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考博英语真题
博士生入学考试英语试题及答案 Part I. Vocabulary (20%) ;J5oO$H+68 Directions: Choose the best answer (from A,B, C and D) to complete eachof the following sentences. Mark your choice with asingle bar across thesquare brackets on your Machine-scoring Answer Sheet. 9<YB&:< 1. Tomdoesn't think that the situationhere is as good as his hometown's. 4({=(O A. economics B.economic <y'ttxeS C. economy D.economical hT
Xc0 2. the increase in the number of computers in our offices, the amount ofpaperLhat we need has risen as well. :heJ5*!, A. Along with B.Altogether 9rid98~d C. Although D.All along -Kc-eU-&q 3. The food was divided __ according to theage and size of the child. stDn{x. A. equally B.individually \GWq0z& C.sufficienfiy D.proportionally 1rKR=To commurllC att. rt bc"{ZL!C 4. Our new firm for a credible, aggressive individualwith.great s~!Is to fill this position. : l9jcoVo. A..have looked B.are looking S2NsqHJr C. is looking D.look _9-Ajv 5. Plastic bags are useful for holding manykinds of food, their c!ea-mess,toughness and low cost. K)v(Z" A. by virtue of B.in addition to >2|#b C. for the sake of D. as opposed to MVj
@0W33m 6: He ___ hinzseLf bitterly for hismiserable behavior that evening. q3[LnmH A.. repealed B.resented 4R0_%x6vG C. replayed D.reproached v_ J.M ] 7. Many of ~e fads of the 1970s as today's latest fashions. J\%:jg( m A. are being revived B. is revised CVUDN2 C. are revoked. D.is being reviled jmb\eOq+~V 8. All of the international delegatesattending the conference to bring asouvenirfrom their own countries #[si.rv-> A. has asked B,! asking q[#\qT&QU C. were asked D.was asking :Hd<S 9. Britain hopes of a gold medal inthe Olympic Games suffered ..... yesterday, whenHunter failed to qualifyduring preliminary session. ufJFS+? A. a severe set-back B. sharp set-back _5)#
{o< C. s severe blown-up D.sharp blown-up Y!`?q8z$G 10. If you want to do well on the exam,you on the directions that theprofessorgives and take exact notes. XX F9oy8 A. will have concentrated B.have to concentrate <|8l ; C. will beconcentrated D.will be concentrating ;L[9[uQ[C 11.What ____ about that article in the newspaper was that its writer showed anattitudecool enough, professional enough and, therefore, creel enough whenfacing that tragedy. I45A$nV#Q A. worked me out B. knocked meout BOWTH{KR<< C. brought me up D.putme forward J.&q[ 12.Since his injury was serious, the doctor suggested that he in the game. -r2cK{Hhp& A, did not play B, must not play ky#6M?
\ C. not play D. not toplay N!v@!z9Mu 13.According to the latest report, consumer c0nfidence a breathtaking 15 points last month, toits lowest level in ten years "VeU
OdNA> A. soared : B.mutated R',w~1RV' C~ plummeted : D. fluctuated ' TAi\#cnl(6 14.Our car trunk with suitcases and wecould hardly make room for anything C0W~Tk\C2 A. went cramming B.was crammed yjO7/<2 C. is cramming D. was beencrammed CvW((
<? 15.The secretary didn't know who he was, or she him more politely. GlZ9k-ZRF A, will be treating B. would have treated @Otc$hj C. was treating D.would have been treated ~ [0LqZ<\5 16.The instructions on how to use the new:machine that nobody seemed to be able to understand. ; vz:0"
y simpli A. were v sfic B, was very confused z]YhQIU4n8 C. were so confusing D. was so simplistic [w/t .. i .... d{hYT\7~1( 17.John played basketball in college:and .... active ever since. 6'ZnyWb A. have extremely been B.has been extremely (0Qq rNs C. will be extremely' D: should extremely be >FHsZKJ
18.The of the spring water attracts a lot:of visitors from all over the country, }ELCnN A.clash B. c larify Mh|`XO.5I C. clarity D. clatter \?^wu 19.__ the gift in beautiful green paper, Sarah departed for the party. AL7O -D A. Having wrapped B.To wrap LPn}QzH C. Wrap D.Wrapping 3R*@m 20.The advertisement for Super Suds detergent that the sale' has increased by 25% in the first quarter of theyear. , weV#%6=5\ A. have been so successful B. had been so successful =.oWg uzu C. has been so successful D. will be so successful t"p#iia 21.Tom and Alice having a new car toreplace their old one for year's. cmU+VZ#pk A. has been dreaming of B.have been dreaming of _0["J:s9 C. has &'eamed D. will have dreamed 4.B*B3 22.Whenthe air in a certain space is squeezed to occupy a smaller space, the airis said to be *UoHzaIqz A. commenced B.compressed s~ZFVi-i C. compromised D. compensated +fQL~0tA 23. theheavy pollution, the cityofficialshave decided to cancel school for theday. . DB%AO:8 A.:Prior B.By means of Mgs|*u-5 24.Our boss is taking everyone to the ballet tonight, and I need to make sure mynew VQ<i$ I dress for the occasion. }l?