专升本英语入学考试样题

发布时间: 2010-03-04 17:05   来源:
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Davidson’s care in matching pays off. By Christmas last year, only four students requested roommate changes out of 480. No one knows whether computer-matching works as well, but at Emory, so far, student reaction seems to be overwhelmingly positive.

 

Questions 26 – 30: Choose the best answer from A, B, C and D. Write your answers on the Answer Sheet. 从A, B, C, D选项中选择一个正确的答案写在答题卷上。

 

26. In computer matchmaking, initially students do not reveal their _______.

A. personalities

B. identities

C. habits

D. hobbies

 

27. If e-mail exchanges between students fail to lead to a match, the students involved _______.

A. will end up with hurt feelings

B. will stop using their screen names

C. won't feel embarrassed or discouraged

D. won't have another chance to contact others

 

28. As mentioned in the passage, only one study found that roommates have an impact on the _______ of the other roommates.

A. academic grades

B. social behavior

C. sleeping patterns

D. personal attitudes

 

29. It can be inferred from the passage that computer matching _______.

A. is unlikely to be a great success

B. is a novelty with no final results

C. will not be as good as expected

D. will soon replace hand selection


 

30. Both computer matching and hand selection follow the principle of _______.

A. putting students with similarities together

B. meeting all legitimate demands of students

C. letting students pick their own roommates

D. seeking diversity in roommate matching

 

Passage Two

 

Daniel Tammet is talking. As he talks, he studies my shirt and counts the stitches (缝线). Ever since the age of three, when he suffered a disease, Tammet has been obsessed with counting. Now he is 26, a mathematical genius who can figure out cube roots quicker than a calculator, but can't drive a car or tell right from left. He lives with extraordinary ability and disability.

 

Tammet is softly spoken and shy about making eye contact. He lives on the Kent coast, but never goes near the beachthere are too many pebbles to count. The thought of a mathematical problem with no solution means too much for him. Trips to the supermarket are always a chore because there's too much mental stimulus. "Instead of thinking 'What cheese do I want this week?', I just keep counting."

 

Tammet is also a "savant", an individual with an extraordinary mental ability. An estimated 1% of the population have savant abilities, but no one knows exactly why. A number of scientists hope that Tammet might help us understand better. Professor Allan Snyder explains why Tammet is of particular, and international, scientific interest. "Savants can't usually tell us how they do what they do. It just comes to them. But Daniel can describe what he sees in his head."

 

Last year Tammet broke the European record for recalling pi, the mathematical constant, to 22,514 decimal places. He found it easy, because he didn't even have to "think". He wanted to prove that though he's technically disabled, the disability needn't get in the way.

 

Questions 31 – 35: Choose the best answer from A, B, C and D. Write your answers on the Answer Sheet. 从A, B, C, D选项中选择一个正确的答案写在答题卷上。

 

31. What do we know about Daniel Tammet?

A. He has trouble doing some simple things.

B. He suffers from serious memory loss.

C. He is good at communicating.

D. He was born with a terrible disease.

 

32. Tammet avoids the beach because _______.

A. he has no sense of direction

B. he is troubled by his odd habit

C. he is afraid of dealing with people

D. he tends to stay away from public places

 

33. Supermarkets are places that would make Tammet _______.

A. excited

B. reasonable

C. uncomfortable  

D. angry

 

34. Tammet is considered unique because _______.

A. he has shown signs of a genius

B. he has an extreme mental ability

C. he is willing to share his experiences

D. he can tell what is happening in his head

 

35. Recalling pi to 22,514 decimal places _______.

A. proved to be difficult for Tammet

B. demonstrated Tammet's optimism

C. meant a new world record was set

D. made clear how savants work

 

Passage Three

 

"For more than eight years we have been recommending that greater care be taken in the use of difficult loan words, but it doesn't seem to have had much effect," said an official of the cultural affairs agency, which compiled the report. "It's not our intention to try to control the spread of foreign terms, but this is something that needs to be debated by the research community."

