《英语》试卷(A) _li3cXE
考试须知 1)本考卷共包括五大项,共9页。考试时间为180分钟,满分100分。 2&V>pE
2)试卷中的客观题用钢笔或圈珠笔将答案在各题前标出。 "@&TC"YG0
3)试卷中的客观题用钢笔或圆珠笔写在每题后的空白处,字迹需清晰端正。 ?gMx
I. Vocabulary and Structure (10%): X(ph$,[
Directions: Below each sentence, there are four words marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that is closest in meaning to the underlined word in the sentence or that best completes the sentence. !d N[9}
1 The bridge was named ______ the hero how gave his life for the cause of the people. L(TM&
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A) after B) with J,?#O#j
C) by D) from
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2 There were no tickets _______ for Friday's performance. L[Vk 6e
A) preferable B) considerable i=EOk}R
C) possible D) available U=G49~E
3 If these shoes are too big, ask the clerk to bring you a smaller _________. Xfc$M(a
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A) suit B) set yl-:9|LT
C) one D) pair j?2~6W/[
4 Many new ______ will be opened up in the future for those with a university education. }Z"iW/?"
A) opportunities B) necessities >s^$-
C) realities D) probabilities )aIcA
5 The rain was heavy and _______ the land was flooded. DO:,PZX
A) consequently B) continuously z;qDl%AF
C) constantly D) consistently |C4fg6XDL
6 The engine ______ smoke and steam. ^j\LB23
A) gives up B) gives in wm`<
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C) gives away D) gives off XZ%,h
7 Don't ________ this news to the public until we give you the go-ahead. 2`f{D~w
A) release B) relieve _@ao$)q{J
C) relate D) retain XKjrS
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8 What you have done is ______ the doctor's orders. ~tp]a]yV
A) attached to B) responsible to zq};{~u(
C) resistant to D) contrary to 7H3v[ f^Q
9 They _____ in spite of the extremely difficult conditions.
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A) carried out B) carried of Z 8rD9
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C) carried on D) carried forward M|DMoi8x
10 My camera can be _____ to take pictures in cloudy or sunny conditions. I0}.!
A) treated B) adjusted *J-pAN
C) adopted D) remedied \jC) ;mk
11 Children who are over-protected by their parents may become_____ kd
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A) hurt B) damaged VIp|U{
C) spoiled D) harmed =2p?_.|'
12 When Mr. Jones gets old, he will______ over his business to his son. Z@Rm^g]o
A) take B) hand W> pe-
C) think D) get &nm
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13 It was difficult to guess what her ______ to the news would be. /!H24[tnk1
A) impression B) reaction agUdI_'~@9
C) comment D) opinion "
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14 There were some ______ flowers on the table 1-gM)x{Jr
A) artificial B) unnatural |
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C) false D) unreal i<ES/U\
15 We are interested in the weather because it ______us to directly - what we wear, what we do, and even how we feel. "^4*,41U
A) benefits B) affects if'=W6W
C) guides D) effects u2#q7}
16 Will all those _______ the proposal raise their hands? v<1@"9EH
A) in relation to B) in contrast to "uBnK
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C) in excess of D) in favor of s$#64"F
17 Children are very curious ______. 9
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A) at heart B) in person 0C<\m\|~k
C) on purpose D) by nature /4r2B.91O
18 I hope my teacher will take my recent illness into _______ when judging my examination. ='"Yj
A) regard B) counting FF8jW1
C) account D) observation ?\\wLZ
19 Important people don't often have much free time as their work ________ all their time. )9 Q+07
A) takes away B) takes over ?nc:bC
C) takes up D) takes in :I#.d7`uk
20 When I was very young, I was terribly frightened of school, but I soon ______ it. vsI;ooR>
A) got off B) got across :%gc Sm
C) got away D) got over (U'n1s/X
II. Reading Comprehension (15%) : +C`!4v\n
Directions: Read the following three passages carefully, choose the best answer to each question from the four choices given. m'2F#{
Passage A v6)QLp
With each announcement of a spectacular breakthrough in cardiac surgery, such as transplantation of the human heart, the attitude of the public progresses through the astonishment, disbelief, deep moral concern, outright objection, confusion, and finally a qualified acceptance. Inevitably the risks and complications later become public knowledge, and public misgivings are intensified. J^"_H:1[
The electrifying news of the first human heart transplant on December 3, 1967, quite understandably caught the civilized world unprepared --- not just scientifically, but also philosophically and psychologically. By what criteria was the donor selected? Is there in every instance a “moment “ of death, or does it occur as a process or series of events? Such fundamental considerations had been of universal concern for centuries, particularly to those in the medical and legal professions. But the unexpected advent of heart transplantation placed a new agency on the problem of defining death. IgbuMEfL
The traditional definition stated that death occurred when the heart ceased to beat. But questions arose in situations where the body and organs remained viable although the brain was destroyed, sometimes even by decapitation. If the heart continued to function, was the physician obliged to support the remains until all signs of viability ceased? Gradually the concept of patient death as synonymous with brain death rather than organ death gained acceptance. W1)SgiXnuy
