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2010-2013 广外MTI真题回忆整理打印版

广东外贸2010年MTI硕士入学考试第1卷:基础英语

Part 1: Grammar and V ocabulary. (30 P)

01. Although she gives badly ____ titles to her musical compositions, they ____ unusual combinations of materials including classical music patterns and rhythms, electronic sounds, and bird songs.

A. conventional / incorporate

B. eccentric / deploy

C. traditional / exclude

D. imaginative / disguise

02. Even though the folktales Perroult collected and retold were not solely French in origin, his versions of them were so decidedly French in style that later anthologies of French folktales have never ____ them.

A. excluded

B. admired

C. collected

D. comprehended

03. In arguing against assertions that environmental catastrophe is imminent, her book does not ridicule all predictions of doom but rather claims that the risks of harm have in many cases been ____.

A. exaggerated

B. ignored

C. scrutinized

D. derided

04. There seems to be no ____ the reading public’s thirst for books about the 1960’s: indeed, the normal level of interest has ____ recently because of a spate of popular television documentaries.

A. quenching / moderated

B. whetting / mushroomed

C. slaking / increased

D. ignoring / transformed

05. Despite a tendency to be overtly ____, the poetry of the Middle Ages often sparks the imagination and provides lively entertainment, as well as pious sentiments.

A. diverting

B. emotional

C. didactic

D. romantic

06. One of the first ____ of reduced burning in Amazon rain forests was the chestnut industry: smoke tends to drive out the insect that, by pollinating chestnut tree, allow chestnuts to develop.

A. reformers

B. discoveries

C. casualties

D. beneficiaries

07. The research committee urged the archaeologist to ____ her claim that the tomb she has discovered was that of Alexander the Great, since her initial report has been based only on ____.

A. disseminate / supposition

B. withdraw / evidence

C. undercut / caprice

D. document / conjecture

08. Although Heron is well known for the broad comedy in the movies she has directed previously, her new film is less inclined to ____: the gags are fewer and subtler.

A. understatement

B. preciosity

C. symbolism

D. melodrama

09. Bebop’s legacy is ____ one: bebop may have won jazz the right to be taken seriously as an art form, but it ____ jazz’s mass audience, which turned to other forms of music such as rock and pop.

A. a mixed / alienated

B. a troubled / seduced

C. an ambiguous / aggrandized

D. a valuable / refined

10. The exhibition’s importance lies in its ____: curators have g athered a diverse array of significant works from many different museums.

A. homogeneity

B. sophistry

C. scope

D. farsightedness

11. Despite the fact that the commission’s report treats a vitally important topic, the report will be

____ read because its prose is so ____ that understanding it requires an enormous effort.

A. seldom / transparent

B. carefully / pellucid

C. little / turgid

D. eagerly / digressive

12. Carleton would still rank among the great ____ of nineteenth century American art even if the circumstance of her life and career were less ____ than they are.

A. celebrities / obscure

B. failures / illustrious

C. charlatans / impeccable

D. enigmas / mysterious

13. Although based on an actual event, the film lacks ____: the director shuffles events, simplifies the tangle of relationships, and ____ documentary truth for dramatic power.

A. conviction / embraces

B. expressiveness / exaggerates

C. verisimilitude / sacrifices

D. realism / substitutes

14. When Adolph Ochs became the publisher of The New York Times, he endowed the paper with

a uniquely ____ tone, avoiding the ____ editorials that characterized other major papers of the time.

A. abstruse / scholarly

B. dispassionate / shrill

C. argumentative / tendentious

D. cosmopolitan / timely

15. There are as good fish in the sea ____ ever came out of it.

A. than

B. like

C. as

D. so

16. All the President’s Men ____ one of the important books for historians who study the Watergate Scandal.

A. remain

B. remains

C. remained

D. is remaining

17. “You ____ borrow my notes provided you take care of them”, I told my friend.

A. could

B. should

C. must

D. can

18. If only the patient ____ a different treatment instead of using the antibiotics, he might still be alive now.

A. had received

B. received

C. should receive

D. were receiving

19. Linda was ____ the experiment a month ago, but she changed her mind at the last minute.

A. to start

B. to have started

C. to be starting

D. to have been starting

20. She ____ fifty or so when I first met her at the conference.

A. must be

B. had been

C. could be

D. must have been

21. It is not ____ much the language as the background that makes the book difficult to understand.

A. that

B. as

C. so

D. very

22. The committee has anticipated the problems that ____ in the road construction project.

A. arise

B. will arise

C. arose

D. have arisen

23. The student said there were a few points in the essay he ____ impossible to comprehend.

A. had found

B. finds

C. has found

D. would find

24. He would have finished his college education, but he ____ to quit and find a job to support his family.

A. had had

B. has

C. had

D. would have

25. The research requires more money than ____.

A. have been put in

B. has been put in

C. being put in

D. to be put in

26. Overpopulation poses a terrible threat to the human race. Yet it is probably ____ a threat to the human race than environmental destruction.

A. no more

B. not more

C. even more

D. much more

27. It is not uncommon for there ____ problems of communication between the old and the young.

A. being

B. would be

C. be

D. to be

28. ____ at in his way, the situation does not seem so desperate.

