中国农业科学院2005年博士研究生入学考试英语试题(附答案解析)
中科院过程所
考试科目
参考书目
出版社
编者
化工原理
《化工原理》
上下册,第二版
化学工业出版社
陈敏恒等
化学反应工程学
《化学反应工程》,第三版
化学工业出版社
朱炳辰等
传递过程原理
《传递过程原理及应用》
冶金工业出版社
查金荣等
传热学
《传热学》
人民教育出版社
杨世铭等
计算数学
《数值分析》
清华大学出版社
李庆扬等
计算方法
《应用数值分析第7版》
机械工业出版社
美柯蒂斯F.杰拉尔德
煤化学
《煤化学》
上海科学技术出版社
朱之培等
流体力学
《流体力学》
高等教育出版社
周光埛等
燃烧学
《燃烧学》
机械工业出版社
许晋源等
生物化学
《生物化学》第三版
人民教育出版社
王镜岩等
微生物学
《微生物学教程》
2.考试日程表:
03月22日
03月23日
03月24日
上午
8:30~11:30
外国语
微生物学煤化学
传递过程原理
排水工程
冶金原理
生物化学
化学反应工程
下午
2:00~5:00
物理化学
化工原理
环境生物学
有机化学
无机化学
3.考试地点:中国科学院研究生院玉泉路园区(具体地点及乘车路线参见附件2)
4.应试及参加体检时请携带有效身份证件(身份证、军人身份证件)、2B铅笔、橡皮以及无字典存储和编程功能电子计算器。
中国农业科学院考博英语真题2005答案解析
中国农业科学院考博英语真题2005答案解析ⅠVocabularyPart A1.C 译文:景色太美了,超出了我的描述能力所能描述的。
解析:transport运输;transfer 转让;transcend超越,超出;transform转变。
2.A 译文:校长在演讲开始时称赞了女孩的勇敢。
解析:applaud称赞;enhance加强;elevate 提升;clap鼓掌。
3.D 译文:“黄色”的字面意思是一种颜色,但它也可以表示“怯懦地”的意思。
解析:literal meaning 字面意思。
4.C 译文:很多人认为公共意识的标准下降了。
解析:固定短语,public awareness公共意识。
Morality道德;rightness 正义;mentality心态。
5.B 译文:人们惊讶地发现他有能力控制他所参与的所有事情。
解析:precede 领先;dominate控制,支配;pervade弥漫;denominate取名,称为。
6.B 译文:他们的反应如此不同的事实反应了他们个性上的差异。
解析:performance表现;personality个性,性格;quality质量;debut初次登台。
7.C 译文:这个要可以减轻胃痛。
解析:ascertain查明,探知;agitate煽动;alleviate减轻,缓和;allocate分配。
8.B 译文:这栋公寓估价50,000美元,它的主人决定卖掉它。
解析:automate自动化;assess评定,估价;assert维护,坚持;avenge报仇。
9.A 译文:部长嘱咐所有的官员交税。
解析:bid 吩咐,嘱咐;bless 保佑;bark吠叫,咆哮;baffle使困惑。
10.B 译文:人死时,要在遗产分配前把他的债还清。
解析:paradox矛盾;legacy遗产;platitude陈腐,平凡;analogy类比。
Section B11.D 译文:游客从远方聚集而来看首都的景色。
2005年03月考博英语试题及答案
中国科学院博士研究生入学考试英语试卷2005年3月考生须知:一、本试卷由试卷一(PAPER ONE)和试卷二(PAPER TWO)两部分组成。
试卷一为客观题,答卷使用标准化机读答题纸;试卷二为主观题,答卷使用普通答题纸。
二、请考生一律用HB或2B铅笔填涂标准化机读答题纸,画线不得过细或过短。
修改时请用橡皮擦拭干净。
若因填涂不符合要求而导致计算机无法识别,责任由考生自负。
请保持机读答题纸清洁、无折皱。
三、全部考试时间总计180分钟,满分为100分。
时间及分值分布如下:试卷一:Ⅰ听力20分钟20分Ⅱ词汇15分钟10分Ⅲ完形填空15分钟15分Ⅳ阅读60分钟30分小计110分钟75分试卷二:Ⅴ英译汉30分钟10分Ⅵ写作40分钟15分小计70分钟25分CHINESE ACADEMY OF SCIENCESENGLISH ENTRANCE EXAMINATIONFORDOCTORAL CANDIDATESMarch 2005PAPER ONEPART Ⅰ LISTENING COMPREHENSION (20 minutes, 20 points)Directions:In this section, you will hear ten short conversations between two speakers. At the end of each conversation, a question will be asked about what was said. The question will be spoken only once. Choose the best answer from the four choices given by marking the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square brackets on your Machine-scoring Answer Sheet.1. A. He needs more fresh air. B. He is willing to go out.C. He is too sick to go out.D. He opened the window.2. A. Their friemts. B. Daily activities.C. Past experiences.D. Historical events.3. A. To buy a ticket. B. To pay a fee.C. To pay back a debt.D. To buy a gift.4. A. Give information. B. State preferences.C. Ask permission.D. Attract attention.5. A. In a gymnasium. B. In an art exhibition.C. In a shop.D. In a hotel.6. A. 19 dollars each. B. 38 dollars each.C. 30 dollars altogether.D. 36 dollars altogether.7. A. Jack is a gentleman. B. Jack does everything right.C. Jack is a desirable husband.D. Jack behaves immaturely sometimes.8. A. It was remarkable to both the man and the woman.B. It was not suitable for the woman.C. The man hated this kind of movie.D. The woman complained about its quality.9. A. See how much the jacket is.B. See if the jacket there is blue.C. See if there is a cell phone in the jacket.D. See if there was anything turned in this morning.10. A. The man has caught a cold. B. The woman was caught in a rainstorm.C. The weather forecast was inaccurate.D. It rained very heavily.Directions:In this section, you will hear three short talks. At the end of each talk, there will be a few questions. Both the talk and the questions will be read to you only once. After each question, there will be a pause. During the pause, you must choose the best answer fromthe four choices given by marking the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square brackets on your Machine-scoring Answer Sheet.Questions 11-13 are based on Talk 1.11. A. Language comes from physical labor.B. Language learning is a long-term endeavor.C. Language reflects history.D. Language study is very important.12. A. Constructing a wheel. B. Making a choice.C. Coming back.D. Turning around.13. A. The overthrow of a class. B. The overthrow of a tyrant.C. The overthrow of a belief.D. The overthrow of an act.Questions 14-17 are based on Talk 2.14. A. It‟s a wonderful idea.B. It‟s not a smart thing to do.C. It‟s too difficult to put into practice.D. It‟s interesting to the decision maker.15. A. Telling people about your degrees.B. Promising that you will make good achievements.C. Introducing your job responsibilities.D. Talking about the needs of the potential employer.16. A. The results which your potential boss wants to gain with your assistance.B. The results of making more money on an international market.C. The results that the employer has seen in the past.D. The results that your potential boss does not want to see.17. A. Proving that you are capable of doing the job.B. Seeking the position that is not too high or too low for you.C. Insisting that experience is more important than knowledge.D. Claiming that you are better than any other applicant.Questions 18-20 are based on Talk 3.18. A. They exercise dogs twice a day.B. They learn how to be responsible for dogs.C. They encourage dogs to go for long walks.D. They like dogs too much to care about other things.19. A. Working for the police.B. Relaxing with other dogs.C. Protecting businesses.D. Guiding the blind.20. A. Dogs ride in public transport.B. Dogs bite their owners when in a rage.C. Vehicles run over stray dogs.D. People always keep dogs on leads.PART ⅡVOCABULARY (15 minutes, 10 points, 0.5 point each)Directions: Choose the word or expression below each sentence that best completes the statement, and mark the corresponding letter of your choice with a single bar across the square brackets on your Machine-scoring Answer Sheet.21. Giorgio, now fifteen, and Lucia, also in her teens, were reaching the of their adolescence.A. crisisB. criterionC. causalityD. credibility22. At first Jackie prayed, frozen in fear, but gradually his terror curiosity.A. put up withB. lived up toC. did away withD. gave way to23. The International Olympic Committee rejects the accusations that Beijing‟s budget-cutting move might its preparation for the games.A. degradeB. deliberateC. deployD. defend24. You are not allowed to take a second job your employer gives you permission.A. so long asB. otherwiseC. unlessD. whereas25. They continued to about and enjoy themselves until they became tired.A. strokeB. strollC. stammerD. string26. The survey asked 750 school children about the values and beliefs they from television.A. pick upB. take upC. put upD. make up27. I am grateful for your invitation, and I‟d like to accept your offer with pleasure.A. delightedB. innocentC. graciousD. prestigious28. I must you farewell right now, but on some future occasion, I hope to see you again.A. relayB. bidC. sendD. deliver29. Perhaps my dishes will not be as delicious as those which you are accustomed to eating, but I beg you to grant my and have dinner with me.A. resentmentB. requirementC. requestD. reservation30. That singular ach ievement was not just about Korea‟s arrival as a football force but as a self-confident mature nation to be seriously.A. copedB. shownC. establishedD. taken31. Europe as a unit did little by itself; it either sent for US help, or each European government acted on its own.A. incidentalB. apparentC. cohesiveD. descendent32. On 9 December, James Joyce experienced one of those coincidences which affected him at the time and which later became material for his