社科院博士生初试考试英语试题及答案

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中国社会科学院2008年3月博士研究生入学考试英语试题及答案解析 (12年印版)

中国社会科学院2008年3月博士研究生入学考试英语试题及答案解析  (12年印版)
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社科院1999考博英语试题+答案

社科院1999考博英语试题+答案

中国社会科学院研究生院1999博士研究生入学考试英语试题 Part Ⅰ V ocabulary (15%)Section ADirections :On your Answer Sheet ,circle the answer that best completes the sentence .1.With her last child having left home ,she felt a________ need to fill her time .A .tenseB .thoroughC .pressingD .small2.It is generally thought that as teachers work with students ,psychology course work is________ to teacher-training .A .indispensableB .inviolateC .indisposedD .invariable3.The announcement of the death of their leader caused thereafter a feeling of great despair to________ heir lives .A .overflowB .scatterC .permeateD .manipulate4.Fear of pirate________ led the French to fortify their coastline .A .excursionsB .incursionsC .transmigrationsD .transmogrifications5.During the oil crisis of the 1970s ,many states________ speed limits to reduce gasoline use .A .implantedB .imposedC .impairedD .impressed6.Over-taxation ,many argue ,impedes initiative ,so that government income may actually________.A .mushroomB .capsizeC .shrinkD .dispel7.The assassin hid himself carefully from view before________ his future victim .A .drawing fromB .drawing upC .drawing withD .drawing on8.He never exerts himself to aid those trying to________ a difficult situation .A .rectifyB .modifyC .solidifyD .verify9.His alibi was fishy ,yet________ to close scrutiny .A .stood stillB .withstoodC .stood upD .stood off10.Practitioners of law and medicine are esteemed in many countries which seems to indicate that________ depends on profession or title .A .prestigeB .superiorityC .privilegeD .merit11.After the demonstration the protestors________ quietly .A .dismissedB .diffusedC dispatchedD .dispersed12.Mutual trade implies________ advantages .A .alliedB .cooperativeC .periodicalD .reciprocal13.A virtual anchorite ,he________ to his self-sufficiency .A .adheresB .confirmsC .conformsD .admonishes14.It is scarcely an exaggeration to say that during the Cold War period the threat________ by nuclear arms seemed an everpresent danger .A .imposedB .convokedC .posedD .provoked15.Scientific integrity is as much a matter of self-interest as it is of________.A .self-esteemB .self-deceiving 考博家园C .selfishnessD .self-improvement Section BDirections :On your Answer Sheet ,circle the letter that is the closest synonym to the underlinedword .16.The majority of the observers at the conference ,in contradistinction to the delegates ,were opposed to ratification .A .adjournmentB .distributionC .tablingD .approval17.Although it was none of my business I asked her if the one she was lamenting for was in any way kin .A .speaking forB .running risks forC .pleading forD .mourning for18.I could never spend the tome that he does pouring over sports magazines ,compiling in tricate lists ,and calculating averages .A .delicateB .incomprehensibleC .meaninglessD .complicated19.In England ,Latin appears never to have superseded the old Gaelic speech among the people .A .joinedB .replacedC .influencedD .given way to20.Landslides triggered by heavy rainfall impeded our best attempts at rescuing the victims .A .encouragedB .hinderedC .nullifiedD .crowned21.Death ensued as a result of suffocation .A .heartfailure B .an accident C .disease D .asphyxiation 22.We must safeguard against coerced confessions .A .bribedB .emotionalC .unprofitableD .forced23.My attention was engaged by the article's caption .A .graphB .authorC .contentsD .title24.The report was unusual in that it insinuated corruption on the part of the minister .A .deniedB .suggestedC .proposedD .stated25.When a newspaper prints an inaccurate date for an event ,universal chagrin results .A .discomfitureB .amusementC .reprisalD .loss of profit26.In various parts of the world ,the devoted and devout participate enthusiastically in public processions during the major events of the liturgical year .A .piousB .seriousC .diseasedD .misled27.Absent impartiality on the part of the psychotherapist ,a patient's conflicts may be exacerbated .A .indifferenceB .objectivityC .voiced concernD .engagement28.They awoke to find the maid had left the remnants of dinner on the table .A .list of items for aB .invitations to aC .leftovers ofD .preparations for a29.The upshot of all this was that travelling had become precarious .A .gloriousB .funC .expensiveD .dangerous30.Some would consider that an infringement of good manners whereas others would not .A .an exampleB .a violationC .a problemD .an indication Part Ⅱ Grammar (15%)Section ADirections :On your Answer Sheet ,circle the letter that best completes the sentence .1.________ sugar________ salt is oil water . 考博家园A .Not as ...as B .No more than ...is C .Not more than ....is D .Not more than ...as2.His mother frequently denies him permission to do things ,and that is________.A .everB .thisC .thatD .over3.The staff in pediatrics________ rushed whereas the geriatric ward is not busy at all .A .is nearly alwaysB .nearly is alwaysC .always is nearlyD .is always nearly4.Anais Nin's diaries are often scandalous ,probably because she describes herself as she is rather than________.A .others' define herB .as others define herC .her definition by othersD .she is defined by others5.________,the mayor conceded defeat in his bid for re-election .A .Having racked up a lead of some 150,000 votesB .Having been racked up a lead of some 150,000 votesC .His opponent having racked up a lead of some 150,000 votesD .His opponent racking up a lead of some 150,000 votes6.Never has a scientific explanation emerged________ someone somewhere has objected to it .A .thatB .whichC .whomD .but7.Your mentor and friend________ to support me in my financial undertaking .A .have consentedB .has consentedC .have been consentingD .are consented8.Due in large part to the complexity of its structure—over two hundred bones________ together by ligaments—the human skeleton is a marvel of architectural construction .A .bindingB .boundC .houndedD .bind9.Inasmuch as a year does not elapse without a certain number of villagers falling victim to the ferocity of a tiger ,its roar is________ heard by the natives________ feelings of terror .A .not ...withB .not ...withoutC .seldom ...withD .always ...without10.I regret to say that your thesis requires more thinking than________ for the problem is exceedingly complex .A .to be put inB .has been put inC .being put inD .have been put in11.I must finish this assignment tonight ,________.A .it is ever so lateB .be it ever so lateC .it be ever so lateD .so late it be12.Science majors ,________,require a good basic foundation in the sciences as a whole .A .whether they are future physicists and chemistsB .be they future physicists or chemistsC .they are future physicists or chemistsD .whether they should be future physicists and chemists13.Those are very important papers and I'd just as soon________ here .A .as you leave themB .you leave themC .you will leave themD .that you will leave them14.Anatomists generally maintain that the human heart is nearest________. 考博家园A .to the size in our fistB .in the size to our fistC .in size to our fistD .to the size to our fist15.Foreigners are very fussy about their phone calls .They hate________ anyone eavesdropping .A .thereB .there beC .there to beD .beingSection BDirections :In the sentences below ,either A ,B ,C or D is the incorrect gramatical form for thesentence .Pick the incorrect form as your answer ,and on your Answer Sheet ,circle the corresponding letter .16.One of the more intriguing theories about the destruction of Ur is his contention that the A population may destroy their ziggurats and abandoned their metropolis in anger a gainst the deitiesB C that permitted so long a famine .D17.In the bush ,the ill took it to be only logical if the one who could dure an illness should also possess A B C the ability of causing it ,and that even at a distance .D18.Ores which are occurred naturally as elements ,such as gold are of extreme rarity andA B C are occasionally of high value .D19.Unless they are so permitted by the attending physician ,no visitors or relatives can enter theA B C patient's room .D20.A rigorous alertness must be adhered when notetaking with the inessential ignored and theA B C D superfluous eliminated .21.It is largely through perspiration ,or the evaporation of water through the pores ,that humansA B C rid them of excess moisture .D22.Provided the computer is given correct information to start ,accuracy is another out standingA B C Dadvantage .23.And so early every morning therefore ,but not before the infant bathed , did she betake herself A B C D to the outhouse .24.He stood on tiptoe ,stretching as far as he could ,however ,still ,he could not reach the book . A B C D25.As gentle as possible ,and with help from an assistant ,the veterinarian examined the hippo to A B 考博家园determine if she was pregnant .C D26.In a recent survey ,that responsiveness was that most of all made a woman dear to them was theA B C opinion of three out of four men .D27.All personnel will be required to undergo special sensitivity training programs prior to leavingA B for aboard in order to be prepared against culture shock .C D28.Among the many changes were those to the New Yorker book review ,and very shortsighted A B C they were .D29.The majority of students ,preferring eternal verities ,rarely see that knowledge is subject A of growth and transformation ,and that it shifts in meaning and status with time .B C D30.Because of the recent turmoil and until further notice ,any gathering of more than two people isA B C prohibited in the interest of preserving the law and order .DPart Ⅲ Cloze (10%)Directions :Choose as your answer the word that best fits the blank .On your Answer Sheet ,circlethe corresponding letter .My knees were shaking . 1 afraid 2 with them , 3 Ⅰ 4 myself out on the path to follow them .Amara's husband 5 coming back and saw me .“ 6 my age mates 7 thiswitchcraft .You come back with me and keep watch 8 my wife .Help me guard 9 body .He will kill her and I cannot prevent it .But he 10 killed her in vain .He shall not eat her body .”It was dark inside the reception hut ,and very quiet .The women 11 kept watch over Amara ,and her co-wife still sat with her .The man stood looking down upon her .A man must never call his wife 12 her name and may never touch her 13 public .The man knelt 14 hiswife .“Child of Lain .”She did not 15 .Tentatively he 16 his hand on her forehead .Perhaps he thought she heard , 17 he added bravely , 18 will happen to you ,Amara 19 wife .”He clasped her hand in 20 .We sat on in silence waiting for Amara to die .1.A .Am B .Was C .Will be D .Have been2.A .I went B .go C .but D .to go3.A .yet B .moreover C .even D .soon4.A .obliged B .constrained C .coerced D .forced5.A .is B .was C .will be D .had been6.A .Grant B .Let C .Pardon D .Forgive 考博家园7.A .takecare for B .take care of C .care of D .care for 8.A .around B .with C .by D .for9.A .my B .your C .his D .her10.A .is B .was C .will have D .would have11.A .even B .ever C .still D .while12.A .for B .with C .around D .by13.A .around the B .in C .when D .while14.A .along B .beside C .besides D .thinking15.A .budge B .mix C .stir D .bestir16.A .laid B .lain C .had lain D .sat17.A .for B .when C .listening D .quietly18.A .Nothing B .Something C .Anything D .Everything19.A .my B .your C .his D .her20.A .his B .hers C .theirs D .ours Part Ⅳ Reading Comprehension (30%)Directions :Read each passage and answer all the questions that follow the passage .On yourAnswer Sheet ,circle the letter that best answers the question .Passage 1The sources of anti-Christian feeling were many and complex .On the more intangible side ,there was a general pique against the unwanted intrusion of the Western countries ;there was an understandable tendency to seek an external scapegoat for internal disorders only tangentially attributable to the West and perhaps most important ,there was a virile tradition of ethnocentricism ,vented long before against Indian Buddhism ,which ,since the seventeenth century ,focused on Western Christianity .Accordingly ,even before the missionary movement really got under way in the mid-nineteenth century ,it was already at a disadvantage .After 1860,as missionary activity in the hinterland expanded ,it quickly became apparent that in addition to the intangibles ,numerous tangible grounds for Chinese hostility abounded .In part ,the very presence of the missionary evoked attack .They were ,after all ,the first foreigners to leave the treaty ports and venture into the interior ,and for a long time they were virtually the only foreigners whose quotidian labors carried them to the farthest reaches of the Chinese empire .For many of the indigenous population ,therefore ,the missionary stood as a uniquely visible symbol against which opposition to foreign intrusion could be vented .In part ,too ,the missionary was attacked because the manner in which he made his presence felt after 1860 seemed almost calculated to offend .By indignantly waging battle against the notion that China was the sole fountainhead of civilization and ,more particularly ,by his assault on many facets of Chinese culture per se ,the missionary directly undermined the cultural hegemony of the gentry class .Also ,in countless ways ,he posed a threat to the gentry's traditional monopoly of social leadership .Missionaries ,particularly Catholics ,frequently assumed the garb of the Confucian literati .They were the only persons at the local level ,aside from the gentry ,who were permitted to communicate with the authorities as social equals .Amid they enjoyed an extraterritorial status in the interior that gave them greater immunity to Chinese law than had ever been possessed by the gentry .Although it was the avowed policy of the Chinese government after 1860 that the new 考博家园treaties were to be strictly adhered to ,in practice implementation depended on the wholehearted accord of provincial authorities .There is abundant evidence that cooperation was dilatory .At the root of this lay the interactive nature of ruler and ruled .In a severely understaffed bureaucracy that ruled as much by suasion as by might ,the official ,almost always a stranger in the locality of his service ,depended on the active cooperation of the local gentry class .Energetic attempts to implement treaty provisions concerning missionary activities ,in direct defiance of gentry sentiment ,ran the risk of alienating this class and destroying future effectiveness .1.In a vague way ,anti-Christian feeling stemmed from________.A .the mere presence of invadersB .a generalized unfocused feelingC .the introduction to the WestD .none of the above2.The author would agree that________.A .many problems in China came from internal disorders due to Western influenceB .many problems in China came from China itself and were unrelated to the WestC scapegoats perform a necessary function and there should be more of themD .all of the above are true3.With which of the following statements would the author agree?A .Ethnocentricism is a manly tradition .B .The disdain toward Christianity was prefigured by a disdain toward Buddhism .C .Although Christianity was not well received in China ,Buddhism was .D .The author would agree with A and C4.Missionaries________.A .often dressed the same way as Chinese scholars didB .were free of the legal constraints that bound the local indigenous populationC .had greater access to authority than Chinese peasantsD .may be described by all of the above5.By which of the following statements may the dichotomy between government policy and its implementation be described?A .There's many a slip twixt the cup and the lip .B .You can lead a horse to water but you cannot make him drink .C .All that glitters is not gold .D .All of the above apply in various ways to the dichotomy .6.Provincial authorities________.A .cooperated fully with the central government's policyB .were alive to local feelingsC .were obliged to determine whether local sentiment tolerated implementationD .may be described by B and CPassage 2Proponents of creating large private sectors as quickly as possible in transition economies offer both political and economic arguments to support their view .They argue that if democracy is to become a viable political system in the countries undergoing transition ,the state's monopoly 考博家园over the bases of political power must be broken so that the countervailing sources of political influence may emerge (Berger ,1991).Otherwise ,the nomenklatura ,managers of state-owned firms and former bureaucrats ,may sabotage or block economic reforms ,as well as loot ,dissipate or transfer to their own possession the assets of the firms they manage .By creating property owners ,privatization can create an ascent middle class that has a stake in the creation and maintenance of an effective system of property rights and the pursuit of economic policies that would enable the private sector to flourish .The most compelling economic reason for privatizing state-owned enterprises in the transition economies is that as units of production—as distinct from providers of secure employment—they were a failure .Private ownership is thus seen as the means of unlocking gains in productivity by stimulating productive efficiency ,offering greater motivation for both managers and workers ,and creating incentives to enter new markets and exit declining ones .Privatization ,it is argued ,will unleash dynamic small businesses ,act as a lure for foreign direct investment and speed the painful process of restructuring industry ,and it would accomplish all this while returning property to its rightful historical owners and raising funds for the government .Despite this enticing list of promises ,many countries of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union remain reluctant to privatize .Some of the opposition is ideological .Some comes from insiders at state-owned enterprises ,both workers and managers ,who fear the loss of income and power .More broadly ,there are fears that privatization will reduce employment as private owners dismiss redundant workers and that the new private sector will be unlikely to provide the social benefits—like housing ,health and nursery care ,and recreation ,sports and vacation facilities—that state-owned enterprises often provided .At the extreme ,there are fears that if privatization exacerbates unemployment and causes declines in production ,reformist governments will be swept away .Practical difficulties have compounded this resistance to privatization .The valuations of firms is difficult because capital markets barely exist ,accounting statements can be almost meaningless ,and profits and sales achieved in the communist era are a poor guide to future viability .Households in these countries do not have sufficient sayings to purchase many of the largest firms ,and ,even if they did have the money ,they view former stateowned enterprises as dubious investments .With a rudimentary banking system ,loans for the purchase of state property are seen as both risky and inflationary .In this muddled situation ,suspicions naturally arise that buyers are benefiting from low prices at the expense of the state .7.The argument about democracy is________.A .a political argumentB .an economic argumentC .an argument based upon demonstrable proofD .an argument favored by all economists8.The information contained between brackets refers to________.A .something unknownB .an American Supreme Court Justice's legal decisionC .someone who does not in fact believe the argumentsD .an author who deals with the topic being discussed9.Which of the following statements is true? 考博家园A .“Nomenklatura” is underlined because its meaning cannot be determined by the text .B .“Nomenklatura” is different from managers and bureaucrats .C .“Nomenklatura” is a foreign term whose meaning in English is managers and bureaucrats .D .The origin of the word “nomenklatura” is well-known .10.The author would necessarily agree________.A .with the political argumentsB .that state-owned enterprises were successful in providing secure employmentC .that state-owned enterprises were successful as units of productionD .that none of the above is true11.In paragraph 3,the ultimate fear is that of________.A .the enterprise managersB .the workersC .the average citizenD .the government itself12.The practical difficulties may be explained by________.A .theoretical argumentsB .the state of the economic systemsC .fears of privatizationD .all of the abovePassage3One traditional justification for greater judicial deference to agencies ,on legal questions in the U. S. administrative regime is she expertise argument :This justification comports with traditional understandings about the respective roles of the different branches of government and agencies' place in modern government .Agencies ,in this view ,are the technical experts that put into operation the policy judgments made by legislators .Indeed ,technical expertise is the raison d'etre of agencies ;by focusing on a particular regulatory field ,or sector of the economy ,agencies can do what Congress lacks the time and other institutional resources to do .Chevron v .National Resources ,which presented the question whether the statutory term “stationary source” referred to an entire pollution—emitting plant or ,rather ,to every single smokestack within such a plant ,supplies an apt example of when an agency's special technical expertise can aid statutory interpretation .According to the expertise argument ,agencies are deemed to understand even the legal ramifications of the problems agencies are created to work on .Admittedly ,the dichotomy between legal and factual questions may at times be difficult to maintain ,but that observation argues asmuchin favor of as it does against Chevron deference .Agency expertise ,however ,is not the only common justification ,sometimes the doctrine is justified also on democratic grounds .According to the argument from democracy ,it is agencies ,not courts ,that are answerable to both the executive and the legislative representatives of the citizenry .Because judges are not elected ,while presidents and legislators are ,and because agencies but not judges are accountable to the President and to Congress ,judicial deference to agency decisions enhances the political legitimacy of the administrative regime .Finally ,Chevron may be justified also in the name of administrative efficiency or coordination .Before Chevron ,different federal courts in different jurisdictions could interpret the same statutory provision differently .Multiple interpretations by different federal courts would mean that the statute “said” different things in those different jurisdictions .Such confusion could be eliminated by appellate review ,but agencies faced uncertainty pending review ,and the possibility of different interpretations across different appellate circuits remained .Because multiple agencies do not typically interpret the same statutory language ,however ,Chevron 考博家园deference allows the agency charged with administering a statute to interpret that statute .One agency ,rather than many federal courts ,now resolves ambiguities in the statute that the agency in question is charged to administer .Such interpretive streamlining not only reduces uncertainty but also promotes regulatory coordination .Once an agency has settled on a reasonable interpretation ,it can act on the basis of that interpretation nationally .13.The expertise argument assumes that________.A .an agency has experts but that Congress does notB .Congress is more interested in policy than in implementationC .modern agencies are more responsible than agencies were in the pastD .all of the above are true14.Chevron is underlined________.A .because it is the name of a companyB .because it is one party to a law caseC .because it is the title of a bookD .because it is the title of a scholarly article15.A “stationary source”________.A .refers to where one goes to buy writing paperB .may mean either a plant or a smokestack ,but not bothC .is in this instance a legal term whose meaning is being questionedD .refers to something not covered by the above16.We may assume that________.A .different lower federal courts may have different opinions about a lawB .the decision of a lower federal court is not necessarily the final decisionC .both of the above are trueD .none of the above is true17.The difference between an appellate circuit court and a given agency is________.A .that the latter is local whereas the former is nationalB .that a variety of appellate courts may review a given law in contradistinction to a given agency and its jurisdictionC .that albeit the former specializes in a given area ,the latter has a range of expertise across many different areasD .that the first is state—based while the latter is nationally—based18.Throughout this passage ,“Chevron deference” refers to________.A .favoring ChevronB .favoring National ResourcesC .favoring the agency involvedD .favoring none of the abovePassage 4The main feature of a convention—a pattern of behavior that is customary ,expected ,and selg-enforced—is that ,out of a host of conceivable choices ,only one is actually used .This fact also explains why conventions are needed :they resolve problems of indeterminacy in interactions that have multiple equilibria .Indeed ,from a formal point of view ,we may define a convention as an equilibrium that everyone expects in interactions that have more than one equilibrium . 考博家园Theeconomic significance of conventions is that they reduce transaction costs .Imagine the inconvenience if ,whenever two vehicles approached one another ,the drivers had to get out and negotiate which side of the road to take .Or consider the cost of having to switch freight from one type of railroad to another whenever a journey involves both a wide-gauge and a narrow-gauge railroad line .This was a common circumstance in the nineteenth century and not unknown in the late twentieth :until recently ,Australia had different rail gauges in the states of South Wales and Victoria ,forcing a mechanical switch for all trains bound between Sydney and Melbourne . Conventions are also a notable feature of legal contracts .People rely on standard leases ,wills ,purchasing agreements ,construction contracts and the like ,because it is less costly to fill in the blanks of a standard contract than to create one from scratch .Even more important ,such agreements are backed up by legal precedent ,so the signatories have even greater confidence that ,their terms are enforceable .We may discern two ways in which conventions become established .One is by central authority .Following the French Revolution ,for example ,it was decreed that horse-drawn carriages in Paris should keep to the right .The previous custom had been for carriages to keep left and for pedestrians to keep right ,facing the oncoming traffic .Changing the custom was symbolic of the new order :going on the left had become politically incorrect because it was identified with the privileged classes :going on the right was the habit of the common many and therefore more “democratic”.In Britain ,by contrast there seems to have been no single defining event that gave rise to the dominant convention of left-handed driving .Rather ,it grew up by local custom ,spreading from one region to another .This is the second mechanism by which conventions become established :the gradual accretion of precedent .The two mechanisms are not mutually exclusive ,of course .Society often converges on a convention first by an informal process of accretion :later it is codified into law to regulate exceptions .In many countries ,rules of the road were not legislated until the nineteenth century ,but by this time the law was merely reiterating what had already become established custom .The surprising fact is that until the end of the eighteenth century ,the dominant convention was for horse-drawn carriages to keep to the left .This situation obtained in Great Britain ,France ,Sweden ,Portugal ,Austria ,Hungary ,Bohemia and parts of Italy .A chain of historical accidents—Napoleon adopting the new convention for his armies and imposing this convention in occupied countries ;Portugal sharing a common border with occupied Spain ;Austria ,Hungary and Bohemian Czechoslovakia falling under German rule ;Italy having elected a “modern” leader under a king—gradually tipped the balance .19.In the first sentence ,the word “convention” is underlined________.A .for personal reasons regarding styleB .to stress the importance of the wordC .because the author will define itD .for none of the above reasons20.A synonym for “equilibria” is________.A .choicesB .conventionsC .problemsD .interactions21.We may assume that the cost in time of passenger traffic in Australia as a whole________.A .is great 考博家园。

