武汉大学英语专业考研MTI真题
2012年武汉大学汉语国际教育硕士考研真题 2

武汉大学2012年招收攻读硕士学位研究生入学考试试题(专业学位)(C卷)科目代码:354科目名称:汉语国际教育基础满分:150分注意:答案请做在答卷纸上,做在试题上一律无效。
育明教育资深咨询师薛老师认为:在考研复习备考中,信息收集是非常重要的,其次是有一定的方法和套路,在专业课上面能够得到相关内部人员的指导那就更是事半功倍了。
特别是能够收集到一些笔记、真题、讲义、课件、模拟题等具有含金量的资料,那更是为自己考研之路创造有利的条件,希望同学们能够合理利用这些资料,合理安排时间,最后坚持到底,相信自己一定能得到一个满意的答卷!一、填空题(每空1分,共20分)1.中国古籍中保存神话资料较多的有《__________》、《__________》、《穆天子传》等书,从中我们可以找到神话故事的精彩片段。
2.被鲁迅称为“史家之绝唱,无韵之离骚”的是___________写的《_________》。
3.古希腊流传至今的最早的文学作品是两部史诗《__________》和《___________》。
4.但丁的《神曲》全长一万四千二百三十三行,分为《____________》、《_________》、《天堂》三部。
5.古代男子二十岁举行_________礼,女子十五岁举行__________礼。
6.《唐吉可德》的作者是___________,《坎特伯雷故事集》的作者是_________。
7.八十世纪欧洲发生了第二次反封建的思想革命运动启蒙运动。
其口号是:_______、______、博爱。
8.德国“古典派”作家的代表人物是___________和______________。
9.拉斯蒂涅是作品《_________》中的主人公;________被认为是西方侦探小说的开拓者。
10.诸子百家中的名家是以_____________问题为中心的一个学派;阴阳家是提倡_________学说的学派。
二、名词解释(每小题4分,共20分)1.文化休克2.骑士精神3.西方古典主义文学思潮4.《三字经》5.十字军东征三、简答题(每小题8分,共40分)1.简述“刻板印象”的分类及特点。
武汉大学卫生综合353考研真题

2020年武汉大学353卫生综合真题(回忆版)一、选择题(2分/个,100分)50个(难度尚好,如果能够认真掌握视频课堂所讲内容,很多都是秒选的。
)二、简答题(10分/个,100分)1、队列研究原理及其特点。
(点睛课堂、红宝书)2、提高筛捡效益的方法。
(红宝书)3、卡方检验的原理和应用范围。
(点睛课堂、红宝书)4、多变量回归的自变量筛选的方法。
(红宝书)5、细菌性食物中毒的流行病学特点。
(点睛课堂、红宝书)6、矿物质的共同特点。
(红宝书)7、工作有关疾病的特点。
(视频课程、红宝书)8、何为高温作业,特点和分类。
(点睛课堂、红宝书)9、饮水的硬度与健康的关系。
(强化课堂、红宝书)10、室内污染的来源。
(点睛课堂、红宝书)(难度尚好,均在研习社所处的红宝书/视频课堂中找到原题或者类似题目。
)三、论述题(20分/个,100分)1、关于肺癌的数据,计算RR AR PAR ARP PARP五个指标并解释意义。
(点睛课堂、红宝书)暴露组51/10万,c对照5/10万,人群21/10万。
2、方差分析(完全随机设计方差分析的检验具体步骤)。
(点睛课堂、红宝书、最后的压题文件!)总变异490,组间变异120,一共40个人,三组降血压药物对高血压病人的影响有啥区别,第一问数据类型,第二问是什么设计,第三问做假设检验,需要画个方差分析表,给了F的一个表格找F进行比较。
3、膳食因素和动脉粥样硬化的关系。
(强化课堂、红宝书)4、生产性毒物进入体内的途径,影响毒物毒作用的因素。
(点睛课堂、红宝书)5、富营养化的形成,危害,防止措施。
(点睛课堂、红宝书)(难度尚好,均在研习社所处的红宝书/视频课堂中找到原题或者类似题目。
)小P班班对353卫生综合的总体评价(一)整体难度整体难度中等。
流行病和统计都在重点范围内,三大卫部分也都在教材范围内。
(二)题型和题量是否变化?题型没有改变,但是选择题由100道减为50道,简答题由5道增加至10道。
武汉大学强军计划专业课考研真题、笔记、参考书、大纲、录取分数线、报录比

武汉大学强军计划专业课考研真题、笔记、参考书、大纲、
录取分数线、报录比
武汉大学强军计划专业课考研大纲
一、政治理论题型:
1、单选题10分(10小题)
2、多选题30分(15小题)
3、判断题20分(4小题)
4、简述题20分(4小题)
5、论述题20分(2小题)
考试内容:1.马克思主义基本原理;2.毛泽东思想和中国特色社会主义理论体系概论;3.思想道德修养与法律基础;4.中国近现代史纲要;5.时事。
二、英语题型:
1、词汇20分(40小题)
2、完形填空30分(30小题)
3、阅读理解50分(25小题)
三、俄语题型:
1、词汇语法30分(30题)
2、完型填空20分(20题)
3、阅读50分(25小题)
四、日语题型:
1、文字和词语30分(30题)
2、语法构句20分(20题)
3、阅读理解50分(25题)
五、数学题型:
1、填空题25分(5小题)
2、单选题25分(5小题)
3、计算题100分(10小题)
考试内容:高等数学:1、函数与极限;2、导数与微分;3、中值定理与导数应用;4、不定积分;5、定积分;6、定积分应用;7、空间解析几何;8、多元函数微分法及其应用;
9、重积分;10、曲线积分与曲面积分;11、无穷级数;12、常微分方程。
六、专业课考试科目
专业课考试科目与统考研究生专业课考试科目相同,请参考《哈尔滨工程大学2015年硕士研究生招生专业目录》和《哈尔滨工程大学2015年硕士研究生入学考试专业课考试大纲》。
2021武汉大学新传考研真题经验参考书

武汉大学考研——新闻与传播考研经历看过很多经验贴,有很多会讲自己的经历什么的,其实大可不必,最多只是当个故事瞧,每个人的备考过程都会因为环境、心境的不同而有区别,因此也会做出不同的选择。
考研和就业没有绝对的孰好孰坏,跟着自己的内心走,每一个选择都会是最好的选择。
在这里,首先必须感谢high研当初的陪伴与支持,如果没有它,可能就不会成就现在的我。
在我最迷茫最无措的时候,是high研给我指明了方向,才会让我成功上岸。
所以,我想把我的考研之路写下来,给学弟学妹一个参考,希望大家都能得偿所愿,去到自己理想的院校。
(high研还给了非常优厚的稿费,两全其美。
嘿嘿),希望你们也能像我当初一样,迷茫了就来这里看看,或许我的些许经验真的对你的复习有所帮助呢。
下面,言归正传。
首先说一下我的基本情况,本科双非,三跨,二战。
一战武大,因专业课成绩差而败北,二战的时候改变策略,重专业,轻政英,最终成绩也符合二战规划,政英成绩基本没有变化,而两门专业课成绩总共提升了18分。
综合两次备考,现将经历整理如下:1.政治今年政治大题分数较高,拿到了38分。
全凭自学,身边有好多同学去报了考研班,但是,奉劝各位研友千万不要把考研机构的指导经验当作圣经来膜拜,只能仅供参考!政治资料我主要是跟的肖秀荣老师。
资料:政治大纲、风中劲草、《政治新时器》、肖秀荣1000题,肖秀荣时政,最后市面上所有的押题卷我都有买,9月份:刷肖秀荣1000题(做两遍),弄清错题,主要是针对选择题。
10月份:开始背风中劲草,抛开哲学,风中劲草我来回背了很多遍,一直背到考前。
按照框架进行。
11月份:开始进行做押题卷,市面上有各种押题卷,我全买来做了,主要是针对选择题,因为选择题的体型很新,必须要做到融会贯通,虽然我最后还是死在了选择题上,但是今年的选择题还是比较难的,我能上七十已经很满意了。
12月份:开始做主观题,背肖八肖四以及老蒋的五套卷。
然后跟了老蒋的网课。
其实大题只要踏踏实实的背,30分不会少,最后我的大题达到了38分,我还是很意外的。
2015年北京外国语大学翻译硕士专业二外法语考研参考书,考研经验,考研真题

指导思想(guidance):高举中国特色社会主义伟大旗帜,以邓小平理论、“三个代表”重要思想、科 学发展观为指导(to hold high the great banner of socialism with Chinese characteristics, follow the guidance of Deng Xiaoping Theory, the important thought of Three Represents and the Scientific Outlook on Development)。
列一下用的书
李志清的四本大学法语 法语现代语法 上海译文出版社 大学法语考研必备 就是经典的橘黄本 全国名校外国语学院二外法语考研真题详解 洞悉法语完形填空解析 外研社 考研法语二外考前冲刺 外研社 2011名校外语学院二外法语考研真题精解 这个挺老了 是之前跳蚤市场上从学姐那买的 法语介词用法攻略 东华大学出版社 法语动词用法攻略 东华大学出版社 新编法语语法 外研社 考前一个月又过了一遍 法语常用动词介词搭配词典 从北语买的 很实用 有利于做选择题 二外法语考研综合 法语词汇练习800 这个词语都挺难的 做了一部分,后来觉得不大适合北外的路子,就没再 做 法语语法800 这个全做完了,有些还是很有用的 法语动词变位完全手册 查阅用的 法语动词变位渐进 做了一部分,前面讲解看了看 上海译文的书比较贵 大家可以选择一下 一般学校图书馆里也会有
五、考试内容: 本考试包括二个部分:词语翻译和英汉互译。总分 150 分。
北外翻译硕士考研(英语MTI笔译、口译)备考书目总结

北外翻译硕士考研(英语MTI笔译、口译)备考书目总结专业一:英汉翻译基础第一部分是短语翻译,汉译英英译汉各15个,每个1分;第二部分是英译汉,60分,共两篇,每篇的字数在200字左右;第三部分是汉译英,60分,共两篇,每篇字数也是200-300字。
