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2000年全国硕士研究生考试英语试卷及答案

减小字体 增大字体 作者:佚名  来源:不详  发布时间:2007-8-13 11:40:45
"look at an organic being as average looks at a ship, as at something wholly beyond his comprehension." No doubt we will remember a 20th century way of life beyond comprehension for its ugliness. But however amazed our descendants may be at how far from Utopia we were, they will look just like us.

  55.What used to be the danger in being a man according to the first paragraph?

  [A]A lack of mates.

  [B]A fierce competition.

  [C]A lower survival rate.

  [D]A defective gene.

  56.What does the example of India illustrate?

  [A]Wealthy people tend to have fewer children than poor people.

  [B]Natural selection hardly works among the rich and the poor.

  [C]The middle class population is 80% smaller than that of the tribes.

  [D]India is one of the countries with a very high birth rate.

  57.The author argues that our bodies have stopped evolving because____ .

  [A]life has been improved by technological advance

  [B]the number of female babies has been declining

  [C]our species has reached the highest stage of evolution

  [D]the difference between wealth and poverty is disappearing

  58.Which of the following would be the best title for the passage?

  [A]Sex Ration Changes in Human Evolution

  [B]Ways of Continuing Man's Evolution

  [C]The Evolutionary Future of Nature

  [D]Human Evolution Going Nowhere 转贴于:博学在线_考研

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  Passage 3

  When a new movement in art attains a certain fashion, it is advisable to find out what its advocates are aiming at, for, however farfetched and unreasonable their principles may seem today, it is possible that in years to come they may be regarded as normal. With regard to Futurist poetry, however, the case is rather difficult, for whatever Futurist poetry may be even admitting that the theory on which it is based may be right, it can hardly be classed as Literature.

  This, in brief, is what the Futurist says; for a noise and violence and speed. Consequently, our feelings, thoughts and emotions have undergone a corresponding change. This speeding up of life, says the Futurist, requires a new form of expression. We must speed up our literature too, if we want to interpret modern stress. We must pour out a large stream of essential words, unhampered by stops, or qualifying adjectives, of finite verbs. Instead of describing sounds we must make up words that imitate them; we must use many sizes of type and different colored inks on the same page, and shorten or lengthen words at will.

  Certainly their descriptions of battles are confused. But it is a little upsetting to read in the explanatory notes that a certain line describes a fight between a Turkish and a Bulgarian officer on a bridge off which they both fall into the river and then to find that the line consists of the noise of their falling and the weights of the officers:` Pluff! Pluff! A hundred and eighty-five kilograms.'

  This, though it fulfills the laws and requirements of Futurist poetry, can hardly be classed as Literature. All the same, no thinking man can refuse to accept their first proposition: that a great change in our emotional life calls for a change of expression. The whole question is really this: have we essentially changed?

  59.This passage is mainly____ .

  [A]a survey of new approaches to art

  [B]a review of Futurist poetry

  [C]about merits of the Futurist movement

  [D]about laws and requirements of literature

  60.When a novel literary idea appers, people should try to_____ .

  [A]determine its purposes

  [B]ignore its flaws

  [C]follow the new fashions

  [D]accept the principles

  61.Futurists claim that we must____ .

  [A]increase the production of literature

  [B]use poetry to relieve modern stress

  [C]develop new modes of expression

  [D]avoid using adjectives and verbs

  62.The author believes that Futurist poetry is_____ .

  [A]based on reasonable principles

  [B]new and acceptable to ordinary people

  [C]indicative of basic change in human nature

  [D]more of a transient phenomenon than literature 转贴于:博学在线_考研

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  Passage 4

  Aimlessness has hardly been typical of the postwar Japan whose productivity and social harmony are the envy of the United States and Europe. But increasingly the Japanese are seeing a decline of the traditional work-moral values. Ten years ago young people were hardworking and saw their jobs as their primary reason for being, but now Japan has largely fulfilled its economic needs, and young people don't know where they should go next.

  The coming of age of the postwar baby boom and an entry of women into the male-dominated job market have limited the opportunities of teen-agers who are already questioning the heavy personal sacrifices involved in climbing Japan's rigid s

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