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[考研类试卷]2004年MBA(英语)真题试卷及答案与解析.doc

1、2004年 MBA(英语)真题试卷及答案与解析 一、 Section II Cloze Directions: Read the following passage. For each numbered blank there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. choices the best one and mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1. 0 The China boom is by now a well-documented phenomenon. Who hasnt【 1】 the Middle Kin

2、gdoms astounding economic growth (8 percent annually , its tremendous consumer market (1.2 billion people), the investment enthusiasm of foreign suitors ($40 billion in foreign direct investment last year【 2】 )? China is an economic wonder.【 3】Nicholas Lardy of the Brookings Institution, a Washingto

3、n D C -based think tank, “No country【 4】 its foreign trade as fast as China over the last 20 years. Japan doubled its foreign trade over【 5】 period; Chinas foreign trade was quintupled(使成五倍 ). Theyve become the pre-eminent producer of labor-intensive manufacturing goods in the world. “ But theres be

4、en【 6】 from the dazzling China growth story-namely, the Chinese I multinational. No major Chinese companies have yet established themselves, or their brands,【 7】 the global stage. But things are now starting to change.【 8】 100 years of poverty and chaos, of being overshadowed by foreign countries an

5、d multinationals, Chinese industrial companies are starting to make a mark on the world. A new generation of large and credible firms【 9】 in China in the electronics, appliance and even high-tech sectors. Some have【 10】 critical mass on the mainland and are now seeking new outlets for their producti

6、on-through exports and by building Chinese factories abroad, chiefly in Southeast Asia. ( A) listened ( B) listened to ( C) heard ( D) heard of ( A) alone ( B) aside ( C) along ( D) lonely ( A) As for ( B) As to ( C) Judging by ( D) According to ( A) has expanded ( B) did expand ( C) does expand ( D

7、) expands ( A) 20-year ( B) a 20-year ( C) 20-years ( D) a 20 years ( A) something lost ( B) lost something ( C) something missing ( D) something missed ( A) at ( B) in ( C) over ( D) on ( A) Before ( B) After ( C) Since ( D) Behind ( A) emerge ( B) have emerged ( C) has emerged ( D) is emerged ( A)

8、 reached ( B) reached over ( C) reached out ( D) reached down 二、 Section III Reading Comprehension Directions: Read the following four passages. Answer the questions below each passage by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1. 10 Less than 40 years ago in the United States, it w

9、as common to change a one-dollar bill for a dollars worth of silver. That is because the coins were actually made of silver. But those days are gone. There is no silver in todays coins. When the price of the precious metal rises above its face value as money, the metal will become more valuable in o

10、ther uses. Silver coins are no longer in circulation because the silver in coins is worth much more than their face value. A silver firm could find that it is cheaper to obtain silver by melting down coins than by buying it on the commodity markets. Coins today are made of an alloy of cheaper metals

11、. Greshams Law, named after Sir Thomas Gresham, argues that “good money“ is driven out of circulation by “bad money“. Good money differs from bad money because it has higher commodity value. Gresham lived in the 16th century in England where it was common for gold and silver coins to be debased. Gov

12、ernments did this by mixing cheaper metals with gold and silver. The governments could thus make a profit in coinage by issuing coins that had less precious metal than the face value indicated. Because different mixings of coins had different amounts of gold and silver, even though they bore the sam

13、e face value, some coins were worth more than others as commodities. People who dealt with gold and silver could easily see the difference between the “good“ and the “had“ money. Gresham observed that coins with a higher content of gold and silver were kept rather than being used in exchange, or wer

14、e melted down for their precious metal. In the mid-1960s when the U. S. issued new coins to replace silver coins, Greshams law went right in action. 11 Why was it possible for Americans to use a one-dollar bill for a dollars worth of silver? ( A) Because there was a lot of silver in the United State

15、s. ( B) Because money was the medium of payment. ( C) Because coins were made of silver. ( D) Because silver was considered worthless. 12 Todays coins in the United States are made of_. ( A) some precious metals ( B) silver and some precious metals ( C) various expensive metals ( D) some inexpensive

16、 metals 13 What is the difference between “good money“ and “bad money“? ( A) They are circulated in different markets. ( B) They are issued in different face values. ( C) They are made of different amounts of gold and silver. ( D) They have different uses. 14 What was the purpose of the governments

