2016考研初试英语(一)真题

本站小编 免费考研网/2016-01-20

  Section I  Use of English

  Directions:

  Read the following text. Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark A, B, C or D on the ANSWER SHEET. (10 points)

  In Cambodia the choice of a spouse is a complex one for the young male. It may involve not only his parents and his friends,1those of the young women, but also a matchmaker. A young man can 2 a likely spouse on his own and them ask his parents to 3 the marriage negotiations. or the young man’s parents may make the choice of a spouse, giving the child little to say in the selection. 4 , a girl may veto the spouse her parents have chosen. 5 a spouse has been selected, each family investigates the other to make sure its child is marrying  6  a good family.

  The traditional wedding is a long and colorful affair. Formerly it lasted three days 7  by the 1980s it more commonly lasted a day and a half. Buddhist priests offer a short sermon and 8 prayers of blessing. Parts of the ceremony involve ritual hair cutting,  9  cotton threads soaked in holy water around the bride’s and groom’s wrists ,and 10 a candle around a circle of happily married and respected couples to bless the 11 .Newlyweds traditionally move in with the wife’s parents and may 12 with them up to a year, 13 they can build a flew house nearby.

  Divorce is legal and easy to 14 ,but not common .Divorced persons are 15 with some  disapproval. Each spouse retains 16 property he or she 17 into the marriage, and jointly –acquired property is 18 equally. Divorced persons may remarry, but a gender prejudice 19 up .The divorced male doesn’t have a waiting period before he can remarry 20 the woman must wait the months.

  1. [A] by way of    [B] as well as    [C] on behalf of    [D] with regard to

  2. [A] adapt to    [B] provide for    [C]compete with    [D] decide on

  3. [A] close    [B] renew    [C]arrange    [D] postpone

  4. [A] In theory    [B] Above all    [C] In time    [D] For example

  5. [A] Although    [B] Lest    [C] After    [D] Unless

  6. [A] into    [B] within    [C] from    [D] through

  7. [A] sine    [B] or     [C] but    [D] so

  8. [A] test    [B]copy    [C]recite    [D] create

  9. [A] folding    [B] piling    [C] wrapping    [D] tying

  10. [A] lighting     [B] passing    [C] hiding     [D] serving

  11. [A] meeting    [B] association    [C] collection    [D]union

  12. [A] grow    [B] part    [C] deal     [D]live

  13. [A] whereas    [B] until    [C] for    [D] if

  14. [A] obtain    [B] follow    [C] challenge    [D]avoid

  15. [A] isolated    [B] persuaded    [C] viewed    [D] exposed

  16. [A]wherever    [B] however    [C] whenever    [D]whatever

  17. [A] changed    [B] brought    [C] shaped     [D] pushed

  18. [A] divided    [B] invested    [C] donated    [D] withdrawn

  19. [A]clears    [B] warms    [C] shows    [D] breaks

  20. [A]while    [B] so what    [C]once    [D] in that

  Section II  Reading Comprehension

  Part A

  Directions:

  Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on the ANSWER SHEET. (40 points)

  Text 1

  France, which prides itself as the global innovator of fashion, has decided its fashion industry has lost an absolute right to define physical beauty for woman. Its lawmakers gave preliminary approval last week to a law that would make it a crime to employ ultra-thin models on runways.

  The parliament also agreed to ban websites that” incite excessive thinness” by promoting extreme dieting.

  Such measures have a couple of uplifting motives. They suggest beauty should not be defined by looks that end up with impinging on health. That’s a start. And the ban on ultra-thin models seems to go beyond protecting models from starring themselves to health –as some have done. It tells the fashion industry that it move take responsibility for the signal it sends women, especially teenage girls, about the social tape –measure they must use to  determine their individual worth.

  The bans, if fully enforced ,would suggest to woman (and many men )that they should not let others be orbiters of their beauty .And perhaps faintly, they hint that people should look to intangible qualities like character and intellect rather than dieting their way to sine zero or wasp-waist physiques .

