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9. D 10. C 11. B 12. B 13. D 14. A 15. B 16. B 17. C 18. C 19. B 20. B Directions: There are 20 blanks in the following passage. For each blank there are four choices marked A), C), B) and D) on the right side of the paper. You should choose the ONE that best fits into the passage. Then mark the corresponding letter in the Answer Sheet with a single line through the center. The horse and carriage is a thing of the past, but love and marriage are still with us and still closely interrelated. Most American marriages, 1 first marriages uniting young people, are the result of mutual attraction and affection 2 than practical considerations. In the United States, parents do not 3 marriages for their children. Teenagers usually find mates through their own academic and social 4 and begin dating in high school. 5 young people feel free to choose their friends from 6 groups, most choose a mate of similar 7 . This is due in part to parental guidance. Parents cannot 8 spouses(配偶) for their children, but they can usually 9 choices by voicing disapproval of someone they consider unsuitable. 10 , marriages between members of different groups (interclass, interfaith, and interracial marriage) are 11 , probably because of greater mobility of today’s youth and the fact that they are 12 by fewer prejudices than their parents. Many young people leave their home towns to attend college, serve in the armed forces, 13 pursue a career in a bigger city. Once away from home and family, they are more 14 to date and marry outside their own social group. In mobile American society, interclass marriages are neither 15 nor astonishing. Interfaith marriages are 16 on the rise, especially between Protestants and Catholics. On the other hand, interracial marriages are still very 17 . It can be difficult for interracial couples to find a place to live, maintain friendships, and 18 a family. Marriages between people of different national 19 (but the same race and religion) have been monplace here 20 colonial times. 1. A)specially B) particularly C)naturally D)fortunately 2. A)more B)less C)rather D)better 3. A)arrange B)manage C)engage D)propose 4. A)position B)contract C)association D)contacts 5. A)Since If C)Though D)Hence 6. A)separate B)independent C)identical D)different 7. A)background B) circumstance C)situation D)condition 8. A)oppose B)select C)reject D)approve 9. A)influence B)afford C)make D)provide 10. A)Therefore B)Moreover C)However D)likewise 11. A)declining B)increasing C)prohibiting D)reducing 12. A)restrained B)reserved C)retained D)restricted 13. A)but B)so C)or D)otherwise 14. A)likely B) reluctant C)possible D)lonely 15. A)scarce B)risky C)rare D)rigid 16. A)in B)for C)at D)on 17. A)normal B)ordinary C)unmon D)mon 18. A)raise B)grow C)settle D)unite 19. A)source B)origin C)convention D) immigrant 20. A)since B)in C)for D)during Anwser:1. C 2. B 3. A 4. D 5. B 6. D 7. A 8. C 9. A 10. B 11. C 12. D 13. B 14. A 15. C 16. D 17. B 18. A 19. C 20. ADirections: In this part there is a short passage with five questions or inplete statements. Read the passage carefully. Then answer the questions or plete the statements in the fewest possible words (not exceeding 10 words.) As we have seen, sociology and the other social sciences focus on the study of certain aspects of human behavior. Yet human behavior is something with which we all have experience about and about which we have at least a bit of knowledge. Many of us, even without Ph. D. degree in the social sciences, could make suggestions about how to help problem gambles. All of us might well have theories about why movie stars and rock stars are the subjects of so much attention. Our theories and suggestions e from our experiences and from a cherished source of wisdommon sense. In our daily lives, we rely on mon sense to get us through many unfamiliar situations. However, this knowledge, which sometimes accurate, is not always reliable, because it rests on monly held beliefs rather than systematic analysis of facts. It was once considered mon sense to accept that the earth was flata view rightly questioned by Pythagoras and Aristotle. Incorrect monsense notions are not just a part of the distant past。 they remain with us today. In American society, by mon sense we know that, given the high level of divorces, most first marriages fail to reach their twentieth anniversaries. By mon sense we realize that when a minority group moves into a previously allWhite neighborhood, property values decline. However, like the view that the earth is flat, these particular monsense notions are untrue。 each has failed to be supported by sociological research. Three out of four first marriages in the United States celebrate their twentieth anniversaries, and one out of five reaches the fiftieth! Race had been found to have little relationship to property values。 such factors, as overcrowding and age of housing are more significant. Questions: (注意:答題盡量簡(jiǎn)短,超過10個(gè)詞要扣分。每條橫線限寫一個(gè)英語單詞,標(biāo)點(diǎn)符號(hào)不占格。) 1. What do sociology and other social sciences study? 2. Where does our knowledge about human behavior e from? 3. Why are the suggestions from ordinary people not always reliable? 4. An example of incorrect monsense notions in the past is the view that. 5. What will affect property values in the United States according to sociological research? Anwsers: 1. Certain aspects of human :They study certain aspects of human :Their study focuses on certain aspects of human behavior. 2. Our experiences and mon :Our experiences and cherished mon :Our experiences and cherished source of wisdommon :They e from our experiences and mon :They are from our experiences and mon sense. 3. Because they do not rest on systematic analysis of facts. 4. the earth is flat 5. Overcrowding and age of housing,.或:Overcrowding and age of housing will affect property :Factors such as Overcrowding and age of housing Directions: There are 20 blanks in the following passage. For each blank there are four choices marked A), C), B) and D) on the right side of the paper. You should choose the ONE that best fits into the passage. Then mark the corresponding let