试卷详情
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大学四级-1857
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[单项选择]A. Turn up the volume. B. Stop talking so much.
C. Play the music more softly. D. Play different music.
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[单项选择]A. can be predicted at birth
B. stays the same throughout his life
C. can be increased by education
D. is determined by his childhood
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[单项选择]A. That babies understand language before they can speak.
B. That babies have simple mathematical skills.
C. Babies’ preferences for different kinds of toys.
D. The influence of television on babies.
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[单项选择]A. They eat protein. B. They never move from one location.
C. They cause erosion of rocks. D. They are found only in deep water.
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[单项选择]A. They’re born with the ability.
B. They’re exceptionally intelligent.
C. They learned it from playing with dolls.
D. They’ve learned it from their parents.
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[单项选择]A. The election for senator. B. The election for treasurer.
C. The election for secretary. D. The election for president.
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[单项选择]A. Language acquisition may be negatively affected.
B. Babies used in experiments often develop emotional problems.
C. Parents may force their children to learn at too early an age.
D. Early coaching will interfere with creativity.
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[填空题]Most people feel the need to make sure everyone in a group is comfortable before they start a business meeting. This pre-discussed conversation—small talk—can cover a wide range of topics, some of (36) may not be related to agenda for the meeting. In most countries, building personal connections is a (37) first step in making sure that business goes smoothly. People often use this phase of interaction to observe and assess the character of their colleagues.
In the Middle East, business men like to get to know new (38) before starting a meeting. They often judge people’s response to certain topics by (39) their eyes, so they need to be able to sit or stand very close to the person. Small talk tends to continue until the people involved are comfortable enough to move close to one another. In Latin American and Asian countries, people also want to (40) if an acquaintance can be trusted. For them, business is conducted with an i
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[填空题]As you begin your study of the heavens, you may feel that the odds of your making any impact on the field of (26) are impossibly low. But in fact important (27) can come from students’ work. You may have heard from the media that the examples of one of the most illusive objects in the (28) the Brown Dwarf, were found by a 27-year-old student Clare Briadger. Scientists all over the world had been searching for more than 50 years and yet the (29) was made by someone still in (30) school, when Ms. Briadger (31) a paper at the meeting of the American Astronomical Society, her talk was for me the (32) of the meeting. There was (33) agreement that what she had found was indeed the illusive Brown Dwarf. For those of you who don’t yet know, Brown Dwarves are these gaseous bodies that are too (34) to be planets, but not massive enough to ignite into full-grown stars. While others spent their time
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[单项选择]A. 85 B. 100 C. 110 D. 125
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[单项选择]A. The reproductive cycle of barnacles. B. A new source of protein.
C. Types of sea animals. D. The adhesive quality of barnacles.
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[单项选择]A. He decided not to attend summer school.
B. He may have difficulty working and studying at the same time.
C. He’s working hard so that he can afford to go to New York.
D. He’s teaching school this summer.
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[单项选择]A. They’re competing against each other in an election.
B. The man is writing the woman’s speech.
C. The man is interviewing the woman.
D. The woman is planning the man’s campaign.
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[单项选择]A. The clothes don’t look clean to him.
B. He doesn’t intend to get the clothes.
C. He can pick out his own clothes.
D. The woman should stop staring at his clothes.
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[单项选择]A. human brains differ considerably
B. the brain a person is born with is important in determining his intelligence
C. environment is crucial in determining a person’s intelligence
D. persons having identical brains will have roughly the same intelligence
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[单项选择]While more and more Americans expand their wardrobes (衣柜) with the click of a mouse, the Japanese are a step ahead, buying clothes on their cell-phones. It’s almost exactly the same as shopping on a computer, just smaller and more mobile. In Japan, cell-phone commerce is an $83 billion industry. The leader is Xavel, which launched girls walker.com, the first free-of-charge cell-phone consumer entrance. Six years later, it’s the country’s most popular cell-phone shopping site getting 100 million hits a day. Its partner, girlsauction, com boasts 1.5 million members and $43 million monthly cell-phone transactions. "If I was going to do business, I was going to do it with women in their 20s and 30s," says the CEO. "I wondered why nobody thought of it, considering they are such a huge market."
