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[主观题]

What is one fact we do not learn from the final commentary of the video?A.People who can r

What is one fact we do not learn from the final commentary of the video?

A.People who can record the next eclipse.

B.The date of an upcoming solar eclipse.

C.How to record an eclipse for your posterity.

D.Where the next Christmas eclipse will occur.

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更多“What is one fact we do not learn from the final commentary of the video?A.People who can r”相关的问题

第1题

What is it that made Steve Jobs special? What can we learn from this once-in-a-lifetime
entrepreneur? Steve Jobs was a visionary and he ensured that he took his company through his vision whenever he was at helm. In【M1】______ fact, during his decade long absent from Apple following his【M2】______ ouster in 1985, Apple went through some tumultuous time for【M3】______ the lack of quality leadership! One of the biggest obstacles which the church faces today is the lack of vision, especially【M4】______ in its leaders. Although we set out with and towards a good【M5】______ vision, the church is just going to be a four-walled structure. Quite often, this results not just from lack of growth, but a【M6】______ slow, but steady stagnation. Steve Jobs thought ahead. Always. He never went out with【M7】______ the flow, and was always one or more steps ahead of the rest,【M8】______ perfectly showcased with the launches of path-breaking product like the iPhone, iPod, and iPad! His approach was【M9】______ "people dont know what they want. We tell them and give them that." How amazing it would be if believers have the【M10】______ same approach? We are often happy with what we have and we just go on with our Sunday-to-Sunday routine! Do we realise the fact that people around us don t quite know that they are lost? They won t approach us(more often than not) with their needs. We need to recognise their need that they may not even know about.

【M1】

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第2题

Education is not an end, but a means to an end. In other words, we do not educate children
only for the purpose of educating them; our purpose is to fit them for life.【C1】______we realize this fact, we will understand that it is very important to【C2】______a system of education which will really prepare children for life.

In many modern countries it has【C3】______been accepted that, by free education for all-whether rich or poor, clever or stupid-we can solve【C4】______of society and build a【C5】______nation. But we can already see that free education for all is not【C6】______: we find in such countries【C7】______people with university degrees than【C8】______jobs for them to do. Because of their degrees, they refuse to do what they think "low" work.

But we have only to think for a moment to understand that the work of a completely uneducated【C9】______is far more important than【C10】______we can live【C11】______education, but we【C12】______ if we have no food. If no one cleaned our streets and took the【C13】______away from our houses, we【C14】______terrible diseases in our towns.

In fact,【C15】______we say that all of us must be educated to fit us for life, it means that we must be educated【C16】______that each of us can do whatever job【C17】______him, and that we can realize that all jobs are【C18】______to society, and that it is very bad to be ashamed to do one's work, or to laugh at【C19】______. Only such a type of education can be【C20】______valuable to society.

【C1】

A.In order that

B.Before

C.As soon as

D.Though

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第3题

Whatever our differences as human beings are, we all think we're more like the rest of the
animal world than we realize. It is said that we share 40 percent of our genetic (遗传的) structure with the simple worm.

But that fact has helped Sir John Sulston win the 2002 Nobel Prize for Medicine. Sir John is the founder of the Sanger Institute in Cambridge, which was set up in 1992 to get further understanding of the human genome (染色体组).

To help them do this, they turned to the worm. The nematode (线虫类的) worm is one of the earliest creatures on planet earth. It is less than one millimeter long, completely transparent and spends its entire life digging holes through sand. But it still has lots to say about human life, and

what can be done to make it better.

What the worm told Sir John and his colleagues was that each of cells in the human body is programmed like a computer. They grow, develop and die according to a set of instructions that are coded in our genetic make-up.

Many of the diseases that humans suffer from happen when these instructions go wrong or are not obeyed. When the cell refuses to die but carries on growing instead, this leads to cancer. Heart attacks and diseases hke AIDS cause more cell deaths than normal, increasing the damage they do to the body. Sir John was the first scientist to prove the existence of programmed cell death.

Sir John Sulston got a Nobel Prize for Medicine because he has ______.

A.found that human beings are similar to the worm

B.got the fact we share 40 percent of our genetic structure with the simple worm

C.found the computer which controls each of the cells in the human body

D.proved that cell death is programmed

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第4题

听力原文: M: Before making out a plan for sightseeing trips for you, I’ll be glad to know
if you have anything spe- cial in mind that you would like to see.

W: Well, as a matter of fact, we were discussing this question last night. We all spoke of the Great Wall, one of the Seven Wonders in the World. We wouldn’t leave China without seeing that if it was possible. How far is it from here?

M: Only about 80 kilometers. Just an hour and a half’ s trip by car. We’ll put down the Great Wall then.

