05年托??荚嚾嬖囶}測(cè)試(2)

字號(hào):

6. In his research at Columbia University, Charles Townes worked with all of the following EXCEPT
    (A) stimulated emission
    (B) microwaves
    (C) light amplification
    (D) a maser
    7.In approximately what year was the first maser built?
    (A) 1917
    (B) 1951
    (C) 1953
    (D) 1957
    8. The word "emerged" in line 20 is closest in meaning to
    (A) increased
    (B) concluded
    (C) succeeded
    (D) appeared
    9. The word "outlining" in line 21 is closest in meaning to
    (A) assigning
    (B) studying
    (C) checking
    (D) summarizing
    10. Why do people still argue about who deserves the credit for the concept of the laser?
    (A) The researchers’ notebooks were lost.
    (B) Several people were developing the idea at the same time.
    (C) No one claimed credit for the development until recently.
    (D) The work is still incomplete.
    Question 11——21
     Panel painting, common in thirteenth -and fourteenth -century Europe , involved a
    painstaking , laborious process. Wooden planks were joined, covered with gesso to
    prepare the surface for painting , and then polished smooth with special tools. On this
    perfect surface, the artist would sketch a composition with chalk, refine it with inks,
    and then begin the deliberate process of applying thin layers of egg tempera paint (egg
    yolk in which pigments are suspended) with small brushes. The successive layering of
    these meticulously applied paints produced the final, translucent colors.
    Backgrounds of gold were made by carefully applying sheets of gold leaf, and then
    embellishing of decorating the gold leaf by punching
    it with a metal rod on which a
    pattern had been embossed. Every step in the process was slow and deliberate . The
    quick-drying tempera demanded that the artist know exactly where each stroke be
    placed before the brush met the panel, and it required the use of fine brushes. It was,
    therefore , an ideal technique for emphasizing the hard linear edges and pure, fine areas
    of color that were so much a part of the overall aesthetic of the time. The notion that an
    artist could or would dash off an idea in a fit of spontaneous inspiration was
    completely alien to these deliberately produced works.
     Furthermore, making these paintings was so time-consuming that it demanded
    assistance. All such work was done by collective enterprise in the workshops. The
    painter or master who is credited with having created painting may have designed
    the work and overseen its production, but it is highly unlikely that the artist’s hand
    applied every stroke of the brush. More likely, numerous assistants, who had been
    trained to imitate the artist’s style, applied the paint. The carpenter’s shop probably
    provided the frame and perhaps supplied the panel, and yet another shop supplied the
    gold. Thus, not only many hands , but also many shops were involved in the final
    product.
    I(yíng)n spite of problems with their condition, restoration, and preservation many panel
    paintings have survived, and today many of them are housed in museum collections.