2019年考研英语(一)真题
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Section ⅠUse of English
Directions:
Read the following text. Choose the best word(s) for each numbered
blank and mark A, B, C or D on the ANSWER SHEET. (10 points)
Today we live in a world where GPS systems, digital maps, and other
navigation apps are available on our smart phones.1of us just walk straight
into the woods without a phone. But phones2on batteries, and batteries can die
faster than we realize.3you get lost without a phone or a compass, and you4can’t
find north, a few tricks to help you navigate5to civilization, one of which is
to follow the land...
When you find yourself well6a trail, but not in a completely7area,
you have to answer two questions: Which 8is downhill, in this particular
area? And where is the nearest water source? Humans overwhelmingly live in
valleys, and on supplies of fresh water.9, if you head downhill, and follow any
H2O you find, you should10see signs of people.
If you’ve explored the area before, keep an eye out for familiar
sights—you may be11how quickly identifying a distinctive rock or tree can
restore your bearings.
Another12: Climb high and look for signs of human habitation.13 ,
even in dense forest, you should be able to14 gaps in the tree line due to
roads, train tracks, and other paths people carve 15the woods. Head toward
these16to find a way out. At night, scan the horizon for17light sources, such
as fires and streetlights, then walk toward the glow of light pollution.
18 , assuming you’re lost in an area humans tend to
frequent, look for the19we leave on the landscape. Trail blazes, tire tracks,
and other features can20you to civilization.
1. [A]Some [B]Most [C]Few [D]All
2. [A]put[B]take[C]run [D]come
3. [A]Since [B] If [C] Though [D]Until
4. [A]formally [B] relatively [C] gradually [D] literally
5. [A] back[B] next [C] around [D] away
6. [A]onto [B]off[C]across [D]alone
7. [A]unattractive[B] uncrowded [C]unchanged [D]unfamiliar
8. [A] site[B]point [C]way [D]place
9. [A] So [B] Yet [C]Instead [D]Besides
10. [A]immediately [B] intentionally [C]unexpectedly [D]
eventually
11. [A]surprised [B]annoyed [C]frightened [D]confused
12. [A] problem [B]option [C]view [D]result
13. [A] Above all [B]In contrast [C] On average [D] For example
14. [A]bridge [B]avoid [C]spot [D]separate
15. [A] from [B] through [C]beyond [D] under
16. [A] posts [B]links [C]shades [D]breaks
17. [A] artificial [B] mysterious[C] hidden[D] limited
18. [A] Finally [B] Consequently [C] incidentally [D]
Generally
19. [A] memories [B] marks[C] notes[D] belongings
20. [A] restrict [B] adopt [C] lead[D] expose
Section Ⅱ Reading Comprehension
Part A
Directions:
Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text
by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on the ANSWER SHEET. (40
points)
Text 1
Financial regulations in Britain have imposed a rather unusual rule
on the bosses of big banks. Starting next year, any guaranteed bonus of top
executives could be delayed 10 years if their banks are under investigation for
wrongdoing. The main purpose of this “clawback” rule is to hold bankers
accountable for harmful risk-taking and to restore public trust in financial
institution. Yet officials also hope for a much larger benefit: more long term
decision-making not only by banks but also bu all corporations, to build a
stronger economy for future generations.
“Short-termism” or the desire for quick profits, has worsened in
publicly traded companies, says the Bank of England’s top economist. Andrew
Haldane. He quotes a giant of classical economies, Alfred Marshall, in
describing this financial impatience as acting like “Children who pick the
plums out of their pudding to eat them at once” rather than putting them aside
to be eaten last.
The average time for holding a stock in both the United States and
Britain, he notes, has dropped from seven years to seven months in recent
decades. Transient investors, who demand high quarterly profits from companies,
can hinder a firm’s efforts to invest in long-term research or to build up
customer loyalty. This has been dubbed “quarterly capitalism”.
In addition, new digital technologies have allowed more rapid
trading of equities, quicker use of information, and thus shortens attention
spans in financial markers. “There seems to be a predominance of short-term
thinking at the expense of long-term investing,” said Commissioner Daniel
Gallagher of the US Securities and Exchange Commission in speech this week.
