专业八级阅读
专八英语阅读
专八英语阅读.英语专业八级考试TEM-8阅读理解练习册(1)(英语专业2012级)UNIT 1Text AEvery minute of every day, what ecologist生态学家James Carlton calls a global “conveyor belt”, redistributes ocean organisms生物.It’s planetwide biological disruption生物的破坏that scientists have barely begun to understand.Dr. Carlton —an oceanographer at Williams College in Williamstown,Mass.—explains that, at any given moment, “There are several thousand marine species traveling… i n the ballast water of ships.” These creatures move from coastal waters where they fit into the local web of life to places where some of them could tear that web apart. This is the larger dimension of the infamous 无耻的,邪恶的invasion of fish-destroying, pipe-clogging zebra mussels有斑马纹的贻贝.Such voracious贪婪的invaders at least make their presence known. What concerns Carlton and his fellow marine ecologists is the lack of knowledge about the hundreds of alien invaders that quietly enter coastal waters around the world every day. Many of them probably just die out. Some benignly亲切地,仁慈地—or even beneficially —join the local scene. But some will make trouble.In one sense, this is an old story. Organisms have ridden ships for centuries. They have clung to hulls and come along withcargo. What’s new is the scale and speed of the migrations made possible by the massive volume of ship-ballast water压载水—taken in to provide ship stability—continuously moving around the world…Ships load up with ballast water and its inhabitants in coastal waters of one port and dump the ballast in another port that may be thousands of kilometers away. A single load can run to hundreds of gallons. Some larger ships take on as much as 40 million gallons. The creatures that come along tend to be in their larva free-floating stage. When discharged排出in alien waters they can mature into crabs, jellyfish水母, slugs鼻涕虫,蛞蝓, and many other forms.Since the problem involves coastal species, simply banning ballast dumps in coastal waters would, in theory, solve it. Coastal organisms in ballast water that is flushed into midocean would not survive. Such a ban has worked for North American Inland Waterway. But it would be hard to enforce it worldwide. Heating ballast water or straining it should also halt the species spread. But before any such worldwide regulations were imposed, scientists would need a clearer view of what is going on.The continuous shuffling洗牌of marine organisms has changed the biology of the sea on a global scale. It can have devastating effects as in the case of the American comb jellyfish that recently invaded the Black Sea. It has destroyed that sea’s anchovy鳀鱼fishery by eating anchovy eggs. It may soon spread to western and northern European waters.The maritime nations that created the biological “conveyor belt” should support a coordinated international effort to find out what is going on and what should be done about it. (456 words)1.According to Dr. Carlton, ocean organism’s are_______.A.being moved to new environmentsB.destroying the planetC.succumbing to the zebra musselD.developing alien characteristics2.Oceanographers海洋学家are concerned because_________.A.their knowledge of this phenomenon is limitedB.they believe the oceans are dyingC.they fear an invasion from outer-spaceD.they have identified thousands of alien webs3.According to marine ecologists, transplanted marinespecies____________.A.may upset the ecosystems of coastal watersB.are all compatible with one anotherC.can only survive in their home watersD.sometimes disrupt shipping lanes4.The identified cause of the problem is_______.A.the rapidity with which larvae matureB. a common practice of the shipping industryC. a centuries old speciesD.the world wide movement of ocean currents5.The article suggests that a solution to the problem__________.A.is unlikely to be identifiedB.must precede further researchC.is hypothetically假设地,假想地easyD.will limit global shippingText BNew ‘Endangered’ List Targets Many US RiversIt is hard to think of a major natural resource or pollutionissue in North America today that does not affect rivers.Farm chemical runoff残渣, industrial waste, urban storm sewers, sewage treatment, mining, logging, grazing放牧,military bases, residential and business development, hydropower水力发电,loss of wetlands. The list goes on.Legislation like the Clean Water Act and Wild and Scenic Rivers Act have provided some protection, but threats continue.The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) reported yesterday that an assessment of 642,000 miles of rivers and streams showed 34 percent in less than good condition. In a major study of the Clean Water Act, the Natural Resources Defense Council last fall reported that poison runoff impairs损害more than 125,000 miles of rivers.More recently, the NRDC and Izaak Walton League warned that pollution and loss of wetlands—made worse by last year’s flooding—is degrading恶化the Mississippi River ecosystem.On Tuesday, the conservation group保护组织American Rivers issued its annual list of 10 “endangered” and 20 “threatened” rivers in 32 states, the District of Colombia, and Canada.At the top of the list is the Clarks Fork of the Yellowstone River, whereCanadian mining firms plan to build a 74-acre英亩reservoir 水库,蓄水池as part of a gold mine less than three miles from Yellowstone National Park. The reservoir would hold the runoff from the sulfuric acid 硫酸used to extract gold from crushed rock.“In the event this tailings pond failed, the impact to th e greater Yellowstone ecosystem would be cataclysmic大变动的,灾难性的and the damage irreversible不可逆转的.” Sen. Max Baucus of Montana, chairman of the Environment and PublicWorks Committee, wrote to Noranda Minerals Inc., an owner of the “ New World Mine”.Last fall, an EPA official expressed concern about the mine and its potential impact, especially the plastic-lined storage reservoir. “ I am unaware of any studies evaluating how a tailings pond尾矿池,残渣池could be maintained to ensure its structural integrity forev er,” said Stephen Hoffman, chief of the EPA’s Mining Waste Section. “It is my opinion that underwater disposal of tailings at New World may present a potentially significant threat to human health and the environment.”The results of an environmental-impact statement, now being drafted by the Forest Service and Montana Department of State Lands, could determine the mine’s future…In its recent proposal to reauthorize the Clean Water Act, the Clinton administration noted “dramatically improved water quality since 1972,” when the act was passed. Bu t it also reported that 30 percent of riverscontinue to be degraded, mainly by silt泥沙and nutrients from farm and urban runoff, combined sewer overflows, and municipal sewage城市污水. Bottom sediments沉积物are contaminated污染in more than 1,000 waterways, the administration reported in releasing its proposal in January. Between 60 and 80 percent of riparian corridors (riverbank lands) have been degraded.As with endangered species and their habitats in forests and deserts, the complexity of ecosystems is seen in rivers and the effects of development----beyond the obvious threats of industrial pollution, municipal waste, and in-stream diversions改道to slake消除the thirst of new communities in dry regions like the Southwes t…While there are many political hurdles障碍ahead, reauthorization of the Clean Water Act this year holds promise for US rivers. Rep. Norm Mineta of California, who chairs the House Committee overseeing the bill, calls it “probably the most important env ironmental legislation this Congress will enact.” (553 words)6.According to the passage, the Clean Water Act______.A.has been ineffectiveB.will definitely be renewedC.has never been evaluatedD.was enacted some 30 years ago7.“Endangered” rivers are _________.A.catalogued annuallyB.less polluted than “threatened rivers”C.caused by floodingD.adjacent to large cities8.The “cataclysmic” event referred to in paragraph eight would be__________.A. fortuitous偶然的,意外的B. adventitious外加的,偶然的C. catastrophicD. precarious不稳定的,危险的9. The owners of the New World Mine appear to be______.A. ecologically aware of the impact of miningB. determined to construct a safe tailings pondC. indifferent to the concerns voiced by the EPAD. willing to relocate operations10. The passage conveys the impression that_______.A. Canadians are disinterested in natural resourcesB. private and public environmental groups aboundC. river banks are erodingD. the majority of US rivers are in poor conditionText CA classic series of experiments to determine the effects ofoverpopulation on communities of rats was reported in February of 1962 in an article in Scientific American. The experiments were conducted by a psychologist, John B. Calhoun and his associates. In each of these experiments, an equal number of male and female adult rats were placed in an enclosure and given an adequate supply of food, water, and other necessities. The rat populations were allowed to increase. Calhoun knew from experience approximately how many rats could live in the enclosures without experiencing stress due to overcrowding. He allowed the population to increase to approximately twice this number. Then he stabilized the population by removing offspring that were not dependent on their mothers. He and his associates then carefully observed and recorded behavior in these overpopulated communities. At the end of their experiments, Calhoun and his associates were able to conclude that overcrowding causes a breakdown in the normal social relationships among rats, a kind of social disease. The rats in the experiments did not follow the same patterns of behavior as rats would in a community without overcrowding.The females in the rat population were the most seriously affected by the high population density: They showed deviant异常的maternal behavior; they did not behave as mother rats normally do. In fact, many of the pups幼兽,幼崽, as rat babies are called, died as a result of poor maternal care. For example,mothers sometimes abandoned their pups,and, without their mothers' care, the pups died. Under normal conditions, a mother rat would not leave her pups alone to die. However, the experiments verified that in overpopulated communities, mother rats do not behave normally. Their behavior may be considered pathologically 病理上,病理学地diseased.The dominant males in the rat population were the least affected by overpopulation. Each of these strong males claimed an area of the enclosure as his own. Therefore, these individuals did not experience the overcrowding in the same way as the other rats did. The fact that the dominant males had adequate space in which to live may explain why they were not as seriously affected by overpopulation as the other rats. However, dominant males did behave pathologically at times. Their antisocial behavior consisted of attacks on weaker male,female, and immature rats. This deviant behavior showed