[外语类试卷]专业英语八级模拟试卷618及答案与解析.doc
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1、专业英语八级模拟试卷 618及答案与解析 SECTION A MINI-LECTURE Directions: In this section you sill 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 you will need them to complete a gap-filling task after the mini-lecture.
2、 When the lecture is over, you 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. 0 To see how big carriers could control the online world, you must understand its structures. Earthlink giv
3、es Jennifer access to the Internet, much in the way than an onramp puts a driver on the national highway system. Earthlink is a local internet service provider, and it will send the【 1】 to an Internet “【 2】 provider“, to route it along its way. These Internet players typically own and lease long-hau
4、l fiber-optic cables spanning a large region. They also own the communications gear that directs【 3】 over the Internet. They connect to each other to exchange data between their customers, like the highway system over which most of the freight of the Internet travels to reach its【 4】 . Now, instead
5、of the National Science Foundation, there are many of them that-link together to provide the global【 5】 , that is the Internet. The problem was, as the Internet grew, the public points became overburdened and traffic showed at these bottlenecks. So they started making arrangements with each other. A
6、nd they arent changing peers now,but there is a lot of discussion about whether they should. And the industry has not figured out how to【 6】 who owes what to whom if fees should be changed. Since the Internet was【 7】 , it has grown by leaps and bounds into a remarkably successful communications medi
7、um without government【 8】 -and most want to stay that way. But the Internet has matured to a point that more uniform rules are needed to【 9】 competition. Those who can afford to pay the price can become peers. Peering would be determined by the【 10】 rather than by a private company with its own comp
8、etitive interests. SECTION B INTERVIEW Directions: In this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow. Questions 1 to 5 are based on an interview. At the end of the interview you will be given 10 seconds to answer each of the following five
9、 questions. Now listen to the interview. 11 In 1900, the worlds use of paper was about _ for each person in a year. ( A) 50 kilograms ( B) I kilogram ( C) 5 kilograms ( D) 15 kilograms 12 Chinese paper was made from ( A) the hair-like parts of certain plants. ( B) the wood of trees. ( C) the skin of
10、 certain young animals. ( D) the stem Of tall plants. 13 Who found out that paper could be made from trees? ( A) An Englishman. ( B) A Canadian man. ( C) A Swedish man. ( D) A German. 14 Now _ makes the best paper in the world. ( A) Norway ( B) USA ( C) Canada ( D) Finland 15 Some people in Finland
11、wear paper boots in the snow in winter because ( A) they are waterproof. ( B) nothing could be warmer. ( C) they are convenient. ( D) they are durable. SECTION C NEWS BROADCAST Directions: In this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow.
12、 At the end of each news item, you will be given 10 seconds to answer the questions. 16 What is the main idea of the news item? ( A) India will market its low-cost computers abroad. ( B) India has developed a type of computer that sells at a very low price. ( C) The devices in the computer were engi
13、neered by Taiwan. ( D) India decides to have its computers manufactured in Taiwan. 16 Most men live in harness. Richard was one of them. Typically he had no awareness of how his male harness was choking him until his personal and professional life and his body had nearly fallen apart. He had to get
14、sick in his harness and nearly be destroyed by role-playing masculinity before he could allow himself to be a person with his own feelings, rather than just a hollow male image. Had it not been for a bleeding ulcer he might have postponed looking at himself for many years more. Like many men, Richar
15、d had been a zombie, a daytime sleep-walker. Worse still, he had been a highly “successful“ zombie, which made it so difficult for him to risk change. Our culture is saturated with successful male zombies, businessmen zombies, golf zombies, sports car zombies, playboy zombies, etc. They have lost to
16、uch with, or are running away from, their feelings and awareness of themselves as people. They have confused their social masks for their essence and they are destroying the selves while fulfilling the traditional definitions of masculine-appropriate behavior. They are the heroes, the providers, the
17、 warriors, the empire builders, the fearless ones. Their reality is always approached through these veils of gender expectations. Men evaluate each other and are evaluated by many women largely by the degree to which they approximate the ideal masculine model. Women have rightfully lashed out agains
18、t being placed into a mold. Many women have described their roles in marriage as a form of socially approved prostitution. They assert that they are selling themselves out for an unfulfilling portion of supposed security. For psychologically defensive reasons the male has not yet come to see himself
19、 as a prostitute, day in and day out, both in and out of the marriage relationship. The males inherent survival instincts have been stunted by the seemingly more powerful drive to maintain his masculine image. He would, for example, rather die in the battle than risk living in a different way and be
20、ing called a “coward“ or “not a man“. As a recently published study concluded, “A surprising number of men approaching senior citizenship say they would rather die than be buried in retirement.“ The male in our culture is at a growth impasse. He wont move not because he is protecting his cherished c
21、entral place in the sun, but because he cant move. He is a cardboard Goliath precariously balanced and on the verge of toppling over if he is pushed ever so slightly out of his well-worn path. He lacks the fluidity of the female who can readily move between the traditional definitions of male or fem
22、ale behavior and roles. She can be wife and mother or a business executive. She can dress in typically feminine fashion or adopt the male styles. She will be loved for having “feminine“ interests such as needlework or cooking, or she will be admired for sharing with the male in his “masculine“ inter
23、ests. She can be sexually assertive or sexually passive. Meanwhile, the male is rigidly caught in his masculine pose and, in many subtle and indirect ways, he is severely punished when he steps out of it. Unlike some of the problems of women, the problems of men are not readily changed through legis
24、lation. The male has no apparent and clearly defined targets against which he can vent his rage. Yet he is oppressed by the cultural pressures that have denied him his feelings, by the mythology of the woman and the distorted and self-destructive way he sees and relates to her, and by the urgency fo
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- 外语类 试卷 专业 英语 模拟 618 答案 解析 DOC
