2011 年上海复旦大学考博英语真题
Part Ⅰ Vocabulary and Structure (15 points)
Directions: There are 30 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 ANSWER SHEET Ⅰ with a single
line through the center.
1. He’s color-blind and can’t
the difference between red and green easily.
A. detect
B. discover
C. distinguish
D.
determine
2. As many as 100 species of fish,
some
to these waters, may have been
affected by the pollution.
A. unusual
B. particular
C. typical
D.
unique
3. In her bright yellow coat, she was easily
in the crowed.
A. accessible
B. identifiable
C. negligible
D.
incredible
4. Some people find that certain foods
their headaches.
A. introduce
B. trigger
C. summon
D. create
5. The workers chose to
their dissatisfaction in a series of strikes.
A. deliver
B. offer
C. manifest
D. indicate
6. Living with a roommate
constraint on her ----she couldn’t play her
trumpet or have parties late at night.
A. imposed
B. illustrated
C. impressed
D.
left
7. I don’t know how to get there either ---- perhaps we’d better
a map.
A. note
B. mark
C. consult
D. draft
8. In the
of recent incidents, we asking our customers to take particular
care of their belongings.
A. process
B. company
C. light
D. form
9. The police are doing all the can to bring those responsible for the bombing
to
A. evidence
B. hearing
C. justice
D. rule
10. The programme aims to make the country
in food and to cut energy
imports.
A. self-confident
B. self-sufficient
C. self-satisfied
D.
self-restrained
11. I think I’d like to stay home this evening
going out as it is raining
so heavily.
A. better than
B. other than
C. rather than
D. sooner
than
12.The public can rest
that detectives are doing everything possible to
find the murderer.
A. assured
B. approved
C. guaranteed
D.
convinced
13. The child’s bad behavior is often more than a way of trying to
his
mother’s attention away from his sister.
A. reflect
B. catch
C. deflect
D. reduce
14. The small building was marked with a modest brass
,stating the name
and the business of the occupiers.
A. plaque
B. plateau
C. plague
D. plaster
15. I don’t know what all the
was about -----it was a dull sort of a
film and there was almost no sex in it.
A. controversy
B. conversation
C. discussion
D.
illumination
16. I missed the last flight, and decided
to stay the night at the airport.
A. however
B. therefore
C. moreover
D.
meanwhile
17. You could be
many dangers by traveling alone in that area.
A. subject to
B. immune to
C. sensitive to
D.
resistant to
18. She chewed each delicious mouthful as slowly as she could,
the
pleasure.
A. delaying
B. prolonging
C. insisting
D.
indulging
19. The candidate has an impressively
range of interests and experience.
A. diverse
B. vivid
C. mobile
D. alive
20. When I was sent to prison, I really felt I had
my parents
.
A. let…off
B. let…down
C. let…out
D. let…
alone
21. He
outrage by calling the TV programmes “talking wallpaper”
A. provoked
B. evoked
C. revoked
D. invoked
22/. The governments is trying to
the people into thinking that a war is
necessary.
A. enlighten
B. involve
C. orient
D. brainwash
23. All the questions
around what she had been doing on the night of
the robbery.
A. dissolved
B. revolved
C. evolved
D. devolved
24. Make sure you’re
him before you start sharing a house.
A. synonymous with
t
B. compatible with
C. subordinate to
D.
autonomous of
25. She said that the treatment she had received in the hospital had completely
her os her dignity.
A. thrived
B. suspended
C. deprived
D. contrived
26. She was unimpressed by the actor describing him as “ a vain man and
dull”
A. intensively
B. intensely
C. downright
D. actual
27.
down than the telephone rang.
A. Not until I lay
B. No sooner had I lain
C. Hardly had I lain
D. Scarcely did I lie
28.. I’m sorry I’m late---- I had a mental
and forget that we would have
a meeting today.
A. aberration
B. perversion
C. imbalance
D. sanity
29. I ignored an old woman
who asked me for money in the street yesterday and
it’s been on my
ever since.
A. morality
B. conscience
C. morale
D. rationale
30. He saw university as a community of scholars, where students were
by
teachers into an appreciation of different philosophical approaches.
A. extracted
B. deducted
C. inducted
D. conducted
Part Ⅱ Reading Comprehension (40 points)
Directions: There are 4 reading passages in this part. Each passage is followed
by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them, there are four choices
marked A,B, C and
D.Choose the best answer and mark corresponding letter
on ANSWER SHEET Ⅰ with a single line through the center.
(1)
I am running down an alley with a stolen avocado, having climbed over a white
brick fence and into the forbidden back yard of a carefully manicured estate at
the corner of El Dorado and Crescent Drive in Beverly Hills, California.
I have
snatched a rock-hard Fuerte avocado from one of the three avocado trees near the
fence.
I have been told that many ferocious dogs patrol the grounds; they are
killers, these dogs.
I am defying them.
They are nowhere to be found, except in
my mind, and I’m out and gone and in the alley with their growls directing my
imagination. I am running with fear and exhilaration, beginning a period of summer.
Emerging from the shield of the alley I cut out into the open.
Summer is about
running, and I am running, protected by distance from the dogs.
At the corner of
Crescent Drive and Lomitas I spot Bobby Tornitzer on a bike.
I shout “Tornitzer!”
He turns his head. His bike wobbles.
An automobile moving rapidly catches
Tornitzer’s back wheel. Tornitzer is thrown high into the air and onto the concrete
sidewalk of Crescent Drive.
