专业英语八级考试试题partilistening
专业英语八级(听力)模拟试卷200(题后含答案及解析)
专业英语八级(听力)模拟试卷200(题后含答案及解析)题型有:1. LISTENING COMPREHENSIONPART I LISTENING COMPREHENSIONSECTION A MINI-LECTUREIn this section you will hear a mini-lecture. You will hear the mini-lecture ONCE ONLY. While listening to the mini-lecture, please complete the gap-filling task on ANSWER SHEET ONE and write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each gap. Make sure the word(s) you fill in is (are) both grammatically and semantically acceptable. You may use the blank sheet for note-taking.You have THIRTY seconds to preview the gap-filling task.听力原文:Meaning in LiteratureGood morning, everyone. Today, we are going to talk about “meaning” in literature. “Meaning” is a difficult issue, and what I have to say today only scratches the surface of a complex and contested area. How do we know what a work of literature is “supposed” to mean, or what its “real” meaning is? There are three ways to approach this: that meaning is what is intended by the author; that meaning is created by and contained in the text itself; and that meaning is created by the reader.First of all, about the author. Does a work of literature mean what the author “intended” it to mean, and if so, how can we tell? If all the evidence we have is the text itself, we can only speculate on what the priorities and ideas of the author were from our set of interpretive practices and values. We can expand this:[1]by reading other works by the same author, by knowing more and more about what sort of meanings seem to be common to works in that particular tradition, time and genre, by knowing how the author and other writers and readers of that time read texts—what their interpretive practices were, and[2]by knowing what the cultural values and symbols of the time were.Any person or text can only “mean” within a set of preexisting, socially supported ideas, symbols, images, ways of thinking and values. In a sense there is no such thing as a “personal” meaning; although we have different experiences in our lives and different temperaments and interests,[3]we will interpret the world according to social norms and cultural meanings—there’s no other way to do it.We may have as evidence for meaning what the author said or wrote about the work, but this is not always reliable. Authorial intention is complicated not only by the fact that an author’s ways of meaning and of using literary conventions are cultural, but by the facts that the author’s work may very well have taken in directions she did not originally foresee and[4]have developed meanings which she did not intend and indeed may not recognize. The works may embody cultural or symbolic meanings which are not fully clear to the author herself and may emerge only through historical or other cultural perspective,[5]and persons may not be conscious of all of the motives that attend their work.Secondly, about the text. Does the meaning exist “in”the text?[6]There is an argument that the formal properties of the text—[7]the grammar, the language, the uses of image and so forth—contain and produce themeaning, so that any educated reader will inevitably come to essentially the same interpretation as any other. Of course, it becomes almost impossible to know whether the same interpretations are arrived at because the formal properties securely encode the meaning, or because all of the “competent” readers were taught to read the formal properties of texts in roughly the same way. As a text is in a sense only ink marks on a page, and as all meanings are culturally created and transferred, the argument that the meaning is “in” the text is not a particularly persuasive one.[8]The meaning might be more likely to be in the conventions of meaning, the traditions, the cultural codes which have been handed down, so that insofar as we and other readers might be said to agree on the meaning of the text,[9]that agreement would be created by common traditions and conventions of usage, practice and interpretation. In different time periods, with different cultural perspectives, or with different purposes for reading, no matter what the distance in time or cultural situation, competent readers can arrive at different readings of texts.[10]On the one hand, a text is a historical document, a material fact, and on the other hand, meaning is inevitably cultural and contextual. Therefore, the question of whether the text “really means”what it means to a particular reader, group or tradition can be a difficult and complex one.Finally, about the reader. Does the meaning then exist in the reader’s response, her processing or reception of the text? In a sense this is inescapable: meaning exists only insofar as it means to someone, and art is composed in order to evoke sets of responses in the reader. But this leads us to three essential issues.Meaning is “social”, that is,[11]language and conventions work only as shared meaning, and our way of viewing the world can exist only as shared. When we read a text, we are participating in social, or cultural, meaning.[12]Response is not merely an individual thing, but is part of culture and history.Meaning is contextual. Change the context, you often change the meaning. Texts constructed as literature or art, have their own codes and practices, and the more we know of them, the more we can decode the text, that is, understand it—[13]consequently, in regard to the question of meaning there is the matter of reader competency, as it is called, the experience and knowledge of decoding literary texts.As meanings are cultural and as art is artifact, you may see that this idea that meaning requires competency in reading can bring us back to different conventions and ways of reading and writing,[14]and to the historically situated understandings of the section on the author.[15]At the least, “meaning”requires a negotiation between cultural meanings across time, culture, gender and class.OK Let me recap my talk today. The point of this brief talk is that “meaning” is a phenomenon that is not easily ascribed or located, that it is historical, social, and derived from the traditions of reading and thinking and understanding the world that you are educated about and socialized in.Meaning in LiteratureI. AUTHOR—Interpret author’s intended meaning bya)Reading other works by【T1】_____【T1】______b)Knowing common meanings in a particular parameterc)Knowing how authors and readers of that time interpreted textsd)Knowing cultural【T2】_____ of that time【T2】______—Personal meaning are influenced by【T3】_____ and cultural meanings【T3】______—Authorial intention is complicateda)Cultural constraintsb)Develop meanings not originally【T4】_____by the author【T4】______c)Cultural or symbolic meanings unclear to authord)Not realise all of the【T5】_____ in the work【T5】______II. TEXT—【T6】_____ of the text【T6】______a)Grammarb)Languagec)Uses of【T7】_____【T7】______—Meanings are agreed upon based on the factors ofa)Conventions of meaningb)Traditionsc)【T8】_____【T8】______d)Conventions of usage, practice and 【T9】_____【T9】______—Meanings are complicateda)A text is a(n)【T10】_____【T10】______b)Meanings are cultural and contextual III. READER—Meaning is sociala)Language and conventions work as meanings are【T11】_____【T11】______b)Readers participate in social or cultural meaningc)【T12】_____ is part of culture and history【T12】______—Meaning is contextuala)Codes in literatureb)Reader competency:the experience and knowledge of【T13】_____texts 【T13】______—Meaning is culturala)Different conventions and ways of reading and writingb)Understand the【T14】_____ of the author【T14】______c)Negotiation across time,【T15】_____, etc.【T15】______1.【T1】正确答案:the same author解析:本题询问我们可以通过什么方式来诠释作者的作品。
专业英语八级听力-试卷105_真题(含答案与解析)-交互
专业英语八级(听力)-试卷105(总分46, 做题时间90分钟)1. LISTENING COMPREHENSIONPART I LISTENING COMPREHENSIONSECTION A MINI-LECTUREIn this section you will hear a mini-lecture. You will hear the mini-lecture ONCE ONLY. While listening to themini-lecture, **plete the gap-filling task on ANSWER SHEET ONE and write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each gap. Make sure the word(s) you fill in is (are) both grammatically and semantically acceptable. You may use the blank sheet for note-taking.You have THIRTY seconds to preview the gap-filling task.What do you need to do in order to understand the lecture? Now there are four things that I'm going to talk about. The first thing is that you need to be aware of all of the【T1】______ that carry meaning. You all know that words carry meaning. So you've got to be aware of the 【T2】______, but there are【T3】______. For one thing, you need to be aware of【T4】______. Let me give you an example. "I went to the bar." "I went to the bar." It makes a difference. In the second example, I'm stressing the fact that【T5】______and not someone else so that this means stress has some meaning. Now the next thing you might want to listen for is【T6】______. For example, if I say "He came." "He came?" There are two different meanings. One is a【T7】______, the other one is a【T8】______. And another thing you need to listen for is【T9】______. For instance, "Can you see, Mary?" VS "Can you see Mary?" da da DA da... da da da DA da. Those two mean something different. In the first one, they are talking【T10】______ to Mary, while the second one means "Can you see Mary... over there?"SSS_FILL1.【T1】该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:正确答案:parts of the languageSSS_FILL2.【T2】该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:正确答案:vocabulary of the languageSSS_FILL3.【T3】该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:正确答案:some other featuresSSS_FILL4.【T4】该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:正确答案:stressSSS_FILL5.【T5】该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:正确答案:it was meSSS_FILL6.【T6】该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:正确答案:intonationSSS_FILL7.【T7】该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:正确答案:statementSSS_FILL8.【T8】该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:正确答案:questionSSS_FILL9.【T9】该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:正确答案:rhythmSSS_FILL10.【T10】该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:正确答案:directly【T1】______ are actually【T2】______. While they are, perhaps,【T3】______ to meaning in communication in the same way as grammar or vocabulary, they may, nevertheless, convey【T4】______ in some way. Let me give you some examples. The first is【T5】______, which indicates the need for【T6】______. The second is【T7】______. This is to show【T8】______. The third is【T9】______, which is to show【T10】______. The fourth is【T11】______. This, um, is to indicate 【T12】______. The last is extra lip rounding, which expresses greater 【T13】______, especially with babies, for example. So we can see that there are a number of ways of altering our tone of voice and when we do this consciously, we do it to create different effects in communication.SSS_FILL11.【T1】该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:正确答案:Vocal featuresSSS_FILL12.【T2】该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:正确答案:tones of voiceSSS_FILL13.【T3】该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:正确答案:not centralSSS_FILL14.【T4】该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:正确答案:attitude or intentionSSS_FILL15.【T5】该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:正确答案:whisperingSSS_FILL16.【T6】该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:正确答案:secrecySSS_FILL17.【T7】该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:正确答案:breathinessSSS_FILL18.【T8】该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:正确答案:deep emotionSSS_FILL19.【T9】该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:正确答案:huskinessSSS_FILL20.【T10】该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:正确答案:unimportanceSSS_FILL21.【T11】该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:正确答案:nasalitySSS_FILL22.【T12】该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:正确答案:anxietySSS_FILL23.【T13】该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 2答案:正确答案:intimacy1。
专业英语八级考题试卷及答案
专业英语八级考题试卷及答案PART I LISTENING COMPREHENSION (40 MIN)In Sections A, B and C you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow. Mark the correct answer to each question on your coloured answer sheetSECTION A TALKQuestions I to 5 refer to the talk in this section. At the end of the talk you will be given 15 seconds to answer each of the following five questions.Now listen to the talk.1. Which of the following statements about offices is NOT true according to the talk?A. Offices throughout the world are basically alike.B. There are primarily two kinds of office layout.C. Office surroundings used to depend on company size.D. Office atmosphere influences workers' performance.2. We can infer from the talk that harmonious work relations may have a direct impact on yourA. promotion.B. colleagues.C. management.D. union.3. Supposing you were working in a small firm, which of the following would you do when you had some grievances?A. Request a formal special meeting with the boss.B. Draft a formal agenda for a special meeting.C. Contact a consultative committee first.D. Ask to see the boss for a talk immediately.4. According to the talk, the union plays the following roles EXCEPTA. mediation.B. arbitration.C. negotiation.D. representation.5. Which topic is NOT covered in the talk?A. Role of the union.B. Work relations.C. Company structure.D. Office layout.SECTION B INTERVIEWQuestions 6 to 10 are based on an interview. At the end of the interview you will be given 15seconds to answer each of the following five questions.Now listen to the interview.6. Which of the following statements is INCORRECT about David's personal background?A. He had excellent academic records at school and university.B. He was once on a PHD programme at Yale University.C. He received professional training in acting.D. He came from a single-parent family.7. David is inclined to believe inA. aliens.B. UFOs.C. the TV character.D. government conspiracies.8. David thinks he is fit for the TV role because of hisA. professional training.B. personality.C. life experience.D. appearance.9. From the interview, we know that at present David feelsA. a sense of frustration.B. haunted by the unknown thingsC. confident but moody.D. successful yet unsatisfied.10. How does David feel about the divorce of his parents?A. He feels a sense of anger.B. He has a sense of sadness.C. It helped him grow up.D. It left no effect on him.SECTION C NEWS BROADCASTQuestion 11 is based on the following news. At the end of the news item, you will be given 15seconds to answer the question.Now listen to the news.11. What is the main idea of the news item?A. US concern over th6 forthcoming peace talks.B. Peace efforts by the Palestinian Authority.C. Recommendations by the Mitchell Commission.D. Bomb attacks aimed at Israeli civilians.Question 12 is based on the following news. At the end of the news item, you will be given 15 seconds to answer the question.Now listen to the news.12. Some voters will waste their ballots becauseA. they like neither candidate.B. they are all ill-informed.C. the candidates do not differ much.D. they do not want to vote twice.Questions 13 to 15 are based on the following news. At the end of the news item, you will be given15 seconds to answer each of the questions.Now listen to the news.13. According to the UN Human Development Report, which is the best place for women in the world?A. Canada.B. The US.C. Australia.D. Scandinavia.14. _______ is in the 12th place in overall ranking.A. BritainB. FranceC. FinlandD. Switzerland15. According to the UN report, the least developed country isA. Ethiopia.B. Mali.C. Sierra Leon.D. Central African Republic.SECTION D NOTE-TAKING AND GAP-FILLINGIn this section you will hear a mini-lecture. You will hear the lecture ONCE ONLY. While listening, take notes on the important points. Your notes will not be marked, but you will need them to complete a 15-minute gap-filling task on ANSWER SHEET ONE after the mini-lecture. Use the blank sheet for note-taking.PART II PROOFREADING & ERROR CORRECTION (15 MIN)Proofread the given passage on ANSWER SHEET TWO as instructed.PART III READING COMPREHENSIOS (40MIN)SECTION A READING COMPREHENSION (30 MIN)In this section there are four reading passages followed by a total of fifteen multiple-choice questions. Read the passages and then mark your answers on your coloured answer sheet~TEXT AHostility to Gypsies has existed almost from the time they first appeared in Europe in the 14th century. The origins of the Gypsies, with little written history, were shrouded in mystery. What is known now from clues in the various dialects of their language, Romany, is that they came from northern India to the Middle East a thousand years ago, working as minstrels and mercenaries, metal-smiths and servants. Europeans misnamed them Egyptians, soon shortened to Gypsies. A clan system, based mostly on their traditional crafts and geography, has made them a deeply fragmented and fractious people, only really unifying in the face of enmity from non-Gypsies, whom they call gadje. Today many Gypsy activists prefer to be called Roma, which comes from the Romany word for “man”. But on my travels among them most still referred to themselves as Gypsies.In Europe their persecution by the gadje began quickly, with the church seeing heresy in their fortune-telling and the state seeing anti-social behaviour in their nomadism. At various times they have been forbidden to wear their distinctive bright clothes, to speak their own language, to travel, to marry one another, or to ply their traditional crafts. In some countries they were reduced to slavery it wasn't until the mid-1800s that Gypsy slaves were freed in Romania. In more recent timesthe Gypsies were caught up in Nazi ethnic hysteria, and perhaps half a million perished in the Holocaust. Their horses have been shot and the wheels removed from their wagons, their names have been changed, their women have been sterilized, and their children have been forcibly given for adoption to non-Gypsy families.But the Gypsies have confounded predictions of their disappearance as a distinct ethnic group and their numbers have burgeoned. Today there are an estimated 8 to 12 million Gypsies scattered across Europe, making them the continent's largest minority. The exact number is hard to pin down. Gypsies have regularly been undercounted, both by regimes anxious to downplay their profile and by Gypsies themselves, seeking to avoid bureaucracies. Attempting to remedy past inequities, activist groups may overcount. Hundreds of thousands more have emigrated to the Americas and elsewhere. With very few exceptions Gypsies have expressed no great desire for a country to call their own -unlike the Jews, to whom the Gypsy experience is often compared. “Romanestan” said Ronald Lee, the Canadian Gypsy writer, "is where my two feet stand."16. Gypsies are united only when theyA are engaged in traditional crafts.B. call themselves Roma.C. live under a clan system.D. face external threats.17. In history hostility to Gypsies in Europe resulted in their persecution by all the followingEXCEPTA. the Egyptians.B the state.C. the church.D. the Nazis.18. According to the passage, the main difference between the Gypsies and the Jews lies in their concepts ofA.language.B. culture.C. identity.D. custom.TEXT BI was just a boy when my father brought me to Harlem for the first time, almost 50 years ago. We stayed at the Hotel Theresa, a grand brick structure at 125th Street and Seventh Avenue. Once, in the hotel restaurant, my father pointed out Joe Louis. He even got Mr. Brown, the hotel manager, to introduce me to him, a bit paunchy but still the champ as far as I was concerned.Much has changed since then. Business and real estate are booming. Some say a new renaissance is under way. Others decry what they see as outside forces running roughshod over the old Harlem.New York meant Harlem to me, and as a young man I visited it whenever I could. But many of my old haunts are gone. The Theresa shut down in 1966. National chains thatonce ignored Harlem now anticipate yuppie money and want pieces of this prime Manhattan real estate. So here I am on a hot August afternoon, sitting in a Starbucks that two years ago opened a block away from the Theresa, snatching at memories between sips of high-priced coffee. I am about to open up a piece of the old Harlem- the New York Amsterdam News—when a tourist asking directions to Sylvia's, a prominent Harlem restaurant, penetrates my daydreaming. He's carrying a book: Touring Historic Harlem.History. I miss Mr. Michaux's bookstore, his House of Common Sense, which was across from the Theresa. He had a big billboard out front with brown and black faces painted on it that said in large letters: "World History Book Outlet on 2,000,000,000 Africans and Nonwhite Peoples." An ugly state office building has swallowed that space.I miss speaker like Carlos Cooks, who was always on the southwest comer of 125th and Seventh, urging listeners to support Africa. Harlem's powerful political electricity seems unplugged-although the sweets are still energized, especially by West African immigrants.Hardworking southern newcomers formed the bulk of the community back in the 1920s and'30s, when Harlem renaissance artists, writers, and intellectuals gave it a glitter and renown that made it the capital of black America. From Harlem, W.E.B. DuBois, Langston Hughes, Paul Robeson, Zora Neal Hurston, and others helped power America's cultural influence around the world.By the 1970s and '80s drugs and crime had ravaged parts of the community. And the life expectancy for men in Harlem was less