南京大学英语专业考研真题
南京大学外国语学院《963英语语言学》历年考研真题及详解专业课考试试题
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目 录2014年南京大学963英语语言学考研真题(回忆版)2013年南京大学963英语语言学考研真题(回忆版)2012年南京大学963英语语言学考研真题(回忆版)2009年南京大学963英语语言学考研真题及详解2008年南京大学963英语语言学考研真题及详解2007年南京大学463英语语言学考研真题及详解2006年南京大学463英语语言学考研真题及详解2003年南京大学英语语言学考研真题2002年南京大学英语语言学考研真题2001年南京大学英语语言学考研真题2000年南京大学英语语言学考研真题2014年南京大学963英语语言学考研真题(回忆版)第一题,术语区分题。
四组术语,24分。
1.phoneme vs. allophone2.homonymy vs. homophony3.illocutionary act vs. perlocutionary actnguage switch vs. L1 transfer第二题,选择题,考察的都是基础知识,10小题,共30分。
第三题,分析题。
给出几个句子,要求先填写名词前的冠词或复数后缀-s;然后总结出使用冠词或复数后缀-s的一般模式(common pattern)。
第四题,分析题,考察的知识点是歧义(ambiguity)。
给出两句话,要求先回答这两句话有无歧义,并写出每句话的不同理解,再分析这两句话产生歧义的原因是否相同。
1.The children play near the bank.2. The professor said on Monday that he would give an exam.显然,第一句话中的bank涉及lexical ambiguity, 而第二句话中的on Monday既可修饰said,又可修饰would give an exam,属于grammatical/structural ambiguity。
第五题,分析题,考察隐喻。
[考研类试卷]2010年南京大学英语专业(基础英语)真题试卷.doc
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[ 考研类试卷 ]2010 年南京大学英语专业(基础英语)真题试卷一、名词解释0 For the definition given in each item in questions 11 to 15, find a matching word in the specified paragraph. The number given after each definition indicates the paragraph in which the word appears.(1x5)1pretension to knowledge not possessed(2)2adjustment(3)3appearing periodically(4)4display of narrow-minded learning(7)5bodies invisible to the naked eye(13)二、阅读理解6THE STUDY OF MANIrving S. Lee1The study of man—even, the scientific study—is ancient and respectable. It goes back to Aristotle, to Hippocrates, and beyond them to obscure beginnings. Today, it is one of the chief studies of the learned. Like our other activities, it may be divided into two parts, the successful part and the unsuccessful part. Speaking very generally and with due regard to numerous and important exceptions, it may be said that the successful part of the scientific study of man is related to medicine, the unsuccessful part to philosophy and to the social sciences. These relations are not only historical, they are also to be seen in methods, attitudes, and traditions.2The successes of medicine and the medical sciences have not been lightly won; from a multitude of failures, they are the survivals and the fortunate productions of tile best or the most-favored men among an endless succession of skillful physicians though pedantry, incompetency, and charlatanry have often hindered and, in evil times, even arrested the accumulations of medical science for long periods, since Hippocrates, at least, the tradition of skillful practice has never been quite lost the tradition that combines theory and practice. This tradition is, especially in three elements,indispensable.3Hippocrates teaches, first, hard, persistent, intelligent, responsible, unremitting labor in the sickroom, not in the library;the all-roundadaptation of the doctor to his task, anadaptation that is far from being merely intellectual. This is adaptation chiefly through the establishment of conditioned reflexes. Something like it seems to be a necessary part of the mastery of any material or of effective work in any medium.4Hippocrates teaches, secondly, accurate observation of things and events; selection, guided by judgment born of familiarity, of the salient and the recurrent phenomena; and their classification and methodical exploitation.5Hippocrates teaches, thirdly, the judicious construction of a theor—y not a philosophical theory, nor a grand effort of the imagination, nor a quas—i religious dogma, but a modest pedestrian affair, or perhaps I had better say, a useful walking stick to help on the way.6All this may be summed up thus: The physician must have, first, intimate habitual intuitive familiarity with things; secondly, a systematic knowledge of things; and thirdly, an effective way of thinking about things.7Experience shows that this is the way to success. It has long been followed in studying sickness, but hardly at all in studying the other experiences of daily life. Let us, therefore, consider more carefully what Hippocrates did and what he did not do. He was in reaction chiefly against three things: firstly, against the ancient, traditional myths and superstitions which still prevailed among the physicians of his day; secondly, against the recent intrusion of philosophy into medical doctrine; thirdly, against the extravagant system of diagnoses of the Cnidian School, a body of contemporary physicians who seem to have suffered from a familiar form of professional pedantry. Here, Hippocrates was opposing the pretentious systematization of knowledge that lacked solid, objective foundation—the concealment of ignorance, probably more or less unconsciously, with a show of knowledge. Note well that such concealment is rarely altogether dishonest and may be practised in thorough good faith.8The social sciences today suffer from defects that are not unlike the defects of medicine to which Hippocrates was opposed. Firstly, social and political myths are everywhere current, and if they involve forms of superstition that are less apparent to us than the medical superstitions of long ago, that may well be because we recognize the latter class of superstitions for what they are while still accepting or half accepting the former class. Secondly, there is at least as much philosophy mingled with our current social science as there was at any time in the medical doctrines ofthe Greeks. Thirdly, a great part of the social science of today consists of elaborate speculation on an insufficient foundation of fact.9Hippocrates endeavored to avoid myths and traditional rules, the grand search for philosophical truth, the authority of philosophical beliefs, the concealment of ignorance with a show of systematic knowledge. He was concerned, first of all not to conceal his own ignorance from himself.10Experience shows that there are two kinds of human behavior which it is ordinarily convenient and often essential to distinguish.11One is the thinking, talking, and writing, by those who are so familiar with relevant concrete experiences that they cannot ordinarily forget the facts, about two kinds of subjects. These are;firstly, concrete observation—s observations and experiences which are representable by means of sharply defined or otherwise unambiguous words; and secondly, more general considerations, dearly and logically related to such concrete observations and experiences.12The other kind of behavior is thinking, talking, and writing about vague or general ideas or "concepts" which do not clearly relate to concrete observations and experiences and which are not designated by sharply defined words.13In the social sciences, special methods and special skills are few. It is hard to think of anything that corresponds to a mathematician's skill in performing mathematical operations or to a bacteriologist's skill in cultivating microorganisms or to a clinician's skill in making physical examinations.14Classificatory, descriptive knowledge, which is so conspicuous in the medical sciences and in natural history and which has proved so essential to the development of such sciences, is relatively lacking in the social sciences. Moreover, there is no common accord among social scientists concerning the classes and subclasses of the things they study, and there is even much disagreement about nomenclature.15The theories of the social sciences seem to be in a curious state. One body of theory, that of economies is highly developed, has been cast in mathematical form, and has reached a stage that is thought to be in some respects definitive. This theory, like those of the natural sciences, is the result of the concerted efforts of a great number of investigators and has evolved in a manner altogether similar to the evolution of certain theories in the natural sciences. But it is hardly applicable to concrete reality.16The reasons why economic theory is so difficult to apply to concrete events are that it is an abstraction from an immensely complex reality and that reasoning from theory to practice is here, nearly always vitiated by "thefallacy of misplaced concreteness. " Such application suggests the analogy of applying Galileo's law of falling bodies to the motion of a falling leaf in a stiff breeze. Experience teaches that under such circumstances it is altogether unsafe to take more than a single step in deductive reasoning without verifying the conclusions by observation or experiment. Nevertheless, many economists, some cautiously and others less cautiously are in the habit of expressing opinions deduced from theoretical considerations concerning economic practice. There is here a striking contrast with medicine, where it is almost unknown for a theorist inexperienced in practice to prescribe the treatment of a patient.17In other fields of social science, theories are generally not held in common by all investigators, but, as in philosophical systems, tend to be sectarian beliefs. This is true even in psychology where the conflicts of physiological psychologists, behaviorists. Gestaltists, and others sometimes almost suggest theological controversy.18On the whole, it seems fair to say that the social sciences in general are not cultivated by persons possessing intuitive familiarity; highly developed, systematic, descriptive knowledge; and the kind of theories that are to be found in the natural sciences.19There is not a little system-building in the social sciences but, with the striking exception of economic theory, it is of the philosophical type rather than of the scientific type, being chiefly concerned in its structural elements with words rather than with things, or in old fashioned parlance, with noumena, rather than with phenomena.20A further difference between most system-building in the social sciences and systems of thought and classification of the natural sciences is to be seen in their evolution. In the natural sciences, both theories and descriptive systems grow by adaptation to the increasing knowledge and experience of the scientists. In the social sciences, systems often issue fully formed from the mind of one man. Then they may be much discussed if they attract attention, but progressive adaptive modification as a result of the concerted efforts of great numbers of men is rare. Such systems are in no proper sense working hypotheses; they are "rationalizations" , or, at best mixtures of working hypotheses and "rationalizations".21Thinking in the social sciences suffers, I believe, chiefly from two defects:One is the fallacy of misplaced concreteness; the other, the intrusion of sentimen—tsof Bacon's Idols—into the thinking, which may be fairly regarded as an occupational hazard of the social scientists.22Sentiments have no place in clear thinking, but the manifestations of sentiments are among the most important things with which the social sciences are concerned. For example, the word "justice" is out of place in pleadingbefore the Supreme Curt of the United States, but the sentiments associated with that word and often expressed by it are probably quite as important as the laws of our country, not to mention the procedure of the Supreme Court. Indeed such sentiments seem to be in many ways and at many times the most important of all social forces.23The acquired characters of men may be divided into two classes. One kind involves much use of reason, logic, the intellect; for example, the ordinary studies of school and university. The other kind involves little intellectual activity and arises chiefly from conditioning from rituals and from routines; for example, skills, attitudes, and acquired sentiments. In modified form, men share such acquired characters with dogs and other animals. When not misinterpreted, they have been almost completely neglected by intellectuals and are frequently overlooked by social scientists. Their study seems to present an opportunity for the application of physiology.24The conclusions of this comparative study are as follows: Firstly, a combination of intimate, habitual, intuitive familiarity with things; systematic knowledge of things; and an effective way of thinking about things is common among medical scientists, rare among social scientists. Secondly, systems in the medical sciences and systems in the social sciences are commonly different. The former resemble systems in the other natural sciences, the latter resemble philosophical systems. Thirdly, many of the terms employed currently in the social sciences are of a kind that is excluded, except by inadvertence, from the medical sciences. Fourthly, sentiments to not ordinarily intrude in the thinking of medical scientists; they do ordinarily intrude in the thinking of social scientists. Fifthly, the medical sciences have made some progress in the objective study of the manifestations of sentiments; the social sciences, where these things are particularly important, have neglected them. This is probably due to the influence of the intellectual tradition " Sixthly" in the medical sciences, special methods and special skills are many; in the social sciences, few. Finally, in the medical sciences, testing of thought by observation and experiment is continuous. Thus, theories and generalizations of all kinds are constantly being corrected, modified, and adapted to the phenomena; and fallacies of misplaced concreteness, eliminated. In the social sciences, there is little of this adaptation and correction through continuous observation and experiment.25These are very general conclusions to which, as I have already said, there are numerous and important exceptions. Perhaps the most important exceptions may be observed in the work of many historians, of purely descriptive writers, and of those theoretical economists who scrupulously abstain from the application of theory to practice.6Hippocrates was chiefly concerned with .