GENERAL ENGLISH QUALIFYING TEST
FOR NON-ENGLISH MAJOR GRADUATE STUDENTS
(GETDEC2913)
考试注意事项
本考试由两份试卷组成:试卷一(Paper One)包括听力理解、词汇、完形填空与阅读
理解四部分,共80题,按顺序统一编号;试卷二(Paper* Two)包括翻译与写作两部分, 共3题。此外,试卷分A卷和B卷,请考生注意在机读卡上标出自己的试卷类型。卷一(题号1-80)为客观评分题(听力Section C部分除外),答案一律用2B铅笔
做在机读答题纸上,在对应题号下所选的字母中间划黑道,如[A][B]te«D]。
ANSWER SHEET II上。答题前,请仔细阅读试卷二
的注意事项。
听力Section C部分除外),答案一律写在答题
纸上,否则无效。
150分钟,釆用试卷一与试卷二分卷计时的办法。
试卷一考试时间为90分钟,听力理解部分以放完录音带为准,大约25分钟;其余部 分共计时65分钟,每部分所占时间均标在试卷上,考生可自行掌握。试卷二共计时60分钟,每部分所占时间均标在试卷上,考生可自行掌握。
教师收点试卷及答题纸。全部考试结束后,须待监考教师将全部试卷及答题纸收点无 误并宣布本考试结束,方可离开考场。
PAPER ONE
PART I LISTENING COMPREHENSION (25 minutes,20 points)
Section A (1 point each)
Directions: In this section, you will hear nine short conversations between two speakers. At the
end of each conversation a question will be asked about what was said. The conversations and the questions will be read only once. Choose the best answer from the four choices given by marking the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square brackets on your machine-scored Answer Sheet.
I.
A. He broke his leg while shopping.B. He is going to have some food first.C. He can’t afford to see the movie.D. He will go to the movie next week.I.
A. It should be highly advanced technically.B. It should have technical support all day every day.C. It should have technical support at seven o’clock.D. It should have at least 247 servers.•
A. At a police station. B. At an airport.C. In a restaurant.
D. On a farm.
A. He doesn’t care about the CD at allB. He has already got the CD back.C. Tommy will never return the CD.D. Tommy will return the CD eventually.A. It was awesome.B. It was unrealistic.C. It was terrible.D. It was ridiculous.A. He goes skiing very often.
B. He doesn’t go skiing so often as he used to.C. He rarely goes skiing nowadays.D. He goes skiing once in a while.
7, A. He asks the woman to wait till the weekendB. He can help the woman this weekend.C. He is moving into the woman’s apartment.D. He would like the woman to move quickly.
8. A. He is a heavy sleeper.B. The clocks won’t work.C. He is scared of thunder.D. He is afraid of being lateA. To take care of his bag .To register for him.C. To go with him.D. To look at his eyes.
Section B (1 point each)
Directions: In this section you will hear two mini-talks. At the end of each talk, there will be some
questions. Both the talks and the questions will be read to you only once. After each question, there will be a pause. During the pause,you must choose the best answer from the four choices given by marking the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square brackets on your machine-scored Answer Sheet.
Mini-talk one10. A. The plum.
B. The apple.C. The rose.D. The pear.11. A. Michigan.
B. Washington. C California.D. Oregon.12. A. 35000.
B,38000.C. 3800. a 3500.
A-2
Mini-talk Two
13. A. He is afraid of being abused.
B. He can’t bear a group situation,C. He is afraid of losing his properly*D. He hates being cared for by strangers.14. A. Their children are not willing to help them
B. Their children are too young to help them.C. Their children are busy all the time.D. Their children live far away from them.15. A. Offering help to seniors living alone at home.
B. Building more nursing homes in the countryside..Arranging for older people to live in group situations.D. Encouraging children to live with their aged parents•Section C (1 point each)
Directions: In this section you will hear a short lecture. Listen to the recording and complete the
notes about the lecture. You will hear the recording twice. After the recording you areasked to write down your answers on the Answer Sheet. You now have 25 seconds to read the notes below.
(请在录音结束后把16-20题的答案抄写在答题纸上)
16. State schools cost less because they get money________________(three words) that startedthem to educate local citizens. 117. Out-of-state and international students usually pay more than state residents(five words).18. The published tuition at Lewis and Clark is almost ___________________(four wonjs)19. Each year Uwis and Clark University awards 二:
, (two words) to twenty students
from other countries.
