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本文([外语类试卷]北京大学考博英语模拟试卷9及答案与解析.doc)为本站会员(registerpick115)主动上传,麦多课文库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。 若此文所含内容侵犯了您的版权或隐私,请立即通知麦多课文库(发送邮件至master@mydoc123.com或直接QQ联系客服),我们立即给予删除!

[外语类试卷]北京大学考博英语模拟试卷9及答案与解析.doc

1、北京大学考博英语模拟试卷 9及答案与解析 一、 Structure and Vocabulary 1 There seemed little hope that the explorer,_in the tropical forest, would find bis way out. ( A) having been deserted ( B) having deserted ( C) to have been deserted ( D) to be deserted 2 By signing an application,I asked that an account_for me and

2、a credit card issued as I requested. ( A) opened ( B) to be opened ( C) be opened ( D) was opened 3 _does he know that the police are about to arrest him. ( A) Seldom ( B) Little ( C) Only ( D) Never 4 The school board listened quietly as John read the demands that his followers_for. ( A) demonstrat

3、e ( B) demonstrated ( C) be demonstrating ( D) had been demonstrating 5 But for his courage, the battle_. ( A) was lost ( B) would be lost ( C) would have been lost ( D) was to be lost 6 _some questions about the bookkeepers honesty, the company asked him to leave. ( A) There being ( B) There be ( C

4、) Being ( D) Having 7 Lisa stood motionless at the end of the diving board, hands at her sides, heels slightly raised, every muscle_action. ( A) anticipated ( B) to anticipate ( C) anticipating ( D) having been anticipating 8 I didnt send out my application form last week, but I_. ( A) had to ( B) w

5、ould ( C) must ( D) should have 9 I wish_to Stockholm when I was in Sweden. I hear its a beautiful city. ( A) I went ( B) I had gone ( C) to go ( D) to have gone 10 I_have written to him because he phoned me shortly afterwards. ( A) neednt ( B) oughtnt to ( C) wouldnt ( D) shouldnt 11 This sort of r

6、ude behavior in public hardly_a person in your position. ( A) becomes ( B) fits ( C) supports ( D) improves 12 I must leave now._, if you want that book Ill bring it next time. ( A) Accidentally ( B) Incidentally ( C) Eventually ( D) Naturally 13 After a long delay, she_replying to my e-mail. ( A) g

7、ot away with ( B) got back at ( C) got back ( D) got round to 14 Personal computers are no longer something beyond the ordinary people; they are_available these days. ( A) promptly ( B) instantly ( C) readily ( D) quickly 15 In my first year at the university, I learnt the_of journalism. ( A) basics

8、 ( B) basic ( C) elementary ( D) elements 16 According to the new tax law, any money earned over that level is taxed at the_of 59 percent. ( A) ratio ( B) percentage ( C) proportion ( D) rate 17 Thousands of_at the stadium came to their feet to pay tribute to an outstanding performance. ( A) audienc

9、e ( B) participants ( C) spectatxbrs ( D) observers 18 We stood still, gazing out over the limitless_of the desert. ( A) space ( B) expanse ( C) stretch ( D) land 19 Doctor often_uneasiness in the people they deal with. ( A) smell ( B) hare ( C) sense ( D) tough 20 Many sat at the table, looked at t

10、he plate and_her lips. ( A) smacked ( B) opened ( C) parted ( D) separated 二 、 Reading Comprehension 20 The energy crisis, which is being felt around the world, has dramatized how the careless use of the earths resources has brought the whole world to the brink of disaster. The over-development of m

11、otor transport, with its increase of more cars, more highways, more pollution, more suburbs, more commuting, has contributed to the near destruction of our cities. The disaster has arrived in the form of the energy crisis. Our present situation is unlike war, revolution or depression. Worldwide reso

12、urces exploitation and energy use have brought us to a state where long range planning is essential. What we need is not a continuation of our present serious state, which endangers the future of our country, our children, and our earth, but a movement forward to a new norm in order to work rapidly

13、and effectively on planetary problems. This country has been falling back under the continuing exposures of loss of morality and the revelation that lawbreaking has reached into the highest places in thei land. There is a strong demand for moral revival and for some devotion that is vast enough and

14、yet personal enough to enlist the devotion of all. In the past it has been only in a way in defense of their own country and their own ideals that any people have been able to devote themselves wholeheartedly. This is the first time that we have been asked to defend ourselves and what we hold dear i

15、n cooperation with all the other inhabitants of this planet, who share with us the same endangered air and the same endangered oceans. There is a common need to reassess our present course, to change that course and to devise new methods through which the world can; survive. This is a priceless oppo