( A)not concealing his own ignorance from himself( B)combining philosophy with medical doctrine( C)the system of diagnosis of the Cnidian school( D)pretentious systematization of knowledge( E)incorporating tradition with systematic knowledge7Most social science systems are, at best, .( A)mixtures of working hypotheses and rationalizations( B)results of concerted efforts of men at adaptive modification( C)adaptations of experience and increasing knowledge to experiments( D)highly developed systems of knowledge( E)studies of the structural elements of things8One branch of the social sciences considered in some respects definitive is .( A)history( B)philosophy( C)sociology( D)politics( E)economics9The social sciences today suffer from defects similar to the defects of medicine in Hippocrates' day, as evidenced by all but one of thesestatements. Which one?( A)Forms of superstition are less apparent today because we half accent them.( B)The concealment of ignorance is as thoroughly dishonest today as it was before.( C)Elaborate speculation is based on poor foundation of fact.( D)Much philosophy is mingled with current social science.( E)Social and political myths are everywhere current.10The tradition of skillful medical practice since Hippocrates' time combines theory and practice. Which description inaccurately represents this tradition?( A)Hard, persistent, intelligent, unremitting labor in the sickroom.( B)Evidence of accurate observation, selection, classification, and methodical exploitation of phenomena.( C)Judicious construction of a modest workable theory.( D)Hard, responsible, intelligent, unremitting labor in the library.( E)All-round adaptation of the doctor to his task as a type of master workman.11The author firmly believes the scientific study of men .( A)comparative religion( B)natural philosophy( C)social science( D)medical science( E)theoretical economics12Which of the following is NOT a conclusion of the author based on his comparative study?( A)Effective thinking is rare among social scientists.( B)In the medical sciences, testing of thought by observation and experiment is continuous.( C)Sentiments ordinarily intrude in the thinking of medical scientists.( D)Social sciences have neglected the objective study of the manifestations of sentiments.( E)Terms employed in the social sciences are of a kind excluded from the medical sciences.13By "the fallacy of misplaced concreteness" , the author means .( A)apprenticeship in a hospital is the only effective preparation for practice( B)the expressing of opinions deduced from theoretical considerations rather than experiment and observation( C)the prescribing of treatment for a patient by an experienced intern( D)treatment of illness by specialists in each field( E)theoretical deductions verified by observation and experimentation14According to the writer, the social sciences suffer from both the fallacy of misplace concreteness and .( A)excessive experimentation( B)judicious theory construction( C)intrusion of sentiments( D)too much observation and checking( E)ancient myths15One may infer that the author's views are .( A)universally accepted by medical students( B)accepted by social scientists( C)not acceptable to Gestaltists( D)parallel to those of economists( E)disputed by many professions15For the given word in each item in questions 16 to 20, decide which semantic variation best conveys the meaning of the author. The number given after each word indicates the paragraph in which the word appears.(1x5)16prevailed(7)( A)existed widely( B)produced the desired effect( C)gained the advantage17 pretentious(7)( A)assumptive of dignity( B)making exaggerated show; ostentatious( C)claiming importance or title18 conspicuous(14)( A)readily attracting attention; striking( B)plainly visible; manifest( C)undesirably noticeable19 fallacy(16)( A)false idea( B)deceitfulness( C)erroneous reasoning 20 sectarian(17)( A)pertaining to a particular school of thought( B)member of a sect( C)bigoted三、句子改错21All high schools attach great importance youngster's performance in the College Entrance Examinations.22He could not say "hippopotamus" and "pomegranate" , and we had to help him to pronounce.23"How to open the door?" , he asked as he turned the key, but the door did not open.24This was a farm where you could find all kinds of birds: chickens, quails, turkeys, ducks and geese and so on.25The boy biked to school but realized that he has forgotten his homework.26It was bad news that all boys in the class were caught skipping the PEclass. Another news, however, was encouraging:all of them passed the math exam.27The teacher got impatient that after explaining the past tense many times and giving many examples, the pupils still wrote "I play football yesterday".28All the sophomores said that they wanted to be a good student.29The teacher found it dissatisfied that students failed to hand in their homework on time.30 A wrong information he gave me is that our shuttle bus leaves at 3. As a result, I missed it.四、汉译英31Translate the following passage into English.(25)建城近2500年来,南京一直是中国多元文化交融共进的中心城市之一。
南京大学二外英语考研真题及参考答案
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8.南京大学二外英语考研真题及参考答案(2009)南京大学2009年二外英语考研真题Ⅰ. Choose the best answer for each of the following sentences (25%)1. Before leaving his office, the manager showed no sign of _________ our proposals.A. responding toB. showing offC. bringing alongD. pointing out2. Hong Kong is a _________ city, and still more people are pouring in.A. popularB. populatedC. populaceD. populous3. Living in the central Australian desert has its problems, _________ obtaining water is not the least.A. for whichB. to whichC. of whichD. in which4. I haven’t the _________ idea what you mean.A. lightestB. smallestC. faintestD. dimmest5. I’d rather that my father _________ me an ipod as a birthday present. Instead he gave a discman.A. had givenB. gaveC. would giveD. would have given6. Do you want to see my driving license or my passport?Oh, _________.A. either does wellB. either one will doC. each one is goodD. each will be fine7. Language belongs to each member of the society, to the cleaner _________ to the professor.A. as much asB. the same asC. as far asD. as long as8. We managed to reach the top of the mountain, and half an hour later we began to _________.A. ascendB. descendC. declineD. plunge9. Sometimes patients suffering from severe pain can be helped by “drugs” that aren’t really drugs at all _________ sugar pills that contain no active chemical elements.A. or ratherB. rather thanC. but ratherD. other than10. Bacon and eggs _________ common Sunday breakfast in England.A. is anB. are theC. is aD. are11. Don’t _________ about lunch for the instructors, because they promised to get some on theway.A. botherB. fussC. troubleD. think12. The factory has turned out _________.A. twice more TV sets this year as last yearB. TV sets this year twice as many as last yearC. TV sets twice more this year than last yearD. twice as many TV sets this year as last year13. The purpose of this election is to set up a government truly _________ of the people.A. typicalB. representativeC. characteristicD. responsible14. I do not believe that this ridiculous scheme is _________ of our serious consideration.A. worthlessB. worthwhileC. worthD. worthy15. American women were _________ the right to vote until 1920 after many years of hardstruggle.A. ignoredB. deniedC. neglectedD. refused16. In the lecture _________ he will tell us something about modern English usage.A. followingB. followedC. to followD. being followed17. If we let our eyes glide _________ the lines of a book, we will probably be unable to come upwith an understanding of what we have read.A. acrossB. inC. fromD. with18. It was at the exhibition that we _________ this kind of minicar made of plastics.A. came upB. came outC. came uponD. came up with19. The concert was _________ start at eight o’clock, but the conductor did not come until aquarter past.A. about toB. due toC. almostD. ready to20. In most countries, the metric system has been _________ for all measurement.A. adaptedB. appliedC. developedD. adopted21. You _________ worry about her. She _________ well already.A. needn’t, may getB. don’t need to, may getC. mustn’t, getsD. needn’t, may have got22. It isn’t quite _________ that he will be present at the meeting.A. sureB. exactC. certainD. right23. The experiment requires more money than _________.A. has been put inB. being put inC. have been put inD. to be put in24. Every man in this country has the right to live where he wants to, _________ the color of hisskin.A. with the exception ofB. in the light ofC. by virtue ofD. regardless of25. The team’s efforts to score were _________ by the opposing goalkeeper.A. preventedB. frustratedC. discouragedD. accomplishedⅡ. Cloze(10%)Publicity is any promotional communication about an organization or its products that is presented by the media but is not paid for by the organization. Publicity usually takes the form of a news story appearing in a mass 1 or an endorsement provided by an individual informally or in a speech or interview.There are three channels for 2 publicity. One is to prepare a story (or a news release) and make it 3 to the media. The intention is for the selected newspapers, television stations, or 4 media to report the information as news. The second channel is personal communication with a group. A press 5 will draw media representatives 6 they feel the subject or speaker has news value. Company tours and speeches to different groups of people are other 7 of individual-to-group communications. The third channel is one-to-one personal communication, often 8 lobbying(游说). Companies lobby law makers or other powerful people 9 an attempt to influence their opinions, and also their decisions. In 10 , firms will give products to highly visible people in hopes that the people will be seen using them.