暨南大学2021考研真题:外语(英)水平考试 (706)
2022.06.07 07:43

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  暨南大学2021考研真题:外语(英)水平考试 (706)

招生专业与代码:英语语言文学(050201),外国语言学及应用语言学(050211

 

考试科目名称及代码:外语(英)水平考试 (706)

考生注意:所有答案必须写在答题纸(卷)上,写在本试题上一律不给分。

Part I. Vocabulary and  Structure (30 points)

 

Directions: There are 30 incomplete sentences in this section.  For each sentence there are 4 choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one  that best completes the sentence and write your answer on the ANSWER SHEET.

 

  1. 1. “The  show must go on” istheoldest _________  of show business; every true  performer lives by that  creed.

  2. A. euphemism    B. allegory      C. precursor       D. tenet

                  

2. An early American film star,  Pearl White starred in several serials _______________ that enticed  audiences to return for the next installment.

A. whose episodes had suspenseful  endings       B. their episodes had  suspenseful endings

C. which had episodes ending  suspenseful        D. of whose episodes  the suspenseful endings

 

3. The article praised Isak  Dinesen not so much for her genius as a storyteller __________of  society’s expectations of women during the early twentieth century.

A. but because she was remarkably  defiant      B. but because of her  remarkable defiance

C. but for being remarkably defiant            D. as for her remarkable defiance

 

4. From this unity created by  the __________ of artists from various social and geographical backgrounds  came a new spirit, which, particularly in densely populated Harlem, was to  result in greater group awareness and self-determination.

A. conclusion   B. conspiracy    C. convergence    D.  consumption

 

5. He ___________ to go to  Beijing today, but he postponed the trip when he heard that there would be a  downpour at noon.

A. was intending      B. would intend     C. was intended     D. had intended

 

  1. 6. Because of itsinclinationto __________, most Indianartis __________ Japanese  art, where symbols have been minimized and meaning has been conveyed by the  merestsuggestion.

  2. A. exaggerate…related to            B. imitate...superiorto   

  3. C. understate  …reminiscentof         D.overdraw...similarto   

 

7. A hibernating  animal needs hardly any food all through the winter, _____?          

A. need it                  B. needn’t  it       C. does it             D. doesn’t it

 

8. As surprising  as the new findings are, Dr. Wilson said he would not characterize them as  ______.

A. sound    B. revolutionary    C. equitable      D. evident

 

9. For some time  now, world leaders ___________ out the necessity for agreement on arms  reduction.

A. had been pointing                  B. have been pointing     

C. were pointing                        D.  pointed

 

10. They  promised to give us whatever support we needed, but nothing ever __________  it.

A. came to     B.  came into       C. came of        D. came with

 

11. A  journalist rather than a scholar, Mr. Cose seems nevertheless to be ______  most of the serious studies relevant to his topic.

A. ignorant of  B. associatedwith     C.  weariedby    D. familiarwith

 

12. In  1997, the Thrust SSC, a British-made car powered by two jet  engines, __________ the first land-traveling vehicle to break the  sound barrier.

A. have become      B. were to become          C. becoming        D. became

 

13. In  their own eyes, it is rather _____ that the medical community as a whole  still has the limited knowledge about the cause of the pandemic.

A. rewarding           B. commanding           C. embarrassing         D. requiring

 

14.  Because our supply of fossil fuel has been sadly________, we must find ­­­­­­________  sources of energy.

A. compensated...significant          B. exhausted...inefficient

C. increased...available              D. depleted...alternate

15. She remembered  several occasions in the past ___ she had experienced a similar feeling.

A. which             B. before                 C.  that              D. when

16.   Because it was already known that  retroviruses could cause cancer in animals, it seemed only _____to search for  similar cancer-causing viruses in human beings.

A. culpable    B. charitable     C.  hypothetical    D. logical   

 

  1. 17. My nephew  ___________ chicken pox this weekend.

