本帖最后由 cherry19890919 于 2012-3-2 21:10 编辑
这几天看着别的省成绩啪啪啪地出,搞得我天天心脏也是砰砰砰地跳,虽然知道广外说了三月上旬才出成绩,虽然明知道提前出成绩的可能性不大,但最近每天晚上仍是失眠,一想到成绩这个问题,就觉得烦。今晚的我跟前几晚一样,仍旧是午夜已至,却无法入睡,想着反正我现在也有时间,还不如上传点自己过去半年积累的资料,造福13年考的同学,正所谓好人有好报,天啊!看在我如此善心的份上,就保佑我政治过线!!!初试过线吧!!!
---以上为本人牢骚,各位看客不喜可以略过,下面就是资料了
上外英语专业考研完形填空题目精选.doc
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Cloze Text A.doc
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Cloze Text B.doc
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这一部分资料是针对广外水平考试第一大题的练习题,本来想以附件形式上传text a 跟text b的答案,但是老是显示不能上传,篇幅不是很长,我就直接黏贴过来了。text a 跟text b比较简单,接近广外的难度,上外的练习题有12篇,答案在最后面,比较难,而且所给单词没有变形,到时做的时候可以先请其他人帮忙把后面答案打乱顺序抄出来,这样题型就跟广外第一大题最接近,我刚开始做上外这份习题受到很大打击,正确个数由16-22个不等,但是我仍坚持每隔三至四天做一篇,做完自己检讨,事实也说明我的努力是有收获的,最开始我做广外的真题,总是错了至少六七个,到了考前一个星期,我做10年的真题,第一大题全对,而这次考试,第一大题基本上我也是有信心拿满分的。
TEXT A
Ricci’s “Operation Columbus”
Ricci, 45, is now striking out on perhaps his boldest venture yet. He plan s to market an English language edition of his elegant monthly art magazine, FMR, in the United States. Once again the skeptics are murmuring that the successful Ricci has headed for a big fall. And once again Ricci intends to prove them wrong.
Ricci is so confident that he has christened his quest “Operation Columbus” and has set his sights on discovering an American readership of 300,000. That goal may not be too far-fetched. The Italian edition of FMR — the initials, of course, stand for Franco Maria Ricci-is only 18 months old. But it is already the second largest art magazine in the world, with a circulation of 65,000 and a profit margin of US $ 500,000. The American edition will be patterned after th e Italian version, with each 160-page issue carrying only 40 pages of ads and no more than five articles. But the contents will often differ. The English-language edition will include more American works, Ricci says, to help Americans get over “an inferiority complex about their art.” He also hopes that the magazine will become a vehicle for a two -way cultural exchange — what he likes to think of as a marriage of brains, culture and taste from both sides of the Atlantic.
To realize this vision, Ricci is mounting one of the most lavish, enterprising — and expensive-promotional campaigns in magazine — publishing history. Between November and January, eight jumbo jets will fly 8 million copies of a sample 16-page edition of FMR across the Atlantic. From a warehouse in Michigan, 6.5 million copies will be mailed to American subscribers of various cultural, art and business magazines. Some of the remaining copies will circulate as a special Sunday supplement in the New York Times. The cost of launching Operation Columbus is a staggering US $ 5 million, but Ricci is hoping that 60% of the price tag will be financed by Italian corporations.“ To land in America Columbus had to use Spanish sponsors,” reads one sentence in his promotional pamphlet. “We would like Italians.”
Like Columbus, Ricci cannot know what his reception will be on foreign shores. In Italy he gambled — and won — on a simple concept: it is more important to show art than to write about it. Hence, one issue of FMR might feature 32 full-color pages of 17th-century tapestries, followed by 14 pages of outrageous eyeglasses. He is gambling that the concept is exportable. “I don’t expect that more than 30% of my reader... will actually read FMR,” he says. “The magazine is such a visual delight that they don’t have to.” Still, he is lining up an impressive stable of writers and professors for the American edition , including Noam Chomsky, Anthony Burgess, Eric Jong and Norman Mailer. In addition, he seems to be pursuing his won eclectic vision without giving a moment’s thought to such established competitors as Connosisseur and Horizon. “The Americans can do almost everything better than we can,” says Rieci, “But we (the Italians) have a 2,000 year edge on them in art.”
