书签 分享 收藏 举报 版权申诉 / 18
上传文档赚钱

类型2005年北京中科院考博英语真题.doc

  • 上传人(卖家):雁南飞1234
  • 文档编号:2536246
  • 上传时间:2022-05-01
  • 格式:DOC
  • 页数:18
  • 大小:190.15KB
  • 【下载声明】
    1. 本站全部试题类文档,若标题没写含答案,则无答案;标题注明含答案的文档,主观题也可能无答案。请谨慎下单,一旦售出,不予退换。
    2. 本站全部PPT文档均不含视频和音频,PPT中出现的音频或视频标识(或文字)仅表示流程,实际无音频或视频文件。请谨慎下单,一旦售出,不予退换。
    3. 本页资料《2005年北京中科院考博英语真题.doc》由用户(雁南飞1234)主动上传,其收益全归该用户。163文库仅提供信息存储空间,仅对该用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对上传内容本身不做任何修改或编辑。 若此文所含内容侵犯了您的版权或隐私,请立即通知163文库(点击联系客服),我们立即给予删除!
    4. 请根据预览情况,自愿下载本文。本站不保证下载资源的准确性、安全性和完整性, 同时也不承担用户因使用这些下载资源对自己和他人造成任何形式的伤害或损失。
    5. 本站所有资源如无特殊说明,都需要本地电脑安装OFFICE2007及以上版本和PDF阅读器,压缩文件请下载最新的WinRAR软件解压。
    配套讲稿:

    如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。

    特殊限制:

    部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。

    关 键  词:
    博士考试统考试题
    资源描述:

    1、2005年北京中科院考博英语真题CHINESE ACADEMY OF SCIENCESENGLISH ENTRANCE EXAMINATION FOR DOCTORAL CANDIDATESMarch 2005PAPER ONEPART ILISTENING COMPREHENSION (20 minutes, 20 points) Section A (10 points, 1 point each)Directions: In this section, you will hear ten short conversations between two speakers. At the e

    2、nd of each conversation, a question will be asked about what was said. The question will be spoken only once. Choose the best answer from the four choices given by marking the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square brackets on your Machine-scoring Answer Sheet.1. A. He needs more f

    3、resh air. B. He is willing to go out. C. He is too sick to go out. D. He opened the window.2. A. Their friends. B. Daily activities. C. Past experiences. D. Historical events.3. A. To buy a ticket. B. To pay a fee. C. To pay back a debt. D. To buy a gift. 4. A. Give information. B. State preferences

    4、. C. Ask permission. D. Attract attention.5. A. In a gymnasium. B. In an art exhibition.C. In a shop.D. In a hotel.6. A. 19 dollars each. B. 38 dollars each.C. 30 dollars altogether.D. 36 dollars altogether. 7. A. Jack is a gentleman.B. Jack does everything right.C. Jack is a desirable husband. D. J

    5、ack behaves immaturely sometimes. 8. A. It was remarkable to both the man and the woman.B. It was not suitable for the woman. C. The man hated this kind of movie.D. The woman complained about its quality.9. A. See how much the jacket is.B. See if the jacket there is blue. C. See if there is a cell p

    6、hone in the jacket.D. See if there was anything turned in this morning.10. A. The man has caught a cold.B. The woman was caught in a rainstorm.C. The weather forecast was inaccurate.D. It rained very heavily. Section B(10 points, 1 point each)Directions: In this section, you will hear three short ta

    7、lks. At the end of each talk, there will be a few questions. Both the talk and the questions will be read to you only once. After each question, there will be a pause. During the pause, you must choose the best answer from the four choices given by marking the corresponding letter with a single bar

    8、across the square brackets on your Machine-scoring Answer Sheet.Questions 11-13 are based on Talk 1.11. A. Language comes from physical labor.B. Language learning is a long-term endeavor.C. Language reflects history.D. Language study is very important.12. A. Constructing a wheel.B. Making a choice.C

    9、. Coming back.D. Turning around.13. A. The overthrow of a class.B. The overthrow of a tyrant.C. The overthrow of a belief.D. The overthrow of an act.Questions 14-17 are based on Talk 2.14. A. Its a wonderful idea. B. Its not a smart thing to do. C. Its too difficult to put into practice. D. Its inte

    10、resting to the decision maker.15. A. Telling people about your degrees. B. Promising that you will make good achievements. C. Introducing your job responsibilities. D. Talking about the needs of the potential employer. 16. A. The results which your potential boss wants to gain with your assistance.

    11、B. The results of making more money on an international market. C. The results that the employer has seen in the past. D. The results that your potential boss does not want to see.17. A. Proving that you are capable of doing the job.B. Seeking the position that is not too high or too low for you.C.

