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2011年专八试题

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2011年专八试题 TEST FOR ENGLISH MAJORS (2011) -GRADE EIGHT-   TIME  LIMIT: 195 MIN    PART  I        LISTENING COMPREHENSION  (35 MIN)    SECTION A        MINI-LECTURE   In  this  section  you  will  hear  a  mini-lecture.  You  will  hear  the  lecture  ONCE  ONLY.  W...

2011年专八试题
TEST FOR ENGLISH MAJORS (2011) -GRADE EIGHT-   TIME  LIMIT: 195 MIN    PART  I        LISTENING COMPREHENSION  (35 MIN)    SECTION A        MINI-LECTURE   In  this  section  you  will  hear  a  mini-lecture.  You  will  hear  the  lecture  ONCE  ONLY.  While listening,  take  notes  on  the  important  points.  Your  notes  will  not  be marked,  but  you  will  need them  to  complete  a  gap-filling  task  after  the mini-lecture. When  the  lecture  is  over,  you  will  be given  two minutes  to check your notes, and another  ten minutes  to complete  the gap-filling  task on ANSWER SHEET ONE. Some of  the gaps may  require a maximum of THREE words. Make sure the word(s) you fill in is(are) both grammatically and semantically acceptable. You may refer to your notes while completing the task. Use the blank sheet for note-taking.     SECTION B        INTERVIEW   In this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow. Mark the best answer  to each question on ANSWER SHEET TWO.    Question 1 to 5 are based on an interview. At the end of the interview you will be given 10 seconds to answer each of the following five questions.    Now listen to the interview.   1.   According to Dr. Harley, what makes language  learning more difficult after a certain age?   A. Differences between two languages.    B. Declining  capacity to learn syntax.    C. Lack of time available.   D. Absence of motivation.    2.  What does the example of Czech speakers show?   A. It‟s natural for language  learners to make errors.   B. Differences between languages cause difficulty.    C. There exist differences between English and Czech.    D. Difficulty  stems from either difference or similarity.   3.   Which of the following methods does NOT advocate speaking?   A. The traditional method.   B. The audiolingual  method.   C. The immersion method.   D. The direct method.   4.  Which hypothesis deals with the role of language knowledge in the learning process?   A. The acquisition and learning distinction  hypothesis.   B. The comprehensible  input hypothesis.    C. The monitor hypothesis.   D. The active filter hypothesis.   5.  Which of the following  topics is NOT discussed during the interview?   A. Causes of language  learning difficulties.   B. Differences between mother tongue and a second language.   C. Theoretical conceptualization  of second language learning.   D. Pedagogical  implementation  of second language teaching.      SECTION C        NEWS BROADCAST   In this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow. Mark the best answer  to each question on ANSWER SHEET TWO.  Question  6  is  based  on  the  following  news.  At  the  end  of  the  news  item,  you  will  be  given  10 seconds  to answer  the question.    Now listen to the news.   6.  Which of the following  statements is INCORRECT?   A. Greyhound is Britain's  largest bus and train operator.   B. Currently Greyhound routes in Britain  are limited.    C. The coach starts from London every hour.    D. Passengers are offered a variety of services.    Questions 7 and 8 are based on the following news. At the end of the news item, you will be given 20 seconds to answer the questions.     Now listen to the news.   7.  What does the news item say about the fires in Greece?   A. Fires only occurred near the Greek capital.   B. Fires near the capital caused casualties.   C. Fires near the capital were the biggest.    D. Fires near the capital were soon under control.   8.   According to the news, what measure did authorities take to fight the fires?   A. Residents were asked to vacate their homes.    B. Troops were brought in to help  the firefighter.    C. Air operations and water drops continued overnight.    D. Another  six fire engines joined  the firefighting operation.    Questions 9 and 10 are based on the following news. At the end of the news item, you will be given 20 seconds to answer the questions.    Now listen to the news.   9.   Which  of  the  following  is NOT mentioned  as  a  cause  of  the current  decline  in  the  Mexican economy?   A. Fewer job opportunities in Mexico.   B. Strong ties with the U.S. economy.    