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绗� 1 闋� 鍏� 13 闋� 鎴愰兘闆诲瓙绉戞妧澶у(xu茅) 2016 骞存敾璁€纰╁+瀛�(xu茅)浣嶇爺绌剁敓鍏ュ(xu茅)鑰冭│瑭﹂ 鑰冭│绉戠洰: 621 鑻辫獮姘村钩娓�(c猫)瑭� 娉細鐒℃(j墨)璁€鍗�锛屾墍鏈夌瓟妗堝繀闋堝鍦ㄧ瓟椤岀礄涓�锛屽鍦ㄨ│鍗锋垨鑽夌ǹ绱欎笂鐒℃晥銆� Part I Reading Comprehension (40 points) Directions: In this part there are 5 passages, each with some questions or incomplete statements. Read them carefully and then choose from the four suggested answers marked A, B, C and D to answer the questions or complete the statements. Please write your answers on the Answer Sheet. Passage 1 Historians of the American civil war find themselves in the same unenviable position as Shakespeare scholars: so thoroughly have their fields of study been explored that finding a nearly virgin comer is all but impossible. But Don Doyle has broken new ground in enlightening and compellingly written book, The Cause of All Nations. More than any previous study, it tells the story of how America鈥檚 civil war was perceived, debated and reacted to abroad, and how that reaction shaped the course of the war at home. At the war鈥檚 outset, however, things were not so simple. Southern diplomats framed their struggle in accordance with liberal principles of self-determination. They judged the conflict, Mr. Doyle notes, to be 鈥渙ne arising naturally between industrial and agricultural societies, not freedom and slavery as the North believed.鈥� The North鈥檚 response, meanwhile, was uncompromising, legalistic and violent. America鈥檚 secretary of state threatened to 鈥渨rap the whole world in flames鈥�, promising total war on any state that dared aid the South. Most histories of the civil war turn inward at the end and examine the war鈥檚 consequences and legacy for America. Mr. Doyle turns outward to show how important America鈥檚 civil war was to the rest of the wor1d: liberty and democracy defeated slavery and the landed gentry. The Union鈥檚 victory had wider impacts. In Spain, Queen Isabella, fearing American naval power, ended the attempted re-colonization of Santo Domingo. Ulysses Grant, a civil-war general, turned his military attention to Mexico, where Napoleon III had installed an Austrian, Maximilian, as emperor. When the threat of an alliance between France and the South was smashed, Napoleon withdrew his support and in 1867 Maximilian was executed by Mexican troops. Across the ocean, Britain鈥檚 republicans marched to victory that same year. Democracy had not just survived, but flourished. After Lincoln鈥檚 death, a French newspaper wrote that he 鈥渞epresented the cause of democracy in the largest and the most universal understanding of the word. That cause is our cause, as much as it is that of the United States.鈥� In honor of the Union鈥檚 victory a French artist crafted a statue out of 绗� 2 闋� 鍏� 13 闋� copper sheeting, a figure representing freedom, tall and proud, holding a torch high. The Statue of Liberty stands today in New York harbor, the copper now green with age, her gaze fixed across the Atlantic on Europe. 1. Shakespeare is mentioned in the first paragraph to illustrate that __________. A. the civil war has been studied as extensively as possible B. the civil war and Shakespeare鈥檚 works are known worldwide C. new discoveries are easy concerning the cause of the civil war D. historians of the civil war should learn from Shakespeare 2. The book entitled The Cause of All Nations is focused on __________. A. the consequences of the civil war for America B. the impact of the civil war on other countries C. the political difference between the North and South D. factors that caused the outbreak of the civil war 3. The North regarded the civil war as a war __________. A. between the government and people B. between salves and slave-owners C. between freedom and slavery D. between industrial and agricultural states 4. Paragraph Four is mainly concerned with __________. A. the effect of incidents abroad on the civil war B. numerous conflicts between European countries C. contributions of Europeans to the Union鈥檚 victory D. effects of the Union鈥檚 victory on other countries Passage 2 Milankovitch proposed in the early twentieth century that the ice ages were caused by variations in the Earth鈥檚 orbit around the Sun. For some time this theory was considered untestable, largely because there was no sufficiently precise chronology of the ice ages with which the orbital variations could be matched. To establish such a chronology it is necessary to determine the relative amounts of land ice that existed at various times in the Earth鈥檚 past. A recent discovery makes such a determination possible: relative land-ice volume for a given period can be deduced from the ratio of two oxygen isotopes, 16 and 18, found in ocean sediments. Almost all the oxygen in water is oxygen 16, but a few molecules out of every thousand incorporate the heavier isotope 18. When an ice age begins, the continental ice sheets grow, steadily reducing the amount of water evaporated from the ocean that will eventually return to it. Because heavier isotopes tend to be left behind when water evaporates from the ocean surfaces, the remaining ocean water becomes progressively enriched in oxygen 18. The degree of enrichment can be determined by analyzing ocean sediments of the period, because these sediments are composed of calcium carbonate shells of marine organisms, shells that were constructed with oxygen atoms drawn from the surrounding ocean. The higher the ratio of oxygen 18 to oxygen 16 in a sedimentary specimen, the more land ice there was when the sediment was laid down. As an indicator of shifts in the Earth鈥檚 climate, the isotope record has two advantages. First, it is 绗� 3 闋� 鍏� 13 闋� a global record: there is remarkably little variation in isotope ratios in sedimentary specimens taken from different continental locations. Second, it is a more continuous record than that taken from rocks on land. Because of these advantages, sedimentary evidence can be dated with sufficient accuracy by radiometric methods to establish a precise chronology of the ice ages. The dated isotope record shows that the fluctuations in global ice volume over the past several hundred thousand years have a pattern: an ice age occurs roughly once every 100,000 years. These data have established a strong connection between variations in the Earth鈥檚 orbit and the periodicity of the ice ages. However, it is important to note that other factors, such as volcanic particulates or variations in the amount of sunlight received by the Earth, could potentially have affected the climate. The advantage of the Milankovitch theory is that it is testable; changes in the Earth鈥檚 orbit can be calculated and dated by applying Newton鈥檚 laws of gravity to progressively earlier configurations of the bodies in the solar system. Yet the lack of information about other possible factors affecting global climate does not make them unimportant. 5. In the passage, the author is primarily interested in __________. A. suggesting an alternative to an outdated research method B. presenting a theory and describing a new method to test that theory C. introducing a new research method that calls an accepted theory into question D. emphasizing the instability of data gathered from the application of a new scientific method 6. The author of the passage would be most likely to agree with which of the following statements about the Milankovitch theory? A. It is not a plausible explanation for the ice ages, although it has opened up promising possibilities for future research. B. It is too limited to provide a plausible explanation for the ice ages, despite recent research findings. C. It is one plausible explanation, though not the only one, for the ice ages. D. It cannot be tested and confirmed until further research on volcanic activity is done. 7. It can be inferred from the passage that the isotope record taken from ocean sediments would be less useful to researchers if which of the following were true? A. It indicated that climate shifts did not occur every 100,000 years. B. It stretched back for only a million years. C. It indicated that lighter isotopes of oxygen predominated at certain times. D. It had far more gaps in its sequence than the record taken from rocks on land. 8. It can be inferred from the passage that precipitation formed from evaporated ocean water has __________. A. less oxygen 18 than does ocean water B. the same isotopic ratio as ocean water C. less oxygen 18 than has the ice contained in continental ice sheets D. more oxygen 16 than has precipitation formed from fresh water 9. It can be inferred from the passage that calcium carbonate shells __________. A. reflect the isotopic composition of the water at the time the shells were formed 绗� 4 闋� 鍏� 13 闋� B. contain radioactive material that can be used to determine a sediment鈥檚 isotopic composition C. are less common in sediments formed during an ice age D. are found only in areas that were once covered by land ice Passage 3 No company likes to be told it is contributing to the moral decline of a nation. 鈥淚s this what you intended to accomplish with your careers?