A. Looking

B. Looked

C. Being looked

D. To look

29. It is absolutely essential that William ____ his study in spite of some learning difficulties.

A. will continue

B. continued

C. continue

D. continues

30. The painting he bought at the street market the other day was a _____ forgery.

A. man-made

B. natural

C. crude

D. real

Part 2: Reading Comprehension. (40 P)

Passage A

On New Year’s Day, 50,000 inmates in Kenyan jails went without lunch. This was not some mass hunger strike to highlight poor living conditions. It was an extraordinary humanitarian gesture: the money that would have been spent on their lunches went to the charity Food Aid to help feed an estimated 3. 5 million Kenyans who, because of a severe drought, are threatened with starvation. The drought is big news in Africa, affecting huge areas of east Africa and the Horn. If you are reading this in the west, however, you may not be aware of it—the media is not interested in old stories. Even if you do know about the drought, you may not be aware that it is devastating one group of people disproportionately: the pastoralists. There are 20 million nomadic or semi-nomadic herders in this region, and they are fast becoming some of the poorest people in the continent. Their plight encapsulates Africa’s perennial problem with drought and famine.

How so? It comes down to the reluctance of governments, aid agencies and foreign lenders to support the herders’ traditional way of life. Instead they have tended to try to turn them into commercial ranchers or agriculturalists, even though it has been demonstrated time and again that pastoralists are well adapted to their harsh environments, and that moving livestock according to the seasons or climatic changes makes their methods far more viable than agriculture in sub-Saharan drylands.

Furthermore, African pastoralist systems are often more productive, in terms of protein and cash per hectare, than Australian, American and other African ranches in similar climatic conditions. They make a substantial contribution to their countries’ national economies. In Kenya, for example, the turnover of the pastoralist sector is worth $800 million per year. In countries such as Burkina Faso, Eritrea and Ethiopia, hides from pastoralists’ herds make up over 10 per cent of export earnings. Despite this productivity, pastoralists still starve and their animals perish when drought hits. One reason is that only a trickle of the profits goes to the herders themselves; the

lion’s share is pocketed by traders. This is partly because the herders only sell much of their stock during times of drought and famine, when they need the cash to buy food, and the terms of trade in this situation never work in their favour. Another reason is the lack of investment in herding areas.

Funding bodies such as the World Bank and-USAID tried to address some of the problems in the 1960s, investing millions o f dollars in commercial beef and dairy production. It didn’t work. Firstly, no one bothered to consult the pastoralists about what they wanted. Secondly, rearing livestock took precedence over human progress. The policies and strategies of international development agencies more or less mirrored the thinking of their colonial predecessors. They were based on two false assumptions: that pastoralism is primitive and inefficient, which led to numerous failed schemes aimed at converting herders to modern ranching models; and that Africa’s drylands can support commercial ranching. They cannot. Most of Africa’s herders live in areas with unpredictable weather systems that are totally unsuited to commercial ranching.

What the pastoralists need is support for their traditional lifestyle. Over the past few years, funders and policy-makers have been starting to get the message. One example is intervention by governments to ensure that pastoralists get fair prices for their cattle when they sell them in times of drought, so that they can afford to buy fodder for their remaining livestock and cereals to keep themselves and their families alive(the problem in African famines is not so much a lack of food as a lack of money to buy it). Another example is a drought early-warning system run by the Kenyan government and the World Bank that has helped avert livestock deaths.

This is all promising, but more needs to be done. Some African governments still favour forcing pastoralists to settle. They should heed the latest scientific research demonstrating the productivity of traditional cattle-herding. Ultimately, sustainable rural development in pastoralist areas will depend on increasing trade, so one thing going for them is the growing demand for livestock products: there will likely be an additional 2 billion consumers worldwide by 2020, the vast majority in developing countries. To ensure that pastoralists benefit, it will be crucial to give them a greater say in local policies. Other key tasks include giving a greater say to women, who play critical roles in livestock production. The rich world should pay proper attention to the plight of the pastoralists. Leaving them dependent on foreign food aid is unsustainable and will lead to more resentment, conflict, environmental degradation and malnutrition. It is in the rich world’s interests to help out.

01. Which of the following CANNOT be concluded from the passage?

A. Forcing Africa’s nomadic herders to become ranchers will save them from drought.

B. The difference between pastoralist and agriculturalist is vital to the African people.

C. The rich world should give more support to the African people to overcome drought.

D. Environmental degradation should be the major concern in developing Africa’s pastoralism.

02. The word “encapsulates”in the sentence “Their plight encapsulates Africa’s perennial problem with drought and famine.”(para. l)can be replaced by ____.

A. concludes.

B. involves.

C. represents.

D. aggravates.

03. What is the author’s attitude toward African drought and traditional lifestyle of pastoralism?

A. Neutral and indifferent.

B. Sympathetic and understanding.

C. Critical and vehement.

D. Subjective and fatalistic.

04. When the author writes “the policies and strategies of international development agencies more or less mirrored the thinking of their colonial predecessors.”(para. 4), he implies all the following EXCEPT that the aid agencies did not ____.