C. Decline  in  tourism.   D. Decline  in  tax revenues.   10. Drop in  remittances from abroad is mainly due to     A. declining  oil production.   B. the outbreak of the H1N1  flu.   C. the declining GDP in Mexico.   D. the economic downturn in the U.S.     PART  II        READING COMPREHENSION  (30 MIN)   In this section there are four reading passages followed by a total of 20 multiple-choice questions. Read the passages  and then mark the best answer  to each question on ANSWER SHEET TWO.    TEXT  A       Whenever we could, Joan and I  took  refuge  in  the streets of Gibraltar. The Englishman's home is his castle because he has not much choice. There  is nowhere  to  sit  in  the streets of England, not even, after twilight, in the public gardens. The climate, very often, odes not even permit him to walk outside. Naturally, he  stays  indoors and creates a cocoon of comfort. That was  the way we  lived  in Leeds.       These southern people, on the other hand, look outwards. The Gibraltar ian home  is, typically, a small and crowded apartment up several  flights of dark and dirty stairs.  In  it, one,  two or even  three old people  share a  few  ill0lit  rooms with  the young  family. Once he has eaten, changed his clothes, embraced his wife, kissed his children and his parents,  there  is nothing  to keep  the  southern man at home. He hurries out,  taking even his breakfast coffee at his  local bar. He comes home  late  for his afternoon meal after an appetit ive hour at his café . He sleeps for an hour, dresses, goes out again and stays out until  late at night. His wife does not miss him,  for  she  is out,  too  – at  the market  in  the morning and in the afternoon sitting with other mothers, baby-minding in  the sun.     The  usual Gibraltarian  home  has  no  sitting-room,  living-room  or  lounge.  The  parlour  of   our working-class  houses  would  be  an  intolerable  waste  of   space.   Easy-chairs,  sofas  and  such-like furniture are unknown. There are no bookshelves, because there are no books. Talking and drinking , as well as eating, are done on hard chairs round the dining-table, between a sideboard decorated with the best glasses and an inevitable display cabinet full of family treasures, photographs and souvenirs. The elaborate chandelier over  this  table proclaims  it as  the hub of  the household and of  the  family. "Hearth  and  home" makes  very  little  sense  in Gibraltar. One's  home  is  one's  town  or  village,  and one's health  is the sunshine.     Our northern towns are dormitories with cubicles, by comparison. When we congregate – in the churches it used to be, now in the cinema, say, impersonally, or at public meetings, formally – we are scarcely ever man  to man. Only  in our pubs can you find  the  truly gregarious and communal  spirit surviving, and in England even the pubs are divided  along class lines.      Along this Mediterranean coast, home is only a refuge and a retreat. The people live together in the open air– in  the  street, market-place. Down here,  there  is a  far stronger  feeling of community than  we  had  ever  known.  In  crowded  and  circumscribed  Gibraltar,  with  its  complicated inter-marriages, its identity of interest, its surviving sense of siege, one can see and feel an integrated society.     To  live  in  a  tiny  town with  all  the  organizat ion  of  a  state, with  Viceroy  (总督),  Premier, Parliament,  Press  and  Pentagon,  all  in miniature,  all within  arm's  reach,  is  an  intensive  course  in civics. In such an  environment, nothing can be hidden,  for better or  for worse. One's successes are seen and recognized; one' failures are  immediately exposed. Social consciousness  is at  its  strongest, with  the  result  that  there  is  a  constant  and  firm  pressure  towards  good  social  behavior,  towards courtesy  and  kindness. Gibraltar,  with  all  its  faults,  is  the  friendliest  and most  tolerant  of  places.   Straight  from  the cynical anonymity of a big city, we  luxuriated  in  its happy personalism. We  look back on it, like  all  its exiled  sons and daughters, with true affection.    11. Which of  the following best explains  the differences  in ways of  living between  the English and  the Gibraltarians?   A. The family  structure.   B. Religious  belief.   C. The climate   D. Eating habit.   12. The italicized  part in  the third paragraph  implies  that   A. English working-class homes are similar  to Gibraltarian  ones.    