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本文(南京财经大学外国语学院《613基础英语》历年考研真题汇编.pdf)为本站会员()主动上传,文库网仅提供信息存储空间,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对上载内容本身不做任何修改或编辑。 若此文所含内容侵犯了您的版权或隐私,请立即通知文库网(发送邮件至13560552955@163.com或直接QQ联系客服),我们立即给予删除!

南京财经大学外国语学院《613基础英语》历年考研真题汇编.pdf

1、目录2011年南京财经大学613基础英语考研真题2010年南京财经大学613基础英语考研真题2009年南京财经大学613基础英语考研真题2008年南京财经大学613基础英语考研真题2007年南京财经大学613基础英语考研真题2011年南京财经大学613基础英语考研真题更多考研资料 v/q:344647 公众号/小程序:顺通考试资料2010年南京财经大学613基础英语考研真题2009年南京财经大学613基础英语考研真题2008年南京财经大学613基础英语考研真题南 京 财 经 大 学2008年攻读硕士学位研究生入学考试(初试)试卷考试科目:613基础英语适用专业:英语语言文学考试时间:2008年

2、1月20上午8:3011:30注意事项:所有答案必须写在答题纸上,做在试卷或草稿纸上无效。I. Paraphrase the underlined part of the following sentences. (10 points)1. Studies serve for delight, for ornament, and for ability.2. Crafty men contemn studies, simple men admire them, and wise menuse them, and above them won by observation.3. Unless t

3、he man exploit others, he has to work in order to live.Howerver simple and primitive his production may be, he has risen above theanimal kindom; rightly has he been defined as “animal that produces”.4. Education makes a people easy to lead, but difficult to drive; easy togovern, but impossible to en

4、slave.5. Even philosophy divorced from theology and from the knowledge oflife and ascertainable facts, is but a famishing pabulum, or a draughtstimulating for a moment, leaving behind drought and disillusion.II. Vocabulary and General Knowledge. (20 points)1. It was found the diet of older people is

5、 often _in vitamins.A. shot B. inadequate C. deficientD. failing2. Your story about the frog turning into a prince is _ nonsense.A. sheer B. shear C. shieldD. sheet3. I understand _preparation that staff must put in under pressureto meet the deadline.A. more than the enormous amount ofB. better than

6、 most the enormous number ofC. better than most the enormous amount ofD. fewer than the number of4. From the available data it may fairly be _ that the writerflourished in the 15th century.A. presupposedB. presumed C. assumed D. supposed5. I _ to one daily newspaper and one weekly magazine.A. prescr

7、ibeB. subscribeC. decretive D. transcribe6. Her enthusiasm, and her violent likes and dislikes, _ herself inall the everyday occupations of life.A. inserted D. counseled C. asserted D. discerned7. Communication satellites contain special instruments which can passon or _ radio and television program

8、s or telephone messages from onestation to another.A. relayB. set C. returnD. emit8. One of the attractive features of the course was the way the practicalwork had been _ with the theoretical aspects of the subject.A. alternatedB. integratedC. adjustedD. embraced9. It is hoped that the prisoner will

9、 be released through the _ of thepresident himself.A. convention B. prevention C. intervention D. interference10. They began constructing the bridge in 1960, but several years_ before the project was completed.A. elapsed B. advanced C. proceededD. compromise11. James Boswell is famous for his biogra

10、phy of _.A. General PaoliB. Samuel JohnsonC. Lord ChesterfieldD. Bertrand Russell12. Which one of the following books is not written by Jane Austen?A. Pride and PrejudiceB. PersuasionC. Emma D. Mrs. Dalloway13.Sigmund Freud is a _.A. neuropsychologistB. writerC. biologist D. anthropologist14. Who wi

11、ns Nobel Prize Laureate for literature among the followingpeople?A. Johannes Kepler B. Enric FermiC. Samuel Beckett D. Sigmund Freud15. The author of The Adventure of Tom Sawyer is _.A. Henry JamesB. Mark TwainC. Thomas CarlyleD. C. S. Lewis16. Which one of the following events was not a part of civ

12、il rightsmovement in 1960s?A. anti-terrorist B. womens liberation movementC. the drug cultureD. the Vietnam War17. Jean-Paul Sartre is the foremost exponent of _.A. modernismB. postmodernismC. intuitionismD. existentialism18. The Greening of America is written by _.A. Thorstein VeblenB. Charles Reic

13、hC. Joseph BrodskyD. Saul Bellow19.Eskimos call their houses as _.A. tepeesB. igloosC. hutsD. cottages20.The author of The Scarlet Letter is _.A. Nathaniel HawthorneB. Kenneth ClarkC. Herman MelvilleD. Ernest HemingwayIII. Error Correction. (10 points)1. Massachusetts was first explored in the late

