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[主观题]

There is a closer relationship between morals and architecture and interior decoration【C1】

______we suspect.Huxley has pointed out that Western ladies did not take frequent baths【C2】______they were afraid to see their own naked bodies,and this moral concept delayed the【C3】______of the modern white-enameled bathtub for centuries.One can understand Why in the design of old Chinese furniture there was so little consideration for human【C4】______only when we realize the Confucian atmosphere in which people moved about.Chinese redwood furniture was designed for people to sit upright in, because that was the only posture approved by society.Even Chinese emperors had to sit on a(n)【C5】______on which I would not think of remaining for more than five minutes, and for that matter the English kings were just as badly off.Cleopatra went about【C6】______on a couch carried by servants, because apparently she had never heard of Confucius.If Confucius should have seen her doing that, he would certainly have struck her shins with a stick, as he did【C7】______one of his old disciples, Yuan Jiang, when the latter was found sitting in an incorrect posture.In the Confucian society in which we lived, gentlemen and ladies had to【C8】______themselves perfectly erect, at least on formal【C9】______, and any sign of putting ones leg up would be at once considered a sign of vulgarity and lack of【C10】______.

【C1】

A.for

B.than

C.as

D.that

答案
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更多“There is a closer relationship between morals and architecture and interior decoration【C1】”相关的问题

第1题

听力原文:Hello, you're watching RBS Evening News and I'm Don Thomas. Jack Wallace, CEO of
Taskette Paper Products, has just announced plans for the company to relocate its distribution facility from Lincoln to Townsend. The move will greatly affect Lincoln's job market, where more than 40 percent of residents have worked for Taskette Paper Products for the past 20 years. Wallace says his main reason for choosing the Townsend location was that moving the plant to Townsend will put it closer to the majority of Taskette's customers and cost the company significantly less money to transport its goods. The move is expected to take place in early July.

Who might the speaker be?

A.A news anchor

B.Tasksette's chairman

C.The Lincoln Town Mayor

D.Taskette's spokesperson

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第2题

听力原文:M: So you've re-installed the printer driver and rebooted the computer, but it's
still not printing?

W: That's right, Andy. I don't know what I'm going to do. I have to print out this report for the 2 o'clock meeting, and it's already one. Everything's working except the printer.

M: It must have something to do with your computer because everyone else can print. Look, since you have the Internet access, why don't you e-mail the report to Mary and then print it from Mary' s computer? While you're printing, I'll take a closer look at your computer and see if I can fix it.

W: That's a great idea.

What is the woman doing?

A.Preparing a report.

B.Fixing the printer.

C.Using e-mail.

D.Talking to Mary.

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第3题

Text What follows are【C1】______on writing a functional resume that will get read—a resume

Text

What follows are【C1】______on writing a functional resume that will get read—a resume that makes you come【C2】______and look interesting to【C3】______.

Never apologize: If you' re returning to the work【C4】______after fifteen years as a parent,【C5】______write a short paragraph(summary of background)【C6】______a chronology of experience. Don' t apologize for working at【C7】______a mother: it' s the hardest job of all. If you have no special training or higher education, just don' t【C8】______education.

How to psych yourself up: The secret is to think about the【C9】______before you start writing about yourself. Take four or five hours off not necessarily【C10】______, and simply write down every accomplishment in your life on or【C11】______the job. That made you feel effective. Don' t worry at first【C12】______what it all means. Study the list and try to spot patterns. As you study your list, you will come closer to the meaning: identifying your marketable skills. Once you discover patterns, give names to your【C13】______of accomplishments(leadership skills, budget management skills, child development skills, etc. ). Try to list at least three accomplishments【C14】______the same skills heading. Now start writing your resume as if you mattered. It may take four【C15】______or more, and several weeks, before you' re ready to show it to a【C16】______(friends are usually too kind)for a reaction. When you' re satisfied, send it to a printer; a【C17】______resume is far【C18】______to photocopies. It shows an employer that you【C19】______job hunting as【C20】______work.

