专业英语八级(阅读)-试卷140及答案解析.doc
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1、专业英语八级(阅读)-试卷140及答案解析 (总分:44.00,做题时间:90分钟)一、READING COMPREHENSIO(总题数:11,分数:44.00)1.PART II READING COMPREHENSION_2.SECTION A MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONSIn this section there are several passages followed by fourteen multiple-choice questions. For each multiple-choice question, there are four suggested
2、 answers marked A , B, C and D. Choose the one that you think is the best answer._Americans are still chuckling about the pants suit. A mana judge, no lesssued his dry cleaners for $54m for allegedly losing his trousers. A sign at the shop promised Satisfaction Guaranteed. The plaintiff was not sati
3、sfied, so he cried fraud. He then used his highly trained legal brain to calculate the damages he was owed. He started with $1,500, a reasonable fine for consumer fraud. He multiplied it by 12, for the number of his complaints. Then by 1,200, for the number of days he was deprived of his trousers. A
4、nd then by three, for the three owners of the dry-cleaning shop. After adding a bit more for mental anguish, the total came to $67m, but he kindly reduced it to $54m. When the case was dismissed in 2007, many felt justice had prevailed. But the defendants had been put through purgatory and saddled w
5、ith $100,000 in legal costs. They closed the shop and considered moving back to South Korea. The case illustrates an important truth about human naturethat angry people can go nuts, observes Philip Howard, a campaigner for legal reform. What was most shocking about the pants suit was not the idiotic
6、 claim, he says, but that the case was allowed to go on for more than two years. Some judges think even the nuttiest plaintiffs deserve their day in court. As the judge who let a woman sue McDonalds for serving her the coffee with which she scalded herself put it: Who am I to judge? The rule of law
7、is a wonderful thing, as anyone who has visited countries ruled by the whims of the powerful can attest. But you can have too much of a wonderful thing. And America has far too much law, argues Mr. Howard in a new book, Life without Lawyers. For nearly every problem, lawmakers and bureaucrats imagin
8、e that more detailed rules are the answer. But people need to exercise their common sense, too. Alas, the proliferation of rules is making that harder. At a school in Florida, for example, a five-year-old girl decided to throw everyones books and pencils on the floor. Sent to the head teachers offic
9、e, she continued to wreak havoc. Her teachers dared not restrain her physically. Instead, they summoned the police, who led her away in handcuffs, howling. The teachers acted as they did for fear of being sued. A teacher at a different school was sued for $20m for putting a hand on a rowdy childs ba
10、ck to guide him out of the classroom. The school ended up settling for $90,000. Understandably, many schools ban teachers from touching pupils under any circumstances. In New York City, where more than 60 bureaucratic steps are required to suspend a pupil for more than five days, teachers are so fri
11、ghtened of violating pupils rights that they cannot keep order. The relentless piling of law upon lawthe federal register has 70,000 ever-changing pages-does not make for a more just society. When even the most trivial daily interactions are subject to detailed rules, individual judgment is stifled.
12、 When rule-makers seek to eliminate small risks, perverse consequences proliferate. Bureaucrats rip up climbing frames for fear that children may fall off and break a leg. So children stay indoors and get fat. The direct costs of lawsuits are only one of the drawbacks of an over-legalistic society.
13、Too many rules squeeze the joy out of life. Doctors who inflict dozens of unnecessary tests on patients to fend off lawsuits take less pride in their work. And although the legal system is supposed to be neutral, the scales are tilted in favour of whoever is in the wrong. Because the process is so e
14、xpensive and juries are so unpredictable, blameless people often settle baseless claims to make them go away. The law is supposed to protect individuals from the state, but it often allows selfish individuals to harness the states power to settle private scores. Will any of this change under Barack
15、Obama? At first glance, the odds are poor. The new President is a lawyer from a party dominated by lawyers. His vice-president publicly thanked God last year that lawyers are such a problem for corporate America. When Mr. Obama was in the Senate, he once voted for a mild curb on jurisdiction-shoppin
16、g by class-action lawyers, but otherwise tended to vote against tort reform. And Democrats in the new Congress are itching to reward the lawyers who donated so generously to their election campaigns, for example by revoking the (admittedly short) statute of limitations on pay-discrimination claims,
17、allowing lawyers to mine decades-old grievances.(分数:8.00)(1).In the case of pants suit,_.(分数:2.00)A.the plaintiff ended up getting $54m from the shop ownersB.the defendants reluctantly agreed to pay a fine of $100,000C.both the plaintiff and the defendants suffered great agonyD.many Americans felt r
18、elieved when the case was settled(2).According to the passage, Mr. Howard might agree that_.(分数:2.00)A.the claim of $54m is not absurdB.even a mad accuser deserve his day in courtC.the rule of law results in more detailed rules for almost every problemD.the explosion of laws is not conducive to judg
19、ing by ones sense(3).According to the author, the proliferation of law upon law might lead to the following EXCEPT _.(分数:2.00)A.the obesity among school childrenB.the abuse of law for personal gainsC.the prevalence of more justice in societyD.the decline of enjoyment in life(4).In the last paragraph
20、, the odds are poor mainly because_.(分数:2.00)A.the vice-President disagrees with the changesB.Obama is inconsistent in his vote toward legal reformC.Obama once supported the restriction on jurisdiction-shopping by class-action lawyersD.lawyers have strong influence on Obamas administration and the n
21、ew congressNot since Harry Truman seized Americas steel mills in 1952 rather than allow a strike to imperil the conduct of the Korean War has Washington toyed with nationalization, or its functional equivalent, on this kind of scale. Mr. Obama may be thinking what Mr. Truman told his staff; The Pres
22、ident has the power to keep the country from going to hell. (The Supreme Court thought differently and forced Mr. Truman to relinquish control.) The fact that there is so little protest in the air nowcertainly less than Mr. Truman heard reflects the desperation of the moment. But it is a strategy fr
23、aught with risks.The first, of course, is the one the President-elect himself highlighted. Governments record as a corporate manager is miserable, which is why the world has been on a three-decade-long privatization kick, turning national railroads, national airlines and national defense industries
24、into private companies. The second risk is that if the effort fails, and the American car companies collapse or are auctioned off in pieces to foreign competitors, taxpayers may lose the billions about to be spent. And the third riskone barely discussed so faris that in trying to save the nations ca
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- 专业 英语 阅读 试卷 140 答案 解析
