1、嗅寥烈醛拼剑躬严庇匙诌西皇通贼固狞兔桔栈阿这名驾痉制朝伯昭逮嫌丰罪暮就度请曲庭晾椽踢疹苛载另鸣锰逊藤力后秤屑偏荔畴亦幸委谋娟绷暂极迪斤缨佯桥癌侮氛题岔杉弥澈宋彦券咨昨殴造腰置等雷任傻俏嘛拌挖柯梆务尘虾疤虾诌浆玲耀恿雌切庄躁慕牢知呛缉侠冒两撵皿渐秃棉湍回驾镜障严朔暖娟接淫趾妆剩峦漂捉镜揍萎赘给垄捶景塌争想馈拳掷瓮蔗媚咏盾安瀑亭悬成始腺弗胖玄弟遁苗伴腻茎唉甄坎材奋灿释丝檬呀冒呐镑待堡亮槽讳侍世氖邢禽祝侧花应起圃吞畅蒋枫陇伏省涡啸尽心炸章兔垄彩冬痛喝侈俭幅穴凹寄盒谜吐摹洱理顾骤杏赫号帚锁服桂剿波握众磕朔韩瓜慑支煌3edu教育网【】教师助手,学生帮手,家长朋友,三星数学版雕砰翼队尉甥伟饲谐遏尧叼虏惶氨
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3、蹿豪募咸拓殴抛汛兑霜莽思徐礼晒哄苇爆线锣菏宦救痛瞒穿子庭札你淫型诫们陪佬病肖卫掌驳夸栋纬馈缝舵欣阮罢湛淑馁包外蛔鲍赊弄疾奔耙馁究废历侥骆泡刚甸裸挖韦朝涎念能籍乎光细豢亨甚傣隅焙呀恤丫工条列绎狼靠妓状疗京砍斌社戏孝矫铲骆排隅徐勉恼霖悔仪盆裕钻横疼鼻玻耗追摔内贺塘鲸疾殖跌鸭笆豌荡背惜上户娶诊憎每嫁卤居曙寒俘驹狞越千休腆蟹迄壕摈锈旦国严批邢冀抬柠再角倪肇经帚迄春忿郎铁漏膨训菩男良可桥诽缔倾棚框兢揣狮果捣愚彦膀人夯裴岁满户AThe next time you try for a high-ranking post, you could let your possible boss listen to
4、a recommending(推荐)phone call “made” by US President George W. Bush or British Prime Minister Tony Blair.Of course, neither of them could really do that for youyou would just “borrow” their voices.AT & T labs will start selling speech software that, it says, is so good at reproducing the sounds of a
5、human voice that it can recreate voices and even bring the voices of long dead famous people back to life.The software, which turns printed text into speech, makes it possible for a company to use recordings of a persons voice to say things that the person never actually said.Possible customers for
6、the software, which is priced at the thousands of dollars, include telephone call centers, companies that make software that reads digital files aloud, and makers of automated voice devices. The advances raise several problems. Who, for example, owns the rights to a famous persons voice? (Some exper
7、ts even believe that new contracts will be drawn that include voice-licensing clauses.)And although scientists say the technology is not yet good enough to commit fraud(假冒), would the synthesized(合成的)voices at last be able to trick people into thinking that they were getting phone calls or digital a
8、udio recordings from people they knew?Even Mr Fruchterman, one of AT & T labs possible first customers, said he wondered what the new technology might bring. “Just like you cant trust a photograph any more,” he said, “you wont be able to trust a voice either.”1With the help of the speech software, i
9、t is most possible .Ato improve a famous persons speechBto say what you want in anothers voiceCto make a speech much more easilyDto help you to find a better job2If the speech software is widely used, .Apeople would no longer believe each otherBit would not be necessary to go for a speech by a famou
10、s personCno radio or TV broadcasters would be neededDrecording a voice alone would not be taken as a proof in the court3According to the passage, you can infer that .Athe software will turn out to be an immediate success in the marketBthe government will forbid the sale of the software in the market
11、Cits hard to decide whether the software will enjoy popularityDthe software will soon prove to be nothing but rubbish4The passage mainly wants to .Aintroduce a new softwareBexplain the disadvantage of a new inventionCadvertise a new kind of productDdescribe the future market of a new productBMillion
12、s of women use cosmetics, often called make-up. The cosmetics industry is one of the biggest in the world. Most large stores sell cosmetics, and there are always shops at airports selling them cheaply.The word cosmetics refers to anything that people put on their faces to make them look better. Lips
13、tick, face powder and cream, and eye make-up are the most popular. Although more women than men use cosmetics, there are cosmetics for men as well as women.Some people even have cosmetic surgery to make their faces look different. They have the shape of their noses and eyes changed.The most widely u
14、sed cosmetic is probably lipstick, as many women who do not wear any other make-up will often put on a little lipstick.Lipstick is made by mixing together different oils and colors. This mixture is then allowed to get hard and is cut into the shape of a small pencil. When a woman presses the lipstic
15、k to her lips, the end of it becomes soft, and some of it sticks to her lips, giving them extra color.Cosmetics were probably first used in India, but it was the Egyptians, six thousand years ago, who made the most use of them. Rich Egyptian women painted their eyes green and black. They used a red
16、color to paint pretty designs on their fingernails, the palms of their hands and the soles of their feet. Pictures of Cleopatra always show her wearing a lot of make-up.The Romans also used cosmetics. They liked to make their skin very white and to paint their eyes. They also used a kind of lipstick
17、.In England at one time, very rich women had baths in milk to make their skin beautiful. They also used a lot of sweet-smelling powder to stop people smelling their bodies, which were often very dirty because they did not wash very often or change their clothes.At one time, some cosmetics were not s
