题目内容
To Chinese immigrants, in the mid-1800s, California was “The Land of the Golden Mountain.” In their homeland they had heard the words, “There’s gold in California.” They sailed 7,000miles to join the gold rush and strike it rich. Between 1849 and 1882, more than 30,000 Chinese came to California. Most were men. They had been farmers in China. They came here to be miners and laborers. They ended up doing many other jobs, too.
Like many other immigrants, they did not plan to stay in America. They came because of their ties to their homeland and their families. They planned to return to China with their fortunes and help their families.
Only a few Chinese gold miners struck it rich. Most picked over the areas that had been mined already. But still, white miners resented the Chinese. Slowly, they drove the “yellow peril” from the mining camps.
By the end of the 1850s, many Chinese returned home. Those who stayed found other jobs.
Few women had come west in the gold rush. The Chinese saw a good business opportunity. They began doing the jobs women would have done. Many became house servants. Many more opened laundries.
The Chinese opened restaurants. Chop suey and show mein are popular Chinese-American dishes. The Chinese probably created these dishes to serve to the white miners. Other Chinese became fishermen, farmers, and even cigar makers.
【小题1】Why did Chinese go to America in the mid-1800s?
| A.Because they could find good jobs there. |
| B.Because they had found gold there. |
| C.Because they could open laundries and restaurants there. |
| D.Because they heard there was gold there. |
| A.liked | B.helped | C.hated | D.served |
| A.Early Chinese immigrants in America |
| B.Dream to strike it rich |
| C.The difference between men and women |
| D.Gold miners in America |
【小题1】D
【小题2】C
【小题3】A
解析试题分析:文章主要介绍中国去美国的移民,当时去美国的原因的因为淘金热,有人发展的很好,也有人回国,现在留在美国的人做着不同的工作。
【小题1】细节题:从第一段的句子:To Chinese immigrants, in the mid-1800s, California was “The Land of the Golden Mountain.” In their homeland they had heard the words, “There’s gold in California.” They sailed 7,000miles to join the gold rush and strike it rich可知19世纪中国人到美国是听说那里有金子,选.D
【小题2】猜词题:从第三段的句子:Slowly, they drove the “yellow peril” from the mining camps. 可知白人恨中国人,选C
【小题3】标题题:纵观全文,文章主要介绍中国去美国的移民,当时去美国的原因,他们的发展情况,和现在的情况,选A
考点:考查历史类短文
The 115-year-old prestigious (有名望的)Oxford Dictionary will now include popular new Chinese terms like“shanzhai” “youtiao” and “fangnu”, as part of the modern Chinese language.
As China plays a more and more important role in the world economy, the Chinese language is forever developing, attracting more attention from people who want to understand this ancient yet lively language.
For instance, the word “shanzhai” is used to describe the countless knockoffs(名牌仿制品)of iPhones or designer bags imprinted with Louis Vuitton logos.
Another new term in the new edition is the word “fangnu”, or a “mortgage slave”—a term used to describe the phenomenon in large cities where well-educated youth complain of a miserable existence due to the heavy burden of a home mortgage.
All these new or often fashionable terms can be found in the new Oxford English –Chinese, Chinese-English dictionary that was unveiled(公布于众的)in the recently concluded Beijing International Book Fair last week.
The dictionary now is available for retail sales since the beginning of this month.This dictionary is the largest single volume English-Chinese, Chinese-English dictionary and contains 670,000 words and phrases after five years of preparation.Sixty editors from the Oxford University Press and its partner in China—the Foreign Language Teaching and Research Press—worked together on the project.According to Julie Kleeman, the dictionary’s chief editor, most of the firm’s editors were Chinese, while about one fourth were native-English speakers.
“We don’t want to make it florid(绚丽的), we want it to be modern and conversational...many of the words in the present dictionary are no longer in use,” said Kleeman.“The need for studying Chinese by foreigners today is totally different from decades ago...Precise, native and practical—that is our main advantage,” she said.
Kleeman said newer publications updates will be available only for the online version as language often changes too quickly for book versions to keep pace.The online version will also offer a Chinese phonetic pronunciation guide.The online version, allowing access via different platforms from the PC to the iPad, will be ready “as soon as possible”, Kleeman said.
