上海社会科学院2004考博英语试题
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<lgX=wx L Q*ixg$> Section I 听力 20% 15分钟
tUk)S ;R([w4[~ FIRST PART (略)
O_ d[{e=5` }u]7 x:lh SECOND PART
l.xKv$uOGR _P9*78 For questions 8— 19 decide whether the statements are true or false. Write “T” for “true”, “F” for “false”.
Vr:`?V9Q2( $'n?V=4 8 Young people go to nomadic clubs just to drink.
9~{,Hj1xE aen0XiB6~^ 9 The Circus has been going for less than three years.
l?B=5*0 .Vrl: 10 Jeremy. the DJ, plays highly original discs.
BB imP @
a i2A| 11 The clubs are held in unusual places.
NwN3T]W 3qkPe_<I 12 The Circus advertises to keep itself exclusive.
)|6OPR@(#/ EE-wi@ 13 The Dirtbox has only a small following.
m=25HH7enb _UV_
n!R 14 Phil and Bob do not bother to decorate their club.
(duR1Dz ?)H:.]7-x 15 The music at The Dirtbox is unpredictable.
6mqp`x` ]&s@5<S[ 16 The Substation thinks that luxury is unimportant.
/!%?I#K{Wq /VD[: sU7 17 You can watch silent films at The Substation.
^VEaOKMr *z};&UsF{ 18 You can stay at the club until breakfast time.
<{j;']V; fw5+eTQ^ 19 It is difficult for the police to find the clubs.
KquuM ]5S sL,|+>7T^M Section II Grammar and Vocabulary 10% (15 minutes)
jOd+LXPJ %
s@ In this section you must choose the word or phrase which best completes each sentence. For each question, 1 to 20, indicate on your answer sheet the letter [A],[Bj[C] or [D] against the number of the question.
sN K^.0 WD1>{TSn I It is against the _________ not to wear seat belts in a car.
nNeCi [A] rule
_
^'QHWP [B] regulation
G'`^U}9V\ [C] law
uAs!5h [D] order
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B*D*w _2{2Xb 2 All those old houses in Church Street are being pulled ________ [A] away
_SkiO}c8 &DjA?0`J [B]off
#=)!\ my/KsB [C] in [D] down
/ZM
xVh0 NwdrJw9 3 I havejust an account with the Great Eastern Bank.
&3J^z7kU m WHyk "l [A] made
*3]2vq [B] opened
|Qcj+HH. [C] entered
=k,?+h~ [D] registered
4>HaKJ-c# a:OM I 4 There was a ________ failure on the underground this morning.
\RtFF w`D$W&3> [A] signal
IG7,-3 [B] direction
^Epup$ [C] sign
1GIBqs~- [D] indication
PVIZ
Y^64 f*ABIm 5 The fishermen were ________ the sinking boat by helicopter
q/Vl>t on"ENT [A] taken round
o4OB xHKy [B] drawn off
:_]0 8 [C] taken off
*B\ @L [D] brought up
"q1S.3V
; WW+F9~S 6 1 don’t think those curtains_______ very well with the wallpaper.
d[5v A/8O [A] suit
5`$!s17 [B] go
E:k]Z [C] fit
J7C?Z [D] march
*M*WjEOA r> Xk1~<! 7 The central heating doesn’t seem to be________ properly.
xK)<763q> [A] going
lrwQ
>N [B] performing
-QR]BD%J*[ [C] warming
]=ZPSLuEm% [D] working
Iz83T9I& tQYV4h\Qj 8 In recent years inflation has almost doubled the________ of living.
2{Dnfl'k gmn b [A] price
#_`p
0wY [B] expense
p&u\gSo [C] charge
5O]ZX3z> [D] cost
sZxTsUW
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hIaI 9 Johnny’s parents always let him have his own ________
|Kjfh};-C qT
#=C'? [A] will
2hso6Oy/v{ [B] wish
[u=yl0f [C] way
3Nwix_&S [D] demand
zHg=K / Gd`7Tf)
' 10 I heard the news _____the radio last night.
=Ti
@Y t^>P,%$ [A] by [B] on [C] with [D] in
Z__fwv.X[ k%\y,b* 11 The residents are organising a protest________ against the closing of their local hospital.
N!ay#V F|/6;&*?M [A] outing
BFP@Yn~k [B] march
1{]S[\F] [C] progress
R.l!KIq [D] run
UWhHzLcXh |+JO]J#bc 12 He never takes _________ in any college activities.
lKU{jWA l+@k:IK [A] part
^_V0irv [B] place
Mae2L2vc d2US~.;>l [C] shares
xXI WEZA /X0<2&v [D] time
",[ /pb >gq=W5vN( 13 Whatever _________ him buy that old’car?
