




版權說明:本文檔由用戶提供并上傳,收益歸屬內(nèi)容提供方,若內(nèi)容存在侵權,請進行舉報或認領
文檔簡介
全國碩士研究生入學考試英語試題及參考答案
SectionIUseofEnglish
Directions:
Readthefollowingtext.Choosethebestword(s)foreachnumberedblankandmarkA,B,C
orDonANSWERSHEET1(10points)
Thehumannoseisanunderratedtool.Humansareoftenthoughttobeinsensitivesmellers
comparedwithanimals,1thisislargelybecause,2animals,westandupright.Thismeansthat
ourrosesare3toperceivingthosesmellswhichfloatthroughtheair,4themajorityofsmells
whichsticktosurfaces.Infact5,weareextremelysensitivetosmells,6wedonotgenerally
realizeit.Ournosesarecapableof7humansmellsevenwhentheseare8tofarbelowonepart
inonemillion.
Strangely,somepeoplefindthattheycansmellonetypeofflowerbutnotanother,9others
aresensitivetothesmellsofbothflowers.Thismaybebecausesomepeopledonothavethegenes
necessarytogenerate10smel1receptorsinthenose.Thesereceptorsarethecellswhichsense
smellsandsend11tothebrain.However,ithasbeenfoundthatevenpeopleinsensitivetoa
certainsmell12cansuddenlybecomesensitivetoitwhen13toitoftenenough.
Theexplanationforinsensitivitytosmellsoomstobethatbrainfindsit14tokeepall
smellreceptorsworkingal1thetimebutcan15newreceptorsifnecessary.Thismay16explain
whywearenotusuallysensitivetoourownsmellswesimplydonotneedtobe.Wearenot17
oftheusualsmellofourownhousebutwe18newsmellswhenwevisi;someoneelse*s.Thebrain
findsitbesttokeepsmellreceptors19forunfamiliarandemergencysignals20thesmellof
smoke,whichmightindicatethedangeroffire.
1.[A]although[Bias[C]but[D]while
2.[A]above[B]uniike[C]excluding[D]besides
3.[A]limited[B]committed[C]dedicated[D]confined
4.[A]catching[B]ignoring[C]missing[D]tracking
5.[A]anyway[B]though[C]instead[D]therefore
6.[A]evenif[B]ifonly[C]onlyif[D]asif
7.[A]distinguishing[B]discovering[C]determining[D]detecting
8.[A]diluted[Bldissolved[C]determining[D]diffused
9.[A]when[B]since[C]for[D]whereas
10.[A]unusual[B]particular[C]unique[D]typical
11.[A]signs[B]stimuli[C]messages[D]impulses
12.[A]atfirst[B]atall[C]a:larg[D]attimes
13.[A]subjected[B]left[C]drawn[D]exposed
14.[A]ineffective[B]incompetent[C]inefficient[D]insufficient
15.[A]introduce[B]summon[C]trigger[D]create
16.[A]still[B]also[C]otherwise[D]nevertheless
17.[A]sure[Blsick[C]aware'D]tired
18.[A]tolerate[B]repel[C]neglect[D]notice
19.[Alavailabe[Blreliable[C]identifiable[D]suitable
20.[A]similarto[B]suchas[C]alongwith[D]asidefrom
SectionIIReadingComprehension
PartA
Directions:
Readthefollowingfourtexts.AnswerthequestionsbeloweachtextbychoosingA,B,Cor
D.MarkyouranswersonANSWERSHEET1(40points)
Text1
Everybodylovesafatpayrise.Yetpleasureatyourowncanvanishifyoulearnthatacolleague
hasbeengivenabiggerone.Indeed,ifhehasareputationforslacking,youmightevenbeoutraged.
Suchbehaviourisregardedas“alltoohuman°,withtheunderlyingassumptionthatotheranimals
wouldnotbecapableofthisfinelydevelopedsenseofgrievance.ButastudybySarahBrosnan
andFransdeWaalofEmoryUniversityinAtlanta,Georgia,whichhasjustbeenpublishedinNature,
suggeststhatitalltoomonkey,aswell.
