[外语类试卷]专业英语八级(阅读)模拟试卷61及答案与解析.doc
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1、专业英语八级(阅读)模拟试卷 61及答案与解析 0 There are around 6,000 languages in the world today. At least there were until January of 2001. Then Carlos Westez died. Westez was the last speaker of the native American language Catawba. With him passed away the language itself. The death of Westez was mourned not just b
2、y professional linguists, but more generally by advocates of cultural diversity. Writing in The Independent of London, Peter Popham warned that “when a language dies“ we lose “the possibility of a unique way of perceiving and describing the world“. What particularly worries people like Popham is tha
3、t many other languages are likely to follow the fate of Catawba. Aore is a language native to one of the islands of the Pacific state of Vanuatu. When the islands single inhabitant dies, so will the language. Ironically, the status of Gafat, an Ethiopian language spoken by fewer than 30 people, has
4、been made more precarious thanks to the efforts of linguists attempting to preserve it. A language researcher took two speakers out of their native land, whereupon they caught cold and died. Of the 6,000 extant languages in the world, more than 3,000 will disappear over the next century. Linguist Je
5、an Aitcheson believes that “this massive disappearance of so many languages will be an irretrievable loss“. Popham compares this loss to the “death of untold species of plants and insects“ from rainforest destruction. Warning of the “impact of a homogenizing monoculture upon our way of life,“ he wor
6、ries about the “spread of English carried by American culture, delivered by Japanese technology“ and the “hegemony of a few great transnational languages: Chinese, Spanish, Russian, Hindi.“ Yet the whole point of a language is to enable communication. A language spoken by one person is not a languag
7、e at all. It is a private conceit, like a childs secret code. Carlos Westez might well have had “a unique way of perceiving the world,“but it was so unique that only he had access to it. However happy Westez might have been talking to himself, to everyone else in the world he may as well have been t
8、alking gibberish. It is, of course, enriching to learn other languages and delve into other cultures. But it is enriching not because different languages and cultures are unique, but because making contact across barriers of language and culture allows us to expand our own horizons and become more u
9、niversal in our outlook. Cultural homogenization is something to be welcomed, not feared. The more universally we can communicate, the more dynamic our culture will be. It is not being parochial to believe that the more people to speak English or Spanish, Chinese, or Hindi the better it would be. Th
10、e real chauvinists are surely those who worry about the spread of “American culture“ and “Japanese technology“. The idea that particular languages embody unique visions of the world derives from the romantic concept of cultural difference, a concept that underlies much of contemporary thinking about
11、 multiculturalism. “Each nation speaks in the manner it thinks,“Johann Gottfried von Herder argued in the 18th century,“and thinks in the manner it speaks. “For Herder the nature of a people was expressed through its Volksgeist the unchanging spirit of a people refined through history. Language was
12、particularly crucial to the delineation of a people, because “in it dwells its entire world of tradition, history, religion, principles of existence; its whole heart and soul. “ Herders Volksgeist became transformed into racial makeup, an unchanging substance, the foundation of all physical appearan
13、ce and mental potential, and the basis for division and difference within humankind. The contemporary argument for the preservation of linguistic diversity, liberally framed though it may be, draws on the same philosophy that gave rise to racial difference. “Nobody can suppose that it is not more be
14、neficial for a Breton or a Basque to be a member of the French nationality, admitted on equal terms to all the privileges of French citizenship.than to sulk on his own rocks, the half-savage relic of past times, revolving in his own little mental orbit, without participation or interest in the gener
15、al movement of the world. “So wrote John Stuart Mill, more than a century ago. “The same applies,“ he added, “to the Welshman or the Scottish Highlander as members of the British nation. “It would have astonished him that, as we approach a new era, there are those who think that sulking on your own
16、rock is a state worth preserving. 1 Peter Popham is afraid that_. ( A) some languages are in peril of extinction ( B) some languages are losing their own features ( C) some languages are replaced by their dialects ( D) some languages are facing great challenges 2 “ .hegemony of a few great transnati
17、onal languages.“ in the third paragraph probably means_. ( A) the exchange of features of some languages used in different countries ( B) the exchange of features of some languages used in allied countries ( C) the bad influence of some languages reaching beyond national boundaries ( D) the predomin
18、ant influence of some languages reaching beyond national boundaries 3 The mention of Westezs talking gibberish is to_. ( A) exemplify the point that communicative function is of great importance to languages ( B) support the fact that nobody else in the world can understand Catawba ( C) illustrate t
19、hat Westez indeed enjoyed talking to himself in Catawba ( D) argue that diverse languages cannot prevent cultural homogeneity 4 According to the author, those who are afraid of cultural homogenization are_. ( A) responsible citizens ( B) fanatic patriots ( C) real heroes ( D) supporters for diverse
20、cultures 5 Which of the following is INCORRECT of the philosophy of racial makeup? ( A) It originates from Volksgeist. ( B) It provides a basis for calling on language diversity. ( C) It is used as a basis to maintain racial difference. ( D) It has been challenged by many linguists. 5 Global warming
21、 could actually chill down North America within just a few decades, according to a new study that says a sudden cooling event gripped the region about 8,300 years ago. Analysis of ancient moss from Newfoundland, Canada, links an injection of freshwater from a burst glacial lake to a rapid drop in ai
22、r temperatures by a few degrees Celsius along North Americas East Coast. This event created a colder year-round climate with a much shorter growing season for about 150 years, from northern Canada to what is now Cape Hatteras, North Carolina. The results suggest that North Americas climate is highly
23、 sensitive to meltwater flowing into the ocean, said lead study author Tim Daley of Swansea University in the U. K. The work also means that history could repeat itself: Currently Greenlands ice sheet is melting at a rapid clip, releasing freshwater into the North Atlantic. In a worst-case scenario,
24、 the authors say, a sudden melt could trigger another regional cooling event although other experts say todays extreme, human-driven warming might cancel out any strong cooling effect. Daley and colleagues studied mosses dating back more than 8,700 years that were preserved in a Newfoundland peat bo
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- 外语类 试卷 专业 英语 阅读 模拟 61 答案 解析 DOC