books.A. inadequatelyB. systematicallyC. profoundlyD. simultaneously33. Embarrassed, I nodded, trying to think of some way to my error.A. make do withB. make up forC. go in forD. go along with34. Furthermore, if I were to leave him, he would , for he cannot endure to be separated from me for more than one hour.A. prevailB. presideC. perishD. persecute35. With high hopes, the company sent samples of the substance to scientists, but theycouldn‟t any practical uses for it.A. come up withB. do justice toC. get even withD. look up to36. He signed a new contract with the Dublin firm, Maunsel & Company, on more favorable than those Grant Richards had given him.A. itemsB. termsC. articlesD. specifications37. Most scientists agree this outpouring contributes to global warming, which could eventually lead to coastal flooding, weather, and widespread crop loss.A. intensiveB. extremeC. unpleasedD. unique38. There was a quick turnover of staff in the department as the manager treated his employees with contempt.A. utterB. soleC. intimateD. corresponding39. The source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, to discuss the implication of that conclusion.A. recededB. impliedC. compliedD. declined40. Childhood can be a time of great insecurity and loneliness, during which the need to be accepted by peers great significance.A. takes onB. works outC. brings aboutD. gives inPART ⅢCLOZE TEST (is minutes, 15 points)Directions: There are 15 blanks in the following passage. Read the passage through. Then, go back and choose the most suitable of the words or phrases marked A, B, C, and D for each blank in the passage. Mark the corresponding letter of the word or phrase you have chosen with a single bar across the square brackets on your Machine-scoring Answer Sheet.Can exercise be a bad thing? Sudden death during or soon after strenuous exertion on the squash court or on the army training grounds, is not unheard of. 41 trained marathon runners are not immune to fatal heart attacks. But no one knows just 42 common these sudden deaths linked to exercise are. The registration and investigation of such 43 is very patchy; only a national survey could determine the true 44 of sudden deaths in sports. But the climate ofmedical opinion is shifting in 45 of exercise, for the person recovering from a heart attack as 46 as the average lazy individual. Training can help the victim of a heart attack by lowering the 47 of oxygen the heart needs at any given level of work 48 the patient can do more before reaching the point where chest pains indicate a heart starved of oxygen. The question is, should middle-aged people, 49 particular, be screened for signs of heart disease before 50 vigorous exercise?Most cases of sudden death in sport are caused by lethal arrhythmias in the beating of the heart, often in people 51 undiagnosed coronary heart disease. In North America 52 over 35 is advised to have a physical check-up and even an exercise electrocardiogram. The British, on the whole, think all this testing is unnecessary. Not many people die from exercise, 53 , and ECGs(心电图)are notoriously inaccurate. However, two medical cardiologists at the Victoria Infirmary in Glasgow, advocate screening by exercise ECG for people over 40, or younger people 54 at risk of developing coronary heart disease. Individuals showing a particular abnormality in their ECGs 55 , they say, a 10 to 20 times greater risk of subsequently developing signs of coronary heart disease, or of sudden death.41. A. Then B. Though C. Since D. Even42. A. why B. how C. if D. what43. A. runners B. exercises C. patients D. cases44. A. initiation B. evidence C. incidence D. indication45. A. favor B. positive C. inclination D. bias46. A. good B. well C. much D. far47. A. weight B. amount C. degree D. quality48. A. however B. because C. but D. so49. A. at B. to C. for D. in50. A. taking up B. trying on C. getting over D. doing with51. A. beyond B. by C. with D. of52. A. anyone B. none C. some D. nobody53. A. of course B. at all C. after all D. by far54. A. readily B. suddenly C. already D. ready55. A. having B. had C. having been D. havePART ⅣREADING COMPREHENSION (60 minutes, 30 points)Directions: You will read five passages in this part of the test. Below each passage there are some questions or incomplete statements. Each question or statement is followed by four choices marked A, B, C, and D. Read the passage carefully, and then select the choice that best answers the question or completes the statement. Mark the letter of your choice with a single bar across the square brackets on your Machine-scoring Answer Sheet.Passage 1I myself first saw Samarkand from a rise across a wilderness of crumbling ruins and great graveyards which lie between it and the airport. Suddenly we caught a glimpse of painted towers and the great blue domes of mosques and tombs shouldering the full weight of the sky among bright green trees and gardens. Beyond the gardens and the glittering domes still were those watchful mountains and their evocative snow. I found myself thinking of the thrill I had on catching my first sight of Damascus after crossing the desert from Syria. The light, the orchards and many of the trees were the same but deeper still was the sense of coming into contact with one of the most astonishing cultures in history, the world of the one and only Allah and his prophet Muhammad. It was a world that completely overawed me.Yet the memory of Samarkand which stays with me most clearly is quite a humble one. Coming back to the city from the country on my last evening we passed some unusual elm trees and I stopped to have a look at them. They were, my guide told me, perhaps a thousand years old, older certainly than Genghis Khan. A flock of fat-tailed sheep (the same kind of sheep that my own ancestors saw a Hottentot keeping when they landed at the Cape of Good Hope 321 years ago), tended by some Tadshik children, moved slowly home in the distance. Then from the city came quite clearly the call to prayer from mosque and minaret. I had not expected any calls at all and it made no difference that some of the calls came over loud-speakers. Then beyond the trees an old manappeared on a donkey, dismounted, spread a prayer mat on the ground, and kneeling towards Mecca, he began to pray.From Samarkand I journeyed on to Bokhara which was once the holiest city in Central Asia. At one time it possessed over a hundred religious colleges and close to four hundred mosques. It drew adventurers of all races towards it as it did Marco Polo. Not many of them reached their destination. These days at what used to be one of the richest market places in the world, one buys ice-cream instead of slaves; watches and mass-produced trinkets and fizzy drinks instead of gold, silks and turquoise jewellery. Few of the four hundred mosques remain and most have vanished without even leavinga trace.56. Samarkand lies .A. in a desertB. high in the mountainsC. in front of DamascusD. between the mountains and the airport57. The author said that he was overawed by .A. the beauty of the sceneB. the sight of DamascusC. the age of the placeD. the world of Allah and Muhammad58. The author refers to his clearest memory of Samarkand as “humble” because .A. it was an ordinary scene that he rememberedB. it was his last night in the city and his last memoryC. the elm trees were older than Genghis KhanD. the trees looked impressive in the evening light59. The author says that the sheep he saw were similar to .A. the ones his ancestors had keptB. the ones that lived in his own countryC. those his