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北京大学2007年博士研究生入学考试英语试题 {'@`:p&3r
Part One: Listening Comprehension略 @^cR
Part Two: Structure and Written Expression (20%) :tf'Gw6v
Directions: For each question decide which of the four choices given will most suitably complete the sentence if inserted at the place marked. Mark your choices on the ANSWER SHEET. ,7h0y
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21._________ before we leave the day after tomorrow, we should have a wonderful time together. %iR"eEE
[A] Had they arrived aM7=>
[B] Would they arrive r\T'_wo
[C] Were they arriving Q&]f9j_
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[D] Were they to arrive "K c/Cs2[
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22._________ last year and is now earning his living as an advertising agent. c]%~X&Tg`
[A] He would leave school %EH{p@nM&-
[B] He left school CC
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[C] He had left school x:$ xtu
[D] He has left school !rsGCw!Pg
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23.Some people viewed the findings with caution, noting that a cause-and-effect relationship between passive smoking and cancer remained _________. ZA+w7S3
[A] to be shown rU9z? (
[B] to have been shown <&RpGAk%I
[C] to have shown R8-=N+hX
[D] being shown yu>)[|-
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24.__________ that should be given priority to. +L|x^B3
[A] It is the committee has decided UR~ s\m
[B] It is only the committee has decided N
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[C] It is what the committee has decided fSVb.MZa7
[D] It is what has the committee decided UvR.?js(O
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25. The most interesting new cars may owe __________ the simple wisdom of hiring a few talented people and allowing them to work. $0Ys{m
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[A] less local free-spiritedness than uJ`:@Z^J
[B] less local free-spiritedness than to 4sq](!A
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[C] to less local free-spiritedness than to H'+3<t>
[D] less to local free-spiritedness than to y*
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26. Over the years, Jimmy Connors __________ phenomenal displays of tennis and temper—and at the U.S. Open last week, he exhibited both again. @ZRg9M:N
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[A] has treated spectators with M`n0
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[B] has treated spectator for /dO*t4$ @?
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[C] has treated spectators IrUoAQ2xpG
[D] has treated spectators to %l
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27. Summer holidays spent on the hot ghetto streets are __________ the time middle-class students devote to camps, exotic vacations and highly organized sports. 7 0PGbAD
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[A] as hardly culturally enriching as # [
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[B] as hardly enriching culture as P%ThW9^vnj
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[C] hardly as culturally enriching as |qVM`,%L
[D] hardly as cultural enriching as ?D|kCw69SE
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28. The major obstacle to the reform in New Orleans, __________, is money. ~^'WHuzPy
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[A] as is it across the country nch#DE82
[B] as it is across the country 1:Ff#Eq,s
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[C] as it were across the country @
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[D] as were it across the country xs
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29.Nearly all trees have seeds that fall to the earth, take root, and eventually __________. P,b&F
[A] generate new seeds ;VE KrVD
[B] new seeds generated NB5lxaL
[C] generates new seeds <EdNF&S-
[D] new seeds are generated f3imkZ(
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30. The well-maintained facility in San Francisco _________ leagues in virtually every sport. 4'tY1d
[A] were home to p>f?Rw_
[B] was the home of ef!f4u\
[C] was home to m=Gb<)Y
[D] was home of x6$3KDQm
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31. Students at these schools test far below the state average in reading, and their scores have improved only __________. A`Rs
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[A] marginally FUZuS!sJ
[B] marvelously mi7~(V>
[C] martially 4#.Q|vyl]"
[D] markably *=!r|UdB.