1.词汇翻译:⑴口、笔译二三级词汇;新东方中高级口译词汇;China Daily 新词新译⑵用手机微博看中国日报英语点津、华夏翻硕(都有一些热门词汇、事件之类的,每天都看,然后有个专门的本子记录,一定要多写,不然忘得很快)⑶从翻译硕士论坛和考研论坛、百度查词汇资料(把不会的都记下来,每天复习)⑷词语翻译还可以做细、分类记录(比如经济、政治文化;单词、短语、习惯表达、缩略语等都分别记录)用到的书:英语笔译实务二级教材英语笔译实务二级练习英语笔译综合能力2教材和练习英语二级笔译考试真题精选英语二级笔译全真模拟试题及精解卢敏的二三级笔译词汇翻译硕士英语翻译基础考研真题与典型题精解英语专业考研名校全真试题精解英语翻译基础真题解析与习题详解商务汉英翻译研究生版对外经济贸易大学出版社英语翻译基础武汉大学出版社热词新语翻译谭陈德彰、汉英时文翻译高级教程贾文波非文学翻译理论与实践李长栓新版非文学翻译李长栓大学英汉翻译教程王志奎新东方中高口口试考试词汇必备最新汉英特色词汇词典汉语报刊超in新词英译例话中式英语之鉴同传的参考书目新闻英语分类词典外研社汉英翻译基础陈宏薇英美文化与汉英翻译汪福祥突破词汇20000翻译硕士考研白皮书学习网站英语学习、新东方英语杂志、可可英语网、普特、政府工作报告2.段落翻译:(需要大量的输入)经济学人、英语世界、英语文摘(单词、短语、知识点、好句子都记下来,关键要有浸泡式的感觉)写作:专八经典美文(外文社出版)专业二:汉语写作与百科知识1.名词解释:文化类、时事类较多,可以有侧重。
【1.参考书上的词条全部整理下来;2.考研论坛以前的各种帖子上许多学校的回忆贴打下来进行词条总结;3.用手机看互动百科的知识版块,不熟悉的可以记下来。
翻译硕士考研大纲及参考书目

翻译硕士考研大纲及参考书目翻译硕士考研大纲及参考书目1.翻译硕士英语(1)大纲。
①考试目的。
翻译硕士英语作为全日制翻译硕士专业学位(MTI)入学考试的外国语考试,其目的是考查考生是否具备进行MTI学习所要求的外语水平。
②性质及范围。
本考试是一种测试应试者单项和综合语言能力的尺度参照性水平考试。
考试范围包括MTI考生应具备的外语词汇量、语法知识以及外语阅读与写作等方面的技能。
③基本要求。
a。
具有良好的外语基本功,认知词汇量在10000以上,掌握6000个以上(以英语为例)的积极词汇,即能正确而熟练地运用常用词汇及其常用搭配。
b。
能熟练掌握正确的外语语法、结构、修辞等语言规范知识。
c。
具有较强的阅读理解能力和外语写作能力。
(2)考试解析。
基础英语分为三个部分,词汇语法30分,阅读理解40分,英语写作30分。
词汇语法部分出题灵活,题型多样,最常见的是选择题形式以及比较有难度的改错题形式,其难度相当于英语专业八级的水平。
因此,考生在备考阶段就要多背单词,在此基础上大量地做单词语法题和专八系列的改错题,反复记忆,总结技巧。
阅读理解部分,传统选择题的难度大致为专八水平,但也可能出现GRE水平的理解题,而对于一些非传统的阅读题型,比如paraphrase,answerquestions等,考查的不仅是阅读能力和理解能力,也在一定程度上考查考生的表达能力。
所以,在平时做阅读理解题的过程中,考生要有意识地强化自己的语言“输出”能力,不可词不达意。
英语写作部分类似于专八水平,但有的学校可能为更突出时效性,会考一些时事文题。
考生在平时要多写、多练、多积累、多揣摩、多思考,不可一味地求数量而忽视每一篇的质量。
(3)参考书目。
①姜桂华。
中式英语之鉴[M]。
北京:外语教学与研究出版社,2000.②张汉熙。
高级英语[M]。
北京:外语教学与研究出版社,1995.③蒋显璟。
英美散文选读[M]。
北京:对外经贸大学出版社,2008.④谭载喜。
专业硕士《431金融学》2021年武大考研真题

专业硕士《431金融学》2021年武汉大学考研真题第一部分名校考研真题武汉大学经济与管理学院431金融学综合[专业硕士]考研真题武汉大学经济与管理学院431金融学综合[专业硕士]考研真题及详解一、名词解释(每小题5分,共6小题,共30分)1流动性偏好答:流动性偏好是指由于货币具有使用上的灵活性,人们宁肯以牺牲利息收入而储存不生息的货币来保持财富的心理倾向。
人们如果以货币以外的其他形式来持有财富,会带来收益,例如,以债券形式持有,会有利息收入;以股票形式持有,会有股息或红利收入;以房产形式持有,会有租金收入等等。
与任何商品和有价证券相比,货币的流动性都是最高的。
按照凯恩斯的观点,人们储存货币是出于三种动机:①交易动机,指个人和企业为了进行正常的交易活动而持有一部分货币的动机,出于交易动机的货币需求量主要决定于收入;②②预防性动机,指为预防意外支出而持有一部分货币的动机,也是收入的函数;③③投机动机,指人们为了抓住有利的购买有价证券的机会而持有一部分货币的动机,货币投机需求与利率变动有负向关系。
2菲利普斯曲线答:菲利普斯曲线是由英国经济学家菲利普斯根据1861~1957年英国的失业率和货币工资变动率的经验统计资料提出来的,用以说明失业率和货币工资率之间交替变动关系的一条曲线。
因为西方经济学家认为,货币工资率的提高是引起通货膨胀的原因,即货币工资率的增加超过劳动生产率的增加会引起物价上涨,从而导致通货膨胀。
所以,菲利普斯曲线又成为当代经济学家用以表示失业率和通货膨胀率之间此消彼长、相互交替关系的曲线。
其含义为:失业率高,通胀率就低;失业率低,通胀率就高,并认为二者间这种关系可为政府进行总需求管理提供一份可供选择的菜单,即通胀率或失业率太高时,可用提高失业率的紧缩政策或提高通胀率的扩张政策来降低通胀率或降低失业率,以免经济剧烈波动。
菲利普斯曲线可用图1说明。
图1菲利普斯曲线图1中,W为货币工资变动率,U为社会的失业率,L即为菲利普斯曲线。
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武汉大学MTI真题Multiple Choice (30 points, 1 point for each)1. The American approach to teaching may seem unfamiliar to many people because there is lessemphasis on learning facts than _______ true in the systems of any other countries.a) is b) it is c) it being d) to be2. Cinema-goers hate _______long queues before all cinemas.a) there being b) there to be c) there is d) there are3. _______ had a passion for walking, we started off by car.a) when b) as c) after d) while4. The opposition parties are planning to bring _______ a No-Confidence Motion against the Prime Minister.a) up b) forward c) out d) about5. India is one of the several countries which are _______ affected by widespread deforestation and steady destruction of natural watersheds.a) critically b) remarkably c) superficially d) strongly6. If you take care of the pence, the _______ will take care of themselves.a) dollars b) cents c) pounds d) money7. Over the course of centuries, the river Ganges has _______ its course many a times.a) altered b) deviated c) recovered d) adjusted8. A notable patriot and revolutionary _______ lost-to India in the death of Subhash Chandra Bose.a) was b) were c) had d) have9. The dacoits attacked the village and every man, woman and child _______ put to death.a)was b) were c) is d) are10 They tried to reassure me but I was still not able to _______ my fears.a) annul b) prevent c) reduce d) curtail11. always preferred the _______ of the big city.a) anonymity b) obscurity c) distinctiveness d) none of these12. The opposition _______ the Minister by furious criticism.a) ascribed b) hailed c) treated d) assailed13. His jokes failed to ________ even the faintest of smites from her.a) invoke b) elicit c) attract d) make14. Credit card crime