Passage Three

    If you had asked me then if I would accept a job as a restaurant critic for The New York Times, or any established publication, I would have replied, without a second thought, 'Of course not!' And not just because I did not want to think of myself as an ambitious sort. Working in restaurants was honest labor; anyone could see that. Writing about them for the mainstream press was not; it felt like joining the enemy.
    But reviewing was fun, so much fun that when mainstream publishers started paying me for my opinions, I didn't do the decent thing.  Before I knew it, I had stopped cooking professionally. Then I stopped cooking altogether. 'She's joined the leisure class,' my friends said.
    I disarmed my critics by inviting them along; nobody I knew could afford to eat out and nobody refuseD. We went with equal amounts of guilt and pleasure, with a feeling that we were trespassing on the playgrounds of the rich.
    We didn't belong in those starchy restaurants. We always got the worst table. And then, because I didn't own a credit card, I had to pay in cash. The year turned into two, and three, and more. I got a credit carD. I got good clothes. I was writing for increasingly prestigious publications. Meanwhile, a voice inside me kept whispering, 'How could you?'
    When I receive weekly letters from people who think it is indecent to write about $100 meals while half the world is hungry, the voice yacks right along.  'They're absolutely right,' it whispers. And when it asks, 'When are you going to grow up and get a real job?' it sounds a lot like my mother.
    And just about then is when I tell the voice to shut up. Because when my mother starts telling me that all I'm doing with my life is telling rich people where to eat, I realize how much the world has changed.
    Yes, there are still restaurants where rich people go to remind themselves that they are different from you and me. But there are fewer and fewer of them. As American food has come of age, American restaurants have changeD. Going out to eat used to be like going to the opera; today, it is more like going the movies.
单选题     Why would the author have refused to accept the job as a restaurant critic if people had asked her then?
 
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】由第一段最后一句writing about them...felt like joining the enemy可知在作者眼中,当餐厅评论家与投奔敌人一样。
单选题     The word 'decent' in 'doing the decent thing' in paragraph 2 is closest in meaning to ______.
 
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】本句中提到出版商started paying me for my opinions,这是有利可图的。选项A为正确答案。
单选题     In Paragraph 4, by 'The year turned into two, three and more,' the author means that ______.
 
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】从第四段倒数第二句可以得知作者在写餐馆评论。她不在餐馆工作,而且生活并不奢侈,其写作目的也并非为了得到信用卡。
单选题     Which of the following can be inferred from the last paragraph?
 
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】从本段得知,美国的大部分人都能负担起在餐馆吃饭的费用,推断出美国大部分餐馆都不贵。选项A不符合文意。选项B根据American food has come of age得知美国食物并非一成不变。选项C并不能由文中推出,只能推测出在美国看电影便宜。
单选题     Which of the following can be concluded from this article?
 
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】由第二段I had stopped cooking professionally得知作者曾经是厨师。