ancestors had seen at the Cape of Good HopeD. those his ancestors had taken to the Cape of Good Hope60. The author was surprised to hear the calls to prayer because .A. he was far away from the city, yet he could hear them clearlyB. he did not think there would be any callsC. the calls came from the mosquesD. the calls were no different over loud-speakers61. The market has changed in character because now .A. it does sell jewelleryB. the holy men do not sell thereC. it sells goods for tourists and items of little valueD. the traders have disappeared because it is too dangerous to sell therePassage 2The component of the healthy personality that is the first to develop is the sense of trust. As with other personality components, the sense of trust is not something that develops independent of other manifestations of growth. It is not that infants learn how to use their bodies for purposeful movement, learn to recognize people and objects around them, and also develop a sense of trust. Rather, the concept “sense of trust” is a shortcut expression intended to convey the characteristic flavor of all the child‟s satisfying experiences at this early age.Studies of mentally ill individuals and observations of infants who have been grossly deprived of affection suggest that trust is an early-formed and important element in the healthy personality. Psychiatrists find again and again that the most serious illnesses occur in patients who have been sorely neglected or abused or otherwise deprived of love in infancy.Observations of infants brought up in emotionally unfavorable institutions or moved to hospitals with inadequate facilities for psychological care support these findings. A recent report says that “Infants under 5 months of age who have been in an institution for some time present a well-defined picture. The outstanding features are listlessness, relative immobility, quietness, poor sleep, an appearance of unhappiness, etc.”Another investigation of children separated from their mothers at 6 to 12 months and not provided with an adequate substitute comes to much the same conclusion.Most significant for our present point, these reactions are most likely to occur in children who, up to the time of separation at 6 to 9 months of age, had a happy relation with their mothers, while those whose relations were unhappy are relatively unaffected.It is at about this age that the struggle between trusting and mistrusting the world comes to a climax, for it is then that children first perceive clearly that they and their environment are things apart. That at this point formerly happy infants should react so badly to separation suggests, indeed, that they had a faith that now has been shattered. In most primitive societies and in some sections of our own society, the attention accorded infants is more in line with natural processes. Throughout infancy the baby is surrounded by people who are ready to feed it, fondle it, and otherwise comfort it at a moment‟s notice. Moreover, these ministrations are given spontaneously and wholeheartedly, and without that element of nervous concern that may characterize the efforts of young mothers made self-conscious and insecure by our scientific age.We must not exaggerate, however. Most infants in our society too find smiles and comfort. As their own bodies come to be more dependable, there is added to the pleasures of increasing sensory response and motor control the pleasure of the mothers‟ encouragement. Then, too, psychologists tell us that mothers create a sense of trust in their children not by the particular techniques they employ but by the sensitiveness with which they respond to the children‟s needs and by their overall attitude.62. The sense of trust in an infant is under development when .A. the infant experiences some satisfactionB. adults‟ trust is adequateC. the infant learns how to moveD. the infant is surrounded by people he can recognize63. The author raises evidence of mental illness and other disorders in children .A. to introduce a discussion of the effect of institutions on childrenB. to show the effect on children of an unhappy relation with their mothers during infancyC. to warn parents of the dangers of neglecting and abusing their childrenD. to support the point that trust is an early formed and important element of a healthy personality64. Babies might mistrust the world if .A. they did not receive food when they were hungryB. they mastered their body movements too quicklyC. someone came too close to themD. they saw an object disappear65. The climax in the development of a sense of trust occurs .A. before maternal affection is providedB. when a child perceives that he or she is separate from the environmentC. when a child successfully controls his or her muscular coordinationD. as a result of maternal separation66. A possible reason that a child having an unhappy relation with his/her mother will not be affected by maternal separation at 6 to 9 months is that .A. the struggle between trusting and mistrusting has reached a climaxB. the child sees himself/herself as being separate from the environmentC. the child‟s sense of trust is destroyedD. no sense of trust has ever developed67. According to this passage, the most important factor in developing a sense of trust is .A. the type of techniques used by the motherB. the sensitivity of the childC. maternal loveD. the combined effect of natural feeling and cultural attitudes68. How can mothers create a sense of trust in a child?A. By showing confidence and experience in front of the child.B. By applying techniques taught by psychologists.C. By showing the child that the mother is understanding of his/her wants.D. By offering smiles and comforts.Passage 3I saw a television advertisement recently for a new product called an air sanitizer. A woman stood in her kitchen, spraying the empty space in front of her as though using Mace against an imaginary assailant. She appeared very determined. Where others aresatisfied with antibacterial-laced sponges, dish soaps, hand sanitizers and telephone wipes, here was a woman who sought to sterilize the air itself.As a casual student of microbiology, I find it hard to escape the absurdity here. This woman is, like any human being, home to hundreds of trillions of bacteria. Bacteria make up a solid third, by weight, of the contents of her intestines. If you were to sneak into her bathroom while she was showering—and based on my general impression of this woman from the advertisement, I don‟t recommend this—and secret away a teaspoon of the water at her feet, you would find some 820 billion bacteria. Bacteria are unavoidably, inevitably—and, usually, utterly benignly—a part of our world.The fantasy of a germ-free home is not only absurd, but it is also largely pointless. Unless you share your home with someone very old, very young (under 6 months) or very ill, the few hundred bacteria on a countertop, doorknob or spoon pose no threat. The bacteria that cause food poisoning, the only significant rational bacterial worry in the average home, need to multiply into the thousands or millions before they can overwhelm your immune system and cause symptoms.The only way common food poisoning bacteria can manage this is to spend four or five hours reproducing at room temperature in something moist that you then eat. If you are worried about food poisoning, the best defense is the refrigerator. If you don‟t make a habit of eating perishable food that has been left out too long, don‟t worry about bacteria.Viruses are slightly different. You need only pick