2006年同等学力英语人员申请硕士学位外国语水平全国统一考试 B
英语试卷一
ENGLISH QUALIFICATION TEST
FOR MASTER-DEGREE APPLICANTS
Paper One (90 minutes)
PartⅠ Dialogue Communication (10 minutes, 10 points)
PartⅡ Vocabulary (10 minutes, 10 points)
PartⅢ Reading Comprehension (45 minutes, 25 points)
PartⅣ Cloze (15 minutes, 15 points)
PartⅤ Error Detection (10 minutes, 5 points)
考试须知
1. 本考试分卷一和试卷二两部分.试卷一满分65分,考试时间为90分钟,9:00开始, 10:30 结束;试卷二满分35分,考试时间为60分钟,10:30 开始, 11:30 结束. 本考试及格标准为总分60 分,其中试卷二不低于18分.
2. 本试卷一为B型试卷,请将答案用2B铅笔填涂在B 型答题卡上,答在其它类型答题卡或试卷上的无效.答题前,请核对答题卡是否为B 型卡,若不是,请要求监考人员予以更换.
3. 在答题卡正确的填涂方法为:在答案所代表的字母上划线,如:
4. 监考人员宣布试卷一考试结束后,请停止答试卷一,将试卷一和试卷一答题卡反扣在自己的桌面上,继续做试卷二.监考人员将到座位上收取试卷一和试卷一答题卡.
5. 监考人员收卷过程中,考生须配合监考人员验收,并请监考人员在准考证上签字(作为考生交卷的凭据). 否则,若发生答卷遗失,责任由考生自负.
Part I.Dialogue Communication (10minutes 10 points)
Section A Dialogue Completion
Direction: In this section, you will read 5 short incomplete dialogues between two speakers, each n
followed by 4 choices marked A, B, C, and D Choose the best answer that best suits the situation to
complete the dialogue by marking the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square
brackets on your machine-scoring ANSWER SHEET.
1. A: Sorry to bother you ,but could you tell me the way to Sunset Road?
B: ____________
A. Sorry I couldn’t help
B. Yes, what can I do for you?
C. I’m afraid I have no idea.
D. It’s not too far from here, is it?
2. A:Do you do exercises every day?
B: ________________
A. No,it depends on what kind of exercise?
B. No, I go to health club most of the time.
C. Yes,usually every other day.
D. Yes,rain or shine.
3. A: That was a delicious meal, Mrs. Barr. Thank you very much.
B: __________________
A. You’re welcome. B. Never mind.
C. It doesn’t matter. D. It's just OK.
4. A:I have a last favor to ask of you. Could you drive my daughter to the airport?
B: ______________
A. Shall I get the ticket for her.
B. Yeah, I like that.
C. You bet I will.
D. Sure it’d be a pleasure.
5. A: May I see the dentist now?
B: __________________
A. Is it a real emergency?
B. Do you have an appointment?
C. In that case, you’ll have to wait.
D. I'll talk to the dentist and squeeze you in.
Section B Dialogue Comprehension
Direction: In this section, you will read 5 short conversations between a man and a woman, At the
end of each conversation there is a question followed by 4 choices marked A, B, C, and D Choose
the best answer to tile question from the 4 choices by marking the corresponding letter with a single
bar across the square brackets on your machine-scoring ANSWER SHEET.
6. Man: I'm going to ask the neighbors to turn the music down. I can’t hear myself think
Woman: Do you really think it makes my difference to them?
Question: What does the woman mean?
A. He should have told them earlier.
B. It is of no use to turn the music down.
C. The neighbors will not listen to him.
D. He should focus on his own thinking
7. Man: What shall we take for the rap?
Woman: We'd better take the bare necessities.
Question: What does the woman suggest?
A. They should take as little as possible.
B. They should take their daily necessities
C. They should take as much as they can.
D. They should take nothing with them,
8. Woman: We are going to go away on vacation… Can you hear me?
Man: I'm all ears.
Question: What does the man mean?
A. He is listening attentively
B. He couldn't care less.
C. He likes the woman's idea
D. He is against the woman's plan.
9. Woman: I’m really behind with my project. Can you help me?
Man: I'01 afraid you bit off more than you could chew!
Question: What does the man mean?
