[外语类试卷]专业英语八级(阅读)模拟试卷119及答案与解析.doc
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1、专业英语八级(阅读)模拟试卷 119及答案与解析 SECTION A MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS In this section there are several passages followed by fourteen multiple-choice questions. For each multiple-choice question, there are four suggested answers marked A , B, C and D. Choose the one that you think is the best answer. 0 (1)Ho
2、llywood was an attractive place for the early filmmakers to settle, full of good weather, orange and lemon trees. For producers who owed money on borrowed camera equipment if a creditor came after them, they could hide among the trees. It was a hard business full of casualties and took a pirates men
3、tality to survive. Most of the studio heads were from poor backgrounds, with limited English skills and never forgot their childhood or a personal slight. Included were Jack, Harry, Albert and Sam, the four Warner Brothers from Youngstown, Ohio. They had begun with showing movies off the side of a t
4、ent in Youngstown, borrowing all the chairs from the local undertaker. Every time there was a funeral in Youngstown, they had to give all the chairs back and the film patrons were forced to stand. (2)As a boy Jack Warner wished to be a singer and a comedian. His brothers, recognizing his lack of tal
5、ent instructed him to sing in the tent when they wanted the audience to leave. He was later advised that the money was not in performing, it was in paying performers. Among the stars that would be under contract to him would be Betty Davis, James Cagney, Humphrey Bogart and Errol Flynn. (3)The silen
6、t days were a struggle for Warner Bros. Rin Tin Tin, a German shepherd that according to his publicity was born in a foxhole in World War I, was their biggest star. Heroic as he might have been on the screen, he proved to be, like many stars, cantankerous in person. Jack Warner took the dog on a pub
7、licity tour. As he introduced him to the crowd, his ungrateful employee bit him on the behind, leading to the dogs dismissal. It proved to be a prelude to Warners many future battles with stars. (4)Trying to make a name for themselves, the four brothers got great publicity by announcing that the ren
8、owned opera tenor Caruso would be arriving from Italy to make a film for them. They paid him 25,000 dollars and then put him in a silent movie. (5)The movie studios had the technology to make talking films years before they made them. One of the reasons why they resisted the idea was that they didnt
9、 want to risk losing their overseas market. Stars like Charlie Chaplin, Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford rarely ever had a flop as their films were shown around the world and knew no language barriers. But in 1926 the silent films faced their biggest competition with a new device called the radio
10、. As movie attendance dwindled, the studio heads shut their eyes and pretended the radio was not there. But the Warners led by the ambitious Sam, decided to push the envelope and try to save their sinking studio by experimenting with movie sound. (6)Sam purchased an experimental sound system called
11、Vitaphone. They then acquired the rights to The Jazz Singer, a popular play about a young man who had a beautiful voice and is offered a Broadway career against the wishes of his Old World Jewish father. In the play the son gave in to his father but the Warners, wishing to reach a wider audience, Am
12、ericanized the story by having the son follow his own dreams. Star Al Jolson adlibbed the dialogue, “Wait a minute, wait a minute you aint heard nothing, yet! “ The Warners were only intending singing but at the last minute they impulsively kept the line in the film. The Jazz Singer received a stand
13、ing ovation when it premiered in New York in 1927 and went on to make three and half million dollars at a time when admission costs 20 cents. The sound revolution was under way! (7)Movie audiences had often been loud and noisy while watching silent films. Now the theaters got quiet as people straine
14、d to hear every word. Movie Theaters had to be rewired for sound, costing major studios like Paramount and Fox millions of dollars. Movies now had to film mostly at night as any passing truck noise could ruin a sound recording. “How boring!“ said Mary Pickford “At first we moved! Now everyone is sta
15、nding around talking!“ One enterprising actor was hired for one days work. When the director wasnt looking he let a bunch of crickets loose on the set. It was five days before the crew could round up the chirping crickets, and the actor kept on hold received five times the paycheck. 1 The phrase “a
16、pirates mentality to survive“ in the first paragraph probably means that _. ( A) in order to survive, they had to sail on the seas ( B) in order to survive, they had to sell others works ( C) when being asked for money, they had to hide up ( D) when short of money, they had to rob the others 2 What
17、was Hollywood like? ( A) It was a place of wild grassland. ( B) It was a place full of small stars. ( C) It was a place filled with talents. ( D) It was a place full of poor boys. 3 The following were the experiences of Warner Brothers EXCEPT _. ( A) showing film off the tent side ( B) being a singe
18、r and a comedian ( C) playing the silent films ( D) playing the sound films 4 Which of the following did NOT contribute to Warner Brothers success? ( A) Ambition. ( B) Suspicion. ( C) Persistence. ( D) Publicity. 4 (1)Disaster struck 250 million years ago, when the worst devastation in the earths hi
19、story occurred. Called the end-Permian mass extinction, it marks a fundamental change in the development of life. (2)The history of life on the earth is replete with catastrophes of varying magnitudes. The one that has captured the most attention is the extinction of the dinosaurs and other organism
20、s 65 million years ago between the Cretaceous and Tertiary periods which claimed up to half of all species. As severe as that devastation was, it pales in comparison to the greatest disaster of them all: the mass extinction some 250 million years ago, at the end of the Permian period. Affectionately
21、 called “the mother of mass extinctions“ among paleontologists(with apologies to Saddam Hussein), it yielded a death toll that is truly staggering. About 90 percent of all species in the oceans disappeared during the last several million years of the Permian. On land, more than two thirds of reptile
22、 and amphibian families vanished. Insects, too, did not escape the carnage: 30 percent of insect orders ceased to exist, marking the only mass extinction insects have ever undergone. (3)But from catastrophes, opportunities arise. For several hundred million years before the end-Permian event, the sh
23、allow seas had been dominated by life-forms that were primarily immobile. Most marine animals lay on the seafloor or were attached to it by stalks, filtering the water for food or waiting for prey. In the aftermath of the extinction, many once minor groups active, predatory relatives of modern-day f
24、ish, squids, snails and crabs were able to expand. Some completely new lineages appeared. This ecological reorganization was so dramatic that it forms a fundamental boundary in the history of life. Not only does it demarcate the Permian and Triassic periods, it also establishes the close of the Pale
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