  2. A. came down with       B. come up  with     C. brought up with    D. broke down with

 

18. He resented  _____ to wait. He expected the minister _____ him at once.     

A. to be asked, to see               B. being asked, to see  

C. to be asked, seeing               D. being asked, seeing

 

19. _________ the  least expensive ratethe package was so heavy that it cost  Jose nearly a hundred dollars to mail it to his cousin in Madrid.

A. Even chosen              B. Although choosing

C. Even though he chose      D. Having chosen

20. _______  his broker had told him at the stock was a __________ investment, he insisted  on buying 100 shares.

  1. A. Because...speculative             B. Although...precarious

  2. C. Since...negligible                 D. Although...formidable

  1. 21. Let’s ___________ these lines one more time before the show.

    A.  run into    B. work out     C. run through     D. work by

22. Given that goats and sheep were  domesticated earlier than cattle, it is thought that the production of  cheeses made from goat’s and sheep’s milk ___________ cheese made from  cow’s milk.

A. predate that of   B. predated that of     C. predated  those of        D. have predated

23. It  is well known that the _____ of the seasons has long been observed by people  in all parts of the world.   

  1. A. rhythm              B.  regulation          C.  click                      D.  identity

  1. 24.  The scents of the flowers was______ to us by the breeze. 

  2. A. intercepted         B. detested         C. saturated            D. wafted 

25. When you are suffering from  ______, you have red spots on your skin and you feel as if you have  a cold.

A. apathy              B. measles          C. impotence        D. schizophrenia  

 

  1. 26. Dr. Jones ordered __________ for the  laboratory.

   A.  two equipments              B. two  pieces of equipments

   C. two pieces  of equipment       D. two equipment  pieces.

  1. 27. If everyone _______, we can get the kitchen painted by noon.

  2. A. moves in      B.  gives in      C.  cuts in       D. chips  in

28. Because he  is so _______, we can never predict what course he will take at any moment.

A. incoherent     B. superficial      C. capricious    D. deleterious

 

  1. 29. My doctor wants me  to _________ sweets and fatty foods.

    A. cut into          B. cut down on           C. cut at         D. cut across

  1. 30. A diligent scholar, she devoted herself  _____to the completion of the book.

  2. A. assiduously    B. ingenuously      C. theoretically      D. sporadically

 

 

Part II. Cloze (20 points)

Directions: There are 20 blanks in the  following passage. Decide which of the choices given below would best  complete the passage if inserted in the corresponding blanks. Write your  answers on the ANSWER SHEET.

A few decades ago, computers were  considered as sophisticated tools used by scientists to work out complex  mathematical calculations, or by big companies and organizations  to 1)________  their data. Today, computers have become  so 2)________  that they sometimes don’t even come with an  instruction 3)________  anymore.

Though becoming widely popular, computer  technology still continues to 4)________  many people. Researchers  who have been using computers 5)________  a daily basis for  many years are still 6)________  hidden wonders and surprises  about this technology. A 7)________  number of grandparents are  making an effort to 8)________  themselves with smart phones  with designs that appear so 9)________  to them. In addition,  the purchase of laptops in many third world and developing nations is ever  increasing. All this 10)________  a good thing because they  result in less 11)________  between people of different ages  and countries in their ability to use technology. If people of old  ages 12)________  people in the third world countries are  afraid of technology that is so 13)________ today, and thus choose  to 14)________  it, the purposes and advantages that  technology has to offer would be ultimately 15)________ .

As there are two sides to every story,  complex technology can be either good or  bad, 16)________  your knowledge or experience. The point  being driven here is that if a technological 17)________  is  too complex for the average consumer, they will finally not 18)________ it.  This will directly affect the sales of the 19)________  product.  Any producer knows that this will mean product 20)________ at a  catastrophic level.