Theresearchersstudiedthebehaviouroffemalebrowncapuchinmonkeys.Theylookcute.They
aregood-natured,co-operativecreatures,andtheysharetheirfoodtardily.Aboveall,liketheir
femalehumancounterparts,theytendtopaymuchcloserattentiontothevalueofugoodsand
serviceswthanmales.SuchcharacteristicsmakethemperfectcandidatesforDr.Brosnan*sand
Dr.cewaal?s;study.Theresearchersspenttwoyearsteachingtheirmonkeystoexchangetokens
forfood.Normally,themonkeyswerehappyenoughtoexchangepiecesofrockforslicesofcucumber.
However,whentwomonkeyswereplacedinseparatebutadjoiningchambers,sothateachcould
observewhattheotherwasgettinginreturnforitsrock,theirbecamemarkedlydifferent.
Intheworldofcapuchinsgrapesareluxurygoods(andmuchpreferabletocucumbers)Sowhen
onemonkeywashandedagrapeinexchangeforhertoken,thesecondwasreluctanttohandhers
overforamerepieceofcucumber.Andifonereceivedagrapewithouthavingtoprovidehertoken
inexchangeatall,theothereithertossedherowntokenattheresearcheroroutofthechamber,
orrefusedto;acceptthesliceofcucumberIndeed,themerepresenceofagrapeintheother
chamber(withoutanactualmonkeytoeatit)wasenoughtoreduceresentmentinafemalecapuchin.
Theresearchessuggestthatcapuchinmonkeys,likehumans,areguidedbysocialemotions,
inthewild,theyareaco-operative,grouplivingspecies,Suchco-operationislikelytobestable
onlywheneachanimalfeelsitisnotbeingcheated.Feelingsofrighteousindignation,itseems,
arenotthepreserveofpeoplealone,Refusingalesserrewardcompletelymakesthesefeelings
abundantlycleartoothermembersofthegroup.However,whethersuchasenseoffairnessevolved
independentlyincapuchinsandhumans,orwhetheritstemsformthecommonancestorthatthe
specieshad35millionyearsago,is,asyet,anunansweredquestion.
21.Intheopeningparagraph,theauthorintroduceshistopicby
A.posingacontrast.
B.justifyinganassumption.
C.makingacomparison.
D.explainingaphenomenon.
22.Thestatement“itisalltoomonkey”(Lastline,paragraph1)impliesthat
A.monkeysarealsooutragedbyslackrivals.
B.resentingunfairnessisalsomonkeys1nature.
C.monkeys,likehumans,tendtobejealousofeachother.
D.noanimalsotherthanmonkeyscandevelopsuchemotions.
23.Femalecapuchinmonkeyswerechosenfortheresearchmostprobablybecausetheyare
A.moreinclinedtoweighwhat二heyget.
B.attentivetoresearchers*instructions.
C.niceinbothappearanceandTemperament.
D.moregenerousthantheirmalecompanions
24.Dr.BrosnanandDr.deWaalhaveeventuallyfoundintheirstudythatthemonkeys
A.prefergrapestocucumbers.
B.canbetaughttoexchangethings.
C.willnotbeco-operativeiffeelingcheated.
D.areunhappywhenseparatedfromothers.
25.Whatcanweinferfromthelastparagraph?
A.Monkeyscanbetrainedtodevelopsocialemotions.
B.Humanindignationevolvedfromanuncertainsource.
C.Animalsusuallyshowtheirfeelingsopenlyashumansdo.
D.Cooperationamongmonkeysremainsstableonlyinthewild.
Text2
Doyourememberallthoseyearswhenscientistsarguedthatsmokingwouldkillusbutthe
doubtersinsistedthatwedidn'tknowforsure?Thattheevidencewasinconclusive,thescience
uncertain?Thattheantismokinglobbywasouttodestroyourwayoflifeandthegovernmentshould
stayoutoftheway?LotsofAmericansboughtthatnonsense,andoverthreedecades,some10million
smokerswenttoearlygraves.
