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中国人民大学 2008 年博士生入学考试英语试题

中国人民大学 2008 年博士生入学考试英语试题
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Part I. Vocabulary (20%) ;ZX P*M9  
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Directions: Choose the best answer (from A, B, C and D) to complete each of the following sentences. Mark your choice with a single bar across the square brackets on your Machine-scoring Answer Sheet. KY H*5  
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1. Let's give a big _____to tonight's prize-winner. qKt8sxg  
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 A. respect B. shout Jfa=#`    
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C. praise D. hand ~R/w~Kc!/A  
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2. It was a depressed and divided country, accustomed to failure and of change. 'ah|cMRn  
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 A. definite B. curious v{`Z  
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 C. suspicious D. anxious Ol H{!  
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3. The secret of the____ of Wal- mart in the retailing industry lies in is single-minded and skillful pantsuit of the lowest prices. ;KJJK#j  
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 A. unalleviated B, uncombed / U1VE|T  
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 C. unprecedented D. unaccompanied [0.>:wT  
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4. Those who got angry and crazy set fire to cars and shops in the Paris suburb of Clichy-sous-Bois, then the problems_____. d,[.=Jqv[  
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 A. evolved B. evaporated 5 EDHJ U>  
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 C. escalated D, exalted ZiM#g1;  
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5. The supervisor, his explanation when his fault was pointed out by some  talented young students. UXD?gK1  
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 A. stumbled over B. got over YS=|y}Q|7d  
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 C. dashed to D. gave out )|,-l^lC  
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6, it is evident that no one, no matter how much they _____ is immunity from the effect of advertising. SdC505m0*  
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 A, refuse B. reflect Z)'jn8?P  
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 C. proclaim D. protest /k<*!H]KSg  
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7. "It's probably just stress." How many times have you uttered those words to yourself to____ a headache, pain or illness? 'j#oMA{0  
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 A. dismiss B. dispose /e Dah3%d  
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 C. dispel D. disrupt acB,u&  
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8. Schools and colleges have no right to use our public money to promote conduct that is _____to the religious and moral values of parents and taxpayers. C yC<{D+  
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 A. conducive B. comparable @A!Ef=R  
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 Caponizing D. offensive qA9*t  
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9. The old farmer his wife, living until 105 years of age. \^EjE  
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 A. beat B. survived s .^9;%@$J  
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 C. lasted D. endured ig; ~ T  
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10. He didn't know anything about business, so starting his own was______ ]gTa TY  
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. A. a climb to power B. a leap in the dark PNT.9 *d  
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 C. a run on the bank D. a step backwards U,iTURd  
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11. Public attitudes toward business regulations are deeply _______ most people resent intensive government rules, yet they expect government to prevent business from defrauding, exploiting the public. ksDG8^9>]  
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 A. hostile B. emotional Iay7Fkv  
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 C. ambiguous D. cynical ]*i >KR@G  
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12. Ever since the TV show came off the air, there has been _______ that a movie might be made of the show. Finally in autumn 2007, news broke that filming had started. m{%_5nW  
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 A. specification B. suspicion H _3gVrP_  
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 C. simulation D. speculation /unOZVr(  
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 13. A quick wit and a warm smile were the salesman's stock______. `R:<(:  
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 A. in trade B. in reserve ^D.B^BR  
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 C. in effect D. in business 5I&^n0h|&  
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 14. Innovative product platforms like the portable transistor radio and the_____ walkman the digital lifestyle era. Jr''S}@|x  
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 A. set the Stage for B. shed light on ppV\FQ{K  
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 C. made sense of D. gave a hand to snEkei|0  
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 15. Successful imitation, far from being symptomatic of a lack of _____, is the first step in learning to be creative. DJn>. Gd  
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 A. resolution B. elegance efbt\j6@%2  
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 C. aspiration D. originality o9~qJnB/O  
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16. Our parents love us because we are their children, and this is an fact. so that we feel safer with them than with anyone else. kb%W3c9HO  
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 A. unambiguous B. uncontrollable Pc(2'r@#  
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 C. unalterable D. unintentional JI*ikco-  
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17. As a journalist Hemingway trained himself in of expression. His deliberate avoidance of very attractive adjectives is some of the traces of his early journalistic practices. d&ZwVF!  
