云南师范大学学位英语试卷

上传人:xue****ang 文档编号:140490195 上传时间:2022-08-23 格式:DOC 页数:12 大小:117.51KB
返回 下载 相关 举报
云南师范大学学位英语试卷_第1页
第1页 / 共12页
云南师范大学学位英语试卷_第2页
第2页 / 共12页
云南师范大学学位英语试卷_第3页
第3页 / 共12页
点击查看更多>>
资源描述
专业PAPERONEPART I VOCABULARY ( 20 minutes, 10 points)Section A ( 0.5 point each)Directions: In this section there are ten sentences, each with one word or phrase underlined. Choose the one from the four choices marked A, B, C and D that best keeps the meaning of the sentence. Then mark the corresponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET with a single line through the center.1.Outbreaks of teenage violence here are confined to technical schools students fighting mindless.A. restrictedB. confirmedC. relevantD. dedicated2.Something clearly disturbs Thai youth and parents who need to do something before things get worse.A. boostsB. disruptsC. annoysD. stuns3.They came from different backgrounds, but both resorted to the use of handguns to resolve their problems.A. objected toB. took toC. amounted toD. turned to4.Children do not learn what it is to lose and will seek violence to restrain their disappointment.A. releaseB. checkC. eliminateD. restore5.Streep possesses a fragile, fleeting beauty that allows her to be as earthy and plain as she can be glamorous and radiant.A. fragmentaryB. permanentC. delicateD. tender6. Faced with such a dilemma, the top executives had to weigh one option against another.A. scaleB. seekC. balanceD. reject7.Despite conflicts and disagreements, the fundamental sympathies and similarities between the two countries will continue.A. essentialB. intenseC. necessaryD. difficult8.The car broke down about five kilometers short of the destination, so they had to go on foot.A. lacking inB. except forC. up toD. away from9.Kant revolutionized philosophy, questioned established authorities and placed reason and freedom at the center of his thinking.A. foundedB. acceptedC. overthrownD. stereotyped10.The freshmen will be introduced to some methods of coping with stress and depression.A. handlingB. executingC. cooperationD. consumingSection B (0.5 point each)Directions: In this section there are ten sentences. Each sentence has something omitted. Choose the one from the four choices marked A, B, C and D that best completes each sentence. Then mark the corresponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET with a single line through the center.11.I had expected to win the race, but things did notthat way.A. break outB. work outC. pass outD. figure out12.Anyone employing people and paying them a fair wage, in my view, makes a(n)contribution to society.A. immenseB. giganticC. largeD. spacious13.I have time to enjoy family and friends, activities such as reading, writing, listening to music and playing sports.A. chaseB. involveC. pursueD. capture14.And not one of these pleasures is taxation under the Internal RevenueCode.A. committed to B. subject toC. attached toD. indifferent to15.Middle-aged ladies somehow tend to weight more easily even if they arevegetarians.A. put onB. put upC. put forwardD. put away16.AsChina, reform and opening-up have led to substantial improvement oflives.A. in the case of B. in the face ofC. in the name of D. in the middle of17. Niagara Falls is a great tourist _, drawing millions of visitors every year. A. attention B. attraction C. appointment D. arrangement18. The manager spoke highly of such _ as loyalty, courage and truthfulness shown by his employees. A. virtues B. features C. properties D. characteristics19. Some old people dont like pop songs because they cant _ so much noise. A. resist B. sustain C. tolerate D. undergo20. Since the matter was extremely _, we dealt with it immediately. A. tough B. tense C. urgent D. instantPART II CLOZE TEST ( 20 minutes 10 points)Directions: Read the passage through. Then go back and choose one item of suitable word(s) marked A, B, C or D for each blank in the passage. Mark the corresponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET with a single line through the center.Deaths and injuries from motor-vehicle accidents are reaching epidemic proportions in developing countries around the world, according to the World Health Organization. Traffic accidents in the young nations of 21 amount to a “social scourge(祸害)”, and all too often the victims are young, educated Africans 22 increased earning power has enabled them to buy a motorcycle or an automobile. Statistics 23 three Latin-American countries, Chile, Costa Rica and Venezuela, 24 that, as in the US, traffic accidents have become the leading cause of 25 among young adults.About 250 000 people throughout the world are _26_ in traffic accidents each year, and more than seven million are injured. 