2002年12月研究生英语学位考试全真考试试卷
Part I Listening Comprehension (15 minutes, 15 points) Section A (1 point each)
1. A. He owns a radio factory. B. He owns an audio-video center.
C. He is a technician in a factory. D. He works at a radio station.
2. A. The woman works in a bookstore. B. The two speakers are visiting a museum.
C. The man is going to write a science
fiction. D. The two speakers are talking about a movie.
3. A. A laser
printer. B. A color
printer.
C. A color copier. D. A computer.
4. A. The man doesn't have as many hobbies as the woman.
B. The woman is a professional painter.
C. The man is good at painting.
D. The woman doesn't have much
leisure time.
5. A. A museum tour guide. B. A college teacher.
C. An at-home-mother. D. An aeronautical engineer.
6. A. John will keep walking. B. They have no idea what to do next.
C. They are going to buy some hot dogs. D. They'll eat in a table-service restaurant.
7. A. At home. B. In a hotel,
C. At a friend's house. D. In a school dorm.
8. A. The post office. B. A map store.
C. The local police station, D. A gas station.
9. A. They have both graduated. B. They are with the same company.
C. They both lost their jobs. D. They are both in a computer class
Section B (1 point each)
Questions 10 through 12 are based on the talk you have just heard.
10. A. Telecommunication was introduced.
B. Written communication developed rapidly.
C. People wrote postcards with pencils.
D. More people
learned to; read and write.
11. A. They were used to promote business sales.
B. They were .collected, and traded by people.
C. People read postcards to get information on politics.
D. People used postcards to save on postage.
12. A. Laws that allowed postcards to be used as advertisements
B. Laws that allowed postcards to replace letters completely.
C. Laws that allowed manufacturers to develop postcard businesses.
D. Laws that allowed the use of postcards as a means of communication.
Questions 13 through 15 are based on the talk you have just heard.
13. A. Speaking smart in public.
B. Helping speech-impaired people.
C. Ways to help
hearing-impaired people.
D. Ways to help reduce stammering.
14. A. They work with family members of the patients.
B. They work independently.
C. They work. with other
specialists.
D. They work with physical health consultants.
15. A. The therapists let them 'imitate essential speech patterns.
B. The therapists let physicians treat them first.
C. The therapists ask them to
ignore their anxiety.
D. The therapists use a program of speech exercise.
Part II Vocabulary (10 minutes, 10 points)
Section A (0. 5 point each)
16. Few people can give a coherent account of the film they saw the week before last.
A. clear B. liable C. chronic D. classical
17. He was a
devotedscientist and made a
thorough study of the plants in the area.
A.
vigorous B. rigorous C. harsh D. ridiculous.
18. These red crosses on the
drawingdesignate all the possible entrances to the ancient castle.
A. entitle B. indicate C.
define D. clarify
19. Modern printing equipment quickly turns out
duplicate copies of textual and
pictorial matter.
A.
excessive B. illustrated C. legible D. identical
20. Buyers have
withdrawn from the market in view of the
abrupt turn of the trend of prices.
A.
unexpected B. ongoing C.
enduring D. accelerated
21. I am always
suspicious of anyone who wants to sell-me something on the ...cheap.
A. believable B.
incredible C.
doubtful D. curious
22. Susan has been blind from birth but she did not let her
handicap stop her from going to college.
A. virtue B. insulation C.
hindrance D. thrift
23. He described the situation as very dangerous and called for
resolute action.
A. determined B. shaken C.
courteous D.
hopeful24. Nuclear electric power reactors should be built on two major premises of assuring safety and strengthening disaster
prevention systems, for emergencies.
A.
guarantees B. preconditions C. convictions D. interactions
25. The players
frustration mounted as the rain continued to pour down outside.
A.
contentment B. disappointment C.
gratification D. uproar
Section B (0.5 point each)
26. When a lawyer ____ a case, he or she tries to prove that the person who is on trial is guilty.
A. proclaims B. profiles C. propagates D. prosecutes
27. The doctor explained that he was prescribing a ______ drug; hence I needed only a very small dosage.
A. stout B.
vigorous C.
potent D.
potential
28. Can you tell me on what ______ you believe he has killed the man?
A. grounds B. fountain C. proof. D. conclusion.
29. The tests are supposed to provide a basis for he _____ of children.
A.
assignment B. assessment C.
detachment D. appointment
30. By helpful kindness the teacher _______the new boy's shyness.
A. broke away B. broke off C. broke out D. broke d0wn,
31. Long skirts, have been out of fashion for a long time, but they are ____ this year.
A. coming put B. coming back C. coming on D. coming/off
32. Buildings are left to decay at the _____ of vandals and, the weather.
A. point B. attribute C. judgment D. mercy
33. "I need a little time to answer you," the speaker replied, and you could see that question had____ him off his balance.