Ⅲ. Reading Comprehension (20%)Passage AThe ordinary family in colonial North America was primarily concerned with sheer physical survival and beyond that, its own economic prosperity. Thus, children were valued in terms of their productivity, and they assumed the role of producer quite early. Until they fulfilled this role, their position in the structure of the family was one of subordination and their psychological needs and capacities received little consideration.As the society became more complex, the status of children in the family and in the society became more important. In the complex, technological society that the United States has become, each member must fulfill a number of personal and occupational roles and be in constant contact with a great many other members. Consequently, viewing children as potentially acceptable and necessarily multifaceted members of society means that they are regarded more as people in their own right than as utilitarian organisms. This acceptance of children as equal participants in the contemporary family is reflected in the variety of statutes protecting the rights of children and in the social and public welfare programs devoted exclusively to their well-being.This new view of children and the increasing contact between the members of society has also resulted in a surge of interest in child-rearing techniques. People today spend a considerable portion of their time conferring on the proper way to bring up children. It is now possible to influence the details of the socialization of another person’s child by spreading the gospel of current and fashionable theories and methods of child rearing.The socialization of the contemporary child in the United States is a two-way transaction between parent and child rather than a one-way, parent-to-child training program. As a consequence, socializing children and living with them over a long period time is for parents a mixture of pleasure, satisfaction, and problems.1. Which of the following would be the best title for the passage?A. The Place of Children in United States SocietyB. The Children of Colonial North AmericaC. The Development of Cultural ValuesD. The Child as a Utilitarian Organism2. According to the author, children in colonial North America were mainly valued for their _________.A. academic achievementsB. survival instinctsC. physical characteristicsD. productive roles3. What can be inferred about formal schooling in colonial North America?A. It was generally required by law.B. It was considered relatively unimportant.C. It was improperly administered.D. It was highly disciplined.4. Which of the following is a possible cause of changes in the role of the child in the United States?A. An increase in technology.B. The growing complexity of the child’s psychological needs.C. A decrease in the child’s intellectual capacities.D. The growing number of single parent families.5. According to the passage, parents have become increasingly interested in _________.A. their children’s future occupationsB. having smaller familiesC. adoption programs for childless couplesD. child-rearing techniquesPassage BI am one of the many city people who are always saying that given the choice we managed to convince myself that if it weren’t for my job l would immediately head out for the open spaces and go back to nature in some sleepy village buried in the country. But how realistic is the dream?Cities can be frightening places. The majority of the population live in massive tower blocks, noisy, dirty and impersonal. The sense of belonging to a community tends to disappear when you live fifteen floors up. Children become aggressive and nervous—cooped up at home all day, with nowhere to play; their mothers feel isolated from the rest of the world. Strangely enough, whereas in the past the inhabitants of one street all knew each other, nowadays people on the same floor in tower blocks don’t even say hello.Country life, on the other hand, differs from this kind of isolated existence in that a sense of community generally binds the inhabitants of small villages together. People have the advantage of knowing there is always someone to turn to when they need help. But country life has disadvantages too. While it is true that you may be among friends in a village, it is also true that you are cut off from the exciting and important events that take place in cities. There’s little possibility of going to a new show or the latest movie. Shopping becomes a major problem, and for anything slightly out of the ordinary you have to go on an expedition to the nearest large town.Some people have found (or rather bought) a compromise between the country and the city: they have expressed their preference for the “quiet life” by leaving the suburbs and moving to villages within commuting distance of large cities. They generally have about as much sensitivity as the plastic flowers they leave behind—they are polluted with strange ideas about change and improvement which they force on to the unwilling original inhabitants of the village.What then of my dreams of leaning on a cottage gate and murmuring “morning” to the locals as they pass by? I’m keen on the idea, but you see there’s my cat, Toby. I’m not at all sure that he would take to all that fresh air and exercise in the long grass.I mean, can you see him mixing with all those hearty males down the farm? No, he would rather have the electric imitation-coal fire any evening.6. We get the impression from the first paragraph that the author _________.A. used to live in the countryB. used to work in the cityC. works in the cityD. lives in the country7. In the author’s opinion, the following may cause city people to be unhappy EXCEPT _________.A. a strong sense of fearB. lack of communicationC. housing conditionsD. a sense of isolation8. The passage implies that it is easy to buy the following things in the country EXCEPT _________.A. daily necessitiesB. fresh fruitsC. designer clothesD. fresh vegetables9. According to the passage, which of the following adjectives best describes those people who work in large cities and live in villages?A. Original.B. Quiet.C. Arrogant.D. Insensitive.10. Do you think the author will move to the country?A. Yes, he will do so.B. No, he will not do so.C. It is difficult to tell.D. He is in two minds.Ⅳ. Translate the following passage into Chinese (25%)The way that people spend their money, and the objects on which they spend it, are one of the areas where free choice and individuality can be expressed. The choice reflects personal taste, the way people see themselves and the fantasies they have about their lives, the restrictions on money available to them, the presence of others in the family with a claim on that money, and theinfluence of current convention, cultivation, surroundings and locality. Shopping is an important human activity. Yet shoppers are faced with a confusing situation and a rapidly changing one. The confusion arises from the claims made by advertising, from inadequate information about new products, new materials, new places to shop—a confusion enhanced by rising prices and a wider choice of goods than ever before. The search for the right purchase is based on ignorance of their own needs and ignorance of the product’s fitness for those needs. When choosing any particular item, there are several lines of communication which might provide some guidance. Yet none of these is entirely satisfactory. For example, you can ask a shop assistant initially. Even if you find one, she may quite generally not know the answers. She may be a schoolgirl with a Saturday job, or a housewife working part-time.Ⅴ. Translate the following passage into English (20%)这次到台湾访问交流,虽然行程匆匆,但是,看了不少地方,访了旧友,交了新知,大家走到一起,谈论的一个重要话题就是中华民族在21世纪的强盛。
[考研类试卷]2009年南京大学英语专业(英美文学)真题试卷.doc
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[考研类试卷]2009年南京大学英语专业(英美文学)真题试卷.doc[考研类试卷]2009年南京大学英语专业(英美文学)真题试卷一、填空题1 Author______ Title______Ten Thousand saw I at a glance,Tossing their heads in sprightly dance.2 Author______ Title______It was now midnight, and my task was drawing to a close. I had completed the eighth, the ninth and the tenth tier. I had finished a portion of the last and the eleventh; there remained but a single stone to be fitted and plastered in.3 Author______ Title______Roger edged past the Chief, only just avoiding pushing him with his shoulder. The yelling ceased, and Samneric lay looking up in quiet terror. Roger advanced upon them as one wielding a nameless authority.4 Author______ Title______I shall be telling this with a sighSomewhere ages and ages hence;Tow roads diverged in a wood, and I—I took the one less traveled by,And that has made all the difference.5 Author______ Title______The two waiters inside the cafe knew that the old man was a little drunk, and while he was a good client they knew that if he became too drunk he would leave without paying, so they kept watch on him.6 Author______ Title______Uncle Oscar took both Bassett and Paul into Richmond Park for an afternoon, and there they talked.7 Author______ Title______He decided to rest her in a clump of trees during the afternoon, and push onward under cover of darkness. At dusk Clare purchased food as usual, and their night march began, the boundary between Upper and Mid-Wessex being crossed about eight o' clock.8 Author______ Title______What thoughts I have of you tonight, Walt Whitman, for I walked down the sidestreets under the trees with a headache self-conscious looking at the full moon.9 Author______ Title______I would not have gone back to Joe now, I would not have gone back to Biddy now, for any consideration: simply, I suppose, because my sense of my own worthless conduct to them was greater than every consideration.10 Author______ Title______And though your graciousness might stream,And I contrive,Grandmother, stones are nothing of homeTo that spumiest dove.Against both bar and tower the black sea runs.二、问答题11 What does "Araby" mean? Discuss its significance as the tide of the story.12 What is the symbolic meaning of the tiger in William Blake' s "The Tyger" ?13 Emerson states; "Let a man then know his worth, and keep things under his feet. " This indicates the author' s belief in realvirtue. Please make comments on this line.14 Why did F. Scott Fitzgerald use "great" to modify the protagonist' s name Gatsby in the title of his novel The Great Gatsby?14 Moon LandingIt' s natural the Boys should whoop it up forso huge a phallic triumph, an adventureit would not have occurred to womento think worth while, made possible onlybecause we like huddling in gangs and knowingthe exact time: yes, our sex may in fairnesshurrah the deed, although the motivesthat primed it were somewhat less than menschlich.A grand gesture. But what does it period?What does it osse? We were always adroiterwith objects than lives, and more facileat courage than kindness; from the momentthe first flint was flaked this landing was merelya matter of time. But our selves, like Adam' s,still don' t fit us exactly, modernonly in this—Our lack of decorum.Homer' s heroes were certainly no braverthan our Trio, but more fortunate: Hectorwas excused the insult of havinghis valor covered by television.Worth going to see? I can well believe it.Worth seeing? Mneh! I once rode through a desertand was not charmed: give me a wateredlively garden, remote from blatherersabout the New, the von Brauns and their ilk, whereon August mornings I can count the morningglories where to die has a meaning,and no engine can shift my perspective.Unsmudged, thank God, my Moon still queens the Heavens as She ebbs and fulls, a Presence to glop at,Her Old Man, made of grit not protein,still visits my Austrian severalwith His old detachment, and the old warningsstill have power to scare me: Hybris comes toan ugly finish, Irreverenceis a greater oaf than Superstition.Our apparatniks will continue makingthe usual squalid mess called History:all we can pray for is that artists,chefs and saints may still appear to blithe it.(1969)15 What does the speaker mean in lines 1 -4? Do you agree with these sentiments?(4%)16 Besides being a satellite or a celestial body, what else does the moon suggest?(2%)17 What does the speaker think of science and technology? Does his opinion conform to or conflict with your ideas about the American space program?(4%)18 In the poem, the poet questions the wisdom of the 1969 moon landing. Write a short essay in which you discuss whether the United States should or should not continue space exploration.(10%)三、评论题19 Essay Question.(50 %)Bildunsroman refers to "novel of formation" or "novel of education". The subject of Bildunsroman, according to M. H.Abrams, is "the development of the protagonist' s mind and character, in the passage from childhood through varied experiences—and often through a spiritual crisis—into maturity, which usually involves recognition of one' s identity and role in the world". Choose a typical Bildunsroman you have read, and write a critical essay.。
南京大学外国语学院《211翻译硕士英语》[专业硕士]历年考研真题及详解
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目 录2010年南京大学211翻译硕士英语考研真题及详解2011年南京大学211翻译硕士英语考研真题及详解2012年南京大学211翻译硕士英语考研真题及详解2013年南京大学211翻译硕士英语考研真题及详解2014年南京大学211翻译硕士英语考研真题及详解2010年南京大学211翻译硕士英语考研真题及详解Part O e: Proof ReadingThe following sentences contain some errors. Copy and edit them on your answer sheet. (1.5×10) 1.An important information I got from her is our teacher’s new marriage.2.She had a lot of difficulty with the long vowel /ei/, so I taught her how to pronounce.3.The tutor asked the pupils: “How to write an essay on your mother?”4.The volleyball players of our department went through very tough training for a whole semester and finally win the championship of the university.5.I felt frustrated and wondered why my English wasn’t improved even after having watched many movies and read many books.6.The news of the H1N1 flu worried the headmaster, but another news was upbeat: so far, everyone in his school was healthy.7.All of us in the class would like to become a teacher in the future.8.In high school, we had to take many classes, Chinese, English, physics, chemistry, mathematics and history and so on.9.The students found it dissatisfied that their hard work was not rewarded or recognized. 10.The university attaches great importance to teacher’s research and publications.【答案与解析】1.An: The(information为不可数名词,因此将An改为The。
南京大学翻译硕士考研真题及答案
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南京大学翻译硕士考研真题及答案
南京大学(回忆)
翻译硕士英语
一、改错:专八难度。
二、阅读:和南大基础英语题型一样,一篇巨长的文章,讲的是role-play在serious literature里的作用。
三、作文:是否应该推广the general education.
