更多"Why Do We Need English"的相关试题:
[简答题]Why Do We Need English
[单项选择]Why do we need active sleep
A. To prepare for passive sleep.
B. To rest our body.
C. To stay healthy.
D. To help us rest our minds.
[简答题]Why do we say "English is a heavy borrower" Please justify it.
[填空题]
Why do we feel pleased about the reception
We feel very pleased to have so many () attending our reception this evening.
[填空题]Why do you need food
We need food for ______.
[填空题]Why do we laugh For years scientists have asked themselves this question. No other animals lau
gh and smile--only human beings, so does laughter help us to (36) in any way The answer seems to be that smiling and laughter help us to relax, reducing (37) and preventing illnesses which are caused by stress. Laughter really is the best (38) !
But if you’re unhappy, it can’t do you any good to smile, can it Not true. Apparently the (39) effects of smiling are just the same (40) you feel like smiling or not. Scientists in California asked a group of (41) to act five different feelings: happiness, sadness, (42) , surprise and fear--just using their faces.
Changes in their heart rate, blood pressure and temperature were (43) down. Most of the feelings they acted didn’t cause changes, but when they smiled their heart rate and their blood pressure went down. (44) . A sense of hu
[填空题]Why do we categorize science fiction as one of the branches of prose fiction
[简答题]Why do we engage in philosophy What is there about human beings that leads us to engage in reflective thought, thinking about questions which do not appear to produce practical results It could be argued that in the long run philosophical thought does produce widespread practical consequences. In the political realm, for example, the writings of John Locke significantly influenced the development of American democracy, while the theories of Karl Marx have brought into being a radically new form of government. It could also be said that what separates us from the animal world and from uncivilized human beings is just this intellectual endeavor, which could be justified as valuable even if only for its own sake. But there is a deeper reason for engaging in philosophy, and that is that we simply cannot turn away from certain questions which constantly confront us. Our human constitution or our human condition predisposes us to want to know. It was Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889-1951) of Cambri