 

1) A.  release         B. retrieve      C. proceed      D.  process

2) A.   common       B. ordinary     C. portable      D. specialized

3) A.   handout       B. pamphlet    C. bulletin      D. profile

4) A.   intrigue       B. inflict       C. infringe      D. intervene

5) A.  at            B. in          C. on          D. by

6) A.   discerning     B.  disclosing    C. displacing    D. distorting

7) A.   reasonable     B. maximum    C. significant    D. consistent

8) A.   identify       B. associate     C. represent     D. familiarize

9) A.   authentic      B. promising     C. dominant    D. intricate

10) A.  creates       B.  commits     C.  deduces    D.  pledges

11) A.  discontent     B.   discrepancy   C.   dismay    D.  disregard

12) A.  as far as      B.  as long as    C.  as well as   D.  as good as

13) A.  scarce       B.  crucial       C.  delicate     D.  handy

14) A.  conceal      B.  divert        C.  dodge      D.  rupture

15) A.  caught       B.  lost         C.  doomed     D.  denied

16) A.  based on     B.  built on      C.  hinged on    D.  focused on

17) A.  accessory     B.   axis         C.  gadget     D.  turbine

18) A.  absorb       B.  obsess        C.  indulge    D.  purchase

19) A.  spoken       B.  said          C.  told       D.  uttered

20) A.  failure        B.  fault         C.  defect     D.  defeat

 

Part III. Reading Comprehension (30 points)

 

Directions: In this  section, there are three passages followed by questions or unfinished  statements, each with four suggested answers marked A, B, C, and D. Choose  the best answer and write the letter of your choice on the ANSWER SHEET.

 

Passage One

 

The world’s greatest structures built by  insects or animals other than humans are, surprisingly, constructed by  termites. Termites, sometimes known as white ants, are little insects that  resemble ants in appearance, but they tend to be smaller, fatter, slower  moving. There are about twelve to fifteen hundred species of termites.  However, not a single one of them belong to the same class of insects as  ants. Termites are actually more closely related to cockroaches and mantids.  They are known to be social insects that have an instinct to use a system of  cooperation and specialization as their main method of survival. Termites are  most known to people and scientists for their peculiar and marvelous works of  architecture. Australian and African termites, especially, build housing  structures reaching almost ten meters in height. Considering their relative  size, such a building would be the equivalent of a 200-story edifice for  humans. Their knowledge to construct such astonishing structures is known to  be inborn in their nature.

The termite  nest, or termitary, usually takes the shape of a gigantic mound, or sometimes  a multi-fingered hand, rising up from the surface. To build this housing for  the colony, termites spend a considerable amount of time. It may take months,  or sometimes even a year. The most common material composing a termitary is  dirt. Termites carry the local soil and combine it with their saliva to  solidify it. Because it is very firm and also impermeable, it is frequently  used by people in Africa as a material for building their shelters.

The termitary  consists of thousands of chambers, each for a different purpose. The bottom  layer of the mound generally serves as the living and working quarter for  workers that assume the labors of foraging, food storage, and nest  maintenance. Their chambers are located in the lower core so that they can  easily go in and out of the termitary in search for food. Some species have  gardens of various fungi in this lower part of the nest. The workers are in  charge of cultivating and harvesting them as a stable source     of food for the young. Above the worker  chamber dwell termite soldiers devotedly protect their kind. Soldiers, as a  mechanism for fighting, have developed big, strong jaws proportionally too  big for their body size. Therefore, they cannot feed themselves without the  help of workers. Above these two layers lie chambers called nymphs. The eggs  and young termites stay here until they hatch and are fully grown. There is  also a room for food  storage in this part of the nest. At the top of the mound are the royal chambers for the kings and queens. Any  males and females that mate with the opposite sex are termed as kings and  queens. Each couple is in different chambers sustaining close proximity all  the time. Once a termite has been chosen as a king or queen, such title and  responsibility remains for the rest of its life. Unlike male ants which die  immediately after mating, termite kings enjoy peaceful lives and are  considered just as important as the queen. Queens, at maturity, can lay over  a thousand eggs per day.

One of the  amazing facts about a termitary is that it comes with the most efficient  systems of cooling and ventilation. Walls of the mixture of soil and saliva  help keep the nest moist, and thus, cool. Each  layer of the mound where a different class of termites resides is vented by a  system of passages and ducts, which circulate air throughout because they are  connected with parts of the nest in between the layers that have ventilation  holes. Thus, the termitary is always maintained cool by having access to  a supply of fresh air or light breeze and by allowing stale air to leave.  This is very good news for termites, for they will not last even for a few  minutes in sweltering conditions. Moreover, termites living in the most arid  regions also manage to keep themselves cool by digging into the earth as deep  as it is necessary, sometimes resulting in depths over 100 feet. Their task  is completed when they reach underground water. This waterway brings a supply  of cool and fresh air that rises to the nest and circulates throughout. The  gardens tended by workers are also known to aid the cooling process.

