欢迎光临散文网 会员登陆 & 注册

2023年硕士研究生考试英语(二)真题及答案

2022-12-26 23:45 作者:农硕的西方经济学  | 我要投稿

2023年全国硕士研究生招生考试英语(二)


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  the  ANSWER   SHEET.(10     points)


Here's   a   common   scenario   that   any   number   of   entrepreneurs face  today:  you're  the  CEO  of  a  small  business,  and  though  you're  making  a  nice     1    you  need  to  find  a  way  to  take  it  to  the  next level. What you need to do is 2    growth  by  establishing  a  growth team.A  growth  team  is  made  up  of   members    from    different departments   within   your   company,   and   it   harnesses   the   power   of   collaboration   to   focus   3  on  finding  ways  to  grow.


Let'slook at a real world    4     Prior   to   forming   a   growth team,   the   software   company   BitTorrent   had   50   employees   working in    the   5   departments     of     engineering,marketing     andoduct development. This brought them good  results  until   2012,when   their growth    plateaued.   The   6   was  And   7   making   improvements to the premium,paid version,few people were making the upgrade.Things changed,   8   ,when    an    innovative   project-marketing   manager  came  aboard,        9   a  growth  team  and  sparked  the  kind  of   10   perspective   they   needed.   By   looking   at   engineering   issues from   a  marketing  point   of  view,   it  became   clear  that  the    11     of  

upgrades wasn't due to a quality issue.Mostcustomerswere simply  unaware  of the  premium  version  and  what  it  offered.

Armed   with   this   1 2    the   marketing   and   engineering   teams joined    forces    to    raise    awareness    by    prominently        1 3    the premium   version   to   users   of  the   free   version.   14    ,upgrades skyrocketed,  and  revenue  increased  by  92  percent.  But  in  order  for   your   growth   team   to   succeed,   it   needs   to   have   a   strong   leader.It   needs  someone  who  can    15   the   interdisciplinary   team   and   keep  them  on  course  for  improvement.  This  leader  will   16   the   target area,  set  clear  goal  sand  establish  a  time  frame  for  the   17   of  these   goals.


The  growth  leader  is  also      18   for  keeping  the  team  focused  on  moving   forward   and   steering  them   clear   of  distractions.        19  attractive    new    ideas    can    be    distracting,the    team    leader    must   recognize   when   these   ideas   don't   20    the  current  goal  and  need to be put on the back burner.


1.A.    purchase   B.  profit     C.connection    D.bet

正确答案【【B 】

2.A.define   B.predict    C.prioritize  preciate

正确答案【C】

3.A.exclusively   B.temporarily   C.potentially     D.initially

正确答案【A】

4. A.experiment      B.proposal   C.debate D.example

正确答案【D 】

5.A.identical    B.marginal    C.provisional  D.traditional

正确答案 |【D 】

6.A.rumor      B.secret        C.myth       D. problem

正确答案【D 】

7.A.despite      B. unlike  C.through    D.besides

正确答案【/A 】

8.A.moreover B.however C.therefore D.again

正确答案【B 】

9.A.inspected B.created C.expanded D.reformed

正确答案【B 】

10.A.cultural B.objective C.fresh D. personal

正确答案【C 】

11.A.end B.burden C.lack D.decrease

正确答案【C 】

12.A. policy B.suggestion C.purpose D.insight

正确答案 【D 】

13.A.contributing B.allocating      C.promoting     D.transferring

正确答案【C】

14.A.As a  result  B.At  any  rate       C.By  the  way     D.In  a  sense

正确答案【A】

15.A.unite B.finance            C.follow                D.choose

正确答案【A】

16.A. share B. identify         C. divide             D. broaden

正确答案【B 】

17.A. announcement B. assessment    C. adjustment         D. accomplishment

正确答案【D】

18.A.famous B.responsible         C.available          D.respectable

正确答案【B】

19.A.Before          B.Once              C.While                  D.Unless


正确答案【C】

20.A.serve            B.limit            C.summarize              D.alter

正确答案【A】

Section Ⅱ      Reading   Comprehension


Part A


Directions:Read  the  following  four  texts.  Answer  the  questions after each text by choosing A, B, Cor D.Mark your answers on  the  ANSWER  SHEET.(40  points)