鈥� Senator Robert Dole asked Time Warner executives last week, 鈥淵ou have sold your souls, but must you corrupt our nation and threaten our children as well?鈥� At Time Warner, however, such questions are simply the latest manifestation of the soul-searching that has involved the company ever since the company was born in 1990. It鈥檚 a self-examination that has, at various times, involved issues of responsibility, creative freedom and the corporate bottom line. At the core of this debate is Chairman Gerald Levin, 56, who took over for the late Steve Ross in 1992. On the financial front, Levin is under pressure to raise the stock price and reduce the company鈥檚 mountainous debt, which will increase to $ 17.3 billion after two new cable deals close. He has promised to sell off some of the property and restructure the company, but investors are waiting impatiently. The flap over rap is not making life any easier for him. Levin has consistently defended the company鈥檚 rap music on the grounds of expression. In 1992, when Time Warner was under fire for releasing Ice-T鈥檚 violent rap song Cop Killer, Levin described rap as lawful expression of street culture, which deserves an outlet. 鈥淭he test of any democratic society鈥�, he wrote in a Wall Street Journal column, 鈥渓(f膩)ies not in how well it can control expression but in whether it gives freedom of thought and expression the widest possible latitude, however disputable or irritating the results may sometimes be. We won鈥檛 retreat in the face of any threats.鈥� Levin would not comment on the debate last week, but there were signs that the chairman was backing off his hard-line stand, at least to some extent. During the discussion of rock singing verses at last month鈥檚 stockholders鈥� meeting. Levin asserted that music is not the cause of society鈥檚 ills and even cited his son, a teacher in the Bronx, New York, who uses rap to communicate with students. But he talked as well about the balanced struggle between creative freedom and social responsibility, and he announced that the company would launch a drive to develop standards for distribution and labeling of potentially objectionable music. The 15-member Time Warner board is generally supportive of Levin and his corporate strategy. But insiders say several of them have shown their concerns in this matter. 鈥淪ome of us have known for many, many years that the freedoms under the First Amendment are not totally unlimited,鈥� says Luce. 鈥淚 think it is perhaps the case that some people associated with the company have only recently come to realize this.鈥� 10. Senator Robert Dole criticized Time Warner for __________. A. its raising of the corporate stock price B. its emphasis on creative freedom C. its neglect of social responsibility D. its self-examination of soul 11. In face of the recent attacks on the company, the chairman __________. A. stuck to a strong stand to defend freedom of expression 绗� 5 闋� 鍏� 13 闋� B. softened his tone and adopted some new policy C. changed his attitude and yielded to objection D. received more support from the 15-member board 12. The best title for this passage could be __________. A. A Debate on Moral Decline B. A Company under Fire C. A Lawful Outlet of Street Culture D. A Form of Creative Freedom Passage 4 Industrial production managers coordinate the resources and activities required to produce millions of goods every year in the United States. Although their duties vary from plant to plant, industrial production managers share many of the same major responsibilities. These responsibilities include production scheduling, staffing, procurement and maintenance of equipment, equality control, inventory control, and the coordination of production activities with those of other department. The primary mission of industrial production managers is planning the production schedule within budgetary limitations and time constraints. They do this by analyzing the plant鈥檚 personnel and capital resources to select the best way of meeting the production quota. Industrial production managers determine, often using mathematical formulas, which machines will be used, whether new machines need to be purchased, whether overtime of extra shifts are necessary, and what the sequence of production will be. They monitor the production run to make sure that it stays on schedule and correct any problems that may arise. Industrial production managers also must monitor product standards. When quality drops below the established standard, they must determine why standards are not being maintained and how to improve the product. If the problem relates to