Thereareupsettingparallelstoday,asscientistsinonewaveafteranothertrytoawaken
ustothegrowingthreatofglobalwarming.ThelatestwasapanelfromtheNationalAcademyof
Sciences,enlistedbytheWhiteHouse,totellusthattheEarth*satmosphereisdefinitelywarming
andthattheproblemislargelyman-made.Theclearmessageisthatweshouldgetmovingtoprotect
ourselves.ThepresidentoftheNationalAcademy,BruceAlberts,addedthiskeypointintepreface
tothepanel'srepor“ScienceneverhalltheanswersButsciencedoesprovideuswiththebest
availableguidetothefuture,anditiscriticalthatoutnationandtheworldbaseimportant
policiesonthebestjudgmentsthatsciencecanprovideconcerningthefutureconsequencesof
presentactions.w
Justasonsmokingvoicesnowcomefrommanyquartersinsistingthatthescienceaboutglobal
warmingisincomplete,thatit*sOktokeeppouringfumesintotheairuntilweknowforsure,
thisisadangerousgame:bythe100percentoftheevidenceisin,itmaybetoolate.Withthe
risksobviousandgrowing,apruden:peoplewouldtakeoutaninsurancepolicynow.
Fortunately,theWhiteHouseisstartingtopayattention.Butit'sobviousthatamajority
ofthepresident'sadvisersstilldon'ttakeglobalwarmingseriously.Insteadofaplanofaction,
theycontinuetopressformoreresearch-aclassiccaseofaparalysisbyanalysisw.
Toserveasresponsiblestewardsoftheplanet,wemustpressforwardondeeperatmospheric
andoceanicresearchButresearchaloneisinadequate.IftheAdministrationwon*ttakethe
legislativeinitiative,CongressshouldhelptobeginfashioningconservationmeasuresAbill
byDemocraticSenatorRobertByrdofWestVirginia,whichwouldofferfinancialincentivesfor
privateindustryisapromisingstartManyseethatthecountryisgettingreadytobuildlots
ofnewpowerplantstomeetourenergyneeds.Ifwcareevergoingtoprotecttheatmosphere,
itiscrucialthatthosenewplantsbeenvironmentallysound.
26.Anargumentmadebysupportersofsmokingwasthat
A.therewasnoscientificevidenceofthecorrelationbetweensmokinganddeath.
B.thenumberofearlydeathso:smokersinthepastdecadeswasinsignificant.
C.peoplehadthefreedomtochoosetheirownwayoflife.
D.antismokingpeoplewereusuallytalkingnonsense.
27.AccordingtoBruceAlberts,sciencecanserveas
A.aprotector.
B.ajudge.
C.acritic.
D.aguide.
28.Whatdoestheauthormeanby“paralysisbyanalysis”(Lastline,paragraph4)
A.Endlessstudieskillaction.
B.Carefulinvestigationrevealstruth.
C.prudentplanninghinders.
D.Extensiveresearchhelpsdecision-making.
29.Accordingtotheauthor,whatshouldtheAdministrationdoabout
A.Offeraidtobuildcleanerpowerplants.
B.Raisepublicawarenessofconservation.
C.Pressforfurtherscientificresearch.
D.Takesomelegislativemeasures.
30.Theauthorassociatestheissueofglobalwarmingwiththatofsmokingbecause
A.theybothsufferedfromthegovernment*snegligence.
B.alessonfromthelatterisapplicabletotheformer.
C.theoutcomeofthelatteraggravatestheformer.
D.bothofthemhaveturnedfrombadtoworse.
Text3
Ofal1thecomponentsofagoodlight'ssleep,dreamsseemtobeleastwithinourcontrol.
Indreams,awindowopensintoaworldwherelogicissuspendedanddeadpeoplespeak.Acentury
ago,Freudformulatedhisrevolutionarytheorythatdreamswerethedisguisedshadowsofour
unconsciousdesiresandrears,bythelate1970s.neurologistshadswitchedtothinkingofthem
asjust“mentalnoise“therandombyproductsoftheneural-repairworkthatgoesonduringsleep.