The driver, a woman with gray hair, swirls from the
car hysterically and hovers noisily over Tornitzer, who will not survive the
accident.
I hold the avocado to my chest and stand, frozen, across the street.
I am shivering in the heat, and sink to my knees.
It is approximately 3:30 in the
afternoon.
It is June 21, 1946.
In seven days, I will be 8 years old.
31. The best title for this story could be
A. Summer
B. Killer Dogs
C. My Eighth Birthday
D. The Alley
32. The main image in paragraph 1 is of a young boy
A. climbing a white brick fences
B. snatching avocados
C. running with fear and exhilaration
D. defying ferocious dogs
33. The main image in paragraph 2 is of
A. Tornitzer riding his bike
B. exhilaration turning into horror
C. the 7-year-old emerging from the alley
D. the hysteria of the woman driver
34. The story start with the feeling of
and ends with the feeling of
.
A. joyful action…horrified inaction
B. running…standing
C. being alone…being with others
D. being alone in the open…shivering in the heat
35 The phrase “ shivering in the heat ” (near the end of this passage)
dramatically describes shock through
A. the use of minute detail
B. the unexpected combination of hot and cold
C. its implied reference to the word ‘frozen’
D. the contrast of death and play
(2)
Analysts have had their go at humor, and I have read some of this interpretative
literature, but without being greatly instructed. Humor can be dissected, as a frog
can, but the thing dies in the process and the innards are discouraging to any but
the pure scientific mind.
In a newsreel theatre the other day I saw a picture of a man who had developed
the soap bubble to a higher point than it had ever before reached. He had became
the ace soap bubble blower of America, had perfected the business of blowing bubbles,
refined it, doubled it, squared it, and had even worked himself up into a convenient
lather. The effect was not pretty. Some of the bubbles were too big to be beautiful,
and the blower was always jumping into them or out of them, or playing some sort
of unattractive trick with them. It was, if anything, a rather repulsive sight.
Humor is a little like that: it won’t stand much blowing up, and it won’t stand
much poking. It has a certain fragility, an evasiveness, which one had best respect.
Essentially, it is a complete mystery. A human frame convulsed with laughter, and
the laughter becoming hysterical and uncontrollable, is as far out of balance as
one shaken with the hiccoughs or in the throes of a sneezing fit.
One of the things commonly said about humorists is that they really very sad
people---clown with a breaking heart. There is some truth in it, bur it is badly
stated. It would be more accurate, I think, to say that there is a deep vein of
melancholy running through everyone’s life and that the humorist, perhaps more
sensible of it than some others, compensates for it actively and positively.
Humorist fatten on trouble. The have always made trouble pay. They struggle along
with a good will and endure pain cheerfully, knowing how well it will serve them
in the sweet by and by. You find them wrestling with foreign languages, fighting
folding ironing boards and swollen drainpipes, suffering the terrible discomfort
of tight boots( or as Josh Billing wittily called them, “tite” boots). They pour
out their sorrows profitably, in a form that is not quite fiction nor quite fact
either. Beneath the sparkling surface of these dilemmas flows the strong tide of
human woe.
36. The central theme of this essay is:
A. There is little humor in old newsreel.
B. Humor can be dissected like a frog.
C. Humor is essentially a mystery, and because humorists are more aware of
melancholy, they seem sadder than most people.
D. Humorists need to compensate for the pain they have suffered.
37. The main idea of paragraph 2 is:
A. The author once saw a picture of the largest soap bubble ever made
B. The bubble blowing performance was a repulsive sight.
C. Humor is fragile.
D. Laughter is not a measure of humor.
38. Why does the author feel that when humor is dissected, it dies in the process?
A. The fun in humor lies in examining its contents
B. Humor must tantalize the senses on impact---if it has to be explained, it
loses its effect.
C. Humor is best enjoyed by people with scientific minds.
D. A good humorist should explain his or her joke to make sure everyone
understands it.
39. The word “melancholy” in paragraph 3 probably means
A. joy
B. sadness
C. hysteria
D. exhilaration
40. In his final sentence, the author is evoking an image of
A. the ocean
B. sparkling germs
C. high tide
D. flowing water
(3)
Every time an old building is torn down in this country, and
a new building
goes up, the ground floor becomes a bank.
The reason for this is that banks are the only ones who can afford the rent
for the ground floor of the new buildings going up. Besides, when bank loans someone
money to build a new building, it usually takes an option for the street-floor
facilities.
Most people don’t think there is anything wrong with this and they accept it
as part of the American free-enterprise system. But there is s small group of people
in this country who are fighting for Bank Birth Control.
This is how Huddlestone Hubbard, the BBC’s chairman, explained it.
“whenever you see an old building torn down,” Hubbard said, “you usually
see a candy store, a dry cleaner, a delicatessen, and possibly a florist torn down
with it. These shops are all replaced in the new buildings with a beautiful glass,
aluminum, wall-to wall-carpeted money factor.
“Now from an aesthetic viewpoint, a bank looks better than a fry cleaner, a
candy store, a delicatessen and a florist. But from a practical point of view, it’
s a sheer disaster. If you want a newspaper, a candy bar or a chocolate milk shake,
you can’t get it a bank. Nor can you run out to a bank for a pound of Swiss cheese
and a six-pack of beer when have guests coming over.
“A bank is great if you want to buy a car, but it’s useless if you want to
have your dress cleaned.
“And while a bank might buy flowers to give itself a human image, it doesn’
t sell any when you want to make up with your wife.”
“What you’re saying then, Mr. Hubbard, is that every time a bank goes up,
something in all of us dies.”