In the US, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 has pushed most public
companies to defer performance bonuses for senior executives by about a year,
slightly helping reduce “short-termism.” In its latest survey of CEO pay, The
Wall Street Journal finds that “ a substantial part” of executive pay is now
tied to performance.
Much more could be done to encourage “long-termism,” such as changes
in the tax code and quicker disclosure of stock acquisitions. In France,
shareholders who hold onto a company investment for at least two years can
sometimes earn more voting rights in a company.
Within companies, the right compensation design can provide
incentives for executives to think beyond their own time at the company and on
behalf of all stakeholders. Britain’s new rule is a reminder to bankers that
society has an interest in their performance, not just for the short term but
for the long term.
21. According to Paragraph 1, one motive in imposing the new
rule is the_________.
A. enhance banker’s sense of responsibility
B. help corporations achieve larger profits
C. build a new system of financial regulation
D. guarantee the bonuses of top executives
22. Alfred Marshall is quoted to indicate_________.
A. the conditions for generating quick profits
B. governments’ impatience in decision-making
C. the solid structure of publicly traded companies
D. “short-termism” in economics activities
23. It is argued that the influence of transient investment on
public companies can be__________.
A. indirect
B. adverse
C. minimal
D. temporary
24. The US and France examples are used to
illustrate____________.
A. the obstacles to preventing “short-termism”.
B. the significance of long-term thinking.
C. the approaches to promoting “long-termism”.
D. the prevalence of short-term thinking.
25. Which of the following would be the best title for the
text?
A. Failure of Quarterly Capitalism
B. Patience as a Corporate Virtue
C. Decisiveness Required of Top Executives
D. Frustration of Risk-taking Bankers
Text 2
Grade inflation--the gradual increase in average GPAs(grade-point
averages) over the past few decades—is often considered a product of a consumer
era in higher education, in which students are treated like customers to be
pleased. But another, related force—a policy often buried deep in course
catalogs called “grade forgiveness”—is helping raise GPAs.
Grade forgiveness allows students to retake a course in which they
received a low grade, and the most recent grade or the highest grade is the
only one that counts in calculating a student’s overall GPA.
The use of this little-known practice has accelerated in recent
years, as colleges continue to do their utmost to keep students in school (and
paying tuition) and improve their graduation rates. When this practice first
started decades ago, it was usually limited to freshmen, to give them a second
chance to take a class in their first year if they struggled in their
transition to college-level courses. But now most colleges save for many
selective campuses, allow all undergraduates, and even graduate students, to
get their low grades forgiven.
College officials tend to emphasize that the goal of grade
forgiveness is less about the grade itself and more about encouraging students
to retake courses critical to their degree program and graduation without
incurring a big penalty. “Untimely,” said Jack Miner, Ohio State University’s
registrar,“we see students achieve more success because they retake a course
and do better in subsequent contents or master the content that allows them to
graduate on time.”
That said, there is a way in which grade forgiveness satisfies
colleges’ own needs as well. For public institutions, state funds are sometimes
tied partly to their success on metrics such as graduation rates and student
retention—so better grades can, by boosting figures like those, mean more
money. And anything that raises GPAs will likely make students—who, at the end
of the day, are paying the bill—feel they’ve gotten a better value for their
tuition dollars, which is another big concern for colleges.
Indeed, grade forgiveness is just another way that universities are
responding to consumers’ expectations for higher education. Since students and
parents expect a college degree to lead a job, it is in the best interest of a
school to turn out graduates who are as qualified as possible—or at least appear
to be. On this, students’ and colleges’ incentives seem to be aligned.
26. What is commonly regarded as the cause of grade inflation?
A.The change of course catalogs.
B.Students’ indifference to GPAS.
C.Colleges’ neglect of GPAS.
D.The influence of consumer culture.
27. What was the original purpose of grade forgiveness?
A. To help freshmen adapt to college learning.
B. To maintain colleges’ graduation rates.
C. To prepare graduates for a challenging future.
D. To increase universities’ income from tuition.
28. According to Paragraph 5,grade forgiveness enable colleges
to_________.
