[外语类试卷]大学英语六级模拟试卷65及答案与解析.doc
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1、大学英语六级模拟试卷 65及答案与解析 一、 Part I Writing (30 minutes) 1 For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a short essay entitled Widespread Extravagant Spending on Campus. You should write at least 150 words, and base your composition on the outline given in Chinese below: 1现在很多大学生花钱大手大脚 2这一现象的原因是 3我的
2、看法 Widespread Extravagant Spending on Campus 二、 Part II Reading Comprehension (Skimming and 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
3、 agrees with the information given in the passage; N (for NO) if the statement contradicts the information given in the passage; NG (for NOT GIVEN) if the information is not given in the passage. 2 Olympic Torches Every two years, people around the world wait in anticipation as a torch-beating runne
4、r enters the Olympic arena and lights the cauldron(主火炬 ). The symbolic lighting of the Olympic flame marks the beginning of another historic Olympic Games. The opening ceremony is the end of a long journey for the Olympic torah. By the time it arrives in the stadium, it has traveled thousands of mil
5、es. It may have crossed oceans and deserts and traversed mountains. It may have been carried on planes, trains, bicycles, boats, and even dog sleds. And it will have passed through the hands of thousands of different people around the globe. This article chronicles the history of the Olympic torch,
6、reveals how it is designed to stay lit through even the harshest weather conditions, and follows its path from Olympia, Greece, to the Olympic Games. History of the Torch Fire is always held great power for humans. It cooks our food, keeps us warm, and lights our way through the dark. The ancient Gr
7、eeks revered the power and fire. In Greek mythology, the god Prometheus stole fire from Zeus and gave it to humans. To celebrate the passing of fire from Prometheus to man, the Greeks would hold relay races. Athletes would pass a lit torch to one another until the winner reached the finish line. The
8、 Greeks held their first Olympic Games in 776 B.C. The Games, held every four years at Olympia, honored Zeus and other Greek gods. The Olympics also marked the beginning of a period of peace for the often warring Greeks. At the start of the Games, runners called “heralds of peace“ would travel throu
9、ghout Greece, declaring a “sacred truce(休战 ) “to all wars between rival city-states. The truce would remain in place for the duration of the games, so that spectators could safely travel to the Olympics. A constantly burning flame was a regular fixture throughout Greece. It usually graced the alters
10、(祭坛 ) of the Greek gods. In Olympia, there was an altar dedicated to Hera, goddess of birth and marriage. At the start of the Olympic Games, the Greeks would ignite a cauldron of flames upon Heras altar. They lit the flame using a hollow disc or mirror called a skaphia, which, much like the modern o
11、val mirror, focused the suns rays into a single point to light the flame. The flame would burn throughout the Games as a sign of purity, reason, and peace. The Greeks stopped holding their Olympic Games after about a thousand years, and the torch, relays and lighting of the flame also stopped. The O
12、lympic Games did not reemerge until 1896, when the first modern Games were held in Athens. The torch relay took a bit longer to reemerge. The Birth of the Modern Torch Relay The flame was reintroduced to the Olympics at the 1928 Amsterdam Games. A cauldron was lit, but there was no torch relay. The
13、first Olympic torch relay was at the 1936 Berlin Summer Games. Carl Diem, a German history professor and Secretary General of the Organizing Committee of the Games inn, educed the relay as a way of reconnecting the modern Olympics with the Games historical roots. The flame was lit in Olympia, Greece
14、, just as it had been centuries before. Then it was carried to Berlin, Germany, for the start of the Olympics. The torch relay was not introduced to the Winter Olympics until the 1952 Games. It was lit that year not in Olympia, Greece, but in Norway, which was chosen because it was the birthplace of
15、 skiing. But since the 1964 Olympics at Innsbruck, Austria, every Olympic Games Winter and Summer has begun with a torch-lighting ceremony in Olympia, Greece, followed by a torch relay to the Olympic stadium. The Lighting of the Olympic Torch The Olympic torch is lit several months before the start
16、of the actual Games. The flame begins its journey at the site of the original Olympic Games Olympia, Greece. It is lit,just as it was in ancient times, at the Temple of Hera. An actress dressed as a ceremonial priestess, in the robes of the ancient Greeks, lights the torch via the same technique use
17、d in the original Games. She uses a parabolic(抛物线型的 ) mirror to focus light rays from the sun. The parabolic mirror has a curved shape. When it is held toward the sun, the curvature focuses the rays to a single point. The energy from the sun creates a great deal of heat. The priestess holds a torch
18、in the center of the parabolic mirror, and the heat ignites the fuel in the torch, sparking a flame. If the sun is not shining on the day of the lighting ceremony, the priestess can light the torch with a flame that was lit on a sunny day before the ceremony. The flame is carried in a fire pot to an
19、 altar in the ancient Olympic stadium,where it is used to light the first runners torch. For the Winter Games, the relay actually begins at the monument to Pierre de Coubertin (the man who founded the modern Olympic Games in 1896), which is located near the stadium. Then, the relay begins. The Torch
20、 Relay The Olympic Torch Relay begins with the torch lighting in Olympia, Greece. From there, the journey to the host city varies from year to year. The Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games (OCOG) determines the route, as well as the theme, modes of transportation for the torch, and the stops
21、that it will take along its way to the Opening Ceremony. The torch is generally carried from one country to another on a plane. Once it arrives in a city, it usually spends one day being carried from torchbearer to torchbearer on foot. It may also be ferried from place to place by car, boat, bicycle
22、, motorcycle, dog sled, horse, or virtually any other type of conveyance. On certain legs of the relay, the torch must be housed in a special container. For a trip across the Great Barrier Reef before the 2000 Olympic Games, a special torch was designed to burn underwater. On airplanes, where open f
23、lames are not allowed, the flame is typically stored in an enclosed lamp, much like a Miners lamp. At night, it is kept in a special cauldron until the relay begins once again the following day. As in any relay race, each runner carries the torch for only one short leg of its trip. As a runner compl
24、etes a leg, he lights the torch of the next person in the relay. It is considered a great privilege to be chosen as a torchbearer. Athlete, actors, musicians, sports figures, and politicians have all carried the flame. In 1996, boxing legend Muhammed Ali lit the Olympic cauldron to mark the start of
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