Nowresearcherssuspectthatdreamsarepartofthemind'semotionalthermostat,regulatingmoods
whilethebrainis“offTine“Andoneleadingauthoritysaysthattheseintenselypowerfulmental
eventscanbenotonlyharnessedbutactuallybroughtunderconsciouscontrol,tohelpussleep
andfeelbetter,"It'syourdream“saysRosalindCartwright,chairofpsychologyatChicago*s
MedicalCenter."Ifyoudon,tlikeit,changeit.”
Evidencefrombrainimagingsupportsthisview.ThebrainisasactiveduringREM(rapideye
movement)sleep-whenmostvividdreamsoccur-asitiswhenfullyawake,saysDr,EricNofzinger
attheUniversityofPittsburgh.Butnotallpartsofthebrainareequallyinvolved,thelimbic
system(theemotionalbrainw)isespeciallyactive,whiletheprefrontalcortex(thecenter
ofintellectandreasoning)isrelativelyquiet."Wewakeupfromdreamshappyofdepressed,and
thosefeelingscanstaywithusallday“saysStanfordsleepresearcherDr,WilliamDement.
Andthisprocessneednotbelefttotheunconscious.Cartwrightbelievesonecanexercise
consciouscontroloverrecurringbaddreamsAssoonasyouawaken,identifywhatisupsetting
aboutthedream.Visualizehowyouwouldlikeittoendinstead,thenexttimeisoccurs,try
towakeupjustenoughtocontrolitscourse.Withmuchpracticepeoplecanlearnto,literally,
doitintheirsleep.
Attheendoftheday,there'sprobablylittlereasontopayattentiontoourdreamsatall
unlesstheykeepusfromsleepingof“wewakeuinapanic,“CartwrightsaysTerrorism,economic
uncertaintiesandgeneralfeelingsofinsecurityhaveincreasedpeople*sanxiety.Thosesuffering
frompersistentnightmaresshouldseekhelpfromatherapistFortherestofus,thebrainhas
itswaysofworkingthroughbadfeelings.Sleep-orratherdream-onitandyou,11feelbetterin
themorning.
31.Researchershavecometobelievethatdreams
A.canbemodifiedintheircourses.
B.aresusceptibletoemotionalchanges.
C.reflectourinnermostdesiresandfears.
D.arearandomoutcomeofneuralrepairs.
32.Byreferringtothelimbicsystem,theauthorintendstoshow
A.itsfunctioninourdreams.
B.themechanismofREMsleep.
C.therelationofdreamstoemotions.
D.itsdifferencefromtheprefrontalcortex.
33.Thenegativefeelingsgeneratedduringthedaytendto
A.aggravateinourunconsciousmind.
B.developintohappydreams.
C.persisttillthetimewefallasleep.
D.showupindreamsearlyatnight.
34.Cartwrightseemstosuggest二hat
A.wakingupintimeisessentialtotheriddingofbaddreams.
B.visualizingbaddreamshelpsbringthemundercontroll.
C.dreamsshouldbelefttotheirnaturalprogression.
D.dreamingmaynotentirelybelongtotheunconscious.
35.WhatadvicemightCartwrightgivetothosewhosometimeshavehaddreams?
A.leadyourlifeasusual.
B.Seekprofessionalhelp.
C.Exerciseconsciouscontrol.
D.Avoidanxietyinthedaytime.
Text4
Americannolongerexpectpublicfigures,whetherinspeechorinwriting,tocommandthe
English1anguagewithskillandgift.Nordotheyaspiretosuchcommandthemselves.Inhislatest
book,DoingOurOwnThing.TheDegradationoflanguageandMusicandwhyweshouldlike,care,
JohnMcWhorter,alinguistandcontroversialistofmixedliberalandconservativeviews,sees
thetriumphof1960scounter-cultureasresponsibleforthedeclineofformalEnglish.