B. English working-class homes have spacious sitting-rooms.   C. English working-class homes waste a lot of space.   D. the English working-class parlour is intolerable  in Gibraltar.   13. We learn from the description of the Gibraltarian  home that it  is   A. modern.   B. luxurious.   C. stark.   D. simple.   14. There is a much stronger sense of ________ among the Gibraltarians.    A. togetherness   B. survival   C. identity   D. leisure   15. According  to  the passage, people  in Gibraltar  tend  to be will-behaved because of  the following     EXCEPT   A. the entirety of the state structure.    B. constant pressure from the state.    C. the small  size of the town.   D. transparency of occurrences.    TEXT  B       For  office  innovators,  the  unrealized  dream  of  the  “paperless”  office  is  a classic  example  of high-tech hubris (傲慢). Today's office drone is drowning in more paper than ever before.        But after decades of hype, American offices may  finally be  losing  the ir paper obsession. The demand  for  paper  used  to  outstrip  the  growth  of  the US  economy,  but  the  past  two  or  three  years have seen a marked slowdown in sales – despite a healthy economic scene.       Analysts  attribute  the  decline  to  such  factors  as  advances  in  digital  databases  and communication  systems.  Escaping  our  craving  for  paper,  however, will  be  anything  but  an  easy affair.     “Old habits are hard to break.” says Merilyn Dunn, a communications supplies director. “There are  some  functions  that paper serves where a screen display doesn't work. Those functions are both its strength and its weakness.”     In the early to mid-'90s, a booming economy and improved desktop printers helped boost paper sales  by  6  to  7  percent  each  year.  The  convenience  of  desktop  printing  allowed  office workers  to indulge  in printing anything and everything at very little  effort or cost.      But now, the growth rate of paper sales in the United States is  flattening by about half a percent each year. Between 2004  and 2005, Ms. Dunn says, plain white office paper will  see  less  than a 4 percent growth rate, despite the strong overall economy. A primary reason for the change, says Dunn, is  that  for  the  first  time  ever,  some  47  percent  of  the  workforce  entered  the  job  market  after computers had already been introduced to offices.      “We're  finally  seeing  a  reduction  in  the  amount  of  paper  being  used  per  worker  in  the workplace.” says  John Maine, vice president of a pulp and paper economic consulting  firm.  “More information  is being  transmitted electronically, and more and more people are comfortable with  the information  residing only  in electronic form without printing multiple  backups.”     In addition, Mr. Maine points  to  the  lackluster employment market  for white-collar workers – the primary driver of office paper consumption – for the shift in paper usage.     The  real  paradigm  shift may  be  in  the way  paper  is  used. Since  the  advent  of  advanced  and reliable office-network  systems, data storage has moved away from paper archives.  The secretarial art  of  “filing”  is  disappearing  from  job  descriptions.  Much  of  today's  data  may  never  leave  its original  digital  format.     The changing attitudes toward paper have finally caught the attention of paper companies, says Richard Harper, a  researcher at Microsoft.  “All of a sudden,  the paper  industry has  started  thinking, "We need to learn more about the behavioural aspects of paper use, ” he says. “They had never asked, they'd just assumed that 70 million sheets would be bought per year as a literal function of economic growth.”     To  reduce  paper  use,  some companies  are working  to combine  digital  and  paper  capabilit ies. For  example, Xerox  Corp.  is  developing  electronic  paper:  thin  digital  displays  that  respond  to  a stylus, like a pen on paper. Notations can be erased or saved digitally.      Another idea, intelligent paper, comes from Anoto Group. It would allow notations made with a stylus on a page printed with a special magnetic ink to simultaneously appear on a computer screen.      Even with such technological advances, the improved capabilit ies of digital storage continue to act  against  “paperlessness,”  argues  Paul  Saffo,  a  technology  forecaster.  In  his  prophetic  and metaphorical 1989 essay, “The Electronic Piñata (彩罐),” he suggests that the increasing amounts of electronic data necessarily require more paper.      