A. He is not willing to help the woman
B. The woman is unable to do the project.
C. The woman is doing more than she can manage.
D. He is not in a position to help the woman.
10. Woman: There's Bill on his motorcycle again. Did he get it fixed in the garage?
Man: Don't be silly. That would have keen a waste of money. It only had a flat tire.
Question: What does the man imply?
A. The woman was so silly as to waste much money.
B. It was costly to have the motorcycle fixed in the garage.
C. Bill must have repaired me motorcycle himself.
D. There was a serious problem with the motorcycle.
part II Vocabulary (10 minutes, 10 points)
Section A
Direction: In this section there are 10 sentences, each with one word or phrase underlined. Choose
the one from the 4 choices marked A, B, C and D that best keeps the meaning of the sentence. Then
mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square brackets on your machine- scoring ANSWER SHEET.
11. Readers are required to abide by the rules of the library and mind their manners.
A. observe B. memorize C. review D. compose
12. The coach explained the regulations at length to make sure that none of his players world
become violators
A. at last B. at large
C. in detail D. in short
13.The cost of healthcare and health insurance remains the most urgent health problem
facing the country today.
A. pressing B. important
C. neglected D. complicated
14.She believes that she is not a good mother because she does not fit the stereotype of a woman
who spends all her time with her children.
A. popular image B. common standard
C. fixed conception D. pleasant notion
15.Thus the most logical approach is to focus our analysis on the trade relations of Spain with other European countries.
A. reasoning B. conclusion
C. position D. method
16.We no longer keep up the close friendship of a few years ago though we still visit
each other on occasion.
A. in good time B. up to date C. now and then D. once and for all
17.The university offered several more courses for the purpose of furthering the career
aspirations of its students.
A. ambitions B. achievements
C. advantages D. advances
18.Many women prefer to use cosmetics to enhance their beauty and make them look
younger.
A. enforce B. magnify
C. improve D. polish
19.The leaders of the two countries are planning their summit meeting with a pledge to maintain and
develop good ties.
A. strategy B. standpoint
C. promise D. priority
20.Many youngsters have heard their parents say “You’ll never amount to anything if you keep
daydreaming that way!”
A. be equal to B. accomplish
C. add up to D. pursue
Section B
Directions: In this section, there are 10incomplete sentences. For each sentence there are 4 choices marked A b C and D .Choose the one that best completes the sentence. Then mark the corresponding
letter with a single bar across the square brackets on your machine-scoring ANSWER SHEET.
21.Two decades ago a woman who shook hands with men on her own _________was
usually viewed as too forward.
A. endeavor B. initiative
C. motivation D. preference
22.The fruit ___________more than half the country’s annual exports. according to a
recent report.
A. accounts for B. stands for
C. provides for D. makes for
23.The violent_ _______of his youth reappeared and was directed not only at the army
but at his wife as well.
A. impatience B. character C. temper D. quality
24.This hypothesis states that environments that are too clean may actually make the
________system develop oversensitive responses.
A. mental B. nervous
B. immune D. physical
25.The Adult Vocational College is an opportunity to gain the right qualifications for
various careers for it offers an________ range of subjects and courses.
A. additional B. excessive
C. adequate D. extensive
26.It’s disturbing to note how many of the crimes we do know about were detected
_________ not by systematic inspections or other security procedures.
A. by accident B. on schedule
C. in general D. at intervals
27. You can always _______ Jim in a crisis, for he is simply the most helpful person I’ve ever
known.
A. refer to B. count on
C. cope with D. run into
28. He wanted to stay at home, but at last he agreed, very_____ though, to go to the concert.
A. decisively B. reluctantly
C. willingly D. deliberately
29. The audience, hostile at first, were greatly _____ by her excellent performance.
A. annoyed B. encouraged
C. impressed D. depressed
30. Many birds and insects an build _____ nests to provide shelter for their young.
A. glories B. elaborate
C. splendid D. advanced
Part III Reading Comprehension (45minutes, 25points)
Directions: There are 5passages in this part. Each passage is followed by 5 questions or unfinished
statement. For each of them there are 4 choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the best one and
mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square brackets on your machine-scoring
ANSWER SHEET.
Passage One
At all age and at al stages of life, fear presents a problem to almost everyone. “We are largely the
playthings of our fears,” wrote the British author Horace Walpole many years ago. “To one, fear of
the dark; to another, of physical pain; to a third of public ridicule; to a fourth, of poverty; to
loneliness ---- for all of us our particular creature waits in a hidden place.”
