西南大学博士入学考试英语试题(2012) 1q~U3'l:$
Part I Vocabulary (10 points) P,iLqat
Directions: In this part there are 20 incomplete sentences. For each sentence there
$7)O&T*q'
are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that best completes the g$dL5N7
following sentences. Then blacken the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet HcHfwLin0
1. A broadcasting station will sometimes to its listeners a programme which 2{p`"xX
it has received from another station. M)EKS
. A>>@&c:(
A. rely B. relay C. relate D. reside P
xpz7He
2. The United Nations Conference on Drug Abuse, which took place earlier this year y%TR2CvT
in Vienna, was a very meeting. M=o,Sav5*
A. productive B. overwhelming C. compulsory D. protective +@%9pbM"z
3. A person who studies ___ learns how to express numbers approximately and 7@EYF
how to calculate ratios and averages. 2y_rsu\
A. static B. statistic C. statistics D. status f`
A
4. If you ______ someone, you form a fixed general idea or image of them so that QJdSNkc6
you assume that they will behave in a particular way. bvG").8$
A. assimilate B. simulate C. stereotype D. subordinate V]k!]
5. Reading ______ the mind only with materials of knowledge, it is thinking that f[.hN
makes what we read ours. a' #-%!]
A. rectifies B. prolongs C. furnishes D. minimizes &1Cq+YpI
6. Satellite communications are so up-to-date that even when _____ in the middle 7=QV ^G
of the Pacific, businessman can contact their offices as if they were next door. f!LZT! y
A. gliding B. cruising C. piloting D. patrolling #(aROTV5a
7. Now a paper in Science argues that organic chemicals in the rock come mostly bk6$+T=>
from _______ on earth rather than bacteria on Mars. RX2=
iO"
A. configuration B. constitution C. condemnation D. contamination sgX}`JH?z
8. Scientists, who are now aware of how nautiluses regulate their buoyancy, have lmmyDg1R
been able to dispel ideas about these creatures. ljt1:@SN(
A. erroneous B. misdemeanors C. misgivings D. misdirection m]"YR_
9. History has demonstrated that countries with different social systems and /0o 2
ideologies can join hands in meeting the common challenges to human _____ and /$eEj
development. ^w&TTo(
A. evolution B. survival C. rivalry D. dignity r`B+ KQ4
10. To avoid an oil shortage, we should advocate that more machines must _____ of !@YYi[Gk
life in a short time, and this made others astonished. TS[Z<m
(原题有误) :T{or-
A. accelerate B. operate C. generate D. utilize FwW%@Y
11. Japanese leaders aboard the U. S. battleship Missouri and signed the ____ ZcWl{e4
surrender, which ended World War Two in 1945.
E,6E-9
A. conditional B. infinite C. everlasting D. unconditional aSF&^/j
12. It is a _____ that in such a rich country there should be so many poor people who _b5iR<f
could hardly keep their body and soul together.
u-K5
A. hypothesis B. paradox C. conflict D. dispute wcL0#[
)
13. The _____ effects of many illnesses made him a weak man and he still didn’t ^|K*lI/
want to do sports every day. #TSM#Uqe
A. cumulative B. formidable C. eternal D. prospective hT]p8m
aRZ
14. The robbers broke into the bank, _____ the clerics with revolvers and forced them Bhs`Y/Ls-
to give money just as they were about to knock off. hqd
s T
A. shot B. frightened C. amused D. menaced ttKfZ0
15. This pair of boots cost much less than yours for I bought them when the VuBp$H(U
department store made a _____ of the stored goods. uf>w* [m5
A. clearance B. reduction C. fortune D. deal f7W=x6Z4
16. Technology has _____ the sharing information and the storage and delivery of 2k
gm)-z
information, thus making more information available to more people. e=R}
4`
A. formulated B. facilitated C. furnished D. functioned 7,4x7!
17. Language, culture and personality may be considered _____ of each other I thought, T*ic?!
but they are inseparable in fact. -)Vj08aP
A. indistinctly B. separately C. irrelevantly D. independently G`P+J
18. More than 85 percent of French Canada’s population speaks French as a mother >mV""?r]
tongue and _____ to the Roman Catholic faith. y5ExEXa
A. caters B. adheres C. ascribes D. subscribes (j/O=$mJ
19. There are not many teachers who are strong _____ of traditional methods in FV9RrI2
English teaching. Rta P+6'X
A. sponsors B. contributors C. advocates D. performers ,]Ma, 2
20. The ______ of the scientific attitude is that the human mind can succeed in *,pqpD>
understanding the universe.