TEXT B
My mother’s relations were very different from the Mitfords. Her brother, Uncle Geoff, who often came to stay at Swimbrook, was a small spare man with thoughtful blue eyes and a rather silent manner. Compared to Uncle Tommy, he was a n intellectual of the highest order, and indeed his satirical pen belied his mild demeanor. He spent most of his waking hours composing letters to The Times and other publications in which he outlined his own particular theory of the development of English history. In Uncle Geoff’s view, the greatness of England had risen and waned over the centuries in direct proportion to the use of natural manure in fertilizing the soil. The Black Death of 1348 was caused by gradual loss of the humus fertility found under forest trees. The rise of the Elizabethans tw o centuries later was attributable to the widespread use of sheep manure.
Many of Uncle Geoff’s letters-to-the-editor have fortunately been preserved in a privately printed volume called Writings of a Rebel. Of the collection, one letter best sums up his views on the relationship between manure and freedom
. He wrote:
Collating old records shows that our greatness rises and falls with the living fertility of our soil. And now, many years of exhausted and chemically murdered soil, and of devitalized food from it, has softened our bodies and still worse, softened our national character. It is an actual fact that character is largely a product of the soil. Many years of murdered food from deadened soil has made us too tame. Chemicals have had their poisonous day. It is now the worm’s turn to reform the manhood of England. The only way to regain our punch, our character, our lost virtues, and with them the freedom natural to islanders, is to compost our land so as to allow moulds, bacteria and earthworms to remake living s oil to nourish Englishmen’s bodies and spirits.
The law requiring pasteurization of milk in England was a particular target of Uncle Geoff’s. Fond of alliteration, he dubbed it “Murdered Milk Measure ”, and established the Liberty Restoration League, with headquarters at his house in London, for the specific purpose of organizing a counteroffensive. “Freedom not Doctordom” was the League’s proud slogan. A subsidiary, but nevertheless important, activity of the League was advocacy of a return to the “unsplit, slowly smoked fish” and bread made with “English stone-ground flour, yeast, milk, sea s alt and raw cane-sugar.”
唉!本来还想继续上传点真题的,没想到这网速太慢了,不过我看这论坛资料也蛮齐全的,只有针对水平第一大题的练习题比较少,所以优先上传这个。我这里还有08-10年水平考试真题+答案(word文档的),近几年的写作与翻译的真题也有(没有答案),有没有人需要啊?有就出来吼一声,我才上传,不然我就不麻烦了
下面是我手头上的一些资料,写作与翻译的真题不知为什么上传不了,我当初也是在这个论坛上找的,想要的同学自己在这个论坛的帖子找找吧!
2010年英语水平考试试题答案.doc
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2010年英语水平考试试题.doc
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2009年英语水平考试试题.doc
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2008年英语水平考试参考答案.doc
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2008年英语水平考试试题.doc
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Key to the 2009 Test of English Proficiency(09年答案无法上传,我就直接黏贴了) I. Cloze (30%, 1 point for each) 1. adjusted 2. sight 3. largely 4. strange 5. question 6. rather 7. set 8. interests 9. tendency 10. exclusive 11. with 12. condemnation 13. appalling 14. extreme 15. times 16. secure 17. through 18. empathy 19. indeed 20. where 21. inherent 22. justify 23. respect 24. consumed 25. against 26. massacre 27. expected 28. extending 29. long 30. face II. Proofreading and Error Correction (30%, 2 points for each) 31. fallen 32. particularly 33. are Х 34. and (but Х) 35. by (for Х) 36. since (after Х) 37. been (have been made) 38. on (in Х) 39. bad (weak Х) 40. and (and appears) 41. Moreover (Therefore Х) 42. issue (question Х) 43. on (advise on) 44. to (targets for) 45. upgraded (upgrading Х) III. Gap-filling (30%, 2 points for each) 46. exactly 47. being dismissed 48. exposure 49. homely 50. imposition 51. liberty 52. memorize 53. observatory 54. presently 55. vitalizing 56. provisions 57. sensual 58. tactic 59. flippant 60. negate IV. Reading Comprehension (60%, 2 points for each) 61. C 62. A 63. D 64. B 65. C 66. A 67. B 68. C 69. A 70. D 71. D 72. C 73. B 74. C 75. B 76. A 77. B 78. C 79. B 80. D 81. C 82. B 83. C 84. B 85. A 86. D 87. C 88. C 89. A 90. D
英译散文电子版.doc
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补充内容 (2012-4-16 12:17):
我剩下的真题确实上传不了,那么多同学想要,我的网速太卡,也发不了,我那个时候是在这个论坛找的,还是请想要的同学在这个论坛仔细找找吧! |