20. Prices alone do not say anything about the quality of a school or the
(four words).
PART II VOCABULARY (10 minutes,10 points ) Section A (0.5 point each)
A-3
Directions: There are ten questions in this section. Each question is a sentence with one word or
phrase underlined. Below the sentence are four words or phrases marked Af B, C andD. Choose the word or phrase that is closest in meaning to the underlined one. Mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square brackets on your
%
machine-scored Answer Sheet.
21. Laura Bush still remembers the sentence “the old maid of Midland married Midland’s most
eligible bachelor.,,A. desirable President Obama.A. for some reason rendered.A. told A. abused A. revise A. help A. luxurious A. benefit A. after
A. in the course of Section B (0.5 point each)
Directions: There are ten questions in this section. Each question is a sentence with something
missing. Below each sentence are four words or phrases marked A, B, C and D. Choose one word or phrase that best completes the sentence. Mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square brackets on your machine-scored Answer Sheet.
B. advertised B. exhausted B. negotiate B. demand B. traditional B. toll B. during B. in the event of
C- decorated C enhanced C. seek C postpone C. splendid C. agony C. before
C. in the middle of
D. admiredD. depressedD. rejectD. induceD. stunningD. effectD. by
D. in the way of
24. By the time the general election was over,George felt mentally and physically worn out.25. It is by no means stupid to ask for advice on how to turn down a job offer.
26* The two countries are going to sign political agreements that facilitate troop withdrawals.27. The majority of people living the United States prefer a conventional church wedding.28. Scientists are still measuring the impact of automation on the lives of factory workers.29. Andrew had taught English in a couple of schools prior to working in this academy.30. In any city,there are some telephone numbers to call in case of emergency.
B. by large measure
C. to some extent
D. at any time
23. Her sense of humor,her grace and her willingness to bare her heart make this story beautifully
B. negligible
C. miserable
D. affordable
22. Timothy Dolan commented that he felt somewhat better following a private meeting with
八
-4
31. This young lady was brave enough to prevent what-------might have been a tragedy.
A. however
B. therefore
C. otherwise
D. only
32. When I asked about his son, he did not answer at first, but then he------in tears.
A. shut down
• let down C. took down D. broke down
■
w m •
w 零零 ■ ■ ■------------------------- _ —
33. The Arab oil embargo and long gas lines_______oil companies flocking back to Midland.
A. compelled B. sent
C. delivered
D- committed
ma
A, satisfied B. satisfaction C. satisfactoryD. satisfy35. I felt good about the debates,believing that my performance hadexpectations A. exceeded B.succeeded C. proceededD. preceded36. It seems a lot of effort but I,m sure it’s the best solution
A. on the other hand B. in the long run C. once upon a timeD. out of the way 37. Cherie Blair feels she has a lot to say when asked what she likes_____her husband.A. from B. in C. toD. about38. Experts offer health________as kids will be returning to the classroom this week.A. slips B. tips
C. gossips D. clips39. The progress of science depends largely on the interactions within the scientific___A. community B. neighborhood C. federation D. integration40. The speed of an object moving in a________direction is called the velocity.
A. unique
B. special
C. particular
D. strange
PART III CLOZE TEST (10 minutes,10 points, 1 point each)
Directions: There are 10 questions in this part of the test. Read the passage through. Then,go
back and choose one suitable word or phrase marked A, B, C, or Dfor each blank in the passage. Mark the corresponding letter of the word or phrase you have chosen ^ith a single bar across the square brackets on your machine-scored Answer Sheet.
As a society,we,re living longer and better than at any time in history. In part,this is due to medical1 advances. Death rates are down, life 一41— is higher than ever, and we're making progress _42— the most serious diseases we face. As we consider the direction health care will —43— in the future, one thing is certain: new, innovative medicines will assume an increasingly —44— role in the way we improve the quality of care for future generations.