the quality of work performed in the plant, the manager may implement better training programs, reorganize the manufacturing process, or institute employee suggestion or involvement programs. If the cause is substandard materials, the manager works with the purchasing department to improve the quality of the product鈥檚 components. Because the work of many departments is interrelated, managers work closely with heads of other departments such as sales, procurement, and logistics to plan and implement company goals, policies, and procedures. For example, the production manager works with the procurement department to ensure that plant inventories are maintained at their optimal level. This is vital to a firm鈥檚 operation because maintaining the inventory of materials necessary for production ties up the firm鈥檚 financial resources, yet insufficient quantities cause delays in production. A breakdown in communications between the production manager and the purchasing department can cause slowdowns and a failure to meet production schedules. Just-in-time production techniques have reduced inventory levels, making constant communication among the manager, suppliers, and purchasing departments even more important. Computers play an integral part in this coordination. They also are used to provide up-to-date information on inventory, the status of work in progress, and quality standards. Production managers usually report to the plant manager or the vice president for manufacturing, and may act as liaison between executives and first-line supervisors. In many plants, 绗� 6 闋� 鍏� 13 闋� one production manager is responsible for all aspects of production. In large plants with several operations鈥攖here are managers in charge of each operation, such as machining, assembly, or finishing. 13. The passage is mainly about __________. A. the role of an industrial production manager B. the procedures for industrial production C. the ways to raise working efficiency and productivity D. the importance of coordination in production activities 14. To meet the production quota, it is of vital importance that __________. A. the optimal staffing and budgeting arrangement be made B. every machine be utilized to its fullest capability C. problems be corrected at once whenever they arise D. work shifts be arranged to yield the highest productivity 15. Which of the following aspects is the focus of the fourth paragraph? A. The necessity to obtain the latest information. B. Coordination of production activities. C. Quality control. D. Inventory control. 16. What is the role of computers in the production process? A. They control the techniques of production. B. They monitor the progress and status of work. C. They transmit directions from the management to employees. D. They keep each department well-informed. Passage 5 Linguists have understood for decades that language and thought are closely related. Humans construct reality using thought and express these thoughts through the use of language. Edward Sapir and his student Benjamin Whorf are credited with developing the most relevant explanation outlining the relationship between thought and language, the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis. The hypothesis consists of two parts, linguistic relativity and linguistic determinism. Supporters of linguistic relativity assume that culture is shaped by language. Terwilliger defines linguistic determinism as the process by which 鈥渢he functions of one鈥檚 mind are determined by the nature of the language which one speaks.鈥� In simpler terms, the thoughts that we construct are based upon the language that we speak and the words that we use. In its strongest sense, linguistic determinism can be interpreted as meaning that language determines thought. In its weakest sense, language partially influences thought. Whorf was careful to avoid authoritative statements which would permanently commit him to particular position. Because of the broad nature of his statements, it is difficult to distinguish exactly to what extent Whorf believes that language determines thought. Heated debate among modern linguists demonstrates that disagreement exists about the accuracy and correctness of Whorf鈥檚 studies and of the actual level of influence of language on thought processes. The Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis essentially consists of two distinct statements connecting the 绗� 7 闋� 鍏� 13 闋� relation of thought and language. Whorf believes that humans may be able to think only about objects, processes, and conditions that