A. made B. taken C. thrown D. got
34. Tidying up, in fall, many Swedish farmers machine-wrap their hay in "air-tight polyethylene to ____ it through winter.
A.
prolong B. protect C. pile D. preserve
35. With the aid of a sonar type electronic device that he wears on his head, the blind man is learning to ____ the. People and objects around him by means of echoes.
A.
provoke B.
specify C.
stimulate D. identify
Part I Cloze Test (10 minutes, 15 points)
Scientists who study the Earth's climate are convinced that
volcanoeruptions have a
significant effect on general weather patterns. In fact, one of the. many _(36)_ which attempt to explain how an ice. age begins holds that the __(37)__ is a dramatic increase in
volcaniceruptions. The
volcanicexplosions, besides causing local thunderstorms and lightning,
inject great amounts of gas and __(38)_ into the stratosphere. At. This_ (39)_ , the
volcanic material spreads all the way around the Earth. This
volcanic material (40) a certain amount of sunlight and (41) some back into space. The net result is to (42) the planet's surface. For instance, (43) was perhaps the largest
eruption occurred in 1883 when the Indonesia
volcano Krakatoa exploded. The following year was (44) in Europe as the "year without summer" because the. (45) was so cool and rainy.
While there is (46) scientific agreement that
volcaniceruption can lead to; cooling, (47) of how this happens are not clear. As a result,
scientists cannot (48) whether the
volcanic activity which (49) past ice ages would result (50) sufficient cooling to cause a glacial period. Similarly, it is not possible .for
scientists to
predict the climate effect of a future
volcaniceruption with any confidence.
36. A. theories B. inventions- C. judgments D. discoveries
37. A. cause B. course C. means D. case
38. A.
petroleum B. ash C. flame D. garbage
39. A. relation B. instance C. moment D. altitude
40. A. scatters B. releases C. constitutes D. absorbs
41. A. carries B. converts C. reflects D. gathers
42. A. cool B. warm C. freeze D. heat
43. A. such, B. what C. there D. that
44. A. known B. reported C. marked D. testified
45. A. air B. temperature C. sky: D. weather
46. A. committed v B. optimistic C. general D. absolute
47. A. indexes B.
predictions C. details D. decisions
48. A. analyze B. determine C. assure D. assume
49. A. confronted B. promoted C. proceeded D. preceded
50. A. in. B. front C. to D. with
Part IV Reading Comprehension (45 minutes, 30 points)
Passage 1
So far as I know Miss Barireah Arendt was the first person to
define the essential difference between work and labor. To be .happy, a man must feel, firstly, free and
secondly, important. He cannot be really happy if he is compelled by society to do what he does not enjoy doing, or if. what he enjoys doing is
ignored by society as of no value or importance. In a society where slavery in the
strict sense has been abolished, the sign that what a man does is of social value is that he is paid money to do it, but a
laborer today can
rightly be called a wage slave. A man is a
laborer if the job society offers him is of no interest to himself but he is compelled to take it by the necessity of earning living and supporting his family.
The antithesis to labor is play. When we play a game, we enjoy what we are doing, otherwise we should not play it ,but it is purely private activity; society could not care less whether we play it or not.
Between labor and play stands work. A man is a worker if he is
personally interested in the job which society pays him to do what from the point of view of society is necessary labor is from his own point of view
voluntary play. Whether a job is to be classified as
laborer work depends, not on the job itself, but on the tastes of the individual who undertakes it. The difference does not for example,
coincide with the difference between
manual and a mental job; a
gardener or
cobbler may be a worker, a bank clerk a
laborer. Which a man is can be seen from his attitude toward
leisure. To a worker,
leisure means simply the hours he needs to relax and rest in order to work
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efficiently. He is therefore more likely to take too little
leisure than too much; workers die of coronaries and forget their wives' birthdays. To be the
laborer, on the other hand,
leisure means freedom from
compulsion, so that it is natural for him to imagine the fewer hours he has to spend laboring, and the more hours he is free to play, the better.