One 一45— role of new medicines will be the prevention, treatment, and management of many diseases suffered by the aging Baby Boomer generation. In the year 2000,there were —46— 35.6 million Americans aged 65 and older. By 2030, this number is
47 ’ to double
estimated
‘
• •
mm «
房
• ••蠡
___48 — to
patients but to our ability to keep health care affordable. We have to do better in our Styles and
A.5
in our health care system to___49___an enormous disease burden and economic burden on theBoomers themselves, their families, employers, and federal and state governments. New drugs are a vital part of the solution to this rapidly___50___issue.41. A. expression42. A. against43. A. concern44. A. populous45. A. crude46. A. roughly47. A. pronounced48. A. except for49. A. live up to50. A, emerging
• expectancyB. for• implementB. prominent.conciseB, sincerely .providedB. not only• lose sight ofappearing
C. explorationC. without.addressC preliminary C criticalC. toughly .prohibitedC. instead of .stay clear ofC. booming
D. exploitationD. towardsD. takeD. preferentialD. capableD. desperatelyD. projectedD. as muchD. be stuck inD. diminishing
PART IV READING COMPREHENSION (45 minutes,30 points,1 point each)
Directions: In this part of the test,there are five short passages. Read each passage carefully,
and then do the questions that follow. Choose the best answer from the four choices given and mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square brackets
on your machine-scored Answer Sheet
Passage One
Like many writers, Fve been kicking around an idea for a novel for years. I wrote part of my then abandon the project for months.
This is a problem many people face, I learned while writing about workday schedules for my recent book. We have grand ideas for where to take our careers someday, but immediate deadlines or meetings or aggressive coworkers always seem to take precedence on Monday morning. Internal motivation is powerful, but it’s easier to say no to ourselves rather than the rest of the world.
So what do successful people do? They create external motivations for things they want to do but that life has a way of crowding out. They create accountability systems that boost important but not urgent items to the top of their priority lists -- ideally in a way that makes failure really uncomfortable,
Nika Stewart, for instance, owns a social media marketing business. She\\s also part of an accountability group called the 7-Figure Club. Every Monday, each entrepreneur checks in online to determine the amount of a week’s work that will advance her toward her annual goals. Then on
tale during a less busy time in my life years ago. But I couldn’t build momentum, I,d write a bit,
A-6
Friday, everyone chccks hack in to say whether she met her goal. If Stewart s weekly goal,shared with the group on Monday, was to send out 10 proposals, she tells me, Thursday night, if I didn t do it, I might stay up and do it•” Why? She doesn’t want to look lazy to people whose opinion shecares about.
I knew I needed an accountability system for myself, or my novel would never get written. Late last year,I found my partner Katherine Reynolds Lewis. Fm almost embarrassed to say how
___
•
made
嚨
-. •.
words, just so I could email her saying I,d written them. There weren’t any real consequences to failing,but the part of my brain that learned to turn in papers on time in schoolyears ago leapt to attention once it had an assignment.
“Write 2,000 words” got a spot on my to-do list In 10 weeks, I had enough words (20,000) to have a sense of how I intended to shape the second half of the book. By April 15,I had my draft.
51. In Paragraph 1,“build momentum” refers to
44
A. find enough time for writing B. form a good habit of writingC. keep on writing my novel
D. decide on the plot of my novel
52. What is the problem mentioned in Paragraph 2?
A. Lack of internal motivation..Limited time and energy.
C. Competition among coworkers.D. Over-demanding job responsibility.53. The accountability system can help people________,
A. create an internal motivation to do important thingsB. accomplish what they have promised to doC. determine what are the important things to doD. succeed in doing things they don’t want to do54. Nika Stewart makes sure that she meets her goals________A. by winning friends,support
B. by staying up each dayC. through effective communication
D. through group pressure
55. What can we say about the effect of the accountability system on the author?
A. Very disappointing. B. Hard to say for now.C. Kind of promising. D. Quite successful.
A^7
56. What is the main idea of the passage?
A. How does the accountability system work?B. Who is going to join the accountability system?C. When is the accountability system most effective?D. Why are people interested in the accountability system?Passage Two
The tomatoes your great-grandparents ate probably tasted little like the ones you eat today. In fact,tomatoes ‘‘were once so flavorful that you could take one in your hand and eat it straight away just like we regularly eat apples or peaches,” according to plant scientist Alan Bennett. He belongs to a team of international scientists who now think they know one reason why the fruit has lost so much flavor.
Although some unripe tomatoes have a dark green patch near the stem,farmers prefer that their unripe tomatoes are the same shade of green all over. The consistent coloring makes it easier for them to know when the fruit should be picked.
But tomatoes without the dark green patch are also missing an important genetic ingredient that helps the fruit make more sugar and other tasty molecules. So by breeding tomatoes for that consistent color,Bennett’s team says,crop scientists may have accidentally contributed to also making this fruit bland. “It is a good illustration of unintended consequences,,’ Harry Klee told Science News.
