摘要:歷年考研英語真題是每一位考研學子的考研資料,對考研英語的復習至關重要。希賽網英語考試頻道為大家整理了2011年考研英語二真題與答案完整版,供大家參考學習。
2011年全國碩士研究生入學統(tǒng)一考試英語(二)試題及答案
Section I Use of English
Directions: Read the following text. Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark A, B, C or D on Answer Sheet 1 (10 points)
Individuals and businesses have legal protection for intellectual property they create and own. Intellectual property _1_from creative thinking and may include products, _2_, processes, and ideas. Intellectual property is protected _3_ misappropriation (盜用) Misappropriation is taking the intellectual property of others without _4_ compensation and using it for monetary gain.
Legal protection is provided for the _5_ of intellectual property. The three common types of legal protection are patents, copyrights, and trademarks.
Patents provide exclusive use of inventions. If the U.S. Patent Office _6_ a patent, it is confirming that the intellectual property is _7_. The patent prevents others from making, using, or selling the invention without the owner’s _8_ for a period of 20 years.
Copyright are similar to patents _9_ that they are applied to artistic works. A copyright protects the creator of an _10_ artistic or intellectual work, such as a song or a novel. A copyright gives the owner exclusive rights to copy, _11_, display, or perform the work. The copyright prevents others from using and selling the work. The _12_ of a copyright is typically the lifetime of the author _13_ an additional 70 years.
Trademarks are words, names, or symbols that identify the manufacturer of a product and _14_ it from similar goods of others. A servicemark is similar to a trademark _15_ is used to identify service. A trademark prevents others from using the _16_ or a similar word, name, or symbol to take advantage of the recognition and _17_ of the brand or to create confusion in the marketplace. _18_ registration, a trademark is usually granted for a period of ten years. It can be _19_ for additional ten-year periods indefinitely as _20_ as the mark’s use continues.
1. A. retrieves B. deviates C. results D. departs
2. A. services B. reserves C. assumptions D. motions
3. A. for B. with C. by D. from
4. A. sound B. partial C. due D. random
5. A. users B. owners C. masters D. executives
6. A. affords B. affiliates C. funds D. grants
7. A. solemn B. sober C. unique D. universal
8. A. perspective B. permission C. conformity D. consensus
9. A. except B. besides C. beyond D. despite
10. A. absolute B. alternative C. original D. orthodox
11. A. presume B. stimulate C. nominate D. distribute
12. A. range B. length C. scale D. extent
13. A. plus B. versus C. via D. until
14. A. distract B. differ C. distinguish D. disconnect
15. A. or B. but C. so D. whereas
16. A. identical B. analogical C. literal D. parallel
17. A. ambiguity B. utility C. popularity D. proximity
18. A. From B. Over C. Before D. Upon
19. A. recurred B. renewed C. recalled D. recovered
20. A. long B. soon C. far D. well
Section II Reading Comprehension
Part A
Directions: Read the following four passages. Answer the questions below each passage by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on Answer Sheet 1 (40 points)
Text 1
Within a large concrete room, cut out of a mountain on a freezing-told island just 1,000 kilometers from the North Pole, could lie the future of humanity.
The room is a vault (地下庫) designed to hold around 2 million seeds, representing all known varieties of the world’s crops. It is being built to safeguard the world’s food supply against nuclear war, climate change, terrorism, rising sea levels, earthquakes and the collapse of electricity supplies. “If the worst came to the worst, this would allow the world to reconstruct agriculture on this planet.” says Cary Fowler, director of the Global Crop Diversity Trust, an independent international organization promoting the project.
The Norwegian (挪威的) government is planning to create the seed bank next year at the request of crop scientists. The $3 million vault will be built deep inside a sandstone mountain on the Norwegian Arctic island of Spitsbergen. The vault will have metre-thick walls of reinforced concrete and will be protected behind two airlocks and high-security doors.
The vault’s seed collection will represent the products of some 10,000 years of plant breeding by the world’s famers. Though most are no longer widely planted, the varieties contain vital genetic properties still regularly used in plant breeding.