k$2Y)
A. essence B. content C. texture D. threshold hJ@nW5CI
Part II Reading Comprehension (30 points) DXGO-]!!0
Directions: $d=lDN
Questions 21 to 25 are based on the following passage. YH>n{o;-
?
There are 6 reading passages in this part. Each passage is followed by gkdjH8(2
some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices LQjqwsuN{
marked A, B, C and D. you should decide on the best choice and mark your answer on E*l"uV
the Answer Sheet. Txh;r.1e
Spread across the United States are about 500,000 doctors, cheeked by jowl, in the <gy'@w?
big cities and thin on the ground in isolated small towns. In June 1986, the secretary fm*Hk57
of health and human services, Dr. Otis Bowen, passed on a view of his experts: 5%-15% x,%&[6(
of America’s 500,000 doctors should be candidates for disciplinary action, many of D4|_?O3|m
them because of drug taking or alcoholism. Others give their patients poor care I}WJ0}R
because they are senile, incompetent, guilty of misconduct or out of touch with j$^]WRt
developments in medicine. q|l|gY1g)
The granting, or withdrawal, of licenses to practice is in the hands of state medical +9X[gef8
boards, but they are overwhelmed with complaints and lack the money to handle even bqO"k t
a fraction of them. Recently, however, things have been changing. In 1985, 406 nM`) `!/
doctors lost their licenses (compared with 255 in 1984), nearly 500 were placed on ?q P}=nJ
probation and nearly 1,000 received reprimands or had their right to practice curtailed. >g&`g}xZQ
The federal inspector general demanded, and won the right far the states and the 0FOf *Lz
federal government, which provide health care for the elderly and for the poor under )YFs
the Medicare and Medicaid programme, to refuse payment to the doctors considered Q
Y'-]
unsatisfactory. DtZm|~)a
Yet putting these powers into practice is proving to be far from easy. O f the 35 )VT/kIq-U
doctors so far denied reimbursement from Medicare, almost all work in lightly ho1F8TG=
populated rural areas. O n March 27th, their indignation and that of their patients were Ub,unU
a sympathetic hearing by the Senate Finance Committee. Rural doctors may not be as umzYJ>2t
up to date as those in the big towns, but they are often the only source of medical help Q-v[O4y~
for miles around and their patients are loyal to them. Members of the review boards, G$ FBx
which are paid by the government, insist, however, that elderly and poor people 7&4,',0VL
should not be forced to receive (and the state to pay for) inferior care. "> 3@<f>
An innovation is on the horizon in Texas, the most under-doctored state in the TpgBS4q
country (with only one doctor for every 1,100 residents). Lubbock University is gEP
E9ew
setting up a computer network that will enable country doctors to obtain medical {%{GZ
expertise and access to medical records in a hurry. The aim is to reduce the isolation w|C~{
of the country doctors and thus, in the long run, to attract more young doctors to rural Q8y|:tb$Y
areas. lWvd"Vlt
21. The main topic of the passage is . (, "E9.
A. the present situation of American doctors P~e$iBH'
B. the legislation on rural medical services I0K!Kcu5Iu
C. the problems of country doctors and possible solutions ?LI9F7n
D. some factors of disqualification of country doctors 2(Uz9!<V
22. According to the text, disciplinary action should be taken against those who "\;wMR{
give patients poor care because of the following reasons EXCEPT . _eV n#!|
A. taking drugs and drinking alcohol
2p>SB/
B. feeling remorse of their bad behavior +o]BjgG
C. being professional unskillful (JW?azU
D. being sick and conservative :-La
$I>
23. Which of the following is true about the unfit doctors? ;
,jLtl
A. 1,500 doctors were deprived of the right to practice medicine. Y&