 

1. According to paragraph 1, termites achieve fascinating works of architecture with

A. about twelve to fifteen hundred species.

B. cooperative help from ants.

C. their intrinsic knowledge.

D. numerous trials and errors.

 

2. It can be inferred from paragraph 3 that termite soldiers

A. cannot fly.

B. fight with their  jaws.

C. sometimes search for  food.

D. eat termite workers.

 

3. According to  paragraph 3, what is the main difference between royalties of ants and  termites?

A. There is only one queen in an ant colony whereas there are many in  a termite colony.

B. Male termites that become king live on even after the mating  process is over.

C. Queen termites can lay more eggs compared to queen ants.

D. Kings and queens of a termite colony must mate their whole lives.

 

4. Which of the following can be inferred from  the passage about the cooling and ventilation systems in a termitary?

A. They are absolutely necessary for the survival of termites.

B. Supply of air in hot and arid regions will only make the termitary  hotter.

C. Water from underground is an essential component of the systems.

D. It cannot work properly without the fungi gardens.

 

5. Which of the  sentences below best expresses the essential information in the italicized  sentence in the passage?

A. All passages and ducts in a termitary can be  supplied with fresh air because they are hooked up together.

B. Termites  punch out ventilation holes in every chamber to obtain direct supply of air  in all passages and ducts.

C. Fresh air  rising from the underground passages and ducts flows all the way through and  cools the termitary.

D. Every layer has ventilation holes that are  attached to passages and ducts located outside the termitary where fresh air  comes from.

 

Passage Two

 

When I accepted  a volunteer position as a social worker at a domestic violence shelter in a  developing nation, I imagined the position for which my university experience  had prepared me. I envisioned conducting intake interviews and traipsing  around from organization to organization seeking the legal, psychological and  financial support that the women would need to rebuild their lives. When I  arrived, I felt as if I already had months of experience, expe­rience  garnered in the hypothetical situations I had invented and subsequently  resolved single-handedly and seamlessly. I felt thoroughly prepared to tackle  head-on the situation I assumed was waiting for me.

I arrived full  of zeal, knocking at the shelter’s door. Within moments, my reality made a  sharp break from that which I had anticipated. The coordinator explained that  the shelter’s need for financial self-sufficiency had become obvious and  acute. To address this, the center was planning to open a bakery. I  immediately enthused about the project, making many refer­ences to the small  enterprise case studies I had researched at the university. In response to my  impassioned reply, the coordinator declared me in charge of the bakery and  left in order to “get out of my way.” At that moment, I was as prepared to  bake bread as I was to run for political office. The bigger problem, however,  was that I was completely unfamiliar with the for-profit business models  necessary to run the bakery. I was out of my depth in a foreign river with  only my coordinator’s confidence to keep me afloat.

They say that  necessity is the mother of invention. I soon found that it is also the mother  of initiative. I began finding recipes and appropriating the expertise of  friends. With their help making bread, balancing books, printing pamphlets  and making contacts, the bakery was soon running smoothly and successfully.  After a short time it became a significant source of income for the house.

In addition to  funds, baking bread provided a natural environment in which to work with and  get to know the women of the shelter. Kneading dough side by side, I shared  in the camaraderie of the kitchen, treated to stories about their children  and the towns and jobs they had had to leave behind to ensure their safety.  Baking helped me develop strong relationships with the women and advanced my  understanding of their situations. It also improved the women’s self-esteem.  Their ability to master a new skill gave them confidence in themselves, and  the fact that the bakery contributed to the upkeep of the house gave the  women, many of them newly single, a sense of pride and the conviction that  they had the capability to support themselves.