Butthecultoftheauthenticandthepersonal,“doingourownthing”,hasspeltthedeath
offcrmalspeech,writing,poetryancmusic.Whileeventhemodestlyeducatedsoughtanelevated
tonewhentheyputpentopaperbeforethe1960s,eventhemostwellregardedwritingsincethen
hassoughttocapturespokenEnglishonthepage.Equally,inpoetry,thehighlypersonal,
performativegenreistheonlyformthatcouldclaimrealliveliness.Inbothoralandwritten
English,talkingistriumphingoverspeaking,spontaneityovercraft.
Illustratedwithanentertainingarrayofexamplesfrombothhighandlowculture,thetrend
thatMr.McWhorterdocumentsisunmistakable.Butitislessclear,totakethequestionofhis
subtitle,whyweshould,likecare.Asalinguist,heacknowledgesthatallvarietiesofhuman
language,includingnon-standardoneslikeBlackEnglish,canbepowerfullyexpressive-there
existsnolanguageordialectintheworldthatcannotconveycomplexideasHeisnotarguing,
asmanydo,thatwecannolongerthinkstraightbecausewedonottalkproper.
Russianshaveadeeplovefortheirownlanguageandcarrylargechunksofmemorizedpoetry
intheirheads,whileItalianpoliticianstendtoelaboratespeechthatwouldseemold-fashioned
tomostEnglish-speakers.Mr.McWhorteracknowledgesthatformallanguageisnotstrictly
necessary,andproposesnoradicaleducationreforms-heisreallygrievingoverthelossof
somethingbeautifulmorethanuseful.WenowtakeourEnglish“onpaperplatesinsteadofchina”.
Ashame,perhaps,butprobablyaninevitableone.
36.AccordingtoMeWhorter,thedeclineofformalEnglish
A.isinevitableinradicaleducationreforms.
B.isbutalltoonaturalinlanguagedevelopment.
C.hascausedthecontroversyoverthecounter-culture.
D.broughtaboutchangesinpublicattitudesinthe1960s.
37.Theword“talking”(Linge6,paragraphs)denotes
A.modesty.
B.personality.
C.liveliness.
D.informality.
38.Towhichofthefollowings:atemcntswouldMeWhortermostlikelyagree?
A.Logicalthinkingisnotnecessarilyrelatedtothewaywetalk.
B.BlackEnglishcanbemoreexpressivethanstandardEnglish.
C.Non-standardvarietiesofhumanlanguagearejustasentertaining.
D.Ofallthevarieties,standardEnglishCanbestconveycomplexideas.
39.ThedescriptionofRussians*loveofmemorizingpoetryshowstheauthor's
A.interestintheirlanguage.
B.appreciationoftheirefforts.
C.admirationfortheirmemory.
D.contemptfortheirold-fashionedness.
40.Accordingtothelastparagraph,upaperplateswisto“china”as
A.wtemporaryMisto“permanent”.
B.”radical"isto"conservative”.
C.”functional"isto"artistic".
D.”humble"isto"noble".
PartB
Directions:
Inthefollowingtext,somesentenceshaveremoved.ForQuestions41-45,choosethemost
suitableonefromthelistA-Gtofitintoofthenumberedblanktherearetwoextrachoices,
whichdonotfitinanyofthegaps.Markyouranswerson
ANSWERSHEET1.(10points)
Canada'spremiers(theleadersofprovincialgovernments),iftheyhaveanybreathleft
aftercomplainingaboutOttawaattheirlateJulyannualmeeting,mightspareamomenttodo
something,toreducehealth-carecosts.
They'reallgroaningaboutsoaringhealthbudgets,thefastest-growingcomponentofwhich
arepharmaceuticalcosts.
41.
Whattodo?BoththeRomanowcommissionandtheKirbycommitteeonhealthcare-tosaynothing
ofreportsfromotherexpertsrecommendedthecreationofanationaldrugagency.Insteadofeach
provincehavingitsownlistofapproveddrugs,bureaucracy,proceduresandlimitedbargaining
power,allwouldpoolresources,workwithOttawa,andcreateanationalinstitution.
