文档库 最新最全的文档下载
当前位置:文档库 › 广外考研英语专业09年水平考试初试真题

广外考研英语专业09年水平考试初试真题

广外考研英语专业09年水平考试初试真题
广外考研英语专业09年水平考试初试真题

英语专业水平考试试题

I.Cloze (30 points, 1 point for each)

Read the following passage and choose a proper word from the Word List to fill in each of the blanks in the passage. Each word can be used only once. Write the words you choose for each blank on YOUR ANSWER SHEET in the following way: Example

I. Cloze

1. paper

2. continuously

3. …

Now, do the Cloze.

WORD LIST

Most of Mark Twain‘s books bubbled out 1 him like water out of a fountain.

2 of his gifts was the capacity to take a scene and fill it

3 every sparkling detail of nature and of human action, to put in every spoken word and accompanying gesture, and to slowly exaggerate the successive moments

4 the whole episode reached a climax of joyous, sidesplitting laughter.

5 he had trouble weaving his incidents into meaningful plot patterns. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn,Mark Twain‘s masterpiece, came into __

6 slowly.

7 in 1876, immediately after he had dashed off The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, he wrote 400 manuscript pages quickly and

8 stalled; in disgust he meditated

9 the work. __10 the winter of 1879-1880 he penned further sections; again the spark of enthusiasm died. __11 taking a journey down the Mississippi River in April, 1882, he quickly completed Lift on the Mississippi(1883) and with unabated zest 12 the novel. The trip had reawakened his boyhood memories and suggested new episodes; the two books became 13 , the weaker travel account serving as scaffolding for the great edifice. __14 The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn was 15 in 1884, it met a mixed reception. A Brooklyn lady protested 16 its presence in the children‘s room of the public library; the librarian reshelved the volume in the adult area to 17 Huck‘s

and Tom‘s ―mischievou s and deceitful practices which made them poor examples for youth.‖ Today the novel is among the world‘s 18 and vies with Nathaniel Hawthorne‘s The Scarlet Letter(1850) for the position of American‘s _19 artistic work of fiction.

The reader is reminded at the outset that in 1850 Huck Finn had been a playmate of Tom Sawyer in St. Petersburg, Missouri, the 20 name of Mark Twain‘s native village of Hannibal. For three months Huck had lived with the lady 21 life he had saved, the Widow Douglas, ―fair, smart, and forty‖; her hill mansion was ―the only palace in the town, and the most hospitable and much the most lavish in the matter of festivities‖ that the town could boast. The lad 22 had run away from elegance was again a candidate for the major role in a rags-to-riches tale. Huck wanted it otherwise. Like Tom, whose name turns up throughout the __23 . Huck wanted adventure. For six months Huck endured starched clothes and virtual imprisonment within the mansion. When Pap returned on April 1 and took Huck 24 from the Widow, Huck came to prefer his slovenly island home. 25 against Pap‘s cruelty led Huck to plan his own ―murder‖ and to decamp about two months later. He discovered Jim 26 June 4 and started the rafting trip down the river on June 22. On July 7 he reached the Grangerfords and stayed __27 about a month. On August 10 the Duke and Dauphin came 28 the raft; their shenanigans ended at Pikeville on September 18. The 29 at Aunt Sally‘s lasted twenty-six days, until October 15. Then Huck decided to light out for Indian Territory and forever depart from a ―civilization‖ that he30 .

II. Proofreading and Error Correction (30 points, 2 points for each) The following passage contains fifteen errors. Each indicated line contains a maximum of ONE error. In each case, only ONE word is involved. Correct the errors and write the answers on YOUR ANSWER SHEET in the following way:

For a wrong word, write the correct one on Your Answer Sheet.

For a missing word, write the missing wo rd with a ―∧‖ sign before it on Your Answer

Sheet.

For an unnecessary word, write the unnecessary word with a deleting line on it on Your

Answer Sheet.

