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1、2022上海GRE考试真题卷本卷共分为1大题25小题,作答时间为180分钟,总分100分,60分及格。一、单项选择题(共25题,每题2分。每题的备选项中,只有一个最符合题意) 1.SPEAK : DRAWL:Aeat : sipBrun : canterClament : sighDgain : coverE(E) look: glance 2.LIZARD : REPTILE:Adaisy : daffodilBprofessor : academyCofficer : armyDviolet : flowerE(E) chlorine : alcohol 3.CHURCH: SANCTUA
2、RY :Alounge: hotelBporch : mansionCstage : curtainDcavern : mountainE(E) house : boudoir 4.In mentioning dreams, fantasies, and actions (line 12) the author supports the claim that ego-centered conscious is not really self-sufficient (lines 14-15) by implying which of the followingADreams, fantasies
3、 and actions tend to be hereditary phenomenon, suggesting that ones culture plays the most primary role in shaping ones consciousness.BCertain elements of consciousness deserve repression of which the consciousness is not sufficiently capable.COther elements of consciousness, such as cultural archet
4、ypes, affect the human experience than those of which human beings are directly aware.DMost dreams, fantasies and actions occur peripherally to the center of the ego.E(E) The symbolic archetypes in the collective unconscious tend to play a greater role than the personal unconscious in shaping the eg
5、o. 5.Which of the following can be inferred concerning Freuds psychological viewsAFreud tended to be critical of all psychologists who did not support his view of the libido as the sexual drive of fulfillment.BFreud tended to ascribe little importance to the hypothetical elan vital, even questioning
6、 its existence.CFreud tended to restrict the notion of the libido to matters of human sexuality, ignoring its broader role as a life drive.DFreud tended to view the libido as a mechanism of the conscious, but not of the collective or personal unconscious.E(E) Freud failed to acknowledge the role of
7、the conflicting desires of the individual in shaping the human libido. 6.According to the passage, the collective unconscious and the personal and unconscious have in common which of the followingABoth the collective unconscious and the personal unconscious are hereditary, deriving from common cultu
8、ral experiences, including symbolic archetypes.BBoth the collective unconscious and the personal unconscious share an extricable link with the conscious that should be made evident.CBoth the collective unconscious and the personal unconscious contain repressed experiences.DBoth the collective uncons
9、cious and the personal unconscious share a position at the center of the human ego.E(E) Both the collective unconscious and the personal unconscious include dreams, fantasies, and actions that should be made conscious. 7.Which of the following best describes the passageAIt discusses an apparent inco
10、nsistency in theoretical discourse and suggests a reason for it.BIt outlines a sequence of theoretical shifts in psychology.CIt shows why a formerly held view is inaccurate.DIt evaluates an explanation of a psychological phenomenon and finally rejects that explanation.E(E) It places into context the
11、 discursive origins of a theory and elaborates upon it. 8.According to the passage, the case of the Penan foragers cultivation of the sago palm fails to indicate thatAa co-evolutionary argument is unnecessary to establishing that rain-forest adaptation is the effect of human interventionBplant-speci
12、es inimical to carbohydrate-rich species would continue to thrive without the practices of foraging peoplesCthe thinning effect produced by the Penans foraging practice is responsible for the sago palms long-term survivalDthe Penan have justification for abandoning the exploitation of sago palms or
13、relocating to more carbohydrate-rich areasE(E) rain forests may evolve as a result of the quantity and availability of extant carbohydrate-rich species 9.The tone of the author of the passage in describing theories of co-evolution can best be described as one ofAappreciation of the theorys ability t
14、o explain the disappearance of certain carbohydrate-rich plant speciesBadmiration for the theorys refutation of the seed-disbursal theory of the disappearance of the carbohydrate-rich plant speciesCskepticism toward the theorys ability to account for the evolution of trade relations between agricult