Tomatoes make sugars in compartments called chloroplasts (叶绿体)• Bennett and his colleagues found that tomatoes need the correct version of a gene (one called S1GLK2) to form chloroplasts properly in the fruit. A gene acts as a biological instruction book that tells cells which molecules to make.
Tomatoes without the dark green patch have the wrong version of this gene, the researchers report in Science. As these fruits ripen,they can’t make as many chloroplasts. And chloroplasts that they do produce are smaller. One result: The tomatoes make less sugar一and don’t taste as good.
Tomatoes also produce gases responsible for some of the odors we associate with the fruit. Even though you only breathe them,these gases affect the way that you perceive flavor. Tomatoes with weak chloroplasts can’t make as much of these gases,further reducing flavor.
But the newfound gene change is “not the whole story of why modern tomatoes are so bad, by a long shot,,,Klee told Science News. Tomatoes are also blander when they arc picked too early or stored in the fridge.
A-8
57. Which of the following results from the help of crop scientists?
A. Tomatoes with various colors.B. Improved color and taste of tomatoes.C Increased output of tomatoes.
D. Tomatoes with a consistent green color.
58. The word “bland”(Para. 3) probably means________•
A. less nutritious B. less tasteful C. more colorful 59. What does Harry Klee think of the work of crop scientists?
A. It is a mixed blessing- C. It is hard to evaluate.
60. What can be learned about chloroplasts?
A. The more the chloroplasts, the sweeter the tomatoes.B. The smaller the chloroplasts, the better odor tomatoes have.C. Chloroplasts help form the correct version of S1GLK2.D. Chloroplasts mainly affect tomatoes’ color, not their flavor
臞
D. more productive
B. It is beneficial to farming.D. It does more good than hariiL
61. Which of the following is NOT mentioned as a reason for tomatoes’ flavor today?
A. The change of tomatoes,gene. C, The soil where tomatoes are planted. 62. The passage is mainly written to________•
A. introduce the modem way of breeding tomatoesB. compare tomatoes today and those in the pastC. describe how the tomato technology has evolved
0
B. The time tomatoes are picked.D. The storage temperature.
D. explain why tomatoes today have lost much flavor Passage Three
Recently,I was struck by Eric Holder’s comment on the George Zimmerman versus TrayvonMartin case in Florida. Talking about his son and the fears of African-American fathers for theirteenage sons,Holder said: “I am his father and it is my responsibility, not to burden him with thebaggage of eras long gone,but to make him aware of the world he must still confront. This is a sad reality in a nation that is changing for the better in so many ways.”
I also agree with the commentary of Lawrence Bobo:
A-9
The most essential facts of this ease will never change. A teenager went out to buy iced tea.At some point,he was confronted by a man with a gun who killed him. There is no universe Iunderstand where this can be declared a noncriminal act. Not in a sound, just and racism-free universe•”
What happened was a crime and the released shooter, Zimmerman,is no role model for anyone. He was aggressively stupid.
But for me, the mentally-retarded killer is not the issue. I think this story is about guns andtelevision. Florida is a swampy place and so are its laws. It is absurd to permit a civilian likeZimmerman to legally go around with a concealed weapon, following or pursuing anyone hedecides or imagines is a danger to his community. Circumstances like that are the reason we have laws,courts and police.
And television, I know a bit about television in courtrooms, which I thought was a bad idea from the start. In 1978,I wrote about what I believe was the first televised trial — in Miami. The defendant was a kid named Ronny Zamora, who killed an 83-year-old neighbor in an unskilled burglary in her home. He was sentenced to life imprisonment.
The Zamora case,like the Zimmerman case, was a big story,not because it was an unusual trial, but because of cameras in the courtroom. The television press could not ignore it. The video feed was a real reality show. It was irresistible and dangerous television wallpaper,guaranteed to fan the ever-withering racial coals of the nation.
Back to guns. My father was for gun control because,as he told me many times,in disputes that escalate into violence, someone inevitably reaches for the deadliest weapon available. If there’s a gun and someone uses it,death is likely.
He was right,then and now.
