2016年5月北美SAT真题高清PDF完整版可下载

2022-05-30 15:18:24

  2016年5月北美

  2016年5月北美SAT真题Reading Test

  Questions 1-10 are based on the following

  passage.

  This passage is adapted from William Maxwell, The Folded

  Leaf. ©1959 by William Maxwell. Originally published

  in 1945.

  The Alcazar Restaurant was on Sheridan Road

  near Devon Avenue. It was long and narrow, with

  tables for two along the walls and tables for four

  down the middle. The decoration was art moderne,

  5 except for the series of murals depicting the four

  seasons, and the sick ferns in the front window.

  Lymie sat down at the second table from the cash

  register, and ordered his dinner. The history book,

  which he propped against the catsup and the glass

  10 sugar bowl, had been used by others before him.

  Blank pages front and back were filled in with maps,

  drawings, dates, comic cartoons, and organs of the

  body; also with names and messages no longer clear

  and never absolutely legible. On nearly every other

  15 page there was some marginal notation, either in ink

  or in very hard pencil. And unless someone had

  upset a glass of water, the marks on page 177 were

  from tears.

  While Lymie read about the Peace of Paris, signed

  20 on the thirtieth of May, 1814, between France and

  the Allied powers, his right hand managed again and

  again to bring food up to his mouth. Sometimes he

  chewed, sometimes he swallowed whole the food that

  he had no idea he was eating. The Congress of

  25 Vienna met, with some allowance for delays, early in

  November of the same year, and all the powers

  engaged in the war on either side sent

  plenipotentiaries. It was by far the most splendid and

  important assembly ever convoked to discuss and

  30 determine the affairs of Europe. The Emperor of

  Russia, the King of Prussia, the Kings of Bavaria,

  Denmark, and Wurttemberg, all were present in

  person at the court of the Emperor Francis I in the

  Austrian capital. When Lymie put down his fork and

  35 began to count them off, one by one, on the fingers

  of his left hand, the waitress, whose name was Irma,

  thought he was through eating and tried to take his

  plate away. He stopped her. Prince Metternich (his

  right thumb) presided over the Congress, and

  40 Prince Talleyrand (the index finger) represented

  France.

  A party of four, two men and two women, came

  into the restaurant, all talking at once, and took

  possession of the center table nearest Lymie.

  45 The women had shingled hair and short tight skirts

  which exposed the underside of their knees when

  they sat down. One of the women had the face of a

  young boy but disguised by one trick or another

  (rouge, lipstick, powder, wet bangs plastered against

  50 the high forehead, and a pair of long pendent

  earrings) to look like a woman of thirty-five, which

  as a matter of fact she was. The men were older. They

  laughed more than there seemed any occasion for,

  while they were deciding between soup and shrimp

  55 cocktail, and their laughter was too loud. But it was

  the women’s voices, the terrible not quite sober pitch

  of the women’s voices which caused Lymie to skim

  over two whole pages without knowing what was on

  them. Fortunately he realized this and went back.

  60 Otherwise he might never have known about the

  ...

  1.Over the course of the passage, the primary focus shifts from

  A) Lymie’s inner thoughts to observations made by the other characters.

  B) an exchange between strangers to a satisfying personal relationship.

  C) the physical setting of the scene to the different characters’ personality traits.

  D) Lymie’s experience reading a book to descriptions of people in the restaurant

  2.The main purpose of the first paragraph is to

  A) introduce the passage’s main character by showing his nightly habits.

  B) indicate the date the passage takes place by presenting period details.

  C) convey the passage’s setting by describing a place and an object.

  D) foreshadow an event that is described in detail later in the passage.

  3.It can reasonably be inferred that Irma, the waitress,thinks Lymie is “through eating” (line 37) because

  A) he has begun reading his book.

  B) his plate is empty.

  C) he is no longer holding his fork.

  D) he has asked her to clear the table.

  4.Lymie’s primary impression of the “party of four”(line 42) is that they

  A) are noisy and distracting.

  B) are a refreshing change from the othercustomers.

  C) resemble characters from his history book.

  D) represent glamour and youth.

  5.Which choice provides the best evidence for theanswer to the previous question?

  A) Lines 45-47 (“The women... down”)

  B) Lines 47-52 (“One... was”)

  C) Lines 55-59 (“But... them”)

  D) Line 69 (“Lymie... book”)

  ...

  

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