Fear is often a useful emotion. When you become frightened, many physical changes occur
within your body. Your heartbeat and responses quicken; your pupils expand to admit more light;
large quantities of energy-producing adrenaline (肾上腺素)are poured into your bloodstream.
Confronted with a fire or accident, fear can fuel life-saving flight(逃离). Similarly, when a danger
is psychological rather than physical, fear can force you to take self-protective measures. It is only
when fear is disproportional to the danger at hand that it becomes a problem.
Some people are simply more vulnerable to fear than others. A visit to the newborn nursery of
any large hospital will demonstrate that, from the moment of their births, a few fortunate infants
respond calmly to sudden fear-producing situations such as a loudly slammed door. Yet a neighbor
in the next bed may cry out with profound fright. From birth, he or she is more prone to learn fearful
responses be3cause he or she has inherited a tendency to be more sensitive.
Further, psychologists know that our early experiences and relationships strongly shape and
determine our later fears. A young man named Bill, for example, grew up with a father who regarded
each adversity as a temporary obstacle to be overcome with imagination and courage. Using his
father as am model ,Bill came to welcome adventure and to trust his own ability to solve problems.
Phil’s dad, however, spent most of his time trying to protect himself and his family. Afraid to
risk the insecurity of a job change, he remained unhappy in one position. He avoided long vacations
because “the car might break down. “ Growing up in such a home, Phil naturally learned to become
fearful and tense.
31. In the last sentence of Paragraph 1, “ our particular creature’ refers to ______.
A. fear of something B. a fierce beast
C. physical pain D. public ridicule
32. Fear can be useful emotion to us because it can _____.
A. stimulate many physical changes within our body
B. quicken our heartbeat and responses
C. pour large quantities of adrenaline into our bloodstream
D. help us respond quickly to danger and protect ourselves
33. Fear becomes a problem only when ______.
A. the danger is thought greater than it really is
B. the danger is ore psychological than physical
C. one cannot stand the danger
D. one is not well prepared for it
34. Different responses of newborn infants to a loudly slammed door imply that ______.
A. some people are inherently more easily affected by danger
B. people’s response to stimuli is not an inherited feature
C. some people seem to be very sensitive to noise
D. people sometimes seem to turn a deaf ear to noise
35. Psychologists have found that our later fears are determined largely by our ______.
A. home education B. school education
C. parents’ lifestyle D. early experiences
Passage Two
Sea horses are unusual parents. The female sea horses lay the eggs, but unlike other creatures,
it’s the males that give birth to the young.
Male sea horse have a fold of skin on their bellies that forms a pocket, called a brood pouch.
During the breeding season, the sea horse’s pouch swells to receive eggs. A female sea horse lays up
to 200 eggs at a time in the pouch. Then she swims off, leaving her male partner to care for the
developing eggs and give birth to young sea horses. The female will return every day to check on her
mate and the eggs, but she doesn’t stay long, nor does she take part in the birth.
It takes from to six weeks for the eggs in the male’s pouch to develop. During this time the
male avoids open water and hides in sea grass. His big pouch makes it difficult form him to swim, so
the male often uses his often uses his tail to grasp a piece of sea grass. Firmly, gripping the grass, he
will stay perfectly still for hours or even days. The male sea horse will change his color to blend with
his surroundings and avoid being seen by predators who will try to eat him or poke holes in his
pouch to get the eggs.
The eggs hatch inside the male’s pouch. When the babies begin moving around , the male sea
horse knows it’s time for them to be born. He grabs a sea grass stem with his tail and begins rocking,
bending his body back and forth.This causes the opening to enlarge until it is wide enough for the first baby sea horse to shoot out. The father sea horse continues rocking, bending, and stretching his
baby sea horse to shoot our. The father sea horse continues rocking, bending, and stretching his body
so that the rest of the babies can be born. Sometimes he has to press his pouch against a rock or some
stiff seaweed to force the young out.
Sea horse babies are born in groups of five or more. Sometimes it takes two days for the father
sea horse to give birth to all his young. He is very tiered when it’s over.
Soon after giving birth to one brood, the male will approach his mate and show her his empty
pouch. This tells her he is ready to receive eggs again.