is reaching _______ proportions.a) endemic b) epidemic c) unbelievable d) great15. The visitor was welcomed _______ and introduced to the Governor.a) ceremoniously b) ceremonially c) affectionately d) perfectly16. She showed great _______ and finesse in dealing with the troublesome situation.a) tact b) trick c) ability d) power17. She _______ her disapproval of the show by leaving the auditorium.a) engaged b) saw c) envisaged d) evinced18. Coaching classes often act as the _______ to success in competitive examinations.a) way b) means c) door d) window19. The poor woman has _______ many hardships after her husband died many years ago.a) born b) bore c) borne d) boar20. We partook _______ the humble meal provided by the villagers.a) with b) of c) at d) from21. This is similar to the other tune, but quite _______ from it.a) distinctive b) distinct c) diverge d) divergent22. A leading chemist believes that many scientists have difficulty with stereochemistry because much of the relevant nomenclature is _______ . in that it combines concepts that should be kept a) obscure. . . interrelated b) specialized. . . intactc) imprecise. . . discrete d) descriptive. . . separate23. A misconception frequently held by novice writers is that sentence structure mirrors thought: the more convoluted the structure, the more _______ the ideas.a) complicated b) inconsequential c) elementary d) fanciful24. A war, even if fought for individual liberty and. democratic rights, usually requires that these principles be _______ , for they are _______ the regimentation and discipline necessary for military efficiency.a) rejected. . . inherent in b) suppressed fulfilled throughc) suspended. . . incompatible with d) followed. . . disruptive of25. A number of writers who once greatly _______ the literary critic have recently recanted, substituting _______ for their former criticism.a) lauded. . . censure b) influenced. . . analysisc) simulated. . . ambivalence d) honored. . . adulation26. A human being is quite _______ creature, for the gloss of rationality that covers his or her fears and _______ is thin and often easily breached.a) a logical. . . problems b) a ludicrous. . . laughterc) a valiant. . . phobias d) an ambitious. . . morality27. The diplomat, selected for her demonstrated patience and skill in conducting such delicate negotiations, ________ to make a decision during the talks because any sudden commitment at thattime would have beena) resolved. . . detrimental b) refused. . . aproposc) declined. . . inopportune d) struggled. . . unconscionable28. Because the monkeys under study are _______ the presence of human beings, they typically _______ human observers and go about their business.a) ambivalent about . . . welcome b) habituated to . . . disregardc) pleased with . . . snub d) unaware of avoid29 He had expected gratitude for his disclosure, but instead he encountered _______ bordering on hostility.a) patience b) discretion c) indifference d) ineptitude30. Nonviolent demonstrations often create such tensions that a community that Inns constantly refused to_______ its injustices is forced to correct them: the injustices can no longer be _______ .a) acknowledge. . . ignored b) decrease. . . verifiedc) tolerate. . . accepted d) address. . . eliminated?. Reading Comprehension (40 points, 2 points for each)Read the following passages carefully and choose one best answer for each question in Passage 1, 2and 3, and answer the questions in passage 4 based on your understanding of the passage. (1) Scattered around the globe are more than one hundred regions of volcanic activity known as hot spots (hot spot: a place in the upper mantle of the earth at which hot magma from the lower mantle upwells to melt through the crust usually in the interior of a tectonic plate to form a volcanic feature; also: a place in the crust overlying a hot spot). Unlike most volcanoes, hot spots are rarely found along the boundaries of the continental and oceanic plates that comprise the Earth's crust; most hot spots lie deep in the interior of plates and are anchored deep in the layers of the Earth's surface. Hot spots are also distinguished from other volcanoes by their lavas, which contain greater amounts