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 A. economy B. elegance 6*LU+U=`  
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 C. depth D. neatness l+N?:E$5=%  
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18. It is the vast number of irresponsible dog owners which has roused public and demands for tighter controls. sO  
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 A. obsession B. apprehension JPpYT~4  
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 C. exclamation D. indignation Ke/P [fo  
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19. Talking to children about the death of others is a subject that adults_____away from very strongly. %fyb?6?Y  
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 A. shy B. stay nAX |=qp#  
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 C. slip D. skip I |ULf  
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20. That's all fight, it is better to the feeling than to let it build up. RXof$2CZS  
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 A. displace B. disarm $e;!nI;z  
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 C. discharge D. dispatch I{AU,  
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21. Many people are to insect bites, and some even have to go to hospital. -'N#@Wdr  
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A. insensitive B. allergic C. sensible D. infected KGWENX_U  
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22. When you're driving on a motorway, you must obey the signs telling you to get into the right ___ %zD-gw>  
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A. way B. track C. road D. lane e-')SB  
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23. The motorist had to ____ to avoid knocking the old woman down in the middle of the road. VoyH:  
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A. swerve B. twist C. depart D. swing ygW@[^g  
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24. In winter drivers have trouble stopping their cars from on icy roads. (XwLKkw0n  
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A. skating B. skidding C. sliding D. slipping z-gwNE{  
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25. This project would __ a huge increase in defense spending. &v-V_.0(H  
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A. result B. assure C. entail D. accomplish \l:g{GnoT  
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26. The chances of a repetition of these unfortunate events are ___ indeed. /kA19E4  
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A. distant B. slim C. unlikely D. narrow 8$v7|S6 z  
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27. We should make a clear ___ between "competent" and "proficient" for the purposes of our discussion. G; [A Q:Iy  
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A. separation B. division C. distinction D. difference ~8m>DSs)D  
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28. In the present economic we can make even greater progress than previously. icul15'i  
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A. air B. mood C. area D. climate 0c61q Q6  
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29. Rite of Passage is a good novel by any standards__ it should rank high on any list of science fiction. F!&pENQ  
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A. consistently B. consequently C. invariably D. fortunately EO&ACG  
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30. The diversity of tropical plants in the region represents a seemingly source of raw materials, of which only a few have been utilized. a9Fm Y`  
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A. exploited B. controversial C. inexhaustible D. remarkable kr(<Y|  
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31. his expenditure on holidays and luxuries is rather high in to his income. H@MFj>~  
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A. comparison B. proportion C. association D. calculation As+;qNO  
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32. Although he has become rich, he is still very of his money. [ DxefYyI  
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A. economic B. thrifty C. frugal D. careful !p,hy `  
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33. As the manager was away on a business trip, I was asked to the weekly staff f5aF6FBH  
meeting. XalJo@%-  
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A. preside B. introduce C. chair D. dominate +^*5${g;@H  
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34. The of the word is unknown, but it is certainly not from Greek. >&;>PZBPCO  
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A. origin B. generation C. descent D. cause 9$+^"ilk  
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35. The hook was a work of such that it took 20 years to write. 'B3Wz a.  
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A. magnitude B. extent C. degree D. amount (/U)> %n  
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36. The police have offered a large for information leading to the robber's arrest. hza> jR  
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A. award B. compensation C. prize D. reward m_m8c8{Y  
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37. I arrived at the airport so late that I missed the plane. 1E5a(  
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A. only B. quite C. narrowly D. seldom M3Khc#5S(  
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38. The popularity of the film shows that the reviewers' fears were completely ___. &yx NvyA[u  
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A. unjustified B. unjust C. misguided D. unaccepted I@0z/4H ``  
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39. The head of the Museum was ___ and let us actually examine the ancient manuscripts. m'cz5mcD  
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A. promising B. agreeing C. pleasing D. obliging _wf5%(~b  
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40. The multi-national corporation was making a take-over ___ for a property company. 6'xomRpYN  
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A. application B. bid C. proposal D. suggestion q0,kDM66   
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Part II. Reading Comprehension (30%) vQ:wW',i  
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Directions: Read the following passages and then choose the best answer (from A, E {tx/$f  
B,C and D) to complete each of the following sentences. Mark your choice with a `79[+0hL'  
single bar across the square brackets on your Machine-scoring Answer Sheet. 7vn%kW=$  
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Passage one #/Ruz'H1>  
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Many of the home electric goods which are advertised as liberating the modern J/2j;,8D  
