Part
Ⅰ Structure and Vocabulary
Section A
Directions:
Beneath each of the following
sentences, there are four choices
marked [A],[B],[C] and [D].Choose
the one that best completes
the sentence. Mark your answer
on ANSWER SHEET 1 by blackening
the corresponding letter in
the brackets with a pencil.
(5 points)
Example:
I have been to the Great
Wall three times _________ 1979.
[A]from [B]after [C]for
[D]since
The sentence should read,
I have been to the Great Wall
three times since 1979. Therefore,
you should choose [D].
Sample Answer
[A][B][C][D]
1.If I were in movie, then
it would be about time that
I _________ my head in my hands
for a cry.
[A]bury [B]am burying [C]buried
[D]would bury
2.Good news was sometimes
released prematurely, with the
British recapture of the port
_________ half a day before
the defenders actually surrendered.
[A]to announce [B]announced
[C]announcing [D]was announced
3.According to one belief,
if truth is to be known it will
make itself apparent, so one
_________ wait instead of searching
for it.
[A]would rather [B]had to
[C]cannot but [D]had best
4.She felt suitably humble
just as she _________ when he
had first taken a good look
at her city self, hair waved
and golden, nails red and pointed.
[A]had [B]had had [C]would
have and [D]has had
5.There was no sign that
Mr. Jospin, who keeps a firm
control on the party despite
_________ from leadership of
it, would intervene personally.
[A] being resigned [B]having
resigned
[C]going to resign [D]resign
6.So involved with their
computers _________ that leaders
at summer computer camps often
have to force them to break
for sports and games.
[A]became the children [B]become
the children
[C]had the children become
[D]do the children become
7.The individual TV viewer
invariably senses that he or
she is _________ an anonymous,
statistically insignificant
part of a huge and diverse audience.
[A]everything except [B]anything
but
[C]no less than [D]nothing
more than
8.One difficulty in translation
lies in obtaining a concept
match. _________ this is meant
that a concept in one language
is lost or changed in meaning
in translation.
[A]By [B]In [C]For [D]With
9.Conversation becomes weaker
in a society that spends so
much time listening and being
talked to _________ it has all
but lost the will and the skill
to speak for itself.
[A]as [B]which [C]that
[D]what
10.Church as we use the word
refers to all religious institutions,
_________ they Christian, Islamic,
Buddhist, Jewish, and so on.
[A]be [B]being [C]were
[D]are
Section B
Directions:
Beneath each of the following
sentences, there are four choices
marked [A],[B],[C] and [D].Choose
the one that best completes
the sentence. Mark your answer
on ANSWER SHEET 1 by blackening
the corresponding letter in
the rackets with a pencil. (10
points)
Example:
The lost car of the Lees
was found _________ in the woods
off the highway.
[A]vanished [B]scattered
[C]abandoned [D]rejected
The sentence should read.
The lost car of the Lees was
found abandoned in the woods
off the highway. There fore,
you should choose [C].
Sample Answer
[A][B][C][D]
11.He is too young to be
able to _________ between right
and wrong.
[A]discard [B]discern [C]disperse
[D]disregard
12.It was no _________ that
his car was seen near the bank
at the time of the robbery.
[A]coincidence [B]convention
[C]certainty [D]complication
13.One of the responsibilities
of the Coast Guard is to make
sure that all ships _________
follow traffic rules in busy
harbors.
[A]cautiously [B]dutifully
[C]faithfully [D]skillfully
14.The Eskimo is perhaps
one of the most trusting and
considerate of all Indians but
seems to be _________ the welfare
of his animals.
[A]critical about [B]indignant
at [C]indifferent to [D]subject
to
15.The chairman of the board
_________ on me the unpleasant
job of dismissing good workers
the firm can no longer afford
to employ.
[A]compelled [B]posed [C]pressed
[D]tempted
16.It is naive to expect
that any society can resolve
all the social problems it is
faced with _________,
[A]for long [B]in and out
[C]once for all [D]by nature
17.Using extremely different
decorating schemes in adjoining
rooms may result in _________
and lack of unity in style.
