2022上海公共英语考试真题卷(8).docx
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1、2022上海公共英语考试真题卷(8)本卷共分为1大题50小题,作答时间为180分钟,总分100分,60分及格。一、单项选择题(共50题,每题2分。每题的备选项中,只有一个最符合题意) 1.John Miltons _ is the most famous epic after Beowulf.A. Areopagitica B. Samson Agonistes C. Paradise Regained D. Paradise Lost 2.Kimiyuki Suda should be a perfect customer for Japans car makers. Hes a young
2、 (34) , successful executive at an internet-services company in Tokyo and has plenty of disposable income. He used to own Toyotas Hilux Surf, a sport utility vehicle. But now he uses mostly subways and trains. Its not inconvenient at all, he says. Besides, having a car is so 20th century. Suda refle
3、cts a worrisome trend in Japan; the automobile is losing its emotional appeal, particularly among the young, who prefer to spend their money on the latest electronic gadgets. While minicars and luxury foreign brands are still popular, everything in between is slipping. Last year sales fell 6.7 perce
4、nt7.6 percent if you dont count the minicar market. There have been larger one-year drops in other nations: sales in Germany fell 9 percent in 2007 thanks to a tax hike. But analysts say Japan is unique in that sales have been eroding steadily over time. Since 1990, yearly new-car sales have fallen
5、from 7.8 million to 5.4 million units in 2007.A suitable title for the passage would be A Japan: A Mobility Oriented Society. B A Irreversible Trend in Japan. C Japan: A Post-Car Society. D The Gadget-Crazy Generation.Alarmed by this state of decay, the Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association lau
6、nched a comprehensive study of the market in 2006. It found a widening wealth gap, demographic changesfewer households with children, a growing urban populationand general lack of interest in cars led Japanese to hold their vehieles longer, replace their cars with smaller ones or give up car ownersh
7、ip altogether. Japans automobile society stands at a crossroads, says Ryuichi Kitamura, a transport expert and professor at Kyoto University. He says he does not expect the trend to be reversed, as studies show that the younger Japanese consumers are, the less interested they are in having a car. JA
8、MA predicts a further sales decline of 1.2 percent in 2008. Some analysts believe that if the trend continues for much longer, further consolidation in the automotive sector (already under competitive pressure) is likely.Japanese demographics have something to do with the problem. The countrys urban
9、 population has grown by nearly 20 percent since 1990, and most city dwellers use mass transit (the countrys system is one of the best developed in the world) on a daily basis, making it less essential to own a car. Experts say Europe, where the car market is also quite mature, may be in for a simil
10、ar shift.But in Japan, the demotorizationprocess, or kuruma banare, is also driven by cost factors. Owning and driving a car can cost up to $500 per month in Japan, including parking fees, car insurance, toll roads and various taxes. Taxes on a $17, 000 ear in Japan are 4.1 times higher than in the
11、United States, 1.7 times higher than in Germany and 1.25 times higher than in the U. K. , according to JAMA. Automobiles used to represent a symbol of our status, a Western, modern lifestyle that we aspired for, says Kitamura. For todays young people, he argues, such thinking is completely gone. Car
12、s are increasingly just a mobile utility; the real consumer time and effort goes into p3.In sixteenth-century Italy and eighteenth-century France, waning prosperity and increasing social unrest led the ruling families to try to preserve their superiority by withdrawing from the lower and middle clas
13、ses behind barriers of etiquette. In a prosperous community, on the other hand, polite society soon adsorbs the newly rich, and in England there has never been any shortage of books on etiquette for teaching them the manners appropriate to their new way of life. Every code of etiquette has contained
14、 three elements: basic moral duties; practical rules which promote efficiency; and artificial, optional graces such as formal compliments to, say, women on their beauty or superiors on their generosity and importance. In the first category are considerations for the weak and respect for age. Among t
15、he ancient Egyptians the young always stood in the presence of older people. Among the Mponguwe of Tanzaia, the young men bow as they pass the huts of the elders. In England, until about a century ago, young children did not sit in their parents presence without asking permission. Practical rules ar
16、e helpful in such ordinary occurrences of social life as making proper introductions at parties or other functions so that people can be brought to know each other. Before the invention of the fork, etiquette directed that the fingers should be kept as clean as possible; before the handkerchief came
17、 into common use, etiquette suggested that after spitting, a person should rub the spit inconspicuously underfoot. Extremely refined behavior, however, cultivated as an art of gracious living, has been characteristic only of societies with wealth and leisure, which admitted women as the social equal
18、s of men. After the fall of Rome, the first European society to regulate behavior in private life in accordance with a complicated code of etiquette was twelfth-century Province, in France. Provinces had become wealthy. The lords had returned to their castle from the crusades, and there the ideals o
19、f chivalry grew up, which emphasized the virtue and gentleness of women and demanded that a knight should profess a pure and dedicated love to a lady who would be his inspiration, and to whom he would dedicate his valiant deeds, though he would never come physically close to her. This was the introd
20、uction of the concept of romantic love, which was to influence literature for many hundreds of years and which still lives on in a debased form in simple popular songs and cheap novels today. In Renaissance Italy too, in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, a wealthy and leisured society develope
21、d an extremely complex code of manners, but the rules of behavior of fashionable society had little influence on the daily life of the lower classes. Indeed many of the rules, such as how to enter a banquet room, or how to use a sword or handkerchief for ceremonial purposes, were irrelevant to the w
22、ay of life of the average working man, who spent most of his life outdoors or in his own poor hut and most probably did not have a handkerchief, certainly not a sword, to his name. Yet the essential basis of all good manners does not vary. Consideration for the old and weak and the avoidance of bann
23、ing or giving unnecessary offence to others is a feature of all societies everywhere and at all levels from the highest to the lowest.According to the writer which of the following is put of chivalry A knight should _.A. inspire his lady to perform valiant deedsB. perform deeds which would inspire r
24、omantic songsC. express his love for his lady from a distanceD. regard his lady as strong and independent4.Early in the film A Beautiful Mind, the mathematician John Nash is seen sitting in a Princeton courtyard, hunched over a playing board covered with small black and white pieces that look like p
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