36. What part does the female sea horse play in having babies?
A. Receive eggs. B. Laying eggs.
C. Hatching eggs D. Protecting eggs
37. What can be learned from the passage about giving birth to baby sea horses?
A. It is dangerous for the female. B. It happens once a year
C. It is hard work for the male D. It occurs in the deep sea.
38. To protect himself and his eggs, the male sea horse does all the following EXCEPT______.
A. changing his color B. gripping a piece of grass
C. staying motionless D. enlarging his pouch
39. The author suggests when sea horse babies are ready to be born _______.
A. the male sea horse seems very happy
B. it is difficult for them to come out
C. the female sea horse joins the male
D. they need large space in the pouch
40. Which fact does the author want the reader to remember most?
A. The male sea horse gives birth to the young.
B. The female sea horse lays up to 200 eggs at a time.
C. Baby sea horse are born in groups of five or more.
D. The female will return every day to check on the eggs.
Passage Three
When 23- year-old Eric Atienza graduated from college last year, he didn’t have a job. Not
wanting to give up his apartment and move back with his parents, he did what many young
Americans are doing: he signed up with a temp agency, which places workers on short-term jobs.
Temporary workers such as Atienza comprise 20 per5cent of the US workforce. In 1985, 417,000 workers were classified as temporary help. In 2005, there are more than 2.5 million, according to
Labour Department data.
Using temporary workers allows companies to increase or decrease the number of staff as their
workloads change. It also allows companies to avoid the costs involved in hiring and firing
long-term employees.
Many temp agency owners and career specialists say temping is a good way for recent graduates
to get experience. “Short-term jobs let graduates try out different companies to find the best fit,” said
Pegi Wheatley, owner of McCall Staffing, a San Francisco temp agency.
But things don’t always work out that way. “When I started temping, I had this notion that a
temporary job could turn full-time. It worked for a friend of mine, but that didn’t happen for me,” ,
said Atienza, who quickly became bored with his office work. Atienza stayed with the temp agency
because he could earn US $ 10 an hour doing office work. Other short-term jobs, such as working as
a store clerk or in a café, pay about US $ 7.
But there were trade-offs for the higher pay. Because in the US, health insurance is provided
through employer, most temps are not eligible for workplace health benefits. Atienza ran the risk
that an accident or illness would land him in the hospital with no way to pay the bill. Other
drawbacks, though less serious, still mean that temping for most graduates is exactly what its name
implies ---- a temporary choice. Instability, gaps between contracts, lack of vacation time and
isolation from other employees are often- cited negatives.
“Temping gave me the time to figure out what I wanted to do, because I could pay off my bills.
But none of that came from the jobs themselves,” said Atienza, who quit temping last month in favor
of a full-time job.
41. Atienza took a short-term job mainly because _______.
A. he didn’t want to give up his apartment
B. he liked to try out different companies
C. he wanted to get more experience
D. he couldn’t find a long-term job
42. According to the passage, in the year of 2005, the United States had a workforce of more than
______.
A. 25 million
B. 12.5 million
C. 4.17 million
D. 2.5 million
43. Which is NOT mentioned as an advantage of temping?
A. It gives recent graduates experience.
B. It enables employers to adjust their workforce.
C. A temporary job will turn full-time.
D. Employers can reduce their costs.
44. Atinenza stayed with the temp agency for some time because______.
A. he liked his office work
B. he was satisfied with the pay
C. his employer provided health insurance
D. he hated gaps between contracts
45. What does the word “trade-offs” in Paragraph 5 mean?
A. Benefits
B. Compromises
C. Risks
D. Disadvantages.
Passage Four
Scientists are hoping to eliminate malaria (疟疾 ) by developing a genetically modified
mosquito that cannot transmit the disease. Malaria has long troubled the populations of South
America, Africa, and Asia, where mosquito bites infect up to 500 million people a year with this
serious and sometimes fatal parasitic blood disease. For generations, scientists have been trying to
eliminate malaria by developing new drugs and using pesticide (杀虫剂) to wipe out local mosquito
populations. But these measures aren’t working ---- and some scientists, like Greg Lanzaro, say that
because of drug resistance and population changes, malaria is actually more prevalent now than it
was 20 years ago. Lanzaro says he has a better way to stop the spread of malaria : genetically
modifying mosquitoes so they are unable to carry the disease.