woman tend to have the opposite effect, because they simply change the nature of a1Hz3y~S/  
work instead of eliminating it. Machines have a certain novelty value, like toys for Nln`fE/Ht  
adults. It is certainly less tiring to put clothes in a washing machine, but the time &FSmqE;@ ^  
saved does not really amount to much: the machine has to be watched, the clothes zuSq+px L@  
have to be carefully sorted out first, stains removed by hand, buttons pushed and |EKu2We*  
water changed, clothes taken out, aired and ironed. It would be more liberating to ohUdGO[/  
pack it all off to a laundry and not necessarily more expensive, since no capital _AFQ>j  
investment is required. Similarly, if you really want to save time you do not make ,~COZi;R.D  
cakes with an electric mixer, you buy one in a shop. If one compares the image of the  UXT p  
woman in the women's magazine with the goods advertised by those periodicals, one -KH)J  
realizes how useful a projected image can be commercially. A careful balance has to )p<WDiX1!e  
be struck: if you show a labor-saving device, follow it up with a complicated recipe * z'8j  
on the next page; on no account hint at the notion that a woman could get herself a job, M|q~6oM  
but instead foster her sense of her own usefulness, emphasizing the creative aspect of _]b3,% 2  
her function as a housewife. So we get cake mixes where the cook simply adds an egg `lO(s%HC  
herself, to produce .. that lovely home-baked. flavor the family love" , and knitting rq sdE  
patterns that can be made by hand, or worse still, on knitting machines, which became ~e `Bq>  
tremendously fashionable when they were first introduced. Automatic cookers are t 42ub  
advertised by pictures of pretty young mothers taking their children to the park, not by K_~h*Yc  
professional women presetting the dinner before leaving home for work. S${Zzt"  
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41. According to the passage, many of the home electric goods which are supposed to 20b<68h$:  
liberate women 'OkGReKt  
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A. remove unpleasant aspects of housework. (@r `$5D.b  
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B. save the housewife very little time. %' $o"  
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C. save the housewife's time but not her money.  R'}95S<  
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D. have absolutely no value for the housewife. X(A.X:"  
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42. According to the context, "capital investment" refers to money 6"/WZmOp  
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A. spent on a washing machine. B. borrowed from the bank. 6E ~g#(8  
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C. saved in the bank. D. lent to other people." rit BU:6  
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43. The goods advertised in women's magazines are really meant to Fmyj*)J[Z  
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A. free housewives from housework. B. encourage housewives to go out to O.G'?m<: #  
work. h!rM^  
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C. turn housewives into excellent cooks. D. give them a false sense of fulfillment. P{OAV+cG  
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44. The example of automatic cookers in the end supports that the home electric 1MlUG5  
goods ___ fhPk EvJ  
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A. completely liberate the modem woman B. only change the nature of work N`@NiJ(O;  
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C. indeed eliminate the tedious work D. actually have novelty value ?eH&'m}-  
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45. From this passage, we can infer that the writer is ___ about the home electric [.se|]t7X  
goods for liberating the modem women. }%b;vzkG5  
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A. opponent B. pessimistic C. happy D. concerned 7tUA>;++  
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Passage two :NJ_n6E  
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The "standard of living" of any country means the average person's share of the Jk@]tAwoM  
goods and services which the country produces. A country's standard of living, {3;AwhN0H  
therefore, depends first and foremost on its capacity to produce wealth. "Wealth" in X%z }VA  
this sense is not money, for we do not live on money but on things that money can JB!:JML  
buy:" goods" such as food and clothing, and "services" such as transport and en- KT]Pw\y5  
tertainment. b vfk  
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A country's capacity to produce wealth depends upon many factors, most f)f J+rCxn?;g  
which have an effect on one another. Wealth depends to a great extent upon a COH<Tj  
country's natural resources, such as coal, gold, and other minerals, water supply and *8~86u GU  
so on. Some regions of the world are well supplied with coal and minerals, and have a ;iDPn2?6?x  
fertile soil and a favorable climate; other regions possess none of them. f{SB1M   
(&/2\0QV  
Next to natural resources comes the ability to turn them to use. Some countries I*9e]m"  
are perhaps well off in natural resources, but suffered for many years from civil and vJAZ%aW  
external wars, and for this and other reasons have been unable to develop their z-M3  
resources. Sound and stable political conditions, and freedom from foreign invasion, ^C2\`jLMY  
enable a country to develop its natural resources peacefully and steadily, and to  KWLbD#  
produce more wealth than another country equally well served by nature but less well THmb6^  
ordered. Another important factor is the technical efficiency of a country's people. ySI~{YVM  
Industrialized countries that have trained numerous skilled workers and technicians xf|mlHS+  
are better placed to produce wealth than countries whose workers are largely R|i/lEq  
unskilled. n3J53| %v  
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A country's standard of living does not only depend upon the wealth that is re> rr4@  
produced and consumed within its own borders, but also upon what is indirectly @ A)R_p  
produced through international trade. For example, Britain's wealth in foodstuffs and i<pk6rO1  
other agricultural products would be much less if she had to depend only on those ve&zcSeb  
grown at home. Trade makes it possible for her surplus manufactured goods to be LjV]0%j?r  
traded abroad for the agricultural products that would otherwise be lacking. A Nj(" |`9"  
country's wealth is, therefore, much influenced by its manufacturing capacity, ;5@  t[r  
provided that other countries can be found ready to accept its manufactures. *Q1~S]g  
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46. The standard of living in a country is determined by W_0>y9?  
