2015年华中科技大学博士英语真题回忆 %A^
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一、完形填空(缺,10分) s9)U",
二、阅读理解(40分) ^.HvuG},O
Passage 1 NrK.DY4
In contrast to traditional analyses of minority business, the sociological analysis contends <(c_[o/
that minority business ownership is a group-level phenomenon, in that it is largely dependent upon Qu;cl/&
social-group resources for its development. Specifically, this analysis indicates that support o#~Lb9`@U
networks play a critical role in starting and maintaining minority business enterprises by providing ^kO+NH40
owners with a range of assistance, from the informal encouragement of family members and =
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friends to dependable sources of labor and clientele from the owner’s ethnic group. Such self-help fFYfb4o
networks, which encourage and support ethnic minority entrepreneurs, consist of “primary” :2zga=)g
institutions, those closest to the individual in shaping his or her behavior and beliefs. They are tg%#W`
characterized by the face-to-face association and cooperation of persons united by ties of mutual qC x|}5:
concern. They form an intermediate social level between the individual and larger “secondary” 6|G&d>G$_
institutions based on impersonal relationships. Primary institutions comprising the support yCvP-?2
network include kinship, peer, and neighborhood or community subgroups. -Is;cbfLj/
A major function of self-help networks is financial support. Most scholars agree that minority L}a-c(G+8
business owners have depended primarily on family funds and ethnic community resources for .<Rw16O
investment capital. Personal savings have been accumulated, often through frugal living habits :*} -,{uX
that require sacrifices by the entire family and are thus a product of long-term family financial v8} vk]b
behavior. Additional loans and gifts from relatives, forthcoming because of group obligation /wI"oHZd
rather than narrow investment calculation, have supplemented personal savings. Individual OAauD$Hh
entrepreneurs do not necessarily rely on their kin because they cannot obtain financial backing 1PB"1.wnd
from commercial resources. They may actually avoid banks because they assume that commercial 'L@kZ
institutions either cannot comprehend the special needs of minority enterprise or charge HSk_'g(\0
unreasonably high interest rates. ?Gl]O3@3
Within the larger ethnic community, rotating credit associations have been used to raise 64i
*_\UKe
capital. These associations are informal clubs of friends and other trusted members of the ethnic /rIyW?& f
group who make regular contributions to a fund that is given to each contributor in rotation. One w7@TM%nS
author estimates that 40 percent of New York Chinatown firms established during 1900-1950 hp1+9vEN
utilized such associations as their initial source of capital. However, recent immigrants and third $
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or fourth generations of older groups now employ rotating credit associations only occasionally to Rf
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raise investment funds. Some groups, like Black Americans, found other means of financial
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support for their entrepreneurial efforts. The first Black-operated banks were created in the late 1ysQvz
nineteenth century as depositories for dues collected from fraternal or lodge groups, which OXm`n/64+
themselves had sprung from Black churches. Black banks made limited investments in other Black RG*Vdom
enterprises. Irish immigrants in American cities organized many building and loan associations to 9QaE)wt
provide capital for home construction and purchase. They, in turn, provided work for many Irish Z\$M)e8n
home-building contractor firms. Other ethnic and minority groups followed similar practices in lm6hFvEZ
founding ethnic-directed financial institutions. Q~tXT_
1. Based on the information in the passage, it would be LEAST likely for which of the following /)T~
(o|i
persons to be part of a self-help network? (6.uNLr
(A) The entrepreneur’s childhood friend 1~'jC8&J
(B) The entrepreneur’s aunt cGiL9|k
(C) The entrepreneur’s religious leader 6Cz
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ztn
(D) The entrepreneur’s neighbor >{N}UNZ$}
(E) The entrepreneur’s banker m`l9d4p
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2. Which of the following illustrates the working of a self-help support network, as such networks M+0PEf.
are described in the passage? PJcfiRa'jQ
(A) A public high school offers courses in book-keeping and accounting as part of its openenrollment =#/Kg_RKL
adult education program. ;F#(:-:
(B) The local government in a small city sets up a program that helps teen-agers find summer jobs. R0}1:1}$Sn
(C) A major commercial bank offers low-interest loans to experienced individuals who hope to o//h|f U@
establish their own businesses. o]~\u{o#.
(D) A neighborhood-based fraternal organization develops a program of on-the-job training for its %rMCiz
members and their friends. +4.s4&f)
(E) A community college offers country residents training programs that can lead to certification 6q\*{_CPB
in a variety of technical trades. `Bw]
PO
3. Which of the following can be inferred from the passage about rotating credit associations? t|$jgM
(A) They were developed exclusively by Chinese immigrants. >Jmla~A
(B) They accounted for a significant portion of the investment capital used by Chinese immigrants d?8OY
in New York in the early twentieth century. |ZL?Pqki
(C) Third-generation members of an immigrant group who started businesses in the 1920’s would .