英语翻译基础
一、两篇:一个是讲工业革命的一个是讲中华传统文化的。
中间考的短语比较多,比如:己所不欲勿施于人、天下兴亡匹夫有责……
二、词汇翻译:
WHO世界卫生组织
CBD中央商务区(CBD center business district)
交易前付款(=cash before delivery)
IMF UNESCO
科技下乡bringing science and technology to the countryside
老字号an old and famous shop or enterprise
学分制credit system
I-STEEL工字型钢
汉语写作与百科知识
一、名词解释:
单位、华夏、国务院、打酱油、女娲、因特网、二战、冷战、苏联、赤字、欧元区……
二、应用文:自荐信。
三、大作文:什么是翻译工作者应该具备的基本素质。
南京大学2007年基础英语考研真题
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%2*+()-#)/#8+’$%3$/(/865-)%+#%&)+)/-5$&)68/#)&)+$+.88/-()$-)9%()6/-#8.-)/(&*(/-8%)0$/(/9/()$/;-(/$)$6&$)$/&)-#8-(8+’2+(-.%);+’)$/0$+./&+5%/);0%..://#$-#5/8<=$/(/’+(/$8%&$+#/&);&$+6.8:/-9+%8/8 #+2-))/(0$-)/I56&/)$/*/(&+#’%#8&<J’-8%&$+#/&)-5)%&3%9/#&;2*-)$;-#85+#&%8/(/8-55/*)-:./%#-&*/5%’%5&%)6-)%+#$)$/&.-57#/&&%#)$/&/.’156.)%9-)%+#0%..’%#-..;-55626.-)/6#)%..%7/-7%#8+’(%9/(-+#/)$-) %&+6)+’5+#)(+.$/-)%#3-))$/’+6#8-)%+#+’)$%#3&0/(/&*/5)<A6&)%2-3%#/%)$-&)68/#)5$/-)&+#-#/I-2’+( )$/’%(&))%2/-#8$-&)+’%#8/I56&/&)+5+2’+()$%2&/.’6#)%.$/8+/&#@)’//.36%.);<=$/#$#/I))%2/$0$/#$/ 5$/-)&+#/I-2&-3-%#$$/8+/&#@)’//./2:-((-&&/8-)-..<J)@&-))$-)2+2/#))$-)5$/-)%#3:/5+2/&-#+(2-.*-()%#$%&.%’/-#8$/.+&/&)$/2+&)%2*+()-#)9%()6/-&-$62-#:/%#3<6%07Q!<00%R 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[考研类试卷]2010年南京大学英语专业(语言学)真题试卷.doc
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[考研类试卷]2010年南京大学英语专业(语言学)真题试卷一、区分题1 Distinguish the following pairs of terms. Clarify the differences with appropriate examples.(20/150)homonymy vs. polysemy2 entailment vs. presupposition3 surface structure vs. deep structure4 endophoric reference vs. exophoric reference二、单项选择题5 For each group of items in the following, point out which item does not fall under the same category as the rest and explain the reason in ONE sentence.(A)ex<u>p</u>ensive(B)re<u>p</u>eat(C)s<u>p</u>ring(D)cons<u>p</u>iracy[Focus on the pronunciation of "p"](A)co<u>n</u>siderate(B)to<u>n</u>icity(C)poi<u>n</u>tless(D)i<u>n</u>consistency[Focus on the pronunciation of "n"](A)number<u>s</u>(B)classroom<u>s</u>(C)island<u>s</u>(D)laptop<u>s</u>[Focus on the pronunciation of "s"] (A)competent(B)principal(C)individual(D)animate[Focus on the location of the stress](A)/f/(B)/p/(C)/d/(D)/g/[Focus on the classification of consonants] (A)provide(B)supply(C)offer(D)accuse[Focus on transitivity](A)re<u>ceive</u>(B)en<u>able</u>(C)re<u>vol</u>utionary(D)pro<u>ceed</u>[Focus on the type of morphemes](A)aboard(B)beyond(C)beneath(D)without[Focus on word types](A)parent/child(B)teacher/student(C)tree/forest(D)buyer/seller[Focus on the type of semantic relation](A)locutionary act(B)illocutionary act(C)perlocutionary act(D)elocutionary act[Focus on Austin's trichotomy of speech act theory] (A)Quality Maxim(B)Method Maxim(C)Quantity Maxim(D)Relation Maxim[Focus on Grice's Cooperative Principle](A)Content of discourse(B)Mode of discourse(C)Tenor of discourse(D)Field of discourse[Focus on Halliday's Register Theory]三、分析题17 Use the method of binary cutting(as used in the IC Analysis)to analyze the morphological or syntactic structure of the following.(12/150)inconsistency(4/150)18 The scholar also argues that the spread of English is nothing neutral.(8/150)19 What is metaphor? How does cognitive linguistics interpret it differently from traditional rhetoric? Use a few examples to illustrate how the farmer contributes to our understanding of language.(20/150)20 What do Brown and Levinson(1987)mean by "positive face" and "negative face"? Study the following utterances and decide which type of face is being attended to in each utterance. Support each of your decisions with a brief explanation.(20/150)(1)Come here, Johnny.(2)Passengers please refrain from smoking.(3)I just want to ask you if I can use your bike.(4)You must be tired after the long flight. Shall we talk about the contract tomorrow?21 Academic writing is supposed to be formal in style. However, colloquialisms of various kinds abound in Chinese learners' theses. Study the following excerpt from a postgraduate student's B. A. thesis. Point out those linguistic forms that are too colloquial to be appropriate. What might be the major causes for the use of the inappropriate language style? What advice do you have for teachers of English?(22/150)Presidents' inaugural address is an art that maybe includes all the skills of public speaking. How do American Presidents make their addresses attractive and persuasive? Do they have some skills or secrets of success on public speaking? Yes, I think so. I think many people who have great talent in public speaking make concerted effort to construct such a perfect text. That is to say, they check wording and phrasing, use all kinds of figures of speech as long as they need. So inaugural addresses show their especial charm to appeal to millions of fellow citizens.In this research, I'll try to prove that rhetoric techniques are frequently used in the speeches and play indispensable roles in making a good inaugural address. But it's obviously a "mission impossible" to study the whole family of rhetoric techniques ininaugural addresses. So I'll only choose one important and active member in the rhetoric family—metaphor, because it's used most frequently in presidents' inaugural addresses, and I'll use three American presidents' inaugural addresses as my samples.I hope that through my research I can find out the usage of metaphors in those addresses, and what effects they make respectively on the theme the addressers want to deliver. And I also hope that the comparison and contrast among the three different speeches will give us some clues about the change of American's political, economic, municipal, and diplomatic tactics in different periods.22 What is euphemism? Define it briefly in your own words. Then, study the following euphemistic expressions carefully and write out their non-euphemistic equivalents in the thirdcolumn.(16/150)23 The following statements are some items listed in a questionnaire designed to investigate Chinese high school students' motivation in learning English. Read these statements and fulfill three tasks: 1)provide your definition of motivation in language learning; 2)categorize the statements in relation to different types of motivation; and3)based on your definition of motivation, add at least TWO more items to the questionnaire(You can write the items in Chinese).(16/150)1.我学英语是因为英语是必修课。
[考研类试卷]2009年南京大学英语专业(英美文学)真题试卷.doc
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[考研类试卷]2009年南京大学英语专业(英美文学)真题试卷一、填空题1 Author______ Title______Ten Thousand saw I at a glance,Tossing their heads in sprightly dance.2 Author______ Title______It was now midnight, and my task was drawing to a close. I had completed the eighth, the ninth and the tenth tier. I had finished a portion of the last and the eleventh; there remained but a single stone to be fitted and plastered in.3 Author______ Title______Roger edged past the Chief, only just avoiding pushing him with his shoulder. The yelling ceased, and Samneric lay looking up in quiet terror. Roger advanced upon them as one wielding a nameless authority.4 Author______ Title______I shall be telling this with a sighSomewhere ages and ages hence;Tow roads diverged in a wood, and I—I took the one less traveled by,And that has made all the difference.5 Author______ Title______The two waiters inside the cafe knew that the old man was a little drunk, and while he was a good client they knew that if he became too drunk he would leave without paying, so they kept watch on him.6 Author______ Title______Uncle Oscar took both Bassett and Paul into Richmond Park for an afternoon, and there they talked.7 Author______ Title______He decided to rest her in a clump of trees during the afternoon, and push onward under cover of darkness. At dusk Clare purchased food as usual, and their night march began, the boundary between Upper and Mid-Wessex being crossed about eight o' clock.8 Author______ Title______What thoughts I have of you tonight, Walt Whitman, for I walked down the sidestreets under the trees with a headache self-conscious looking at the full moon.9 Author______ Title______I would not have gone back to Joe now, I would not have gone back to Biddy now, for any consideration: simply, I suppose, because my sense of my own worthless conduct to them was greater than every consideration.10 Author______ Title______And though your graciousness might stream,And I contrive,Grandmother, stones are nothing of homeTo that spumiest dove.Against both bar and tower the black sea runs.二、问答题11 What does "Araby" mean? Discuss its significance as the tide of the story.12 What is the symbolic meaning of the tiger in William Blake' s "The Tyger" ?13 Emerson states; "Let a man then know his worth, and keep things under his feet. " This indicates the author' s belief in real virtue. Please make comments on this line.14 Why did F. Scott Fitzgerald use "great" to modify the protagonist' s name Gatsby in the title of his novel The Great Gatsby?14 Moon LandingIt' s natural the Boys should whoop it up forso huge a phallic triumph, an adventureit would not have occurred to womento think worth while, made possible onlybecause we like huddling in gangs and knowingthe exact time: yes, our sex may in fairnesshurrah the deed, although the motivesthat primed it were somewhat less than menschlich.A grand gesture. But what does it period?What does it osse? We were always adroiterwith objects than lives, and more facileat courage than kindness; from the momentthe first flint was flaked this landing was merelya matter of time. But our selves, like Adam' s,still don' t fit us exactly, modernonly in this—Our lack of decorum.Homer' s heroes were certainly no braverthan our Trio, but more fortunate: Hectorwas excused the insult of havinghis valor covered by television.Worth going to see? I can well believe it.Worth seeing? Mneh! I once rode through a desertand was not charmed: give me a wateredlively garden, remote from blatherersabout the New, the von Brauns and their ilk, whereon August mornings I can count the morningglories where to die has a meaning,and no engine can shift my perspective.Unsmudged, thank God, my Moon still queens the Heavensas She ebbs and fulls, a Presence to glop at,Her Old Man, made of grit not protein,still visits my Austrian severalwith His old detachment, and the old warningsstill have power to scare me: Hybris comes toan ugly finish, Irreverenceis a greater oaf than Superstition.Our apparatniks will continue makingthe usual squalid mess called History:all we can pray for is that artists,chefs and saints may still appear to blithe it.(1969)15 What does the speaker mean in lines 1 -4? Do you agree with these sentiments?(4%)16 Besides being a satellite or a celestial body, what else does the moon suggest?(2%)17 What does the speaker think of science and technology? Does his opinion conform to or conflict with your ideas about the American space program?(4%)18 In the poem, the poet questions the wisdom of the 1969 moon landing. Write a short essay in which you discuss whether the United States should or should not continue space exploration.(10%)三、评论题19 Essay Question.(50 %)Bildunsroman refers to "novel of formation" or "novel of education". The subject of Bildunsroman, according to M. H. Abrams, is "the development of the protagonist' s mind and character, in the passage from childhood through varied experiences—and often through a spiritual crisis—into maturity, which usually involves recognition of one' s identity and role in the world". Choose a typical Bildunsroman you have read, and write a critical essay.。
[考研类试卷]2012年南京大学英语专业(语言学)真题试卷.doc