1998年社科院考博英语真题

1998年社科院考博英语真题

1998年社科院考博英语真题1998年攻读博⼠学位研究⽣⼊学考试试卷GENERAL DIRECTIONS: Each student has an answer sheet on which is to be written the student’s examination ID number. All answers to the multiple choice questions of parts Ⅰ,Ⅱ,Ⅲand Ⅳare to be written on this answer sheet. Circle the letter that is your answer.PART Ⅰ:VOCABULARY [15%]DIRECTIONS FOR SECTION A: On your answer sheet, circle the answer that best completes the sentence.1. The day was crisp and sharp, but suddenly a misty rain began to fall and the landscape.a. hidb. blurredc. relievedd. belittled2. this coming Thursday, it will be too late to enrol for the course.a. As ofb. As forc. As tod. As on3. Those who let uncertainty rarely achieve much.a . turn them down b. send them downc. weigh them downd. huddle down4. The speaker went on and on, to his listeners obvious boredom.a. obligatedb. obsessivec. obviousd. oblivious5. Such as self-respect and industriousness merit the full backing of an employer.a. advantagesb. traitsc. interestsd. shortcomings6. The police inspector, having received new information from a confidential source, decided to enlarge the or his enquiry.a. scope7. An intelligent TV viewer may occasionally become enraged by the argumentation in commercials.a. imperativeb. fallaciousc. persuasived. fabulous8. flees if one is constantly subjected to demeaning orders.a. Primeb. Harassmentc. Conceitd. Pride9. popularity of subject matter and frequency of use, the books on the two middle shelves will be the most helpful to you.a. As ofb. As regardsc. As fromd. As against10. I was in my reading, and didn’t at first hear the doorbell ring.a. immuredb. immersedc. busyd. infatuated11. Their chances of winning are slight, given that their opponents are so .a. well-knownb. vitalc. formidabled. distinguished12. When I reach home after an impossible day’s work, I feel a general to watch TV.a. inducement13. Fallen electric lines, rubble, ruins and the occasional house--such is the destruction wrought by the war.a. neglectedb. desolatec. tragicd. chopped14. Geographic illiteracy is widespread, and hardly a month passes without from some survey revealing new depths of ignorance.a. wordsb. a wordc. wordd. the word15. of course it is possible that the new policy may have some adverse effects, but it is our that these will be negligible.a. constitutionb. conditionc. convictiond. consideringDIRECTIONS FOR SECTION B: On your answer sheet, circle the letter that is the closest synonym to the underlined word.16. Serial murderers rarely deviate from a certain type of prey.a. attackerb. nourishmentc. victimd. enemy17. The new guppies I bought have just a tinge of yellow.a. dotb. markc. touchd. tingle18. He covered the fish lavishly with sauce.a. sparinglyb. completelyc. generouslyd. simply19. Machiavelli cautions the prince not to relinquish power under passing duress.d. abandon20. The play was hilarious!a. a merry oneb. a prudish onec. sedated. prodigious21. The Salk polio vaccine provides immunity from that disease.a. securityb. publicityc. liabilityd. help22. The Smithsonian houses a miscellaneous collection of aircraft, artifacts, butterflies, stones [bothprecious and common], and so on.a. a heterogeneousb. an overwhelmingc. a unifiedd. a vast23. The jungles of the sub-Sahara, afflicted with tse-tse and mosquitos, is an unhealthy area.a. requiring inoculation againstb. heated byc. flooded byd. plagued by24. He is constantly late, and ill-prepared when he does finally arrive. He is jeopardizing his future.a. developingb. endangeringc. assuringd. destroying25.Chaos theory stresses the magnitude of the results produced by so small an event as the fluttering of a butterfly’s wings.a. sizeb. volume26.The ancillary data, however, did not substantiate his argument.a. necessaryb. involuntaryc. subsidiaryd. extraordinary27. Subsequent events vindicated her point of view.a. proved wrongb. indicatedc. proved rightd. invalidated28. Rhenium is added as an alloy inasmuch as it withstands heat.a. dischargesb. resistsc. reducesd. opposes29. At 70, she hardly seems cut-out for mountain climbing.a. chosen forb. fond ofc. likely to enjoyd. fit for1. The elevated roadway collapsed. This calamity could have been avoided had the municipality allocated funds for infrastructure.a. consequenceb. eventc. disasterd. thingPART Ⅱ:GRAMMAR [15%]DIRECTIONS FOR SECTION A: On your answer sheet, circle the letter that best completes the sentence.1. Now that in scientific communities the use of computers is widespread, and supposing that there is sufficient time, there exist no complicated problem can be addressed with some hope of resolution.a. andb. butc. asd. which2. Out of the elementary plane geometry developed by the Greeks we use today.a. the theoretical geometry evolutionb. evolved the theoretical geometryc. the evolution of theoretical geometry camed. the theoretical geometry came3. We had to go miles to find a restaurant, it a holiday.a. beingb. wasc. to bed. is4. A good indication of he followed the teacher’s advice was that he failed.a. what littleb. however littlec. how littled. whatever little5. None of the day’s transactions,sales or delivery, came off well.a. fromb. it beingc. be itd. was it6. The traffic was very heavy, , and so we arrived after the start of the program.a. this was completely unexpectedb. which was completely unexpectedc. that was completely unexpectedd. it was completely unexpected7. , he finds the work interestinga. Though he is computer expertb. A computer expert he isc. As computer expertd. Computer expert as he is8. , he never alters a decision.a. What may comeb. May what comec. Come what mayd. May come whatever9. ‘The car ran out of gas!’‘That the cause, I filled the tank this morning. ’a. mustn’t beb. must have beenc. can bed. can’t have been10. Their proposal is better than ours, .a. all things consideringb. all things consideredc. all things are consideredd. all considered things11. Unless to bend somehow, perhaps with the helps of a mirror, light only travelsstraight ahead.a. you makeb. to be madec. is maded. made12. The sloth is so named for its inactivity, its greatest energy in the search for food.a. it expendsb. for expendingc. to expendd. and it expends13. Although most foodstuffs enter the bloodstream only after being subjected to the digestive process beginning in the stomach, alcohol is highly unusual at least one-fifth of the quantity ingested is directly absorbed.a. so thatb. in thatc. thatd. in which14. , we will leave without her.a. If she were to fail to come on timeb. She should fail to come on timec. Should she fail to come on timed. Would she fail to come on time15. My phone call to the electrician as I subsequently discovered my wife had phoned.My wife had phoned.a. needn’t be madeb. shouldn’t be madec. needn’t have been maded. didn’t have to beDIRECTIONS FOR SECTION B: In the sentences below, either A, B, C or D is the INCORRECT grammatical form for the sentence. Pick the INCORRECT form as your answer, and on your answer sheet, circle the corresponding letter.16.The Mercandiser widget isA so named bec ause itB believed isC discovered be to by Albert Mercandiser, a DutchmanD by birth.17. Although the city acquired modernizations ofA recent more a kind during the twentieth century,B its present appearance Cshapes took during D .nineteenth the 18.As she A qrew older her vision Bbegan sporadically to fade, so that intermittent times the C seldom knew what sheD looking was at. 19. A For the grounds that fiction is not B y objectivel true, there C are those who D object to it. 20.As Christmas approached, with peopleAcrowded department stores, restaurants, theaters and movie houses, the downtown area B was, C , always as theD busiest. 21. A you, Mind under no circumstances B are you to allow your C child to change D broken bulbs by himself.22.Today, I firmly A believe, they B deliver the new television, and if they C do, I D shall help you set up the cable stations.23. TheAyear -f ive project would B expose C l educationa disadvantaged students to Ds experience both creative and enriching. 24. At the museum, I saw various exhibits of Af amily ape members, B was and particularly C struck by one groupD f aces had they resembling humans. 25.So far A is story the from being true that I B surprised was anyoneC believed have could itD was so. 26. To the most famous A alumnae B were extendedC a special invitation to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary ofD their graduation. 27. Whether she is A pretty as , or prettier than B the other girls C in her officeD is moot. 28. A f or But the services provided by B eaters,-insect insects C will make D it impossible to live.29.Unless those currently working –both men and women -- A given be would theB necessarytraining for somewhat higher positions, unemployment in general will becomeC ly increasing more serious as automationD continues . 30. Improved agro-technology rendered Af easible it for far more people To B f ed be per square unit than C can be fed on Dthe produce formerly available in the same area. PART Ⅲ: CLOZE [10%]DIRECTIONS: Choose as your answer the word that best fits the blank. On your answer sheet, circle the corresponding letter.There is no question but that Newton was a highly competent Minister of the Mint. It was mainlythrough his efforts [1] the English currency was put on [2] satisfactory basis at a difficult time. [3] discovered a relationship between prices and [4] amount of money in circulation, which [5] later formalized in the so-called “quality [6] ” of money: if the amount of [7] In circulation is doubled – other things [8] the same – then prices also will[9] double. This is a simple application [10] the principle that it isimpossible [11] get something for nothing, but apparently [12] took someone like Newton to discover it. There [13] an obvious comparison with Copernicus, who [14] the Polish government on currency questions [15]in doing so discovered another important [16] (usually known asGresham’s Law): when [17] money is accepted as legal tender, [18] money will be driven out of [19] . Copernicus anticipated Gresham in the formulation [20] this law.1. a. which b. why c. that d. for2. a. a b. very c. the d. most3. a. It b. He c. Was d. We4. a. an b. their c. the d. big5. a. too b. was c. they d. has6. a. theory b. them c. thesis d. proposal7. a. coins b. currency c. bills d. gold8. a. stay b. much c. remaining d. be9. a. come b. seem c. multiply d. approximately10. a. for b. of c. calling d. by11. a. our b. to c. for d. we12. a. they b. had c. it d. he13. a. is b. comes c. be d. with14. a. talked b. advised c. formed d. created15. a. from b. but c. and d. by16. a. true b. legend c. theme d. law17. a. much b. foreign c. bad d. lawful18. a. good b. much c. bad d. some19. a. work b. function c. marketing d. circulation20. a. for b. by c. of d. toPART Ⅳ: READING COMPREHENSION [30%]DIRECTIONS: Read each passage and answer all the questions that follow the passage. On your answer sheet, circle the letter that best answers the question.1.There is little question that substantial labor-market differences exist between men and women. Among the most researched difference is the male-female wage gap. Many different theories are used to explain why men earn more than women. One possible reason is based on the limited geographical mobility of married women [Robert Frank, 1978]. Family mobility is a joint decision in which the needs of the husband and wife are balanced to maximize family welfare. Job-motivated relocations are generally made to benefit the primary earner in the family. This leads to a constrained job search for the secondary earner, as he or she must search for a job in a limited geographic area. Since the husband is still the primary wage earner in many families, the job search of the wife may suffer. Individuals who are tied to a certain area are labeled ‘tied-stayers,’while secondary earners who move for the benefit of the family are labeled ‘tied-movers’[Jacob Mincer, 1978].The wages of a tied-stayer or tied-mover may not be substantially lower if the family lives in or moves to a large city. If a large labor market has more vacancies, the wife may locate a wage offer near the maximum she would find with a nation-wide search. However, being a tied-stayer or tied-mover can lower the wife’s wage if the family lives in or moves to a small community. A small labor market will reduce the likelihood of her finding a job that utilizes her skills. As a result she may accept a job for which she is overqualified and thus earn a lower wage. This hypothesized relationship between the likelihood of being overqualified and SMSA size is termed ‘differential overqualification. ’Frank [1978] and Haim Ofek and Yesook Merrill [1994] provide support for the theory of differential overqualification by finding that the male-female wage gap is grater in smaller SMSA’s.While the results are consistent with the existence of differential overqualificatio n, they may also result from other situations as well. Firms in small labor markets may use their monopsony power to keep wages down. Local demand shocks are found to be a major source of wage variation both across and within local labor markets [Robert Topel, 1986]. Since large labor markets are generally more diversified, a demand shock can have a substantial impact on immobile workers in small labor markets. Another reason for examining differential overqualification involves the assumption that there are more vacancies in large labor markets. While there is little doubt that more vacancies exist in large labor markets, there are also likely to be more people searching for jobs in large labor markets. If the greater number of vacancies is offset by the larger number of searchers, it is unclear whether women will be more likely to be overqualified in small labor markets. Instead of relying on wages to determine if differential overqualification exists, we consider an explicit form of over qualification based on education.1. In the author’s opinion, the male-female wage gapa. is the most important difference.b. is justified.c. has important repercussions on family life.d. represents a sexist attitude toward women.e. is simply one of a considerable number of labor-market differences.2.