Example

When ∧art museum wants a new exhibit, it 31. _____

never buys things in finished form and hangs 32. _____

them on the wall. When a natural history museum

wants an exhibition, it must often build it. 33. _____

Write on your Answer Sheet:

II. Proofreading and Error Correction

31. ∧an 32. never 33. exhibit

Now, do the Proofreading and Error Correction.

Scientists claim that air pollution causes a decline in the

world average air temperature. In order to prove that theory, [31] ___

ecologists have turned to historical datum in relation to [32] ___

especially huge volcanic eruptions. They suspect that volcanoes

affect weather changes that are similar to air pollution. [33]___

One source of informations is the effect of the eruption [34]__

of Tambora, a volcano in Sumbawa, the Dutch East Indies, in

April 1815. The largest recorded volcano eruption, Tambora [35]___

threw 150 million tons of fine ash into the stratosphere. The

ash from a volcano spreads around worldwide in a few days [36] ___

or remains in the air for years. Its effect is to turn incoming [37] ___

solar radiation into the space and thus cool the earth. For [38]___

example, records of weather in England shows that between [39] ___

April and November 1815, the average temperature had fallen

4.5? F. During the next twenty-four months, England suffered

o ne of the coldest periods of their history. Farmers‘ records [40]___

from April 1815 to December 1818 indicate frost throughout

the spring and summer and sharp decreases at crop and [41]___

livestock markets. Since there was a time lag of several years

between cause and effect, by the time the world agricultural

commodity community had deteriorated, no one realizes the [42]___

cause.

Ecologists today warn that we face a twofold menace. The

ever-present possibility of volcanic eruptions, such as those [43]___

of Mt. St. Helens in Washington, added man‘s pollution of [44]___

the atmosphere with oil, gas, coal, and other polluting

substances, may bring us increasingly colder weather. [45]___

III. Gap-filling (30points, 2 points for each)

Fill in the following banks with the correct words and the correct forms of the words given according the meanings of the sentences. Write the answers on YOUR ANSWER SHEET in the following way:

Example

46. prolong, refuse, delay, postpone, lengthen

I hope the __________ of the appointment will not cause you much inconvenience.

Write on your Answer Sheet:

III. Gap-filling

46. postponement 47. … 48. …

Now, do the Gap-filling.

46. affect, influence, effect, impact

We have tried our best to ________ a reconciliation between the two parties. 47. attain, acquire, obtain, gain, secure, procure

Chrysler, including sales of newly ________ American Motors, delivered 1.01 million cars, down 17.7 percent and amounting to 9.6 percent of the market. 48. ensure, assure, guarantee

The Labor Department issued guidelines to_________ equal job opportunities for women on work paid for by federal funds.

49. ability, capability, competence, capacity, aptitude

Researchers using the new measuring technique found the skull to have a ________ of only about 515 cubic centimeters (about 31 cubic inches).

50. take part in, attend, participate in, enter for, join

To the amazement of the organizing committee, so many professional singers ________ the singing competition to be held next month.

51. insist on, persist in, stick/adhere to, persevere in

Due to the bankruptcy of the company, they failed to ________ the original agreement.

52. stable, secure, steady, firm, durable

Political ________ and wars in many sub-Saharan countries have also contributed to poverty. As a result of such factors, the number of people living in extreme poverty in sub-Saharan Africa grew from 217 million in 1987 to more than 300 million in 1998.

53. manager, director, headmaster, proprietor, governor

As one of the four ________ of the company, he often had to attend Board meetings.

54. permit, allow, approve, accept, consent, endorse

Eligible paper, as defined in 1951, is a negotiable note, draft, or bill bearing the

________ of the member bank, the proceeds of which have been or are to be used in producing, purchasing, carrying, or marketing goods in one or more steps of the process of production, manufacture, or distribution

55. income, wages, dividend, salary, earnings, pension

Now that he has retired, he lived partly on his ________ and partly on the interest on his post office savings account.

56. complain, grieve, reclaim, grumble

The peasants‘ many ________ resulting from ill-treatment by their landlords led finally to rebellion.

57. renew, renovate, refresh, recreate

He had been completely exhausted but felt considerably ________ after a meal and a good rest.

