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1、上海交通大学英语水平考试样题学生姓名:_ 年级:_学号: _班级代号:_ 考试地点: 授课教师: Part I Listening (40)Section 1 Long Conversations (10)Directions: In this section, you will hear two long conversations. At the end of each conversation, you will hear five questions. Both the conversations and the questions will be spoken ONLY ONCE.
2、After you hear a question, you must choose the best answer from the four choices. (注意:请把答案写在答题卷上,否则以零分处理)Conversation 11. A) It is exaggerated.B) It is self-important.C) It is a move toward the concepts she teaches.D) It doesnt give a clear idea of what the department does.2. A) She didnt agree with
3、 him.B) It illustrates one of her basic ideas.C) The man was an expert on people management.D) It shows how some people do not understand people management.3. A) Worrying can cause needless stress.B) It is important to remember other things as well.C) They can stop you thinking about more basic thin
4、gs.D) We cant solve them, so theres no point in worrying.4. A) Completely.B) In no way at all.C) With respect to relationships.D) With respect to professional questions.5. A) By giving them a written warning.B) By sacking people who break the rules.C) By following organizational procedures.D) By und
5、erstanding the employees personal circumstances.Conversation 26. A) Sarcastic.B) Humorous.C) Indifferent.D) Matter-of-fact.7. A) She was talking about suicide literally.B) She was talking about smoking literally.C) She wanted to be left alone by saying so.D) She was talking about both smoking and he
6、r life.8. A) None of them helped her positively.B) Her mother was too busy to be around her.C) Her father was the role model she followed.D) Her friends always cheered her up when she was feeling down.9. A) She feels less hopeless.B) She feels she has many dreams.C) She feels she is not part of this
7、 world any more.D) She feels that her life took the wrong way in the past, but now she wants to make a change for the better.10. A) He is a psychiatrist.B) He is a school teacher.C) He is a policeman in disguise.D) He is a stranger she just ran into by chance.Section 2 Compound Dictation (10)Directi
8、ons: In this section, you will hear a passage twice. You have its script in the following, but with eleven blanks in it. You are required to fill in the first eight blanks with the exact words you have just heard. For the last three blanks, you can either use the exact words you have just heard or w
9、rite down the main points in your own words. Remember, there will be a pause for the last three blanks in the second reading. (注意:请把答案写在答题卷上,否则以零分处理)The medical center at New York University is one of the clinical sites for the study.Thirty-nine-year-old Denise Harris is helping researchers gain a b
10、etter understanding of the brain. She suffers from epilepsy, and doctors are monitoring her seizures in the hope of performing an operation to minimize them. Her head is 1) _. Wires protruding from the side are attached to electrodes implanted in her brain. Harris says doctor
11、s are monitoring her to see whether she is a good candidate for surgery."I've been on many medications throughout my life and after a while, they don't work," said Denise Harris. "I still get seizures. So now, when they remove the part that the seizure is 2) _ from, it
12、39;s supposed to stop."But while Harris is in the hospital, she is also helping scientists understand how the brain comprehends and uses language. For the study, researchers are monitoring the implanted 3) _ on a part of the frontal lobe called Broca's area, named after 19th century F
13、rench physician Pierre Paul Broca. He was the first doctor to recognize the major role of that area in language.Through the implant process, called Intra-cranial Electrophysiology, or ICE, the researchers have found that Broca's area processes three different language functions in 4) _ wit
14、hin a quarter of a second. It is the first time the technique has been used to document how the brain processes grammar and produces words.Eric Halgren of the University of California, San Diego, School of Medicine, is one of the 5) _ investigators of the study."What we were able to find
15、was that within a centimeter, around less than an inch, certainly, and probably half an inch, there were different regions - perhaps they 6) _ some but they were doing, at different times, different processes, all within this small area."The first function deals with recognizing a word, the sec
16、ond with understanding the word's context in a sentence, and the third lets us 7) _ the word by speaking.Harvard University brain expert Steven Pinker is another of the study's authors. Ned Sahin, a 8) _ fellow at Harvard and the University of California, San Diego, School of Medicine
17、was the first author of the paper outlining the work, which was published in the journal Science. According to Sahin, 9)_ _ _."Nearly every introductory textbook as well as people practicing in the field in speech pathology, for instance, teach and believe that 10) _ _ _ Broca's area a
18、nd Wernicke's area, where Broca's area is responsible for producing, for speaking, and Wernicke's for comprehending," said Sahin.This study shows that Broca's area is involved in both speaking and comprehension, illustrating that parts of the brain perform more than one task.&qu