that even though the dominant males had enough living space, they too were affected by the general overcrowding in the enclosure.Non-dominant males in the experimental rat communities also exhibited deviant social behavior. Some withdrew completely; they moved very little and ate and drank at times when the other rats were sleeping in order to avoid contact with them. Other non-dominant males were hyperactive; they were much more active than is normal, chasing other rats and fighting each other. This segment of the rat population, likeall the other parts, was affected by the overpopulation.The behavior of the non-dominant males and of the other components of the rat population has parallels in humanbehavior. People in densely populated areas exhibit deviant behavior similar to that of the rats in Calhoun's experiments. In large urban areas such as New York City, London, Mexican City, and Cairo, there are abandoned children. There are cruel, powerful individuals, both men and women. There are also people who withdraw and people who become hyperactive. The quantity of other forms of social pathology such as murder, rape, and robbery also frequently occur in densely populated human communities. Is the principal cause of these disorders overpopulation? Calhoun’s experiments suggest that it might be. In any case, social scientists and city planners have been influenced by the results of this series of experiments.11. Paragraph l is organized according to__________.A. reasonsB. descriptionC. examplesD. definition12.Calhoun stabilized the rat population_________.A. when it was double the number that could live in the enclosure without stressB. by removing young ratsC. at a constant number of adult rats in the enclosureD. all of the above are correct13.W hich of the following inferences CANNOT be made from theinformation inPara. 1?A. Calhoun's experiment is still considered important today.B. Overpopulation causes pathological behavior in rat populations.C. Stress does not occur in rat communities unless there is overcrowding.D. Calhoun had experimented with rats before.14. Which of the following behavior didn’t happen in this experiment?A. All the male rats exhibited pathological behavior.B. Mother rats abandoned their pups.C. Female rats showed deviant maternal behavior.D. Mother rats left their rat babies alone.15. The main idea of the paragraph three is that __________.A. dominant males had adequate living spaceB. dominant males were not as seriously affected by overcrowding as the otherratsC. dominant males attacked weaker ratsD. the strongest males are always able to adapt to bad conditionsText DThe first mention of slavery in the statutes法令,法规of the English colonies of North America does not occur until after 1660—some forty years after the importation of the first Black people. Lest we think that existed in fact before it did in law, Oscar and Mary Handlin assure us, that the status of B lack people down to the 1660’s was that of servants. A critique批判of the Handlins’ interpretation of why legal slavery did not appear until the 1660’s suggests that assumptions about the relation between slavery and racial prejudice should be reexamined, and that explanation for the different treatment of Black slaves in North and South America should be expanded.The Handlins explain the appearance of legal slavery byarguing that, during the 1660’s, the position of white servants was improving relative to that of black servants. Thus, the Handlins contend, Black and White servants, heretofore treated alike, each attained a different status. There are, however, important objections to this argument. First, the Handlins cannot adequately demonstrate that t he Whit e servant’s position was improving, during and after the 1660’s; several acts of the Maryland and Virginia legislatures indicate otherwise. Another flaw in the Handlins’ interpretation is their assumption that prior to the establishment of legal slavery there was no discrimination against Black people. It is true that before the 1660’s Black people were rarely called slaves. But this should not overshadow evidence from the 1630’s on that points to racial discrimination without using the term slavery. Such discrimination sometimes stopped short of lifetime servitude or inherited status—the two attributes of true slavery—yet in other cases it included both. The Handlins’ argument excludes the real possibility that Black people in the English colonies were never treated as the equals of White people.The possibility has important ramifications后果,影响.If from the outset Black people were discriminated against, then legal slavery should be viewed as a reflection and an extension of racial prejudice rather than, as many historians including the Handlins have argued, the cause of prejudice. In addition, the existence of discrimination before the advent of legal slavery offers a further explanation for the harsher treatment of Black slaves in North than in South America. Freyre and Tannenbaum have rightly argued that the lack of certain traditions in North America—such as a Roman conception of slavery and a Roman Catholic emphasis on equality—explains why the treatment of Blackslaves was more severe there than in the Spanish and Portuguese colonies of South America. But this cannot be the whole explanation since it is merely negative, based only on a lack of something. A more compelling令人信服的explanation is that the early and sometimes extreme racial discrimination in the English colonies helped determine the particular nature of the slavery that followed. (462 words)16. Which of the following is the most logical inference to be drawn from the passage about the effects of “several acts of the Maryland and Virginia legisla tures” (Para.2) passed during and after the 1660’s?A. The acts negatively affected the pre-1660’s position of Black as wellas of White servants.B. The acts had the effect of impairing rather than improving theposition of White servants relative to what it had been before the 1660’s.C. The acts had a different effect on the position of white servants thandid many of the acts passed during this time by the legislatures of other colonies.D. The acts, at the very least, caused the position of White servants toremain no better than it had been before the 1660’s.17. With which of the following statements regarding the status ofBlack people in the English colonies of North America before the 1660’s would the author be LEAST likely to agree?A. Although black people were not legally considered to beslaves,they were often called slaves.B. Although subject to some discrimination, black people had a higherlegal status than they did after the 1660’s.C. Although sometimes subject to lifetime servitude, black peoplewere not legally considered to be slaves.D. Although often not treated the same as White people, black people,like many white people, possessed the legal status of servants.18. According to the passage, the Handlins have argued which of thefollowing about the relationship between racial prejudice and the institution of legal slavery in the English colonies of North America?A. Racial prejudice and the institution of slavery arose simultaneously.B. Racial prejudice most often the form of the imposition of inheritedstatus, one of the attributes of slavery.C. The source of racial prejudice was the institution of slavery.D. Because of the influence of the Roman Catholic Church, racialprejudice sometimes did not result in slavery.19. The passage suggests that the existence of a Roman conception ofslavery in Spanish and Portuguese colonies had the effect of _________.A. extending rather than causing racial prejudice in these coloniesB. hastening the legalization of slavery in these colonies.C. mitigating some of the conditions of slavery for black people in these coloniesD. delaying the introduction of slavery into the English colonies20. The author considers the explanation put forward by Freyre andTannenbaum for the treatment accorded B lack slaves in the English colonies of North America to be _____________.A. ambitious but misguidedB. valid有根据的but limitedC. popular but suspectD. anachronistic过时的,时代错误的and controversialUNIT 2Text AThe sea lay like an unbroken mirror all around the pine-girt, lonely shores of Orr’s Island. Tall, kingly spruce s wore their regal 王室的crowns of cones high in air, sparkling with diamonds of clear exuded gum流出的树胶; vast old hemlocks铁杉of primeval 原始的growth stood darkling in their forest shadows, their branches hung with long hoary moss久远的青苔;while feathery larches羽毛般的落叶松,turned to brilliant gold by autumn frosts, lighted up the darker shadows of the evergreens. It was one of those hazy朦胧的, calm, dissolving days of Indian summer, when everything is so quiet that the fainest kiss of the wave on the beach can be heard, and white clouds seem to faint into the blue of the sky, and soft swathing一长条bands of violet vapor make all earth look dreamy,and give to the sharp, clear-cut outlines of the northern landscape all those mysteries of light and shade which impart such tenderness to Italian scenery.The funeral was over,--- the tread鞋底的花纹/ 踏of many feet, bearing the heavy burden of two broken lives, had been to the lonely graveyard, and had come back again,--- each footstep lighter and more unconstrained不受拘束的as each one went his way from the great old tragedy of Death to the common cheerful of Life.The solemn black clock stood swaying with its eternal “tick-tock, tick-tock,” in the kitchen of the brown house on Orr’s Island. There was there that sense of a stillness that can be felt,---such as settles down on a dwelling住处when any of its inmates have passed through its doors for the last time, to go whence they shall not return. The best room was shut up and darkened, with only so much light as could fall through a little heart-shaped hole in the window-shutter,---for except on solemn visits, or prayer-meetings or weddings, or funerals, that room formed no part of the daily family scenery.The kitchen was clean and ample, hearth灶台, and oven on one side, and rows of old-fashioned splint-bottomed chairs against the wall. A table scoured to snowy whiteness, and a little work-stand whereon lay the Bible, the Missionary Herald, and the Weekly Christian Mirror, before named, formed the principal furniture. One feature, however, must not be forgotten, ---a great sea-chest水手用的储物箱,which had been the companion of Zephaniah through all the countries of the earth. Old, and battered破旧的,磨损的, and unsightly难看的it looked, yet report said that there was good store within which men for the most part respect more than anything else; and, indeed it proved oftenwhen a deed of grace was to be done--- when a woman was suddenly made a widow in a coast gale大风,狂风, or a fishing-smack小渔船was run down in the fogs off the banks, leaving in some neighboring cottage a family of orphans,---in all such cases, the opening of this sea-chest was an event of good omen 预兆to the bereaved丧亲者;for Zephaniah had a large heart and a large hand, and was apt有…的倾向to take it out full of silver dollars when once it went in. So the ark of the covenant约柜could not have been looked on with more reverence崇敬than the neighbours usually showed to Captain Pennel’s sea-chest.。
