English Entrance Examination \5P.C
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For Non-English Major Doctoral Candidates g`OOVaB
Paper One d_C4B
Part I Listening Comprehension (15 points, 20 minutes) z@~&Kwf\}
Section A V->%)d3i
Directions: In this section you will hear several short conversations. At the end of each conversation, a question will be asked about what was said. Each conversation and question will be spoken only once. After each question there will be a pause. During the pause, you must read the four suggested answers marked (A), B), C) and D), and decide which is the best answer. Then blacken the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet. naIv=
1. A) To cancel his trip B) To go to bed early. HB7(
C) To catch a later flight D) To ask for a wake-up call ^ L^F=q x
2. A) They have different opinions as to what to do next. lV<Tsk'
B) They have to pay for the house by installments. FxfL+}?Q
C) They will fix a telephone in the bathroom. "W@XP+POAY
D) The man's attitude is more sensible than the woman's. Hl3)R*&'J
3. A) She will save the stamps for the man's sister. Mjj}E
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B) She will no longer get letters from Canada. _Dj<Eu_
C) She can't give the stamps to the man's sister. XY{:tR_al
D) She has given the stamps to the man's roommates. YN@6}B#1
4. A) Visiting the Brownings B) Writing. VD24X
C) Looking for a postcard. D) Filling in a form. A=%k/
5. A) The man should work with somebody else i<m$#6<Z
B) The man should meet his partner's needs. *q*HG W5
C) They should come to a compromise. 5r4gmy>
D) They should find a better lab for the project. (`6%og#8
6. A) She can't finish her assignment, either. t'R':+0Vf
B) She can't afford a computer right now. A)hhnb0o
C) The man can use her computer. 3Q"F(uE v^
D) The man should buy a computer right away. X0WNpt&h
7. A) The visiting economist has given several lectures. pp~3@_)b
B) The guest lecturer's opinion is different from Dr.Johnson's.
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C) Dr. Johnson and the guest speaker were schoolmates. b]*X<,p
D) Dr. Johnson invited the economist to visit their college. u#+RUt
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8. A) She's never watched a better game. 9?;@*x
B) Football is her favorite pastime. c^=R8y-N
C) The game has been canceled %bP~wl~
D) Their team played very badly. d/{Q
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Section B Vkr`17`G
Directions: In this section, you will hear three short passage. At the end of each passage, there will be two or three questions. Both the passage and the questions will be read to you only once. After each question, there will be a pause. During the pause, you must choose the best answer from the four choices given by marking the corresponding letter A, B, C or D on your Answer Sheet. lC#RNjDp/~
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Passage 1 47IY|Jdz
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9. A) He sold fast food. 2sKG(^=Z
B) He raised dogs. +UxI{,L
C) He was a cook. 6Rcua<;2P
D) He was a cartoonist. XHxz @_rw
10. A) Because the Americans found they were from Germany. ~,ynJ]_aJB
B) Because people thought they contained dog meat. <uZPqi||
C) Because people had to get used to their taste. McjS)4j&.
D) Because it was too hot to eat right away. ->\N_|_
Passage 2 0p-#f|ET
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11. A) They give out faint cries. Xo Y7/&&
B) They make noises to drive away insects. R"
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C) They extend their water pipes. /D[dO6.
D) They become elastic like rubber bands. `<^*jB@P
12. A) They could drive the insects away
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B) They could keep the plants well watered. o/
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C) They could make the plants grow faster "u;YI=+
D) They could build devices to trap insects. f&yt
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Passage 3 lUv =7"
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13 A) To look for a different lifestyle. B) To enjoy themselves |5,<jy
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C) For adventure. D) For education QH~Jy*\+PX
14 A) It is a city of contrasts uEx9-,!
B) It possesses many historical sites. e1unzpWN
C) It is an important industrial center. rB%y6P B
D) It has many big and beautiful parks. CWi8Fv
15. A) It helps develop our personalities. +8AvTSgX%
B) It enables us to acquire first-hand knowledge. )iU^&@[S
C) It makes our life more interesting. T%(C-Quh
D) It brings about changes in our lifestyle. :CaTP% GW
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Part II Reading Comprehension (30 points, 45 minutes) 3qi_]*dD
Directions: In this part there are several passages. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked (A), B), C) and D). You should decide on the best choice and mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet. Es.nHN^]%K
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Passage 1 k_aW
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Every year scientists open more doors that lead to the secrets of zizk7<?L.
new beneficent drugs. 6~8F!b2
There is bacitracin, which was discovered by two scientists at /L v1$~
Columbia University's College of Physicians and Surgeons. These two %8mm Hh
people, Dr. Frank Meleney and Miss Balbina Johnson, knowing that the %=Tr^{i
human body had some kind of action in itself with which it fights 8W+5)m.tp
infections, began to search for the chemical that does this. In the WVX`<
hospital they examined badly infected wounds of people who had been v`DI<Lt
hurt in accidents and made tests of the blood and the infected tissue. *:hyY!x
Finally, in the wound of a girl who had broken a leg bone, they p&N#_dmlH
found the useful germs which seemed to be fighting the poisonous UE :HMn6
infection. They took some of these into the laboratory and from them W5pb;74|
developed cultures; that is, larger masses of the germs with which to o3N] `xD'
experiment. At last, after long and painstaking work, they were able N|:'XwL
to draw from these germs a substance which is a germ destroyer. Dr. B_^]C9C|
Meleney and Miss Johnson named it bacitracin-baci because the germ is, |<
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in scientific language, a bacillus and tracin for Margaret Tracy, jQh^WmN
whose broken leg supplied the germ. 'g)n1 {
Bacitracin at first was used only locally; later the drug was TgfrI
developed into a solution that can be used to fight germ through the ^3]UZ@
blood stream. /)>S<X
16.Today, the discovery of a new drug occurs . r"{<%e
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A)very seldom. B)once in a generation. LM)`CELsYc
