题目内容

Doors and windows can't keep them out; airport immigration officers can't stop them and the Internet is an absolute re production soil. They seem harmless in small doses, but large imports threaten Japan's very uniqueness, say critics. "They are foreign words and they are infecting the Japanese language".
"Sometimes I feel like I need a translator to understand my own language," says Yoke Fujimura with little anger, a 60-year-old Tokyo restaurant worker. "It's becoming incomprehensible."
It's not only Japan who is on the defensive. Countries around the globe are wet through their hands over the rapid spread of American English. Coca-Cola, for example, is one of the most recognized terms on Earth.
It is made worse for Japan, however, by its unique writing system. The country writes all imported utterances-except Chinese-in a different script. called katakana(片假名). It is the only country to maintain such a distinction. Katakana takes far more space to write than kanji-the core pictograph(象形文字) characters that the Japanese borrowed from China 1,500 years ago. Because it stands out, readers complain that sentences packed with foreign words start to resemble ex tended strings of lights. As if that weren't enough, katakana terms tend to get confusing. For example, digital camera first appears as degitaru kamera. Then they became the more ear-pleasing digi kamey. But kamey is also the Japanese word for turtle. "It's very frustrating not knowing what young people are talking about," says humorously Minom Shiratori, a 53-year-old bus driver. "Sometimes I can't tell if they're discussing cameras or turtles."
In a bid to stop the flood of katakana, the government has formed a Foreign Words Committee to find suitable Japanese replacements. The committee is slightly different from French-style. language police, which try to support a law that forbids advertising in English. Rather, committee members and traditionalists hope a sustained campaign of persuasion, gentle criticism and leadership by example can turn the tide.
According to the author, the mason why the Japanese is infected greatly by English is _____.

A. that nothing can prevent it from entering into Japan
B. that English is the most recognized language in the world
C. that the government has not set up a special administration department to control this trend before it becomes popular in Japan
D. not clearly mentioned in this passage

查看答案
更多问题

Which of the following is NOT recommended for the break during the children's study after

A. Shoot baskets.
B. Play some games with parents.
C. Go out to drink some beverage in a bar for a long time.
D. Relax a bit by using the bathroom.

By saying "countries around the globe are wet through their hands over the rapid spread of

A. even a restaurant worker in Japan may feel the English infection on Japanese
B. the flood of katakana has covered most of countries in the world
Coca-Cola is the most popular brand of beverage on the earth and this product occupy all the global market
D. many other countries are influenced greatly by American English

听力原文: Today it is perfectly natural for us to shake hands when we greet someone, or say good-bye. But like so many other things we do without thinking such actions at one time probably symbolized something else.
For example, in primitive life the hand was probably a symbol of power and strength. The hand was used to fight enemies, kill animals and make spears and implements. So when the hand was extended to someone, it could have re presented good will, since it showed that the person was not armed or ready to fight.
We know that the hand was an important symbol in early religion, probably as a mark of power. The Greeks prayed to their gods with raised hands. Presenting hands palm to palm was at one time the way an inferior person paid respect to a superior.
Among the Arabs, it was customary at one time to kiss the hand of a superior. Later on, polite Arabs began to resist the efforts of people to kiss their hands, and some times they would end up clasping hands as each tried to prevent the other from showing this mark of "inferiority".
The early Greeks held out the right hand when they wished to indicate friendship to a stranger. The hand and what was done with it have been full of meaning to people down through the ages. And while we shake hands, we are really carrying on a custom that has been handed clown to us from ancient times.
(33)

A. Unfriendliness.
B. Generosity.
C. Friendship.
D. Strength.

According to the passage, the expert named Martin, appearing in the second paragraph, most

A. a specialist in children education
B. a professional consultant in an after-school program
C. the leader of a research group about sports, such as basketball
D. mostly the same as what Freimuth(in the last paragraph) does

答案查题题库