大三了,我是英语专业的,想知道专八、雅思和托福...

发布时间:2021-01-01


大三了,我是英语专业的,想知道专八、雅思和托福的难易程度是怎样的?


最佳答案

关于专八,雅思,托福的难易程度我们可以从以下几点来分析:

一、词汇量

1、专八词汇量10000-12000

2、雅思/托福词汇量8000-15000 按照以往的考试词汇量要求来看,对词汇量要求最大的是托福,其次是专八,然后雅思。所以就词汇量而言,专八介于雅思跟托福之间。

二、从使用方面

1、英语专业八级考试是由高等学校外语专业教学指导委员会主办的(非教育部主办),只有英语专业的学生有资格参加考试,其他专业学生均无报考资格。而且专八的证书是一直有效的,不会过期。

2、如果你要出国留学的话,就要要考托福、雅思,这些成绩单有时间限制。

三、从内容方面

1、英语专业八级是英语专业的学生参加的考试,考试中除了基础英语以外还会有部分英美文学和英语语言学,英语国家文化的内容。

2、想出国的话才会考虑考雅思或者托福,这两者比起来雅思更注重技巧性,稍微简单一些,托福相对难一些。


下面小编为大家准备了 专四专八考试 的相关考题,供大家学习参考。

Which of the following is NOT among the reasons that India is creating a secondary sanctuary for the Asiatic lions?

A.Too many of them in the present sanctuary.

B.Possible outbreak of disease.

C.Clashing with people.

D.Food shortage.

正确答案:D

【7】

正确答案:place
place

During the first half of the seventeenth century, when the nations of Europe were quarreling over who owned the New World, the Dutch and the Swedes founded competing villages ten miles apart on the Delaware River. Not long afterward, the English took over both places and gave them new names, New Castle and Wilmington.

For a century and a half the two villages grew rapidly, but gradually Wilmington gained all the advantages. It was a little closer to Philadelphia, so when new textile mills opened, they opened in Wilmington, not in New Castle. There was plenty of water power from rivers and creeks at Wilmington, so when young Irenee DuPont chose a place for his gunpowder mill, it was Wilmington he chose, not New Castle. Wilmington became a town and then a city —a rather important city, much the largest in Delaware. And New Castle, bypassed by the highways and waterways that made Wilmington prosperous, slept ten miles south on the Delaware River. No two villages with such similar pasts could have gone such separate ways. Today no two pieces could be more different.

Wilmington, with its expressways and parking lots and all its other concrete ribbons and badges, is a tired old veteran of the industrial wars and wears a vacant stare. Block after city block where people used to live and shop is broken and empty.

New Castle never had to make way for progress and therefore never had any reason to tear down its seventeenth-and eighteenth-century houses. So they are still here, standing in tasteful rows under ancient elms around the original town green. New Castle is still an agreeable place to live. The pretty buildings of its quiet past make a serene setting for the lives of 4,800 people. New Castle may be America's loveliest town, but it is not an important town at all. Progress passed it by.

Poor New Castle.

Lucky Wilmington.

Which is the major factor that made the difference between Wilmington and New Castle?

A.Convenience for traffic.

B.The Delaware River.

C.The investment of Irenee DuPont.

D.The textiles mills.

正确答案:A

Thomas Hardy's impulses as a writer, all of which he indulged in his novels, were numerous and divergent, and they did not always work together in harmony. Hardy was to some degree interested in exploring his characters' psychologies, though impelled less by curiosity than by sympathy. Occasionally he felt the impulse to comedy (in all its detached coldness) as well as the impulse to farce, but he was more often inclined to see tragedy and record it. He was also inclined to literary realism in the several senses of that phrase. He wanted to describe ordinary human beings; he wanted to speculate on their dilemma rationally (and, unfortunately, even schematically); and he wanted to record precisely the material universe. Finally, he wanted to be more than a realist. He wanted to transcend what he considered to be the banality of solely recording things exactly and to express as well his awareness of the occult and the strange.

In his novels these various impulses were sacrificed to each other inevitably and often. Inevitably, because Hardy did not care in the way that novelists such as Flaubert or James cared, and therefore took paths of least resistance. Thus, one impulse often surrendered to a fresher one and, unfortunately, instead of exacting a compromise, simply disappeared. A desire to throw over reality a light that never was might give way abruptly to the desire on the part of what we might consider a novelist-scientist to record exactly and concretely the structure and texture of a flower. In this instance, the new impulse was at least an energetic one, and thus its indulgence did not result in a relaxed style. But on other occasions Hardy abandoned a perilous, risky, and highly energizing impulse in favor of what was for him the fatally relaxing impulse to classify and schematize abstractly. When a relaxing impulse was indulged, the style. —that sure index of an author's literary worth —was certain to become verbose. Hardy's weakness derived from his apparent inability to control the comings and goings of these divergent impulses and from his unwillingness to cultivate and sustain the energetic and risky ones. He submitted to first one and then another, and the spirit blew where it listed; hence the unevenness of any one of his novels. His most controlled novel, Under the Greenwood Tree, prominently exhibits two different but reconcilable impulses —a desire to be a realist-historian and a desire to be a psychologist of love —but the slight interlockings of plot are not enough to bind the two completely together. Thus even this book splits into two distinct parts.

The most appropriate title for the passage could be ______.

A.Under the Greenwood Tree: Hardy's Ambiguous Triumph

B.The Real and the Strange: the Novelist's Shifting Realms

C.Hardy's Novelistic Impulses: the Problem of Control

D.Divergent Impulses: the Issue of Unity in the Novel

正确答案:C

声明:本文内容由互联网用户自发贡献自行上传,本网站不拥有所有权,未作人工编辑处理,也不承担相关法律责任。如果您发现有涉嫌版权的内容,欢迎发送邮件至:contact@51tk.com 进行举报,并提供相关证据,工作人员会在5个工作日内联系你,一经查实,本站将立刻删除涉嫌侵权内容。