have language associated with them. The Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis also explains the relationship between different languages (French, English, German, Chinese, and so on) and thought. Whorf demonstrated that culture is largely determined by language. Different cultures perceive the world in different ways. Culturally essential objects, conditions and processes usually are defined by a plethora of words, while things that cultures perceive as unimportant are usually assigned one or two words. Whorf developed this theory while studying the Hopi Indian tribe. Whorf was amazed that the Hopi language has no words for past, present, and future. The Hopi have only one word for flying objects. A dragonfly, an airplane, and a pilot are defined using the same word. Whorf questioned whether or not the Hopi view the world differently than western peoples. After further interpretation and analysis he concluded that the Hopi have a sense for the continuum of time despite having no words to specifically describe past, present, and future. It is commonly believed that the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis possesses some truth, but the extent to which it is applicable to all situations is questioned. Linguists generally support a 鈥渟trong鈥� or a 鈥渨eak鈥� interpretation. Linguists who study the hypothesis tend to cite examples that support their beliefs but are unable or unwilling to refute the opposing arguments. Examples exist that strengthen the arguments of everyone who studies the hypothesis. Nobody has gained significant ground in proving or refuting the hypothesis because the definitions of Sapir and Whorf are very vague and incomplete, leaving room for a significant amount of interpretation. 17. Advocates of linguistic determinism insist that __________. A. language and thought are intimately related to each other B. culture is shaped by language through which it expresses itself C. the realities constructed through different languages are different D. both the culture and the mind determine the language to be used 18 Whorf himself tends to hold that __________. A. thoughts are based on language B. language determines thought C. language partially influences thought D. culture is shaped by language 19. According to the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis, if a culture has more expression for certain concepts, it shows that __________. A. the culture is very much advanced and civilized B. these concepts are more important than others C. other concepts will be perceived as unimportant D. these expressions developed earlier in the language 20. Which of the following criticism is often made of the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis? A. It has no empirical evidence in its favor. B. It is formulated on the basis of only one case study. C. Its applicability has been greatly exaggerated. D. No convincing examples can be found to support its claim. 绗� 8 闋� 鍏� 13 闋� Part II Structure and Vocabulary (20 points) 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. Please write your answers on the Answer Sheet. 21. A(n) _________ at the Library Company is a designed fund that is invested to produce income to make possible the donor鈥檚 wishes. A. endowment B. investment C. provision D. reimbursement 22. Fortunately, the new government backed off and now _________ joins the international consensus against infant mortality. A. garishly B. gradually C. grudgingly D. gruesomely 23. It is part of the method in the madness that military dictators employ to terrorize and _________ the civil population. A. strain B. stale C. subdue D. stagger 24. There you will find men treating women with just the same respect formerly _________ only to religious dignitaries or to great nobles. A. acceded B. accelerated C. accreted D. accorded 25. One of the things _________ parents worry about most is that you will end up not achieving anything. A. intelligent B. pushy C. advisable D. industrious 26. The improvements are being done to _________ to new federal regulations governing security around nuclear generating facilities. A. conform B. consistent C. coordinate D. comply 27. A visitor to a museum today would notice _________ changes in the way museums are operated. A. precarious B. conspicuous C. rigorous D. insidious 28. Until recently the country鈥檚 economy has been _________ from recession by its reserves of raw materials. A. isolated B. insulated C. illuminated D. instigated 29. Some astronomers spend their whole life studying certain stars since each