2020年江西师范大学硕士研究生入学考试初试科目
考试大纲
科目代码、名称: |
716 综合英语 |
适用专业: |
050201英语语言文学、050211外国语言学及应用语言学 |
|
|
|
一、考试形式与试卷结构
(一)试卷满分 及 考试时间
本试卷满分为 150 分,考试时间为180分钟。
(二)答题方式
答题方式为闭卷、笔试。
试卷由试题和答题纸组成;答案必须写在答题纸相应的位置上。
(三)试卷内容结构(考试的内容比例及题型)
各部分内容所占分值为:
第一部分 Vocabulary. 20分
第二部分 Cloze. 20分
第三部分 Reading Comprehension. 40分
第四部分 Translation. 40分
第五部分 Writing. 30分
(四)试卷题型结构
词汇选择题:20小题,每小题1分,共20分
完型填空题:20小题,每小题1分,共20分
阅读理解题:4或5篇短文,20小题,每小题2分,共40分
翻译:中译英----1篇短文,20分
英译中----1篇短文,20分
作文:30分
二、样卷
2020年江西师范大学2011年硕士研究生入学考试试题( A 卷)
专业: 英语语言文学 外国语言学及应用语言学
科目: 综合英语
注:考生答题时,请写在考点下发的答题纸上,写在本试题纸或其他答题纸上的一律无效。
(本试题共 12 页)
Ⅰ.Vocabulary (20×1points)
There are 20 incomplete sentences in this part. For each sentence there are four choices marked a, b, c, and d. Choose the one that best completes the sentence. Then mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet.
1. There is no _______for the united States to sign the treaty since there is every reason to believe that no other nation intends to honor its provisions.
a. arrangement b. continuation c. incentive d. procedure
2.Although the conditions in which she chooses to live suggest that she is miserly, her contributions to the worthwhile charities show that she is _______.
a. stingy b. frugal c. intolerant d. generous
3. There are many dialects of English with radically different pronunciations of the same word, but the spelling of these words is _______.
a. inconstant b. uniform c. contemplated d. abbreviated
4. There is no necessary intrinsic connection between a word and the thing it refers to; the relationship is purely _______.
a. conventional b. consistent c. strategic d. illustrative
5. Naturally _____from birth, Arnold practiced hard to ______his talents.
a. adept…perfect b. handicapped…overcome
c. inept…develop d. gifted…limit
6. The teacher’s pride was hurt when he discovered that half his class had ____the exam.
a. enjoyed b. reassessed c. flunked d. redeemed
7. The reporter’s _______probings finally brought results in the case.
a. scattered b. severe c. obsessive d. relentless
8. Every new theory not only must _____the valid predictions of the old theory, but must also explain why those predictions _____within the range of that old theory.
a. organize…failed b. generate…faltered
c. promote…functioned d. accommodate…succeeded
9. After several______attempts to send the missle into space, the spacecraft was finally launched successfully.
a. abortive b. difficult c. preliminary d. excellent
10. He worked ______at his task for weeks before he felt satisfied that the results would justify his long efforts.
a. regularly b. patiently c. assiduously d. intermittently
11. His ______directions misled us; we did not know which of the two roads to take.
a. complicated b. extenuating c. ambiguous d. arbitrary
12. In order to photograph ____ animals, elaborate flashlight equipment is necessary.
a. predatory b. nocturnal c. live d. rare
13. His _____remarks are often embarrassing because of their frankness.
a. sarcastic b. sadistic c. frank d. ingenuous
14. Automation threatens mankind with an increased number of _______hours.
a. meager b. useless c. complex d. idle
15. The pioneers’ greatest asset was not their material wealth but their______.
a. fortitude b. simplicity c. companions d. possessions
16. Some students are _______and want to take only the courses for which they see immediate value.
a. theoretical b. pragmatic c.foolish d. opinionated
17. Americans do not feel that ____ obedience and implicit submission to the will of another is necessary in order to maintain good government.
a. titular b. blind c. partial d. verbal
18. We do not mean to be disrespectful when we refused to follow the advice of our _____leader.
a. venerable b. respectful c. gracious d. dynamic
19. The child’s earliest words deal with concrete objects and actions, it is much later that he is able to grapple with _______.
a. decisions b. abstractions c. opponents d. mathematics
20. _______enables us to know the past and to use it in preparing for the future.
a. Truth b. Language c. Antiquity d. Thought
Ⅱ. Cloze(20×1points)
Response to noise in hospital was clearly related to custom and background. All patients of __1___ classes discussed ward noises, and expressed varying degrees of ___2____with what they thought of as “ avoidable noise”. The 74 people who made no ___3___on noise and the 19 who thought that the ward was not noisy were either in unskilled work, often factories, or the wives of unskilled workers living a __4___communal life in tenement property. There is a suggestion also that noise is related to ___5_____of illness, and resultant length of stay in hospital. Noise that may not ___6___ a seriously ill patient because of his condition, begins to irritate as he ___7___strength. It would not be profitable to list noises ___8_____by patients, but it would perhaps be ___9____ to look at what were broadly thought of as “ hospital noises”, that is, noise __10_____ in a sickness situation and accepted, if not __11___by patients; and then to consider the “avoidable noises” -----those made through, perhaps, _12______of thought or care. Because of the structure of the wards in which the patients were nursed,___13____to the noise of the other members of the community was __14____ and accepted by all patients as such (if it was a noise associated with illness), ____15____much it may have disturbed them both physically and emotionally. It has already been discussed that patients suggested the _16____ of seriously ill or disturbed patients from the main ward, but, so long as the practice is, whether by dictate of policy or staffing, to keep such patients in the wards, this will always be a __17____of hospital noise. Patients were always tolerant of this , many expressing the ___18____that they might, some day, be responsible for the __19___of others in a similar way. To say that patients were always tolerant of noises associated with illness__20____here that they were tolerant because they themselves were concerned, but many questioned the effect of such noise by, for example, young people in the ward.