  The French measures, however, rely too much on severe punishment to change a culture that still regards beauty as skin-deep-and bone-showing. Under the law, using a fashion model that does not meet a government-defined index of body mess could result in a $85,000 fine and six months in prison.

  The fashion industry knows it has an inherent problem in focusing on material adornment and idealized body types. In Denmark, the United States, and a few other countries, it is trying to set voluntary standard for models and fashion images there rely more on pear pressure for enforcement.

  In contrast to France’s actions, Denmark’s fashion industry agreed last month on rules and sanctions regarding age, health, and other characteristics of models .The newly revised Danish Fashion Ethical charter clearly states, we are aware of and take responsibility for the impact the fashion industry has on body ideals, especially on young people. The charter’s main toll of enforcement is to deny access for designers and modeling agencies to Copenhagen. Fashion week, which is men by the Danish Fashion Institute .But in general it relies on a name-and –shame method of compliance.

  Relying on ethical persuasion rather than law to address the misuse of body ideals may be the best step. Even better would be to help elevate notions of beauty beyond the material standards of a particular industry.

  21. According to the first paragraph, what would happen in France?

  [A] Physical beauty would be redefined

  [B] New runways would be constructed

  [C] Websites about dieting would thrive

  [D] The fashion industry would decline

  22. The phrase “impinging on”(Line2 Para2) is closest in meaning to

  [A] heightening the value of

  [B] indicating the state of

  [C] losing faith in

  [D] doing harm to

  23. Which of the following is true of the fashion industry

  [A] The French measures have already failed

  [B] New standards are being set in Denmark

  [C] Models are no longer under peer pressure

  [D] Its inherent problems are getting worse

  24. A designer is most likely to be rejected by CFW for

  [A] setting perfect physical conditions

  [B] caring too much about models’ character

  [C] showing little concern for health factors

  [D] pursuing a high age threshold for models

  25. Which of the following maybe the best title of the text?

  [A] A challenge to the Fashion Industry’s Body Ideals

  [B] A Dilemma for the starving models in France

  [C] Just Another Round of struggle for beauty

  [D] The Great Threats to the Fashion Industry

  Text 2

  For the first time in the history more people live in towns than in the country. In Britain this has had a curious result. While polls show Britons rate “the countryside” alongside the royal family. Shakespeare and the National Health Service (NHS) as what make them proudest of their country, this has limited political support.

  A century ago Octavia Hill launched the National Trust not to rescue stylish houses but to save “the beauty of natural places for everyone forever”. It was specifically to provide city dwellers with spaces for leisure where they could experience “a refreshing air”. Hill’s pressure later led to the creation of national parks and green belts. They don’t make countryside any more, and every year concrete consumes more of it .It needs constant guardianship.

  At the next election none of the big parties seem likely to endorse this sentiment. The Conservatives’ planning reform explicitly gives rural development priority over conservation,

  even authorizing “off–plan” building where local people might object. The concept of sustainable development has been defined as profitable. Labour likewise wants to discontinue local planning where councils oppose development. The Liberal Democrats are silent only u   sensing its chance, has sides with those pleading for a more considered approach to using green land. Its campaign to protect Rural England struck terror into many local conservative parties.    

  The sensible place to build new houses factories and offices is where people are in cities and towns where infrastructure is in place. The London agents Stirling Ackroyed recently identified enough sites for half of million houses in the Landon area alone with no intrusion on green belts. What is true of London is even truer of the provinces. The idea that “housing crisis” equals “concreted meadows” is pure lobby talk. The issue is not the need for more houses but, as always, where to put them under lobby pressure, George Osborne favours rural new-build against urban renovation and renewal. He favours out-of-town shopping sites against high streets. This is not a free market but a biased one. Rural towns and villages have grown and will always grow. They do so best where building sticks to their edges and respects their character. We do not ruin urban conservation areas. Why ruin rural ones?