【C1】

A.trips

B.secrets

C.tips

D.mysteries

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第4题

阅读下面对话,根据其内容写一篇有关Linda帮助祖父搬家的短文。要求:1.所写短文应与对话相关内

阅读下面对话,根据其内容写一篇有关Linda帮助祖父搬家的短文。要求:

1.所写短文应与对话相关内容意义相符,涵盖其要点;

2.用你自己的语言表达,可改写对话中的句子,但不可照抄原句。注意:

1.词数80词左右,开头已为你写好;

2.请将短文直接写在答题卡上的相应位置。

John: Hi, Linda. I‘ m thinking of going camping this weekend with Mary and tom. Will you join us?

Linda: I‘d like to, but I‘ m going to help my grandfather. He‘s moving out this weekend. John: Oh, is he? That‘s an important thing. Where‘s your grandfather living now?

Linda: In a two-story house here at Morris Plains. He doesn‘t like it. It‘s too big for him.

John: What‘s the new house like, then?

Linda: It‘s a small apartment. In fact, it‘ s the smallest one here in the neighborhood(居民区).

John: Is it near your house?

Linda: Yes, not even a mile away. He wants to be closer to me, you know.

John: Sounds like a perfect home for him. It must have taken your grandfather a long time to find the apartment.

Linda: Actually, I found this apartment for him. A year ago, he started to think about moving. He wanted a smaller apartment. He also wanted there to be a supermarket and a hospital in the neighborhood.

John: A smaller apartment and closer to his granddaughter. So, your grandfather must be glad now.

Linda: You‘re right, John.

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第5题

California Gives Green Light to Space Solar PowerEnergy beamed down from space is one step

California Gives Green Light to Space Solar Power

Energy beamed down from space is one step closer to reality,now that California has given the green light to an agreement that would see the Pacific Gas and Electric Company buy 200 megawatts(兆瓦)of power beamed down from solar-power satellites beginning in 2016.But some major challenges will have to be overcome if the technology is to be used widely.

A start-up company called Solaren is designing the satellites,which it says will use radio waves to beam energy down to a receiving station on Earth.

The attraction of collecting solar power in space is the almost uninterrupted sunshine available in geosynchronous(与地球同步的)orbit.Earth-based solar ceils,by contrast,can only collect sunlight during daytime and when skies are clear.

But space.based solar power must grapple(努力克服)with the high cost per kilogram of launching things into space,says Richard Schwartz of Purdue University in West Lafayette,Indiana.“If you're talking about it being economically viable for power of the Earth,it's a tough go,”he says.

Cal Boerman,Solaren's director of energy services,says the company designed its satellites with a view to keeping launch costs down.“We knew we had to come up with a different,revolutionary design,” he says.A patent the company has won describes ways to reduce the system's weight,including using inflatable mirrors to focus sunlight on solar cells,so a smaller number can collect the same amount of energy.

But using mirrors introduces other challenges,including keeping the solar cells from overheating,says Schwartz.“You have to take care of heat dissipation(散发)because you're now concentrating a lot of energy in one place,”he says.According to the company's patent,Solaren's solar cells will be connected to radiators to help keep them cool.

Though Boerman says the company believes it can make space-based solar power work,it is not expecting to crowd out other forms of renewable energy.Laws in California and other states require increasing use of renewable energy in coming years,he points out.“To meet those needs,we're going to need all types of renewable energy sources,”he says.

Solar-power satellites will use radio waves to beam energy down from space.

A.Right

B.Wrong

C.Not mentioned

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第6题

Decling Internet in Developing Foreign Language Skills Australians' foreign language skill

Decling Internet in Developing Foreign Language Skills

Australians' foreign language skills are declining, Voice of America has reported. New figures show that only 13 percent of high school graduates can speak a foreign language. But four decade ago, 40 percent had foreign language skills.

Professor Elise Tipton, from the University of Sydney, says increasingly students do not feel the need to learn another language to boost their career. She believes that Australia's economic boom, which is driven by red-hot demand for its minerals, is helping mask serious deficiencies (缺陷) in its language skills.

Australia does business very successfully in English with most of its trading partners. But as the world's economic power shifts to emerging regions such as Asia, its language gap could soon be exposed. According to the new figures, less than 6.5 percent of high school graduates are proficient in an Asian language. Academics worry that this means Australia will increasingly be isolated from its economically important Asian neighbors, Dilip Dutta, from the economics and business faculty at Sydney University, says language skills can enhance trading opportunities. If Australians want to trade with Asian countries, it is very important for them to learn the language that will help them to get closer to the culture.