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have been unlikely to rely on them. %+H _V1F
(D) They were frequently joint endeavors by members of two or three different ethnic groups. K9lekevB
(E) Recent immigrants still frequently turn to rotating credit associations instead of banks for >!t3~q1Cn
investment capital. wX0D^)NtF
4. The passage best supports which of the following statements? Sv T0%2
(A) A minority entrepreneur who had no assistance from family members would not be able to +Yc^w5 !(
start a business. ==OUd6e}
(B) Self-help networks have been effective in helping entrepreneurs primarily in the last 50 years. A$=ny6
(C) Minority groups have developed a range of alternatives to standard financing of business =I`S7oF
ventures. o
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(D) The financial institutions founded by various ethnic groups owe their success to their unique 2%
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formal organization. 5c` ;~
(E) Successful minority-owned businesses succeed primarily because of the personal strengths of uQIPnd(V
their founders. w'K7$F51
5. Which of the following best describes the organization of the second paragraph? Vr
EGR$
(A) An argument is delineated, followed by a counter-argument. ?$|tT\SFV
(B) An assertion is made and several examples are provided to illustrate it. @G"nkB
(C) A situation is described and its historical background is then outlined. '4 *0Pw
(D) An example of a phenomenon is given and is then used as a basis for general conclusions. dd
(E) A group of parallel incidents is described and the distinctions among the incidents are then )8A.Wg4S;c
clarified. ,~Mf2Y#m0p
6. According to the passage, once a minority-owned business is established, self-help networks EB}B75)x
contribute which of the following to that business? E7L>5z
(A) Information regarding possible expansion of the business into nearby communities Sb[>R(0:
(B) Encouragement of a business climate that is nearly free of direct competition 4Y8
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(C) Opportunities for the business owner to reinvest profits in other minority-owned businesses tnJ7m8JmC
(D) Contact with people who are likely to be customers of the new business gw)4P tb!
(E) Contact with minority entrepreneurs who are members of other ethnic groups vwT1bw .
7. It can be inferred from the passage that traditional analyses of minority business would be \6|y~5Hw{r
LEAST likely to do which of the following? gy}3ZA*F
(A) Examine businesses primarily in their social contexts rWTaCU^qV
(B) Focus on current, rather than historical, examples of business enterprises VW*%q0i-
(C) Stress common experiences of individual entrepreneurs in starting businesses |8'}mjs.Q
(D) Focus on the maintenance of businesses, rather than means of starting them 6Cy Byj&
(E) Focus on the role of individual entrepreneurs in starting a business k
* C69
8. Which of the following can be inferred from the passage about the Irish building and loan %unn{92)
associations mentioned in the last paragraph? sWlxt q g
(A) They were started by third- or fourth-generation immigrants. RnkV)ed(
(B) They originated as offshoots of church-related groups. bo=H-d|
(C) They frequently helped Irish entrepreneurs to finance business not connected with g$uiwqNA%
construction. jWUrw
(D) They contributed to the employment of many Irish construction workers. zeMV_rW~
(E) They provided assistance for construction businesses owned by members of other ethnic q]="ek&_
groups. >&.N_,*
Passage2 (]q
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It was once assumed that all living things could be divided into two fundamental and :$G^TD/n
exhaustive categories. Multicellular plants and animals, as well as many unicellular organisms, are Nf4@m|#
eukaryotic—their large, complex cells have a well-formed nucleus and many organelles. On the OAkqPG&w
other hand, the true bacteria are prokaryotic cell, which are simple and lack a nucleus. The 'gN[LERT
distinction between eukaryotes and bacteria, initially defined in terms of subcellular structures Kh3i.gm7g
visible with a microscope, was ultimately carried to the molecular level. Here prokaryotic and @g[ijs\
eukaryotic cells have many features in common. For instance, they translate genetic information Zg_b(ks
into proteins according to the same type of genetic coding. But even where the molecular iX?j "=!
processes are the same, the details in the two forms are different and characteristic of the F7} yt
respective forms. For example, the amino acid sequences of various enzymes tend to be typically )P7oL.)