专业英语八级阅读附答案
专业英语八级阅读附答案专业英语八级阅读精选附答案Reputation is often got without merit and lost without fault.以下是店铺为大家搜索整理的专业英语八级阅读精选附答案,希望能给大家带来帮助!Passage 8 (Equality of opportunity in the twentieth Century Has Not Destroyed the Class System)These days we hear a lot of nonsense about the ‘great classless society'. The idea that the twentieth century is the age of the common man has become one of the great clichés of our time. The same old arguments are put forward in evidence. Here are some of them: monarchy as a system of government has been completely discredited. The monarchies that survive have been deprived of all political power. Inherited wealth has been savagely reduced by taxation and, in time, the great fortunes will disappear altogether. In a number of countries the victory has been complete. The people rule; the great millennium has become a political reality. But has it? Close examination doesn't bear out the claim.It is a fallacy to suppose that all men are equal and that society will be leveled out if you provide everybody with the same educational opportunities. (It is debatable whether you can ever provide everyone with the same educational opportunities, but that is another question.) The fact is that nature dispenses brains and ability with a total disregard for the principle of equality. The old rules of the jungle, ‘survival of the fittest', and ‘might is right' are still with us. The spread of education has destroyed the old class system and created a new one. Rewards are based on merit. For ‘aristocracy' read ‘meritocracy'; inother respects, society remains unaltered: the class system is rigidly maintained.Genuine ability, animal cunning, skill, the knack of seizing opportunities, all bring material rewards. And what is the first thing people do when they become rich? They use their wealth to secure the best possible opportunities for their children, to give them ‘a good start in life'. For all the lip service we pay to the idea of equality, we do not consider this wrong in the western world. Private schools which offer unfair advantages over state schools are not banned because one of the principles in a democracy is that people should be free to choose how they will educate their children. In this way, the new meritocracy can perpetuate itself to a certain extent: an able child from a wealthy home can succeed far more rapidly than his poorer counterpart. Wealth is also used indiscriminately to further political ends. It would be almost impossible to become the leader of a democracy without massive financial backing. Money is as powerful a weapon as ever it was.In societies wholly dedicated to the principle of social equality, privileged private education is forbidden. But even here people are rewarded according to their abilities. In fact, so great is the need for skilled workers that the least able may be neglected. Bright children are carefully and expensively trained to become future rulers. In the end, all political ideologies boil down to the same thing: class divisions persist whether you are ruled by a feudal king or an educated peasant.1. What is the main idea of this passage?[A] Equality of opportunity in the twentieth century has not destroyed the class system.[B] Equality means money.[C] There is no such society as classless society.[D] Nature can't give you a classless society.2. According to the author, the same educational opportunities can't get rid of inequality because ___________[A] the principle ‘survival of the fi ttest' exists.[B] Nature ignores equality in dispensing brains and ability.[C] Material rewards are for genuine ability.[D] People have the freedom how to educate their children.3. Who can obtain more rapid success ___________[A] those with wealth.[B] Those with the best brains.[C] Those with the best opportunities.[D] Those who have the ability to catch at opportunities.4. Why does the author say the new meritocracy can perpetuate itself to a certain extent? Because ___________[A] money decides everything.[B] Private schools offer advantages over state schools.[C] People are free to choose the way of educating their children.[D] Wealth is used for political ends.5. According to the author, class divisions' refers to ___________[A] the rich and the poor.[B] Different opportunities for people.[C] Oppressor and the oppressed.[D] Genius and stupidity.Vocabulary1. discredit 损害,破坏,败坏(某人的名声),不可信2. monarch 国王,女皇,君主政体3. millennium 千年the millennium 千僖年4. bear out 证实5. level out (升跌之后)呈平稳状态6. meritocracy 英才管理,英才教育,能人统治7. knack 技巧,诀窍8. perpetuate 使永久,永存或持续9. indiscriminate 不加鉴别的,不加分析的,任意的10. boil down 归结为……难句译注1. Close examination doesn't bear out the claim.【参考译文】深入探索证实此断言不确。
英语专业八级考试建议阅读参考书目
英语专业八级考试建议阅读参考书目英语专业八级考试建议阅读参考书目【文学类】一、英国文学Kingsley Amis Lucky JimJane Austen Pride and PrejudiceArnold Bennett The Old Wiveds’TaleElizabeth Bowen The Death of the HeartCharlotte Bronte Jane EyreEmily Bronte Wuthering HGeightsAnthony Burgess A Clockwordk OrangeSamuel BVutler The Way of All FleshA.S.Byatt PossessionLewis Carroll Alice’s Adventures in WonderlandAngela Carter The Com pany of WolvesAgatha Christie Mdurder on the Orient ExpressIvy Compton-Burnett A Fdamily and a FortuneJoseph Conrad Heart of Darkness, Lord JimDaniel Defoe Robinson CrusoeCharles Dickens David CopperfieldSir Arthur C. Ddyle Adventure of Sherlock Holmes Margaret Drabble The WaterfallDaphne Du Maurier RebeccaGeorge Eliot MiddlemarchE.M.FGorster Howards End, A Passage to IndiaJohn Fowles The French Lieutenant’s WomanJohn Galsworthy The Man of PropertyWilliam Golding Lord of the FliesGraham Greene The Human FactorThomas Hardy Tess of the D’Urbervilles, Jude the Obscure Aldous Huxley After Many a SummerHenry James Daisy MillerJames Joyce A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man Rudyard Kipling KimCharles Lamb Tales from Shakespearedwrence Sons and LoversJohn Le Carred The Spy Who Came in from the ColdDoris Lessing The Grass Is SingingDavid Lodge Nice WorkW.Somerset Maugham The Moon and Sixpence, Of Human Bondage Iris Murddoch The Black PrinceGeorge Orwell Nineteen Eighty-fourSalman Rushdie Midnight ChildrenSir Walter Scott IvanhoeC.P.Snow Thed AffairMuriel Spark The Prime of Miss Jean BrodieRobert Louis Stevenson Treasure IslandJohathan Swift Gulliver’s TravelsWilliam M.Thackeray Vanity FairEvelyn Waugh A Hand ful of DustH.G.Wells The Invisible ManOscar Wilde The Picture of Dorian GrayVirginia Woolf Mrs Dalloway, To the Lighthouse二、美国文学Sherwood Anderson Winesburg, OhioJames Baldwin Go Tell It on the MountainSaul Bellow Seize the Day, Henderson the Rain KingWillam S.Burroughs The Naked LunchWilla Cather My AntoniaKate Chopin The AwakeningStephen Crane The Red Badge of CourageTheodore Dreiser Sister Carrie, An American TragedyRalph Ellison Invisible ManWilliam Faulkner Go Down, Moses, The Sound and the FuryF.Scott Fitzgerald The Great GatsbyAlex Haley RootsNathaniel Hawthorne The Scarlet LetterJosph Heller Catch-22Ernest Hedmingway The Sun Also Rises, Thed Old Man and the Sea James Jones From Here to EternityMaxine Hong Kingston The Woman WarriorHarper lee To Kill a MockingbirdSinchlair Lewis Main StreetJack London The Call of the Wild, Martin Eden Norman Mailer The Naked and the DeadCarson McCullers The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter James A. Michener CentennialMargaret Mitchell Gone with the WindToni Morrison The Bluest EyeVladimir Nabokov LolitaFrank Norris The OctopusJ.D.Salinger The Catcher in the RyeErich Segal Man, Woman and ChildUpton Sinclair The JungleJohn Steinbeck The Grapes of WrathHarriet Beecher Stowe Uncle Tom’s Cabin William Styron Sophie’s ChoiceMark Twain The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Alice Walker The Color PurpleRobert Penn Warren All the King’s MenEdith Wharton The Age of InnocenceThornton Wilder The Bridge of San Luis Rey Thomas Wolfe Look Homeward, AngelHerman Wouk The Winds of WarRichard Wright Native Son三、加拿大文学Morley Callaghan That Summer in ParisNorthrop Frye The Great CodeMargaret Laurence The Stone AngelStephen Leacock Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town Malcolm Lowry Under the VolcanoHugh MacLennan The Watch That Ends the NightL.M.Montgomery Anne of Green Gables四、澳大利亚文学Martin Boyd Lucinda BrayfordPeter Carey Oscar and LucindaMiles Franklin My Brilliant CareerThomas Keneally Shindler’s ArkAlex Miller The Ancestor GameHenry Handel Richardson The Fortunes of Richard Mahony Christina Stead The Man Who Loved ChildrenRandolph Stow To the IslandsPatrick White Voss, The Tree of Man五、中国文化Yung Ming My Life in China and AmericaChiang monlin Tides from the WestTcheng Ki Tong The Chinese Painted by ThemselvesKu Hung Ming The Spirit of the Chinese PeopleFei Hsiao Tung Peasant Life in ChinaLin Yu Tang My Country and My PeopleA Retrospective of Chinese Literature: Classical Poetry A Retrospective of Chinese Literature: Classical Prose A Retrospective of Chinese Literature: Classical Fiction A Retrospective of Chinese Literature: Modern PoetryA Retrospective of Chinese Literature: Modern ProseA Retrospective of Chinese Literature: Modorn Fiction。
英语专业八级阅读(逻辑推理)
批判性推理问题要求考生对给定的信息进行评估和判断,并得出结论。
总结词
这类问题通常提供一系列信息或观点,要求考生对这些信息或观点进行评估和判断,判断其真实性和合理性。在解答这类问题时,考生需要运用批判性思维,对信息或观点进行深入分析,评估其逻辑和证据的可靠性,然后得出结论。
总结词
详细描述
Example 2: Identifying logical fallacies
总结词
推断作者意图
要点一
要点二
详细描述
在Level 8的阅读理解中,考生需要具备推断作者意图的能力。这包括理解作者的写作目的、观点和态度等。考生需要通过分析文章的语言、结构和语境来推断作者的意图。例如,文章中的语气、措辞和上下文线索可以帮助考生理解作者的意图和态度。
distinguish between statements of fact and opinions, and analyze how they are used in the argument.
Identify logical relationships in the article
identify the main claim or argument made in the article, and analyze how it is developed through the text.
Identify the claim
identify the premises or assumptions that support the argument, and analyze how they are related to the claim.
Examine the premises
英语专业八级阅读技巧总结
英语专业八级阅读技巧总结在学习英语专业的过程中,阅读是一个非常重要的技能。
对于英语专业八级考试而言,阅读部分更是必不可少的一部分。
为了能够更好地应对阅读考试,下面将总结一些英语专业八级阅读技巧,帮助大家提高阅读能力。
一、扩大词汇量在阅读理解中,词汇是非常重要的。
首先,要扩大自己的词汇量。
不仅要学习常用的单词和短语,还要了解一些学科相关的术语。
这样才能够更好地理解文章的意思。
在学习词汇的过程中,背单词是一个很好的方法。
二、重视词义辨析词义辨析在英语专业八级阅读中占据很重要的一部分。
同义词或者近义词之间的差异可能会对文章的理解造成困扰。
因此,要多做一些练习,尽量掌握不同词汇的精确用法和含义。
三、掌握文章结构阅读一篇文章之前,先浏览文章的结构和段落标题,了解大致的内容框架。
有时候段落标题会给出文章的主题或者总结,这样更有助于对文章的理解。
同时,掌握不同类型文章的结构特点,比如比较和对比、因果关系等等。
四、抓住关键信息在阅读过程中,要学会如何抓住关键信息。
快速浏览文章,寻找与问题相关的信息,通过划线或者做笔记的方式记录下来。
这样一来,可以避免在阅读过程中浪费过多的时间,提高解题效率。
五、利用上下文推断在英语专业八级阅读中,有时会遇到一些生词或者不熟悉的词汇。
此时,可以通过上下文来推断其含义。
通过理解上下文的逻辑关系,可以较准确地猜测出词汇的意思,提高阅读理解的能力。
六、多做阅读练习最重要的还是要多做阅读练习。