But students have different opinions about Asian language learning. Pippa McCowage, a 22-year-old Australian student, says many young Australians have a half-hearted approach to foreign languages, and the language curriculum is often weak. "While we're encouraged in high school to learn another language, it's not really apparent to me as a realistic expectation that you will have to speak it," said McCowage. "For example, I learned Japanese in high school. When I went on an exchange in Year 10,I found that the Japanese students of my age had a much greater proficiency in English than I did in Japanese. So in that sense, it almost discourages you."

At present, about 70 percent of Australia's major exports go to Asia and the Australian government has been keen on developing closer economic and diplomatic ties with Asia. Academics say that, as Asia becomes one of the world's economic powerhouses (经济体), Australia needs to improve its language skills if it is to take full advantage of the business opportunities on its doorstep.

What percentage of high school graduates were proficient in foreign languages forty years ago?

A.70 percent.

B.13 percent.

C.40 percent.

D.65 percent.

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第7题

Scientists have been taking a closer look at the lighting in our homes, offices and vehicl
es, and they're seeing a possible way to improve health.

Engineer E. Fred Schubert is talking about a new era of "smart" light sources. "We are looking at lighting systems that provide more than lighting," he says.

He's talking about light-emitting diodes(二极管),or LEDs. Most people know them as being quite small, like the lights that form. numbers on digital clocks. But recent technological advances have made them much more powerful, able to illuminate swimming pools and serve as traffic signals, for example.

Meanwhile, the lighting in offices and schools could be improved to help people stay healthy and productive, by acting on their internal body clocks. The 24-hour internal body clock is best known for governing cycles of alertness and sleep, and for producing jet lag(飞行时差) when people travel across time zones. Lights cues, especially blue light, help keep the clock on its daily cycle. We're pretty much blue-sky detectors. Our clocks count on bright days and dark nights.

But that's not necessarily what modern life delivers. During the winter in the northeast of America, for example, a person can commute roundtrip in the dark and sit all day in electric light that's fine for vision, but may be too dim to stimulate the body clock. That's called biological darkness.

How that affects people has been hard to document in the general population, but studies suggest such possibilities as seasonal depression, fatigue, sleep disturbances and maybe even cancer, especially breast cancer. Some studies suggest reduced productivity on the job. To counter that, architects and lighting engineers might someday take body clocks into account when they design lighting schemes. They may be encouraged to take steps like providing plenty of natural Night through windows and skylights, and installing bright blue LEDs near computer screens to give a dose of clock-adjusting light.

In the following places, where can we not find the LEDs?

A.Digital clock.

B.Traffic lights.

C.Swimming pools.

D.Cassette players' speakers.

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第8题

第二篇 Declining Interest in Developing Foreign Language Skills Australia's foreign langua

第二篇 Declining Interest in Developing Foreign Language Skills

Australia's foreign language skills are declining, Voice of America has reported. New figures show that only 13 percent of high school graduates can speak a foreign language. But four decades ago, 40 percent had foreign language skills.

Professor Elise Tipton, from the University of Sydney, says increasingly students do not feel the need to learn another language to boost their career. She believes that Australia's economic boom, which is driven by red-hot demand for its minerals, is helping mask serious deficiencies in its language skills.

Australia does business very successfully in English with most of its trading partners. But as the world's economic power shifts to emerging regions such as Asia, its language gap could soon be exposed. According to the new figures, less than 6.5 percent of high school graduates are proficient in an Asian language. Academics worry that this means Australia will increasingly be isolated from its economically important Asian neighbors. Dilip Dutta, from the economics and business faculty at Sydney University, says language skills can enhance trading opportunities. If Australians want to/fade with Asian countries, it is very important for them to

learn the language that will help them to get closer to the culture.

But students have different opinions about Asian language learning. Pippa McCowage, a 22-year-old Australian student, says many young Australians have a half-hearted approach to foreign languages, and the language curriculum is often weak. "While we're encouraged in high school to learn another language, it's not really apparent to me as a realistic expectation that you will have to speak it," said McCowage. "For example, I learned Japanese in high school, when I went on an exchange in Year 10, I found that the Japanese students of my age had a much greater proficiency in English than I did in Japanese. So in that sense, it almost discourages you.