The  information  industry  today  is  like a huge electronic  piñata, composed of a  thin paper crust surrounding an electronic core,” Mr. Saffo wrote. The growing paper crust  “is most noticeable, but the hidden electronic core that produces the crust is far larger – and growing more rapidly. The result is that we are becoming paperless, but we hardly notice at all.”     In  the  same way  that digital  innovations have  increased paper consumption, Saffo says, so has video conferencing – with its promise of fewer in-person meetings – boosting business travel.     “That's  one  of  the  great  ironies  of  the  information  age,” Saffo  says.  “It' s  just common  sense that the more you talk to someone by phone or computer, it inevitably leads to a face-to-face meeting. The best thing  for the aviation  industry was the Internet.”   16. What function does the second sentence in the first paragraph serve?   A. It further explains high-tech hubris.   B. It confirms the effect of high-tech hubris.   C. It offers a cause for high-tech hubris.   D. It offers a contrast to high-tech hubris.   17. Which of the following  is NOT a reason for the slowdown in paper sales?   A. Workforce with better computer skills.    B. Slow growth of the US economy.   C. Changing patterns in paper use.   D. Changing employment  trends.   18. The two innovations by Xerox Corp. and Anoto Group feature   A. integrated use of paper and digital  form.   B. a shift from paper to digital  form.    C. the use of computer screen.   D. a new style of writing.   19. What does the author mean by “irony of  the information age”?   A. The dream of the “paperless” office will  be realized.   B. People usually prefer to have face-to-face meetings.   C. More digital  data use leads  to greater paper use.   D. Some people are opposed to video-conferencing.      20. What is the author 's attitude towards “paperlessness”?   A. He  reviews the situation from different perspectives.    B. He agrees with some of the people quoted in  the passage.    C. He has a preference for digital  innovations.    D. He  thinks airlines benefit most from the digital  age.    TEXT  C       When George Orwell wrote in 1941 that England was “the most class-ridden country under the sun”, he was only partly right. Societies have always had their hierarchies, with some group perched at  the  top.  In  the  Indian state of Bihar  the Ranveer Sena, an upper-caste private army, even killed  to stay there.       By  that measure  class  in  Britain  hardly  seems  entrenched  (根深蒂固的).  But  in  another way Orwell was right, and continues to be. As a new YouGov poll shows, Britons are surprisingly alert to class – both their own and that of others. And they still think class is sticky. According to the poll, 48% of  people  aged  30  or  over  say  they  expect  to  end  up  better  off  than  their  parents.  But  only  28% expect  to end up  in a different class. More  than  two-thirds  think neither  they nor  their children will leave  the class they were born into.     What does this thing that people cannot escape consist of these days? And what do people look at when decoding which class  someone belongs  to? The most useful  identifying markers, according to  the  poll,  are  occupation,  address,  accent  and  income,  in  that  order.  The  fact  that  income  comes fourth is revealing: though some of the habits and attitudes that class used to define are more widely spread than they were, class still indicates something less blunt than mere wealth.     Occupation  is  the most  trusted guide  to class, but changes  in  the  labour market have made  that harder  to  read  than when Orwell was writing. Manual workers have  shrunk along with  farming and heavy industry as a proportion of the workforce, while the number of people in white-collar jobs has surged. Despite  this  striking change, when  they were asked to place  themselves  in a class, Brits  in 2006  huddled  in much  the  same  categories  as  they  did when  they were  asked  in  1949.  So,  jobs, which were once a fairly  reliable  guide  to class, have become misleading.      A survey conducted earlier this year by Expertian shows how this convergence on similar types of work has blurred class boundaries. Expertian asked people  in a number of different  jobs  to place themselves  in  the  working  class  or  the  middle  class.  