58. view, scene, scenery, sight, nature

Switzerland is well-known for its impressive mountainous ________.

59. nevertheless, accordingly, however, yet, eventually

He has impressed his employer considerably and ________ he is soon to be promoted.

60. gap, pause, space, interruption, interval

During the ________, the audience strolled and chatted in the foyer.

IV. Reading Comprehension (60 points, 2 points for each)

In this section, there are six reading passages followed by a total of thirty multiple-choice questions. Read the passages carefully and then write your answers on YOUR ANSWER SHEET.

Example

Write on your Answer Sheet:

IV. Reading Comprehension

61. A 62. B 63. …

Now, do the Reading Comprehension.

Text A

Tommy Albelin, a Devils defenseman, was the team‘s most effective performer

the night the Stanley Cup champions played their best game of the young season. Playing left wing instead of defense against the Detroit Red Wings last Thursday night, Albelin scored the second goal of the game and made the pass that set up the fourth one.

Albelin played so well in the 4-2 victory that Coach Jacques Lemaire said, ―Tommy, you lost your job.‖

―I was kind of surprised,‖ Albelin said today. ―When he saw the look on my face, he said very quickly ?as a defenseman‘ and I knew then he was joking.‖Lemaire had Albelin right back on defense in the next game, last Saturday‘s 4-1 triumph over the Ottawa Senators. Albelin responded just as well, making the pass for the winning goal.

With Brian Rolston leaving today‘s practice because of a foot problem and ready to join Bobby Holik and Bob Carpenter as injured Devils, look for Albelin to return to left wing when New Jersey plays the Vancouver Canucks Wednesday night at the Meadowlands.

This season, the 31-year-old Albelin has played left wing three times and defenseman four. In addition, because Albelin is so adept at skating and puck-handling, Lemaire has been using him for penalty killing and the power play.

―It‘s a big advantage to have a player like him,‖ Lemaire said after today‘s practice. ―When you don‘t have the necessary player to play against a player, you can use Abbey because he adjusts very well. He listens to all the things I tell the defensemen and all the things I tell the forwards. ―

Lemaire‘s decision to shuttle Albelin is not prompted by a desire to find the best position for him. Rather, it is testimony to Albelin‘s versatil ity.

Albelin was used as a left wing for the first time by Herb Brooks, the man whom Lemaire replaced after Brooks resigned three summers ago, but he played only a handful of games in that position.

The Devils changed coaches frequently in Albelin‘s early years with the team. As a result, Albelin contemplated returning home to Sweden several times. But he said today he was glad he never did.

Albelin came to the Devils from Quebec in 1988 and has been a solid player. Year after year, despite coaching changes, injuries and the presence of marquee names like Scott Stevens, Slava Fetisov, Stephane Richer and Claude Lemeiux, Albelin‘s dedication and consummate professionalism have made him an integral part of the team.

―My philosophy has always been to play where the team needs me,‖ Albelin said. ―I don‘t question the decisions by the coaches. As long as I‘m out there on the ice, I don‘t care what position I play.‖

Albelin has performed effectively at wing and on defense despite the different responsibilities. Judging by the way Albelin described them, it is clear he prefers to play defense.

―There are a lot of adjustments you have to make as a forward,‖ Albelin said, ―You have to be a little more creative, do more things with the puck. Improvise

somewhat, but to a point. As a defenseman, you can get by most of the time by giving the puck to your forwards and support the play.‖

Albelin said today that the uncertainty over whether he will play defense or offense on any given night was not much of a concern in terms of preparing himself.

―I don‘t mind as long as I know before the warm-ups,‖ he said.