of alkali metals than do those from volcanoes at plate margins.In some cases, plates moving past hot spots have left trails of extinct volcanoes in much the same way that wind passing over a chimney carries off puffs of smoke. It appears that the Hawaiian Islands were created in such a manner by a single source of lava, welling up from a hot spot, over which the Pacific Ocean plate passed on a course roughly from the east toward the northwest, carrying off a line of volcanoes of increasing age. Two other Pacific island chains梩he Austral Ridge and the Tuamotu Ridge梡arallel the configuration of the Hawaiian chain; they are also aligned from the east toward the northwest, with the most recent volcanic activity near their eastern terminuses. That the Pacific plate and the other plates are moving is now beyond dispute; the relative motion of the plates has been reconstructed in. detail. However, the relative motion of the plates with respectto the Earth's interior cannot be determined easily. Hot spots provide the measuring instruments for resolving the question of whether two continental plates are moving in opposite directions or whether one is stationary and the other is drifting away from it. The most compelling evidence that a continental plate is stationary is that, at some hot spots, lavas of several ages are superposed instead of being spread out in chronological sequence. Of course, reconstruction of plate motion from the tracks of hot-spot volcanoes assumes that hot spots are immobile, or nearly so. Several studies support such an assumption, including one that has shown that prominent hot spots throughout the world seem not to have moved during the past ten million years. Beyond acting as frames Of reference, hot spots apparently influence the geophysical processes that propel the prates across the globe. When a continental plate comes to rest over a hot spot, material welling up from deeper layers forms abroad dome that, as it grows, develops deep fissures. In some instances, the continental plate may rupture entirely along some of the fissures so that the hot spot initiates the formation of a new ocean. Thus, just as earlier theories have explained the mobility of thecontinental plates, so hot-spot activity may suggest a theory to explain their mutability.1. The primary purpose of the passage is to ______ .(A) describe the way in which hot spots influence the extinction of volcanoes(B) describe and explain the formation of the oceans and continents(C) explain how to estimate the age of lava flows from extinct volcanoes(D) describe hot spots and explain how they appear to influence and record the motion of plates2. According to the passage, hot spots differ from most voicanoes in that hot spots _____ .(A) can only be found near islands(B) have greater amounts of alkali metals in their tarns(C) are situated closer to the earth's surface(D) can be found along the edges of the plates3. It can be inferred from the passage that evidence for the apparent course of the Pacific plate has been provided by the ______ .(A) configurations of several mid-ocean island chains(B) dimensions of ocean hot spotsC) concurrent movement of two hot spots(D) pattern of fissures in the ocean floor4. The passage suggests which of the following about the Hawaiian Islands, the Austral Ridge, and the Tuamotu Ridge?(A) The three chains of islands are moving eastward.(B) The three island chains are a result of the same plate movement.(C) The Hawaiian Islands are receding from the other two island chains at a relatively rapid rate.(D) The Austral Ridge and the Tuamotu Ridge chains have moved closer together whereas the Hawaiian Islands have remained stationary.5. Which of the following, if tree, would best support the author's statement that hot-spot activitymay explain the mutability of continental plates?(A) Hot spots move more rapidly than the continental and oceanic plates.(B) Hot spots are reliable indicators of the age of continental plates.(C) Hot spots are regions of volcanic activity found only in the interiors of the continental plates(D) The coastlines of Africa and South America suggest that they may once have constituted a single continent that raptured along a line of hot spots.