Another thing nobody thought of was a buy-it-as-you-see-it fashion show. In August, Xavel threw Japan’s largest fashion event to date, the Tokyo Girls Collection. The 12,600 attendees and 15 mill
A. Technology develops faster in Japan than in America.
B. Cell-phone commerce has become the most important industry in Japan.
C. Xavel is the CEO of the company which launched girlswalker.com.
D. Japanese can purchase items on their cell-phones through girlswalker.com.
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[单项选择]A. Staring at the dolls longer. B. Crying loudly.
C. Blinking their eyes rapidly. D. Reaching for the dolls.
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[单项选择]A. A salary cut. B. A real estate bargain.
C. A rent increase. D. A vacation trip.
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[单项选择]A. Rewrite the paper. B. Ask the woman to do some typing.
C. Read the newspaper again. D. Check the paper for mistakes.
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[单项选择]A. The transportation for the trip is free.
B. The class didn’t enjoy going on the field trip.
C. Some people may not go on the trip.
D. Everyone in the class has paid the fee.
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[单项选择]A. Human personality. B. His conscious theory.
C. His free will. D. Personality theory.
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[单项选择]Human language is the subject of endless scientific investigation, but the gestures that accompany speech are a surprisingly neglected area. It is sometimes jokingly said that the way to render an Italian speechless is to tie his wrists together, but almost everyone moves their hands in meaningful ways when they talk. Susan Goldin-Meadow of the University of Chicago, however, studies gestures carefully—and not out of idle curiosity. Introspection suggests that gesturing not only helps people communicate but also helps them to think. She set out to test this, and specifically to find out whether gestures might be used as an aid to children’s learning. It turns out, as she told the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), that they can.
The experiment she conducted involved balancing equations. Presented with an equation of the form 2+3+4=x+4, written on a blackboard, a child is asked to calculate the value of x. In the equations Dr. Goldin-Meadow always made the
A. Italians cannot talk with others if they don’t move their hands in meaningful ways
B. gesturing going with speech is rarely chosen as the subject of the scientific investigation
C. human language is much more important than meaningful gestures
D. meaningful gestures are considered to be of help to children’s learning
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[填空题]
Small Class’s Magic
A. The question "Are smaller classes better than larger classes " continues to be debated among teachers (and their unions), administrators, and parents as well as in the research community. The issue persists because of the powerful common-sense appeal of small classes to alleviate problems indigenous to our classrooms.
B. Small classes are an integral component of nationally subsidized programs including special education classes for disruptive or learning-disabled students and Title I interventions for children living in poverty. Small classes or small groups working with one teacher or tutor also are a key element of programs targeted most often at students at risk, for example, Success for All (Slavin, et al., 1990; Slavin & Madden, 1995) and Reading Recovery (Pinnell, deFord, & Lyons, 1988).
C. The issue persists because of the tension between the research findings and the cost of implementation.
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[多项选择]在中国,人们对一切艺术的艺术,即生活的艺术,懂得很多。一个较为年轻的文明国家可能会致力于进步;然而,一个古老的文明国度,在人生的历程上见多识广,她所感兴趣的自然是如何过好生活。就中国而言,由于有了中国的人文主义精神,把人当做一切事物的中心,把人类幸福当做知识的终结,于是,强调生活的艺术就是更为自然的事了。但即使没有人文主义,一个古老的文明也一定会有自己的价值尺度,只有这样,它才会知道什么是“持久的生活乐趣”。任何一个民族,如果它不知道如何享受生活,那么,在我们的眼里,这个民族一定是粗野的,不文明的。
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[单项选择]A. He was joking with Freud.
B. He played in Freud’s office.
C. He unconsciously revealed his intention of refusing to pay.
D. He only made his empty promise to Freud.
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[单项选择]A. He doesn’t know how to turn the calculator on.
B. He lost the woman’s calculator.
C. He broke something the woman lent him.
D. He can’t help the woman tonight.
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[单项选择]A. The woman should get another job.
B. He won’t have to wait much longer.
C. The woman was mistaken.
D. He was waiting in the wrong place.
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[单项选择]A. Make posters. B. Write a speech.
C. Answer questions. D. Study chemistry.
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[单项选择]A. It works on wet surfaces. B. It’s stronger than synthetic glue.
C. It’s a nutritious source of protein. D. It has been used successfully by doctors.
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[单项选择]A. Money. B. Jewish independence.
C. University setting. D. Theory.
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[单项选择]A. Compare their lecture notes.
B. Review the man’s talk.
C. Prepare questions to ask candidates.
D. Vote in the school election.