To survive, the seeds need freezing temperatures. Operators plan to replace the air inside the
vault each winter, when temperatures in Spitsbergen are around -18℃. But even if some disaster meant that the vault was abandoned, the permanently frozen soil would keep the seeds alive. And even accelerated global warming would take many decades to penetrate the mountain vault.
“This will be the world’s most secure gene bank,” says Fowler. “But its seeds will only be used when all other samples have gone for some reason.”
The project comes at a time when there is growing concern about the safety of existing seed banks around the world. Many have been criticized for poor security, ageing refrigeration (冷藏) systems and vulnerable electricity supplies.
The scheme won UN approval at a meeting of the Food and Agriculture Organization in Rome in October 2005. A feasibility study said the facility “would essentially be built to last forever”.
21. The Norwegian vault is important in that _________________.
A. the seeds in it represent the rarest varieties of world’s crops.
B. the seeds in it could revive agriculture if the worst thing should happen
C. it is built deep in a mountain on a freezing-cold Arctic island
D. it is strong enough against all disasters caused by man and nature
22. The seed bank project was proposed by __________.
A. the Norwegian government B. Norwegian farmers
C. Spitsbergen residents D. agricultural scientists
23. The seeds in the vault will be stored ____________________.
A. as samples of world crop varieties
B. as products of world plant breeding
C. for their valuable genetic properties
D. for their resistance to plant diseases
24. For the seed bank project to be successful, the most important factor is probably________.
A. constructing tight airlocks B. maintaining high security
C. keeping freezing temperatures D. storing large quantities of seeds
25. Which of the following statements is true?
A. The Norwegian vault models after existing seed banks
B. The Spitsbergen seed bank is expected to last 10,000 years
C. The existing seed banks have potential problems
D. The UN financed the Spitsbergen seed bank
Text 2
Both the number and the percentage of people in the United States involved in nonagricultural pursuits expanded rapidly during the half century following the Civil War, with some of the most dramatic increases occurring in the domains of transportation, manufacturing, and trade and distribution. The development of the railroad and telegraph systems during the middle third of the nineteenth century led to significant improvements in the speed, volume, and regularity of shipments and communications, making possible a fundamental transformation in the production and distribution of goods.
In agriculture, the transformation was marked by the emergence of the grain elevators, the cotton presses, the warehouses, and the commodity exchanges that seemed to so many of the nation’s farmers the visible sign of a vast conspiracy against them. In manufacturing, the transformation was marked by the emergence of a “new factory system” in which plants became larger, more complex, and more systematically organized and managed. And in distribution, the transformation was marked by the emergence of the jobber, the wholesaler, and the mass retailer. These changes radically altered the nature of work during the half century between 1870 and 1920.
To be sure, there were still small workshops, where skilled craftspeople manufactured products ranging from newspapers to cabinets to plumbing fixtures. There were the sweatshops in city tenements, where groups of men and women in household settings manufactured clothing or cigars on a piecework basis. And there were factories in occupations such as metalwork where individual contractors presided over what were essentially handicraft proprietorships that coexisted within a single building. But as the number of wage earners in manufacturing rose from 2.7 million in 1880 to 4.5 million in 1900 to 8.4 million in 1920, the number of huge plants like the Baldwin Locomotive Works in Philadelphia burgeoned, as did the size of the average plant. (The Baldwin Works had 600 employees in 1855, 3,000 in 1875, and 8,000 in 1900.) By 1920, at least in the northeastern United States where most of the nation’s manufacturing wage earners were concentrated, three-quarters of those worked in factories with more than 100 employees and 30 percent worked in factories with more than 1,000 employees.