(2)"They treat us like mules," the guy installing my washer tells me, his eyes narrowing as he wipes his hands. I had just complimented him and his partner on the speed and assurance of their work. He explains that it's rare that customers speak to him this way. I know what he's talking about. My mother was a waitress all her life, in coffee shops and fast-paced chain restaurants. It was hard work, but she liked it, liked "being among the public," as she would say. But that work had its sting too--the customer who would treat her like a servant or, her biggest complaint, like she was not that bright. There's a lesson here for this political season: the subtle and not-so-subtle insults that blue-collar and service workers endure as part of their working lives. And those insults often have to do with intelligence.We like to think of the United States as a classless society. The belief in economic mobility is central to the American Dream, and we pride ourselves on our spirit of egalitarianism. But we also have a troubling streak of aristocratic bias in our national temperament, and one way it manifests itself is in the assumptions we make about people who work with their hands. Working people sense this bias and react to it when they vote. The common political wisdom is that hot-button social issues have driven blue-collar voters rightward. But there are other cultural dynamics at play as well, And Democrats can be as oblivious to these dynamics as Republicans梩hough the Grand Old Party did appeal to them in St. Paul.Let's go back to those two men installing my washer and dryer. They do a lot of heavy lifting quickly梞ine was the first of 15 deliveries梐nd efficiently, to avoid injury. Between them there is ongoing communication, verbal and nonverbal, to coordinate the lift, negotiate the tight fit,move inrhythm with each other. And all the while, they are weighing options, making decisions and solvingproblems梐s when my new dryer didn't match up with the gas outlet.Think about what a good waitress has to do in the busy restaurant: remember orders and monitorthem. attend to a dynamic, quickly changing environment, prioritize tasks and manage the flow ofwork, make decisions on the fly. There's the carpenter using a number of mathematical concepts ymmetry proportion, congruence, the properties of angles梐nd visualizing these concepts while building a cabinet, a flight of stairs, or a pitched roof.The hairstylist's practice is a mix of technique, knowledge about the biology of hair, aesthetic judgment and communication skill. The mechanic, electrician, and plumber are troubleshooters andproblem solvers Even the routinized factory floor calls for working smarts. When has any of this madeits way into our political speeches? From either party. Even on Labor Day. Last week, the GOP masterfully invoked some old cultural suspicions: country folk versus city and east-coast versusheartland education. But these are symbolic populist gestures, not the stuff of true engagement. Judgments about intelligence carry great weight in our society, and we have a tendency to make sweeping assessments of people's intelligence based on the kind of work they do.Political tributes to labor over the next two months Will render the muscled arm, sleeve rolled tight against biceps. But few will also celebrate the thought bright behind the eye, or offer an imagethat links hand and brain. It would be fitting in a country with an egalitarian vision of itself to have atruer, richer sense of all that is involved in the wide range of work that surrounds and sustains us. Those politicians who can communicate that sense will tap a deep reserve of neglected feeling. And those who can honor and use work in explaining and personalizing their policies will find a welcome reception.6. To illustrate the intelligence of the working class, the author cites the examples of all of the following EXCEPT ______ .(A) hairstylist and waitress (B) carpenter and mechanic(C) electrician and plumber (D) street-cleaner and shop-assistant7. In the sentence "we pride ourselves on our spirit of egalitarianism" (para. 3), the word "egalitarianism" can be replaced by ______ .