【学历类职业资格】高级英语自考题分类模拟15及答案解析.doc
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1、高级英语自考题分类模拟 15 及答案解析(总分:100.02,做题时间:90 分钟)1.By ordinary standards these are _ enough to qualify one as coming from Watts.(分数:0.50)A.proveB.credentialsC.showD.attitude2.The Watts-as-a-way-station _ has a firm hold on both those who remain and those who leave.(分数:0.50)A.physicsB.physicalC.mentalD.ment
2、ality3.Without exception, the prime American values _ the notion.(分数:0.50)A.scoreB.overscoreC.underscoreD.underscored4.Regardless of _ poll results, a number of objections have been published in newspapers.(分数:0.50)A.practicalB.sensibleC.favorableD.outstanding5.I“ll never escape from the ghetto. I h
3、ave _ my all on its future. Watts is my home.(分数:0.50)A.stakedB.stakeC.stakesD.staking6.As a customer, you don“t have to spend much time _ over what brand of coffee or home appliance to select.(分数:0.50)A.deliberateB.deliberatingC.deliberatedD.deliberates7.He got his tip by telephone from a J they _
4、relationships.(分数:0.50)A.cultivationsB.cultureC.cultivateD.civilization10.They are _ giving the customer more than he or she expects.(分数:0.50)A.adoptB.adepted atC.adept atD.adopted11.When salesmen are doing well, there is pressure upon them to begin _ better, for fear they may start doing worse.(分数:
5、0.50)A.didB.doneC.doingD.do12.The concentration of populations in cities has given _ to many problems of housing, education, and medical services.(分数:0.50)A.riseB.reasonC.resultD.responseRead the following passage carefully and complete the succeeding three items. (1)People who grow up in a particul
6、ar culture share certain values and assumptions. That doesn“t mean they all share exactly the same values, to exactly the same extent It does mean that most of them, most of the time, mostly agree with each other“s ideas about what is right and wrong, desirable and undesirable, and so on. They also
7、agree, mostly, with each other“s assumptions about human nature, social relationships, and so on. (2)One of the most important things to understand about Americans is how devoted they are to “individualism“. They have been trained since very early in their lives to consider themselves as separate in
8、dividuals who are responsible for their own situations in life and their own destinies. They have not been trained to see themselves as members of a close-knit, tightly interdependent family, religious group, tribe or nation. (3)You can see this in the way Americans treat their children. Even very y
9、oung children are given opportunities to make their own choices and express their opinions. A parent will ask a one-year-old child what color balloon she wants, which dessert she prefers, or where she wants to sit. The child“s preference will normally be accommodated. Through this process, Americans
10、 come to see themselves as separate human beings who have their own opinions and who are responsible for their own decisions. (4) Indeed, American child-rearing manuals state that the parents“ objective is for the child to move out of the parents“ house and make his or her own way in life. Americans
11、 take this advice very seriously, so much so that someone who remains dependent on their parents longer than the norm may be thought to be “immature“, “tied to the mother“s apron strings“, or otherwise unable to lead a normal independent life. (5)Americans are trained to conceive of themselves as se
12、parate individuals, and they assume everyone else in the world is so, too. When they encounter a person from abroad who seems to them excessively concerned with the opinions of parents, following traditions, or fulfilling obligations to others, they assume that the person feels trapped, or is weak a
13、nd “too dependent“. (6)Americans, then, consider the ideal person to be an individualistic, self-reliant, independent person. They assume, incorrectly, that people from elsewhere share this value and this self-concept. In the degree to which they glorify “the individual“ who stands alone and makes h
14、is or her own decisions, Americans are quite distinctive. (7)The American version of the “ideal individual“ prefers an atmosphere of freedom, where neither the government nor any other external force or agency dictates what the individual does. For Americans, the ideal of individual freedom is stron
15、gly positive. By contrast, people from many other cultures regard some of the behaviors Americans justify as “individual freedom“ to be self-centered and lack in consideration for others. (8)Foreigners who understand the degree to which Americans are imbued with the notion that the free, self-relian
16、t individual is the ideal kind of human being will be able to understand many aspects of American behavior and thinking that otherwise might not make sense. A very few of the many possible examples. (9)Americans see those individuals as heroes who “stand out from the crowd“ by doing something first,
17、 longest, most often, or otherwise “best“. Examples are aviators Charles Lindbergh and Amelia Earhart. (10)Americans admire people who have overcome adverse circumstances (for example, poverty or a physical handicap) and “succeeded“ in life. Black educator Booker T. Washington is one example; the bl
18、ind and deaf author and lecturer Helen Keller is another one. (11)Many Americans do not display the degree of respect for their parents that people in more traditional or family-oriented societies commonly display. They have the conception that it was a sort of historical or biological accident that
19、 put them in the hands of particular parents, that the parents fulfilled their responsibilities to the children while the children were young, and now that the children have reached “the age of independence“ the close child-parent ties are loosened, if not broken. (12)It isn“t unusual for Americans
20、who are beyond the age of about 22 and who are still living with their parents to pay their parents for room and board. Elderly parents living with their grown children may do likewise. Paying for room and board is a way of showing independence, self-reliance, and responsibility for oneself. (13)Cer
21、tain phrases one commonly hears among Americans which capture their devotion to individualism include. (14)“Do your own thing.“ (15)“I did it in my own way.“ (16)“You“ll have to decide that for yourself.“ (17)“You made your bed, now lie in it.“ (18)“God helps those who help themselves.“ (19)“Look ou
22、t for number one.“ (20)Closely associated with the value they place on individualism is the importance Americans assign to privacy. Americans assume that people “need some time for themselves“ or “some time alone“ to think about things or to recover their spent psychological energy. Americans have g
23、reat difficulty understanding someone who always wants to be with another person and dislikes being alone. (21)If the parents can afford it, each child will have his or her own bedroom. Having one“s own bedroom, even as an infant, imbues people with the notion that they“re entitled to a place of the
24、ir own where they can be by themselves and keep their possessions. They have their own clothes, toys, books and so on. These things are theirs and no one else“s. (22)Americans assume that people have their “private thoughts“ that might never be shared with anyone else. Doctors, lawyers, psychiatrist
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