26. What can be inferred from the passage about the agricultural sector of the economy after the Civil War?
A. New technological developments had little effect on farmers.
B. The percentage of the total population working in agriculture declined.
C. Many farms destroyed in the war were rebuilt after the war.
D. Farmers achieved new prosperity because of better rural transportation.
27. Which of the following was NOT mentioned as part of the “new factory system?”
A. A change in the organization of factories.
B. A growth in the complexity of factories.
C. An increase in the size of factories.
D. An increase in the cost of manufacturing industrial products.
28. Which of the following statements about manufacturing before 1870 can be inferred from the passage?
A. Most manufacturing activity was highly organized.
B. Most manufacturing occurred in relatively small plants.
C. The most commonly manufactured goods were cotton presses.
D. Manufacturing and agriculture each made up about half of the nation’s economy.
29. The author mentions the Baldwin Locomotive Works in Paragraph 3 because it was
A. a well-known metal-works
B. the first plant of its kind in Philadelphia
C. typical of the large factories that were becoming more common
D. typical of factories that consisted of a single building
30. The word “presided over” in Paragraph 3 are closest in meaning to
A. managed B. led to
C. worked in D. produced
Text 3
In 1985 when a Japan Air Lines (JAL) jet crashed, its president, Yasumoto Takagi, called each victim’s family to apologize, and then promptly resigned. And in 1987, when a subsidiary of Toshiba sold sensitive military technology to the former Soviet Union, the chairman of Toshiba gave up his post.
These executive actions, which Toshiba calls “the highest form of apology,” may seem bizarre to US managers. No one at Boeing resigned after the JAL crash, which may have been caused by a faulty Boeing repair.
The difference between the two business cultures centers around different definitions of delegation. While US executives give both responsibility and authority to their employees, Japanese executives delegate only authority—the responsibility is still theirs. Although the subsidiary that sold the sensitive technology to the Soviets had its own management, the Toshiba top executives said they “must take personal responsibility for not creating an atmosphere throughout the Toshiba group that would make such activity unthinkable, even in an independently run subsidiary.”
Such acceptance of community responsibility is not unique to businesses in Japan. School principals in Japan have resigned when their students committed major crimes after school hours. Even if they do not quit, Japanese executives will often accept primary responsibility in other ways, such as taking the first pay cut when a company gets into financial trouble. Such personal sacrifices, even if they are largely symbolic, help to create the sense of community and employee loyalty that is crucial to the Japanese way of doing business.
Harvard Business School professor George Lodge calls the ritual acceptance of blame “almost a feudal (封建的) way of purging (清除) the community of dishonor,” and to some in the United States, such resignations look cowardly. However, in an era in which both business and governmental leaders seem particularly good at evading responsibility, many US managers would probably welcome an infusion (灌輸) of the Japanese sense of responsibility, If, for instance, US automobile company executives offered to reduce their own salaries before they asked their workers to take pay cuts, negotiations would probably take on a very different character.
31. Why did the chairman of Toshiba resign his position in 1987?
A. In Japan, the leakage of a state secret to Russians is a grave crime.
B. He had been under attack for shifting responsibility to his subordinates.
C. In Japan, the chief executive of a corporation is held responsible for the mistake made by its subsidiaries.
D. He had been accused of being cowardly towards crises that were taking place in his corporation.
32. According to the passage if you want to be a good manager in Japan, you have to ________.
A. apologize promptly for your subordinates' mistakes
B. be skillful in accepting blames from customers
C. make symbolic sacrifices whenever necessary
D. create a strong sense of company loyalty
33. What’s Professor George Lodge’s attitude towards the resignations of Japanese corporate leaders?
A. sympatheticB. biased C. critical D. approving.
34. Which of the following statements is TRUE?
A. Boeing had nothing to do with the JAL air crash in 1985.
B. American executives consider authority and responsibility inseparable.
C. School principals bear legal responsibility for students' crimes.
D. Persuading employees to take pay cuts doesn’t help solve corporate crises.
35. The passage is mainly about ______________.
A. resignation as an effective way of dealing with business crises
B. the importance of delegating responsibility to employees
C. ways of evading responsibility in times of crises
D. the difference between two business cultures
Text 4
The end of the nineteenth century and the early years of the twentieth century were marked by the development of an international Art Nouveau style, characterized by sinuous lines, floral and vegetable motifs, and soft evanescent coloration. The Art Nouveau style was an eclectic one, bringing together elements of Japanese art, motifs of ancient cultures, and natural forms. The glass objects of this style were elegant in outline, although often deliberately distorted, with pale or iridescent surfaces. A favored device of the style was to imitate the iridescent surface seen on ancient glass that had been buried. Much of the Art Nouveau glass produced during the years of its greatest popularity had been generically termed “art glass.” Art glass was intended for decorative purposes and relied for its effect upon carefully chosen color combinations and innovative techniques.