‘Geographic mobility,’as used in the text, refers toa. the way in which Americans tend to move from job to job.b. the penchant wage-earners have to maximize family welfare.c. the necessity to relocate in order to increase wages.d. all of the above.e. none of the above.3. In the author’s opinion, which of the following statements is true?a. The term ‘secondary earner’ does not depend on gender.b. If A will earn more money than B, family welfare is maximized if B agrees to relocate.c. If B will earn more money than A, family welfare is maximized if A agrees to relocate.d. All of the above are true.e. None of the above are true.4.The difference between a ‘tied-stayer’and ‘tied- mover’is that.a. the former is the husband and the latter is the wife.b. the primary earner is forced to search for work in a specific area while the secondary earner is freer to roam about.c. the former is obliged to remain in an area while the latter not.d. the former is the wife and the latter is the husband.e. the latter’s salary is of secondary importance to the former’s salary.5. With which of the following statements would the author agree?a. The size of the labor market determines recompense.b. The size of the labor market determines acquired skills utilization.c. The size of the labor market determines the probability of matching skills with appropriatewage level.d. The author would agree with all of the level.e. The author would agree with none of the above.6. The names and dates between parenthesesa. refer to bibliographical entries.b. explain who discussed what and when they discussed it.c. are references to what the author has read.d. may be described by all of the above.e. may be described by none of the above.2.] The repression in the Netherlands, instead of solving a crucial problem, elicited bitter criticism from every major European state. Alba was unrepentant about his tough policy convinced than the population must remain in a state of fear, ‘so that every individual has the feeling that one fine night or morning the house will fall in on him.’Of the leading dissidents who escaped from Alba’s hands, only William of Orange remained. Tall, dark-haired, with a small moustache and a short peaked beard, the prince of Orange-Nassau was aged thirty-five at the moment that fortune left him in the unenviable role of defender of his country. A comrade-in-arms of Philip during the latter’s years abro ad in mid-century, he never made a secret of his concern for the privileges of his class or of his dislike for religious dogmatism. Widowed in 1558, in 1561 he married Anne, the Lutheran daughter of the late Maurice of Saxony. The marriage, celebrated in Leipzig, gave him a useful link with the princes of the Holy Roman Empire. When news came of Alba’s departure from Spain, Orange opportunely took refuge in Germany. It became clear that the only way to regain the Netherlands was by the use of them. In the course of 1568 Orange sponsored invasions by several small forces, which entered from France and from Germany. All were defeated. Captured prisoners gave details of Orange’s links with protestants in several countries. The invasions could not fail to affect the fate of the distinguished prisoners in Alba’s hands. On 5 June 1568, in the public square of Brussels, the counts of Egmont and Hornes were beheaded for high treason.The executions shocked opinion throughout Europe. The two nobles, as knights of the Golden Fleece, could be tried only bytheir peers. But Philip, grand master of the order, had cleared the way for the trial by a special patent which he had drawn up in April 1567 and sent to Alba in December. There is no doubt that Philip considered Egmont responsible for much of the trouble in Flanders, but the pressure for an exemplary punishment came rather from the members of his council, particularly [it seems] from cardinal Espinosa. Alba had always regretted the need to arrest the two counts, whom ‘‘I have always loved and esteemed as my own brother. ”According to some, he was reluctant to proceed to execution. Philip wrote formally to Alba: “I very deeply regret that the offenses of the counts were so serious that they called for the punishment tha t has been carried out.” The remorse, which came too late, was probably sincere. The counts were victims of a political crisis. Their names, interestingly enough, continued to be held in honour at the Spanish court. A book on the events of Flanders published in Castile a few years later, when all books had to be licensed by the royal council, referred to them as “outstanding princes, well loved and of the highest and finest character.”1. ‘Bitter criticism’is criticism that isa. sour.b. major.c. angry.d. vinegary.e. none of the above.2. The repression in the Netherlands was wrought bya. minor European states.b. Alba.c. William of Oranged. all of the above.e. none of the above.3. We may assume thata. the prince of Orange-Nassau was married twice.b. the marriage was premised upon political consideration.c. some of the princes of the Holy Roman Empire were protestants.d. the counts of Egmont and Hornes were decapitated in retaliation for the invasions.e. all of the above are true.4. Philipa. travelled to various countries in the mid-16th century.b. was the chief officer of the knights the Golden Fleece.c. was Alba’s superior.d. may have reluctantly acceded to the beheading.e. may be described by all of the above.5. Which of the following is true?a. In the text, Flanders and the Netherlands are two completely separate entities.b. Cardinal Espinosa was instrumental in swaying Philip’s councilc. Philip was personally opposed to the punishment.d. All of the above are true.e. None of the above are true.6. The deaths of the two countsa. were caused more by the political situation than by their actions.b. did not destroy their reputations in Spain.c. were brought about by their brother, Alba.d. may be described by none of the above statements.e. may be described by [a] and [b].3.] Despite efforts to provide them with alternatives such as the shelter, women frequently and repeatedly returned to violent and abusive partner. By the late 1970s, feminists at Women Together, like those doing similar work throughout the United States, began to understand that battered women experience a range of post-traumatic psychological responses to abuse, similar to those of victims of other types of violence or trauma. Subsequently, the psychological response of battered women became reified as “battered woman syndrome,”a sub-category of post-traumatic stress disorder. Interestingly, in the course of trying to create social change, the focus of feminists perceptibly shifted to trying to explain why battered women fail to leave the partners who beat them. In trying to address this question, a debate ensued among feminists and mental health workers as to potential merits and problems of categorizing as mental disorder what many feminists labeled a normal response to fear and an appropriately angry response to abuse. Although many women left abusive relationships or successfully ended violence by other means, some responded to ongoing or accelerated abuse by killing or trying to kill their male partners. In many states, when they went to trial, such women found they were restricted from introducing testimony about the abuse they had endured or their resulting states of mind. In trying to address these women’s ne eds, some activists and scholars advocated the use of expert testimony to explain battered woman syndrome to juries. This strategy would introduce evidence of past abuse and challenge the gender biases of self-defense law by explaining the woman’s stage of mind at the time of the offense. Feminist legal scholars raised potential problems in the use of battered woman syndrome. They argued that it could be used against women who did not neatly fit pre-established criteria and had the potential to become anoth er example of the tendency to label women’s normal angry responses as mental illness. While the desirability of working to admit expert testimony was debated, individual state courts and legislatures varied in their willingness to recognize battered woman syndrome, permit evidence of past abuse, or allow expert testimony. As the legal debate about battered women’s responses to violence was beginning to unfold, the Ohio movement became directly involved in it when a former shelter resident shot and killed her abusive common law husband. In 1978 women Together, in conjunction with the woman’s lawyer, decided to challenge existing law by trying to introduce battered woman syndrome expert testimony at trial.Because at the time the syndrome had little scientific merit or legal recognition, the trial court declared inadmissibility, a decision upheld by the State supreme Court (State v. Thomas 1981 66 Ohio St. 2d 51).Women Together founders left the shelter to establish professional careers, viewing this as a means of advancing the feminist agenda. The frustrations, limitations and defeats they hadexperienced as outside challengers impelled them to adopt a strategy of infiltration and appropriation of the institutions they sought to change. For example, on founder, who had worked through lobbying for ERA America in addition to her other feminist activism, explained her decision to run for elected office by saying:“[When ERA was defeated] I decided to run for the legislature. I said I can do better than these turkeys.”1. Battered woman syndrome isa. a psychological response.b. a sub-category of a specific stress disorder.c. similar to that experienced by a range of victims.d. all of the above.e. none of the above.2. Generally speaking, women who are beatena. address questions to feminists.b. return to their male partners.c. require an explanation for the beating.d. leave their partners.e. do none of the above.3. A debate arose as to whethera. feminists of mental health workers were correct.b. battered wives should return to their husbands.c. anger and fear were appropriate or inappropriate.d. focus should be shifted.e. all of they above.4. Responses to abuse by male partners includea. leaving them.b. killing them.c. other means.d. all of the above.e. none of the above.5. The use of expert testimonya. depends on the situation.b. is a way around legal restrictions.c. is required by state laws in women’s trials.d. is a way of ending abuse by other means.e. may not be defined by any of the above.6. We may assume that prior to the period discussed self-defensea. applied to men only.b. posed a problem for the battered woman syndrome.c. refers to expert testimony.d. includes all of the above.e. includes none of the above.7. The word “turkeys”a. refers to the bird that Americans eat at Thanksgiving.b. is an unflattering reference to other law-makers.c. is an unflattering reference to the speaker herself.d. will be explained in the following paragraph.e. refers to none of the above.4.] The position of Burleigh School in the English educational system would be very difficult to explain to a foreigner (who has, God knows, enough to contend with in comprehending the other parts of the system). Nor would it be possible to refer him to any works of literature (before the present one) from which he could gain enlightenment. The prep schools have had their Orwell, the public schools their Connolly and Benedictus, the convent schools their Antonia White, the private boarding schools their Waugh and Nicolas Blake. No one has thought it worth their while to eulogize or anathematize schools like Burleigh. Indeed, schools like Burleigh do not seem the sort of places from which writers emerge.And yet, any medium-sized town in the southern half of England has its Burleigh School: a private day school to which, for a not too exorbitant fee, parents can send their children and boast that they are privately educated. Not well educated, but privately. Burleigh itself had been founded – no, started – between the wars, had survived the Depression (as the South of England middle classes in general had so signally managed to coast blithely through the Depression) and had offered over the years an alternative to the Grammar, Secondary Modern and Technical Schools of the town of Cullbridge. Which meant, in effect, that though some parents chose to send their children there rather than to the Grammar School, many more sent them there because they failed their eleven-plus, that Beecher’s Brook of English childhood. With the coming of comprehensive education three years before, even the faint whiff of privilege attached to the Grammar School had evaporated, a fact on which Burleigh had been able to capitalize, in a mild way.Foreigners are always apt to find charming the examples they come across of quaint anachronisms, of dated anomalies, in English life. One such charming and dated anomaly is that a school like Burleigh can be bought. A man – any man – can buy such a place, set himself up as headmaster, and run it as he likes. Indeed, that is precisely what Edward Crumwallis had done. He had bought it from its previous aging owner/ headmaster in 1969 and had been there ever since. This must not be taken to imply that Edward Crumwallis was unfit for his position. He was in fact a BA (3rd class, Geography), from the University of Hull (graduated 1948). Still, scholarship was not exactly his thing. He might take the odd class in Geography in a pinch, but he had never given the subject any particular prominence in the school, and most boys gave it up after two years. Nor was Crumwallis anxious to take over periods in other subjects when there was need--as in cases of sickness or (frequently) death. Since his graduation he had not cultivated Learning. He had cultivated Manner. He had bought Burieigh (which he invariably called The Burleigh School, in capitals) preciselty so that his manner might be given free reign and ample pasturage. A very good manner it was too, with parents – decidedly impressive. It certainly impressed those of limited intelligence, among whom may be numbered Crumwallis himself. He really believed in it: he not only thought that others should remain silent during his threadbare pontifications, but he actually believed they would benefit from them. Such a conspicuous lack of self-knowledge had its dangers.Not that the Manner –which he intended should be so admired later in the week on Parents’ Evening -- was particularly in evidence on the Monday, as he sat at his study desk and went over the plans for that event with his wife. The side of Edward Crumwallis that was most evidentduring such t·te-·-t·tes was the pretty-minded, niggling side that side of his psychological profile that was seldom turned in the parents’ direction.“The question is, shall we splurge on the coffee and scrimp on the tea, or vice versa,”he said.1. Orwell, Connolly, Benedictus, Antonia White, Waugh and Nicolas Blakea. are the names of different schools.b. taught at schoolsc. eulogized or anathematized their schools.d. are reflected in all of the above.e. are explained by none of the above.2. Burleigh Schoola. is relatively expensive.b. is an ineffective school.。