galaxy contains _________ of stars. A. myriads B. volumes C. stacks D. rafts 30. Statistics have shown that violent crime is only one of the _________ afflicting modern society. A. ailments B. infirmities C. disturbances D. maladies 31. After the tornado had hit the coastal regions, the rescue team started their work immediately and they first tried to _________ the areas in most urgent need of help. A. smear B. fortify C. mobilze D. pinpoint 32. Owning to his malpractice in the official position, Mike Brown has been _________ to the role of a mere assistant last week. A. relegated B. redeemed C. traversed D. contrived 33. It has been reported recently that many celebrities in South Korea have used _________ credentials while doing job hunting so that their reputation has been ruined. 绗� 9 闋� 鍏� 13 闋� A. fraudulent B. distorted C. spurious D. counterfeit 34. Although I gave him many presents, I had no _________ gifts from him. A. mutual B. reciprocal C. stereotypical D. gratuitous 35. The best and brightest bicycle riders in all the land will _________ on South Florida this weekend to have a contest. A. diverge B. converge C. converse D. diverse 36. On weekends my grandpa usually _________ a glass of wine. A. subscribes to B. engages in C. encroaches on D. indulges in 37. I had lost my pen, but she _________ another one for me from somewhere. A. conferred upon B. put forward C. conjured up D. correlated with 38. The local government _________ on spending in order to help the laid-off and the homeless out of the plight. A. crumbled B. cursed C. curbed D. conflated 39. His generous offer should be considered seriously instead of being _________ at. A. disliked B. dissembled C. snapped D. sniffed 40. To understand the power of blockchain systems and the things they can do, it is important to distinguish between three things that are commonly _________. A. muddled up B. shot straight C. engrossed in D. shrunk from Part III Cloze (20 points) Directions: Fill in each blank with ONE appropriate word to complete the passage. Please write your answers on the Answer Sheet. Passage A: I chose to study 41 at a small liberal-art university that doesn鈥檛 even offer a major in electrical engineering. 42 , this was not a practical choice; I came here for more noble reasons. I wanted a broad education that would 43 me with flexibility and a value system to guide me in my career. I wanted to open my eyes and expand my 44 by interacting with people who weren鈥檛 studying science or engineering. My parents, teachers and other adults praised me for such a 45 choice. They told me I was wise and mature beyond my 18 years, and I believed them. I headed off college sure I was going to have an 46 over those students who went to big engineering 鈥渇actories鈥� 47 they didn鈥檛 care if you had values or were flexible. I was going to be a complete engineering; technical genius and sensitive humanist all in one. Now I鈥檓 not so sure. Somewhere along the way my noble ideals crashed into reality, as all noble ideals eventually do. After three years of struggling to 48 math, physics and engineering courses with liberal-arts courses, I have learned there are reasons why few engineering students try to reconcile engineering with liberal-arts courses in college. 41. ____________ 42. ____________ 43. ____________ 44. ____________ 45. ____________ 46. ____________ 47. ____________ 48. ____________ 绗� 10 闋� 鍏� 13 闋� The reality that has 49 my path to become the typical successful student is that engineering and the liberal arts simply don鈥檛 mix as easily as I assumed in high school. Individually they shape a person in very different ways; together they threaten to confuse. The struggle to 50 the two fields of study is difficult. 49. ____________ 50. ____________ Passage B: In Latin America and the Middle East, North Americans can frequently be psychologically stressed. 51 in a poly-chronic environment in the markets, stores, and souks of Mediterranean and Arab countries, one is 52 by other customers all vying for the attention of a single clerk who is trying to 53 on everyone at once. There is no recognized order as to who is to be served next, no queue or members to indicate who has been waiting the longest. To the North European or American, it appears that confusion and clamor abound. In a different 54 , the same patterns can be seen 55 in the governmental bureaucracies of Mediterranean countries: a typical office layout for important officials frequently includes a large reception area, outside the private suite, where small groups of people can wait and be visited by the minister or his or her aides. These functionaries do most of their 56 outside in this semipublic setting, moving from group conferring with each in turn. The semiprivate transactions take less time, giving others the 57 that they are in the presence of the minister as well as other important people with 58 they may also want to confer. Once one is used to this pattern, it is clear that there are advantages 59 frequently overweigh the 60 of a series of private meetings in the inner office. 