51. The best title for the passage could be ___________.
A. Work, Labor and Play B. Ways Leading to Happiness
C. The Most Desirable Job in the World D. The Necessity of Leisure
52. If a person wishes to be happy; _________.
A. he must have something to do
B. he must realize the essential difference between work and labor
C. he must feel free first of all
D. he must do something valuable to society
53. A man is a
laborer if _______
A. what he likes to do is not recognized by society
B. he has to make a living or supporting his family
C. he cannot get paid for what he does
D. he is forced to do what he doesn't enjoy
54. According to the passage, what is society's attitude toward the game we play?
A. Society regards play as another kind of labor.
B. Society doesn't care what we play at all.
C. Society forbids us to play any game.
D. Society cares for private games very much.
55. Which of the following kinds of person is a worker?
A. A teacher who enjoys working with students
B. A
white-collar employee, who is well paid
C. A man who does not mix work with play
D. A man who has good appetite and enjoys good health
56. What does the
laborer think of'
leisure?
A. He thinks he-has no time for it since he has to support his family.
B. He wishes to have as little
leisure as possible
C. He hopes to have more
leisure to play
D. He thinks it more important than health and family.
Passage 2
For decades, "U.S. school kids have chewed
nervously on their No. 2 pencils as they sweated over multiple-choice exams. Now, testing fever is about to liven up. Sates are beginning to put into practice the No Children Let Behind Act the
sweeping education law George Bush signed last January. The decisions reach state makes about how to proceed with the bill's mandates will determine whether "it improves .the' education children receive--or actually lowers
educational standards.
The
scramble to meet the law's ambitious goals is already under way. States are required to test the math and English proficiency of every child, in grades three through eight, which must begin no later than 2005. Each year
thereafter, schools must show progress on their test fail to improve will be subject to escalating penalties, ranging from being forced to bus their students to better schools to having their administrations tossed out. The idea: Use testing to shine a light on what students are learning and to prod schools to do better.
The concept is simple, the
execution. Anything but, because each state ----- not Washington-gets to decide what proficiency means, it can in effect decide just how many schools are "failing". States also get to choose which testing system to use. If they follow the advice of most education experts, state officials will devote lots of time and money to designing high-quality tests that reflect the classroom curriculum and well-studied proficiency standards. A
handful, such as Maryland and Massachusetts are doing just that.
But at a time of
budget crises from Albany (capital city of New York state) to Sacramento (capital city of California State), many education departments are under pressure to take a quicker, less costly approach. With education
budgets already under the knife, there are few extra funds to (improve classroom-and test scores-performance.
Facing an
aggressive timeline, state educators are
setting standards that won't cause too many students to fail on the upcoming tests. Connecticut, for example, recently set its benchmarks so that 80% of students will pass its tests under, the new federal guidelines. Louisiana and Colorado are following suit, while Wyoming set its proficiency goals so low that not a single school in the state is failing. Such moves prompted Education Secretary Rod Paige to fire off a blistering letter to the nation's school commissioners in late October,
saying: "Some states have lowered the bar of expectations to hide the low performance of their schools. This is not worthy of a great country."
57. The new education law was meant to ____.
.A. urge schools to
guarantee kids' proficiency in basic courses
B. give school kids easier tests in the future
C. push state governments to spend more money on education
D. ensure the right to education for
minority and poor students
58. After 2005, a school
administrator may get fired if ____. .
A. kids in his school do not show progress on their test scores
B. he doesn't shine a light on what students are learning
C. he does not bus his students to better schools
D. testing system in his school does not reflect the curriculum
59. Which of the following states seems doing well in executing the law?
A. Maryland. B. Connecticut. C. Louisiana. D. Wyoming.
60. The author thinks the new Act is ____.
A. easier said than done
B. of primary importance to the nation
C. raising, the national education standard
D. bound to fail in the future .
61. Some states found it difficult to meet the requirements of the new federal law because they did not __________.
A. have enough funds and time B. want to lose their students
C. like to appear
aggressive before the kids
D. think the new standards, were reasonable
62. The author implies that as a result of the new Act,________.
A.
educational standards in some states may be lowered
B. state governments will assign more money to education
C. about 20% of the American students may fail their tests
D. testing will
eventually be eliminated in most schools
Passage 3
When anti-globalization protesters took to the streets, of Washington last
weekend, they blamed globalization for everything from: hunger to the destruction of indigenous cultures. And globalization meant the United States. The critics call. it Coca-Colonization, and French sheep farmer Jose Bove has become a cult figure since destroying a McDonald's restaurant in 1999. Contrary to
conventional wisdom, however, globalization is neither homogenizing nor Americanizing the cultures of the world.
To understand why not, we/have to step back-and put the current period in a larger
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historicalperspective. Although they are
related, the long-term
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historical trends of globalization and modernization are not the same. While modernization has produced some common traits, such, as-large cities, factories and mass communications, local cultures have by no means been erased. The appearance of similar institutions in
response to similar problems is not surprising, but it does not lead to homogeneity. In the first half of the 20th century, for example, there were some similarities among the industrial societies of Britain, Germany, America and Japan, but there were even more important differences. When China, India and Brazil complete their current processes of industrialization and modernization, we should not expect them to be .exact copies of Japan, Germany or the United States.