Lanzaro and his colleagues are planning a multi- year project to produce malaria- resistant
mosquitoes ---- and he thinks they can do it wihin five years. “We can get foreign into mosquitoes
and they go where they’re supposed to go,” Lanzaro says , pointing out that scientists have already
succeeded in genetically engineering mosquitoes that cannot transmit malaria to birds and mice. And,
he says, scientists are quickly making progress on genes that block transmission of the disease to
humans as well.
The most difficult part scientifically, Lanzaro says, is figuring out how to get the
lab-engineered mosquitoes to spread their genes into natural populations After all, he points out, it’s
useless to engineer mosquitoes in the lab that can’t transmit malaria when there are millions out in
the wild that can. To solve this problem, Lanzaro wants to load up a mobile piece of DNA with the
malaria- resistant gene, and then insert it into a group of mosquito embryos. The malaria-resistant
gene would be integrated directly into the mosquitoes’ DNA, making it impossible for those
mosquitoes to tr5ansmit the parasite that causes malaria. In this way a small group of lab-raised mosquitoes could be released into the wild, and by interbreeding with wild mosquitoes, eventually
transmit the beneficial gene to the entire population.
46. One reason for malaria to be more widespread now is that ______.
A. more people have moved to malaria-infected areas
B. mosquitoes have become resistant to pesticides
C. genetically modified mosquitoes still transmit the disease
D. mosquitoes bite as many as 500 million people a year
47. Lanzaro is hopeful that in a few year man can ______.
A. start to eliminate malaria
B. cure parasitic blood diseases
C. prevent mice form transmitting parasites
D. acquire immunity against malaria
48. Lanzaro is confident that scientists can block the transmissions of malaria to humans because
_______.
A. natural mosquito populations do not change
B. scientists have succeeded with birds and mice
C. foreign genes always go where they are required
D. lab- raised mosquitoes will not be resistant to drugs
49. What is the most difficult part of Lanzaro’s project?
A. Spreading malaria- resistant genes into natural mosquito populations
B. Raising malaria- resistant mosquitoes
C. Making genes that block the transmission of malaria
D. Identifying malaria-resistant genes
50. According to the passage , a fundamental way to wipe out malaria is to ______.
A. develop new malaria-resistant drugs
B. produce effective pesticides to kill mosquitoes
C. change the genetic makeup of mosquitoes
D. remove people from malaria – infected areas
Passage Five
According to Scott Adams, creator of the comic strip (系列漫画) Dilbert, the annual performance review is “one of the most frightening and weakening experiences in every employee’s life. Adam’s stor5ies and comic figures poke fun at the workplace, but his characterization of people’s feelings
about the annual performance review has its serious side. Although a recent study of 437 companies
indicates that effective annual performance reviews can help raise profits, most employees of those
companies hate them.
In theory, annual performance reviews are constructive and positive interactions between
managers and employees working together to attain maximum performance and strengthen the
organization. In reality, they often create division, undermine morale, and spark anger and jealousy.
Thus although the object of the annual performance review is to improve performance, it often has
the opposite result. A programmer at an IT firm was stunned to learn at her annual performance
review that she was denied a promotion because she wasn’t a “term player.” What were the data
used to make this judgment? She didn’t smile in the company photo.
Although this story might sound as if it came straight out of Dilbert, it is a true account of one
woman’s experience. By following a few ideas and guidelines from industry analysis, this kind of
ordeal can be avoided:
To end the year with a positive and useful performance review, managers and employees must
start the year by working together to establish clear goals and expectations.
It may be helpful to allow employees to propose a list of people associated with the company
who will be in a good position to assess their performance at the end of the year; these people may
be co-workers, suppliers ,or even customers.
Goals should be measurable but flexible, and everyone should sign off on the plan.
By checking employees’ progress at about nine months, managers can give them a chance to
correct mistakes and provide guidance to those who need it before the year is out.
When conducting the review, managers should highlight strengths and weaknesses during the
past year and discuss future responsibilities, avoiding punishment or blame.
In short, when employees leave their performance reviews, they should be focusing on what
they can do better in the year ahead, not worrying about what went into their files about the past.
