[考研类试卷]2007年南京大学英语专业(基础英语)真题试卷及答案与解析.doc
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1、2007年南京大学英语专业(基础英语)真题试卷及答案与解析 一、阅读理解 0 Read the passage below and then do the exercises that follow. THE INTERNATIONAL LANGUAGE OF GESTURES On his first trip to Naples, a well-meaning American tourist thanks his waiter for a good meal well-served by making the “A-Okay“ gesture with his thumb and for
2、efinger. The waiter pales and heads for the manager. They seriously discuss calling the police and having the hapless tourist arrested for obscene and offensive, public behavior. What happened? Most travelers wouldnt think of leaving home without a phrase book of some kind, enough of a guide to help
3、 them say and understand “la,“ “Nein,“ “Grazie“ and “Ou se trouvent les toilettes?“ And yet, while most people are aware that gestures are the most common form of cross-cultural communication, they dont realize that the language of gestures can be just as different, just as regional and just as like
4、ly to cause misunderstanding as the spoken word. Consider our puzzled tourist. The thumb-and-forefinger-in-a-circle gesture, a friendly one in America, had an insulting meaning in France and Belgium: “Youre worth zero,“ while in Greece and Turkey it is an insulting or vulgar sexual invitation. There
5、 are, in fact, dozens of gestures that take on totally different meanings as you move from one country or region to another. Is “thumbs up“ always a positive gesture? Absolutely not. Does nodding the head up and down always mean “Yes“? No! To make matters even more confusing, many hand movements hav
6、e no meaning at all, in any country. If you watch television with the sound turned off, or observe a conversation at a distance, you become aware of almost constant motion, especially with the hands and arms. People wave their arms, they shrug, they waggle their fingers, they point, they scratch the
7、ir chests, they pick their ROSES. These various activities can be divided into three major categories: manipulators, emblems, and illustrators. In a manipulator, one part of the body, usually the hands, rubs, picks, squeezes, cleans or otherwise grooms some other part. These movements have no specif
8、ic meaning. Manipulators generally increase when people become uncomfortable or occasionally when they are totally relaxed. An emblem is a physical act that can fully take the place of words. Nodding the head up and down in many cultures is a substitute for saying “Yes“. Raising the shoulders and tu
9、rning the palms upward clearly means “I dont know“, or “Im not sure“. Illustrators are physical acts that help explain what is being said but have no meaning on their own. Waving the arms, raising or lowering the eyebrows, snapping the fingers and pounding the table may enhance or explain the words
10、that accompany them, but they cannot stand alone. People sometimes use illustrators as a pantomime or charade, especially when they cant think of the right words, or when its simply easier to illustrate, as in defining “zigzag“ or explaining how to tie a shoe. Thus the same illustrator might accompa
11、ny a positive statement one moment and a negative one the next. This is not the case with emblems, which have the same precise meaning on all occasions for all members of a group, class, culture or subculture. Emblems are used consciously. The user knows what they mean, unless, of course, he uses th
12、em inadvertently. When Nelson Rockefeller raised his middle finger to a heckler, he knew exactly what the gesture meant, and he believed that the person he was communicating with knew as well. The three of us are working on a dictionary, of emblems. .In looking for emblems, we found that it isnt pro
13、ductive simply to observe people communicating with each other, because emblems are used only occasionally. And asking people to describe or identify emblems that are important in their culture is even less productive. Even when we explain the concept clearly, most people find it difficult to recogn
14、ize and analyze their own communication behavior this way. Instead, we developed a research procedure that has enabled us to identify emblems in cultures as diverse as those of urban Japanese, white, middle-class Americans, the preliterate South Fore people of Papua, natives of New Guinea, Iranians,
15、 Israelis and the inhabitants of London, Madrid, Paris, Frankfurt and Rome. The procedure involves three steps. Give a group of people from the same cultural background a series of phrases and ask if they have a gesture or facial expression for each phrase: “What time is it?“ “Hes a homosexual.“ “Th
16、ats good“. “Yes“. And so on. We find that normally, after 10 to 15 people have provided responses, we have catalogued the great majority of the emblems of their culture. Analyze the results. If most of the people cannot supply a “performance“ for a verbal message, we discard it. Study the remaining
17、performances further to eliminate inventions and illustrators. Many people are so eager to please that they will invent a gesture on the spot. Americans asked for a gesture for “sawing wood“ could certainly oblige, even if they had never considered the request before, but the arm motion they would p
18、rovide would not be an emblem. To weed out these false emblems, we show other people from the same culture videotapes of the performances by the first group. We ask which are inventions, which are pantomimes and which are symbolic gestures that they have seenbefore or used themselves. We also ask th
19、e people to give us their own meanings for each performance The gestures remaining after this second round of interpretations are likely to be the emblems of that particular culture. Using this procedure, we have found three types of emblems: First, popular emblems have the same or similar meanings
20、in several cultures. The side-to-side head motion meaning “No“ is a good example. Next, unique emblems have a specific meaning in one culture but none elsewhere. Surprisingly, there seem to be no uniquely American emblems, although other countries provide many examples. For instance, the French gest
21、ure of putting ones fist around the tip of the nose and twisting it to signify, “Hes drunk.“ is not used elsewhere. The German “good luck“ emblem, making two fists with the thumbs inside and pounding an imaginary, table, is unique to that culture. Finally, multi-meaning emblems have one meaning in o
22、ne culture and a totally different meaning in another. The thumb inserted between the index and third fingers is an invitation to have sex in Germany, Holland and Denmark, but in Portugal and Brazil it is a wish for good luck or protection. The number of emblems in use varies considerably among cult
23、ures, from fewer than 60 in the United States to more than 250 in Israel. The difference is understandable, since Israel is composed of recent immigrants from many countries, most of which have their own large emblem vocabularies. In addition, since emblems are helpful in military operations where s
24、ilence is essential, and all Israelis serve in the armed forces, military service provides both the opportunity and the need to learn new emblems. The kind of emblems used, as well as the number, varies considerably from culture to culture. Some are especially heavy on insults, for instance, while o
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