(2017)考研英语阅读理解精读100篇(基础版)在线阅读 印建坤 第4部分(8)

本站小编 辅仁网/2017-07-19



The Bush camp says it intends to pay up. But Ben Ginsberg, the former chief campaign counsel who has inherited the mess, hasn't yet figured out how. As for the law firms, they are taking pains not to alienate their deadbeat clients, for fear of damaging their burgeoning Washington lobbying practices. Greenberg Traurig now represents electric power companies, drug manufacturers and Internet gambling interests willing to pay big money for access to policymakers. Whether Richard and company collect or not, that $800,000 could end up being a smart investment.

注(1):本文选自Newsweek;

注(2):本文习题命题模仿对象:第1、2、3、5、4题分别模仿1995年真题Text 3第1、2、3、5题和Text 4第1题。

1. The word “quarterback”(Line 2, Paragraph 1) most probably means______.

A) supporter

B) counsel

C) assistant

D) adviser

2. The main problem Richard is facing now is______.

A) the ingratitude of the Bushes

B) the complaints of his law partners

C) the unpaid bills

D) Bush advisers' criticism

3. From the passage we can infer that______.

A) lawyers also benefited a lot from working for the Bush Camp

B) Al Gore lost the recount case because his Recount Committee raised far fewer funds than that of Bush's

C) Texan women are all very proud of having Bush as their president

D) the Bushes intend to become deadbeat clients because it does no harm to their relationship with law firms

4. According to the passage, the Bush Recount Committee______.

A) spent all the raised money to pay its lawyers

B) had got most of its funds from individuals

C) could have raised more money if they hadn't imposed a cap on individual donations

D) had to pay the bills of the army for their help in Bush's election

5. We can learn from the last paragraph that______.

A) the Bush camp also owes electrical power companies and drug manufacturers a lot of money

B) richard and his company have invested their legal fees to expand their business

C) greenberg Traurig works for electric power companies, drug manufacturers and Internet gambling interests

D) law firms don't want to lose influential clients even if they don't pay off their legal fees





篇章剖析


本文是一篇说明文,采用提出问题——分析问题的写作模式。第一段,作者介绍了Barry Richard这个帮助布什赢得选举的重要人物;第二段则说明了他和他的法律公司所面临的问题:布什重新计票委员会尚未支付他们的律师费;第三段介绍了布什重新计票委员会的工作及其资金使用情况;第四段则分析说明即使该法律公司收不回律师费,他们仍然需要维持和这种客户的关系。





词汇注释


quarterback /ˈkwɔːtəbæk/ n. (橄榄球)四分卫;关键人物;智囊

bruising /ˈbruːzɪŋ/ adj. 困难的;令人不快的

mane /meɪn/ n. (人的)长头发;鬃毛

Tallahassee /ˌtæləˈhæsɪ/ n. 塔拉哈西(美国佛罗里达州首府)

litigator /ˈlɪtɪgeɪtə/ n. 诉讼律师

GOP 大老党(美国共和党的别称)(Grand Old Party)

paralegal /ˌpærəˈliːgəl,ˈpærəl-/ n. 律师的专职助手,律师帮办

stiff /stɪf/ v. 〈美俚〉不肯给…小账,让…空手而去;失信没给予或供给(担保的或期望的东西)

astronomical /æstrəˈnɒmɪk(ə)l/ adj. 庞大的,无法估计的

bellyache /ˈbelɪeɪk/ v. 发(不该发的)牢骚,抱怨

nebulous /ˈnebjuləs/ adj. 含糊的,模糊的;暧昧的

bankroll /ˈbæŋkrəʊl/ v. 为…提供资金,资助

PR 公共关系 (public relation)

caterer /ˈkeɪtərə(r)/ n. 包办伙食的人;筹备文娱节目的人

deadbeat /ˈdedbi:t/ n. 〈俗〉赖债不还的人,游手好闲者

burgeon /ˈbɜːdʒ(ə)n/ v. (迅速)成长,发展





难句突破


A nebulous entity not legally required to disclose how it spent its money, the committee and its chief fund-raiser, Texas oilman (and now Commerce secretary) Don Evans, swiftly collected $8.3 million——more than twice the $3.9 million Al Gore's recount committee raised to pay its lawyers.

