2023年考研外语模拟卷14.docx
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1、考研外语模拟卷14一、Use of English1 William Appleton, author of a recent book entitled Fathers and Daughters, believes that it is a womans relationship with her father (1)decides how successful she will be in her(2) life. According to Appleton there are three important steps a girl must (3)in her relationshi
2、p with Daddy.The (4)is the little girl stage in which the daughter loves and idolizes her father (5) he were a god or hero without (6) And her father loves his daughter (7) blindly, seeing her as an /zoasis of smiles in a hard, cold world. Then comes the second stage. It starts during adolescence an
3、d (8)for many years. Here, the little girl begins to rebel against Daddy and (9)his authority. He reacts with anger and (10)And the final stage comes (11)a woman reaches the age of about thirty. At this time, the daughter sees her father not-as a hero (12)as a fool, but learns to accept him (13) he
4、is, for better or worse. And Daddy forgives her, too, forD. many products would lose their value5、How many advantages of money are mentioned in this passage?A. TwoB. ThreeC. FourD. Five6、Today business cards are distributed by working people of all social classes, illustrating not only the uniquity
5、of commercial interests but also the fluidity of the world of trade. Whether one is buttonholing potential clients for a carpentry service, announcing ones latest academic appointment, or “networking with fellow executives, it is permissible to advertise ones talents and availability by an outstretc
6、hed hand and the statement Heres my card. As Robert Louis Stevenson once observed, everybody makes his living by selling something. Business cards facilitate this endeavor.It has not always been this way. The cards that we use today for commercial purposes are a vulgarization of the nineteenth-centu
7、ry social calling cards, an artifact with a quite different purpose. In the Gilded Age, possessing acalling card indicated not that you were interested in forming business relationships, but that your money was so old that you had no need to make a living. For the calling-card class, life was a cont
8、inual round of social visits, and the protocol(礼 遇) governing these visits was inextricably linked to the proper use of cards. Pick up any etiquette manual predating World War I, and you will find whole chapters devoted to such questions as whether a single gentleman may leave a card for a lady; whe
9、n a lady must, and must not, turn down the edges of a card; and whether an unmarried girl of between fourteen and seventeen may carry more than six or less than thirteen cards in her purse in months beginning with a J. The calling card system was especially cherished by those who made no distinction
10、 between manners and mere form, and its preciousness was well defined by Mrs. John Sherwood. Her 1887 manual called the card the field mark and device of civilization.The business version of the calling card came in around the mm of the century, when the formerly, well defined borders between the co
11、mmercial and the personal realms were used widely, society mavens (内彳亍)considered it unforgivable to fuse the two realms. Emily Posts contemporary Lilian Eichler called it very poor taste to use business cards for social purposes, and aslate as 1967 Amy Vanderbilt counseled that the merchants marker
12、 may never double for social purposes”.Business cards are usually used toA. announce ones latest academic appointmentB. establish business relationshipsC. make a livingD. illustrate the fluidity of the world of tradeThe statement which has not been mentioned in the passage isA. business, cards are a
13、 vulgarization of the nineteenth一century social calling cardB.The calling card system was especially cherished by these who made no distinction between manners and mere formC. most people thought it improper to use business cards for social purposesD.everyone makes his living by selling somethingThe
14、 sentence that your money was so old in the second paragraph meansA.you have an old pound noteB.your money was uselessC. you have a lot of moneyD.you inherited a fortune from your ancestorsBusiness cards are likely to have appearedA.at the beginning of nineteenth centuryB.at the beginning of twentie
15、th centuryC.before the nineteenth centuryD.after World War IIn the Gilded Age, people who possessed a calling cardA.had to make their livingB. were interested in forming business relationshipsC.boasted of their wealthD. advertised their talents and availability11、As everyone knows, words constantly
16、take on new meanings. Since they do not necessarily, nor even usually, take the place of the old ones, we should picture this process as the analogy of a tree throwing out new branches which themselves throw out subordinate branches. The new branches sometimes overshadow and kill the old one but by
17、no means always. We shall again and again find the earliest senses of a word flourishing for centuries despite a vast overgrowth of later senses which mightbe expected to kill them.When a word has several meanings historical circumstances often make one of them dominant during a particular period. T
18、hus “station is now more likely to mean a railway-station than anything else; speculation more likely to bear its financial sense than any other. Until this century plane had as its dominant meaning a flat surface or a carpenters tool to make a surface smooth”, but the meaning an aeroplane7 is domin
19、ant now. The dominant sense of a word lies uppermost in our minds. Whenever we meet the word, our natural impulse is to give it that sense. We are often deceived. In an old author the word may mean something different.One of my aims is to make the reading of old books easy as far as certain words ar
20、e concerned. If we read an old poem with insufficient regard for the change of the dictionary meanings of words we won t be able to understand the poem the old author intended. And to avoid this, knowledge is necessary.We see good words or good-senses of words losing their edge or more rarely gettin
21、g a new edge that serves some different purposes. Verbicide, the murder of a word, happens in many ways. Inflation is the commonest: those who taught us to say awfully for very , tremendous for great , and“unthinkable for undesirable were verbicides.I should be glad if I sent any reader away with a
22、sense of responsibility to the language. It is unnecessary to think we can do nothing about it. Our conversation will have little effect, but if we get into print一perhaps especially if we are leader writers or reporters一we can help to strengthen or weaken some disastrous words, can encourage a good
23、and resist a bad Americanism. For many things the press prints today will be taken up by a great mass of people in a few years.The main idea of the first paragraph isA.only old words take on new meaningsB. a tree throws out new branches as the words pick up hew meaningsC. words obtain new meanings f
24、rom time to timeD. it is possible for the old words to lose their old senses 12、By mentioning the tree throwing out new branches, the author hopes toA.stress the natural phenomenaB.picture the process of growth of new branchesC.explain what the analogy isD. illustrate his view in a clearer wayWe are
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