1、北京环球时代学校 内部资料严禁翻印 1环球时代:英语专业考研考前 10 天基础英语水平模考测试卷 (2)活动说明:(北京环球时代学校)为了更好地帮助同学们顺利走过 2007 年英语专业考研的最后一段艰辛的日子,北京环球时代学校英语专业考研命题研究组的专家们特地为英研考生准备了 3 套英语专业考研考前 10 天基础英语水平模考测试卷并提供参考答案,希望能帮助同学们在最后的冲刺阶段全面检验复习成果,找出差距,查漏补缺,争取考出最好成绩。本次模考测试将于 2007 年 1 月 8 日开始,16 日结束,具体安排如下:第一套:2007 年 1 月 8 日公布试卷,1 月 10 日公布第一套模拟卷参考答
2、案;第二套:2007 年 1 月 11 日公布试卷,1 月 13 日公布第二套模拟卷参考答案;第三套:2007 年 1 月 14 日公布试卷,1 月 16 日公布第三套模拟卷参考答案。另外,环球时代学校 2008 英语专业考研全年复习备考攻略专家咨询热线已经开通 010-82665581。最后预祝同学们考研成功!(编辑:王进)Important: This test lasts for three hours. All your answers must be written on a separate sheet called “Answer Sheet“. Do not write any
3、thing in this test booklet.Part I (20)In this part you are asked to complete each of the 20 sentences with one out of the four words marked A, B, C, and D that follow each sentence. The Word you choose must fit into the sentence both in form and meaning. For every correct choice, you will get one po
4、int1. I object to you speaking of learning French as a second language in Canada; French is as_ a first language as English.A. far B. well C. much D. good2. For this situation, learning and using English for wider communication _ a country, particularly for educational, commercial, and political pur
5、poses, English can be referred to as an international language.A. outside B. within C. with D. of3. It reveals itself in the assumptions underlying _ , in the planning of a course of study, in the routines of the classroom, in value judgments about language teaching, and in the decisions that the la
6、nguage teacher has to make day by day.A. learning B. teaching C. theory D. practice4. The debate on language teaching methods continued into the period between the two world wars, a period which from the point of view of language pedagogy is characterized by the search for realistic solutions to the
7、 method _.A. controversy B. problems C. issues D- crises5. This conviction led to various experiments, all designed to _ the traditional teacher-centred language class.A. change B. convert C. modify D. verify6. The communicative approach, understood in this comprehensive way, has had a _ _ on second
8、 language curriculum, on teaching methodology and materials, and also on evaluation.A. effect B. mark C. bearing D. weight7. By virtue of their iconicity and their obvious formal aspects, poems are ideally suited to have learners experience early on the two main features of _ experience: distance an
9、d relation.A. literary B. social C. aesthetic D. dialectic8. Furthermore, being able to recite it from memory enables the teacher to keep eye contact with the students, to anticipate their misunderstandings and respond to their facial A. responses B. expressions C. performance D. inquiries北京环球时代学校 内
10、部资料严禁翻印 29. As translators move from word to word and from sentence to sentence through the text they produce bit by bit of the original in a different language.A. replicas B. versions C. relics D. sediments10. Besides exploring different levels of the same text and different languages ways of expre
11、ssing the same event, intermediate and advanced learners can profit from the same event into different literary forms.A. reproducing B. imitating C. expressing D. recasting11. It has often been suggested that we lack an adequate analysis of the concept of analyticity and consequently that we lack ad
12、equate criteria for deciding whether a statement is . .A. adequate B. realistic C. efficient D. analytic12. The tacit ideology which seems to lie behind these objections is that non-extensional explications are not explications at all and that any concept which is net extensionally is defective.A. i
13、deological B. explicable C. explicit D. objectional13. The reason for concentrating on the study of speech acts is simply this: all linguistic communication involves linguistic .A. devices B. meanings C. forms D. acts14. This is because in certain institutional situations we not only ascertain the f
14、acts but we need an authority to lay down a decision as to what the after the fact-finding procedure has been gone through.A. situations B. assertions C. facts D. reasons15. The simplest cases of meaning are those in which the speaker utters a sentence and means exactly and what he says.A. verbally
15、B. definitely C simply D. literally16. And since meaning consists in part in the intention to produce understanding in the hearer a large part of that problem is that of how it is possible for the hearer to understand the indirect speech act when the sentence he hears and understands means something
16、 .A. true B. else C false D. indirect17. We ail believe that it is the faculty of language which has enabled the human race to develop diverse cultures, each with its social customs, religious observances, laws, oral traditions, patterns of trading, and so on.A. diverse B. distinctive C. multiple D.