_Cfvu A. has been cleaned B.should have been Cleaned r_,m\'~s! C. is being cleaned D. has been cleaning !TL}~D:J 25. erry s mother kept telling him that in the street is dangerous, but he would @nX2*j*u not listen. NND=Zxl A. played ' B. will play 0o$HC86w C. playing D.been playing nYy}''l< 26. A knowledge of history us to deal with the vast range ofproblems confronting Z) i1?# the contemporary world. -f2`qltjb A.equips B. provides '#i]SU&* C. offers ' D. satisfies lhA
s!\F 27. He wouldn't even think of wearing 'clothes; they nake him look so old! )g:,_ 1s)| "]s|D@^4#b A. same B.despite o+_/)c C. such D.that. ;#yu"6{ 28. Mary finalty decided all the junk she had kept in the garage. "gvw0) A. get rid B.gotten rid of B+e_Y\Bu C. getting rid of D.to get rid of nN`Z0? 29.The team leader of mountain climbers marked out
X'#$e{ A.that seemed to be the best route B.what seemed to be the best route C. which seemed to be tile best route D. something that to be the best route 30. Tom Jones, who around the world, will come to Asia next month. q _] A. will be touring B. have toured $J
hZ'Z ]fADaw-R C. had been touring D. has been touring ;*-@OLT_K 31. The paint on the clown's face that it scared the children he was tryingtoentertain.
Ku/H= A. was so exaggeration B.were an exaggeration /iTUex7T C. was such an exaggeration D. was exaggerating |J<pLz 32. Men often wait longer to get help formedical problems than women, andwomen live about six years longer than men onan average. C9m
zg A. instead of B.constantly xZP
>g C. consequently D.because xQ#Akd= 33. The . emphasis on exams is by far the worst form of competition in schools. 6L8tz8 A. negligent B. edible Sj0 ucnuHi C. fabulous D.disproportionate
^%5~; 34. There is conflicting information on how much ironwomen need in their diet. U1
> A. so much. B. so many Ld\LKwo C, too few D: a few GX7 eRqz > 35. It must guarantee freedom ofexpression, to the end that all tothe flow of ']ITuP8 ideas shall be removed. <+T\F; A. prophecies B.transactions H~?*KcZ 0\ C. arguments D.hindrances \!UF|mD^tG 36. Not until the 1980s in Beijingstart to find ways to preserve historic buildings d; mmM\3] from destruction. @],6SKbG6 A. some concerned citizens B. some concerning citizens @V* ju C. did some concenfmg citizens D. did some concerned citizens C#U<k0R 37. After failing his mid-term exams,Jeremy was face his parents. `1fJ:b/M A. too ashamed to B.too embarrassing to ?W[J[cb C.very ashamed of ..... : : D. very embarrassing to R`@8.]cpPy 38. My grandmother has been going to abetter dentist, so this problems sheis ,DQGv_ having with her dentures. z(g%ue\ A. won't eliminate B. will be elimination [&h#iTRT C. should have been eliminated D. should help eliminate ny12U;'s, 39. He told a story about his sister whowas in a sad when she was ill andhad no
Ws-6W!Ib% money. jlu`lG*e& @-'/__c
gt A. plight B. polarization jo9J%
vo C. plague D. pigment )
-bD2YA{ 40. During her two-week stay in Beijing, Elizabethnever a chrome to practiceherChinese. A Gv!c($ A. passed by B. passed on +
,@ FxZl ~C. passed out D.passed up Km6Ub?/7o Part II. Reading Comprehension (30%) i\t753<Ys Directions: Read the following pa~sages andthen choose the best answer F(Lb8\to\M (from A, B, C and D) to complete each ofthe following sentences. Mark your f{)+-8 choice with a single bar across the squarebrackets on your Machine-scoring zP_ ] Answer Sheet. YV5Yx-+3w$ Passage 1 8)L'rW{q# British food has a good reputation, but English cooking has a bad one.Iris difficultto explain the re'on for this.Unformnately, however; superb rawingredients are oftenmined h the kitchen s0 that:they come to the table withoutany of theh' natural flavorand goodness. Z5((1J9 This bad reputation discourages a lot of people