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1、2013年浙江理工大學(xué)博士入學(xué)考試英語真題Part I Vocabulary (20 marks, 1 mark each)Section A Directions: In this section there are 10 incomplete sentences in this section. For each sentence there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that best completes the sentence. Then mark the corresponding letter on
2、 Answer Sheet I with a single line through the center. 1. If you never do any work, you will only have yourself _ if you fail your examination.A. to fault B. to reprove C. to mistake D. to blame2. Id like to study under your guidance, because I know you are a(n) _ scientist in physics.A. prominent B
3、. requisite C. desperate D. impatient3. Before their skins were used, their feet were _, leading to the misconception that the birds never had feet.A. cut down B. cut into C. cut over D. cut off4. With the constant change of the conditions, the outcome is not always _.A. favorable B. reasonable C. d
4、ependable D. predictable5. The television station is supported by _ from foundations and other sources.A. pensions B. accounts C. donations D. advertisements6. Well all take a vacation in the mountains as soon as I finish working _ my project.A. with B. on C. in D. about7. Her husband is interested
5、in designing electronic _.A. safety B. management C. routine D. devices8. Gestures are an important means to _ message. A. study B. convey C. keep D. exploit9. _ preparations were being made for the Prime Minister's official visit to the four foreign countries. A. Elaborate B. Wise C. Neutral D.
6、 Optional10. _ adults, young children find little difficulty in imitating sounds in foreign languages.A. Not like B. Unlike C. Being not D. Not asSection BDirections: In this section there are 10 sentences, each with one word or phrases underlined. Choose the one from the four choices marked A, B, C
7、 and D that best keeps the meaning of the sentence. Then mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet I with a single line through the center. 11. The financial pressure will bring about enormous psychological discomfort. A. dense B. distinct C. doubtful D. great12. It is the unique satisfactio
8、n they can derive from the work they accomplished. A. inherit B. obtain C. ignore D. accompany 13. The managers are working hard to transform their entire organizations. A. found B. rank C. reform D. destroy 14. The most terrible disputes are those about matters as to which there is no good evidence
9、. A. agreements B. discussions C. conversations D. arguments 15. You should be cautious about what you are going to say. A. polite B. prevailing C. internal D. careful 16. They consulted their tutor about this difficult issue and got what they needed. A. asked advice of B. got benefit from C. kept a
10、n eye on D. made up of17. It is necessary to contrast Chinas education system with in USA. A. overcome B. compare C. admit D. celebrate18. He mentioned that kind of happiness which most people have lived through. A. concealed B. proposed C. complained D. experienced19. It must be clear that these pr
11、oblems must be tackled before Friday. A. existed B. solved C. remembered D. assumed 20. My friend unexpectedly dropped in, and I had no time to entertain them. A. visited B. stepped in C. dropped off D. met Part II Cloze Test (20 marks, 1 mark each)Directions: There are 20 blanks in the following pa
12、ssage. For each blank there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. You should choose the one that best fits into the passage. Then mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet I with a single line through the center.During the early years of this century, wheat was seen as the very lifeblood of
13、 Western Canada. 21 the crops were good, the 22 was good; when the crops failed, there was 23 . People on city streets 24 the yields and the price of wheat with almost as much 25 as if they were growers. The 26 of wheat became an increasingly 27 topic of conversation.War set the stage for the most 2
14、8 events in marketing the western crop. For years farmers 29 speculative (投機(jī)的) grain selling as carried on through the Winnipeg grain Exchange. Wheat 30 were generally low in the autumn, 31 farmers could not wait for markets to improve. It had happened too often 32 they sold their wheat soon after h
15、arvest when farm 33 were coming due only to see prices rising and speculators 34 rich. On various 35 , producer groups asked for firmer controls, but governments had no wish to become involved, at least 36 wartime when wheat prices threatened to run wild.Anxious to check inflation and rising living
16、cost, the federal government appointed a 37 of grain supervisors to handle deliveries from the crops of 1917 and 1918. Grain Exchange trading was 38 , and farmers sold at prices 39 by the board. To handle the crop of 1919, the government 40 the first Canadian Wheat Board, with full authority to buy,
17、 sell, and set prices.21. A IfB. Since C. When D. But22. A. economistB. economicalC. economicsD. economy23. A. depressionB. deprivationC. descriptionD. depletion24. A. lookedB. watched C. saw D. noticed25. A. thoughtB. feelingC. idea D. mind26. A. growingB. purchasingC. keeping D. marketing27. A. fa
18、vourableB. favourite C. favourD. frequent28. A. dramaticB. amusing C. dreadful D. interesting29. A. misunderstoodB. mistook C. mistrusted D. misjudged30. A. valuesB. worthC. pricesD. sales31. A. soB. because C. and D. but32. A. whichB. what C. that D. because33. A. debtsB. savings C. taxes D. duties