France produced a number of outstanding exponents of the Art Nouveau style; among the most celebrated was Emile Galle (1846-1904). In the United States, Louis Comfort Tiffany (1848-1933) was the most noted exponent of this style, producing a great variety of glass forms and surfaces, which were widely copied in their time and are highly prized today. Tiffany was a brilliant designer, successfully combining ancient Egyptian, Japanese, and Persian motifs.
The Art Nouveau style was a major force in the decorative arts from 1895 until 1915, although its influence continued throughout the mid-1920’s. It was eventually to be overtaken by a new school of thought known as Functionalism that had been present since the turn of the century. At first restricted to a small avant-garde group of architects and designers, Functionalism emerged as the dominant influence upon designers after the First World War. The basic tenet of the movement—that function should determine form—was not a new concept. Soon a distinct aesthetic code evolved: form should be simple, surfaces plain, and any ornament should be based on geometric relationships. This new design concept, coupled with the sharp postwar reactions to the styles and conventions of the preceding decades, created an entirely new public taste which caused Art Nouveau types of glass to fall out of favor. The new taste demanded dramatic effects of contrast, stark outline, and complex textural surfaces.
36. What does paragraph 1 mainly discuss?
A. Design elements in the Art Nouveau style
B. The popularity of the Art Nouveau style
C. Production techniques for art glass
D. Color combinations typical of the Art Nouveau style
37. What is the main purpose of paragraph 2?
A. To compare different Art Nouveau styles
B. To give examples of famous Art Nouveau artists
C. To explain why Art Nouveau glass was so popular in the United States
D. To show the impact Art Nouveau had on other cultures around the world
38. What does the author mean by stating that “function should determine form” (para 3, line 6)?
A. A useful object should not be attractive
B. The purpose of an object should influence its form
C. The design of an object is considered more significant than its function
D. The form of an object should not include decorative elements
39. It can be inferred from the passage that one reason Functionalism became popular was that it
A. clearly distinguished between art and design
B. appealed to people who liked complex painted designs
C. reflected a common desire to break from the past
D. was easily interpreted by the general public
40. Paragraph 3 supports which of the following statements about Functionalism?
A. Its design concept avoided geometric shapes.
B. It started on a small scale and then spread gradually.
C. It was a major force in the decorative arts before the First World War
D. It was not attractive to architects and designers
Part B
Directions: Read the following text and then answer the questions by finding a subtitle for each of the marked parts or paragraphs. There are two extra items in the subtitle. Mark your answers on Answer Sheet 1 (10 points)
Growth in the market for glass crafts
Historical development of glass
Architectural experiments with glass
A former glass technology
Computers and their dependence on glass
What makes glass so adaptable
Exciting innovations in fiber optics
Glass, in one form or another, has long been in noble service to humans. As one of the most widely used of manufactured materials, and certainly the most versatile, it can be as imposing as a telescope mirror the width of a tennis court or as small and simple as a marble rolling across dirt. The uses of this adaptable material have been broadened dramatically by new technologies: glass fiber optics—more than eight million miles—carrying telephone and television signals across nations; glass ceramics serving as the nose cones of missiles and as crowns for teeth; tiny glass beads taking radiation doses inside the body to specific organs; even a new type of glass fashioned of nuclear waste in order to dispose of that unwanted material.
41. _____________________________________
On the horizon are optical computers. These could store programs and process information by means of light—pulses from tiny lasers—rather than electrons. And the pulses would travel over glass fibers, not copper wire. These machines could function hundreds of times faster than today’s electronic computers and hold vastly more information. Today fiber optics are used to obtain a cleaner image of smaller and smaller objects than ever before—even bacterial viruses. A new generation of optical instruments is emerging that can provide detailed imaging of the inner workings of cells. It is the surge in fiber optic use and in liquid crystal displays that has set the U.S. glass industry (a 16 billion dollar business employing some 150,000 workers) to building new plants to meet demand.
