[外语类试卷]在职申硕同等学力英语(阅读)模拟试卷29及答案与解析.doc
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1、在职申硕同等学力英语(阅读)模拟试卷 29及答案与解析 一、 Reading Comprehension Directions: There are 5 passages in this part. Each passage is followed by 5 questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are 4 choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the best one and mark the corresponding letter with a single bar acr
2、oss the square brackets on your machine-scoring ANSWER SHEET. 0 More than half of all Jews married in U. S. since 1990 have wed people who arent Jewish. Nearly 480,000 American children under the age of ten have one Jewish and one non-Jewish parent. And, if a survey compiled by researchers at the Un
3、iversity of California at Los Angeles is any indication, its almost certain that most of these children will not identify themselves as “Jewish“ when they get older. That survey asked college freshmen, who are usually around age 18, about their own and their parents religious identities. Ninety-thre
4、e percent of those with two Jewish parents said they thought of themselves as Jewish. But when the father wasnt Jewish, the number dropped to 38 percent, and when the mother wasnt Jew, just 15 percent of the students said they were Jewish, too. “I think what was surprising was just how low the Jewis
5、h identification was in these mixed marriage families. “ Linda Sax is a professor of education at UCLA. She directed the survey which was conducted over the course of more than a decade and wasnt actually about religious identity specifically. But Professor Sax says the answers to questions about re
6、ligion were particularly striking, and deserve a more detailed study. She says its obvious that interfaith marriage works against the development of Jewish identity among children, but says its not clear at this point why thats the case. “This new study is necessary to get more in-depth about their
7、feelings about their religion. Thats something that the study that I completed was not able to do. We didnt have information on how they feel about their religion, whether they have any concern about their issues of identification, how comfortable they feel about their lifelong goals. I think the ne
8、w studys going to cover some of that,“ she says. Jay Rubin is executive director of Hillel, a national organization that works with Jewish college students. Mr. Rubin says Judaism is more than a religion, its an experience. And with that in mind, Hillel has commissioned a study of Jewish attitudes t
9、owards Judaism. Researchers will concentrate primarily on young adults, and those with two Jewish parents, and those with just one, those who see themselves as Jewish and those who do not. Jay Rubin says Hillel will then use this study to formulate a strategy for making Judaism more relevant to the
10、next generation of American Jews. 1 The best title of this passage is_. ( A) Jewish and Non-Jewish in America ( B) Jewish Identity in America ( C) Judaism a Religion? ( D) College Jewish Students 2 Among the freshmen at UCLA_thought themselves as Jewish. ( A) most ( B) 93% of those whose parents wer
11、e both Jewish ( C) 62% of those only whose father were Jewish ( D) 15% of those only whose mother were Jewish 3 The phrase “interfaith marriage“ in Paragraph 3 refers to the_. ( A) marriage of people based on mutual belief ( B) marriage of people for the common faith ( C) marriage of people of diffe
12、rent religious faiths ( D) marriage of people who have faith in each other 4 Which of the following statements is NOT true about professor Saxs research? ( A) The research indicates that most students with only one Jewish parent will not think themselves as Jewish. ( B) The survey was carried out am
13、ong Jewish Freshmen. ( C) The research survey didnt find out what and how these Jewish students think about their religion. ( D) The research presents a new perspective for the future study. 5 Which of the following is true according to the last paragraph? ( A) Mr. Rubin is the founder of Hillel. (
14、B) Mr. Rubin thinks that Judaism is not a religion and its an experience. ( C) Hillel is an organization concerned with Jewish college students in the world. ( D) Hillel has asked certain people to carry out a study about Jewish attitudes towards Judaism. 6 According to the last paragraph, what kind
15、 of study has Hillel commissioned? ( A) A study of non-Jewish attitudes towards Judaism. ( B) A study of Jewish attitudes towards Judaism. ( C) A study of non-Jewish attitudes towards other religions. ( D) A study of Jewish attitudes towards other religions. 6 Governments that want their people to p
16、rosper in the burgeoning world economy should guarantee two basic rights: the right to private property and the right to enforceable contracts, says Mancur Olson in his book Power and Prosperity. Olson was an economics professor at the University of Maryland until his death in 1998. Some have argued
17、 that such rights are merely luxuries that wealthy societies bestow, but Olson turns that argument around and asserts that such rights are essential to creating wealth. “Incomes are low in most of the countries of the world, in short, because the people in those countries do not have secure individu
18、al rights,“ he says. Certain simple economic activities, such as food gathering and making handicrafts, rely mostly on individual labor; property is not necessary. But more advanced activities, such as the mass production of goods, require machines and factories and offices. This production is often
19、 called capital-intensive, but it is really property-intensive, Olson observes. “No one would normally engage in capital-intensive production if he or she did not have rights that kept the valuable capital from being taken by bandits, whether roving or stationary,“ he argues. “There is no private pr
20、operty without government individuals may have possessions, the way a dog possesses a bone, but there is private property only if the society protects and defends a private right to that possession against other private parties and against the government as well. “ Would-be entrepreneurs, no matter
21、how small, also need a government and court system that will make sure people honor their contracts. In fact, the banking systems relied on by developed nations are based on just such an enforceable contract system. “We would not deposit our money in banks, if we could not rely on the bank having to
22、 honor its contract with us, and the bank would not be able to make the profits it needs to stay in business if it could not enforce its loan contracts with borrowers,“ Olson writes. Other economists have argued that the poor economies of Third World and communist countries are the result of governm
23、ents setting both prices and the quantities of goods produced rather than letting a free market determine them. Olson agrees there is some merit to this point of view, but he argues that government intervention is not enough to explain the poverty of these countries. Rather, the real problem is lack
24、 of individual rights that give people incentive to generate wealth. “If a society has clear and secure individual rights, there are strong incentives(刺激,动力 )to produce, invest, and engage in mutually advantageous trade, and therefore at least some economic advance,“ Olson concludes. 7 Which of the
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- 外语类 试卷 在职 同等学力 英语 阅读 模拟 29 答案 解析 DOC
