____

题目
填空题
____
如果没有搜索结果或未解决您的问题,请直接 联系老师 获取答案。
相似问题和答案

第1题:

问答题
音乐保存极为有限,传播距离和传播方向也极为有限。当人类发明了乐谱后,音乐便开始脱离表演,演变成“文字”得以记录和传播。然而,人类音乐传播的真正革命性里程碑的建立者无疑是科学家们。他们创造了令人叹为观止的音乐传播手段,从最早的机械“留声机”到今天五花八门的“电子媒体”,音乐的传播变得如此便捷,如此高保真。

正确答案:
【参考译文】
There was a severe limitation to the extent of music preservation, as well as to the distance and directions of music transmission. When mankind invented musical scores, music started to break away from the boundaries of being merely a performing art, and develop into a system of “written symbols” that can be recorded and spread. Undoubtedly, however, it was the scientists who should be crowned as the founders of the real revolutionary milestone of human musical communication. Scientists invented marvelous means of music transmission, from the earliest mechanical “record turntable” to today’s many kinds of “electronic media”. Music transmission has become something that is amazingly convenient, fast, and hi-fi supported!
解析: 暂无解析

第2题:

问答题
What’s the author’s purpose of giving us the example of Sir Cloudesly Shovel?

正确答案: It aimed to point out that public monuments could reflect the image of one country.
解析:
推断题。根据关键词Sir Cloudesly Shovel可定位到文章最后一段。本段通过列举Sir Cloudesly Shovel和一个荷兰人的例子表明,外国人容易从公众纪念碑和铭文中对一个民族产生或无知或礼貌的印象。

第3题:

单选题
The problem threatening big corporations and independents is that______.
A

they are criticized for high prices.

B

cremations are gradually replacing burials.

C

the average costs of cremations are growing.

D

they are suffering from a shortage of manpower.


正确答案: B
解析:
推断题文章第六段首句提到,大公司和独立公司都会因为火葬的逐渐普及而遇到困难;接下来又具体谈到火葬的普及是如何对这些公司造成影响的。由此可见,大公司和独立公司所面临的共同威胁就是B项(火葬正在逐渐取代土葬)。选项A利用第五段第一句中的high prices设置干扰,但criticized在文中没有提及,纯属无中生有,故排除;文中也没有提到“火葬的平均成本在增加”这一观点,故选项C错误;选项D(它们遭受劳动力短缺)是最后一段谈到的家庭式经营所面临的问题,故也应排除。综上所述,本题答案为B项。

第4题:

问答题
我们两个伟大的国家,交往的历史已经有200年了,跨越三个世纪。两国人民友谊和合作的动人事迹还历历在目。19世纪60年代,中国数以万计的华工参加了美国横贯东西部大铁路的修建工作。他们不顾严寒、饥饿和待遇菲薄的恶劣条件,当别的建筑队伍都撤下来的时候,只有中国这支队伍坚持到底。最后一根枕木是由四位华工铺上的,无数人为这个工程献出了生命。1991年伊利诺伊州曾经专门派人到上海用3000个道钉做了个纪念碑。他们说,中国筑路工人的最大贡献就是沟通了美国东西部的大通道,并由此推动了美国的统一,这是一个重要的因素。

正确答案:
【参考译文】
China and the United States, two great nations, have had exchanges for over 200 years and across three centuries. And I remember so well so many touching stories about the profound friendship and good cooperation between the two peoples. In the 1860s, Chinese workers, by the tens of thousands, went to the U.S. to build the trans-continental railroad that links the east and west coast. The Chinese workers defied starvation and cold. Many other workers could not endure the harsh conditions. Only the Chinese workers stuck it out to the very end. Many, many Chinese workers lost their lives in the process of construction and there were too many to count. However, it was recorded in history that the last track was laid by four Chinese workers.
解析: 暂无解析

第5题:

填空题
____

正确答案: pronunciation
解析:
录音中提到许多可能存在的错误,如发音不好,词汇量不足,现在完成时和条件从句的语法问题等。由此可知答案为pronunciation。举例处为常考点,应做好笔记。