42. ______________________________________
But it is not only in technology and commerce that glass has widened its horizons. The use of glass as art, a tradition going back at least to Roman times, is also booming. Nearly everywhere, it seems, men and women are blowing glass and creating works of art. “I didn’t sell a piece of glass until 1975,” Dale Chihuly said, smiling, for in the 18 years since the end of the dry spell, he has become one of the 20th century. He now has a new commission—a glass sculpture for the headquarters building of a pizza company—for which his fee is half a million dollars.
43. ______________________________________
But not all the glass technology that touches our lives is ultra-modern. Consider the simple light bulb; at the turn of the century most light bulbs were hand blown, and the cost of one was equivalent to half a day’s pay for the average worker. In effect, the invention of the ribbon machine by Corning in the 1920s lighted a nation. The price of a bulb plunged. Small wonder that the machine has been called one of the great mechanical achievements of all time. Yet it is very simple: a narrow ribbon of molten glass travels over a moving belt of steel in which there are holes. The glass sags through the holes and into waiting moulds. Puffs of compressed air then shape the glass. In this way, the envelope of a light bulb is made by a single machine at the rate of 66,000 an hour, as compared with 1,200 a day produced by a team of four glassblowers.
44. _______________________________________
The secret of the versatility of glass lies in its interior structure. Although it is rigid, and thus like a solid, the atoms are arranged in a random disordered fashion, characteristic of a liquid. In the melting process, the atoms in the raw materials are distributed from their normal positioning the molecular structure; before they can find their way back to crystalline arrangements the glass cools. This looseness in molecular structure gives the material what engineers call tremendous “formability” which allows technicians to tailor glass to whatever they need.
45. ______________________________________
Today, scientists continue to experiment with new glass mixture and building designers test their imaginations with applications of special types of glass. A London architect, Mike Davies, sees even more dramatic buildings using molecular chemistry. “Glass is the great building material of the future, the ‘dynamic skin’ ” he said. “Think of glass that has been treated to react to electric currents going through it, glass that will change from clear to opaque at the push of a button, that gives you instant curtains. Think of how the tall buildings in New York could perform a symphony of colors as the glass in them is made to change colors instantly.” Glass as instant curtains is available now, but the cost is exorbitant. As for the glass changing colors instantly, that may come true. Mike Davies’s vision may indeed be on the way to fulfillment.
Section III Translation
46. Directions: In this section there is a passage in English. Translate it into Chinese and write your version on Answer Sheet 2 (15 points)
The media can impact current events. As a graduate student at Berkeley in the 1960s, I remember experiencing the events related to the People’s Park that were occurring on campus. Some of these events were given national media coverage in the press and on TV. I found it interesting to compare my impressions of what was going on with perceptions obtained from the news media. I could begin to see events of that time feed on news coverage. This also provided me with some healthy insights into the distinction between these realities.
Electronic media are having a greater impact on the people’s lives every day. People gather more and more of their impressions from representations. Television and telephone communications are linking people to a global village, or what one writer calls the electronic city. Consider the information that television brings into your home every day. Consider also the contact you have with others simply by using telephone. These media extend your consciousness and your contact, for example, the video coverage of the 1989 San Francisco earthquake focused on “l(fā)ive action” such as the fires or the rescue efforts. This gave the viewer the impression of total disaster. Television coverage of the Iraqi War also developed an immediacy. CNN reported events as they happened. This coverage was distributed worldwide. Although most people were far away from these events, they developed some perception of these realities.