Text 1


In  the  quest  for  the  perfect  lawn,  homeowners  across  the country  are  taking  a  shortcut—and  it  is  the  environment  that  is paying the price.About  eight million  square metres  of plastic  grass is  sold  each  year  but  opposition  has  now  spread  to  the  highest gardening circles. The Chelsea Flower  Show has banned fake grass from this year's  event,  declaring it to be not part of its  ethos. The Royal Horticultural  Society  (RHS), which runs the  annual  show in west London, says it has introduced the ban because of the damage  plastic grass does to the environment and biodiversity.


Ed  Horne,  of the  RHS,  said:“We  launched  our  sustainability strategy last year and fake grass is just not in line with our ethos and views  on  plastic.  We  recommend  using  real  grass  because  of its environmental      benefits,    which     include     supporting     wildlife  alleviating flooding and cooling the environment.”


The RHS's   decision   comes   as   campaigners   try   to   raise  awareness  of the  problems  fake  grass  causes.  A  Twitter  account,which claims to “cut through the greenwash’ of artificial grass,already has more than 20,000 followers. It is trying to encouragepeople to sign two petitions, one calling for a ban on the sale ofplastic grass and another calling for an “ecological damage tax onsuch lawns.They have gathered 7,276 and 11,282 signatures.However, supporters of fake grass point out that there is also anenvironmental impact with natural lawns, which need mowing andtherefore usually consume electricity or petrol. The industry alsopoints out that real grass requires considerable amounts of water.weed killer or other treatments and that people who lay fake grasstend to use their garden more. The industry also claims that peoplewho lay fake grass spend an average of f500 on trees or shrubs fortheir garden, which provides habitat for insects.


In response to another petition last year about banning fakelawns, which gathered 30,000 signatures, the government respondedthat it has “no plans to ban the use of artificial grass’It added:“We prefer to help people and organisaions make theright choice rather than legislating on such matters. However, the useof artificial grass must comply with the legal and policy safeguardsin place to protect   biodiversity and ensure sustainable drainage.while measures such as the strengthened biodiversity duty shouldserve to accourage public  authorities to consider sustainable alternatives .


21.The  RHS  thinks  that  plastic  grass                   

A. is  harmful  to  the  environment

B. is a  hot  topic  in  gardening  circle

C. is overpraised  in  the  annual  show

D. is ruining  the  view  of west  London

正确答案【 A 】

22.The petitions   mentioned   in   Paragraph   3  reveal   the   campaigners’

A. disappointment with  the  RHS

B. resistance to  fake  grass  use

C. anger over  the  proposed  tax

D. concern  above  real  grass  supply

正确答案【B】

23.In  Paragraph  4,supporters  of  take  grass  point  out                   

A. the  necessity  to  lower  the  costs  of fake  grass

B. the  disadvantages  of  growing  real  grass

C. the  way  to  take  care  of artificial  lawns

D. the  challenges  of  insect  habitat  protection

正确答案【B 】

24. What  should  the  government  do  with  regard  to  artificial  grass?

A. Urge  legislation  to  restrict  its  use.

B.Take measures  to  guarantees  its  quality.

C.Remind its users to  obey  existing rules.

D. Replay  it with  sustainable  alternatives.

正确答案【C 】

25.It can be learned from the text take fake grass

A. is being  improved  continuously

B. has seen a market  share decline

C. is becoming  increasingly  affordable

D. has been  a  controversial  product

正确答案【D 】

Text 2


It's  easy to  dismiss  as  absurd the  federal  government's  ideas  for plugging  the  chronic  funding  gap  of our  national  parks.  Can  anyone really think  it's  a  good  idea to  allow Amazon  deliveries to your tent in  Yosemite  or  food  trucks  to  line  up  under  the  redwood  trees  at Sequoia  National  Park?


But  the  administration  is  right  about  one  thing:  U.S.  national parks  are  in  crisis.  Collectively, they have  a maintenance backlog  of more  than  $12  billion.Roads,  trails,  restrooms,  visitor  centers  and  other  infrastructure  are  crumbling.