可以选择一些专业书籍、报刊杂志、经济学文章等进行阅读。
不仅可以提高阅读的速度和准确性,还可以更好地了解学科知识和专业术语。
七、注意时间分配在考试中,要合理安排时间。
不要在一道题上花费过多的时间而影响其他题目的完成。
可以根据题目的难度和分值分配时间,确保每个题目都有足够的时间来完成。
八、谨防陷阱在英语专业八级阅读中,有时会设置一些陷阱选项。
这些选项看似正确,但实际上是会误导读者的。
要保持警惕,通过细致的分析和推理,找出正确的答案。
英语专八阅读理解技巧
英语专八阅读理解技巧(1)浏览试题在阅读文章之前,先浏览一遍试题和/或相关选项,对文章内容有个初步的预判。
同时,确定每个题的题型,并针对性的制定解题思路。
(2)推断体裁专八阅读文章体裁广泛,应该针对不同的体裁确定不同的解题步骤。
关于文学作品或者记叙文体裁的文章,往往句子短,段落意思零碎,态度及观点隐晦,所以建议考生先通读文章再解题。
而关于议论、说明等体裁的文章,往往每个段落都有自己的主题句,所以考生可以采用边看文章边做题的方式进行答题,这样可以省去反复查找定位的步骤,节省阅读时间。
(3)找出段落中心思想一篇文章、一个段落、甚至一句话都有中心思想,而关于非小说体的阅读材料,如议论文和说明文,通常文章的开头或者结尾会给出整篇文章的主题,并且针对每段都会有一个段落的主题句,所以在阅读文章时,必须先对这些主旨有一定的了解,这样,做起任何题型就都不会偏离主题。
(4)灵活对待主旨题如果文章中没有明确的主题句,建议先做其他题,等把其他题做完后考生将会对文章的理解更加深入,这样再做主旨题的时候会相对有利。
(5) 解决生词问题提升阅读速度的一个重要内容是扩展词汇量。
但阅读过程中不可避免地要碰到生词,碰到生词不要停顿,应该持续阅读,如果发现不影响意思的理解,可以直接略过。
2英语专业专八备考考试时间是每年的3月上旬,对象是英语及相关专业大四同学。
非英语及相关专业与非在校生无法参加考试。
考试成绩分三级:60-69分是合格;70-79分是优良;80分及以上是出色。
下面我来分享下备考经验。
第一部分,听力理解Listening Comprehension,可以准备口语性较强、反映现代生活的英语资料,多听一些大众媒介英语,进行实战演习。
报刊、杂志、电影、电视的英语都是不错的。
校对与改错Proofreading and Error Correction,这个必须要积存词汇,平常多做一些联系,积存自己的词汇。
阅读理解 Reading Comprehension,阅读是获取语言知识最直接、最有效的方法,关键是多做学习,大量阅读,通过阅读来提升阅读水平。
专业英语八级(阅读)练习试卷1(题后含答案及解析)
专业英语八级(阅读)练习试卷1(题后含答案及解析)题型有:1.44% required hospitalization. Based on that data, published in PLoS Medicine, Lipsitch anticipates far fewer deaths from 2009 H1N1than was initially believed. By the end of the flu season in the spring of 2010, Lipsitch predicts, anywhere from 6,000 to 45,000 people will have died from H1N1 in the U.S., with the number most likely to end up between 10,000 and 15,000. Those estimates are far below the death toll of the 1957 flu, which killed 69,800 people in the U.S., according to government figures, and smaller also than the early predictions for the2009 H1N1 flu deaths, which ranged from 30,000 to 90,000. It is not clear, however, that past pandemics are an appropriate gauge for evaluating the current flu or that the new projections are based on complete data. The eventual death toll of 2009 H1N1 may be less grim than the outcomes of previous pandemics, but it should be noted that 90 years ago, and even 40 years ago, health officials lacked the antiviral therapies and nationwide vaccination capabilities that are available today. That may have contributed to pandemics having a more devastating effect on the health of past populations. The new estimates are also less alarming than those provided—also by Lipsitch—to the President’s Council of Advisers on Science and Technology last summer near the start of the pandemic. At the time, researchers had only patchy data on the number of people infected by, and seeking treatment for, the new flu. The initially bleak prediction of the impact of H1N1—with up to 50% of the U.S. population becoming infected in the fall and winter of 2009, resulting in as many as 90,000 deaths—was based on modeling of previous pandemics. Fortunately, the worst case scenario did not come to pass. “The worst case consistent with the data we have now is a lot milder than the worst case consistent with the data we had in the summer or spring,”Lipsitch says. Still, Lipsitch and other health officials acknowledge that the 2009 H1N1 pandemic is not over. What worries health officials most is that as both seasonal and H1N1 flu viruses circulate among the population, the two strains could recombine into a more virulent and aggressive version that could cause more widespread illness and even death. How viruses behave once they nestle into a host is completely unpredictable, but scientists know that in a lab dish, seasonal and H1N1 flu strains mix and match readily. “I’m thinking we may have dodged a bullet here if in fact we don’t get a more severe wave coming on the heels of the current wave,”says Redlener. “But we’ll see what happens.” A second wave could still prove more deadly than the seasonal flu, especially for young children. To date, 189 children have died of influenza in the U.S., the majority of them related to H1N1 infection, and that number is already higher than the total number of pediatric deaths attributed to flu in 2008. Lipsitch says that if current trends hold,H1N1 may end up causing as many influenza deaths, if not more, than the seasonal flu, which kills about 36,000 Americans each year. Instead of hitting the elderly the hardest, though, most of the deaths may be among young children and infants.6.What can be inferred from the passage?A.It is not as severe as experts expected.B.It is likely to have a second wave of H1N1.C.It is not likely to have a second wave of H1N1.D.No one knows for sure whether there will be a second wave of H1N1.正确答案:D解析:此题是推理判断题。
英语专业八级阅读答题技巧
英语专业八级阅读答题技巧阅读是英语考试中一个重要的部分,对于专业八级考试来说,阅读的难度和要求会更高。
为了帮助大家提升专业八级阅读的答题技巧,本文将介绍一些实用的方法和技巧。
一、扩大词汇量在专业八级阅读中,词汇量是至关重要的。
为了能够准确理解和回答问题,我们需要掌握更多的专业词汇。
平时可以通过背单词、做题、阅读专业书籍等方式来扩大自己的词汇量。
二、提高阅读速度专业八级阅读考试的时间相对较紧张,因此提高阅读速度是必要的。
我们可以通过平时多做阅读练习,逐渐培养快速阅读的能力。
同时,可以使用一些阅读技巧,比如快速浏览首尾段、注重文章的主旨句等,来提高阅读速度。
三、理解文章结构在阅读专业八级文章时,了解文章的结构对于理解文章内容和回答问题非常重要。
可以通过分析文章的段落结构,关注标题和首尾段,掌握文章的大意和主要论点。
同时注意段落之间的逻辑关系,把握文章的发展脉络。
四、抓住关键信息专业八级阅读题目往往会涉及到一些细节或者关键信息,我们需要注意细节并将其记忆下来。
可以使用标记、划线等方法,将重要的信息或者关键词语标记出来,以便在回答问题时能够迅速找到相关信息。
五、练习做题除了掌握一些技巧和方法外,多做阅读练习也是非常重要的。
可以选择专业八级的真题或者练习题进行反复练习,逐渐提高自己的阅读和答题能力。
通过不断的练习,我们能够更好地掌握题型的特点,提高解题的准确性和效率。
六、注意时间管理专业八级阅读考试的时间一般较为紧张,因此合理的时间管理非常重要。
在考试前,可以规划好每个篇章的阅读时间,以及答题时间。
在做题时,可以根据题目难易程度和分值来合理分配时间,避免花费过多时间在一道难题上。
总结:专业八级阅读不仅要求我们熟练掌握英语阅读的基本技巧,还需要对专业领域有一定的了解。
通过扩大词汇量、提高阅读速度、理解文章结构、抓住关键信息、练习做题以及注意时间管理,我们可以提高专业八级阅读的答题技巧,从而更加有效地解决问题,提高成绩。
英语专业八级阅读材料来源
英语专业八级阅读材料来源在英语专业八级考试中,阅读理解是一个重要的部分。
为了能够更好地应对考试,学生需要积累大量的阅读材料,并且选择合适的来源来提高自己的阅读能力。
下面将介绍一些常见的英语专业八级阅读材料来源。
1. 学术期刊:学术期刊是英语专业学习中重要的阅读资源之一。
学生可以通过订阅或者在线浏览学术期刊,获取各个领域的最新研究成果和学术观点。
学术期刊的内容通常会比较专业,需要学生具备一定的专业知识和阅读能力才能理解。
2. 学术论文数据库:学术论文数据库包括国内外知名的数据库,如Web of Science、Google Scholar等。
通过这些数据库,学生可以搜索到大量的学术论文,涵盖了各个领域的研究成果。
学生可以根据自己的兴趣和需求选择相关的论文进行阅读。
3. 英语专业书籍:英语专业书籍是学习英语专业知识必备的资源。
学生可以选择教材、参考书、专业书籍等来提高自己的阅读能力。
这些书籍的内容会比较系统和全面,适合用来扩展自己的知识面和培养英语专业素养。
4. 英语学术网站:英语学术网站是获取各类阅读材料的重要途径。
如ScienceDirect、JSTOR等网站提供了大量的学术期刊、学术会议论文集等资源。
除了学术资源外,一些英语新闻网站、博客等也可以作为阅读材料来源,帮助学生提高英语阅读能力。
5. 英语学术会议:学生可以关注一些英语学术会议的信息,了解最新的研究成果和学术动态。
一些会议会发布会议论文集,学生可以通过阅读这些论文集来提高自己的阅读能力。
同时,参加学术会议也是提高阅读能力和学术交流能力的有效途径。
总而言之,英语专业八级阅读材料的来源多种多样,学生可以根据自己的需求和兴趣选择适合自己的阅读材料。
通过多样化的阅读材料来源,可以提高英语阅读能力,拓宽自己的知识视野,为专业八级考试做好充分准备。
专八阅读理解猜词策略
专八阅读理解猜词策略在英语专业八级考试中,阅读理解部分通常会包含一些生词,要求考生根据上下文语境进行猜测。
以下是一些有效的猜词策略,帮助你更好地理解文章内容:1. 利用上下文语境:根据生词前后的句子,理解整个段落或文章的意思,从而猜测出生词的含义。
上下文通常会提供线索,帮助你推断出生词的意思。
2. 识别同义词和反义词:如果一个生词与上下文中出现的其他词汇有同义词或反义词的关系,可以根据已知词汇的意思来猜测生词的含义。
3. 利用定义或解释:文章中可能会出现一些定义或解释,帮助你理解生词的含义。
注意寻找生词前后的解释性语句,这些语句通常会用一些关键词如"means"、"refers to"、"is"等来引导。
4. 识别指代关系:代词在文章中通常会指代前面提到的名词或名词短语。
通过识别代词和其指代的名词,可以帮助你理解代词的含义。
5. 识别句子结构:注意分析句子的结构,特别是主语、谓语和宾语的位置。
这有助于你理解句子中的生词,因为句子结构通常会影响词汇的含义和用法。
6. 利用逻辑关系:注意分析句子之间的逻辑关系,如因果关系、比较关系等。
这些逻辑关系可以帮助你推断出生词的含义。
7. 识别例子和类比:文章中可能会出现一些例子或类比,这些例子或类比可以帮助你理解生词的含义。
注意寻找与生词相关的例子或类比,并根据这些例子或类比来猜测生词的意思。
8. 利用背景知识:如果你对文章的主题有一定的背景知识,可以利用这些知识来帮助你理解生词。
背景知识可以提供与生词相关的信息和线索,帮助你推断出生词的含义。
9. 利用构词法:英语中有许多构词法,如前缀、后缀、词根等。
通过分析生词的构词法,可以帮助你猜测生词的含义。
了解一些常见的构词法规则和词汇变化形式,可以帮助你更快地猜测出生词的意思。
10. 识别标点符号:标点符号在文章中起着重要的作用。
它们可以用来表示句子之间的停顿、强调、语气等。
英语专业八级阅读理解技巧
英语专业八级阅读理解技巧在英语专业八级考试中,阅读理解是一个非常重要的部分,考察学生的阅读能力和理解能力。
为了帮助大家更好地应对这部分内容,本文将介绍一些英语专业八级阅读理解的技巧和方法。
一、扩大词汇量词汇量的积累对于阅读理解至关重要。
建议学生平时通过阅读英文原版书籍、文章、报纸等来提升自己的词汇量。
在考前可以通过复习课本、词汇书以及模拟试题等方式进行巩固。
二、了解不同题型的解题思路英语专业八级阅读理解通常包括多种题型,如多选题、判断题、填空题等。
每种题型都有其特点和解题思路。
在解题过程中,要根据题干的要求和文章的内容进行准确、全面的答题。
三、掌握快速阅读技巧快速阅读是阅读理解中非常重要的一个技巧。
通过这种技巧,考生可以在有限的时间内迅速获取文章的主要信息。
在阅读过程中,可以通过略读和扫读的方式快速浏览文段,找出关键词和句子,理解大意。
四、注意细节和推理题的解答在阅读理解中,一些题目需要考生根据文章中的细节信息进行解答,还有一些题目需要考生进行推理和判断。
这就要求考生在阅读过程中注意抓住关键细节,并进行逻辑推理。
细致的观察和敏锐的思维是解答这些题目的关键。
五、做题顺序灵活应变按照自己的习惯和水平,可以根据题目的难易程度和自己的兴趣爱好来决定做题的顺序。
有些同学可能做选择题,有些同学可能先做填空题。
只要能高效率地完成每道题,都是可以接受的。
六、多做模拟题和真题练习是提高阅读理解能力的有效方法。
在考前,可以通过做模拟题和真题来练习和巩固知识。
这样不仅可以加深对题型的理解,还能够熟悉考试的节奏和要求。
总结:英语专业八级阅读理解技巧包括扩大词汇量、了解不同题型的解题思路、掌握快速阅读技巧、注意细节和推理题的解答、做题顺序灵活应变以及多做模拟题和真题。
通过积极的学习和实践,相信大家一定能够在阅读理解中取得好成绩。
祝愿大家考试顺利!。
英语专业八级阅读题型梳理
英语专业八级阅读题型梳理在英语专业八级考试中,阅读部分是考察考生对英语阅读理解能力的重要一部分。
了解各种题型并掌握解题技巧,对于提高阅读理解能力、应对考试有着重要的帮助。
本文将对英语专业八级阅读部分常见的题型进行梳理,并针对每种题型提供解题技巧和注意事项。
一、细节理解题细节理解题是阅读部分最常见的题型,它要求考生根据文章内容选择正确的答案。
解答细节理解题的技巧包括:1. 首先,通读问题和文段,弄清问题的定位词。
定位词可以帮助我们在文段中迅速找到与问题相关的信息。
2. 掌握问题的类型。
细节理解题可能涉及到数字、日期、地点、人物等具体细节的问题,考生需要根据问题的类型进行定位。
3. 不懂就放过。
如果遇到无法理解的词汇或句子,不要纠结于此,可以先跳过,继续寻找其他可以解答的问题。
二、推理判断题推理判断题要求考生根据文章内容推断出正确的答案。
解答推理判断题的技巧包括:1. 注意寻找线索词。
文章中可能会出现一些线索词,通过分析线索词可以帮助我们进行逻辑推理。
2. 注意推理的方向。
有时候我们需要进行正推理,有时候我们需要进行反推理,考生需要根据具体情况进行推理。
3. 注意排除干扰项。
在选择答案时,要注意排除无关选项,只选与文章内容相关的选项。
三、主题大意题主题大意题要求考生根据全文的内容选择最能概括文章中心思想的选项。
解答主题大意题的技巧包括:1. 首先,通读全文,弄清文章的中心思想和核心观点。
2. 注意关键词。
文章中一些关键词可以帮助我们找到文章的主题。
3. 注意选项表达的范围。
主题大意题的选项应该概括全文的内容,而不能只局限于某个段落或细节。
四、词汇理解题词汇理解题要求考生根据上下文推断词语或短语的意思。
解答词汇理解题的技巧包括:1. 注意上下文的逻辑关系。
上下文中的其他词语和句子可以提供线索,帮助我们推测词语的含义。
2. 注意词性和词形变化。
有时候词性和词形变化也可以提供一些线索,帮助我们理解词语的意思。
完整版)英语专业八级阅读及参考答案
完整版)英语专业八级阅读及参考答案___ the upper 15 miles of the Earth's surface。
but they can happen at depths up to about 460 miles。
As the depth increases。
the number of ___。
At around 460 miles。
earthquakes only occur every few years。
Near the surface。
earthquakes can happen as often as 100 times in a month。
but the ___。
the number of ___ small compared to the total number of ___.A。
The number of earthquakes is closely related to depth。
(This cannot be ___ the sea and give rise to seismic sea waves。
but does not provide n on the ___.)There is a type of ___ - the one ___。
this is incorrect as they have nothing to do with tides。
Submarine earthquakes can give rise to these waves。
which are not noticeable out at sea due to their long ___。
when they reach harbors。
they pile up into walls of water that can be 6 to 60 feet high。
The Japanese call them "tsunamis," meaning "harbor waves," because they only ___.___ of up to 500 miles an hour。
(完整版)英语专业八级阅读及参考答案