17、 varied18. In general, too, rhythmic and features of speech are ignored in transcriptions; the rhythmic structure which appears to bind some groups of words more closely than others, and die speeding up and slowing down of the overall pace of speech relative to the speakers normal pace in a given si
18、tuation, are such complex variables that we have very little idea how they are exploited and to what effect.A. metrical B. mobile C. acoustic D. temporal19. It seems reasonable to suggest that, whereas in daily life in a literate culture, we use largely for the establishment and maintenance of human
19、 relationships, we use written language largely for the working out of and transference of information,A. words B. speech C. sounds D. sentences20. The higher level of achievement is a contribution to the of the text: the linguistic analysis may enable one to say why the text is, or is not, an effec
20、tive text for its own purposes in what respects it succeeds and in what respects it fails, or is less successful.A. analysis B. reading C evaluation D. interpretationPart IIEach of the following 20 sentences contains an error. And the error involves oniy one word You are required to identify the err
21、or and correct it Instructions on haw to write your answers are given on the Answer Sheet For each correction you make, you will get one point北京环球时代学校 内部资料严禁翻印 321. A Spanish history of the “Indies,“ read with eager curiosity (and later paraphrased) by the English entrepreneur Sir Waiter Raleigh, to
22、ld to the court splendors of a supposed ancestor of the * emperor of Guiana.“22. Elizabethan merchants and ministers were second for none in their lively concern for treasure, but the real success of Great Britain as a colonizing power was eventually to rest23. The faith was sustained for the newcom
23、ers not only by the promises before but by the horrors left behind, across the Atlantic.24. In a sense, the seventeenth century saw the emergence of those institutions that are characteristic in the modem world: centralized and wholly sovereign nation-states; capitalism; individualism, secularism, a
24、nd heroic grandeur in the arts.25. What was more, warfare, both civil and international, erupted epidemically in massive dislocations of power.26. No history of the American people a title after which, after all, the Indians have the most legitimate claim can omit the red men and womens role.27. Eve
25、n before Europe hung suspended between the rise of Roman Imperial order and the emergence of feudalism, in the so-called Dark Ages, some North American Indiana had developed what anthropologists call the Hopewellian Culture.28. At first they called the chiefs they met after names both familiar and c
26、urious princes, emperors, caciques, and werowances.29. He pointed out that one of the first signs of adaptation to the new environment as a Europeans part was to strip off the garments of civilization, with their class and social connotations, and wear the undifferentiated skin garments of the India
27、n.30. The story began, then, with interaction among the continents new and old inhabitants the Indian “garrison“ and the colonized immigrants.31. They learned to sing hymns, to pray, even to participate in the Mass, and to hold their new beliefs by a grip that survived the vicissitudes of many years
28、 of battle between white warriors and red.32. After an unsuccessful attempt to get the Dutch to plant a new settlement on the Delaware, he traveled to Swede.33. Despite the political weaknesses of the Dutch, they set an impress on the life of Americans as unborn.34. Tradesmen went home, entered thro
29、ugh brick-faced doorways and ascended to cozy rooms where, below tiled roofs, windows with tiny panes illuminated polished delftware.35. The Church of England, for example, though firmly established, did not command the loyalties of great Catholic families on the one hand, or on the other, of the Pu
30、ritans who hoped to purge it into “Romish idolatry.“36. With chronic misgivings about the future, no wonder that some men were tempted by the prospects of secure estates and freedom of harassment across what seemed an infinity of ocean.37. Huddled into the city, the poor were helpless before the pla
31、gues that swept devastatingly into their slums and then undiscriminatingly went on to lay down the proud and wealthy as well.38. Imperiled by pestilence and starvation, many of the able-bodied men among the poor might have looked at impressment as an opportunity at least to eat and to be clothed.39.