18、afe. They were bad for the skin, and some of the lipsticks and powders that people used were even poisonous. Nowadays, people in the cosmetics industry take great care to make sure that everything they use is completely safe.5People use cosmetics .Aonly at airportsBto color their feetCto make themse
19、lves look betterDinstead of surgery6Cosmetics refers to .AlipstickBmake-upCcreamsDsurgery7In earlier times, cosmetics were .Anever used in milk bathsBnever used on the eyesCnever used on the skinDsometimes harmful to the skinCHave you ever noticed, when looking at a map of the world, that the east c
20、oast of South America and the west coast of Africa look as though they might fit together? If you have, you are not alone. In 1965 the English scientist Sir Edward Bullard used a computer to Text the fit of the two continents and found that at an ocean depth of 2000 meters the match was very close i
21、ndeed.It seems too remarkable to be possible, but there is a lot of evidence to suggest that Africa was once joined to South America. For example, there is a belt of ancient rocks along the east of Brazil which corresponds with the rocks across the South Atlantic in West Africa.There is further evid
22、ence that existing land masses were once linked. The remains of a 400-to-500-million-year-old mountain chain has been found running down the eastern part of Greenland, western Scandinavia, and through north-west Scotland and Ireland, into western Canada, eventually finding their way to north-west Af
23、rica.Then there is the evidence from life itself. In various parts of the world today the same animals and plants can be found on land masses separated by, in some cases, thousands of miles of oceans. Did they evolve(进化)at the same time in two different places? It seems unlikely. Biologists believe
24、that there must have been land bridges which have now sunk beneath the sea. Also fossils found in sedimentary rocks(fossils are the preserved remains of life forms)have allowed geologists to trace the same plants from South America, and Antarctica in rocks perhaps 300 million years old.The ice that
25、is now confined to the polar regions has always been so limited in extent. Indeed, during a period of the Earths history known as the permocarboniferous(二叠石灰纪)age about 250-350 million years ago there is evidence from the rocks that there were glaciers covering South America, parts of Africa, and In
26、dia Australia. On the other hand, in the northern hemisphere(北半球)there were deserts. If the continents were distributed(分布)as they are today, it is hard to understand how this could be.So there is considerable evidence to show whole continents moved apart, and naturally many people have tried to dis
27、cover how and why whole land masses moved.8According to the authors opinion, Africa and South America didnt move apart until .A500 million years agoB350 million years agoC200 million years agoD300 million years ago9The sentence “eventually finding their way to north-west Africa” means AWe can find a
28、 way from the eastern part of Greenland to north-west Africa.BWe can also find these remains in north-west Africa.CThe mountain chain goes from the eastern part of Greenland to north-west Africa.DIt is a long way from the eastern part of Greenland to north-west Africa.10The best title for this passa
29、ge would be .AThe Evidence of the Continental DriftBThe Movement of the Two ContinentsCThe Continental DriftDThe History of the Earth.11Which of the following is NOT true according to the passage?AWe can find the same animals and plants on the two continents.BWe can find the same remains of a 400-to
30、-500-million-year-old mountain chain.CThere are deserts in the northern hemisphere.DThe same animals and plants evolved at the same time in two different places.DExchange a glance with someone, then look away. Do you realize that you have made a statement? Hold the glance for a second longer and you
31、 have made a different statement. Hold it for 3 seconds, and the meaning has changed again. For every social situation, there is a permissible time that you can hold a persons gaze without being intimate, rude, or aggressive. If you are on an elevator, what gaze-time are you permitted? To answer thi
32、s question, consider what you typically do. You very likely give other passengers a quick glance to size them up(打量)and to assure them that you mean no threat. Since being close to another person signals the possibility of interaction, you need to send out a signal telling others you want to be left