Section IV Writing
Part A
47. Directions: Read the following Chinese and write an abstract of 80-100 words. You should write your abstract on Answer Sheet 2. (10 points)
高崚、楊威被華中科技大學“勸退”,暴露出這樣一個問題,一些運動員上學,只是名義上的,他們并沒有真正走進課堂,也沒有讀一些應該讀的書。這不得不讓我們去重新審視運動員的“學歷熱”——
包括眾多奧運冠軍在內的優(yōu)秀運動員進入各大高校求學,曾一度被視為是運動員退役后職業(yè)轉型的最佳出路。然而,近年來屢屢出現(xiàn)的“冠軍學生”無法正常上課、無法按時畢業(yè)甚至是被提前退學的尷尬,卻不得不讓我們去重新審視運動員的“上學熱”。
在常人看來,運動員是一個風光與風險并存的職業(yè)。在役時,并非每個運動員都能像劉翔和姚明那樣風光無限;退役后,也并非每個運動員都能像田亮和劉璇那樣成功轉型。即使是獲得過全國甚至世界冠軍的鄒春蘭和艾冬梅等人,也曾面臨著就業(yè)的尷尬和生活的窘迫,更何況那些“拿青春賭明天”卻沒能“瀟灑走一回”的眾多普通運動員。
正因如此,優(yōu)秀運動員特別是世界冠軍和奧運冠軍“求學”,已逐漸成為中國體育界的一種“時尚”。據記者了解,我國專業(yè)運動員特別是優(yōu)秀運動員的學歷在近年來呈現(xiàn)出不斷升高的趨勢——1984年至今,奧運冠軍中???、本科以上學歷者約占81.95%,碩士以上學歷者約占28%。據中國校友網等機構發(fā)布的《中國奧運冠軍調查報告》顯示,在北京奧運會前選擇就讀北京體育大學的奧運冠軍就有27人(北體大還專門設立了研究生冠軍班);選擇就讀中國人民大學的有13人(人大為此專門設立優(yōu)秀跳水運動員班);其次為南京體育學院、上海交通大學、北京大學和清華大學。隨著北京奧運會后更多奧運冠軍的誕生,這一數字還在不斷上升中,林躍、火亮、何雯娜、陸春龍等新科奧運冠軍紛紛走進大學校園……
運動員特別是優(yōu)秀運動員的“上學熱”,與相關部門的政策支持密不可分。早在2002年,體育總局、等部門便聯(lián)合印發(fā)了《關于進一步做好退役運動員就業(yè)安置工作的意見》,提出“鼓勵運動員進入高等院校學習并通過高校畢業(yè)生就業(yè)渠道就業(yè)?!薄兑庖姟分羞€專門指出“獲得全國體育比賽前三名、亞洲體育比賽前六名、世界體育比賽前八名和獲得球類集體項目運動健將、田徑項目運動健將、武術項目武英級和其他項目國際級運動健將稱號的運動員,可以免試進入各級各類高等院校學習”,此后又將保送范圍擴大到了現(xiàn)役運動員。
雖然有關部門已將進入高校學習明確作為安置退役運動員的渠道,但運動員“求學”促就業(yè)的效果究竟如何卻值得商榷。在運動員特別是優(yōu)秀運動員的學歷近年來不斷提升的趨勢背后,人們所期待的高校與優(yōu)秀運動員“賽而優(yōu)則學”的雙贏局面卻并未如期出現(xiàn)。
從高校方面來看,吸引世界冠軍特別是奧運冠軍來校就讀,除了響應號召,承擔更多培養(yǎng)優(yōu)秀運動員綜合素質的社會責任外,還可以進一步擴大學校的知名度和影響力。因此,在有關部門出臺相關規(guī)定后,不少高校特別是知名高校都制定了很多優(yōu)惠條件吸引冠軍運動員就讀。比如人大、清華等高校就專門為就讀的“冠軍學員”度身定制了培養(yǎng)方案,實行彈性學制、放寬畢業(yè)年限、單獨開班、小班授課甚至是放寬英語成績等“特殊”政策。
然而,名校可以選擇,不少冠軍選手在進入名校后卻不一定能夠順利完成學業(yè)。冠軍們“掛牌讀書”,無法按時畢業(yè)的現(xiàn)象并不鮮見。以此次出現(xiàn)在華中科技大學307名“超學時”擬清退研究生名單中的奧運冠軍高崚和楊威為例,他們同是2005年華中科技大學公共管理學院的研究生,曾先后4次出現(xiàn)在“未注冊研究生名單”中。據該校學籍管理規(guī)定,碩士研究生學習年限最長不超過4年,否則將被退學……
對于此次“清退”事件所引發(fā)的種種爭論,不少業(yè)內人士在接受記者采訪時均認為,奧運冠軍上大學之所以如此引人關注,其深層次原因還是國內運動員特別是退役運動員再就業(yè)選擇面較窄,使得外界產生了有限的教育資源被“低標準”利用的爭議。
據記者了解,近兩年來,國內對于運動員特別是退役運動員的安置和就業(yè)問題進行了積極探索和嘗試——遼寧開設了 “遼寧省體育行業(yè)特有工種職業(yè)技能鑒定站”,幫助運動員獲得與運動項目相關的體育行業(yè)資格證書,為運動員轉型培訓搭建服務平臺;廣州正在積極推進退役運動員再就業(yè)立法,力求從立法層面上解決運動員就業(yè)難的問題;北京則通過財政統(tǒng)籌、社會捐助、提取體育彩票公益金等途徑建立退役運動員創(chuàng)業(yè)基金,扶持退役運動員自主創(chuàng)業(yè)……
Part B
Directions: In this section, you are asked to write an essay based on the following statement. You should write at least 150 words on the Answer Sheet 2. (15 points)
My Comment on Students’ Dealing in Stock Market
股市的活躍造就了很多新富翁,從而吸引了無數年輕人,特別是在校大學生加入了炒股的隊伍.對此有人贊成,認為大學生可以借此增加自己的金融知識,鍛煉自己的分析決斷能力.但也有人反對,認為大學生經濟上不獨立,自己沒有固定的收入,承受風險的能力較差,不應盲目入市.請就此事發(fā)表您的觀點看法.
附:2011年全國碩士研究生入學統(tǒng)一考試英語(二)答案 [非考試中心標準答案,僅供參考]
客觀題
1-5 ACBDD;6-10 BACCA;11-15 DBACA;16-20 CDACD