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[考研类试卷]2012年南京大学英语专业(语言学)真题试卷一、区分题1 Distinguish the following pairs of terms. Clarify the differences with appropriate examples.metaphor vs. metonymy2 generalized conversational implicature vs. particularized conversational implicature3 coordination vs. subordination4 inflectional morpheme vs. derivational morpheme二、单项选择题5 For each group of items in the following,point out which item does not fall under the same category as the rest and explain the reason in ONE sentence.(24/150)(A)repub<u>l</u>ic(B)conso<u>l</u>ation(C)mu<u>l</u>tiple(D)p<u>l</u>umber[Focus on the pronunciation of "l"](A)recko<u>n</u>(B)recog<u>n</u>ition(C)rethi<u>n</u>king(D)resig<u>n</u>ation[Focus on the pronunciation of "n"](A)a<u>s</u>piration(B)bu<u>s</u>iness(C)ari<u>s</u>en(D)re<u>s</u>ilience[Focus on the pronunciation of "s"] (A)admirable(B)advertising(C)adamant(D)addictive[Focus on the location of the stress](A)/w/(B)/n/(C)/m/(D)/b/[Focus on the classification of consonants](A)peddle(B)edit(C)resurrect(D)realize[Focus on the device of word formation] (A)misplace(B)empower(C)unbutton(D)displease[Focus on the type of affix](A)however(B)therefore(C)whereas(D)nevertheless[Focus on word types](A)mother/father(B)fairly/rather(C)top/bottom(D)local/global[Focus on the type of semantic relation] (A)cabin/aircraft(B)lens/glasses(C)mouse/computer(D)entrance/park[Focus on myronymy](A)we(B)it(C)now(D)here[Focus on deixis](A)Honesty Maxim(B)Approbation Maxim(C)Agreement Maxim(D)Sympathy Maxim[Focus on Leech's Politeness Principle]三、分析题17 Use the method of binary cutting(as used in the IC Analysis)to analyze the morphological or syntactic structure of the following.(12/150)representational(4/150)18 What happened next was astonishing to all present at the meeting.(8/150)19 Analyze the following sentences as required.(20/150)<u>The door</u> was knocked open by <u>a young man</u> with <u>abrick</u>.(Analyze the underlined parts of the sentence in terms of semantic roles and discuss how this sentence differs from" The young man knocked the door open with a brick".)20 On daily occasions, noise can be a big headache.(Discuss the conceptual metaphor used in this sentence and supply a sentence with a metaphor of the same type. Then, think of another possible conceptual metaphor for NOISE.)21 A smile on your face will make your appearance more welcome.(Rewrite the sentence with "you" as the subject. Discuss the difference(s)between the original sentence and the new one.)22 If yon waste time <u>today</u>, you will repent <u>tomorrow</u>.(Are the underlined words in the sentence deictic in this context? Why yes(or why not)?)四、简答题23 What are the four conditions that the performance of speech acts is supposed to satisfy if it is to be felicitous? Discuss how the following two instances of speech act performance may "deviate"from the rules or conditions.(20/150)(1)Thank for not smoking.(used as a public sign)(2)I really appreciate your effort to share my secret with my enemy!24 By definition,tautology like"Business is business"involves meaningless repetition. However, we do often find the use of it in real-life communication. Can yon think of twomore examples and discuss the possible contexts in which they might be heard? What do their users intend to convey? How are the tautological ways of saying different from their non-tautological equivalents?(22/150)25 Read the following poem carefully. What syntactic deviations are employed in it? What stylistic effect might result from the deviations? What cohesive devices are used? Who does "thou"refer to? How effective is its use?(16/150)My friend—Emily Dickinson My friend must be a Bird—Because it flies! Mortal,my friend must be,Because it dies'.Barbs has it, like a Bee!Ah, curious friend!Thou puzzlest me!26 Second language(L2)learners may correct themselves from time to time during their L2oral production. Listed below are some instances of self-correction(or self-repair)inL2speeches. Each instance is followed by the speaker's own retrospective account of the reasonfor the repair. Study these instances and fulfill the following tasks.(16/150)Task 1)Categorize these self-correction instances into some meaningful types. Name each type,briefly define it, and specify the instances that belong to it. For example, there are some instances(2,6,and 9)that exemplify Error Repairs as a type of self-repairs:Error Repairs: The L2 speakers correct themselves when they realize that they have made(or are making)language errors.Instance 2; The speaker corrects a phonological error.1. Uhm well there's a big dining table for forty person. And then we've also got er well it's well the dining table occupies half of the room.Retrospection: I thought, I did not tell you first how big the room was, so I said that the dining table occupies half of the room,and then I said what I originally wanted to say.2. We could arrange er more smallertabia[teibi]table[teibl] if you would like that better.Retrospection; I mispronounced the word" table," and I corrected it.3. There are very wide choice of er main courses er er steak er er several kinds of steak. Retrospection: I wanted to say it more precisely that we do not only have one kind of steak but several kinds of steak.4. You have to we have to make a contract.Retrospection: I realized that it is stupid to say that you have to make a contract, it's up to us to do it.5. In this urn in this part of the town er there are many vegetarians. Er this is because the university is here and vegetarians like it er like this restaurant.Retrospection: I noticed that" it" could also mean the university, so I wanted to make it clear that it is the restaurant that the vegetarians like and not the university.6. Will er have to pay er five er sorry er twenty-five percent. Retrospection; Here I said "five "instead of" twenty-five "accidentally.7. It doesn't it's not a problem.Retrospection: First I wanted to say "it does not matter" but I realized that in a business deal you cannotsay" it does not matter. "8. Thirty-five per... people.Retrospection: First I wanted to say " persons" but I had used " persons " several times before,so I said"people. " 9. I think it a very nice it's a very niceRetrospection: I left out "is, "and I corrected it.10. Uhm our fish fish meals er foods are very good too.Retrospection: I corrected"fish meals"for"fish food'" because I was not sure you can say "fish meals"and"fish foods"sounded a bit better.11. We have some er er v ... maybe you have vegetarians in your group. Retrospection; Here the idea of vegetarians suddenly popped up, and I abandoned what I was going to say because I would not have been able to list any more types of food anyway.27 Task 2)Analyze these self-correction instances and answer the following two questions: What feature can the self-correction phenomenon reveal about the process of L2 speech production? How does it influence L2 oral production?。
[考研类试卷]2011年南京大学英语专业(语言学)真题试卷.doc
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[考研类试卷]2011年南京大学英语专业(语言学)真题试卷一、名词解释1 Define the following terms. Support your definition with one or two appropriate examples.Ambiguity2 metalanguage3 minimal pair4 neologism5 euphemism二、单项选择题6 The word "edit" is formed through the process of______.(A)blending(B)back-formation(C)compounding(D)derivation7 By______, it is sometimes meant that the form of a word or sign partially or fully conveys the meaning of the word or sign.(A)arbitrariness(B)creativity(C)duality of structure(D)iconicity8 Assimilation occurs in the articulation of the word "______".(A)invincible(B)inconvenience(C)inherent(D)inadequate9 Deletion occurs in the articulation of all the words below except "______". (A)debt(B)rhetoric(C)style(D)flight10 The primary stress of the word "______" falls on the first syllable. (A)comparable(B)resistible(C)considerable(D)negotiable11 All the following words except "______" are dynamic verbs.(A)boost(B)discourage(C)unpack(D)concern12 The proverb "Modest dogs miss much meat" exemplifies the use of______. (A)alliteration(B)consonance(C)assonance(D)rhyming13 As a presupposition trigger, "continue" belongs to the category of______. (A)factive verbs(B)iterative verbs(C)implicative verbs(D)change-of-state verbs14 The expression "first priority" is generally considered to be a case of______. (A)redundancy(B)tautology(C)contradiction(D)inconsistency15 All the following words except "______" are performative verbs.(A)warn(B)advise(C)understand(D)remind三、分析题16 Analyze the structure of the following by means of binary cutting.(12/150) deinstitutionalization17 The person I met yesterday is my boss.18 In most cases, a sentence with a prepositional phrase indicating transfer can be naturally transformed into a double-object construction, as in:He gave a book to Mary. →He gave Mary a book.However, when the following three sentences undergo the same transformation, they sound rather unnatural(possibly for different reasons), as marked by the question mark. Explain why.(15/ 150)(1)He sent a book to London. →? He sent London a book.(2)He sang a song to his dead lover. →? He sang his dead lover a song.(3)He gave a book to the fans who followed him around the world for over three months. →? He gave the fans who followed him around the world for over three months a book.19 Study the following collection of words carefully. Point out what types of semantic relations are involved among these words. Put the words into different groups according to the different semantic relations involved(Note that some words can be found in more than one group). Add ONE word of your own to each semantic group, wherever possible.(18/ 150)vessel van deck boat wing subwayengine truck metro jet sail vehicle20 Study the following headlines carefully. Specify the type of rhetorical device used in each and the presupposed information in(1)and(3).(20/150)Mercury. Once Coveted, Now Orphaned21 U. S. and South Korea Begin Joint Naval Exercises22 Fashion Goes, Keds Stay.23 Digital Domain: When the Software Is the Sportswriter24 In China, Cultivating the Urge to Splurge25 Domestic Lives; An Empty House Where Time Stands Still26 Read the following two pairs of sentences. Compare Sentences A and B and answer the following two questions: 1)How are Sentences A and Sentences B different? and2)Which sentence(Sentence A or Sentence B)in each pair do you prefer to use in academic writing? Why?(15/150)(1)A. It may be said that the commitment to some of the social and economic concepts was less strong than it is now.B. The commitment to some of the social and economic concepts was less strong than it is now.(2)A. Recent work on the religious demography of Northern Ireland seems to show a separating out of protestant and catholic, with the catholic population drifting westwards and vice versa.B. Recent work on the religious demography of Northern Ireland shows a separating out of protestant and catholic, with the catholic population drifting westwards and vice versa.27 Below is a questionnaire aimed at investigating the learner autonomy among college EFL learners(i. e. , to what extent can college students take an autonomus role in their English learning). Go over the items in the questionnaire and try to categorize them in the following table. Do you think these categories(or aspects of the learner autonomy)are adequate? If not,add TWO more categories together with specific items.(20/150) 英语学习情况问卷调查请根据下面每个数字所代表的含义,选出其中一个数字填在句子开头的括号里。
南京大学二外英语2009年考研真题及参考答案范文