Secretaries,  waiters  and  journalists  were signif icantly more  likely  to  think  themselves middle-class  than accountants, computer programmers or civil  servants. Many new white-collar  jobs offer no more autonomy or better prospects than old blue-collar ones. Yet despite the muddle over what the markers of class are these days, 71% of those polled by YouGov  still  said  they  found  it very or  fairly easy  to  figure out which class others belong to.       In addition  to changes  in  the  labour market,  two other  things have  smudged  the borders on  the class map. First, since 1945 Britain has  received  large numbers of  immigrants who do not fit easily into  existing  notions  of  class  and may  have  their  own  pyramids  to  scramble  up.  The  flow  of  new arrivals has increased since the late 1990s, multiplying  this effect.      Second, barriers  to  fame have been  lowered, Britain's  fast-growing  ranks of celebrit ies–like David  Beckham and his wife Victoria  –  form a kind of parallel  aristocracy open  to  talent, or at  least to those who are uninhibited enough to meet the requests of television producers. This too has made definitions more complicated.     But many  Br its,  given  the  choice,  still  prefer  to  ident ify with  the  class  they were  born  into rather  than  that which  their  jobs or  income would  suggest. This often entails pretending  to be more humble  than  is  actually  the  case:  22%  of white-collar  workers  told  YouGov  that  they  consider themselves working  class.  Likewise,  the  Expertian  survey  found  that  one  in  ten  adults who  call themselves  working  class  are  among  the  richest  asset-owners,  and  that  over  half  a  million households which  earn more  than  $191,000  a  year say  they  are working  class. Pretending  to  be grander than income and occupation suggest is rarer, though it happens too.      If class no  longer describes a clear  social, economic or even political  status,  is  it worth paying any attention to? Possibly, yes. It is still  in most cases closely correlated with educational attainment  and career expectations.   21. Why does the author say “…Orwell was right, and continues to be” (Paragraph Two)?   A. Because there was stronger class consciousness in India.    B. Because more people hoped to end up in a higher class.    C. Because people expect to gain more wealth than their parents.   D. Because Britons are still conscious of their class status.    22. “…class  still indicates something less blunt than mere wealth” (Paragraph Three) means that   A. class is still defined by its own habits and attitudes.    B. class would refer to something more subtle than money.    C. people  from different classes may have the same habits or attitudes.    D. income is unimportant in determining which class one belongs  to.    23. Which of the following  statements is INCORRECT?   A. White-collar workers would place themselves in a different class.    B. People with different jobs may place themselves in the same class.    C. Occupation and class are no longer related with each other.    D. Changes in the workforce have made it difficult to define class.      24. Which of the following  is NOT a cause to blur class distinction?   A. Notions of class by immigrants.    B. Changing  trends of employment.    C. Fewer types of work.   D. Easy access to fame.   25. When  some  successful white-collar workers choose  to  stay  in  the working class,  it  implies  that   they are   A. showing modesty.   B. showing self-respect.   C. expressing boastfulness.   D. making an understatement.   TEXT  D       The  train was whirling  onward with  such  dignity  of motion  that  a  glance  from  the window seemed  simply  to  prove  that  plains  of  Texas were  pouring  eastward.  Vast  flats  of  green  grass, dull-hued  spaces  of mesquite  and  cactus,  little  groups  of  frame  houses, woods  of  light  and  tender trees, all were sweeping into the east, sweeping over the horizon, a precipice.     A  newly married  pair  had  boarded  this coach  at San Antonio.  The man's  face was  reddened from  many  days  in  the wind  and  sun,  and  a  direct  result  of  his  new  black  clothes was  that  his brick-coloured hands were constantly performing in a most conscious fashion. From time to time he looked  down  respectfully  at  his  attire. He  sat with  a  hand  on  each  knee,  like  a man waiting  in  a barber 's shop. The glances he devoted to other passengers were furtive and shy.      The  bride was  not  pretty,  nor was  she  very  young.  