16、rtunity. To grasp it we need a widespread understanding of nature if the crisis confronting us-and the world-is a crisis that is no passing inconvenience, no by product of thej ambitions of the oil producing countries, no environmentalists mere fears, no by product of any present system of governmen

17、t. What we face is the outcome of the invention of the last four hundred years. What we need is a transformed life style. This new life style can flow directly from science and technology, but its acceptance depends on a sincere devotion to finding a higher quality of life for the worlds children an

18、d future generation. 21 Which condition does the author feel has nearly destroyed our cities? ( A) Lack of financial planning. ( B) The breakup of the family. ( C) Natural disasters in many regions. ( D) The excessive growth of motors. 22 The author in the second paragraph states what we need in our

19、 present situation is_. ( A) a continuation of our present serious state ( B) worldwide resources exploitation and energy use ( C) a movement forward to a new norm to planet research work ( D) a state where long range planning is essential to us 23 According to the author, what is one example of our

20、 loss of morality? ( A) Disregard for law. ( B) Lack of devotion. ( C) Lack of cooperation. ( D) Exploitation of resources. 24 By comparing past problems with present ones, the author draws attention to the_. ( A) significance of this crisis ( B) inadequacy of governments ( C) similarity of the past

21、 to the present ( D) hopelessness of the situation 25 According to the last paragraph, what contribution does the author feel people must now make? ( A) Search for new energy sources. ( B) Outlaw motor transportation. ( C) Accept a new life style. ( D) Adopt a new form of government. 25 Futurists ha

22、ve identified two changes that seem to be central to contemporary social life. First, the United States is being restructured from an industrial to an information society. Second, modern societies are increasingly shifting from a national to a global economy. Futurists have applied a good many metap

23、hors to these changes, including Daniel Bells “postindustrial society“, Alvin Toffiers “the third wave“ and John Naisbitts “megatrends “. Common to these metaphors is the notion that American society is shifting from the production of goods to the production of services and from society based on the

24、 coordination of people and machines to a society organized around knowledge. These changes, it is contended, will afford a myriad of choices. The world will increasingly be one of many flavors, not just vanilla(香草 ) or chocolate. Many observers of contemporary American life believe that we are witn

25、essing a historical change and the first major impact of the shift from an energy economy to an information economy. For 300 years technology has been cast in a mechanical model, one based on the combustion processes that go on inside a star like the sun. The steam engine opened the mechanical age,

26、and it reached its peak with the discovery of nuclear fission and nuclear fusion, which replicated the energy producing processes of a star. We now seem to be moving toward a biological model based on information and involving the intensive use of materials. Although biological processes need physic

27、al energy and materials, they tend to substitute information for both. Biological processes “miniaturize“ size, energy, and materials by “exploding“ information. The human brain is some ten times the size and weight of the brain of a lemur, but it handles a billion times more information. As a resul

28、t, high tech industries are information intensive rather than energy or material intensive. Sociologists have played and will continue to play an important role in assessing and interpreting these developments and other aspects of change. 26 It can be inferred that underlying the two changes is the

29、change of_. ( A) the instrument of production ( B) the size of the society ( C) the social structure ( D) the economic market 27 With what does the mechanical age reach its highest point? ( A) The steam engine. ( B) Nuclear power production. ( C) The combustion process. ( D) The energy producing pro

30、cess of the sun. 28 With the coming of the information age, the society is becoming. ( A) more intolerable ( B) larger ( C) more varie ( D) a more pleasant place 29 What characterizes the information society? ( A) The amount of knowledge to be learned. ( B) Physical energy and materials. ( C) Rapid

31、change and its social effects. ( D) Small size and high capacity. 30 What is the attitude of the author towards the function of sociologists in the great changes? ( A) Critical. ( B) Positive. ( C) Negative. ( D) Indifferent. 30 America Loses a Great Public Thinker Arthur Millers death last week mea

32、nt more than the loss of an outstanding playwright. It was the loss of a great public thinker who believed strongly that the essence of America its greatness was in its promises. (51) Miller knew what ignorance and fear and the madness of crowds, especially when exploited by sinister leadership, cou

33、ld do to those promises. (52) His greatest concerns, “were with the moral corruption brought on by bending ones ideals to societys dictates, buying into the values of a group when they conflict with the voice of personal conscience.“ (53) The individual in Millers view, had an abiding moral responsi

34、bility for his or her own behavior, and for the behavior of society as a whole. He said that “I felt that as improbable as it might seem, there were moments when an individual conscience was all that could keep a world from falling.“ Miller saw some of the differences in two sharply defined eras: th