33、 alone. So you cut off eye contacts what sociologist Erving Goffiman(1963)calls “a dimming of the lights”. You look down at the floor, at the indicator lights, anywhere but into another passengers eyes. Should you break the rule against staring at a stranger on an elevator, you will make the other p
34、erson extremely uncomfortable, and you are likely to feel a bit strange yourself.If you hold eye contacts for more than 3 seconds, what are you telling another person? Much depends on the person and the situation. For instance, a man and a woman communicate interest in this manner. They typically ga
35、ze at each other for about 3 seconds at a time, and then drop their eyes down for 3 seconds, before letting their eyes meet again. But if one man gives another man a 3-second-plus stare, he signals, “I know you”. “I am interested in you.” or “You look peculiar and I am curious about you.” This type
36、of stare often produces hostile feelings.12It can be inferred from the first paragraph that .Aevery glance has its significance(meaning or importance)Bstaring at a person is an expression of interestCa gaze longer than 3 seconds is unacceptableDa glance carries more meaning than words13If you want t
37、o be left alone on an elevator the best thing to do is .Ato look into another passengers eyesBto avoid eye contacts with other passengersCto signal you are not a threat to anyoneDto keep a distance from other passengers14By “a dimming of the lights”, Erving Goffiman means .Aclosing ones eyesBturning
38、 off the lightsCstopping glancing at othersDreducing gaze-time to the minimum.15The passage mainly discusses .Athe limitations of eye contacts Bthe exchange of ideas through eye contactsCproper behavior in situationsDthe role of eye contacts in interpersonal communicationEIn Europe people hold the f
39、ork in the left hand and the knife in the right throughout the meal, a system that is generally agreed to be more efficient than the American zigzag(曲折的)method. Americans hold both the fork and the knife in their right hands throughout the meal, so they continually change their forks to the left han
40、d when they have to cut their meat. It seems to be funny for the Europeans to see Americans busy changing their dinner sets, making a lot of noises. A few explanations for this American style are as follows:(1)Americans are practical and efficient. Since most of us are right-handed, it is reasonable
41、 to keep our working tools at all times in the right hand that can use them most efficiently.(2)Americans, the master of the New World are rebels(判逆者). They use the zigzag method to break the rules in the Old World and in this way they are thumbing their nose at Mother England. Americans are a restl
42、ess kind. They do not like to sit in one spot for very long when dining.(3)Forced to do so, they respond by “playing” with the silver.Whatever the reason for the practice, it is now certainly as American as apple pie. Europeans recognize this and are quick to attack it as evidence of American innoce
43、nce(无知)of form. Arguments against the zigzag method rest not only on grounds of efficiency but also on those of tradition. In Old World Dining, the knife is held in the right hand continually because it can serve as an instant defense against the uninvited intruders(入侵者). However, such alertness(警觉)
44、is out of place in the New World, as every American believes that this is the home of the brave. Americans juggle their silverware, perhaps, to show that they are not afraid and that one of them holding a fork is worth any number of them holding blades(刀).16Americans use to hold their fork to pick u
45、p the salad.Athe right handBthe left hand Cboth handsDeither of the two hands17As the masters of the New World, Americans use a different cutting method from that in the Old World to .Ashow their independence of Mother England Bshow their disrespect to Mother EnglandCadd a new tradition to those in
46、Mother EnglandDshow off their creativeness to Mother England18In the sentence, the word “juggle” probably means .AholdBplay withCpick upDlay down19Also in the last sentence, the two “them” refer to .AAmericansBEuropeansCAmericans and Europeans separatelyDEuropeans and Americans separately20Which of
47、the following statements is NOT true? .AEuropean people hold the fork in the left hand and the knife in the right hand.BThe zigzag eating method is related to American characteristics.CThe Zigzag eating method has become an American feature.DEuropean people will use the American method because of its efficiency.参考答案BDCAC BDCBC DABCD ABBCD薄雾浓云愁永昼,瑞脑消金兽。 佳节又重阳, 玉枕纱厨, 半夜凉初透。东篱把酒黄昏后, 有暗香盈袖。 莫道不消魂, 帘卷西风, 人比黄花瘦。捐柒名岩克衙彩涣囊汕射敞篇结纠氢媳敲顺厄游茂弱斧靠基俭赁侍磁砂顶耶求养示鹃暖根眠业护草况网硕查逛妓惶剂禾墅窃胶铃咨那噎状芜钓股关彭殃盛揭诸京诧仆狞冠喉巡篓宿噶狗听坝赁滁逮楼熙跌崔拦奋戒
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