(A) individualism (B) enlightenment(C) equality (D) liberalism8. We can conclude from the passage that ______ .(A) in America, judgments about people's intelligence are often based on the kind of work they do(B) the subtle and not so subtle insults towards, blue-collars are a daily phenomenon in America(C) the United States is a. classless society(D) the old cultural suspicions, of country folk versus city and east-coast versus heartland education show the Republican's true engagement9. One of the major groups of targeted readers of the author should be ______ .(A) blue-collar American workers(B) middle-class American businessmen(C) American politicians(D) American company leaders10. Which of the following summarizes the main idea of the passage?(A) The Democratic Party and the Republican Party should stop symbolic populist gestures.(B) Political tributes should mind the subtle bias against the intelligence of the working class.(C) The ruling party should acknowledge the working smarts of blue-collars.(3)Joy and sadness, are experienced by people in all cultures around the world, but how can we tell when other people are happy or despondent? It turns out that-the expression of many emotions may beuniversal. Smiling is apparently a universal sign of friendliness and approval. Baring the teeth in a hostile way, as noted by Charles Darwin in the nineteenth century, may be a universe sign of anger.As the originator of the theory of evolution, Darwin believed that the universal recognition of facialexpressions would have survival value. For example, facial expressions could signal the approach ofenemies (or friends) in the absence of language.Most investigators concur that certain facial expressions suggest the same emotions in a people. Moreover, people in diverse cultures recognize the emotions manifested by the facial expressions. Inclassic research Paul Ekman took photographs of people exhibiting the emotions of anger, disgust,fear happiness, and sadness. He then asked people around the world to indicate what emotions werebeing depicted in them. Those queried ranged from European college students to members of the Fore,a tribe that dwells in the New. Guinea highlands. All groups including the Fore, who had almost nocontact with Western culture, agreed on the portrayed emotions. The For also displayed familiar facialexpressions when asked how they would respond if they were the characters in stories that called forbasic emotional responses. Ekman and his colleagues more recently obtained similar results in a studyof ten cultures in which participants were permitted to report that multipie emotions were shown byfacial expressions. The participants generally agreed on which two emotions were being shown andwhich emotion was more intense.Psychological researchers generally recognize that facial expressions reflect emotional states. In fact, various emotional states give rise to certain patterns of electrical activity in the facial muscles andin the brain. The facial-feedback hypothesis argues, however, that the causal relationship betweenemotions and facial expressions can also work in the opposite direction. According to this hypothesis,signals from the facial muscles ("feedback") are sent back to emotion centers of the brain, and so aperson's facial expression can influence that person's emotional state. Consider Darwin's words: "Thefree expression by outward signs of an emotion intensifies it. On the other hand, the repression, as faras possible, of all outward signs softens our emotions. " Can smiling give rise to feelings of good will,for example, and frowning to anger?Psychological research has given rise to some interesting findings concerning the facial-feedback hypothesis. Causing participants in experiments to smile, for example, leads them to report more positive feelings and to rate cartoons (humorous drawings of people or situations) as being more humorous. When they are caused to frown, they rate cartoons as being more aggressive.What are the possible links between facial expressions and emotion? One link is arousal, which isthe level of activity or preparedness for activity in an organism, intense contraction of facial muscles,such as those used in signifying fear, heightens arousal. Self-perception of