2012年复旦大学考博英语试卷 gCd9"n-e
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1 It was very difficult to find the partsneeded to do the job because of the ______ 9hcZbM]
waythe store was organized. Up`zVN59.
A logical B haphazard C orderly D tidy gg5`\}
2 Mississippialso uplolds the South’s well-deserved reputation for warm,hospitablepeople;balmy year-round weather;and truly______cuisine. hb`(d_= 7F
A destructive B horrible C amiable D delectable x
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3 If she is stupid,she’s _____pleasant tolook at. WnA]gyc
A at any rate B by chance C at a loss D by the way }56"4/ Z
4 The mother was_____with grief when sheheard that her child was dead. !qT.D:!@zF
A fantastic B frank C frantic D frenzy B2VUH..am
5 In your teens,peer-group friendships may _____from parents as themajor influence on you. 9MVW~V
A take control B take place C take up D take over .hnGHX
6 Parents often faced the ___between doingwhat they felt was good for the development of the child and what they couldstand by way of undisciplined noise and destructiveness. %
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A paradox B junction C premise D dilemma @r'8<6hVO
7 There have been demonstrationson the streets____the recent terrorist attack. PoQ@9
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A in the wake of B in the course of OE WIP
C in the context of D in the light of Qr$uFh/y
8 Thousands of Medicare patientswith chronic medical conditions have been wrongly_____access to necessary care. @:X~^K.
A grudged B denied C negated D invalidated P6dIU/w
9 It has been proposed by many linguiststhat human language______,our biologically programmed abilith to use language,is still not well defined and understood. 27}k63 \
A potentiality B perception C faculty D acquisition $wAVM/u&
10 Western medicine,_______science andpracticed by people with academic internationally accepted medical degrees,isonly one of many systems of healing. IKH#[jW'IB
A rootedin B originated from C trapped in D indulged in =]E;wWC
11 When I asked if a black politician couldwin in France,however,he responded _____:”No,conditions are different here.” 1P@&xcvS\
A ambiguously B implicitly C unhesitatingly D optimistically WADNr8.
12 The development of staff cohesion and asense of team effort in the workplace can be effectively _______by the use ofhumor. Z'hW;^e%_z
A acquainted B installed C regulated D facilitated e=QnGT*b5
13 In both Americaand Europe,itis _____to tip the waiter or waitress anywhere from 10% to 20%. >?'cZTNk]
A elementary B temporary C voluntary D customary (F
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14 Such an approach forces managers tocommunicate with one another and helps______rigid departmental borndaries. \,oT(p4N%M
A pass over B stand for C break down Dset off C
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15 As a teenager,I was_____by a blindpassion for a slim star I would never meet in my life. ts
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A pursued B seduced C consumed D guaranteed M8Q-x-7
16 His originality as a composer is____bythe following group of songs. [w
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A exemplified B created C performed D realized 1B}6
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17 They are going to London,buttheir______destination is Rome. <G/O!02
A ultimate B prime C next D cardinal A!x_R {,yH
18 The poor old man was _____with diabetesand without proper treatment he would lose his eyesight and become crippledvery soon. pg ;agtI
A suffered B afflicted C induced D infected l!EfvqWX
19 The bribe and the bridegroom wereoverwhelmed in happiness when their family offered to take them to Rome to _______themarriage. OXK?R\ E+
A terminate B initiate Cconsummate D separate ?TLMoqmXM{
20 Join said that the richer countries ofthe world should make a _____effort to help the poorer countries.
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A futile B glittering C frantic D concentrated j|A *rzL8
21 The problem is inherent and _______in any democracy,but it has been moresevere in ours during the past quarter-century because of the near universaldenigration of government,politics and politicians. V#'sH
A perishable B periodical C perverse D perennial -:h5Ky"
22As is known to all ,____commodities willdefinitely do harm to our life sooner or later. K, WNM S
A counterfeit B fake C imitative D fraudulent cAogz/<S
23 It would be _____to think that thiscould solve all the area’s problems straight away. I QS|
A subtle Bfeeble C nasty D naïve @(,k%84z
24It is surprising that such aninnocent-looking man should have____such a crime. -SGR)
A confirmed B clarified C committed D converyed N4}j,{#
25 Hummans are ___,which enables them tomake dicisions even when they can’t justify why. U@@#f;&
A rational B reasonable C hesitant D intuitive a]>gDDF
26 More than 100____cats that used to roamthe streets in a Chinese province have now been collected and organized into atram to fight rodents that are destroyingcrops. y{0`+/\`
A loose B tamed C wild D stary rp6Y&3p.