"}%j' H8B.c%_|U [A] obliged [B] forced [C] made [D] encouraged
oRcP4k;d= r8N)]HsZH 14 All medicines should be kept out of _____of children.
r3OtQ _Gb7n5p [A] hand
UUtSme [B] touch
e.(d?/!F_ [C] contact
Sx Bo% [D] reach
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8Y #Q_<eo%lI* 15 Everything in the sale has been_______ to half price.
&`>dY
/Y [A] reduced
$:-C9N29 [B] decreased
"]'W^Fg [C] diminished
sT<h+[2d [D] lowered
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(5y*Btd= 16 I can never touch lobster because I’m ______to shellfish.
8F)9.s,* [A] sensitive
|\"%Dy[m [B] allergic
QZO<'q`L [C] infected
,g|ht%" [D] sensible
%\B?X;( G&M)n*o 17 All the food in that little cafe is
]i
`~J [A] handmade
#0#6eT{- [B] self made
91T[@p [C] homemade
+K;%sAZy [D] home-based
Z%r8oj\n M[R'
18 Please inform the college secretary if you ________ your address.
vDc&m [A] move
PbMvM [B] remove
y
] $-:^ [C] vary
H
a`V"X{} [D] change
z KG]7 mT1Q7ta*P 19 Our telephone has been______ for three weeks.
o 7 &q [A] out of line
HNfd[#gV [B] out of touch
K*j1Fy: [C] out of order
uv7tbI"r [D] out of place
2QIo|$ EixAmG 20 Label on bottle of medicine: It is dangerous to exceed the stated______
6b4]dvl_ [A] drops
x&FBh!5H [B] measure
KVpQ,x&q~ [C] limit
l-[5Zl;" [D] dose
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{2ec:? `SYq/6$VEH Section III Reading Comprehension 30% (80 minutes)
FzFP 0 v,c:cKj In this section you will find afier each of the passages a nwnber of questions or unfinished statements about the passage, each with four suggested answers or ways offinishing You must choose the one which you think fits best. For each question, 1 to 30, indicate on your answer sheet the letter [A],[B],[C] or [D] against the number of the question.
UTuOean ]' Passage 1
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^1[ Voluntary Service Overseas (VSO) is a registered charity dedicated to assisting development in the world’s poor countries. It is an independent non-sectarian organisation. VSO is a direct response to an urgent need. Each year about 450 volunteers are sent to work on projects in 36 developing countries. Each volunteer goes overseas in response to a specific appeal from a developing country. Over the past 23 years more than 20,000 volunteers have worked abroad with VSO. Together they have contributed over 30,000 man-years to development.
9
J~KM=p rJcZ a# But VSO volunteers gain as well as give. They gain responsibility, experience and a personal viewpoint on development. On their return they can make an effective contribution to the development debate. Above all, VSO is aid that the Third World needs. For this reason the Third World countries themselves pay almost half the cost of each VSO volunteer
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x*F_XE1#M When VSO was established over 20 years ago, the first volunteers were school-leavers. However, increasingly the demand was for skilled and professional people. Today, all VSO volunteers are skilled and/or qualified people — teachers and doctors, mechanics and electricians, accountants and civil engineers. Why do they volunteer? To make a personal contribution, to take on extra responsibility, to gain overseas work experience, to work within a community —often for all these reasons. The task of VSO is to match these specialists with particularvacancies, notified to them by overseas countries. Then, having made the match, they prepare the volunteer to work for two years in a very different environment.