A. have an objective view of the situation in Africa

B. understand the unpredictable weather systems there

C. feel themselves superior in decision making

D. care about the development of the local people

05. The author’s main purpose in writing this article is ____.

A. to evaluate the living conditions of Kenyan pastoralists

B. to give suggestions on the support of the traditional pastoralism in Africa

C. to illustrate the difference between commercial ranching and pastoralism

D. to criticize the colonial thinking of western aid agencies

Passage B

Civil-Liberties advocates reeling from the recent revelations on surveillance had something else to worry about last week: the privacy of the billions of search queries made on sites like Google, AOL, Yahoo and Microsoft. As part of a long-running court case, the government has asked those companies to turn over information on its users’search behavior. All but Google have handed over data, and now the Department of Justice(DOJ)has moved to compel the search giant to turn over the goods.

What makes this case different is that the intended use of the information is not related to national security, but the government’s continuing attempt to police Internet pornography. In 1998, Congress passed the Child Online Protection Act(COPA), but courts have blocked its implementation due to First Amendment concerns. In its appeal, the DOJ wants to prove how easy it is to inadvertently stumble upon pore. In order to conduct a controlled experiment—to be performed by a UC Berkeley professor of statistics—the DOJ wants to use a large sample of actual search terms from the different search engines. It would then use those terms to do its own searches, employing the different kinds of filters each search engine offers, in an attempt to quantify how often “material that is harmful to minors” might appear. Google contends that since it is not a party to the case, the government has not right to demand its proprietary information to perform its test. “We intend to resist their motion vigorously,” said Google attorney Nicole Wong. DOJ spokesperson Charles Miller says that the government is requesting only the actual search terms, and not anything that would link the queries to those who made them. (The DOJ is also demanding a list of a million Web sites that Google indexes to determine the degree to which objectionable sites are searched. )Originally, the government asked for a treasure trove of all searches made in June and July 2005; the request has been scaled back to one week’s worth of

search queries.

One oddity about the DOJ’s strategy is that the experiment could conceivably sink its own case. If the built-in filters that each search engine provides are effective in blocking porn sites, the government will have wound up proving what the opposition has said all along—you don’t need to suppress speech to protect minors on the Net. “We think that our filtering technology does a good job protecting minors from inadvertently seeing adult content,”says Ramez Naam, group program manager of MSN Search.

Though the government intends to use these data specifically for its COPA-related test, it’s possible that the information could lead to further investigations and, perhaps, subpoenas to find out who was doing the searching. “What if certain search terms indicated that people were contemplating terrorist actions or other criminal activities?” Says the DOJ’s Miller, “I’m assuming that if something raised alarms, we would hand it over to the proper autho rities.” Privacy advocates fear that if the government request is upheld, it will open the door to further government examination of search behavior. One solution would be for Google to stop storing the information, but the company hopes to eventually use the personal information of consenting customers to improve search performance. “Search is a window into people’s personalities,” says Kurt Opsahl, an Electronic Frontier Foundation attorney. “They should be able to take advantage of the Internet without w orrying about Big Brother looking over their shoulders.”

01. When the American government asked Google, AOL, Yahoo and Microsoft to turn over information on its users’ search behavior, the major intention is ____.

A. to protect national security

B. to help protect personal freedom

C. to monitor Internet pornography

D. to implement the Child Online Protection Act

02. Google refused to turn over “its proprietary information”(para. 2)required by DOJ as it believes that ____.

A. it is not involved in the court case

B. users’ privacy is most important

C. the government has violated the First Amendment

D. search terms is the company’s business secret

03. The phrase “scaled back to”in the sentence “the request has been scaled back to one week’s worth of search queries”(para. 3)can be replaced by ____.

A. maximized to

B. minimized to

C. returned to

D. reduced to

04. In the sentence “One oddity about the DOJ’s strategy is that the experiment could conceivably sink its own case.”(para. 4), the expression “sink its own case”most probably means that ____.

A. counterattack the opposition

B. lead to blocking of porn sites

C. provide evidence to disprove the case

D. give full ground to support the case

05. When Kurt Opsahl says that “They should be able to take advantage of the Internet without worrying about Big Brother looking over their shoulders.”(para. 5), the expression “Big Brother”is used to refer to ____.

A. a friend or relative showing much concern

B. a colleague who is much more experienced

C. a dominating and all-powerful ruling power

D. a benevolent and democratic organization

Part 3: Answering Questions. (20 P)

Passage A

Millions of elderly Germans received a notice from the Health & Social Security Ministry earlier this month that struck a damaging blow to the welfare state. The statement informed them that their pensions were being cut. The reductions come as a stop-gap measure to control Germany’s ballooning pension crisis. Not surprisingly, it was an unwelcome change for senior citizens such as Sabine Wetzel, a 67-year-old retired bank teller, who was told her state pension would be cut by $12. 30, or 1% to $1,156. 20 a month. “It was a real shock,” she says. “My pension had always gone up in the past.”