27 To say that his resignation was a shockwould be an______-------it caused panie. mqrP0/sN
A excuse B indulgence C exaggeration D understatement I3uaEv7OZc
28 Here the burden of his thought is thatthe philosopher ,aiming at truth,must not ____the seduction of trying to writebeautifully. d+[yW7%J
A subject to B carry on C yield to D aim at Py^F},?J
29 I found the subject very difficult ,andat one time thought I should have to give it up,but you directions are so clearand ____that I have succeeded in getting a picture we all think pretty,thoughwanting in the tender grace of yours. iW(HOsA
A on the point B off the point C to the point D up to a point B;
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30 They both watched as the crime scenetechnicians took samples of various fibers and bagged them,dusted forfingerprints,took pictures and tried to _____what could have happened. idMb}fw>
A rehearse B reiterate C reinforce D reenact m\(4y Gj
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In 1896 a georgiacouple suing for damages in the accidental death of their two year old was told thatsince the child had made no realeconomic contribution to the family,there was no liability for damages. in contrast, less than a century later, in 1979,the parents of a three year oldsued in New Yorkfor accidental-death damages andwon an award of $750,000. thetransformation in social values implicit in juxta- posing these two incidents is thesubject of viviana zelizer'sexcellent book, <i>pricing the priceless child</i>. during the nineteenth century, sheargues, the concept of the"useful" child who contributed to the family economy gave way gradually to thepresent-day notion of the"useless" child who, though producing no income for, and indeed extremely costly to,its parents, is yet consideredemotionally "priceless." well established among segments of the middle and upperclasses by the mid-1800's, thisnew view of childhood spread through- outsociety in the iate-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries as reformers introducedchild-labor regulations andcompulsory education laws predicated in part on the assumption that a child's emotionalvalue made child labor taboo. for zelizer the origins of thistransformation were many andcomplex. the gradual erosion of children's productivevalue in a maturing industrial economy, thedecline in birth and death rates, especially in child mortality, and the development of thecompanionate family (a family inwhich members were united by explicit bonds of love rather than duty) were all factors critical in changing the assessment ofchildren's worth. yet"expulsion of children from the 'cash nexus,'... although clearly shaped by profoundchanges in the economic,occupational, and family structures," zelizer maintains. "was also part of acultural process 'of sacralization' of children's lives. " protectingchildren from the crass businessworld became enormously important for late-nineteenth-centurymiddle-class Americans, she suggests;this sacralization was a way of resisting what they perceived as the relentlesscorruption of human values by the marketplace. instressing the cultural determinants of a child's worth. zelizer takes issue withpractitioners of the new "sociologicaleconomics," who have analyzed such traditionally sociological topics ascrime, marriage, education, and health solely in terms of their economicdeterminants. allowing only a small role for cultural forces in the form of individual"preferences," these sociologists tendto view all human behavior as directed primarily by the principle of maximizing economicgain. zelizer is highly criticalof this approach, and emphasizes instead theopposite phenomenon: the power of social values to wj!p6D;;
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transform price. as children became morevaluable in emotional terms, sheargues, their "exchange" or " surrender" value on themarket, that is, the conversion of theirintangible worth into cash terms, became much greater. =;-/( C
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1. itcan be inferred from the passage that accidental-death damage awards in Americaduring the nineteenth century tended to be based principally on the ~aQ>DpSEf
(a) earnings of the person at time of death VO] Jvf
(b) wealth of the party causing the death =G]} L<
(c) degree of culpability of the party causingthe death !MSz%QcO
(d) amount of money that had been spent on theperson killed M7-piRnd4
2. itcan be inferred from the passage that in the early 1800's children weregenerally regarded by their families as individuals who gQ3Co ./
(a) needed enormous amounts of security andaffection TS^(<+'
(b) required constant supervision whileworking JryDbGc8
(c) were important to the economic well-beingof a family fQi7e5
(d) were unsuited to spending long hours inschool r5%K2q{
3. whichof the following alternative explanations of the change in the cash value ofchildren would be most likely to be put forward by sociological economists asthey are described in the passage? {:xINQ=}D
(a) the cash value of children rose during thenineteenth century because parents began to increase their emotional investmentin the upbringing of U>7"BpC
their children. 0kS[`a(}J
(b) the cash value of children rose during thenineteenth century because their expected earnings over the course of alifetime increased greatly. zDeh#
(c) the cash value of children rose during thenineteenth century because the spread of humanitarian ideals resulted in awholesale reappraisal of the worth of an individual rpu9
(d) the cash value of children rose during thenineteenth century because compulsory education laws reduced the supply, andthus raised the costs, of available child labor. ;ZPAnd:pb
4. theprimary purpose of the passage is to wUHuykF
(a) review the literature in a new academicsubfield O|m-Uz"+
(b) present the central thesis of a recentbook 6[,*2a8
(c) contrast two approaches to analyzinghistorical change *q_
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(d) refute a traditional explanation of asocial phenomenon Yxz(g]
5. zelizerrefers to all of the following as important influences in changing theassessment of children's worth except changes in EQ1wyKZS2g
(a) the mortality rate `An|a~G1
(b) the nature of industry XKN`{h-@
(c) the nature of the family y5B4t6M(
(d) attitudes toward reform movements jCqs^`-
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A stout old lady was walking with her basket down the middle ofa street in Petrograd to the great confusionof the traffic and with no small peril to herself. It was pointed out to herthat the x!fvSoHp
pavement was the place for pedestrians, but she replied: 'I'm going " NnUu8x
to walk where I like. We've got liberty now.' It did not occur mG@xehH
to the dear old lady that if liberty entitled the pedestrian to \_
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walk down the middle of the road, then the end of such liberty ;V`e%9.
would be universal chaos. Everybody would be getting in everybody else's wayand nobody would get anywhere. Individualliberty would have become social anarchy.There is a danger of the world gettingliberty-drunk in these days like the old lady with the basket, and it is justas well to remind ourselves of what the rule of the road means. It means thatin order that the liberties of all may be preserved, the liberties of everybody must becurtailed. When the policeman,say, at Piccadilly Circussteps into the middle of the road and puts out his hand, he is the symbol notof tyranny, but of liberty.You may not think so. You may, being in a hurry, andseeing your car pulled up by this insolence of office, feel that your liberty has been outraged. How darethis fellow interfere with tNg}:a|J
your free use of the public highway? Then, if you are a reasonable person, youwill reflect that if he did not interfere with you, he would interfere with noone, and the result would be that Piccadilly Circuswould be a maelstrom that you would never eE5U|y)_
cross at all. You have submitted to a curtailment of private liberty VeeQmR?u-
in order that you may enjoy a social order which makes your 0FD#9r
liberty a reality. }D/0&