A. obtain more financial support
B. boost their student enrollments
C. improve their teaching quality
D. meet local governments’ needs
29. What does the phrase “to be aligned”(Line 5, Para.6) most
probably mean?
A. To counterbalance each other.
B. To complement each other.
C. To be identical with each other.
D. To be contradictory to each other.
30. The author examines the practice of grade forgiveness
by________.
A. assessing its feasibility
B. analyzing the causes behind it
C. comparing different views on it
D. listing its long-run effects
Text 3
This year marks exactly two countries since the publication of
Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus, by Mary Shelley. Even before the
invention of the electric light bulb, the author produced a remarkable work of
speculative fiction that would foreshadow many ethical questions to be raised
by technologies yet to come.
Today the rapid growth of artificial intelligence (AI) raises
fundamental questions:”What is intelligence, identify, or
consciousness? What makes humans humans?”
What is being called artificial general intelligence, machines that
would imitate the way humans think, continues to evade scientists. Yet humans
remain fascinated by the idea of robots that would look, move, and respond like
humans, similar to those recently depicted on popular sci-fi TV series such as
“Westworld” and “Humans”.
Just how people think is still far too complex to be
understood, let alone reproduced, says David Eagleman, a Stanford University
neuroscientist. “We are just in a situation where there are no good theories
explaining what consciousnesss actually is and how you could ever build a
machine to get there.”
But that doesn’t mean crucial ethical issues involving AI aren’t at
hand. The coming use of autonomous vehicles, for example, poses thorny ethical
questions. Human drivers sometimes must make split-second decisions. Their
reactions may be a complex combination of instant reflexes, input from past
driving experiences, and what their eyes and ears tell them in that moment. AI
“vision” today is not nearly as sophisticated as that of humans. And to
anticipate every imaginable driving situation is a difficult programming
problem.
Whenever decisions are based on masses of data, “you quickly get
into a lot of ethical questions,” notes Tan Kiat How, chief executive of a
Singapore-based agency that is helping the government develop a voluntary code
for the ethical use of AI. Along with Singapore, other governments and
mega-corporations are beginning to establish their own guidelines. Britain is
setting up a data ethics center. India released its AI ethics strategy this
spring.
On June 7 Google pledged not to “design or deploy AI” that would
cause “overall harm,” or to develop AI-directed weapons or use AI for
surveillance that would violate international norms. It also pledged not to
deploy AI whose use would violate international laws or human rights.
While the statement is vague, it represents one starting point. So
does the idea that decisions made by AI systems should be explainable,
transparent, and fair.
To put it another way: How can we make sure that the thinking of
intelligent machines reflects humanity’s highest values? Only then will they be
useful servants and not Frankenstein’s out-of-control monster.
31. Mary Shelley’s novel Frankenstein is mentioned because it
A. fascinates AI scientists all over the world.
B. has remained popular for as long as 200 years.
C. involves some concerns raised by AI today.
D. has sparked serious ethical controversies.
32. In David Eagleman’s opinion, our current knowledge of
consciousness
A. helps explain artificial intelligence.
B. can be misleading to robot making.
C. inspires popular sci-fi TV series.
D. is too limited for us to reproduce it.
33. The solution to the ethical issues brought by autonomous
vehicles
A. can hardly ever be found.
B. is still beyond our capacity.
C. causes little public concern.
D. has aroused much curiosity.
34. The author’s attitude toward Google’s pledge is one of
A. affirmation.
B. skepticism.
C. contempt.
D. respect.
35. Which of the following would be the best title for the
text?
A. AI’s Future: In the Hands of Tech Giants
B. Frankenstein, the Novel Predicting the Age of AI
C. The Conscience of AI: Complex But Inevitable
D. AI Shall Be Killers Once Out of Control
Text 4
States will be able to force more people to pay sales tax when they
make online purchases under a Supreme Court decision Thursday that will leave
shoppers with lighter wallets but is a big financial win for states.
The Supreme Court’s opinion Thursday overruled a pair of decades-old
decisions that states said cost them billions of dollars in lost revenue
annually. The decisions made it more difficult for states to collect sales tax
on certain online purchases.
