专业英语四级-161及答案解析.doc
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1、专业英语四级-161及答案解析 (总分:100.00,做题时间:90分钟)一、CLOZE(总题数:4,分数:100.00)Early in the film A Beautiful Mind, the 1 John Nash is seen sitting in a Princeton courtyard, hunched over a playing board covered with small black and white pieces that look like pebbles. He was playing Go, an ancient Asian game. Frustrat
2、ion at losing that game 2 the real Nash to pursue the mathematics of game theory, research for which he eventually was awarded a Nobel Prize. In recent years, computer experts, particularly those specializing in 3 intelligence, have felt the same fascination and 4 . Programming other board games has
3、 been a relative snap. Even chess has 5 to the power of the processor. Ten years ago, a chess-playing computer called Deep Blue not only beat but 6 humbled Garry Kasparov, the world champion at that time. That is because chess, while 7 complex, can be reduced to a matter of brute force computation.
4、Go is different. Deceptively easy to learn, either for a computer or a human, it is a game of such 8 and complexity that it can take years for a person to become a strong player. To date, no computer has been able to achieve a skill level beyond that of the casual player. The game is played on a boa
5、rd divided into a grid of 19 horizontal and 19 vertical lines. Black and white pieces called stones are placed one at a time on the grids intersections. The object is to acquire and 9 territory by surrounding it with stones. Programmers working on Go see it as more accurate than chess in reflecting
6、the ways the human mind works. The challenge of programming a computer to mimic that process goes to the core of artificial intelligence, which involves the study of learning and decision-making, 10 thinking, knowledge representation, pattern recognition and perhaps most intriguingly, intuition. A.
7、highly B. pushed C. mathematician D. thoroughly E. strategic F. frustration G. succumbed H. inspired I. artificial J. grand K. depth L. occupy M. profound N. defend O. obsession(分数:25.00)Considering how jazz is transcribed in Chinese (jueshi), you may be 11 into assuming that it is an aristocratic c
8、ultural form. Nothing could be further from the truth. It 12 among black Americans at the end of the 19th century, at a time when they occupied the very 3 of the American social heap. So how has something that was created by a once downtrodden and 13 minority acquired a central place in todays Ameri
9、can culture? Mr. Darrell A Jenks, director of the American Center for Educational Exchange, and also a drummer in the jazz band Window, analyses the phenomenon for us here. Jazz: the 14 of America. Perhaps the essence of America is that you could never get two Americans to agree on just what that mi
10、ght be. After thinking about it for a while, we might, chuckle and say, Hmm, seems like being American is a bit more complicated than we thought. Certainly things like 15 , success (the American Dream ), innovation and tolerance stand out. But these things come together because of our ability to wor
11、k with one another and find common purpose no matter how we might be 16 Some, like African-American writer Ralph Ellison, believe that jazz 17 the essence of America. For good reason, for in jazz all of the characteristics I mentioned above come together. The solos are a celebration of individual br
12、illiance that cant take place without the group efforts of the rhythm section. Beyond that, though, jazz has a connection to the essence of America in a much more fundamental 18 . It is an expression of the African 19 of American culture, a musical medium that exemplifies the culture of the Africans
13、 whose culture came to dominate much of what is American. A. diverse B. distinctive C. bottom D. trapped E. soul F. way G. misled H. captures I. despised J. originated K. culture L. individualism M. roots N. top O. acquires(分数:25.00)Sign has become a scientific hot 21 . Only in the past 20 years hav
14、e specialists in language study realized that signed languages are uniquea speech of the hand. They offer a new way to 22 how the brain generates and understands language, and 23 new light on an old scientific 24 : whether language, complete with grammar, is something that we are born with, or it is
15、 a learned behavior. The current interest in sign language has 25 in the pioneering work of one rebel teacher at Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C., the worlds only liberal arts university for deaf people. When Bill Stokoe went to Gallaudet to teach English, the school 26 him in a course in si
16、gning. But Stokoe noticed something 27 : among themselves, students signed differently from his classroom teacher. Stokoe had been taught a sort of gesture code, each movement of the hands representing a word in English. But Stokoe believed the hand talk his students used looked richer. He wondered:
17、 Might deaf people actually have a(n) 28 language? And could that language be unlike any other on Earth? It was 1955, when even deaf people 29 their signing as substandard. Stokoes idea was academic heresy (异端邪说). It is 37 years later. Stokoenow devoting his time to writing and editing books on ASLi
18、s explaining how he started a 30 . For decades educators fought his idea that signed languages are natural languages like English, French and Japanese. A. controversy B. dig C. dismissed D. genuine E. probe F. revolution G. spot H. roots I. throw J. odd K. real L. considered M. button N. origins O.
19、enrolled(分数:25.00)For many years it was common in the United States to associate Chinese Americans with restaurants and laundries. People did not realize that the Chinese had been 31 into these occupations. The first Chinese to reach the United States came during the California Gold Rush of 1849. Li
20、ke most of the other people there, they had come to search for gold. In that 32 unoccupied land, the men 33 a claim for themselves by placing makers in the ground. However, either because the Chinese were so different from the others or because they worked so patiently that they sometimes succeeded
21、in turning a 34 worthless mining claim into a profitable one, they became the scapegoats of their envious competitor. They were 35 in many ways. Often they were prevented from working their claims; some localities even passed regulations forbidding them to own 36 . The Chinese therefore started to s
22、eek out other ways of earning a living. Some of them began to do the 37 for the white miners; others set up small restaurants. (There were almost no women in California in those days, and the Chinese filled a real need by doing this womans work.) Some went to work as farmhands or as fishermen. Chine
23、se Americans retain many aspects of their ancient culture, even after having lived here for several generations. For example, their family ties continue to be 38 strong (encompassing grandparents, uncles, aunts, cousins, and others). Members of the family lend each other 39 support and also practica
24、l help when necessary. From a very young age children are imbued with the old values and attitudes, including respect for their elders and a feeling of responsibility to the family. This helps to explain why there is so 40 juvenile delinquency among them. A1ittle Bsevere Cmoral Ddriven Estaked Fforc
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- 专业 英语四 161 答案 解析