14、sixteenth and earlyseventeenth centuries, and the A B Cfirst permanent settlement at Plymouth in 1620.D2. Composer Richard Rodgers and lyricist Oscar Hammerstein IIbrought to the musical AOklahoma! extensive musical and theatrical background as well asfamiliar with the B C traditional forms of opere

15、tta and musical comedy.D3. Harvesting of grain is affected by annual changes in temperature orthe amount of moisture,A B C but both.D4. A patent gives inventors exclusive rights to their inventions for a fixperiod of time. A B C D5. The economy of Litue Rock, Arkansas, is basing primarily onmanufact

16、uring, wholesale andA Bretail trade and government functions. C D6. How many people realize that Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings TheYearling is a minor literary A Bclassic and an important contribute to regional literature?C D7. Dams vary in size from small rock barriers to concrete structuresmany feet hei

17、ght. A B C D 8. Scientists estimate that as many as two hundred millions visiblemeteors enter the Earths A B Catmosphere every day. D9. In the early twentieth century, there was considerable interestingamong sociologists in the Afact that in the United States the family was losing its traditional ro

18、les. B C D10. Government money appropriated for art in the 1930s made possiblehundreds of murals and A Bstatues still admiration in small towns all over the United States. C D IV. Reading Comprehension (40 points)TEXT AA few common misconception. Beauty is only skin-deep. Ones physicalassets and lia

19、bilities dont count all that much in a managerial career. Awoman should always try to look her best.Over the last 30 years, social scientists have conducted more than 1,000studies of how we react to beautiful and not-so-beautiful people. Thevirtually unanimous conclusion: Looks do matter, more than

20、most of usrealize. The data suggest, for example, that physically attractive individualsare more likely to be treated well by their parents, sought out as friends, andpursued romantically. With the possible exception of women seekingmanagerial jobs, they are also more likely to be hired, paid well,

21、andpromoted.Un-American, you say, unfair and extremely unbelievable? Once again,the scientists have caught us mouthing pieties (虔诚) while acting just thecontrary. Their typical experiment Works something like this. They give eachmember of a group college students, perhaps, or teachers or corporatepe

22、rsonnel mangers a piece of paper relating an individualsaccomplishments. Attached to the paper is a photograph. While the papers allsay exactly the same thing the pictures are different. Some show a strikinglyattractive person, some an average looking character, and some an unusuallyunattractive hum

23、an being. Group members are asked to rate the individual oncertain attributes, anything from personal warmth to the likelihood that he orshe will be promoted.Almost invariably, the better looking the person in the picture, thehigher the person is rated. In the phrase, borrowed from Sappho, that thes

24、ocial scientists use to sum up the common perception, what is beautiful isgood. In business, however, good looks cut both ways for women, and deeperthan for men. A Utah State University professor, who is an authority on thesubject, explains. In terms of their careers, the impact of physicalattractiv

25、eness on males is only modest. But its potential impact on femalescan be tremendous, making it easier, for example, for the more attractive toget jobs where they are in the public eye. On another note, though, there isenough literature now for us to conclude that attractive women who aspire(追求) to m

26、anagerial positions do not get on as well as women who may beless attractive.1. According to the passage, people often wrongly believe that inpursuing a career as a manager _.A. a persons property or debts do not matter muchB. a persons outward appearance is not a critical qualificationC. women shou

27、ld always dress fashionablyD. women should not only be attractive but also high-minded2. The result of research carried out by social scientists show that_.A. people do not realize the importance of looking ones bestB. women in pursuit of managerial jobs are not likely to be paid wellC. good looking

28、 women aspire to managerial positionsD. attractive people generally have an advantage over those who are not3. Experiments by scientists have shown that when people evaluateindividuals on certain attributes _.A. they observe the principle that beauty is only skin-deepB. they do not usually act accor

29、ding to the views they supportC. they give ordinary-looking persons the lowest ratingsD. they tend to base their judgment on the individuals accomplishments4. It can be inferred from the passage that in the business world _.A. handsome men are not affected as much by their looks as attractivewomen a

30、reB. physically attractive women who are in the public eye usually doquite wellC. physically attractive men and women who are in the public eyeusually get along quite wellD. good looks are important for women as they are for menTEXT BTo emphasize the stagnation and the narrowness of the societydepic

31、ted in Jane Austins novels is to take a narrow and mechanical view ofthem. Emma is not a period piece, nor is it what is sometimes called acomedy of manners. We read it to illuminate not only the past but also thepresent. And we must face here in both its crudity and its importance aquestion. Exactl

32、y what relevance and helpfulness does Emma have for ustoday? In what sense does a novel dealing skillfully and realistically with asociety and its standards, which are dead and gone forever, have value in ourvery different world today? Stated in such terms, the question itself isunsatisfactory. If E