    12、Insisting that experience is more important than knowledge.D. Claiming that you are better than any other applicant.Questions 18-20 are based on Talk 3. 18. A. They exercise dogs twice a day. B. They learn how to be responsible for dogs. C. They encourage dogs to go for long walks. D. They like dogs

    13、 too much to care about other things. 19. A. Working for the police.B. Relaxing with other dogs.C. Protecting businesses.D. Guiding the blind.20. A. Dogs ride in public transport.B. Dogs bite their owners when in a rage.C. Vehicles run over stray dogs.D. People always keep dogs on leads.PART IIVOCAB

    14、ULARY (15 minutes, 10 points, 0.5 point each)Directions: Choose the word or expression below each sentence that best completes the statement, and mark the corresponding letter of your choice with a single bar across the square brackets on your Machine-scoring Answer Sheet.21. Giorgio, now fifteen, a

    15、nd Lucia, also in her teens, were reaching the _ of their adolescence.A. crisis B. criterion C. causality D. credibility 22. At first Jackie prayed, frozen in fear, but gradually his terror _ curiosity.A. put up with B. lived up to C. did away with D. gave way to 23. The International Olympic Commit

    16、tee rejects the accusations that Beijings budget-cutting move might _ its preparation for the games.A. degrade B. deliberate C. deploy D. defend24. You are not allowed to take a second job _ your employer gives you permission. A. so long as B. otherwise C. unless D. whereas25. They continued to _ ab

    17、out and enjoy themselves until they became tired. A. strokeB. strollC. stammer D. string26. The survey asked 750 school children about the values and beliefs they _ from television.A. pick up B. take up C. put up D. make up27. I am grateful for your _ invitation, and Id like to accept your offer wit

    18、h pleasure. A. delighted B. innocent C. gracious D. prestigious28. I must _ you farewell right now, but on some future occasion, I hope to see you again. A. relayB. bidC. send D. deliver29. Perhaps my dishes will not be as delicious as those which you are accustomed to eating, but I beg you to grant

    19、 my _ and have dinner with me.A. resentment B. requirementC. request D. reservation30. That singular achievement was not just about Koreas arrival as a football force but as a self-confident mature nation to be _ seriously. A. coped B. shown C. established D. taken 31. Europe as a _ unit did little

    20、by itself; it either sent for US help, or each European government acted on its own.A. incidental B. apparent C. cohesive D. descendent 32. On 9 December, James Joyce experienced one of those coincidences which affected him _ at the time and which later became material for his books. A. inadequately

    21、B. systematicallyC. profoundlyD. simultaneously33. Embarrassed, I nodded, trying to think of some way to _ my error. A. make do with B. make up for C. go in for D. go along with 34. Furthermore, if I were to leave him, he would _, for he cannot endure to be separated from me for more than one hour.

    22、A. prevailB. preside C. perishD. persecute35. With high hopes, the company sent samples of the substance to scientists, but they couldnt _ any practical uses for it. A. come up with B. do justice to C. get even with D. look up to 36. He signed a new contract with the Dublin firm, Maunsel & Company,

    23、on more favorable _ than those Grant Richards had given him.A. items B. terms C. articles D. specifications37. Most scientists agree this outpouring contributes to global warming, which could eventually lead to coastal flooding, _ weather, and widespread crop loss.A. intensive B. extreme C. unplease

    24、d D. unique 38. There was a quick turnover of staff in the department as the manager treated his employees with _ contempt. A. utter B. sole C. intimate D. corresponding 39. The source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, _ to discuss the implication of that conclusion. A. receded B. implied C. com

    25、plied D. declined 40. Childhood can be a time of great insecurity and loneliness, during which the need to be accepted by peers _ great significance.A. takes on B. works out C. brings about D. gives in PART IIICLOZE TEST (15 minutes, 15 points)Directions: There are 15 blanks in the following passage

    26、. Read the passage through. Then, go back and choose the most suitable of the words or phrases marked A, B, C, and D for each blank in the passage. Mark the corresponding letter of the word or phrase you have chosen with a single bar across the square brackets on your Machine-scoring Answer Sheet.Ca

    27、n exercise be a bad thing? Sudden death during or soon after strenuous exertion on the squash court or on the army training grounds, is not unheard of. 41 trained marathon runners are not immune to fatal heart attacks. But no one knows just 42 common these sudden deaths linked to exercise are. The r

    28、egistration and investigation of such 43 is very patchy; only a national survey could determine the true 44 of sudden deaths in sports. But the climate of medical opinion is shifting in 45 of exercise, for the person recovering from a heart attack as 46 as the average lazy individual. Training can h

    29、elp the victim of a heart attack by lowering the 47 of oxygen the heart needs at any given level of work 48 the patient can do more before reaching the point where chest pains indicate a heart starved of oxygen. The question is, should middle-aged people, 49 particular, be screened for signs of hear

    30、t disease before 50 vigorous exercise?Most cases of sudden death in sport are caused by lethal arrhythmias in the beating of the heart, often in people 51 undiagnosed coronary heart disease. In North America 52 over 35 is advised to have a physical check-up and even an exercise electrocardiogram. Th

    31、e British, on the whole, think all this testing is unnecessary. Not many people die from exercise, 53 , and ECGs(心电图)are notoriously inaccurate. However, two medical cardiologists at the Victoria Infirmary in Glasgow, advocate screening by exercise ECG for people over 40, or younger people 54 at ris

    32、k of developing coronary heart disease. Individuals showing a particular abnormality in their ECGs 55 , they say, a 10 to 20 times greater risk of subsequently developing signs of coronary heart disease, or of sudden death. 41. A. Then B. Though C. Since D. Even42. A. why B. how C. if D. what43. A.