61. Tommy Albelin is _______ defenseman.

A. Red Wings

B. Canucks

C. Devils

D. Brooks

62. Albelin has played defenseman _______ this season.

A. three times

B. four times

C. two times

D. five times

63. Coach Lemaire shuttles Albelin because he _______.

A. is versatile

B. is a solid player

C. is very dedicated

D. is docile

64. The Devils changed coaches frequently ________.

A. in the late 1980s

B. in Albelin‘s years w ith the team

C. as many of them resigned

D. during Albelin‘s stay in the team

65. Albelin prefers to play _________.

A. forward

B. left wing

C. defense

D. offense

66. Among the following titles, ________ is suitable for the article.

A. The Defenseman Albelin in Red Wings

B. The Best Player in Devils

C. The Versatile Albelin in Canucks

D. Versatile Albelin Brings Devil Victories

Text B

The effect of any writing on the public mind is mathematically measurable by its depth of thought. How much water does it draw? If it awaken you to think, if it lift you from your feet with the great voice of eloquence, then the effect is to be wide, slow, permanent, over the minds of men; if the pages instruct you not, they will die

like flies in the hour. The way to speak and write what shall not go out of fashion is, to speak and write sincerely. The argument which has not power to reach my own practice, I may well doubt, will fail to reach yours. But take Sidney‘s maxim: —―Look in thy heart, and write.‖ He that writes to himself writes to an eternal public. That statement only is fit to be made public, which you have come at in attempting to satisfy your own curiosity. The writer who takes his subject from his ear, and not from his heart, should know that he has lost as much as he seems to have gained, and when the empty book has gathered all its praise, and half the people say, ―What poetry! What genius!‖ it still needs fuel to make fire. That only profits which is profitable. Life alone can impart life; and though we should burst, we can only be valued as we make ourselves valuable. There is no luck in literary reputation. They who make up the final verdict upon every book are not the partial and noisy readers of the hour when it appears; but a court as of angels, a public not to be bribed, not to be entreated, and not to be overawed, decides upon every man‘s title to fame. Only those books come down which deserve to last. Gilt edges, vellum, and morocco, and presentation-copies to all the libraries, will not preserve a book in circulation beyond its intrinsic date. It must go with all Walpole‘s Noble and Royal Authors to its fate. Blackmore, Kotzebue, or Pollok may endure for a night, but Moses and Homer stand forever. There are not in the world at any one time more than a dozen persons who read and understand Plato: — never enough to pay for an edition of his works; yet to every generation these come duly down, for the sake of those few persons, as if God brought them in his hand. ―No book,‖ said Bentley, ―w as ever written down by any but itself.‖ The permanence of all books is fixed by no effort friendly or hostile, but by their own specific gravity, or the intrinsic importance of their contents to the constant mind of man. ―Do not trouble yourself too much about the light on your statue,‖ said Michelangelo to the young sculptor; ―the light of the public square will test its value.‖

In like manner the effect of every action is measured by the depth of the sentiment from which it proceeds. The great man knew not that he was great. It took a century or two for that fact to appear. What he did, he did because he must; it was the most natural thing in the world, and grew out of the circumstances of the moment. But now, every thing he did, even to the lifting of his finger or the eating of bread, looks large, all-related, and is called an institution.

67. T he following statements are wrong EXCEPT _________.

A. Only the thing that is profitable profits.

B. If the pages do not instruct you, they will not die like flies in the hour.

C. Only the statement, which you have come at in attempting to satisfy your

reader‘s curiosity, is fit to be made public.

D. He that writes by himself writes to an eternal public.

68.―How much water does it draw?‖ means__________.

A. How much content does it have?

B. How much influence does it exert?

C. How much value does it have?

D. How important is it?

69. A writer‘s fame is decided upon by __________.

A. partial and noisy readers

B. a court of angels

C. an angel-like public not to be bribed

D. a public to be bribed

70. At any time in the world Plato‘s work are read and understood by

__________.

A. less than a dozen persons

B. more than a dozen persons

C. many people

D. no one

71. The permanence of all books is fixed by__________.

A. no effort

B. friendly effort

C. hostile effort

D. their own specific gravity

Text C

Psychologists study memory and learning with both animal and human subjects. The two experiments reviewed here show how short-term memory has been studied.