1999年社科院考博英语真题

1999年社科院考博英语真题

1999年攻读博士学位研究生入学考试试卷CENERAL DIRECTIONS: EACH STUDENT HAS AN ANSWER SHEET ON WHTCH IS TO BE WRITTEN THE STUDENT’S EXAMINA TION ID NUMBER. ALL ANSWERS TO THE MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTIONS OF PARTS Ⅰ,Ⅱ,Ⅲand ⅣA RE TO BE WRITTEN ON THIS ANSW ER SHEET. CIRCLE THE LETTER THAT IS YOUR A NSW ER.PART Ⅰ:VOCA BULA RY [15%]DIRECTIONS FOR SECTION A: ON YOUR ANSW ER SHEET, CIRCLE THE A NSW ER THAT BEST COMPLETES THE SENTENCE.1. W ith her last child having left home, she felt a need to fill her time.a. tenseb. thoroughc. pressingd. s mall2. It is generally thought that as teachers work with students, psychology course work is to teacher-training.a. indispensableb. inviolatec. indisposedd. invariable3. The announcement of the death of their leader caused thereafter a feeling of great despair totheir lives.a. overflowb. scatterc. permeated. manipulate4. Fear of pirate led the French to fortify their coastline.a. excursionsb. incursionsc. transmigrationsd. transmogrifications5. During the oil crisis of the 1970s, many states speed limits to reduce gasoline use.a. implantedb. imposedc. impairedd. impressed6. Over-taxation, many argue, impedes initiative, so that government income may actually .a. mushroomb. capsizec. shrinkd. dispel7. The assassin hid himself carefully from view before his future victim.a. drawing fromb. drawing upc. drawing withd. drawing on8. He never exerts himself to aid those trying to a difficult situation.a. rectifyb. modifyc. solidifyd. verify9. His alibi was fishy, yet to close scrutiny.a. stood stillb. withstoodc. stood upd. stood off10. Practitioners of law and medicine are esteemed in many countries which seems to indicate thatdepends on profession or title.a. prestigeb. superiorityc. privileged. merit11. After the demonstration the protestors quietly.a. dis missedb. diffusedc. dispatchedd. dispersed12. Mutual trade implies advantages.a. alliedb. cooperativec. periodicald. reciprocal13. A virtual anchorite, he to his self-sufficiency.a. adheresb. confirmsc. conformsd. admonishes14. It is scarcely an exaggeration to say that during the Cold War period the threat by nuclear armsseemed an ever-present danger.a. imposedb. convokedc. posedd. provoked15. Scientific integrity is as much a matter of self-interest as it is of .a. self-esteemb. self-deceivingc. selfishnessd. self-improvementDIRECTIONS FOR SECTION B: ON YOU’ ANSWER SHEET, CIRCLE THE LETTER THAT IS THE CLOSEST SYNONYM TO THE UNDERLINED WORO.16. The majority of the observers at the conference, in contradistinction to the delegates, were opposed to ratification .a. adjournmentb. distributionc. tablingd. approval17. Although it was none of my business I asked he if the one she was lamenting for was in any waykin.a. speaking forb. running risks forc. pleading ford. mourning for18. I could never spend the tome that he does pouring over sports magazines, compiling intricate lists, and calculating averages.a. delicateb. incomprehensiblec. meaninglessd. complicated19. In England, Latin appears never to have superseded the old Gaelic speech among the people.a. joinedb. replacedc. influencedd. given way to20. Landslides triggered by heavy rainfall impeded our best attempts at rescuing the victims.a. encouragedb. hinderedc. nullifiedd. crowned21. Death ensued as a result of suffocation.a. heart failureb. an accidentc. diseased. asphyxiation22. We must safeguard against coerced confessions.a. bribedb. emotionalc. unprofitabled. forced23. My attention was engaged by the article’s caption .a. graphb. authorc. contentsd. title24. The report was unusual in that it insinuated corruption on the part of the minister.a. deniedb. suggestedc. proposedd. stated25. When a newspaper prints an inaccurate date for an event, universal chagrin results.a. discomfitureb. amusementc. reprisald. loss of profit26. In various parts of the world, the devoted and devout participate enthusiastically in public processions during the major events of the liturgical year.a. piousb. seriousc. diseasedd. misled27. Absent impartiality on the part of the psychothera pist, a patient’s conflicts may be exacerbated.a. indifferenceb. objectivityc. voiced concernd. engagement28. They awoke to find the maid had left the remnants of dinner on the table.a. list of items for ab. invitations to ac. leftovers ofd. preparations for a29. The upshot of all this was that travelling had become precarious.a. gloriousb. func. expensived. dangerous30. Some would consider that an infringement of good manners whereas others would not.a. an exampleb. a violation.c. a problemd. an indicationPART Ⅱ: GRAMMA R [15%]DIRECTIONS FOR SECTION A: On YOUR A NSW ER SHEET, CIRCLE THE LETTER THAT BEST COMPLETES THE SENTENCE.1. sugar salt is oil water.a. Not as…asb. No more than…isc. No more than…isd. Not more than…as2. His mother frequently denies him permission to do things, and that is .a. everb. thisc. thatd. over3. The staff in pediatrics rushed whereas the geriatric ward is not busy at all.a. is nearly alwaysb. nearly is alwaysc. always is nearlyd. is always nearly4. Anais Nin’s diaries are often scandalous, probably because she describes herself as she is rathe r than.a. other’s define herb. as others define herc. her definition by othersd. she is defined by others5. , the mayor conceded defeat in his bid for re-election.a. Having racked up a lead of some 150,000 votesb. Having been racked up a lead of some 150,000 votesc. His opponent having racked up a lead of some 150,000 votesd. His opponent racking up a lead of some 150,000 votes6. Never has a scientific explanation emerged someone somewhere has objected to it.a. thatb. whichc. whomd. but7. Your mentor and friend to support me in my financial undertaking. a. have consented b. has consented c. have been consenting d. are consented8. Due in large part to the complexity of its structure —over two hundred bones together by ligaments —the human skeleton is a marvel of architectural construction. a. binding b. bound c. bounded d. bind9. Inas much as a year does not elapse without a certain number of villagers falling victim to the ferocity of a tiger, its roar is heard by the natives feelings of terror. a. not…with b. not…without c. seldom…with d. always…without10. I regret to say that your thesis requires more thinking than for the problem is exceedingly complex. a. to be put in b. has been put in c. being put in d. have been put in 11. I must finish this assignment tonight, .a. it is ever so lateb. be it ever so latec. it be ever so lated. so late it be12. Science majors, , require a good basic foundation in the science as a whole. a. whether they are future physicists and chemists b. be they future physicists or chemists c. they are future physicists or chemistsd. whether they should be future physicists and chemists13. Those are very important papers and I’d just as soon here. a. as you leave them b. you leave them c. you will leave them d. that you will leave them14. Anatomists generally maintain that the human heart is nearest . a. to the size in our fist b. in the size to our fist c. in size to our fist d. to the size to our fist15. Foreigners are very fussy about their phone calls. They hate anyone eavesdropping. a. there b. there be c. there to be d. beingDIRECTIONS FOR SECTION B: IN THE SENTENCES BELOW, EITHER A, B, C OR D IS THE INCORRCT GRAMATTICA L FORM FOR THE SENTENCE. PICK THE INCORRECT FORM AS YOUR ANSW R, A ND ON YOUR ANSW ER SHEET, CIRCLE THE CORRESPONDING LETTER. 16. One of theAintriguingmore theories about the destruction of Ur is his contention that t he popula tionB destroy may their ziggurats andC abandoned their metropolis in anger against the deities that permittedD a long so famine.17. In the bush, the illAbeit to took only logicalBif the one who could cure an illnessC posses also shouldthe ability of causing it, and Dthateven at a distance. 18. Ores whichAoccurredare naturallyBas elements, such as goldCof are extreme rarity andDlyoccasional are of high value.19. UnlessApermittedso are they by the attendingBphysician, no visitors or relativesCcan enter theDspatient' room.20. A rigorous alertness Abe mustB adheredwhenCnotetakingwith the inessential ignoredDand thesuperfluous eliminated. 21. It isAlargely through perspiration, Bor the evaporation of waterCthroughthe pores, that humansDthemrid of excess moisture.22.AProvidedthe computer isBgiven correct information toCstart to , accuracyDis another outstandingadvantage. 23. AndAearlyso every morningBtherefore, but not before the infantCbathed ,Dbetakeshe did herself tothe outhouse. 24. He Astood on tiptoe,B stretchingas far as he could,Choweverstill, heDreachnot could the book.25.A posesibleas gentle As , andBfromhelp with an assistant, the veterinarian examined the hippo todetermine CifD shewas pregnant.26. In a recent survey, Athat responsiveness wasBthat most of allCdear towoman a made them was theopinion of threeDof out four men.27. A ll personnel will be required toAundergospecial sensitivity training programsBprior to leavingCaboardfor in order to be preparedD against culture shock.28. A mong the many changes were Athose to theBYorkerNew book review, and veryC ed shortsight theyD were .29. The majority of students, Apreferringeternal verities, rarely see that knowledge is subjectB growth of andtransformation, and that itC in shifts meaning and statusDwith time.30. BecauseAof the recent turmoil and untilB further notice, any gathering of more than two peopleC isprohibited in the interest of preserving Dorderand law the .PART Ⅲ: CLOZE [10%]DIRECTIONS: CHOOSE AS YOUR ANSW ER THE W ORO THAT BEST FITS THE BLA NK. ON YOUR ANSWER SHEET, CIRCLE THE CORRESPONDING LETTER.My knees were shaking. I [1] afraid [2] with them, [3] I[4] myself out on the path to follow them. A mara’s husband [5] coming back and saw m. “ [6] my age mates [7] this witchcraft. You come back with me and keep watch [8] my wife. Help me guard [9] body. He will kill her and I cannot prevent it. But he [10] killed her in vain. He shall not eat her body.” It was dark inside the reception hut, and very quiet. The women [11] kept watch over A mara, and her co-wife still sat with her. The man stood looking down upon her. A man must never call his wife [12] her name and my never touch her [13] public. The man knelt [14] his wife. “Child of Lam.” She did not [15] . Tentatively he [16]his hand on her forehead. Perhaps he thought she heard, [17] he added bravely, “ [18]will happen to you, Amara [19] wife.” He clasped her hand in [20] . We sat on in silence waiting for A mara to die. 1. a. am b. was c. will be d. have been 2. a. I went b. go c. but d. to go 3. a. yet b. moreover c. even d. soon 4. a. obliged b. constrained c. coerced d. forced 5. a. is b. was c. will be d. had been 6. a. Grant b. Let c. Pardon d. Forgive 7. a. take care for b. take care of c. care of d. care for 8. a. around b. with c. by d. for 9. a. my b. your c. his d. her 10. a. is b. was c. will have d. would have 11. a. even b. ever c. still d. while 12. a. for b. with c. around d. by 13. a. around the b. in c. when d. while 14. a. along b. beside c. besides d. thinking 15. a. budge b. mix c. stir d. bestir 16. a. laid b. lain c. had lain d. sat 17. a. for b. when c. listening d. quietly 18. a. Nothing b. Something c. Anything d. Everything 19. a. my b. your c. his d. her 20. a. his b. hers c. theirs d. oursPART Ⅳ: READING COMPREHENSION [30%]DIRECTIONS: READ EACH PASSAGE AND ANSWER ALL THE QUESTIONS THA T FOLLOW THE PASSAGE. ON YOUR ANSWER SHEET, CIRCLE THE LETTER THA T BEST ANSWERS THE QUESTION.1. The sources of anti-Christian feeling were many and complex on the more intangible side, there was a general pique against the unwanted intrusion of the Western countries; there was an understandable tendency to seek an external scapegoat for internal disorders only tangentially attributable to the West and perhaps most important, there was a virile tradition of ethnocentricism, vented long before against Indian Buddhism, which, since the seventeenth century, focused on Western Christianity. Accordingly, even before the missionary movement really got under way in the mid-nineteenth century, it was already at a disadvantage. After 1860, as missionary activity in the hinterland expanded, it quickly became apparent that in addition to the intangibles, numerous tangible grounds for Chinese hostility abounded.In part, the very presence of the missionary evoked attack. They were, after all, the first foreigners to leave the treaty ports and venture into the interior, and for long time they were virtually the only foreigners whose quotidian labors carried them to the farthest reaches of the Chinese empire. For many of the indigenous population, therefore, the missionary stood as a uniquely visible symbol against which opposition to foreign intrusion could be vented.In part, too, the missionary was attacked because the manner in which he made his presence felt after 1860 seemed almost calculated to offend. By indignantly waging battle against the notion China to offend. By indignantly waging battle against the notion that china was the sole fountainhead of civilization and, more particularly, by his assault on many facets of Chinese culture per se, the missionary directly undermined the cultural hegemony of the gentry class. Also, In countless ways, he posed a threat to the gentry’s traditional monopoly of social leadership. Missionaries, particularly Catholics, frequently assumed the garb of the Confucian literati. They were the only persons at the local level, aside from the gentry, who were permitted to communicate with the authorities as social equals. And they enjoyed an extraterritorial status in the interior that gave them greater immunity to Chinese law than had ever been possessed by the gentry.Although it was the avowed policy of the Chinese government after 1860 that the new treaties were to be strictly adhered to, in practice implementation depended on the wholehearted accord of provincial authorities. There is abundant evidence that cooperation was dilatory. At the root of this lay the interactive nature of ruler and ruled.In a severely understaffed bureaucracy that ruled as much by suasion as by might, the official, almost always a stranger in the locality of his service, depended on the active cooperation of the local gentry class. Energeticattempts to implement treaty provisions concerning missionary activities, in direct defiance of gentry sentiment, ran the risk of alienating this class and destroying future effectiveness.1. In a vague way, anti-Christian feeling stemmed froma. the mere presence of invaders.b. a generalized unfocused feeling.c. the introduction to the West.d. none of the above.2. The author would agree thata. many problems in China came from internal disorders due to Western influence.b. many problems in China came from China itself and were unrelated to the West.c. scapegoats perform a necessary function and there should be more of them.d. all of the above are true.3. W ith which of the following statements would the author agree?a. Ethnocentricism is a manly tradition.b. The disdain toward Christianity was prefigured by a disdain toward Buddhism.c. Although Christianity was not well received in China, Buddhism was.d. The author would agree with [a] and [c].4. Missionariesa. often dressed the same way as Chinese scholars did.b. were free of the legal constraints that bound the local indigenous populations.c. had greater access to authority than Chinese peasants.d. may be described by all of the above.5. By which of the following statements may the dichotomy between government p olicy and its implementation be described?a. There’s many a slip twixt the cup and the lip.b. You can lead a horse to water but you cannot make him drink.c. All that glitters is not gold.d. All of the above apply in various ways to the dichotomy.6. Provincial authoritiesa. cooperated fully with the central government’s policy.b. were alive to local feelings.c. were obliged to determine whether local sentiment tolerated implementation.d. may be described by [b] and [c].2. Proponents of creating large private sectors as quickly as possible in transition economies offer both political and economic arguments to support their view. They argue that if democracy is to become a viable political system in the countries undergoing transition, the state’s monopoly over the bases of political power must be broken so that the countervailing sources of political influence may emerge [Berger, 1991]. Otherwise, the nomenklatura, managers of state-owned firms and former bureaucrats, my sabotage or block economic reforms, as well as loot, dissipate or transfer to their own possession the assets of the firms they manage. By creating property owners, privatization can create nascent middle class that has a stake in the creation and maintenance of an effective system of property rights and the pursuit of economic policies that would enable the private sector to flourish.The most compelling economic reason for privatizing stage-owned enterprises in the transition economies is that as units of production-- as distinct from providers of secure employment—they were a failure. Private ownership is thus seen as the means of unlocking gains in productivity by stimulating productive efficiency, offering greater motivation for both managers and workers, and creating incentives to enter new markets and exit declining ones. Privatization, it is argued, will unleash dynamic small businesses, act as a lure for foreign direct investment and speed the painful process of restructuring industry, And it would accomplish all this while returning property to its rightful historical owners and raising funds for the governmentDespite this enticing list of promises, many countries of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union remain reluctant to privatize. Some of the opposition is ideological. Some comes from insiders at state-owned enterprises, both workers and managers, who fear the loss of income and power. More broadly, there are fears that privatization will reduce employment as private owners dismiss redundant workers and that the new private sector will be unlikely to provide the social benefits--like housing, health and nursery care, and recreation, sports and vacation facilities—that state-owned enterprises often provided. At the extreme, there are fears that if privatization exacerbates unemployment and causes declines in production, reformist governments will be swept away.Practical difficulties have compounded thi s resistance to privatization,.The valuations of firms is difficult because capital markets barely exist, accounting statements can be almost meaning less, and profits and salesachieved in the communist era are a poor guide to future viability. Households in these countries do not have sufficient savings to purchase many of the largest firms, and, even if they did have the money, they view former state-owned enterprises as dubious investments. With a rudimentary banking system, loans for the purchase of state property are seen as both risky and inflationary. In this muddled situation, suspicions naturally aris e that buyers are benefiting from low prices at the expense of the state.7. The argument about democracy isa. a political argument.b. an economic argument.c. an argument based upon demonstrable proof.d. an argument favored by all economists.8. The information contained between brackets refers toa. something unknown.b. an A merican Supreme Court Justice’s legal decision.c. someone who does not in fact believe the arguments.d. an author who deals with the topic being discussed.9. Which of the following statements is true?a. “Nomenklatura ”is underlined because its meaning cannot be determined by the text.b. “Nomenklatura”is different from managers and bureaucrats.c. “Nomenklatura”is a foreign term whose meaning in English is managers and bureaucrats.d. The origin of the word “nomenklatura”is well-known.10. The author would necessarily agreea. with the political arguments.b. that state-owned enterprises were successful in providing secure employment.c. that state-owned enterprises were successful as units of production,.d. that none of the above is true.11. In paragraph 3, the ultimate fear is that ofa. the enterprise managers.b. the workers.c. the average citizen.d. the government itself.12. The practical difficulties may be explained bya. theoretical arguments.b. the state of the economic systems.c. fears of privatization.d. all of the above.3. One traditional justification for greater judicial deference to agencies on legal ques tions in the U.S. administrative regime is the expertise argument. This justification comports with traditional understandings about the respective roles of the different branches of government and agencies’ place in modern government. Agencies, in this vi ew, are the technical experts that put into operation the policy judgments made by legislators. Indeed, technical expertise is the raison d’etre of agencies; by focusing on a particular regulatory field, or sector of the economy, agencies can do what Congress the time and other institutional resources to do .Chevron v. National Resources, which presented the question whether the statutory term “stationary source”referred to an entire pollution-emitting plant or, rather, to every single smokestack within su ch a plant, supplies an apt example of when an agency’s special technical expertise can aid statutory interpretation. According to the expertise argument, agencies are deemed to understandeven the legal ramifications of the problems agencies are created to work on. Admittedly, the dichotomy between legal and factual questions may at times be difficult to maintain, but that observation argues as much in favor of as it does against Chevron deference.Agency expertise, however, is not the only common justification. Sometimes the doctrine is justified also on democratic grounds. According to the argument from democracy, it is agencies, not courts, that are answerable to both the executive and the legislative representatives of the citizenry. Because judges are not elected, while presidents and legislators are, and because agencies but not judges are accountable to the President and to Congress, judicial deference to agency decisions enhances the political legitimacy of the administrative regime.Finally, Chevron may be justified also in the name of administrative efficiency of coordination. Before Chevron, different federal courts in different jurisdictions could interpret the same statutory provision differently. Multiple interpretations by different federal courts would mean that the statute “said”different things in those different jurisdictions. Such confusions could be eliminated by appellate review, but agencies faced uncertainty pending review, and the possibility of different interpretations across different appellate circuits remained. Because multiple agencies do not typically interpret the same statutory language, however, Chevron deference allows the agency charged with administering a statute to interpret that statute. One agency, rather than many federal courts, now resolves ambiguities in the statute that the agency in question is charged to administer. Such interpretive streamlining not only reduces uncertainty but also promotes regulatory coordination. Once an agency has settled ona reasonable interpretation, it can act on the basis of that interpretation nationally.13. The expertise argument assumes thata. an agency has experts but that Congress does not.b. Congress is more interested in policy than in implementation.c. modern agencies are more responsible than agencies were in the past.d. all of the above are true.14. Chevron is underlineda. because it is the name of a company.b. because it is one party to a law case.c. because it is the title of a book.d. because it is the title of a scholarly article.15. A“stationary source”a. refers to where one goes to buy writing paper.b. may mean either a plant or a smokestack, but not both.c. is in this instance a legal term whose meaning is being questioned.d. refers to something not covered by the above.16. We may assume thata. different lower federal courts may have different opinions about a law.b. the decision of a lower federal court is not necessarily the final decision.c. both of the above are true.d. none of the above are true.17. The difference between an appellate circuit court and a given agency isa. that the latter is local whereas the former is national.b. that a variety of appellate courts may review a given law in contradistinction to a given agency and its jurisdiction.c. that albeit the former specializes in a given area, the latter has a range of expertise across many different areas.d. that the first is state-based while the latter is nationally-based.18. Throughout this passage, “Chevron deference”refers toa. favoring Chevron.b. favoring National Resources.c. favoring the agency involved.d. favoring one of the above.4. The main feature of a convention – a pattern of behavior that i s customary, expected, and self-enforced – is that, out of a host of conceivable choices, only one is actually used. This fact also explains why conventions are needed: they resolve problems of indeterminacy in interactions that have multiple equilibria. Indeed, from a formal point of view, we may define a convention as an equilibrium that everyone expects in interactions that have more than one equilibrium.The economic significance of conventions is that they reduce transaction costs. Imagine the inconvenience if, whenever two vehicles approached one another, the drivers had to get out and negotiate which side of the road to take. Or consider the cost of having to switch freight from one type of railroad to another whenever a journey involves both a wide-gauge and a narrow-gauge railroad line. This was a common circumstance in the nineteenth century and not unknown in the later twentieth: until recently, Australia had different rail gauges in the states of South Wales and Victoria, forcing a mechanical switch for all trains bound between Sydney and Melbourne.Convention s are also a notable feature of legal contracts. People rely on standard leases, wills, purchasing agreements, construction contracts and the like, because it is less costly to fill in the blanks o f a standard contract than to create one from scratch. Even more important, such agreements are backed up by legal precedent, so the signatories have even greater confidence that their terms are enforceable.We may discern two ways in which conventions become established. One is by central authority. Following the French Revolution, for example, it was decreed that horse-drawn carriages in Paris should keep to the right. The previous custom had been for carriages to keep left and for right. The previous cus tom had been for carriages to keep left and for pedestrians to keep right, facing the oncoming traffic. Changing the custom was symbolic of the new order: going on the left had become politically incorrect because it was identified with the privileged clas ses: going on the right was the habit of the common many and therefore more “democratic.”In Britain, by contrast, there seems to have been no single defining event that gave rise to the dominant convention of left-handed driving. Rather, it grew up by local custom, spreading from one region to another. This is the second mechanism by which conventions become established: the gradual accretion of precedent. The two mechanis ms are not mutually exclusive, of course. Society often converges on a convention first by an informal process of accretion: later it is codified into law to regulate exceptions. In many countries, rules of the road were not legislated until the nineteenth century, but by this time the law was merely reiterating what had already become established custom.The surprising fact is that until the end of the eighteenth century, the dominant convention was for horse-drawn carriages to keep to the left. This situation obtained in Great Britain, France, Sweden, Portugal, Austria, Hungary, Bohemia and parts of Italy. A chain of historical accidents – Napoleon adopting the new convention for his armies and imposing this convention in occupied countries; Portugal sharing a common border with occupied Spain; Austria, Hungary and Bohemian Czechoslovakia falling under German rule; Italy having elected a “modern”leader under a king – gradually tipped the balance.19. In the first sentence, the word “convention”is underlineda. for personal reasons regarding style.b. to stress the importance of the word.c. because the author will define it.d. for none of the above reasons.。