Baking gave me  the opportunity to work in a capacity I had not at all anticipated, but one  that proved very successful. I became a more sensitive and skillful social  worker, capable of making a mean seven-grain loaf. Learning to bake gave me  as much newfound self-con­fidence as it gave the women, and I found that  sometimes quality social work can be as simple as kneading dough.

 

6. The primary purpose of the passage is to show how the author

A. was shocked by the discrepancy between her earlier  ideas about her work and the reality she faced

B. discovered a talent her overly focused mind had never allowed her to  explore

C. broadened how she defined the scope of her work

D. developed her abilities to orchestrate a for-profit business enterprise

 

7. The author was initially enthusiastic about the idea of the bakery  because she

A. considered it from a theoretical point of view

B. hoped to obtain a leadership position in the bakery

C. wanted to demonstrate her baking knowledge to her new coordinator

D. believed it would be a good way to build the women’s self-esteem

 

8. The comparison between baking bread and running political officedemonstrates the author’s belief that

A. the bakery would never be a success

B. social workers should not be involved in either baking or politics

C. similar skills were involved in both bak­ing and politics

D. she was unqualified for a job baking bread

 

9. The penultimate sentence in the second paragraph suggests that the  author believed that

A. learning the necessary business practices would be a  more daunting challenge than learning to bake bread

B. good business practices are more impor­tant to  running a successful bakery than is the quality of the bread

C. her coordinator’s confidence in for-profit business models was  misplaced

D. for-profit business models are signifi­cantly more  complex than the nonprofit models with which she was familiar

 

10. The last sentence (“Learning... dough”) indicates that the author

A. found that performing social work is surprisingly easy with no  education

B. underestimated her own ability to learn new skills

C. discovered that social work is more effec­tive when it includes  tactile activities

D. derived a benefit from her work while helping others

 

Passage Three

 

For people in Southeast  Asian refugee families, the experience of aging in America is very different  from what they had expected for their second half of life. Older Southeast  Asian refugees must cope with their rapidly acculturating younger family  members, while taking on new roles and expectations in a foreign culture.

Many Southeast Asian  immigrants are sur­prised to find that by American standards, they are not  even considered elderly. Migration to a new culture often changes the  definition of life stages. In the traditional Hmong culture of Vietnam, one  can become an elder at 35 years of age when one becomes a grandparent. With  grandparent status, elder Hmong can retire and expect their children to take  financial responsi­bility for the family. Retiring at 35, of course, is not  common in the United States.

There is a strong  influence of Confucianism in traditional Vietnamese society. Confucianism, an  ancient system of moral and religious thought, fosters strong filial piety  and respect for family elders. In many Southeast Asian societies, age roles  are hierarchical, with strict rules for social interaction. In America,  however, because older refugees lack facility with the English lan­guage and  knowledge of American culture, their credibility decreases when advising  younger family members about important decisions. As younger family members  take on primary roles as family mediators with American institu­tions—schools,  legal systems, and social service agencies, for example—the leadership  position of elders within the family is gradually eroded.

Refugee elders must  also cope with differences in gender roles in the United States. Even before  migration, traditional gender roles were changing in Southeast Asia. During  the Vietnam War, when men of military age were away, women took  responsibility for tasks normally divided along gender lines. When Vietnamese  families came to this country, these changes became more pronounced. There  were more employment opportunities for younger refugees and middle-aged  refugee women because their expectations often fit with the lower status jobs  that were among the few opportunities open to refugees. Many middle-aged  women and younger refugees of both sexes became family breadwinners. This was  a radical change for middle-aged men, who had been the major breadwinners of  the family.

Although the pattern  for long-term adaptation of middle-aged and older Southeast Asian refugees is  still unknown, there are indications that the outlook for women is  problematic. Many older women provide household and childcare services in  order to allow younger family members to hold jobs or go to school. While  these women are help­ing younger family members to succeed in America, they  themselves are often isolated at home and cut off from learning English or  other new skills, or becoming more familiar with American society. Thus,  after the immi­grant family passes through the early stages of meeting basic  survival needs, older women may find that they are strangers in their own  families as well as in their new country.