from eating in anEnglish restaurant.If they do go to one: they ate usury full of prejudiceagainst the food. Ks is a pity,because :there are:: excellent cookS'in England,exCellentrestaurants, and excellenthome-cooking. How, then;has the bad reputauon beenbuilt up. EkN_8(w Perhaps one reason iS that Bfitain's InduStrial Revolution occurred veryearly, in therrdddle of the nineteenth century. As a result, the quality of foodchanged too. This(wasbecause Britainstopped being a largely agricultural country. The population of thetownsincreased enormously between 1840 and 1.870, and_people could no longergrow. theirown food, or buy it fresh from a farm. Huge quantities of food hadto be taken to thetowns, and a lot of it lost its freshness on the way. /8f>':zUb This lack of freshness was disguised by "dressing up" thefood. The rich middleclasses ate long; elaborate meals which were cooked forthem by French chefs. Frenchbecame, and has remained, the official language ofthe dining room. Out-of-seasondelicacies were served in spite of theirexpense,' for there, were a large number 'ofextremely wealthy people who wantedto establish themselves socially. The "look" ofthe food was moreimportant than its taste. R<"2%oY In the 1930s, the supply of servafftS began to decrease. People stilltried to producecomplicated dishes, however, but they economized on thepreparation time. The Second `TUZZz orld War made things even worse by makingraw ingredients extremely scarce. As a *8z"^7?^= result, there were many women who never hadthe opportunity to choose a piece of meat Z}|TW~J=
from a well-stocked butcher's shop, butwere content and grateful to acceptanything ?nQ_w0j that was offered to them. 0CT}DQ._^N Food rationing continued in Britain until the early 1950s. Itwas only after this had O`cdQu stopped, and butter, eggs and cream becamemore plentiful, and it was possible to travel }VF#\q ' P' e Ve)ClH/DW abroad again and taste other ways ofpreparing food, that the English md~fferenc to rvW!7-R eating became replaced by a new enthusiasmfor it. Rv98\VD" 41 According to the author, it is difficultto explain . Kl{-z X ~ A.why excellent ingredients are spoiled in the process of cooking ~e{H#*f&1/ -B. why people do not like English cooking "jT#bIm C. why British food often has a natural flavor Bp
:~bHf D. why people prefer home-cooking to ready made food l';pP^.q 42. The negative effect of Britain'sIndustrial Revolution on English cooking is that g+/0DO_F3 A. the population in the countrysidedecreased dramatically qpI]R B. people no longer grew their own food ontheir own farms ]nQ+nH C. the freshness of food was lost on the way to the cities ;+sl7qlA4 D. Britainwas no longer an agnSculmral country t-WjL@$F/ 43 As a result of the Industrial Revolution, r088aUO
P A. more attention was given to the look of the food .... N>0LQ
MI B. French became the official language .in English restaurants BWh}^3?l C. a large number of extremely wealthy people ate in French restaurants OOok hZd` D. out-of-season delicacies became very expensive ,of]J| 44. The Second World'Wm' worsened the problem because Y6A;AmM8 A. there was an increasing demand f6r serv-ants O
iF{3ae( B. there was a lack of raw ingredient supply iRNLKi C. many women refused to choose meat from butcher's shops ;FU|7L$H D. French chefs dominated English restaurants /4*W DiH 45. A new enthusiasm for eating emerged in Britain y%S})9 A. when many women fmaUy had the opportunity to purchase fresh meat froma R(G\wqHUT3 i
x0A7O well-stocked butcher's shop. Ow@v"L;jF! B. when butter, eggs and cream became available L2fZ{bgy C. when people started traveling to other cities .... s5&=Bsv D. after the early 1950s - /ylc*3e'4 Passage 2 -R0/o7 In his typically American open style of communication, Mr. Hayes confrontedIsabetaabout not looking at him. Reluctantly, she explained why. As a newcomerfromMexico, she had been taught to avoid eye contact as a mark of respect toauthorityfigures teachers, employers,parents. Mr. Hayes did not know this. He then informedher that most Americansinterpret tack of eye contact as disrespect and deviousness.Ultimately, heconvinced Isabela to try and change her habit, which she slowly did. L&kr |