But privatizing   and   commercializing  the   campgrounds  would not  be  the  panacea  that  the  Interior  Department's  Outdoor  Advisory  Committee would have us believe. Campgrounds are a tiny portion of the  overall  infrastructure  backlog,  and  concessionaires  in  the parks hand over, on average, only about 5% of their revenues to the National Park Service.


Moreover, increased privatization would certainly undercut one of the major reasons why 300 million visitors come to the parks each year: to enjoy nature and get a respite from the commercial drumbeat that overwhelms daily life.


The real problem is that the parks have been chronically starved of funding. We conducted a comprehensive survey examining how U.S. residents  view  their  national  parks,   and  we   found  that Americans place a very high value on them—whether or not they actually visit them. The peer-reviewed economic survey of 700 U.S. taxpayers, conducted by mail and internet, also found that people would be willing to pay a significant amount of money to make sure the   parks   and   their   programs   are   kept   intact.Some   81%   of respondents said they would be willing to pay additional taxes for the next 10 years to avoid any cuts to the national parks.


The national parks provide great value to U.S. residents both as places to  escape  and  as  symbols  of nature.  On  top  of this,  they produce  value  from  their  extensive  educational  programs,  their  positive impact on the climate through carbon sequestration, their contribution  to  our  cultural  and  artistic  life,  and  of  course  through tourism.  The  parks  also  help  keep  America's  past  alive,  working with  thousands  of  local  jurisdictions  around  the  country  to  protect historical  sites—including  Ellis  Island  and  Gettysburg—and  to  bring the stories of these places to life.


The parks  do  all  this  on  a  shoestring.Congress  allocates  only $3  billion  a  year  to  the  national  park  system—an  amount  that  has been  flat  since  2001(in  inflation-adjusted  dollars)  with  the  exception of a  onetime boost  in  2009  as part  of the  Obama  stimulus package. Meanwhile,  the  number  of  annual  visitors  has  increased  by  more  than  50%  since   1980,and  now  stands  at  330  million  visitors  per year.


26.What  problem  are  U.S.national  parks  faced  with                   

A. decline  of business  profits

B. inadequate commercialization

C. lack of transportation  services

D. poorly maintained   infrastructure

正确答案【D 】

27.Increased  privatization  of  the  campground  may                   

A. spoil  visitor  experience

B. help  preserve  nature

C. bring  operational  pressure

D.boost  visits  to  parks

正确答案【A】

28.According    to   para.5,most    respondents    in    the    survey    would

A. go to the national parks on a regular basis

B. advocate  a bigger budget  for the national parks

C. agree to pay extra for the national parks

D. support  the  national  parks'recent  reforms

正确答案【C】

29.The  national  parks  are  valuable  in  that  they                   


A. lead the way in tourism


B. have  historical   significance

C. sponsor  research  on  climate

D. provide an income for the locals

正确答案【B】

30.It  can  be  concluded  from  the  text  that  the  national  park  system

A. is able to cope with  staff shortages

B. is  able  to  meet  visitor'demands

C. is in need of a new pricing policy

D. is in need of a funding increase

正确答案【D】


Text3


The Internet may be changing merely what we remember, notour capacity to do so, suggests Columbia University psychologyprofessor Betsy Sparrow. In 2011, Sparrow led a study in whichparticipants were asked to record 40 factoids in a computer (“anostrich's eye is bigger than its brain, for example). Half of theparticipants were told the information would be erased. while 

the other half were told it would be saved.Guess what? The latter group made no effort to recall the information when quizzed on it later, because they knew they could find it on their computers. In the same study, a group was asked to remember both the information and the folders it was stored in. They didn't remember the information, but they remembered how to find the folders. In other words, human memory is not deteriorating but“adapting to new communications  technology,”Sparrow  says.

In a very practical way, the Internet is becoming an external hard  drive   for   our   memories,   a process   known   as“cognitive offloading.”Traditionally,  this  role  was  fulfilled  by  data  banks, libraries,  and  other  humans.  Your  father  may  never  remember birthdays because your mother does, for instance. Some worry that this is having a destructive effect on society, but Sparrow sees an upside.Perhaps, she suggests, the trend will change our approach to learning from a focus on individual facts and memorization to an emphasis  on  more  conceptual thinking—something  that  is  not available on the Internet.“I personally have never seen all that much intellectual value in memorizing things,”Sparrow says, adding that we haven't lost our ability to do it.