[A]conflict [B]confrontation [C]disturbance
[D]disharmony
18.The Timber rattlesnake
is now on the endangered species
list, and is extinct in two
eastern states in which it once
_________.
[A]thrived [B]swelled [C]prospered
[D]flourished
19.However, growth in the
fabricated metals industry was
able to _________ some of the
decline in the iron and steel
industry.
[A]overturn [B]overtake
[C]offset [D]oppress
20.Because of its intimacy,
radio is usually more than just
a medium; it is _________.
[A]firm [B]coMPAny [C]corporation
[D]enterprise
21.When any non-human organ
is transplanted into a person,
the body immediately recognizes
it as _________.
[A]novel [B]remote [C]distant
[D]foreign
22.My favorite radio song
is the one I first heard on
a thick 1923 Edison disc I _________
at a garage sale.
[A]trifled with [B]scraped
through [C]stumbled upon [D]thirsted
for
23.Some day software will
translate both written and spoken
language so well that the need
for any common second language
could _________.
[A]descend [B]decline [C]deteriorate
[D]depress
24.Equipment not _________
official safety standards has
all been removed from the workshop.
[A]conforming to [B]consistent
with
[C]predominant over [D]providing
for
25.As an industry, biotechnology
stands to _________ electronics
in dollar volume and perhaps
surpass it in social iMPAct
by 2020.
[A]contend [B]contest
[C]rival [D]strive
26.The authors of the United
States Constitution attempted
to establish an effective national
government while preserving
_________ for the states and
liberty for individuals.
[A]autonomy [B]dignity
[C]monopoly [D]stabilit
27.For three quarters of
its span on Earth, life evolved
almost _________ as microorganisms.
[A]precisely [B]instantly
[C]initially [D]exclusively
28.The introduction of gunpowder
gradually made the bow and arrow
_________, particularly in Western
Europe.
[A]obscure [B]obsolete
[C]optional [D]overlapping
29.Whoever formulated the
theory of the origin of the
universe, it is just _________
and needs proving.
[A]spontaneous [B]hypothetical
[C]intuitive [D]empirical
30.The future of this coMPAny
is _________: many of its talented
employees are flowing into more
profitable net-based businesses.
[A]at odds [B]in trouble
[C]in vain [D]at stake
Part Ⅱ Cloze Test
Directions:
For each numbered blank in
the following passage, there
are four choices marked [A],[B],[C]
and [D]. Choose the best one
and mark your answer on ANSWER
SHEET 1 by blackening the corresponding
letter in the brackets with
a pencil. (10 points)
The government is to ban
payments to witnesses by newspapers
seeking to buy up people involved
in prominent cases 31 the trial
of Rosemary West.
In a significant 32 of
legal controls over the press.
Lord Irvine, the Lord Chancellor,
will introduce a 33 bill that
will propose making payments
to witnesses 34 and will strictly
control the amount of 35 that
can be given to a case 36
a trial begins.
In a letter to Gerald Kaufman,
chairman of the House of Commons
media select committee. Lord
Irvine said he 37 with a committee
report this year which said
that self regulation did not
38 sufficient control.
39 of the letter came two
days after Lord Irvine caused
a 40 of media protest when
he said the 41 of privacy
controls contained in European
legislation would be left to
judges 42 to Parliament.
The Lord Chancellor said
introduction of the Human Rights
Bill, which 43 the European
Convention on Human Rights legally
44 in Britain, laid down that
everybody was 45 to privacy
and that public figures could
go to court to protect themselves
and their families.
Press freedoms will be in
safe hands 46 our British
judges, he said.
Witness payments became an
47 after West was sentenced
to 10 life sentences in 1995.
Up to 19 witnesses were 48
to have received payments for
telling their stories to newspapers.
Concerns were raised 49 witnesses
might be encouraged to exaggerate
their stories in court to 50
guilty verdicts.