Most earthquakes occur within the upper 15 miles of the earth's surface. But earthquakes can and d o occur at all depths to about 460 miles. Their number decreases as the depth increases. At about 460 miles one earthquake occurs only every few years. Near the surface earthquakes may run as hi gh as 100 in a month, but the yearly average does not vary much. In comparison with the total nu mber of earthquakes each year, the number of disastrous earthquakes is very small.The extent of the disaster in an earthquake depends on many factors. If you carefully build a t oy house with an erect set, it will still stand no matter how much you shake the table. But if you build a toy house with a pack of cards, a slight shake of the table will make it fall. An earthqua ke in Agadir, Morocco, was not strong enough to be recorded on distant instruments, but it comple tely destroyed the city. Many stronger earthquakes have done comparatively little damage. If a build ing is well constructed and built on solid ground, it will resist an earthquake. Most deaths in earth quakes have been due to faulty building construction or poor building sites. A third and very seriou s factor is panic. When people rush out into narrow streets, more deaths will result.The United Nations has played an important part in reducing the damage done by earthquakes. It has sent a team of experts to all countries known to be affected by earthquakes. Working with local geologists and engineers, the experts have studied the nature of the ground and the type of m ost practical building code for the local area. If followed, these suggestions will make disastrous ear thquakes almost a thing of the past.There is one type of earthquake disaster that little can be done about. This is the disaster caus ed by seismic sea waves, or tsunamis. (These are often called tidal waves, but the name is incorrec t. They have nothing to do with tides.) In certain areas, earthquakes take place beneath the sea. Th ese submarine earthquakes sometimes give rise to seismic sea waves. The waves are not noticeable out at sea because of their long wave length. But when they roll into harbors, they pile up into walls of water 6 to 60 feet high. The Japanese call them "tsunamis", meaning "harbor waves", becaus e they reach a sizable height only in harbors.Tsunamis travel fairly slowly, at speeds up to 500 miles an hour. An adequate warning system is in use to warn all shores likely to be reached by the waves. But this only enables people to le ave the threatened shores for higher ground. There is no way to stop the oncoming wave.1. Which of the following CANNOT be concluded from the passage?A. The number of earthquakes is closely related to depth.B. Roughly the same number of earthquakes occur each year.C. Earthquakes are impossible at depths over 460 miles.D. Earthquakes are most likely to occur near the surfaces.2. The destruction of Agadir is an example of ______.A. faulty building constructionB. an earthquake's strengthC. widespread panic in earthquakesD. ineffective instruments3. The United Nations' experts are supposed to______.A. construct strong buildingsB. put forward proposalsC. detect disastrous earthquakesD. monitor earthquakes4. The significance of the slow speed of tsunamis is that people may______.A. notice them out at seaB. find ways to stop themC. be warned early enoughD. develop warning systems参考答案:1~4 C A B C 1~5 ADBDC 6~10 ADBCA。
专业英语八级(阅读)模拟试卷164含答案和解析
专业英语八级(阅读)模拟试卷164讲座会话听力大题型(1) On any person who desires such queer prizes, New York will bestow the gift of loneliness and the gift of privacy. It is this largess that accounts for the presence within the city's walls of a considerable section of the population; for the residents of Manhattan are to a large extent strangers who have pulled up stakes somewhere and come to town, seeking sanctuary or fulfillment or some greater or lesser grail. The capacity to make such dubious gifts is a mysterious quality of New York. It can destroy an individual, or it can fulfill him, depending a good deal on luck. No one should come to New York to live unless he is willing to be lucky.(2) New York is the concentrate of art and commerce and sport and religion and entertainment and finance, bringing to a single compact arena the gladiator, the evangelist, the promoter, the actor, the trader, and the merchant. It carries on its lapel the unexpungeable odor of the long past, so that no matter where you sit in New York you feel the vibrations of great times and tall deeds, of queer people and events and undertakings. I am sitting at the moment in a stifling hotel room in90-degree heat, halfway down an air shaft, in midtown. No air moves in or out of the room, yet I am curiously affected by emanations from the immediate surroundings. I am twenty-two blocks from where Rudolph Valentino lay in state, eight blocks from where Nathan Hale was executed, five blocks from the publisher's office where Ernest Hemingway hit Max Eastman on the nose, four miles from where Walt Whitman sat sweating out editorials for the Brooklyn Eagle, thirty-four blocks from the street Willa Cather lived in when she came to New York to write books about Nebraska, one block from where Marceline used to clown on the boards of the Hippodrome, thirty-six blocks from the spot where the historian Joe Gould kicked a radio to pieces in full view of me public, thirteen blocks from where Harry Thaw shot Stanford White, five blocks from where I used to usher at me Metropolitan Opera and only 112 blocks from me spot where Clarence Day me elder was washed of his sins in me Church of me Epiphany (I could continue this list indefinitely). And for mat matter I am probably occupying me very room that any number of exalted and somewise memorable characters sat in, some of mem on hot, breamless afternoons, lonely and private and full of their own sense of emanations from without.(3) New York blends the gift of privacy with the excitement of participation; and better than most dense communities it succeeds in insulating me individual (if he wants it, and almost everybody wants orneeds it) against all enormous and violent and wonderful events mat are taking place every minute. Since I have been sitting in this miasmic air shaft, a good many rather splashy events have occurred in town. A man shot and killed his wife in a fit of jealousy. It caused no stir outside his block and got only small mention in the papers. I did not attend. Since my arrival, the greatest air show ever staged in all me world took place in town. I didn't attend and neither did most of the eight million other inhabitants, although they say there was quite a crowd. I didn't even hear any planes except a couple of westbound commercial airliners that habitually use this air shaft to fly over.The biggest oceangoing ships on the North Atlantic arrived and departed. I didn't notice them and neither did most other New Yorkers. I am told this is the greatest seaport in the world, with 650 miles of waterfront, and ships calling here from many exotic lands, but the only boat I've happened to notice since my arrival was a small sloop tacking out of the East River night before last on the ebb tide when I was walking across the Brooklyn Bridge. I heard the Queen Mary blow one midnight, though, and the sound carried the whole history of departure and longing and loss.(4) I mention these events merely to show that New York is peculiarly constructed to absorb almost anything that comes along (whether a thousand-foot liner out of the East or a twenty-thousand-man convention out of the West) without inflicting the event on itsinhabitants; so that every event is, in a sense, optional, and the inhabitant is in the happy position of being able to choose his spectacle and so conserve his soul. In most metropolises, small and large, the choice is often not with the individual at all. He is thrown to the Lions. The Lions are overwhelming; the event is unavoidable.(5) Although New York often imparts a feeling of great forlornness or forsakenness, it seldom seems dead or unresourceful; and you always feel that either by shifting your location ten blocks or by reducing your fortune by five dollars you can experience rejuvenation. Many people who have no real independence of spirit depend on the city's tremendous variety and sources of excitement for spiritual sustenance and maintenance of morale. In the country there are a few chances of sudden rejuvenation—a shift in weather, perhaps, or something arriving in the mail. But in New York the chances are endless. I think that although many persons are here from some excess of spirit (which caused them to break away from their small town), some, too, are here from a deficiency of spirit, who find in New York a protection, or an easy substitution.1.According to Para. 1, the author seems to believe that______.(B)A. New York is not suitable for people to live inB. whether an individual enjoys living in New York depends on luckC. most residents of New York lead an isolated lifeD. New York is a city full of bizarreness and mystery解析:细节题。
英语专业八级阅读题型分类
英语专业八级阅读题型分类第一部分:选择题选择题是英语专业八级阅读中常见的题型之一。
在选择题中,考生会面临一篇短文或者一组问题,需要选择正确的答案。
选择题可以分为以下几种类型:类型一:单项选择题单项选择题要求从几个选项中选择一个最佳答案。
常见的题干形式有:1. What does the passage mainly discuss?2. What is the meaning of the word XXX in the passage?3. Which of the following statements is NOT true according to the passage?在回答单项选择题时,考生应该注意阅读整篇文章,理解文章的主旨和细节信息,从而选择出最符合文章意思的选项。
类型二:多项选择题多项选择题要求从几个选项中选择多个正确答案。
常见的题干形式有:1. Which of the following statements are true according to the passage? (Choose two)2. Which of the following options are mentioned ascauses/factors/reasons for XXX? (Choose three)在回答多项选择题时,考生需要注意文章中出现的关键信息,通常在文章中会有明示或者隐含的提示。
第二部分:配对题配对题要求把一组问题、事件或者人物与与之相对应的答案或者描述进行匹配。
常见的题干形式有:1. Match each paragraph with its main idea.2. Match the people with the job they are most likely to have.在回答配对题时,考生需要通读短文或者问题,明确每个选项的含义,然后进行主观判断和合理匹配。
专业英语八级(阅读)练习试卷33(题后含答案及解析)
专业英语八级(阅读)练习试卷33(题后含答案及解析) 题型有: 2. READING COMPREHENSIONPART II READING COMPREHENSION (30 MIN)Directions: In this section there are four reading passages followed by a total of 20 multiple-choice questions. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. You should decide on the best choice.Even if they produced no other positive result, the attacks on the London Underground have compelled Europeans of all faiths to think with new urgency about the Continent’s Muslim minority. Such a reckoning was long overdue. Some left-wing politicians, like London’s mayor, Ken Livingstone, have chosen to emphasize the proximate causes of Muslim anger, focusing on the outrage widely felt in Islamic immigrant communities over the war in Iraq and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. But the harsh reality is that the crisis in relations between the European mainstream and the Islamic diaspora has far deeper roots, consoling as it might be to pretend otherwise. Indeed, the news could scarcely be worse. What Europeans are waking up to is a difficult truth: the immigrants who perform the Continent’s menial jobs, and, as is often forgotten, began coming to Europe in the 1950’s because European governments and businesses encouraged their mass migration, are profoundly alienated from European society for reasons that have little to do with the Middle East and everything to do with Europe. This alienation is cultural, historical and above all religious, as much if not more than it is political. Immigrants who were drawn to Europe because of the Continent’s economic success are in rebellion against the cultural, social and even psychological sources of that success. In a sense, Europe’s bad fortune is that Islam is in crisis. Imagine that Mexican Catholicism was in a similar state, and that a powerful, well-financed minority of anti-modem purists was doing its most successful proselytizing among Mexican immigrants in places like Los Angeles, Phoenix and Chicago, above all among the discontented, underemployed youth of the