Take the current information revolution. The United States is at the forefront of this great movement of change, so the uniform social and cultural habits produced by television viewing or Internet,, use,,, for instance, are often attributed to Americanization. But correlation is not causation. Since the United States does exist and is at the leading edge of the information revolution, there is a degree of Americanization at present, but it is likely to diminish over the course of the 21st century as technology spreads and local cultures modernize in their own ways.
Historical proof that globalization does not
necessarily mean homogenization can be seen in the case of Japan. In the mid-19th century, it became the Asian country to embrace, globalization and to borrow
successfully from the world without losing its
uniqueness. Following the Meiji Restoration of 1868, Japan searched
broadly for tools and innovations that would allow it to become a major power rather than a victim of Western imperialism. The lesson that Japan has to teach the rest of the world is that even a century and a .half of openness to global trends does not
necessarily assure destruction of a country's separate cultural identity.
63. The purpose of the author is to_______.
A. report the progress of some news event
B. criticize extreme and violent actions
C. recall a certain period of American history
D. convince his readers of his viewpoints
64. Jose Bove is a French farmer who ____.
A. joined the Washington protest as a leading figure
B. believes globalization means Americanization
C. rose to fight against the American
traditional wisdom
D. is a
supporter of Coca-colonization in the world
65. The author refers to world history prove that modernization __________.
A. does not lead to homogeneity of local cultures
B. is somewhat
related to globalization
C. is one of the long-term
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historical trends
D. has produced different traits in industrial countries
66. The author admits that a degree of Americanization dogs "exist because _______.
A. it is a long term
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historical trend of the world
B. industrial societies are almost, exact copies of the United States
C. Internet and TV promote the spread of American social and cultural habits.
D. local cultures are gradually weakened over the course of the 2tst century
67. Japan is mentioned in the passage to show that_________.
A. openness to globalization will not cost a nation's Cultural identity.
B. it was the first Asian country to develop
successfullyG. the Meiji Restoration of 1868 was crucial in Japan's history
D. tools and innovations would allow a country to become a major power
68. We may conclude from the discussion here that the author strongly in defense of ________.
A. Americanization B. globalization
C. information revolution D. modernization
Passage 4
Large animals that
inhabit the desert have
evolved a number of
adaptations for reducing the effects of extreme heat. One
adaptation is to be light in color and to reflect rather than absorb the Sun's rays. Desert
mammals also depart from the normal
mammalian practice of maintaining a body temperature. Instead of
trying to keep down the body temperature deep inside the body, which would involve
expenditure of water and energy, desert
mammals allow their temperatures to rise what would
normally be fever height, and temperatures as high as 46 degrees Celsius have been measured in Grant's gazelles. The overheated body then cools down during the cold desert night, and indeed the temperature may fall
unusually low by dawn, as low as 34 degrees Celsius in the camel. This is an advantage since the heat of the first few hours of daylight is absorbed in
warming up the body, and an
excessive buildup of teat does not begin until well into the day.
Another
strategy of large desert animals is to
tolerate the loss of body water to a point that would be fatal for non-adapted animals. The camel can lose up to 30 percent of its body weight as water without harm to itself whereas human beings die after losing only 12 to 13 percent of their body weight. An equally important
adaptation is the ability
replenish this water loss at one drink. Desert animals can drink
prodigious volumes in a short time, and camels have been known to drink. Over 100 litters in a few minutes. A very dehydrated person, oh the other hand, cannot drink enough water to rehydrate at one
session, because the human stomach is not sufficiently big and because a too rapid dilution of the body fluids causes death from water intoxication The tolerance of water loss is of obvious advantage in the desert, as animals do not have to remain near a water hole but can obtain food from grazing sparse and far-flung pastures. Desert-adapted
mammals have lithe further ability to feed
normally when extremely dehydrated, it is a common experience in people that appetite is lost even under conditions of moderate thirst.
69. What is the main topic of the passage?
A. Weather
variations in the desert.
B. Adaptations of desert animals.
C. Diseases of desert animals.
D. Human use of desert animals.
70. According to the passage, why is light coloring an advantage to large-desert .animals?
A. It helps them hide from predators.
B. It reflects sunlight and protects the body against heat.
C. It helps them see their young at night
D. It keeps them cool at night.
71. The author uses Grant's gazelle as an example of _______.
A. an animal with a low average temperature