Hunter studied short-term memory in rats. He used a special apparatus which had a cage for the rat and three doors. There was a light in each door. First the rat was placed in the closed cage. Next one of the lights was turned on and then off. There was food for the rat only at this door. After the light was turned off, the rat had to wait a short time before it was released from its cage. Then, if it went to the correct door, it was rewarded with the food that was there. Hunters did this experiment many times. He always turned on the lights in a random order. The rat had to wait different intervals before it was released from the cage. Hunter found that if the rat had to wait more than ten seconds, it could not remember the correct d oor. Hunter‘s results show that rats have a short-term memory of about ten seconds.

Henning studied how students who are learning English as a second language remember vocabulary. The subjects in his experiment were 75 students at the University of California in Los Angeles. They represented all levels of ability in English: beginning, intermediate, advanced, and native-speaking students.

To begin, the subjects listened to a recording of a native speaker reading a paragraph in English. Following the recording, the subjects took a 15-question test to see which words they remembered. Each question had four choices. The subjects had to circle the word they had heard in the recording. Some of the questions had four choices that sound alike. For example, weather, whether, wither, and wetter are four

words that sound alike. Some of the questions had four choices that have the same meaning. Method, way, manner, and system would be four words with the same meaning. Some of them had four unrelated choices. For instance, weather, method, love, result could be used as four unrelated words. Finally the subjects took a language proficiency test.

Henning found that students with a lower proficiency in English made more of their mistakes on words that sound alike; students with a higher proficiency made more of their mistakes on words that have the same meaning. Henning‘s results suggest that beginning students hold the sound of words in their short-term memory, and advanced students hold the meaning of words in their shot-term memory.

72. In hunter‘s experiment, the rat had to remember_________.

A. where the food was

B. how to leave the cage

C. how big the cage was

D. which light was turned on

73. Hunter found that rats_________.

A. can remember only where their food is

B. cannot learn to go to the correct door

C. have no short-term memory

D. have a short-term memory of one-sixth a minute

74. Henning tested the students‘ memory of _________.

A. words copied several times

B. words explained

C. words heard

D. words seen

75. Henning concluded that beginning and advanced students________.

A. have no difficulty holding words in their short-term memory

B. differ in the way they retain words

C. have much difficulty holding words in their short-term memory

D. hold words in their short-term memory in the same way

76. The following statements are wrong EXCEPT_________.

A. The rat could find the correct door when the light of the next door was turned off

B. The rat could find the correct door to get the food whenever it was released from its cage

C. Each of the three doors had a light that was turned on

D. The rat could remember where to find the food if it waited for less than ten seconds Text D

A Frenchman, the psychologist Alfred Binet, published the first standardized test of human intelligence in 1905. But it was an American, Lewis Terman, a psychology professor at Stanford, who thought to divide a test taker‘s ―mental age‖, as revealed by that score, by his or her chronological age to derive a number that he called the

―intelligence quotient‖, or IQ. It would be hard to think of a pop-scientific coinage that has had a greater impact on the way people think about themselves and others.

No country embraced the IQ –and the application of IQ testing to restructure society – more thoroughly than the U.S. Every year millions of Americans have their IQ measured, many with a direct descendant of Binet‘s original test, the Standford-Binet, although not necessarily for the purpose Binet intended. He developed his test as a way of identifying public school students who needed extra help in learning, and that is still one of its leading uses.

But the broader and more controversial use of IQ testing has its roots in a theory of intelligence – part science, part sociology – that developed in the late 19th century, before Binet‘s work and entirely separate from it. Championed first by Charles Darwin‘s cousin Francis Galton, it held that intelligence was the most valuable human attribute, and that if people who had a lot of it could be identified and put in leadership positions, all of society would benefit.

Terman believed IQ tests should be used to conduct a great sorting out of the population, so that young people would be assigned on the basis of their scores to particular levels in the school system, which would lead to corresponding socioeconomic destinations in adult life. The beginning of the IQ-testing movement overlapped with the eugenics movement –hugely popular in America and Europe among the ―better sort‖ before Hitler gave it a ba d name – which held that intelligence was mostly inherited and that people-deficient in it should be discouraged from reproducing. The state sterilization that Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes notoriously endorsed in a 1927 Supreme Court decision was done with an IQ score as justification.

