电子商务英语2011年1月真题试题及答案解析(00888)

如果您发现本试卷没有包含本套题的全部小题,请尝试在页面顶部本站内搜索框搜索相关题目,一般都能找到。
7

阅读下面的短文,然后把划线的句子翻译成汉语。

It has been a tumultuous time for dot-com start-ups. In fact, Gartner, Inc. estimates that over 75% of e-commerce start-ups will end in failure. (71) [While it is tempting to blame prevailing market conditions for this failure rate, the fact is that early planning ultimately determines the potential success or failure of a start-up.] This whitepaper helps managers understand the characteristics that contribute to successful start-ups. (72) [Importantly, this work also includes a valuable diagnostic survey that helps entrepreneurs quantify the strength of the business and identify problem areas.]

One thing is clear: There are a lot of ways for a new business to go out of business. (73) [Loss of focus, an inability to fulfill customer orders or service, and a mismatch of top management with the corporate culture are but a few common reasons that businesses fail.] To increase the chances of success, managers need to consider four crucial inputs: 

Management/People:The single most vital component of any business, every start-up needs a skilled management team that can execute the business plan, adapt to changing environments, and attract and retain valuable staff.

Market Opportunity:To succeed, a venture requires a business model that is adaptable, scalable, defensible, and able to generate both revenue and profits. (74) [In addition, ma-nagement must recognize the company’s market position and the potential of its ideas in the market.]

Funding:The ability of the venture to raise operating cash in order to establish profitability.

Product and Service:This defines the demand for the product, including the degree to which it addresses customer needs and the ability to provide fulfillment and client service functions.

(75) [By keeping a close eye on these found areas — strong leadership and management, good people, a solid business plan, and a product that people want to purchase—businesses can position themselves to weather inevitable challenges.]

36

39、In Papousek’s experiment babies make learned movements of the head in order to ____.

  • A.have the lights turned on
  • B.be rewarded with milk
  • C.please their parents
  • D.be praised
37

40、The babies would “smile and bubble” at the lights because ____.

  • A.the lights were directly related to some basic “drives”
  • B.the sight of the lights was interesting
  • C.they need not turn back to watch the lights
  • D.they succeeded in “switching on” the lights
39

37、What does the last sentence in the passage most probably mean?

  • A.B2B and B2C are no longer suitable e-business models.
  • B.The aim of taking e-business is to earn more profit.
  • C.E-business is by no means a good way of getting profit.
  • D.P2P is the most suitable e-business model.
40

Passage 3

For some time past it has been widely accepted that babies - and other creatures - learn to do things because certain acts lead to “rewards”; and there is no reason to doubt that this is true. But it also used to be widely believed that effective reward, at least in the early stages, had to be directly related to such basic physiological (生理的) “drives” as thirst or hunger. In other words, a baby would learn if he got food or drink of some sort of physical comfort, not otherwise.

It is now clear that this is not so. Babies will learn to behave in ways that produce results in the world with no reward except the successful outcome.

Papousek began his studies by using milk in the normal way to “reward” the babies and so teach them to carry out some simple movements, such as turning the head to one side or the other. Then he noticed that a baby who had had enough to drink would refuse the milk but would still go on making the learned response with clear signs of pleasure. So he began to study the children’s responses in situations where no milk was provided. He quickly found that children as young as four months would learn to turn their heads to right or left if the movement “switched on” a display of lights —and indeed that they were capable of learning quite complex turns to bring about this result, for instance, two left or two right, or even to make as many three turns to one side.

Papousek’s light display was placed directly in front of the babies and he made the interesting observation that sometimes they would not turn back to watch the lights closely although they would “smile and bubble” when the display came on. Papousek concluded that it was not primarily the sight of the lights which pleased them, it was the success they were achieving in solving the problem, in mastering the skill, and that there exists a fundamental human urge to make sense of the world and bring it under intentional control.

38、According to the author, babies learn to do things which ____.

  • A.are directly related to pleasure
  • B.will meet their physical needs
  • C.will bring them a feeling of success
  • D.will satisfy their curiosity
42

35、The phrase“the first movers” in paragraph 2 most probably means ____.

  • A.the first motivations for the companies to take e-commerce.
  • B.the earliest transformation of transactions from paper orders to e-commerce.
  • C.the first companies that have failed in the field of e-commerce.
  • D.the earliest companies that get involved in e-commerce.
43

Passage 2

The impact of e-commerce is happening in phases. In its first phase (1994—1997), e-commerce was about presence: making sure that everybody had a Web site, meeting the demand that every company, large or small, get out there and have at least something on the Internet. People weren’t quite sure why they were doing it, but they knew that they had to have an online presence.