19、ot;Here's an example of one relatively small part of the brain that's doing three very different things at three different times, but all within the space of a quarter of a second."But Eric Halgren points out that despite our growing knowledge, much about the human brain remains unknown
20、."How does this hunk of flesh, which is not much different from a muscle it's just a bowl of porridge how does it produce the mind? It's a total mystery".He says 11) _ _.Section 3 Short-answer Questions (10)Directions: In this section, you will hear a passage ONLY ONCE. In th
21、e following you have five questions. You are required to answer these questions with as few words as possible, in any case, no more than 25 words. (注意:请把答案写在答题卷上,否则以零分处理)1) What is the basic idea about intercultural competence?2) What is listed as one of the most important criteria for intercultural
22、 competence?3) What is considered as offensive in the Arab countries according to the woman?4) What mistake did the woman make when conducting business in Russia?5) What is the advice the woman gave in the end?Section 4: Listening and Translating (10)Directions: In this section you are going to hear
23、 five short passages. You will hear them ONLY ONCE. In each of these passages some of the sentences are already printed. You are required to translate the missing parts into Chinese. After each of the passages there will be a pause lasting one and a half minutes. The pause is intended for you to do
24、the translation. (注意:请把答案写在答题卷上,否则以零分处理)1) Our development agenda will also focus on women as drivers of economic growth and social stability. Women have long comprised the majority of the worlds unhealthy, unschooled, and underfed. They are also the bulk of the worlds poor. _2) About 80 percent of
25、Australians live in coastal areas. There are fears that some low-lying communities may have to be abandoned in years to come because of flooding and erosion. And with higher sea levels, heavy rains and massive tides known as storm surges, which often accompany tropical storms, can do unexpected dama
26、ge. _ _3) It is no coincidence that the relationship between our countries has accompanied a period of positive change. _ _4) And yet the success of that engagement depends upon understanding - on sustaining an open dialogue, and learning about one another and from one another. For just
27、as that American table tennis player pointed out, we share much in common as human beings, but our countries are different in certain ways. _5) For a variety of reasons, production of the H1N1 vaccine has lagged behind demand. The vaccine for the so-called swine flu is made in the same way as t
28、he seasonal flu vaccine - in chicken eggs. But the government's top infectious disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci, said the goal is to perfect new ways to make a vaccine. "What we really want to do is get away from that and get it to be 21st century technology - molecular biology, recombinan
29、t DNA technology, where you have very good control over the process. It's rapid, it's consistent, and it proves to be something that we can rely on." _ _ _Part II Integrated Reading (30%)Section 1 Banked Cloze (10%)Directions: In this section, there is a passage with ten blanks. You are
30、 required to select one word for each blank from a list of choices given in a word bank following the passage. Read the passage through carefully before making your choices. You may not use any of the words in the bank more than once. Give your answers to the questions on your ANSWER SHEET. Attentio
31、n: You need to change the forms of the words in the word bank where necessary. (注意:请把答案写在答题卷上,否则以零分处理) A name might tell you something about a person's background. Names can be 1) _ of class and race. Data show African Americans are far more likely than other 2) _ groups to give their children u
32、ncommon names. White people tend to 3) _ more familiar names that were formerly popular with more affluent white people. The new study purports to show a link between name and outcome of life: The more 4) _ your name, the more likely you are to land in juvenile hall. That's because we know that
33、boys with uncommon names are more likely to come from a socio-economically 5) _ background, which means that they also are more likely to get involved with crime. Even the researchers readily admit that it's not a name alone that 6)_ a child's outcome, but rather the circumstance underlying
34、the name. The researchers first assigned a popularity score to boys' names, based on how often they showed up in birth records in an undisclosed state from 1987 to 1991. Michael, the No. 1 boy's name, had a Popular Name Index score of 100; names such as Malcolm and Preston had index scores o
35、f 1. The researchers then assessed names of young men born during that time who landed in the juvenile justice system. They found that only half had a rating higher than 11. By 7) _, in the general population, half of the names scored higher than 20. "A 10% increase in the popularity of a name