33、mma today captures our imagination and engages oursympathies (as, in fact, it does), then either it has some genuine value for us,or else there is something wrong with the way we give our sympathy and ourvalues are pretty useless.Put this way, it is clear that anyone who enjoys Emma and then remarks

34、“but of course it has no relevance today” is, in fact, debasing the novel,looking at it not as a living, enjoyable work of art but as a mere dead pictureof a past society. Such an attitude is fatal both to art and to life. It can beassumed that Emma has relevance. The helpful approach is to ask why

35、thisnovel still has the power to move us today.What gives Emma its power to move us is the realism and depth offeeling behind Jane Austins attitudes. She examines with a scrupulous yetpassionate and critical precision the actual problems of her world. That thisworld is narrow cannot be denied. But t

36、he value of a work of art rests on thedepth and truth of the experience it communicates, and such qualities cannotbe identified with the breadth of the works panorama(概要). A conversationbetween two people in a grocery store may tell us more about as world warthan a volume of dispatches from the fron

37、t. The silliest of all criticisms of JanAusten is the one the blames her for not writing about the Battle of theWaterloo and French Revolution, which were in th4e headlines of thenewspapers she read. She wrote about what she genuinely understood, and noartist can do more.5.The main idea of the passa

38、ge is that _.A. a narrow view of Emma is natural and acceptableB. a novel should not depict a vanished societyC. a good novel is an intellectual rather than an emotional experienceD. Emma should be read with sensitivity and an open mind6. The author would probably disagree with those critics or read

39、ers whofind that the society in Jane Austens novels is _.A. unsympatheticB. uninterestingC. crudeD. authoritarian7. The author implies that a work of art is properly judged on the basisof its _.A. universality of human experience truthfully recordedB. popularity and critical acclaim in its own ageC.

40、 openness to varied interpretations, including seemingly contradictoryonesD. avoidance of political and social issues of minor importance8. The authors attitude toward someone who “enjoys Emma and thenremarks but of course it has no relevance today” can best be described asone of _.A. amusementB. as

41、tonishmentC. disapprovalD. resignationText CJoseph Jones had a criminal record, but he swore up and down that thistime he was innocent. Thats what the 36-year-old felon told a Los AngelesSuperior Court judge last year, just moments before pleading guilty to sellingcocaine. He received an eight-year

42、sentence. On Wednesday, Jones walkedout of Californias Salinas Valley State Prison, his conviction overturned atthe request of the Los Angeles District Attorney Gil Garcetti. Turns out,Jones really was innocent of the cocaine charge. Jones case is not all that unusual. In Los Angeles lately, it is t

43、heprosecutors who are asking that defendants be set free. The criminal justicesystem seems to have been turned inside out as authorities probe what mightbecome the most widespread police corruption scandal in the citys history.“I wouldnt say the system is in shambles, but it has certainly been serio

44、uslydisrupted,” says Michael Judge, chief public defender for Los Angeles. Ahigh-ranking police official who asked not to be named adds: “Ive neverseen anything like this before in Los Angeles. Its the kind of thing you hearabout in other places. I dont know if well ever get over it.” Police authori

45、ties say at least one officer has been fired, 11 placed onadministrative leave, and one, Rafael Perez, has resigned, as allegations swirlthat they stole contraband, lied, planted evidence, roughed up witnesses andkept a crash pad where they had sex with prostitutes. Perez admitted shootingan unarmed

46、 man, then framing him by planting a semiautomatic rifle near hisunconscious body and accusing him of attacking officers. Five Los Angelesprosecutors and a special police task force are reviewing hundreds of casesthat might have been compromised. More than 200 police departmentsupervisors and assist

47、ants are part of a board of inquiry expected to makerecommendations to Police Chief Bernard Parks as early as next week. Fivecriminal convictions that Perez and his partner obtained have beenoverturned, and more could follow, a spokeswoman for Garcetti said.On Wednesday, public defenders received a

48、list of more than 1 000cases involving eight law enforcement officers targeted in the probe. Eachmust be reviewed for possibly tainted testimony. If evidence is suspect,lawyers say, theyll argue for new trials or dismissal of charges. The courtscould be tied up for years. Adding to the morass, offic

49、ials expect anonslaught of civil law-suits against the police department from defendantswho were wrongly convicted. The first has been filed.“This is a tarnish on our badge,” says Officer Ted Hunt, president of theLos Angeles Police Protective League, which provides lawyers for accusedofficers. He c

50、autioned, however, against jumping to the conclusion thatpolice corruption is widespread. Only Perez has been proved guilty, he notes.“Other than this one tiny person who embarrassed all of us, LAPD coppersare honest and ethical, and they want to do the right thing,” Hunt adds.In September, Perez ad

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