专业八级-473及答案解析.doc
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1、专业八级-473 及答案解析(总分:100.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、READING COMPREHENSIO(总题数:5,分数:100.00)One school night this month I sidled up to Alexander, my 15-year-old son, and stroked his cheek in a manner I hoped would seem casual. Alex knew better, sensing by my touch, which lingered just a moment too long, that I was s
2、neaking a touch of the stubble that had begun to sprout near his ears. A year ago he would have ignored this intrusion and returned my gesture with a squeeze. But now he recoiled, retreating stormily to his computer screen. That, and a peevish roll of his eyes, told me more forcefully than words, Mo
3、m, you are so busted! I had committed the ultimate folly: invading my teenager“s personal space. “The average teenager has pretty strong feelings about his privacy,“ Lara Fox, a recent young acquaintance, told me with an assurance that brooked no debate. Her friend Hilary Frankel chimed in: “What Al
4、ex is saying is: “This is my body changing. It“s not yours.“ Intruding, however discreetly, risked making him feel babied “at a time when feeling like an adult is very important to him,“ she added. O.K., score one for the two of you. These young women, after all, are experts. Ms. Frankel and Ms. Fox
5、, both 17, are the authors of Breaking the Code (New American Library), a new book that seeks to bridge the generational divide between parents and adolescents. It is being promoted by its publisher as the first self-help guide by teenagers for their parents, a kind of Kids Are From Mars, Parents Ar
6、e From Venus that demystifies the language and actions of teenagers. The girls tackled issues including curfews, money, school pressures, smoking and sibling rivalry. Personally, I welcomed insights into teenagers from any qualified experts, and that included the authors. The most common missteps in
7、 interacting with teenagers, they instructed me, stem from the turf war between parents asserting their right to know what goes on under their roof and teenagers zealously guarding their privacy. When a child is younger, they write, every decision revolves around the parents. But now, as Ms. Fox tol
8、d me, “often your teenager is in this bubble that doesn“t include you.“ Ms. Fox and Ms. Frankel acknowledge that they and their peers can be quick to interpret their parents“ remarks as dismissive or condescending and respond with hostility that masks their vulnerability. “What we want above all is
9、your approval,“ they write. “Don“t forget, no matter how much we act as if we don“t care what you say, we believe the things you say about us.“ Nancy Samalin, a New York child-rearing expert and the author of Loving Without Spoiling (McGraw-Hill, 2003), said she didn“t agree with everything the auth
10、ors suggested but found their arguments reasonable. “When your kids are saying, “You don“t get it, and you never will,“ there are lots of ways to respond so that they will listen,“ she said, “and that“s what the writers point out.“ As for my teenager, Alex, Ms. Fox and Ms. Frankel told me I would ha
11、ve done better to back off or to have asked “Is your skin feeling rougher these days?“ A more successful approach, the authors suggest in their book, would have been for the mother to offer, as Ms. Fox“s own parents did, a later curfew once a month, along with an explanation of her concerns. “My par
12、ents helped me see,“ Ms. Fox told me, “that even though they used to stay out late and ride their bicycles to school, times have changed. These days there is a major fear factor in bringing up kids. Parents worry about their child crossing the street.“ The writers said they hoped simply to shed ligh
13、t on teenage thinking. For their parents it did. Reminded by Ms. Fox that teenagers can be quite territorial, her father, Steven Fox, a dentist, said, “These days I“m better about knocking on the door when I want to come into Lara“s room.“ “I try to talk to her in a more respectful way, more as an a
14、dultish type of teenager rather than a childish type of teenager,“ he added.(分数:20.00)(1).The book Kids Are From Mars, Parents Are From Venus is mentioned in the third paragraph because -|_|-.(分数:5.00)A.it has the same theme of the book written by the two girlsB.it has the opposite opinion to the bo
15、ok written by the two girlsC.it has ranked first on the list of best sellers for several timesD.it is another book that the two girls have ever written(2).As to the views mentioned in the two girls“ book, the author believes that -|_|-.(分数:5.00)A.they provide some approaches to her child-rearingB.th
16、ey revealed thought patterns of teenagers and parentsC.they have obtained unanimous support from the publicD.they have overestimated the rights of teenagers(3).Which of the following words best describes teenagers as seen by the two girls?(分数:5.00)A.Independent.B.Arrogant.C.Sensitive.D.Isolated.(4).
17、What does the sentence “You don“t get it, and you never will“ (6th paragraph) imply?(分数:5.00)Whom can you trust these days? It is a question posed by David Halpern of Cambridge University, and the researchers at the Downing Street Strategy Unit who take an interest in “social capital“. At intervals
18、they go around asking people in assorted nations the question: “Generally speaking, would you say that most people can be trusted?“ The results are fascinating. The conclusion that leaps from the figures and into sensational headlines is that social dislocation, religious decline, pubic scandals, fa
19、mily fragmentation and the fear of crime have made us less trusting. Comparative surveys over 40 years suggest that British trustfulness has halved: in the 1950s 60 percent of us answered “yes, most people can be trusted“, in the 1980s 44 percent, today only 29 percent. Trust levels also continue to
20、 fall in Ireland and the USmeanwhile, the Norwegians, Swedes, Danes and Dutch express tremendous confidence in one another“s probity: levels are actually rising. And the Palme d“Or for paranoid mutual suspicion goes to the Brazilianswith less than 3 percent replying “yes“and the Turks with 6.5 perce
21、nt. The French, apparently, never trusted one another and still don“t. So we become less Scandinavian and more French (or Turkish) every year. Regarding Britain, the obvious conclusions are being drawn. Mr. Halpern and others cite reasons why we appear less trustful: the demise of the job-for-life c
22、ulture, rising divorce, physical mobility, higher immigration, an aggressive commercial ethic and the new isolation of mass media. This is useful research, but there are a few caveats. The trouble is that you may not get a very thoughtful answer if you merely askas they did last yearwhether “general
23、ly speaking, most people can be trusted“. For the British like to think of themselves as canny, savvy, nobody“s fools, we have a powerful culture of satire and a hypercritical media which gleefully splash news of every private and public betrayal, however trivial. In our fantasy life we court parano
24、ia, lapping up crime thrillers and spy novels. We are fascinated by rogues, from Chaucer“s Pardoner to Del Boy. We are bad at risk-assessment, and repeated surveys show that we fear crime far more than is justified. So we are conditioned to claim that we don“t trust people much. A Scandinavian or Du
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