2004年英语专业八级真题答案.doc
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1、2004年英语专业八级真题答案真题 120PART I LISTENING COMPREHENSION SECTION A MINI-LECTURE In this section you will hear a mini-lecture. You will hear the lecture ONCE ONLY. while listening, take notes on the important points. Your notes will not be marked, but yon will need them to complete a gap-filling task afte
2、r the mini-lecture. when the lecture is over, yon will be given two minutes to check your notes, and another ten minutes to complete the gap-filling task on ANSWER SHEET ONE. Use the blank sheet for note-taking.听力原文Language is used for doing things. People use it in everyday conversation for transac
3、ting business, planning meals and vacations, debating politics and gossiping. Teachers use it for instructing students, and comedians use it for amusing audiences. All these are instances of language use, that is, activities in which people do things with language. As we can see, language use is rea
4、lly a form of joint actions. What is a joint action? I think it is an action that is carried out by a group of people doing things in coordination with each other. A simple example: think of two people waltzing, or playing a piano duet. When two dancers waltz, they each move around the ballroom in a
5、 special way. But waltzing is different from the sum of their individual actions. Can you imagine these two dancers doing the same steps but in separate rooms or at separate times. So Waltzing is, in fact, the joint action that merges as the two dancers do their individual steps in coordination as a
6、 couple. Similarly, doing things with language is also different form the sum of a speakers speaking and a listeners listening. It is the joint action that merges when speakers and listeners, or writers and readers, perform their individual actions in coordination, as ensembles. Therefore, we can sa
7、y that language use incorporates both individual and social processes. Speakers and listeners, writers and readers, must carry out actions as individuals if they are to succeed in their use of language. But they must also work together as participants in a social unit I have called ensembles. In the
8、 example I mentioned just now, the two dancers perform both individual actions, moving their bodies, arms and legs and joint actions coordinating these movements as they create the Waltz. In the past, language use has been studied as if it were entirely an individual process, and it has also been st
9、udied as if it were entirely a social process. For me, I suggest that it belongs to both. We cannot hope to understand language use without viewing it as a joint action built on individual actions. In order to explain how all these actions work, Id like to review briefly settings of language use. By
10、 settings, I mean scene in which the language use takes place, plus the medium which refers to whether language used is spoken or written. And in this talk, Ill focus on spoken settings. The spoken setting mentioned most often is conversation, either face to face, or on the telephone. Conversations
11、may be devoted to gossip, business transactions or scientific matters, but they are all characterized by the free exchange of turns among the two or more participants. Ill call these personal settings. Then we have what I would call non-personal settings. A typical example is the monologue. In monol
12、ogues, one person speaks with little or no opportunity for interruption or turns by the members of the audience. Monologues come in many varieties too, as when a professor lectures to a class or a student gives a presentation in a seminar. These people speak for themselves, uttering words they formu
13、late themselves for the audience before them and the audience isnt expected to interrupt. In another kind of setting which is called institutional settings, the participants engage in speech exchanges that look like ordinary conversation, but they are limited by institutional rules. As examples, we
14、can think of a government official holding a news conference, a lawyer cross-questioning a witness in court, or a professor directing a seminar discussion. In these settings, what is said is more or less spontaneous, even no turns of speaking are allocated by a leader, or are restricted in other way
15、s. The person speaking isnt always the one whose intentions are being expressed. We have the clearest examples in fictional settings. Vivien Leigh plays Scarlet OHara in Gone with the Wind. Frank Loesser sings a love song in front of a live audience. The speakers are each vocalizing words prepared b
16、y someone else, for instance, a playwright or a composer, and are openly pretending to be speakers expressing intentions that are not necessarily their own. Finally, there are private settings, in which people speak for themselves without actually addressing anyone else. For example, I like to expla
17、in silently to myself, or talk to myself about solving a research problem, or rehearsing what Im about to say in a seminar tomorrow. What I say isnt intended to be recognized by other people; it is only of use to myself. These are the features of private settings. 第1题:参考答案:A答案解析:第2题:参考答案:B答案解析:第3题:参
18、考答案:C答案解析:第4题:参考答案:D答案解析:第5题:参考答案:D答案解析:听力原文H: Good evening, Im Nancy Johnson. The guest on our radio talk this evening is Professor Wang Gongwu. Hello, Professor Wang. W: Hello. H: Professor Wang, you are now professor emeritus of Australian National University. And in your long academic career, yo
19、uve worn many hats as tutor, lecturer, department head, dean, professor and vice chancellor. However, as I know, you are still very fond of your university days as a student. W: Thats right. That was in 1949. The university I went to was a brand new university then, and the only one in the country a
20、t that time. When I look back, it was an amazingly small university and we knew everybody. H: How did the students like you, for example, study then? W: We did not study very hard, because we did not have to. We didnt have all these fantastic competitions as you have today. We were always made to fe
21、el that getting a first degree in the Arts faculty was not preparation for a profession, it was a general education. We were not under any pressure to decide on our careers, and we had such a good time. We were left very much on our own, and we were encouraged to make things happen. H : What do you
22、think is the most striking difference in the present day education since then? W: University education has changed dramatically since those days. Things are very specialized today. H: Yes, definitely so. And in your subsequent career experience as an educator, and later administrator in various inst
23、itutions of higher education in Asia and elsewhere, Prof. Wang, you have repeatedly noted that one has to look at the development of education in one particular country in the broad context. What do you mean by that? W. Well, the whole world has moved away from elite education and universities to me
24、et the needs of mass education. And entering universities is no longer a privilege for the few. And universities today are more concerned with providing jobs for their graduates in a way that universities in our time never had to be bothered about. Therefore, the emphasis of university programs toda
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- 2004 英语专业 八级真题 答案