31.[A]as to [B]for instance
[C]in particular [D]such
as
32.[A]tightening [B]intensifying
[C]focusing [D]fastening
33.[A]sketch [B]rough [C]preliminary
[D]draft
34.[A]illogical [B]illegal
[C]improbable [D]improper
35.[A]publicity [B]penalty
[C]popularity [D]peculiarity
36.[A]since [B]if [C]before
[D]as
37.[A]sided [B]shared [C]complied
[D]agreed
38.[A]present [B]offer
[C]manifest [D]indicate
39.[A]Release [B]Publication
[C]Printing [D]Exposure
40.[A]storm [B]rage [C]flare
[D]flash
41.[A]translation [B]interpretation [C]exhibition
[D]demonstration
42.[A]better than [B]other
than [C]rather than [D]sooner
than
43.[A]changes [B]makes
[C]sets [D]turns
44.[A]binding [B]convincing
[C]restraining [D]sustaining
45.[A]authorized [B]credited
[C]entitled [D]qualified
46.[A]with [B]to [C]from
[D]by
47.[A]iMPAct [B]incident
[C]inference [D]issue
48.[A]stated [B]remarked
[C]said [D]told
49.[A]what [B]when [C]which
[D]that
50.[A]assure [B]confide
[C]ensure [D]guarantee
Part Ⅲ Reading Comprehension
Directions:
Each of the passages below
is followed by some questions.
For each question there are
four answers marked [A],[B],[C]
and [D].Read the passages carefully
and choose the best answer to
each of the questions. Then
mark your answer on ANSWER SHEET
1 by blackening the corresponding
letter in the brackets with
a pencil.(40 points)
Passage 1
Specialization can be seen
as a response to the problem
of an increasing accumulation
of scientific knowledge. By
splitting up the subject matter
into smaller units, one man
could continue to handle the
information and use it as the
basis for further research.
But specialization was only
one of a series of related developments
in science affecting the process
of communication. Another was
the growing professionalisation
of scientific activity.
No clear-cut distinction
can be drawn between professionals
and amateurs in science: exceptions
can be found to any rule. Nevertheless,
the word 'amateur' does carry
a connotation that the person
concerned is not fully integrated
into the scientific community
and, in particular, may not
fully share its values. The
growth of specialization in
the nineteenth century, with
its consequent requirement of
a longer, more complex training,
implied greater problems for
amateur participation in science.
The trend was naturally most
obvious in those areas of science
based especially on a mathematical
or laboratory training, and
can be illustrated in terms
of the development of geology
in the United Kingdom.
A coMPArison of British geological
publications over the last century
and a half reveals not simply
an increasing emphasis on the
primacy of research, but also
a changing definition of what
constitutes an acceptable research
paper. Thus, in the nineteenth
century, local geological studies
represented worthwhile research
in their own right; but, in
the twentieth century, local
studies have increasingly become
acceptable to professionals
only if they incorporatel, and
reflect on, the wider geological
picture. Amateurs, on the other
hand, have continued to pursue
local studies in the old way.
The overall result has been
to make entrance to professional
geological journals harder for
amateurs, a result that has
been reinforced by the widespread
introduction of refereeing,
first by national journals in
the nineteenth century and then
by several local geological
journals in the twentieth century.
As a logical consequence of
this development, separate journals
have now appeared aimed mainly
towards either professional
or amateur readership. A rather
similar process of differentiation
has led to professional geologists
coming together nationally within
one or two specific societies,
whereas the amateurs have tended
either to remain in local societies
or to come together nationally
in a different way.
Although the process of professionalisation
and specialization was already
well under way in British geology
during the nineteenth century,
its full consequences were thus
delayed until the twentieth
century. In science generally,
however, the nineteenth century
must be reckoned as the crucial
period for this change in the
structure of science.
51.The growth of specialization
in the 19th century might be
more clearly seen in sciences
such as _________.
[A]sociology and chemistry
[B]physics and psychology
[C]sociology and psychology
[D]physics and chemistry
52.We can infer from the
passage that _________.
[A] there is little distinction
between specialization and professionalisation
[B]amateurs can compete with
professionals in some areas
of science
[C]professionals tend to
welcome amateurs into the scientific
community
[D]amateurs have national
academic societies but no local
ones
53.The author writes of the
development of geology to demonstrate
_________.
[A]the process of specialization
and professionalisation
[B]the hardship of amateurs
in scientific study
[C]the change of policies
in scientific publications
[D]the discrimination of
professionals against amateurs
54.The direct reason for
specialization is _________.