There’s more bad news on the way. On Mar. 11, Germany’s lower house of Parliament passed a bill gradually cutting state pensions—which have been rising steadily since World War II—from 53% of average wages now to 46% by 2020. And Germany is not alone. Governments across Western Europe are racing to curb pension benefits. In Italy, the government plans to raise the minimum retirement age from 57 to 60, while France will require that civil servants put in 40 years rather than 37. 5 to qualify for a full pension. The reforms are coming despite tough opposition from unions, leftist politicians, and pensioners’ groups.

The explanation is simple: Europeans are living longer and having fewer children. By 2030 there will only be two workers per pensioner, compared with four in 2000. With fewer young workers paying into the system, cuts are being made to cover a growing shortfall. The gap between money coming in and payments going out could top $10 billion this year in Ger many alone. “In the future, a state pension alone will no longer be enough to maintain the living standards employees had before they retired,” says German Health & Social Security Minister Ulla Schmidt. Says Italian Finance Minister Giulio Tremonti: “The welfare state is producing too few cradles and too few graves.”

Of course, those population trends have been forecast for years. Some countries, such as Britain and the Netherlands, have responded by making individuals and their employers assume more of the responsibility for pensions. But many Continental governments dragged their feet. Now, the rapid runup in costs is finally forcing them to act. State-funded pension payments make up around 12% of gross domestic product in Germany and France and 15% in Italy—two percentage points more than 20 years ago. Pensions account for an average 21% of government spending across the European Union. The U. S. Social Security system, by contrast, consumes just 4.8% of GDP. The

rising cost is having serious repercussio ns on key European nations’ commitments to fiscal restraint. “Governments have no choice but to make pension reform a priority,” says Antonio Cabral, deputy director of the European Commission’s Directorate General for Economic & Financial Affairs.

Just as worrisome is the toll being exacted on the private sector, corporate contributions to state pension systems—which make up 19. 5% of total gross pay in Germany—add to Europe’s already bloated labor costs. That, in turn, blunts manufacturers’ competitivene ss and keeps unemployment rates high. According to the Institute of German Economics in Cologne, benefit costs reached a record 41. 7% of gross wages in Germany last year, compared with 37.4% a decade before. French cement manufacturer Lafarge says pension cost of $121 million contributed to a 9% fall in operating profits last year.

To cope, Germany and most of its EU partners are using tax breaks to encourage employees to put money into private pension schemes. But even if private pensions become more popular, European governments will have to increase minimum retirement ages and reduce public pensions. While today’s seniors complain about reduced benefits, the next generation of retirees may look back on their parents’ pension checks with envy.

Questions

Paraphrase Italian Finance Minister Giulio Tremonti’s statement “The welfare state is producing too few cradles and too few graves”? What is implied by the last sentence of the passage “While today’s seniors complain about reduced benefits, the next gene ration of retirees may look back on their parents’ pension checks with envy”?

Passage B

In the old days, it was all done with cakes. For Marcel Proust, it was a visit to Mother’s for tea and madeleines that provided the access to “the vast structure of recollection” that was to become his masterpiece on memory and nostalgia, “Remembrance of Past Things.” These days, it’s not necessary to evoke the past: you can’t move without tripping over it.

In an age zooming forward technologically, why are all the backward glances? The Oxford English Dictionary’s first definition of nostalgia reads: “acute longing for familiar surroundings; severe homesickness.” With the speed of computers doubling every 18 months, and the net doubling in size in about half that, no w onder we’re aching for familiar surroundings. Since the cornerstone of the Information Age is change, anything enduring becomes precious. “People are looking for something authentic,” says McLaren. Trouble is, nostalgia has succumbed to trends in marketing, demographics and technology. “Nostalgia ain’t what it used to be,” says Michael J. Wolf, senior partner at Booz-Allen & Hamilton in New York. “These are the new good old days.” Baby boomers form the core of the nostalgia market. The boomers, defined by American demographers as those born between 1946 and 1964, are living long and prosperous lives. In both Europe and America, they remain the Holy Grail for admen, and their past has become everyone’s present. In a study on “entertainment imprinting,” two A merican marketing professors, Robert Schindler and Morris Holbrook, asked people ranging in age from 16 to 86 which popular music from the past they liked best. People’s favorite songs, they found, tended to be those that were popular when they were about 24, with their affection for pop songs diminishing on either side of that age. Doubtless Microsoft knows about entertainment imprinting, or at least nostalgia. The

company hawks its latest Explorer to the strains of Simon and Garfunkel’s “Homeward Bound,” just as it launched Windows 98 to the tune of “Start Me up” by the Rolling Stones. Boomers remember both tunes from their 20s.