C)once every ten years. D)frequently. 9X}I>
17. The scientific term for the action with which the human body 3Q By\1h.
fights infection . F<&!b2)ML
A)drug. B)biotic. ,!#ccv+Vm%
C)not mentioned. D)both A and B. 1zxq^BI
18. Searching for the fighting chemical, the scientists examined . &1|?BZv
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A)fresh wounds. B)infected wounds. ]wVk+%e
C)only infected leg bones. D)only a few wounds. ^jE8+h
19. Cultures, as used in this article, are . jXg
A)masses of germs. 0(TTw(;
B)blood tests. +IFw_3$
C)masses of infected tissue. BU Z
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D)poisonous germs. -~{c
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20. Bacitracin . / |r
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A)is poisonous. B)destroys germs. )cJ#-M2
C)restores broken bones. D)develops germs. _qwQ;!9
21. To say that a drug was used locally is to say that it was . */qtzt
A)distributed through the whole system. o{qr!*_3
B)used only in the area of infection. kOwMs<1J
C)used only at Columbia eV^d6T$
D)used only in hospitals. #6v27:XK
22. From reading this selection you can infer that LpbsYl
A)many scientific discoveries are due to chance. Ws U)Y&
B)every year scientists discover new beneficent drugs. z;tI D~Y
C)behind medical discovery there may be a dramatic story. '@|_Omc
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D)culture are large masses of germs. en S}A*Io
Passage 2 {
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Our echo sounder located the wreck of a French submarine that had 'NjzgZ~]P
foundered during the war in seventy-five feet of water outside Dakar !^#jwRpeN
harbor. Dumas and I plunged down and found the vessel lying clean and 3981ie
upright, surrounded by such clouds of fish as we had rarely seen-small Ks^6.)
silver fingerlings and dark metals. As Dumas swam into the shadow of @}p2aV59
the port propeller, he came face to face with a gigantic fish, grouper (/d5UIM{&
variety, cousin to our familiar Mediterranean meroblast-fish. This 8
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specimen was ten times the size of our old acquaintances: he weighed E:sz$\Ht)
at least four hundred pounds. The wide, flat head and tiny eyes _/8FRkx
advanced on Dumas; the ugly mouth yawned open, wide enough to admit `+'rib5
him. Dumas knew that sedentary groupers have no teeth to speak of; it 5,qj7HZF
seemed, however, that this individual might wish to swallow him y.5/?{GL
unmasticated in the fashion of the mero type which swims agape(大张着嘴), 5Wyz=+?m|
taking in whole octopuses(章鱼). S:4crI
The cavernous mouth approached within two feet; Dumas sculled O RGD
backward, watchfully keeping a modest interval as the monster fH`P[^N
unhurriedly followed. The knowledge that the species was harmless gave ;{i'#rn{
Dumas little comfort as he gazed into the fish's mouth; he and the fbyQjvURnC
grouper exchanged mutual stares of revulsion for a seemingly 3&u_A?;
interminable period while Dumas was steadily pressed back. Then the h~&gIub
beast lost interest, turned aside, and returned to its dim home under
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the lost submarine. Dumas surfaced in a reflective mood: "Imagine U~h'*nV&
being swallowed by a lousy grouper." z,qRcO&
23. Dumas encountered the jewfish while . ur
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A)trying to locate an old wreck. l Z#o+d2Y
B)skin fishing in Dakar harbor. Hsih[f
C)swimming near a foundered submarine. D3|oOOoG
D)attempting to salvage a submarine. b'VV'+|
24. The gigantic fish was actually . X37 L\e[c
A)an extraordinarily large pomfret. jV.g}F+1m
C)a kind of grouper fish. 7.DtdyM
B)a mero. W_m"ySQs
D)both B and C. uwRr LF
25. This type of fish was supposed to be . *f,DhT/P
A) dangerous if provoked. B) vicious. ??n*2s@t
C) harmless. D) afraid of man. OB[o2G <0
26. Dumas regarded the fish with . *x)Ozfe
A)tolerant amusement. +?p.?I
B)immediate terror. R!l:O=[<
C)complete objectivity. lKEkXO
D)increasing suspicion. nW;g28
27. It seemed to Dumas that the fish wished to . hp{OL< 2M
A)drive him away from its home. Wrr cx(
B)swallow him whole. 5K|"\
C)protect itself. h" H2z1$
D)force him to surface. \rVQQ|l
28. Dumas' comment on surfacing expressed . {.yStB.T
A)terror at a near escape. rDm
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B)shame at his reaction to the fish. iCHt1VV]
C)the unreasonableness of the situation. `/HUV&i"S
D)revulsion for the fish. [F5h
29. Implied but not stated: The fish . 7\ nf:.
A)intended to eat Dumas. Q,&