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A. its goods and services. B. the type of wealth produced. ek&kv#G  
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C. how well it can create wealth. D. what an ordinary person can share. u ElAnrm  
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47. A country's capacity to produce wealth depends on all the factors EXCEPT ne^imht  
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A. people's share of its goods. B. political and social stability. 8uA,iYD  
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C. qualities of its workers. D. use of natural resources. Znetzm=0  
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48. According to the passage, ___ play an equally important role in determining a $Y 7c  
country's standard of living. 1 E22R  
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A. farm products B. industrial goods ,\v91Rp~?  
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C. foodstuffs D. export & import  aH#l9kCb  
z~A]9|/61v  
49. The manufacturing capacity may be a key factor to a higher standard of living ,6r{VLN  
when one country \cCV6A[  
8| $3OVS  
A. has traded her manufacture. B. has established her wealth. r#6_]ep}<'  
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C. has been an industrialized one D. has produced surplus manufactured goods aj}(E +  
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Passage three +Y+Y6Ac[}  
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 How we look and how we appear to others probably worries us more when we L;od6<.*m  
are in our teens or early twenties than at any other time in our life. Few of us are |^9BA-nA  
content to accept ourselves as we are, and few are brave enough to ignore the trends _.-;5M-  
of fashion. &Ni`e<mP  
[= |jZVhT  
Most fashion magazines or TV advertisements try to persuade us that we should ~0b O}   
dress in a certain way or behave in a certain manner. If we do, they tell us, we will be Xb QlHfrS  
able to meet new people with confidence and deal with every situation confidently  ,$eK-w  
and without embarrassment. Changing fashion, of course, does not apply just to dress. _wdG|{px  
A barber today does not cut a boy's hair in the same way as he used to, and girls do d,by / .2  
not make up in the same way as their mothers and grandmothers did. The advertisers ^#0U  ?9  
show us the latest fashionable styles and we are constantly under pressure to follow gI8Bx]  
the fashion in case our friends think we are odd or dull. @ps1Dr4s  
b9XW9O `B  
What causes fashions to change? Sometimes convenience or practical necessity 46k?b|Q  
or just the fancy of an influential person can establish a fashion. Take hats, for "4%"&2L  
example. In cold climates, early building were cold inside, so people wore hats z(\4 M==2O  
indoors as well as outside. In recent times, the late President Kennedy caused a nQ GQWg`  
depression in the American hat industry by not wearing hats: more American men b^[F""!e  
followed his example. jM:Y ' l]  
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There is also a cyclical pattern in fashion. In the 1920s in Europe and America, U8(Nk\"X\  
short skirts became fashionable. Meter World War II , they dropped to ankle length. [V 8{b{  
Then they got shorter and shorter until the miniskirt was in fashion. Meter a few more q:<{% U$  
years, skirts became longer again. 4ikdM/  
b$eXFi/  
Today, society is much freer and easier than it used to be. It is no longer necessary to e${>#>  
dress like everyone else. Within reason, you can dress as you like or do your hair the uw},`4`  
way you like instead of the way you should because it is the fashion. The popularity V#jWege  
of jeans and the "untidy" look seems to be a reaction against the increasingly KzQ3.)/q  
expensive fashions of the top fashion houses. I=;+n-  
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At the same time, appearance is still important in certain circumstances and then kg`.[{k  
we must choose our clothes carefully. It would be foolish to go to an interview for. a ;=? ~ -_  
job in a law firm wearing jeans and a sweater; and it would be discourteous to visit ,TRTRb;  
some distinguished scholar looking as if we were going to the beach or a night club. ~y$ !48o  
However, you need never feel depressed if you don't look like the latest fashion photo. }$\M{# C~  
Look around you and you'll see that no one else does either! X w.p  
?:Y#Tbi3  
50. The author thinks that people are w{dIFvQ"$  
VtOZ%h[#  
A. satisfied with their appearance. *6 U&Qy-M  
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B. concerned about appearance in old age. JCY~W=;v  
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C. far from neglecting what is in fashion. MV=9!{`  
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D. reluctant to follow the trends in fashion. >\w&6 i~  
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51. Fashion magazines and TV advertisements seem to link fashion to *6BThvg|&X  
Qo = Kqv  
A. confidence in life. B. personal dress. _owjTo}  
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C. individual hair style. D. personal future. A>VX*xd  
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52. According to the passage, changing fashions reflected in all of the following
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