[A]the development in communication
[B]the growth of professionalisation
[C]the expansion of scientific
knowledge
[D]the splitting up of academic
societies
Passage 2
A great deal of attention
is being paid today to the so
called digital divide-the division
of the world into the info(information)
rich and the info poor. And
that divide does exist today.
My wife and I lectured about
this looming danger twenty years
ago. What was less visible then,
however, were the new, positive
forces that work against the
digital divide. There are reasons
to be optimistic.
There are technological reasons
to hope the digital divide will
narrow. As the Internet becomes
more and more commercialized,
it is in the interest of business
to universalize access-after
all, the more people online,
the more potential customers
there are. More and more governments,
afraid their countries will
be left behind, want to spread
Internet access. Within the
next decade or two, one to two
billion people on the planet
will be netted together. As
a result, I now believe the
digital divide will narrow rather
than widen in the years ahead.
And that is very good news because
the Internet may well be the
most powerful tool for coMBAting
world poverty that we've ever
had.
Of course, the use of the
Internet isn't the only way
to defeat poverty. And the Internet
is not the only tool we have.
But it has enormous potential.
To take advantage of this
tool, some impoverished countries
will have to get over their
outdated anti-colonial prejudices
with respect to foreign investment.
Countries that still think foreign
investment is an invasion of
their sovereignty might well
study the history of infrastructure
(the basic structural foundations
of a society) in the United
States. When the United States
built its industrial infrastructure,
it didn't have the capital to
do so. And that is why America's
Second Wave infrastructure-including
roads, harbors, highways, ports
and so on-were built with foreign
investment. The English, the
Germans, the Dutch and the French
were investing in Britain's
former colony. They financed
them. Immigrant Americans built
them. Guess who owns them now?
The Americans. I believe the
same thing would be true in
places like Brazil or anywhere
else for that matter. The more
foreign capital you have helping
you build your Third Wave infrastructure,
which today is an electronic
infrastructure, the better off
you're going to be. That doesn't
mean lying down and becoming
fooled, or letting foreign corporations
run uncontrolled. But it does
mean recognizing how important
they can be in building the
energy and telecom infrastructures
needed to take full advantage
of the Internet.
55.Digital divide is something
_________.
[A]getting worse because
of the Internet
[B]the rich countries are
responsible for
[C]the world must guard against
[D]considered positive today
56.Governments attach importance
to the Internet because it _________.
[A]offers economic potentials
[B]can bring foreign funds
[C]can soon wipe out world
poverty
[D]connects people all over
the world
57.The writer mentioned the
case of the United States to
justify the policy of _________.
[A]providing financial support
overseas
[B]preventing foreign capital's
control
[C]building industrial infrastructure
[D]accepting foreign investment
58.It seems that now a country's
economy depends much on _________.
[A]how well developed it
is electronically
[B]whether it is prejudiced
against immigrants
[C]whether it adopts America's
industrial pattern
[D]how much control it has
over foreign corporations
Passage 3
Why do so many Americans
distrust what they read in their
newspapers? The American Society
of Newspaper Editors is trying
to answer this painful question.
The organization is deep into
a long self-analysis known as
the journalism credibility project.
Sad to say, this project
has turned out to be mostly
low-level findings about factual
errors and spelling and grammar
mistakes, combined with lots
of head-scratching puzzlement
about what in the world those
readers really want.
But the sources of distrust
go way deeper. Most journalists
learn to see the world through
a set of standard templates
(patterns) into which they plug
each day's events. In other
words, there is a conventional
story line in the newsroom culture
that provides a backbone and
a ready-made narrative structure
for otherwise confusing news.
There exists a social and
cultural disconnect between
journalists and their readers,
which helps explain why the
standard templates of the newsroom
seem alien to many readers.
In a recent survey, questionnaires
were sent to reporters in five
middle-size cities around the
country, plus one large metropolitan
area. Then residents in these
communities were phoned at random
and asked the same questions.
