出版时间:2012-5 出版社:中国人民大学 作者:白洁 编 页数:514
内容概要
《2012在职联考:在职攻读硕士学位全国联考英考试历年真题精解》特点: 1.《2012在职联考:在职攻读硕士学位全国联考英考试历年真题精解》以套题形式按年代逆序编排,使考生了解最新出题动态和趋势。 2.指出并详析每题的考点,考生不但可以了解出题的角度,而且可以把握题目类型、出题模式和命题特点。 3.所有题目(包括词汇和语法结构部分的单句、完形填空、阅读理解)给出中文译文,便于考生尤其是基础较差的考生确切理解原文意思。 4.阅读部分指出文章题材、体裁,分析结构。内容包括逻辑衔接关系分析,长难句分析和生词分析,从词一句一章方面进行详细的分析讲解,考生一书在手,不用再翻词典或语法书就能够理解题意。 5.在讲解正确答案的同时,对错误选项也进行了比较详细的分析,使考生了解正确选项的设置特点和干扰项的陷阱所在,总结命题规律,掌握正确的做题思路。 6.写作部分不但给出各个分数段样卷,而且分析讲解得分多少的原因,使考生把握得分与失分点,进而指导自己的练笔,避免犯无知错误,最大限度争取高分。
书籍目录
上篇 真题与解析 2011年在职攻读硕士学位全国联考英语试题 2011年在职攻读硕士学位全国联考英语试题解析 2010年在职攻读硕士学位全国联考英语试题 2010年在职攻读硕士学位全国联考英语试题解析 2009年在职攻读硕士学位全国联考英语试题 2009年在职攻读硕士学位全国联考英语试题解析 2008年在职攻读硕士学位全国联考英语试题 2008年在职攻读硕士学位全国联考英语试题解析 2007年在职攻读硕士学位全国联考英语试题 2007年在职攻读硕士学位全国联考英语试题解析 2006年在职攻读硕士学位全国联考英语试题 2006年在职攻读硕士学位全国联考英语试题解析 2005年在职攻读硕士学位全国联考英语试题 2005年在职攻读硕士学位全国联考英语试题解析 2004年在职攻读硕士学位全国联考英语试题 2004年在职攻读硕士学位全国联考英语试题解析 2003年在职攻读硕士学位全国联考英语试题 2003年在职攻读硕士学位全国联考英语试题解析 2002年在职攻读硕士学位全国联考英语试题 2002年在职攻读硕士学位全国联考英语试题解析 下篇 模拟试题与解析 模拟试题一 模拟试题一解析 模拟试题二 模拟试题二解析 模拟试题三 模拟试题三解析 模拟试题四 模拟试题四解析 模拟试题五 模拟试题五解析
章节摘录
版权页: A political expression with a similar meaning is "the last hurrah". The expression may be used to describe a politician's last campaign, his final attempt to win cheers and votes. The last hurrah also can mean the last acts of a politician, before his term in office ends. Writer Edwin O'Connor made the expression popular in 1956. He wrote a book about the final years in the political life of a long-time mayor of Boston. He called his book The Last Hurrah. Some language experts say the expression came from a name given to noisy supporters of Andrew Jackson, America's seventh president. They cheered hurrah so loudly for Andy Jackson during his presidential campaign that they became known as the hurrah boys. Jackson's hurrah boys also played a part in the election to choose the next president. Jackson's choice was his vice president, Martin Van Buren. A newspaper of the time reported that Van Buren was elected president. "...by the hurrah boys, and those who knew just enough to shout hurrah for Jackson. " President Jackson really heard his last hurrahs in the campaign of the man who would replace him in the White House. 36. In ancient times, people believed that a swan sings most beautifully____. A. before deathB. when is happy C. for ApolloD. in front of other birds 37. According to Socrates, swans were____. A. holy birdB. happy birds C. pets of a Greek GodD. a symbol of poetry and song 38. The English expression "swan song" ____. A. was first used by ChaucerB. changed its meaning through timeC. means the best song ever createdD. refers to a work of Shakespeare 39. Martin Van Buren____. A. was the U.S. president before JacksonB. served as the eighth U.S. presidentC. is the author of The Last HurrahD. was a political rival of O'Connor 40. President Jackson's last hurrah was to____. A. express his gratitude to his supportersB. win the final cheers from his supportersC. defeat another candidate in the electionD. help his vice president get elected There is no question that the academic enterprise has become increasingly global, particularly in the sciences. Nearly three million students now study outside their home countries-a 57%increase in the last decade. Foreign students now dominate many U.S. doctoral programs, accounting for 64% of Ph. Ds in computer science, for example. Faculty members are on the move, too. Half of the world's top physicists no longer work in their native countries. And major institutions such as New York University are creating branch campuses in the Middle East and Asia. There are now 162 satellite campuses worldwide, an increase of 43% in just the past three years. At the same time, growing numbers of traditional source countries for students, from South Korea to Saudi Arabia (沙特阿拉伯), are trying to improve both the quantity and quality of their own degrees, engaging in a fierce and expensive race to recruit students and create world-class research universities of their own. Such competition has led to considerable hand-wringing in the West. During a 2008 campaign stop, for instance, then-candidate Barack Obama expressed alarm about the threat that such academic competition poses to U.S. competitiveness. Such concerns are not limited to the United States. In some countries worries about educational competition and brain drains have led to academic protectionism. India, for instance, places legal and bureaucratic barriers in front of Western universities that want to set up satellite campuses to enroll local students. Perhaps some of the anxiety over the new global academic enterprise is understandable. Particularly in a period of massive economic uncertainty. But educational protectionism is as big a mistake as trade protectionism is. The globalization of higher education should be embraced, not feared-including in the United States. There is every reason to believe that the worldwide competition for human talent, the race to produce innovative research, the push to extend university campuses to multiple countries, and the rush to train talented graduates who can strengthen economics increasingly knowledge-based economics will be good for the United States, as well. 41. A feature of the globalization of the academic enterprise is that more students____. A. study in foreign countriesB. major in computer scienceC. take joint doctoral programsD. return home after studying abroad 42. A satellite campus is probably a branch campus that a university sets up____. A. in developed countriesB. in another country C. inside another universityD. on the Internet 43. The word "hand-wringing" (Para. 4) probably means“____”. A. angerB. worries C. interestsD. delight 44. Academic protectionism is characterized by____. A. enlarging enrollment of local studentsB. limiting the growth of Ph.D. programsC. creating more satellite campuses abroadD. restricting satellite campuses of foreign universities
编辑推荐
《2012在职联考:在职攻读硕士学位全国联考英语考试历年真题精解》由中国人民大学出版社出版。
图书封面
评论、评分、阅读与下载
在职攻读硕士学位全国联考英语考试历年真题精解 PDF格式下载