63. According to Paragraph One,Eric Holder is probably________•
A. reluctant to face the real worldB. disappointed with some social realitiesC. indifferent to racial discrimination
D. confident about the future of this country
64. Lawrence Bobo,s comment reveals his
A. sympathy for ZimmermanC. intense anger at the verdict65. In Paragraph Five,the author is -----A. criticizing local laws in FloridaC. arguing for death penalty in Florida
B. praising Florida for its legislation D. defending the killer ZimmermanB, tolerance of street violence D. doubt about the evidence
A-10
66. Television is blamed for its_______-•
A. distorted presentation of court trials B. constant exaggeration of the crime rateC. prejudice against the colored people
D. negative effect on racial issues
67. The author agrees with his father in that-----•
A. guns have nothing to do with crime B. guns can effectively prevent crime
C. guns can serve as deadly weapons
D. guns should not be controlled
68. Which of the following can best serve as the title of this passage?
A. A Big Tragedy And A Big Story: Race, Guns And TelevisionB. Gun Control: Both A Blessing And A CurseC. What Is To Be Done to Prevent Illegal ShootingD. The Role of Television in Fair Trials
Passage Four
Forecasting the weather requires huge quantities of data, mainly collected by high-tech means such as satellites and radar, but low-tech tools are important too~especially old-fashioned rain gauges (雨量器)•
Each technique has its strengths and weaknesses. Radar and satellites can cover swathes of land,yet they lack detail. Gauges are much more accurate, but the price of that accuracy is spotty coverage. Now,though,Aart Overeem of the Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute and his colleagues reckon they have come up with another way to watch the rain carefully. It offers, they believe, both broad coverage and fine detail. Best of all,it relies on something that is already almost everywhere—the mobile-phone network.
Their scheme starts from the observation that rain can make it harder for certain sorts of electromagnetic radiation to travel through the atmosphere. Measure this resistance and you can measure how rainy it is. The researchers do not measure the strength of mobile-phone signals themselves. Instead,they rely on something that mobile networks already do,and measure the strength of the microwave links that base stations use to talk to each other.
The idea itself is not new,and there have been trials in recent years. Like all the best science, the idea is both technically elegant and practically useful,since it allows better cross-checking of existing methods. There are other advantages. Coverage is one. Even in rich countries with well-financed weather forecasters,there are probably far more mobile-phone base stations than rain gauges. That is truer still in poor countries, where rain gauges are scarce and radar often nonexistent, but mobile phones common. Another boon is that network operators tend to keep a close eye on their microwave links. Although the researchers were able to obtain data only every 15 minutes, some firms sample their networks once a minute. That means rainfall could, in
principle, be measured almost in real time,something that neither gauges nor radar nor satellites can manage.
The technology is not perfect; snow and hail are harder than rain for microwaves to spot, for example. Besides,mobile networks are densest in urban areas, which are also the places that probably have weather-forecasting equipment already. Even in the rich,urbanized Netherlands, coverage outside cities is noticeably irregular.69. Paragraph 3 mainly talks about________•
A. how to use the mobile-phone network to measure rainfall
B. the equipment for measuring rainfall with the mobile-phone networkC. the limits of using the mobile-phone network to measure rainfallD. the efficiency of measuring rainfall with the mobile-phone network
70. What is true about the idea of using the mobile-phone network to measure rain?
A. It is completely new. C. It is worth a try.
B. It is a bit impractical.D. It is easier said than done.
71. What does the word “boon” (Paragraph 4) probably mean?
A. A problem.
B. A flaw.
C A theory.
D. A benefit.
72. The mobile-phone network has advantages over both satellites and gauges because________.
A. it is easy to use C. it is less expensive
B. it offers real-time measurementD. it is more accurate
73. One of the problems with this new technology is that________•
A. mobile phones are rarely used in rural areasB. weather forecasts are not easy in big citiesC. some areas can’t be adequately covered
D. this technology can hardly be used in poor countries74. The purpose of writing the passage is to------•
A. introduce a new way of forecasting the weatherB. compare the existing ways of forecasting the weatherC. point out the need for improvement in weather forecastD. analyze the technological development in weather forecast
A-12
Passage Five
Oh no,not Anthony Weiner again.
The older generation never gets it. Anthony Weiner, a candidate for mayor of New York, admitted this week to having sent more snaps of himself to a digital acquaintance. As any youngster could have told him,the way to find love is to send photos of your face.Consider Will,a 24-year-old future film director in California* He meets potential dates via a smartphone app called Tinder. It finds potential matches who are nearby一your phone always knows where you are—and shows him photos from their Facebook profiles. Will can like or reject each photo. If a woman he likes also likes him,both are alerted and can start chatting.