1. A good title for this selection would be_____________________. _h1bVd-
A. How to Select a Transplant Donor x;[)#>.'
B. The Ethical Questions in Heart Transplants s`x2Go
C. Death Is Difficult to Define ^$oa`B^2JM
D. The Story of the First Human Heart Transplant :Ou~?q%X
2.The word “electrifying” in the second paragraph of the passage can best be replaced by______. \gP?uJ
A. extraordinary `6rLd>=R
B. exciting }6l:'nW
C. powerful Hl$qmq
D. conflicting ?Z|y-4 &>
3. The selection suggests that________________. _U}|Le@ e
A. decapitation results in immediate heart death =F[M>o
B. when the brain dies all organs die Q8HNST($?
C. patient death occurs when the heart stops beating O4-#)#-)S~
D. patient death is not easy to define /;_$:`|/
4. In heart transplant surgery, it is necessary to have a definition of death because_____________. oxFd@WV5
A. the donor must know when the recipient is dead
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B. the doctor must know when he may remove the donor’s heart +
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C. the doctor may not have learned this in medical school W[QgddR
D. questions always arise during surgery f$ /C.E
5. The author states that we have come to regard a patient as dead when_______________. pz2E+o
A. his reflexes no longer function >
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B. he has stopped breathing )cN=/i
C. his brain no longer functions J{Ij
D. his heart no longer functions \sGJs8#v][
Passage B \ bNDeA&l
I was not all happy at the prospect of the 700-mile drive from Dar-es-Salaam to Nairobi. It was not that I disliked driving but I suspected that what is a very pleasant trip in the dry season could prove disastrous during the long rains, and the monsoons had arrived the previous week. I was fully aware of the possibility of a breakdown, of hitting large animals as they stopped, dazzled by my headlamps, or even of skidding off the road. But these dangers worried me much less than the thought of stretches of black cotton soil I would have to negotiate, grey and hard as concrete when dry, but a black, viscous, muddy mess with the consistency of elastic after just one heavy shower of rain. However, I had to be in Nairobi by the weekend so there was nothing for it but to drive; all planes were fully booked three weeks ahead and with the railway line washed out there was little likelihood of a train in the next few days. 2aivc,m{r
The first half of the journey proved completely uneventful, and I was in a very cheerful frame of mind as I pulled in to Moshi in the misty dawn. A little later, buoyed up by an excellent breakfast and the thought of tarmac roads all the way to the border, I resumed my journey. Another 80 miles brought a complete reversal of mood; I was now within 20 miles of the border and what I saw ahead matched my spirits. Gone were the hills, completely hidden by the lowering clouds, their ominous, gloomy depths rent by jagged flashes of lightning. [HXd|,~_j-
Ten minutes later the rain struck --- an almost solid wall of water that smashed down on the car in a noisy frenzy, sheeted down the windscreen and made it almost impossible for me to see where I was going. The windscreen wipers did little to help; they were not designed to cope with such an avalanche of water. But rain of such intensity could not last long, and by the time I reached the border check-point the rain had ceased off to proportions I felt I could cope with. D{]w+
The check-point consisted of two poles resting on tar barrels with the half-completed structure of a modern control post in between. In six months or so, everything would be complete as far as I could see. In the meantime, the officials I needed to stamp my passport and check my luggage could only be in the bedraggled tent I noticed perched on a slope over to my left. I took off my shoes and socks, climbed out of my car and dashed over to the tent. In the tent was an impeccably dressed immigration official sitting on a chair with his feet tucked under him while a river of water flowed in under one wall of the tent and out under another. These were hardly ideal working conditions. Yet nobody would have thought that, as he saw me, he could grin cheerfully and extend a very courteous welcome. g3n>}\xG>
6. To the writer, the greatest hazard on the journey was the possibility of _________________. I-s$U T[p
A. his car breaking down 0NsPo
B. hitting large animals -}qay@cDt
C. skidding off the road ;X
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D. having to drive through black cotton soil yj,+7[)
7. The writer was happy when he reached Moshi because___________________. How:_ Hj
A. he had had no trouble so far 4>=Y@
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B. dawn was breaking and it would be easier to drive in daylight k<