  Development should be planned, not let trip, After the Netherlands, Britain is Europe’s most crowed country. Half a century of town and country planning has enable it to retain an enviable rural coherence, while still permitting low-density urban living. There is no doubt of the alternative-the corrupted landscapes of southern Portugal, Spain or Ireland. Avoiding this rather than promoting it should unite the left and right of the political spectrum.

  26. Britain’s public sentiment about the countryside

  [A] is not well reflected in politics

  [B] is fully backed by the royal family

  [C] didn’t start fill the Shakespearean age

  [D] has brought much benefit to the NHS

  27. According to paragraph 2,the achievements of the National Trust are now being

  [A] largely overshadowed

  [B] properly protected

  [C] effectively reinforced

  [D] gradually destroyed

  28. Which of the following can be offered from paragraph 3

  [A] Labour is under attack for opposing development

  [B] The Conservatives may abandon “off-plan” building

  [C] Ukip may gain from its support for rural conservation

  [D] The Liberal Democrats are losing political influence

  29. The author holds that George Osbornes’s preference

  [A] shows his disregard for the character of rural area

  [B] stresses the necessity of easing the housing crisis

  [C] highlights his firm stand against lobby pressure

  [D] reveals a strong prejudice against urban areas

  30. In the last paragraph the author show his appreciation of

  [A] the size of population in Britain

  [B] the enviable urban lifestyle in Britain

  [C] the town-and-country planning in Britain

  [D] the political life in today’s Britain

  Text 3

  “There is one and only one social responsibility of business” wrote Milton Friedman, a Nobel Prize-winning economist “That is, to use its resources and engage in activities designed to increase its profits.” But even if you accept Friedman’s premise and regard corporate social responsibility(CSR) policies as a waste of shareholders’s money, things may not be absolutely clear-act. New research suggests that CSR may create monetary value for companies at least when they are prosecuted for corruption.

  The largest firms in America and Britain together spend more than $15 billion a year on CSR, according to an estimate by EPG, a consulting firm. This could add value to their businesses in three ways. First, consumers may take CSR spending as a “signal” that a company’s products are of high quality. Second, customers may be willing to buy a company’s products as an indirect may to donate to the good causes it helps. And third, through a more diffuse “halo effect” whereby its good deeds earn it greater consideration from consumers and others.

  Previous studies on CSR have had trouble differentiating these effects because consumers can be affected by all three. A recent study attempts to separate them by looking at bribery prosecutions under American’s Foreign Corrupt Practices Act(FCPA).It argues that since prosecutors do not consume a company’s products as part of their investigations,they could be influenced only by the halo effect.

  The study found that,among prosecuted firms,those with the most comprehensive CSR programmes tended to get more lenient penalties. Their analysis ruled out the possibility that it was firm’s political influence, rather than their CSR stand, that accounted for the leniency: Companies that contributed more to political campaigns did not receive lower fines.

  In all, the study concludes that whereas prosecutors should only evaluate a case based on its merits, they do seem to be influenced by a company’s record in CSR. “We estimate that either eliminating a substantial labour-rights concern, such as child labour, or increasing corporate giving by about20% result in fines that generally are 40% lower than the typical punishment for bribing foreign officials.” says one researcher.

  Researchers admit that their study does not answer the question at how much businesses ought to spend on CSR. Nor does it reveal how much companies are banking on the halo effect, rather than the other possible benefits, when they companies get into trouble with the law, evidence of good character can win them a less costly punishment.

  31. The author views Milton Friedman’s statement about CSR with

  [A]uncertainty

  [B]skepticism

  [C]approval

  [D]tolerance

  32. According to Paragraph 2, CSR helps a company by

  [A]guarding it against malpractices

  [B]protecting it from consumers

  [C]winning trust from consumers.