Tinder is quick (you can look through dozens of photos in minutes) and spares your blushes (you never know if someone rejects you). Will has already had three romantic encounters and hundreds of matches, he says. Justin Mateen, a cofounder of Tinder, says it has made 100m matches since its launch in September, and led to 50 marriage proposals. He adds: “The app has only really been going for nine months. There could be a baby popping out soon.”
Americans are dating longer, which creates opportunities for matchmakers. Some are quite direct.
Bang with Friends (BWF),another app, allows users to specify which of their Facebook friends they would like to spend the night with. If both parlies feel the same way,BWF notifies them. If not, no one is any wiser. BWF was booted from Apple’s app store,but that hasn’t stopped it from creating 200,000 pairings since its January launch. BWF’s boss admits he came up with the concept while “a bit drunk,,.
Such apps make it easier to find potential partners, but don’t seem to have turned America into a nation of bed-hoppers. Young women claim to have had an average of 3.6 male intimate friends while young men 6,1 female ones. These figures may be inaccurate—men may exaggerate; women may undercount—but they have not changed much in years.
Parents worry that staring at screens all day has made youngsters socially awkward face-to-face. A survey by two dating sites found that 36-38% of Americans aged 21-34 ask for dates by text message. But when they meet, they must still make their moves in person. Witty joking and a well-placed facial expression still have their uses.75. It can be summarized from the first three paragraphs that________.
A. we used to judge a potential match by his or her appearanceB. one can find love by sending his photos to a digital acquaintanceC. Anthony Weiner is trying to win more votes from digital friendsD. Tinder will probably replace traditional matchmakers worldwide
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76. The underlined sentence in Paragraph 4 probably means that____
A. babies may send photos to each other via a smartphoneB. babies will appear in advertisements about cell phonesC. Tinder can possibly lead to marriages and baby birthsD. parents usually send digital photos of their baby to friends77. Paragraph 6 is focused on________•
78-79. Potential matches found by Tinder are probably80. This passage is primarily concerned withA. the huge success that BWF has achievedB. the serious consequence of digital datingC. the evolution of matchmaking in the U.S.D. the future developments of Facebook________.
A. excessive use of apps leaves youngsters socially awkwardB. most young people find love through text messagesC people in love often move their homes before marriageD. verbal or non-verbal language is still used during dates________•
A. young, single and nearby
B. poor,married but lonely
C. illiterate, retired but divorced D. far-away,busy and happy
________•
A. novel cell phones
B. virtual marriageC. digital dating
D. functions of the Internet
请确认是否己在机读卡上标明A卷或18卷
The last paragraph implies thatPAPER TWO
译写答题注意事项
一
、
本试卷(PaperTwo)答案一
律写在符题纸II
(Answer Sheet II)上,草稿纸上的答题内
容一律不予计分。
二、中、英文尽可能做到字迹清晰,书写工整,疏密相间均匀,字体大小适当。三、英文作文必须逐行书写,不得隔行或跳行。
PART V TRANSLATION (30 minutes,20 points)Section A (15 minutes,10 points)
Directions: Put the following paragraph into Chinese. Write your Chinese version in the proper
space on Answer Sheet II.
My goals in writing this book are twofold. First,I hope to paint a picture of what it was like to serve as president for eight straight years. My conviction is that it is virtually impossible to reach definite conclusions about my presidency for several decades. The passage of time allows passions to cool, results to clarify, and scholars to compare different approaches. This book can contribute to studies on this period in American history. Second, I gave an exhaustive account of the options I weighed and principles I complied with to give you a better sense of why I made the decisions I did. This book is primarily based on my recollections. If there are inaccuracies,the responsibility is mine.
Section B (15 minutes,10 points)
Directions: Put the following paragraph into English. Write your English version in the proper
space on Answer Sheet II.
只有在大学你才可能意识到自我约束的重要性。适应大学生活往往需要几个月的时间, 因此有必要学会自立。此外,你要制定一些可实现的目标,如读研。学习成绩对于你的未 来关系很大。把尽可能多的时间用于学习的人最有可能成为尖子生。
PART VI WRITING ( 30 minutes, 10 points )
Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a composition of no less than 150 words under the title of 4iA Teacher I love ”• You are advised to avoid usin^ any stereotyped expressions or sentences, such as “lust hut not the least\".
A-15
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