题目内容
Table manners in the USA
During the meal, you should be careful not to leave a spoon in a soup bowl, a coffee cup or other dish. The coffee spoon should be on the saucer(碟子), and the soup spoon should be on the plate under the bowl. When you are having soup, make as little noise as you can and use the side of your spoon, not the front. Do not pick up your soup bowl to drink the last drops of your soup from the bottom of the bowl.
Very often, there are only one main course and a salad, followed by something sweet. If you haven’t had enough, say“Oh, it’s delicious. ”and ask for some more chicken, steak, or whatever you have just had. The hostess will be very happy that you like her cooking and will give you more. But if you follow the Chinese way of being polite and say, “No, thank you. ”when the hostess offers you more, you may starve later. Americans will never force you to eat more. Yet it is not polite to keep silent and not to talk to the person next to you. It is good manners to use your silverware(银餐具) carefully so that they don’t make any noise. When the coffee comes, drink it from your cup. The coffee spoon should be put on the saucer while you are drinking. And smoking, of course, is rarely seen at a dinner table. Well, when the meal is finished, the guests put their napkins on the table and stand up. The men help the ladies move their chairs.
After the dinner, the guests usually stay for an hour or two, and then they would say, “Well, I’m afraid I must get going now. ”The host and hostess would, of course, ask everyone to stay longer. “What? Already? Won’t you have some more coffee? ”The guests might say, “I’d love to, but I have to be up early tomorrow. Thank you for a most enjoyable evening. Good night. ”
If you stay overnight or for the weekend, it is nice to send a thank-you note to the host or hostess the following day, very often with a small gift such as a box of chocolates or some flowers as a sign of thanks for their hospitality(好客).
Questions:
1. Which of the following is true according to the passage?
A. To make the hostess happy, you should ask for more food even if you are full.
B. During the dinner, you’d better make as little noise as possible.
C. It’s polite to leave a spoon in a soup bowl.
D. Never talk with people at table.
2. What does the underlined word ‘course’ mean?
A. A series of lessons.
B. Any of the separate parts of a meal.
C. A moment in time.
D. Direction or the routine.
3. The passage implies that______.
A. Chinese customs are similar to American ones
B. if you are polite, the hostess will make you eat more food
C. different nations have different customs
D. Chinese are more hospitable(好客的) than Americans
提示:
1题从第一段When you are having soup, make as little noise as you can and use the side of your spoon可知1题选B项。 2题course的意思是“(几)道菜”,故2题选B. 3题是推断题,推断题的答案必须是能从文章中推知但文章中并没有直接说的内容,本题选C
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What makes Americans spend nearly half their food dollars on meals away from home? The answers lie in the way Americans live today. During the first few decades of the twentieth century, canned and other convenience foods freed the family cook from full-time duty at the kitchen range. Then, in the 1940s, work in the wartime defense plants took more women out of the home than ever before, setting the pattern of the working wife and mother. Today about half of the country’s married women are employed outside the home. But, unless family members pitch in with food preparation, women are not fully liberated from that housework. Instead, many have become, in a sense, prisoners of the completely cooked convenience meals. It’s easier to pick up a bucket of fried chicken on the way home from work or take the family out for pizzas or burgers than to start opening cans or heating up frozen dinners after a long , hard day. Also, the rising divorce rate means that there are more single working parents with children to feed. And many young adults and elderly people, as well as unmarried and divorced mature people, live alone rather than as part of a family unit and don’t want to bother cooking for one.
Fast food is appealing because it is fast, it doesn’t require any dressing up, it offers a “fun” break in the daily outline, and the outlay of money seems small. It can be eaten in the car--- sometimes picked up at a drive-in window without even getting out---or on the run. Even if it is brought home to eat, there will never be any dirty dishes to wash because of the handy disposable (一次性的) wrappings. Children, especially, love fast food because it’s finger food, no struggling with knives and forks, no annoying instructions from adults about table manner.
【小题1】Americans enjoy fast food mainly because __________.
| A.it can be eaten in the car |
| B.it is much more tasty than home-made food |
| C.one only uses his fingers while eating it |
| D.it is time-saving and convenient |
| A.want to have more freedom at table |
| B.never wash dishes after each meal |
| C.are good at using forks and knives while eating |
| D.take eating time as a fun break |
| A.they want to make a change after eating the same food for years at home |
| B.the food made outside home tastes better than food cooked at home |
| C.many of them live alone and don’t like taking trouble to cook |
| D.American women refuse to cook at home due to women’s liberation movement |
| A.car window from which you can see the driver |
| B.window in the restaurant from which you get your takeout in the car |
| C.place where you check the mechanic condition of your car |
| D.place where you return the used plates after eating |