At present, about 70 percent of Australia's major exports go to Asia and the Australian government has been keen on developing closer economic and diplomatic ties with Asia. Academics say that, as Asia becomes one of the world's economic powerhouses, Australia needs to improve its language skills if it is to take full advantage of the business opportunities on its doorstep.

36. How much percent of high school graduates were proficient in foreign languages forty years ago?

A) 70.

B) 13.

C) 40.

D) 6.5

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第9题

第二篇 Declining Interest in Developing Foreign Language SkillsAustralians' foreign langu

第二篇

Declining Interest in Developing Foreign Language Skills

Australians' foreign language skills are declining, Voice of America has reported. New figures show that only 13 percent of high school graduates can speak a foreign language. But four decades ago, 40 percent had foreign language skills.

Professor Elise Tipton, from the University of Sydney, says increasingly students do not feel the need to learn another language to boost their career. She believes that Australia's economic boom, which is driven by red-hot demand for its minerals, is helping mask serious deficiencies (缺陷) in its language skills

Australia does business very successfully in English with most of its trading partners. But as the world's economic power shifts to emerging regions such as Asia, its language gap could soon be exposed. According to the new figures, less than 6.5 percent of high school graduates are proficient in an Asian language. Academics worry that this means Australia will increasingly be isolated from its economically important Asian neighbors. Dilip Dutta, from the economics and business faculty at Sydney University, says language skills can enhance trading opportunities. If Australians want to trade with Asian countries, it is very important for them to learn the language that will help them to get closer to the culture.

But students have different opinions about Asian language learning. Pippa

McCowage, a 22-year-old Australian student, says many young Australians have a half-hearted approach to foreign languages, and the language curriculum is often weak. "While we're encouraged in high school to learn another language, it's not really apparent to me as a realistic expectation that you will have to speak it," said McCowage. "For example, I learned Japanese in high school. When I went on an exchange in Year 10, I found that the Japanese students of my age had a much greater proficiency in English than I did in Japanese. So in that sense, it almost discourages you."

At present, about 70 percent of Australia's major exports go to Asia and the

Australian government has been keen on developing closer economic and diplomatic ties with Asia. Academics say that, as Asia becomes one of the world's economic

powerhouses (经济体), Australia needs to improve its language skills if it is to take full advantage of the business opportunities on its doorstep.

36 What percentage of high school graduates were proficient in foreign languages forty years ago?

A 70 percent.

B 13 percent,

C 40 percent

D 6.5 percent.

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第10题

Why Do People Shrink?Did you ever see the movie Honey, I shrunk the kids? It&39;s about a

Why Do People Shrink?

Did you ever see the movie Honey, I shrunk the kids? It&39;s about a wacky(古怪的)dad (who&39;s also a scientist) who accidentally(偶然的) shrink&39;s his kids with his homemade miniaturizing (使小型化) invention. Oops! The kids spend the rest of the movie as tiny people who are barely visible while trying to get back to their normal size.

(46) It takes place over years and may add up to only one inch or so off of their adult height (maybe a little more, maybe less), and this kind of shrinking can*t be magically reversed, although there are things that can be done to stop it or slow it down. But why does shrinking happen at all?

(47) As people get older, they generally lose some muscle and fat from their bodies as part of the natural aging process. Gravity (the force that keeps your feet on the ground) take hold, and the bones in the spine, called vertebrae(椎骨), may break down or degenerate, and start to collapse into one another. (48) . But perhaps the most common reason why some older people shrink is because of osteoporosis (骨质疏松症).

Osteoporosis occurs when too much spongy(海绵) bone tissue (which is found inside of most bones) is broken down and not enough new bone material is made. (49) . Bones become smaller and weaker and can easily break if someone with osteoporosis is injured. Older people—especially women, who generally have smaller and lighter bones to begin with—are more likely to develop osteoporosis. As years go by, a person with osteoporosis shrinks a little bit.

Did you know that every day you do a shrinking act? You aren&39;t as tall at the end of the day as you are at the beginning. (50) . Don&39;t worry, though. Once you get a good night&39;s rest, your body recovers, and the next morning, you&39;re standing tall again.

46

A. They end up pressing closer together, which makes a person lose a little height and become shorter.B. That&39;s because as the day goes on, water in the disks of the spine gets compressed (squeezed) due to gravity, making you just a tiny bit shorter.C. Over time, bone is said to be lost because it&39;s not being replaced.D. Luckily, there are things that people can do to prevent shrinking.E. For older people, shrinking isn&39;t that dramatic or sudden at all.F. There are a few reasons.