2019年社科院考博英语真题5页word

2019年社科院考博英语真题5页word

2019年社科院考博英语真题5页word2011年的题目SECTION A1.Long treatment of the elderly drains funds from the health needsof other groups and from urgent social problems.A. restrainsB. detainsC. soarsD. exhausts2.For cancer cells destroy not only all rival cells, in theirruthless biological warfare, but also destroy the larger organization---the body itself—signing their own suicide warrant.A. refinedB. randomC. mercilessD. perpetual3.The report also examined the overall effectiveness of the 43-daybombing campaign carried out by coalition forces and Congress released a brief synopsis to the public.A. compendiumB. bibliographyC. addendumD. postscript4.All that may come to my knowledge in the exercise of my professionor in daily commerce with men, which ought not to be spread abroad,I will keep secret and will never reveal.A. businessB. exchangeC. wedlockD.contact5.With the awfully limited vocabulary to only a thousand words orfewer, the reader resembles a color blind artist who is only aware of a few colors and consequently his ability to create on canvas is lamentably restricted.A. auspiciouslyB. deplorablyC. suspiciouslyD.disbelievingly6.The epic is possible because America is an idea as much as it isa country. America has nothing to do with allegiance to a dynastyand very little to do with allegiance to a particular place, but everything to do with allegiance to a set of principles.A. convictionB. loyalty C .conversion D. component7.After a few short but interminable seconds, U.S. Astronaut NeilArmstrong placed his foot firmly on the fine-grained surface of the moon. The time was 10:56 p.m, July 20, 1969.A. inseparableB. fastC. indelibleD. long8.Hopelessly entrapped in the two-year tangle of his own deceit,forced into a confession of past lies, he watched the support of his most loyal defenders collapse in a political maelstrom, driven by their bitterness over the realization that he had betrayed their trust.a. probeb. confusionc. findingd. potential9.Although this could be seen as a strength because it allowsflexibility, it can also be argued that it invalidates the theory;in this case several people’s rights must be relinquished to reach a conclusion.A. given upB.put off c. thought of D. held on10.War is the social cancer of mankind. It is a pernicious form ofignorance, for it destroys not only its “enemies”, but also the whole superstructure of what it is a part—and thus eventually it defeats itself.a. banefulb. optimal C. paradoxical D. perilous SECTION B11. In this great global clash of interests, it is time for both sides to soften their anger and seek new ways to get along with each other. If sanity is to prevail, the guiding policy must not be ------------------------but cooperation and conservation.A. confrontationB. reconciliationC. rationD.resumption12. Looking ahead, the computer industry sees pure gold. Estimates for the number of personal computers in use by the end of the century run as high as 80 million. Then there are all the ---------------------industries: desks to hold computers, luggage to carry them, cleansers to polish them.A concessionary B. feasible c. hypothetical D. auxiliary13. In north Dakota, which had barely an inch of rain in four months, there was no grass for cattle. Farmers tramped their dusty fields watching their dwarfed stand of grain shrivel and --------------.A. survive, b. wail c. perish d. swell14. As most new buyers soon learn, it is not that easy for a novice。