51. ____________ 52. ____________ 53. ____________ 54. ____________ 55. ____________ 56. ____________ 57. ____________ 58. ____________ 59. ____________ 60. ____________ Part IV Paraphrasing (10 points) Directions: Paraphrase the underlined parts. Please write your answers on the Answer Sheet. (61) Submission, a novel by French author Michel Houellebecq that is newly available in English, tells the story of an Islamic political party overtaking France鈥檚 government at the ballot box and fundamentally changing society. It became an instant best seller in Europe when it was released on Jan. 7, the same day Muslim extremists murdered 12 people at the Paris offices of Charlie Hebdo, a French satirical weekly newspaper. (62) In the months since, an already tense Europe has dealt with a wave of migrants and refugees from Syria against a backdrop of fear of historic transformation. In the U.S., presidential candidate Ben Carson stated that no Muslim should be elected to the White House. (63) Houellebecq is never easy reading, but on those grounds alone, Submission may be the most relevant book of the year. Over the course of the novel, a fictional Muslim Brotherhood consolidates power in France by joining with the neutered Socialists in the 2022 elections, narrowly wresting control from Marine Le 绗� 11 闋� 鍏� 13 闋� Pen (the right-wing politician, here rendered by Houellebecq as impassioned but ineffectual). (64) The changes the new political party enacts seem to make life only more difficult in a nation that, in Houellebecq鈥檚 imagining, had already been teetering on the verge of collapse. Change occurs at a bizarre remove: from the forced veiling of women to the defunding of education to the encouragement of Jewish immigration to Israel, everyone more or less goes along. (65) Before the election, the book鈥檚 central character, a literature professor, reflects that his long-held hope of a calm life is now impossible, no matter which side wins: 鈥淭here was no reason that I should be spared from grief, illness, or suffering. But until now I had always hoped to leave this world without undue violence.鈥� (66) It鈥檚 the sort of dream only someone raised in an industrialized nation in the latter half of the 20th century might have had. So much for that. But (67) Houellebecq stops short of portraying violence or even resistance; the book ends with the professor鈥檚 conversion to Islam, about which he feels little but a nihilistic comfort at having behaved in the socially correct manner. (68) The lack of narrative fireworks is particularly jarring given Houellebecq鈥檚 r茅sum茅, which contains more instances of provocation than it does fiction. He was acquitted in 2002 after being charged with inciting racial hatred for calling Islam 鈥渢he stupidest religion鈥� and has referred to himself as 鈥減robably鈥� Islamophobic. (69) Houellebecq鈥檚 restraint on the page, though, his schematic logic and bland refusal to indulge panic, seems somehow realer than real life. And Submission has less to do with religion than you might think. It examines rapid political change in general: How much of it are we meant to live through? And does it move inevitably toward extremes? If it weren鈥檛 the Muslim Brotherhood ruling France, after all, it would be Le Pen. She too is animated by beliefs that, if given purchase, would change the face of Europe. (70) Even those with concerns about Houellebecq鈥檚 subject can acknowledge the present moment鈥檚 potential for radical change, in one direction or another. At a moment in which American novelists seem wary of delving into politics, Houellebecq has clomped onto the world stage and delivered a book whose brash conceit is getting far more attention than its frightened heart. It鈥檚 not Muslims whom Houellebecq is scared of. It鈥檚 the future. Part V Translation (50 points) 71. Translate the following paragraph into Chinese. Our tragedy today is a general and universal physical fear so long sustained by now that we can even bear it. There are no longer problems of the spirit. Because of this, the young man