  [D]raising the quality of its products

  33. The expression “more lenient”(line 2,Para.4)is closest in meaning to

  [A]less controversial

  [B]more lasting

  [C]more effective

  [D]less severe

  34. When prosecutors evaluate a case, a company’s CSR record

  [A]comes across as reliable evidence

  [B]has an impact on their decision

  [C]increases the chance of being penalized

  [D]constitutes part of the investigation

  35. Which of the following is true of CSR according to the last paragraph?

  [A] The necessary amount of companies spending on it is unknown

  [B] Companies’ financial capacity for it has been overestimated

  [C] Its negative effects on businesses are often overlooked

  [D]It has brought much benefit to the banking industry

  Text 4

  There will eventually come a day when The New York Times ceases to publish stories on newsprint. Exactly when that day will be is a matter of debate. ”Sometime in the future,” the paper’s publisher said back in 2010.

  Nostalgia for ink on paper and the rustle of pages aside, there’s plenty of incentive to ditch print. The infrastructure required to make a physical newspaper – printing presses, delivery trucks – isn’t just expensive; it’s excessive at a time when online – only competitors don’t have the same set of financial constraints. Readers are migrating away from print anyway. And though print ad sales still dwarf their online and mobile counterparts, revenue from print is still declining.

  Overhead may be high and circulation lower, but rushing to eliminate its print edition would be a mistake, says BuzzFeed CEO Jonah Peretti.

  Peretti says the Times shouldn’t waste time getting out of the print business, but only if they go about doing it the right way. “Figuring out a way to accelerate that transition would make sense for them,” he said, “but if you discontinue it, you’re going have your most loyal customers really upset with you.”

  Sometimes that’s worth making a change anyway. Peretti gives the example of Netflix discontinuing its DVD-mailing service to focus on streaming. “It was seen as blunder,” he said. The move turned out to be foresighted. And if Peretti were in charge at the Times? ”I wouldn’t pick a year to end print,” he said “I would raise prices and make it into more of a legacy product.”

  The most loyal customers would still get the product they favor, the idea goes, and they’d feel like they were helping sustain the quality of something they believe in. “So if you’re overpaying for print, you could feel like you were helping,” Peretti said. “Then increase it at a higher rate each year and essentially try to generate additional revenue.” In other words, if you’re going to make a print product, make it for the people who are already obsessed with it. Which may be what the Times is doing already. Getting the print edition seven days a week costs nearly $500 a year – more than twice as much as a digital – only subscription.

  “It’s a really hard thing to do and it’s a tremendous luxury that BuzzFeed doesn’t have a legacy business,” Peretti remarked. “But we’re going to have questions like that where we have things we’re doing that don’t make sense when the market changes and the world changes. In those situations, it’s better to be more aggressive that less aggressive.”

  36. The New York Times is considering ending it’s print edition partly due to

  [A] the increasing online and sales

  [B] the pressure from its investors

  [C] the complaints from its readers

  [D] the high cost of operation

  37. Peretti suggests that in face of the present situation, The Times should

  [A] make strategic adjustments

  [B] end the print sedition for good

  [C] seek new sources of leadership

  [D] aim for efficient management

  38. It can be inferred from paragraphs 5and 6 that a ” legacy product”

  [A] helps restore the glory of former times

  [B] is meant for the most loyal customers

  [C] will have the cost of printing reduced

  [D] expands the popularity of the paper

  39. Peretti believes that in a changing world

  [A] traditional luxuries can stay unaffected

  [B] cautiousness facilitates problem-solving

  [C] aggressiveness better meets challenges

  [D] legacy businesses are becoming out dated

  40. which of the following would be the best title of the text?

