[外语类试卷]考博英语模拟试卷274及答案与解析.doc
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1、考博英语模拟试卷 274及答案与解析 一、 Reading Comprehension 0 A century ago in the United States, when an individual brought suit against a company, public opinion tended to protect that company. But perhaps this phenomenon was most striking in the case of the railroads. Nearly half of all negligence cases decided
2、through 1896 involved railroads. And the railroads usually won. Most of the cases were decided in state courts, when the railroads had the climate of the times on their sides. Government supported the railroad industry; the progress railroads represented was not to be slowed down by requiring them o
3、ften to pay damages to those unlucky enough to be hurt working for them. Court decisions always went against railroad workers. Mr. Farwell, an engineer, lost his right hand when a switchmans negligence ran his engine off the track. The court reasoned that since Farwell had taken the job of an engine
4、er voluntarily at good pay, he had accepted the risk. Therefore the accident, though avoidable had the switchmen acted carefully, was a “pure accident“. In effect a railroad could never be held responsible for injury to one employee caused by the mistake of another. In one case where a Pennsylvania
5、Railroad worker had started a fire at a warehouse and the fire had spread several blocks, causing widespread damage, a jury found the company responsible for all the damage. But the court overturned the jurys decision because it argued that the railroads negligence was the immediate cause of damage
6、only to the nearest buildings. Beyond them the connection was too remote to consider. As the century wore on, public sentiment began to turn against the railroadsagainst their economic and political power and high fares as well as against their callousness(无情 )toward individuals. 1 What does the wor
7、d “negligence“ mean in the passage? ( A) ignorance ( B) arrogance ( C) carelessness ( D) depression 2 Which of the following is NOT true in Farwells case? ( A) Farwell would not have been injured if the switchman had been more careful. ( B) The court argued that the victim had accepted the risk sinc
8、e he had willingly taken his job. ( C) The court decided that the railroad should not be held responsible. ( D) Farwell was injured because he negligently ran his engine off the track. 3 What must have happened after the fire case was settled in court? ( A) The railroad compensated for the damage to
9、 the immediate buildings. ( B) The railroad compensated for all the damage by the fire. ( C) The railroad paid nothing for the damaged building. ( D) The railroad worker paid for the property damage himself. 4 The following aroused public resentment EXCEPT_. ( A) political power ( B) high fares ( C)
10、 economic loss ( D) indifference 5 What does the passage mainly discuss? ( A) Railroad oppressing individuals in the U. S. ( B) History of the U. S. railroads. ( C) Railroad workers working rights. ( D) Law cases concerning the railroads. 5 Researchers have studied the poor as individuals, as famili
11、es and households, as members of poor communities, neighborhoods and regions, as products of larger poverty-creating structures. They have been analyzed as victims of crime and criminals, as members of minority cultures, as passive consumers of mass culture and active producers of a “counterculture“
12、, as an economic burden and as a reserve army of laborto mention just some of the preoccupations of poverty research. The elites, who occupy the small upper stratum within the category of the non-poor, and their functions in the emergence and reproduction of poverty are as interesting and important
13、an object for poverty research as the poor themselves. The elites have images of the poor and of poverty which shape their decisions and actions. So far, little is known about those images, except as they are sketchily portrayed in popular stereotypes. The elites may well ignore or deny the external
14、 effects of their own actions(and omissions)upon the living conditions of the poor. Many social scientists may take a very different view. As poverty emerged and was reproduced, legal frameworks were created to contain the problems it caused with profound, and largely unknown, consequences for the p
15、oor themselves. In general, political, educational and social institutions tend to ignore or even damage the interests of the poor. In constructing a physical infrastructure for transport, industry, trade and tourism, the settlements of the poor are often the first to suffer or to be left standing a
16、nd exposed to pollution, noise and crowding. Most important are the economic functions of poverty, as for lack of other options the poor are forced to perform activities considered degrading or unclean. The poor are more likely to buy second-hand goods and leftover foodstuffs, thus prolonging their
17、economic utility. They are likely to use the services of low-quality doctors, teachers and lawyers whom the non-poor shy away from. Poverty and the poor serve an important symbolic function, in reminding citizens of the lot that may befall those who do not heed the values of thrift, diligence and cl
18、eanliness, and of the constant threat that the rough, the immoral and the violent represent for the rest of society. Physically, the poor and the non-poor are kept apart, through differential land use and ghettoization. Socially, they are separated through differential participation in the labor mar
19、ket, the consumption economy, and in political, social and cultural institutions. Conceptually, they are divided through stereotyping and media cliche. This separation is even more pronounced between the elites and the poor. 6 According to the author, studying the elites also sheds light on poverty
20、research because _. ( A) they are also members of the same society as the poor ( B) they play an important role in creating and reproducing poverty ( C) solution of the poverty problem is at their mercy ( D) they know the living conditions of the poor better than other groups 7 While social scientis
21、ts are devoting much of their effort to poverty research,_. ( A) not enough legal frameworks have been created to relieve the condition of the poor ( B) they have done little to actually provide relief programs for the poor ( C) they ignore the role of the elites as an object for poverty research (
22、D) the poor people themselves do not much appreciate such effort 8 In the eyes of the society, _. ( A) the poor tend to symbolize what lazy and evil people turn out to be ( B) the poor are not worthy of the sympathy the society shows them ( C) economic prejudice is more of an obstacle to the solutio
23、n of poverty ( D) the non-poor should show more sympathy for the poor 9 The word “pronounced“ in the last sentence of the passage probably means_. ( A) sympathetic ( B) conspicuous ( C) identifiable ( D) unbridgeable 10 In the passage, the author is mainly concerned with_. ( A) analyzing a problem (
24、 B) providing a solution ( C) defining a situation ( D) outlining a proposal 10 Industrial production managers coordinate the resources and activities required to produce millions of goods every year in the United States. Although their duties vary from plant to plant, industrial production managers
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