社科院2000考博英语试题+答案

社科院2000考博英语试题+答案

中国社会科学院研究生院2000博士研究生入学考试英语试题 Part Ⅰ V ocabulary (15 points)Section ADirections :On your Answer Sheet ,circle and black out the letter that is closest in meaning to theunderlined word .1.The cultural life of a social group ,qua social group ,may be said to depend upon its cognitive level .A .perditionB .perceptionC .pertinenceD .permanent2.The article insinuates that the crime did not take place .A .states flatlyB .argues convincinglyC .positively deniesD .suggests indirectly3.The international committee ,at its annual general meeting ,finally waived the rule about the 12-month qualifying period .A .ratifiedB .agreed in principle withC .modifiedD .dropped4.The Bulletin ,noted for its impartial advice ,recommends in a recent issue that GPs and nurses learn a variety of skills transmittable to patients .A .influentialB .judiciousC .unprejudicedD .medical5.She is an amiable member of the committee .A .conventionalB .congenialC .cogentD .congenital6.When a careful individual speaks or writes there are usually nuances of meaning that need to be recognized .A .slight annoyancesB .slight differencesC .slight preferencesD .slight shades7.Civilian oversight of the police means ,among other things ,that suspects will probably not be coerced into confessing .A .bribedB .persuadedC .deceivedD .forced8.She told her niece she would leave her a small legacy .A .noteB .articleC .giftD .inheritance9.Because his inattention was responsible for the accident ,he was rebuked .A .criticizedB .punishedC .delayedD .disturbed10.The emperor ,in establishing the archbishopric in 968,revealed his interest in both religious and pastoral considerations .A .bucolicB .churchlyC .agriculturalD .rural11.Among the requisites of polite society figures a basic politeness to everyone .A .demandsB .stepsC .awarenessD .doings12.Quacks rely on the anguish of cancer sufferers ,as well as their credulity ,for their financial success .A .grimacesB .wrathC .irritationD .torment13.The debris from the crash was strewn over the countryside for miles around . 考博家园A .trapsB .remainsC .resultsD .weapons14.If the Minnesota Vikings continue to confound their critics ,their entry into the playoffs will be assured .A .confusingB .confuse byC .confuseD .confuse with15.Older writers are frequently patronizing towards young writers .A .supportiveB .criticalC .kindD .condescendingSection BDirections :On your Answer Sheet ,circle and black out the letter that best completes the sentence .16.Disruptive behavior at meetings governed by Robert's Rules of Order usually results in________.A .electionB .erectionC .ejaculationD .ejection17.In 1981,the two factors of conservation measures and world recession resulted in a________ of the demand for oil .A .curbingB .invertingC .spreadD .scotching18.The new budgetary constraints forbid the allocation of supplementary funds if it can be established that the original allotment had been________.A .dispelledB .dissipatedC .dispatchedD .dispirited19.When a room is supplied with an adequate amount of flesh air ,people usually say it is________.A .well-modulatedB .well-simulatedC .well-ventilatedD .well-stimulated20.You don't want a proctoscope if you hope to________ an image ;you want a telescope .A .displaceB .distortC .replaceD .magnify21.Among the________ components of contemporary construction figure steel ,concrete ,and glass .A .requitedB .integralC .topicalD .ornamental22.Zero or even negative growth ,a soaring budgetary deficit ,a________ in inflation—the government report paints a dismal picture .A .surplusB .survivalC .surgeD .survey23.The eye tends to see distance as________.In painting ,this is sometimes called “the vanishing point .”A .conformingB .comfortingC .contrivingD .converging24.Many an underdeveloped country ,faced with crippling national debt ,rums to________ a greater harvest from its timber resources .A .extractingB .extrapolatingC .excavatingD .exfoliating25.The Court has been castigated for a steady________ of minority rights and women's fights .A .instigationB .infringementC .involvementD .inquisition26.He became a legend as an opera singer ,not so much because of his voice range or emotive ability ,but rather because of his fiery________.A .mannersB .dispositionC .altitudeD .approach27.In America ,moon—lighting is an attempt to________ one's income .A .diluteB .affectC .augmentD .offset28.The reports coming from the site________ that all the hostages have been killed . 考博家园A .allegeB .inferC .evokeD .promise29.It is less to skill than to hard work that he________ his continuing success .A .ascribesB .subscribesC .prescribesD .describes30.The lad was quite fortunate in finding a________ to aid him financially in his studies .A .patroonB .pauonC .platoonD .poltroonPart Ⅱ Grammar (15 points)Section ADirections :On your Answer Sheet ,circle and black out the letter that is the best choice of word tofill in the blank .1.As with any isolated and largely self-contained community the agricultural village was often________ fierce loyalty among its inhabitants .A .the objection ofB .objective fromC .the object ofD .objective2.From its customs and traditions the village________ a strong sense of identity and morality ,which ,looking back ,may easily be mourned in a more impersonal ,amoral ,and uncertain modern world .A .could draw inB .could draw uponC .would draw fromD .would draw in3.What this galloping advance in analytical acuity means is that scientists can now isolate the tiniest amounts of harmful substances in foods which ,________,have always been considered safe ,or in some cases beneficial .A .from thenB .whenceC .hithertoD .hence4.Possibly because there are few bare patches of gravel on that continent ,________ because of an innately gregarious habit of mind ,their rookeries number almost millions of individuals .A .though most possiblyB .probablyC .but more probablyD .most possibly5.She observed quite unashamedly that though they had been married for 8 years ,she knew nothing about________ in the army .A .he servedB .him having servedC .him to serveD .his having been served6.The Mary Rose was a remarkable ship ,________ have rarely been seen .A .the likes of whichB .like whichC .which the likesD .which of the likes7.________ can be seen by the results of the study ,the principle seems to require the active involvement of the patient in the modification of his condition .A .AsB .WhatC .ThatD .It8.Test scores do not improve by magic .Improving your test scores ,especially________ it comes to classroom tests ,depends on doing the assignments .A .whenB .beforeC .asD .since9.I would not take his claim to being an authority very seriously .________ he knows about his area is either inaccurate or outdated .A .How muchB .That muchC .How littleD .What little10.For the purposes of the study ,it was at the beginning and at the end of preschool and first grade 2 that observations were made________ the children . 考博家园A .ofB .towardsC .onD .with11.Half________,the number of participants registering for this year's marathon was disappointing .A .of them for last year'sB .that of last year'sC .of those of last yearD .those of last years12.Attentiveness and involvement are prerequisites for there________ successful communication .A .isB .to beC .will beD .are13.Who has the time to read or listen to an account of everything currently going on in the world?A .that isB .as isC .there isD .it is14.After turning the whole room inside out ,she eventually found the magazine ,________ were either torn or dog-eared .A .many of whose pagesB .many of its pagesC .many of which pagesD .whose many pages15.Professor Li's hook will show you________ can be used in other contexts .A .that you have observedB .how what you have observedC .you have observed whatD .how that you have observedSection BDirections :Each sentence below contains one error .On your Answer Sheet ,circle and blacken theletter that represents the error .16.Tornadoes—actually miniscule storms which paths are not usually over a quarter mileA B in width—are nonetheless extremely violent .C D17.Not only did various ancient civilizations cremate their dead ,but they also cremated along withA B the dead person every which object he might possibly use in the afterlife .C D18.T o say that Ferdinand Magellan ,the first European to discover ,the Philippines ,did not actually circumnavigateA B the earth because he was killed before his famous voyage was completed .C D19.Only in the late nineteenth or early twentieth century in Great Britain did it begin to be likelyA B that a resolution that women to be allowed to join a previously all-male organization C would be carried .D20.Not had she lived virtually next door to the police station ,the burglars would have escapedA B C scot-free . 考博家园D21.Cannibalism or humans eating other humans ,has ,throughout the history ,exerted both morbidA B C Dfascination and extremes of repulsion .22.Some enthusiasts claim that the humble Hawaiian ukulele is the most versatility of all musical A B C D instruments .23.It is to the skillful utilization of voice range ,the chief emphasizing in speech-making ,thatA B C success as an orator may be attributed .D24.It is the predetermined ability of the shell of a variety of marine animals to develop only withinA B certain limits that prevents themselves from growing past a specific size .C D25.Absent any convinced link between the quantity or the so-called quality of the brain cells ,one A B C is able to state whatever one chooses .D26.Early missionaries discovered that their converts would backslide if left to their own devices ,A B and would charge them with guilty of so doing upon their return .C D27.When in childhood ,Wagner seems to have had few interests apart from music ,about which heA B C D exhibited an insatiable curiosity .28.It is the general level of comfort of the average citizen that determines whether or not a countryA considers wars rendered uselessly as a means of settling a disagreement with a neighboringB C DCoantry .29.The government's new economic policies have as a goal the reducing down of the rate of A B inflation from its peak of three months ago .C D30.In Victorian England ,many a respective and very rich older man had ,as a youth ,been involvedA B Cin at least foolish ,if not downright criminal ,acts .D 考博家园Part Ⅲ Cloze (10 points)Directions :On your Answer Sheet ,circle and black out the letter for the word that best fits in thesentences below .The rest of the afternoon passed slowly .I wasn't able to 1 on the brief I 2 submit for the sodomy case I was scheduled to 3 4 ,and I was desperate to 5 ,unnecessary phone conversations .The only phone call 6 interest was from Mercer .He was pleased .“Katherine's Fryer's 7 is the best 8 .She's really good on 9characteristics .She's 10 about the 11 and shape of the mustache .I never had an illustrator as a victim 12 but it sure helps the sketch take on some 13 .”I knew exactly what he 14 .The 15 description started with witnesses saying they're 16 at doing this ,and that the guy was average height ,average weight ,average-looking , 17 distinctive about his appearance ,and so on .I had a folder full of 18 of wanted rapists who looked like everybody and 19 .Try and display one to a jury and claim a resemblance to the defendant on trial and it was mom likely to look like three of the 20 .Not guilty .1.A .conglomerate B .concentrate C .concentric D .commiserate2.A .must B .ought to C .had to D .could3.A .attempt B .try C .write D .analyze4.A .three weeks ago B .three weeks beforeC .after three weeksD .in three weeks5.A .avert B .abort C .avoid D .annul6.A .of B .with C .responding D .evincing7.A .outgo B .outcome C .intake D .input8.A .still B .to come C .before D .yet9.A .facial B .face C .personal D .personality10.A .dubious B .decided C .firm D .strong11.A .position B .location C .size D .magnitude12.A .ago B .before C .then D .once13.A .verisimilitude B .exactitude C .meaning D .definition14.A .described B .inferred C .defined D .meant15.A .average B .median C .typical D .general16.A .lousy B .representative C .partial D .lousy17.A .anything B .nothing C .something D .everything18.A .sketches B .photos C .paintings D .etchings19.A .somebody B .else C .nobody D .me20.A .defendants B .jurors C .same D .people Part Ⅳ Reading Comprehension (30 points)Directions :On your Answer Sheet ,circle and black out the letter that best answers the questionsbelow .Passage 1Obviously ,the per capita income of a country depends on many things ,and any statistical test that does not take account of all important determinants is misspeeified ,and thus must be used only for descriptive and heuristic purposes .It is nonetheless interesting—and for many people surprising—to find that there is a positive and even a statistically significant relationship between 考博家园these two variables :the greater the number of people per square kilometer the higher the per capita income .The law of diminishing returns is not invariably mae :it would be absurd to suppose that a larger endowment of land ipso facto makes a country poorer .This consideration by itself would ,of course ,call for a negative sign on population density .Thus ,it is interesting to ask what might account for the “wrong” sign and think of what statistical tests should ultimately be done .Clearly there is a simultaneous two-way relationship between population density and per capita income :the level of per capita income affects population growth just as population ;by increasing the labor force ,affects per capita income .The argument offered here suggests that perhaps countries with better economic policies and institutions come to have higher per capita incomes than countries with inferior policies and institutions ,and that these higher incomes bring about a higher population growth through more immigration and lower death rates .In this way ,the effects of better institutions and policies in raising per capita income swamps the tendency of diminishing returns to labor to reduce it .This hypothesis may also explain why many empirical studies have not been able to show a negative association between the rate of population growth and increases in per capita income .One reason why the ratio of natural resources to population does not account for variations in per capita income is that most economic activity can now readily be separated from deposits of raw material and arable land .Over time ,transportation technologies have certainly improved ,and products that have a high value in relation to their weight ,such as most services and manufactured goods like computers and airplanes ,may have become more important .The Silicon Valley is not important for the manufacture of computers because of the deposits of silicon ,and London and Zurich are not great banking centers because of fertile land .Even casual observation suggests that most modern manufacturing and service exports are not closely fled to natural resources .Western Europe does not now have a high ratio of natural resources to population ,but it is very important in the export of manufactures and services .In a parallel way ,the striking success of Japan ,HongKong ,and Singapore ,with relatively few natural resources per capita ,cannot be explained by reliance thereon .1.In paragraph 1,three words are in italics________ ?A .for reasons of English language styleB .because of personal reason of styleC .in order to highlight their importanceD .to help the reader avoid confusion2.The people who are surprised are so because they have assumed that________.A .there is a positive correlation between the two variablesB .the higher the per capita income the lower the population densityC .the greater the number of people the greater the per capita incomeD .the relationship between the variables is statistically insignificant3.With which of the following statements would the author agree?A .One would not ordinarily suppose that a large country would be poor .B .A negative sign on population density may be a wrong sign .C .Per capita income depends on the size of the labor force . 考博家园D .The author would agree with all of the above statements .4.The word “here” in paragraph 3,line 1 means________.A .supraB .at this very momentC .in this articleD .in this country5.The population growth in countries with higher per capita income________.A .comes not from the birth rate of the citizens but rather from the influx of othersB .is a natural result because the citizens have more money for childrenC .is only an artifact based on a declining birth rateD .does not invalidate the population growth of poorer countries6.Which of the following statements is true?A .None of the following statements is true .B .Silicon Valley has great deposits of silicon .C .London and Zurich have vast amounts of arable land .D .Western Europe has always depended on services .Passage 2The procedures followed by scholars studying literature are often unsatisfactory :the control over a cognitive project as a whole is often lost .The literary scholar seems to be collecting data—which is a preliminary operation—without making use of them .Like a diligent ant gathering food it will never eat ,the contemporary literary scholar seems intent upon writing footnotes of a books he will never try to read .I propose that at the outset of a research project it is necessary to render explicit the questions the scholar will try to answer ,what methods will be used and why and the reason why s /he thinks that it may be worthwhile answering such questions .More ,the work of the people concerned with the study of literature seems casual .For instance ,much research is devoted to one author ,often on the occasion of an anniversary .Now there is no reason to think that our observations will be more valid ,urgent ,appropriate ,useful ,or interesting if the author of the texts we are concerned with was born or died or the texts were written fifty ,one hundred ,or two hundred years ago .This seems to be celebration and not research producing knowledge .It does not seem to make any sense to determine one's research program by looking at the calendar .The widespread habit of limiting thescope of a research project to a single author often leads to a confined understanding of the author and the texts ,which ,in turn ,offers marginal results .The average literary scholar considers these results satisfactory .But for what purpose are they satisfactory?Often the research strategies and methods of the literary scholar are repetitive .A new operation that is analogous to previous ones is often considered worthwhile :it is on these premises that many texts concerning literature are produced and accepted .I propose instead that in a concrete project that tries to produce knowledge ,any statement needs verification .But there is a point where it is unnecessary to repeat the same operation on new data ,because the result has already been established :rather than additional confirmation of what is already known ,it is the exploration of what is still unknown that deserves priority .Contemporary literary research seems to be based on habits that originated in the past and that bear little resemblance to research projects as they are intended now in other fields .If our main aim were the proposal of some objects as cultural models ,then it would be useful to our purpose to try to attract our society's 考博家园attention toward these objects and the persons who produced them .It would be reasonable to perform our actions on the occasion of anniversaries ,because we would not be doing research ,but celebration and propaganda .Celebration aims at confirming certitudes and strengthening bonds of solidarity among the participants .It does not produce knowledge ,but it confirms what is already known .Legitimating by means of the power of words has been for many centuries the main job of the man of letters .7.In the view of the writer ,scholars studying literature need to________.A .research more diligentlyB .establish a clear purpose before commencing researchC .decrease the number of footnotesD .avoid writing special works to celebrate anniversaries8.The writer of this article is critical of modern literary research because________.A .it uses too many analogiesB .it is not concrete writingC .it relies on established methods that have not changed muchD .it is too subjective9.According to the writer ,writing about an author on their anniversary________.A .is useful because it creates stronger ties with the authorB .is useful because it strengthens the cultural informationC .is useful because it is celebration and celebration confirms certitudesD .is not useful since it does not add much to the pool of established information10.In paragraph 3,sentence 2,the words “to previous ones” refers to________.A .previous authors written about by othersB .earlier scholars who wrote comparative literary worksC .earlier methods for researchD .repeats of research11.This article________.A .criticizes the limited approach taken by many literary scholars in their researchB .criticizes the approach taken to footnotes in literary researchC .supports the idea that literary scholars must remain a cohesive groupD .maintains that more careful personal data needs to be collected about authors12.In the writer's opinion________.A .repetition over a period of time can provide proofB .evidence in research is criticalC .celebratory research does not require proofD .research concerning an author from antiquity does not require evidence Passage 3After a run of several thousand years ,it is entirely fitting that 2000 will be marked as the year the tide tuned against taxation .Clay tablets recall the taxes of Hammurabi in the Babylon of 2000BC ,but the practice is certainly older .People in power have always tried to divert some of the proceeds of economic activity in their own direction .Lords took feudal dues from their vassals ;landowners took tolls from merchants ;gangsters took protection money from small businesses ;governments took taxes from their citizens .Despite the different names ,the principle 考博家园has remained constant :those who do not produce take resources from those who do ,and spend it on altogether different things .The tide is turning because of the convergence of several factors .In the first place ,taxes are becoming harder to collect .Capital is more mobile than ever ,and inclined to fly from places that tax to places that do not .Governments do not move their boundaries and jurisdictions as rapidly as companies can change locations .Attempts to establish trans-national tax powers are almost certainly ,ably doomed by international competition to attract economic activity .Many businesses will choose to stay out of reach .The global economy and the internet mean that purchases can now cross frontiers .People buy books ,clothes ,and cars from abroad ,and any finance minister who likes to tax these items find his tax base diminishing .It is not only capital and goods which are harder to pin down .Even wages are crossing frontiers .The rise of the service sector means that many income-generating activities can take place across frontiers ,causing yet more headaches for over-stretched public treasuries .Farther more ,the pace of electronic ,hard-to-trace activity is accelerating .No less important has been the rise of political resistance .The past quarter-century has been marked by a movement led in Britain and America itself in California's famous tax-cutting referendum proposition 13,but saw its fullest expression in the Thatcher and Reagan tax cuts of the 1980's .Britain's Tories entered office in 1979 with the top rate of income tax at 98%,and left office 18 years later with a top rate of 40%.Indeed ,their Labour Opponents became electable only after a firm promise not to raise it again .The plain fact is that electmates these days will not stand for it .They recognize ,correctly ,that governments spend their money less carefully and less efficiently than they can spend it themselves .One of the greatest uses of tax money is to provide pensions .And here a revolution—as important and pervasive as privatization—is sweeping the world .Fully-funded personal pension plans ,based on individual savings ,are sweeping away the poorly funded public pensions promised by governments .The latter take taxes from the young to support the old .The former invest savings from the young to support themselves when old .13.The main idea of this text is that________.A .taxation is changing and will continue to changeB .ways of collecting tax have changedC .pensions are increasingly being paid out of taxpayer's moneyD .public money is being misspent in most western countries14.Taxes are more difficult to collect because________.A .it is almost impossible to tax transnational companiesB .of the increase in buying goods through the internetC .some burgeoning areas of employment have activities that are not easily taxedD .all of the above15.The biggest change in taxation________.A .is in provident accountsB .is privatization of companiesC .is in individual pension plans which are replacing government pensionsD .is the increased tax on personal investment16.From this article it is evident that________. 考博家园A .small business will continue to be heavily taxedB .in England ,personal income tax will rise to a top rate of 40%C .many large companies can still avoid paying high taxesD .globalization is making tax-collection easier17.According to this article ,the people who have many problems relating to tax are________.A .the oldB .the youngC .the bankD .the finance ministers of various countries18.Trans-national companies________.A .do not have to pay taxB .are often encouraged by a country to pay less taxC .are finding it difficult to pay taxes because of the significant increasesD .all of the abovePassage 4Handwriting analysis (graphology) circumvents the law by frying to determine an employee's traits (e. g. ,stability) according to some handwriting group stereotype to which he or she belongs ,(Indeed ,some graphologists have so little respect for the law and so much confidence in their stereotyping that they have proposed using the technique in lieu of court proceedings to identify and prosecute criminals!) The analysis works by comparing the speed ,size ,slant ,form ,pressure ,layout ,and continuity of an individual's handwriting with various patterns and typologies ,and assimilating this person's script into these types .As a result the individual judged ceases to be an individual and becomes little more than a composite of traits .This end result differs little from judgements based on race ,sex ,religion ,etc .Granted ,no individual is totally unique .Any evaluation of character ,or for that matter ,skills ,turns ,in some measure ,on employing generic ideas about virtue ,vice ,and technical competence .Still ,there is a human individuality which manifests itself in our imagination and in the innovative arguments we choose to advance .Standardized handwriting analysis is far less respectful of individuality in this latter sense than other modes of screening .Individuals who are asked to write a personal essay describing their qualifications in their own terms ;and who are given an opportunity in an interview to describe their motivations in seeking a particular job retain far more of what makes them distinctive .This more personalized format gives the individual an opportunity to express unusual or provocative opinions the employer may not have previously considered .Upon reflection ,the employer may think these comments so pertinent that s /he awards the job to this candidate .Handwriting analysis ,though ,is ostensibly purely :formal .It does not provide the candidate with any opportunity to distinguish himself or herself in this substantive fashion .At best ,graphology will yield some vague assessment such as “the candidate is highly creative”.It is worth remembering what the driving force is behind graphological testing .Handwriting analysis ,like automated telephone screening ,is increasingly being used early in the hiring process because it purports to deliver salient ,accurate information cheaply .Yet precisely because these techniques are standardized ,the data has reduced value .Judgements about the precise relevance of some perceived character traits to a job are rarely :straightforward .Good interviewers learn through training and through interaction itself to qualify previous judgements .Perhaps the candidate who fails to make eye contact has a guilty conscience (as it is standardly assumed).On 考博家园。