42.
But“national”doesn,thavetomeanthat."National“couldmeaninterprovincial-provinces
combiningeffortstocreateonebody.
Eitherway,onebenefitofa“national“organizationwouldbetonegotiatebetterprices,
ifpossible,withdrugmanufacturers.Insteadofhavingoneprovince-oraseriesofhospitals
withinaprovince-negotiateapriceforagivendrugontheprovinciallist,thenationalagency
wouldnegotiateonbehalfofallprovinces.
Ratherthan,say,Quebec,negotiatingonbehalfofsevenmillionpeople,thenationalagency
wouldnegotiateonbehalf31millionpeople.Basiceconomicssuggeststhegreaterthepotential
consumers,thehigherthelikelihoodofabetterprice.
43.
Asmallstephasbeentakeninthedirectionofanationalagencywiththecreationofthe
CanadianCo-ordinatingOfficeforHealthTechnologyAssessment,fundeebyOttawaandtheprovinces.
Underit,aCommonDrugReviewrecommendstoprovinciallistswhichnewdrugsshouldbeincluded,
predictablyandregrettablyQuebecrefusedtojoin.
Afewpremiersaresuspiciousofanyfederal-provincialdeal-making.They(particularly
QuebecandAlberta)justwantOttawatoforkoveradditionalbillionswithfew,ifany,strings
attached.That*sonereasonwhytheideaofanationalisthasn5tgoneanywherewhiledrugcosts
keeprisingfast.
44.|
PremierslovetoquoteMr.Romanow'sreportselectively,especiallythepartsaboutmore
federalmoneyperhapstheyshouldreadwhathehadtosayaboutdrugs.
“Anationaldrugagencywouldprovidegovernmentsmoreinfluenceonpharmaceuticalcompanies
inordertoconstraintheever-increasingcostofdrugs.”
45.
SowhenthepremiersgatherinNiagaraFallstoassembletheirusualcomplaintlist,they
shouldalsogetcrackingaboutsomethingintheirjurisdictionthatwou1(1helptheirbudgetsand
patients.
A.Quebec1sresistancetoanationalagencyisprovincialistideology.Oneofthrstadvocates
fornationallistwasaresearcheratLavalUniversity.Quebec*sDrugInsuranceFundhasseen
itscostsskyrocketwithannualincreasesfrom14.3percentto26.8percent!
B.OrtheycouldreadMr.Kirby'sreport:”thesubstantialbuyingpowerofsuchanagency
wouldstrengthenthepublicprescription-druginsurancedanstonegotiatethelowestpossible
purchasepricesfromdrugcompanies”
C.Whatdoes“national"mean?RoyRomanowandSenatorMichaelKirbyrecommendeda
federal-provincia1bodymuchliketherecentlycreatedNationalHealthCouncil.
D.Theproblemissimpleandstark:health-carecostshavebeen,are,andwillcontinueto
increasefasterthangovernmentrevenues.
E.AccordingtotheCanadianInstituteforHealthInformation,prescriptiondrugcostshave
risensince1997attwicetherateofoverallhealth-carespending.Partoftheincreasecomes
fromdrugsbeingusedtoreplaceotherkindsoftreatmentspartofitarisesfromnewdrugscosting
morethanolderkinds.Partofitishigherprices.
F.So,iftheprovinceswanttorunthehealth-careshow,theyshouldprovetheycanrunit,
startingwithaninterprovincialhealthlistthatwouldendduplication,saveadministrativecosts,
preventoneprovincefrombeingplayedoffagainstanother,andbargainforbetterdrugprices.
G.Ofcoursethepharmaceuticalcompanieswillscream.Theylikedividedbuyers,theycan
lobbybetterthatway.Theycanusethethreatofremovingjobsfromoneprovincetoanother.
Theycanhopethat,ifoneprovinceincludesadrugonits,listthepressurewillcauseothers
toincludeitontheirs.Theywouldr?tlikeanationalagencyagency,butself-interestwould
leadthemtodealwithit.
