New Yorkers do it. Parisians do it. Fashion types, Swedes and architects do it. In fact, name any stylish tribe and you’ll find

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问题     New Yorkers do it. Parisians do it. Fashion types, Swedes and architects do it. In fact, name any stylish tribe and you’ll find that they do it. Wear black, that is—a colour that has come to signify so much: rigour, elegance, sex appeal, piety, formality, slenderness, even wickedness. Recently, however, black’s supposedly timeless status as the go-to hue for the chic has been thrown into the shade. And maybe that is no bad thing.
    Scroll through any British fashion website today and a rainbow of colour beams out. The breadth of shades feels remarkable: Topshop sets out its stall with a parrot-green silk skirt , a lemon coat and an azure trouser suit. At Boden, it’s all tomato-red cardigans and spotty cerise frocks. At Zara, there are russet and emerald tartans and rollneck jumpers in highlighter pen yellow and candy pink.
    Yes, Britain is in the midst of a heatwave, but this is no seasonal aberration. For months, the fashion news agenda has been hijacked by colour, seen everywhere from Amal Clooney’s dandelion-yellow royal wedding frock to Janelle Monae’s so-called "vagina" trousers (pink , of course).
    Colour is hot, and the trend forecaster WGSN has the data to prove it. In January, it says, brightly coloured clothes represented a 20. 2% share of the UK market, up from 16. 7% two years previously. Meanwhile, between April 2017 and April 2018, black fell by 10%. Yellow has performed spectacularly , up 50% year on year. Another retail analyst, Edited, has a different take, but one which is nevertheless telling. Though it reports that the overall ratio of black clothing sold is up , the shade has slipped out of the fashion spotlight, falling by 2% this year within " best-selling products—the stuff that sells out fast" , according to the retail analysis and insights director Katie Smith.
    Black is not dead, but Florence Allday, Euromonitor International’s analyst, predicts it will become an " increasingly smaller proportion of retailers’ product offering" , thanks to shifts in our lifestyles. "Now your office can be anywhere, the boundaries between formal/informal, work/home, online/offline are blurring," she says. "Colour is no longer seen as frivolous, eccentric or inappropriate. "
    The philosophy behind John Lewis’s biggest womenswear relaunch in decades, on sale in September, is about using colour as a means for expressing individuality, with most items available in up to four hues. The professionally seen-and-not-heard have used colour cannily for decades. The Queen, for one, dresses brightly to ensure visibility. Recently, she has noticeably ramped up the intensity, dabbling in head-to-toe lime green and shocking chartreuse. Such expert tricks are becoming part of civilian wardrobes, too, thanks to social media, and what Smith describes as "millennial peacocking". She says: "It’s the fastest way to stand out on an endlessly updating feed. "
The underlined sentence " black’s supposedly timeless status as the go-to hue for the chic has been thrown into the shade" most probably means that______.

选项 A、black is getting popular
B、black’s status is getting higher
C、black is out of fashion
D、black is not bad thing

答案C

解析 句意理解题。该句话的字面意思是“黑色原本享有时尚经典的永恒地位,现在却被打入了阴影里”,实际意思是“现在被遗弃在角落,不再受欢迎了”。[A]“黑色更流行了”,[B]“黑色的地位更高了”,[D]“黑色不是坏事”都与题意无关,因此应该选择[C]。
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