填空题
{{B}}Directions:{{/B}}
In the following text, 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.
The maple smoke of autumn bonfires is incense to Canadians. Bestowing
perfume for the nose, color for the eye, sweetness for the spring tongue, the
sugar maple prompts this sharing of a favorite myth and original etymology of
the word maple.
(2) The maple looms large in Ojibwa folk tales.
The time of year for sugaring-off is "in the Maple Moon." Among Ojibwa, the
primordial female figure is Nokomis, a wise grandmother.
(3) 41.
__________.
(4) Knowing this was a pursuit to the death, Nokomis
outsmarted the cold devils. She hid in a stand of maple trees, all red and
orange and deep yellow. This maple grove grew beside a waterfall whose mist
blurred the trees' outline. As they peered through the mist, slavering wendigos
thought they saw a raging fire in which their prey was burning.
(5)42. __________.
(6) For their service in saving the
earth mother's life, these maples were given a special gift: their water of life
would be forever sweet, and Canadians would tap it for nourishment.
(7)43. __________.
(8) The contention that maple syrup is
unique to North America is suspect, I believe. China has close to 10 species of
maple, more than any country in the world. Canada has 10 native species. North
America does happen to be home to the sugar maple, the species that produces the
sweetest sap and the most abundant flow.
(9) But are we to
believe that in thousands of years of Chinese history, these inventive people
never tapped a maple to taste its sap? I speculate that they did.
(10)44. __________.
(11) What is certain is the maple's
holdfast on our national imagination. Is leaf was adopted as an emblem in
New France as early as 1700, and in English Canada by the mid-19th century. In
the fall of 1867, a Toronto schoolteacher named Alexander Muir was traipsing at
street a the city, all squelchy underfoot from the soft felt of falling leaves,
when a maple leaf alighted to his coat sleeve and stuck there.
(12) The word "maple" is from "mapeltreow", the Old English term for maple
tree, with "mapl"--as its Proto-Germanic root, a compound in which the first "m"
--is, I believe, the nearly worldwide "ma", one of the first human sounds, the
pursing of a baby's lips as it prepares to suck milk from mother's breast.
The "ma" root gives rise in many world languages to thousands of words
like "mama", "mammary", "maia", and "Amazon." Here it would make "map!-" mean
"nourishing mother tree," that is, tree whose maple sap in nourishing.
(13)45. __________.
[A] The second part of the compound,
"apl-", is a variant of Indo-European able "fruit of any tree" and the origin of
another English fruit word, apple. So the primitive analogy compares the
liquid sap with another nourishing liquid, mother's milk.
[B] In
one tale about seasonal change, cannibal wendigos-creatures of evil-chased
through the autumn countryside old Nokomis, who was a symbol for female
fertility. Wendigos throve in icy cold. When they entered the bodies of
humans, the human heart froze solid.
[C] Here wendigos represent
oncoming winter. They were hunting to kill and eat poor Nokomis, the warm
embodiment of female fecundity who, like the summer, has grown
old.
[D] Could Proto-Americas who crossed the Bering land bridge
to populate the Americas have brought with them a knowledge of maple syrup? Is
there a very old Chinese phrase for maple syrup? Is maple syrup mentioned in
Chinese literature? For a non-reader of Chinese, such questions are daunting but
not impossible to answer.
[E] Maple and its syrup flow sweetly
into Canadian humor. Quebeckers have developed a special love for such a
nutriment.
[F] After it resisted several brushings-off, Muir
'joked to his walking companion that this would be "the maple leaf for ever!" At
home that evening, he wrote a poem and set it to music, in celebration of
Canada's Confederation. Muir's song, "The Maple Leaf Forever," was wildly
popular and helped fasten the symbol firmly to Canada.
[G] But
it was only old Nokomis' being hidden by the bright red leaves of her friends,
the maples. And so, drooling ice and huffing frost, the wendigos left her and
sought easier prey.