than that of men in Bangladesh. Harlem had become a symbol of the dangers of inner-city life.Now, you want to shout “Lookin’good!”at this place that has been neglected for so long. Crowds push into Harlem USA, a new shopping centre on 125th, where a Disney store shares space with HMV Records, the New York Sports Club, and a nine-screen Magic Johnson theatre complex. Nearby, a Rite Aid drugstore also opened. Maybe part of the reason Harlem seems to be undergoing a rebirth is that it is finally getting what most people take for granted.Harlem is also part of an “empowerment zone”—a federal designation aimed at fostering economic growth that will bring over half a billion in federal, state, and local dollars. Just the shells of once elegant old brownstones now can cost several hundred thousand dollars. Rents are skyrocketing. An improved economy, tougher law enforcement, and community efforts against drugs have contributed toa 60 percent drop in crime since 1993.19. At the beginning the author seems to indicate that HarlemA. has remained unchanged all these years.B. has undergone drastic changes.C. has become the capital of Black America.D. has remained a symbol of dangers of inner-city life.20. When the author recalls Harlem in the old days, he has a feeling ofA. indifference.B, discomfort.C. delight.D. nostalgia.21. Harlem was called the capital of Black America in the 1920s and '30s mainly because of itsA. art and culture.B. immigrant population.C. political enthusiasm.'D. distinctive architecture.22. From the passage we can infer that, generally speaking, the authorA. has strong reservations about the changes.B. has slight reservations about the changes,C. welcomes the changes in Harlem.D. is completely opposed to the changes.TEXT CThe senior partner, Oliver Lambert, studied the resume for the hundredth time and again found nothing he disliked about Mitchell Y. McDeere, at least not on paper. He had the brains, the ambition, the good looks. And he was hungry; with his background, he had to be. He was married, and that was mandatory. The firm had never hired an unmarried lawyer, and it frowned heavily on divorce, as well as womanizing and drinking. Drug testing was in the contract. He had a degree in accounting, passed the CPA exam the first time he took it and wanted to be a tax lawyer, which of course was a requirement with a tax firm. He was white, and the firm had never hired a black. They managed this by being secretive and clubbish and never soliciting job applications. Other firms solicited, and hired blacks. This firm recruited, and remained lily white. Plus, the firm was in Memphis, and the top blacks wanted New York or Washington or Chicago. McDeere was a male, and there were no women in the firm. That mistake had been made in the mid-seventies when they recruited the number one grad from Harvard, who happened to be a she and a wizard at taxation. She lasted four turbulent years and was killed in a car wreck.He looked good, on paper. He was their top choice. In fact, for this year there were no other prospects. The list was very short. It was McDeere, or no one.The managing partner, Royce McKnight, studied a dossier labeled "Mitchell Y. McDeere-Harvard." An inch thick with small print and a few photographs; it had been prepared by some ex-CIA agents in a private intelligence outfit in Bethesda. They were clients of the firm and each year did the investigating for no fee. It was easy work, they said, checking out unsuspecting law students. They learned, for instance, that he preferred to leave the Northeast, that he was holding three job offers, two in New York and one in Chicago, and that the highest offer was $76,000 and the lowest was $68,000. He was in demand. He had been given the opportunity to cheat on a securities exam during his second year. He declined, and made the highest grade in the class. Two months ago he had been offered cocaine at a law school party. He said no and left when everyone began snorting. He drank an occasional beer, but drinking was expensive and he had no money. He owed close to $23,000 in student loans. He was hungry.Royce McKnight flipped through the dossier and smiled. McDeere was their man. Lamar Quin was thirty-two and not yet a partner. He had been brought along to look young and act young and project a youthful image for Bendini, Lambert & Locke, which in fact was a young firm, since most of the partners retired in their late forties or early fifties with money to bum. He would make partner in this firm. With a six-figure income guaranteed for the rest of his life, Lamar could enjoy the twelve-hundred-dollar tailored suits that hung so comfortably from his tall, athletic frame. He strolled nonchalantly across the thousand-dollar-a-day suite and poured another cup of decaf. He checked his watch. He glanced at the two partners sitting at the small conference table near the windows.Precisely at two-thirty someone knocked on the door. Lamar looked at the parmers, who slid the resume and dossier into an open briefcase. All three reached for their jackets. Immar buttoned his top button and opened the door.23. Which of the following is NOT the firm’s recruitment requirement?A. Marriage.B. Background.C. Relevant degree.D. Male.24. The details of the private investigation show that the firmA. was interested in his family background.B. intended to check out his other job offers.C. wanted to know something about his preference.D. was interested in any personal detail of the man.25. According to the passage, the main reason Lama Quin was there at the interview was thatA. his image could help impress McDereer.B. he would soon become a partner himself.C. he was good at interviewing applicants.D. his background was similar to MeDereer's.26. We get the impression from the passage that in job recruitment the firm was NOTA. selective.B. secretive.C. perfunctory.D. racially biased.TEXT KFirst read the questions.39. When did Moore receive his first commission?A. In 1948.B. In 1946.C. In 1931.D. In 1928.40. Where did Moore win his first international prize?A. In London.B. In Venice.C. In New York.D. In Hamburg.Now go through TEXT K quickly to answer questions 39 and 40.Henry Moore, the seventh of eight children of Raymond Spencer Moore and his wife Mary, was born in Yorkshire on 30 July 1898. After graduating from secondary school, Moore taught for a short while. Then the First World War began and he enlisted in the army at the age of eighteen. After the war he applied for and received an ex-serviceman's grant to attend Leeds School of Art. At the end of his second year he won a scholarship to the Royal College of Art in London.In 1928 Moore met Irina Radetsky, a painting student at the college, whom he married a year later. The couple then moved into a house which consisted of a small ground-floor studio with an equally small flat above. This remained their London home for ten years.Throughout the 1920's Moore was involved in the art life of London. His first commission, received in 1928, was to produce a sculpture relief for the newly opened headquarters of London Transport. His first one-man exhibition opened at the Warren Gallery in 1928; it was followed by a show at the Leicester Galleries in 1931 and his first sale to a gallery abroad- the Museum fur Kunst und Gewerbe in Hamburg. His success continued.In 1946 Moore had his first foreign retrospective exhibition at the Museum of Modem Art, New York. In 1948 he won the International Sculpture Prize at the 24th Venice Biennale, the first of countless international accolades acquired in succeeding years. At the same time sales of Moore's work around the world increased, as did the demand for his exhibitions. By the end of 1970's the number of exhibitions had grown to an average of forty a year, ranging from the very small to major international retrospectives taking years of detailed planning and preparation. The main themes in Moore's work included the mother and child, the earliest work created in 1922, and the reclining figure dating from 1926. At the end of the 1960's came stringed figures based on mathematical models observed in the Science Museum, and the first helmet head, a subject that later developed into the internal-external theme- variously interpreted as a hard form coveting a soft, like a mother protecting her child or a foetus inside a womb.A few years before his death in 1986 Moore gave the estate at Perry Green with its studios, houses and cottages to the Trustees of the Henry Moore Foundation to promote sculpture and the fine arts within the cultural life of the country and in particular the works of Henry Moore.ANSWER SHEET ONEPART I LISTENING COMPREHENSIONSECTION D NOTE-TAKING & GAPFILING (15 MIN)Fill in each of the gaps with ONE word You may refer to your notes. Make sure the word you fill in is both grammatically and semantically acceptable.Marslow's Hierarchy of NeedsAbraham Maslow has developed a famous theory of human needs, which can be arranged In order of importance.Physiological needs: the most (1)______________ones for survival.They include such needs as food, water, etc. And there is usually one way to satisfy these needs.(2)______________needs: needs for a) physicalsecurity;b)(3)_______________security.The former means no illness or injury, while the latter is concerned with freedom from (4)______________, misfortunes, etc. These needs can be met through a variety of means, e.g. job security, (5)______________________plans, and safe working conditions.Social needs: human requirements for a) love and affection;b) a sense of belonging.There are two ways to satisfy these needs: a) formation of relationships at workplace;b) formation of relationships outside workplace.Esteem needs: a) self-esteem, i.e. one's sense of achievement;b) esteem of others, i.e. others' respect as a result of one's (6__________.These needs can be fulfilled by achievement, promotion, honours, etc.Self-realization needs: need to realize one'spotential.Ways to realize these needs are individually (7)______________________ Features of the hierarchy of needs:a) Social, esteem and self-realization needs are exclusively(8)______________ needs.b) Needs are satisfied in a fixed order from the bottom up.c) (9)_____________for needs comes from the lowest un-met level.d) Different levels of needs may (10)_______________when they come into play. ANSWER SHEET TWOTEST FOR ENGLISH MAJORS [2003]-GRADE EIGIHT-PART II PROOFREADING & ERROR CORRECTION (15 MIN)The passage contains TEN errors. Each indicated line contains a maximum of ONE error. In each case, only ONE word is involved You should proof, read the passage and correct it in the following way:For a wrong word, underline the wrong word and write the correct one in the blank pro-vided at the end of the line.For a missing word, mark the position of the missing word with a "^" sign and write the word you believe to be missing in the blank provided at the end of the line. For an unnecessary word, cross the unnecessary word with a slash "/" and put the word in the blank provided at the end of the line.EXAMPLEWhen ^ art museum wants a new exhibit, it never buys things in finished form and hangs them on the wall. When a natural history museum wants an exhibition, it must often build it.Demographic indicators show that Americans in the postwarperiod were more eager than ever to establish families. They quicklybrought down the age at marriage for both men and women and broughtthe birth rate to a twentieth century height after more than a hundred (1)__ years of a steady decline, producing the “baby boom.”These young (2)__adults established a trend of early marriage and relatively largefamilies that Went for more than two decades and caused a major (3)__but temporary reversal of long-term demographic patterns. Fromthe 1940S through the early 1960s, Americans married at a high rate (4)__and at a younger age than their Europe counterparts.(5)__Less noted but equally more significant, the men and women on who (6)__formed families between 1940 and 1960 nevertheless reduced the (7)__divorce rate after a postwar peak; their marriages remained intact toa greater extent than did that of couples who married in earlier as well (8)__ as later decades. Since the United States maintained its dubious (9)__ distinction of having the highest divorce rate in the world, thetemporary decline in divorce did not occur in the same extent in (10)__ Europe. Contrary to fears of the experts, the role of breadwinner and homemaker was not abandoned.TEST FOR ENGLISH MAJORS (2003)-GRADE EIGHT-PAPER TWOTIME LIMIT: 120 MINPART IV TRANSLATION (60 MIN)SECTION A CHINESE TO ENGLISHTranslate the following text into English. Write your translation on ANSWER SHEET THREE.得病以前,我受父母宠爱,在家中横行霸道,一旦隔离,拘禁在花园山坡上一幢小房子里,我顿觉打入冷宫,十分郁郁不得志起来。
专业英语八级(听力)-试卷149
专业英语八级(听力)-试卷149(总分:120.00,做题时间:90分钟)一、 LISTENING COMPREHENSION(总题数:4,分数:120.00)1.PART I LISTENING COMPREHENSION(分数:30.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ 解析:2.SECTION A MINI-LECTUREIn this section you will hear a mini-lecture. You will hear themini-lecture ONCE ONLY. While listening to the mini-lecture, please complete the gap-filling task on ANSWER SHEET ONE and write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each gap. Make sure the word(s) you fill in is (are) both grammatically and semantically acceptable. You may use the blank sheet for note-taking.You have THIRTY seconds to preview the gap-filling task.(分数:30.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ 解析:Communicative Approach The Communicative Approach emphasizes that the goal of language learning is communicative competence. Here are three aspects of it.1. The Development of the Communicative Approach —In 1971, experts began to explore.—In 1976, D. A. Wilkins revised it in Notional Syllabuses.—Communicative Approach expanded and some variants appeared:The Natural Approach—the core:【T1】 1【T1】 2—four stages: Pre-Production, Early Production, Speech Emergence,and【T2】 3【T2】 4【T3】 5【T3】 6—to teach language skills in integrated fashion through target language—three general models:【T4】7, adjunct, and sheltered【T4】8Task-based Teaching—aiming at experimenting with and exploring spoken and writtenlanguage through【T5】9【T5】10—three stages: pre-task, task cycle,【T6】11【T6】122. The Features of the Communicative Approach—everything being done with a(n)【T7】 13【T7】 14—the activities being implemented by students【T8】 15【T8】 16—learner-centered teaching method: the main role of the teacher being to 【T9】 17the communicative process【T9】 183. The Advantages and Disadvantages of the Communicative Approach Advantages:—develop communicative competence: target language being used more【T10】19and commonly【T10】20—【T11】21being taught integrally【T11】22—more attention being paid to【T12】 23【T12】 24—emphasize【T13】 25and operational capabilities【T13】26Disadvantages:—【T14】27being not clear【T14】28—the usage of【T15】29being ignored【T15】30—student's errors being not corrected effectivelyCommunicative Approach The Communicative Approach emphasizes that the goal of language learning is communicative competence. Here are three aspects of it.1. The Development of the Communicative Approach —In 1971, experts began to explore.—In 1976, D. A. Wilkins revised it in Notional Syllabuses.—Communicative Approach expanded and some variants appeared:The Natural Approach—the core:【T1】 31【T1】 32—four stages: Pre-Production, Early Production, Speech Emergence,and【T2】33【T2】34【T3】35【T3】36—to teach language skills in integrated fashion through target language—three general models:【T4】37, adjunct, and sheltered【T4】38Task-based Teaching—aiming at experimenting with and exploring spoken and writtenlanguage through【T5】39【T5】40—three stages: pre-task, task cycle,【T6】41【T6】422. The Features of the Communicative Approach—everything being done with a(n)【T7】 43【T7】 44—the activities being implemented by students【T8】 45【T8】 46—learner-centered teaching method: the main role of the teacher being to 【T9】 47the communicative process【T9】 483. The Advantages and Disadvantages of the Communicative Approach Advantages:—develop communicative competence: target language being used more【T10】49and commonly【T10】50—【T11】51being taught integrally【T11】52—more attention being paid to【T12】 53【T12】 54—emphasize【T13】 55and operational capabilities【T13】56Disadvantages:—【T14】57being not clear【T14】58—the usage of【T15】59being ignored【T15】60—student's errors being not corrected effectively(分数:30.00)(1).【T1】(分数:2.00)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:正确答案:language acquisition)解析:解析:本题考查重要细节。
专业英语八级(政治类新闻听力)模拟试卷1(题后含答案及解析)
专业英语八级(政治类新闻听力)模拟试卷1(题后含答案及解析) 题型有:1. LISTENING COMPREHENSIONPART I LISTENING COMPREHENSION (35 MIN)SECTION C NEWS BROADCASTDirections: In this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow. At the end of each news item, you will be given 10 seconds to answer the questions.听力原文:Democracy was born in Greece and many still consider it the cradle of Western civilization. But in 2011 the bedrock of democracy in Greece, its parliament, has been defended by armed police against battalions of citizens who say their voice has been forgotten. The root of this crisis is money. After years of borrowing, Greece is in debt. Faced with a massive deficit and under pressure from the international community, the government has revved up taxes and put the brakes on spending. That’s been bad news for most Greeks. Business profits are low and poverty rates are high. Babis Papadimitriou, a journalist with the daily paper Kathimerini, says some Greeks conclude that the country would be better to default on its debt and leave the eurozone. Many protestors say the rights and well-being of Greek citizens are not at the heart of government policy. They say their government is making decisions that serve the interests of global economic powers and wealthy nations, while Greek people suffer the costs. Many though still believe that Greece is made stronger by its partners in the EU. And with street battles raging in the Greek capital, without a compromise it’s unclear if the government can maintain its authority. If it fails to do so, Greece may be forced to bid farewell to its membership of the eurozone, whether it wants to or not.1.What is the main idea of the news item?A.Street protests against parliament in Greece.B.The root of the economic crisis in Greece.C.The cause of political crisis in Greece.D.The origin of democracy.正确答案:C 涉及知识点:政治类2.Which of the following is CORRECT?A.EU partners are trying their best to help Greece finally.B.Raising taxes and reducing spending are the way out for Greece.C.Greek government does not concern the interests of Greek people.D.The protestors finally compromised with government authorities.正确答案:C 涉及知识点:政治类听力原文:The court’s ruling says Britain would be in violation of the European Convention on Human Rights if it sent the two men back to Somalia. The men have been convicted of burglary, drug dealing and threatening to kill people. British authorities sought to deport them. But the Strasbourg-based court said while their actions were “undesirable,” they would be at risk of mistreatment in Somalia and therefore they cannot be forced to go there. It ordered the British government to pay the men’s legal fees, totaling more than $ 30,000. The court analyzed each man’s personal and family situation before making its decision, suggesting it might approve the forced return of some people if they had the means to keep themselves safe. British media say the ruling could affect more than 200 other Somali convicts held in the country. The director of the European Institute at University College London, Professor Richard Bellamy, says when there is a risk of mistreatment, the cost to the British government of holding the men and the danger they might pose if they are released from prison someday are not relevant. Bellamy says under the European Convention on Human Rights, a person’s protection from torture is absolute. Bellamy says the Convention is designed, in part, to provide incentive to European countries to take action to help improve the human rights situation in other parts of the world so that foreign criminals can be sent home.3.Which of the following is NOT the crime committed by the men?A.Threatening to kill people.B.Drug dealing.C.Burglary.D.Robbery正确答案:D 涉及知识点:政治类4.According to Richard Bellamy, what is the partial goal of the European Convention on Human Rights?A.To improve human rights around the world.B.To threaten foreign criminals in European countries.C.To legally hold the foreign criminals of other counties.D.To make the British government not to violate the Convention.正确答案:A 涉及知识点:政治类听力原文:The nurses came from across the United States to Wall Street to lead a national organized labor movement against what they consider the inequities of Wall Street traders and banks. They are advocating a new fee on financial transactions that they say should be used for health care, jobs, national infrastructure and education. National Nurses United Executive Director Rose Ann DeMoro says such a tax could raise $ 350 billion—money, she says, belongs to the people. One of the nurses union co-directors, Deborah Burger, says it is time to share. Why are the nurses taking the lead in this transaction tax proposal? Diane Brady, senior editor of the magazine Bloomberg-Businessweek, has written about the nurses’ movement.Brady says Sweden and Japan had to ditch such a tax after a few years. She says the reality is that financial products more than any other products in the world are mobile, so if you add a tax in one jurisdiction all the trades will go somewhere else. New York University business and economics professor Joe Foudy says such a proposal has also come up in Congress during the past two years, but it is dead in the water. Foudy adds there is a huge disconnect between the culture of Wall Street and the rest of the country. The rest of the country looks at Wall Street as having helped to create the financial crisis in the United States, while people on Wall Street view this as, “It was someone who had my job four years ago and it is not my problem.”And he believes there will be rising popular anger as long as the disconnect is there.5.What is the main idea of the news item?A.National Nurses United negotiated with Wall Street to share tax money.B.The nurses protested against the inequities of Wall Street traders and banks.C.The public held a street demonstration against Wall Street traders and banks.D.Wall Street traders and banks are going to charge a new fee on financial transactions.