The American IQ promoters scored a great coup during World War I when they persuaded the Army to give IQ tests to 1.7 million inductees. It was the world‘s first mass administration of an intelligence test, and many of the standardized tests in use today can be traced back to it: the now ubiquitous and obsessed-over SAT (Study Ability Test); the Wechler, taken by several million people a year, according to its publisher; and Terman‘s own National Intelligence Test, originall y used in tracking elementary school children. All these tests took from the Army the basic technique of measuring intelligence mainly by asking vocabulary questions (synonyms, antonyms, analogies, reading comprehension).

77. According to Terman‘s theory, a twelve-year-old boy‘s mental age is 10, then his

IQ number is about __________.

A. 0.8

B. 0.9

C. 1.0

D. 1.2

78. IQ test is originally used to ___________.

A. find out the students who need extra help in learning

B. assign young people to different majors

C. select the acceptable recruits for army

D. select the leaders for society

79. The viewpoint that intelligence was mostly inherited and people deficient in

intelligence should be discouraged from reproducing was held by ___________.

A. A.IQ-testing movement

B. Eugenic movement

C. C.Hitler

D.D.both IQ-testing and Eugenic movements

80. What does the author probably mean by ―scored a great coup‖ (see Para. 5)?

A. Failed

B. Succeeded

C. Criticized

D. Advocated

Text E

Historical developments of the past half century and the invention of modern telecommunication and transportation technologies have created a world economy. Effectively the American economy has died and been replaced by a world economy.

In the future, there is no such thing as being an American manager. Even someone who spends an entire management career in Kansas City is in international management. He or she will compete with foreign firms, buy from foreign firms, sell to foreign films, or acquire financing from foreign banks.

The globalization of the world‘s capital markets that has occurred in the past 10 years will be replicated right across the economy in the next decade. An international perspective has become central to management. Without it managers are operating in ignorance and cannot understand what is happening to them and their firms.

Partly because of globalization and partly because of demography, the work forces of the next century are going to be very different from those of the last century. Most firms will be employing more foreign nationals. More likely than not, you and your boss will not be of the same nationality. Demography and changing social mores mean that white males will become a small fraction of the work force as women and minorities grow in importance. All of these factors will require changes in the traditional methods of managing the work force.

In addition, the need to produce goods and services at quality levels previously thought impossible to obtain in mass production and the spreading use of participatory management techniques will require a work force with much higher levels of education and skills. Production workers must be able to do statistical quality control; production workers must be able to do just in-time inventories. Managers are increasingly shifting from a ―don‘t think, do what you are told‖ to a ―think, I am not going to tell you what to do‖ style of management.

This shift is occurring not because today‘s managers are more enlightened than yesterday‘s managers but because the evidence is rapidly mounting that the second style of management is more productive than the first style of management. But this means that problems of training and motivating the work force both become more central and require different modes of behaviour.

In the word of tomorrow managers cannot be technologically illiterate regardless of their functional tasks within the firm. They don‘t have to be scientists or engineers inventing new technologies, but they have to be managers who understand when to bet and when not to bet on new technologies. If they don‘t understand what is going

on and technology effectively becomes a black box, they will fail to make the changes that those who do understand what is going on inside the black box make. They will be losers, not winners.

Today‘s CEOs are those who solved the central problems facing their companies 20 years ago. Tomorrow‘s CEOs will be those who solve central problems facing their companies today. Sloan hopes to produce a generation of managers who will be solving today‘s and tomorrow‘s problems and because they are successful in doing so they will become tomorrow‘s captains of business.

81. The author suggests that a manger should hold a _________ view on

management.

A. economical

B. geographical

C. international

D. financial

82. Speaking of the problems of training and motivating labourers, the author implies

that __________.

A. labourers should keep up with the rapid development of modern technology.

B. labourers pay more attention to wages.

C. labourers want to advance themselves

D. there is a radical change in management style.

83. Which of the following statements is NOT true?

A. Globalization and demography lead to the differences between the work

forces of the last century and those of the next century.