主体句式:The committee and its chief fund-raiser… swiftly collected…

结构分析:本句是个包含同位语和附加说明的长句。A nebulous entity not legally required to disclose how it spent its money 是委员会的同位语,起到补充说明的作用,而破折号之后的成分也是对句子的补充说明。

句子译文:法律不要求这个性质模糊的机构透露其使用资金的情况。该委员会和它的主要筹资人,得克萨斯州石油商(现商务秘书)唐·伊万斯很快就筹集了830万美元——比艾尔·戈尔重新计票委员会所筹集的390万美元资金的两倍还多,并主要用这笔钱来支付律师费用。





题目分析


1. B 语义题。 根据上下文,Richard作为诉讼律师为布什在佛罗里达法庭的成功立下了汗马功劳。Quarterback原意是橄榄球比赛中的四分卫,是球赛中的关键人物,这里则是指在法庭中为布什效力的辩护律师,是在法庭中胜诉的关键人物。Counsel有“辩护律师”的意思,词义最为接近。

2. C 细节题。文章第二段提到了布什阵营拖欠Richard的公司巨额律师费以及由此引发的抱怨和布什竞选班子的辩解,可见其面临的主要问题是账单未付清。

3. A 推理题。这从第二段引用布什竞选班子成员的话:“Yet these guys got huge in-kind contributions to their reputations out of this.”和最后一段“that $800,000 could end up being a smart investment”两句中可以看出律师事务所和律师们都从其为布什阵营的服务中获益匪浅。

4. C 细节题。文章第三段提到布什重新计票委员会设置了个人捐助的上限(imposed a $5,000 cap on individual donations),并为其后悔。在第三段结尾处讲到在付完各种费用后,他们的资金已经所剩无几(the “kitty ran dry”),由此可以推断出答案是C。

5. D 推理题。从最后一段“As for the law firms, they are taking pains not to alienate their deadbeat clients, for fear of damaging their burgeoning Washington lobbying practices.”来看,为了华盛顿的业务,律师事务所还不得不拉拢赖账的客户。所以答案D是正确的。





参考译文


为了帮助乔治·W.布什成为总统,巴里·理查德做了比大多数律师都要多的工作。作为在去年秋天那场难解难分的重新计票风波中布什的法庭辩护律师,这位来自佛罗里达州塔拉哈西市的满头白发的诉讼律师成了电视观众熟悉的人物。去年一月他到华盛顿参加布什就职典礼的时候,得到了共和党对待摇滚歌星的待遇。据他的律师合伙人弗莱德·巴格特回忆,在一场舞会中,一位体格壮实的得克萨斯妇女将理查德举了起来,在他脸上重重地吻了一下,并且大声说道:“你成就了我们的总统,我爱你!”

但理查德发现布什阵营的感激是有限的。在美国最高法院裁定2000年选举最终获胜者四个多月后,他和他的“格林伯格·特里格”公司仍然被拖欠了超过80万美元的法律服务费。他的公司将39名律师和13名律师助手派往全州各地参与法庭辩论,现在和其他十几家公司一样没有收到劳务费。估计拖欠费用总计已经超过了200万美元。据《新闻周刊》了解,现在这种局面已经变得越来越困难了。虽然律师们私下对拖延付费颇有微词(理查德说他没有抱怨过),布什的顾问手里还有一大把“天文数字”的账单——包括一位诉讼律师开出的每天超过24小时工作费的账单。“在这里的都是些收入不菲还抱怨个不停的律师。”一位前布什竞选班子的官员说道,“可是这些人还从这项工作中得到了提高他们声望的巨大实惠。”

这些律师应该从布什重新计票委员会那里拿到他们的报酬。该委员会成立于佛罗里达之争开始的时候,其主要工作就是筹集资金。法律不要求这个性质模糊的机构透露其使用资金的情况。该委员会和它的主要筹资人,得克萨斯州石油商(现商务秘书)唐·伊万斯很快就筹集了830万美元——比艾尔·戈尔重新计票委员会所筹集的390万美元资金的两倍还多,并主要用这笔钱来支付律师费用。为了避免被指控其重新计票工作获得特殊利益集团的资助,布什班子对个人捐款设置5000美元的上限,现在他们正为这种公关姿态后悔不已。在付清了用于包办伙食、包租飞机以及到佛罗里达“观察”助阵的共和党议员团的账单之后,“筹集的资金已经所剩无几”,一位知情人说道。

布什阵营说他们想要付清账单。但前主要竞选顾问本·金斯伯格面对着接手的一团糟局面还没有理出头绪。至于那些法律事务所,他们正在尽力不疏远那些赖账的客户,以免损害他们在华盛顿刚刚起步的院外游说业务。现在“格林伯格·特里格”公司代表着那些愿意出巨资来接近政策制定者的电力公司、药品制造商和互联网博彩行业。不论理查德及其公司能不能收回法律服务费,那80万美元都是一笔精明的投资。





第6章 教育类



Unit 71


On campuses, cheerful undergraduates are pressing leaflets into freshers' hands. At Heathrow airport, where many foreign students enter Britain, the welcome has been less warm. Officials herded recent arrivals into a separate queue that at times took six hours to get through——and those were the lucky ones. Many potential students are languishing at home, and will miss out on university places this autumn unless they receive visas in the next few days.