正确答案:B 涉及知识点:政治类6.The likely cause for the disconnect between the culture of Wall Street and the rest of the country is______.A.who raised heavy taxB.who advocated a new feeC.who triggered the public angerD.who created the financial crisis正确答案:D 涉及知识点:政治类听力原文: A two-day meeting of the G8 foreign ministers ended without agreement on establishing a no-fly zone against Libya, with reservations expressed by Russia and Germany. The flight restrictions had been pushed by France and Britain, but even before the meeting ended, French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe acknowledged that support was far from unanimous. In an interview on France’s Europe 1 radio, Juppe said that if such a no-fly zone had been agreed to last week, the Libyan opposition might not have experienced its recent setbacks against the forces of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi. He said G8 ministers had agreed to relaunch discussions at the United Nations on ways to increase pressure against the Gadhafi government, including a possible air exclusion zone. But German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle described any military intervention, as difficult and dangerous. Westerwelle said a no-fly zone amounted to military intervention, and the international community had to be careful not to provoke the opposite effect of what it intended.7.Which of the following country does NOT agree on establishing a no-fly zone against Libya?A.Russia.B.France.C.Britain.D.the US正确答案:A 涉及知识点:政治类8.According to German Foreign Minister, what is difficult and dangerous?A.Military intervention.B.Establishing a no-fly zone.C.The reservations of Russia.D.The toppling of Gadhafi government.正确答案:A 涉及知识点:政治类听力原文:US President Barack Obama pledged assistance for what he called a potentially catastrophic disaster in Japan. Mr Obama called Japan one of America’s strongest allies and said the US is offering whatever assistance is needed. US Defense Secretary Robert Gates said a preliminary assessment indicates that American troops, ships and military facilities were not seriously damaged by the quake or tsunami. Gates says the military, which has enormous assets in the Pacific, is ready to assist in rescue and recovery efforts. The US military newspaper Stars and Stripes is reporting a carrier group led by the USS Ronald Reagan was diverted to Japan as it sailed toward South Korea for military exercises. British Prime Minister David Cameron, arriving in Brussels for a European summit, sent his sympathies and condolences to the Japanese people. Also in Brussels, Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt said his country stands ready to help the Japanese people. French President Nicolas Sarkozy also offered his country’s assistance, saying France is planning to send planes and other resources to assist in Japan. Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiabao also expressed deep sympathy for the Japanese people and officials from China’ s Earthquake Administration told the Xinhua news agency that rescuers are prepared to travel to those areas affected by the quake.9.According to US Defense Secretary Robert Gates, American______.A.ships were heading for Japan for helpB.troops were ready for cooperation with JapanC.air force was sending planes to Japan for helpD.military facilities were not seriously damaged by the quake正确答案:D 涉及知识点:政治类10.Who said his country stands ready to help the Japanese people?A.Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt.B.British Prime Minister David Cameron.C.Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiabao.D.French President Nicolas Sarkozy.正确答案:A 涉及知识点:政治类听力原文:Prime Minister Gillard delivered what she called a “simple message”as she became the first head of state to address Congress since new members were elected in November. Prime minister Gillard said she stands firm in support of the US-led strategy in the decade-long war against the Taliban and is “cautiously optimistic” about the future of Afghanistan. Australia is the strongest non-NATO US ally, with more than 1,500 troops in Afghanistan. Ms Gillard also pledged cooperation in the Asia Pacific region, where she said the global order is changing the most. She acknowledged both countries’complex relationship with China, but said the United States should not fear China’s rapid growth as it bares the burden of its own tough economic times. In a direct appeal to lawmakers, Prime Minister Gillard urged them to make tough economic reforms and to pass legislation opening the door for more free trade in the Asia-Pacific region. The Australian prime minister also noted what she called the “momentous” upheaval in the Middle East, and pledged her alliance with the United States in condemning Iran’ s nuclear program, and in a call for an Israeli-Palestinian resolution.11.What is the main idea of the news item?A.Australian Prime Minister stands firm in support of the US-led strategy.B.The history of American and Australian alliance in world issues.C.The summit meeting among non-NATO US allies.D.The cooperation in the Asia Pacific region.正确答案:A 涉及知识点:政治类12.Which of the following did Prime Minister Gillard NOT do?A.She urged lawmakers to make tough economic reforms.B.She acknowledged complex relationship with China.C.She pledged cooperation in the Asia Pacific region.D.She condemned North Korea’s nuclear program.正确答案:D 涉及知识点:政治类听力原文:Russians turned out on a sunny Saturday afternoon in Moscow for two rival protests against corruption, the top issue on voters’ minds in this election year according to polls. This tale of two protests speaks volumes about the state of democracy in Russia—20 years after the fall of the Soviet Union. The state threw its weight fully behind the official anti-corruption protest. One day in advance Moscow officials blocked off a one kilometer long avenue for the demonstration. The avenue was conveniently located between a 10-lane highway and transit center with two subway and three commuter rail stations. Chartered buses brought in participants, who were issued flags, banners and crisp white “anticorruption” aprons. Numbering in the thousands, they then marched in groups into the protest zone. There, eight massive video screens and a powerful music system thumped out techno music and anti corruption messages. Each unit chanted its place of origin, in this case Moscow. The protest was organized by Nashi, widely seen as a youth wing of the ruling United Russia party.13.What is the main idea of the news item?A.Russians protest corruption.B.Russians fight for democracy.C.Russians elect their new leaders.D.Russians organize two rival parties.正确答案:A 涉及知识点:政治类14.Which of the following is CORRECT?A.Participants number in the thousands.B.Nashi is a youth wing of the ruling party.C.Some Moscow officials joined the protest.D.The election is on a sunny Saturday afternoon.正确答案:A 涉及知识点:政治类听力原文:NATO foreign ministers offered a show of unity in calling for the departure of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi, but they ended their meeting in Berlin still apparently at odds over ways to add to their Libyan air operation. The leaders of the US, France and Britain published a joint opinion piece in several newspapers Friday saying a future with Mr Gadhafi in power was unthinkable. They said NATO operations must continue so long as the Libyan leader remained in power to protect civilians and keep up the pressure against the Libyan regime. NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen reacted to the letter at a final press conference Friday afternoon. But only half of the 28 NATO members are actively participating in the airstrikes. France and Britain, which have taken leading roles in the operation, are calling on other NATO members to do more. Following talks with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, British Foreign Secretary William Hague said the two saw “eye to eye” on what was required in the Libya campaign.15.What is the main message of the news item?A.NATO launches a new air strike on Libya.B.NATO asks other members to do more in Libya.C.NATO fails to add the pressure against the Libyan regime.D.NATO Secretary General answers questions at a press conference.正确答案:B 涉及知识点:政治类16.The news item implies that______in the Libya campaign.A.several newspapers have reported differently on Mr. Gadhafi’s futureB.NATO foreign ministers continue to discuss Libyan civilians’ situationC.US Secretary of State and British Foreign Secretary share the same ideasD.the 28 NATO members are actively supporting US, France and Britain正确答案:A 涉及知识点:政治类听力原文:Thousands of Syrian protesters marched in the streets of a Damascus suburb Friday, shouting and chanting against the government. Witnesses say security forces used tear gas against the protesters who were marching towards the capital after Friday prayers. A Facebook website supporting change in Syria showed videos of protesters marching in the streets of nearly a dozen Syrian cities. In the mostly Sunni Muslim city of Horns, witnesses say protesters dispersed as security forces fired automatic rifles. In the flashpoint port city of Banias, scores of protesters marched towards the city center to demonstrate against the government, despite the presence of army troops. In a move to appease protesters, the government announced the release Friday of some prisoners arrested during recent sectarian strife.A video released by the opposition Sham TV showed dozens of protesters in Banias being beaten by what appeared to be Syrian secret police. Media figures and academics sympathetic to the government tried to downplay the violence and alleged government brutality in interviews with two pan-Arab television networks.17.What is the main idea of the news item?A.Unrest engulfs parts of Syria.B.Security forces appease protesters.C.A Facebook website witnesses a government change.D.Government brutality shows on two pan-Arab television networks.正确答案:C 涉及知识点:政治类18.What does the news item say about Syrian secret police?A.They beat dozens of protesters in Banias.B.They fired automatic rifles in the city of Homs.C.They arrested scores of protesters the city center.D.They used tear gas against the protesters in a Damascus suburb.正确答案:A 涉及知识点:政治类听力原文:Anti-government protesters shouted, jeered and ran for cover after government security forces attacked their protest camp Saturday close to Sana’ a University. The attack, which took place during dawn prayers, caught the mostly young protesters off-guard. Eyewitnesses said that police used live ammunition to try and disperse the crowd, along with tear-gas and batons. The protesters threw rocks and bottles at police to try and stop their advance. Arab satellite channels showed dozens of young anti-government protesters being carried away on stretchers, some with blood pouring from their faces. Others appear to have passed out and laysprawled on the ground. Doctors also reported treating numerous victims of gas-inhalation. Stephen Steinbeiser of the American Institute for Yemeni Studies in Sana’ a says that the attack on the anti-government protesters is causing a backlash among the public and that activity appears to have ground to a halt in many places. The attack on the anti-government protest camp comes two days after President Saleh offered a vast series of political reforms to opposition political leaders and to the protesters. The protest movement is demanding that Mr. Saleh, who has ruled the country since 1978, resign.19.According to Stephen Steinbeiser, the attack on the anti-government protesters______.A.caught the mostly young protesters off-guardB.will lead to a vast series of political reformsC.offered opposition political leaders chancesD.is causing a backlash among the public正确答案:D 涉及知识点:政治类20.Which of the following is NOT used by the police?A.Live ammunition.B.Tear-gas.C.Blocks.D.Batons.正确答案:C 涉及知识点:政治类。
2021年英语专八听力真题和原文答案
2021年英语专八听力真题和原文答案PART I LISTENING COMPREHENSION [25 MIN]2021英语专八真题音频.mp3SECTION A MINI-LECTUREIn this section, you will hear a mini-lecture. You will hear the lecture ONCE ONLY. While listening, please complete the gap-fulling task on ANSWER SHEET ONE and write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each gap. Make sure the word(s) you fill in is (are) both grammaticallyand semanticallyacceptable.You may use the blank sheet for note taking. You have THIRTY seconds to preview the gap-filling task. Now listen to the mini-lecture. When it is over, you will be given THREE minutes to check your work.Current Challenges Confronting U.S. Higher EducationSection B InterviewThis is the end of Part Two of the interview. Questions 6 to 10 are based on what you have just heard. Question 6, what did Maureen think about socializing with writers?Question 7, what was Maureen's view about a community for poets?Question 8, why did her sections have concluding stanzas?Question 9, what did Maureen think about her way of poetry reading?Question 10, what is the interview mainly about?This is the end of Part One of the interview. Questions 1 to 5 are based on what you have just heard. Question 1, what is Maureen McLean, according to the interviewer?Question 2, when did Maureen first begin to read poetry?Question 3, who were the most important teachers to Maureen?Question 4, which of the following did Maureen feel more strongly about when she returned to teach at Harvard?Question 5, why did Maureen bring recordings to class?答案解析和原文1、MINI-LECTURE 录音原文Current Challenges Confronting U.S. Higher EducationGood morning, everyone. In our last lecture, we discussed challenges that face universities and colleges worldwide. Today, we'll take a special look at U.S. higher education and see what challenges U.S. higher education is facing. OK, let's get started.The first challenge we are examining in today's lecture is the force of the marketplace on higher education. Many people believe that the marketplace has overtaken state government as the dominant external force, shaping and reshaping American higher education, even for public colleges and universities. You may ask, why is it so? Well, as is always the case, government support is not keeping pace with educational expenditures. So, in many ways the market is having more bearing on higher education than government. In order to create more flexibility, many public colleges and universities are now asking for less government regulation and supervision. In some instances, they are even asking for less state money in return for more autonomy. And, their argument is that the current structures and accountability requirements have hindered their capacity to be effective and efficient. The ability to set their own tuition fees and secure freedom from state policies and regulations in areas, such as purchasing and building, represent just some of the additional autonomy that public institutions are seeking. And many are pressing for new legislation to provide this freedom through a range of innovations, including public corporations, charter colleges, state enterprise status and performance contracts.So, what is the result of these efforts? Well, the result is that activities and research in certain fields and disciplines, for example, engineering, applied natural science and agricultural science become higher institutional priorities because they have stronger market value than other programs such as humanities do. So, what has happened is that institutions create new programs, alter academic calendars and pursue differentfinancial aid policies to capture more and better students, in particular those who can afford to pay high tuition. For instance, executive MBA programs are increasingly popular. Also, institutions seek contracts and partnership agreements and enhance research programs with practical applications that have large financial payouts. In order to do so, they are changing their institutional structures. And how do they do it? Let me tell you, institutions would add new units that focus on generating external grants and bringing new technology to market. They would build conference centers and create for profit subsidiaries. All of these are done to generate more revenue for institutions. What are the implications of this? Well, the implications are that academic research is increasingly focused on marketable knowledge. Entrepreneurial priorities are taking precedence, services are being outsourced, and students are carrying an increasing burden to pay higher tuition fees for their education.Then how do university administrators view this trend? That is, the marketplace is showing stronger impact on how institutions are run. In fact, university administrators see little option except to respond to the marketplace. The reason is if their institution does not react effectively, it will not have the necessary resources to offer high quality and diverse academic programs. Institutions unable to compete may face hard circumstances because government support continues to fall, students become better informed consumers and advances in technology also widen the number and reach of competitors. In turn, the ability to compete for students, resources, faculty and prestige becomes a driving strategic force. At its extreme, competition can overtake more traditional academic values. However, the downside of pursuing market goals without appropriately balancing them against the public good is, is that institutions will no longer be able to fulfill their social responsibility to produce well-educated citizens and face the threat of losing their privileged place in society as they resemble more closely other market driven organizations.Now, let's move on to the second challenge facing U.S. higher education, that is the tension between competition and equality in admissions decisions. Since World War Two, U.S. higher education has been engaged in a process of massification, that is expanding to serve students from all walks of life. Motivating this effort is a widespread belief in the power of education to create social and economic mobility, and a belief in the morality and social value of making higher education accessible to everyone. Research data bear out public perceptions. When young people from low-income backgrounds complete a bachelor's degree. Their income and employment characteristics after graduation are equivalent to their peers from more affluent backgrounds. So, education can truly be the great equalizer.Although there is widespread public faith in the value of higher education, the progress of massification has been slow and uneven. And why is it slow and uneven? Well, one, higher education did not admit significant numbers of racial and ethnic minorities until after the civil rights of the 1960s forced change. Second, despite significant expenditures on financial aid, minority and low-income individuals are still less likely to attend college than whites or students from middleand upper-income families. Although access gaps have nowadays narrowed somewhat, large gaps remain between completion rates. Low-income students come to college less prepared and must balance academic demands with work and family responsibilities.Finding ways to increase the enrollment rates of low-income students and encourage their success once enrolled are two of the most important problems facing American higher education. One of the challenges to meet these goals is that they can conflict with the other central tenets of American higher education, that is, market competition and resistance to government control. As I said before, for example, institutional competition for the most academically talented students is likely to encourage increased use of tuition discounting for students who have no financial need. And this could divert resources away from low-income students who need financial aid. Similarly, institutions may seek to distinguish themselves in the academic marketplace by becoming more selective in admissions decisions, thus reducing the number of low-income students admitted. However, a primary role of government is to mediate the potentially negative effects of competition by insisting that institutions adhere to their missions, and that institutions provide need-based financial assistance to students. So, a constant preoccupation of American higher education is this tension between the competitive, ambitious natureof institutions and the interests of government in promoting important public goals, primary among them, broad access and widespread success for all students.OK, for today's lecture, we have briefly discussed some of the major challenges facing U.S. higher education, such as the impact of the marketplace on institutions and the tension between competition and promoting public goals.2、MINI-LECTURE 答案解析1. dominant / prevailing / governing 等解析:美国高等教育所面临的两大挑战之一便是市场的力量。