If boomers are one market that values memories, exiles are another. According to the International Organization of Migration, more than 150 million people live today in a country other than the one where they were born—double the number that did so in 1965. This mass movement has sources as dire as tyranny and as luxurious as the freedoms of an EU passport. But exiles and refugees share one thing: homes left behind. Type in “nostalgia” on the search engine Google, and one of the first sites that pop up is the nostalgia page of The Iranian, an online site for Iran’s exiles, most of whom fled after 1978’s Islamic revolution. Perhaps t he savviest exploitation of nostalgia has been the secondhand-book site alibris. com, which features stories of clients’ rediscovering long-lost books on it. One John Mason Mings writes of the glories of finding a book with information on “Kickapoo Joy Juice,” ad dreaded medicine of his youth. A Pennsylvanian waxes over alibris’s recovery of his first-grade primer” Down cherry Street.” The Net doesn’t merely facilitate nostalgia—it promotes it. Web-based auction houses have helped jump-start markets for vintage items, form marbles to Apple Macintoshes.

Cutting-edge technology, designed to be transient, has even bred its own instanostalgia. Last year a $666 Apple I went for $18,000 to a British collector at a San Francisco auction. “Historic! Microsoft Multi plan for Macintosh” crows one item on eBay’s vintage Apple section. Surf to The Net Nostalgia Quiz to puzzle over questions like “In the old days, Altavista used to have which one of these URLs?”

Those who don’t remember their history are condemned to rep eat it. Or so entertainment moguls hope, as they market “70s TV hits like “Charlie’s Angels” and “Scooby Doo,” out next year, to a generation that can’t remember them the first time round. If you’ve missed a Puff Daddy track or a “Sopranos” episode, panic not. The megahits of today are destined to be the golden oldies of 2020, says Christopher Nurko of the branding consultant FutureBrand. “I guarantee you, Madonna’s music will be used to sell everything,” he says. “God help me, I hope it’s not selling insurance.” It could be. When we traffic in the past, nothing’s sacred.

Questions

Explain the beginning sentence “In the old days, it was all done with cakes.” What is the other big group besides baby boomers which values memories? What do these people share? What is “nostalgia market”? What do they sell in the nostalgia market?

Part 4: Writing. (30 P)

Please reflect on the following opinion and write an essay of about 400 words elaborating your view with a well-defined title.

Some people believe the key of the reform in the education system is a well-shared awareness that educations is there, instead of simply offering the knowledge important to the students, to improve the students in an all-round way, and especially to guide them to a careful pondering over such fundamental issues as life itself and social responsibility. An undue emphasis on knowledge-education and the resultant ignorance over the guidance to the students to a proper understanding of life will bring us nothing but a large number of “memorizing machines”. We can never expect a group of young people well prepared for the real social life.

广东外贸2010年MTI硕士入学考试:汉语写作与百科知识第一部分百科知识(50分)

请用汉语简要解释以下段落中划线部分的名词(共20题,每题2.5分。)(1)法兰克福

(2)Google

(3)亚马逊

(4)欧盟

(5)版权法

(6)资本市场

(7)IPO

(8)纽约交易所

(9)纳斯达克

(10)创业板

(11)中国传统文化

(12)封建王朝

(13)《圣经》

(14)《古兰经》

(15)中世纪

(16)最高法院

(17)司法解释

(18)大陆法系

(19)法律关系

(20)审判机关

第一段

据香港《文汇报》报道,在第61届的(1)法兰克福书展中,(2)Google 表示有意透过Goolge Books计划,将数以百万计的书籍电子化,供读者在网上阅读。书展中的另一热话,即Google的另一计划──Google Editions,希望通过完善的网络连结设定令读者随时随地能以手提电话或电子书进行阅读,以挑战(3)亚马逊刚于上周推出的Kindle电子书。正当Google的计划如箭在弦,(4)欧盟却提出在Google现存近100万本的典藏中,有近90万本仍受(5)版权法所保护,亦即是说,Google Books及Google Editions两大计划定必与欧盟法律龃龉。

第二段

今年以来全世界主要(6)资本市场IPO的规模,中国的融资额是900亿元,全球所有的融资额加起来是3000亿元,中国当之不让的成为世界最大的(7)IPO 市场,第二名是香港,第三名是美国,美国IPO的总额是(8)纽约交易所和(9)纳斯达克,因此我们是远远领先于其他成熟的市场。分析市场和(10)创业板的时候,关键要看是否可以适应社会和经济发展的需求,换句话说,是否有足够的上市资源。

第三段

(11)中国传统文化是一种理性的文化,越是科学发达,人们的文化水准提高,认识能力增强的情况下,越是有利于中国传统文化的传播。在人们没有文化愚昧的情况下,中国传统文化是不易推广与传播的,因为它不具备传播这种文化的软件与硬件。在中国历史上,无论什么时候,哪一个(12)封建王朝都没有真正彻底的贯彻中国传统文化,所以,中国的传统文化从来都没有像(13)《圣经》文化和(14)《古兰经》文化那样,左右一个国家的政治经济的命运。现在最有利于中国传统文化的彻底贯彻,而这种贯彻是民主的、自由的,人们自觉自愿地接受的,不愿接受马上就可以反对,而不是像欧洲(15)中世纪历史上的《圣经》文化。