up a few virus particles to infect yourself with a cold or flu, and virus particles can survive on surfaces for days. So disinfecting the surfaces in the home should, in theory, reduce the chances of picking up a bug.In practice, the issue is less clear. A study by Dr. Elaine Larson at the Columbia School of Nursing called into question the usefulness of antibacterial products for the home. In New York, 224 households, each with at least one preschooler, were randomly assigned to two groups. One group used antibacterial cleaning, laundry and hand-washing products. The other used ordinary products. For 48 weeks, the groups were monitored for seven symptoms of colds, flu and food poisoning—and found to be essentially thesame. A ccording to Dr. Gerba‟s research, an active adult touches an average of 300 surfaces every 30 minutes. You cannot win at this. You will become obsessive-compulsive. Just wash your hands with soap and water a few times a day, and leave it at that.69. What is the main idea of this passage?A. We don‟t need to worry too much about bacteria everywhere in our life.B. Antibacterial products for the home are found to be effective.C. The TV advertisement the writer mentioned is a total failure.D. The existent bacteria pose a threat only to the very young and very old.70. We can infer from Paragraph 3 that .A. healthy people should live separately from unhealthy members of the familyB. a germ-free home is not only possible, but significantC. unless you live with the vulnerable, it is pointless to sterilize the airD. our immune systems are too weak to fight against the food poisoning bacteria71. In the first sentence of Paragraph 4, “... manage this” means “to manage the process of .A. killing the bacteria in your bodyB. multiplying to a significantly large numberC. raising the room temperatureD. sterilizing the perishable food72. According to the author, if you want to keep healthy, you had better .A. make the room dryB. keep the food in the refrigeratorC. wash your hands as much as possibleD. clean the surfaces with anti-bacterial products73. From Paragraph 5 the author emphasizes .A. the danger of virusesB. the common existence of virus particlesC. the short life span of virusesD. the difficulty in killing viruses74. The word “bug” used in Paragraph 5 means .A. a bacteriumB. a coldC. a fluD. a virus75. According to the author, one will become obsessive-compulsive .A. if he washes his hands every time he touches a surfaceB. if he only washes his hands with soap and waterC. if he could not win over the bacteria in his homeD. if he does not fight against the bacteria at homePassage 4Until recently the halls of North High in Minneapolis were lined with vending machines where students could buy soda pop and other sugary drinks, as they can in most other high schools in the nation. But with rates of childhood obesity sky-rocketing, the Minneapolis school district worried about pushing pop. The district needed a way to keep its lucrative vending contract with Coca-Cola while steering kids toward more healthful beverages.Bryan Bass, North‟s assistant principal, took the challenge. He stocked 12 of North‟s 16 vending machines only with water, priced at 75 cents a bottle. Three machines dispensed juice and sports drinks for $1. Only one sold soft drinks, at $1.25 per can. “We located the water machines strategically outside our buildings, so when you come out of a classroom what you see is a water machine,” says Bass. “We also decided to allow water in classrooms but not juice or pop.” The result? Profits from the vending machines nearly tripled, from $ 4,500 to $11,000 in two years. They‟re now in their third year, and says Bass:“Water has become …cool.‟”North‟s suc cess demonstrates what many obesity experts and parents believe: Kids will learn to make healthful food and drink choices if they have access to them and are motivated to do so. “Price is a powerful motivator,” says Simone French of the University of Minnesota, an expert on school-based obesity prevention. She‟s impressed with North‟s efforts, but she says the problem is implementing these strategiesthroughout society. “Obesity is the biggest health issue facing kids,and we‟ve got to do more.”How to do mo re was outlined last week in the Institute of Medicine‟s 460-page action plan, mandated by Congress, on “Preventing Childhood Obesity.” Chaired by Emory University‟s Jeffrey Koplan, the plan is the first comprehensive look at childhood obesity and what government, industry, schools, communities, families, and medical professionals can do to reduce its impact. “I think this is similar in importance to the first Surgeon General‟s Report on Smoking and Health in 1964,” Koplan says. That landmark document led to the health warning on cigarette packages and a ban on cigarette advertising on TV.76. In most American high schools, selling soft drinks is .A. encouragedB. allowedC. unlawfulD. unprofitable77. Water has become “cool” in the Minneapol is school district partly because .A. water is provided freeB. most kids can afford nothing but waterC. water machines are put in noticeable positionsD. children have realized the harm of sugary drinks78. We can infer that in terms of healthful drinks for kids, Simone French and some other experts are .A. confident about children‟s choicesB. pessimistic about the futureC. puzzled about which approach to takeD. worried about how to motivate children79. By mentioning the 1964 report on smoking, Jeffrey Koplan implied that .A. more children tend to smoke today than yesterdayB. both obesity and smoking require the attention of schools and society.C. the present plan on obesity would function similarly as a landmark.D. obesity and smoking are both health problems.80. The primary purpose of this passage is to .。
历年自考英语翻译试题及答案
2000年4月全国英语英语翻译试卷、答案1. In the years that followed, Bill learned to spell in this uncomprehending way a great many words.B.在往后的几年里,比尔就这样学着拼写,虽然不理解意思,却也学会了拼写许多单词。
2. It is undoubtedly true that poverty is still a problem in this country, as it is in many other developing and even developed economies.D.毫无疑问,这个国家同其它许多发展中国家乃至发达国家一样,仍然存在着贫困问题。
3. 破镜虽已粘补,但既不美观,又不牢固。
A. A mirror that has been glued back together has an unsightly flaw and breaks again easily.4. 为了发展初等教育,根据我国宪法和实际,特制订本法律。
A. This law has been drawn up on the basis of the Constitution and the reality in our country in order to develop primary education.5. 不搞改革,不坚持开放政策,我们确定的战略目标就不能实现。
C. We can not achieve our strategic goals unless we carry out reforms and adhere to the opening-up policy.6.就英汉两种语言的区别而言,下列选项中不正确的一项是_____________。
C.英语定语位置较固定,汉语定语位置较灵活7.就法律英语的特点而言,下列选项中不正确的一项是_____________。
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中国农业科学院考博英语真题2007答案解析
中国农业科学院考博英语真题2007答案解析PartⅠVocabularySection A1.C 译文:经过数百年的自我实施专制后,中国已经在国际事务上占有一席之地,并进入了现代历史的浪潮。
解析:cooperation合作;monopoly垄断;dictatorship专政,专制;seclusion隐居。
2.C 译文:满族人已经和保证双方地位的贵族阶层形成了联盟。
贵族人与普通平民区分开来,并且他们被给予政府部门中的专有职位特权。
解析:inclusive包含的;special 专用的,专门的;exclusive独有的,专有的;especial 特别的,尤其的。
3.C 译文:理论科学是在物质环境中产生的,而应用则是思想的强力驱动力。
照这样看,他便是一位伟大的思想传播者。
解析:encouragement 鼓舞;spur鼓舞,刺激;drive驱动,常用表达a drive to sth;driving force驱动力,推动力,常用表达driving force for sth。
4.C 译文:他们用来建立维护追随者的方法与完成这样的活动的展望也成为了现今中国政治行为的重要来源。
解析:precedents 引用单元;pioneer 先锋;source来源;resource资源。
5.B 译文:在他身上,有一个交汇点,一个斗争的典型代表,因而他是一个真正的历史人物。
解析:representation表现;representative代表,典型;symbol象征,标志;sign符合,记号。
6.B 译文:社会稳定源于各种力量的微妙平衡。
在这种连续的平衡中,可变因素已经得到了暂时的平衡。
改变一个因素便会发生一系列改变和调整。
解析:saturation饱和;continuum连续体;continuation继续;melting point熔点。
a continuum of 连续的。