35、e Depression-wracked 1930s and the prosperous postwar 1950s. It was perhaps around 1936, people who used to mind no polities began thinking for the first time of common action as a way out of their impossible conditions. (54) By the early 50s the agony of the Depression was gone. McCarthyism was in

36、flower. After the 50s, however, Americans became more practical and pragmatic. The dean of the University of Michigan was complaining that his students highest goal was to fit in with corporate America father than to separate truth from falsehood. (55) “They become experts at grade-getting, but ther

37、es less speculating about the wrongs of the world and ideal solutions something no employer was interested in.“ Now Miller is gone, and if we are not wise enough to pay attention, his uncomfortable truths will die with him. 三、 Cloze 35 It is a dream world, where chemists can turn a sows ear into a s

38、ilk purse, where bioengineers can put a little hit of a sheep into a wolf or vice versa and whete the life-styles of the rich are beamed by satellite_【 C1】 every upwardly mobile village on the planet. Thanks to science and technology, more people are consuming a more amazing array of worldly goods t

39、han at any time in history. But beneath the surface all is not well. Like Oscar Wildesi fictional creation Dorian Gray, who stayed forever_【 C2】 while a portrait of him in the attic aged horribly, the modern economy masks a disfigured planet. The engine of consumption has scarred the land and staine

40、d the sea,_【 C3】 away at the foundations of nature and threatening to destroy humanitys only means of survival. Todays elderly, bern at the beginning of last century, started life in a world_【 C4】 about 50% of its ancient forests still standing. Though far from pristine, it was a world of oceans and

41、 land masses teeming with all kinds of life. But those who will be born after the turn of the millennium will_【 C5】 of age to find that previous generations have squandered and defiled their inheritance, foreclosing some potions even as new ones were created. Our grandchildren may have_【 C6】 to conv

42、eniences that further reduce the drudgery of everyday life, but they will also inherit a planet with less than 20% of its original forests_【 C7】 , with most of the readily available freshwater already spoken fori and much of the amble_【 C8】 under plough. They will inherit a stressed atmosphere and a

43、n unwanted legacy of toxic waste in the soil and water. Missing from the estate will be coantless species, most_【 C9】 out before even_【 C10】catalogued by scientist. 36 【 C1】 37 【 C2】 38 【 C3】 39 【 C4】 40 【 C5】 41 【 C6】 42 【 C7】 43 【 C8】 44 【 C9】 45 【 C10】 四、 Proofreading 45 (66) A state university p

44、resident was arrested today and charged with impersonate a police officer became, the authorities say, he pulled over a speeding driver here last month. (67)Using flashing headlights, Richard L. Judd, 64, the president of Central Connecticut State University made the driver. Peter Baba, 24, of Plain

45、ville. pull on Jan. 23, the state police said. (68) He then flashed a gold badge and barked at him for speed, they said. (69) Mr. Judd is New Britains police commissioner from 1981 to 1989 and from 1993 to 1995.(70) But Detective Harold Gannon of the New Britain police said today that the job involv

46、ed more policy as police work, and did not include the authority to charge or chide criminals. (71) The gold badge was mere a university award. (72) The governor said he would not ask for a resignation because Mr. Judd had made a “misiudgment“ and had written a letter of apologizing. (73)Later, Mr.

47、Judds lawyer. Paul J. McQuillan, issued a long apology from his superior, whom he described as “the best thing to happen to New Britain.“(74) “My experience and instinct as an E. M. T. and former police commissioner prompted me to involve myself with this matter.“ Mr. Judd said in the statement. (75

48、)“ln hindsight, I see it was mine to manage.“ 五、 Writing 56 In this part, you are asked to write a composition on the title of “Effect of Research Event on My Later Life and Work“ with no less than 200 English words. Your composition should be based on the following outline given in Chinese. Put you

49、r composition on the ANSWER SHEET. 1在科研和学习中使我最难忘的一件事情是 。 2使我难忘的原因是 。 3它对我后来的影响是 。 北京大学考博英语模拟试卷 9答案与解析 一、 Structure and Vocabulary 1 【正确答案】 A 【试题解析】 having been deserted in the tropicaI forest“独自处在热带雨林之中 ”,是完成式现在分词短语作状语,表示原因。 2 【正确答案】 C 【试题解析】 ask的宾语从句谓语动词需用虚拟语气。 3 【正确答案】 B 【试题解析】 半否定词 little放在句首时,句子要用倒装语序。 seldom never放在句首时句子也需用倒装语序; only引导的状语放在句首时也需用倒装语序,但这三个不合句意。 4 【正确答案】 D 【试题解析】 demands后面的 that从句为限制性定语从句,因此从句谓语

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