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2013年上海口译考试高级口译笔试模拟练习(2)

2013年上海口译考试高级口译笔试模拟练习

  Questions 11 to 15 are based on the following interview.

  11. (A) Closed to the public. (B) Silent and empty.

  (C) Packed with (D) Strangely crowded.

  12. (A) New Mexico. (B) Minnesota.

  (C) The coast of Florida. (D) The Caribbean.

  13. (A) Several gallons of petrol. (B) Food for at least three days.

  (C) Plenty of drinking water. (D) A sturdy pair of work boots.

  14. (A) The potential damage.

  (B) The unexpected temperature changes.

  (C) The hurricane's possible path.

  (D) The vulnerability of the locals.

  15. (A) Watch, wait and try not to panic.

  (B) Choose another place for a vacation.

  (C) Ask for their money back if there's a hurricane.

  (D) Plan for very bad weather.

  Questions 16 to 20 are based on the following talk.

  16. (A) Car alarms.

  (B) Sirens.

  (C) Jack-hammers.

  (D) Loud music.

  17. (A) Break eggs on the road.

  (B) Take certain legal action.

  (C) Use some minor retaliatory step.

  (D) Paint the windshield or front hood of a car.

  18. (A) It can only alert the police.

  (B) It is of no use.

  (C) It can prevent the car being broken into.

  (D) It is really too expensive.

  19. (A) It makes them noisier than they were 20 years ago.

  (B) It makes it difficult for them to fall asleep.

  (C) It affects their work during the day.

  (D) It does harm to their hearing.

  20. (A) Many New Yorkers agree about banning this form of sonic pollution.

  (B) The police have formed a posse to reduce the amount of noise.

  (C) Police can break into a car as soon as the alarm goes off.

  (D) Car alarms are very effective at preventing theft.

  SECTION 2: READING TEST

  Directions: In this section you will read several passages. Each one is followed by several questions about it. You are to choose ONE best answer, (A), (B), (C) or (D), to each question. Answer all the questions following each passage on the basis of what is stated or implied in that passage and write the letter of the answer you have chosen in the corresponding space in your ANSWER BOOKLET.

  Questions 1-5

  When Harvey Ball took a black felt-tip pen to a piece of yellow paper in 1963, he never could have realized that he was drafting the face that would launch 50 million buttons and an eventual war over copyright. Mr. Ball, a commercial artist, was simply filling a request from Joy Young of the Worcester Mutual Insurance Company to create an image for their "smile campaign" to coach employees to be more congenial in their customer relations. It seems there was a hunger for a bright grin—the original order of 100 smiley-face buttons were snatched up and an order for 10,000 more was placed at once.

  The Worcester Historical Museum takes this founding moment seriously. "Just as you'd want to know the biography of General Washington, we realized we didn't know the comprehensive history of the Smiley Face," says Bill Wallace, the executive director of the historical museum where the exhibit "Smiley—An American Icon" opens to the public Oct. 6 in Worcester, Mass.

  Worcester, often referred to by neighboring Bostonians as "that manufacturing town off Route 90," lays claim to several other famous commercial firsts, the monkey wrench and shredded wheat among them. Smiley Face is a particularly warm spot in the city's history. Through a careful historical analysis, Mr. Wallace says that while the Smiley Face birthplace is undisputed, it took several phases of distribution before the distinctive rounded-tipped smile with one eye slightly larger than the other proliferated in the mainstream.

  As the original buttons spread like drifting pollen with no copyright attached, a bank in Seattle next realized its commercial potential. Under the guidance of advertising executive David Stern, the University Federal Savings & Loan launched a very public marketing campaign in 1967 centered on the Smiley Face. It eventually distributed 150,000 buttons along with piggy banks and coin purses. Old photos of the bank show giant Smiley Face wallpaper.

  By 1970, Murray and Bernard Spain, brothers who owned a card shop in Philadelphia, were affixing the yellow grin to everything from key chains to cookie jars along with "Have a happy day." "In the 1970s, there was a trend toward happiness," says Wallace. "We had assassinated a president, we were in a war with Vietnam, and people were looking for [tokens of] happiness. [The Spain brothers] ran with it."

(责任编辑:秩名)