专业英语八级(听力)练习试卷1(题后含答案及解析)
专业英语八级(听力)练习试卷1(题后含答案及解析) 题型有:1. LISTENING COMPREHENSIONPART I LISTENING COMPREHENSION (35 MIN)SECTION B INTERVIEWDirections: In this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow. Questions 1 to 5 are based on an interview. At the end of the interview you will be given 10 seconds to answer each of the following five questions.Now listen to the interview.听力原文:W: Today I’d like to welcome Edward Fox, a seasoned real estate agent, who is going to talk to us about buying a house. Hello, Edward.M: Hello.W: Now Edward, for most people buying a house is a major life event, and probably the single most expensive item they are ever likely to buy. What precautions do they have to take before a real purchase? Can you give some suggestions?M: You are right in saying buying a house costs a lot. But as to me, the most important thing to consider before buying any property is the location.W: Location?M: Right. Because it is where you plan to spend a large part of your life. Or, indeed, the rest of your life in some circumstances. (1) Therefore, consider the type of life you enjoy leading. If you are a very sociable person who enjoys nightclubs and discos, you may consider something close to a city. Anyway, a city is convenient for all types of nightlife.W: Then, for those who seek a quiet life, do you recommend a house in the countryside?M: Well, countryside is a tranquil place. However, do remember that proximity to the place of work also counts. Indeed, we spend most of our life at work, and you don’t want to have to spend two or more hours every day traveling to work, do you? Therefore, transport is of the utmost importance. (2) City suburbs, however, are often conveniently located for commuting to work, or for shopping, without being in the heart of a busy city.W: But houses in the suburbs are far more expensive than those in cities.M: They seem to be. But actually houses located in cities can often exceed the price of suburban houses. So cheek out the prices. You may be surprised.W: Really?(1) So we should consider our places of work and personalities in choosing the location. Is that so?M: I’m afraid you have to take family into consideration as well. You may prefer a house that is away from a busy street or main road. (1) And, of course, remember that children have to attend school: is there a good school in the area, or would your children have to travel a long distance to get to school? Therefore, if you have children, or you plan to have children, location is a very important factor. And, of course, remember that a family influences the size of the property.W: Oh, I see. How many types of houses can we choose?M: There are various types of houses. The first is called detached houses, which stand alone, and are not joined by another building. (3) Then there are semi-detached houses, which are the most common. This is because they are, in fact, two houses joined together, and therefore take up lessspace. And there are town houses, too, which are many houses joined together to form a hmg row. But don’t think that town houses are less expensive than semi-detached houses. They rarely are. This is because they are usually built in cities where the price of property is very expensive.W: Then what about old houses? (4) They must be cheaper than new ones.M: (4) Maybe they are. But if the house is too old, you may be faced with expensive repairs and renovation bills. So have a house thoroughly checked by a professional surveyer before you decide to buy. But then again there are things you can look for yourself. Things such as the condition of the woodwork, especially doors and windows that can be expensive to replace. But more importantly make sure all the fixtures and fittings, things such as cupboards, sinks, taps and bath tubs arc all in good working order because replacing kitchens and bathrooms can he very costly.W: I agree. It’s economical to buy old houses only when they are in good condition. By the way, a lot of property has a garden attached to it. Do you think it’s a good choice?M: It’s true that a lot of property has a garden. If you enjoy gardening, that’s fine. But if you don’t enjoy gardening then you may prefer a small garden, as opposed to a big one. But even if you do enjoy gardening it is important to remember that gardens take up a lot of your time. (5) So keeping a garden in good order may be veU difficult if you work long hours.W: You are quite right. Any other suggestions?M: One final thing is the general feel of the place. Does it have a good atmosphere? And most important of all, would you feel comfortable living there?W: Edward, I never knew I had to consider so many things while buying a house. Thank you very much for talking with us.M: My pleasure.1.According to Edward, in deciding the location of a house, people should consider all the following EXCEPTA.the type of life they enjoy.B.the price of the house.C.the distance between the house and the place of work.D.the school their children can attend.正确答案:B 涉及知识点:听力2.Which of the following is an ideal place for quiet people to live in?A.City.B.Downtown.C.Countryside.D.Suburb.正确答案:D 涉及知识点:听力3.According to the interview, ______ are the most common type of houses.A.detached housesB.semi-detached housesC.town housesD.old houses正确答案:B 涉及知识点:听力4.What does Edward think of old houses compared to new ones?A.They are definitely cheaper.B.They are too old to live in.C.They may be cheaper but repairs and renovation cost much.D.They need to he checked professionally from time to time.正确答案:C 涉及知识点:听力5.Edward shows ______ when talking about gardens attached to houses.A.disapprovalB.excitementC.uncertaintyD.indifference正确答案:A 涉及知识点:听力SECTION C NEWS BROADCASTDirections: In this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow. At the end of each news item, you will be given 10 seconds to answer the questions.听力原文:Foreign pilots are to be drafted into Chinese airlines to relieve the shortage of qualified flyers. CAAC statistics show that about 11, 000 pilots are employed to fly more than 770 aircraft operated by the major Chinese commercial airlines, which industry experts consider as inadequate to cope with the rocketing demand for passenger services. Around 145 new aircraft will be delivered for operation this year in China, and the new planes alone will push aircraft numbers beyond the capacity of training schools to supply new pilots. (6) Industry experts estimate China needs between 1, 200 and 1, 600 new pilots every year since 2000, while the nation’s major training schools for commercial airline pilots can provide a maximum of 600 pilots annually.6.Industry. experts estimate China needs between ______ and ______ new pilots annually since 2000.A.770; 1,200B.1,200; 1,300C.1,200; 1,600D.1,300; 1,600正确答案:C 涉及知识点:听力听力原文:West Aft’lean leaders say they are cautiously in favor of using genetically modified crops. But non-governmental organizations are calling for a five-year moratorium so more research can be done. The issue is being discussed at a U. S. -sponsored conference in Burkina Faso. During the three-day conference, which started Monday, West African leaders said they want assurances that genetically modified products are safe for the people who eat or use them, and for the environment. (7) But the leaders say that in general they believe the genetically modified crops will lead to higher agricultural productivity and therefore should be used. But non-governmental organizations in West Africa remain unconvinced. A protest by non-governmental organization is planned for Wednesday, when the conference ends.7.West African leaders who want assurances believe the genetically modified crops will lead toA.higher financial earnings.B.more genetically modified crops.C.higher agricultural productivity.D.more genetically modified products.正确答案:C 涉及知识点:听力听力原文:China’s automobile revolution is accelerating; (8) despite efforts by the government to slow what many economists believe is an overheating of its economy. China is the fastest growing ear market in the world, and sales next year are expected to climb 20 percent from last year. Meanwhile, the world’s automakers have announced they will launch massive expansion projects in China. In recent months, banks have started to tighten their lending criteria, in part a response to what analysts say are the government’s efforts to stop China’s rapidly growing economy from overheating, but ear sales are skyrocketing, with many Chinese using their savings to purchase new cars.8.Many economists believe that the fast-paced growth of car market in China is A.a proof of abundance.B.an overheating of its economy.C.an attraction of investment.D.a result of foreign expansion projects.正确答案:B 涉及知识点:听力听力原文:(9) A 12-storey building has collapsed in the Egyptian capitalCairo after a fire in the lower floors. A number of people are trapped in the wreckage and about 30 people were injured. The fire broke out in the ground floor of the 12-storey building in the modern suburb of Cairo. Police officials say it started in a fast food restaurant or possibly in an adjacent home appliances shop. Hundreds of residents lived in the apartment block. They were able to leave before the building collapsed 3 hours after the fire started. (10) Policemen and firemen, however, were trapped when the upper floors came crashing down. Working under floodlights, their colleagues have been battling to free them from the rabble. The governor of Cairn said the collapsed building had planning permission for 4 floors only. But at least 7 other floors were added on illegally.9.The fire broke out in ______ of the 12-storey building.A.the ground floorB.the second floorC.the fourth floorD.the seventh floor正确答案:A 涉及知识点:听力10.Who were the majority in the people trapped in the wreekage?A.Residents nearby.B.Clients in the fast-food restaurant.C.Shoppers.D.Policemen and firemen.正确答案:D 涉及知识点:听力。
专业英语八级(听力)-试卷100
专业英语八级(听力)-试卷100(总分:50.00,做题时间:90分钟)一、 LISTENING COMPREHENSION(总题数:6,分数:50.00)1.PART I LISTENING COMPREHENSION__________________________________________________________________________________________ 解析:2.SECTION A MINI-LECTUREIn this section you will hear a mini-lecture. You will hear themini-lecture ONCE ONLY. While listening to the mini-lecture, please complete the gap-filling task on ANSWER SHEET ONE and write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each gap. Make sure the word(s) you fill in is (are) both grammatically and semantically acceptable. You may use the blank sheet for note-taking.You have THIRTY seconds to preview the gap-filling task.__________________________________________________________________________________________ 解析:Study Activities in University In order to help college and university students in the process of learning, four key study activities have been designed and used to encourage them to make knowledge their own.1. essay writing: central focus of university work esp. in thehumanities, e.g. 【T1】 1【T1】 2Benefits: 1) helping to 【T2】 3interesting content in books 【T2】 4and to express understanding2) enabling teachers to know progress and to offer【T3】5【T3】63) 【T4】7students with exam forms 【T4】82. seminars and classroom discussion: another form to internalize knowledge in specialized contextsBenefits: 1) 【T5】 9enables you to know the effectiveness of 【T5】 10and others' response to your speech immediately2) Within the same period of time, more topics can be dealtwith than in 【T6】 11【T6】 123) The use of a broader range of knowledge is encouraged3. individual tutorials: a substitute for group discussionFormat: from teacher 【T7】13to flexible conversation 【T7】 14Benefit: encouraging acceptance of 【T8】 15and producing interaction 【T8】 164. lectures: a most 【T9】 17used study activity 【T9】 18Disadvantages: 1) less 【T10】19than discussions or tutorials 【T10】202) more demanding in 【T11】21【T11】22Advantages: 1) providing a general 【T12】23of a subject 【T12】24under discussion2) offering more easily 【T13】25versions of a theory 【T13】263) updating students on 【T14】27developments 【T14】 284) allowing students to follow different 【T15】 29【T15】 30Study Activities in University In order to help college and university students in the process of learning, four key study activities have been designed and used to encourage them to make knowledge their own.1. essay writing: central focus of university work esp. in thehumanities, e.g. 【T1】31【T1】32Benefits: 1) helping to 【T2】33interesting content in books 【T2】34and to express understanding2) enabling teachers to know progress and to offer【T3】 35【T3】 363) 【T4】 37students with exam forms 【T4】 382. seminars and classroom discussion: another form to internalize knowledge in specialized contextsBenefits: 1) 【T5】 39enables you to know the effectiveness of 【T5】40and others' response to your speech immediately2) Within the same period of time, more topics can be dealtwith than in 【T6】 41【T6】 423) The use of a broader range of knowledge is encouraged3. individual tutorials: a substitute for group discussionFormat: from teacher 【T7】43to flexible conversation 【T7】44Benefit: encouraging acceptance of 【T8】45and producing interaction 【T8】464. lectures: a most 【T9】47used study activity 【T9】48Disadvantages: 1) less 【T10】49than discussions or tutorials 【T10】502) more demanding in 【T11】51【T11】52Advantages: 1) providing a general 【T12】53of a subject 【T12】54under discussion2) offering more easily 【T13】55versions of a theory 【T13】563) updating students on 【T14】57developments 【T14】 584) allowing students to follow different 【T15】 59【T15】 60(分数:30.00)(1).【T1】(分数:2.00)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:正确答案:literature/history/politics)解析:解析:在谈到论文写作时,原文指出“……大学教学工作。
专业英语八级(听力)-试卷137
专业英语八级(听力)-试卷137(总分:50.00,做题时间:90分钟)一、 LISTENING COMPREHENSION(总题数:6,分数:50.00)1.PART I LISTENING COMPREHENSION__________________________________________________________________________________________ 解析:2.SECTION A MINI-LECTUREIn this section you will hear a mini-lecture. You will hear themini-lecture ONCE ONLY. While listening to the mini-lecture, please complete the gap-filling task on ANSWER SHEET ONE and write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each gap. Make sure the word(s) you fill in is (are) both grammatically and semantically acceptable. You may use the blank sheet for note-taking.You have THIRTY seconds to preview the gap-filling task.__________________________________________________________________________________________ 解析:A Short History of the Origins and Development of EnglishI. Origins— dated back to【T1】 1 of three Germanic tribes:【T1】2the Angles,【T2】3 and the Jutes.【T2】4II. Development of EnglishA. Old English1. much more highly inflected【T3】 5 than Middle English【T3】 62. consists of most 【T4】 7 words and some borrowed ones【T4】 8B. Middle English1. French words were【T5】 9 the vocabulary【T5】102. much change on grammar and【T6】11【T6】12C. Early Modern English1. elimination of a vowel sound in certain【T7】 13positions【T7】 142. the Great Vowel Shift3. invention of printing:1)common language appearing【T8】15【T8】162)bringing【T9】17 to English【T9】184.a period of English Renaissance: borrowing words from French ,Latin, GreekD. Late Modern Englishtwo principal factors【T10】 19 more words:【T10】 201. the Industrial Revolution and technology2.【T11】21 foreign words from many countries【T11】22III. Main influencing factors on the varieties of EnglishA. the English【T12】23 of North America【T12】24example: trash for rubbish:【T13】 25 for lend etc.【T13】 26B.【T14】 27 words like canyon, ranch, stampede etc.【T14】 28C. French wordsD.【T15】 29 words【T15】 30A Short History of the Origins and Development of EnglishI. Origins— dated back to【T1】 31 of three Germanic tribes:【T1】 32the Angles,【T2】 33 and the Jutes.【T2】 34II. Development of EnglishA. Old English1. much more highly inflected【T3】35 than Middle English【T3】362. consists of most【T4】 37 words and some borrowed ones【T4】 38B. Middle English1. French words were 【T5】 39 the vocabulary【T5】 402. much change on grammar and【T6】 41【T6】 42C. Early Modern English1. elimination of a vowel sound in certain【T7】 43positions【T7】 442. the Great Vowel Shift3. invention of printing:1)common language appearing【T8】 45【T8】 462)bringing【T9】 47 to English【T9】484. a period of English Renaissance: borrowing words from French ,Latin, GreekD. Late Modern Englishtwo principal factors【T10】49 more words:【T10】501. the Industrial Revolution and technology2.【T11】51 foreign words from many countries【T11】52III. Main influencing factors on the varieties of EnglishA. the English【T12】53 of North America【T12】54example: trash for rubbish:【T13】 55 for lend etc.【T13】 56B.【T14】 57 words like canyon, ranch, stampede etc.【T14】 58C. French wordsD.【T15】 59 words【T15】 60(分数:30.00)(1).【T1】(分数:2.00)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:正确答案:the arrival)解析:解析:这篇讲座的主题是“the origins and development of English(英语的起源与发展)”。
专业英语八级考题试卷及答案
专业英语八级考题试卷及答案PART I LISTENING COMPREHENSION (30 MIN)SECTION A MINI-LECTUREIn this section you will hear a mini-lecture. You will hear the lecture ONCE ONLY. While listening, take notes on the important points. Your notes will not be marked, but you will need them to complete a gap-filling task after the mini-lecture. When the lecture is over, you will be given two minutes to check your notes, and another ten minutes to complete the gap-filling task on ANSWER SHEET ONE. Use the blank sheet for note-taking.Writing a Research PaperI. Research Papers and Ordinary EssayA. Similarity in (1) __________:e.g. —choosing a topic—asking questions—identifying the audienceB. Difference mainly in terms of (2) ___________1. research papers: printed sources2. ordinary essay: ideas in one's (3) ___________II. Types and Characteristics of Research PapersA. Number of basic types: twoB. Characteristics:1. survey-type paper:—to gather (4) ___________—to quote—to (5) _____________The writer should be (6) ___________.2. argumentative (research) paper:a. The writer should do more, e.g.—to interpret—to question, etc.b. (7) _________varies with the topic, e.g.—to recommend an action, etc.III. How to Choose a Topic for a Research PaperIn choosing a topic, it is important to (8) __________.Question No. 1: your familiarity with the topicQuestion No. 2: Availability of relevant information on the chosen topic Question No. 3: Narrowing the topic down to (9) _________Question No. 4: Asking questions about (10) ___________The questions help us to work out way into the topic and discover its possibilities. SECTION B INTERVIEWIn this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow. Mark the correct answer to each question on your coloured answer sheet.Questions 1 to 5 are based on an interview. At the end of the interview you will be given 10 seconds to answer each of the following five questions.Now listen to the interview.1. What is the purpose of Professor McKay's report?A. To look into the mental health of old people.B. To explain why people have negative views on old age.C. To help correct some false beliefs about old age.D. To identify the various problems of old age2. Which of the following is NOT Professor McKay's view?A. People change in old age a lot more than at the age of 21.B. There are as many sick people in old age as in middle age.C. We should not expect more physical illness among old people.D. We should not expect to find old people unattractive as a group.3. According to Professor McKay's report,A. family love is gradually disappearing.B. it is hard to comment on family feeling.C. more children are indifferent to their parents.D. family love remains as strong as ever.4. Professor McKay is ________ towards the tendency of more parents living apart from their children.A. negativeB. positiveC. ambiguousD. neutral5. The only popular belief that Professor McKay is unable to provide evidence against isA. old-age sickness.B. loose family ties.C. poor mental abilities.D. difficulities in maths.SECTION C NEWS BROADCASTIn this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow. Mark the correct answer to each question on your coloured answer sheet.Question 6 is based on the following news. At the end of the news item, you will be given 10 seconds to answer the question. Now listen to the news.6. Scientists in Brazil have used frog skin toA. eliminate bacteria.B. treat burns.C. Speed up recovery.D. reduce treatment cost.Question 7 is based on the following news. At the end of the news item, you will be given 10 seconds to answer the question. Now listen to the news.7. What is NOT a feature of the new karaoke machine?A. It is featured by high technology.B. It allows you to imitate famous singers.C. It can automatically alter the tempo and tone of a song.D. It can be placed in specially designed theme rooms.Question 8 is based on the following news. At the end of the news item, you will be given 10 seconds to answer the question. Now listen to the news.8. China's Internet users had reached _________ by the end of June.A. 68 millionB. 8.9 millionC. 10 millionD. 