华东师范大学2006年招收攻读博士学位研究生入学考试试题 考试科目:英语 ?;7>`F6ld
Paper One bIl0
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注意:答案请做在答题卡上,做在试题上一律无效 BCDf9]X
Part I Vocabulary and Structure (20%) P*=3$-`
Directions: There are 20 incomplete sentences in this part. For each sentence there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that best completes the sentence. Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet I with a single line through the center. b0Cao
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1. Police believe that many burglars are amateurs who would flee if an alarm sounded or lights . Ox1QP2t6Y
A. came out B. came on C. came to D. came down 8}b[Q/h!
2. Mr. Jenkins drove along at his usual high speed for police cars in his mirror from time to time to make sure he was safe. -r0\
A. pulling out B. running through C. going ahead D. watching out >l*9DaZ
3. Miss Tracy moved to New York in the early 1960s, apparently to escape jealous friends who were becoming increasingly of her success.
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A. delightful B. graceful C. resentful D. respectful bH]!~[
4. In theory, governments are free to set their own economic policies; in practice, they must conform to a global economic model or risk being by the market. &IY_z0=
A. replaced B. overlooked C. saturated D. penalized _@?Jx/`;bk
5. Mrs. Black finds that her piano has always had the magic power of taking her away ,colGth54
from the grim realities of daily life and her to fairyland of her own once she L. ?dI82c
started to play. ]* Ki7h|B
A. transforming B. transporting C. transplanting D. transcending dV*rnpN
6. It is hard to think of a field in which it is not important to what is likely to happen and act accordingly. :u+#:8u
A. look out B. figure out C. turn out D. point out ~TIZumGB
7. At about the same time, some black Christians walked in protest out of churches where _jKVA6_E
they were forced to worship in sections. KftM4SFbK
A. segregated B. sustained C. connected D. engaged p arG
8. San Francisco climbs and falls over numerous hills, which provides views of the wide bay and the Golden Gate Bridge. euC,]n.
A. flashy B. transient C. breathtaking D. ambiguous wA&)y>n-
9. Martin Luther King, Jr. persuaded his followers to bring the of the American Negroes to the attention of the United Nations, but they did not act very effectively. YhR"_
A. conspiracy B. pledge C. plight D. compulsion 70(?X/5#
10. Even though strong evidence has proved the nicotine to be , the tobacco company still insists that its products are harmless. @x
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A. soluble B. deficient C. addictive D. skeptical [)c|oh%
11. Prof. Flynn found no students in the lecture hall when he arrived. Only then did he realize that he came early. IcA~f@
A. too much B. so much C. much too D. much so cYS+XBz
12. I wanted to be sure a sudden emergency that we gave the right advice. 6V
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A. on account of B. in case of C. at the risk of D. in spite of 2 -8:qmP(
13. in India, the banana was brought to the Americas by the Portuguese who found it in Africa. h%e!f#
A. Originally cultivated B. Having originally cultivated ogbdt1
C. Originally being cultivated D.Although it originally cultivated 3o^
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14. It was the end of my exhausting first day as a waitress, and I really appreciated time to relax. Rj=Om
A. to have B. having C. to have had D. of having H.K`#W&
15. We’ve just installed central heating, should make a tremendous difference to the house next winter. LRs;>O
A. what B. that C. it D. which X.|0E87
16. So fast that it is difficult for us to imagine its speed. #0H[RU?
A.has light traveled B.light travels C.does light travel D.travels light hKYPH?b%
17. she was living in Paris that she met her husband Terry. NWj@iyi<
A. Just when B. It was while C. Soon after D. During the time when c>.X c[H
18. While crossing the mountain areas, all the men had guns for protection lest they X
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by the local bandits. [hbIv
A. be attacked B. must be attacked C. were attacked D.would be attacked ij5YV3
19. The police chief announced that the deaths of two young girls would soon be inquired Y.#+Yh[
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A. about B. of C. into D. after KYN{iaj
20. They were more than glad to leave their cars parked and walked a change. ,iUx'U
A. as B. for C. to D. by 1YL5 ![T
Part II Reading Comprehension (40%) k*^W
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Directions: There are 4 reading passages in this part. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the best answer and mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet I with a single line through the center. Y?cw9uYB
(1) fO nvC*
When the brash British raider Sir James Goldsmith calculated that U. S. timberland was a tempting prize, he launched a $500-million bid to take over San Francisco’s Crown Zellerbach paper company in order to grab the corporation’s vast forests. As a result, Goldsmith owns 1.9 million acres of forests in Washington State, Oregon, Mississippi and Louisiana. ?C3cPt"
The United States seems to have become a country for sale. Foreign ownership in the United States, including everything from real estate to securities, rose to a remarkable $ 1.33 trillion last year, up 25.5 percent from the previous year. Foreign investors now own 46 percent of the commercial real estate in downtown Los Angeles, 39 percent in downtown Houston, 32 percent in downtown Minneapolis and 21 percent in downtown Manhattan. =ndKG5
Esteemed U. S. corporate nameplates have been changing citizenship at a rapid clip. Smith & Wesson handguns have gone to the British. General Electric television sets have been bought by the French, Carnation foods by the Swiss, General Tire by the West Germans. t`B']Ac;T
In fact, the question of what is truly America has become befuddling. The British, who burned Washington in 1814, have built or bought an estimated $773 million in District of Columbia property, including ownership of the famed Watergate complex. And what about breakfast (or a diamond ring) at Tiffany, or drinks in the cultured atmosphere of Manhattan’s Algonquin Hotel? Those vintage landmark buildings are now Japanese possessions. [DwB7l)O(
The reasons for the rush to buy are abundantly clear. The U. S. dollar has plunged more than 50 percent in value during the past three years against such major foreign currencies as the Japanese yen, the West German mark and the British pound. The result is that everything with a dollar-denominated price tag has looked like a tremendous steal to holders of stronger currencies. (%}C
Japanese bargain shoppers increasingly cover neglected American gambling casinos. In April last year, Ginji Yasuda, a Korean-born Japanese, bought the 1100-room Aladdin Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas for $ 54 million and reopened it after spending another $30 million to restore its glitzy décor. Says Yasuda: “You have a lot of dreams still available in this country that you don’t have in Japan.” He plans to shuttle customers from Japan in a posh jet equipped with sleeping cabins. Y2n*T
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Wile the Japanese have largely shied away from takeovers of major U. S. industrial corporations, at least partly in fear of a public relations backlash, the least inhibited bidders have been the British. They committed more than $27 billions last year to U. S. takeovers. Pa<