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8.南京大学二外英语考研真题及参考答案(2009)南京大学2009年二外英语考研真题Ⅰ. Choose the best answer for each of the following sentences (25%)1. Before leaving his office, the manager showed no sign of _________ our proposals.A. responding toB. showing offC. bringing alongD. pointing out2. Hong Kong is a _________ city, and still more people are pouring in.A. popularB. populatedC. populaceD. populous3. Living in the central Australian desert has its problems, _________ obtaining water is not the least.A. for whichB. to whichC. of whichD. in which4. I haven’t the _________ idea what you mean.A. lightestB. smallestC. faintestD. dimmest5. I’d rather that my father _________ me an ipod as a birthday present. Instead he gave a discman.A. had givenB. gaveC. would giveD. would have given6. Do you want to see my driving license or my passport?Oh, _________.A. either does wellB. either one will doC. each one is goodD. each will be fine7. Language belongs to each member of the society, to the cleaner _________ to the professor.A. as much asB. the same asC. as far asD. as long as8. We managed to reach the top of the mountain, and half an hour later we began to _________.A. ascendB. descendC. declineD. plunge9. Sometimes patients suffering from severe pain can be helped by “drugs” that aren’t really drugs at all _________ sugar pills that contain no active chemical elements.A. or ratherB. rather thanC. but ratherD. other than10. Bacon and eggs _________ common Sunday breakfast in England.A. is anB. are theC. is aD. are11. Don’t _________ about lunch for the instructors, because they promised to get some on theway.A. botherB. fussC. troubleD. think12. The factory has turned out _________.A. twice more TV sets this year as last yearB. TV sets this year twice as many as last yearC. TV sets twice more this year than last yearD. twice as many TV sets this year as last year13. The purpose of this election is to set up a government truly _________ of the people.A. typicalB. representativeC. characteristicD. responsible14. I do not believe that this ridiculous scheme is _________ of our serious consideration.A. worthlessB. worthwhileC. worthD. worthy15. American women were _________ the right to vote until 1920 after many years of hardstruggle.A. ignoredB. deniedC. neglectedD. refused16. In the lecture _________ he will tell us something about modern English usage.A. followingB. followedC. to followD. being followed17. If we let our eyes glide _________ the lines of a book, we will probably be unable to come upwith an understanding of what we have read.A. acrossB. inC. fromD. with18. It was at the exhibition that we _________ this kind of minicar made of plastics.A. came upB. came outC. came uponD. came up with19. The concert was _________ start at eight o’clock, but the conductor did not come until aquarter past.A. about toB. due toC. almostD. ready to20. In most countries, the metric system has been _________ for all measurement.A. adaptedB. appliedC. developedD. adopted21. You _________ worry about her. She _________ well already.A. needn’t, may getB. don’t need to, may getC. mustn’t, getsD. needn’t, may have got22. It isn’t quite _________ that he will be present at the meeting.A. sureB. exactC. certainD. right23. The experiment requires more money than _________.A. has been put inB. being put inC. have been put inD. to be put in24. Every man in this country has the right to live where he wants to, _________ the color of hisskin.A. with the exception ofB. in the light ofC. by virtue ofD. regardless of25. The team’s efforts to score were _________ by the opposing goalkeeper.A. preventedB. frustratedC. discouragedD. accomplishedⅡ. Cloze(10%)Publicity is any promotional communication about an organization or its products that is presented by the media but is not paid for by the organization. Publicity usually takes the form of a news story appearing in a mass 1 or an endorsement provided by an individual informally or in a speech or interview.There are three channels for 2 publicity. One is to prepare a story (or a news release) and make it 3 to the media. The intention is for the selected newspapers, television stations, or 4 media to report the information as news. The second channel is personal communication with a group. A press 5 will draw media representatives 6 they feel the subject or speaker has news value. Company tours and speeches to different groups of people are other 7 of individual-to-group communications. The third channel is one-to-one personal communication, often 8 lobbying(游说). Companies lobby law makers or other powerful people 9 an attempt to influence their opinions, and also their decisions. In 10 , firms will give products to highly visible people in hopes that the people will be seen using them.Ⅲ. Reading Comprehension (20%)Passage AThe ordinary family in colonial North America was primarily concerned with sheer physical survival and beyond that, its own economic prosperity. Thus, children were valued in terms of their productivity, and they assumed the role of producer quite early. Until they fulfilled this role, their position in the structure of the family was one of subordination and their psychological needs and capacities received little consideration.As the society became more complex, the status of children in the family and in the society became more important. In the complex, technological society that the United States has become, each member must fulfill a number of personal and occupational roles and be in constant contact with a great many other members. Consequently, viewing children as potentially acceptable and necessarily multifaceted members of society means that they are regarded more as people in their own right than as utilitarian organisms. This acceptance of children as equal participants in the contemporary family is reflected in the variety of statutes protecting the rights of children and in the social and public welfare programs devoted exclusively to their well-being.This new view of children and the increasing contact between the members of society has also resulted in a surge of interest in child-rearing techniques. People today spend a considerable portion of their time conferring on the proper way to bring up children. It is now possible to influence the details of the socialization of another person’s child by spreading the gospel of current and fashionable theories and methods of child rearing.The socialization of the contemporary child in the United States is a two-way transaction between parent and child rather than a one-way, parent-to-child training program. As a consequence, socializing children and living with them over a long period time is for parents a mixture of pleasure, satisfaction, and problems.1. Which of the following would be the best title for the passage?A. The Place of Children in United States SocietyB. The Children of Colonial North AmericaC. The Development of Cultural ValuesD. The Child as a Utilitarian Organism2. According to the author, children in colonial North America were mainly valued for their _________.A. academic achievementsB. survival instinctsC. physical characteristicsD. productive roles3. What can be inferred about formal schooling in colonial North America?A. It was generally required by law.B. It was considered relatively unimportant.C. It was improperly administered.D. It was highly disciplined.4. Which of the following is a possible cause of changes in the role of the child in the United States?A. An increase in technology.B. The growing complexity of the child’s psychological needs.C. A decrease in the child’s intellectual capacities.D. The growing number of single parent families.5. According to the passage, parents have become increasingly interested in _________.A. their children’s future occupationsB. having smaller familiesC. adoption programs for childless couplesD. child-rearing techniquesPassage BI am one of the many city people who are always saying that given the choice we managed to convince myself that if it weren’t for my job l would immediately head out for the open spaces and go back to nature in some sleepy village buried in the country. But how realistic is the dream?Cities can be frightening places. The majority of the population live in massive tower blocks, noisy, dirty and impersonal. The sense of belonging to a community tends to disappear when you live fifteen floors up. Children become aggressive and nervous—cooped up at home all day, with nowhere to play; their mothers feel isolated from the rest of the world. Strangely enough, whereas in the past the inhabitants of one street all knew each other, nowadays people on the same floor in tower blocks don’t even say hello.Country life, on the other hand, differs from this kind of isolated existence in that a sense of community generally binds the inhabitants of small villages together. People have the advantage of knowing there is always someone to turn to when they need help. But country life has disadvantages too. While it is true that you may be among friends in a village, it is also true that you are cut off from the exciting and important events that take place in cities. T here’s little possibility of going to a new show or the latest movie. Shopping becomes a major problem, and for anything slightly out of the ordinary you have to go on an expedition to the nearest large town.Some people have found (or rather bought) a compromise between the country and the city: they have expressed their preference for the “quiet life” by leaving the suburbs and moving to villages within commuting distance of large cities. They generally have about as much sensitivity as the plastic flowers they leave behind—they are polluted with strange ideas about change and improvement which they force on to the unwilling original inhabitants of the village.What then of my dreams of leaning on a cottage gate and murmuring “morning” to the locals as the y pass by? I’m keen on the idea, but you see there’s my cat, Toby. I’m not at all sure that he would take to all that fresh air and exercise in the long grass.I mean, can you see him mixing with all those hearty males down the farm? No, he would rather have the electric imitation-coal fire any evening.6. We get the impression from the first paragraph that the author _________.A. used to live in the countryB. used to work in the cityC. works in the cityD. lives in the country7. In the author’s opinion, the following may cause city people to be unhappy EXCEPT _________.A. a strong sense of fearB. lack of communicationC. housing conditionsD. a sense of isolation8. The passage implies that it is easy to buy the following things in the country EXCEPT _________.A. daily necessitiesB. fresh fruitsC. designer clothesD. fresh vegetables9. According to the passage, which of the following adjectives best describes those people who work in large cities and live in villages?A. Original.B. Quiet.C. Arrogant.D. Insensitive.10. Do you think the author will move to the country?A. Yes, he will do so.B. No, he will not do so.C. It is difficult to tell.D. He is in two minds.Ⅳ. Translate the following passage into Chinese (25%)The way that people spend their money, and the objects on which they spend it, are one of the areas where free choice and individuality can be expressed. The choice reflects personal taste, the way people see themselves and the fantasies they have about their lives, the restrictions on money available to them, the presence of others in the family with a claim on that money, and theinfluence of current convention, cultivation, surroundings and locality. Shopping is an important human activity. Yet shoppers are faced with a confusing situation and a rapidly changing one. The confusion arises from the claims made by advertising, from inadequate information about new products, new materials, new places to shop—a confusion enhanced by rising prices and a wider choice of goods than ever before. The search for the right purchase is based on ignorance of their own needs and ignorance of the product’s fitness for those needs. When choosing any particular item, there are several lines of communication which might provide some guidance. Yet none of these is entirely satisfactory. For example, you can ask a shop assistant initially. Even if you find one, she may quite generally not know the answers. She may be a schoolgirl with a Saturday job, or a housewife working part-time.Ⅴ. Translate the following passage into English (20%)这次到台湾访问交流,虽然行程匆匆,但是,看了不少地方,访了旧友,交了新知,大家走到一起,谈论的一个重要话题就是中华民族在21世纪的强盛。
【优质】南京大学二外英语考研真题及参考答案
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B. being put in
C. have been put in
D. to be put in
24. Every man in this country has the right to live where he wants to, _________ the colorof his skin.
B. worthwhile
C. worth
D. worthy
15. American women were _________ the right to vote until 1920 after manyyears of hard struggle.
A. ignored
B. denied
C. neglected
A. had given
B. gave
C. would give
D. would have given
6. Do you want to see my driving license or my passport?
Oh, _________.
A. either does well
Bቤተ መጻሕፍቲ ባይዱ either one will do
A. responding to
B. showing off
C. bringing along
D. pointing out
2.Hong Kongis a _________ city, and still more people are pouring in.