1.5 millionQuestion 9 and 10 are based on the following news. At the end of the news item, you will be given 20 seconds to answer the question. Now listen to the news.9. According to the WTO, Chinese exports rose _________ last year.A. 21%B. 10%C. 22%D. 4.7310. According to the news, which trading nation in the top 10 has reported a 5 per cent fall in exports?A. The UK.B. The US.C. Japan.D. Germany.PART II READING COMPREHENSION (30 MIN)TEXT AI remember meeting him one evening with his pushcart. I had managed to sell all my papers and was coming home in the snow. It was that strange hour in downtown New York when the workers were pouring homeward in the twilight. I marched among thousands of tired men and women whom the factory whistles had unyoked. They flowed in rivers through the clothing factory districts, then down along the avenues to the East Side.I met my father near Cooper Union. I recognized him, a hunched, frozen figure in an old overcoat standing by a banana cart. He looked so lonely, the tears came to my eyes. Then he saw me, and his face lit with his sad, beautiful smile -Charlie Chaplin's smile."Arch, it's Mikey," he said. "So you have sold your papers! Come and eat a banana." He offered me one. I refused it. I felt it crucial that my father sell his bananas, not give them away. He thought I was shy, and coaxed and joked with me, and made me eat the banana. It smelled of wet straw and snow."You haven't sold many bananas today, pop," I said anxiously.He shrugged his shoulders."What can I do? No one seems to want them."It was true. The work crowds pushed home morosely over the pavements. The rusty skydarkened over New York building, the tall street lamps were lit, innumerable trucks, street cars and elevated trains clattered by. Nobody and nothing in the great city stopped for my father's bananas."I ought to yell," said my father dolefully. "I ought to make a big noise like other peddlers, but it makes my throat sore. Anyway, I'm ashamed of yelling, it makes me feel like a fool. "I had eaten one of his bananas. My sick conscience told me that I ought to pay for it somehow. I must remain here and help my father."I'll yell for you, pop," I volunteered."Arch, no," he said, "go home; you have worked enough today. Just tell momma I'll be late."But I yelled and yelled. My father, standing by, spoke occasional words of praise, and said I was a wonderful yeller. Nobody else paid attention. The workers drifted past us wearily, endlessly; a defeated army wrapped in dreams of home. Elevated trains crashed; the Cooper Union clock burned above us; the sky grew black, the wind poured, the slush burned through our shoes. There were thousands of strange, silent figures pouring over the sidewalks in snow. None of them stopped to buy bananas.I yelled and yelled, nobody listened.My father tried to stop me at last. "Nu," he said smiling to console me, "that was wonderful yelling. Mikey. But it's plain we are unlucky today! Let's go home."I was frantic, and almost in tears. I insisted on keeping up my desperate yells. But at last my father persuaded me to leave with him.11. "unyoked" in the first paragraph is closest in meaning toA. sent outB. releasedC. dispatchedD. removed12. Which of the following in the first paragraph does NOT indicated crowds of people?A.Thousands ofB. FlowedC. PouringD. Unyoked13. Which of the following is intended to be a pair of contrast in the passage?A. Huge crowds and lonely individuals.B. Weather conditions and street lamps.C. Clattering trains and peddlers' yells.D. Moving crowds and street traffic.14. Which of the following words is NOT suitable to describe the character of the son?A. CompassionateB. ResponsibleC. ShyD. Determined15. What is the theme of the story?A. The misery of the factory workers.B. How to survive in a harsh environment.C. Generation gap between the father and the son.D. Love between the father and the son.16. What is the author's attitude towards the father and the son?A. IndifferentB. SympatheticC. AppreciativeD. Difficult to tellTEXT B提示:原文出自美国时代杂志(TIME)日期Jan. 29, 2001文章标题No Fall Insurance 作者AN K. SMITH, M.D.When former President Ronald Reagan fell and broke his hip two weeks ago, he joined a group of more than 350,000 elderly Americans who fracture their hips each year. At 89 and suffering from advanced Alzheimer's disease, Reagan is in one of the highest-risk groups for this type of accident. The incidence of hip fractures not only increases after age 50 but doubles every five to six years as the risk of falling increases. Slipping and tumbling are not the only causes of hip fractures; weakened bones sometimes break spontaneously. But falling is the major cause, representing 90% of all hip fractures. These... ...17. The following are all specific measures to guard against injuries with the EXCEPTION ofA. removal of throw rugs.B. easy access to devicesC. installation of grab barsD. re-arrangement of furniture18. In which paragraph does the author state his purpose of writing?A. The third paragraphB. The first paragraphC. The last paragraphD. The last but one paragraph19. The main purpose of the passage is toA. offer advice on how to prevent hip fracturesB. emphasize the importance of health precautionsC. discuss the seriousness of hip fractures.D. identify the causes of hip fractures.TEXT C提示:原文同专八英译汉翻译试题相同In his classic novel, "The Pioneers", James Fenimore Cooper has his hero, a land developer, take his cousin on a tour of the city he is building. He describes the broad streets, rows of houses, a teeming metropolis. But his cousin looks around bewildered. All she sees is a forest. "Where are the beauties and improvements which you were to show me?" she asks. He's astonished she can't see them. "Where! Everywhere," he replies. For though they are not yet built on earth, he has builtthem in his mind, and they as concrete to him as if they were already constructed and finished.Cooper was illustrating a distinctly American trait, future-mindedness: the ability to see the present from the vantage point of the future; the freedom to feel unencumbered by the past and more emotionally attached to things to come. As Albert Einstein once said, "Life for the American is always becoming, never being."... ...20. The third paragraph examines America's future-mindedness from the _________ perspective.A. futureB. realisticC. historicalD. present21. According to the passage, which of the following is NOT brought about by future-mindedness?A. Economic stagnationB. Environmental destructionC. High divorce ratesD. Neglect of history22. The word "pooh-pooh" in the sixth paragraph meansA. appreciateB. praiseC. shunD. ridicule23. According to the passage, people at present can forecast ________ of a new round of future-mindedness.A. the natureB. the locationC. the varietyD. the features24. The author predicts in the last paragraph that the study of future-mindedness will focus onA. how it comes into beingB. how it functionsC. what it brings aboutD. what it is related to.TEXT D25. The phrase "men's sureness of their sex role" in the first paragraph suggests that theyA. are confident in their ability to charm women.B. take the initiative in courtship.C. have a clear idea of what is considered "manly".D. tend to be more immoral than women are.26. The third paragraph does NOT claim that menA. prevent women from taking up certain professions.B. secretly admire women's intellect and resolution.C. doubt whether women really mean to succeed in business.D. forbid women to join certain clubs and societies.27. The third paragraphA. generally agrees with the first paragraphB. has no connection with the first paragraphC. repeats the argument of the second paragraphD. contradicts the last paragraph28. At the end of the last paragraph the author uses humorous exaggeration in order toA. show that men are stronger than womenB. carry further the ideas of the earliest paragraphsC. support the first sentence of the same paragraphD. disown the ideas he is expressing29. The usual idea of the cave man in the last paragraphA. is based on the study of archaeologyB. illustrates how people expect men to behaveC. is dismissed by the author as an irrelevant jokeD. proves that the man, not woman, should be the wooer30. The opening quotation from Margaret Mead sums up a relationship between man and woman which the authorA. approves ofB. argues is naturalC. completely rejectsD. expects to go on changingPART III GENERAL KNOWLEDGE (10 MIN)31. ______ is the capital city of Canada.A. VancouverB. OttawaC. MontrealD. York32. U.S. presidents normally serves a (an) _________term.A. two-yearB. four-yearC. six-yearD. eight-year33. Which of the following cities is NOT located in the Northeast, U.S.?A. Huston.B. Boston.C. Baltimore.D. Philadelphia.34. ________ is the state church in England.A. The Roman Catholic Church.B. The Baptist ChurchC. The Protestant ChurchD. The Church of England注:The Church of England is the officially established Christian church in England and acts as the mother and senior branch of the worldwide Anglican Communion as well as a founding member of the Porvoo Communion.35. The novel Emma is written byA. Mary Shelley.B. Charlotte Brontë.C. Elizabeth C. Gaskell.D. Jane Austen.36. Which of following is NOT a romantic poet?A. William Wordsworth.B. George Elliot.C. George G. Byron.D. Percy B. Shelley.37. William Sidney Porter, known as O. Henry, is most famous forA. his poems.B. his plays.C. his short stories.D. his novels注:O. Henry was the pen name of William Sydney Porter (September 11, 1862 - June 5, 1910), He was famous for his short stories and a master of the surprise ending, O. Henry is remembered best for such enduring favorites as "The Gift of the Magi" and "The Ransom of Red Chief." The combination of humor and sentiment found in his stories is the basis of their universal appeal.38. Syntax is the study ofA. language functions.B. sentence structures.C. textual organization.D. word formation.注:Definition of Syntax:a. The study of the rules whereby words or other elements of sentence structure are combined to form grammatical sentences.b. A publication, such as a book, that presents such rules.c. The pattern of formation of sentences or phrases in a language.d. Such a pattern in a particular sentence or discourse.39. Which of the following is NOT a distinctive feature of human language?A. Arbitrariness. 任意性B. Productivity. 丰富性C. Cultural transmission. 文化传播性D. Finiteness. 局限性?注:design feature: features that define our human languages,such as arbitrariness,duality,creativity,displacement,cultural transmission,etc.相关内容请点击查看:胡壮麟《语言学教程》课后答案40. The speech act theory was first put forward byA. John Searle.B. John Austin.C. Noam Chomsky.D. M.A.K. Halliday.注:John Langshaw Austin (March 28, 1911 - February 8, 1960) was a philosopher of language, who developed much of the current theory of speech acts. He was born in Lancaster and educated at Balliol College, Oxford. After serving in MI6 during World War II, Austin became White's Professor of Moral Philosophy at Oxford. He occupies a place in the British philosophy of language alongside Wittgenstein in staunchly advocating the examination of the way words are used in order to elucidate meaning. 【改错】The University as BusinessA number of colleges and universities have announced steeptuition increases for next year much steeper than the current,very low, rate of inflation. They say the increases are needed becauseof a loss in value of university endowments' heavily investing in common ___1 stock. I am skeptical. A business firm chooses the price that maximizesits net revenues, irrespective fluctuations in income; and increasingly the ___2 outlook of universities in the United States is indistinguishable from those of ___3 business firms. The rise in tuitions mayreflect the fact economic uncertainty ___4 increases the demand for education. The biggest cost of beingin the school is foregoing income from a job (this isprimarily a factor in ___5 graduate and professional-school tuition); the poor one' s job prospects, ___6 the more sense it makes to reallocate time from the job market to education,in order to make oneself more marketable. The ways which universities make themselves attractive to students ___7include soft majors, student evaluations of teachers, giving studentsa governance role, and eliminate required courses. ___8Sky-high tuitions have caused universities to regard their students as customers. Just as business firms sometimes collude to shorten the ___9rigors of competition, universities collude to minimize the cost to them of the athletes whom they recruit in order to stimulate alumni donations, so the best athletes now often bypass higher education in order to obtain salaries earlier from professional teams. And until they were stopped by the antitrust authorities, the Ivy League schools colluded to limit competition for the best students, by agreeing not to award scholarships on the basis of merit rather than purelyof need-just like business firms agreeing not to give discounts on their best ___10 customer.PART V TRANSLATION (60 MIN)提示:今年专八翻译部分的选材均出自《散文佳作108篇(汉英•英汉对照)》作者:乔萍翟淑蓉宋洪玮,建议大家熟读此书。
专业英语八级41_真题(含答案与解析)-交互
专业英语八级41(总分77, 做题时间130分钟)PART I LISTENING COMPREHENSION (35 MIN)SECTION A MINI-LECTUREDirections: In this section you sill hear a mini-lecture. You. will hear the lecture ONCE ONLY. While listening, take notes on the important points. Your notes will not be marked, but1. Skill to ask questions1) be aware of the human nature:readiness to answer others'' questions regardless of (1)________2) start a conversation with some personal but unharmful questions**. questions about one''s (2)________ jobquestions about one''s activities in the (3)________3) be able to spot signals for further talk2. Skill to (4)________ for answers1) don''t shift from subject to subject―sticking to the same subject: signs of (5)________ in conversation2) listen to (6)________of voice―If people sound unenthusiastic, then change subject.3) use eyes and ears―steady your gaze while listening3. Skill to laughEffects of laughter:ease people''s (7)________―help start (8)________4. Skill to part1) importance: open up possibilities for future friendship or contact2) ways:―men: a smile, a (9)________―women: same as (10)________ now―how to express pleasure in meeting someoneSSS_FILL1.该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 0.1答案:characterSSS_FILL2.该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 0.1答案:firstSSS_FILL3.该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 0.1答案:morningSSS_FILL4.该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 0.1答案:listenSSS_FILL5.该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 0.1答案:interestSSS_FILL6.该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 0.1答案:tonesSSS_FILL7.该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 0.1答案:discomfortSSS_FILL8.该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 0.1答案:conversation或talkSSS_FILL9.该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 0.1答案:handshakeSSS_FILL10.该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 0.1答案:menSECTION B INTERVIEWDirections: In this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow. Questions 1 to 5 are based on an interview. At the end of the interview youwill be given 10 seconds to ansSSS_SINGLE_SEL11.Nancy became a taxi driver becauseA she owned a car.B she drove well.C she liked drivers'' uniforms.D it was her childhood dream.该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 0.2答案:DSSS_SINGLE_SEL12.According to her, what was the most difficult about becoming a taxi driver?A The right sense of direction.B The sense of judgment.C The skill of maneuvering.D The size of vehicles.该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 0.2答案:BSSS_SINGLE_SELWhat does Nancy like best about her job?A Seeing interesting buildings in the city.B Being able to enjoy the world of nature.C Driving in unsettled weather.D Taking long drives outside the city.该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 0.2答案:BSSS_SINGLE_SEL14.It can be inferred from the interview that Nancy is a(n) ____ mother.A uncaringB strictC affectionateD permissive该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 0.2答案:CSSS_SINGLE_SEL15.The people Nancy meets areA rather difficult to please.B rude to women drivers.C talkative and generous with tips.D different in personality.该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 0.2答案:DSECTION C NEWS BROADCASTDirections: In this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow. At the end of each news item, you will be given 10 seconds to answer the questions.16.SSS_SINGLE_SELA It is featured by high technology.B It allows you to imitate famous singers.C It can automatically alter the tempo and tone of a song.D It can be placed in specially designed theme rooms.该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 0.5答案:DSSS_SINGLE_SELA they cover the whole story of the former US president.B the assassin used to live in the former Soviet Union.C they are the only official documents released about Kennedy.D they solved the mystery surrounding Kennedy''s assassination. 该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 0.5答案:BPART II GENERAL KNOWLEDGE (10 MIN)Directions: There are ten multiple-choice questions in this section. Choose the best answer to each question.18.The word tail once referred to the "the tail of a horse", but now it is used to mean "the tail of any animal". This is an exampleof________.SSS_SINGLE_SELA widening of meaning.B narrowing of meaning.C meaning shift.D loss of meaning.该题您未回答:х该问题分值: 1答案:A本题译文:tail一词曾指“马的尾巴”,现在该词用来指“任何动物的尾巴”这个例子说明了什么?动物是马的上义词,tail一词从过去指马的尾巴到现在指任何动物的尾巴,说明了词义的扩大。
大学专业英语八级考试模拟试题(带答案)
大学专业英语八级考试模拟试题PART ⅠLISTENING COMPREHENSIONSECTION A MINI-LECTUREIn this section you will hear a mini-lecture. You will hear the mini-lecture ONCE ONLY. While listening to the mini-lecture, please complete the gap-filling task on ANSWER SHEET ONE and write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each gap. Make sure what you fill in is both grammatically and semantically acceptable. You may use the blank sheet for note-taking.You have THIRTY seconds to preview the gap-filling task.Now listen to the mini-lecture. When it is over, you will be given THREE minutes to check your work.Non-Verbal Communications Across CulturesNon-verbal communications can affirm, complement or even contradict what is being verbally transmitted. In addition to this, non-verbal communications vary from country to country.Ⅰ. Gesture—Pointinga) Pointing with a single finger is considered 1 in Asiab) American people use 2 fingers to pointc) German people use pinky to pointd) In UK, flashing a peace sign with the back of one's hand is an3 of flipping someone the bird—Greetinga)USA: 4b) Somewhere else: a kissⅡ. Eye Contact—West: direct eye contact is 5—African-Americans: more eye contact when speaking, less when listening—Anglo-Americans: 6 African-Americans—Northern Europe: more flirtatious facets—Middle East: prolonged eye contact means to show 7—Some Asian countries: avoiding eye contact means to show 8Ⅲ. Physical Contact—Americans will shake hands, 9 , upon encountering someone—Islamic cultures: 10 is not allowed—Asian cultures: touching the head is considered 11 the soulⅣ. 