[外语类试卷]专业英语八级(阅读)模拟试卷99及答案与解析.doc
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1、专业英语八级(阅读)模拟试卷 99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 mid-September, the heat is just leaking out of the end of summer, and Japan is enjoying a rare public holiday. A holiday, that is, in the uniquely Japanese sense of the word, which means the GPS hardwired into every citizen is sending thousands upon thousands to the same fashionable boutiques nea
3、r my home in Tokyo to shop. It is more crowded than a commuter train at rush hour. Policemen shepherd the multitude along the streets with flashing orange batons. Yet there is something peaceful about the way the Japanese drift together in a crowd; they carry a tiny aura of personal space with them,
4、 no bigger than one of their Louis Vuitton handbags, and every bit as precious. They hardly touch, like those shoals of translucent fish that dart from one direction to another without colliding. The policemen use their batons like conductors, keeping everything harmonious. But if you try to defy th
5、em, those batons will block your way faster than they can say “Dame desu“ which is about as final as “Not on your life.“ (2)Such are the means by which order and harmony are maintained in Japan. There is a deep-rooted respect for others, so ingrained that ground staff at Narita airport bow to depart
6、ing planes as they taxi to the runway. And there is a subtle coercion, like an invisible hand on societys collar, based on centuries of ancestor worship that has made many customs immutable. The attitudes have been shaped partly by the physical landscape of Japan, which packs one of the most crowded
7、 populations on earth onto narrow plains, bounded by sea and inhospitable mountains. For centuries the main activity has been rice farming, which requires communal planting, weeding, watering and harvesting, rather than the rugged individualism of American and European agriculture. (3)I have been ca
8、ptivated by life here since I arrived a year ago, floating on a wave of adoration of most things Japanese, yet getting in everyones way and doing everything wrong. I would jog around the Imperial Palace in a clockwise direction, only to find everyone else running anti-clockwise, bearing down on me a
9、s if I didnt exist. I wore short sleeves in early autumn, and couldnt work out why, when it was still blazing hot outside, everyone had put on their jackets and ties again. After swimming with dolphins on the island of Mikurajima this summer, my family and I went to a cafe to have lunch, still in ou
10、r damp bathing costumes. Our hostess was so livid that at first I thought we must have set the place alight, not left a few damp seats where our bottoms had been. Living as a foreigner in Japan, for all its attractions, has many such small humiliations. You may be on a noble quest to plumb the depth
11、s of the Japanese soul, but you will take so many wrong turns you end up wondering whether you are indeed too brutish to make sense of it. (4)You may also be struck by how few of the locals have a matching interest in you and your culture. That is because it increasingly seems as if the outside worl
12、d with its sharper elbows, fattier food and shoddy dress sense is kept at arms length. Fewer young Japanese are travelling abroad, fewer are studying English, and fewer are taking places at leading academic institutions overseas such as Harvard Business School. Bosses at Japans legendary export busi
13、nesses complain they cannot find youngsters who are prepared to work abroad. Two clever young Japanese friends, just posted to excellent jobs in America, told me that Japan is so comfortable they find it hard to leave. (5)Yet as those friends are the first to admit, it is a cotton-wool comfort that
14、keeps out alien germs like the surgical facemasks that many Japanese wear, so at odds with the rest of their perfect dress. To the outsider, it can lend the society an air of feeble vulnerability. At times it is downright maddening. Foreign ATM cards dont work in most Japanese banks, Japanese movies
15、 even the classics rented at the ubiquitous Tsutaya video store dont offer the option of foreign-language subtitles. Japanese mobile-phone technology is so unusual that analysts talk of “the Galapagos effect“, because it has grown up in a unique eco-system that makes it unsuitable for use anywhere e
16、lse. 1 According to the passage, which is NOT seen as a cause for the order and harmony in Japan? ( A) Forefathers influence. ( B) The large population. ( C) Geographical environment. ( D) The ingrained notions. 2 Which of the following statements about the third paragraph is INCORRECT? ( A) The Jap
17、anese get accustomed to run anti-clockwise. ( B) It is a little difficult to probe into the Japanese mind for foreigners. ( C) Having dinners in bathing costumes after swimming seems unacceptable in Japan. ( D) Wearing short sleeves and pants is popular in a burning hot day during September. 3 In th
18、e authors view, which of the following is NOT a fact that makes foreigners crazy in Japan? ( A) The locals live too cozily and have no interest in foreign countries. ( B) Most Japanese banks dont identify foreign ATM cards. ( C) Movies for rent offer no choice of foreign-language subtitles. ( D) The
19、 cell phone made in Japan is not suitable to use outside Japan. 4 According to the passage, we learn that _. ( A) citizens in Japan all drive to boutiques with a GPS in public holiday ( B) young people in Japan are not hard-working in their academic study ( C) Japan is a densely-populated country an
20、d unsuitable for living ( D) Japan tends to live in isolation, shunning off from the rest of world 4 (1)The Muslim calendar, now in its 1,431st year, follows the cycle of the moon rather than the sun. This means it shifts by 11 days a year in comparison with the Gregorian calendar, completing a full
21、 cycle in about 33 years. And it ignores the seasons. Ramadan(斋月 ), the month of fasting which this year began on August 12th, is now taking place slap in the middle of the Arab worlds summer holiday. Those who observe the fast must not only put up with the heat and the ensuing dangers of dehydratio
22、n and exhaustion. There are economic costs that did not weigh a generation ago, when consumer culture had yet to take hold. Across the Arab world, for instance, the price of cooking oil shoots up, since fried sweets are a Ramadan speciality. The cost of sugar rises too. So does the price of honey, e
23、specially in the Maghreb. Food importers do particularly well out of pistachios(开心果 ), dates and dried apricots. Caf6s close by day but often make up for that with late-night revels. Many big new television shows are launched during Ramadan, accounting for a third of annual advertising revenue for A
24、rab satellite television stations. (2)But for many businesses, especially government ones, productivity plummets as the working day shortens by two or three hours. The stock market, however, usually surges, according to a recent study by Ahmad Etebari, a professor at the University of New Hampshire.
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