 

11. The major purpose of the passage is to discuss

A. the reasons why Southeast Asian people move to the United States

B. educational challenges facing young refugees in America today

C. problems that elderly Southeast Asian people encounter in America

D. changing gender relationships in Southeast Asian refugee families

      

12. In paragraph 1, “older Southeast Asian refugees must cope with their  rapidly acculturating younger family members” refers to

A. middle-aged men’s embarrassment at not being the principal breadwinner

B. middle-aged women’s isolation in the home

C. younger refugees’ better educational and social opportunities in  America

D. the tendency of younger refugees to join non-Asian gangs

 

13. The author uses the term “family mediators” to mean the

A. traditional role of elders  in Vietnamese families

B. responsibilities which young refugees assume in a new country

C. help that newly arrived refugees get from friends who  migrated earlier

D. professional help available to refugee families in U.S. communities

 

14. The phrase “radical change” in the last but one paragraph refers to  the fact that

A. older refugees find that retirement ages are very different in  America

B. women filled men’s jobs during the Vietnam War

C. the education of their children is consid­ered crucial by refugee  parents

D. refugee men are often displaced as pri­mary income earners in their  families

 

15. The author’s point about the problematic long-term outlook for  refugee women is made primarily through

A. personal recollection

B. historical discussion

C. case study analysis

D. informed speculation

 

 

Part IV. Translation (40 points) 

 

Section A. Chinese to English (20 points): Translate the following into English.  Write your translation on the ANSWER SHEET.

 

一个西方人开始阅读中国哲学著作时,第一个印象也许是,这些作者的言论和著述往往十分简短,甚至互不连贯。打开《论语》,每一小段只包含几个字,各段之间往往也没有联系。打开《老子》,全书只有约五千字,只相当于一般杂志上一篇文章的篇幅,但是老子的全部哲学都在其中了。习惯于长篇大论地进行理性论辩的学生,遇到这种情况,会感到摸不着头脑,不知这些中国哲学家在说什么,由此不免会认为,这些中国哲学家的思想不够连贯。假若真是这样,中国哲学就不存在了。不连贯的思想,怎能称得上是哲学呢?可以说,中国哲学家的言论著述,表面看起来不连贯,乃是由于它们本不是专门的哲学著作。

 

Section B. English to Chinese (20 points): Translate the following into Chinese.  Write your translation on the ANSWER SHEET.

 

It is important  to remember that, in strictness, there is no such thing as an uneducated man.  Take an extreme case. Suppose that an adult man, in the full vigor of his  faculties, could be suddenly placed in the world, as Adam is said to have  been, and then left to do as he best might. How long would he be left  uneducated? Not five minutes. Nature would begin to teach him, through the  eye, the ear, the touch, the properties of objects. Pain and pleasure would  be at his elbow telling him to do this and avoid that; and by slow degrees  the man would receive an education, which, if narrow, would be thorough, real  and adequate to his circumstances, though there would be no extras and very  few accomplishments.

And if to this  solitary man entered a second Adam, or better still, an Eve, a new and  greater world, that of social and moral phenomena, would be revealed.Joys and woes,  compared with which all others might seem but faint shadows, would spring from the new relations. Happiness  and sorrow would take the place of  the coarser monitors, pleasure  and pain; but conduct would still be shaped by the observation of the natural  consequences of actions; or, in other words, by the laws of the nature of  man.

 

 

 

Part V. Writing (30 points)

 

Directions: Write a 400-word essay  about the issue presented in the following excerpt. DO NOT WRITE ON ANOTHER  TOPIC. AN OFF-TOPIC ESSAY WILL RECEIVE A SCORE OF ZERO.  

 

Don’t part with your illusions. When they  are gone you may still exist but you have ceased to live.—Mark Twain

 

In an essay, support your position by  discussing an example (or examples) from literature, the arts, science and technology,  history, current events, or your own experience, or observations.

 


  以上就是新东方在线小编为各位考研的同学整理的“暨南大学2021考研真题:外语(英)水平考试 (706)”,希望对各位同学有所帮助,希望大家都可以考出好的成绩。


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