  [A] shift to online newspapers all at once

  [B] Cherish the Newspapers still in Your Hand

  [C] keep Your Newspapers Forever in Fashion

  [D] Make Your print Newspapers a luxury Good

  Part B

  Directions:

  Read the following text and answer the questions by choosing the most suitable subheading from the list A-G for each of the numbered paragraphs (41-45). There are two extra subheadings. Mark your answers on the ANSER SHEET. (10 point)

  [A] Create a new image of yourself

  [B] Decide if the time is right

  [C] Have confidence in yourself

  [D]Understand the context

  [E]Work with professionals

  [F]Make it efficient

  [G]Know your goals

  No matter how formal or informal the work environment, the way you present yourself has an impact. This is especially true in the first impressions. According to research from Princeton University , people assess your competence, trustworthiness, and likeability in just a tenth of a second, solely based on the way you look.

  The difference between today’s workplace and the “dress for success” era is that the range of options is so much broader. Norms have evolved and fragmented. In some settings, red sneakers or dress T-shirts can convey status; in other not so much. Plus, whatever image we present is magnified by social-media services like LinkedIn. Chances are, your headshots are seen much more often now than a decade or two ago. Millennials, it seems, face the paradox of being the least formal generation yet the most conscious of style and personal branding. It can be confusing.

  So how do we navigate this? How do we know when to invest in an upgrade? And what’s the best way to pull off one than enhances our goals? Here are some tips:

  41_________________________

  As  an executive coach, I’ve seen image upgrades be particular helpful during transitions-when looking for a new job, stepping into a new or more public role, or changing work environments. If you’re in a period of change or just feeling stuck and in a rut, now may be a good time. If you’re not sure, ask for honest feedback from trusted friends, colleagues and professionals. Look for cues about how others perceive you. Maybe there’s no need for an upgrade and that’s OK

  42________________________

  Get clear on what impact you’re hoping to have. Are you looking to refresh your image or pivot it? For one person, the goal may be to be taken more seriously and enhance their professional image. For another, it may be to be perceived as more approachable, or more modern and stylish. For someone moving from finance to advertising, maybe they want to look more “SoHo.” (It’s OK to use characterizations like that )

  43 ________________________

  Look at your work environment like an anthropologist. What are the norms of your environment? What conveys status? Who are your most important audiences? How do the people you respect and look up to present themselves? The better you understand the cultural context, the more control you can have over your impact.

  44 _______________________

  Enlist the support of professionals and share with them your goals and context. Hire a personal stylist, or use the free styling service of a store like J. Crew. Try a hair stylist instead of a barber. Work with a professional photographer instead of your spouse or friend. It’s not as expensive as you might think.

  45 ________________________

  The point of a style upgrade isn’t to become more vain or to spend more time fussing over what to wear. Instead, use it as an opportunity to reduce decision fatigue. Pick a standard work uniform or a few go-to options. Buy all your clothes at once with a stylist instead of shopping alone, one article of clothing at a time.

  Part C

  Directions:

  Read the following text carefully and then translate the underlined segments into Chinese. Your translation should be written neatly on the ANSWER SHEET. (10 points)

  Mental health is our birthright. (46) we don’t have to learn how to be mentally healthy, it is built into us in the same way that our bodies know how to heal a cut or mend, a broken bone. Mental health can’t be learned, only reawakened. It is like immune system of the body, which under stress or through lack of nutrition or exercise can be weakened, but which never leaves us. When we don’t understand the value of mental health and we don’t know how to gain access to it, mental health will remain hidden from us. (47) Our mental health doesn’t go anywhere; like the sun behind a cloud, it can be temporarily hidden from view, but it is fully capable of being restored in an instant.

  Mental health is the seed that contains self-esteem –confidence in ourselves and an ability to trust in our common sense. It allows us to have perspective on our lives-the ability to not take ourselves too seriously, to laugh at ourselves, to see the bigger picture, and to see that things will work out. It’s a form of innate or unlearned optimism. (48) Mental health allows us to view others with sympathy if they are having troubles, with kindness if they are in pain, and with unconditional love no matter who they are. Mental health is the source of creativity for solving problems, resolving conflict, making our surroundings more beautiful, managing our home life, or coming up with a creative business idea or invention to make our lives easier. It gives us patience for ourselves. And toward others as well as patience while driving, catching a fish, working on our car, or raising a child. It allows us to see the beauty that surrounds us each moment in nature, in culture, in the flow of our daily lives.