[中科院]中国社会科学院研究生院博士研究生英语入学试题及答案

[中科院]中国社会科学院研究生院博士研究生英语入学试题及答案

中国社会科学院研究生院2005年博士研究生英语入学考试和答案PART I: VocabularySection A (10 points)Directions: Choose the word that is the closest in meaning with the underlined word.1. Too often, the sales manager who hires salesmen simply because of their extroverted and flamboyant personality will have a high turnover.a. deviousb. humorousc. singulard. ostentatious2. He remains alert to signs of hope and finds one in the story of the late SuAnne Big Crow, a high-school basketball star whose exploits and character united the reservation in pride.a. featsb. peatsc. leatsd. beats3. The emergence of extraterrestrial life, particularly intelligent life, is a key test for these rival paradigms.a. doctrinesb. heresiesc. examplesd. debates4. There are no national statistics, but family-law experts agree that with remarriage and a booming economy creating an increasingly mobile work force, relocation is becoming a much more. contentious issue in divorce cases.a. precariousb. urgentc. elusived. controversial5. Although astronomers increasingly suspect that bio-friendly planets may be abundant in the universe, the chemical steps leading to life remain largely mysterious.a. doubtb. assumec. emerged. amplify6. Small wonder, then, that the heavy surrounding wall is obsolete, and we build, instead, membranes of thin sheet metal or glass.a. extantb. manifest e. archaic d. dilapidated7. That prospect has infuriated ordinary Mexicans, who have seen the purchasing power of their paychecks erode more than 40% since 1982, and who voted for the new president because he promised to replace austerity with prosperity.a. severe and restricted economyb. affluence and large-scale economyc. inefficient and small-scale economyd. scarce and uncontrolled economy8. The benefits and pleasure from embezzlement will only be ephemeral for those corrupt officials, at the expense of the whole country for centuries to come.a. transitoryb. durablec. immortald. resilient9. We might feel ambivalence about taking PhD candidate tests that require us to work extremely hard and under too much stress.a. an antagonistic feelingb. a contradictory feelingc. a Monday-morning feelingd. an altruistic feeling10. Much of the emotionalism of modern pop music, which seems to offer catharsis to both performer and audience, is taken directly from the sacred-music traditions of African Americans.a. abreactionb. laxnessc. euphemismd. euthanasiaSection B (10 points)Directions: Choose the word that best completes the sentence.11. It is hoped that the severe prison sentences will serve as a(n) to other would-be offenders.a. hoaxb. deterrentc. hindranced. anguish12. and grit are much more important than intelligence and talent. So those who were responsible for cheating were kicked off the team, even in the face of overwhelming criticism.a. integrityb. culpabilityc. persistenced. indolence13. And so to the of the Games --- faster, higher, stronger ---Tonya Harding adds words she knows all too well: harder. Harder. Longer. Badder. She has worked so hard, tried for so long, wanted so bad.a. creedb. convictionc. dogmad. qualm14. Traditionally, biologists believed that life is a freak --- the result of a zillion-to-one accidental concatenation. It follows that the likelihood of its happening again elsewhere in the cosmos is .a. infinitesimalb. immeasurablec. multitudinousd. miscellaneous15. By starting treatment early, and interrupting it for brief periods once they had the virus under control, all of the study's eight participants were able to _ their immune responses.a. consoleb. fosterc. bolsterd. decrease16. His former wife had ____ the court for permission to move them to Colorado, but a judge said that would damage their relationship with Caldwell and ruled she could either stay in Illinois or relinquish custody.a. defiedb. ratifiedc. petitionedd. eluded17. Some managers in the slate-owned enterprises have been charged with for depositing public funds into private bank accounts at a time when economic reform is being carried out.a. embezzlementb. pillagec. pilferaged. arson18. Both sections are designed to be taken by high school seniors. Over 20 percent of the children with these top scores were found to be left-handed or , twice the rate observed among the general population.a. ambidextrousb. ambivalentc. ambientd. dexterous19. Poorer parents, meanwhile, may be tempted to borrow more than they ever expect to repay; the rate on government-backed loans is roughly 22% and bound to rise.a. interestb. mortalityc. defaultd. velocity20. It is not only that they are supposed to fall in love and to enter into a monogamous marriage in which she gives up her name and he his _______. but this love must be manufactured at all cost or the marriage will seem insincere to all concerned.a. concessionb. solvencyc. paroled. meditationPART Ⅱ: GrammarSection A (10 points)Directions: Choose the answer that best fills in the blank.21. We cannot observe and measure innate intelligence, we can observe and measure the effects of the interaction of whatever is inherited with whatever stimulation has been received from the environment.a. thereforeb. therebyc. whereasd. thus22. The critics tended to speculate who had the greatest influence on the development of that writer's novels.a. as tob. so as toc. thatd. of23. the stock market has posted its worst loss since the '87 crash and has provoked fears ofa bearish season to come.a. Panicked by a faltering buyout deal and a whiff of inflation,b. To be panicked by a hesitating buyout deal and a whiff of inflation,c. Being panicked by a hesitant buyout deal and a trace of inflation,d. Panicking by a faltering buyout deal and a hair-raising inflation,24. The assumption that the initiative in the establishment of this wondrous arrangement should be in the hands of the male, with the female graciously succumbing ____ the impetuous onslaught of his wooing , goes back right to prehistoric times when savage warriors first descended _________ some peaceful matriarchal hamlet and dragged away its screaming daughters to their marital beds.a. to ... onb. to ...withc. with ...tod. on...at25. Hacker could even take control of the entire system by implanting his own instructions in the software that runs it. Moreover, he could program the computer to ease any sigh ofa. his being thereb. him having ever been therec. his ever having been thered. having ever been there26.Jefferson was a renowned doubter,urging his nephew to “question with boldness even the existence of a God” John Adams was at least a skeptic,.a.as were of course the revolutionary firebrands Tom Paine and Ethan Allemb.as the revolutionary firebrand was of course Tom Paine and Ethan Allemc. as of course the revolutionary firebrands Tom Paine and Ethan Allem wered.as of course the revolutionary firebrand was Tom Paine and Ethan Allem27.Should Earth be struck by an asteroid,destroying all higher life-forms,intelligent beings,still less humanoids,a.would almost certainly not arise next time aroundb.will almost undoubtedly not arise next time aroundc.would not have to arise next time around indeedd.Would have arisen next time around for a certainty28.Another reason argues for the separation of church and state.If the Founding Fathers had one overarching aim、it was to limit the power the churches the state.They had seen the abuses of kings who claimed to rule with divine approval,from arbitrary Henry VIII to the high-handed George Ⅲ.a.not of ...but of b.not only ...but alsoc.of ...as well as d.of ...or of29.Many such chemical changes have been performed by man since very early times,probably the first the heating of clay to make pottery,which has been known for 1O,000 years.a was b is C.had been d.being30.But if life on Earth is not unique,the case for a miraculous origin would be undermined.The discovery of even a humble bacterium on Mars,____, would support the view that life emerges naturally.a.if they could be shown to have arisen separately from Earthb.if it could show to have arisen in parallel from Earthc if it could be shown to have arisen independently from Earthd. if they can be shown to have arisen autonomously from EarthSection B (10 points)Directions:Choose the letter that indicates the error in the sentence31.Bill Gates rules because early on he acted on the assumption which computing power---theA Bcapacity of microprocessors and memory chips---would become nearly free;his company keptCchuming out more and more lines of complex software to make use of the cheap bounty.D32. What struck the imagination of the world was, in first place, the dramatic character ofA Bthe discovery - the long and patient search, a real act of faith, culminating in the discoveryCof something the like of which had never been found before - the undisturbed body of theDancient Egyptian kings.33. Even George Washington must shudder in his sleep to hear the constant emphasis onA"Judeo-Christian values.” It is he who writes, “We have abundant reason to rejoice that in thisB CLand ... every person may here worship God according to the dictates of his own heart.”D34. It was a textbook case of crisis mismanagement. Hitting by hundreds of lawsuits and a federalA Bprobe into the safety of its silicone breast implant, Dow Coming spent much of the past year hunkered down in a defensive crouch -- stalling investigators, sitting on evidence andC Dminimizing the complaints of women who said the devices caused them pain, disfigurement and serious autoimmune disorders.35. As the colleges and universities have less and less resources to devote to the humanities andAliberal arts, by which a sensitivity toward social advancement has traditionally been nurturedB Cthey are forced to look to private industry for money.D36. In the space of 12 hours last Thursday, Mexican Finance Minister Guillermo Ortiz Martinez undertook the unenviable task of charming, consoling and begging the forgiveness of three AAmerican credit-rating agencies, the head of a dozen U.S. commercial banks and 400 investorsBand analysts who lost nearly $10 billion last month when Mexico's newly minted President,CErnesto Zedillo Ponce de Leon, abruptly allowed the peso to float against the dollar.D37. He believed that Nazca only made sense if the people who had designed and made theseAvast drawings on the ground could actually see them. and that led him to the theory that theBancient Peruvians had somehow learned to fly, as only from above they could really see theC Dextent of their handiwork.38. The rescue package he finally unveiled Tuesday called for cutting budgets, keeping prices inA check and holding wage increases to 7% for 1995, backed by an $18 billion emergency fundBsubstantially financed by the U.S. Those sacrifices, however, make them clear that Mexico nowCfaces an anguished period of economic stagnation, even if the government can make the planD stick.39. But our guess, and certainly our hope, is that you are among the far greater number whoA knows that walls are only temporary at best, and that over the long run, we can serve society'sB Cinterests better by working together in mutual accommodation.D40. No wonder John Adams once described the Judeo-Christian tradition as “the most bloodyAreligion that ever existed,” and that the Founding Fathers took such pains to keepBthe hand that held the musket separate from the one that carries the cross.C DPART II1: Reading comprehension: (30 points)Directions: Answer all the questions based on the information in the passages below.Passage 1I have shown how democracy destroys or modifies the different inequalities that originate in society; but is this all, or does it not ultimately affect that great inequality of man and woman which has seemed, up to the present day, to be eternally based in human nature? I believe that the social changes that bring nearer to the same level the father and son, the master and servant, and, in general, superiors and inferiors will raise woman and make her more and more the equal of man. But here, more than ever, I feel the necessity of making myself clearly understood; for there is no subject on which the coarse and lawless fancies of our age have taken a freer range.There are people in Europe who,confounding together the different characteristics of the sexes would make man and woman into beings not only equal but alike.They would give to boththe same functions,impose on both the same duties,and grant to both the same rights:they would mix them in all things—their occupations,their pleasures.their business.It may readily be conceived that by thus attempting to make one sex equal to the other, both are degraded,and from so preposterous a medley of the works of nature nothing could ever result but weak men and disorderly women.It is not thus that the Americans understand that species of democratic equality Which may be established between the sexes.They admit that as nature has appointed such wide differences between the physical and moral constitution of man and woman,her manifest design was to give a distinct employment to their various faculties;and they hold that improvement does not consist in making beings so dissimilar do pretty nearly the same things,but in causing each of them to fulfill their respective tasks in the best possible manner The Americans have applied to the sexes the great principle of political economy which governs the manufacturers of our age,by carefully dividing the duties of man from those of woman in order that the great work of society may be the better carried on.In no country has such constant care been taken as in America to trace two clearly distinct lines of action for the two sexes and to make them keep pace one with the other,but in two pathways that are always different.American women never manage the outward concerns of the family or conduct a business or take a part in political life:nor are they,on the other hand,ever compelled to perform the rough labor of the fields or to make any of those laborious efforts which demand the exertion of physical strength.No families are so poor as to form an exception to this rule.If, on the one hand,an American woman cannot escape from the quiet circle of domestic employments.she is never forced,on the other,to go beyond it.Hence it is that the women of America,who often exhibit a masculine strength of understanding and a manly energy,generally preserve great delicacy of personal appearance and always retain the manners of women although they sometimes show that they have the hearts and minds of menNor have the Americans ever supposed that one consequence of democratic principles is the subversion of marital power or the confusion of the natural authorities in families They hold that every association must have a head in order to accomplish its object.and that the natural head of the conjugal association is man.They do not therefore deny him the right of directing his partner,and they maintain that in tile smaller association of husband and wife as well as in the great social community the object of democracy is to regulate and legalize the powers that are necessary, and not to subvert all power.Comprehension Questions:41.What does the writer think will improve equality between the sexes?a.the opinions of those who comment on society's foiblesb.the fact that democracy has leveled other inequalitiesc. the social changes that have occurredd.the wider gender demographic assumptions of our age42. Why does the writer oppose the views of some Europeans?a. Because he does not think men and women should do the same jobs, enjoy the same pastimes, or indulge in the same business transactions.b. Because he thinks they confuse the different characteristics of men and women.c. Because he thinks it absurd that the sexes should have the same duties and rights.d. Because he does not think the sexes have the same function in society.43. In what particular way do Americans have a different interpretation of democratic equality between the sexes?a. They want men and women to take different roles in society.b, They believe the sexes are very different from each other.c. They encourage men and women to fulfill different tasks as well as they can.d. They impose a division of labor in order to benefit society as a whole.44. What does the writer suggest to be the main strengths of American women?a. They concentrate on work in the home.b. They heed their comportments and show brainpowers analogous to those of men.e. They refrain from shirking domestic employment.d. They do not participate in business or politics.45. What effect has democracy had on the relations between the sexes in America?a. It has resulted in women being subordinate to men.b. It has subverted natural authority in families.c. It has formulated and endorsed necessary