The cases the court overturned said that if a business was shipping
a customer’s purchase to a state where the business didn’t have a physical
presence such as a warehouse or office, the business didn’t have to collect
sales tax for the state. Customers were generally responsible for paying the
sales tax to the state themselves if they weren’t charged it, but most didn’t
realize they owed it and few paid.
Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote that the previous decisions were
flawed. “Each year the physical presence rule becomes further removed from
economic reality and results in significant revenue losses to the States,” he
wrote in an opinion joined by four other justices. Kennedy wrote that the rule
“limited states’ ability to seek long-term prosperity and has prevented market
participants from competing on an even playing field.”
The ruling is a victory for big chains with a presence in many
states, since they usually collect sales tax on online purchases already. Now,
rivals will be charging sales tax where they hadn’t before. Big chains have
been collecting sales tax nationwide because they typically have physical
stores in whatever state a purchase is being shipped to. Amazon.com, with its
network of warehouses, also collects sales tax in every state that charges it,
though third-party sellers who use the site don’t have to.
Until now, many sellers that have a physical presence in only a
single state or a few states have been able to avoid charging sales taxes when
they ship to addresses outside those states. Sellers that use eBay and Etsy,
which provide platforms for smaller sellers, also haven’t been collecting sales
tax nationwide. Under the ruling Thursday, states can pass laws requiring
out-of-state sellers to collect the state’s sales tax from customers and send
it to the state.
Retail trade groups praised the ruling, saying it levels the
playing field for local and online businesses. The losers, said retail analyst
Neil Saunders, are online-only retailers, especially smaller ones. Those
retailers may face headaches complying with various state sales tax laws. The
Small Business & Entrepreneurship Council advocacy group said in
a a statement, “Small businesses and internet entrepreneurs are not well served
at all by this decision.”
36. The Supreme Court decision Thursday will
A. Dette business’ relutions with states
B. put most online business in a dilemma
C. make more online shoppers pay sales tax
D. forces some states to cut sales tax
37. It can be learned from paragraphs 2 and 3 that the
overruled decisions
A.have led to the dominance of e-commerce
B.have cost consumers a lot over the years
C.were widely criticized by online purchases
D.were considered up favorable by states
38. According to Justice Anthony Kennedy, the physical presence
rule has
A. hindered economic development
B.brought prosperity to the country
C.harmed fair market competition
D. boosted growth in states revenue
39. Who are most likely to welcome the Supreme Court ruling
A. Internet entrepreneurs B. Big-chair owners
C. Third-party sellersD. Small retailers
40. In dealing with the Supreme Court decision Thursday, the
author
A. gives a factual account of it and discusses its consequences
B.describes the long and complicated process of its making
C.presents its main points with conflicting views on them
D. cities some saces related to it and analyzes their
implications
Part B
Directions:
The following paragraphs are given in a wrong order. For Questions
41-45, you are required to reorganize these paragraphs into a coherent article
by choosing from the list A-G and filling them into the numbered boxes. Paragraph
C and F have been correctly placed. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET. (10
points)
A. These tools can help you win every argument-not in the
unhelpful sense of beating your opponents but in the better sense of learning
about the issues that divide people. Learning why they disagree with us and
learning to talk and work together with them. If we readjust our view of
arguments—from a verbal fight or tennis game to a reasoned exchange through
which we all gain mutual respect, and understanding—then we
change the very nature of what it means to “win” an argument.
B.Of course, many discussions are not so successful. Still, we need
to be careful not to accuse opponents of bad arguments too quickly. We need to
learn how to evaluate them properly. A large part of evaluation is calling out
bad arguments, but we also need to admit good arguments by opponents and to
apply the same critical standards to ourselves. Humility requires you to
recognize weakness in your own arguments and sometimes also to accept reasons
on the opposite side.
C.None of these will be easy but you can start even if others refuse
to. Next time you state your position, formulate an argument for what you claim
and honestly ask yourself whether your argument is any good. Next time you talk
with someone who takes a stand, ask them to give you a reason for their view.
Spell out their argument fully and charitably. Assess its strength impartially.
Raise objections and listen carefully to their replies.