M4}zRr([.5
Jb`yK@x I The work of VSO is concerned with _______
|f"1I4Kg [A] helping the poor in all parts of the world
[~IFg~*, [B] giving practical assistance to poor countries
(k5d.E]CK [C] the development of any worthwhile project
TZS:(MJ9M [D] increasing the need for development in the Third World
JztSP? Vb8{OD3PK 2 The experience gained by VSO volunteers working abroad ________
U^xtS g {DGnh1 [A] provides the basic training they need
e!O:z [B] increases their understanding of particular problems
&<S]=\ [C] helps them to deal with their own problems
-Mufo.Jz1o [D] encourages them to contribute to Third World appeals
&$E.rgtg Ewczq1%l: 3 The majority of VSO volunteers today are ________
;CdxKr-d Av^<_`L: [A] over-qualified
[^E{Yz=8, [B] unskilled
c ,RY
j [C] school-leavers
#`{L_n$c [D]. highly trained
;tu2}1#r wZ =*ejo 4 People who volunteer for VSO do so ________
7[u$!.4{* DFF
B:< [A] for a variety of reasons
t+Rt*yjO [B] because they have personal problems
aXO|%qX [C] in response to requests from overseas
-z$&lP] [D] because they are unemployed
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BY^5z<^. 5 A volunteer who is accepted must be prepared to ________
JqYt^,,Q: @s/0 .7 [A] take a two-year training course
F|t_&$Is? [B] be away from home for two years
8cyC\Rs [C] spend two years visiting different countries
-6u#:pVpU [D] take two years to adapt to a new environment
z("Fy mrz@Y0mgL Passage 2
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dOJ_" }8cX0mZ1j During the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries the London district of Southwark
SQd`xbIuL nmrYB w> was prospering, and an extremely important and far-reaching development was taking place at
3V`.< `2Oh0{x0*O Bankside, an area situated just beside the church now known as Southwark Cathedral. The Rose
\v}3j^Yu {b6g!sE Theatre, the Swan, the Hope Playhouse and Bear Garden, were set up here along with the famous
@)YQiE$ T>;Kq;(9 Globe Theatre, in which Shakespeare acted.
Z*rA~`@K6 -'OO6mU William Shakespeare is commemorated in Southwark Cathedral today by the modern memorial window in the south aisle. The window was designed by Christopher Webb in 1954, after an earlier window had been destroyed in the war, and depicts characters from Shakespeare’s plays. Beneath it is a recumbent alabaster figure of Shakespeare, carved by Henry McCarthy in 1912, set against a background of seventeenth-century Southwark in relief, showing the Globe Theatre, Winchester Palace and the Tower of St. Saviour’s Church. This memorial was provided by public subscription and was dedicated in 1911, and every year a birthday service, attended by many great actors and actresses, is held here in honour of Shakespeare’s genius. Shakespeare’s brother Edmund was buried here in 1607, and, although the position of Edmund’s grave is unknown, he is commemorated by an inscribed stone in the paving of the choir.
b|HH9\ zsx12b^w 6 In Shakespeare’s lifetime Bankside in Southwark was notable for ________
Xqac$%[3 [A] the style of its buildings
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[B] Shakespeare’s performances at the Globe Theatre
_~ipO1* [C] its influence on public taste
U0M>A [D] the number of plays produced there
Hf'yRKACj c.\J_^ 7 The original memorial window to Shakespeare in Southwark Cathedral was [A] designed in 1954
rGe^$!QB Nh[{
B{k [B] damaged by enemy action
!r8Jo{(pb A<&
:-Zz [C] replaced during the Second World War [D] carvedin 1912
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n/@;E PUN.n
t 8 Underneath the window there is a ________
LEJ7. 82 [A] painting of seventeenth-century Southwark
Z0~}'K [B] wooden effigy
LQMVC^G [C] a sculpted figure
"Jp6EL% [D] tablet dedicated to Shakespeare’s brother
N!fp;jvG e< Ee2pGX 9 In Southwark Cathedral, on the anniversary of Shakespeare’s birth, there is ________
w^*jhvV%kW [A] a commemoration service
iDO~G($C [B] a drama festival
m,u?
^W [C] a special service for actors
/Ki :6 [D] a theatrical presentation
V,uhBMT# ]sjOn?YA+ 10 This information would most likely be found in _________
fxLhVJ"b [A] an advertisement
UY**3MK [B] a historical survey
Y54*mn [C] a tourist guide
e<^tY0rR& [D] a news bulletin
7l Aa6"Y68 2597#O Passage 3
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|y%pP/;&! Americans are people obsessed with child-rearing. In their books, magazines, talk shows, parent training courses, White House conferences, and chats over the back fence, they endlessly debate the best ways to raise children. Moreover, Americans do more than debate their theories; they translate them into action. They erect playgrounds for the youngster’s pleasure, equip large schools for their education, and train skilled specialists for their welfare. Whole industries in America are devoted to making children happy, healthy and wise.
d1j v>tu &V( LeSI But this interest in childhood is relatively new. In fact, until very recently people considered childhood just a brief, unimportant prelude to adulthood and the real business of living. By and large they either ignored children, beat them, or fondled them carelessly, much as we would amuse ourselves with a liner of puppies. When they gave serious thought to children at all, people either conceived of them as miniature adults or as peculiar, unformed animals.