27 the US has the highest number of people killed in traffic accidents of 28 country (about 50 000 per year), it has one of the lowest rates of fatalities(死亡) per motor vehicle or passenger mile, 29 , in the US there are six fatalities per 100 million passenger miles, 30 in Kenya and Uganda there are from 55 to 65 fatalities per 100 31 passenger miles. In India the fatality rate per motor vehicle is 10 to 15 times higher than it is in the US. In all countries the death rate from traffic accidents is higher for 32 than it is for females.-The majority of developing countries 33 a higher incidence of traffic accidents involving pedestrians (行人) than of accidents 34 motor vehicles alone. Among the causes, the WHO reports, are 35 roads, pedestrian ignorance of road signs, lack of instruction in the use of roads and heavy pedestrian and bicycle traffic on the roads.To 36 the growing epidemic of traffic accidents, the WHO has 37 a worldwide epidemiological study of road traffic accidents and is encouraging the development of preventive programs If traffic accidents are 38 by methods similar to those used against the great killing diseases, the organization states, the present epidemic of road deaths could be made to disappear 39 as plague (瘟疫) and smallpox have now been 40 almost everywhere in the world.21.A. AmericaB. AsiaC. AfricaD. Europe22.A. whoseB. whichC. asD. that23.A. againstB. withC. uponD. from24.A. remarkB. revealC. involveD. doubt25.A. accidentB. jamC. crashD. death26.A. killedB. injuredC. woundedD. included27.A. Now thatB. ProvidedC. OnceD. Although28.A.everyB. someC. anyD.the29.A. at lastB. for exampleC. howeverD. in addition30.A. BecauseB.BeforeC. WhereasD. If311.A. hundredB. millionC. thousandD. billion32 A. inhabitantsB. driversC. malesD. injured33.A. possessesB.hadC. hasD. have34-A. involvingB. containingC. resulting inD. existing in35.A. firmB. poorC. good D. dependent36.A. hardenB. studyC. struggleD. combat37.A. overtakenB. exploredC. undertakenD. regarded38.A. tackledB. recognizedC. shiftedD. threatened39.A. suchB.justC.soD. also40.A. eliminatedB. knockedC. soughtD. adjustedPART III READING COMPREHENSION (60 minutes, 50 points)Directions: In this part of the test, there are five short passages for you to read. Read each passage carefully, and hen do the questions that follow. Choose the best answer from the four choices marked A, B, C and D and then mark the corresponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET with a single line through the center.Passage OnePeng Gonglin wasnt an important man. He lived in a bare concrete house in a small village of Deng Zhuang where women stoop beside ponds to scrub clothes in buckets and the men often harvest crops by hand.When his rice fields came up empty last October, Peng had no influence and little cash. The 43-year-old farmer had spent almost all of his familys savings and borrowed more to lease the land and buy seeds.County experts in the central province of Henan tested the seeds hed planted and determined that hed been sold inferior goods. Peng begged for financial or legal help from the local agricultural bureau and its county seed station.He took what remained of his familys money and tried to bribe two local officials to intervene. They accepted the meals, massages and prostitutes, but they did nothing in return, according to a letter he later wrote.Finally, on March 29 he returned to the county seed station to plead once more. Men there beat Peng about the head until he went home, humiliated.Facing financial ruin, he carried out one last act of protest. Early the next morning, Peng Gonglins body was found hanging at the seed station.The story of Pengs lonely suicide reveals the pitfalls beneath the glossy surface of Chinas booming economy. Ordinary Chinese whove been cheated or defrauded, especially in rural areas, find themselves trapped in neo-feudal conditions with no protection beyond the mercy of corrupt officials.Outsiders are sometimes baffled by the emphasis Chinese leaders put on order and harmony, and their crushing response to any signs of unrest. From the turmoil in a village such as Deng Zhuang, though, its clear that the nation sits uneasily on deep social fault lines.41.People like Peng Gonglin _.A. live simple and humble lifeB. try to bribe officialsC. have no land and have to lease from othersD. hate the officials42. What happened to the seeds Peng Gonglin had bought?A. They were tested inferior.B. They were illegal.C. They were cheated.D. They were too expensive.43. He bribed local officials hoping that _.A. they may help him get financial compensation or legal aidB. they may accept the meals, massages and prostitutesC. they may interfere the affairD. they may offer plea for him44. Which of the following statements is NOT the reason of Peng Gonglins suicide? A. He was beaten by the men at the seed station and felt humiliated.B. It was his final cry for protest in the face of financial ruin.C. The desperation was beyond his psychological endurance.D. He feared that his