Replies show that coMPAred
with other Americans, journalists
are more likely to live in upscale
neighborhoods, have maids, own
Mercedeses, and trade stocks,
and they're less likely to go
to church, do volunteer work,
or put down roots in a community.
Reporters tend to be part
of a broadly defined social
and cultural elite, so their
work tends to reflect the conventional
values of this elite. The astonishing
distrust of the news media isn't
rooted in inaccuracy or poor
reportorial skills but in the
daily clash of world views between
reporters and their readers.
This is an explosive situation
for any industry, particularly
a declining one. Here is a troubled
business that keeps hiring employees
whose attitudes vastly annoy
the customers. Then it sponsors
lots of symposiums and a credibility
project dedicated to wondering
why customers are annoyed and
fleeing in large numbers. But
it never seems to get around
to noticing the cultural and
class biases that so many former
buyers are complaining about.
If it did, it would open up
its diversity program, now focused
narrowly on race and gender,
and look for reporters who differ
broadly by outlook, values,
education, and class.
59.What is the passage mainly
about?
[A]needs of the readers all
over the world
[B]causes of the public disappointment
about newspapers
[C]origins of the declining
newspaper industry
[D]aims of a journalism credibility
project
60.The results of the journalism
credibility project turned out
to be_________.
[A]quite trustworthy [B]somewhat
contradictory
[C]very illuminating [D]rather
superficial
61.The basic problem of journalists
as pointed out by the writer
lies in their _________.
[A]working attitude [B]conventional
lifestyle
[C]world outlook [D]educational
background
62.Despite its efforts, he
newspaper industry still cannot
satisfy the readers owing to
its _________.
[A]failure to realize its
real problem
[B]tendency to hire annoying
reporters
[C]likeliness to do inaccurate
reporting
[D]prejudice in matters of
race and gender
Passage 4
The world is going through
the biggest wave of mergers
and acquisitions ever witnessed.
The process sweeps from hyperactive
America to Europe and reaches
the emerging countries with
unsurpassed might. Many in these
countries are looking at this
process and worrying:Won't the
wave of business concentration
turn into an uncontrollable
anti-competitive force?
There's no question that
the big are getting bigger and
more powerful. Multinational
corporations accounted for less
than 20% of international trade
in 1982.Today the figure is
more than 25% and growing rapidly.
International affiliates account
for a fast-growing segment of
production in economies that
open up and welcome foreign
investment. In Argentina, for
instance, after the reforms
of the early 1990s,multinationals
went from 43% to almost 70%
of the industrial production
of the 200 largest firms. This
phenomenon has created serious
concerns over the role of smaller
economic firms, of national
businessmen and over the ultimate
stability of the world economy.
I believe that the most important
forces behind the massive M
wave are the same that underlie
the globalization process: falling
transportation and communication
costs, lower trade and investment
barriers and enlarged markets
that require enlarged operations
capable of meeting customer's
demands. All these are beneficial,
not detrimental, to consumers.
As productivity grows, the world's
wealth increases.
Examples of benefits or costs
of the current concentration
wave are scanty. Yet it is hard
to imagine that the merger of
a few oil firms today could
re-create the same threats to
competition that were feared
nearly a century ago in the
U.S., when the Standard Oil
trust was broken up. The mergers
of telecom coMPAnies, such as
WorldCom, hardly seem to bring
higher prices for consumers
or a reduction in the pace of
technical progress. On the contrary,
the price of communications
is coming down fast. In cars,
too, concentration is increasing-witness
Daimler and Chrysler, Renault
and Nissan-but it does not appear
that consumers are being hurt.
Yet the fact remains that
the merger movement must be
watched. A few weeks ago, Alan
Greenspan warned against the
megamergers in the banking industry.
Who is going to supervise, regulate
and operate as lender of last
resort with the gigantic banks
that are being created? Won't
multinationals shift production
from one place to another when
a nation gets too strict about
infringements to fair competition?
And should one country take
upon itself the role of defending
competition on issues that affect
many other nations, as in the
U.S. vs. Microsoft case?
63.What is the typical trend
of businesses today?
[A]to take in more foreign
funds
[B]to invest more abroad
[C]to combine and become
bigger
[D]to trade with more countries
64.According to the author,
one of the driving forces behind
M wave is _________.