12—Some cultures think Americans do not bathe 13—Some think Americans over-bathe themselvesⅤ. Time—14 is highly valued in Switzerland, Germany and Sweden—Europeans: 15 of vacation is the norm—Americans: 2 weeks is the normSECTION B INTERVIEWIn this section you will hear TWO interviews. At the end of each interview, five questions will be asked about what was said. Both the interviews and the questions will be spoken ONCE ONLY. After each question there will be a ten-second pause. During the pause, you should read the four choices of A, B, C and D, and mark the best answer to each question on ANSWER SHEET TWO.You have THIRTY seconds to preview the choices.16、A. He never feels road rage when he is out driving.B. He sometimes is aggressive when he is out driving.C. He manages to stay in the car when he feels road rage.D. He always tries to keep away from minor accidents.17、A. 68%. B. 23%. C. 40%. D. 50%.18、A. Around 13,333-20,000. B. Around 13,333-26,666.C. Around 20,000-26,666.D. Around 26,666-40,000.19、A. Drivers lose their cool and change lanes carelessly.B. Drivers lock their vehicle and refuse to leave the highways.C. Drivers get angry at other motorists and move into physical confrontation.D. Drivers aggressively pursue other cars with their own and smash into them.20、A. It involved a father of two. B. The father was shot.C. The father changed lanes carelessly.D. The father refused to get out of the car.21、A. A super flexible body.B. A tremendously strong body.C. An independent personality with strong will power.D. A peaceful mind.22、A. Because we feel healthy enough.B. Because they are less important than making money.C. Because they cause no visible impact on our daily routine.D. Because we are feeling tired and have no time to exercise.23、A. It was caused by yoga exercise. B. Yoga helped alleviate it.C. It was caused by cardio exercise.D. Yoga helped exacerbate it.24、A. Because yoga provides stress relief. B. Because yoga is easy.C. Because yoga is fashionable.D. Because yoga is cool.25、A. They are good for all people. B. They are as good as yoga.C. They may not be suitable for old people.D. They help lose weight.PART ⅡREADING COMPREHENSIONSECTION A MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONSIn this section there are three passages followed by fourteen multiple choice questions. For each multiple choice question, there are four suggested answers marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that you think is the best answer and mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET TWO.PASSAGE ONE26When I was 10 years old one of my father's customers had caught a bigcatfish on a weekend trip to the Colorado River. It weighed 86 pounds, a swollen, gasping, grotesque netherworld creature pulled writhing and fighting up into the bright, hot, dusty world above.27The man had brought the fish, wrapped in wet burlap, all the way out to my father's service station in the back of his car. We were to have a big barbecue that weekend, and I was given the job of keeping the fish watered and alive until the time came to kill and cook it.28All day long that Friday—in late August, school had not yet started—I knelt beside the gasping fish and kept it hosed down with a trickle of cool water, giving the fish life one silver gasp at a time, keeping its gills and its slick gray skin wet: the steady trickling of that hose, and nothing else, helping it stay alive. We had no tub large enough to hold the fish, and so I squatted beside it in the dust, resting on my heels, and studied it as I moved the silver stream of water up and down its back.29The fish, in turn, studied me with its eyes, which had a gold lining to their perimeter, like pyrite. The fish panted and watched me while the heat built all around us, rising steadily through the day from the fields, giving birth in the summer-blue sky to towering white clouds. I grew dizzy in the heat, and from the strange combination of the unblinking monotony and utter fascination of my task, until the trickling from my hose seemed to be inflating those clouds—I seemed to be watering those clouds as one would water a garden. Do you ever think that those days were different—that we had more time for such thoughts, that time had not yet been corrupted? I am speaking less of childhood than of the general nature of the world we are living in. If you are the age I am now—mid-50s—then maybe you know what I mean.30The water pooled and spread across the gravel parking lot before running in wandering rivulets out into the field beyond, where bright butterflies swarmed and fluttered, dabbing at the mud I was making.31Throughout the afternoon, some of the adults who were showing up wandered over to examine the monstrosity. Among them was an older boy, Jack, a 15-year-old who had been kicked out of school the year before for fighting. Jack waited until no adults were around and then came by and said that he wanted the fish, that it was his father's—that his father had been the one who had caught it—and that he would give me five dollars if I would let him have it.32"No," I said, "my father told me to take care of it."33Jack had me figured straightaway for a Goody Two-Shoes. "They're just going to kill it," he said. "It's mine. Give it to me and I'll let it go. I swear I will," he said. "Give it to me or I'll beat you up."34As if intuiting or otherwise discerning trouble—though trouble followed Jack, and realizing that did not require much foresight—my father appeared from around the corner, and asked us how everything was going. Jack, scowling but saying nothing, tipped his cap at the fish but not at my father or me, and walked away.35"What did he want?" my father asked.36"Nothing," I said. "He was just looking at the fish." I knew that if I told on Jack and he got in trouble, I would get beaten.37"Did he say it was his fish?" my father asked. "Was he trying to claim it?"38"I think he said his father caught it."39"His father owes us $67," my father said. "He gave me the fish instead. Don't let Jack take that fish back."40"I won't," I said.41I can't remember if I've mentioned that, while not poor, we were right at the edge of poor.42The dusty orange sky faded to the cool purple-blue of dusk. Stars appeared and fireflies emerged from the grass. I watched them, and listened to the drum and groan of the bullfrogs in the stock tank in the field below, and to the bellowing of the cattle. I kept watering the fish, and the fish kept watching me, with its gasps coming harder. From time to time I saw Jack loitering, but he didn't come back over to where I was.43Later in the evening, before dark, but only barely, a woman I thought was probably Jack's mother—I had seen her talking to him—came walking over and crouched beside me. She was dressed as if for a party of far greater celebration than ours, with sequins on her dress, and fiat leather sandals. Her toenails were painted bright red, but her pale feet were speckled with dust, as if she had been walking a long time. I could smell the whiskey on her breath, and on her clothes, I thought, and I hoped she would not try to engage me in conversation, though such was not to be my fortune.44"This's a big fish," she said.45"Yes, ma'am," I said, quietly. I dreaded that she was going to ask for the fish back.46"My boy and my old man caught that fish," she said. "You'll see. Gonna have their pictures in the newspaper." She paused and stared at the fish as if in labored communication with it. "That fish is worth a lot of money, you know?" she said.47I didn't say anything. Her diction and odor were such that I would not take my first sip of alcohol until I was 22.PASSAGE TWO26Improving the balance between the working part of the day and the rest of it is a goal of a growing number of workers in rich Western countries. Some are turning away from the ideals of their parents, for whom work always came first; others with scarce skills are demanding more because they know they can get it. Employers, caught between a falling population of workers and tight controls on immigration, are eager to identify extra perks that will lure more "talent" their way. Just now they are focusing on benefits (especially flexible working) that offer employees more than just pay.27Some companies saw the change of mood some time ago. IBM has more than 50 different programmes promoting work-life balance and Bank of America over 30. But plenty of other firms remain unconvinced and many lack the capacity to cater to such ideas even if they wanted to. Helen Murlis, with Hay Group, a human-resources consultancy, sees a widening gap between firms at the creative endof employment and those that are not.28The chief component of almost all schemes to promote work-life balance is flexible working. This allows people to escape rigid nine-to-five schedules and work away from a formal office. IBM says that 40% of its employees today work off the company premises. For many businesses, flexible working is a necessity. Globalization has spread the hours in which workers need to communicate with each other and increased the call for flexible shifts.29Nella Barkley, an American who advises companies on work-life balance, says that large firms are beginning to understand the value of such schemes, "but only slowly". For most of them, they still mean little more than child care, health care and flexible working.30Yet some schemes go well beyond these first steps. American Century Investments, an investment manager in Kansas City, pays adoption expenses and the cost of home-fitness equipment for its employees. Rob Marcolina, a consultant with Bain & Company based in Los Angeles, was allowed time off to marry his partner in Canada. Mr Marcolina, who has an MBA from the high-ranked Kellogg business school, says his employer's understanding makes him want to be "part of Bain for some time".31Businesses have other good reasons for improving employees' work-life balance. Wegmans Food Markets, a grocery chain based in Rochester, New York, frequently appears near the top of lists of the best employers in America. It has a broad range of flexible-work programmes, which gives it one of the lowest rates of employment turnover in its industry—8% a year for full-tinge workers, compared with 19% across the industry.32Simple programmes can be surprisingly cost-effective. IBM, for instance, is spending $50m over five years on "dependant-care" facilities for its employees. Although that sounds generous, it is the equivalent of little more than $30 for each IBM employee every year. That is far cheaper than a pay rise and probably a better way to retrain talented mothers and fathers. Ernst & Young, a global accounting firm, has a low-cost range of initiatives called "People First". It provides breaks for people to provide care and has over 2,300 flexi-time employees in the United States. James Freer, a senior executive, says he is "absolutely convinced" the initiatives help produce better financial results.33DeAnne Aguirre, a mother of four and a senior partner in San Francisco with Booz Allen Hamilton (BAH), says "it is easy to make the business case" for work-life balance programmes at the consultancy by looking at attrition rates. BAH calculated that it was investing more than $2m in turning a raw recruit into a partner, an investment it should be reluctant to write off. Coming, an American glass company, reckons that it costs 1.5 times a worker's salary and benefits to replace him. If it can retain just 20 workers a year who would otherwise have left, Corning reckons it would produce annual savings of $2.6m.34The spread of flexible work has come about at least partly as a result of initiatives to keep women workers. Companies have had to offer extended periods of leave for them to look after dependants (young and old), and flexible working inbetween. At BAH, women partners take an average of eight-and-a-half extended breaks during their careers. Men take an average of one-and-a-half. Ernst & Young, keen to show that part-time workers can also become partners, recently made the first such appointment in Houston, Texas.35Some of these initiatives are spreading even to the castles of binge working, such as investment banks. Business schools are now climbing on the bandwagon, too. In October Tuck School at Dartmouth, New Hampshire, will start a course on returning to corporate life after an extended absence. Called "Back in Business", the 16-day, $12,000 re-entry programme is open only to students with "'work experience in a high-potential career".36The majority will inevitably be mothers wanting to rejoin the workforce. But fathers are also asking for sabbaticals (公休假). Work-life balance "is not just a women's issue" any more, says Ted Childs, who is in charge of workforce diversity at IBM. "Men, too, are very concerned about it."37The demand is being stoked by the "Generation Y", the tmder-28s. They look sceptically at the idea of lifetime employment within a single organisation and they are wary of the commitment they believe too often drove their parents to the divorce courts. Hay's Ms Murlis says that today's business-school graduates are "looking for a workstyle to go with their lifestyle", not the other way round. They are happy to binge-work for a while, but in return want extended sabbaticals.38Many of the more imaginative schemes come from organisations that are not under pressure to report quarterly to Wall Street. Wegmans and American Century Investments are family-controlled businesses and the big accounting firms and consultancies, such as Ernst & Young, KPMG, Bain and BAH, are partnerships. This allows them to take a longer-term view of growth and costs.39To some extent, the proliferation of work-life-balance schemes is a function of today's labour market. Companies in knowledge-based industries worry about the shortage of skills and how they are going to persuade talented people to work for them. Although white-collar workers are more likely to be laid off nowadays, they are also likely to get rehired. Unemployment among college graduates in America is just over 2%. The same competition for scarce talent is evident in Britain.40For some time to come, talented people in the West will demand more from employers, and clever employers will create new gewgaws to entice them to join. Those employers should note that for a growing number of these workers the most appealing gewgaw of all is the freedom to work as and when they please.PASSAGE THREE26The blind, overweight patient in the wheelchair has terrible pain in her back and burning pain in her legs. She also has advanced arthritis in her knees and end-stage circulatory disease, which have left her with two useless legs that are red, swollen and infected. Now her shoulder has started to hurt. She can't raise her arm to comb her hair. Five or six other things are wrong with her—she tells me about each. Some we can help; most we can't. I tell her as much.27In my office, she listens carefully. I hardly ever have to repeat myself with Doris (not her real name). She asks questions—mostly good ones. She needs lots oftests, various therapies. I ultimately recommend an operation on her shoulder. Sick, weakened by multiple symptoms and with lousy insurance, Doris is—surprise—a really good patient. She communicates efficiently with her doctors and treats us with respect and trust. She has reasonable expectations. I can tell she looks things up, but her knowledge is helpful—never challenging. I've talked about her with other doctors, and we agree on this: when you see Doris' name on your day's list, you know you're going to work hard. But you're usually glad her name is there.28Few patients realize how deeply they can affect their doctors. That is a big secret in medicine—one doctors hate to admit. We think about, talk about, dream about our patients. We went into clinical medicine because we like dealing on a personal, even intimate level with people who have chosen to put their bodies in our hands. Our patients make or break our days.29Take the compliment. Our career choice means we really do think that you —with your aches and pains—are more interesting than trading hot securities, more fun than a courtroom full of lawyers. Massaging the ego is the key to manipulating responsible types like doctors. When we feel your trust, you have us.30The most compelling reasons to be a good patient are selfish ones. You will get more than free drug samples if your doctor is comfortable and communicates easily with you. You'll get more of the mind that you came for, a mind working better because it's relaxed—recalling and associating freely, more receptive to small, even unconscious clues. That means better medical care. But you should try to be a good patient for unselfish reasons too. We worry about you 60 hours a week. We gave up our 20s for you. Why not show us some love? It's not hard.31The medical relationship is intrinsically one-sided. It's about you and your problem. I am going to find out more about you in the next 20 minutes than you will find out about me. Don't fret about that. We don't expect you to ask much about us. Good patients answer questions accurately and completely. They ask questions too.32But many patients talk too much. You might notice that we are writing when we see you—we are creating your chart. We need specific facts but not every fact in your life. Here's a classic exchange:33How long has your shoulder hurt, Beatrice? "Oh, for quite some time now." But for how long? How many months? "Oh, at least since the wedding—well, then again it did act up a bit when Margaret came back from Ireland..."34All I want to do is write something like "Right shoulder, 6 months, no trauma" on my chart. Although I lack the heart to tell her, Beatrice would be a better patient if she tried to be a bit more concise. There are lots of Beatrices.35Here's another classic:36"Well, I don't need to have good mariners—I'm sick—and I'm not going to be a patsy for some smooth talker in a white coat. The squeaky wheel gets the grease, you know."37That is the mind-set of many patients who abuse their doctors; my bet is they abuse other people as well. Any good doctor knows when you're too sick to be polite and will let it roll off his back. The squeaky wheel we don't like is the one playing a dominance game. That big wheel is likely to get a shorter, less sensitiveexamination and more tests, and then still more tests to follow up the abnormalities in the first tests, followed by extra consultations with specialists—anything to relieve the doctor's responsibility for a bad patient.38Are doctors good patients? Others may disagree, but I think they are. Medical terms don't faze them, so communication is easier, and their expectations tend to be more reasonable. Anyone in medicine is painfully aware that there are plenty of problems for which we have no good answer. Nurses tend to be even better patients, being adept at following doctors' orders—a virtue lacking in doctors.39Doctors and nurses also know when to respect an educated opinion. When the MRI says one thing and I want to do another, they are more likely to be on my side. But you need not be a medical professional, or educated at all, to be a great patient. It's pretty much the same strain of human decency— a truthful consideration of who the people around you are and of what they are trying to do—that infects a good patient and any good person.26、The author's behavior of guarding the fish showed (PASSAGE ONE.A. bravery and serf-control.B. wisdom and responsibility.C. devotion and romance.D. chivalry and charity.27、From the fourth paragraph, we get the impression that (PASSAGE ONE.A. the author cherished his childhood memories.B. the author spent much time in daydreaming.C. the author may not have a happy childhood.D. the author can't remember his childhood days.28、"Jack had me figured straightaway for a Goody Two-Shoes." (Paragraph Eight) means that (PASSAGE ONE.A. I was not the boy as Jack supposed to be.B. I was much stingier than Jack thought.C. I was viewed as virtuous and righteous.D. I was irritating and foolish in Jack's eyes.29、It can be inferred from the passage that Jack was all EXCEPT (PASSAGE ONE.A. cunning.B. bad-tempered.C. rude.D. considerate.30、Employees tend to demand more from their employers because (PASSAGE TWO)A. they always give priority to their work.B. they are pursuing a more balanced lifestyle.C. they are equipped with special skills.D. they focus on benefits rather than salary.31、The current situation about the work-life balance problem is that (PASSAGE TWO)A. many companies launch varying programmes for the problem.B. most companies are ready to take effective solutions.C. companies are at two extremes in solving the problem.D. most companies are indifferent to the problem.32、IBM is cited as an example in the third paragraph to show that (PASSAGE TWO)A. IBM has many different programmes enhancing work-life balance.B. the tendency of large firms to improve employee's work-life balance.C. flexible working includes allowing employees to work outside offices.D. flexible working is adopted to meet the new demand of communication.33、Which of the following is NOT the cause for the spread of flexible work? (PASSAGE TWO)A. Low turnover rate.B. Initiatives to stabilise workforce.C. General thirst for talents.D. Labour force competition.34、The word gewgaws in the last paragraph probably means (PASSAGE TWO)A. jewelry.B. positions.C. strategies.D. payment.35、The first two paragraphs in the passage (PASSAGE THREE.A. cite an example as a hook to start the issue.B. bring out the theme with strong argument.C. provide ways to deal with the issue.D. introduce the issue with an extreme case.36、The expression "massaging the ego" in Paragraph Four most probably means (PASSAGE THREE.A. affecting doctors deeply.B. praising doctors sincerely.C. showing interest in doctors.D. staying in touch with doctors.37、The benefit for one to be a good patient is that (PASSAGE THREE.A. his doctor will be receptive to all clues.B. his doctor will undercharge him for medicine and operation.C. he can get free drug samples and better care.D. he can get more time to talk with his doctor.38、If one intends to become a good patient, he should learn (PASSAGE THREE.A. to find out more about his doctor.B. to respect both doctors and nurses.C. to become as unselfish as possible.D. to accurately follow his doctor's orders.39、The text is mainly about (PASSAGE THREE.A. what makes a good patient.B. how deeply patients can affect their doctors.C. the relationship between patients and doctors.D. the most significant reasons to be a good patient.40、SECTION B SHORT ANSWER QUESTIONSIn this section there are eight short answer questions based on tire passages in SECTION A. Answer each question in NO more than 10 words in the space provided on ANSWER SHEET TWO.Why did the author water the fish? (PASSAGE ONE.41、What created the towering clouds? (PASSAGE ONE.42、Why did the author hope Jack's mother not to engage him in conversation? (PASSAGE ONE.43、What do the examples of American Century Investments and Bain & Company in Para.5 show? (PASSAGE TWO)44、Why does IBM invest money for employees? (PASSAGE TWO)45、What are the characteristics of today's business-school graduates? (PASSAGE TWO)46、What does the first classic exchange show? (PASSAGE THREE.47、What might happen to the big wheel style patients? (PASSAGE THREE.PART ⅢLANGUAGE USAGEThe passage contains TEN errors. Each indicated line contains a maximum of ONE error. In each case, only ONE word is involved. You should proofread the passage and correct it in the following way:For a wrong word, underline the wrong word and write the correct one in the blank provided atthe end of the line.For a missing word, mark the position of the missing word with a "∧" sign and write the wordyou believe to be missing in the blank provided at the end of the line.For an unnecessary word, cross the unnecessary word with a slash "—" and put the word in the blankprovided at the end of the line.For centuries, immigrants have come to America seeking thepromise of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Some camefleeting religions persecution. Others came for the possibility of a 48better life. But all were inspired by the freedoms that exist in theUnited States because of the rule of law.Throughout our history, immigrants have contributed toAmerican society and help build the American dream. But today 49 we face with an immigration crisis. Lax enforcement of our 50immigration laws threatens the promise of life, liberty, and thepursuit of happiness that has made America that it is today. In 51order to protect the American dream, we must enforce ourimmigration laws.According to a report by the Government AccountabilityOffice, only 44 percent of the U.S.-Mexico border is under the"operational control" of the U.S. Border Patrol. Forty-four percentis a failure grade. Holes in the security of our borders threaten 52American lives. The first promise of the American dream is "life."In order to protect that promise, we must secure the U.S.-Mexicoborder.We must also do more to prohibit Americans from criminal 53illegal immigrants. Despite the Obama administration has 54increased the deportation of criminal immigrants, two SupremeCourt rulings created a safe haven for dangerous criminalimmigrants who can be removed. Because these rulings prohibit 55 criminal immigrants from detained longer than six months 56when they cannot be deported, federal officials have been forced to 57。