第四段

(16)最高法院院长肖扬在提交给全国人大的工作报告中提出,未来最高法院在出台重要(17)司法解释之前,将通过互联网等媒体予以公布,广泛征求有关部门、专家学者和社会各界意见。中国属(18)大陆法系国家,从原则上说,立法权专属于宪法所规定的立法机构,主要是人大及行政部门,司法机关的职能则是严格地适用这些法律。但事实上,因为立法者永远都不可能是全能的,不可能预知未来,因而,法律全书不可能覆盖人间全部(19)法律关系。更何况,中国社会正处于迅速变革中,而诸多领域的法律要么存在空白,要么迅速落后于现实情况。在这种情况下,(20)审判机关制定一定范围内的法律规则,实有必要,“司法解释”由此应运而生。

第二部分写作(100分)

21. 请根据以下文字提供的信息,撰写一份会议通知。(40分)

要求:

①内容完备,格式齐全;

②可根据实际需要,合理添加内容。

弹簧行业将举办技术交流会

本报讯全国弹簧行业产品质量分析暨2009弹簧行业技术交流及产品展示会,将于4月16-19日在山东省济南市召开。

这次会议由机械工业通用零部件产品质量监督检测中心、全国弹簧标准化技术委员会主办。会上将通报国内外弹簧行业质量现状和发展趋势,并通过技术讲座和交流,为企业提供体系认证与ISO9000标准2009版转换、弹簧标准化、产品质量国家监督抽查的要求与程序等信息。大会还将举办圆柱螺旋弹簧、钢板弹簧、碟形弹簧、气弹簧等产品技术及装备的展示活动,并结合专题讲座、发布等方式进行洽谈、交易。

22. 请根据下面的文字,写一篇不少于800字现代文。题目自拟,体裁不限(诗歌、戏剧除外)。(60分)

18世纪初,在德国的匹兹堡大学,有位哲学和医学教授白令葛,他非常喜欢研究化石。一天,几个学生给他带来了一些他从没见过的奇妙的化石,其中不仅绘有飞鸟、昆虫以及其他珍禽异兽,还刻着类似希伯来文的古老而又难以理解的石头书。教授看后十分兴奋,立即跟学生一起到了发现化石的现场,又挖出若干块化石。这是匹兹堡的郊外,有着古老的地层,是教授经常采集化石并乐此不疲的地方。

从那一天起,教授便废寝忘食地埋头整理那些采集到的标本。那时,人类对化石的研究和认识还处于起步阶段。经过数十载的辛劳,教授的研究终于结出了果实——一本精美的、有21张化石图片的专著出版了,书名为《匹兹堡石志》。

然而,没过多久,一个让善良的人们永远无法想到的悲剧发生了。一天,当教授再度对化石进行研究时,突然发现有些化石中竟刻着自己的名字。他恍然大悟——可怜的教授为之耗尽了毕生心血、孜孜以求进行科学研究的客体竟然是伪造的!原来,这些是学生们事先把动物形象和文字雕刻在石灰岩上,然后埋入地下做出的人造化石。事实上,这不仅仅是学生们的恶作剧,也是其他教授为了戏弄他而暗地里设置的一个陷阱。

在经历了这一严酷的打击后不久,白令葛教授也即将走完他的人生之路。在将要离别人世的时候,教授本着一个学者的良心,尽自己的最大努力回收那些已出售的书,并把它们付之一炬。

“决不能让这些错误的研究成果流传到后世。”这是一位误入歧途的科学家惊醒之后的唯一信念。当白令葛教授亲手点燃焚烧《匹兹堡石志》的火焰时,我们看到了一个失败科学家的人性的光辉。

2011 广外真题回忆版

百科知识

名词解释(20个此处缺)

梁漱溟

封建制度

春秋战国

经学

青铜器文化

G20

福特汽车公司

低碳生活

节能减排

宪法

法制

新型市场

法律适用

司法公正

经济全球化

企业社会责任

可持续发展

应用文

是写一篇请示,以广州交通委员会的名义向广州市人民政府写一篇请示,取消公交地铁全免费,改为发放现金补贴。要求发文字号、标题、主送机关、正文、结语、落款等等格式正确。建议大家买本公文写作的书看看。

现代汉语作文

Version1是材料作文,给了四篇简短的新闻,都是一个主题,就是人家做错了什么事,“上面”就把人家“公开处理”进行示众,话题就是“示众”。不能写成诗歌和剧本。800以上。Version2给了三则材料,一则是陕西省富平市某两个农民上访被抓回来,然后在全县公开进行批斗大会。一则是广东省某公安局将涉嫌卖淫的妇女用绳子牵着,赤足游街。另一则是某学校将违法乱纪的学生,包括早恋的学生的资料照片贴出来,公开示众。请你以示众为

话题写一篇800字的现代文。体裁不限,诗歌和戏剧不可以。

翻硕英语

选择题(30个)感觉这次并不是词汇和语法各15个,词汇明显偏多。语法我的印象中就那么几个题。

Version2总体感觉广外的这次翻译硕士英语考试难度极低!大概跟六级差不多!三十个单选题,几乎都是基本的语法点或搭配。考察词义辨析的大概占一半,另外的是语法点和词组搭配。call on 和call off,因为这个真不知道怎么选。

阅读(四篇)