[A]the greater customer demands
[B]a surplus supply for the
market
[C]a growing productivity
[D]the increase of the world's
wealth
65.From paragraph 4 we can
infer that _________.
[A]the increasing concentration
is certain to hurt consumers
[B]WorldCom serves as a good
example of both benefits and
costs
[C]the costs of the globalization
process are enormous
[D]the Stanard Oil trust
might have threatened competition
66.Toward the new business
wave, the writer's attitude
can be said to be _________.
[A]optimistic [B]objective [C]pessimistic [D]biased
Passage 5
When I decided to quit my
full time employment it never
occurred to me that I might
become a part of a new international
trend. A lateral move that hurt
my pride and blocked my professional
progress prompted me to abandon
my relatively high profile career
although, in the manner of a
disgraced government minister,
I covered my exit by claiming
I wanted to spend more time
with my family.
Curiously, some two-and-a-half
years and two novels later,
my experiment in what the Americans
term downshifting has turned
my tired excuse into an absolute
reality. I have been transformed
from a passionate advocate of
the philosophy of having it
all,preached by Linda Kelsey
for the past seven years in
the page of She magazine, into
a woman who is happy to settle
for a bit of everything.
I have discovered, as perhaps
Kelsey will after her much-publicized
resignation from the editorship
of She after a build up of stress,
that abandoning the doctrine
of juggling your life,and making
the alternative move into downshifting
brings with it far greater rewards
than financial success and social
status. Nothing could persuade
me to return to the kind of
life Kelsey used to advocate
and I once enjoyed:12 hour working
days, pressured deadlines, the
fearful strain of office politics
and the limitations of being
a parent on quality time.
In America, the move away
from juggling to a simpler,
less materialistic lifestyle
is a well-established trend.
Downshifting-also known in America
as voluntary simplicity-has,
ironically, even bred a new
area of what might be termed
anticonsumerism. There are a
number of best-selling downshifting
self-help books for people who
want to simplify their lives;
there are newsletters, such
as The Tightwad Gazette, that
give hundreds of thousands of
Americans useful tips on anything
from recycling their cling-film
to making their own soap; there
are even support groups for
those who want to achieve the
mid-'90s equivalent of dropping
out.
While in America the trend
started as a reaction to the
economic decline-after the mass
redundancies caused by downsizing
in the late'80s-and is still
linked to the politics of thrift,
in Britain, at least among the
middle-class down-shifters of
my acquaintance, we have different
reasons for seeking to simplify
our lives.
For the women of my generation
who were urged to keep juggling
through the'80s,downshifting
in the mid-'90s is not so much
a search for the mythical good
life-growing your own organic
vegetables, and risking turning
into one-as a personal recognition
of your limitations.
67.Which of the following
is true according to paragraph
1?
[A]Full-time employment is
a new international trend.
[B]The writer was compelled
by circumstances to leave her
job.
[C]A lateral move means stepping
out of full-time employment.
[D]The writer was only too
eager to spend more time with
her family.
68.The writer's experiment
shows that downshifting _________.
[A]enables her to realize
her dream
[B]helps her mold a new philosophy
of life
[C]prompts her to abandon
her high social status
[D]leads her to accept the
doctrine of [WTBX]she magazine
69.Juggling one's life probably
means living a life characterized
by _________.
[A]non-materialistic lifestyle [B]a
bit of everything
[C]extreme stress [D]anti-consumerism
70.According to the passage,
downshifting emerged in the
U.S. as a result of _________.
[A]the quick pace of modern
life
[B]man's adventurous spirit
[C]man's search for mythical
experiences
[D]the economic situation
Part Ⅳ English-Chinese Translation
Directions:
Read the following passage
carefully and then translate
the underlined sentences into
Chinese. Your translation must
be written neatly on ANSWER
SHEET 2.(15 points)
In less than 30 year's time
the Star Trek holodeck will
be a reality. Direct links between
the brain's nervous system and
a computer will also create
full sensory virtual environments,
allowing virtual vacations like
those in the film Total Recall.