【小题1】According to the above passage, we learn that ________
| A.knockoffs can be found in China but not very often. |
| B.the Oxford University Press made the dictionary without outside aid. |
| C.most Chinese editors are also native speakers of English. |
| D.well-educated youth in China’s big cities have difficulty buying houses. |
| A.book versions can’t keep up with the changes of language. |
| B.the computer network is available everywhere. |
| C.book versions can’t offer a Chinese phonetic pronunciation guide. |
| D.computer technology like the PC and the iPad keeps pace with language. |
| A.New Chinese terms like “shanzhai” and “fangnu” have got into Oxford Dictionary. |
| B.The latest Oxford English-Chinese, Chinese-English Dictionary is on the market. |
| C.Oxford Dictionary has become more fashionable due to the Chinese language. |
| D.Beijing International Book Fair was where the new Oxford Dictionary was published. |
From the beginning of human history, wild animals provided food, clothing and sometimes medicine for man. We may not depend as much on wild animals now. But we hear about them every day. Americans use the names of animals in many ways. Automobile manufacturers and gasoline companies especially like to use big cats to sell their products. They like lions, tigers and wildcats. When Americans say wildcat, they usually mean a lynx, an ocelot or a bobcat. All these cats attack quickly and fiercely. So wildcats represent something fast and fierce. www.zxxk.com
An early American use of the word wildcat was quite different. It was used to describe members of Congress who declared war on Britain in 1812. A magazine of that year said the wildcat congressmen went home. It said they were unable to face the responsibility of having involved their country in an unnecessary war.
Wildcat also has been used as a name for money in the 1800s. At that time, some states permitted banks to make their own money. One bank in the state of Michigan offered paper money with a picture of a wildcat on it. Some banks, however, did not have enough gold to support all the paper money they offered. So the money had little or no value. It was called a wildcat bill or a wildcat banknote. The banks who offered this money were called wildcat banks. A newspaper of the time said those were the days of wildcat money. It said a man might be rich in the morning and poor by night.
Wildcat then was also used for an oil well or gold mine that had almost no oil or gold in it. Dishonest developers would buy such property. Then they would sell it and leave town with the money. The buyers were left with worthless holes in the ground. Today, wildcat oil wells are in areas that are not known to have oil.
【小题1】What is the main idea of the passage?
| A.Wildcats and their stories. |
| B.Wildcats and their characters. |
| C.Varieties of animal species. |
| D.Relationship between animals and humans. |
| A.gasoline companies | B.automobile manufacturers |
| C.brands of automobile | D.names of wildcats |
| A.Wildcat congressmen. | B.Wildcat oil wells. |
| C.Wildcat banks. | D.Wildcat cars. |
| A.people couldn't buy anything with the money |
| B.people complained and suffered a lot |
| C.the rich invested too much on oil wells |
| D.people didn't know how to save money |
From the beginning of human history, wild animals provided food, clothing and sometimes medicine for man. We may not depend as much on wild animals now. But we hear about them every day. Americans use the names of animals in many ways. Automobile manufacturers and gasoline companies especially like to use big cats to sell their products. They like lions, tigers and wildcats. When Americans say wildcat, they usually mean a lynx, an ocelot or a bobcat. All these cats attack quickly and fiercely. So wildcats represent something fast and fierce.
An early American use of the word wildcat was quite different. It was used to describe members of Congress who declared war on Britain in 1812. A magazine of that year said the wildcat congressmen went home. It said they were unable to face the responsibility of having involved their country in an unnecessary war.
Wildcat also has been used as a name for money in the 1800s. At that time, some states permitted banks to make their own money. One bank in the state of Michigan offered paper money with a picture of a wildcat on it. Some banks, however, did not have enough gold to support all the paper money they offered. So the money had little or no value. It was called a wildcat bill or a wildcat banknote. The banks who offered this money were called wildcat banks. A newspaper of the time said those were the days of wildcat money. It said a man might be rich in the morning and poor by night.
Wildcat then was also used for an oil well or gold mine that had almost no oil or gold in it. Dishonest developers would buy such property. Then they would sell it and leave town with the money. The buyers were left with worthless holes in the ground. Today, wildcat oil wells are in areas that are not known to have oil.
【小题1】What is the main idea of the passage?
| A.Wildcats and their stories. | B.Wildcats and their characters. |
| C.Varieties of animal species. | D.Relationship between animals and humans. |
| A.gasoline companies | B.automobile manufacturers |
| C.brands of automobile | D.names of wildcats |
| A.Wildcat congressmen. | B.Wildcat oil wells. |
| C.Wildcat banks. | D.Wildcat cars. |
| A.people couldn't buy anything with the money |
| B.people complained and suffered a lot |
| C.the rich invested too much on oil wells |
| D.people didn't know how to save money |