47

A. They end up pressing closer together, which makes a person lose a little height and become shorter.B. That&39;s because as the day goes on, water in the disks of the spine gets compressed (squeezed) due to gravity, making you just a tiny bit shorter.C. Over time, bone is said to be lost because it&39;s not being replaced.D. Luckily, there are things that people can do to prevent shrinking.E. For older people, shrinking isn&39;t that dramatic or sudden at all.F. There are a few reasons.

48

A. They end up pressing closer together, which makes a person lose a little height and become shorter.B. That&39;s because as the day goes on, water in the disks of the spine gets compressed (squeezed) due to gravity, making you just a tiny bit shorter.C. Over time, bone is said to be lost because it&39;s not being replaced.D. Luckily, there are things that people can do to prevent shrinking.E. For older people, shrinking isn&39;t that dramatic or sudden at all.F. There are a few reasons.

49

A. They end up pressing closer together, which makes a person lose a little height and become shorter.B. That&39;s because as the day goes on, water in the disks of the spine gets compressed (squeezed) due to gravity, making you just a tiny bit shorter.C. Over time, bone is said to be lost because it&39;s not being replaced.D. Luckily, there are things that people can do to prevent shrinking.E. For older people, shrinking isn&39;t that dramatic or sudden at all.F. There are a few reasons.

50

A. They end up pressing closer together, which makes a person lose a little height and become shorter.B. That&39;s because as the day goes on, water in the disks of the spine gets compressed (squeezed) due to gravity, making you just a tiny bit shorter.C. Over time, bone is said to be lost because it&39;s not being replaced.D. Luckily, there are things that people can do to prevent shrinking.E. For older people, shrinking isn&39;t that dramatic or sudden at all.F. There are a few reasons.

请帮忙给出每个问题的正确答案和分析,谢谢!

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第11题

It's not technology that will determine the shape of land transport so much as political,
economic and environmental considerations. We can build stronger, quieter roads with better skid resistance now, but we don't because of the cost.

The environmental lobby has had a huge impact on car manufacturers and emission control has improved a lot. But there's still some way to go on the air pollution front, particularly for lorries which run on diesel fuel, which is bad because of its particulate emission when it is burnt.

Cars and lorries could be driven by electric motors if fuel-cells, which convert fuel into electricity without burning it, can be made more efficient. However, they've been advertised for a generation and have never really met expectations. American domination of the automotive industry makes rapid progress unlikely. Because the cost of gasoline is so low in the States, there's not much incentive to develop fuel cells and electric vehicles for widespread use.

When it comes to communication, we already have Trafficmaster, which operates from transducers on motorway bridges to gauge the speed of the traffic and warn of blockages ahead. We also have global navigation satellites that can pinpoint your position. The challenge is to provide a full driver guidance system that can tell you the best direction to go in a way you can absorb at the wheel.

The next big step in transport technology will be automated roads: regulating vehicles in convoys on motorways so that they're safer and can be packed closer together. Sensors would establish what is around each vehicle and electronic control systems would keep them moving in the right direction, at the right safe speed, with maximum comfort and economy. The technology is massively expensive now, but eventually it will become a reality. You would just pay a toll, couple your car into an electronic convoy and sit back to enjoy the journey.

Motorways will gradually become more like railways, with freight vehicles electronically coupled in trains running at relatively high speeds. At suitable intervals, they would uncouple to travel the remainder of the journey with their own driver. That's almost certainly going to happen. In Adelaide there are already buses that run on an automated route for part of their journey.

That sort of combination if personal and centralized control is the direction we're going in road transport, probably first of all for freight. Any rail system has in the end to be inflexible, it doesn't go where you want, especially in rural communities, where the nearest station can be 30 miles away. We're wedded to private cars, because of their flexibility and the pride people take in ownership -- not to mention the huge sums we've spent on the road network.

So cars aren't going to go away. But under electronic control 'they will become greener and safer. In 50 years driving your own car on a fast motorway, mixed up with lorries, and passing at a closing speed of 150 mph within a few metres of people driving other vehicles in the opposite direction will seem. completely insanity.

The word "absorb" in Paragraph 4 means ______.

A.drive

B.suck in

C.acquire

D.run

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