第一篇讲人类的城市化以及城市生活对人们的社交关系和邻里关系的影响和与小型城镇的生活的对比。

第二篇讲富士康跳楼事件以及各方的反应。

第三篇讲如何给自己的博客或网站取一个合适的名字,以及相关的注意点。

感觉都很简单,难度不大。作文话题是要求你根据人类的群居特性、team spirit为切入点来构思一篇作文,400词。

翻译基础

短语翻译(共30个此处缺

International Herald Tribute国际先驱论坛报

FIBA国际篮球联合会

OPEC石油输出国组织

United Nations Security Council联合国安理会

the Common-law system英美法系

Appeal Court上诉法院

CPI消费者价格指数

CFO首席财务官

Associated Press联合通讯社

FIBA 国际篮球联合会

Phrase Translation

Liaison interpretation 陪同口译,

For Whom the Bell Tolls 丧钟为谁而鸣

capital venture 风险投资

海基会海峡交流基金会SEF:Straits Exchange Foundation?

大运会Universidad?

上海公报

儒林外史the scholars

海关总署General Administration of Customs

中国译协TAC

中国红十字会Red Cross Society of China

经济适用房houses for low-income families

易经the Book of Changes

司法部Ministry of Justice

民事诉讼civil action/civil proceedings/ civil procedure

国际惯例international practice

中美联合公报Sino-USA Joint Communiqué?

文章翻译有四篇,

第一篇是英翻汉,是一篇法律文件,劳动合同,大意为保护本公司的商业秘密,雇员在未经允许情况下不得与其他公司有雇佣关系或其他情况等等

第二篇是英译汉,是关于荷兰的介绍,凭着印象在网上搜了下,没搜到原文,主要内容就是荷兰的风车windmill还有荷兰的花,这两样最著名的东西。属于散文类型,写得比较简单优美,翻译的难度不大,注意文采即可。

第三篇是汉译英,是关于中国建筑的,大概是说中国的建筑与中国文明一样古老,所有的资料来源都证明,我们的祖先在很久以前就采用一种土生土长的建筑体系,并一直保留着它的基本特点,受中国文化影响的广袤地区从新疆到日本,从东本三省中海半岛,都流行这个体系。尽管中国过去遭受军事和文化入侵,但这种建筑体系却保存下来,这只有中国文明能与之相媲美。因为中国建筑本来就是中国文明不可或缺的一部分。

Version2介绍中国建筑风格的。大意为中国式建筑风格流传悠久,从日本到新疆,从东三省到中南半岛,广袤的区域里都受到

中国建筑构造体系的影响,并且持续了很久都没有改变其基本特征。最后强调这也是一种文化的作用。

第四篇是汉译英,是关于广州的介绍,这次考的是关于广州的地理位置(珠江三角洲之前记过的,考试的时候忘了,郁闷死了),还有人们的一些生活习惯之类的。

这里要特别提醒下童鞋们,广外很喜欢考跟广东或者广州有关的内容。

2012广外真题回忆版

翻译基础

英汉互译(共30个多?)

UNESCO;

Subprime mortgage crisis;

Christian Science Monitor;

SWOT analysis;

appeal court;

The Tale of Two Cities;

the China-US business council;

liaison interpretation,

World Heritage Organization;

Closed-circuit News Network;

Kyodo News Service;

Savings portfolio;

appeal court;

Summer Davos World Economic Forum

cost-consciousness;

Strategic alignment

广交会

上海合作组织

司法部

国家发改委

中国译协

中国银监会

亚运会

创业板

通胀压力

市场定位

三农问题

零关税待遇

民事诉讼

孙子兵法

史记

两篇翻译

第一篇英翻中是Maryland University的发展演讲

第二篇是讲世界兰花会议关于世界兰花大会the World Orchid Conference的申请举办的演说

论坛答案参考

中—英:《史记》;《孙子兵法》;上海合作组织;中国银监会;广交会;创业板;零关税待遇; 民事诉讼,司法部,中国翻译者协会,日本的共同社,世界遗产委员会,市场定位

(个人感觉这些词汇翻译不是很专业囧虽然我大半没写出来- -但是基本上都在《英语口译教程》这两本书里面有,比如“创业板”

百科与写作

名词解释(20个)

1.文化断层

2.中国传统文化

3.和而不同

4.洋务运动

5.公车上书

6.宏观经济数据

7.CPI

8.“软着陆”

9.货币政策

10.宏观调控

11.成文法典

12.“法治”

13.立法

14.商鞅变法

15.中华法系

16.“双转移”

17.工业园

18.“退二进三”

19.“腾笼换鸟”

20.招商引资

应用文写作:

是关于2008年9月20日深圳市龙岗区龙东社区舞王俱乐部特大火灾的一篇文章,要求考生自选体材,写一篇深圳市人民政府提交给广东省人民政府的汇报。

大作文:是要求考生就老人跌倒无人敢扶、“许云鹤事件”、“殷红彬事件”……写一篇800字的文章

2016年浙大考研801综合真题完美回忆版

2016浙大801经济学综合完美回忆版(西经部分+政经部分+计量简答及分析部分) 写在最前面: 自从浙大2014起便不对外公布真题,对我们考研同学来说是很痛苦的一件事,复习时也有种完全找不到路的感觉,想拿最近真题练手又无路可寻,笔者在考完后,本着为考研筒子谋福利的想法,努力回想一番,整理出了西经部分,政经部分以及计量除计算题以外的部分,希望为各位提供一定的帮助吧。 一、西经部分(100分) (一)、名词解释部分 1.需求弹性 2.价格上限 3.经济增长 4.人力资本 (二)计算部分 5.微观部分:微观考了一个求最大利润的问题,比较简单,参考意义并不大) 6.宏经考研计算题:(与2013年考研题类似) Y = C + I +G +NX C = 300 + 0.8Yd I = 200 – 1500r G = 200 NX = 100 + 0.04Y – 500r 税率:t = 0.2 L = 0.5Y – 1500r M = 550 P = 1 (1):求IS曲线 (2):求LM曲线 (3):求在商品市场和货币市场同时达到均衡下的r,Y是多少? (4):求在均衡下的C,I,NX各为多少? (三)简答部分 7.请简答价格歧视的条件 8.请简答通货膨胀能够造成正的产出效应的三个条件 (四)论述部分 9.请作图分析并论述在完全竞争市场下成本不变,成本递增,成本递减三种情形下行业的长期供给曲线如何形成并分析其特征。 10.请从寻找工作,最低工资,工会,效率工资四个方面来论述失业是如何形成的。 二、政经部分(50分) 简答题: 1.商品的使用价值及价值与劳动二重性之间的关系 2.政府失灵和市场失灵

广外贸大MTI考研真题回忆

广外贸大MTI考研真题回忆 感谢凯程郑老师对本文做出的重要贡献 2015考研初试已经结束,小编在考后整理了2015年广东外语外贸大学翻译硕士(MTI)考研真题(网友回忆版),请参考! MTI初试考试流程: 星期六上午8:30-11:30考研政治星期六下午2:00-5:00翻译硕士英语 星期天上午8:30-11:30英语翻译基础星期天下午2:00-5:00汉语写作与百科知识 一、101考研政治 政治网上的经验资料很多,大家可以去参考,我就推荐考前冲刺卷用肖秀荣4套卷,今年押对了几个选择题和大题,而且选择题网上有详解,任4我也买了,有一些错题,而且选择题答案没有详解,为节约大家经费,可以不用买任4。2015的政治比往年更加灵活,选择题覆盖面广,中国近代史考的内容很细,大家可以去看真题。 二、211翻译硕士英语 1、选择题:好像没几个语法题,考的都很简单,有个either or和neither nor的区别。其他题目就记得几个词组了:gear up to, set off to, carve up。有几个选择题都是跟埃博拉疫情相关的。 2、阅读:前面两篇忘了,不过不是很难。第三篇:很多外来移民涌入英国,有的人认为好,可以带来年轻的劳动力,没怎么减少英国人的福利,其他人认为不好,使得就业竞争激烈,当地人的福利下降等。两个问答题分别针对这两个方面的。第四篇:西班牙的什么地方想要独立出来成为一个国家,民众对此意见不一,有的人投票支持独立,其他人不支持独立。 3、作文:关于高等教育改革,有的人认为现在的教育体系已经实行了改革,有的人认为需要进行彻底的改革,阐述你的观点。 三、357英语翻译基础 1、词组翻译:十八届四中全会,民族凝聚力,廉租房,洲际弹道导弹,综合国力,零和博弈,货物吞吐量,农田水利化,一站式服务,剩余劳动力,暂住证,镇馆之宝。merger and acquisition, royalty rate, light literature, income tax return, export tax refund, collegiate tribunal, civic responsibilities, Financial Times, inflation-proof banking savings, public service

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北京理工大学 2020 年硕士研究生入学考试初试试题(真题回忆) 科目代码: 813 科目名称:计算机专业基础满分: 150 分 注意: ①认真阅读答题纸上的注意事项;②所有答案必须写在答题纸上,写在本试题纸或草稿纸上均无效; ③本试题纸须随答题纸一起装入试题袋中交回! 第一部分:数据结构(120分) 1. 填空题 1)一颗二叉树使用二叉链表存储,使用____遍历可以求出树的深度。 2)m 阶 B-树的非根非叶节点的孩子节点至少有___个 3)一个循环队列(size 为 100),rear 和 front 分别是 6 和 13,这个队列的长度是___. 4)一个关于链表操作的时间复杂度的问题,比较简单,我忘了… 剩下的题就记不清了。 2.判断题 1)静态链表的插入和删除操作比动态链表的要快。 2)从平均时间复杂度来看,折半查找要比二叉排序树查找快。 其他简单的我都忘了。 3.选择题 好像有两道题是考适合的数据结构的。(比如用下面哪一种数据结构表示队列最合适)其他的记不清了。 下面都是大题。 4.给了两个堆的操作函数:(20 分) PercolateUp(T,N,I):对长度为 N 的堆的 I 位置进行向上筛选使得以 I 为根的堆成为一个小顶堆。

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