W: Good. And we talked a lot about the Summer Palace. We would like to see that, too.

M: All right, the Summer Palace. Well, and there are a number of places that I think you will find interesting; the Temple of Heaven, the Former Imperial Palaces and Ming Tombs.

What is the man most probably?

A.A tour guide.

B.A teacher.

C.A driver.

D.The woman’s husband.

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第5题

听力原文:Most of us take our ability to listen for granted. In fact, we have different lis

听力原文: Most of us take our ability to listen for granted. In fact, we have different listening styles for different occasions. How successful we are as listeners may depend in part on choosing the right listening style. for the situation. Perhaps the most basic listening style. is appreciative listening. We listen appreciatively when we enjoy music, a bird's song or the murmur of the book. We need a different style, one called discriminative listening, when we want to single out one particular sound from a noisy environment. You discriminate, for example, when you listen for a friend's voice in a crowded room. We use a firm style. of listening, comprehensive listening, when we want to understand. When we listen to directions or instructions, we are using this style. The last listening style, critical listening, is the one we will examine most closely. Critical listeners are the most active of all listeners, and critical listening, the most helpful. Critical listeners evaluate what they hear, and decide if another person's message is logical, worthwhile or has value. We need to be critical listeners when someone wants us to buy something, vote a certain way or support a particular idea. We also need to be critical listeners in school where we are supposed to listen and think at the same time.

(35)

A.We should not take our ability to listen for granted.

B.We should have the right listening style. for a particular situation.

C.We should try different listening styles one after another.

D.We should be faithful to one listening style. all the time.

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第6题

The philosophy of the Cyrenaic school, founded by Aristippus, proceeds on the assumption t
hat happiness is, in point of fact, the good, the supreme good, or chief end of man; and this assumption, so far from being discountenanced by the philosophy of Socrates, is involved in that philosophy as one of its most vital principles. Viewed as a matter of fact, we must admit that his own happiness, whatever it may consist in, or whatever may be the means to be employed in the attainment, is the end which each individual has most at heart, and at which he ultimately aims. This is the end after which all men most eagerly strive. Happiness is the goal, which, consciously or unconsciously, we are all struggling to reach. Milton has written two epic poems in which he commemorates our fallen and our restored condition. He has written Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained. But the true epic of humanity—the epic which is in a constant course of evolution from the beginning until the end of time, the epic which is daily poured forth from the heart of the whole human race, sometimes in rejoicing paeans, but oftener amid woeful lamentation, tears, and disappointed hopes—what is it but Paradise sought for?

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第7题

听力原文:M: How did you like Egypt?W: Oh, perfect. It’s one of the most interesting places

听力原文:M: How did you like Egypt?

W: Oh, perfect. It’s one of the most interesting places I've ever seen.

M: Where did you go?

W: Well, we spent most of the time in Cairo and Luxor.

M: What's there to see in Cairo?

W: Well, not all that much, in fact, but there is the museum and the pyramids, and that’s really something.

M: What's the city like?

W: It's very large, and the streets are always noisy and dirty.

M: I thought you liked it.

W: Well, I did in a way. It’s very different, but I liked Luxor better. Luxor’s a little town right on the banks of the Nile. It’s very quiet and peaceful and much cleaner than Cairo. And actually I did more sightseeing there.

M: Did you buy anything?

W: Oh, sure. There are some excellent shops in Luxor with all sorts of interesting things. A lot better than Cairo, in fact, I bought a gold necklace. Want to see it?

M: Sure.

Which country did the woman visit?

A.Egypt.

B.Cairo.

C.Cairo and Luxor.

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第8题

听力原文:W: Hi. Phil. can you tell me how it happened?M: Sure: I was mountain climbing in

听力原文:W: Hi. Phil. can you tell me how it happened?

M: Sure: I was mountain climbing in New Hampshire in 1982. Suddenly the weather became really bad. There was a lot of snow and we couldn't see anything. We got lost. Well, we spent four days on the mountain. The temperature was -20℃. We didn't have any equipment or food.

W: So what happened? I guess someone found you, right?

M: Yes. but we were very sick. I couldn't move my legs because of the cold. months in the hospital. The doctors removed my legs.

W: Right. So you lost your legs, but you want to try your best to stay active.

M: That's right. In fact, I decided to make some new legs for myself. I realize that no one has to be physically disabled; We can use modern technology to help us.

W: And you built these great new legs. Can you go mountain climbing again?

M: Yes, I can. In fact, these are better than climbing shoes, The spring de- sign means they are much more, powerful.

What happened when the man was mountain climbing?

A.He got trapped in a cave.

B.He got lost in bad weather.

C.He lost his equipment and food.