D. Carnegie would be right if arguments were fights, which is
how we often think of them. Like physical fights, verbal fights can leave both
sides bloodied. Even when you win, you end up no better off. Your prospects
would be almost as dismal if arguments were even just competitions-like, say,
tennis games. Paris of opponents hit the ball back and forth until one winner
emerges from all who entered. Everybody else loses. This kind of thinking is
why so many people try to avoid arguments, especially about politics and
religion.
E.In his 1936 work How to Win Friends and Influence People ,
Dale Carnegie wrote: “there is only one way…to get the
best of an argument-and that is to avoid it. “This aversion to
arguments is common, but it depends on a mistaken view of arguments that causes
profound problems for our personal and social lives- and in many ways misses
the point of arguing in the first place.
F. These views of arguments also undermine reason. If you see a
conversation as a fight or competition, you can win by cheating as long as you
don’t get caught. You will be happy to convince people with bad arguments. You
can call their views stupid, or joke about how ignorant they are. None of these
tricks will help you understand them, their positions or the issues that divide
you, but they can help you win-in one way.
G. There is a better way to win arguments. Imagine that you favor
increasing the minimum wage in our state, and I do not. If you yell, “yes,” and
I yell. “No,” neither of us learns anything. We neither understand nor respect
each other, and we have no basis for compromise or cooperation. In contrast,
suppose you give a reasonable argument: that full-time workers should not have
to live in poverty. Then I counter with another reasonable argument: that a
higher minimum wage will force businesses to employ fewer people for less time.
Now we can understand each other’s positions and recognize our shared values,
since we both care about needy workers.
41→42→F→43→44→C→45
Part C
Directions:
Read the following text carefully and then translate the underlined
segments into Chinese. Your translation should be written neatly on the ANSWER
SHEET. (10 points)
It was only after I started to write a weekly column about the
medical journals, and began to read scientific papers from beginning to end,
that I realised just how bad much of the medical literature frequently was. I
came to recognise various signs of a bad paper: the kind of paper that purports
to show that people who eat more than one kilo of broccoli a week were 1.17
times more likely than those who eat less to suffer late in life from
pernicious anaemia. (46) There is a great deal of this kind of nonsense in
the medical journals which, when taken up by broadcasters and the lay press,
generates both health scares and short-lived dietary enthusiasms.
Why is so much bad science published? A recent paper, titled “The
Natural Selection of Bad Science”, published on the Royal Society’s open
science website, attempts to answer this intriguing and important question. It
says that the problem is not merely that people do bad science, but that our
current system of career advancement positively encourages it. What is
important is not truth, but publication, which has become almost an end in
itself. There has been a kind of inflationary process at work: (47) nowadays
anyone applying for a research post has to have published twice the number of
papers that would have been required for the same post only 10 years ago. Never
mind the quality, then, count the number.
(48) Attempts have been made to curb this tendency, for
example, by trying to incorporate some measure of quality as well as quantity
into the assessment of an applicant’s papers. This
is the famed citation index, that is to say the number of times a paper has been
quoted elsewhere in the scientific literature, the assumption being that an
important paper will be cited more often than one of small account. (49) This
would be reasonable if it were not for the fact that scientists can easily
arrange to cite themselves in their future publications, or get associates to
do so for them in return for similar favours.
Boiling down an individual’s output to simple metrics, such as
number of publications or journal impacts, entails considerable savings in
time, energy and ambiguity. Unfortunately, the long-term costs of using simple
quantitative metrics to assess researcher merit are likely to be quite great.
(50) If we are serious about ensuring that our science is both meaningful
and reproducible, we must ensure that our institutions encourage that kind of
science.
Section Ⅲ Writing
Part A
51. Directions:
Suppse you are working for the“Aiding rurd Primary School”project of your university. Write an email to answer the inquiry from an international student volunteer, specifying details of the project.
Do not sign your own name at the end of the email. Use “Li Ming” instead.(10
points)
Part B
52. Directions:
Write an
essay of 160—200 words based on the following pictures. In your essay, you
should
1) describe
the pictures briefly,
2)
interpret the meaning, and
3) give
your comments.
You should
write neatly on the ANSWER SHEET. (20 points)