She wore  a  dress  of  blue  cashmere, with small  reservations  of  velvet  here  and  there,  and  with  steel  buttons  abounding.  She  continually twisted her head  to  regard her puff sleeves, very  stiff, and high. They embarrassed her.  It was quite apparent  that  she had cooked, and  that  she expected  to cook, dutifully. The blushes caused by  the careless scrutiny of  some passengers as she had entered  the car were strange  to see upon  this plain, under-class countenance, which was drawn in placid, almost emotionless lines.     They were  evident ly  very  happy.  “Ever  been  in  a  parlor-car  before?”  he  asked,  smiling with delight.     “No.” she answered: “I never was. It's fine, ain't it?”     “Great! And then after a while we'll go forward to the dinner, and get a big lay-out. Fresh meal in the world. Charge a dollar.”     “Oh,  do  they?” cried  the  bride.  “Change  a  dollar? Why,  that's  too much  –  for  us  –  ain't  it, Jack?”     “Nor this trip, anyhow.” he answered bravely. “We're going  to go the whole thing.”     Later he explained to her about the trains. “You see, it's a thousand miles from one end of Texas to  the  other'  and  this  runs  right  across  it,  and  never  stops  but  four  times.” He  had  the  pride  of  an owner. He pointed out  to her  the dazzling  fitt ings of  the coach; and  in  truth her eyes opened wider and she contemplated the sea-green figured velvet, the shining brass, silver, and glass, the wood that gleamed as darkly brilliant as  the  surface of a pool of oil. At one end a bronze figure  sturdily held a support for a separated chamber, and at convenient places on  the ceiling were  frescos  in olive and silver.     To the minds of the pair, their surroundings reflected the glory of their marriage that morning in San Antonio;  this was  the environment of  their new estate; and  the man's  face  in particular beamed with  an  elat ion  that  made  him  appear  ridiculous  to  the  Negro  porter.  This  individual  at  t imes surveyed them from afar with an amused and superior grin. On other occasions he bullied them with skill  in ways  that did not make  it exactly plain  to  them  that  they were being bullied. He  subtly used all  the  manners  of  the  most  unconquerable  kind  of  snobbery.  He  oppressed  them.  But  of  this oppression  they  had  small  knowledge,  and  they  speedily  forgot  that  infrequently  a  number  of travelers  covered  them with  stares  of  derisive  enjoyment.  Historically  there was  supposed  to  be something infinitely  humorous in their situation.     “We are due in Yellow  Sky at 3:42.” he said, looking  tenderly  into her eyes.     “Oh, are we?”  she  said, as  if  she had not been aware of  it. To evince  ( 关于同志近三年现实表现材料材料类招标技术评分表图表与交易pdf视力表打印pdf用图表说话 pdf 现出) surprise at her husband's statement was part of her wifely  amiability. She  took  from a pocket a  litt le  silver watch; and as she held  it before her, and stared at it with a frown of attention, the new husband's face shone.     “I bought it in San Anton' from a friend of mine,” he told her gleefully.     “It's seventeen minutes past twelve.” she said, looking up at him with a kind of shy and clumsy coquetry  (调情;卖俏). A  passenger,  nothing  this  play,  grew  excessively  sardonic,  and winked  at himself  in one of the numerous mirrors.      At  last  they  went  to  the  dining-car.  Two  rows  of  Negro  waiters,  in  glowing  white  suits, surveyed  their  entrance with  the  interest,  and  also  the  equanimity  (平静),  of men who  had  been forewarned.  The  pair  fell  to  the  lot  of  a  waiter  who  happened  to  feel  pleasure  in  steering  them through their meal. He viewed them with the manner of a fatherly pilot, his countenance radiant with benevolence. The patronage, entwined with  the ordinary deference, was not plain  to  them. And yet, as they returned to their coach, they showed in their faces a sense of escape.    26. The description of  the couple's clothes and behaviour at  the beginning of  the passage  seems  to    indicate  that they had a sense of   A. secrecy.   B. elation.   C. superiority.   D. awkwardness.      27. Which of the following adjectives best depicts the interior of the coach?   A. Modern.   B. Luxurious.   C. Practical.   D. Complex.   28.  Which  of  the  following  best  describes  the  attitude  of  other  people  on  the  train  towards  the  couple?   A. They regarded the couple as an object of fun.    B. They expressed indifference towards the couple.   