powers, with the man as head of the family.d. It has reinforced existing inequalities.Passage 2When we speak of progress in connection with our individual endeavors or any organized human effort, we mean an advance toward a known goal. It is not in this sense that social evolution can be called progress, for it is not achieved by human reason striving by known means toward a fixed aim. It would be more correct to think of progress as a process of formation and modification of the human intellect, a process of adaptation and learning in which not only the possibilities known to us but also our values and desires continually change. As progress consists in the discovery of the not yet known, its consequences must be unpredictable. It always leads into the unknown, and the most we can expect is to gain an understanding of the kind of forces that bring it about. Yet, though such a general understanding of the character of this process of cumulative growth is indispensable if we are to try to create conditions favorable to it, it can never be knowledge which will enable us to make specific predictions. The claim that we can derive from such insight necessary laws of evolution that we must follow is an absurdity. Human reason can neither predict nor deliberately shape its own future. Its advances consist in finding out where it has been wrong.Even in the field where search for new knowledge is most deliberate, i,e., in science, no man can predict what will be the consequences of his work, In fact, there is increasing recognition that even the attempt to make science deliberately aim at useful knowledge--that is, at knowledge whose future uses can be foreseen--- is likely to impede progress. Progress by its very nature cannot be planned. We may perhaps legitimately speak of planning progress in a particular field where we aim at the solution of a specific problem and are already on the track of the answer. But we should soon be at the end of our endeavors if we were to confine ourselves to striving for goals now visible and if new problems did not spring up all the time. It is knowing what we have not known before that makes us wiser man.But often it also makes us sadder men. Though progress consists in part in achieving things we have been striving for, this does not mean that we shah like all its results or that all will begainers. And since our wishes and aims are also subject to change in the course of process, it is questionable whether the statement has a clear meaning that the new state of affairs that progress creates is a better one, Progress in the sense of the cumulative growth of knowledge and power over nature is a term that says little about whether the new state will give us more satisfaction than the old. The pleasure may be solely in achieving what we have been striving for, and the assured possession may give us little satisfaction. The question whether, if we had to stop at our present stage of development, we would in any significant sense be better off or happier than if we had stopped a hundred or a thousand years ago is probably unanswerable.The answer, however, does not matter. What matters is the successful striving for what at each, moment seems attainable. It is not the fruits of past success but the living in and for the future in which human intelligence proves itself. Progress is movement for movement's sake, for it is in the process of learning, and in the effects of having learned something new, that man enjoys the gift of his intelligence.Comprehension Questions:46. Which of the following statements does the passage most strongly support?a. Scientific progress will benefit mankind immeasurably.b. Scientific research frequently achieves its intended goals.c. Progress may or may not lead to a better world.d. Progress defined by a infinite trajectory leads to wisdom.47. Progress, in the view of the writer.a. involves the development of the human intellectb. is closely related to social development and evolutionc. is at the expense of tradition and moral valuesd. always remunerates everyone relatively equally48. When considering the search for knowledge,a. we should aim at solving specific problemsb. we should produce useful resultsc. we become wiser because we accumulate a broad range of knowledged. science finds solutions for existing problems and uncovers new problems49. Progress, according to this argument,a. unquestionably leads to a more pleasurable existenceb. facilitates prosperity and personal satisfactionc. involves the achievement of measurable goalsd. is an inevitable movement forward50. The author suggests thata. past achievements are less important than future aspirationsb. history's successes demonstrate change in knowledgec. striving without achieving goals is wasted effortd. movement for movement's sake is pointlessPassage 3The immediate postwar economic regime throughout much of the world could be characterized as a unique compromise between national economic objectives (e.g., industrialization / development, full employment, and social welfare) on the one hand, and aninternational system of co-operative and liberal multilateralism, on the other-a combination often described as “national capitalism” or “embedded liberalism”.In practice the implementation of Keynesianism in each national context was quite specific and had to do with the mediating effect of local institutions or “governance regimes”. In industrialized nations, states regulated economics mainly through fiscal policy. Meanwhile, developing countries experimented with more extreme forms of state intervention, from various versions of “mixed”economies to outright socialism. In Latin America, the guiding postwar paradigm was import-substituting industrialization (ISI), through which governments fostered economic development by protecting domestic industries from foreign competition.This variety of postwar social contracts was made possible by a strong system of international monetary regulations, which were bound together by the political hegemony of the United States. In order to prevent global capital movements (whether outflows from the United States or inflows to Europe) from upsetting the system of pegged exchange rates, a consensus emerged for the establishment of capital controls. In limiting the pressures that could be brought to bear on the exchange rate, these restraints to capital mobility allowed governments to pursue domestic objectives other than currency stability (like full employment and a welfare state in Europe and industrialization in the developing world), and thereby satisfy the social demands formulated by their democratic electorates.Over the course of the postwar period, however, this system was put under considerable stress that culminated during the 1970s, On the domestic front, expansionary policies were beginning to exhaust their potential and were becoming increasingly inflationary. On the international front, the rapid progress of financial innovation and the multinationalization of firms had engendered a movement in favor of the liberalization of capital movements, supported by Britain (initially) and the United States (later). Both emerging and European economies were flooded with foreign capital, which made it even harder to sustain noninflationary courses of action and increased the vulnerability of currencies to speculation. In 1971, the U.S. commitment to such a liberal financial order was ratified by the country's decision to let the dollar float, which in effect brought the Bretton Woods system to an end.The new post-Bretton Woods economic environment not only appeared difficult to control with established economic strategies, but it also changed the political opportunity structure that governments faced. Previously, national policies bad been determined chiefly by the interplay of domestic parties, local interest groups, and national institutions. In contrast, now international finance constituted an increasingly powerful constituency, which could be presumed to have its own set of policy preferences-such as low inflation, balanced budgets, and strict monetary policy managed by an independent central bank.Comprehension Questions:51. What is the best title of this passage?a. The Widely Contrasting Models of the Economy and the Myth of the Mixed Economy.b. The Shifting of the Means of Government Intervention and the Downfall of the Bretton Woods system,c. The Varying Social Contracts and the Disadvantages of the System of Pegged Exchange Ratesd, The Changing International Economic Order and the Rise of the Market Paradigm52. What is the difference in the ways of government intervention between developed and developing countries according to the author?a. The background of developing countries is more general and the contexts of developednations are more specific.b. Industrialized nations focused mainly on government expenditure, while developingcountries tested different experimental forms of state intervention.c. Developed nations regulated the economies through fiscal policies, whereas developingcountries tried to control economies by protectionism.d. Develo ped countries experimented various version of “mixed” economies; meanwhile,developing countries tried to protect domestic industries from foreign competition.53. Which of the following statements is NOT true?a. The restrictive measures gave the governments the first priority on currency stability.b. Not only the U.S political supremacy but a strong system of international monetaryregulations made various social agreements possible.c. To protect the pegged exchange rates from being destabilized by global capital flow, themajority of the countries reached agreement on the establishment of capital control.d. Developed countries concentrated their domestic objective on full employment, whiledeveloping countries focused on industrialization.54. How was the system of pegged exchange rates put under substantial stress for the period before 1970's?a. Domestically, expansionary policies lost their potential and became inflationary;internationally, liberalization of capital movements ensued.b. Domestically, policies exhausted the endangered movements; internationally, the rapidprogress of financial innovation and the multinationalization of firms supported Britain and the United States.c. Domestically, policies exhausted potential and failed to become deflationary, internationally,financial modernization and firms favored support of Britain and the United States.d. Domestically, policies produced exhaust and reversed inflation, internationally, financialinnovation and firms favored support of Britain and the United States.55. In the passage the author's attitude towards “the new post-Bretton Woods economic environment” isa, optimistic b. critical c. indifferent d. approvingPassage 4The first social effect of this state of affairs was to produce a large and ever larger floating population of 'stateless' exiles. During the growth period of Hellenic history such a plight had been uncommon and was regarded as a dreadful abnormality. The evil was not overcome by Alexander's great hearted effort to induce the reigning Faction of the moment to each city-state to allow its ejected opponents to return to their homes in peace; and the fire made fresh fuel for itself; for the one thing that the exiles found for their hands to do was to enlist as mercenary soldiers: and this glut of military man-power put fresh drive into the wars by which new exiles - and thereby more mercenaries - were being created.The effect of these direct moral ravages of the war spirit in Hellas in uprooting her children was powerfully reinforced by the operation of disruptive economic forces which the wars let loose.。

1999年中国社会科学院考博英语真题及详解【圣才出品】

1999年中国社会科学院考博英语真题及详解【圣才出品】

1999年中国社会科学院考博英语真题及详解PART ⅠVOCABULARYSECTION ADirections: Beneath each of the following sentences, there are four choices marked A, B, C and D.Choose the one that best completes the sentence and mark the corresponding letterwith a single bar across the square bracket on ANSWER SHEET Ⅰ.1. With her last child having left home, she felt a _____ need to fill her lime.A. tenseB. thoroughC. pressingD. small【答案】C【解析】tense绷紧的,紧张的。

thorough彻底的,透彻的。

pressing紧迫的,迫切的。

2. It is generally thought that as teachers work with students, psychology course work is _____ to teacher- training.A. indispensableB. inviolateC. indisposedD. invariable【答案】A【解析】indispensable必不可少的,必需的。

inviolate不受侵犯的,不受亵渎的。

indisposed不愿的,厌恶的。

invariable不变的,恒定的。

3. The announcement of the death of their leader caused thereafter a feeling of great despair to _____ their lives.A. overflowB. scatterC. permeateD. manipulate【答案】C【解析】permeate渗透,弥漫,充满。

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社科院博士生初试考试英语试题及答案
细节决定成败,学习重在积累,面对日益严峻的竞争环境,越来越多的在职人员纷纷加入到考博的进修行列中,社会科学院的博士生考试英语试题历来以超难著称,下面我领略一下吧!自2015年起社科院博士生英语考试开始启用如下考题类型,下面我们一起来看看社科院的博士生初试考试英语个性考题吧~
试卷第三部分(包括阅读7 选5、概要),请考生直接写在英语试题答题纸上的指定位置,不再提供额外的答题纸。

PART III: Reading and Writing 10 Section A (10 points) Directions: Some sentences have been removed in the following text. Choose the most suitable one from the list A—G to fit into each of the blanks. There are two extra choices which do not fit in any of the blanks.
(1) __________________ Player 1 may not know these particular words of wisdom, but chances are she’s thinking much the same as she tries to decide whether to send Player 2 some of her $10 stake. If she does, the money will be tripled, and her anonymous partner can choose to return none, some, or all of the cash. But why should Player 2 send anything back? And why should Player 1 give anything in the first place? Despite the iron logic of this argument, she types in her command to send some money. A few moments later she smiles, seeing from her screen that Player 2 has returned a tidy sum that leaves them both showing a net profit.
(2) ___________________ Based on exactly the same cold logic that Player 1 dismissed, the so-called Nash equilibrium predicts that in economic transactions between strangers, where one has to make decisions based on a forecast of another’s response, the optimal level of trust is zero. Yet despite the economic
orthodoxy, the behavior of Players 1 and 2 is not exceptional. In fact, over the course of hundreds of such trials, it turns out that about half of Player 1s send some money, and three- quarters of Player 2s who receive it send some back.
Zak is a leading protagonist in the relatively new field of neuroeconomics, which aims to understand human social interactions through every level from synapse to society. It is a hugely ambitious undertaking. By laying bare the mysteries of such nebulous human attributes as trust, neuroeconomists hope to transform our self- understanding. (3) _________________ “ As we learn more about the remarkable internal order of the mind, we will also understand far more deeply the social mind and therefore the external order of personal exchange, and the extend ed order of exchange through markets.”
(4) __________________ As Zak’s collaborator Steve Knack of the World Bank points out: “Trust is one of the most powerful factors affecting a country’s economic health. Where trust is low, individuals and organizations are more wary about engaging in financial transactions, which tends to depress the national economy.”
And trust levels differ greatly between nations. The World Values Survey, based at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, has asked people in countries around the world, “Do you think strangers can generally be trusted?” the positive response rate varies from about 65% in Norway to about 5% in Brazil. (5) __________________ “Policy-makers in these latter countries might be urgently interested in mechanisms that enable them to raise national trust levels,” observes Knack.
A. Even more intriguingly, it seems that this urge to respond positively when someone shows trust in us is largely outside our
control.
B. Crucially for international economic development, what is true for individuals turns out also to be true for nations.
C. Disturbingly, countries where trust is lower than a critical level of about 30%—as is the case in much of South America and Africa – risk falling into a permanent suspicion- locked poverty trap.
D. “It’s good to trust; it’s better not to,” goes an Italian proverb.
E. They believe their findings even have the potential to help make societies more productive 11 and successful.
F. He points out that our brains have been tailored by evolution to cope with group living.
G. This outcome doesn’t just flout proverbial wisdom, it thumbs its nose at economic theory.
Section B (10 points) Directions: Write a 100—120-word summary of the article in this part.。

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