bribe may be discovered.45. Pengs lonely suicide reveals that _.A. the ordinary people seize neo-feudal conditionsB. the ordinary people can get protection if the corrupt officials ignore themC. there are social problems under the fast developing economyD. people baffle the emphasis on order and harmonyPassage Two Computers have been taught to play not only checkers, but also championship chess, which is a fairly accurate yardstick for measuring the computers progress in the ability to learn from experience.Because the game requires logical reasoning, chess would seem to be perfectly suited to the computer .all a programmer has to do is give the computer a program evaluating the consequences of every possible response to every possible move, and the computer will win every time. In theory this is a sensible approach; in practice it is impossible. Today, a powerful computer can analyze 40 000 moves a second. That is an impressive speed. But there are an astronomical number of possible moves in chessliterally trillions. Even if such a program were written (and in theory it could be, given enough people and enough time), there is no computer capable of holding that much data.Therefore, if the computer is to compete at championship levels, it must be programmed to function with less than complete data. It must be able to learn from experience, to modify its own program, to deal with a relatively unstructured situationin a word, to “think” for itself. In fact, this can be done. Chess-playing computers have yet to defeat world champion chess players, but several have beaten human players of only slightly lower ranks. The computers have had programs to carry them through the early, mechanical stages of their chess games. But they have gone on from there to reason and learn, and sometimes to win the game.There are other proofs that computers can be programmed to learn, but this example is sufficient to demonstrate the point. Granted, winning a game of chess is not an earthshaking event even when a computer does it . But there are many serious human problems which ban be fruitfully approached as games. The Defense Department uses computers to play war games and work out strategies for dealing with international tensions. Other problemsinternational and interpersonal relations , ecology and economics , and the ever-increasing threat of world faminecan perhaps be solved by the joint efforts of human beings and truly intelligent computers .46. The purpose of creating chess-playing computers is _.A. to win the world chess championB. to pave the way for further intelligent computersC. to work out strategies for international warsD. to find an accurate yardstick for measuring computer progress47. Today, a chess-playing computer can be programmed to _. A. give trillions of responses in a second to each possible move and win the gameB. function with complete data and beat the best playersC. learn from chess-playing in the early stage and go on to win the gameD. evaluate every possible move but may fail to give the right response each time48. For a computer to “think”, it is necessary to _. A. mange to process as much data as possible in a second B. program it so that it can learn from its experiences C. prepare it for chess-playing first D. enable it to deal with unstructured situations49. The authors attitude towards the Defense Department is_ _. A. critical B. unconcerned C. positive D. negative 50. In the authors opinion, _ _ . A. winning a chess game is an unimportant event B. serious human problems shouldnt be regarded as playing a game C. ecological problems are more urgent to be solved D. there is hope for more intelligent computersPassage ThreeYou have to have lived in the 1950s and 1960s to have experienced a good economy. In the period between 1950 and 1970 it was the rulerather than the exceptionthat an ordinary family, without higher education, could sustain itself decently on the income of a single breadwinner. In 1955, when I was 19 and living in Brooklyn, N. Y., my father, who had a sixth-grade education, maintained our family of five on a wage of $82 a week as a bookbinder. My mother taught us fairness and compassion; my father, discipline and enterprise.The U. S. economy in those years was good. Then where did this good economy go? It was inflated away. The price of gold, which I take as proxy for the prices of all goods, was $35 an ounce in those years. It is at roughly ten times that price today.There is another answer, though: inflation caused the entire work force to be moved into higher tax groups, thus reducing after-tax purchasing power. That is, my fathers bindery job in1954 paid $82 a week, with $80 after deductions; today, at $ 820 per week the net would be $662.To ordinary people, the economy doesnt look very good at all. After-tax incomes continue to decrease in purchasing power. The jobs