Still other  experts  say  it's  too  soon  to  understand  how  the  Internet  affects  our  brains.  There  is  no  experimental  evidence  showing  that  it  interferes  with  our  ability  to  focus,  for  instance, wrote   psychologists   Christopher   Chabris   and   Daniel   Simons.And surfing  the  web  exercised  the  brain  more  than  reading  did  among computer-savvy    older    adults    in    a    2008    study    involving    24 participants   at   the   Semel   Institute   for   Neuroscieuce   and   Human  Behavior at the University of California, Los Angeles.


“There  may  be  costs  associated  with  our  increased  reliance  on the  Intemet,  but  Id  have  to  imagine  that  overall  the  benefits  are going    to    outweigh    those    costs,”observes    psychology    professor Benjamin  Storm.“It  seems  pretty  clear  that  memory  is  changing,  but  is it changing for the better? At this point, we don't know.”


31.Sparrow's study  shows  that  with  the  Internet,  the  human  brain  will                   

A. analyze information  in  detail

B. collect information   efficiently

C. switch its focus  of memory

D. extend its  memory  duration

正确答案【C】

32.The   process   of“cognitive   offloading”                   

A. helps  us  identify  false  information

B. keeps  our memory  from  failing

C. enables us to  classify trivial  facts

D.lessens  our  memory  burdens

正确答案【D】

33. Which   of   the   following   would   Sparrow   support   about   the

Internet?

A. It may reform  our  learning  approach.

B. It may impact our  society negatively.

C. It may  enhance  our adaptability to technology.

D. It may  interfere with  our  conceptual thinking.

正确答案【A】

34.It  is  indicated  in  Paragraph  3  that  how  the  Internet  affects  our

brains                    

A. requires  further  academic  research

B. is most studies in older adults

C. is reflected in our reading  speed

D. depends  on  our  web-surfing  habits

正确答案【A】

35.Neither  Sparrow  nor  Storm  would  agree  that                  .

A. our reliance on the Internet will be costly

B. the  Internet  is weakening  our memory

C. memory exercise is a must for our brains

D. our ability to focus declines with age

正确答案【B】

Text 4


Teenagers are paradoxical. That's a mild and detached way of saying something that parents often express with considerably  stronger language. But the paradox is scientific as well as personal. In adolescence, helpless and dependent children who have relied on  grown-ups  for  just  about  everything become  independent  people who  can take  care  of themselves  and help  each  other.At the  same time,once cheerful   and compliant children become rebellious teenage risk-takers.


A new  study published  in the journal  Child  Development, by Eveline Crone of the University of Leiden and colleagues, suggests that the positive  and negative  sides  of teenagers  go hand  in hand. The study is part of a new wave of thinking about adolescence. For a long time, scientists and policy makers concentrated on the idea that teenagers were a problem that needed to be solved. The new work emphasizes that adolescence is a time of opportunity as well as risk.


The   researchers    studied“prosocial”and   rebellious   traits    in more  than  200  children  and  young  adults,  ranging  from  11  to  28 years old. The participants filled out questionnaires about how often they did things that were altruistic and positive, like sacrificing their own interests to help a friend, or rebellious and negative, like getting drunk or staying out late.


Other studies have shown that rebellious behavior increases as you become a teenager and then fades away as you grow older.But the new study shows that, interestingly, the same pattern holds for prosocial  behavior.  Teenagers  were  more  likely  than  younger children or adults to report that they did things like unselfishly help a friend.


Most  significantly,  there  was  a  positive  correlation  between prosociality  and  rebelliousness.  The  teenagers  who  were  more rebellious were also more likely to help others.The good and bad   sides of adolescence seem to develop together.


Is there  some common factor that underlies these apparently  contradictory  developments?  One  idea  is that teenage behavior is related to what researchers call “reward sensitivity.” Decision-making  always  involves  balancing  rewards and risks, benefits and costs.“Reward sensitivity”measures how much reward it takes to outweigh risk.


