自考专业英语(英语阅读一)模拟试卷二

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  • 卷面总分:100分
  • 试卷类型:模拟考试
  • 测试费用:免费
  • 答案解析:是
  • 练习次数:1次
  • 作答时间:150分钟
试卷简介

本试卷一共150分钟

  • CAREFUL READING
  • SPEED READING
  • DISCOURSE CLOZE
  • WORD FORMATION
  • GAP FILLING
  • SHORT ANSWER QUESTIONS
  • TRANSLATION
试卷预览
1

Passage 4

 If you know exactly what you want, the best route to a job is to get specialized training. A recent survey shows that companies like the graduates in such fields as business and health care who can go to work immediately with very little on-the-job training.

 That's especially true of booming fields that are challenging for workers. At Cornell's School of an of Hotel Administration, for example, bachelor's degree graduates get an average of four or five job offers with salaries ranging from the high teens to the low 20s and plenty of chances for rapid advancement. Large companies, especially like a background of formal education coupled with work experience.

 But in the long run, too much specialization doesn't pay off. Business, which has been flooded with MBAs, no longer considers the degree an automatic stamp of approval. The MBA may open doors and command a higher salary initially, but the impact of a degree washes out after five years.

 As further evidence of the erosion of corporate faith in specialized degrees, Michigan State's Scheetz cites a pattern in corporate hiring practices. Although companies tend to take on specialists as new hires, they often seek out generalists for middle and upper-level management. "They want who isn't constrained by nuts and bolts to look at the big picture, "says Scheetz. like a formal statement that you approve of the liberal-arts graduate. Time and again labor-market analysts mention a need for talents that liberal-arts majors are assumed to have: writing and communication skills, organizational skills, open-mindedness and adaptability, solve problems. David Birch claims he does not hire anybody with an g degree. "I hire only liberal-arts people because they have a less-than- says Birch. Liberal-arts means an academically thorough and strictes literature, history, mathematics, economics science, human behavior-plus two. With that under your belt, you can feel free to specialize. "A liberal-arts degree coupled with an MBA or some other technical training is a very good combination in the market place,“says Scheetz.

According to the passage, what does "liberal-arts" mean?

1

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 For about a thousand years-from about the fifth century(51)( ) the fifteenth Latin was the second language of educated people all over Europe and all (52)( ) works were written in Latin. For, before the invention of the printing press, reading and writing were skills (53)( )

 only to scholars. Most of the scholars were priests and clergymen, and Latin was the language of the church. Latin was a subject(54)( ) in schools and in colleges, and all(55)( ) people had some familiarity(56)( ) it.

 The number of people who study Latin has not grown smaller, but(57)( ) it has become very much smaller. As ordinary people all over the world began to be able to read and write their own languages, and as scientific work of the sixteenth and later centuries came more and more to be written in living languages, a knowledge of Latin was not so essential. Thus, although Latin might once have been(58)( ) as the most suitable of possible international languages(at least for Europeans), this time has definitely passed.

 The earliest attempts to invent a simplified language for(59)( ) use came in the seventeenth century, but it was not until the late nineteenth century that any sizable group of people did actually attempt to speak and write an artificial language. Esperanto, which was published in 1887, was the first language really to (60)( ) At one time or another, as many as eight million people have learned Esperanto. It has been taught in great many schools and colleges in Europe, and the study of Esperanto was even made compulsory in some high schools in Germany.