojo that was to stage tho 0<V/[$}\D
attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. That earlier revolt is the one referred to in &am<_Tn*3
"Patriotism," one of Mishima's most powerful stories. Here life and fiction "7-}#_!g
become joined. The act of seppuku was for Mishima a fulfdlment, "the ultimate |QZ
E
dream of my life." Bom of an ancient samurai family, he longed to die a hero's x'-gvbj!
death in accordance with the ancient samurai code; but his weak body kept him w.rcYywI
from service in the war, and he had to compensate through body building (he `\##M=
became expert at karate and kendo) and, most important, through the discipline 8i^
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writing. In his short lifetime he turned out twenty novels, thirty plays, many \hBzQ%0
essays, and more than eighty stories: he also produced, directed, and acted in jcC"vr'u|
movies, and even sang on stage. His first book of stories, A Forest in Flower, (-J'x%2)
appeared in 1943, but it was Confession of a Mask (1948), dealing with the X#by Dg
meditations of a young man of homosexual leanings in a repressive society, that `s69p'<;p
brought him fame. NVQ.;" 2w
Mishima has been called "Japan's Hemingway," while others have ,n%b~.$:v5
compared him to "aesthetic" writers like Walter Peter and Oscar Wilde. ZG +FX:v
56. The article implies that %INkuNa8\
A. Mishima refused to join the army when he was young o;DK]o>kH
B. Mishima has been regarded as a lunatic writer 7'At_oG
C. Mishima is a person who'is hard m define AcJrJS)~
D. Critics all agree that Mishima is an aesthetic writer P(-
57. The aim of the rebel led by Mishima was ZJ+ad,?,
A. Fo capture the commanding genera! 8,F|*YA
B. to urge the government to declare a war against America 6pb~+=3n
C. to incite the soldiers to rebel against the Constitutional govemment \)6AzCq
D. to force the Emperor to give up the throne z&c}
58. In the 1970 rebel, the speech made by Mishima____ 3_9CREZCl
A. was web received by the soldiers
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B, was laughed at by the soldiers LRaO}-<b
C. impressed the commanding general :
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D, left a deep impression tO the soldiers "*`!.9pt
59. What IS true according to article? hwvi tD!0
A. The general knew that Mishima had longed to die a hero's death. #l`\'0`.
B. The general was greatly taken aback by Mishima's suicide attemnpt ~K5A$s2
C. Some soldiers surrendered after Mishima's speech. mJ(
ElDG
D. one of Mishima's aides was killed by the soldiers. J"S(GL
60. Mishima became a well-known writer after he had ___ Jqgm>\y
A, written "Patriotism", one of his most powerful stories !/a6;:_y
B. written eighty short stories uzmYkBv
C. published "A Forest in Flower" m<k6oev$
D. published "Confession of a Mask" &PApO{#Q
主观题部分 1M_Vhs^
请用钢笔或圆珠笔将此部分试题的答案做在答题纸二上,否则无效! BHU$QX
V. Translation (20 points) EbX!;z
Fart A. (10 points) ;;
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Directions: Translate the following passage into Chinese on your ANSWER ,uNJz -B8
SHEET. ;/pI@Ck
One might ask why speculation is permitted when there is so real a danger of f8WI@]1F
loss. The basic reason is that speculation can perform useful functions in the X@:Y. /
economy. Buying a commodity or stock in the belief that prices will rise speeds An`*![
market equilibrium and encourages faster entry of more suppliers. If the price 4W49*Je
change lagged until after an actual commodity shortage had occurred, the L AA(2
fluctuation would probably be sharper and more sudden. Remedial supply C4gES"T
action could not be further delayed. Similarly, if speculators foresee a surplus in \X!NoF
some commodity, their selling of futures will help drive the price down to some 5a@9PX^.J
extent before the SurpluS actually occurs. When speculators foresee a shortage %K=_
and bid up the price, they are also helphng to conserve the present supply. As @OFx
nF`
the price goes up,less of the commodity is purchased; a rise in price FIVC~LDd
encourages users to ecor, om2ze. Similarly, a lowering of price encourages users 1ZRkVHiz0
to buy more, thus helping to sell the surplus which is developing. X's<+hK&
Part B. (10 points) W[j,QU
Directions: Translate the following into EngIish on your ANSWER SHEET. >mR8@kob<
中国已经发层成为一个全球极富吸引力的、现实的大市场。世界各国 $?k]KD
和地区不少有远见卓识的企业家,都将目光投向了中国,并从投资活动中 D `V.gV]
获得了丰厚的回报。我相信,中国加入世贸组织后,外商参与中国投资活 `]@=Hx(
动的机会将越来越多,自身发展的空间也越来越大。在中国的投资活动一 U~"Y8g#qgy
定能成为沟通世界各国和地区的企业家与中国市场的一座桥梁,促进中国 pWv1XTs@t:
和世界经济共同发展、共同繁荣。
Su?cC/
VI. Writing (20 points) ?YS 3)
Directions Write an essay in no less than 250 words with file title "My mK"s*tD
Understanding of GlobaIization". Your essay should be written on the Fzt
?M
Answer Sheet.