 

According to a professor of linguistics at Daitobunka University, Japan adopts English words at a more rapid pace than almost any other country. "It sometimes feels like the situation has got out of hand, and there are definitely occasions when we adopt language unnecessarily, but this is a positive step toward the internationalization of Japan," Mr. Suzuki said.

 

In marketing, Japanglisha hybrid of contracted English and Japaneseis used to sell everything from 'Pocari Sweat' soft drinks to famikon (family computer) games. In sports, football commentators talk of hedingu shuuto (headers at goal) and naisu kiipa (nice goal-keeping), while the manager of the country's most popular baseball team promised to meiku durama (make drama) in its chase for the league title. But the biggest exponents of foreign words are teenagers. "Sometimes, I feel that English words really hit the spot because they are often shorter and more precise," said Norihide Watanabe, a middle-aged businessman."But when my daughter uses them, I don't have a clue what she is talking about."

 

Questions 36 – 40: Choose the best answer from A, B, C and D. Write your answers on the Answer Sheet. 从A, B, C, D选项中选择一个正确的答案写在答题卷上。

 

36. It appears that bureaucrats in the cultural affairs agency have been _______.

A. encouraging the use of English in official documents

B. trying to prevent the use of English in public documents

C. trying to encourage careful use of English in official documents

D. trying to control the spread of English in official documents

 

37. It seems English loan words are a greater problem in Japan than in any other country in the world because _______.

A. they spread more rapidly than in other countries

B. Japan is in the middle of a serious economic recession

C. not many people study English in Japan

D. of academic debates in the research community

 

38. The article implies that English is used _______.

A. out of necessity by sports commentators

B. unnecessarily by baseball teams

C. by too many business people

D. by many young people in Japan

 

39. The underlined phrase "hit the spot" in the last paragraph means to _______.

A. be exactly right

B. go the right way

C. be near the center

D. strike out

 

40. The article implies Japanglish is_______.

A. a business language

B. a sporting language

C. a created language

D. not very useful

 

Passage Four

 

The very fact that English is so widely spoken around the world leads to other problems. The commonest examples cited are the British and American versions of the language, but even this is simplifying the issue. As anyone who has traveled to Britain will agree, the "British English" we may have learned at school hardly helps us cope with the varied forms of the language used in different parts of the British Isles. It is often impossible to comprehend some of these dialects. The same might be said of English spoken in the United States: the term "American English" usually means "standard American"the language that is spoken by some of the better-known presidents, congressmen, spokesmen and women, and entertainers we see in our cinemas or on our TV screens. This form of American English is based on the dialect of English used by educated people in Boston in the northeast of the U.S., Boston-based and classless, this form of American English is the one most usually taught to foreign learners of American English. Incidentally, standard American is very similar to a standard form of British English in most respectsexcept in pronunciation. This form of the language is not spoken by the majority of Americans, as visitors to California, Florida, Chicago or New York quickly discover. In many parts of the U.S. people speak a dialect which even other Americans sometimes find hard to comprehend.

 

Other brands of English are spoken in Australia, New Zealand, Canada, South Africa, the Caribbean, and various parts of Africa and Asia. Some have argued that the language is in danger of splitting up into different dialects. However, modern communication systems radio, TV, and now computer-based communication systems such as e-mail and the Internet make this increasingly unlikely. These modern means of communication ensure that English speakers around the world have a vested interest in communicating with each other in a common language. Speakers of different dialects of English may meet up in different places around the world, and have no difficulty in communicating with each other. Whether we like it or not, English, as an international language of communication, is here to stay for the foreseeable future!

 

Questions 41 – 45: Choose the best answer from A, B, C and D. Write your answers on the Answer Sheet. 从A, B, C, D选项中选择一个正确的答案写在答题卷上。

 

41. What does the underlined word "incidentally" mean in paragraph 1?

A. by chance

B. by the way

C. by hand

D. at the same time

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