B. At present, white males make up only a small proportion of work forces in

American firms.

C. In the next century, women and minorities will become the major part of

work forces in the United States.

D. The need to produce goods and services at quality levels previously will call

for a work force with much higher levels of education and skills.

84. By the first sentence of Paragraph 7, the author means that __________.

A. managers should master modern technology

B. managers should have access to technological knowledge

C. managers should focus on functional tasks

D. managers should cooperate with technicians

85. The main topic of this passage is __________.

A. the new concept of management

B. the great shift of management style

C. the qualities of managers for the 21st century

D. the technique of modern management of managers

Text F

Restricting the problem of Third World countries to hunger alone – although not all people who live in poverty are permanently starving – is a manipulation. This way the unjust division of the world is disregarded. And so we hear that out of six billion

people in the world, only 800 million are starving. The reality is that two-thirds of the earth‘s population, or four billion people, lives in poverty.

The gravest manipulation limits the problem to providing food for the starving alone. This reduces a man to his digestive system. To feel better, international organizations initiate projects aimed at providing food for starving people. From time to time they send some rice or corn here and there.

The real problem is that hunger is connected with terrible living conditions, disease, lack of basic education, aggression, lack of family ties or social structures, no prospects and unproductiveness. What we see on TV –masses of people receiving help in a remote place on earth – does not show the real problem. The problem is that those who live in refugee camps were deprived of their work-place and tools. I have seen that many times, mainly in the tropics, where, once the soil is not cultivated for a short while, it dies. And people in the camps, mainly peasants, have no cattle or tools, not even a plow. All they have are mats on which they sleep. They will surely live such lives as long as they receive international help.

With a little bit of good will and with today‘s technology, hunger can be limited. But how can we reduce poverty?

Education in Third World countries is dying because children cannot afford inexpensive pens. In Africa I have often met such children, who begged me for neither bread, water, chocolate nor toys, but for a pen because they go to school and have nothing to write with.

Such societies accept innovations very reluctantly: if I have $100 and invest $10, I can risk it because even I lose it, I will still have $90 left. Bu if I only have $10, invest it and lose it, I risk my life.

This proves that it is not only the problem of capital, but of a lack of good will and interest. The developed world surrounds itself with a sanitary cordon of indifference. It is putting up a global Berlin Wall since it sees the Third World as a world of barbarians. Any news from behind that wall is about wars, murders, drugs, robberies, disease, refugees and famine – about things that constitute a danger for the developed nations.

If we accept the fact that all people around the world, despite geography, history, climate and culture, deserve lives of dignity, then we have a moral obligation to change the mentality of the people brought into the culture of poverty. New ideas about how to gain more independence and new visions of development have to be born within this culture. For this the people need a new generation of intellectuals and politicians, similar to those who granted them political independence. This does not mean, though, that the developed world can forget about the world of poverty and give up trying to help.

86. The word ―manipulation‖ (see Paragraph 1) most probably ref ers to __________.

A. distortion

B. operation

C. control

D. management

87. When the author says that this reduces a man to his digestive system (see

Paragraph 2), he means __________.

A. this makes a man suffer from digestive problems

B. other organs of a man are of the same importance as his digestive system

C. this makes no difference between a man and an animal

D. this decreases the quantity of food supply for the starving animal

88. According to the author, the main reason why poverty occurs in developing

countries is that __________.

A. developing countries fail to receive enough relief from developed countries

B. children in developing countries cannot afford expensive education

C. developed countries do not help developing countries in a sincere manner

D. d eveloping countries cannot produce enough food themselves

89. It could be inferred from the last four paragraphs that __________.

A. Third World countries are very conservative

B. Third World countries lack education fund

C. developed countries are reluctant to take a risk in investing in Third World

countries

D. developed countries are expected to give more help to Third World countries

90. In this passage, the author is intended to ___________.

A. A.expose the essence of poverty

B. https://www.wendangku.net/doc/bb15770001.html,unch criticism on the developed countries

C. emphasize the importance of education

D.D.reveal the poverty nature and criticize the developed countries

相关文档