,)L.^< B0Z~L){i Down through the ages the experiences of childhood have been as varied as its duration. Actions that would have provoked a beating in one era elicit extra loving care in another Babies who have been nurtured exclusively by their mothers in one epoch are left with day-care workers in another In some places children have been trained to straddle unsteady canoes, negotiate treacherous mountain passes, and carry heavy bundles on their heads. In other places they have been taught complicated piano concerti and long multiplication tables.
@F7QQs3 m$J'n A But diverse as it has been, childhood has one common experience at its core and that is the social aspect of nurture. All children need adults to bring them up. Because human young take so long to become independent, we think that civilization may have grown up around the need to feed and protect them. Certainly, from the earliest days of man, adults have made provision for the children in their midst.
.: 7h=neEW nTu" 11 The present day American obsession with child-rearing has ________
<R{\pz2w [A] resulted in ineffectual action
V43JY_: [B] initiated pointless discussions
Q)a*bPz [C] had wide-ranging results
N=+Up\h [D] produced endless theories
QW2% Gv: "Ln\ZYB] 12 Children in the past were ill-treated or petted because they were ________
R4qk/@]t [A] ignorant of adult life
m dC. FO- [B] seen as uninteresting
&P{%C5?{ [C] considered of no importance
oW+R:2I~O [0] conceived of as having animal natures
<bTa88,) 5d4-95['_ 13 How have childhood experiences varied?
fCVSVn"o [A] Children have been alternately beaten and loved through the ages.
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[B] There have been differences in child rearing in different epochs.
z(%Zji@!N [C] Parents have increasingly taken control of their children’s nurturing.
:e9E#o [0] In some places physical training has given way to encouraging creativity.
xjX5 PQu yWK[@;S]% 14 According to the author, children ________
be@MQ}6> [A] need intensive adult nurturing
]jYl:41yI [B] are the instigators of civilization
,,iQG' * [C] remain physically dependent until adulthood
! 9N%=6\ [D] have common social experiences
%Mu dc ~|!lC}!IKL 15 What is the author’s attitude to developments in the perception of childhood?
"{:*fI;! C'$U1%:
j [A] Cynical.
{M$8V~8D [B] Indifferent.
EagI)W!s[ [C] Positive.
1 h"B-x [0] Neutral.
~lL($rE w7W-=\Hvh Passage 4
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The relationship between the home and market economies has gone through two distinct stages. Early industrialization began the process of transferring some production processes (e.g. clothmaking, sewing and canning foods ) from the home to the marketplace. Although the home economy could still produce these goods, the processes were laborious and the market economy was usually more efficient. Soon, the more important second stage was evident — the marketplace began producing goods and services that had never been produced by the home economy, and the home economy was unable to produce them ( e.g. electricity ahd electrical appliances, the automobile, advanced education, sophisticated medical care). In the second stage, the question of whether the home economy was less efficient in producing these new goods and services was irrelevant; if the family were to enjoy these fruits of industrialization, they would have to be obtained in the marketplace. The traditional ways of taking care of these needs in the home, such as in nursing the sick, became socially unacceptable ( and, in most serious cases, probably less successful). Just as the appearance of the automobile made the use of the horsedrawn carriage illegal and then impractical, and the appearance of television changed the radio from a source of entertainment to a source of background music, so most of the fruits of economic growth did not increase the options available to the home economy to either produce the goods or services or purchase them in the market. Growth brought with it increased variety in consumer goods, but not increased flexibility for the home economy in obtaining these goods and services. Instead, economic growth brought with it increased consumer reliance on the marketplace. In order to consume these new goods and services, the family had to enter the marketplace as wage earners and consumers, the neoclassical (新古典主义 ) model that views the family as deciding whether to produce goods and services directly or to purchase them in the marketplace is basically a model of the first stage. It cannot accurately be applied to the second (and current) stage.