  (49)Although mental health is the cure-all for living our lives, it is perfecting ordinary as you will see that it has been there to direct you through all your difficult decisions. It has been available even in the most mundane of life situations to show you right from wrong, good from bad, friend from foe. Mental health has commonly been called conscience, instinct, wisdom, common sense, or the inner voice, we think of it simply as a health and helpful flow of intelligent thought. (50) As you will come to see, knowing that mental health is always available and knowing to trust it allow us to slow down to the moment and live life happily.

  Section III  Writing

  Part A

  51. Directions:

  Suppose you are a librarian in your university. Write a notice of about 100 words. Providing the newly-enrolled international students with relevant information about the library.

  You should write neatly on the ANSWER SHEET.

  Do not sign your own name at the end of the notice. Use Li Ming instead.

  Do not write the address. (10 points)

  Part B

  52. Directions:

  Write an essay of 160-200 words based on the following pictures In your essay, you should

  1) describe the pictures briefly

  2) interpret the meaning , and

  3) give your comments

  You should write neatly on the ANSWER SHEET.(20 points)

  Do not sign your own name at the end of the letter. Use Li Ming instead.

  Do not write the address. (10 points)


相关话题/英语(一)

  • 领限时大额优惠券,享本站正版考研考试资料!
    大额优惠券
    优惠券领取后72小时内有效,10万种最新考研考试考证类电子打印资料任你选。涵盖全国500余所院校考研专业课、200多种职业资格考试、1100多种经典教材,产品类型包含电子书、题库、全套资料以及视频,无论您是考研复习、考证刷题,还是考前冲刺等,不同类型的产品可满足您学习上的不同需求。 ...
    本站小编 Free壹佰分学习网 2022-09-19
  • 2016考研初试英语(一)真题解析
     1、[答案]B as well as [解析]根据空格所在句子的内容可以判断,择偶涉及男方的亲朋好友,_____女方的亲朋好友显然前后是并列关系,选项中只有B选项as well as 表示并列关系。其他选项意思与原文内容不符。 2、[答案]D decide on [解析]根据选项得知空格处需要填谓语动词,空格后面的宾语是ldquo ...
    本站小编 海文教育 2016-01-20
  • 2016考研初试英语(一)答案及解析
    2016考研英语(一)真题及答案详细解析(跨考教育文字版) Section 1 Use of English Directions: Read the following text。 Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark [A], [B], [C] or [D] on ANSWER SHEET 1。 (10 points) In Cambodia, the choice of a spouse is a complex one fo ...
    本站小编 跨考教育 2016-01-20
  • 2016考研大纲:英语(一)大纲原文
    全国硕士研究生入学统一考试  英语(一)考试大纲  (非英语专业)(2016年版)  I. 考 试 性 质  英语(一)考试是为高等学校和科研院所招收硕士研究生而设置的具有选拔性质的全国统一入学考试科目,其目的是科学、公平、有效地测试考生对英语 语言的运用能力,评价的标准是高等学校非英语专业本科毕业生所能达到的及格或及 ...
    本站小编 免费考研网 2015-11-04
  • 2016考研大纲:英语(一)与2015年变化对照表
    2016年与2015年考研英语(一)大纲变化对照表 内容   题型 2016年大纲要求 2015年大纲要求 大纲变化 复习建议 ...
    本站小编 免费考研网 2015-11-04
  • 2016考研大纲:英语(一)考试大纲综述