19、34. A. beingB. gettingC. became D. grew35. A. conditionsB. situations C. occasions D. positions36. A. whenB. because C. if D. not until37. A. boardB. group C. committee D. organization38. A. suspendedB. sustained C. suspected D. delayed39. A. settingB. fixed C. deciding D. determining40. A. disappoi
20、ntedB. assigned C. entrusted D. appointedPart III Reading Comprehension (25 marks, 1 mark each)Directions: There are 5 passages in this part. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. You should decide on the be
21、st choice and mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet I with a single line through the center. Passage 1 There are two methods of fighting, the one by law, the other by force; the first method is that of men, the second of beasts; but as the first method is often insufficient, one must have re
22、course to the second. It is, therefore, necessary for a prince to know how to use both the beast and the man. This was covertly taught to the rules by ancient writers, who relate how Achilles and many others of those ancient princes were given Chiron the centaur to be brought up and educated under h
23、is discipline. The parable of this semi-animal, semi-human teacher is meant to indicate that a prince must know how to use both natures, and that the one without the other is not durable.A prince, being thus obliged to know well how to act as a beast, must imitate the fox, and the lion, for the lion
24、 cannot protect himself from traps, and the fox can not defend himself from wolves. Those that wish to be only lions do not understand this. Therefore, a prudent ruler ought not to keep faith when by doing so it would be against his interest, and the reasons which made him bind himself no longer exi
25、st. If men were all good, this precept would not be a good one; but as they are bad, and would not observe their faith with you, so you are not bound to keep faith with them. Nor have legitimate grounds ever failed a prince who wished to show colorable excuse for the nonfulfilment of his promise. Of
26、 this one could furnish an infinite number of examples, and show how many times peace has been broken, and how many promises rendered worthless, by the faithlessness of princes, and those that have best been able to imitate the fox have succeeded best. But it is necessary to be able to disguise this
27、 character well, and to be a great feigner and dissembler, and men are so simple and so ready to obey present necessities, that the one who deceives will always find those who allow themselves to be deceived.41. The writer does not believe that _.a. the truth makes men free b. people can protect the
28、mselves c. princes are human d. leaders have to be consistent42. “Prince” in the passage designates _.a. anyone in power b. elected officials c. aristocrats d. sons of kings43. The lion represents those who are _.a. too trusting b. reliant on force c. strong and powerful d. lacking in intelligence44
29、. The fox, in the passage, is _.a. admired for his trickery b. no match for the lion c. pitied for his wiles d. considered worthless45. The writer suggests that a successful leader must _.a. be prudent and faithful b. cheat and lie c. have principle to guide his actions d. follow the truthPassage 2
30、The ballad and the folk song have long been recognized as important keys to the thoughts and feelings of a people, but the dime novel, though sought by the collector and referred to in a general way by the social historian, is dismissed with a smile amusement by almost everyone else. Neither folk so
31、ngs nor dime novels were actually created by the plain people of America. But in their devotion to these models of expression, the people made them their own. The dime novel, intended as it was for the great masses and designed to fill the pockets of both author and publisher, quite naturally sought
32、 the lowest common denominator: themes that were found to be popular and attitudes that met with the most general approval became stereotyped. Moreover, the dime novel, reflecting a much wider range of attitudes and ideas than the ballad and the folk song, is the nearest thing we have had in this co
33、untry to a true “proletarian” literature, that is, a literature written for the great masses of people and actually read by them.Although a study of our dime novels alone cannot enable anyone to determine what are the essential characteristics of the American tradition, it can contribute materially
34、to that end. Sooner or later, the industrious researchers who have mined so many obscure lodes of American literary expression will almost certainly turn their attention to these novels and all their kind. Let no one think, however, that the salmon-covered paperbacks once so eagerly devoured by sold
35、iers, lumberjacks, trainmen, hired girls, and adolescent boys now make exciting or agreeable reading even for the historian, much as the social and historical implications may interest him. As for the crowds today who get their sensational thrills from the movies and the tabloids, I fear that they w
36、ould find these hair-raisers of an earlier age deadly dull.46. The principal intention of the author of a dime novel was to _.a. explore a segment of American society. b. promote the American political philosophy. c. raise the level of intelligence of the great masses of people. d. make money.47. Th
37、e “l(fā)owest common denominator” refers to _.a. the poorer classes. b. themes and attitudes that would be accepted by the greatest number of people. c. attitudes accepted by the American intellectuals. d. the character of the authors of the dime novel.48. “Proletarian” literature is _.a. written for an