17、issuing new coins by mixing cheaper metals with gold and silver in the 16th century? ( A) They wanted to reserve some gold and silver for themselves. ( B) There was neither enough gold nor enough silver. ( C) New coins were easier to be made. ( D) They could make money. 14 By the mid-nineteenth cent

18、ury, the term “ice-box“ had entered the American language, but ice was still only beginning to affect the diet of ordinary citizens in the United States. The ice trade grew with the growth of cities. Ice was used in hotels, taverns, and hospitals, and by some forward-looking city dealers in fresh me

19、at, fresh fish, and butter. After the Civil War (1861- 1865), as ice was used to refrigerate freight cars, it also came into household use. Even before 1880, half the ice sold in New York, Philadelphia, and Baltimore, and one-third of that sold in Boston and Chicago, went to families for their own u

20、se. This had become possible because a new household convenience, the ice-box, a precursor of the modern refrigerator, had been invented. Making an efficient ice-box was not as easy as we might now suppose. In the early nineteenth century, the knowledge of heat, which was essential to a science of r

21、efrigeration, was rudimentary. The commonsense notion that the best ice-box was one that prevented the ice from melting was of course mistaken, for it was the melting of ice that performed the cooling. Nevertheless, early efforts to economize ice included wrapping the ice in blankets, which kept the

22、 ice from doing its job. Not until near the end of the nineteenth century did inventors achieve the delicate balance of insulation and circulation needed for an efficient ice-box. But as early as 1803, an ingenious Maryland farmer, Thomas Moore, had been on the right track. He owned a farm about twe

23、nty miles outside the city of Washington, for which the village of Georgetown was the market center. When he used an ice-box of his own design to transport his butter to market, he found that customers would pass up the rapidly melting stuff in the tubs of his competitors to pay a premium price for

24、his butter, still fresh and hard in neat, one-pound bricks. One advantage of his ice-box, Moore explained, was that farmers would no longer have to travel to market at night in order to keep their produce cool. 15 What is the main idea of this passage? ( A) The influence of ice on the diet. ( B) The

25、 transportation of goods to market. ( C) The development of refrigeration. ( D) Sources of the term “ice-box“. 16 According to the passage, when did the word “ ice-box“ become part of the American language? ( A) In 1803 ( B) Around 1850. ( C) During the Civil War. ( D) Before 1880. 17 The word “rudi

26、mentary“ in paragraph 2 is closest in meaning to_. ( A) basic ( B) sufficient ( C) necessary ( D) undeveloped 18 The sentence “Thomas Moore had been on the right track“ (para. 3) indicates that_. ( A) Moores farm was not far away from Washington ( B) Moores farm was on the right road ( C) Moores des

27、ign was completely successful ( D) Moore was suitable for the job 18 Today, the computer has taken up appliance status in more than 42 percent of households across the United States. And these computers are increasingly being wired to the Internet. Online access was up more than 50 percent in just t

28、he past year. Now, more than one quarter of all U.S. households can surf in cyberspace. Mostly, this explosive growth has occurred democratically. The online penetration and computer ownership increases extend across all the demographic levels-by race, geography, income, and education. We view these

29、 trends as favorable without the slightest question because we clearly see computer technology as empowering. In fact, personal growth and a prosperous U.S. economy are considered to be the long-range rewards of individual and collective technological power. Now for the not-so-good news. The governm

30、ents analysis spells out so-called digital divide. That is, the digital explosion is not booming at the same pace for everyone. Yes, it is true that we are all plugged in to a much greater degree than any of us have been in the past. But some of us are more plugged in than others and are getting plu

31、gged in far more rapidly. And this gap is widening even as the pace of the information age accelerates through society. Computer ownership and Internet access are highly classified along lines of wealth, race, education, and geography. The data indicates that computer ownership and online access are

32、 growing more rapidly among the most prosperous and well educated: essentially, wealthy white people with high school and college diplomas and who are part of stable, two-parent households. The highest income bracket households, those earning more than $75,000 annually, are 20 times as likely to hav

33、e access to the Internet as households at the lowest income levels, under $10, 000 annually. The computer penetration rate at the high-income level is an amazing 76.56 percent, compared with 8 percent at the bottom end of the scale. Technology access differs widely by educational level. College grad