7.B 译文:成功人士如何处理一种新文化取决于很多因素,如一个人的原始教育和即将修正的具体行为解析:固定搭配,be contingent on 取决于,依赖于。
新版中国农业科学院农业管理考研经验考研参考书考研真题
经过一年的努力奋斗终于如愿以偿考到自己期望的学校,在这一年的时间内,我秉持着天将降大任于斯人也必先苦其心志劳其筋骨饿其体肤空乏其身的信念终于熬过了这段难熬却充满期待和自我怀疑的岁月。
可谓是痛并快乐着。
在这期间,我不止一次地怀疑自己有没有可能成功上岸,这样的想法,充斥在我的头脑中太多次,明知不可想这么多,但在休息时,思想放空的时候就会凭空冒出来,难以抵挡。
这对自己的心绪实在是太大的干扰,所以在此想跟大家讲,调整好心态,无论成功与否,付出自己全部的努力,到最后,总不会有那种没有努力过而与成功失之交臂的遗憾。
总之就是,付出过,就不会后悔。
在此,我终于可以将我这一年来的所有欣喜,汗水,期待,惶惑,不安全部写出来,一来是对这一重要的人生转折做一个回顾和告别,再有就是,希望我的这些经验,可以给大家以借鉴的作用。
无论是心态方面,考研选择方面,还是备考复习方面。
都希望可以跟大家做一个深入交流,否则这一年来的各种辛酸苦辣真是难吐难吞。
由于心情略微激动了些,所以开篇部分可能略显鸡汤,不过,认真负责的告诉大家,下面的内容将是满满的干货。
只是由于篇幅过长还望大家可以充满耐心的把它看完。
文章结尾会附赠我的学习资料供各位下载使用。
中国农业科学院农业管理的初试科目为:(101)思想政治理论(204)英语二(342)农业知识综合四(839)农村社会调查研究方法先说说英语复习心得词汇量曾经是我的一块心病,跟我英语水平差不多的同学,词汇量往往比我高出一大截。
从初中学英语开始就不爱背单词。
在考研阶段,词汇量的重要性胜过四六级,尤其是一些熟词僻义,往往一个单词决定你一道阅读能否做对。
所以,一旦你准备学习考研英语,词汇一定是陪伴你从头至尾的一项工作。
考研到底背多少个单词足够?按照大纲的要求,大概是5500多个。
实际上,核心单词及其熟词僻义才是考研的重点。
单词如何背?在英语复习的前期一定不要着急开始做真题,因为在单词和句子的基础非常薄弱的情况下,做真题的效果是非常差的。
病毒学试题(回忆版)
病毒学试题(回忆版)一、名词解释:1. spike2. DI(defective interfering)3. Replication intermediate (RI)4. Plague(噬斑)5. PFU(噬斑形成单位)、CPE(细胞病变)、隐蔽期6、信息体(informosome)7、温度敏感性变异株连8、抗原漂移与抗原转变9 准种10、互补11、细胞原癌基因12、干扰素 13、Ribozyme14、DNA疫苗15单克隆抗体16法氏囊,网状内皮组织增殖症等(传染病英文翻译成中文)二、简答题:1、慢病毒感染的概念及原因(两个方面即病毒方面与机体方面)2、病毒载体活疫苗的概念并举例说明病毒载体构建的技术路线3、亚病毒的分类及其定义4、病毒的特性及其疫苗的研究进展(病毒学)5、病毒的吸附和侵入过程(分两步)(病毒学)6、请设计试验方案,如何证明某一种病毒的核酸具有感染性(病毒学)7、简述病毒对细胞的损害作用方式(病毒学)8、叙述新病毒出现的机制(病毒学)9、叙述反转录病毒的复制步骤(病毒学)10、有几个是写出病毒的英文名称让写出分别属哪科、哪属(不常见的几个)11、如果一牛场发生布氏杆菌,请制定免疫计划(传染病)?12、假如发生烈性传染病如何做?(传染病)三、论述题1、详细叙述禽流感病毒的基因组结构,并写出每段基因组所编码的蛋白及其每种蛋白的功能(病毒学)2、详细叙述SARS病毒与禽流感病毒在分子水平上的异同(传染病)。
2003年农科院考博题动物病毒学一、名词解释1 DI2 Antigentic drift3 感染性cDNA4 核酸疫苗5 PFU6 Ribozyme7 LTR8 温度敏感突变株9 envelope 10 准种二、简答题1 类病毒与朊病毒的区别。
2 鉴定新城疫病毒毒力的依据。
3 病毒血凝、血凝抑制作用及血吸附机理。
4 写出下列各科病毒的一种病毒Herpesviridae, Adenoviridae, Coronaviridae, Rhabdoviridae, Orthomyxoviridae5 黄病毒科有几个属,各写出一个病毒。
(完整)全国部分名校考博生物化学真题大全,推荐文档
2004年中山大学医学院博士生入学考试-生物化学一、名词解释1、端粒酶2、嘌呤核苷酸循环3、断裂基因4、模序5、抑癌基因6、RT-PCR7、密码子摆动性8、核心酶9、解偶联机制10、顺式作用元件二、简答题1、血红蛋白氧离曲线为何呈S形?2、DNA双螺旋结构的特点?3、酶促反应的机制4、维生素B12为何能导致巨幼红细胞性贫血?5、IP3、DAG是什么?其在信号传导中的作用是什么?三、问答题1、试述蛋白质一级结构和空间结构与蛋白质功能的关系。
2、试述人类基因组计划的内容、意义,以及后基因组计划的研究方向。
3、以操纵子理论说明:细菌如何利用乳糖作为碳源?当葡萄糖与乳糖共存时,如何调节?4、1分子葡萄糖子体内完全氧化生成38个ATP:(1)各个途径以及其中的能量生成?(2)NADH进入线粒体的途径?(3)NADH的呼吸链组成?5、试述血浆脂蛋白分类及作用,载脂蛋白的含义,作用。
LDL升高、HDL降低为何导致动脉粥样硬化?2003年中山大学医学院博士生入学考试-生物化学一、选择题1、限制性内切酶识别的序列是A、粘性末端B、回文结构C、TATAATD、聚腺苷酸E、AATAA2、由氨基酸生成糖的过程称为A、糖酵解B、糖原分解作用C、糖异生作用D、糖原合成作用3、四氢叶酸不是下列哪种基团或化合物的载体?A、-CHOB、CO2C、-CH=D、-CH3E、-CH=NH ;4、细胞色素aa3的重要特点是A、可使电子直接传递给氧分子的细胞色素氧化酶B、以铁卟啉为辅基的递氢体C、是递电子的不需氧脱氢酶D、是分子中含铜的递氢体E、含有核黄素5、转氨酶的辅酶含有哪种维生素?A、Vit B1B、Vit B2C、Vit PPD、Vit B6E、Vit B126、下列哪种成分的含量高,则双螺旋DNA的溶解温度也增高?A、G+GB、C+TC、A+TD、A+GE、A+C7、胆红素在肝脏中的转变主要是A、转变成胆绿素B、受加单氧化酶体系氧化C、与葡萄糖醛酸结合D、与清蛋白结合E、直接排除8、密度最低的血浆脂蛋白是A、VLDLB、C、MDLD、HDLE、CM9、操纵子的基因表达调控系统属于A、复制水平调节B、转录水平调节C、翻译水平调节D、逆转录水平调节E、翻译后水平调节10、关于DNA复制,下列哪项叙述是错误的?A、原料是4种dNTPB、链的合成方向是C、以DNA链为模板D、复制的DNA与亲代的DNA完全相同E、复制的DNA需要剪切加工二、名词解释1、酮体2、基因3、肽链4、锌指5、核酶6、糖异生7、胆色素8、复制叉9、Km 10、一碳单位三、简答题1、什么是反式作用因子?2、简述脂蛋白的种类。
中国农业科学院考博英语真题2003答案解析
中国农业科学院考博英语真题2003答案解析Part One: Structure and Written Expression1.D 译文:医生预断她会好起来,只要她打胰岛素和注意饮食。
解析:agnosticism不可知论;anticipation预感;diagnosis 诊断;prognosis病状的预断。
2.C 译文:相关方面默然达成一致意见:拜访过他的人没有跟他讲的话以后谁也不许说出去。
解析:uncommunicatively不爱说话地;acceptably可以接受地;tacitly沉默地,默然地;taciturnly指人沉默寡言都。
3.C 译文:奉承话并非出自真诚的、深刻的仰慕,更多情况下是出自一种利己主义的期望,期望自己被某个重要的任务或名人认同。
解析:compliment称赞;adulatory奉承的;flattery奉承;praise夸奖。
4.D 译文:上班时利用足够的时间赶火车可以消除对迟到的担忧。
解析:rule off 划线隔开;prevent预防;avoid 避免;obviate消除、排除(危险、障碍、担忧等)5.A 译文:法国士兵尼古拉斯总是不停地喊叫着来表达对拿破仑的崇敬,以致他都成了所有欧洲人的笑柄。
解析:vociferously喊叫地,吵闹地;patriotically爱国地;verbosely啰嗦地;loquaciously 滔滔不绝地。
6.B 译文:患空旷恐怖症的人宁愿呆在家里,因为在空旷的公共场所或室外会使他们感觉无比痛苦。
解析:acrophobia恐高症;agoraphobia广场恐怖症;claustrophobia幽闭恐怖症xenophobia仇外。
7.C 译文:至少在一定程度上人们是群居在一起的,他们通过参加群体活动获得温暖和亲密感。
解析:segregated被隔离的;congregational公众的;gregarious 社交的,群居的;egregious 惊人的,过分的。
中国农业大学经济管理学院考博真题-主要导师-参考书目
中国农业⼤学经济管理学院考博真题-主要导师-参考书⽬中国农业⼤学经济管理学院考博真题-主要导师-参考书⽬⼀、专业的设置中国农业⼤学经济管理学院每年招收博⼠⽣42⼈,下设⾦融学、产业经济学、国际贸易学、管理科学与⼯程、农业经济管理、农业经济史六个专业。
其中⾦融学专业下设三个⽅向,⾦融理论与政策⽅向有何凌云、焦瑾璞、何⼴⽂三位导师;期货与⾦融衍⽣品⽅向有安毅⼀位导师;投资项⽬分析与评估有任⾦政⼀位导师。
产业经济学专业下设三个⽅向,刘⽟梅的产业组织理论与政策;⽅向明的区域经济与发展;⽩军飞的资源与环境经济学。
国际贸易学下设两个⽅向,国际贸易理论与政策⽅向有⽥志宏、武拉平两位导师;农产品市场与政策有陈永福、林海、刘红曼三位导师。
管理科学与⼯程下设四个⽅向,信息管理与电⼦商务有王瑞梅、赵冬梅两位导师;系统分析与战略决策有卢凤君⼀位导师;物流管理与供应链优化⽅向有侯云先、吕建军两位导师;项⽬分析与风险管理有张旺⼀位导师。
农业经济管理下设两个⽅向,农业经济理论与政策有韩青、韩⼀军、马骥、穆⽉英、司伟、肖海峰、朱俊峰、⾟贤、陈锡⽂、程国强、郭玮、韩俊、黄守宏、刘奇、唐仁健、叶兴庆、赵阳⼗七位导师;农村区域发展张正河、陈前恒两位导师。
农业经济史下设两个⽅向,李军的农业经济思想史;姜长云的农业经济与制度史。
⼀共有38位博导,16个研究⽅向,可以说分类⾮常的全⾯和齐全。
招⽣⼈数不含硕博连读⽣。
招⽣⼈数中含中国农村政策研究中⼼指标。
联系⼈:杨欣;联系电话:62738513。
⼆、导师介绍朱俊峰,职称:副教授,博导兼硕导,单位:中国农业⼤学经济管理学院。
张正河,职称:教授,博导兼硕导,单位:中国农业⼤学经济管理学院。
陈前恒,职称:副教授,博导兼硕导,单位:中国农业⼤学经济管理学院。
⾟贤,职称:副教授,博导兼硕导,单位:中国农业⼤学经济管理学院。
陈锡⽂(外聘),职称:研究员,博导,单位:国务院。
程国强(外聘),职称:研究员,博导,单位:中国农业⼤学经济管理学院。
中国农业科学院和农大动物营养博士考题
中国农业科学院和农大动物营养博士考题2021年中国农科院动物营养博士考题真题名词解释pendfconjugatedlinoleicacid猜谜任选四举例说明氨基酸消化率的测定方法?奶牛低乳汁综合症的原因及研究进展?以畜禽为例说明热境应激对其的影响叶酸的生物学功能、缺乏症,叶酸与vb12的关系英国、美国、中国的能量体系有什么不同?能量体系之间的换算公式论述任选二以畜禽为基准表明幼年动物的生长对成年的影响分子生物学技术在动物营养中的营养及研究进展营养平衡对动物来说具有重要意义,以单胃或反刍动物为例说明纤维素与对它营养素吸收的影响及平衡对动物健康的意义2021中国农科院动物营养博士考题真题简答题1.反刍动物限制性氨基酸的研究方法?对照动物产品和食糜氨基酸组成的差异展开排序,例如单个氨基酸的消化道灌入,乳腺氨基酸的稀释,所需aa的消化道灌入、aa吸收率的方法测评aa的限制性顺序r2752.必需脂肪酸?猪的脂肪消化,吸收,代谢?3.家禽碘的营养?r3194.犊牛消化生理特点?r377,r131,r401论述题1.瘤胃微生物的研究进展?2.共轭亚油酸对猪生长性能的促进作用机制?p141农科院畜牧所<>博士研究生入学考试试题2021年1、如何评价锰的生物利用效率,影响其利用效率的因素有哪些?2、什么是蛋白质周转及其影响因素3、营养素对猪免疫系统功能拉艾的促进作用以及寡糖如何充分发挥功能性促进作用4、反刍动物与单胃动物脂肪代谢的区别,共轭亚油酸的生物合成途径以及如何通过营养手段展开调控5、综合分析基因、环境和营养对畜禽肉品品质的影响农科院畜牧所<>博士研究生入学考试试题2021年1、阴阳离子均衡在家禽上的促进作用、应用领域(20分后)2、断奶仔猪的营养生理特点?怎样做好仔猪的饲料添加剂?(20分)3、提高奶牛小肠aa消化率的方法措施(20分)4、酶制剂的最新研究。
你的观点与看法。
(20分)5、现在我国畜牧业所遭遇的问题存有哪些?你做为一名农业科学研究者的观点。
最新中国农业科学院农村发展考研经验考研参考书考研真题
最新中国农业科学院农村发展考研经验考研参考书考研真题皇天不负有⼼⼈,看到⾃⼰通过初试的结果,总算是踏实了下来,庆幸⾃⼰这⼀年多的坚持还有努⼒,觉得这⼀切都是值得的。
其实在开始备考的时候⾃⼰也有很多问题,也感到过迷茫,当时在⽹上也看了很多前辈们的经验贴,从中也给了⾃⼰或多或少的帮助,所以也想把我的备考经验写下来,希望可以帮助到你们,⽂章也许会有⼀些凌乱,还请⼤家多多包涵,毕竟是第⼀次写经验贴,如果还有什么其他的问题⼤家可以给我留⾔,我⼀定会经常上来回复⼤家的!虽然成功录取,但是现在回想起来还是有很多懊悔,其实当初如果⼼态再稳定⼀些,可能成绩还会再⾼⼀些,这样复试就不会担惊受怕了。
其实,经验本是想考完研就写出来的。
可是⾃⼰最⼤的缺点就是拖延症加上不⾃制。
所以才拖到现在才写完。
备考对于我来说最感谢的要数我的室友了,要不是他们的监督⾃⼰也不会坚持下来。
总之考研虽然很⾟苦,但是也很充实。
想好了⽅向之后,我就开始想关于学校的选择。
因为我本⾝出⽣在⼀个⼩地⽅,对⼤城市特别的向往,所以⼤学选择了⼤城市,研究⽣还想继续留在这。
希望你们从复习的开始就运筹帷幄,明年的这个时候旗开得胜,像战⼠⼀般荣耀。
闲话不多说,接下来我就和你们唠唠关于考研的⼀些⼲货!⽂⽂章很长,结尾有真题和资料下载,⼤家⾃取。
中国农业科学院农村发展的初试科⽬为:(101)思想政治理论(204)英语⼆(342)农业知识综合四(839)农村社会调查研究⽅法参考书⽬为:1、孔祥智.农业经济学[M].北京:中国⼈民⼤学出版社,20142、斯蒂芬·P·罗宾斯.管理学(第11版)[M].北京:中国⼈民⼤学出版社,20123、(美)波⾦斯等.发展经济学(第六版)(经济科学译丛)[M].北京:中国⼈民⼤学出版社,2013⾸先简单介绍⼀下我的英语复习经验。
⑴单词:英语的单词基础⼀定要打好,如果单词过不了关,那你其他可以看懂吗??单词可以⽤⽊糖英语单词闪电版就够了。
各个专业博士入学考试试题整理
中国科学院水生生物研究所——植物生理学2000年博士研究生入学考试试题.txt
中国科学院遥感所——RS,GIS试题2000~2002年博士研究生入学考试试题.txt
中国农业大学——动物营养学1997~2002年博士研究生入学考试试题.txt
中国农业大学——饲料学1996年博士研究生入学考试试题.txt
中国农业大学——饲料学1997年博士研究生入学考试试题.txt
北京大学——比较文学2005年博士研究生入学考试试题.txt
北京大学——古代文学魏晋隋唐方向2004年博士研究生入学考试试题.txt
北京大学——汉语言文字学部分小综合2004年博士研究生入学考试试题.txt
北京大学——中文当代文学专业1999年博士研究生入学考试试题.txt
复旦大学——古代文学魏晋南北朝方向2005年博士研究生入学考试试题.txt
复旦大学——金融学2002年博士研究生入学考试试题.txt
复旦大学经济学院——经济学基础2005年博士研究生入学考试试题.txt
浙江大学——政治经济学2003年春、秋博士研究生入学考试试题.txt
中国科学院自然科学史研究所——科技通史2002年博士研究生入学考试试题.htm
中国科学院自然科学史研究所——科技通史2003年博士研究生入学考试试题.htm
中国科学院自然科学史研究所——科技通史2004年博士研究生入学考试试题.htm
同济大学——诊断学2005年博士研究生入学考试试题.txt
同济大学——专业基础病理2005年博士研究生入学考试试题.txt
武汉大学——分子生物学(专业基础)2004年博士研究生入学考试试题.txt
2023年中国农科院历年考博试题汇总
中国农科院历年考博基因工程概论试题2023年中国农科院博士入学基因工程概论试题一、简答题1、聚丙烯酰胺、琼脂糖在dna电泳中的区别是什么?2、举出动物转基因的两种方法,并说明其原理。
3、双脱氧法测序的原理。
4、以拟南芥或玉米为例,说明转座子标签法进行基因转移的原理。
5、southern印迹的原理及应用。
三、试论述植物基因工程研究进展以及在农业生产上的意义。
2023年中国农科院博士入学基因工程概论试题一、名词解释1、限制性内切酶2、同裂酶3、核酶4、2μ环5、hat选择6、ti质粒7、t-dna8、同功trna9、反义trna 10、有义链11、α互补12、基因文库13、cdna 14、染色体步查二.简答题01、举两种植物基因转移的方法?简述其原理。
2、southern印迹的基本原理,这种方法有何应用。
3、噬菌体与cos作载体有何区别?4、aflp的原理及其应用5、普通pcr与rapd有何区别,何谓普通pcr?6、何谓双元载体,简述其组装过程及其作用机理?三、判断题1、无论用哪种转化方法均可用pbr322作载体2、进入细菌的外来dna之所以被降解,是由于细菌只修饰自身dna,不修饰外来dna3、只有粘粒端才可以被连接起来4、用自身作引物合成的cdna链,往往cdna并不完整1998年中国农科院博士入学基因工程概论试题一、什么是基因工程,基因工程在农业生产上有何意义?二、简答:1、聚丙烯酰胺凝胶电泳和琼脂糖凝胶电泳应用有何特点?2、举两种植物基因转移的方法?简述其原理。
