2024年4月25日发(作者:)
2013年同等学力申硕英语真题(A卷)及参考答案
2013年同等学力人员申请硕士学位
外国语水平全国统一考试
英语试卷一
ENGLISH QUALIFICATION TEST
FOR MASTER-DEGREE APPLICANTS
Paper One
(100 minutes)
Part I Oral Communication (10 points)
Part II Vocabulary (10 points)
Pan III Reading Comprehension (25 points)
Part IV Cloze (10 points)
Part V Text Completion (20 points)
考生须知
1. 本考试分试卷一和试卷二两部分,试卷一满分为75分,考试时问100分钟,9:00开始
10:40结束;试卷二满分为25分,考试时间为50分钟,10:40开始,11:30结束。
2. 考生务必将本人考号最后两位数字填写在本页右上角方框内。
3. 本试卷为A型试卷,请将答案用2B铅笔填涂在A型试卷一答题卡上,答在试卷上或其
A型卡,若不是,请要求他类型的答题卡上无效,答题前,请核对试卷一答题卡是否为
监考老师予以更改。
4. 在答题卡上正确的填涂方法为:在代表答案的字母上划线,如[A][B][C][D]。
5. 监考员宣布考试结束后,请停止答试卷一,将试卷一和试卷一答题卡反扣在自己的桌上,
继续做试卷二。监考员将到座位上收取试卷一和试卷一答题卡。
6. 监考员收卷过程中,考生须配合监考员验收,并请监考员在准考证上签字(作为考生
卷的凭证),否则,若发生答卷遗失,责任有考生自负。
Part 1 Oral Communication (10 points)
Section A
Directions:In this section there are two incomplete dialogues and each dialogue has three blanks
and three choices A
,
B and C, taken from the dialogue. Fill in each of the blanks with
one of the choices to complete the dialogue and mark your answer on the Answer
Sheet.
Dialogue One
A. It sounds like a flu.
B. I also advise resting for a couple of days.
C. Boy
,
when it rains, it pours.
Doctor: What has been bothering you?
Patient:I have a stuffy nose and a sore throat. Plus, I’ve been coughing a lot.
1
Doctor: Any stomach pains?
Patient: Actually, yes. My stomach’s been upset for a few days.
Doctor:2 It’s been going around lately.
Patient: Anything I can do for it?
Doctor: I’ll prescribe some medicines for you to take. 3
Patient:Does that mean I shouldn’t go to work?
Doctor: Only when you feel up to it. You should stay home for at least a day or two.
Dialogue Two
A. So, what are you going to do with the money?
B. You have lots of money.
C. How much do I owe you?
Joshua: Dad. Allowance day. Can I have my allowance?
Father: Oh. I forgot about that.
Joshua: You ALWAYS forget.
Father: I guess I do. 4
Joshua:Just $13.
Father:Well, I’m not sure if I have that much.
Joshua: Go to the bank. 5
Father: Lots of money, uh? Uh
,
well. I think the bank is closed.
Joshua: Then, what about your secret money jar under your bed?
Father: Oh, I guess I could do that. 6
Joshua:I’m going to put some in savings, give some to the poor people, and use the rest to buy
books.
Father: Well, that sounds great, Joshua.
Section B
Directions: In this section there is one incomplete interview which has four blanks and four
choices A, B, C and D, taken from the interview. Fill in each of the blanks with one of
the choices to complete the interview and mark your answer on the Answer Sheet.
A. Nationalities stay in their own areas.
B. People don’t queue like they do here in England.
C. What I liked best was that I could work and still lead a normal life.
D. Some supermarkets are open twenty-four hours a day.
Interviewer: How long did you live in the Slates?
Interviewee: I was there for two years, in New York, and I enjoyed it tremendously.
7 I mean, the shops are open till 10:
Interviewer: All shops?
Interviewee: Yes, everything. Food shops, chemists, and department stores.
8 And on public holidays, only the banks are shut.
Interviewer: I see, um... Do you think New York is as multinational as Loudon?
Interviewee: Oh, that's for sure. But it’s not as mixed.9 like there’s Russian sec-
tion, the German section and China Town. But I think the major difference between
these two cities was the height of the place. Everything was up in the Big Apple.
We lived on the thirty-fifth floor. And of course everything is faster and the New
Yorkers are much ruder.
Interviewer: Oh! In what way?