prokaryotic or eukaryotic. The differences between the groups and the similarities within each <\~@l^lU
group made it seem certain to most biologists that the tree of life had only two stems. Moreover, J)g
+I
arguments pointing out the extent of both structural and functional differences between eukaryotes e[fld,s
and true bacteria convinced many biologists that the precursors of the eukaryotes must have %;wDB2k*
diverged from the common ancestor before the bacteria arose. s3Bo'hGxG
Although much of this picture has been sustained by more recent research, it seems s {*rBX8N
fundamentally wrong in one respect. Among the bacteria, there are organisms that are {v!w2p@
significantly different both from the cells of eukaryotes and from the true bacteria, and it now HA
c"pG
appears that there are three stems in the tree of life. New techniques for determining the molecular iw.F8[})
sequence of the RNA of organisms have produced evolutionary information about the degree to =n.&N
which organisms are related, the time since they diverged from a common ancestor, and the bv7)[,i
reconstruction of ancestral versions of genes. These techniques have strongly suggested that #F/W_G7 v
although the true bacteria indeed form a large coherent group, certain other bacteria, the klmbbLce
archaebacteria, which are also prokaryotes and which resemble true bacteria, represent a distinct .5HD i-
evolutionary branch that far antedates the common ancestor of all true bacteria. &x
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1. The passage is primarily concerned with t^bh2$J
(A) detailing the evidence that has led most biologists to replace the trichotomous picture of FS7D
living organisms with a dichotomous one Wu,=jL3?$A
(B) outlining the factors that have contributed to the current hypothesis concerning the number of ?RE"<L
basic categories of living organisms A
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(C) evaluating experiments that have resulted in proof that the prokaryotes are more ancient than nF-l4 =
had been expected Nt
tu)wr
(D) summarizing the differences in structure and function found among true bacteria, UN<$F yb
archaebacteria, and eukaryotes uEsF 8
(E) formulating a hypothesis about the mechanisms of evolution that resulted in the ancestors of g6gwNC:aF
the prokaryotes )REegFN@
2. According to the passage, investigations of eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells at the molecular IM,d6lN6s
level supported the conclusion that nr>Yj?la
(A) most eukaryotic organisms are unicellular 4Qi-zNNB
(B) complex cells have well-formed nuclei CTqhXk[
(C) prokaryotes and eukaryotes form two fundamental categories ^S|}<6~6b
(D) subcellular structures are visible with a microscope
6 {`J I
(E) prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells have similar enzymes y`z?lmV)xM
3. According to the passage, which of the following statements about the two-category Dl?:Mh
hypothesis is likely to be true? `/G9*tIR8g
(A) It is promising because it explains the presence of true bacteria-like organisms such as <\d`}A:&
organelles in eukaryotic cells. Dz$dJF1
8
(B) It is promising because it explains why eukaryotic cells, unlike prokaryotic cells, tend to 6m:$RW
form multicellular organisms. V\
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(C) It is flawed because it fails to account for the great variety among eukaryotic organisms. '^Q$:P{G?
(D) It is flawed because it fails to account for the similarity between prokaryotes and eukaryotes. z+c8G
(E) It is flawed because it fails to recognize an important distinction among prokaryotes. Q{
g{
4. It can be inferred from the passage that which of the following have recently been compared 6ZXRb
in order to clarify the fundamental classifications of living things? ~A(^<
(A) The genetic coding in true bacteria and that in other prokaryotes |41~U\
(B) The organelle structures of archaebacteria, true bacteria, and eukaryotes }?CKE<#%
(C) The cellular structures of multicellular organisms and unicellular organisms M3fTUCR
(D) The molecular sequences in eukaryotic RNA, true bacterial RNA, and archaebacterial RNA +}g6X6m
(E) The amino acid sequences in enzymes of various eukaryotic species and those of enzymes in FZ FPzH
archaebacterial species @6y)wA9Yx
5. If the “new techniques” mentioned in line 31 were applied in studies of biological |lIgvHgg
classifications other than bacteria, which of the following is most likely? U*BI/wZ
(A) Some of those classifications will have to be reevaluated. /RF&@NJE5
(B) Many species of bacteria will be reclassified. 4^^=^c
(C) It will be determined that there are four main categories of living things rather than three. XCGK&OGI
(D) It will be found that true bacteria are much older than eukaryotes. y=}o|/5"
(E) It will be found that there is a common ancestor of the eukaryotes, archaebacteria, and true |QyZ:`0u
bacteria. cf\GC2+"^$
6. According to the passage, researchers working under the two-category hypothesis were =Nz;R2{@
correct in thinking that V|2[>\Cv
(A) prokaryotes form a coherent group d263#R
(B) the common ancestor of all living things had complex properties 8wCB}q C
(C) eukaryotes are fundamentally different from true bacteria =)!~t/
(D) true bacteria are just as complex as eukaryotes WXa<(\S\V
(E) ancestral versions of eukaryotic genes functioned differently from their modern counterparts 5_rx$av
m
7. All of the following statements are supported by the passage EXCEPT: ^HWa owy=
(A) True bacteria form a distinct evolutionary group. 4SIS#m
(B) Archaebacteria are prokaryotes that resemble true bacteria. DNRWE1P2bg
(C) True bacteria and eukaryotes employ similar types of genetic coding. Vo(bro4ZQi
(D) True bacteria and eukaryotes are distinguishable at the subcellular level. Dd:48sN:Jq
(E) Amino acid sequences of enzymes are uniform for eukaryotic and prokaryotic organisms. LKM;T-
8. The author’s attitude toward the view that living things are divided into three categories is CeUC[cUQU
best described as one of 4=l$wg~;
(A) tentative acceptance !w
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(B) mild skepticism >UXNR`?