barrios. The predictable, perhaps even the inevitable, result would be the same sort of estrangement between Hispanics and the American mainstream. Whatever the roots of the present troubles, what is undeniable is that many immigrant Muslims and their children remain unreconciled to their situation in Europe. Some find their traditional religious values scorned, while others find themselves alienated by the independence of women, with all its implications for the future of the “traditional” Muslim family. In response, many have turned to the most obscurantist interpretation of the Islamic faith as a salve. At the fringes of the diaspora, some have turned to violence. So far, at least, neither the carrot nor the stick has worked. Politicians talk of tighter immigration controls. Yet the reality is that a Europe in demographic freefall needs more, not fewer, immigrants if it is to maintain its prosperity. Tony Blair just proposed new laws allowing the deportation of radicalmullahs and the shutting of mosques and other sites associated with Islamic extremism. But given the sheer size of the Muslim population in England and throughout the rest of Europe, the security services are always going to be playing catch-up. Working together, and in a much more favorable political and security context, French and Spanish authorities have, after more than 20 years, been unable to put an end to the terrorism of the Basque separatist group ETA. And there are at least twice as many Muslims in France as there are Basques in Spain. At the same time, it is difficult to see how the extremists’grievances can ever be placated by conciliatory gestures. It is doubtful that the British government’s proposed ban on blasphemy against Islam and other religions will have a demonstrable effect. (What would have happened to Salman Rushdie had such a ban been in force when “The Satanic Verses”was published?) Meanwhile, the French government has tried to create an “official”state-sanctioned French Islam. This approach may be worth the effort, but the chances of success are uncertain. It will require the enthusiastic participation of an Islamic religious establishment whose influence over disaffected youth is unclear. What seems clearer is that European governments have very little time and nowhere near enough knowledge about which members of the Islamic community really are “preachers of hate” and which, however unpalatable their views, are part of the immigrant mainstream. The multicultural fantasy in Europe—-its eclipse can be seen most poignantly in Holland, that most self-definedly liberal of all European countries—was that, in due course, assuming that the proper resources were committed and benevolence deployed, Islamic and other immigrants would eventually become liberals. As it’s said, they would come to “accept”the values of their new countries. It was never clear how this vision was supposed to coexist with multiculturalism’s other main assumption, which was that group identity should be maintained. But by now that question is largely academic: the European vision of multiculturalism, in all its simultaneous good will and self-congratulation, is no longer sustainable. And most Europeans know it. What they don’t know is what to do next. If the broad-brush anti-Muslim discourse of Jean-Marie Le Pen’s National Front in France or the Vlaams Belang Party in Belgium entered the political mainstream, it would only turn the Islamic diaspora in Europe into the fifth column that, for the moment, it is certainly not. But Europeans can hardly accept an immigrant veto over their own mores, whether those mores involve women’s rights or, for that matter, the right to blaspheme, which the Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh so bravely asserted—and died for. Figuring out how to prevent Europe’s multicultural reality from becoming a war of all against all is the challenge that confronts the Continent. It makes all of Europe’s other problems, from the economy to the euro to the sclerosis of social democracy, seem trivial by comparison. Unfortunately, unlike those challenges, this one is existential and urgent and has no obvious answers.1.According to the passage, which of the following is the major cause for the attacks on the London Underground?A.The anger among Islamic immigrants over the Iraqi War.B.The Israeli-Palestinian conflict.C.The Islamic alienation from European society.D.The Islamic diaspor正确答案:C解析:由第一段和第二段可知,伦敦地铁袭击事件发生的主要原因是伊斯兰移民与欧洲主流社会的紧张关系,故选项C为正确答案。
华研外语专八阅读译文
华研外语专八阅读译文是一份针对英语专业八级考试的阅读材料。
以下是该材料的译文内容:原文:The rise of artificial intelligence has ledto concerns about its impact on the job market. Some experts predict that AI will replace human workers in many industries, while others argue that it will create new job opportunities.译文:人工智能的崛起引发了人们对其对市场的影响的担忧。
一些专家预测,人工智能将取代许多行业中的人类工人,而另一些人则认为它将创造新的就业机会。
原文:The use of natural language processing and machine learning algorithms is increasing in various industries, such as healthcare, finance, and transportation. These technologies can helpbusinesses analyze large amounts of data and makemore informed decisions.译文:自然语言处理和机器学习算法在各种行业中的使用正在增加,例如医疗保健、金融和交通运输。
这些技术可以帮助企业分析大量数据并做出更明智的决策。
原文:However, there are concerns that AI may leadto a skills gap between those who have access to the technology and those who do not. This could result in a lack of workers with the necessary skills to operate and maintain the machines.译文:然而,人们担心人工智能可能导致技能差距,即拥有该技术的人与没有该技术的人之间的差距。
专业八级对考生的阅读能力有何要求
专业八级对考生的阅读能力有何要求专业八级对考生的阅读能力要求专业八级考试是中国高等教育自学考试(自考)中的一项重要考试,它要求考生具备一定的英语综合运用能力。
在专业八级考试中,阅读能力是其中一项重要的考核内容,对考生的阅读能力有着一定的要求。
本文将介绍专业八级对考生阅读能力的要求,并提供提升阅读能力的一些建议。
1.广度和深度要求专业八级考试对考生的阅读素材不限于一般英语学习教材,而是来源广泛,包括报纸、期刊、学术论文、业务资料等多种文本类型。
因此,考生需要具备广泛的阅读能力,能够理解和应用各类专业文本的信息。
此外,专业八级考试对考生的深度阅读能力也有一定要求,即要求考生能够深入理解文章的主题、论点和论证过程,并能进行分析和批判性思考。
2.词汇和语法要求考生需要掌握一定数量的专业词汇和常用词汇,并能够理解和应用这些词汇。
考生还需要熟悉学术论文和专业资料中常见的语法结构,并能够正确运用语法知识进行阅读理解和写作。
3.阅读速度和准确性要求专业八级考试对考生的阅读速度和准确性也有一定的要求。
考生需要在规定的时间内完成一定数量的阅读任务,并保持较高的阅读准确性,准确理解文章的意义,避免对文章内容的错误理解。
为了提高自己的阅读能力,考生可以采取以下一些方法:1.多读英语原版书籍和杂志阅读原版材料可以帮助考生更好地了解英语表达方式和专业术语的使用。
选择自己感兴趣和适合自己水平的书籍和杂志,从中获取信息,并积累词汇和语法知识。
2.注重阅读技巧的培养培养良好的阅读习惯和技巧对提高阅读能力至关重要。
考生可以学习一些阅读技巧,例如快速浏览、预测文本内容、注意文章结构等,以提高阅读效率和准确性。
3.进行刻意练习刻意练习是提高阅读能力的重要方法之一。
考生可以选择一些专业相关的文章进行反复阅读和分析,提高对专业术语和表达方式的理解能力。
4.参加英语阅读训练课程参加专业的英语阅读训练课程可以帮助考生系统性地提高自己的阅读能力。
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In 2011, many shoppers chose to avoid the frantic crowds and do their holiday shopping from the comfort of their computer. Sales at online retailers gained by more than 15%, making it the biggest season ever. But people are also returning those purchases at record rates, up 8% from last year.What went wrong? Is the lingering shadow of the global financial crisis making it harder to accept extravagant indulgences? Or that people shop more impulsively - and therefore make bad decisions - when online? Both arguments are plausible. However, there is a third factor: a question of touch. We can love the look but, in an online environment, we cannot feel the quality of a texture, the shape of the fit, the fall of a fold or, for that matter, the weight of an earring. And physically interacting with an object makes you more committed .When my most recent book Brandwashed was released, I teamed up with a local bookstore to conduct an experiment about the differences between the online and offline shopping experience. I carefully instructed a group of volunteers to promote my book in two different ways. The first was a fairly hands-off approach. Whenever a customer would inquire about my book, the volunteer would take them over to the shelf and point to it. Out of 20 such requests, six customers proceeded with the purchase.The second option also involved going over to the shelf but, this time, removing the book and then subtly holding onto it for just an extra moment before placing it in the customer's hands. Of the 20 people who were handed the book. 13 ended up buying it. Just physically passing the book showed a big difference in sales. Why? We feel something similar to a sense of ownership when we hold things in our hand. That's why we establish or reestablish connection by greeting strangers and friends with a handshake. In this case, having to then let go of the book after holding it might generate a subtle sense of loss, and motivate us to make the purchase even more.A recent study also revealed the power of touch, in this case when it came to conventional mail. A deeper and longer-lasting impression of a message was formed when delivered in a letter, as opposed to receiving the same message online. Brain imaging showed that, on touching the paper, the emotional center of the brain was activated, thus forming a stronger bond. The study also indicated that once touch becomes part of the process, it could translate into a sense of possession. This sense of ownership is simply not part of the equation in the online shopping experience.As the rituals of purchase in the lead-up to Christmas change, not only do we give less thought to the type of gifts we buy for our loved ones but, through our own digital wish lists, we increasingly control what they buy for us. The reality, however, is that no matter how convinced we all are that digital is the way to go, finding real satisfaction will probably take more than a few simple clicks.11. According to the author, shoppers are returning their purchases for all the following reasons EXCEPT that ____.[A] they are unsatisfied with the quality of the purchase [B]they eventually find the purchase too expensive[C] they change their mind out of uncertainty [D] they regret making the purchase without forethought12. What is the purpose of the experiment in the bookstore?[A] To see which promotion method is preferred by customers.[B]To find out the strengths and weaknesses of both methods.[C] To try to set up a new retailer-customer relationship.[D] To see the effect of an approach on customers' decisions.13. Why does the author cite the study by Bangor University and the Royal Mail Service?[A]To compare similar responses in different settings. [B] To provide further evidence for his own observation.[C] To offer a scientific account of the brain's functions.[D] To describe emotional responses in online shopping.14. What can be inferred from the last paragraph?[A]Real satisfaction depends on factors other than the computer.[B] Despite online shopping we still attach importance to gift buying.[C] Some people are still uncertain about the digital age. [D] Online shopping offers real satisfaction to shoppers.2 My professor brother and I have an argument about head and heart about whether he overvalues IQ while I learn more toward EQ. We typically have this debate about people—can we be friends with a really smart jerk(怪物)?