[外语类试卷]专业英语八级(阅读)模拟试卷85及答案与解析.doc
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1、专业英语八级(阅读)模拟试卷 85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)It
2、is nothing new that English use is on the rise around the world, especially in business circles. This also happens in France, the headquarters of the global battle against American cultural hegemony. If French guys are giving in to English, something really big must be going on. And something big is
3、 going on. (2)Partly, its that American hegemony. Didier Benchimol, CEO of a French ecommerce software company, feels compelled to speak English perfectly because the Internet software business is dominated by Americans. He and other French businessmen also have to speak English because they want to
4、 get their message out to American investors, possessors of the worlds deepest pockets. (3)The triumph of English in France and elsewhere in Europe, however, may rest on something more enduring. As they become entwined with each other politically and economically, Europeans need a way to talk to one
5、 another and to the rest of the world. And for a number of reasons, theyve decided upon English as their common tongue. (4)So when German chemical and pharmaceutical company Hoechst merged with French competitor Rhone-Poulenc last year, the companies chose the vaguely Latinate Aventis as the new com
6、pany name -and settled on English as the companys common language. When monetary policymakers from around Europe began meeting at the European Central Bank in Frankfurt last year to set interest rates for the new Euroland, they held their deliberations in English. Even the European Commission, with
7、11 official languages and a traditionally French-speaking bureaucracy, effectively switched over to English as its working language last year. (5)How did this happen? One school attributes Englishs great success to the sheer weight of its merit. Its a Germanic language, brought to Britain around the
8、 fifth century A.D. During the four centuries of French-speaking rule that followed Norman Conquest of 1066, the language morphed into something else entirely. French words were added wholesale, and most of the complications of Germanic grammar were shed while few of the complications of French were
9、 added. The result is a language with a huge vocabulary and a simple grammar that can express most things more efficiently than either of its parents. Whats more, English has remained ungoverned and open to change foreign words, coinages, and grammatical shifts in a way that French, ruled by the pur
10、ist Academie Francaise, has not. (6)So its a swell language, especially for business. But the rise of English over the past few centuries clearly owes at least as much to history and economics as to the languages ability to economically express the concept win-win. What happened is that the competit
11、ion first Latin, then French, then, briefly, German faded with the waning of the political, economic, and military fortunes of, respectively, the Catholic Church, France, and Germany. All along, English was increasing in importance: Britain was the birthplace of the Industrial Revolution, and London
12、 the worlds most important financial centre, which made English a key language for business. Englands colonies around the world also made it the language with the most global reach. And as that former colony the U.S. rose to the status of the worlds preeminent political, economic, military, and cult
13、ural power, English became the obvious second language to learn. (7)In the 1990s more and more Europeans found themselves forced to use English. The last generation of business and government leaders who hadnt studied English in school was leaving the stage. The European Community was adding new mem
14、bers and evolving from a paper-shuffling club into a serious regional government that would need a single common language if it were ever to get anything done. Meanwhile, economic barriers between European nations have been disappearing, meaning that more and more companies are beginning to look at
15、the whole continent as their domestic market. And then the Internet came along. (8)The Net had two big impacts. One was that it was an exciting, potentially lucrative new industry that had its roots in the U.S., so if you wanted to get in on it, you had to speak some English. The other was that by s
16、urfing the Web, Europeans who had previously encountered English only in school and in pop songs were now coming into contact with it daily. (9)None of this means English has taken over European life. According to the European Union, 47% of Western Europeans(including the British and Irish)speak Eng
17、lish well enough to carry on a conversation. Thats a lot more than those who can speak German(32%)or French(28%), but it still means more Europeans dont speak the language. If you want to sell shampoo or cell phones, you have to do it in French or German or Spanish or Greek. Even me U.S. and British
18、 media companies that stand to benefit most from the spread of English have been hedging their bets CNN broadcasts in Spanish; the Financial Times has recently launched a daily German-language edition. (10)But just look at who speaks English: 77% of Western European college students, 69% of managers
19、, and 65% of those aged 15 to 24. In the secondary schools of the European Unions non-English-speaking countries, 91% of students study English, all of which means that the transition to English as the language of European business hasnt been all that traumatic, and its only going to get easier in t
20、he future. 1 Europeans began to favour English for all the following reasons EXCEPT its _. ( A) inherent linguistic properties ( B) association with the business world ( C) links with the United States ( D) disassociation from political changes 2 French lost its dominant status as an international l
21、anguage for _. ( A) religious reasons ( B) political reasons ( C) economic reasons ( D) military reasons 3 Which of the following statements forecasts the continuous rise of English in the future? ( A) About half of Western Europeans are now proficient in English. ( B) U.S. and British media compani
22、es are operating in Western Europe. ( C) Most secondary school students in Europe study English. ( D) Most Europeans continue to use their own language. 4 The passage mainly examines the factors related to _. ( A) the rising status of English in Europe ( B) English learning in non-English-speaking E
23、.U. nations ( C) the preference for English by European businessmen ( D) the switch from French to English in the European Commission 4 (1)Hostility to Gypsies has existed almost from the time they first appeared in Europe in the 14th century. The origins of the Gypsies, with little written history,
24、 were shrouded in mystery. What is known now from clues in the various dialects of their language, Romany, is that they came from northern India to the Middle East a thousand years ago, working as minstrels and mercenaries, metal-smims and servants. Europeans misnamed them Egyptians, soon shortened
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