[考研类试卷]考研英语二(阅读)模拟试卷24及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语二(阅读)模拟试卷 24 及答案与解析Part B (10 points) 0 A. Gender differentiatorB. Mark of PersonalityC. Adoption of foreign drinksD. Statement of affiliationE. Situation definerF. Classification of drinking patternG. Status indicatorIt is clear that in all cultures where more than one type of alcoholic beverag
2、e is available, drinks are classified in terms of their social meaning, and the classification of drinks is used to define the social world. Few, if any, alcoholic beverages are “socially neutral“: every drink is loaded with symbolic meaning, every drink conveys a message. Alcohol is a symbolic vehi
3、cle for identifying, describing, constructing and manipulating cultural systems, values, interpersonal relationships, behavioral norms and expectations. Choice of beverage is rarely a matter of personal taste.【R1 】_At the simplest level, drinks are used to define the nature of the occasion. The type
4、 of drink served defines both the nature of the event and the social relationship between the drinkers. The choice of drink also dictates behavior. In many Western cultures, champagne is synonymous with celebration, such that if champagne is ordered or served at an otherwise “ordinary“ occasion, som
5、eone will invariably ask “What are we celebrating?“【R2 】_Choice of beverage is also a significant indicator of social status. In Poland, for example, wine is regarded as a high-status, middle-class drink, while native beers and vodkas are “ordinary“ or working-class.【R3 】_Choice of beverage may also
6、 be a statement of affiliation, a declaration of membership in a particular group, generation, class, “tribe“, sub-culture or nation and its associated values, attitudes and beliefs. Certain drinks, for example, have become symbols of national identity: Guinness for the Irish, tequila for Mexicans,
7、whisky for Scots, ouzo for Greeks etc. Ones national beverage can be a powerful expression of ones loyalties and cultural identity.【R4 】_While differences in age, class, status, aspirations and affiliations are frequently expressed through beverage choice, the most consistent and widespread use of a
8、lcohol as a social “differentiator“ is in the gender-based classification of drinks. Almost all societies make some distinction between “masculine“ and “feminine“ beverages: even where no other differentiation is found, this primary division is likely to be evident, and, often, to be rigidly observe
9、d. Even in societies where only one alcoholic beverage is available, such as palm wine among the Lele of Zaire, a weaker, sweeter version, Mana ma piya, is considered suitable for women, while Mana ma kobo, described as “strong“ and “fierce“, is a mans drink.【R5 】_It appears that the adoption of for
10、eign drinks also involves the adoption of the drinking patterns, attitudes and behavior associated with the alien culture, while other societies absorb foreign drinks without “taking in“ any of the associated cultural approaches. When the British go to France, they exhibit a tendency to drink wine i
11、n beer quantities and display all of the behavioral excesses associated with their native drinking patterns, with the result that young British tourists “are now renowned in France and elsewhere in Europe for their drinking and drunkenness“. In Spain, by contrast, the young males appear more sensiti
12、ve to alien cultural influences.In spite of many areas covered, information on the symbolic meanings of different types of alcoholic drink is still incomplete. Therefore, further and more precise research on the symbolic functions of alcoholic beverages is needed.1 【R1 】2 【R2 】3 【R3 】4 【R4 】5 【R5 】5
13、 All men are created equal, or so reckoned Thomas Jefferson as he drafted Americas Declaration of Independence in 1776. Subsequent Americans have had reason to question the founding father. So too have people in the land from which the new nation gained its freedom. America and Britain are among the
14、 most unequal countries in the rich world and Britain, at any rate, is more unequal now than it was a generation ago. That is the conclusion of a study commissioned by Harriet Harman, the equalities minister. Class and money have always strongly affected how people do in life in Britain, with well-h
15、eeled families breeding affluent children just as the offspring of the desperately poor tend to remain poor. All that was supposed to have ceased at the end of the Second World War, with the birth of a welfare state designed to meet basic needs and promote social mobility. But despite devoting much
16、thought and more money to improving the lot of the poor, governments have failed to boost those at the bottom of the pile as much as those at the top have boosted themselves. The new study, led by John Hills of the London School of Economics, found, for example, that the richest tenth of households
17、received income more than four times that of the poorest tenth; just a generation ago, it was three times as much. Internationally, only six of the 30 members of the OECD, a club of mainly rich countries, show greater inequality. Wealth is distributed far more unequally than income, with the richest
18、 tenth in Britain holding assets worth almost 100 times those of the poorest. Although the study found that some of the widest gaps between social groups have diminished over time, deep-seated differences between haves and have-nots persist, ruining the life chances of the less fortunate. Politician
19、s of all stripes talk up equality of opportunity, arguing that it makes for a fairer and more mobile society, and a more prosperous one. The goal of greater equality of outcomes also has its boosters. In “The Spirit Level“, epidemic disease experts Kate Pickett and Richard Wilkinson claim that more
20、equal societies are healthier than unequal ones, as well as happier. Not all agree, but in a country where the National Health Service accounts for almost a fifth of public spending, it is worth considering. The difficulty arises in putting these notions into practice, through severe tax increases f
21、or the middle-class and wealthy, or expanding government intervention. These have not recently been vote-winning propositions, but the recession that Britain is now limping away from may have changed things. So Gordon Brown, at any rate, must be hoping. Recently the prime minister said he would put
22、social mobility at the heart of his campaign for re-election. The trouble is that he has had 13 years to work on it already. Despite his pledge to invest in education to “make a reality of genuine equality of opportunity for all“, opinion polls suggest that his prospects are poor. 10 Youve finally f
23、inished the book your co-worker recommended, so what to read next? If it is 5 a.m., chances are that youre reaching for a romance novelespecially if youre in Texas or Georgia. By early morning, thrillers might start to look more appealing. These are some of the insights from Scribd Inc. and Oyster,
24、two startups that offer unlimited e-book rentals for a monthly subscription fee. Scribd, Oyster and Entitle Bookswhich just launched in Decemberare tracking reader behavior in hopes of figuring out recommendations of exactly what youll want to pick up next. Subscription services are popular because
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