2007年12月大学英语六级最新预测试卷及答案详解

出处: 作者: 日期:2007年12月18日 15时02分

  31. The first paragraph is mainly about .

  [A] the intrinsic value of human experiences
  [B] the intrinsic value of the experiences of nonhuman animals
  [C] the intrinsic value of ecological system as a whole
  [D] an ancient ethical question about the nature of intrinsic value

  32. we owe nothing to the future generations.

  [A] In the author’s opinion
  [B] From a social contrast view of ethics
  [C] For a utilitarian
  [D] For most environmentalists

  33. Population policy we take should be considered .

  [A] positive  [B] negative  [C] complex  [D] reasonable

  34. According to this passage, optimum population .

  [A] refers to the population size at which the average level of welfare will be as high as possible
  [B] refers to the population size at which the total amount of welfare will be as great as possible
  [C] is a difficult philosophical issue which remains to be resolved in the future
  [D] is a difficult philosophical issue which Derek Parfit has successfully settled in Reasons and Persons

  35. The proper title for this passage should be .

  [A] A Mystery in Applied Ethics
  [B] Our Obligations to Future Generations
  [C] Environmental Ethics
  [D] Environmental issues

 

Text 4

  Perhaps only a small boy training to be a wizard at the Hogwarts school of magic could cast a spell so powerful as to create the biggest book launch ever. Wherever in the world the clock strikes midnight on June 20th, his followers will flock to get their paws on one of more than 10m copies of “Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix”. Bookshops will open in the middle of the night and delivery firms are drafting in extra staff and bigger trucks. Related toys, games, DVDs and other merchandise will be everywhere. There will be no escaping Pottermania.

  Yet Mr Potter’s world is a curious one, in which things are often not what they appear. While an excitable media (hereby including The Economist, happy to support such a fine example of globalisation) is helping to hype the launch of J.K. Rowling’s fifth novel, about the most adventurous thing that the publishers (Scholastic in America and Britain’s Bloomsbury in English elsewhere) have organised is a reading by Ms Rowling in London’s Royal Albert Hall, to be broadcast as a live webcast. Hollywood, which owns everything else to do with Harry Potter, says it is doing even less. Incredible as it may seem, the guardians of the brand say that, to protect the Potter franchise, they are trying to maintain a low profile. Well, relatively low.

  Ms Rowling signed a contract in 1998 with Warner Brothers, part of AOL Time Warner, giving the studio exclusive film, licensing and merchandising rights in return for what now appears to have been a steal: some $500,000. Warner licenses other firms to produce goods using Harry Potter characters or images, from which Ms Rowling gets a big enough cut that she is now wealthier than the queen—if you believe Britain’s Sunday Times rich list. The process is selfgenerating: each book sets the stage for a film, which boosts book sales, which lifts sales of Potter products.

  Globally, the first four Harry Potter books have sold some 200m copies in 55 languages; the two movies have grossed over $1.8 billion at the box office. This is a stunning success by any measure, especially as Ms Rowling has long demanded that Harry Potter should not be over commercialised. In line with her wishes, Warner says it is being extraordinarily careful, at least by Hollywood standards, about what it licenses and to whom. It imposed tough conditions on Coca Cola, insisting that no Harry Potter images should appear on cans, and is now in the process of making its licensing programme even more restrictive. Coke may soon be considered too mass market to carry the brand at all.

  The deal with Warner ties much of the merchandising to the films alone. There are no officially sanctioned products relating to “Order of the Phoenix”; nor yet for “Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban”, the film of the third book, which is due out in June 2004. Warner agrees that Ms Rowling’s creation is a different sort of commercial property, one with long-term potential that could be damaged by a typical Hollywood marketing blitz, says Diane Nelson, the studio’s global brand manager for Harry Potter. It is vital, she adds, that with more to come, readers of the books are not alienated. “The evidence from our market research is that enthusiasm for the property by fans is not waning.”

  36. When the author says “there will be no escaping Potter mania”, he implies that .

  [A] Harry Potter’s appeal for the readers is simply irresistible
  [B] it is somewhat irrational to be so crazy about the magic boy
  [C] craze about Harry Potter will not be over in the near future
  [D] Hogwarts school of magic will be the biggest attraction world over

  37. Ms Rowling’s reading in London’s Royal Albert Hall is mentioned to show .

  [A] publishers are really adventurous in managing the Potter’s business
  [B] businesses are actually more credible than media in Potter’s world
  [C] the media are promoting Pottermania more actively than Hollywood
  [D] businesses involved with Potter are moving along in an unusual way

  38. The author believes that .

  [A] Britain’s Sunday Times rich list is not very convincing as it sounds
  [B] Time Warner’s management of licenses is a bit over commercialised
  [C] other firms may produce goods using Harry Potter images at will
  [D] what Ms Rowling got in return for her offering to Warner is a real bargain

  39. Paragraph 4 intends mainly to show Warner’s .

  [A] determination to promote Potter
  [B] consistence in conducting busines
  [C] high regard for Ms Rowling’s request
  [D] careful restrictions on licensing to Coco-Cola

  40. It can be concluded from the last paragraph that .

  [A] products of Potter films have brought enormous profits to Warner
  [B] current Hollywood’s marketing of Potter may damage its potential
  [C] readers could get tired of Ms Rowling’s writings sooner or later
  [D] Warner will maintain the same strategy with Potter in future

  Part B

  Sample 1

  Directions:

  In the following article, some sentences have been removed. For Questions 41-45, choose the most suitable one from the list A-G to fit into each of the numbered blank. There are two extra choices, which do not fit in any of the gaps. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1. (10 points). 

  Large, multinational corporations may be the companies whose ups and downs seize headlines. (41) Small businesses, defined as those with fewer than 100 workers, now employ 60 percent of the workforce and expected to generate half of all new jobs between now and the year 2,000.(42)

  Too many of these pioneers, however, will blaze ahead unprepared. Idealists will overestimate the clamor for their products or fail to factor in the competition. (43). Midcareer executives, forced by a takeover or a restructuring to quit the corporation and find another way to support themselves, may save the idea of being their own boss but may forget that entrepreneurs must also. at least for a while, be bookkeepers and receptionists, too.(44) By 1995, more than 60 of those 100 startups, 77 percent of the companies surveyed were still alive. Most credited their success in large part to having picked a business they already were comfortable in Eighty percent had worked with the same product or service in their last jobs.

  Thinking through an enterprise before the launch is obviously critical.(45) you must tenderly monitor its pulse, in their zeal, to expand. Small business owners often ignore early warning signs of a stagnant market or of decaying profitability. They hopefully four more and more into the enterprise, preferring not to acknowledge eroding profit margins that means the market for their ingenious service or product has evaporated, or that they must cut the payroll or vacate their lavish offices.

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