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32. I was in some doubt as to whether the Corporal had __________ us accidentally on his way out of the town or if he'd been deliberately tasked. us8HXvvp{
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[A] 1*'gaa&y
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[B] .>~er?-
bumped into 3lEP:Jp
[C] ori[[~OyB
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[D] f"NWv!
puzzled about B2KBJ4rI[1
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33. In previous time, when fresh meat was in short __________, pigeons were kept by many households as a source of food. )O$S3ojZ
[A] storage a;nYR5f
[B] reserve ?AQA>D#W
[C] supply }n#$p{e$i
[D] provision e**'[3Y
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34. The hospital denies there is any connection between the disciplinary action and Dr. Reid’s __________ about health problems. J83C]2~7
[A] allegiance
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[B] alliance rusYNb1J
[C] allegations j~>J?w9<O
[D] alliteration h?}S|>9
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35. The organization issued a cry of alarm last week, citing “__________ evidence” that those children are not receiving the same quality of education as their richer peers. 2+pXtP@O
[A] comparing aGws?<1$
[B] completing so| U&`G
[C] compelling wuXH'
[D] composing .|TF /b]
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36. Since no one could __________ his scribbling, the chief editor decided to replace him with another columnist. II[-6\d!
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[A] encode Goy[P2
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[B] decipher IjQgmS~G
[C] clear =^l`c$G<
[D] identify `krVfE;_
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37.Many Fine Art graduates take __________ professional practice as artists, and this course encourages them to consider their role as artists in the community by providing opportunities for short-term placements outside the Faculty.
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[A] down 0AoWw-H6V
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[B] up q
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[C] out hewc5vrL
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[D] in 9
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38. The statement said the people of Srebrenica __________ to the presidents of the United States and France to help halt the offensive. =*>.z@WQ
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[A] aroused 3Q )"
[B] ascribed |RqCI9N6
[C] acclaimed YdB/s1|G
[D] appealed R mo'3
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39. The professor stopped for a drink and then __________ with his lecture on the Indian culture. o"A?
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[A] proceeded (l(d0g&p>
[B] processed ORXH<;^0y
[C] preferred
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[D] presented (hRg0Z=
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40. Although the false banknotes fooled many people, they did not __________ close examination. *xKy^f
[A] put up with W* n|T{n
[B] keep up with gl2l%]=\'
[C] stand up to BE0Xg
[D] look up to A,7* 52U
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Part Three: Reading Comprehension vo~Qo;m
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Directions: Each of the following three passages is followed by some questions. For each question four answers are given. Read the passages carefully and choose the best answer to each question. Mark your choices on the ANSWER SHEET. (10%) X2P8Zq=%a
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Passage One _BCq9/
In science the meaning of the word “explain” suffers with civilization’s every step in search of reality. Science cannot really explain electricity, magnetism, and gravitation; their effects can be measured and predicted, but of their nature no more is known to the modern scientist than to Thales who first speculated on the electrification of amber. Most contemporary physicists reject the notion that man can ever discover what these mysterious forces “really” are. Electricity, Bertrand Russell says, “is not a thing, like St. Paul’s Cathedral; it is a way in which things behave. When we have told how things behave when they are electrified, and under what circumstances they are electrified, we have told all there is to tell.” Until recently scientists would have disapproved of such an idea. Aristotle, for example, whose natural science dominated Western thought for two thousand years, believed that man could arrive at an understanding of reality by reasoning from self-evident principles. He felt, for example, that it is a self-evident principle that everything in the universe has its proper place, hence one can deduce that objects fall to the ground because that’s where they belong, and smoke goes up because that’s where it belongs. The goal of Aristotelian science was to explain why things happen. Modern science was born when Galileo began trying to explain how things happen and thus originated the method of controlled experiment which now forms the basis of scientific investigation. {"r
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41. Bertrand Russell’s notion about electricity is __________. 8zjJshE/
[A] disapproved of by most modern scientists bJeF1LjS
[B] in agreement with Aristotle’s theory of self-evident principles <^ratz!-
[C] in agreement with scientific investigation directed toward “how” things happen gXY]NWI
[D] in agreement with scientific investigation directed toward “why” things happen s>{\
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42. The passage says that until recently scientists disagreed with the idea that __________. bY~V?yNgKM
[A] there are self-evident principles \"Qa)1|
[B] there are mysterious forces in the universe H#T&