专业英语八级(听力)-试卷104
专业英语八级(听力)-试卷104(总分:50.00,做题时间:90分钟)一、 LISTENING COMPREHENSION(总题数:6,分数:50.00)1.PART I LISTENING COMPREHENSION__________________________________________________________________________________________解析:2.SECTION A MINI-LECTUREIn this section you will hear a mini-lecture. You will hear themini-lecture ONCE ONLY. While listening to the mini-lecture, please complete the gap-filling task on ANSWER SHEET ONE and write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each gap. Make sure the word(s) you fill in is (are) both grammatically and semantically acceptable. You may use the blank sheet for note-taking.You have THIRTY seconds to preview the gap-filling task.__________________________________________________________________________________________解析:Improving Your Motivation for Learning EnglishI. The importance of the techniques for improving motivationA. Necessity for leaning EnglishB. Necessity for boosting motivation in 【T1】1【T1】2II. Motivation for learning EnglishA. Talking to 【T2】3freely 【T2】4B. Admired by other peopleC. Writing email to people all over the worldIII. Ways to improve the motivation for learning EnglishA. Remember your English is already good but 【T3】5【T3】6—still a lot of things you don't know—still having problems: 【T4】7in pronunciation, vocabulary, grammar, etc.【T4】8B. Use English as much as possible— English is 【T5】 9【T5】 10a) finding information from English-language websitesb) 【T6】 11【T6】 12c) 【T7】 13【T7】 14d) reading interesting English books, etc.—English will be improved when 【T8】15are adopted 【T8】16C. Talking to people about English—people talk about things they are interested in— people gradually 【T9】 17in a boring subject 【T9】 18a) telling others your 【T10】 19when studying a boring subject 【T10】 20b) telling them about the things you have learnedD. Spending money on learning English— the desire to use and improve English 【T11】 21because of 【T11】 22the money you spent—【T12】 23is given to learn English 【T12】24E. Learning English requires【T13】25【T13】26—【T14】27is more powerful than reading a lot 【T14】 28— you will enjoy 【T15】 29only if you change something about your life 【T15】 30Improving Your Motivation for Learning EnglishI. The importance of the techniques for improving motivationA. Necessity for leaning EnglishB. Necessity for boosting motivation in 【T1】 31【T1】 32II. Motivation for learning EnglishA. Talking to 【T2】 33freely 【T2】 34B. Admired by other peopleC. Writing email to people all over the worldIII. Ways to improve the motivation for learning EnglishA. Remember your English is already good but 【T3】 35【T3】 36— still a lot of things you don't know—still having problems: 【T4】37in pronunciation, vocabulary, grammar, etc.【T4】38B. Use English as much as possible—English is 【T5】39【T5】40a) finding information from English-language websitesb) 【T6】 41【T6】 42c) 【T7】 43【T7】 44d) reading interesting English books, etc.— English will be improved when 【T8】 45are adopted 【T8】 46C. Talking to people about English—people talk about things they are interested in—people gradually 【T9】47in a boring subject 【T9】 48a) telling others your 【T10】 49when studying a boring subject 【T10】50b) telling them about the things you have learnedD. Spending money on learning English—the desire to use and improve English 【T11】51because of 【T11】52the money you spent—【T12】53is given to learn English 【T12】54E. Learning English requires【T13】55【T13】56—【T14】57is more powerful than reading a lot 【T14】 58— you will enjoy 【T15】 59only if you change something about your life 【T15】 60(分数:30.00)(1).【T1】(分数:2.00)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:正确答案:other areas/fields)解析:解析:讲座的主题是“techniques for improving your motivation for learning English(提高英语学习动机的方法)”,紧接着提到了它的必要性时说到“在非英语学习的领域中,我们仍采用这些方法来激发我们的动力”,可知答案为other areas或other fields。
英语专八完整试题及答案
英语专八完整试题及答案一、听力理解(Part I Listening Comprehension)Section A: Mini-Lecture1. The speaker mentioned several benefits of learning a second language. What are they?- A. Improved cognitive abilities- B. Enhanced job prospects- C. Increased cultural understanding- D. All of the above2. According to the lecture, what is the most challenging aspect of learning a new language?- A. Vocabulary acquisition- B. Grammar rules- C. Pronunciation- D. Cultural nuancesSection B: Interview3. What is the main topic of the interview?- A. The impact of technology on education- B. The role of arts in society- C. The importance of environmental conservation- D. The future of space exploration4. What does the interviewee suggest as a solution to thediscussed issue?- A. Government intervention- B. Public awareness campaigns- C. International collaboration- D. Technological innovation二、阅读理解(Part II Reading Comprehension)Passage 15. What is the main idea of the passage?- A. The history of the English language- B. The evolution of English literature- C. The influence of English on global communication- D. The development of English as a global lingua franca6. The author uses which of the following to support their argument?- A. Historical events- B. Personal anecdotes- C. Scientific studies- D. Survey resultsPassage 27. What is the author's purpose in writing this passage?- A. To persuade readers to adopt a healthier lifestyle- B. To inform readers about the latest health trends- C. To critique the current state of healthcare- D. To provide a comprehensive review of a health-related topic8. What is the author's stance on the topic discussed?- A. Skeptical- B. Supportive- C. Neutral- D. Critical三、语言知识(Part III Language Knowledge)9. Which of the following is the correct form of the verb "to be" in the past tense for the third person singular?- A. am- B. is- C. are- D. was10. The word "irrespective" is closest in meaning to:- A. regardless- B. respective- C. perspective- D. prospective四、翻译(Part IV Translation)Section A: English to Chinese11. Translate the following sentence into Chinese:- "The rapid development of technology has brought about significant changes in our daily lives."Section B: Chinese to English12. Translate the following sentence into English:- "随着全球化的不断深入,跨文化交流变得越来越重要。
专业英语八级(听力)-试卷115
专业英语八级(听力)-试卷115(总分:120.00,做题时间:90分钟)一、 LISTENING COMPREHENSION(总题数:4,分数:120.00)1.PART I LISTENING COMPREHENSION(分数:30.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ 解析:2.SECTION A MINI-LECTUREIn this section you will hear a mini-lecture. You will hear themini-lecture ONCE ONLY. While listening to the mini-lecture, please complete the gap-filling task on ANSWER SHEET ONE and write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each gap. Make sure the word(s) you fill in is (are) both grammatically and semantically acceptable. You may use the blank sheet for note-taking.You have THIRTY seconds to preview the gap-filling task.(分数:30.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ 解析:How to Find Time for Yourself I. Introduction: ways to carve out your own timeA.【T1】 1: too busy【T1】 2B. Desire: some time for yourself II. Scheduling time for yourselfA. Evenings with yourself—saving certain【T2】3just for you【T2】4—doing whatever you want on those nightsB.【T3】5【T3】6C. Buying tickets【T4】7【T4】8—tickets for anything you enjoy: sports, concerts, etc.— scheduling the plans with a friend laterD. Leaving work on timeE. Joining a(n)【T5】 9【T5】 10F. Taking an adult education classG. Doing some exercise— deciding today— making it 【T6】11 tomorrow【T6】12III. Keeping yourself on the goA. Commuting via【T7】13transportation, using that time【T7】 14— for some reading or【T8】 15【T8】 16— for meditationB. Driving in your car—making the most of the time—【T9】17you spend that time【T9】18—changing "waiting time" into "【T10】 19"【T10】 20— doing reading, writing or entertainment items IV. Trying to be in synergyA. Two birds, one stoneB. Getting to work【T11】 21【T11】 22— getting exercise—using the time to think or enjoy musicC. Arriving early, using the time— for relaxation— for thinking, whateverD.【T12】 23【T12】 24— making a difference for others— escaping work and personal【T13】25【T13】26—growing as a personE. Taking a(n)【T14】27job【T14】28—making money— doing something you loveF. Having【T15】 29【T15】 30How to Find Time for Yourself I. Introduction: ways to carve out your own timeA.【T1】 31: too busy【T1】 32B. Desire: some time for yourself II. Scheduling time for yourselfA. Evenings with yourself—saving certain【T2】33just for you【T2】34—doing whatever you want on those nightsB.【T3】 35【T3】 36C. Buying tickets【T4】 37【T4】 38— tickets for anything you enjoy: sports, concerts, etc.— scheduling the plans with a friend laterD. Leaving work on timeE. Joining a(n)【T5】 39【T5】 40F. Taking an adult education classG. Doing some exercise— deciding today—making it【T6】 41 tomorrow【T6】 42III. Keeping yourself on the goA. Commuting via【T7】43transportation, using that time【T7】44—for some reading or【T8】45【T8】46—for meditationB. Driving in your car—making the most of the time—【T9】47you spend that time【T9】48—changing "waiting time" into "【T10】 49"【T10】 50— doing reading, writing or entertainment items IV. Trying to be in synergyA. Two birds, one stoneB. Getting to work【T11】 51【T11】 52— getting exercise— using the time to think or enjoy musicC. Arriving early, using the time— for relaxation—for thinking, whateverD.【T12】53【T12】54—making a difference for others—escaping work and personal【T13】 55【T13】 56— growing as a personE. Taking a(n)【T14】 57job【T14】58— making money— doing something you loveF. Having【T15】 59【T15】 60(分数:30.00)(1).【T1】(分数:2.00)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:正确答案:Reality)解析:解析:此题需要考生运用概括能力解答。
专业英语八级考试全真试卷参考答案
专业英语八级考试全真试卷参考答案听力原文PART Ⅰ LISTENING COMPREHENSIONSECTION A TALKThe World Bank is one of the major channels through which development aid i s passed from industrial west to the poor and developing nations of the world. I ts scale of operations is vast, which is why its lending program exceeds 7 billi on a year, and its work force numbers about 4500. In the last decade important c hanges have taken place in the size of the bank’s operations and in the emphasi s of its lending policies. What immediately strikes anyone looking at the lending figures over the last 10 years is the tremendous expansion in the bank’s loan p rogram. This has increased from 1 billion to nearly 7 billion. The figure includ es hard loans, which are made at the current rate of interest, and soft loans, w hich are allocated to poor countries at concessionary rates, and usually channel led through the bank’s affiliate—the International Development Association.In deciding the emphasis of its lending policy, the bank has had to take i nto account the population explosion which is occuring in many poor countries of the world. It is a fact that the fertility rate of the poor countries is often very high. This is one of the main reasons for these countries remaining poor. U nfortunately, wide-ranging country sectionprograms do not usually reduce this r ate because this was a strong and deeply rooted tradition among people in these countries to have big families. What the bank discovered was that there was a li nk between economic and social development on the one hand, and reduction of fer tility rate on the other. Thus by improving basic health services, by introducin g better nutrition, by increasing literacy, and by promoting more even income di stribution in a poor country, a lower and more acceptable fertility rate will be achieved. This advanced thinking persuaded the bank to change its overall lend ing strategy,(略,内容不完整,给你带来的困扰请见谅.)PAPER ONEPART Ⅰ LISTENING COMPREHENSIONSECTION A TALK答案:A【问句译文】世界银行运行系统变大系统的变化指的是什么?【试题分析】本题为细节题。
专业英语八级(听力)-试卷124
专业英语八级(听力)-试卷124(总分:60.00,做题时间:90分钟)一、 LISTENING COMPREHENSION(总题数:6,分数:60.00)1.PART I LISTENING COMPREHENSION(分数:10.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________解析:2.SECTION B INTERVIEWIn this section you will hear ONE interview. The interview will be divided into TWO parts. At the end of each part, five questions will be asked about what was said. Both the interview and the questions will be spoken ONCE ONLY. After each question there will be a ten-second pause. During the pause, you should read the four choices of [A] , [B] , [C] and [D] , and mark the best answer to each question on ANSWER SHEET TWO.You have THIRTY seconds to preview the questions.(分数:10.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________解析:(分数:10.00)A.He hated growing up.B.He read 4 books written by Hinton.C.He had difficulties in reading. √D.He determined to be a writer.解析:解析:访谈一开始,作家就说他小时候很不喜欢看书,后来发现他有阅读障碍。
专业英语八级(听力)-试卷120
专业英语八级(听力)-试卷120(总分:120.00,做题时间:90分钟)一、 LISTENING COMPREHENSION(总题数:4,分数:120.00)1.PART I LISTENING COMPREHENSION(分数:30.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ 解析:2.SECTION A MINI-LECTUREIn this section you will hear a mini-lecture. You will hear themini-lecture ONCE ONLY. While listening to the mini-lecture, please complete the gap-filling task on ANSWER SHEET ONE and write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each gap. Make sure the word(s) you fill in is (are) both grammatically and semantically acceptable. You may use the blank sheet for note-taking.You have THIRTY seconds to preview the gap-filling task.(分数:30.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ 解析:Non-Verbal Communication In this talk, we are going to talk about the definition of non-verbal communication, dimensions of non-verbal communication and impression formation and management of nonverbal communication. I. Definition and the five primary functionsA. Definition: Communication that is produced by some means other than wordsB. The five primary functions1.【T1】1【T1】2—Through the face,【T2】3, and voice【T2】42.【T3】5 of interpersonal attitudes 【T3】 6— Tone of voice, gaze, and touch3. Accompany and support speech— Nodding one's head—Using phrases like "uh-huh" when another is talking4. Self-presentation— Appearance5.【T4】 7【T4】 8— Greetings, handshakes or other ritualsII. Traditional dimensions of nonverbal communication1. Physical appearance— The first nonverbal messages— Can be used to【T5】 9【T5】102. Territory and personal space—Personal space: the space an individual maintains around him or herself—Territory: a larger area an individual controls that can provide【T6】11【T6】123.【T7】13【T7】14—Happiness, surprise, fear, sadness, anger, disgust/contempt4.【T8】15【T8】 16— Reflect individual thought processes and regulate communication5. Touch— An interpersonal bond is being offered or established6. Time— Past-oriented: use past to【T9】 17【T9】18—Future-oriented: work for tomorrow—Present-oriented: live for todayIII. Impression formation and management of nonverbal communicationA. Definition: an individual's conscious attempt at control over communication behaviors to【T10】 19 others【T10】 20B. Two important functions for impression management:—【T11】 21 function: consciously trying to control the impression one【T11】 22makes on the person with whom one is communicating with—【T12】 23: consciously controlling your emotional response【T12】 24C. Four dimensions of impressions:—【T13】 25【T13】 26— Iikeability— Interpersonal attractiveness— DominanceD. Factors that influence the impressions we form about other people:—【T14】27【T14】28—First impressions—【T15】 29【T15】 30— Last impressionsNon-Verbal Communication In this talk, we are going to talk about the definition of non-verbal communication, dimensions of non-verbal communication and impression formation and management of nonverbal communication. I. Definition and the five primary functionsA. Definition: Communication that is produced by some means other than wordsB. The five primary functions1.【T1】 31【T1】 32— Through the face,【T2】 33, and voice【T2】 342.【T3】 35 of interpersonal attitudes【T3】36—Tone of voice, gaze, and touch3. Accompany and support speech—Nodding one's head— Using phrases like "uh-huh" when another is talking4. Self-presentation— Appearance5.【T4】37【T4】38—Greetings, handshakes or other ritualsII. Traditional dimensions of nonverbal communication1. Physical appearance— The first nonverbal messages— Can be used to【T5】 39【T5】402. Territory and personal space—Personal space: the space an individual maintains around him or herself—Territory: a larger area an individual controls that can provide【T6】41【T6】423.【T7】43【T7】44—Happiness, surprise, fear, sadness, anger, disgust/contempt4.【T8】45【T8】 46— Reflect individual thought processes and regulate communication5. Touch— An interpersonal bond is being offered or established6. Time— Past-oriented: use past to【T9】 47【T9】48—Future-oriented: work for tomorrow—Present-oriented: live for todayIII. Impression formation and management of nonverbal communicationA. Definition: an individual's conscious attempt at control over communication behaviors to【T10】 49 others【T10】 50B. Two important functions for impression management:—【T11】 51 function: consciously trying to control the impression one【T11】 52makes on the person with whom one is communicating with—【T12】 53: consciously controlling your emotional response【T12】 54C. Four dimensions of impressions:—【T13】 55【T13】 56— Iikeability— Interpersonal attractiveness— DominanceD. Factors that influence the impressions we form about other people:—【T14】57【T14】58—First impressions—【T15】 59【T15】 60— Last impressions(分数:30.00)(1).【T1】(分数:2.00)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:正确答案:Expression of emotion)解析:解析:非语言交际的五大功能中第一个就是情感表达。
专业英语八级(听力)-试卷107
专业英语八级(听力)-试卷107(总分:56.00,做题时间:90分钟)一、 LISTENING COMPREHENSION(总题数:6,分数:56.00)1.PART I LISTENING COMPREHENSION__________________________________________________________________________________________ 解析:2.SECTION A MINI-LECTUREIn this section you will hear a mini-lecture. You will hear themini-lecture ONCE ONLY. While listening to the mini-lecture, please complete the gap-filling task on ANSWER SHEET ONE and write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each gap. Make sure the word(s) you fill in is (are) both grammatically and semantically acceptable. You may use the blank sheet for note-taking.You have THIRTY seconds to preview the gap-filling task.__________________________________________________________________________________________ 解析:First of all, let's talk about what culture is. When we think about culture we first think about a country, and particularly about its food, art, customs, and 1. These are the outward manifestations of a system of values, 2, and deeply rooted beliefs. Culture emerges as a group of people meet and then react to the challenges of life. The responses to those challenges that are successful are taught and shared among members of the group and are passed on from the older to the younger members. Culture is then learned through 3. You can think of culture as having three levels: first, the top level is 4, the artifacts: visible behavior, art, clothing and so on: second, in the middle level are 5. These are invisible rules that cause the artifacts: thirdly, the most powerful dimension of culture is 6. These assumptions lie so deep that they are never questioned, stated or defended.First of all, let's talk about what culture is. When we think about culture we first think about a country, and particularly about its food, art, customs, and 7. These are the outward manifestations of a system of values, 8, and deeply rooted beliefs. Culture emerges as a group of people meet and then react to the challenges of life. The responses to those challenges that are successful are taught and shared among members of the group and are passed on from the older to the younger members. Culture is then learned through 9. You can think of culture as having three levels: first, the top level is 10, the artifacts: visible behavior, art, clothing and so on: second, in the middle level are 11. These are invisible rules that cause the artifacts: thirdly, the most powerful dimension of culture is 12. These assumptions lie so deep that they are never questioned, stated or defended.