Universities had seen trouble looming since March, when a new student-visa system was introduced. By insisting that potential students prove their academic credentials and show that they have enough money to support themselves, the Home Office intended to deter those who were actually coming to Britain to work. It also hoped the reforms would keep out potential terrorists. But the advice it issued to applicants was poor (it has since been revised) and staff at many visa-processing centres were not properly trained.

The result has been a backlog at many centres——in Los Angeles, for example, students waited up to 40 days for a visa. But the problem has been particularly acute in the Indian subcontinent. In Pakistan, 5,000 aspiring students have yet to have their applications processed and 9,000 more are appealing against outright refusals.

The logjam affects mostly wealthy, well-educated folk in strategically important countries. The elite universities, some of which have long had a cosmopolitan clientele, are concerned. “We are all extremely worried about the damage that this could do to the reputation of British higher education overseas, particularly in the Indian subcontinent. It comes at a time when universities' finances are under enormous pressure,”says Simeon Underwood, head of admissions policy at the London School of Economics.

International students are vital to British universities. Although British and European students pay tuition fees of up to £3,225 a year, the cost of educating them is far higher. The state partially plugs the gap and, for that reason, it also caps the number of these students. Fees from overseas students, who pay around £12,000 a year, contribute more than £1.5 billion annually, 8% of universities' total income.

To attract these crucial customers, universities offer to meet them at airports, run events to settle them in and arrange for police to visit campuses to expedite visa controls. But if students cannot make it into Britain, such canny marketing is in vain. This year, even though a weak pound makes British universities a cheap option, some have seen the number of new students from outside the European Union fall by a fifth because of difficulties in getting visas.

On a visit to Islamabad on October 5th Alan Johnson, the home secretary, promised to cut the time it takes to process a visa from 60 days to 15 by hiring more staff, and to help Pakistan establish a national anti-terrorism agency, which would relieve the pressure on the visa system. But his intervention will not help this year's blocked students. And if problems persist, more foreign students may plump for universities in America or Australia in future.

注(1):本文选自Economist;

注(2):本文习题命题模仿对象为1999年真题Text 4第1~ 4题和Text 1第4题。

1. We can learn from the first paragraph that______.

A) Heathrow airport does not like international students as much as university undergraduates

B) the unavailability of visa may force many students to lose their admission into UK universities

C) students feel lucky to wait for only six hours in the airport to get into Britain

D) many students will arrive at the universities much later than expected because they cannot receive the visa

2. According to the new student-visa system, an international student should prove all of the following EXCEPT______.

A) he should have adequate financial resources

B) he should meet the bottom requirements set by the universities

C) he should provide his birth certificate showing he is not from a terrorist country

D) he should convince the visa official that his purpose of coming to UK is to study

3. According to the text, the new student-visa system may lead to______.

A) a negative influence on UK's strategic relations with some important countries

B) more governmental subsidies to British universities

C) an increasing pressure on Britain's governmental finance

D) the damage of the reputation of British higher education

4. It can be inferred from the last paragraph that______.

A) the new student-visa system may undermine the competitiveness of British higher education

B) the new student-visa system will soon achieve a much better efficiency by hiring more staff

C) the new student-visa system aims to send students to other countries such as Australia and America

D) the new student-visa system will help Pakistan establish a national anti-terrorism agency

5. The author's attitude towards the new student-visa system seems to be______.

A) biased

B) indifferent

C) concerned

D) pessimistic





篇章剖析


本文主要讲的是英国新颁布的签证制度导致很多留学生不能及时来英国上学的问题。第一段首先描述了目前学生进入英国学习的困难;第二至四段说明了出现这种现象的原因:新的签证制度导致了一些问题,把很多学生拒之门外,带来了不好的影响;第五、六段则指出,国际学生对于英国大学非常重要,学校通常会有吸引他们的策略;最后一段则说明了政府将采取的解决措施。





词汇注释


herd /hɜːd/ v. 使集在一起,把…赶在一起

languish /ˈlæŋgwɪʃ/ v. 焦思,因渴望而苦恼

loom /luːm/ v. 隐隐呈现;逼近

credential /krɪˈdenʃəl/ n. 证明书,证件

deter /dɪˈtɜː/ v. 阻止;威慑

backlog /ˈbæklɒg/ n. 积压的工作

subcontinent /sʌbˈkɒntɪnənt/ n. 次大陆

outright /ˈaʊtˈraɪt/ adj. 彻底的;无保留的;直率的

logjam /ˈlɒgdʒæm/ n. 阻塞;僵局

cosmopolitan /ˌkɒzməˈpɒlɪtən/ adj. 世界性的

clientele /ˌklaɪənˈtel/ n. 顾客,客户

expedite /ˈekspɪdaɪt/ v. 加快;促进

intervention /ˌɪntəˈvenʃən/ n. 干涉;介入

plump /plʌmp/ v. 只投票选一方





难句突破


This year, even though a weak pound makes British universities a cheap option, some have seen the number of new students from outside the European Union fall by a fifth because of difficulties in getting visas.

