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2004年MBA英语考试样题及答案

来源:编辑:发布时间:2006年4月29日

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<P><FONT face=Verdana> <STRONG>Section I Listening Comprehension (20% )<BR> Section 11 Structure and Vocabulary (10%)<BR></STRONG> Directions: There are 20 incomplete sentences in this part. For each sentence there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the ONE answer that best completes the sentence. Then blacken the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a pencil.</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana> 21. He didn't seem to mind TV while he was trying to study.<BR> A. their watching B. them watch<BR> C. they watching D. them to watch</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  22. It is said that more than one person in this department going to lose his job.<BR> A. are B. were <BR> C. will D. is</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  23. When she all the magazines, she'll come back home.<BR> A. has sold B. will sell<BR> C. sell D. would sell</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  24. The manufacturer claimed that this engine is the previous one.<BR> A. as twice powerful as B. powerful as twice as<BR> C. twice powerful as D. twice as powerful as</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  25. Nowhere else in the world more attractive scenery than in Switzerland.<BR> A. are found B. have been found<BR> C. you can find D. can you find</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  26. If he had not been iii yesterday, he to class.<BR> A. go B. Would go<BR> C. would have gone D. Went</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  27. science and technology help the society to progress is a fact accepted by most people.<BR> A. Modern B. That modern<BR> C. There is modern D. It is modern</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  28. one of the leading novelists in America, Amy Taylor has also written a number of poems and plays.<BR> A. Considered B. Considering<BR> C. Having considered D. Been considered</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  29. The streets are all wet. It during the night.<BR> A. must be raining B. had to rain<BR> C. must have rained D. had rained</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  30. England's chief exports are coal, cars and cotton goods, cars the most important of these.<BR> A. have been B. are<BR> C. be D. being</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  31. Everything was so expensive during the war that it was hardly___ to save penny.<BR> A. likely B. feasible<BR> C. probable D. possible</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  32. The automation has made it possible to great changes in industry.<BR> A. bring about B. bring down<BR> C. bring out D. bring up</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  33. The police stopped him because he the traffic regulation.<BR> A. damaged B. destroyed<BR> C. broke D. corrupted</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  34. All too it was time to go back to school after the glorious summer holidays.<BR> A. fast B. soon<BR> C. quick D. often</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  35. The chief manager refused to on the rumor that he was going to retire.<BR> A. explain B. comment<BR> C. speak D. talk</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  36. Mr. Brown gradually a knowledge of the subject.<BR> A. required B. inquired<BR> C. achieved D. acquired</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  37. If I am not when you come to my office, ask for my secretary.<BR> A. suitable B. available<BR> C. comfortable D. proper</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  38. Peasants supply workers with food, and workers supply peasants with manufactured goods.<BR> A. in turn B. by mm<BR> C. for return D. by return</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  39. Let's go out during the break to our legs.<BR>  A. stretch B. expand<BR>  C. move D. extend</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  40. I have just a beautiful poem in that little book.<BR>  A. come to B. come through<BR>  C. come across D. come up</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  <STRONG>Section Ⅲ Reading Comprehension (40%)<BR>  Part A<BR></STRONG>  Directions: There are 4 passages in this part. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. You should decide on the best choice and blacken the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a pencil.</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  <STRONG>Questions 41 to 44 are based on the following passage:<BR></STRONG>  Americans like to do business without leaving their cars. You'll see drive-in banks, drive-in restaurants, drive-in churches and drive-in movies.</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana> When driving in the U.S., it's a good idea to have an international driver's license if you don't have a state license. Each of the fifty states has its own traffic laws. Get information when you cross the border into a state at a tourist information center.</FONT></P><FONT face=Verdana> <P> There is a national speed limit of 55 miles per hour. Americans are generally polite about letting cars enter busy streets. They usually stop for people who are walking to let them cross the street. In many states you may mm right after stopping at a comer, even if there is a red light. On some roads there may be a minimum speed.</P> <P> If you rent a car, ask the company what to do in case your car breaks down. Some companies will ask you to Call a special number. Others will want you to have the car repaired. They will partly deduct the cost of the repair from your bill.</P> <P> "Mileage" can mean two things. It may mean the total number of miles a car has been driven. We say "This car only has 10 000 miles on it; it has low mileage." On the other hand, "gas mileage" is the number of miles a car can travel on one U.S. gallon of gas. For example, a big car that gets 25 miles to the gallon gets very good mileage. A small economy car should get at least 35 miles to the gallon when it's new.</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  41. If you have a state driver's license<BR>  A. you can drive anywhere in the U.S.<BR>  B. you don't have to apply for an international driver's license<BR>  C. you cannot across the border in a car<BR>  D. you must know the traffic laws of another state before you enter it</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  42. If your rented car breaks down, some companies will <BR>  A. provide you with free telephone service<BR>  B. pay you a certain amount of your total cost of the repair<BR>  C. pay you the total cost of the repair<BR>  D. send workers to repair the car</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  43. “An economy car” here may refer to a car that <BR>  A. can be bought at a rather low price<BR>  B. is easy to operate<BR>  C. uses only a small amount of gas per mile<BR>  D. is specially designed for a small family</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  44. Which of the following statements is true?<BR>  A. Americans are usually willing to wait for another car to enter busy streets.<BR>  B. Americans can do anything without leaving their cars.<BR>  C. American drivers can ignore a red light when they want to turn right.<BR>  D. Americans can drive at 55 miles per hour everywhere in their country.</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  <STRONG>Questions 45 to 48 are based on the following passage:</STRONG></FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  Tests conducted at the University of Pennsylvania's Psychological Laboratory showed that anger is one of the most difficult emotions to find out from facial expressions. Professor Dallas E. Buzby confronted 716 students with pictures of extremely angry persons, and asked them to identify the emotion from the facial expression. Only two percent made correct judgments. Anger was most frequently judged as "pleased".</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana> And a typical reaction of a student confronted with the picture of a man who was mad was to classify his expression as either "bewildered" , "quizzical" , or simply "amazed" .Other studies showed that it is extremely difficult to tell whether a man is angry or not just by looking at his face. The investigators found further that women are better at finding out anger from facial expressions than men are. Paradoxically, they found that psychological training does not improve one's ability to judge a man's emotions by his expressions but actually hinders it. For in the university tests, the more courses the student had taken in psychology, the poorer judgment score he turned in.</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana> 45. The information in this passage centers around <BR>  A. the relation between anger and other emotions<BR>  B. the differences between men and women with respect to emotion<BR>  C. the influence of psychology on human emotions<BR>  D. the discovery of anger from facial expressions</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  46. When tested, students with psychological training <BR>  A. marked less than two percent of their possible choices correctly<BR>  B. did better than the average student in the group<BR>  C. seemed less able to judge correctly than the average student<BR>  D. performed in a manner not specified in the passage</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  47. To achieve the greatest success in finding out anger from facial expressions, it would be best to <BR>  A. use adults rather than students as judges<BR>  B. ask women who do not study psychology to judge it<BR>  C. ask men rather than women to judge it<BR>  D. be satisfied with a two percent success, if such a percentage is guaranteed</FONT></P> <P><FONT face=Verdana>  48. The last two sentences in the second paragraph show that <BR>  A. such training has not resulted in better scores<BR>  B. we have really achieved the anticipated results<BR>  C. the judgment is similar to what we have expected<BR>  D. we can expect such training to have the effect stated</FONT></P> <P><SPAN style="COLOR: #000099">
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