15、uralists and foragersDannoyance at the theorys failure to account for such phenomenon as the success of the sago palmE(E) concern that the theory may be insufficient to discredit the Headland Hypothesis 10.The author of the passage uses the second paragraph toAsummarize the main point of the refutat
16、ion to the argument discussed in the passageBexplain why the hypothesis under criticism in the passage has been disparaged by criticsCsuggest an alternate explanation that undermines the premises of the hypothesis critiqued in the passageDintroduce a hypothesis that will be discussed in detail later
17、 in the passageE(E) present evidence that is intended to qualify the critique of the hypothesis being discussed in the passage 11.The passage is primarily concerned with discussingAhow anthropologists ought to explain the origins of the trade relationship between foragers and agriculturalistsBwhy it
18、 is difficult to measure the amount of time necessary for the disappearance of carbohydrate-rich plant species in the rain forestCwhy a particular account of the unavailability of carbohydrates to rain forest foragers is inaccurateDwhat ought to be included in any account of the effects of forager p
19、eoples on rain forest ecologyE(E) what data are most relevant for an accurate account of the relations between rain forest foragers and agriculturalists 12.The information in the passage suggests that advocates of the Headland Hypothesis discussed in the passage made which of the following errorsAFa
20、iling to recognize the reciprocal relationship between foraging practices and the availability of carbohydrate-rich speciesBAttributing the trade relations between agriculturalists and foragers to the differences in the nutritional qualities of various rain forest food productsCOveremphasizing the i
21、mportance of carbohydrate-rich species to the diet of rain forest foragersDInterpreting changes in rain-forest composition to the willingness of agriculturalists to trade with foragersE(E) Failing to observe the role of seed-disbursal in the ecological success of the sago palm 13.The author of the p
22、assage mentions the professional primitive role (line 15) assumed by foragers in their relationships with agriculturalists primarily in order toAinform the reader of the potential cause of certain changes in rain forest compositionBsuggest that foragers may have developed agricultural practices, the
23、n abandoned them in order to focus on more specialized food-gathering practicesCexplain why certain food gathering practices may be less efficient sources of carbohydrates than othersDintroduce new evidence for the interdependence between agriculturalists and foragers in the rain forest economyE(E)
24、suggest that certain rain forest food products are healthier than others, though more difficult to obtain through foraging 14.The author of the passage mentions which of the following as posing an alternative to the Headland HypothesisARain forests have always possessed insufficient quantities of ca
25、rbohydrate-rich resources to support foragers without the aid of agriculturalists.BThe difficulty of raising carbohydrate-rich plant species in certain areas of the rain forest may have led to the arrest of those species co-evolution.CTrade relationships between agriculturalists and foragers may hav
26、e been the cause of the disappearance of certain carbohydrate-rich plant species, not vice-versa.DForagers may have been willing to trade carbohydrate-rich plants in exchange for the more nutritious food products of agriculturalists.E(E) Environmental changes in rain forest composition may have led
27、to the loss of certain foraging techniques. 15.CACOPHONOUS:AaffordableBdulcetCfickleDhorrificE(E) literate 16.ESCHEW:AutilizeBdenounceCendowDsustainE(E) search for 17.FLEDGLING:Aalert audienceBchampionCreticent assistantDseasoned practitionerE(E) newly transformed person 18.OBDURATE:AestrangedBnosta
28、lgicChesitantDadaptableE(E) fanciful 19.ABERRANT:AaccurateBalluringCprognosticDpleasurableE(E) standard 20.FORESTALL:AextendBprecipitateCvacillateDproclaimE(E) stabilize 21.RUE:AvigorBcontentmentCgenuinenessDmaliceE(E) compassion 22.TENDENTIOUS:AinclinedBextremely industriousCstrongly hinderedDirrel
29、evantE(E) impartial 23.UBIQUITOUS:AarchaicBundisputedCuniqueDaverageE(E) homogenous 24.LIST:AoscillateBslipCbe horizontalDbe verticalE(E) be inverted 25.BELIE:ApreventBexhibitCregulateDaverE(E) inflate第14页 共14页第 14 页 共 14 页第 14 页 共 14 页第 14 页 共 14 页第 14 页 共 14 页第 14 页 共 14 页第 14 页 共 14 页第 14 页 共 14 页第 14 页 共 14 页第 14 页 共 14 页第 14 页 共 14 页