C. They were very curious about the couple.    D. They showed friendliness towards the couple.    29. Which of the following contains a metaphor?   A. … like a man waiting  in a barber ‟s shop.   B. … his countenance radiant with benevolence.   C. … sweeping over the horizon, a precipice.   D. … as darkly brilliant  as the surface of a pool of oil.    30. We can infer from the last paragraph that in the dining-car   A. the waiters were snobbish.   B. the couple felt ill  at ease.   C. the service was satisfactory.    D. the couple enjoyed their dinner.     PART  III        GENERAL KNOWLEDGE  (10 MIN)   There are  ten multiple-choice questions  in this  section. Mark  the best answer  to each question on ANSWER SHEET TWO.   31. The northernmost part of Great Britain  is   A. Northern Ireland.   B. Scotland.   C. England.   D. Wales.   32. It is generally  agreed that ________ were the first Europeans to reach Australia's  shores.   A. the French   B. the Germans   C. the British   D. the Dutch - 13 -   33. Which country is known as the Land of Maple Leaf?   A. Canada.   B. New Zealand.   C. Great Britain.   D. The United  States of America.   34. Who wrote the famous pamphlet, The Common Sense, before the American Revolution?   A. Thomas Jefferson.   B. Thomas Paine.   C. John Adams.   D. Benjamin  Franklin.   35. Virginia  Woolf was an important female ________ in the 20th-century England.   A. poet   B. biographer   C. playwright   D. novelist   36. ________ refers to a long narrative poem that records the adventures of a hero in a nation's     history.   A. Ballad.   B. Romance.   C. Epic.   D. Elegy.   37. Which of the following best explores American myth in the 20th century?   A. The Great Gatsby.   B. The Sun Also Rises.   C. The Sound and the Fury.   D. Beyond the Horizon.   38. ________ is defined as the study of the relationship  between language and mind.   A. Semantics.   B. Pragmatics.   C. Cognitive  linguistics   D. Sociolinguistics   39. A vowel is different from a consonant in English  because of   A. absence of obstruction.   B. presence of obstruction.   C. manner of articulation.   D. Place of articulation. - 14 -   40.  The  definition  “the  act  of  using,  or  promoting  the  use  of,  several  languages,  either  by  an  individual  speaker or by a community of speakers” refers to   A. Pidgin.   B. Creole.   C. Multilingualism.   D. Bilingualism.     PART  IV      PROOFREADING & ERROR CORRECTION  (15 MIN)   The  passage  contains  TEN  errors.  Each  indicated  line  contains  a maximum  of ONE  error.  In each  case,  only ONE  word  is  involved.  You  should  proof-read  the  passage  and  correct  it  in  the following way:     For a wrong word,     underline  the  wrong word  and write  the  correct  one                                       in  the  blank  provided at the end of the line.   For a missing word,  mark  the position of  the missing word with a  “^”  sign and                                  write  the word you believe  to be missing  in  the blank                                  provided at  the end of  the line.   For an unnecessary word,    cross  the unnecessary word with a slash  “/” and                                        put the word  in  the blank provided at the end of the line.      EXAMPLE   When ^ art museum wants a new exhibit,            (1)  an it never buys things in finished  form and hangs  (2)  __never__ them on the wall. When a natural history museum wants an exhibition,  it must often build  it.   (3)  __exhibit_       Proofread the given passage on ANSWER SHEET TWO as instructed.       PART V        TRANSLATION  (60 MIN)     SECTION A        CHINESE TO ENGLISH   Translate  the  underlined  part  of  the  following  text  into  English.  Write  your  translation  on ANSWER SHEET THREE.   现代社会无论价值观的持有还是生活方式的选择都充满了矛盾。而最让现代人感到尴尬的是,面对重重矛盾,许多时候你却别无选择。匆忙与休闲是截然不同的两种生活方式。但在现实生活中,人们却在这两种生活方式间频繁穿梭,有时也说不清自己到底是“休闲着”还是“匆忙着”。譬如说,当我们正在旅游胜地享受假期,却忽然接到老板的电话,告诉我们客户或工作方面出了麻烦—现代便捷先进工具在此刻显示出了它狰狞、阴郁的面容—搞得人一下子兴趣全无,接下来的休闲只能徒有其表,因为心里已是火烧火燎了。   SECTION B        ENGLISH TO CHINESE   Translate the following text into Chinese. Write your translation on ANSWER SHEET THREE.        When  flying  over Nepal,  it's  easy  to  soar  in  your  imagination  and  pretend  you're  tiny–a butterfly – and drifting above one of  those  three-dimensional  topographical maps architects use,  the circling contour lines  replaced by the terraced rice paddies that surround each high ridge.      