3、双脱氧法测序的原理4、转座子标签法克隆植物基因的原理5、southern印迹的基本原理,这种方法有何应用?6、在dna复制过程中会形成一种复制体(replisome)的结构,它是由哪几部分组成的?7、sanger测序法的基本原理是什么?1999年中国农科院博士入学基因工程概论试题一.名词解释:1.cdna 2 ti质粒3. 2u环4. hat选择5 a互补6 yac 7 转导8 基因文库9 限制性内切酶10 染色体步查二.问答题:1 举例说明两种植物转基因的方法。
中国农科院历年博士入学分子遗传学试
中国农科院历年博士入学分子遗传学试题中国农业大学分子遗传学博士研究生入学考试试题(2003年)一、请举出对分子遗传学发展做出贡献的诺贝尔奖获得者10名,其重要成就如何? 30'二、何谓RNA编辑,是如何进行编辑的?15'三、举出2-3种基因组测序或功能基因组研究的策略,并加以说明。
20'四、启动子的作用是什么?原核生物启动子结构特征是什么? 10'五、大肠杆菌与真核生物蛋白质合成起始有何区别? 10 '六、简述真核生物转录因子的三种DNA结构域 10'中国农业大学分子遗传学博士研究生入学考试试题(2002年)一、名词解释(每个4分,共计40分)1、卫星DNA2、基因家族3、反义RNA4、核酶5、CAAT框6、hnRNA7、基因组8、δ因子9、衰减子 10、复制子二、简答题1、原核、真核生物翻译起始的异同点(10分)2、转录因子是什么?其与DNA结合的功能域(motif)的结构特点是什么?3、何谓RNA剪接,何谓RNA编辑?4、什么是转座子?转座子标签法转移基因的原理是什么?5、简述乳糖操纵子的正、负调控。
6、列表比较真核生物三种RNA聚合酶的特点中国农业大学分子遗传学博士研究生入学考试试题(2001年)一、名词解释1、异源双链体2、无义突变(琥珀突变)3、卫星DNA4、TATA框5、反式作用6、引发体二、简答题1、RF1、RF2、RF3的作用各是什么?2、图解真核生物翻译起始,并说明各因子的作用。
3、真核生物中tRNA、rRNA、mRNA的剪接各有何特点?4、如果一段DNA序列的两端为反向重复序列,若发生同源重组将会产生什么结果?5、病毒与细菌在遗传体系上有何差别?6、启动子的作用是什么?原核生物启动子的结构特征是什么?三、分子标记近年来发展很快,试举出三种分子标记,并论述它们在植物育种或动物育种或微生物上的应用?中国农业大学分子遗传学博士研究生入学考试试题(1998年)一、名词解释1、拟基因2、TATA框3、引发体4、卫星DNA5、增变基因7、滚环复制 7、基因家族 8、核酶 9、弱化子 10、反义RNA11、RNA编辑 12、有义链 13、同功tRNA 14、基因转换二、简答题1、如果一段DNA序列的两端为反向重复序列,若发生同源重组将会产生什么结果?2、真核生物中tRNA、rRNA、mRNA的剪接各有何特点?3、RecA蛋白在同源重组中的作用是什么?4、启动子的作用是什么?原核生物启动子有哪些特征?5、大肠杆菌和真核生物的蛋白质合成起始有何区别?6、病毒与细菌在遗传体系上有何区别?三、简述转座子的转座机制及遗传学效应四、分子遗传学在近二十年内取得了许多重大成就,试举出植物和微生物各两个例子,并说明其内容和意义。
中国农业科学院考博英语真题2001答案解析
中国农业科学院考博英语真题2001答案解析Part One Listening Comprehension(略)Part Two Vocabulary21.A 译文:尽管这场足球比赛不是很有趣,但解说员努力地将它解说得有趣。
解析:commentator解说员,评论员;newscaster新闻广播员;announcer宣告者,广播员;presenter主持人,发言者。
22.D 译文:国家的矿产资源已经被外强开采了。
解析:disuse停止使用;deprive使丧失,剥夺;extort 勒索,敲诈;exploit开采,开发。
23.C 译文:爱管闲事的主管要看最近的广告活动后的销售额。
解析:固定搭配,sales amounts销售额24.B 译文:他靠修复旧画谋生。
解析:revive复兴,复活;restore恢复,修复;retrieve检索,重新得到;renew更新。
25.C 译文:如果不引入更加严厉的狩猎法律,海豹将会灭绝。
解析:out-dated过时的;archaic陈旧的;extinct灭绝的,灭种的;obsolete废弃的。
26.A 译文:通货膨胀使得贫穷的人生活艰难。
解析:means在这里指的是“财产”,of scare means 缺钱的,穷的;impoverished贫穷的;introduced引入的;inserted插入的。
27.C 译文:已经引进了新的质量控制体系来克服产品的缺陷。
解析:install安装;inaugurate举行就职典礼;introduce引进,引入;insert插入。
28.A 译文:让出版商给你送来英语课本的最新目录。
解析:catalogue商品目录;prospectus计划书;brochure小册子;pamphlet小册子。
29.D 译文:寄出之前别忘了把信封上。
解析:固定搭配,seal the letter 封信,seal 密封,盖章。
30.D 译文:他在抽烟,我看到烟头在黑暗中闪耀这一丝火星。
中国农业科学院考博英语真题答案解析
中国农业科学院考博英语真题2004答案解析PartⅡVocabulary1.A 译文:他在这个领域的成就的功绩必须归于他的导师方教授解析:credit荣誉,功绩;reputation名誉,声望;respect尊敬;praise赞美。
译文:由于我们无法再等我们定的货,所以不得不取消订单。
解析:postpone推迟;refuse拒绝;accept承受;cancel取消。
译文:年轻人中存在着很高的工作流动性,因为他们今天辞掉这个工作明天就会找一个新的。
解析:固定搭配,quit work 辞职,停顿工作;depart离开,出发;reject排斥;quit 辞职,放弃;leave离开。
译文:由于天气恶劣必须放弃寻找失踪的船。
解析:release 释放,发射;resign辞职;abandon 放弃,断念;surrender使投降。
5.B 译文:人们开的车可能是为了显示他的身份或社会地位。
解析:curiosity好奇心;status身份,地位;importance重要性;reputation声望。
四个选项中与social position是一类词的只有B。
6.A 译文:创造力是指利用现存的资源产生独创与有益的方案、思想和产品。
解析:creativity 创造力;productivity 生产力;application应用;combination组合。
译文:有时艺术家发现让他们的作品赢得群众的欣赏很难。
解析:popular appetite 群众口味,在题目中指的事“赢得群众的喜爱〞。
Welcome欢送;applause喝彩;appetite爱好,喜爱,胃口;appreciation欣赏,感谢。
译文:面临着工程的失败,投资商将忍受着高达三千万的损失。
解析:in the face of面对……;in time of……时期;in the event of如果……发生;in the course of在……期间。
译文:为什么我们有些人擅长数学或写作,而其他人擅长艺术和篮球。
真题回顾(二)-2020年高考英语语法填空考点讲解与真题分析(解析版)
高考英语语法填空考点讲解与真题分析专题23真题回顾(二)Passage 6阅读下面短文,在空白处填入一个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。
(2018全国I)61. 【答案】higher【解析】句意:据一本健康期刊的证据摘要所说,跑步的人比不跑步的人多活三年。
由比较连词than可知,应用比较级。
62. 【答案】to see【解析】句意:你不必跑的很快或跑很长时间来验证跑步的好处。
这里是目的状语,应用不定式。
63. 【答案】dying【解析】句意:你可能喝酒、抽烟、肥胖,但是仍然可以通过跑步来降低早死的风险。
作介词of的宾语,应用动名词。
die是不规则动词,其动名词形式是dying。
64. 【答案】is【解析】句意:报告说,虽然有规律地跑步不能使人长生不老,但是在延年益寿方面比散步,骑车或游泳更有效。
这里说的是研究报告得出的结论,是客观事实,应用一般现在时;主语it是第三人称单数,be动词应用is。
65. 【答案】than【解析】由比较级more effective可知,应填比较连词than。
66. 【答案】which/that【解析】句意:这是一个复合句,主句是Two of the authors of the review also made a study published in 2014,从句是______ showed a mere five to 10 minutes a day of running reduced the risk of heart disease and early deaths from all causes。
从句修饰a study,是一个定语从句。
关系词在从句中作主语,且先行词study 指物,所以用关系代词which或that引导定语从句。
67. 【答案】causes【解析】句意:写这一评论的作家中有两名作家做了一项研究,并于2014年发表,研究表明一天只跑5到10分钟,就能降低心脏病和早死的风险。
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★绝密★中国农业科学院 2005年博士研究生入学考试英语试题(考试时间3小时满分100分)Ⅰ. Vocabulary Part A.Directions: Beneath each of the following sentences, there are four choices marked A, B, C, and D. Choose the one that best completes the sentence and mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square bracket on the ANSWER SHEET.1. The scene is so beautiful that it my power of description. A. transports B. transfersC. transcendsD. transforms2. The schoolmaster the girl’s bravery in his opening speech. A. applauded B. enhancedC. elevatedD. clapped3. The meaning of “yellow” is a color, but it can also mean “cowardly.” A. positive B. negativeC. underlyingD. literal4. Many people think that the standards of public have declined. A. morality B. rightness C . awareness D. mentality5. People were surprised to find that he had the ability to everything he was involved in.A. precedeB. dominateC. pervadeD. denominate6. The fact that they reacted so differently was a reflection of their different . A. performancesB. personalitiesC. qualitiesD. debut7. This medicine will the pain in the stomach.A. ascertainB. agitateC. alleviateD. allocate8. The apartment was as $50,000 and its owner decided to sell it. A. automated B. assessedC asserted D. avenged9. The minister all his officials pay the tax.A. bidsB. blessesC. barksD. baffles10. When a person dies, his debts must be paid before his can be distributed. A. paradoxesB. legaciesC. platitudesD. analogiesPart B.Directions: In each of the following sentences there is one word or phraseunderlined. Below the sentence are four choices marked A, B, C, and D. Choose the one that is clo sest in meaning to the underlined part. Mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square bracket on the ANSWER SHEET.11. Tourists flock from the remotest places to see the capital’s sights. A. invade B. troop C. p rompt D. gather12. He has told so many lies that we can no longer place any reliance on what he says. A. beliefB. trustC. convictionD. dependence.13. Oil can change a society more drastically than anyone could ever have imagined. A. grosslyB. severelyC. rapidlyD. radically14. In times of economic difficulty, governmental budgets for education are often slashed before any others.A. shiftedB. cutC. checkedD. donated15. Modern printing equipment quickly turns out duplicate copies of textual and pictorial matter.A. identicalB. doubleC. illustratedD. legible16. With her youngest child having left home, she felt a pressing need to fill her time. A. tenseB. thoroughC. urgentD. small17. The role of the performing artist is to interpret, not alter, the notes on a printed sheet of music.A. omitB. reproduceC. composeD. change.18. Aircraft and rocket can be used to collect radioactive debris, while high-altitude satellites carr y detectors for gamma rays and other emissions. A. diffusion B. remains C. glitter transfe r19. Although worn out by years of service to his country, Washington accepted the presidency of the United States.A. favoredB. honoredC. exhaustedD. weakened20. Between French friends, who have chosen each other for congeniality of their point of view, li vely disagreement and sharpness of arguments are the breath of life. A. coexistence B. coincide nce C. correlation D. compatibilityⅡ. ClozeDirections: Read the following passage. Choose the best word for each numbered blank and mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square bracket on the ANSWER SHEET. We do not know when man first began to use salt, but we do know that it has been used in many different ways throughout history. (21) evidence shows, for example, that people who lived o ver three thousand years ago ate (22) fish. Stealing salt was considered a major crime at cert ain times in history. In theeighteenth century, for instance, if a person was (23) “stealing salt”, he could be put in prison . History reveals that about ten thousand people were put in prison during that century (24) stealing salt.In the modern world salt has many uses (25) the dining table. It is used in making glass and ai rplane parts, in the (26) of crops and in killing weeds. It is also used to make water soft, to m elt ice on roads and highways, to make soap, and to (27) colors in cloth.Salt can be obtained in various ways, besides being taken from mines underground. Evaporation o f salt water from the ocean or from salt water lakes or small seas is one of the (28) commo n processes for manufacturing salt. In Australia, it can even be taken from a “salt bush”. Yet, (29) it is obtained, salt will continue to play an important (30) in the lives of men and women everywhere.21. A. Ancient B. Historic C. Historical D. Old 22. A. salt B. salted C. saltingD. salty 23. A. arrested B. caught C. got D. seized 24. A. as B. byC. forD. through 25. A. besides B. beyond C. except D. over26. A. bearing B. developing C. growing D. training 27. A. fasten B. fix C. preserve D. tie 28. A. little B. many C. much D. more29. A. however B. whatever C. whenever D. wherever 30. A. duty B. functionC. responsibilityD. roleⅢ. Reading ComprehensionPart A.Directions: There are three reading passages in this part. Each passage isfollowed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices m arked A, B, C, and D. You should decide on the best choice.Passage One(1) Poultry farmers need to adopt strict hygiene standards to curb Asia\'s deadly bird flu virus, a t op Vietnamese official said on the eve of an international conference Wednesday on fighting the disease.(2) A dozen Vietnamese have died of bird flu since Dec. 30, raising concerns that the disease could be re-emerging after an outbreak last year spread to 10 Asian countries, forcing the slaughter of more than 100 million birds.(3) “It\'s difficult to change their habit but we need to educate them," Bui Quang Anh, head of the Department for Animal Health, said Tuesday. "Once they understand and follow all the instructi ons, we can prevent the virus from spreading.”(4) Big commercial farms learned from the first outbreak and applied preventive measures, such a s strict hygiene standards and regular disinfection, Anh said. The most recent outbreak was only r eported in small farms, which failed to apply preventive measures, he said.(5) New regulations should include separating ducks from chickens, requiring ducks to be raised i n cages and improving hygiene measures, Anh said. Ducks should not roam freely in rice fields as they do now in the southern Mekong Delta, he added. (6) The conference will be looking at a vari ety of issues, including mass vaccinations, flu research, farm hygiene, animal husbandry practices and improving coordination between animal health and human health agencies.(7) The virus, which in the last year has killed 46 people — including 32 from Vietnam and 12 fro m Thailand — has yet to mutate into a form that can betransmitted between humans. But scientists say it may mutate to a human form that could beco me as deadly as the ones that killed millions during three influenza pandemics of the 20th centur y.31. The subject of the international conference mentioned in the first paragraph is aboutA. battling the SARSB. epidemic disease controlC. fighting the avian fluD. public health32. According to the passage, which of the following statement is true? A. Bird flu was first found in Vietnam.B. Big commercial farms have taken preventive measures to curb bird flu.C. Bui Quang Anh believ es that it is impossible to prevent the bird flu.D. 1, 000 birds were killed during the last year outb reak of bird flu.33. According to the passage, which of the following measures are NOT effective in fighting agains t the bird flu?A. to adopt strict hygiene standards in poultry farms.B. to carry out regular disinfectionC. to raise ducks and chickens separatelyD. to stop poultry trade34. We can infer from the last paragraph thatA. currently the bird flu virus cannot be transmitted between humansB. the bird flu virus is easy t o mutate.C. the bird flu has killed millions of peopleD. the bird flu is more deadly than common influenza.35. The best title for the passage is . A. Bird Flu: A Deadly DiseaseB. What Can We Learn from the Bird FluC. Vietnam: the Biggest Victim of the Bird FluD. Official Urges Farmers to Curb Bird Flu Passage T(1) The sources of anti-Christian feeling were many and complex. On the more intangible side, th ere was a general pique against the unwanted intrusion of the Western countries; there was an u nderstandable tendency to seek an externalscapegoat for internal disorders only tangentially attributable to the West and perhaps most imp ortant, there was a virile tradition of ethnocentricism, vented long before against Indian Buddhis m, which since the seventeenth century, focused on Western Christianity. Accordingly, even befor e the missionary movement really got under way in the mid-nineteenth century, it was already at a disadvantage. After 1860, as missionary activity in the hinterland expanded, it quickly became a pparent that inaddition to the intangibles, numerous tangible grounds for Chinese hostility abounded. (2) In part , the very presence of the missionary evoked attack, they were, after all, the first foreigners to lea ve the treaty ports and venture into the interior, and for a long time they were virtually the only f oreigners whose quotidian labors carried them to the farthest reaches the Chinese empire. For m any of the indigenous population,therefore, the missionary stood as a uniquely visible symbol against which opposition to foreign i ntrusion could e vented. In part too, the missionary was attacked because the manner in which h e made his presence felt after 1860 seemed almost calculated to offend. By indignantly waging ba ttle against the notion that China was the sole fountainhead of civilization and, more particularly, by his assault on many facets of Chinese culture, the missionary directly undermined the cultural hegemony of the gentry class. Also, in countless ways, he posed a threat to the gentry’s traditiona l monopoly of social leadership. Missionaries, particularly Catholics, frequently, assumed the garb of the Confucian literati. They were the only persons at the local level, aside from the gentry who were permitted to communicate with the authorities as social equals, and they enjoyed an extrat erritorial status in the interior that gave them greater immunity to Chinese law than had ever bee n possessed by the gentry. (3) Although it was the avowed policy of the Chinese government after 1860 that the new treaties were to be strictly adhered to, in practice implementation depended on the wholehearted accord provincial authorities. There is abundant evidence that cooperation was dilatory. At the root of this lay the interactive nature of ruler and ruled.