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高级英语
历年真题
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那么,选择一种策略来应对它是年轻人必须做出的第一个决定,而且通 常也是他们一生中最重要的决定。
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当他说到所有那些反对政府、反对议会的话时,他变得越来越丑陋、越 来越怨恨,我曾为他担惊受怕。
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他们没有以自己的标准来评判他:他属于一个不可理解的阶层,他们起 初甚至没有把怯懦这一概念与他的行为联系起来。
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事实上,当任务巨大、紧急、有些令人恐惧,并且会受到许多人注意时, 我是享受我的工作的。
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她把车停在市中心的一个车库里。一切都在为这一刻做准备。她没有把 花放在车里,而是放在她心里。现在她将会弄清楚(儿子)是死是活。两 种结果她都能忍受。她没想过新闻短片或许不在那里。
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虚荣心的麻烦之一是,它随着滋养环境而增长。你被谈论得越多,你就 越希望被谈论。一个被允许阅读有关他审判报道的已定罪的杀人犯,如果他发现某家报纸对此报道不足,会感到气愤。他在其他报纸上读到的 关于自己的消息越多,对那些报道不充分的报纸就越气愤。政治家和文人也是如此。
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What do we give them in_____32_____ ?Applause and praise, of course. In one 1972 _____33_____opinion poll, more than 10 percent of the high school boys and 20 percent of the girls said their hero was a rock superstar. We _____34_____give them money. “The _____35_____way to become a millionaire these days,” says Forbes, a business _____36_____“is to become a rock 'n’ roll star. ”The need for_____37_____on euthanasia cannot be dodged for much_____38_____. In one of the world's smaller countries, mercy-killing is _____39_____ by the medical establishment and _____40_____practiced a few thousand times each year. In one of the world's biggest countries, euthanasia is condemned by the medical establishment, secretly practiced many times more often, and almost _____41_____ comes to light. In the case ofnews, this practice, in my view,results in _____42_____ communication. I _____43_____ how much of television's nightly news effort is really_____44_____ and understandable. Much of it is what has been aptly described as “machine-gunning with scraps. ” I think the technique fights _____45_____ . I think it tends to make things ultimately boring and dismissible (unless they are _____46_____by horrifying pictures) because almost anything is boring and dismissible if you know almost nothing about it. What will our own lives be like when we are old? Americans find it difficult to think about old age _____47_____they are propelled into the_____ 48_____ of it by their own aging and that of relatives and friends. Aging is the neglected_____ 49_____of the human life cycle. Though we have begun to_____50_____the socially taboo subjects of dying and death, we have leaped over that long period oftime _____51 _____ death known as old age. I agree that America can set as good a table as any nation in the world. I agree that our food is _____52_____ and that the diet of most of us is well-balanced. What America eats is _____53_____ packaged, it is usually clean and pure, it is excellently preserved. The only trouble _____54_____ it is this: year by year it grows _____55_____good to eat. It _____56_____ increasingly to the eye. But who eats with his eyes?A. questionB. accepted C. returnD. nutritiousE. examineF. coherenceG. openlyH. alsoI. magazineJ. precedingK. stepchildL. withM. accompanied N. lawsO. fastestP. lessO. midstR. appealsS. untilT. inefficientU. handsomely V. neverW. nationalX. longerY. absorbable
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What might be the consequences of an aging society?
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Be sure to the remaining Parmesan cheese over the top of the salad andsqueeze a bit of lemon juice before it is served.
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(1)ChatGPT's way with words raises questions about how humans acquire language.It has reignited a debate over the ideas of Noam Chomsky,the world's most famous linguist.(2)When Deep Blue,a chess computer,defeated Garry Kasparov,a world champion,in 1997,many gasped in fear of machines triumphing over mankind. In the intervening years,artificial intelligence has done some astonishing things,but none has managed to capture the public imagination in quite the same way. Now,though,the astonishment of the Deep Blue moment is back,because computers are employing something that humans consider their defining ability:language.(3)Or are they?Certainly,large language models (LLMs),of which the most famous is ChatGPT,produce what looks like impeccable human writing.In other words,ChatGPT is not a general artificial intelligence,an independent thinking machine.It is,in the jargon,a large language model. That means it is very good at predicting what kinds of words tend to follow which others,after being trained on a huge body of text—its developer,OpenAI,does not say exactly from where—and spotting patterns.(4)But a debate has ensued about what the machines are actually doing internally, what it is that humans,in turn,do when they speak—and,inside the academy, about the theories of the world's most famous linguist,Noam Chomsky.(5)Although Professor Chomsky's ideas have changed considerably since he rose to prominence in the 1950s,several elements have remained fairly constant. He and his followers argue that human language is different in kind (not just degree of expressiveness)from all other kinds of communication.All humanlanguages are more similar to each other than they are to,say,whale song or computer code.Professor Chomsky has frequently said a Martian visitor would conclude that all humans speak the same language,with surface variation.(6)Perhaps most notably,Chomskyan theories hold that children learn their native languages with astonishing speed and ease despite “the poverty of the stimulus":the sloppy and occasional language they hear in childhood.The only explanation for this can be that some kind of predisposition for language is built into the human brain.(7)Chomskyan ideas have dominated the linguistic field of syntax since their birth.But many linguists are strident anti-Chomskyans.And some are now seizing on the capacities of LLMs to attack Chomskyan theories anew.(8)Grammar has a hierarchical,nested structure involving units within other units. Words form phrases,which form clauses,which form sentences and so on. Chomskyan theory posits a mental operation,“Merge”,which glues smaller units together to form larger ones that can then be operated on further(and so on).In a recent New York Times op-ed,the man himself (now 94)and two co-authors said “we know”that computers do not think or use language as humans do,referring implicitly to this kind of cognition.LLMs,in effect, merely predict the next word in a string of words.(9)Yet it is hard,for several reasons,to fathom what LLMs "think".Details of the programming and training data of commercial ones like ChatGPT are proprietary. And not even the programmers know exactly what is going on inside.(10)Linguists have,however,found clever ways to test LLMs'underlying knowledge,in effect tricking them with probing tests.And indeed,LLMs seem to learn nested,hierarchical grammatical structures,even though they are exposed to only linear input,i.e.,strings of text.They can handle novel words and grasp parts of speech.Tell ChatGPT that “dax”is a verb meaning to eat a slice of pizza by folding it,and the system deploys it easily:“After a long day at work,I like to relax and dax on a slice of pizza while watching my favourite TV show."(The imitative element can be seen in “dax on”, which ChatGPT probably patterned on the likes of “chew on”or "munch on”.)(11)What about the"poverty of the stimulus?After all,GPT-3(the LLM underlying ChatGPT until the recent release of GPT-4)is estimated to be trained on about 1,000 times the data a human ten-year-old is exposed to. That leaves open the possibility that children have an inborn tendency to grammar, making them far more proficient than any LLM. In a forthcoming paper in Linguistic Inquiry,researchers claim to have trained an LLM on no more text than a human child is exposed to,finding that it can use even rare bits of grammar.But other researchers have tried to train an LLM on a database of only child-directed language (that is,of transcripts of carers speaking to children).Here LLMs fare far worse.Perhaps the brain really is built for language,as Professor Chomsky says.(12)It is difficult to judge.Both sides of the argument are marshaling LLMs to make their case.The eponymous founder of his school of linguistics has offered only a brief response.For his theories to survive this challenge,his camp will have to put up a stronger defence.What made computers stun the world again?