问题 口语交际,情景问答题

下列各句中,加点的成语使用恰当的一句是(3分)

A.“微笑姐”在广州亚运会开幕式近20分钟的时间里一直保持微笑,像雕像般一动不动,几千万电视观众在电视机前看到了这一赏心悦目的情形。

B.在当今各地生源大战中,一些学校和教师为一己私利,不顾当地教育发展的需要,目无全牛,把一些优秀学生介绍到了外地的学校。

C.在20国集团峰会上,七个新兴国家凭着经济上的重大进步鼎足而立,成为构建多边经济新秩序的重要角色。

D.在智利矿难中,33名智利矿工尽管年龄不一,性格各异,但是他们相濡以沫,共同度过了2个多月的井下生活。

答案

答案:D

A“赏心悦目”不能直接修饰“情形”,应在前面加上“令人”。  B“目无全牛”指技艺十分熟练。这里把它当成了不顾大局的意思。  C“鼎足而立”指三方面的势力相对立。与实际不符。  D“相濡以沫”比喻同处困境,以微薄之力相互救助。正确。

单项选择题 A型题
阅读理解

In 1935, the clarinetist and bandleader Benny Goodman, aged just twentysix, left New York with his fourteenpiece “swing” band and, traveling in a ragtag group of cars, headed for the huge Palomar Ballroom in Los Angeles. It was not an easy trip. There were half a dozen dismal, sparsely attended onenighters and three weeks at a dance hall in Denver, where the band was forced to play waltzes, tangos, and novelty numbers. On the opening night at the Palomar, the band played ballad numbers in the first set, and there was little response from the dancers. Then one of the musicians said, if they were going to bomb again they might well do it in style. So Goodman called for his hot, often uptempo arrangements, many of them by the ingenious black bandleader and arranger Fletcher Henderson, and the kids stopped dancing, clustered around the bandstand, and began roaring. Before the weeks at the Palomar were over, it was clear that Goodman had suddenly made jazz—still a suspect and largely subliminal American folk music, despite the brilliant inventions during the previous decade of Jelly Roll Morton and others—into a popular music.

Goodmans surprising ways continued. In 1936, he shook up the white entertainment establishment by hiring two black musicians—the elegant pianist Teddy Wilson and the plunging vibraphonist Lione Hampton. (To be sure, Wilson and Hampton did not play in the band; instead, they appeared with Goodman and the drummer Gene Krupa during intermissions.) A year later, when the band went into the Paramount Theater in New York for three weeks, legions of kids appeared, and a screaming, dancing riot nearly took place. It was the first great American show frenzy, and it prepared the way for the Sinatra frenzy of 1947, and for all the Beatles frenzies, and for all the mindless rockborne frenzies of the Seventies and Eighties.

Then, on the night of January 16, 1938, Goodman, challenging the longhairs, took his band into a soldout Carnegie Hall. The big band played a dozen numbers, the trio two numbers, and the quartet five numbers. Despite the immediate rumblings from Olin Downes, the Timess classical music critic (“The playing last night, if noise, speed and beat, all old devices, are heat, was “hot” as it could be, but nothing came of it all, and in the long run it was decidedly monotonous”), Goodmans concert moved jazz even further up the American popular register. [412 words]

小题1: This passage is mainly

A  a general review of Jazz music.

B  a biography of Benny Goodman.

C  about the origin of American folk music.

D  about how jazz became popular in America.

小题2:  Which of the following statements is true according to the passage?

A  The bands first music show in Los Angles was an immediate success.

B  Goodman is considered the father of Jazz music.

C  Benny Goodman was unknown to public when he left New York.

D  The band scheduled to play waltzes, tangos and novelty numbers at a dance hall in Denver.

小题3: It could be inferred from the passage that

A  Jazz is a style of music native to America.

B  Classic music had become outdated at Goodmans time.

C  Morton and Goodman were contemporaries.

D  Goodman was the first bandleader who hired Black musicians in 1930s.

小题4: The phrase “shake up” (Line 1,Paragraph 2) in the context probably means

A  to give a very unpleasant shock.

B  to make changes to an organization.

B  to get rid of a problem.

D  to point out, designate.

小题5:  Towards Goodmans music show frenzy, Olin Downes, the classical music critic has

A  approving attitude.  B  satirizing attitude.

C  regretting mind.  D  exaggerated tone.