(分数:12.00)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:patterns of behavior)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:assumptions)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:experience)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:the outward manifestations)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:the values)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:the implicit cultural assumptions)解析:Generally speaking, three types of problems are involved in 1. They are 2, prejudices, and discrimination. Let me explain each one to you with examples. First, about 3. Walter Lippmann introduced the term in 1922 to refer to 4 that is used to organise and simplify perceptions of others. Stereotypes are 5 about some group of people to all people who belong to that category. Examples for stereotyping are such beliefs as: "Women are emotional", "Politicians are dishonest", "Germans are cold and too serious", " 6". Secondly, about prejudices. Prejudices refer to 7 towardother people that are based on faulty and inflexible stereotypes. Prejudices include irrational feelings of dislike and even hatred for certain groups of people, who are not based on direct experiences and 8 …Generally speaking, three types of problems are involved in 9. They are 10, prejudices, and discrimination. Let me explain each one to you with examples. First, about 11. Walter Lippmann introduced the term in 1922 to refer to 12 that is used to organise and simplify perceptions of others. Stereotypes are 13 about some group of people to all people who belong to that category. Examples for stereotyping are such beliefs as: "Women are emotional", "Politicians are dishonest", "Germans are cold and too serious", " 14". Secondly, about prejudices. Prejudices refer to 15 toward other people that are based on faulty and inflexible stereotypes. Prejudices include irrational feelings of dislike and even hatred for certain groups of people, who are not based on direct experiences and 16 …(分数:16.00)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:the intercultural communication)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:stereotyping)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:stereotyping)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:a selection process)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:a form of generalization)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:Latinos are lazy)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:negative attitudes)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:first-hand knowledge)解析:I want you to know that different cultures have different negotiation practices. Negotiation practices differ 1. Some cultures expect clients to negotiate over things that would be totally unacceptable in other countries. Some cultures get upset or angry by things that are totally 2 in other cultures. Different cultures simply have different approaches when it comes to negotiation. This can be 3 when you travel to a new country to negotiate for business. And even more so if it is your first time. It is important to know what is culturally expected of you when it comes to negotiation. If you are just starting out in 4, it is wise to do some homework and identify 5 in the country you are travelling to. No matter how much research you do prior to your first cross cultural negotiation communication road blocks can easily come up. This is even more likely if your negotiation is taking place in a foreign environment to what you are used to. So it is even more important to 6 to ride through communication hurdles.I want you to know that different cultures have different negotiation practices. Negotiation practices differ 7. Some cultures expect clients to negotiate over things that would be totally unacceptable in other countries. Some cultures get upset or angry by things that are totally 8 in other cultures. Different cultures simply have different approaches when it comes to negotiation. This can be 9 when you travel to a new country to negotiate for business. And even more so if it is your first time. It is important to know what is culturally expected of you when it comes to negotiation. If you are just starting out in 10, it is wise to do some homework and identify 11 in the country you are travelling to. No matter how much research you do prior to your first cross cultural negotiation communication road blocks can easily come up. This is even more likely if your negotiation is taking place in a foreign environment to what you are used to. So it is even more important to 12 to ride through communication hurdles.(分数:12.00)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:from country to country)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:acceptable)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:intimidating)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:developing your international markets)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:the standard expected negotiating habits)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:develop skills)解析:A high-context culture is a culture in which the context of the message or the action or an event carries a large part of its 1. What this means is that in a high-context culture more attention is paid to what has been 2 than to the message itself. Now let me give you examples. First in terms of personal space, generally speaking, in a high-context culture, because there's greater dependency on 3, people lean towards 4 or closeness to people. And they have 5, for personal space. If you go into that culture, people might stand closer when they're talking to you. They might touch more and if they're jostled in a crowd, they won't feel violated. And also people from a high-context culture pay attention to 6. Because remember what I said, the definition of a high-context culture is that more attention is paid to the context of the message than to the message itself, and part of the context is body language. Second, in terms of time, people in high-context cultures are considered to have what is called a polychrome attitude toward time. Here "poly" means multiple and "chronic" means time. What this means is that they believe 7 have their own time and there can't be a standard system of time for everything. What this leads them to believe is that you can't emphasize 8. Things happen when they are supposed to happen. So there's a different attitude toward time. There is no set standard of time. You can't control time. Everything has its own sense of time. So it's a culture that pays little attention to time, to clock time.A high-context culture is a culture in which the context of the message or the action or an event carries a large part of its 9. What this means is that in a high-context culture more attention is paid to what has been 10 than to the message itself. Now let me give you examples. First in terms of personal space, generally speaking, in a high-context culture, because there's greater dependency on 11, people lean towards 12 or closeness to people. And they have 13, for personal space. If you go into that culture, people might stand closer when they're talking to you. They might touch more and if they're jostled in a crowd, they won't feel violated. And also people from a high-context culture pay attention to 14. Because remember what I said, the definition of a high-context culture is that more attention is paid to the context of the message than to the message itself, and part of the context is body language. Second, in terms of time, people in high-context cultures are considered to have what is called a polychrome attitude toward time. Here "poly" means multiple and "chronic" means time. What this means is that they believe 15 have their own time and there can't be a standard system of time for everything. What this leads them to believe is that you can't emphasize 16. Things happen when they are supposed to happen. So there's a different attitude toward time. There is no set standard of time. You can't control time. Everything has its own sense of time. So it's a culture that pays little attention to time, to clock time.(分数:16.00)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:meaning and significance)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:in and around the message)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:group thinking)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:heavier sensory involvement)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:less respect for privacy)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:body language)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:people, things, events)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:punctuality)解析:。
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2006年专业英语八级考试试卷(1)PART I LISTENING COMPREHENSION(35MIN)SECTION A MINI-LECTUREIn this section you sill hear a mini-lecture. You. will hear the lecture ONCE ONLY. While listening, take notes on the important points. Your notes will not be marked, but you will need them to complete a gap-filling task after the mini-lecture. When the lecture is over, you will be given two minutes to check your notes, and another ten minutes to complete the gap-filling task on ANSWER SHEET ONE. Use the blank sheet for note-taking.SECTION B INTERVIEWIn this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow. Mark the correct answer to each question on your coloured answer sheet.Questions 1 to 5 are based on an interview. At the end of the interview you will be given 10 seconds to answer each of the following five questions.Now listen to the interview.1. Which of the following statements is TRUE about Miss Green's university days?A. She felt bored.B. She felt lonely.C. She cherished them.D. The subject was easy.2. Which of the following is NOT part of her job with the Department of Employment?A. Doing surveys at workplace.B. Analyzing survey results.C. Designing questionnaires.D. T aking a psychology course.3. According to Miss Green, the main difference between the Department of Employment and the advertising agency lies inA. the nature of work.B. office decoration.C. office location.D. work procedures.4. Why did Miss green want to leave the advertising agency?A. She felt unhappy inside the company.B. She felt work there too demanding.C. She was denied promotion in the company.D. She longed for new opportunities.5. How did Miss Green react to a heavier workload in the new job?A. She was willing and ready.B. She sounded mildly eager.C. She a bit surprised.D. She sounded very reluctant.SECTION C NEWS BROADCASTIn this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow. Mark the correct answer to each question on your coloured answer sheet.Questions 6 and 7 based on the following news. At the end of the news item, you will be given 10 seconds to answer each of the two questions.Now listen to the news.6. The man stole the aircraft mainly because he wanted toA. destroy the European Central Bank.B. have an interview with a TV station.C. circle skyscrapers in downtown Frankfurt.D. remember the death of a US astronaut.7. Which of the following statements about the man is TRUE?A. He was a 31-year-old student from Frankfurt.B. He was piloting a two-seat helicopter he had stolen.C. He had talked to air traffic controllers by radio.D. He threatened to land on the European Central Bank.Question 8 is based on the following news. At the end of the news item, you will be given 10 seconds to answer the question.Now listen to the news.8. The news is mainly about the city government's plan toA. expand and improve the existing subway system.B. build underground malls and parking lots.C. prevent further land subsidence.D. promote advanced technology.Questions 9 and 10 are based on the following news. At the end of the news item, you will be given 10 seconds to answer each of the two questions.Now listen to the news.9. According to the news, what makes this credit card different from conventional ones isA. that it can hear the owner's voice.B. that it can remember a password.C. that it can identify the owner's voice.D. that it can remember the owner's PIN.10. The newly developed credit card is said to said to have all the following EXCEPTA. switch.B. battery.C. speaker.D. built-in chip.参考答案:Section A Mini-lecture1.the author2.other works3.literary trends4.grammar,diction or uses of image5.cultural codes6.cultural7.the reader8.social9.reader competency10. social sructure,traditions of writing or political cultural influences,etc.Section B Interview1-5 CDDDASection C News Broadcast6-10 DCBCA2006年专业英语八级考试试卷(2)PART II READING COMPREHENSION(30MIN)In this section there are four reading passages followed by a total of 20 multiple-choice questions.Read the passages and then mark your answers on your coloured answer sheet.TEXT AThe University in transformation, edited by Australian futurists Sohail Inayatullah and Jennifer Gidley, presents some 20 highly varied outlooks on tomorrow's universities by writers representing both Western and mon-Western perspectives. Their essays raise a broad range of issues, questioning nearly every key assumption we have about higher education today.The most widely discussed alternative to the traditional campus is the Internet University - a voluntary community to scholars/teachers physically scattered throughout a country or around the world but all linked in cyberspace. A computerized university could have many advantages, such as easy scheduling, efficient delivery of lectures to thousands or even millions of students at once, and ready access for students everywhere to the resources of all the world's great libraries.Yet the Internet University poses dangers, too. For example, a line of franchised courseware, produced by a few superstar teachers, marketed under the brand name of a famous institution, and heavily advertised, might eventually come to dominate the global education market, warns sociology professor Peter Manicas of the University of Hawaii at Manoa. Besides enforcing a rigidly standardized curriculum, such a "college education in a box" could undersell the offerings of many traditional brick and mortar institutions, effectively driving then out of business and throwing thousands of career academics out of work, note Australian communications professors David Rooney and Greg Hearn.On the other hand, while global connectivity seems highly likely to play somesignificant role in future higher education, that does not mean greater uniformity in course content - or other dangers - will necessarily follow. Counter-movements are also at work.Many in academia, including scholars contributing to this volume, are questioning the fundamental mission of university education. What if, for instance, instead of receiving primarily technical training and building their individual careers, university students and professors could focus their learning and research efforts on existing problems in their local communities and the world? Feminist scholar Ivana Milojevic dares to dream what a university might become "if we believed that child-care workers and teachers in early childhood education should be one of the highest (rather than lowest) paid professionals?"Co-editor Jennifer Gidley shows how tomorrow's university faculty, instead of giving lectures and conducting independent research, may take on three new roles. Some would act as brokers, assembling customized degree-credit programmes for individual students by mixing and matching the best course offerings available from institutions all around the world. A second group, mentors, would function much like today's faculty advisers, but are likely to be working with many more students outside their own academic specialty. This would require them to constantly be learning from their students as well as instructing them.A third new role for faculty, and in Gidley's view the most challenging and rewarding of all, would be as meaning-makers: charismatic sages and practitioners leading groups of students/colleagues in collaborative efforts to find spiritual as well as rational and technological solutions to specific real-world problems.Moreover, there seems little reason to suppose that any one form of university must necessarily drive out all other options. Students may be "enrolled" in courses offered at virtual campuses on the Internet, between -or even during - sessions at a real-world problem-focused institution.As co-editor Sohail Inayatullah points out in his introduction, no future is inevitable, and the very act of imagining and thinking through alternative possibilities can directly affect how thoughtfully, creatively and urgently even a dominant technology is adapted and applied. Even in academia, the future belongs to those who care enough to work their visions into practical, sustainable realities.11. When the book reviewer discusses the Internet University,A. he is in favour of it.B. his view is balanced.C. he is slightly critical of it.D. he is strongly critical of it.12. Which of the following is NOT seen as a potential danger of the Internet University?A. Internet-based courses may be less costly than traditional ones.B. Teachers in traditional institutions may lose their jobs.C. internet-based courseware may lack variety in course content.D. The Internet University may produce teachers with a lot of publicity.13. According to the review, what is the fundamental mission of traditional university education?A. Knowledge learning and career building.B. Learning how to solve existing social problems.C. Researching into solutions to current world problems.D. Combining research efforts of teachers and students in learning.14. Judging from the Three new roles envisioned for tomorrow's university faculty, university teachersA, are required to conduct more independent research.B. are required to offer more course to their students……C.are supposed to assume more demanding duties.D. are supposed to supervise more students in their specialty.15. Which category of writing does the review belong to?A. Narration.B. DescriptionC. persuasionD. Exposition.2006年专业英语八级考试试卷(3)TEXT BEvery street had a story, every building a memory, Those blessed with wonderful childhoods can drive the streets of their hometowns and happily roll back the years. The rest are pulled home by duty and leave as soon as possible. After Ray Atlee had been in Clanton (his hometown) for fifteen minutes he was anxious to get out.The town had changed, but then it hadn't. On the highways leading in, the cheap metal buildings and mobile homes were gathering as tightly as possible next to the roads for maximum visibility. This town had no zoning whatsoever. A landowner could build anything wiih no permit no inspection, no notice to adjoining landowners. nothing. Only hog farms and nuclear reactors required approvals and paperwork. The result was a slash-and-build clutter that got uglier by the year.But in the older sections, nearer the square, the town had not changed at all The long shaded streets were as clean and neat as when Kay roamed them on his bike. Most of the houses were still owned by people he knew, or if those folks had passed on the new owners kept the lawns clipped and the shutters painted. Only a few were being neglected. A handful had been abandoned.This deep in Bible country, it was still an unwritten rule in the town that little was done on Sundays except go to church, sit on porches, visit neighbours, rest and relax the way God intended.It was cloudy, quite cool for May, and as he toured his old turf, killing time untilthe appointed hour for the family meeting, he tried to dwell on the good memories from Clanton. There was Dizzy Dean Park where he had played little League for the Pirates, and (here was the public pool he'd swum in every summer except 1969 when the city closed it rather than admit black children. There were the churches - Baptist, Methodist, and Presbyterian - facing each other at the intersection of Second and Elm like wary sentries, their steeples competing for height. They were empty now, hut in an hour or so the more faithful would gather for evening services.The square was as lifeless as the streets leading to it. With eight thousand people, Clanton was just large enough to have attracted the discount stores that had wiped out so many small towns. But here the people had been faithful to their downtown merchants, and there wasn't s single empty or boarded-up building around the square - no small miracle. The retail shops were mixed in with the banks and law offices and cafes, all closed for the Sabbath.He inched through the cemetery and surveyed the Atlee section in the old part, where the tombstones were grander. Some of his ancestors had built monuments for their dead. Ray had always assumed that the family money he'd never seen must have been buried in those graves. He parked and walked to his mother's grave, something he hadn't done in years. She was buried among the Atlees, at the far edge of the family plot because she had barely belonged.Soon, in less than an hour, he would be sitting in his father's study, sipping bad instant tea and receiving instructions on exactly how his father would be laid to rest. Many orders were about to be give, many decrees and directions, because his father(who used to be a judge) was a great man and cared deeply about how he was to be remembered.Moving again, Ray passed the water tower he'd climbed twice, the second time with the police waiting below. He grimaced at his old high school, a place he'd never visited since he'd left it. Behind it was the football field where his brother Forrest had romped over opponents and almost became famous before getting bounced off the team.It was twenty minutes before five, Sunday, May 7. Time for the family meeting.2006年专业英语八级考试试卷(4)TEXT CCampaigning on the Indian frontier is an experience by itself. Neither the landscape nor the people find their counterparts in any other portion of the globe. Valley walls rise steeply five or six thousand feet on every side. The columns crawl through a maze of giant corridors down which fierce snow-fed torrents foam under skies of brass. Amid these scenes of savage brilliancy there dwells a race whose qualities seem to harmonize with their environment. Except at harvest-time, when self-preservation requires a temporary truce, the Pathan tribes are always engaged in private or public war. Every man is a warrior, a politician and atheologian. Every large house is a real feudal fortress made, it is true, only of sun-baked clay, but with battlements, turrets, loopholes, drawbridges, etc. complete. Every village has its defence. Every family cultivates its vendetta。