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(外研版)2021高考一轮复习Module3Literature课后提能练选修7(英语)
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  • 资源类别试题
    资源子类一轮复习
  • 教材版本外研版(现行教材)
    所属学科高中英语
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[2018·江苏卷]In the 1760s, Mathurin Roze opened a series of shops that boasted (享有) a special meat soup called consommé. Although the main attraction was the soup, Roze's chain shops also set a new standard for dining out, which helped to establish Roze as the inventor of the modern restaurant.

Today, scholars have generated large amounts of instructive research about restaurants. Take visual hints that influence what we eatdiners served themselves about 20 percent more pasta (意大利面食) when their plates matched their food. When a dark­colored cake was served on a black plate rather than a white one, customers recognized it as sweeter and more tasty.

Lighting matters, too. When Berlin restaurant customers ate in darkness, they couldn't tell how much they'd hadthose given extra­large shares ate more than everyone else, but were none_the_wiser — they didn't feel fuller, and they were just as ready for dessert.

Time is money,  but that principle means different things for different types of restaurants. Unlike fast­food places, fine dining shops prefer customers to stay longer and spend. One way to encourage customers to stay and order that extra roundput on some Mozart (莫扎特). When classical, rather than pop,  music was playing, diners spent more. Fast music hurried diners out. Particular scents also have an effectdiners who got the scent of lavender (薰衣草) stayed longer and spent more than those who smelled lemon, or no scent.

Meanwhile, things that you might expect to discourage spending — “bad” tables, crowding, high prices — don't necessarily. Diners at bad tables — next to the kitchen door, say — spent nearly as much as others but soon fled. It can be concluded that restaurant keepers need not “be overly concerned about ‘bad’ tables” given that they're profitable. As for crowds, a Hong Kong study found that they increased a restaurant's reputation, suggesting great food at fair prices.And doubling a buffet's price led customers to say that its pizza was 11 percent tastier.

1The underlined phrase “none the wiser” in paragraph 3 most probably implies that the customers were ________.

Anot aware of eating more than usual

Bnot willing to share food with others

Cnot conscious of the food quality

Dnot fond of the food provided

2How could a fine dining shop make more profit?

APlaying classical music.

BIntroducing lemon scent.

CMaking the light brighter.

DUsing plates of larger size.

3What does the last paragraph talk about?

ATips to attract more customers.

BProblems restaurants are faced with.

CWays to improve restaurants' reputation.

DCommon misunderstandings about restaurants.

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