51. In his comic strip Dilbert, Scott Adams _______.
A. make fun of working people
B. tells a story about as woman employee
C. promote team spirit among co-workers
D. mocks annual performance reviews
52. All the following are mentioned as the drawbacks of annual performance reviews EXCEPT
________.
A. reducing efficiency
B. creating tension
C. undermining morale
D. inducing anger
53. The word “ordeal” Paragraph 3 probably refers to _____.
A. likelihood of promotion
B. depressive experience
C. poor performance
D. unrealistic expectation
54. The annual performance reviews, to be effective, must focus on ________.
A. making employees aware of their company’s future goals
B. involving employees in assessing their own performance
C. encouraging employees to achieve better future performance
D. highlighting what responsibilities employees have failed in
55. The general attitude of the author toward Adam’s comic strip Dilbert is ________.
A. negative
B. positive
C. neutral
D. unclear
Part IV Cloze Test (15 minutes, 15 points)
Directions: In this part, there is a passage with fifteen blanks. For each blank there are four choices
marked A, B, C and D. Choose the best answer for each blank and mark the corresponding letter
with a single bar across the square brackets on your machine-scoring ANSWER SHEET.
Advertising is a form of selling. For thousands of years there have been individuals who have
tried to 56 others to buy the food they have produced or the goods they have made or the
services they can 57 .
But in the 19th century the mass production of goods 58 the Industrial Revolution made
person-to-person selling inefficient. The mass distribution of goods that 59 the development of the
railway and highway made person-to-person selling too slow and expensive. At the same time mass
communication first newspapers and magazines then radio and television made mass selling through
60 possible.
The objective of any advertisement is to convince people that it is in their best 61 to take
the action the advertiser is recommending. The action 62 be to purchase a product use a service
vote for a political candidate or even to join the Army.
Advertising as a 63 developed first and most rapidly in the United States the country that
uses it to the greatest 64 In 1980 advertising expenditures in the U.S. exceeded 55 billion dollars
or 65 2 percent of the gross national product. Canada spent about 1.2 percent of its gross national
product 66 advertising.
67 advertising brings the economies of mass selling to the manufacturer it produces benefits
for the consumer 68 . Some of those economies are passed along to the purchaser so that the cost
of a cost of a product sold primarily through advertising is usually far 69 than one sold through
personal salespeople. Advertising brings people immediate news about products that have just come
on the market. Finally advertising 70 for the programs on commercial television and radio and for
about two thirds of the cost of publishing magazine and newspapers.
56.A.request B. oblige C. affect D. persuade
57.A.transfer B. secure C. enjoy D. perform
58.A.resulting from B. dealing with C. leading to D. going for
59.A.followed B. preceded C.ach5eved D. induced
60. A. marketing B. advertising C. salespeople D agents
61. A. profits B. benefits C. interests D. gains
62.A. should B. would C. may D. will
63. A. business B. service C product D. profession
64. A. amount B. extent C. possibility D. utility
65, A similarly B. supposedly C. approximately D. accountably
66. A. with B. at C. into D. on
67. A. While B. Therefore C. But D. If
68. A. as well B. as usual C. as a result D. as a rule
69. A. more B. less C. cheaper D. dearer
70. A. works B. calls C. looks D. pays
Part V Error Detection (10 minutes, 5 points)
Directions: In this section, there are 10 sentences. Each sentence has 4 underlined words or phrases
marked A, B, C and D. Identify the part of the sentence that is incorrect. Mark the corresponding
letter with a single bar across the square brackets on your machine-scoring ANSWER SHEET.
71. During the dinner we had agreeable conversation-nothing extraordinary-but catching up on recent
A B C
events of each other’s life.
D
72. Because of the injured people laying on the ground below the window, fire fighters were unable to
A B C
place ground ladders up to the windows on the northeast side of the building.
D
73. You’d better hurry up if you want to buy something because there’s hardly nothing left.
A B C D
74. A professional wine taste relies on sight, smell and tasting to determine the quality of a wine.
A B C D
75. Sam used to live in Oklahoma, but his company had him transfer to a better position In Georgia.
A B C D
76. Not too many years ago, it was an excited experience to travel 25 or 50 miles away from home.
A B C D
77. It is perhaps not an exaggeration to say that we shall soon be trusting our health, wealth, and
A B
happiness to elements with whom very names the general public are unfamiliar.
C D
78.China has established three nature reserves to protect the rare species, covering a total of more
A B C
than600,000 sq km, an area 40 times of the size of Beijing.
D
79. It aims to establish a minimum list of standards that ought to include in all codes of conduct covering
A B C D
labor practices.
80.I saw that the last update was made in January of 2002,so I wondered that the webmaster
A B C
had abandoned the site.
D
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