32、 And nothing short for a spectacular peice of luck or royal preferment seemed likely to improve the situation.40. Farther from the social scale, the yeoman might also try to enhance the value of his lands or the prospects of his children by taking fliers in New World ventures such as fishing and tra
33、ding companies.Part III (30)In this part you will be asked to read five passages, each followed by six questions. Read the passages carefully and then asnwer all the questions by choosing the correct options marked A, B, C, and D. Answer one question 北京环球时代学校 内部资料严禁翻印 4correctly, and you will get on
34、e point.Passage 1We know that Poe fought a continuous battle against the demon of plagiarism and the twisted perversion of influence. He even declared war on his fellow-writer Longfellow, accusing him of plagiarism of which he was himself not entirely innocent Passion and influence have their dark s
35、ides not only manifest in literary plagiarism which we note in Baudelaires translations of Poe but also in what may be deemed a confusion of identity or quest for an alter ego. Translating Poe became for Baudelaire a real search for the definition of his own personality and even his understanding of
36、 gender. Baudelaires text is a mixed entity, a complex unity like most of Poes characters, a unity composed of scattered elements. The “ Flowers of Evil,“ are filled with Poes own experience of despair and doubt about the world and about human beings, blended with Baudelaires spleen and bouts of ide
37、al. Both writers were divided into forces of Good and Evil, love and hate, masculine and feminine, they were like two images reflected in the mirrors of their creations so perfectly inverted that the reader does not know who inspired whom. Alter egos of each other, these two monsters of selfishness
38、and misanthropy would probably have hated each other if they had had the opportunity to meet Looking at oneself in a mirror can be very upsetting as the hero of William Wilson discovers in the fast lines of this eponymous tale. Baudelaire chose to exalt Poes character as Griswold presented it becaus
39、e he had many features in common with this portrait. Baudelaire identified with Poe in a very self-centered egotistical way. Both had a strain of masochism and a taste for self-destruction certainly provoked by parental rejection. Baudelaires most palpable self-destructive action was the translation
40、 of Poes works. From this peculiar and unique encounter of two geniuses was bom a new universal poet, we could name Poedelaire. Half European, half American, the writings of this desexualized creator are tinged with black humor, sensationalism, and sprinkled with a touch of French preciosity.Questio
41、ns:41. The author implies that A. Longfellow was guilty of plagiarism.B. Longfellow was not guilty of plagiarism.C. Poe was guilty of plagiarism.D. Poe was not guilty of plagiarism.42. What, according to the author, causes plagiarism?A. Passion and influence. B. Search and quest.C. identity and ego
42、D. Translation43. The authors purpose of mentioning Baudelaires translations of Poe is A. to show how the two writers hate each other.B. to show bow the two writers love each other.C. to prove that plagiarism is pardonable.D. to prove that influence may result in a search for an alter ego.44. It can
43、 be inferred that Poes writing A. favors the theme of evil. B. tends to describe flowers.C. reveals a vague personality. D. contains the image of mirror.45. Why does the author think that Baudelaires translation of Poes works was a self-destructive action?A. Because it made Baudelaire even sadder.B.
44、 Because he allowed Poe to invade his own identity.C. Because it incurred his parents contemptD. Because it ruined his reputation as a good translator.46. Which of the following words can best describe Poedelaire?A. romantic B. sentimental C. pessimistic D. revolutionary北京环球时代学校 内部资料严禁翻印 5Passage 2B
45、audelaire first purchased Poes works in London in 1851. This was his first encounter with American, and he immediately fell in love with the tone, style and content of these texts. He never wrote anything about the theoretical concepts of literary influence and plagiarism whereas Poe had spent a lot
46、 of energy attempting to prove his originality. Baudelaire, inversely, although acknowledging that he felt an intimacy with Poe, always refused to admit that he recreated this intimacy in the works he wrote after his translations of Poe, that is to say, after 1856. He was obviously deeply influenced
47、 by Poes essay Eureka presenting the human coalition as a simultaneous movement of attraction and repulsion. This phenomenon of unconscious reappropriation is another clear manifestation of Harald Blooms Anxiety of Influence. Instead of fighting against the influence of the first writer, the second
48、writer, moved by passion, prefers to vampirize him, to suck out his creative substance like the painter absorbs his brides life in Poes The Oval Portrait. This absorption that Bloom calls a tessera, both completes and betrays at the same time. Like physical possession, it satisfies temporarily the one who possesses, while stealing some independence from the one who