or woman writing today has forgotten the problems of the human heart in conflict with itself which alone can make good writing because only that is worth writing about, worth the agony and the sweat. He must learn them again. He must teach himself that the basest of all things is to be afraid; and, teaching himself that, forget it forever, leaving no room in his workshop for anything but the old verities and truths of the heart, the old universal truths lacking which any story is ephemeral and doomed鈥攍ove and honor and pity and pride and compassion and sacrifice. Until he does so, he labors under a curse. He writes not of love but of lust, of defeats in which nobody loses anything of value, of victories without hope and, worst of all, without pity or compassion. His griefs grieve on no universal bones, leaving no scars. He writes not of the heart but of the glands. 绗� 12 闋� 鍏� 13 闋� The poet鈥檚, or the writer鈥檚, duty is to write about these things. It is his privilege to help man endure by lifting his heart, by reminding him of the courage and honor and hope and pride and compassion and pity and sacrifice which have been the glory of his past. 72. Translate the following paragraph into English. 鏃╁勾鐨勮壉杈涚敓娲荤(绶翠簡鑼冧徊娣瑰爡(ji膩n)闊屼笉鎷旂殑姣呭姏鍜屼笉瑷�(j矛)鍒╁寰楀け銆佸績鎳峰ぉ涓嬬殑鑳歌銆傚湪銆婂渤 闄芥〒瑷樸€嬮€欑瘒鏂囩瓎鍎�(y艒u)缇庢礂绶寸殑鍚嶆枃涓�锛岃寖浠叉饭鍕歌浠栭伃鍒拌捕榛滅殑鏈嬪弸婊曞瓙浜�锛屼笉瑕佸洜?y脿n)闁偓(g猫)浜� 閬亣涓嶅垢鑰屾劅鍒版唫鍌凤紝涓嶈鍥犵溂鍓嶉ⅷ(f膿ng)鏅劒(y艒u)缇庡氨寰楁剰娲嬫磱鑰屽繕鎳峰ぉ涓�锛涜€屾槸瑕佹檪(sh铆)鏅�(sh铆)浠ュ湅瀹跺ぇ浜�銆� 浜烘皯鐤捐嫤鐐哄康銆傞偅绌剁珶浣曟檪(sh铆)鎵嶈兘绺辨儏蹇▊鍛�锛熻寖浠叉饭鐢ㄢ€滃厛澶╀笅涔嬫唫鑰屾唫锛屽悗澶╀笅涔嬫▊鑰屾▊鈥� 鐨勮豹鎯呭/蹇楀仛鍑轰簡鍥炵瓟銆傞€欐棦鏄粬鐐烘湅鍙嬭€屼綔鐨勫媺鍕�(l矛)涔嬭獮锛屼害鏄叾閬�(yu菐n)澶ф姳璨�(f霉)鍜岄珮灏氭儏鎿嶇殑鐪� 瀵�(sh铆)瀵収銆傛瑾炰竴鍑�锛屾洿鏄縺鍕�(l矛)璧蜂簡鍚庝笘鐒℃暩(sh霉)浠佷汉蹇楀+鐐哄湅瀹跺拰浜烘皯鑰屽鐛�(xi脿n)绲傜敓銆� 鐝�(xi脿n)鍦ㄨ畵鎴戝€�?c猫)璩钑緋涓€娆°€婂渤闄芥〒瑷樸€嬬殑閬告鍚э細 浜堝槜姹傚彜浠佷汉涔嬪績鈥︹€︿笉浠ョ墿鍠�锛屼笉浠ュ繁鎮层€傚眳寤熷爞涔嬮珮锛屽墖鎲傚叾姘�锛涜檿姹熸箹涔嬮仩(yu菐n)锛� 鍓囨唫鍏跺悰銆傛槸閫�(j矛n)浜︽唫锛岄€€浜︽唫銆傜劧鍓囦綍鏅�(sh铆)鑰屾▊鑰�锛熷叾蹇呮洶锛氣€滃厛澶╀笅涔嬫唫鑰屾唫锛屽悗 澶╀笅涔嬫▊鑰屾▊鈥濇瓱锛熷櫕锛佸井鏂汉锛屽惥瑾拌垏姝�锛� Part VI Proofreading (10 points) Directions: The passage contains TEN errors. Each indicated line contains a maximum of ONE error. In each case, only ONE word is involved. Proofread the passage and correct it in the following way: For a wrong word, underline the wrong word and write the correct one in the blank provided at the end of the line. For a missing word, mark the position of the missing word with a 鈥溾埀鈥� sign and write the word you believe to be missing in the blank provided at the end of the line. For an unnecessary word, cross the unnecessary word with a line in the center and put the word in the blank provide at the end of the line. Example: When 鈭� art museum wants a new exhibit, it never buys things in finished form and hangs them on the wall. When a natural history museum wants an exhibition, it must often build in 1. When鈭rt an 2. never 3. exhibition exhibit In life he was celebrated for pulling off the 鈥済reatest second act鈥� in business history after his triumph return to Apple rescued the company from bankruptcy and transformed our relationships with computers, music or mobile phones. Now, four years after Steve Jobs鈥檚 death, two new films with Oscar-laden pedigrees are subjecting his character to a similar re-evaluation, emphasizing ruthlessness and lack of empathy underpins those visionary achievements. Both draw on extensive interview with people at the heart of 73. ____________ 74. ____________ 75. ____________ 76. ____________ 绗� 13 闋� 鍏� 13 闋� Jobs鈥檚 professional and personal lives. Together they are likely to significantly alter public perceptions of a man who remains widely revered a hero for bringing the iMac, iTunes, iPad and iPhone into the world. The biggest film at the New York and London film festivals next month is Steve Jobs, starring Michael Fassbender as the enigmatic, Zen-influencing chief executive. It is written by Aaron Sorkin, writer of The West Wing and directed by Danny Boyle, who made Slumdog Millionaire. Steve Wozniak, Apple鈥檚 co-founder was consulted on the film. He said that it was a 鈥渟tellar鈥� accomplishment who got audiences closer than they had never been to the private Steve Jobs. He said he felt that he was 鈥渟eeing the real Steve Jobs in there鈥�, having previously criticized for earlier depictions such as Ashton Kutcher鈥檚 ridiculed portrayal in the 2013 film Jobs. Boyle鈥檚 film follows the relief of a searing new documentary, Steve Jobs: The Man in the Machine, made by Alex Gibney, who won an Academy Award for Taxi to the Dark Side, the Afghanistan conflict documentary. 77. ____________ 78. ____________ 79. ____________ 80. ____________ 81. ____________ 82. ____________
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