[外语类试卷]笔译三级综合能力冠词练习试卷5及答案与解析.doc
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1、笔译三级综合能力冠词练习试卷 5及答案与解析 0 The City of Winchester 温切斯特市 Many visitors to Great Britain who make a point of visting the famous cultural shrines of Stratford, Oxford , Cambridge and Canterbury are less aware of the equally rewarding historical interest and the friendly individuality of the ancient capit
2、al, the city of Winchester. This Hampshire centre of around 30,000 inhabitants has welcomed (and, on various occasions, repulsed) a succession of visitors for nearly three thousand years. Early tribes occupied it from time to time, and much later the Roman colonisers established a commercial centre
3、with solidly-constructed straight roads radiating from it. It was Alfred the Great who, in the ninth century, made the small town the national centre of learning, though his statue dominating the main street recalls the warrior with raised cross-like sworD Norman succeeded Sxon and soon the cathedra
4、l, one of the loveliest and richest in architectural interest in England, was being erected.A college was founded in the fourteenth century and even though a decline in the wood trade led to a period of economic stagnation, the college maintained the towns tradition of learning and is one of the mos
5、t famous public schools of today. Present-day traffic has destroyed much of the peace of the city centre. Private cars and buses which surge through the narrow streets at weekends may be supplemented on weekdays by lorries roaring on their way to Southampton. And yet away from the busier roads, the
6、prevailing atmosphere remains one of calm meditation and contentment. From the smooth sun-flecked lawns of the Close, patterned with leaf-shadows from gently stirring foliage, rises the cathedral, its comfortable, square, late-Norman tower, its Norman transepts and severe Gothic nave suggesting that
7、 the beauty created by man, though not imperishable, may survive wars and revolutions, and represent the endurance of traditional values even in an age of undignified scurrying change.Certain houses round the Close may have provided homes for the loyal subjects of the first Queen Elizabeth when Shak
8、espeare was learning to write. The youth Hostel, a mill standing on the citys river, is more than two hundred years olD In well-mannered unobtrusiveness,the old buildings of the main street blend with the new, and a walk through the town centre is one of enjoyable discoveries. The rounded hills of S
9、outhern England, among which the city is built, shelter a country-side of farms and picturesque villages, where, despite motor transport and television, many of the old rural traditions and mental attitudes are preserveD Winchester belongs to its surroundings: it is the appropriate centre of a regio
10、n of prosperous,quiet, richly-green countryside. Lively, up-to-date and friendly, it maintains very many English traditions of fine domestic and ecclesiastical architecture, of graciousness and imperturbability, of richly inventive variety and peaceful dignity which are among the highest achievement
11、s of all those English planners and designers who created the heritage we now enjoy. 1 It appears that many visitors to Great Britain_. ( A) find the city of Winchester very attractive ( B) think Winchester comparable to other places of interest ( C) are aware of the historical importance of Winches
12、ter ( D) know less about Winchester than about other famous cultural shrines 2 Who was responsible for the building of the famous cathedral in the city? ( A) The Roman colonisers. ( B) The Saxons. ( C) The Normans. ( D) Alfred the Great. 3 The word “severe“ in “severe Gothic nave“ (in Paragraph 3) i
13、s closest in meaning to_. ( A) serious ( B) simple ( C) fierce ( D) violent 4 It can be seen from the passage that the author_. ( A) cherishes old traditions ( B) opposes any social change ( C) works for a tourist agency ( D) lives in the city of Winchester 5 Which of the following words can best de
14、scribe the citys surroundings? ( A) Up-to-date. ( B) Ecclesiastical. ( C) Peaceful. ( D) Lively. 5 Samuel Johnson 塞缪尔 约翰逊 Visitors to St. Pauls Cathedral are sometimes astonished as they walk round the space under the dome to come upon a statue which would appear to be that of a retired gladiator me
15、ditating upon a wasted life. They are still more astonished when they see under it an inscription indicating that it represents the English writer, Samuel Johnson. The statue by Bacon, but it is not one of his best works. The figure ism as often in eighteenth-century sculpture, clothed only in a loo
16、se robe which leaves arms, legs and one shoulder bare. But the strangeness for us is not one of costume only. If we know anything of Johnson, we know that he was constantly ill all through his life; and whether we know anything of him or not we are apt to think of a literary man as a delicate, weakl
17、y, nervous sort of person. Nothing can be further from that than the muscular statue. And in this matter the statue is perfectly right. And the fact which is reports is far from being unimportant.The body and the mind are inextricably interwoven in all of us, and certainly in Johnsons case the influ
18、ence of the body was obvious and conspicuous. His melancholy, his constantly repeated conviction of the general unhappiness of human life, was certainly the result of his constitutional infinities. On the other hand, his courage, and his entire indifference to pain,were partly due to his great bodil
19、y strength. Perhaps the vein of rudeness, almost of fierceness,which sometimes showed itself in his conversation, was the natural temper of an invalid and suffering giant. That at any rate is what he was. He was the victim from childhood of a disease which resembled St. Vituss Dance. He never knew t
20、he natural joy of a free and vigorous use of his limbs; when he walked it was like the struggling walk of one in irons. All accounts agree that his strange gesticulations and contortions were painful for his friends to witness and attracted crowds of starers in the streets. But Reynolds says that he
21、 could sit still for his portrait to be taken, and that when his mind was engaged by a conversation the convulsions ceaseD In any case, it is certain that neither this perpetual misery, not his constant fear of losing his reason, nor his many grave attacks of illness, ever induced him to surrender t
22、he privileges that belonged to his physical strength. He justly thought no character so disagreeable as that of a chronic invalid, and was determined not to be one himself. He had known what it was to live on fourpence a day and scorned the life of sofa cushions and tea into which well-attended old
23、gentlemen so easily slip. 6 We understand from the passage that most eighteenth-century sculpture was_. ( A) done by a man called Bacon ( B) not very well made ( C) loosely draped ( D) left bare 7 “The body and the mind are inextricably interwoven“ means_. ( A) they interact with each other ( B) the
24、y are confused by all of us ( C) they have little effect on each other ( D) they are mixed up in all of us 8 Samuel Johnsons unhappiness was caused by_. ( A) his melancholy nature ( B) his physical disabilities ( C) his strength of character ( D) his ill-temper 9 The author says Johnson found it dif
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