offered in the employment ads pay only a little more than the minimum wage, maybe $5 an hour, which, after payroll deductions, yields $4 an hour. Compare that with minimum-wage jobs of the early 1950s, when 75 cents was worth todays $7.50 before and after taxes.51. In the authors opinion, a good economy, to ordinary people can be expressed in terms of _ _.A. the amount of wageB. after-tax incomeC. the actual purchasing powerD. the minimum wage per hour52. In the period between 1950 and 1970, _.A. there was not much difference in the living standards between people of higher and lower educationB. an ordinary family of five without exception could live on one person incomeC. the income of an ordinary family was more than enough for buying foodD. for an average family the income was sufficient to support all the members53. Today a bookbinders wage is ten times that of the 1950s but its income tax rate has increased _.A.50 times B.60times C. 70 times D. 80 times54. The worsening of a bookbinders livelihood results from _ _.A. his low education and the amount of wageB. the high-taxation and the income deductionsC. the high taxation and cost of livingD. the low wage and higher prices55. The passage implies that while the cost of living is getting higher_ _.A. the value of labor actually is shrinkingB. the minimum wage level is increasing likewiseC. the income tax rate is rising alongD. the employment ads naturally offer a higher minimum wage Passage FourCulture is one of the most challenging elements of the international marketplace. This system of learned behavior patterns characteristic of the members of a given society is constantly shaped by a set of dynamic variables: language, religion, values and attitudes, manners and customs, aesthetics, technology, education, and social institutions. To cope with this system, an international manager needs both factual and interpretive knowledge of culture. To some extent, the factual knowledge can be learned; its interpretation comes only through experience.The most complicated problems in dealing with the cultural environment stem from the fact that one cannot learn cultureone has to live it. Two schools of thought exist in the business world on how to deal with cultural diversity. One is that business is business the world around, following the model of Pepsi and McDonalds. In some cases, globalization is a fact of life; however, cultural differences are still far from converging.The other school proposes that companies must tailor business approaches to individual cultures. Setting up policies and procedures in each country has been compared to an organ transplant; the critical question centers around acceptance or rejection. The major challenge to the international manager is to make sure that rejection is not a result of cultural myopia or even blindness.Fortune examined the international performance of a dozen large companies that earn 20 percent or more of their revenue overseas. The internationally successful companies all share an important quality: patience. They have not rushed into situations but rather built their operations carefully by following the most basic business principles. These principles are to know your adversary, know your audience, and know your customer.56. According to the passage, which of the following is true?A. All international managers can learn culture.B. Business diversity is not necessary.C. Views differ on how to treat culture in business world.D. Most people do not know foreign culture well.57. According to the author, the model of Pepsi .A. is in line with the theories of the school advocating the business is business the world aroundB. is different from the model of McDonaldsC. shows the reverse of globalizationD. has converged cultural differences58. The two schools of thought .A. both propose that companies should tailor business approaches to individual culturesB. both advocate that different policies be set up in different countriesC. admit the existence of cultural diversity in business worldD. Both A and B59. This article is supposed to be most useful for those .A. who are interested in researching the topic of cultural diversityB. who have connections to more than one type of cultureC. who want to travel abroadD. who want to run business on International Scale60. According to Fortune, successful international companies .A. earn 20 percent or more of their revenue overseasB. all have the quality of patienceC. will follow the overseas local culturesD. adopt the policy of interna
展开阅读全文
相关资源
相关搜索

最新文档


当前位置:首页 > 图纸专区 > 中学资料


copyright@ 2023-2025  zhuangpeitu.com 装配图网版权所有   联系电话:18123376007

备案号:ICP2024067431-1 川公网安备51140202000466号


本站为文档C2C交易模式,即用户上传的文档直接被用户下载,本站只是中间服务平台,本站所有文档下载所得的收益归上传人(含作者)所有。装配图网仅提供信息存储空间,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对上载内容本身不做任何修改或编辑。若文档所含内容侵犯了您的版权或隐私,请立即通知装配图网,我们立即给予删除!