专业英语八级(改错)-试卷156及答案解析.doc
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1、专业英语八级(改错)-试卷156及答案解析 (总分:100.00,做题时间:90分钟)一、LANGUAGE USAGE(总题数:5,分数:100.00)1.PART III LANGUAGE USAGE(分数:20.00)_As we have seen, there is nothing about language as such that makes linguistic identity coextensive with national identity. If hespeaks French, he is by any means necessarily French. Frenc
2、h is 1not the private property of Frenchmen, as English of English 2people. This should be obvious when one reflects that English is the mother-tongue in Canada, the United States, UK, Australia, New Zealand, and many other areas of the world. Yet many of usstill half-consciously feel that when anyo
3、ne no other than an 3Englishman uses English, we have a special right to criticise hisusage because he has privileged to handle something that is in the 4Englishmans gift. We feel that he must necessarily look us for a 5standard, because it is our language. It is reasonable to regard 6any language a
4、s the property of a particular nation,and with no language is it more irrational than with English. This is not to saythat English is used by a great number of speakers than any other 7language: it is easily outnumbered in this respect with Chinese.Whereas it is the most international of languages.
5、8 To people in Africa or Pakistan or Chile, English is the obvious foreign language to master, not merely because it is the native language in Great Britain and the United States, but because itprovides a readiest access to the cream of world scholarship and to 9the bulk of world trade. It is unders
6、tanding more widely than any 10other language.(分数:20.00)填空项1:_填空项1:_填空项1:_填空项1:_填空项1:_填空项1:_填空项1:_填空项1:_填空项1:_填空项1:_It is convenient to distinguish between nonverbal and verbalcommunication, just as is to distinguish between decoding and 1encoding processes, but such distinctions can be misled. 2COM
7、MUNICATION is a system, simultaneously engaging in 3encoding and decoding processes. In social settings, we only occasionally speak, but we cannot not behave. To understand nonverbal communication it is necessary to appreciate the interdependence of the verbal and nonverbal components of simultaneou
8、s encoding and decoding processes. An example ofthis interdependence may have seen in the cognitive processes 4directing verbal and nonverbal behavior. Both encoding anddecoding can vary from being automatic to reflective and 5deliberate, but verbal communication is typically more deliberately 6and
9、cognitively demanding than nonverbal communication. Furthermore, if we assume that there are limited cognitive resources available for encoding and decoding verbal andnonverbal components, then altering the cognitive demands on any 7one process can affect other processes and the course of communicat
10、ion. In general, to the extent that nonverbal processes require less 8cognitive resources than verbal processes do, nonverbal communication is more resilient than verbal communication.Moreover, specific interpersonal goals can make the encoding of 9nonverbal behavior(e.g., a difficult impression man
11、agement task)and the decoding of nonverbal behavior(e.g., looking for evidence of deception)less automatic and more cognitively demanding.Understand the dynamic relationships between encoding and 10decoding aspects of verbal and nonverbal behavior is a critical step in understanding the broader comm
12、unicative process.(分数:20.00)填空项1:_填空项1:_填空项1:_填空项1:_填空项1:_填空项1:_填空项1:_填空项1:_填空项1:_填空项1:_In an effort to explain how most of language, which is not so directly relatable to meaning, derived from an onomatopoeic beginning, the discipline of etymology began. Through studyingthe derivational history of
13、words(etymology)the naturalists tended to 1demonstrate that the origin of all of language was ultimately relatable to words which directly reflected the meanings of their referents. The first philosophical forum on language eventually was 2developed into a discussion on the regularity of language pa
14、tterns.Two basic theoretical positions merged as explanatory frameworks 3for language, that which opted for irregularity and that which insisted that language was essentially regular. From thepre-eminence of latter position it became popular to explain the 4irregularities of language on the basis la
15、nguage somehow became 5corrupted with proper usage through time; this theoretical position 6regarded the older forms of language to be the pure forms. 7 By the Nineteenth Century there was a severe reaction to the highly speculative nature of the philosophizing about the original language of man whi
16、ch had characterized much of the study oflanguage up until then. The interest was still historical, and the 8goal was not so idealistic. It was a romantic era of a rediscovery of the national past; the mother tongues of nations and families of nations rather than the mother tongue of the whole human
17、 race became the focus of attention. The romantic nationalism was adefinite influence, but perhaps a more basic cause of the more real 9goal was the reaction to previously unscientific speculations. 10(分数:20.00)填空项1:_填空项1:_填空项1:_填空项1:_填空项1:_填空项1:_填空项1:_填空项1:_填空项1:_填空项1:_Schools throughout the world
18、are experiencing a period ofrapid change and, in many cases, are finding that extremely 1difficult to achieve a balance among a number of critical concerns. Some of the issues that educators and schools are facing includecertainty about what academic and cultural knowledge and skills 2will be needed
19、 by students in the future, wholesale revisions of curricula, experimentation in teaching strategies, the need forteachers and students to become aware and competent in using 3new technologies, dramatic changes in bureaucratic and legislating 4policies and regulations, and increased demands on teach
20、ers. With the exception of the education system in the UnitedStates, perhaps no education system has been studied more 5intensively than of Japan. In 2001, in a well-balanced presentation 6of the Japanese model of schooling, including its similarities toand fro differences with that in the United St
21、ates, Tsuneyoshi 7characterized the American approach to education as one that places an emphasis on competitiveness, individual attention from teachers along with individual accomplishment on the part of students, development of cognitive abilities, and separation ofteachers in terms of their disci
22、plines. In contrary, the Japanese 8approach(particularly at the elementary school level)focuses on the whole child; close interactions between teachers and pupils for long periods of time in cooperative settings with attention tocollected goals, tasks, and rewards; and efforts to provide the same 9o
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