主体句式:This year some have seen the number fall.

结构分析:本句的复杂之处在于句子中有很多定语和状语。在this year后面用了一个even though引导的状语从句来说明前提,接着才引出主体句式。该句中宾语和宾语补足语之间相隔一定的距离,中间的of new students from outside the European Union是the number的定语,用来说明其特征。宾语补足语fall后面跟了两个状语,分别是:by a fifth,说明fall的程度;because of difficulties in getting visas,说明原因。

句子译文:今年,尽管英镑疲软使英国学费相对较低,一些大学的非欧盟国家新生人数仍旧因为签证困难而下跌了五分之一。





题目分析


1. B 推理题。本题主要针对文章第一段,文章中提到“At Heathrow airport, where many foreign students enter Britain, the welcome has been less warm”,而A项说机场不那么喜欢这些国际学生,是对这句话的误读,所以该选项错误。而该段说的lucky不是因为只等六小时——事实上这个时间已经很长了,而是他们最终能够顺利通过,所以C项也不正确。文中说“如果不能在接下来的几天内拿到签证,那么他们很可能就会失去今年秋季的入学资格”(…will miss out on university places this autumn unless they receive visas in the next few days.),原文miss out on university places指的不是他们会晚到学校,而是他们会因此无法入学,所以D项不正确,B项正确。

2. C 细节题。文章第二段指出,根据新的留学生签证制度,“英国内政部要求留学生出具学业资格证书并证明有足够的资金保障,以此来防止那些意在来英国打工的人员进入”,A、B、D三个选项与此句内容一一对应。虽然文章后面提到“内政部希望这些改革措施能够将潜在的恐怖分子拒之门外”,但并没有提到要出具出生证明,况且也很难定义恐怖国家,因此C项表述不正确,故选C。

3. D 细节题。本题可以将选项与原文信息一一对应。首先文章第四段提到“这场僵局主要影响了许多富裕且受过良好教育的学生,他们都来自对英国具有战略重要性的国家”,但这并不表示英国与这些国家的关系因此受到了影响,因此A项是错的。文章第五段虽然提到国际学生的减少会影响英国大学的收入,但没有说英国政府因此就会增加补助,同时这也并不表示英国政府的财政会受到影响,因此B项和C项都不正确。而第四段还提到大学负责人担心新签证政策损害英国高等教育在海外的声誉,可见正确答案是D。

4. A 推理题。本题主要针对文章最后一段,正确答案是A,对应信息为文章最后一句话“如果这些问题得不到解决,那么可能会有更多的外国学生将选择美国或澳大利亚的大学”,由此可以推断,签证问题使外国学生被拒之门外而被迫选择其他国家的大学,从而会降低英国高等教育的竞争力。B项的错误在于,虽然内政部长艾伦·约翰逊承诺增加人手,但这并不表示一定会提高效率。C项的错误在于,留学生们转向别国的大学这一结果并不是该政策的目的,而是英国不愿意看到的结果。D项的错误在于,帮助巴基斯坦建立全国反恐机构并不是留学生签证制度的规定,而是英国政府的政策。

5. C 情感态度题。纵观全文,作者并没有直接表明自己的观点,但是我们可以发现作者在用一种非常关切的口气讨论、分析问题,对该问题没有偏见,也并没有表现出漠然或者悲观的态度,因此C是最佳选项。





参考译文


在各个大学校园,本科生们正兴高采烈地将一份份传单塞给刚入校的新生。但在外国学生抵达英国的希思罗机场,他们所受到的欢迎却并非如此热情。官员们让刚到达的学生排成单独的一列,有时得排队等六个小时才能顺利通关——而这都已经算是幸运的了。许多计划赴英留学的学生们正在家里受着煎熬,因为如果不能在接下来的几天内拿到签证,那么他们很可能就会失去今年秋季的入学资格。

自从今年五月实施新的留学生签证制度以来,各大学的麻烦接踵而至。英国内政部要求留学生出具学业资格证书并证明有足够的资金保障,以此来防止那些意在来英国打工的人员进入。同时,内政部希望这些改革措施能够将潜在的恐怖分子拒之门外。但是,它给申请人的建议却没什么用处(之后已进行了修改),而且许多签证中心的工作人员也并未受过良好的培训。

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