.KD07 Tld{b 16 The reason why many production processes were taken over by the marketplace was that ________
:`|,a( _96&P7 [A] it was a necessary step in the process of industrialization
g?`J ,*y Nf~<
xK [B] they depended on electricity available only to the market economy
<eI;Jph5 g$tW9 Q [C] it was troublesome to produce such goods in the home
F,bl>;{[{ h
Na<LZ [D] the marketplace was more efficient with respect to these processes
v 3NaX. g,;MV7yE 17 It can be seen from the passage that in the second stage ________
:s5g6TR F~Li.qF [A] some traditional goods and services were not successful when provided by the home economy
oK>,MdB 'tbb"MEi4 [B] the market economy provided new goods and services never produced by the home economy
S;NXOsSu =bDG|:+ [C] producing traditional goods at home became socially unacceptable
s*IfXv jz)H?UuDY [0] whether new goods and services were produced by the home economy became irrelevant
,uv$oP- --9mTqx 18 During the second stage, if the family wanted to consume new goods and services, they had to enter the marketplace _________
w.8~A,5}Dh g|P hNo [A] as wage earners
CytpL`&^] dc05,Bz [B] both as manufacturers and consumers [C] both as workers and purchasers [D] as customers
cGp^;> ]M x3Ud0[( 19 Economic growth did not make it more flexible for the home economy to obtain the new goods and services because _________
P5>CSWy% H
[D/Sz5` [A] the family was not efficient in production [B] it was illegal for the home economy to produce them [C] it could not supply them by itself
{9Y'v )hug<D *h [0] the market for these goods and services was limited
|6>_L6t CC\z_C*P-p 20 The neoclassical model is basically a model of the first stage, because at this stage ________ [A] the family could rely either on the home economy or on the marketplace for the needed
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I)3 L|X5Ru goods and services
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`xUPML- [B] many production processes were being transferred to the marketplace [C] consumers relied more and more on the market economy
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qR qy [D] the family could decide how to transfer production processes to the marketplace
I*}#nY0+ vi8~j Passage 5
&r%*_pX D,\=zX; The teacher of reading is involved, whether this consciously realised or not, in the development of a literate society. And every teacher, therefore, needs to determine what level of literacy is demanded by society, what role he or she should take in achieving the desired standard of literacy, and what the implications of literacy are in a world context.
BuTIJb+Q\ Ug21d42Z4 The Unesco report presents a world view of literacy. Too often we limit our thoughts to the relatively small proportion of illiterates in our own country and fail to see it in its intemational context.
3Mx@ ~7pjk The problems facing developing nations are also facing industrialised nations. Literacy, as the report points out, is ‘inextricably intertwined with other aspects of national development (and) ... national development as a whole is bound up with the world context’. Literacy is not a by-product of social and economical development — it is a component of that development. Literacy can help people to function more effectively in a changing environment and ideally will enable the individual to change the environment so that it functions more effectively.
?Z>.G{Wm@ Wq(l :W' Literacy programmes instituted in different countries have taken and are taking different approaches to the problem: for example the involvement of voluntary non-governmental organisations, which underlines the importance of seeing literacy not as a condition imposed on people but as a consequence of active participation within society. People can leam from the attempts of other countries to provide an adequate ‘literacy environment’.
C8E C?fSQ wkD:i 2E7 Who are the ‘illiterates’ and how do we define them? At what point do we decide that illiteracy ends and literacy begins? Robert Hillerich addresses these questions. An illiterate, he finds, ‘may mean anything from one who has no formal schooling to one who has attended four years or less, to one who is unable to read or write at the level necessary to perform successfully in his social position.’ Literacy, he points out, is not something one either has or has not got: ‘Any definition of literacy must recognise this quality as a continuum, representing all degrees of development.’
1>w^ q`P D a[C'm= An educational definition - i.e. in terms of grades completed or skills mastered-is shown to be inadequate in that educationally defined mastery may bear only minimal relation to the language proficiency needed in coping with environmental demands. From a sociological/economic viewpoint the literacy needs of individuals vary greatly, and any definition must recognise the needs of the individual to engage effectively and to act with responsible participation.
,g_onfY </gp3WQ. Such a broadened definition excludes assessment based on a ‘reading-level type’; assessment must, rather, be flexible to fit both purpose and population.
iIaT1i4t. zpqGh 21 Part of the teacher of reading’s involvement in the development of a literate society is through
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t,{9 [A] ascertaining their society’s literacy standard
c%@~%IGF ShJK&70O [B] determining a level of literacy for their society [C] deciding on a world standard of literacy
<{420 9xn23*Fo [D] achieving a desired role for teaching literacy
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X lhoq3A 22 What problems are facing both developing and industrial nations? [A] How to achieve literacy in their own countries.
HI\f>U e j%;%`C- [B] How the environment can be changed to suit the people.
{R-82% X 7TkxvSL X [C] What methods of producing social and economical development can be found.
Y#&0x_Z 1N9<d, [D] Which ways of encouraging literacy as part of national development are possible.
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