A. popular
B. populated
C. populace
D. populous
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南京大学英语专业考研真题(2008-12-05 12:12:47)标签:杂谈南京大学英语专业考研真题Part A Vocabulary and Reading (50/150)Read the passage below and then complete the tasks that follow:Language and Cultural IdentityC. Kramschpara.1 It is widely believed that there is a natural connection between the language spoken by members of a social group and that group's identity. By their accent, their vocabulary, their discourse patterns, speakers identify themselves and are identified as members of this or that speech and discourse community. From this membership, they draw personal strength and pride, as well as a sense of social importance and historical continuity from using the same language as the group they belong to.para.2 But how to define which group one belongs to? In isolated, homogeneous communities like the Trobrianders studied by Malinowski, one may still define group membership according to common cultural practices and daily face-to-face interactions, but in modem, historically complex, open societies it is much more difficult to define the boundaries of any particular social group and the linguistic and cultural identities of its members.para.3 Take ethnicity for example. In their 1982 survey conducted among the highly mixed population of Belize (formerly British Honduras), Le Page and Tabouret-Keller found out that different people ascribed themselves to different ethnicities as either 'Spanish', 'Creole', 'Maya' or 'Belizean', according to which ethnic criterion they focused on — physical features (hair and skin), general appearance, genetic descent, provenance, or nationality. Rarely was language used as an ethnically defining criterion. Interestingly, it was only under the threat of a Guatemalan takeover as soon as British rule would cease, that the sense of a Belizean national identity slowly started emerging from among the multiple ethnic ascriptions that people still give themselves to this day.para.4 Group identity based on race would seem easier to define, and yet there are almost as many genetic differences, say, between members of the same White, or Black race as there are between the classically described human races, not to speak of the difficulty in some cases of ascertaining with 100 percent exactitude a person's racial lineage. For example, in 1983 the South African Government changed the racial classification of 690 people: two-thirds of these, who had been Coloreds, became Whites, 71 who had been Blacks became Coloreds, and 11 Whites were redistributed among other racial groups! And, of course, there is no necessary correlation between a given racial characteristic and the use of a given language or variety of languagepara.5 Regional identity is equally contestable. As reported in the London Times of February 1984, when a Soviet book, Populations of the World, claimed that the population of France consisted of 'French, Alsatians, Flemings, Bretons, Basques, Catalans, Corsicans, Jews, Armenians, Gypsies and "others'", Georges Marchais, the French Communist leader, violently disagreed: 'For us', he said, 'every man and woman of French nationality is French. France is not a multinational state: it is one nation, the product of a long history....'para.6 One would think that national identity is a clear-cut either/or affair (either you are or you are not a citizen), but it is one thing, for example, to have a Turkish passport, another thing to ascribe to yourself a Turkish national identity if you were born, raised and educated, say, in Germany, are native speaker of German, and happen to have Turkish parents.para.7 Despite the entrenched belief in the one language = one culture equation, individuals assume several collective identities that are likely not only to change over time in dialogue with others, but are liable to be in conflict with one another. For example, an immigrant's sense of self that was linked in his country of origin perhaps to his social class, his political views, or his economic status becomes, in the new country, overwhelmingly linked to his national citizenship or his religion, for this is the identity that is imposed on him by others, who see in him now, for example, only a Turk or a Muslim. His own sense of self, or cultural identity, changes accordingly. Out of nostalgia for the 'old country', he may tend to become more Turkish than the Turks and entertain what Benedict Anderson has called 'long distance nationalism'. The Turkish he speaks may become with the passion of years somewhat different from the Turkish spoken today in the streets of Ankara; the community he used to belong to is now more an 'imagined community' than the actual present-day Turkey.para. 8 The problem lies in equating the racial, ethnic, national identity imposed on an individual by the state's bureaucratic system, and that individual's self-ascription. Group identity is not a national fact, but a cultural perception, to use the metaphor with which we started this book. Our perception of someone's social identity is very much culturally determined. What we perceived about a person's culture and language is what we have been conditioned by our own culture to see, and the stereotypical models already built around our own. Group identity is a question of focusing and diffusion of ethnic, racial national concepts or stereotypes. Let us take an example,para. 9 Le Page and Tabouret-Keller recount the case of a man in Singapore who claimed that he would never have any difficulty in telling the difference between an Indian and a Chinese. But how would he instantly know that the dark-skinned non-Malay person he saw on the street was an Indian (and not, say a Pakistani), and that light-skinned non-European was a Chinese (and not, say, a Korean), unless he differentiated the two according to the official Singaporean 'ethnic' categories: Chinese, Malay, Indian, Others? In another context with different racial classifications he might have interpreted: differently the visual clues presented to him by people on the street. His impression was focused by the classificatory concepts prevalent in his society, a behavior that Benjamin Whorf would have predicted. In turn this focus may prompt him, by a phenomenon of diffusion, to identify all other 'Chinese' along the same ethnic categories, according to the stereotype 'All Chinese look alike to me'.para.10 It has to be noted that societies impose racial and ethnic categories only on certain groups: Whites do not generally identify themselves by the color of their skin, but by their provenance or nationality. They would find it ludicrous to draw their sense of cultural identity from their membership in the White race. Hence the rather startled reaction of two Danish women in the United States to a young African-American boy, who, overhearing their conversation in Danish, asked them 'What's your culture?' Seeing how perplexed they were, he explained with a smile 'See, I'm Black. That's my culture. What's yours?' Laughingly they answered that they spoke Danish and came from Denmark. Interestingly, the boy did not use language as a criterion of group identity, but the Danish did.para.11 European identities have traditionally been built much more around language and national citizenship, and around folk models of 'one nation = one language', than around ethnicity or race. But even in Europe, the matter is not so simple. For example, Alsatians who speak German, French and Germanic Piatt mayalternatively consider themselves as primarily Alsatians, or French, or German, depending on how they position themselves vis-à-vis the history of their region and their family biography. A youngster born and raised in France of Algerian parents may, even though he speaks only French, call himself Algerian in France, but when abroad he might prefer to be seen as French, depending on which group he wishes to be identified with at the time.para.12 Examples from other parts of the world show how complex thelanguage-cultural identity relationship really is. The Chinese, for example, identify themselves ethnically as Chinese even though they speak languages or dialects which are mutually unintelligible. Despite the fact that a large number of Chinese don't know how to read and write, it is the Chinese character-writing system and the art of calligraphy that are the major factors of an overall Chinese group identity.Task 1: For each of the following items, study the reading passage and choose A, B or C that best completes the statement (30/150):(1) In the sentence "By their accent, their vocabulary, their discourse patterns, speakers identify themselves and are identified as members of this or that speech and discourse community," the phrase "discourse community" means:A) communal group B) cultural group C) discourse group(2) When the author states: "[The modern, historically complex, open societies it is much more difficult to define the boundaries of any particular social group and the linguistic and cultural identities of its members," he implies that an open society is:A) a society of many peopleB) a society of diverse discoursesC) a society of multi-ethnic structure(3) "[T]he sense of a Belizean national identity" means a sense ofA) language B) belonging C) history(4) When the author declares that "there is no necessary correlation between a given racial characteristic and the use of a given language or variety of language," he thinks that the relationship between a language and a culture isA) complex B) fixed C) uncertain(5) Georges Marchais said, "every man and woman of French nationality is French. France is not a multinational state: it is one nation, the product of a long history...." He probably regarded "'French" asA) a historical symbol of a stateB) a primary token of a national identityC) a product of a long historyTask 2: The following are definitions of the words contained in the above reading passage. Find these words in the paragraphs as marked in the parentheses (20/150):略海天海天教育海天考研Part B Proofreading (30/150)EXAMPLEWhen ∧ museum wants a new exhibit, (1) __a__it never buys things in finished form and hangs them (2) _neveron the wall. When a natural history museumwants an exhibition, it must often build it. (3) exhibitPart C Translation (40/150)Translate the following passage into Chinese: (20/150)Folktales played a very important role in the social and cultural life of the Plains Indians. Farmers and nomadic hunters alike enjoyed gathering around the fire, especially on wintry nights, to hear the tales of the storyteller. The talents of a good storyteller and the novelty of the tale had the power to figuratively transport hard working Indians to another world.Even today, American Indians believe in the enormous power of the spoken word. As in the past, the imaginative storyteller, typically an old man or an old woman, builds up a reputation as a performer. They enhance their stories by adding gestures, voice changes and songs. He or she might occasionally adapt a particular tale to suit a specific cultural group or tribe. For example, there are usually many different versions of every good tale. Therefore, whenever a story is retold it is likely to be varied, but only within the limits of the tradition established for that particular tale. The storyteller is always mindful of his own, as well as the cultural background of the listener.Translate the following passage into English: (20/150)略Part D Writing (30/150)The following is excerpted from a letter that appeared in the Letter-to-the-Editor column of China Daily: (30/150)Editor:I just graduated from university with a BA in English, but looking back at my university education, I have to say that I have wasted four years of my life. When I entered the university four years ago, I had the highest English score in the city where I grew up. However, on a job interview a few days ago, the personnel manager of a joint venture company said my English was not good enough.It is my university that is to blame. I have never found my classes helpful; they often repeat what I learned in high school. What's more, the teachers often mispronounce words and use ungrammatical sentences or simply use Chinese throughout the class. Some of them often arrive in class unprepared. They have no interest in us or in teaching; they are probably only interested in making money and publishing their papers.In comparison, my high school teachers were committed They had been well trained and were very strict with us. They gave me more help than those university professors. Even today, if I write an English essay, most of the words and sentence patterns I use would be those I learned during my high school years.All in all, I do not think our government should fund a university undergraduate English program if most of the students are not satisfied. If it is a waste of time for us, it must be a waste of resources for our country.Zhu Fan, Nanjing海天海天教育海天考研This controversial letter has generated a lot of discussion in China Daily, and you would like to join the discussion, too. Complete the following tasks on your answer sheets:(1) (4 / 150) Suppose you are going to write a letter for the Letter-to-the-Editor column of China Daily to express your agreement or disagreement with Zhu Fan, and the letter is about 400 words long. In the introductory paragraph (the first paragraph), you will begin with a sentence that introduces the topic. Write down the sentence that begins this paragraph.(2) (5 /150) Write down the last sentence of the introductory paragraph, that is, the thesis statement that expresses your main idea.