【考研类试卷】考研英语(阅读)-试卷43及答案解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)-试卷 43 及答案解析(总分:70.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、Reading Comprehensio(总题数:7,分数:70.00)1.Section II Reading Comprehension(分数:10.00)_2.Part ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D.(分数:10.00)_Boys and girls used to grow up and set aside their c
2、hildish pursuits. Not anymore. These days, men and women hold on to their inner kid. They live with their parents far longer than previous generations. They“re getting married later. Even when they have kids, moms and dads download pop songs for their cell phone ringtones, play video games, watch ca
3、rtoons, and indulge in foodsfrom their childhood. Christopher Noxon explores this Peter Pan culture in his new book, Rejuvenile: Kickball, Cartoons, Cupcakes, and the Reinvention of the American Grownup. For rejuveniles today, all roads lead back to Peter Pan and the turn of the twentieth century. T
4、he natural capacities of children, which for centuries had been viewed as weak and obstinate were over the course of these few years discovered as a primary source of inspiration and profit. It would be another century before the rejuvenile rebellion we know today, but resistance to what historian W
5、oody Register calls “the weakening prudence, restraint and solemnity of growing up“ began here, with the first flight of Pan and the dawn of the twentieth century. The temptation today is to think of adulthood as a historic and natural fact. In a 2004 essay on “The Perpetual Adolescent,“ Joseph Epst
6、ein wrote that adulthood was treated as the “lengthiest and most earnest part of life, where everything serious happened.“ To stray outside the defined boundaries of adulthood, he wrote, was “to go against what was natural and thereby to appear inappropriate, to put one“s world somehow out of joint.
7、“ Before the Industrial Revolution, no one thought much about adulthood, and even less about childhood. In sixteenth-century Europe, for instance, “children shared the same games with adults, the same toys, and the same fairy stories. They lived their lives together, never apart,“ notes historian J.
8、H. Plumb. This shouldn“t suggest that people in the past didn“t distinguish between kids and grown-ups. of course they did. The distinction forms the basis of rites of passage that are as old as human history. Amazonian initiation rites, Jewish Bar and Bat Mitzvahs, Christian confirmationsall serve
9、the same basic function: to formally announce the end of childhood and the assumption of new duties and freedoms. It“s a mistake, though, to confuse maturity with adulthood. The maturity celebrated in traditional rites of passage is not the same thing as the idea of adulthood hatched a century ago b
10、y a group of Victorian clergymen and society ladies. Maturity is old. “Adulthood“ is new.(分数:10.00)(1).According to the passage, Peter Pan culture is probably a phenomenon that(分数:2.00)A.people cast away their childish pursuits once they grow up.B.people indulge in foods and games from their childho
11、od.C.people still act in a childish way when they are adults.D.people hang on to their adult interests and attitudes.(2).The natural capacities of children turn out to be(分数:2.00)A.weak and unpredictable.B.inspiring and profitable.C.restrained and solemn.D.historic and natural.(3).To which of the fo
12、llowing statements will Joseph Epstein most probably agree?(分数:2.00)A.Considering adulthood as historic and natural is dangerous.B.Adulthood is the longest and most important period in our life.C.Since you are an adult, you should behave like an adult.D.Adulthood is not necessarily a historic and na
13、tural period in one“s life.(4).Historian J. H. Plumb“s remarks are cited to show that(分数:2.00)A.adults and children had many things in common.B.adults and children enjoyed a pretty close relationship.C.both childhood and adulthood are new topics.D.adulthood is not a historic and natural fact.(5).Suc
14、h rites of passage as Christian confirmations are performed to celebrate(分数:2.00)A.childhood.B.adolescence.C.maturity.D.adulthood.After clashes between riot police and protesters, workers at the Keihin Hotel in Tokyo were forcibly ejected on January 25th. They had been fired in October when the hote
15、l went bankrupt, but decided to keep it runningan example of the lengths to which people will go to keep their jobs in Japan, where unemployment is suddenlyrising at an alarming rate. Over 150,000people are expected to lose their jobs between October and March. Hisashi Yamada of the Japan Research I
16、nstitute expects 1.5 million job losses by the end of next year, lifting the unemployment rate from 4% last year to over 6% Though low by international standards, yet that is exceptionally high in Japan. Hardest hit will be “non-regular“ workersthose who work part-time, as day-laborers, for a fixed
17、duration, or under agency contracts. “Regular“ workers enjoy benefits such as housing, bonuses, framing and (usually) lifetime employment, but non-regular workers earn as little as 40% of the pay for the same work, and do not receive training, pensions or unemployment insurance. In the past 20 years
18、 their numbers have grown to one-third of all workers. For years most Japanese ignored their predicament But now their problems have erupted into plain sight. In January around 500 recently fired, homeless people set up a tent village in Hibiya Parka highly visible spot in the centre of Tokyo. Polit
19、icians and television news crews flocked to the scene. The embarrassed city government eventually found accommodation for the park“s homeless in unused city-owned buildings, though it put them up for only a week. The problem is that Japan lacks a social safety net, says Makoto Yuasa, the organizer o
20、f the Hibiya tent village, who dropped out of a PhD program at Tokyo University to help homeless people. Because families or companies traditionally looked after people, the state did not have to. Moreover, there is a stigma in Japan if an unemployed person asks for help: “If you don“t work, you don
21、“t deserve to eat“, the saying goes. Yet there are signs of change. The main political parties recognize the need to establish better support and training for non-regular workers. And there is even a new government program to help unemployed foreign workers, such as Brazilians who worked at car fact
22、ories, so that they do not leave Japan if they are laid off. With a shrinking population and workforce, losing skilled hands would only compound the country“s woes when the economy eventually recovers.(分数:10.00)(1).We can infer from the event of Keihin Hotel in Japan that(分数:2.00)A.workers would try
23、 every means to keep their jobs.B.the protesters are fired because of several conflicts.C.the hotel has to be shut down to avoid further clashes.D.unemployed workers cause instability in the society.(2).The main difference between regular workers and non-regular workers lies in(分数:2.00)A.working env
24、ironment.B.legal status.C.job benefits.D.labor intensity.(3).The word “predicament“ (line 1, Paragraph 3) most probably means(分数:2.00)A.plight.B.inferiority.C.poverty.D.misery.(4).The text suggests that tent village in Hibiya Park has(分数:2.00)A.shown most laid-off workers in Tokyo were homeless.B.he
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