21-25BBDAA;26-30DBCBB;31-35BDCDB;36-40DCBAC;
41-45EDCFG
46.翻譯
有誰會想到,在全球范圍內,IT行業(yè)產生的溫室氣體跟全球航空公司產生的一樣多?占二氧化碳總排量的2%.
很多日常工作對環(huán)境造成了讓人震驚的破壞作用。根據你查詢正確答案的嘗試次數,谷歌搜索引擎會插手0.2-7克的二氧化碳的排放量。要快速將結果傳遞給用戶,谷歌必須用強大和大量的計算機系統(tǒng)來維護全球巨大的數據庫中心。這些計算機在散發(fā)大量熱量的同時也產生大量的二氧化碳氣體。所以中心處理器必須要有很好的散熱裝備,然而卻耗能更多。
英語(二)小作文范文:
A Letter to Liming
Jan-15-2011
Dear Liming,
Congraduate on you success in passing the entrance examination.
Now, please allow me to give you some suggestion during your holidays.
First of all, you should read. Because it makes a full man. Reading during the holiday helps you get the habit of it that when you become a freshman. College life is so plentiful but reading is the most important thing.
Second, to do some housework can bring you another feelings. Once you get into the college, you must do the things for yourself, including washing, clear the room and shedule your daily life and etc.
However, reading and housework doesn’t mean all of your holiday. You need contact with your friends or communicate with them. The reason is that old friends will be in your memory and new friends will be there. And we all know that the friendship among senior school.
From the things I mentioned above, hope they will bring you a richful life in your college.
Zhangwei
英語二大作文范文
As can be seen clearly from the chart, the market share taken by domestic car brands increased rapidly from 25% in 20008 to nearly 35% in 2009, while conversely, the market share owned by Japanese car brands dropped by 10% from 35% in 2008 to 25% in 2008. What’s more, the market share taken by American car brands is on the upward trend, from 10% to nearly 15%.
Three reasons, in my opinion, can account for the changes in car market in these two years. First, the rise of Chinese cars is of little surprise as we have seen Chinese enterprises’ commitment to developing self-owned technologies, which not only free them from potential risks, but also bring about long-term benefit. Second, Japanese cars, which used to be highly praised for their outstanding quality and superior stability, is now reeling from a crisis of confidence. Last, the improvement of American cars’ performance must be attributed to the smart marketing strategy employed by American sellers. They launched a lot of marketing campaigns designed specially for Chinese market, which won them applaud as well as benefit.
In order to maintain the good momentum of development, domestic cars should on one hand stick to their self-independent policy, and on the other, learn some experiences from Japanese car’s failures and Americans’ success.
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