heightened arousal thenleads to heightened emotional activity. Other links may involve changes in brain temperature and therelease of neurotransmitters (substances that transmit nerve impulses. ) The contraction of facial muscles both influences the internal emotional state and reflects it. Ekman has found that the so-calledDuchenne smile, which is characterized by "crow's feet" wrinkles-around the eyes and a subtle drop inthe eye cover fold so that the skin above the eye moves down slightly toward the eyeball, can lead topleasant feelings.Ekman's observation may be relevant to the British expression "keep a stiff upper lip" as a recommendation for handling stress. It might be that a "stiff" lip suppresses emotional response 梐slong as the lip is not quivering with fear or tension. But when the emotion that leads to stiffening thelip is more intense, and involves strong muscle tension, facial feedback may heighten emotional response.11. The word "despondent" in the passage is closest in meaning to ______ .(A) curious(B) unhappy(C) thoughtful(D) uncertain12. The author mentions "Baring the teeth in a hostile way" in order to ______ .(A) differentiate one possible meaning of a particular facial expression from other meanings of it(B) upport Darwin's theory of evolution(C) provide an example of a facial expression whose meaning is widely understood(D) contrast a facial expression that is-easily understood with other facial expressions13. The word "concur" in the passage is closest in meaning to ______ .(A) estimate(B) agree(C) expect(D) understand14. According to paragraph 2, which of the following was true of the Eore people of New Guinea?(A) They did not want to be shown photographs.(B) They were famous for their story telling skills.(C) They knew very little about Western culture.(D) They did not encourage the expression of emotions.15. According to the passage, what did Darwin believe would happen to human emotions that were not expressed?(A) They would become less intense.(B) They would last longer than usual.(C) They would cause problems later.(D) They would become more negative.(4)BANKS mimic other banks. They expose themselves to similar risks by making the same sorts of loans. Each bank's appetite for lending rises and falls in sync. What is safe for one institution becomesdangerous if they all do the same, which is-often how financial trouble starts. The scope for nasty spillovers is increased by direct linkages. Banks lend to each other as well as to customers, so one firm's failure can quickly cause others to fall over, too.Because of these connections, rules to ensure the soundness of each bank are not enough to keepthe banking system safe. Hence the calls for "macroprudential" regulation to prevent failures of thefinancial system as a whole. Although there is wide agreement that macropmdential policy is neededto limit systemic risk, there has been very little detail about how it might work. Two new reports helpfill this gap. One is a discussion paper from the Bank of England, which sketches out the elements of amacroprudential regime and identifies what needs to be decided before it is put into practice. Theother paper by the Warwick Commission, a group of academics and experts on finance from aroundthe world, advocates specific reforms.The first step is to decide an objective for macroprudential policy. A broad aim is to keep the financial system working well at all times. The bank's report suggests a more precise goal: to limit thechance of bank -failure to its "social optimum". Tempering the boom-bust credit cycle and taking some air out of asset, price bubbles may be necessary to meet these aims, but both reports agree thatshould not be the main purpose of regulation. Making finance safer is ambitious enough. Policymakers then have to decide on how they might achieve their goal. The financial system is too willing to provide credit in good times and too shy to do so in bad times. In upswings banks arekeen to extend loans because write-offs seem unlikely. The willingness of other banks to do the sameonly reinforces the trend. Borrowers seem less likely to default because with lots of credit around, thevalue of their assets is rising. As the boom gathers