(4) In a severely understaffed bureaucracy that ruled as much by suasion as by might, the official, almost always a stranger in the locality of his service, depended on the active cooperation of the l ocal gentry class. Energetic attempts to implement treaty provisions concerning missionary activit ies, in direct defiance of gentry sentiment, ran the risk of alienating this class and destroying future effectiveness.36. In a vague way, anti-Christian feeling stemmed from .A. the mere presence of invadersB. a generalized unfocused feelingC. the introduction to the W estD. none of the above37. The author would agree that .A. many problems in China came from internal disorders due to Western influence.B. many probl ems in China came from China itself and were unrelated to the WestC. scapegoats perform a nec essary function and there should be more of themD. all of the above are true.38. With which of the following statements would the author agree? A. Ethnocentricism is a manl y tradition.B. The disdain toward Christianity was prefigured by a disdain toward Buddhism.C. Although Chri stianity was not well received in China, Buddhism was.D. The author would agree with A and C.39. Missionaries .A. often dressed the same way as Chinese scholars didB. were free of the legal constraints that bound the local indigenous populationC. had greater ac cess to authority than Chinese peasantsD. may be described by all of the above40. Provincial authorities .A. cooperated fully with the central government’s policyB. were alive to local feelingsC. were obliged to determine whether local sentiment tolerated implementationD. may be descri bed by B and C.Passage Three(1) The natural environment has, of course, always conditioned technology. For example, the nature of an environment (polar, desert, jungle) engenders thedevelopment of technologies appropriate to that environment to enable man to adapt successfull y to it. Further, emerging scarcity of some technological resource mayignite a research for, and gradual transition to, a new technology using resources present in the e nvironment in greater abundance, as, for example, in the case of the gradual change from wood-based to coal-based technology in England that began in Elizabeth times and stretched until the e nd of the eighteenth century.(2) In modern Western society, environment has begun to condition technology in new ways, although admittedly more indirectly. The safety and quality of the environment and public percep tions of it have begun to translate into presidential politics and congressional mandates to regulat ory agencies to protect or enhance environmental quality or safety, occasionally even at the cost of some perturbation of the tech-economic status-quo. In France, Italy, and recently the United St ates, political parties have been formed, organized around a complex of technology/ environment issues. In general, in the last fifteen years, the gradual development of broad-based environment al awareness, the lobbying and litigious activities of environmental interest groups, and guideline s issued and reinforced by the EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) in response to congression al mandates have markedly increased the heed paid to the environment by many corporations in going about their technology activities. Both research an development priorities and capital inves tment programs of the corporations have been affected by this.41. Which of the following statements is TRUE?A. Environment enables man to adapt successfully to new technology.B. Technologies enable ma n to adapt successfully to his environment.C. The development of the technologies depends solely on the natural environment.D. Lack of technologies to cope with the environment is caused by lack of natural resources.42. We can infer from the article that in the 1800s England was probably rich in . A. wood resou rces B. technological resources C. natural resources D. coal resource43. in modern Western society, the environmental problem has . A. received great attention fo rm the governmentsB. caused some serious disorders in technology and economy Affected modern technologies mor e directly than before.D. become more important but received less and less attention44. The underlined word “heed” in the last but one sentence of the passage means . A. lawsuitB. interestC. attentionD. expense45. What is the best topic for the passage? A. What can nature contribute to technology?B. Environment can sometimes block the progress of technology.C. Technologies of all kinds shou ld serve the natural environment.D. Environment deserves the most attention in the development of technology.Part BDirections: After you have read the following passage, write out a summary in English whit about 70 to 90 words. Put your summary on the ANSWER SHEET.What is Society?Society is a group of human beings, held together by agreement for reasons that are mutually be neficial to the individual members. Societies operate as a whole, as a collective body, chiefly in w ays that look out for the highest common good of all. Members have specific roles and responsibi lities within the society. One of the best direct analogies is with the human body itself. The cells a re all alive, independently, yet they group together and establish roles, responsibilities, and relati onships that allow a greater whole to exist that is more than just the sum of the parts. The cells g ain from the specific roles they play because they are allowed to be what they are more effectivel y. Further, they are given a limited awareness of the whole that their efforts aid in creating. Similarly, when individual human beings group together to form societies, anorganization is created in which the members are the cells. Subgroups of the members may form organs through which higher level functions can then manifest. If the relationships are loose, the body created has limited functionality over that of any individual member because there is little s ynergy. When the relationships are close and founded on a basis of love, the body thus created h as significant functionality over that of the individuals. When the group is small, few organs can b e created so there is limited complexity or functionality. When the group is large, many organs ca n be created, resulting in highly increased complexity and functionality.Countries, regions, states cities, and neighborhoods could all be considered to be societies as coul d teams, groups, and any other organizations of people. For our purposes here, the most importa nt society is The United States of America since it is the one established to set up the New Order f or the Ages, Novus Ordo Seclorum. Society is more than the government, however. It also includ es all the economic and social infrastructure necessary to provide people with what they need. Ⅳ. Translation1. Translate the following passage into Chinese.Water is a limited natural resource and a public good fundamental for life and health. The human right to water is indispensable for leading a life in human dignity. It is a prerequisite for the realiza tion of other human rights. The Committee has been confronted continually with the widespread denial of the right to water in developing as well as developed countries. Over I billion persons lac k access to a basic water supply, while several billion do not have access to adequate sanitation, which is theprimary cause of water contamination and diseases linked to water. The continuing contaminatio n, depletion and unequal distribution of water is exacerbating existing poverty. States have to ado pt effective measures to realize, without discrimination, the right to water.2. Translate the following passage into English.和平与发展是当今世界的两大主题。