34、uates are 16 times as likely to be Internet surfers at home as are those with only elementary-school education. If you look at the differences between these groups in rural areas, the gap widens to a twenty-six-fold advantage for the college-educated. From the time of the last study, the information

35、 access gap grew by 29 percent between the highest and lowest income groups, and by 25 percent between the highest and lowest education levels. In the long run, participation in the information age may not be a zero sum game, where if some groups win, others must lose. Eventually, as the technology

36、matures we are likely to see penetration levels approach all groups equally. This was true for telephone access and television ownership, but eventually can be cold comfort in an era when tomorrow is rapidly different from today and unrecognizable compared with yesterday. 19 How many U. S. household

37、s have linked to Internet today? ( A) More than 25 percent. ( B) By 29 percent. ( C) More than 42 percent. ( D) More than 50 percent. 20 According to the text, the computer use by the high-income level is _ that by the lowest income levels. ( A) 8 percent more than ( B) 76.56 percent more than ( C)

38、nearly 10 times as many as ( D) about 20 times as many as 21 According to the author, which of the following prevents people from gaining access to the Internet? ( A) Income level. ( B) Poor education and low-income level. ( C) Participation in the information age. ( D) Telephone access and televisi

39、on ownership. 22 Judging from the context, what does “digital divide“ (para. 4) probably mean? ( A) The governments analysis. ( B) The divide between the poor and the rich. ( C) The pace of the information age. ( D) The gap between peoples access to the computer. 22 Just over a year ago, I foolishly

40、 locked up my bicycle outside my office, but forgot to remove the pannier(挂篮 ). When I returned the pannier had been stolen. Inside it were about ten of the little red notebooks I take everywhere for jotting down ideas for articles, short stories, TV shows and the like. When I lost my notebooks, I w

41、as devastated; all the ideas Id had over the past two years were contained within their pages. I could remember only a few of them, but had the impression that those I couldnt recall were truly brilliant. Those little books were crammed with the plots of award-winning novels and scripts for radio co

42、medy shows that were only two-thirds as bad as the ones on at the moment. Thats not all, though. In my reminiscence, my lost notebooks contained sketches for many innovative and incredible machines. In one book there was a design for a device that could turn sea water into apple cider; in another, p

43、lan for an automatic dog; in a third, sketches for a pair of waterproof shoes with television screens built into the toes. Now all of these plans are lost to humanity. I found my notebooks again. It turns out they werent in the bike pannier at all, but in a carrier bag in my spare room, where I foun

44、d six months after supposedly losing them. And when I flipped through their pages, ready to run to the patent office in the morning, I discovered they were completely full of rubbish. Discovering the notebooks really shook me up. I had firmly come to believe they were brimming with brilliant, invent

45、ive stuff-and yet clearly they werent. I had deluded myself. After surveying my nonsense, I found that this halo effect always attaches itself to things that seem irretrievably lost. Dont we all have a sneaking feeling that the weather was sunnier, TV shows funnier and cake-shop buns bunnier in the

46、not-very-distant past? All this would not matter much except that it is a powerful element in reactionary thought, this belief in a better yesterday. After all, racism often stems from a delusion that things have deteriorated since “they“ came. What a boon to society it would be if people could visi

47、t the past and see that it wasnt the paradise they imagine but simply the present with different hats. Sadly, time travel is impossible. Until now, that is. Because Ive suddenly remembered I left a leather jacket in an Indonesian restaurant a couples of years ago, and Im absolutely certain that in t

48、he inside pocket there was a sketch Id made. 23 By “only two-thirds as bad as the ones on at the moment“, the author means“_“. ( A) better than ( B) as bad as ( C) worse than ( D) as good as 24 As soon as the author read the lost notebooks, he_. ( A) reported the fact ( B) found it valueless ( C) re

49、gistered the inventions ( D) was very excited 25 Which of the following would the author most probably agree with? ( A) Yesterday is better. ( B) Yesterday is no better than today. ( C) Self delusion sometimes is necessary. ( D) Things today have deteriorated. 25 A television ad features a ship drifting on a twinkling ocean as the voice-over intones words to this effect, “When was the last time the world revolved around you?“ Whenever my husband and I see this, we cant help but laugh. Pointing to

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