Interviewee: Well, pushing in the street, fights about getting on the bus. 10 And of course
the taxi drivers! New York taxi drivers must be the rudest in the world!
Part II Vocabulary (10 points)
Directions: In this part there are ten sentences, each with one word or phrase underlined. Choose
the one from the four choices marked A, B, C and D that best keeps the meaning of the
sentence. Mark your answer on the Answer Sheet.
11. I read the newspaper every day so that I can stay informed about current events.
A. important B. international
C. latest D. cultural
12. After seven days in the desert, the explorer was relieved when he eventually found water.
A. predictably B. finally
C. luckily D. accidentally
13. When we gave the children ice cream,they immediately ceased crying.
A. started B. continued
C. resumed D. stopped
14. The science teacher demonstrated the process of turning solid gold into liquid.
A. showed B. elaborated
C. devised D. simplified
15. John’application s for admission to graduate studies in the School of Education
approved.
A. entrance B. acceptance
C. experience D. allowance
16. Most college students in the United States live away from home.
A. apart B. down
C. elsewhere D. along
has been
17. The pursuit of maximum profit often drives manufacturers to turn out things that can do harm
to people’ealth.s h
A. preserve B. promote
C. process D. produce
18. Many different parts make up an airplane: the engine(s), the wings, the tail, and so on.
A. compose B. decorate
C. construct D. derive
19. You make it sound as if I did it on purpose.
A. carefully B. unwillingly
C. incredibly D. deliberately
20. He could never have foreseen that one day his books would sell in millions.
tood B. explained
C. expected D. believed
Part III Reading Comprehension (25 points)
Section A
Directions:In this section, there are four passages followed by questions or unfinished statements,
each with four suggested answers A, B, C and D. Choose the best answer and mark
your answer on the Answer Sheet
Passage One
Five or six years ago, I attended a lecture on the science of attention. A philosopher who
conducts research in the medical school was talking about attention blindness, the basic feature of
the human brain that, when we concentrate intensely on one task, causes us to miss just about
everything else. Because we can’t see what we can’t see, our lecturer was determined to catch us
in the act. He had us watch a video of six people tossing basketballs back and forth, three in white
shirts and three in black, and our task was to keep track only of the tosses among the people in
white. The tape rolled, and everyone began counting.
Everyone except me, I’m dyslexic (有阅读障碍的),and the moment I saw that grainy tape
with the confusing basketball tossers, I knew I wouldn’t be able to keep track of their movements,
so I let my mind wander. My curiosity was aroused, though, when about 30 seconds into the tape,
a gorilla (大猩猩)came in among the players. She (we later learned a female student was in the
gorilla suit) stared at the camera, thumped her chest, and then strode away while they continued
passing the balls.
When the tape stopped, the philosopher asked how many people had counted at least a dozen
basketball tosses. Hands went up all over. He then asked who had counted 13, 14, and
congratulated those who’d scored the perfect 15, Then he asked, “And who saw the gorilla?
I raised my hand and was surprised to discover I was the only person at my table and one of
only three or four in the large room to do so. He'd set us up,trapping us in our own attention
blindness. Yes, there had been a trick, but he wasn’t the one who had played it on us. By
concentrating so hard on counting, we had managed to miss the gorilla in the midst.
21. This passage describes_______.
A. a basketball match B. an experiment
C. a philosopher D. a gorilla
22. “Attention blindness” refers to _______.
A. the fact that one can’t see what one can’t see
B. seeing one thing while missing all else
C. keeping track of just about everything
D. the condition of being blind to details
23. “Catch us in the act” (Para. 1) is closest in meaning to “find us_______.
A. doing something improper
”
B. sleeping during the lecture
C. counting the basketball losses
D. failing to notice something within sight
24. How many people in the room saw the gorilla in the video?
A. 1. B. 3 or 4.
C. 13 or 14. D. 15.
25. Whom does “he” (last paragraph) refer to?
A. The author. B. The gorilla.
C. The lecturer. D. The student.
Passage Two
There are few sadder sights than a pile of fan letters, lovingly decorated with hand drawings,
suffering in a bin. The sparkly envelopes were addressed to Taylor Swift, a pop star much beloved
by teenage and pre-teen girls.