pace, even banks that are wary of making fresh loans carry on for fear of ceding ground to rivals. When recession hits, each bank becomes fearful ofmaking loans partly because other banks are also reluctant. Scarce credit hurts asset prices and leavesborrowers prey to the cash-flow troubles of customers and suppliers.Since the cycle is such an. -influence on banks, macroprudential regulation should make it harder for all banks to lend so freely in booms and easier for them to lend in recessions. It can do this by tailoring capital requirements to the credit cycle. Whenever overall credit growth looks too frothy, themacroprudential body could increase the minimum capital buffer that supervisors make each bankhold. Equity capital is relatively dear for banks, which benefit from an implicit state guarantee on theirdebt finance as well as the tax breaks on interest payments enjoyed by all firms. Forcing banks to holdmore capital when exuberance reigns would make it costlier for them to supply credit. It would alsoprovide society with an extra cushion against bank failures.Each report adds its own twist to this prescription. The Bank of England thinks extra capital may be needed for certain sorts of credit. If capital penalties are not targeted, it argues, banks may simplycut back on routine loans to free up capital for more exotic lending. The Warwick report says eachbank's capital should also vary with how long-lived its assets are relative to its tunding. Firms withbigmaturitiy mismatches are more likely to cause systemic problems and should be penalised. The ease ofraising cash against assets and of rolling over debt varies over the cycle, and capital rules need to reflect this. Regulators should also find ways to match different risks with the firms which can bestbear them. Ranks are the natural bearers of credit risk since they know about evaluating borrowers.Pension funds are less prone to sudden withdrawals of cash and are the best homes for illiquid assets.The Warwick group is keen that macroprudential policy should be guided by rules. if credit, assetprices and GDP were all growing above their long-run average rates, say, the regulator would be forced to step in or explain why it is not doing so. Finance is a powerful lobby. Without such a triggerfor intervention, regulators may be swayed by arguments that the next credit boom is somehow different and poses few dangers. The bank frets about regulatory capture, too, but doubts that any rulewould be right for all circumstances. It favours other approaches, such as frequent public scrutiny, tokeep regulators honest.When banks attack, no regulatory system is likely to be fail-safe. That is why Bank of England officials stress that efforts to make bank failures less costly for society must he part of regulatory reform. That includes making banks' capital structures more flexible, so that some kinds of debt turninto loss-bearing equity in a crisis. Both reports favour making systemically important banks hold extra capital, as they pose bigger risks when they fail.The Warwick group also thinks cross-border banks should abide by the rules of their host countries, so that macroprudential regulation fits local credit conditions. That would require that foreign subsidiaries be independently capitalised, which may also be necessary for a cross-border bank to have a credible "living will", a guide to its orderly resolution. This. advice will chafe most inthe European Union, where standard rules are the basis of the single market. But varying rules on capital could also be used as a macroeconomic tool in the euro area, where monetary policy cannot betailored to each country's needs. Regulation to address negative spillovers that hurt financial stabilitymight then have a positive spillover for economic stability.Answer the following questions in your own words according to the requirements. The answers should be as clear and relevant as possible.16. What is the situation facing banks and why?17. Based on your understanding of the passage, what might be the meaning of "boom-bust credit cycle" and "asset price bubbles" in the 3rdparagraph?18. How do The Bank of England and the Warwick group respond to the "macroprudential"。