专业八级模拟607及答案解析.doc
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1、专业八级模拟607及答案解析 (总分:133.10,做题时间:90分钟)一、PART LISTENING COM(总题数:0,分数:0.00)二、SECTION A MINI-LECTU(总题数:1,分数:30.00)English as a Global Language. English is a global language Its widely used in economic, political, and scientific fields, and in 1 English as a global language is bad news for 2 - Writers wil
2、l write in English to reach a(n) 3 . The positive impacts of English as a global language In 4 area: a medium of communication In 5 : a language commonly used in lecture-rooms or lecture-conferences In English Language Teaching: English-speaking countries 6 from the spread of English . The negative
3、impacts of English as a global language Inequality in language and 7 - e.g.: classroom a. Students who dont speak fluent English tend to be 8 b. Students who speak fluent English tend to 9 Social inequality - International conference: English speaking people are usually 10 Linguistic power - Native
4、English speakers will be more 11 than non-native English speakers - Native speakers have a(n) 12 Linguistic 13 - English speakers are less 14 to learn other languages and cultures Linguistic death - The existence of a global language may lead to 15 and the death of other languages (分数:30.00)三、SECTIO
5、N B INTERVIEW(总题数:2,分数:17.50)(分数:5.00)A.Great advancement.B.No improvement.C.Success.D.Failure.A.Liberia.B.Sierra Leone.C.Syria.D.Sudan.A.The progress of the disease is slowing.B.There are not enough operational efforts on the ground.C.Patients are not recovering.D.The efforts around treatment and c
6、ontainment are not working.A.The health care infrastructures are very weak.B.The spread wasnt contained more quickly some months ago.C.The USAIDs Office didnt take enough donation.D.People are afraid to provide treatment.A.Because health workers are also highly vulnerable to the infection of Ebola.B
7、.Because treatment workers can open up more treatment facilities by training.C.Because the disease is outpacing the operational efforts on ground.D.Because health workers are unwilling to step forward and help.(分数:12.50)A.Tuition fees.B.Food and lodging.C.Inheritances.D.Characters.A.Personal income.
8、B.Taxes.C.Real estate.D.Stocks.A.Life insurance.B.Health insurance.C.Unemployment insurance.D.Auto insurance.A.Marriage is beneficial to all of your insurances.B.Marriage is sustained by the money you owned.C.Marriage is more economical than being single.D.Marriage has nothing to do with finance.A.T
9、he less discussion the better.B.The more discussion the better.C.You may consult parents.D.You may consult an advisor.四、PART READING COMPR(总题数:1,分数:34.00)SECTION A MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS In this section there are three passages followed by fourteen multiple choice questions. For each multiple cho
10、ice question, there are four suggested answers marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that you think is the best answer. PASSAGE ONE (1) Not long ago there lived in uptown New York, in a small almost meager room, though crowded with books, Leo Finkle, a rabbinical student in the Yeshivah University. F
11、inkle, after six years of study, was to be ordained in June and had been advised by an acquaintance that he might find it easier to win himself a congregation if he were married. Since he had no present prospects of marriage, after two tormented days of turning it over in his mind, he called in Piny
12、e Salzman, a marriage broker whose two-tine advertisement he had read in the Forward. (2) The matchmaker appeared one night out of the dark fourth-floor hallway of the gray stone rooming house where Finkle lived, grasping a black, strapped portfolio that had been worn thin with use. Salzman, who had
13、 been long in the business, was of slight but dignified build, wearing an old hat, and an overcoat too short and tight for him. He smelled frankly of fish, which he loved to eat, and although he was missing a few teeth, his presence was not displeasing, because of an amiable manner curiously contras
14、ted with mournful eyes. His voice, his lips, his wisp of beard, his bony fingers were animated, but give him a moment of repose and his mild blue eyes revealed a depth of sadness, a characteristic that put Leo a little at ease although the situation, for him, was inherently tense. (3) He at once inf
15、ormed Salzman why he had asked him to come, explaining that his home was in Cleveland, and that but for his parents, who had married comparatively late in life, he was alone in the world. He had for six years devoted himself almost entirely to his studies, as a result of which, understandably, he ha
16、d found himself without time for a social life and the company of young women. Therefore he thought it the better part of trial and errorof embarrassing fumblingto call in an experienced person to advise him on these matters. He remarked in passing that the function of the marriage broker was ancien
17、t and honorable, highly approved in the Jewish community, because it made practical the necessary without hindering joy. Moreover, his own parents had been brought together by a matchmaker. They had made, if not a financially profitable marriagesince neither had possessed any worldly goods to speak
18、ofat least a successful one in the sense of their everlasting devotion to each other. Salzman listened in embarrassed surprise, sensing a sort of apology. Later, however, he experienced a glow of pride in his work, an emotion that had left him years ago, and he heartily approved of Finkle. (4) The t
19、wo went to their business. Leo had led Salzman to the only clear place in the room, a table near a window that overlooked the lamp-lit city. He seated himself at the matchmaker side but facing him, attempting by an act of will to suppress the unpleasant tickle in his throat. Salzman eagerly unstrapp
20、ed his portfolio and removed a loose rubber band from a thin packet of much-handled cards. As he flipped through them, a gesture and sound that physically hurt Leo, the student pretended not to see and gazed steadfastly out the window. Although it was still February, winter was on its last legs, sig
21、ns of which he had for the first time in years begun to notice. He now observed the round white moon moving high in the sky through a cloud menagerie (动物园), and watched with half-open mouth as it penetrated a huge hen, and dropped out of her like an egg laying itself. Salzman, though pretending thro
22、ugh eye-glasses he had just slipped on, to be engaged in scanning the writing on the cards, stole occasional glances at the young mans distinguished face, noting with pleasure the long severe scholars nose, brown eyes heavy with learning, sensitive yet ascetic lips, and a certain almost hollow quali
23、ty of the dark cheeks. He gazed around at shelves upon shelves of books and let out a soft, contented sigh. (5) When Leos eyes fell upon the cards, he counted six spread out in Salzmans hand. (6) So few? he asked in disappointment. (7) You wouldnt believe how many cards I got in my office, Salzman r
24、eplied. The drawers are already filled to the top, so I keep them now in a barrel, but is every girl good for a new rabbi? (8) Leo blushed at this, regretting all he had revealed of himself in a curriculum vitae he had sent to Salzman. He had thought it best to acquaint him with his strict standards
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- 专业 模拟 607 答案 解析