1. a. official b. amateur c. professional d. educational
2. a. accommodation b. destination c. dissatisfaction d. reservation
3. a. comment b. impression c. decline d. impact
4. a. temporarily b. objectively c. initially d. comparatively
5. a. rarity b. purity c. simplicity d. severity
6. a. annoy b. ignore c. treat d. secure
7. a. remedies b. recovers c. retreats d.retains
8. a. resented b. mentioned c. produced d. remembered
9. a. questionable b. conclusive c. deficient d. useful
10. a. adherent b. inherent c. coherent d. intrinsic
11. a. harnessed b. expected c. referred to d. identified
12. a. lack b. load c. list d. loss
13. a. delivery b. response c. exposure d. judgement
14. a. dismal b. inevitable c. avoidable d. continuous
15. a. too b. so c. as d. however
16. a. escape b. disappearance c. removal d. maintenance
17. a. source b. protection c. disaster d. curiosity
18. a. determination b. will c. fear d. idea
19. a. burdens b. obstacles c. desperation d. discomfort
20. a. ignores b. criticizes c. regards d. means
Ⅲ. Reading Comprehension (20ⅹ2 points)
There are 5 passages in this part. Each passage is followed by some questions . For each of them there 4 choices marked a,b,c,and d.You should decide on the best choice and write the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet.
Passage 1
In April 2000, immunologist Alain Fischer at Necker Hospital in Paris announced that he and his team had successfully installed a gene that restores normal immune function in three baby boys with a rare genetic illness. The disease, called X-linked Severe Combined Immune Deficiency disorder, cripples a key immune cell and leads to fatal infections. Then in August 2002, one of the treated boys developed a leukemia like condition. In September that trial and three other clinical trials for related immune disorders in the United states were suspended. Subsequent tests revealed that the retrovirus used to ferry the corrective gene into the DNA of blood-making cells in the bone marrow had lodged in or near a gene that regulates T cells, possibly prompting their uncontrolled growth.
The boy was treated with chemotherapy and is reported to be responding well. Factors other than gene therapy---cancer in the boy’s family history and a recent fit with chicked pox ---may have helped the condition develop. Nonetheless, the result has renewed concern about the oversight of clinical trials for gene therapy. After meeting in mid-October, the PDA’s advisory committee recommended that the American trials be resumed and that patients be told that the retrovirus had induced cancer in one child. The agency also asked that trial sponsors inform any patients who have received similar treatments of the adverse result.
“We’ve known that this was a hypothetical risk.” Says Donald Kohn, a immunologist at Children’s Hospital in Los Angeles. He leads one of four clinical trials for Severe Cimbined Immune Deficiency disease in the United States. “What we don’t know is the frequency that we would be seeing in patients treated with this therapy.” The boy in the French trial “was one out of 10 in the trial. Eight others are doing well---at least as well as with other treatments at this time.” The disorder affecting the French boy can be treated only with bone-marrow transplants, and suitable donors are often unavailable. The disorder Kohn is working on can be treated with drugs costing about $300,000 a year.
Nearly 80 clinical trials have attempted to correct faulty disease-causing genes, but only treatments for inherited immune-deficiency disorders have shown any success. In light of the French report, Kohn’s group is modifying the consent form for their trial so that families will know before enrolling that adverse effects are possible. They are also developing analysis to detect the problem in DNA. “We don’t yet know the risks and benefits of this treatment,” Kohn says. “ The only way to know is to cautiously proceed with other patients.”
1. Which of the following statements is TRUE according to the passage?
a. Alain Fischer and his team were successfully installed a gene restore normal immune function in April 2000.
b. In April 2000 there were three boys stricken with a rare genetic condition.
c. The three boy’s normal immune function was restored in April 2000.
d. One of the three boys treated by Alain Fischer and his team was stricken with another disease two years later.
2. The word “suspended” (Line,Para.1) means_________.
a. halted b. cancelled c. banned d. adjusted
3. According to the passage, apart from gene therapy, the boy’s development of cancer is also due to factors like____________.
a. his family history
b. cancer in his family
c. his chemotherapy history
d. chemotherapy in his family history
4. The advisory committee suggested that ____________.
a. the American trials be continued
b. the American trials be stopped again
c. the American trials be halted
d. the American trials be put off
5. We can infer from the passage__________.
a. cancer can be treated with bone-marrow transplants
b. only bone-marrow transplant can front cancer
c. bone-marrow transplants need the help of blood donors
d. bone-marrow transplants need appropriate donors difficult to find
Passage Two
As any World Wide Web surfer knows, finding information over the Internet can be painfully time-consuming. Search engines such as Yahoo!, Alta Vista and Infoseek help, but an improperly honed query can easily result in digital diarrheatens of thousands of Web pages that are irrelevant. A new technique that analyzes how documents posted on the Internet are linked to one another could provide relief. Developed by researchers from IBM, Cornell University and the university of California at Berkeley, the method finds two t
免责声明:本文系转载自网络,如有侵犯,请联系我们立即删除,另:本文仅代表作者个人观点,与本网站无关。其原创性以及文中陈述文字和内容未经本站证实,对本文以及其中全部或者部分内容、文字的真实性、完整性、及时性本站不作任何保证或承诺,请读者仅作参考,并请自行核实相关内容。