    教育部考试中心在2015年9月18日颁布了《2016年全国硕士研究生入学统一考试英语(一)考试大纲》,与去年的考纲相比,今年的考纲未进行任何调整和变化。万学海文现在基于最新大纲和历年真题命题规律,对2016年考研英语的考查要求和试卷结构进行全面分析。  从语言知识来看,新大纲中,对词汇的掌握和去年大纲要求完全 ...
    本站小编 免费考研网 2015-11-04
  • 2015考研英语(一)小作文难度略有降低
      今年考研英语作文的难度略有降低。小作文是历年来常考的形式之一书信体,要求写一封推荐信。继2011推荐一部你喜欢的电影,今年考查给你的俱乐部成员推荐一部书。  首先提醒考生的是英文没有书名号,用斜体或下划线表示,其次注意书信格式,然后写内容本次作文要求推荐一本书。开头可以直接写明是哪本书,接下来说明这部书好在哪里,有什么意义等内容。最后可以说一下相信对方一定会喜欢等内容。最后提醒考生注意单词拼写及避免语法错误,尽量词汇句型多样化。  下面提供范文一篇。  Dear Friends,  I am writing to tell youabout a fantastic book I have just read, as we always share the same taste ofbooks。  ...
    本站小编 新浪教育 2015-01-01
  • 2015考研英语(一)小作文解析
    2015考研英语(一)的小作文考的仍然是书信。题目指令为;你要在读书俱乐部举办一次读书会,给俱乐部的会员们写一封电子邮件,推荐一本书,同时写出推荐这本书的原因。这不是推荐信第一次出现在考研英语中,2011年英语(一)小作文考的也是推荐信,当时是写信给朋友推荐一部电影。结合书信格式以及推荐信的写作思路,文都考研高端辅导中心的老师对2015考研英语(一)小作文解析如下:  1. 称呼  这封电子邮件的写信人与收信人属于一对多,应该用Dear friends称呼比较恰当  2. 正文  1)首段  开篇表明写作目的,指出读书俱乐部要举办一次读书会,这封信的目的就是给大家推荐一本书,附上书名。  这里有一个难点,就是如何来写 ...
    本站小编 新浪教育 2015-01-01
  • 2015年考研英语(一)作文范文
      Part A   51. Directions:  you are going to hold a club reading session.Write an email of about 100 words recommending a book to the club members。  You should state reasons for yourrecommendation。  You should write neatly on theANWSER SHEET. Do not sign you own name at the end of the letter, use Li Ming instead. Do not write the address 。(10 points)  Dear friends,  I am writing to tell you about a fantasticbook I have just read, as we always share the same taste of books。  The book is called Journey to the West, which tells us a story thatfour monks conquere ...
    本站小编 跨考教育 2014-12-31
  • 2015年考研英语(一)翻译原文
      The Colonial Period  Heaven and earth never agreed better to frame a place for man&s habitation.  John Smith, founder of the colony of Virginia, 1607  The Mayflower  Within the span of a hundred years, in the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, a tide of emigration -one of the great folk wanderings of history-swept from Europe to America. 46 This movement, impelled by powerful and diverse motivations, built a nation out of a wilderness and, by its nature, shaped the character and destiny of an uncharted continent。  47 Today, the United States is the product of two pri ...
    本站小编 新浪教育 2014-12-31
  • 2015考研英语(一)完形填空题型分类解析
    2015考研英语完形填空的文章以说明文和议论文为主,主要是用来考查考生的综合基础能力,要求考生在熟练掌握语法、词语的基础上,认识文章的结构和各部分的逻辑关系。其中,最常考察的有语义衔接、逻辑衔接、结构衔接和惯用衔接(固定搭配)。下面结合2015年英语(一)的完形填空的选项,分析总结四大完形填空题型。  1)语义题  主要是对实义词的考查,同时又结合了近义词辨析或者形近词辨析。如真题中的2.concluded,6.significant,8.resemble等。  2)逻辑题  语篇中的逻辑衔接是指句子之间或句子内部各成分之间,通过连接性词语的运用,实现语义上的连贯。逻辑衔接反映在考题上主要是选择逻辑连接词:包括反映句际逻辑关系的连接词、介词、短 ...
    本站小编 免费考研网 2014-12-31