第6题:

问答题
Chemistry is the study of the behavior and composition of matter. All foodsare made up of chemical substance which undergoes chemical changes when cooking   1._______in an oven or digested within the body. The cooking of meat and vegetables induce 2._______chemical changes, making it more delicious; similarly the leavening action of   3._______baking powder is a straightforward chemical change, as is the conversion ofstarch into sweet sugars by digestion.  Cookery is a science requiring for a knowledge of chemistry.          4._______This is evident from the variety of cooking products and food additives availableas cooking oils, fats, colorings, sweeteners, tenderizers, flavorings, scream-ing agents, preservatives, etc. Each is carefully prepared before painstaking   5._______research.  It is therefore essential for trained cookers to understand          6._______chemical science in order to appreciate the chemistry nature of foods        7._______and the changes achieving on cooking. Homeworkers should also            8._______know cleansing agents and textiles used in the home and how the latter       9._______responds to the effects of heat, light, water, and chemical cleansing agents.   10._______

正确答案:
1.cooking改为cooked 主语all foods是cook的逻辑宾语,因此应使用过去分词形式。
2.induce改为induces 句子主语是the cooking而不是meat and vegetables,动词应使用单数。
3.it改为them 因为其先行词为复数名词短语“the meat and vegetables”。
4.去掉for
require是及物动词。
5.before改为after 根据文意可以推断这里要表达“之后”的意思,使用before不合逻辑。
6.cookers改为cooks
cooker厨房用具,cook厨师。
7.chemistry改为chemical
chemistry是名词,名词不能用来修饰名词。
8.achieving改为achieved 此处要修饰changes,应使用achieved,因为changes不能主动“实现”。
9.在know后加about
know认识,知道,know about表达“对……有所了解”之意。
10.responds改为respond,the latter指代的是复数名词textiles,故谓语动词应使用复数。
解析: 暂无解析

第7题:

填空题
____

正确答案: in Europe→to Europe
解析:
extent要与介词to搭配来构成短语。

第8题:

填空题
____

正确答案: sharing your knowledge
解析:
讲座在最后部分提到,广泛分享你的专业知识,让人们明白为何需要专家。研读题干,该部分的并列项均为名词形式,可知此空也应填入名词形式。故答案为sharing your knowledge。讲座分论点或分标题之处是常考点,笔记时需注意。
【录音原文】
How to be an Expert  Hi, everyone. I’ve been thinking lately, what makes someone an “expert” in his or her field, which is also the topic of today’s lecture. As far as I know, Lorelle has been thinking the same thing, because she recently wrote a post called What Gives You the Right to Tell Me? at the Blog Herald that explores the issue of expertise in some depth.
  For me, this question started to occur to me when I was invited to speak at an academic conference on anthropology recently. Apparently, I have become an expert on the topic, someone people look to when they want more information.
  How did that happen? This is not a topic I studied at school or the subject of my dissertation; in fact, it wasn’t even really a topic at all until the US Army released their new counterinsurgency field manual last year and started for operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. Thinking about how I came to be a “go-to” person on this topic has gotten me thinking about how anyone becomes the person to call when you need help, about how people become experts in their field. In fact, anyone who thinks they have learned everything there is to know about a topic probably isn’t an expert—I’d call them something closer to “rank amateur”.
  Let’s start with this question: What’s an expert? While knowledge is obviously an important quality of expertise, it’s only one of several factors that make someone an expert in their field. I’ve come up with five characteristics of real experts: knowledge, experience, communication ability, connectedness and curiosity. Now let’s come to them respectively in detail.
  Clearly being an expert requires an immense working knowledge of your subject. Part of this is memorized information, and part of it is knowing where to find information you haven’t memorized.
  In addition to knowledge, an expert needs to have significant experience working with that knowledge. He or she needs to be able to apply it in creative ways, to be able to solve problems that have no pre-existing solutions they can look up—and to identify problems that nobody else has noticed yet.
  Expertise without the ability to communicate it is practically pointless. Being the only person in the world who can solve a problem, time after time after time, doesn’t make you an expert, it makes you a slave to the problem. It might make you a living, but it’s not going to give you much time to develop your expertise—meaning sooner or later, someone with knowledge and communication ability is going to figure out your secret, teach it to the world, and leave you to the dustbin of history.
  Expertise is ultimately social. Experts are embedded in a web of other experts who exchange new ideas and approaches to problems, and they are embedded in a wider social web that connects them to people who need their expertise.
  Experts are curious about their field and recognize the limitations of their own understanding of it. They are constantly seeking new answers, new approaches, and new ways of extending their field.
  Then, let’s move on to this topic: How to become an expert? Sometimes becoming an expert just kind of happens, which is how I became an expert in anthropology and counterinsurgency without really trying. But most of the time, we carefully pursue expertise, whether through schooling, self-education, on-the-job training or some other avenue. There’s no “quick and easy” path to expertise. That said, people do become experts every day, in all sorts of fields. You become an expert by focusing on these things:
  Firstly, that is perpetual learning. Being an expert means being aware, sometimes painfully aware, of the limitations of your current level of knowledge. There simply is no point as which you’re “done” learning your field. Invest yourself in a lifelong learning process. Constantly be on the lookout for ideas and views both within and from outside your own field that can extend your own understanding.
  Then, build strong connections with other people in your field. Seek out mentors—and make yourself available to the less experienced. Also, learn to promote yourself to the people who need your skills—the only way you’ll gain experience is by getting out and doing, which is what’s we called networking.
  Furthermore, not just in the “gain experience” sense but in your the “practice what you preach” sense. You wouldn’t trust a personal organizer who always forgot your appointments, or a search engine optimization expert whose site was listed on the 438th results page in Google, right? Your daily practice needs to reflect your expertise, or people will not trust you as an expert. So, practice is necessary.
  The fourth thing is presentation skills: Learn to use whatever technologies you need to present your expertise in the best possible way. And by “technologies” I don’t just mean web design and PowerPoint, I mean writing, drawing, public speaking—even the way you dress will determine whether you’re taken for an expert or a know-it-all schmuck.
  Lastly, remember to share: 10 years ago, nobody knew they needed expert bloggers on their staff to promote themselves. 5 years ago, nobody knew they needed SEO experts to get attention for their websites. A handful of early experts—experts that, in some cases, didn’t even know what they were experts in—shared enough of what they knew to make people understand why they needed experts. Share your knowledge widely, so that people understand why they need an expert, and you don’t become a one-trick pony who is the only person who can fix a particular problem.
  To sum up briefly, we’ve discussed what all expert is and how to become one. Hope all of you have enjoyed this lecture. Thank you.

第9题:

问答题
圣经在英语的发展过程中对英语的影响可谓深远。它不仅对英语词汇的补充和习惯用语的形成功不可没,人们在日常交往中对其的引用更是无处不见。美国有位词汇学教授曾经说过,难以想象一个没有读过圣经的人能够学好英语。我们无意去讨论这位教授的话对错与否,但我们对圣经对于英语学习的作用却是肯定的。本栏目借此一角,以中英文对照的形式向广大英语爱好者提供原汁原味的圣经故事。

正确答案:
【参考译文】
The Bible has played a very important role during the development of English. It has significant impact on the formation of the English vocabulary and English idioms. People quote the Bible almost everywhere during their daily work and life. An American lexicologist once said that it is hard to imagine one can learn English well without reading the Bible. We are not discussing whether what he said was true or not. However, we are on the YES side about the Bible’s contribution to the language. We will make use of this column to share with our readers stories from the original in the form of Chinese and English comparison.
解析: 暂无解析

第10题:

问答题
Why can’t the cars made by European manufacturer sell well in China?

正确答案: The cars do not cater for the Chinese buyers.
解析:
推断题。由题干关键词可定位到文章首段。该段提到,中国消费者注重汽车的外观,中美合资企业以满足消费者需求为目标,重视汽车的设计和内饰,因此汽车销量好;而欧美生产商则侧重于产品的质量和性能,由此可推断,正是没有迎合中国消费者的需求才导致欧洲生产商的销量差。