問題詳情

一、 第一大題:英文(共 20 題單選題) 第 1 至 10 題為題組    Fortune cookies, commonly served after meals at Chinese restaurants in the U.S.,are characterized by a fortune, which is written on a small piece of paper tucked insidethe cookie. There are several 1  stories about the origin of the fortune cookie.None of them, however, has been proven to be entirely true.   One of these stories 2  the cookie’s origin back to 13th- and 14th-centuryChina, which was then occupied by the Mongols. According to the legend, notes of3  plans for a revolution to overthrow the Mongols were hidden in mooncakesthat would ordinarily have been stuffed with sweet bean paste. The revolution turnedout to be 4 and eventually led to the formation of the Ming Dynasty. Thisstory may sound highly credible, but there seems to be no solid evidence that it inspiredthe creation of the 5  we know of today as fortune cookies.   Another 6 claims that David Jung, a Chinese immigrant living in LosAngeles, created the fortune cookie in 1918. Concerned about the poor people he saw wandering near his shop, he made cookies and passed them out free on the streets. Eachcookie 7  a strip of paper inside with an inspirational Bible quotation on it.   However, the more generally accepted story is that the fortune cookie first8  in either 1907 or 1914 in San Francisco, created by a Japanese immigrant,Makoto Hagiwara. The fortune cookie was based on a Japanese snack, but Hagiwarasweetened the recipe to appeal to American 9  . He enclosed thank-you notesin the cookies and served them to his guests with tea. Within a few years, Chineserestaurant owners in San Francisco had copied the recipe and 10  the thankyou notes with fortune notes. Such fortune cookies became common in Chineserestaurants in the U.S. after World War II.(AB) account (AC) appeared (AD) competing (AE) contained(BC) replaced (BD) secret (BE) successful (CD) tastes(CE) traces (DE) treats

1

參考答案

答案:A,D
難度:困難0.2
統計:A(28),B(24),C(9),D(24),E(11)

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