[外语类试卷]专业英语四级(阅读)模拟试卷133及答案与解析.doc
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1、专业英语四级(阅读)模拟试卷 133及答案与解析 一、 SECTION A In this section there are several passages followed by ten multiple-choice questions. For each question, there are four suggested answers marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that you think is the best answer. 0 (1)My job is to provide relevant, factually accura
2、te information that is interesting, useful and entertaining to my readers, be they Brainstorm or ITWeb readers. (2)My job is not to get your corporate message across. If you want to get your corporate message out to the market take an advertisement, or, failing that, do a good enough job that your c
3、lients get your message and spread it for you, then you wouldnt be so desperate that you have to attempt to force me to do it. (3)Secondly, my job is to take information from any sources as I feel are relevant or necessary, and process it into one smooth, seamless story that makes sense, and is easy
4、 and pleasant to read. It is not my job to print every single word of jargon and marketing waffle that spews from your lips. Should you choose to spew jargon and marketing waffle during an interview, it will not be used. Try plain, simple English in future. (4)What my job reminds me of is to use com
5、ments and quotes! that provide knowledge and insight, not to use anything you have said merely because you have said it. What I use and what I do not use in a story is my privilege. Should I choose not to use your quote there is nothing you can do about it. (5)Further, my job is to write stories tha
6、t my readers want to read, thus keeping the magazine or websites ideas alive and kicking, and thus providing advertisers with an audience to advertise to. Should I write what you want me to write my readers will stop reading and you will have no vehicle for your marketing and advertising. (6)Additio
7、nally, should you have a hissy fit and threaten to pull your ads, or never advertise again, because I ran a story you did not like, or did not use your quotes, or looked at you funny when you were having a bad day, you are not going to get a sympathetic response. You will get a positive and professi
8、onal response. Nice people will kindly attempt to explain to you about press freedom, and what is enshrined in SAs constitution, and that “really, really, were sorry but advertising people have no control over what those journalists do“. (7)What you will get from me is the pleasure of never being in
9、terviewed by me again. I will not be blackmailed. I will not be bullied. And I most certainly will not interview you again, knowing that if you happen to take an ad for that feature you will assume I am running your quotes to keep you happy. Conversely, I will not do an interview knowing that if I d
10、o not run your quotes you will assume it is because you have not taken an ad. (8)So the next time you have the urge to ask me if you can approve copy, or tell my sales team that you will not take an ad unless you are guaranteed editorial, remember the above and think about what you are actually doin
11、g. You are asking me to compromise my ethics, credibility, reputation, integrity and ultimately my career and I will not do that for you or anyone. 1 According to the author, jargon and marketing waffle are _. ( A) irrelevant ( B) unintelligible ( C) professional ( D) monotonous 2 The author writes
12、most probably in order to chiefly satisfy _. ( A) his desire ( B) the editors ( C) the media ( D) his readers 3 When the author refuses to take the clients quotes, he doesnt expect them to think _. ( A) that he is being blackmailed ( B) it is because they have taken an ad ( C) it is because they hav
13、e not taken an ad ( D) that he is being professional 3 (1)Ah, praise. So powerful are simple words of approval and admiration that the late psychologist B. F. Skinner once called praise giving “the greatest tool in behavior modification“. (2)Yet precisely because praise is such heady stuff, motivati
14、on researchers warn of its psychological perils. Although the researchers agree that encouragement is essential for everyone, studies have found that poorly chosen words of praise can be as manipulative as any other reward and just as destructive to creativity, perseverance and performance. Even beh
15、aviorists who advocate heavy use of praise for positive reinforcement in the classroom warn that its power can easily be missed. (3)Such condemnation of simple good words is difficult even for those who can clearly see the destructive potential of gold stars and other glittery enticements. But in fa
16、ct, Kohn argues, praise should not always be considered a synonym for human kindness. Children, he argues, can become completely dependent on praise and in that emotional process lose any love of doing things for their own sake. Experiments show, for example, that children who are praised for being
17、generous with others actually end up being less generous than those who received no strokes. (4)Praise has also been shown to have very disruptive effects on confidence, concentration and performance. People who receive praise often become so self-conscious of their temporary good standing that they
18、 cannot focus on the task at hand, or alternatively they simply avoid challenging themselves in order to prevent the possibility of failure. Case Western Reserve University researcher Roy F. Baumeister found that compliments are an effective way to increase pressure, making a person more likely to “
19、choke“. Subjects who were praised just before a test of video skills consistently performed worse than did those who were not. And students who were heavily praised became more unconfirmed in their answers and gave up more quickly on ideas teachers disagreed with. “I worry about children whose eyes
20、light up every time they are praised,“ says Kohn. “Many of them will grow to be adults desperate for others approval, unable to formulate their own standards.“ (5)Although words of praise may be more subtle than other rewards, the basic psychological issue is one of power and manipulation. “Often, t
21、he most striking thing about a positive judgment is that its a judgment,“ says Kohn. “It implies, I have power over you.“ Whats more, he adds, praise carries with it the possibility of criticism, which can make the loftiest praise threatening: todays “youre perfect“ can become tomorrows “you are wor
22、thless“. 4 Words of praise could become destructive when _. ( A) they are casually chosen ( B) they are heavily used ( C) they are not used by behaviorists ( D) they are out of an educational environment 5 Roy F. Baumeister found that heavy praise could result in peoples _. ( A) stubbornness ( B) la
23、ck of persistence ( C) lack of creativity ( D) incapability 5 (1)After 21 years of marriage, my wife wanted me to take another woman out to dinner and a movie. She said, “I love you, but I know this other woman loves you too, and she would love to spend some time with you.“ (2)The other woman that m
24、y wife wanted me to visit was my mother, who has been a widow for 19 years, but the demands of my work and my three children had made it possible to visit her only occasionally. That night I called to invite her to go out for dinner and a movie. “Whats wrong, are you well?“ she asked. My mother is t
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- 外语类 试卷 专业 英语四 阅读 模拟 133 答案 解析 DOC