Teenagers are particularly sensitive to social rewards—winning the game, impressing a new friend, getting that boy to notice you. Reward sensitivity, like prosocial behavior and risk-taking, seems to go up in adolescence and then down again as we age. Somehow, when you hit 30, the chance that something exciting and new will happen  at  that  party just  doesn't  seem  to  outweigh  the  effort  of   getting up off the couch.



36.According   to   paragraph    1,children    growing    into    adolescence

tend  to                   

A. develop  opposite  personality  traits

B. see the world in an unreasonable way

C. have  fond memories  of their past

D. show  affection  for  their parents

正确答案【A】

37.It  can be  learned  from paragraph  2  that  Crone's  study                   

A. explores    teenagers'social    responsibilities

B. examines    teenagers'emotional    problems

C. provides  a  new  insight  into  adolescence

D. highlights  negative  adolescent  behavior

正确答案【C】

38.What  does  Crone's  study  find  about  prosocial  behavior?

A. It results from the wish to cooperate.

B. It  is  cultivated  through  education.

C. It is subject to family influence.

D. It tends to peak in adolescence.

正确答案【D 】

39.It  can  be  learned  from  the  last  two  paragraphs  that  teenagers

A. overstress their influence on others

B. care a lot about social recognition

C. become anxious about their future

D. endeavor to live a joyful life

正确答案【B 】

40. What is the text mainly about?

A. Why teenagers are self-contradictory.

B. Why teenagers are risk-sensitive.

C. How teenagers develop prosociality.

D. How teenagers become independent.

正确答案【A】

Part B


Directions:Read   the    following   text    and   match    each    of   the  numbered   items   in   the   left   column   to   its   corresponding information in the right column. There are two extra choices in the right column. Mark your answers on the ANSWER SHEET.


(10 points)Net-zero rules  set to  send cost of new homes and extensions


soaring


New building regulations aimed at improving energy efficiency are  set  to  increase  the  price  of new  homes,  as  well  as  those  of extensions and loft conversions on existing ones.


The rules, which came into effect on Wednesday in England, are part of government plans to reduce the UK's carbon emissions to net  zero  by  2050.They  set  new  standards  for  ventilation,  energy efficiency and heating, and state that new residential buildings must have charging points for electric vehicles.


The   moves   are   the   most   significant   change   to   building regulations in years, and industry experts say they will inevitably lead to higher prices at a time when a shortage of materials and high  labour costs are already driving up bills.


Brian  Berry,  chief  executive  of  the  Federation  of  Master Builders,  says  the  measures  will  require  new  materials,  testing methods, products and systems to be installed.“All this comes at an increased  cost  during  a  time  when  prices  are  already  sky  high.Inevitably, consumers will have to pay more,”he says.


Gareth Belsham, of surveyors Naismiths, says people who are upgrading, or extending their home, will be directing affected.“The biggest changes relate to heating and insulation,”he explains."There are new rules concerning the amount of glazing used in extensions,and any new windows or doors must be highly insulated.”


Windows and doors will have to adhere to higher standards. while there are new limits on the amount of glazing you can have to reduce unwanted heat from the sun.


Thomas Goodman, of MyJobQuote, says this will bring in newrestrictions for extensions.“Glazing on windows, doors androoflights must cover no more than 25% of the floor area to preventheat loss, he says.


As the rules come into effect last Wednesday, propertydevelopers were rushing to file plans just before the deadline. Anyplans submitted before that date are considered to be under theprevious rules, and can go ahead as long as work starts before 15June next year.


Builders which have costed projects, but have not filed thepaperwork, many need to go back and submit fresh estimates, saysMarcus Jefford of Build Aviator.


Materials prices are already up 25% in the last two years. Howmuch overall prices will increase as a result of the rule changes isnot clear“Whilst admirable in their intentions, they will add to the cost of housebuilding at a time when many already feel that they arepriced out of homeownership, says Jonathan Rolande of theNational Association of Property Buyers.“An average extension willprobably see around f3,000 additional cost thanks to the new regs.John Kelly, a construction lawyer at Freeths law firm, believesprices will eventually come down. But not in the immediate future.“As the marketplace adapts to the new requirements, and the   technologies that support them, the scaling up of these technologieswill eventually bring costs down, but in the short term, we will allhave to pay the price of the necessary transition.” he says.