—but there’s corollary to animals as well. I’d love it if our dog could fetch the morning paper and then read it to me over coffee, but I actually care much more about her loyal and innocent heart. There’s already enough thinking going on is our house, and we probably spend too much time in our heads, where we need some role modeling is in instinct,and that’s where a dog is a roving revelation.I did not grow up with dogs, which meant that my older daughter’s respectful but unyielding determination to get one required some adjustment on my part. I often felt she was training me: from ages of 6 to 9, she gently schooled me in various breeds and their personalities, whispered to the dogs we encountered so they would charm and persuade me, demonstrated by her self-displine that she was ready for the responsibility. And thus came our dog Twist, whom I sometimes mistake for a third daughter.At first I thought the challenge would be to train her to sit, to heel, to walk calmly beside us and not go wildly chasing the neighbourhood rabbits. But I soon discovered how much more we had to learn from her than she from us.If it is true, for example, that the secret to a child’s success is less rare genius than raw persistence, Twist’s ability to stay on task is a model for us all, especially if the task is trying to capture the sunbeam that flicks around the living room as the wind blows through the branches outside. She never succeeds, and she never gives up. This includes when she runs square into walls.Then there is her unfailing patience, which breaks down only when she senses that dinnertime was 15 minutes ago and we have somehow failed to notice. Even then she is more eager than indignant, and her refusal to whine shows a restraint of which I’m not always capable when hungry.But the lesson I value most is the one in forgiveness, and Twist first offered this when she was still very young. When she was about 7 months old, we took her to the vet to be sprayed(切除卵巢). We turned her over to a stranger, who procceeded to perform a procedure that was probably not pleasant, But when the vet returned her to us, limp and tender, there was no recrimination(反责),no how could you do that to me? It was as though she really knew that we could not intentionally cause her pain, and while she did not understand, she forgave and curled up with her head on my daughter’s lap.I suppose we could have concluded that she was just blindly loyal and docile. But eventually we knew better. She is entirely capable of disobedience, as she has proved many times. She will ignore us when there are more interesting things to look at, rebuke us when we are careless, bark into the twilight when she has urgent messages to send. But her patience with our failings and frickleness and her willingness to give us a scond chance are a daily lesson in gratitude.My friends who grew up with dogs tell me how when they were teenagers and trusted no one in the world, they could tell their dog all their secrets. It was the one friend who would not gossip or betray, could provide in the middle of the night the soft, unbegrudging comfort and peace that adolescence conspires to disrupt. An age that is all about growth and risk needs some anchors and weigths, a model of steadfastness when all else is in flux. Sometimes I think Twist’s devotion keeps my girls on a benevolent lash, one that hangs quietly at their side as they trot along but occasionally yanks them back to safety and solid ground.We’ve weighed so many decisions so carefully in raising our daughters—what school to send them to and what church to attend, when to give them cell phones and with what precautions. But when it comes to what really shapes their character and binds our family, I never would have thought we would owe so much to its smallest member.15. In the first paragraph, the author suggests that____.[A]a person can either have a high IQ or a low EQ [B]her professor brother cares too much about IQ[C]we need examples of how to follow one's heart [D]she prefers dogs that are clever and loyal16. According to the passage, all the following are Twist's characteristics EXCEPT____.[A]resignation [B]patience [C]forgiveness [D]tenacity17. According to the context, the meaning of the word "square"is closest to____.[A]fast [B]blindly [C]straight [D]stubbornly18.ThatTwist's devotion keeps my girls on a benevolent leash means that____.[A]Twist is capable of looking after the girls [B]Twist and the girls have become friends[C]Twist knows how to follow the girls [D]Twist's loyalty helps the girls grow up19. What does the author try to express in the last paragraph?[A]Difficulties in raising her children. [B]Worries about what to buy for kids.[C]Gratitude to Twist for her role. [D]Concerns about schooling and religion.Text CMost West African lorries ate not in what one would call the first flush of youth, and I had learnt by bitter experience not to expect anything very much of them. But the lorry that arrived to take me up to the mountains was worse than anything I had seen before: it tottered on the borders of senile decay. It stood there on buckled wheels, wheezing and gasping with exhaustion from having to climb up the gentle slope to the camp, and I consigned myself and my loads to it with some trepidation. The driver, who was a cheerful fellow, pointed out that he would require my assistance in two very necessary operations: first, I had to keep the hand brake pressed down when travelling downhill, for unless it was held thus almost level with the floor it sullenly refused to function. Secondly, I had to keep a stern eye on the clutch, a wilful piece of mechanism, that seized every chance to leap out of its socket with a noise like a strangling leopard. As it was obvious that not even a West African lorry driver could be successful in driving while crouched under the dashboard in a pre-natal position, I had to take over control of these instruments if I valued my life. So, while I ducked at intervals to put on the brake, amid the rich smell of burning rubber, our noble lorry jerked its way towards the mountains at a steady twenty miles per hour; sometimes, when a downward slope favoured it, it threw caution to the winds and careered along in a madcap fashion at twenty-five.For the first thirty miles the red earth road wound its way through the lowland forest, the giant trees standing in solid ranks alongside and their branches entwined in an archway of leaves above us. Flocks of hornbills flapped across the road, honking like the ghosts of ancient taxis, and on the banks, draped decoratively in the patches of sunlight, the agama lizards lay, blushing into sunset colouring with excitement and nodding their heads furiously. Slowly and almost imperceptibly the road started to climb upwards, looping its way in languid curves round the forested hills. In the back of the lorry the boys lifted up their voices in song:Home again, home again, When shall I see ma home? When shall I see ma mammy? I'll never forget ma home . . .The driver hummed the refrain softly to himself, glancing at me to see if I would object. To his surprise I joined in, and so while the lorry rolled onwards trailing a swirling tail of red dust behind it, the boys in the back maintained the chorus while the driver and I harmonized and sang complicated twiddly bits, and the driver played a staccato accompaniment on the horn.Breaks in the forest became more frequent the higher we climbed, and presently a new type of undergrowth began to appear: massive tree-ferns standing in conspiratorial groups at the roadside on their thick, squat, and hairy trunks, the fronds of leaves sprouting from the tops like delicate green fountains. These ferns were the guardians of a new world, for suddenly, as though the hills had shrugged themselves free ofcloak, the forest disappeared. It lay behind us in the valley, a thick pelt of green undulating away into the heat-shimmered distance, while above us the hillside rose majestically, covered in a coat of rippling, waist-high grass, bleached golden by the sun. The lorry crept higher and higher, the engine gasping and shuddering with this unaccustomed activity. I began to think that we should have to push the wretched thing up the last two or three hundred feet, but to everyone's surprise we made it, and the lorry crept on to the brow of the hill, trembling with fatigue, spouting steam from its radiator like a dying whale. We crawled to a standstill and the driver switched off the engine.“We must wait small-time, engine get hot, he explained, pointing to the forequarters of the lorry, which were by now completely invisible under a cloud of steam. Thankfully I descended from the red-hot inside of the cab and strolled down to where the road dipped into the next valley. From this vantage point I could see the country we had travelled through and the country we were about to enter.20. That it tottered on the borders of senile decay means that the lorry was_________.about to break downa very old vehicleunable to travel the distance[D] a dangerous vehicleWhich of the following words in the first paragraph is used literally?Flush.Borders.Operations.Gasping.We learn from the first paragraph that the author regards the inadequacies of the lorry as_________.[A] inevitable and amusing[B]. dangerous and frightening[C] novel and unexpected[D] welcome and interesting23. All the following words in the last but one paragraph describe the lorry as a humanEXCEPT .tremblingspoutingshudderingcrept24. We can infer from the passage that the author was ________.bored by the appearance of the grasslands aheadreluctant to do any walking in so hot a climateunfriendly towards the local driver and boysa little surprised to have to help drive the lorry25. A suitable title for the passage would be _______.A journey that scared meA journey to rememberThe wild West African lorryA comic journey in West AfricaText DHave you ever noticed a certain similarity in public parks and back gardens in the cities of the West? A ubiquitous woodland mix of lawn grasses and trees has found its way throughout Europe and the United States, and it’s now spread to other cities around the worl d. As ecologist Peter Groffman has noted, it's increasingly difficult to tell one suburb apart from another, even when they're located in vastly different climates such as Phoenix, Arizona, or Boston in the much chillier north-east of the US. And why do parks in New Zealand often feature the same species of trees that grow on the other side of the world in the UK?Inspired by the English and New England countrysides, early landscape architects of the 19th Century such asAndrew Jackson Downing and Frederick Law Olmstead created an aesthetic for urban public and private open space that persists to this day. But in the 21st Century, urban green space is tasked with doing far more than simply providing aesthetic appeal. From natural