Nepal  is a  small country, and from  the windows of our plane  floating eastward at 12,000 feet, one can see clearly  the brilliant  white mirage of the high Himalayas  thirty miles off the lef t window.     Out the right window, the view is of three or four high terraced ridges giving sudden way to the plains of India beyond.     There were  few roads visible below, most  transportation  in Nepal being by  foot along ancient trails  that connect and bind  the country  together. There  is also a network of dirt airstrips, which was fortunate  for me,  as  I  had  no  time  for  the  two-and-a-half week  trek  to my  destination.  I was  on  a flight  to the local airport.    PART VI       WRITING  (45 MIN)       According  to a recent  newspaper  report, many  famous sites of historical  interest  in China have begun  or  are  considering  charging  tourists  higher  entry  fees  during  peak  travel  seasons.  This  has aroused  a  lot  of  public  attention  and  also  public  debate.  What  is  your  opinion?  Should  famous Chinese  sites of historical  interest charge higher  fees during peak  travel  seasons? Write an essay of about 400 words.       In the first part of your essay you should state clearly your main argument, and in the second part you should support your argument with appropriate details. In the last part you  should bring what you have written to a natural conclusion or make a summary.         You should supply an appropriate title for your essay.         Marks will be awarded  for content,  organization,  language and appropriateness. Failure  to follow the above instructions may result in a loss of marks.        Write your essay on ANSWER SHEET FOUR.  2011年专八Mini Lecture参考答案: 1. and significance 2. the context 或 what is doing 3. closeness to people 4. body language 5. polychronic 6. in itself 7. personal space 8. monochrome 9. lateness 10. multicultural situation  2011年专八听力参考答案: 1-5 ACDCD  6-10 ABABD 2011年专八阅读参考答案: 11-15 ADDAB   16-20 DDBCA   21-25 DBCBA   26-30 DBACB 2011年专八人文知识参考答案: 31. B) 英国最北部:Scotland; 32. D) 第一个到澳洲的人:Dutch; 33. A) 枫叶之国:Canada; 34. B) The Common Sense的作者:Thomas Paine 35. D) Virginia Woolf:Novelist; 36. C) 历史叙事诗:Epic 37. A) 探讨20世纪American Myth的文学作品:The Great Gatsby 38. C)探讨语言和思维的学科:Cognitive Lingusitics 39. A) 元音和辅音的区别:Obstruction of the air stream; 40. C) 推动多种语言使用:Multilingualism   2011年专八改错参考答案: 1. grew 后加 up 2. conscience 改成 consciousness 3. soon 改成 sooner 4. the 去掉 5. disagreeing 改成 disagreeable 6. imaginative 改成 imaginary 7. literal 改成 literary 8. in 去掉 9. which 前加 in 10. Therefore, 改成 Nevertheless 2011年专八英译汉参考答案: 飞机飞越尼泊尔上空时。你很容易天马行空起来,假想自己很渺小----像只蝴蝶----在建筑师所使用的某个三维地形图上方漂浮着,在这里,地形图一圈圈的轮廓线变成了环绕高耸的山脊成阶梯状的稻田。 尼泊尔是个小国。我们的飞机在12000英尺的高空向东飞去。从左边的机窗望去,你能清晰地看到30英里开外的高耸的喜马拉雅山的耀眼的白色蜃景。 靠右边的机窗外是三、四条成梯状的高耸山脊,再往远处突然之间成了印度平原。飞机下面看不这几条公路。尼泊尔的交通方式以步行为主,人们沿着连接整个国家的古老小径行走着。尼泊尔也有一个土筑的飞机场网络,这对我来说很幸运,因为我没时间长途跋涉两周半的时间到达我的目的地。我在飞往当地机场的飞机上。 2011年专八汉译英参考答案: Being hasty and at leisure are two quite distinct lifestyles. But in the real world, people have to frequently shuttle between these two lifestyles, sometimes not sure whether they are “at ease” or “in a rush”. For example, we are enjoying our holidays in the resort while suenly we receive phone calls from the boss who tells us there are some troubles with our customers and work----so at this moment the modern, convenient and advanced device shows its vicious and gloomy features---and we lose all our interest. The subsequent leisure is the mere showy for we are in a restless and anxious state of mind. 2011年专八作文参考答案: 作文内容: 正方:坚决反对旅游高峰期风景区景点门票涨价。景区景点的门票在一段时间内是恒定的,景区经营者应当靠服务质量来吸引游客,增加收入,而不是一看来的消费者多就趁机涨价,这样有损企业的形象,觉得他们不厚道。 反方:景点门票遇到节假日涨点儿价是可以理解的。现在是市场经济,什么事儿都是由经济杠杆来调节的,我们不能过分地用有关部门或有关规定来干预市场,更何况物价部门规定的门票价格是有上下浮动空间的,只要不超过规定的范围,也就不算违规。 作文参考: Pros: firmly opposed to the peak of tourist scenic spot ticket prices. Tickets of scenic spots is constant over time, the area should depend on the quality of service operators to attract tourists and increase revenue, rather than a view of the consumers to take the opportunity to price increases, so detrimental to the corporate image, that they do not Kind. Against: Tickets for attractions face up a little holiday price is understandable. Now a market economy, what thing is to adjust the economic levers, and we can not be used excessively to intervene in the department or the relevant provisions of the market, 510730874not to mention the price department under the upper and lower ticket prices are floating in space, as long as does not exceed the Range, it is not illegal.
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