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第9题

听力原文:Man: I'd like to introduce our studio guest, Sally Upton, who was the editor of t
he magazine 'Teenage Fashion' and is now about to produce her own magazines. Welcome Sally.

Woman: Thank you.

Man: Sally, your first idea for publishing needed a one billion pound loan, didn't it?

Woman: It did. I wanted to buy MPC - the biggest magazine company in the UK. And the bank agreed!

Man: But in fact that deal didn't succeed, so you didn't borrow the money.

Woman: That's right. Someone made them a better offer and then not long after I just missed another deal with a smaller company. So, in the end I decided to see if it would be possible to find finance for a completely new company, which I've called Close Communications.

Man: Was it easy to find a bank to agree to the idea of a new company?

Woman: It's harder to get financial support for starting a new company than for buying an existing one, even though I didn't want nearly as much as a billion pounds. I tried a lot of bankers, but none wanted to invest in us.

Man: So, what then?

Woman: Well, I got a business partner, and he suggested something really simple. We rang up six friends we knew had money to invest, and asked them to support us, and they agreed!

Man: Well, they were good friends! And how did you recruit your staff? I've heard you use quite unusual methods...

Woman: We didn't have to advertise formally in newspapers, in fact people contacted us, not us them. We asked them out for dinner to discuss their ideas and if we liked what they said, we asked them to be on the team.

Man: So in general do you see your company as being different to most other companies?

Woman: In every way - big and small. Take company transport policy. We don't have company cars, we don't think they make sense. In fact I come in by bicycle.

Man: Really?

Woman: However, we do give our employees a very generous expense account for rail journey, - it doesn't matter what the distance is, we are happy to pay the fare! Just so the team get out and meet people.

Man: And do you think you will stay different? Will success change you?

Woman: Not at all! For example, if Close Communications is successful, all the staff will benefit, because we are all equals. We don't give large rises in salary or extra pay every now and again but we do have a division of the profits every three months.

Man: I see.

Woman: Also, when we moved into our office we wanted everyone to feel at home. We didn't want everyone to have the same desks and chairs like a school or even to choose from a narrow range. So, to get it furnished, we gave them the money and let them choose exactly what they wanted.

Man: Brave.

Woman: Not brave. We trust each other! You see. I think there's only one reason why anybody becomes unhappy at work...

Man: What's that?

Woman: Well, in my experience it's not pay, it's when you're not allowed to make any decisions because you always have to do what the managers say. Your voice isn't heard.

Man: Personally, it's filling in forms and filing papers that I hate most.

Woman: Yes, but they're your papers, it's different isn't it?

Man: True. And now the big day has come, your own magazines produced by your own company. Your first two titles tomorrow, both aimed at girls under 16, is that right?

Woman: That's right, they are just two of the nine we are going to produce in our first twelve months.

Man: Well, Sally, best of luck to you and your team tomorrow.

Woman: Thank you.

Man: And now...

?You will hear an interview with a woman who publishes magazines.

?For each question 23-30, mark one letter (A, B or C) for the correct answer.

?After you have listened once, replay the recording.

Sally wanted to borrow one billion pounds to

A.start a new company.

B.purchase a large company.

C.expand a small company.

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第10题

听力原文:I grew up in a house where the TV was seldom turned on and with one wall in my be

听力原文: I grew up in a house where the TV was seldom turned on and with one wall in my bedroom entirely lined with bookshelves; most of my childhood was spent on books I could get hold of. In fact, I grew up thinking of reading as natural as breathing and books unbelievably powerful in shaping perspectives by creating worlds we could step into, take part in and live in.

With this unshakable belief, I, at fourteen, decided to become a writer. Here too, reading became useful. Every writer starts off knowing that he has something to say, but being unable to find the right ways to say it. He has to find his own voice by reading widely and discovering which parts of the writers he agrees or disagrees with, or agrees with so strongly that it reshapes his own world. He cannot write without loving to read, because only through reading other people's writing can one discover what works, what doesn't and, in the end, together with lots of practice, what voice he has.

Now I am in college, and have come to realize how important it is to read fiction. As a law student, my reading is in fact limited to subject matter — the volume of what I have to read for classes every week means there is little time to read anything else. Such reading made it all the clearer to me that I live in a very small part in this great place called life. Reading fiction reminds me that there is life beyond my own. It allows me to travel across the high seas and along the Silk Road, all from the comfort of my own armchair, to experience, though secondhand, exciting experiences that I wouldn't necessarily be able to have in my lifetime.

Questions 33 to 35 are based on the passage you have just heard.

33. What can we learn about the speaker as a child?

34. What effect does reading fiction have on the speaker?

35. Which can be the best title for this passage?

(30)

A.He never watched TV.

B.He read what he had to.

C.He found reading unbelievable.

D.He considered reading part of his life.

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