[外语类试卷]2008年厦门大学考博英语真题试卷及答案与解析.doc
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1、2008年厦门大学考博英语真题试卷及答案与解析 一、 Reading Comprehension 0 Forum for the Future, working with Tesco and Unilever, reckon that by 2022 what we buy, how we buy it and who from will have changed radically. In their report, Retail Futures, they look ahead 15 years to see what lies in store for shoppers and the
2、retail groups. They see not only new or bigger store chains, more sprawling retail parks, and more poultry products and pasta sauces. Their visions range from multi-storey car parks converted into city centre allotments or “vertical farms“ with produce markets where the parking payment booths once w
3、ere, to a nation of stay-at-home shoppers who let their fingers do the walking to order in almost everything they need or let their refrigerators do the talking, with automatic, direct-to-store reordering and home delivery every time yoghurt, salad or beer stocks run low. Forum for the Future, a sus
4、tainable development charity founded by veteran environmentalist Sir Jonathan Porritt and which now advises more than 100 organizations in the public and private sector, says the reality of 2022 is probably somewhere between the two extremes. “It will be a mixture,“ said Tom Berry, the Forums main s
5、ustainability adviser. The high street is vital to the economy and the environment; nearly three million people work in retail which generates 6%of UK GDP and 2. 5% of the countrys carbon dioxide emissions. The Forum says stores and retail groups have “a disproportionate influence over society“ as a
6、 result of marketing campaigns and daily dealings with consumers. The Forums researchers identified a range of factors which will affect what we buy, how we buy and who we will buy from in the next 15 years. They include; climate change, which is likely to affect agricultural production? higheror lo
7、weroil prices; new technology) advances in energy production; more globalization and demographic changes that will mean more immigrant labor and more elderly and single person households. They could prompt new shopping formats, says the Forum, like “Tesco Silver“ outlets with customized products for
8、 retired baby boomers. They also reckon the bell could be tolling for endless aisles of utility products like toilet paper and bin liners, which might only be sold online, or from a utility section at the back of a store, alongside vast vats of liquids like fabric conditioner, where shoppers could f
9、ill reusable containers. The long queue at the checkout could also be history when bar codes are read for prices immediately an item is dropped into a trolley. The online revolution, says the Forum, has only just started; “We can anticipate innovations such as entering your postcode for hyper-local
10、sourcing. “ Consumers, however, might also use the internet to cut out the middleman and source direct from farms and manufacturers “so posing a threat to major retailers. “ The explosion in the number of TV channels and the rise of the internet to download entertainment means store chains will have
11、 to work far harder to build, and keep, consumers trust. One retailer told the researchers; “We wont be able to rely on hitting millions of people at 7: 45 pm on a Wednesday night with a Coronation Street advertising slot. “ The Forum came up with four different visions of the future depending on hi
12、gh or low economic growth and changing consumer outlooks; whether shoppers want more convenience or to do more for themselves; perhaps buying more locally sourced products with more information about what their families are eating and wearing. 1 What does the passage mainly talk about? ( A) The big
13、retailers and experts have forecast an individualistic, optimistic society where technology is held in very high regards. ( B) The big retailers and experts have gazed into the future and seen a new world of shopping. ( C) The big retailers and experts have recognized that the economy is buoyant and
14、 big business will meet shoppers demands. ( D) The big retailers and experts have predicted that consumer confidence will be low and people rely on big business for security. 2 Which of the following behaviors has been carried out by Forum for the Future according to the passage? ( A) It provides me
15、thods for consumers to measure their energy use and carbon emission. ( B) It promotes campaigns for the big retailers to build up consumer confidence. ( C) It provides counsels for some public and private organizations. ( D) It predicts that the big retailers would become more powerful in 2022. 3 Ac
16、cording to the report, the shopping scenario for shoppers and retailers in 15 years time will include the followings, except_. ( A) vertical farms ( B) orders from home refrigerators ( C) home delivery ( D) fingers doing the walking 4 Which of the following aspects has influence on peoples shopping
17、behaviors according the researchers? ( A) The changes of the population. ( B) The emission of the countrys carbon dioxide. ( C) The emerging of the baby boomers. ( D) The rearrangement at the back of the stores. 5 When the Forum advances four kinds of future consumption, the condition not taken into
18、 consideration is_. ( A) smart package products ( B) purchasing more local products ( C) economic growth ( D) consumers perspectives 5 Its often hard to see your mistakes as youre making them. When it comes to living arrangements, a humdinger is being made in this country right now and few have noti
19、ced it yet. “Yikes! The kids are moving back in!“ Thus goes the mantra of the baby boom generation, circa 2007. Analysts estimate that some 18 million adults between the ages of 20 and 34 live with their parents. Thats roughly a third of that age group. But letting the kids move back in is not the s
20、ocietal error were talking about. Instead, the big mistake is the loudly voiced chagrin of the boomers. Most mistakenly decry the notion of the boomerang generation. In order to fully appreciate the depth of the error being made here, we all need to step back a bit and look at the bigger picture. Th
21、is epidemic of kids moving back home is first, not “unprecedented,“ and second, its not a bad thing. The precedent for this trend can be found among the other 6. 2 billion non-Americans on the planet, many of whom happily live with their adult children, often in three-generation households. Then the
22、res the growing number of non-Anglo Americans, including many recent immigrants, who see no problem in having adult kids contribute to the household. Finally, the agrarian history of this country before World War II allowed kids to live and work around the farm well into adulthood. Adult kids moving
23、 back home is merely the most noticeable symptom of a larger, fundamental transformation of American society. We are nationally beginning to recognize the costs of the independence the so-called greatest generation foisted on us. We cant blame them. They did have to grow up fast. Kids in their gener
24、ation went off to World War II and grew up on the bloody beaches of distant lands. After the war, the survivors had factories to build and the wealth to buy their white-picket-fence dream out West. They designed a social and fiscal system that has served their retirement years very well. But their h
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- 外语类 试卷 2008 厦门大学 英语 答案 解析 DOC