However, the long-term effects of the changes will be morecomfortable and energy-efficient homes, adds Andrew Mellor, ofPRP architects.“Homeowners will probably recoup that cost overtime in energy bill savings. It will obviously be very volatile at themoment, but they will have that benefit over time.



A] The rise of home prices is a temporary


matter.


 


 


41.Brian Berry


[B] Builders possibly need to submit new


estimates of their projects.


 

 

42.Gareth Belsham

[C] There will be specific limits on home


extensions to prevent heat loss


 


43.Marcus Jefford


[D] The new rules will take home prices to


an even higher level.


 


44.John Kelly


E] Many people feel that home prices are


already beyond what they con afford.


 


45.Andrew Mellor


F] The new rules will affect people whose home extensions  include new windows or


doors.



[G]The      rule  changes  will    benefit


homeowners   eventually


41.正确答案【D 】42 .正确答案【F】43.正确答案【B】44.正确答案【A】45.正确答案【G】


Section III    Translation


46.  Directions:Translate  the  following  text  into  Chinese.  Write


your translation on the ANSWER SHEET.(15 points)


In the late 18th century, William Wordsworth became famous for his  poems  about  nature.And  he  was  one  of  the  founders  of  a movement called Romanticism, which celebrated the wonders of the natural world.


Poetry is powerful. Its energy and rhythm can capture a reader, transport them to another world and make them see things differently. Through   carefully   selected   words   and   phrases,   poems   can   be dramatic, funny, beautiful, moving and inspiring.


No one knows for sure when poetry began but it has been around for thousands of years, even before people could write. It was a way  to tell stories and pass down history. It is closely related to song and even  when  written  it  is  usually  created  to  be  performed  out  loud. Poems really come to life when they are recited. This can also help with understanding them too, because the rhythm and sounds of the  words become clearer.


参考翻译:


18世纪后期,作为浪漫主义运动的奠基人之一,威廉 ·华兹 华斯因其描写自然的诗歌而闻名于世。在浪漫主义的世界中,大自然总是奇妙无比的。


诗歌的力量是强大的。它所充斥的能量和节奏韵律可以吸引 读者,将他们带入到另一个世界,使他们能够以不同的角度看待 事物。经过高度凝练的语言锤炼,诗歌也可以充满戏剧性和感染力,妙趣横生且美丽动人,并能鼓舞人心。


即使是在文字出现以前,也无人知晓诗歌究竟发祥于何时, 但其却已存与世间数千年。作为一种用来讲述故事和传承历史的 方式,诗歌与歌曲有着异曲同工之妙。即便是以文字的形式来呈 现,诗歌的创作初衷也是为了能够放声表演。毕竟,诗歌经过朗 诵后才能够真正鲜活起来。正因其明快的节奏感及声色,才使人们能够更好地走进和了解它。


Section   IV   Writing


Part A


47.Directions:   An art exhibition and a robot show are to be held on Sunday, and your friend David asks you which one he should go to.


Write him an email to

1) make a suggestion, and

2) give your reason(s).

You should write about 100 words on the ANSWER SHEET.

Do not use  your  own  name.Use“Li  Ming”instead.(10  points)

Part B

48.Directions:       Write   an   essay   based   on   the   chart   below.In   your   essay,  you   should

1)  describe  and  interpret  the  chart,  and

2)  give  your  comments.

Write  your  answer  in  about   150  words  on  the  ANSWER  SHEET.(15   points)

 

图片

*健康素养(health literacy)是指个人获取和理解基本健康信息和服务,并运用 这些信息和服务作出正确决策,以维护和促进自身健康的能力。健康素养水平指具备基本健康素养的人在总人群(15-69岁城乡居民)中所占的比例。


2023年硕士研究生考试英语(二)真题及答案的评论 (共 条)

分享到微博请遵守国家法律