1. Queen Elizabeth I has quite correctly been called a ________ of the arts, because many young artists received her patronage.
2 U8 H. \ x. Y* X2 T+ i (A) connoisseur - D8 U, a( C8 ^# J' ]
(B) critic
. N" S5 n w/ J: W- H0 n p7 H (C) friend
9 R( l) I4 N- {! K8 I; C' X! ] (D) scourge
8 Y- |1 K2 R( \$ v0 ~ (E) judge
2 u2 m, p. k; t, ^ ! c4 J# U8 Z, Q3 H- N+ _3 t
2. The commissions criticized the legislature for making college attendance dependent on the ability to pay, charging that, as a result, hundreds of qualified young people would be ________ further education. ' }( l- E& l+ o1 f
(A) entitled to 7 Z* R- U; C, S6 ~. D
(B) striving for U6 k( Z+ ~! k2 t6 ]# d P5 g8 P
(C) deprived of $ k M4 T- p5 s# V0 K/ {% m
(D) uninterested in
; Y v6 Q- r2 Z (E) participating in
0 Z4 T1 u, b/ z
5 s! K% d* _7 `3. Broadway audiences have become inured to ________ and so ________ to be pleased as to make their ready ovations meaningless as an indicator of the quality of the production before them.
" m) U# O0 [0 g2 C (A) sentimentality ... reluctant 9 k# F' ~ E# q; Q# N
(B) condescension ... disinclined + p; ^) I. V0 {* m
(C) histrionics ... unlikely
7 Z* U2 f1 \* y5 Y x* x (D) cleverness ... eager
; D* d# S9 I+ S) N3 u (E) mediocrity ... desperate ; v, _; M/ e! i% p* ~
, C& b% F- _* M, O* [; z' S+ Z
4. Any language is a conspiracy against experience in the sense that it is a collective attempt to ________ experience by reducing it into discrete parcels.
, r8 {2 E* Y8 {1 F! r. k6 O (A) extrapolate & g a) k G3 O8 e& n/ ]0 O
(B) transcribe
& r" X4 A6 H# H+ | (C) complicate
5 ^4 S6 z. i7 v0 d; F$ O (D) amplify 3 F+ k% C {, F' K) W+ ~1 _/ ?; ?
(E) manage
! i2 m9 h8 H. H% t 6 E8 r L: L; n
5. Given the evidence of Egyptian and Babylonian ________ later Greek civilization, it would be incorrect to view the work of Greek scientists as an entirely independent creation. , p6 k8 I2 ?' B' k+ ]8 _' W
(A) disdain for W5 ^" |3 [8 u) ^ f
(B) imitation of 8 D# Y/ K$ n) U7 y1 M3 {* n
(C) ambivalence about 7 n! s9 N6 B, E" i3 ~
(D) deference to
2 S2 |" y2 a# Z* P- K4 P* S/ d (E) influence on [9 p, a+ s/ Y6 y `+ ]: H
" I* h: X! k D5 X' ^8 L6. Since she believed him to be both candid and trustworthy, she refused to consider the possibility that his statement had been ________. $ ]6 J3 M# S# ]: c8 M& O
(A) irrelevant
5 ^- y' J, `' i# v1 G! S' o1 r (B) facetious
: u3 y% A. _9 {3 L$ b (C) mistaken
; t4 K# l V; R/ p4 e6 g2 r. b (D) critical
0 |1 r$ G* v. E8 i) }5 j1 ] (E) insincere
) p6 f& d; C7 ]) L1 \
- B/ `$ |7 P4 ^/ Y7. The struggle of the generations is one of the obvious constants of human affairs; therefore, it may be presumptuous to suggest that the rivalry between young and old in Western society during the current decade is ________ critical.
! Z$ q% I& ?" ~7 { (A) perennially
, J# _+ y" c* P- W (B) disturbingly 0 J$ k9 b7 o! b
(C) uniquely 1 m# \- |+ ~, ^" i& a2 C
(D) archetypally
+ u+ m6 r( o" d- y+ H (E) captiously 8 n. e3 w' c# j
因果关系 / Y2 n0 J+ r. [) b+ w2 d2 X. u* H$ J
思路
' G1 [+ }3 h |原因是一般陈述句 结果是双重否定句 + Y/ O( E- Q( Y5 Y3 q7 A X- p
5. Given 表因果关系
* p& F+ D7 e+ o6 w# q后面的内容与前面相反
4 l3 X3 U. G( g+ K/ t" i% t前面是不独立的
2 o. B+ l' F/ Q: E& o/ j% _+ m答案:E ) A& p u& \! m/ L* n
later 7 W/ ~) n& e* h3 n% H
distain for 蔑视
# D0 V- M# d+ ~8 t/ d0 q3 b* ? imitation 模仿
8 s$ [$ F! t2 L0 Z4 N5 o2 q ambivalence about 有爱恨的矛盾心理 6 \5 M. D+ M6 B" b/ p3 u5 g+ v
deference 尊敬influence on 影响
V' Q6 O- y7 }* h9 n6. since 因果关系
: l8 a, ~4 O0 @2 J! { refused to consider 4 _: A+ X) v2 K) s0 N. S9 W4 Z
答案:E
+ a3 o( z2 z7 K/ ~& Y1 `insincere 不真诚的 " J/ r9 X8 |$ ^2 u+ V
7. 代沟 ( y4 s) B8 t0 N# }/ F; k2 v/ T. [, c
obvious constants 明显长存
' m# p4 P# |% }! {0 ?4 P: d perennially 永久存在的 . ^9 R( b. v5 A! f9 f/ d5 U
disturbingly 令人心烦意乱的 5 ?& J: |0 d! w& T
uniquely 独一无二的 独特的
3 M, Y2 M$ E+ e 答案:C
- h9 X w0 f) ?+ L0 o rivalry 争斗 -> struggle
# _$ a$ a7 O. a. g! ucritical 重要的
- e: f8 c9 j/ p- T5 x( N9 p/ B M3 M从句表原因 * G8 c+ ~- K ]- N( o& N
when; which; what; where; who |