(3) (4 x 2/ 150) Suppose you have two body paragraphs that support the thesis statement. Write down the topic sentence for each of them. You may begin it with "First,..." or "Second,...."(4) (4 x 2/150) For each topic sentence you write in (3), give one concrete example that illustrates the point you make in the topic sentence. Each example should not exceed two sentences. (There will be a penalty for using more than two sentences for an example.)(5 / 150) Based on what you write down in (2), (3) and (4), write a conclusion paragraph that contains two or three sentences. (There will be a penalty for using more than three sentences.)Part A Vocabulary and Reading (50/150)Read the passage below and then complete the tasks that follow:Language and Cultural IdentityC. Kramschpara.1It is widely believed that there is a natural connection between the language spoken by members of a social group and that group's identity. By their accent, their vocabulary, their discourse patterns, speakers identify themselves and are identified as members of this or that speech and discourse community. From this membership, they draw personal strength and pride, as well as a sense of social importance and historical continuity from using the same language as the group they belong to.para.2 But how to define which group one belongs to? In isolated, homogeneous communities like the Trobrianders studied by Malinowski, one may still define group membership according to common cultural practices and daily face-to-face interactions, but in modem, historically complex, open societies it is much more difficult to define the boundaries of any particular social group and the linguistic and cultural identities of its members.para.3 Take ethnicity for example. In their 1982 survey conducted among the highly mixed population of Belize (formerly British Honduras), Le Page and Tabouret-Keller found out that different people ascribed themselves to different ethnicities as either 'Spanish', 'Creole', 'Maya' or 'Belizean', according to which ethnic criterion they focused on — physical features (hair and skin), general appearance, genetic descent, provenance, or nationality. Rarely was language used as an ethnically defining criterion. Interestingly, it was only under the threat of a Guatemalan takeover as soon as British rule would cease, that the sense of a Belizean national identity slowly started emerging from among the multiple ethnic ascriptions that people still give themselves to this day.para.4 Group identity based on race would seem easier to define, and yet there are almost as many genetic differences, say, between members of the same White, or Black race as there are between the classically described human races, not to speak of the difficulty in some cases of ascertaining with 100 percent exactitude a person's racial lineage. For example, in 1983 the South African Government changed the racial classification of 690 people: two-thirds of these, who had been Coloreds, became Whites, 71 who had been Blacks became Coloreds, and 11 Whites were redistributed among otherracial groups! And, of course, there is no necessary correlation between a given racial characteristic and the use of a given language or variety of languagepara.5Regional identity is equally contestable. As reported in the London Times of February 1984, when a Soviet book, Populations of the World, claimed that the population of France consisted of 'French, Alsatians, Flemings, Bretons, Basques, Catalans, Corsicans, Jews, Armenians, Gypsies and "others'", Georges Marchais, the French Communist leader, violently disagreed: 'For us', he said, 'every man and woman of French nationality is French. France is not a multinational state: it is one nation, the product of a long history....'para.6 One would think that national identity is a clear-cut either/or affair (either you are or you are not a citizen), but it is one thing, for example, to have a Turkish passport, another thing to ascribe to yourself a Turkish national identity if you were born, raised and educated, say, in Germany, are native speaker of German, and happen to have Turkish parents.para.7 Despite the entrenched belief in the one language = one culture equation, individuals assume several collective identities that are likely not only to change over time in dialogue with others, but are liable to be in conflict with one another. For example, an immigrant's sense of self that was linked in his country of origin perhaps to his social class, his political views, or his economic status becomes, in the new country, overwhelmingly linked to his national citizenship or his religion, for this is the identity that is imposed on him by others, who see in him now, for example, only a Turk or a Muslim. His own sense of self, or cultural identity, changes accordingly. Out of nostalgia for the 'old country', he may tend to become more Turkish than the Turks and entertain what Benedict Anderson has called 'long distance nationalism'. The Turkish he speaks may become with the passion of years somewhat different from the Turkish spoken today in the streets of Ankara; the community he used to belong to is now more an 'imagined community' than the actual present-day Turkey.para. 8 The problem lies in equating the racial, ethnic, national identity imposed on an individual by the state's bureaucratic system, and that individual'sself-ascription. Group identity is not a national fact, but a cultural perception, to use the metaphor with which we started this book. Our perception of someone's social identity is very much culturally determined. What we perceived about a person's culture and language is what we have been conditioned by our own culture to see, and the stereotypical models already built around our own. Group identity is a question of focusing and diffusion of ethnic, racial national concepts or stereotypes. Let us take an example,para. 9 Le Page and Tabouret-Keller recount the case of a man in Singapore who claimed that he would never have any difficulty in telling the difference between an Indian and a Chinese. But how would he instantly know that the dark-skinned non-Malay person he saw on the street was an Indian (and not, say a Pakistani), and that light-skinnednon-European was a Chinese (and not, say, a Korean), unless he differentiated the two according to the official Singaporean 'ethnic' categories: Chinese, Malay, Indian, Others? In another context with different racial classifications he might have interpreted: differently the visual clues presented to him by people on the street. His impression was focused by the classificatory concepts prevalent in his society, a behavior that Benjamin Whorf would have predicted. In turn this focus may prompt him, by a phenomenon of diffusion, to identify all other 'Chinese' along the same ethnic categories, according to the stereotype 'All Chinese look alike to me'.para.10 It has to be noted that societies impose racial and ethnic categories only on certain groups: Whites do not generally identify themselves by the color of their skin, but by their provenance or nationality. They would find it ludicrous to draw their sense of cultural identity from their membership in the White race. Hence the rather startled reaction of two Danish women in the United States to a young African-American boy, who, overhearing their conversation in Danish, asked them 'What's your culture?' Seeing how perplexed they were, he explained with a smile 'See, I'm Black. That's my culture. What's yours?' Laughingly they answered that they spoke Danish and came from Denmark. Interestingly, the boy did not use language as a criterion of group identity, but the Danish did.para.11 European identities have traditionally been built much more around language and national citizenship, and around folk models of 'one nation = one language', than around ethnicity or race. But even in Europe, the matter is not so simple. For example, Alsatians who speak German, French and Germanic Piatt may alternatively consider themselves as primarily Alsatians, or French, or German, depending on how they position themselves vis-à-vis the history of their region and their family biography. A youngster born and raised in France of Algerian parents may, even though he speaks only French, call himself Algerian in France, but when abroad he might prefer to be seen as French, depending on which group he wishes to be identified with at the time.para.12 Examples from other parts of the world show how complex the language-cultural identity relationship really is. The Chinese, for example, identify themselves ethnically as Chinese even though they speak languages or dialects which are mutually unintelligible. Despite the fact that a large number of Chinese don't know how to read and write, it is the Chinese character-writing system and the art of calligraphy that are the major factors of an overall Chinese group identity.Task 1: For each of the following items, study the reading passage and choose A, B or C that best completes the statement (30/150):(1)In the sentence "By their accent, their vocabulary, their discourse patterns, speakers identify themselves and are identified as members of this or that speech and discourse community," the phrase "discourse community" means:A) communal group B) cultural group C) discourse group(2)When the author states: "[The modern, historically complex, open societies it is much more difficult to define the boundaries of any particular social group and the linguistic and cultural identities of its members," he implies that an open society is:A)a society of many peopleB)a society of diverse discoursesC)a society of multi-ethnic structure(3)"[T]he sense of a Belizean national identity" means a sense ofA) languageB) belongingC) history(4)When the author declares that "there is no necessary correlation between a given racial characteristic and the use of a given language or variety of language," he thinks that the relationship between a language and a culture isA) complexB) fixedC) uncertain(5)Georges Marchais said, "every man and woman of French nationality is French. France is not a multinational state: it is one nation, the product of a long history...." He probably regarded "'French" asA)a historical symbol of a stateB)a primary token of a national identityC)a product of a long historyTask 2: The following are definitions of the words contained in the above reading passage. Find these words in the paragraphs as marked in the parentheses (20/150):略Part B Proofreading (30/150)EXAMPLEWhen ∧ museum wants a new exhibit,(1) __a__it never buys things in finished form and hangs them (2) _neveron the wall. When a natural history museumwants an exhibition, it must often build it.(3) exhibit.pb{}.pb textarea{font-size:14px; margin:10px; font-family:"宋体";background:#FFFFEE; color:#000066}.pb_t{line-height:30px; font-size:14px; color:#000; text-align:center;}/*分页*/.pagebox{overflow:hidden; zoom:1; font-size:12px;font-family:"宋体",sans-serif;}.pagebox span{float:left; margin-right:2px; overflow:hidden; text-align:center; background:#fff;}.pagebox span a{display:block; overflow:hidden; zoom:1; _float:left;}.pagebox span.pagebox_pre_nolink{border:1px#ddd solid; width:53px; height:21px; line-height:21px; text-align:center; color:#999; cursor:default;}.pagebox span.pagebox_pre{color:#3568b9; height:23px;}.pagebox span.pagebox_pre a,.pagebox span.pagebox_pre a:visited,.pagebox span.pagebox_next a,.pagebox span.pagebox_next a:visited{border:1px #9aafe5 solid; color:#3568b9;text-decoration:none; text-align:center; width:53px; cursor:pointer; height:21px; line-height:21px;}.pagebox span.pagebox_pre a:hover,.pagebox span.pagebox_prea:active,.pagebox span.pagebox_next a:hover,.pagebox span.pagebox_nexta:active{color:#363636; border:1px #2e6ab1 solid;}.pageboxspan.pagebox_num_nonce{padding:0 8px; height:23px; line-height:23px; color:#fff; cursor:default; background:#296cb3; font-weight:bold;}.pageboxspan.pagebox_num{color:#3568b9; height:23px;}.pagebox span.pagebox_num a,.pagebox span.pagebox_num a:visited{border:1px #9aafe5 solid; color:#3568b9;text-decoration:none; padding:0 8px; cursor:pointer; height:21px;line-height:21px;}.pagebox span.pagebox_num a:hover,.pagebox span.pagebox_numa:active{border:1px #2e6ab1 solid;color:#363636;}.pageboxspan.pagebox_num_ellipsis{color:#393733; width:22px; background:none;line-height:23px;}.pagebox span.pagebox_next_nolink{border:1px #ddd solid; width:53px; height:21px; line-height:21px; text-align:center; color:#999; cursor:default;}Part C Translation (40/150)Translate the following passage into Chinese: (20/150)Folktales played a very important role in the social and cultural life of the Plains Indians. Farmers and nomadic hunters alike enjoyed gathering around the fire, especially on wintry nights, to hear the tales of the storyteller. The talents of a good storyteller and the novelty of the tale had the power to figuratively transport hard working Indians to another world.Even today, American Indians believe in the enormous power of the spoken word. As in the past, the imaginative storyteller, typically an old man or an old woman, builds up a reputation as a performer. They enhance their stories by adding gestures, voice changes and songs. He or she might occasionally adapt a particular tale to suit a specific cultural group or tribe. For example, there are usually many different versions of every good tale. Therefore, whenever a story is retold it is likely to be varied, but only within the limits of the tradition established for that particular tale. The storyteller is always mindful of his own, as well as the cultural background of the listener.Translate the following passage into English: (20/150)略。