[考研类试卷]2008年四川大学英语专业(基础英语)真题试卷及答案与解析.doc
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1、2008年四川大学英语专业(基础英语)真题试卷及答案与解析 一、完形填空 0 It is acknowledged that the modern musical show is Americas most original and dynamic contribution toward theater. In the last quarter of a century, America has produced large【 C1】 _of musical plays that have been popular abroad【 C2】_at home. 【 C3】 _. it is ver
2、y difficult to explain【 C4】 _is new or【 C5】 _American about them, for the【 C6】 _are centuries old. Perhaps the uniqueness of Americas contribution to the【 C7】 _can best be characterized through brief descriptions of several of the most important and best-known musicals, one of these is surely Oklaho
3、ma by Richard Rogers and Oscar Hamerstein. It burst【 C8】 _popularity in 1943, Broadway audience and critics were【 C9】_by its【 C10】 _. vitality and excitement. This “new“ type of musical was【 C11】 _as kind of【 C12】 _theater in which the play, the music and lyrics, the dancing, and the scenic backgrou
4、nd were assembled not merely to provide entertainment and【 C13】 _. but to【 C14】 _in a single unifying whole to contribute its unique feature. 【 C15】 _. it meant that the songs and dances should【 C16】 _naturally out of the situations of the story and play an important part in carrying the action【 C17
5、】 _. In Oklahoma, an American folk-dance style was organically combined with classical ballet and modern dance. It is right to say that the musical was a brilliantly integrated performance by the talented dancers and singing actors. Oklahoma also marked a new【 C18】 _in the choice of story on which a
6、 musical is based. Writers and composers began to abandon the sentimentally picturesque or aristocratic setting【 C19】 _more realistic stories in authentic social and cultural【 C20】 _. Oklahoma was based on a “folk“ whose story dealt not only with young love but also with the opening of the American
7、West. 1 【 C1】 ( A) number ( B) amount ( C) quantity ( D) numbers 2 【 C2】 ( A) better ( B) instead of ( C) as well as ( D) rather than 3 【 C3】 ( A) Therefore ( B) Yet ( C) Moreover ( D) Thus 4 【 C4】 ( A) which ( B) that ( C) what ( D) how 5 【 C5】 ( A) characteristically ( B) particularly ( C) mainly
8、( D) exactly 6 【 C6】 ( A) factors ( B) ingredients ( C) composers ( D) facts 7 【 C7】 ( A) trait ( B) feature ( C) genre ( D) style 8 【 C8】 ( A) with ( B) into ( C) out into ( D) in 9 【 C9】 ( A) struck ( B) touched ( C) moved ( D) hit 10 【 C10】 ( A) vivacity ( B) originality ( C) creativity ( D) dyna
9、mic 11 【 C11】 ( A) conceived ( B) thought ( C) believed ( D) perceived 12 【 C12】 ( A) special ( B) peculiar ( C) gross ( D) total 13 【 C13】 ( A) variety ( B) amusement ( C) sundries ( D) fun 14 【 C14】 ( A) mix ( B) join ( C) put ( D) share 15 【 C15】 ( A) In other words ( B) sum up ( C) On the contra
10、ry ( D) Generally speaking 16 【 C16】 ( A) arise ( B) derive ( C) raise ( D) originate 17 【 C17】 ( A) out ( B) on ( C) forward ( D) through 18 【 C18】 ( A) direction ( B) way ( C) method ( D) epoch 19 【 C19】 ( A) for ( B) with ( C) without ( D) except 20 【 C20】 ( A) circumstances ( B) context ( C) sit
11、uation ( D) surrounding 二、阅读理解 20 If you had asked me then if I would accept a job as a restaurant critic for The New Times, or any established publication, I would have replied, without a second thought, “Of course not!“ And not just because I did not want to think of myself as an ambitious sort. W
12、orking in restaurants was honest labor anyone could see that. Writing about for the mainstream press was not; it felt like joining the enemy. But reviewing was fun, so much fun that when mainstream publishers started paying me for my opinions, I didnt do the decent thing. Before I knew it, I had sto
13、pped cooking professionally. Then I stopped cooking altogether. “Shes joined the leisure class,“ my friends said. I disarmed my critics by inviting them along; nobody I knew could afford to eat out and nobody refused. We went with equal amounts of guilt and pleasure, with a feeling that we were tres
14、passing on the playgrounds of the rich. We didnt belong in those starchy restaurants. We always got the worst table. And then, because I didnt own a credit card, I had to pay in cash. The year turned into two, and three, and more. I got a credit card. I got good clothes. I was writing for increasing
15、ly prestigious. Meanwhile, a voice inside me kept whispering, “How could you?“ When I receive weekly letters from people who think it is indecent to write about $ 100 meals while half the world is hungry, the voice yacks right along. “Theyre absolutely right,“ it whispers. And when it asks, “When ar
16、e you going to grow up and get a real job?“ It sounds a lot like my mother. And just about then is when I tell the voice to shut up. Because when my mother starts telling me that all Im doing with my life is telling rich people where to eat, I realize how much the world has changed. Yes, there are s
17、till restaurants where rich people go to remind themselves that they are different from you and me. But there are fewer and fewer of them. As American food has come of age, American restaurants have changed. Going out to eat used to be like going to the opera today, it is more like going the movies.
18、 21 Why would the author have refused to accept the job as a restaurant critic if people had asked her then? ( A) Because she was ambitious. ( B) Because she didnt think highly of the job. ( C) Because she didnt think well of the job as a cook. ( D) Because she didnt want to criticize anyone. 22 The
19、 word “decent“ in do the decent thing in paragraph 2 is closest in meaning to_. ( A) very profitable ( B) morally acceptable ( C) fairly attractive ( D) very pleasant 23 In Paragraph 4, by “The year turned into two, three and more,“ the author means that_. ( A) she went on and on working in restaura
20、nts ( B) she lived a luxurious life for many years ( C) she kept working for publications until she got a credit card ( D) she went on and on Writing as a restaurants critic 24 Which of the following can be inferred from the last paragraph? ( A) Most American cant afford to eat out. ( B) American fo
21、od has remained unchanged. ( C) American like going to the movies. ( D) Food in most American restaurants is cheap. 25 Which of the following can be concluded from this article? ( A) Cooks are respected in the U.S. ( B) The author was once a cook. ( C) Rich people like going to the theatre. ( D) Res
22、taurants critics all feel guilty. 25 The British psychoanalyst John Bowlby maintains that separation from the parents during the sensitive “attachment“ period from birth to three may scar a childs personality and predispose to emotional problems in later life. Some people have drawn the conclusion f
23、rom Bowlbys work that children should not be subjected to day care before the age of three because of the parental separation it entails, and many people do believe this. But there are also arguments against such a strong conclusion. Firstly, anthropologists point out that the insulated love affair
24、between children and parents found in modern societies does not usually exist in traditional societies. For example, in some tribal societies, such as the Ngoin, the father and mother of a child did not rear their infant alone far from it. Secondly, common sense tells us that day care would not be s
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