71)There will be television
chat shows hosted by robots,
and cars with pollution monitors
that will disable them when
they offend. 72) Children will
play with dolls equipped with
personality chips, computers
with in-built personalities
will be regarded as workmates
rather than tools, relaxation
will be in front of smell-television,
and digital age will have arrived.
According to BT's futurologist,
Ian Pearson, these are among
the developments scheduled for
the first few decades of the
new millennium(a period of 1,000
years), when supercomputers
will dramatically accelerate
progress in all areas of life.
73)Pearson has pieced together
to work of hundreds of researchers
around the world to produce
a unique millennium technology
calendar that gives the latest
dates when we can expect hundreds
of key breakthroughs and discoveries
to take place. Some of the biggest
developments will be in medicine,
including an extended life expectancy
and dozens of artificial organs
coming into use between now
and 2040.
Pearson also predicts a breakthrough
in computer human links. By
linking directly to our nervous
system, computers could pick
up what we feel and, hopefully,
simulate feeling too so that
we can start to develop full
sensory environments, rather
like the holidays in Total Recall
or the Star Trek holodeck, he
says. 74)But that, Pearson points
out, is only the start of man-machine
integration:It will be the beginning
of the long process of integration
that will ultimately lead to
a fully electronic human before
the end of the next century.
Through his research, Pearson
is able to put dates to most
of the breakthroughs that can
be predicted. However, there
are still no forecasts for when
faster-than-light travel will
be available, or when human
cloning will be perfected, or
when time travel will be possible.
But he does expect social problems
as a result of technological
advances. A boom in neighborhood
surveillance cameras will, for
example, cause problems in 2010,
while the arrival of synthetic
lifelike robots will mean people
may not be able to distinguish
between their human friends
and the droids. 75)And home
appliances will also become
so smart that controlling and
operating them will result in
the breakout of a new psychological
disorder-kitchen rage.
Part Ⅴ Writing
76.Directions:
Among all the worthy feelings
of mankind, love is probably
the noblest, but everyone has
his/her own understanding of
it.
There has been a discussion
recently on the issue in a newspaper.
Write an essay to the newspaper
to
1) show your understanding
of the symbolic meaning of the
picture below,
2) give a specific example,
and
3) give your suggestion as
to the best way to show love.
You should write about 200
words on ANSWER SHEET 2. (20
points)
参考答案:
Part ⅠStructure and Vocabulary
(15 points)
Section A
1.C 2.B 3.D 4.A 5.B 6.D
7.D 8.A 9.C 10.A
Section B
11.B 12.A 13.B 14.C 15.C 16.C
17.D 18.A 19.C 20.B 21.D
22.C 23.B 24.A 25.C 26.A
27.D 28.B 29.B 30.D
Part Ⅱ Cloze Text(10 points)
31.D 32.A 33.D 34.B 35.A 36.C
37.D 38.B 39.B 40.A 41.B
42.C 43.B 44.A 45.C 46.A
47.D 48.C 49.D 50.C
Part Ⅲ Reading Comprehension
(40 points)
51.D 52.B 53.A 54.C 55.C 56.A
57.D 58.A 59.B 60.D 61.C
62.A 63.C 64.A 65.D 66.B
67.B 68.B 69.C 70.D
Part Ⅳ English-Chinese Translation(15
points)
71.届时,将出现由机器人主持的电视谈话节目以及装有污染监控器的汽车,一旦这些汽车排污超标(违规),监控器就会使其停驶。
72.儿童将与装有个性化芯片的玩具娃娃玩耍,具有个性内置的计算机将被视为工作伙伴而不是工具,人们将在气味电视机前休闲,届时数字体时代就来到了。
73.皮尔森汇集世界各地数百位研究人员的成果,编制了一个独特的新技术千年历,它列出了人们有望看到数百项重大突破和发现的最迟日期。
74.但皮尔森指出,这个突破仅仅是人机一体化的开始:“它是人机一体化慢长之路的第一步,最终会使人们在下世纪末之前就研制出完全电子化的仿真人。“
75.家用电器将会变得如此智能化,以至于控制和操作它们会引发一种新的心理疾病-厨房狂躁。
Part ⅤWriting (20 points)
76.(略)