(C) limited denial % 3<7HY]~
(D) studious criticism ,a":/ /[
(E) whole hearted endorsement #?DoP]1Y
Passage3 %vRCs]
Stratford-on-Avon, as we all know, has only one industry-William Shakespeare-but there are +6(\7?
two distinctly separate and increasingly hostile branches. There is the Royal Shakespeare 8M7Bw[Q1
Company (RSC), which presents superb productions of the plays at the Shakespeare Memorial =A_fL{ SM
Theatre on the Avon. And there are the townsfolk who largely live off the tourists who come, not
"6i3'jc`
to see the plays, but to look at Anne Hathaway’s Cottage, Shakespeare’s birthplace and the other |}o3EX
sights. 3yLJWHO%W
The worthy residents of Stratford doubt that the theatre adds a penny to their revenue. They
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frankly dislike the RSC’s actors, them with their long hair and beards and sandals and noisiness.
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It’s all deliciously ironic when you consider that Shakespeare, who earns their living, was himself {vp*m:K
an actor (with a beard) and did his share of noise - making. 5I/lF oy7
The tourist streams are not entirely separate. The sightseers who come by bus- and often a" L9jrVrw
take in Warwick Castle and Blenheim Palace on the side– don’t usually see the plays, and some of 9`7>"[=P
them are even surprised to find a theatre in Stratford. However, the playgoers do manage a little V}Ce3wgvA
sight - seeing along with their play- going. It is the playgoers, the RSC contends, who bring in *eMMf
xFl
much of the town’s revenue because they spend the night (some of them four or five nights) #j)"#1IE2W
pouring cash into the hotels and restaurants. The sightseers can take in everything and get out of 6K^O.VoV^J
town by nightfall. A}(o1wuw
The townsfolk don’t see it this way and local council does not contribute directly to the %RzCJxT
subsidy of the Royal Shakespeare Company. Stratford cries poor traditionally. Nevertheless every ?$VkMu$2k
hotel in town seems to be adding a new wing or cocktail lounge. Hilton is building its own hotel #g<6ISuf
there, which you may be sure will be decorated with Hamlet Hamburger Bars, the Lear Lounge,
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the Banquo Banqueting Room, and so forth, and will be very expensive. sGc.;":
Anyway, the townsfolk can’t understand why the Royal Shakespeare Company needs a $ByP 9=|
subsidy. (The theatre has broken attendance records for three years in a row. Last year its 1,431 Yh;A)Np
seats were 94 per cent occupied all year long and this year they’ll do better.) The reason, of 6i%Xf i
course, is that costs have rocketed and ticket prices have stayed low. R$;TX^r'o&
It would be a shame to raise prices too much because it would drive away the young ,(N
N)Oj
people who are Stratford’s most attractive clientele. They come entirely for the plays, not the <jBRUa[j_
sights. They all seem to look alike (though they come from all over)–lean, pointed, dedicated e9>~mtx
faces, wearing jeans and sandals, eating their buns and bedding down for the night on the /y(0GP4A
flagstones outside the theatre to buy the 20 seats and 80 standing-room tickets held for the sleepers wOsg,p;\'
and sold to them when the box office opens at 10:30 a.m. -F MonM
26. From the first two paragraphs, we learn that [pInF
Qh6
A. the townsfolk deny the RSC‘s contribution to the town’s revenue ]'pL*&"X
B. the actors of the RSC imitate Shakespeare on and off stage .br6x^\<
C. the two branches of the RSC are not on good terms l z-I[*bA
D. the townsfolk earn little from tourism JfmYr47Pv
27. It can be inferred from Paragragh 3 that Sb(OG 6
A. the sightseers cannot visit the Castle and the Palace separately [v\m)5
B. the playgoers spend more money than the sightseers 8|zOgn{
C. the sightseers do more shopping than the playgoers AREjS$
D. the playgoers go to no other places in town than the theater iu3L9UfL[
28. By saying “Stratford cries poor traditionally”(Line 2-3, Paragraph 4), the author dT[JVl+3=
implies that wE}Wh5
A. Stratford cannot afford the expansion projects 7*"Jx}eM
B. Stratford has long been in financial difficulties U_l9CZ
C. the town is not really short of money k8
1%$E