PartC
Directions:
ReadthefollowingtextcarefullyandthentranslatetheunderlinedsegmentsintoChinese.
YourtranslationshouldbewrittenclearlyonANSWERSHEET2.(lOpoints)
Itisnoteasytotalkabouttheroleofthemassmediainthisoverwhelminglysignificant
phaseinEuropeanhistory.Historyandnewsbecomeconfused,andone'simpressionstendtobe
amixtureofskepticismandoptimism.(46)Televisionisoneofthemeansbywhichthesefeelings
arecreatedandconveyed-andperhapsneverbeforehasitservedtomuchtoconnectdifferent
peoplesandnationsasistherecenteventsinEurope.TheEuropethatisnowformingcannotbe
anythingotherthanitspeoples,theirculturesandnationalidentities.Withthisinmindwe
canbegintoanalyzetheEuropeantelevisionscene.(47)InEurope,cseIssvhorninu11i-media
groupshnvebeenincreasinglysuccess「ulgroupswhichbringlogelhertelevision,radionewspapers,
magazinesandpublishinghousesthatworkinrelationtoon。another.OneItalianexamplewould
betheBerlusconigroupwhileabroadMaxwellandMurdochcometomind.
Clearly,onlythebiggestandmostflexibletelevisioncompaniesaregoingtobeableto
competecompleteinsucharichandhotly-contestedmarket.(48)Thisalonedemonstratesthat
th。televisionbusinessisnotaneasyworldtosurviveinafactunderlinedbystatisticsthat
showthatoutofeightyEuropeantelevisionnetworksnolessthan50%tookalossin1989.
Moreover,theintegrationoftheEuropean
溫馨提示
- 1. 本站所有資源如無特殊說明,都需要本地電腦安裝OFFICE2007和PDF閱讀器。圖紙軟件為CAD,CAXA,PROE,UG,SolidWorks等.壓縮文件請下載最新的WinRAR軟件解壓。
- 2. 本站的文檔不包含任何第三方提供的附件圖紙等,如果需要附件,請聯(lián)系上傳者。文件的所有權益歸上傳用戶所有。
- 3. 本站RAR壓縮包中若帶圖紙,網(wǎng)頁內(nèi)容里面會有圖紙預覽,若沒有圖紙預覽就沒有圖紙。
- 4. 未經(jīng)權益所有人同意不得將文件中的內(nèi)容挪作商業(yè)或盈利用途。
- 5. 人人文庫網(wǎng)僅提供信息存儲空間,僅對用戶上傳內(nèi)容的表現(xiàn)方式做保護處理,對用戶上傳分享的文檔內(nèi)容本身不做任何修改或編輯,并不能對任何下載內(nèi)容負責。
- 6. 下載文件中如有侵權或不適當內(nèi)容,請與我們聯(lián)系,我們立即糾正。
- 7. 本站不保證下載資源的準確性、安全性和完整性, 同時也不承擔用戶因使用這些下載資源對自己和他人造成任何形式的傷害或損失。
最新文檔
- 云南省監(jiān)理聘用合同范本
- 北碚區(qū)運輸合同范本
- 興業(yè)快遞轉讓合同范本
- 北京入職合同范本
- 農(nóng)資農(nóng)藥購銷合同范本
- 農(nóng)莊合作期間轉讓合同范本
- 公司雇傭個人合同范本
- 出貨貨期合同范本
- 價稅分開合同范本
- 化妝品經(jīng)營合同范本
- PEP六年級上冊英語unit1
- 接納與承諾(ACT)療法課件
- 裝配式混凝土建筑技術標準
- 房地產(chǎn)公司銷售管理部賞罰制度
- 《方位介詞介紹》課件
- 甲狀腺術后出血搶救流程
- 個人購買家具合同
- 國際救生設備規(guī)則
- 第三方檢查應對措施方案
- 2020年財產(chǎn)保險公司部門職責和崗位說明書
- 抽水臺班記錄表
評論
0/150
提交評論