“Dear Taylor,read one discarded message, “I ” love you so much!! You’re the best!! And
you're really beautiful and cute!! I’m really enjoying your songs,”
This, along with hundreds of other similar letters sent from around the world, was discovered in
a Nashville recycling disposal unit by a local woman. Swifts management was quick to reassure
her admirer that they had been thrown out accidentally. The response may come as a
disappointment to any devotee who imagines, as they compose their letters, that Swift makes time
lo view each one personally.
Dealing with piles of fan mail is, however, an administrative burden for most celebrities.
While some celebrities do like to go through their mail personally, the majority simply do not
have time. But the fate of their correspondence is something most committed fans will not wish, to
dwell on, says Lynn Zubernis,an expert in the psychology of fandom at West Chester University.
“There’s this little bit of every fan that thinks theirs will be the one that stands outit's not
an expectation, but a hope that theirs will be seen by the celebrity.”
While the relationship between the fan and the celebrity may exist only in the mind of the
former, it stems from a deeply-rooted human need for community and belonging, Zubernis
believes. As a result, even receiving a mass-produced letter of acknowledgement and a photo
stamped with a reproduced signature can be a powerful experience.
“People have a tremendous need to connect with the person they are idolizing (偶像化),” she
says. “They can’t ring them up and say, ’Can we have coffee?’ It’s not about the autograph (签
名) ,It’s about the moment of connection.”
26. Which of the following statements is true?
A. The letters in the bin were exaggerating.
B. Some letters to Swift were thrown away unread.
C. A woman discovered the letters and discarded them.
D. Poorly decorated letters were left unread.
27. Swift’s management claimed that_______.
A. Swift had read each one of the letters
B. fans could trust them with their letters
C. they were quick in response to the incident
D. they didn’t intend to throw away the letters
28. Most celebrities_______
A. are too busy to read fan mail
B. are afraid of receiving fan mail
C. try their best to read fan mail themselves
D. care about the fate of fan mail
29. According to Zubernis, fans want their letters to be read because they _______.
A. hope to show their hand drawings
B. want the celebrities to see their talent
C. desire to get connected with the stars
D. dream of getting a photo of the stars
30. Which of the following will fans cherish the most?
A. The feeling of being related to their stars.
B. The sense of being similar to their stars.
C. The time spent with their stars.
D. The autograph of their stars.
Passage Three
Facelift (紧肤术)followed by a week on a beach in Thailand? Hip surgery with a side of
shopping in Singapore? Over the last 10 years, Asia’s rise on the medical tourism scene has been
quick. Eastern nations dominate the global scene. Now Bali wants a slice of the action.
The Indonesian island recently opened its first facility specifically targeting medical tourists
with packages and services, Bali International Medical Centre (BIMC) Nusa Dua. BIMC already
has an international hospital in Kuta, which opened in 1998.
The new internationally managed facility offers surgical and non-surgical cosmetic
procedures and dental care.
Unlike most of the region
假村)than a medical facility.
’s hospitals, BIMC is designed to feel more like a spa or resort (度
The 50-bed hospital has a 24-hour medical emergency entrance and hotel-like lobby at the
front of the building servicing the hospital’ntal centers.s medical, and de
If you’re a celebrity who doesn’t want everyone to know you’re here for a bit of lipo (吸脂
术),no worries. There's a private entrance that leads to the CosMedic Centro, which offers views
of a golf course.
BIMC has even teamed up with the nearby Courtyard by Marriott Bali, which provides
specific after-care services like tailor-made meals and wellness programs for patients.
Latest technology and cool interiors are a start, but breaking into a regional industry that
already has some of the world top international hospitals will be tough, says Josef Woodman, ’s
CEO of U.S.-based medical travel consumer guide Patients Beyond Borders (PBB).
“As a newcomer, Bali faces stiff competition from nearby international healthcare providers.
To compete,Bali will need to demonstrate a quality level of care and promote its services to the
region and the world. On the positive side, Bali is blessed as one of the region's safest,most
popular tourist destinations, with a built-in potential to attract medical travelers.”
The Indonesian island couldn’have picked t a better time to get into the game, says PBB.
“The world population is aging and becoming wealthier at rates that surpass the availability of
quality healthcare resources,” says the company's research.
31. What does "medical tourism” (Para. 1) probably mean?
A. Treating a disease during a trip.
B. Attracting patients with package tours.
C. Cosmetic treatment and a tour in one:
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