    33、runners B. exercises C. patients D. cases 44. A. initiation B. evidence C. incidence D. indication45. A. favor B. positive C. inclination D. bias46. A. good B. well C. much D. far47. A. weight B. amount C. degree D. quality48. A. however B. because C. but D. so 49. A. at B. to C. for D. in 50. A. ta

    34、king up B. trying on C. getting over D. doing with51. A. beyond B. by C. with D. of52. A. anyone B. noneC. some D. nobody53. A. of course B. at all C. after all D. by far54. A. readily B. suddenly C. already D. ready55. A. having B. had C. having been D. have PART IVREADING COMPREHENSION (60 minutes

    35、, 30 points)Directions: You will read five passages in this part of the test. Below each passage there are some questions or incomplete statements. Each question or statement is followed by four choices marked A, B, C, and D. Read the passage carefully, and then select the choice that best answers t

    36、he question or completes the statement. Mark the letter of your choice with a single bar across the square brackets on your Machine-scoring Answer Sheet.Passage 1 I myself first saw Samarkand from a rise across a wilderness of crumbling ruins and great graveyards which lie between it and the airport

    37、. Suddenly we caught a glimpse of painted towers and the great blue domes of mosques and tombs shouldering the full weight of the sky among bright green trees and gardens. Beyond the gardens and the glittering domes still were those watchful mountains and their evocative snow. I found myself thinkin

    38、g of the thrill I had on catching my first sight of Damascus after crossing the desert from Syria. The light, the orchards and many of the trees were the same but deeper still was the sense of coming into contact with one of the most astonishing cultures in history, the world of the one and only All

    39、ah and his prophet Muhammad. It was a world that completely overawed me.Yet the memory of Samarkand which stays with me most clearly is quite a humble one. Coming back to the city from the country on my last evening we passed some unusual elm trees and I stopped to have a look at them. They were, my

    40、 guide told me, perhaps a thousand years old, older certainly than Genghis Khan. A flock of fat-tailed sheep (the same kind of sheep that my own ancestors saw a Hottentot keeping when they landed at the Cape of Good Hope 321 years ago), tended by some Tadshik children, moved slowly home in the dista

    41、nce. Then from the city came quite clearly the call to prayer from mosque and minaret. I had not expected any calls at all and it made no difference that some of the calls came over loud-speakers. Then beyond the trees an old man appeared on a donkey, dismounted, spread a prayer mat on the ground, a

    42、nd kneeling towards Mecca, he began to pray. From Samarkand I journeyed on to Bokhara which was once the holiest city in Central Asia. At one time it possessed over a hundred religious colleges and close to four hundred mosques. It drew adventurers of all races towards it as it did Marco Polo. Not m

    43、any of them reached their destination. These days at what used to be one of the richest market places in the world, one buys ice-cream instead of slaves; watches and mass-produced trinkets and fizzy drinks instead of gold, silks and turquoise jewellery. Few of the four hundred mosques remain and mos

    44、t have vanished without even leaving a trace.56. Samarkand lies _.A. in a desertB. high in the mountainsC. in front of DamascusD. between the mountains and the airport57. The author said that he was overawed by _.A. the beauty of the sceneB. the sight of DamascusC. the age of the placeD. the world o

    45、f Allah and Muhammad 58. The author refers to his clearest memory of Samarkand as “humble” because _. A. it was an ordinary scene that he remembered B. it was his last night in the city and his last memoryC. the elm trees were older than Genghis KhanD. the trees looked impressive in the evening ligh

    46、t59. The author says that the sheep he saw were similar to _.A. the ones his ancestors had keptB. the ones that lived in his own countryC. those his ancestors had seen at the Cape of Good Hope D. those his ancestors had taken to the Cape of Good Hope60. The author was surprised to hear the calls to prayer because _.A. he was far away from the city, yet he could hear them clearlyB. he did not think there would be an

    展开阅读全文
    提示  163文库所有资源均是用户自行上传分享,仅供网友学习交流,未经上传用户书面授权,请勿作他用。
    关于本文
    本文标题:2005年北京中科院考博英语真题.doc
    链接地址:https://www.163wenku.com/p-2536246.html

    Copyright@ 2017-2037 Www.163WenKu.Com  网站版权所有  |  资源地图   
    IPC备案号:蜀ICP备2021032737号  | 川公网安备 51099002000191号


    侵权投诉QQ:3464097650  资料上传QQ:3464097650
       


    【声明】本站为“文档C2C交易模式”,即用户上传的文档直接卖给(下载)用户,本站只是网络空间服务平台,本站所有原创文档下载所得归上传人所有,如您发现上传作品侵犯了您的版权,请立刻联系我们并提供证据,我们将在3个工作日内予以改正。

    163文库