systems to deal with surface water run-off and pollution to green corridors to increasing interest in urban food production, the urban parks of the future will be designed and engineered for functionality as well as for beauty.Imagine travelling among the cities of the mid-21st Century and finding a unique set of urban landscapes that capture local beauty, natural and cultural history, and the environmental context. They are tuned to their locality, and diverse within as well as across cities. There are patches that provide shade and cooling, places of local food production, and corridors that connect both residents and wildlife to the surrounding native environment. Their functions are measured and monitored to meet the unique needs of each city for food production, water use, nutrient recycling, and habitat. No two green spaces are quite the same.Planners are already starting to work towards this vision. And if this movement has a buzzword it is “hyperfunctionality” – designs which provide multiple uses in a confined space, and a term coined by Richard Pouyat of the US Forest Service. At the moment, urban landscapes are highly managed and limited in their spatial extent. Even the "green" cities of the future will contain extensive areas of buildings, roads, railways, and other built structures. These future cities are likely to contain a higher proportion of green cover than the cities of today, with an increasing focus on planting on roofs, vertical walls, and formerly impervious surfaces like car parks. But built environments will still be ever-present in dense megacities. We can greatly enhance the utility of green space through designs that provide a range of different uses in a confined space. A hyperfunctional planting, for example, might be designed to provide food, shade, wildlife habitat, and pollution removal all in the same garden with the right choice of plants, configurations, and management practices.What this means is that we have to maximise the benefits and uses of urban parks, while minimising the costs of building and maintaining them. Currently, green space and street plantings are relatively similar throughout the Western world, regardless of differences in local climate, geography, and natural history. Even desert cities feature the same sizable street trees and well-watered and well-fertilized lawns that you might see in more temperate climes. The movement to reduce the resources and water requirements of such urban landscapes in these arid areas is called "xeriscaping" – a concept that has so-far received mixed responses in terms of public acceptance. Scott Yabiku and colleagues at the Central Arizona Phoenix project showed that newcomers to the desert embrace xeriscaping more than long-time residents, who are more likely to prefer the well-watered aesthetic. In part, this may be because xeriscaping is justified more by reducing landscaping costs –in this case water costs –than by providing desired benefits like recreation, pollution mitigation, and cultural value. From this perspective, xeriscaping can seem more like a compromise than an asset.But there are other ways to make our parks and natural spaces do more. Nan Ellin, of the Ecological Planning Center in the US, advocates an asset-based approach to urbanism. Instead of envisioning cities in terms what they can't have, ecological planners are beginning to frame the discussion of future cities in terms of what they do have - their natural and cultural assets. In Utah’s Salt Lake City, instead of couching environmental planning as an issue of resource scarcity, the future park is described as "mountain urbanism" and the strong association of local residents with the natural environment of the mountain ranges near their home. From this starting point, the local climate, vegetation, patterns of rain and snowfall, and mountain topography are all deemed natural assets that create a new perspective when it comes to creating urban green space. In Cairns, Australia, the local master plan embraces "tropical urbanism" that conveys a sense of place through landscaping features, while also providing important functions such as shading and cooling in this tropical climate.The globally homogenised landscape aesthetic – which sees parks from Boston to Brisbane looking worryingly similar –will diminish in importance as future urban green space will be attuned to local values and cultural perceptions of beauty. This will lead to a far greater diversity of urban landscape designs than are apparent today. Already, we are seeing new purposes for urban landscaping that are transforming the 20th century woodland park into bioswales –plantings designed to filter stormwater –green roofs, wildlife corridors, and urban food gardens. However, until recently we have been lacking the datasets and science-based specifications for designs that work to serve all of these purposes at once.In New York City, Thomas Whitlow of Cornell University sends students through tree-lined streets with portable, backpack-mounted air quality monitors. At home in his laboratory, he places tree branches in wind tunnels to measure pollution deposition onto leaves. It turns out that currently, many street tree plantings are ineffective at removing air pollutants, and instead may trap pollutants near the ground. My students and I equipped street trees with sensors in and around the trunk in Los Angeles to monitor growth and water use in real time to help find which species provide the largest canopies for the lowest amount of water. Rather than relying on assumptions about the role of urban vegetation in improving the environment and health, future landscaping designs will be engineered based on empirical data and state of the art of simulations.New datasets on the performance of urban landscapes are changing our view of what future urban parks will look like and what it will do. With precise measurements of pollutant uptake, water use, plant growth rates, and greenhouse gas emissions, we are better and better able to design landscapes that require less intensive management and are less costly, while providing more social and environmental uses.26. According to the passage, which of the following serves as the BEST reason for thesimilarity in urban green space throughout the West?[A] Climate.[B] Geography.[C] Functional purposes.[D] Design principles.27. The following are all features of future urban green space EXCEPT that .[A] each city has its distinct style of urban green space[B] urban landscape will focus more on cultural history[C] urban green space will be designed to serve many uses[D] more green cover will be seen on city roofs and walls28. Why are some local residents opposed to "xeriscaping"?[A] It cannot reduce water requirements.[B] It has proved to be too costly.[C] It is not suited for the local area.[D] It does not have enough advantages.29. According to the passage, if planners adopt an asset-based approach, they willprobably .[A] incorporate the area's natural and cultural heritage into their design[B] make careful estimation of the area's natural resources before designing[C] combine natural resources and practical functions in their design[D] envision more purposes for urban landscaping in their design30. According to the passage, future landscaping designs will rely more on . .[A] human assumptions[B] field work[C] scientific estimation[D] laboratory workPart ⅢGENERAL KNOWLEDGE31. Which party is in power now in the UK?[A]The Conservative Party.[B]The Labour Party.[C]The Liberal Democrats.[D]The Scottish National Party.32. Which of the following lakes does Canada share with the United States?[A]Lake Winnipeg.[B]The Great Slave Lake.[C]The Great Bear Lake.[D]The five Great Lakes.33. U. S. senators serve for ____ years after they are elected.[A]four[B]six[C]three[D]two34. Who were the natives of Australia before the arrival of the British settlers?[A]The Eskimos.[B]The Maori.[C]The Indians.[D]The Aborigines.35. ____ is best known for the technique of dramatic monologue in his poems.[A]Robert Browning[B]W. B. Yeats[C]William Blake[D]William Wordsworth36. Which of the following is a contemporary British poet?[A]Ted Hughes.[B]William Wordsworth.[C]E. E. Cummings.[D]Carl Sandburg.37. Who was the author of Moby-Dick?[A]Nathaniel Hawthorne.[B]Ralph Waldo Emerson.[C]Herman Melville.[D]Washington Irving.38. The words "tennis, badminton, golf, basketball and football" constitute a ____ field. [A]semantic[B]connotative[C]conceptual[D]collocative39. A: Do you like ice cream? B: Yes, I do.This is an example of ____.[A]reference[B]substitution[C]conjunction[D]ellipsis40. Which of the following is a voiceless consonant?[A][ j ][B][ w ][C][ p ][D][ l ]PART IV PRROFREADING & ERROR CORRECTIONThe passage contains TEN errors.Each indicated line contains a maximum of ONE error. Ineach 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 blankprovided at the end of the line.For a missing word.mark the position of the missing word with a "^" sign and write theword you believe to be missing in the blank provided at the end ofthe line.For an unnecessary word,cross the unnecessary word with a slash”/”and put the word in theblank provided at the end of the line.EXAMPLEWhen ^ art museum wants a new exhibit,(1) anit never buys things in finished form and hangs (2) neverthem on the wall.When a natural history museumwants an exhibition, it must often build it.(3) exhibitWhen I was in my early teens, I was taken to a spectacular showon ice by the mother of a friend. Looked round at the luxury of the (1)rink, my friend’s mother remarked on the “plush” seats we had beengiven. I did not know what she meant, and being proud of my (2) vocabulary, I tried to infer its meaning from the context. “Plush”was clearly intended as a complimentary, a positive evaluation; that (3)much I could tell it from the tone of voice and the context. So I (4)started to use the word Yes, I replied, they certainly are plush, andso are the ice rink and the costumes of the skaters, aren’t they? Myfriend’s mother was very polite to correct me, but I could tell from her (5) expression that I had not got the word auite right.Often we can indeed infer from the context what a word roughlyNeans, and that is in fact the way which we usually acquire both (6)new words and new meanings for familiar words, specially in our (7)own first language. But sometimes we need to ask, as I should haveasked for plush, and this is particularly true in the (8)aspect of a foreign language. If you are continually surrounded by (9)speakers of the language you are learning, you can ask them directly,but often this opportunity does not exist for the learner of English.So dictionaries have been developed to mend the gap. (10)PART V TRANSLATIONSECTION A CHINESES TO ENGLISH茶花(camellia)的自然花期在12月至翌年4月,以红色系为主,另有黄色系和白色系等,花色艳丽。