36、is associated with a 3.7% 8) _ in the number of juvenile delinquents who have that name." Still, the study theorizes that teenagers named Malcolm might also 9) _ because their peers treat them differently or they just don't like their names. And since the study's release last week, the
37、name-crime 10) _ has been written or talked about in major media outlets.popular connect favorite race affect compare decrease deprivation act out signify effect derive increase major concludeSection 2 True or False Judgement & Sentence Completion (10%)Directions: In this part, you will find 7 s
38、tatements and 3 incomplete sentences followed by the reading passage. For questions 1-7, markY (for YES) if the statement agrees with the information given in the passage;N (for NO) if the statement contradicts the information given in the passage;For questions 8-10, complete the sentences with the
39、information given in the passage.Attention: For questions 1-7, one more point will be deducted if you dont answer each one correctly. (注意: 1-7题中每答错一题倒扣1分, 不答不得分,答对得1分; 请把答案写在答题卷上,否则以零分处理)Who are smarter, men or women? It's a topic of common and often comic contemplation, but it has also become a
40、 serious policy issue for colleges and students in the United States. After years of concentrated effort to raise the academic achievement of girls, who in previous decades had often received less attention in the classroom and been steered away from college-prep courses, the nation can brag that fe
41、male students have progressed tremendously. Though still underrepresented in calculus and other advanced-level science and math courses in high school, women now outnumber men applying to and graduating from college so much so that it appears some colleges are giving male applicants an admissions bo
42、ost. As a result, the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights is examining whether colleges are engaging in widespread discrimination against women in an effort to balance their male and female populations. Consider some of the numbers at leading schools: At Vassar College in New York State, a formerly all-
43、women's college that is still 60% female, more than two-thirds of the applicants last year were women. The college accepted 35% of the men who applied, compared with 20% of the women. Locally, elite Pomona College accepted 21% of male applicants for this year's freshman class, but only 13% o
44、f female applicants. At Virginia's College of William & Mary, 7,652 women applied for this year's freshman class, compared with 4,457 male applicants. Yet the numbers of each who gained admittance were nearly the same. That's because the college accepted 45% of the men and only 27% o
45、f the women.A 2007 analysis by U.S. News & World Report, based on the data sent by colleges for the magazine's annual rankings, found that the admissions rate for women averaged 13 percentage points lower than that for men. But percentages don't tell the whole story. It could be that the
46、 men were stronger candidates, or they might have applied in areas of engineering and science where women's numbers are still lower. But such justifications, even if true, are unlikely to fully explain these numbers. At schools such as the University of California, where admissions rely overwhel
47、mingly on statistical measures of academic achievement such as grades and test scores, the disparities don't appear. Far more women than men applied to UCLA the UC's most selective campus last year. The university accepted about the same percentage of each, with a slight edge to the women. A
48、s a result, the freshman class has close to 800 more women than men.In recent years, several college leaders have admitted that their institutions give a boost to male applicants to maintain gender balance on campus. Most students of either sex, they point out, prefer such balance. If Vassar accepte
49、d equal percentages of each sex, women would outnumber men by more than 2 to 1. Jennifer Delahunty Britz, the dean of admissions at Kenyon College in Ohio, a formerly all-male school, brought the matter to broad public attention in 2006 with an Op-Ed article for the New York Times describing the dil
50、emma of her admissions office. "What messages are we sending young women that they must . . . be even more accomplished than men to gain admission to the nation's top colleges?" New York Times has long favored allowing colleges to use race as an admissions factor in order to diversify
51、student populations.She also wrote that exposure to people of different backgrounds and viewpoints better educates all students not just those given a leg up. We are not in favor of accepting underqualified or clearly inferior students for the sake of diversity. But most colleges are inundated with
52、applications from students who more than meet their standards; the differences among many of them are slight. It makes sense for colleges to pick a balanced population from within this group. At the same time, admissions officers should avoid rigid notions of what constitutes enough men on campus. It's not harming UCLA, or destroying college social life, to admit somewhat more women than men. Even if the Civil Rights Commission finds perv
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