[外语类试卷]大学英语六级模拟试卷201及答案与解析.doc
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1、大学英语六级模拟试卷 201及答案与解析 一、 Part I Writing (30 minutes) 1 Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a short essay entitled Blog Writing. You should write at least 150 words following the outlines given below: 1. 写博客的好处; 2写博客存在的 问题; 3你的看法。 二、 Part II Reading Comprehension (Skimming a
2、nd Scanning) (15 minutes) Directions: In this part, you will have 15 minutes to go over the passage quickly and answer the questions attached to the passage. For questions 1-4, mark: Y (for YES) if the statement agrees with the information given in the passage; N (for NO) if the statement contradict
3、s the information given in the passage; NG (for NOT GIVEN) if the information is not given in the passage. 1 Ancient Olympic Games Amateur athletes from all over the world take part in the modem Olympic Games. Any nation may enter a team in the games if it agrees to follow the roles of the Internati
4、onal Olympic Committee. The games are held during the first year of each Olympiad. (An Olympiad is a period of 4 years that begins in a leap year 1960, 1964, 1968, and so on.) Olympic Games were held in ancient Greece at least as long ago as 776 B.C. The custom lasted for more than 1000 years but th
5、en died out under the rules of Rome. In the late 1800s Frenchman, Baron Pierre de Coubertin (1862-1937), decided to try to start the games again. He wished to renew those ideals of excellence of body, mind and spirit shown in the ancient Greek Olympics. He succeeded, and the modem Olympic Games bega
6、n in Athens, Greece, in 1896. Through legend, the beginning of the Olympic Games can be found in religious celebrations that were held to show respect to the gods of the Greeks. These gods were tike humans in some ways, but they could not die, that is to say, they were immortal. They were said to ha
7、ve bodies of great size, strength, and beauty. They had the power to change from one form to another. Pretending to be ordinary people, they sometimes entered the lives of men and women, married them, and had children. The first Olympic winners were said to be children of the Greek gods. Three thous
8、and years ago Olympia was an important religious center in southwestern Greece. Here was the Temple of Zeus, father of the gods and ruler of both gods and men. Here men came to worship and to approach as nearly as possible the skills and strength of the gods. Speed and skill in hand-to-hand fighting
9、 were necessary for survival. They were even more important for leadership among men. Physical excellence was very important, too, but it was not all. Next to family line from the gods, the Greeks valued fame through poetry and song. Poets and people were eager to sing the praises not only of victor
10、s in battle but also of victors in contests of skill and strength. So, the seeds of achievement in arts, in moral conduct, and in affairs of the mind were planted on the plains of Olympia at the feet of the good and kind Zeus. Here the Olympic Games began. They survived for centuries, inspiring the
11、music and poetry and the architecture and sculpture that were to become the magnificence of the Golden Age of Greece. The great poet Pindar wrote poems of praise in memory of the winners of the laurel or olive wreath. This prize looked like the crown of Zeus. It was for the wreath that Coroebus race
12、d about 200 yards to victory in the first recorded Olympic Games. This marked the beginning of the first Olympiad. By our calendar the year was 776 B.C. It was a cook, Coroebus, not a Greek nobleman, who was the first known winner of an Olympic award. A crowd of 45,000 people rose from their seats o
13、n the grass in the stadium to cheer. Although the Greeks were said to be democratic, slaves and women had few rights. Only freedom male citizens could take part in the Olympic Games. Women were forbidden, with death as the punishment, even to see the games. One woman did successfully get away from t
14、he punishment. The mother of Pisidorus continued the training of her son after this father died. Pretending to be a man, she attended the games. She was not recognized until shouted with joy over her sons victory. She was pardoned, and in time women were allowed in the games. Athletic competition be
15、came so important to the Greeks that the Olympic celebrations were a peaceful influence on the warlike city-states. Sparta, famous for its strict training of youth and its many Olympic honors, would wait until the games were over before sending fighters into battle. Other cities followed this exampl
16、e. The “sacred month“ of the games became a time for peace and friendship. Milo, a wrestler of the 6th century B.C., may be considered the greatest athletes of ancient times. He won the wrestling crown six times. Thus, he was champion for a quarter of a century. He was said to be so powerful that he
17、 could carry a young cow or even a full-grown bull on his shoulders. New sports continually added variety to the Olympics. The hoplitodrome was a footrace run in armor. An event called the pancratium was a combination of boxing and wrestling. A winner was named only when one man raised his hand in d
18、efeat or lay unconscious or dead. One of the greatest honors was to be crowned to winner of the pentathlon (meaning “five contests“). The athletes had to compete in the broad jump, javelin throw, a footrace, discus throw, and wrestling. These events called for the use of a variety of muscles and cre
19、ated the beautiful bodies admired so much by the Greeks. The Golden Age of Greece came in the 5ax century B.C., when the ancient Greeks reached the peak of their power and influence. It was a time that produced some of the greatest thought and art that the world has ever known. The Olympic Games sha
20、red this greatness by setting standards of physical and moral excellence that are still used in our time. In the setting of a religious celebration the Greeks were the first to develop game rules and standards of good sportsmanship. Every athlete was required to take an oath that he would follow the
21、 rules of the game and of fair play. In a direct way, too, the Olympic Games inspired the Greek poets and artists. The Olympic buildings were examples of the beauty of Greek architecture. Remains of the huge statue of Zeus at Olympia bear the signature of Phidias, the famous Athenian sculptor and ar
22、chitect. The spirit of the times may have inspired Platos Republic, a book that provided a pattern for building an ideal nation through the careful education of its children. The poet Pindar read his victory poems at the Olympics, and Herodotus his history. By awarding honors to artists and scholars
23、, the Olympic Games helped to further the growth of Greek culture. Interest in the Olympic Games spread with the colonial and trade growth of Greece. Foreign athletes came to compete. But after Rome defeated Greece (in the 2nd century B.C.), Olympic standards began to decline. The emperor Nero broug
24、ht his own cheering section, built his house at Olympia, and demanded first prizes for all his entries. They were willing to use any way to win. After more than 1,000 years the Olympic Games had become and influence for bad rather than good. In A.D. 394 the Roman emperor Theodosius I ordered them st
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- 外语类 试卷 大学 英语六级 模拟 201 答案 解析 DOC