D. the townsfolk used to be poorly paid K6sXw[VC[
29. According to the townsfolk, the RSC deserves no subsidy because 6?;z\AP&
A. ticket prices can be raised to cover the spending 8g
Z)c\
B. the company is financially ill-managed v; R2,`[W
C. the behavior of the actors is not socially acceptable *0to,$ n
D. the theatre attendance is on the rise kguZ AO6
30. From the text we can conclude that the author b?c/J{me
A. is supportive of both sides {/H<_
B. favors the townsfolk’s view WTJ{
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C. takes a detached attitude lo(C3o'
D. is sympathetic to the RS (zsv!U
Passage4 OF+4Mq
Last month, Hansen Transmissions International, a maker of gearboxes for wind turbines, was rQyjNh
listed on the London Stock Exchange. Nothing noteworthy about that, you might say, despite the DA.k8M
jump in the share price on the first day of trading and the handsome gain since: green technology ;o9ixmT<-o
is all the rage, is it not But Hansen exemplifies another trend too, which should prove every bit as }\Rmwm-
durable: the rise of multinational companies from emerging economies. Its parent is Suzlon, an YO$D-
Indian firm that began life as a textile manufacturer but is now among the world’s five leading 1l"2 ~k
makers of wind turbines. Along the way, Suzlon has acquired not only Hansen, originally Belgian, ,(pp+hNq
but also REpower, a German wind-energy firm, spending over $ 2 billion on the pair. oJ\g0|\qwe
The world is now replete with Suzlons: global companies from emerging economies buying Uq$/Q7
businesses in rich countries as well as in poorer places. Another Indian company, Tata Motors, U/^#nU.,
looks likely to add to the list soon, by buying two grand old names of British carmaking, Jaguar O~6%Iz`
and Land Rover, from America’s enfeebled Ford. As a symbol of a shift in economic power, this {MSE
}|A\V
is hard to match #-<Go'yF
Economic theory says that this should not happen. Richer countries should export capital to 5dI=;L>D
poorer ones, not the other way round. Economists have had to get used to seeing this turned on its <Q\KS
head in recent years, as rich countries have run large current-account deficits and borrowed from }!oEj
cX'
China and other emerging economies (notably oil, exporters) with huge surpluses. Similarly, A5TSbW']+5
foreign direct investment (FDI) the buying of companies and the building of factories and offices 45sEhs[$
abroad— should also flow from rich to poor, and with it managerial and entrepreneurial prowess. n@RmH>"
It is not yet time to tear up the textbook on FDI. According to the UN Conference on Trade i7XY3yhC
and Development (UNCTAD), in 2006 the flow of FDI into developing economies exceeded the R~kO5jpW
outflow by more than $ 200 billion. But the transfer of finance and expertise is by no means all in Sv{n?BYq
one direction. Developing economies accounted for one-seventh of FDI outflows in 2006, most of s@ @Km1w
it in the form of takeovers. Indian companies have done most to catch the eye, but firms from Ee2P]4_d
Brazil, China and Mexico, in industries from cement to consumer electronics and aircraft !SW0iq[7j
manufacture, have also gone global. Up to a point, emerging-market multinationals have been kt2_WW[
buying Western know-how. But they have been bringing managerial and entrepreneurial skill, as X]p3?
"7
well as just money, to the companies they buy. British managers bear grudging witness to the Lz.khE<
financial flair of Mexican cement bosses; Boeing and Airbus may have learnt a thing or two from |p&EP2?T
the global supply chains of Brazil’s Embraer. ,s #~00C|
Perhaps no one should be surprised. Half a century ago, Japan was a poor country, today Lc{arhN
Sony and Toyota are among the best-known and mightiest companies on the planet. South Korea S>~
f.
and Taiwan are still listed as developing countries in UNCTAD’s tables, but that seems bizarrely .Rk8qR
B
outdated for the homes of Samsung and Taiwan Semiconductor. Now another generation is I.jqC2G
forming. To its critics, globalization may be little more than a license for giant Western companies [g/D<g5O
to colonize the emerging world, yet more arid more firms from poorer economies are planting Q^Cm3|ZO
their flags in rich ground. E{u6<