38、d read by the great masses of people. b. distinguished by its devotion to pornography. c. distinguished by its elegant style. d. written for, but not actually read by, most people.49. The author believes that a study of our dime novels _.a. is a waste of time. b. would be sufficient in itself to det
39、ermine the essential characteristics of the American tradition. c. would be a valuable contribution in determining the essential characteristics of the American tradition. d. would be amusing but unimportant.50. Which of the following is implied in the passage?a. The attitudes of the masses of peopl
40、e are best expressed by sociology texts. b. The nearest thing we have had to a proletarian literature is the dime novel. c. The study of the formal literature alone will not enable the historian to understand the attitudes and interests of the common people. d. Because the themes in the dime novels
41、were not good, they could no longer be legally distributed.Passage 3When we say somebody touches us emotionally, it means he or she has gone to the core of our being. Physical touch, too, is more than skin-deep. Skin is the human bodys largest organ, containing millions of receptors - about 8,000 in
42、 a single fingertip - that send messages through nerve fibers to the spinal cord and then to the brain. A simple touch - a hand on a shoulder, an arm around a waist - can reduce the heart rates and lower blood pressure. Even people in deep comas may show changes in their heart rates when their hands
43、 are held. Positive, nurturing touch appears to stimulate the release of endorphins, the bodys natural pain suppressors. That may explain why a mothers hug can literally “make it better” when a child skins his knee. According to TRI research, message boosts immune function - even in HIV positive pat
44、ients - and lower levels of stress hormones cortical and nor epinephrine. Also, massaged preemies were discharged from the hospital six days sooner on average. With hundreds of thousands of premature births each year, one might think hospital nurseries would be falling all over themselves to establi
45、sh massage programs. Yet they are still not widespread. Perhaps one reason is cultural. Some countries are more tactile than others. When psychologist Sidney Jourard observed rates of causal touch among couples in cafes around the world, he reported the highest rate in Puerto Rico (180 times per hou
46、rs). Field found that French adolescents demonstrate significantly more casual touching - learning on a friend, putting an arm around anothers shoulder. “American teenagers were more likely to fiddle with their rings, crack their knuckles or engage in other forms of self-stimulation. French parents
47、and teachers are more physically affectionate, and the kids are less aggressive,” says Field. First and last: touch is the first sense to develop in humans, and it may be the last to fade. TRI set up a study in which volunteers over age 60 were given three weeks of massage and then were trained to m
48、assage toddlers at the preschool. Giving massage proved even more beneficial than getting them: The elders exhibited less depression and loneliness and lower levels of stress hormones. They had fewer doctor visits, drank less coffee and made more social phone calls.51.When we say somebody touches us
49、 emotionally, it means _A. he or she has known what we are thinking aboutB. we have got in touch with him or herC. he or she has moved usD. he or she can understand us52. A positive touch may _ A. make a patient recover B. relieve the pain C. make a child skin his knee D. stimulate a patient53. Pree
50、mies were discharged from hospital _ A. six days sooner on average B. when they were in good health C. after they had stayed in hospital for six days on average D. sooner than the others if they had been massaged54. Why are French children less aggressive than their American counterparts? A. Because
51、 French parents and children touch each other more frequently. B. Because American kids are more likely to fiddle with their rings. C. Because French kids are less aggressive by nature. D. Because American kids like self-stimulation.55. The study with volunteers over 60 proved that physical touch _
52、A. may do good to both who touches the others and who are touched B. may be more beneficial to the one who are touched C. may be more beneficial to elders.D. may be more beneficial to babiesPassage Four A few years ago a young mother watched her husband diaper their firstborn son. “You do not have t
53、o be unhappy about it,” she protested. “You can talk to him and smile a little.” The father, who happened to be a psychologist, answered firmly, “He has nothing to say to me, and I have nothing to say to him.” Psychologist now know how wrong that father was. From the moment of birth, a baby has a gr
54、eat deal to say to his parent and they to him. But a decade or so ago, these experts were describing the newborn as a primitive creature who reacted only by reflex, a helpless victim of its environment without capacity to influence it. And mothers accepted the truth. Most thought (and some still do)
55、 that a new infant could see only blurry shadows, that his other senses were undeveloped, and that all he required was nourishment, clean diapers, and a warm bassinet.Today university laboratories across the country are studying newborns in their first month of life. As a result, psychologists now describe the new baby as perceptive, with remarkable learning abilities and an even more remarkable capacity to shape his or her environment including the attitudes and actions of his parents. Some researchers believe that the
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