更多"We all enjoyed ______ on the farm."的相关试题:
[单项选择]I have always enjoyed all the events you organized and I hope to attend()in the coming years
A. little more
B. no more
C. much more
D. many more
[单项选择]We enjoyed the concert last night; they played ______ beautiful music.
A. such a
B. so a
C. so
[填空题]All we request is that the committee (consider)()our suggestion again.
[填空题]
How We Form First Impression
1
We all have first impression of someone we just met. But why Why do we form an
opinion about someone without really knowing anything about him or her aside
perhaps from a few remarks or readily observable traits.
2 The
answer is related to how your brain allows you to be aware of the world. Your
brain is so sensitive in picking up facial traits, even very minor difference in
how a person’s eyes, ears, nose, or mouth are placed in relation to each other
make you see him or her as different. In fact, your brain continuously processes
incoming sensory information-the sights and sounds of your world. These incoming
"signals" are compared against a host of "memories" stored in the brain areas
called the cortex system to determine what these new signals "mean".
3 If you see someone you know and like at school, your brain says
"familiar and safe". If you see someone new, it says, "new potentially
threatening". Then your brain starts to match features of this stranger with
other "known" memories. The height, weight, dress, ethnicity, gestures, and tone
of voice are all matched up. The more unfamiliar the characteristics, the more
your brain may say, "This is new. I don’t like this person". Or else. "I’m
intrigued". Or your brain may perceive a new face but familiar clothes,
ethnicity, gestures-like your other friends; so your brain says: "I like this
person." But these preliminary "impressions" can be dead wrong.
4 When we stereotype people, we use a less mature form of thinking (not unlike
the immature thinking of a very young child) that makes simplistic and
categorical impressions of others. Rather than learn about the depth and breadth
of people-their history, interest, values, strengths, and true character-we
categorize them as jocks, geeks, or freaks,
5 However, if we
resist initial stereotypical impressions, we have a chance.to be aware of what a
person is truly like. If we spend time with a person, hear about his or her
life, hopes, dreams, and become aware of the person’s character, we use a
different, more mature style of thinking and the most complex areas of our
cortex, which allow us to be humane.
A. Ways of Departure from
Immature and Simplistic Impressions
B. Comment on First
Impression
C. Illustration of First Impression
D. Comparing Incoming Sensory Information Against Memories
E.
Readily Observable Traits of First Impressions
F. Differences
Among Jocks, Geeks and FreaksParagraph 1______
[单项选择]
Passage One
All that we really need to plot out the future of our universe are a few good measurements. This does not mean that we can sit down today and outline the future course of the universe with anything like certainty. There are still too many things we do not know about the way the universe is put together. But we do know exactly what information we need to fill in our knowledge, and we have a pretty good idea of how to go about getting it.
Perhaps the best way to think of our present situation is to imagine a train coming into a switch yard(调车场). All of the switches are set before the train arrives, so that its path is completely determined. Some Switches we can see, others we cannot. There is no ambiguity (不明确) if we can see the setting of a switch; we can say with confidence that some possible futures will not materialize (实现) and others will. At the unseen switches, however, there is no such certainty. We know the train will take one of the trac
A. A statement illustrated by an analogy.
B. A hypothesis supported by documentation.
C. A comparison of two contrasting theories.
D. A critical analysis of a common assumption.
[单项选择]All the information we have collected in relation to that case______very little.
A. makes up for
B. adds up to
C. comes up with
D. puts up with
[单项选择]
Passage Three
We all associate colors with feeling and attitudes. In politics dark blue often means "tradition", and red means "social change". But blue can also mean sadness (I’m feeling blue), white is often for purity, although in China white is worn at weddings and black for funerals. Advertisers are aware of the importance of selecting colors according to the way people react to them. Soap powders come in white and light blue packets (clean and cold, like ice); cereals often come in brown packets (like wheat fields), but cosmetics never come in brown jars (dirty).
Where do these ideas come from Max Luscher from the University of Geneva believes that in the beginning life was dictated by two factors beyond our control: night and day. Night brought passivity, and a general slowing down of metabolism; day brought with it the possibility of action, and increase in the metabolic rate, thus providing us with energy and initiative. D
A. Dark blue brings tragedy.
B. Dark blue means tradition.
C. Dark blue represents night.
D. Dark blue indicates quietness.