The second phase (1997—2000) of e-commerce was about transactions — buying and selling over digital media. The focus in this phase was on order flow and gross revenue. Some of that was the matching of buyers and sellers who would never have found each other in the past. Some of that was simply taking transactions that would have been done through paper purchase orders and saying that this business was done on the Internet, although the meaning of that change was quite insignificant. But in this phase, the announcements were all about order flow at any cost: why-sell-it-when-you-can-give-it-away business models. As a result, many of the first movers in this phase such as Value America, are either gasping, have gasped their last breath, or are flailing about in a sea of red ink.

Today, e-commerce is entering the third phase (2000-?), with a focus on how the Internet can impact profitability. And profitability is not about increasing gross revenues but rather increasing gross margins. We call this phase e-business, and it includes all the applications and processes enabling a company to service a business transaction. In addition to encompassing e-commerce, e-business includes both front- and back-office applications that form the core of engine for modern business. Thus, e-business is not just about e-commerce transactions or about buying and selling over the Web: it’s the overall strategy of redefining old business models, with the aid of technology, to maximize customer value and profits. To paraphrase Business Week: “Forget B2B and B2C, E-business is about P2P — path to profitability.”

34、Between 1994 and 1997, companies built their web sites mainly because they ____.

  • A.wanted to find more customers
  • B.had no other things to do
  • C.wanted to show their existence on Internet
  • D.felt the Internet was quite interesting
44

33、How do flying foxes care for their young?

  • A.They only care for their own babies.
  • B.They share the feeding of their young.
  • C.They help when a baby bat is in danger.
  • D.They often leave home and forget their young.
45

32、Flying foxes tend to ____.

  • A.double their number every year
  • B.fight and kill a lot of themselves
  • C.move from place to place constantly
  • D.lose a lot of their young
47

30、()

  • A.warning
  • B.help
  • C.safety
  • D.weather
48

29、()

  • A.Furthermore
  • B.However
  • C.Consequently
  • D.Frequently
49

28、()

  • A.could
  • B.does
  • C.would
  • D.should
50

27、()

  • A.populated
  • B.deserted
  • C.unpopulated
  • D.undeserted
51

24、()

  • A.circles
  • B.circulates
  • C.fly
  • D.circuit
52

25、()

  • A.In that
  • B.In terms of
  • C.Except for
  • D.Along with
53

26、()

  • A.occur
  • B.rise
  • C.raise
  • D.foster
54

23、()

  • A.made
  • B.called
  • C.meant
  • D.defined
56

22、()

  • A.range
  • B.scale
  • C.region
  • D.area
57

20. Let’s fix a ____ date for the next meeting.

  • A.infinite
  • B.plain
  • C.distinct
  • D.definite
58

19. A poor memory ____ her efforts to become an actress.

  • A.encouraged
  • B.accomplished
  • C.frustrated
  • D.devoted
59

The clerk ____ the judge by looking up related precedents.

  • A.resisted
  • B.assisted
  • C.handed
  • D.supported
60

The document requires ____ changes.

  • A.substantial
  • B.strong
  • C.authentic
  • D.stable
61

The government is ____ a new education policy.

  • A.expressing
  • B.formulating
  • C.defining
  • D.voicing
62

He has an unusual ____ of life.

  • A.conception
  • B.look
  • C.philosophy
  • D.science
64

They have got into ____troubles.

  • A.monetary
  • B.affluent
  • C.financial
  • D.miserable
65

He dreams to ____ his goal of serving in the army.

  • A.pertain
  • B.attain
  • C.retain
  • D.maintain
66

He soon ____ his fortune.

  • A.confused
  • B.cost
  • C.paid
  • D.consumed
67

All you need to do ____ the form.

  • A.fill in
  • B.fills in
  • C.are to fill in
  • D.is to fill in
68

Get me a hammer from the kitchen, ____?

  • A.will you
  • B.would you
  • C.shall you
  • D.do you
70

They ____out because the light is on.

  • A.mustn’t have gone
  • B.may not have gone
  • C.cannot have gone
  • D.needn’t have gone
71

I was ill that day. Otherwise I ____ part in the parade.

  • A.would take
  • B.would have taken
  • C.took
  • D.had taken
73

The lighter an object, the ____it moves.

  • A.freer
  • B.more freely
  • C.more free
  • D.freelier
74

The food that Mark is cooking in the kitchen ____ delicious.

  • A.smells
  • B.is smelling
  • C.has smelled
  • D.has been smelling
75

I have so much work to do that a holiday for me this year is ____.

  • A.out of question
  • B.out of a question
  • C.out of questions
  • D.out of the question
76

____broke down again but luckily they knew how to fix it.

  • A.Cliff’s and Al’s car
  • B.Cliff and Al’s cars
  • C.Cliff’s and Al’s cars
  • D.Cliff and Al’s car