题目内容 (请给出正确答案)
[主观题]

Critics who turn back to cosmetic surgery think personal fulfillment should not be closed linked to physical perfection.

提问人:网友xyh293 发布时间:2022-01-07
参考答案
  抱歉!暂无答案,正在努力更新中……
如搜索结果不匹配,请 联系老师 获取答案
更多“Critics who turn back to cosme…”相关的问题
第1题
Which one the following best states the authors main conclusion?A.Because P.D.James"s pote

Which one the following best states the authors main conclusion?

A.Because P.D.James"s potential as a writer is stifled by her chosen genre, she should turn her talents toward writing mainstream novels.

B.Although her plots are not always neatly resolved, the beauty of her descriptive passages justifies P.D.James"s decision to write in the crime-novel genre.

C.The dichotomy between popular and sophisticated literature is well illustrated in the crime novels of P.D.James.

D.The critics who have condemned P.D.James"s lack of attention to the specifics of detection fail to take into account her carefully constructed plots.

点击查看答案
第2题
Text 2 Mothers Against Drunk Driving(MADD)has launched a new public awareness campaign a

Text 2 Mothers Against Drunk Driving(MADD)has launched a new public awareness campaign aimed at Canadian Justice Minister Irwin Cotler.“Enough is Enough”advocates dropping the Criminal Code’s blood alcohol concentration(BAC)limit from 0.08 to 0.05 percent,to“protect innocent drivers on our roads.”MADD Canada CEO Andrew Murie thinks tllat lowering the BAC limit could result in a 6-to-18 percent reduction in crash deaths.But questions have been raised about the science behind that campaign. MADD selectively cites a report published in 2002 by Robert Mann of the Mental Health Centre.Mama,in turn,had got those numbers from two separate studies whose data was selected from Sweden and Australia.The conclusions in Mann’s report seem to ignore the Swedish authors’numerous warnings and cautions,as well as the limitations in the Australian study.First,the Australian study examined the effectiveness of breath testing,not lowered BAC levels,on fatal traffic crashes.Also.that research was started in 1976 when“liquid lunches”were far more common.What’s more.the Australian data varied:whereas the state of Queensland saw the 18 percent decline in fatal accidents cited by MADD’s Murie,in neighboring New South Wales,fatal accidents decreased just 8 percent. It is also reported by the Ontario Community Council that the majority of drivers in alcoholrelated fatal erashes are repeat offenders with BACs over 0.15 percent-meaning that the problem is drivers who repeatedly get behind the wheel with BAC levels twice the legal limit.not social drinkers who consume a glass of wine or tw0.This makes MADD’s concern seem wasteful,given the downward trend in alcohol-related tramc deaths. The Canada Safety Council,the Canadian Council of Motor Transport Administrators and the Traffic Injury Research Foundation take issue with MADD’s campaign.Even the Ontario Community Council has determined that lowering the BAC would mean more work for police and the courts. But to MADD’s Murie,the math question is simple:“If you lower BAC limits,regardless to what level,you’ll save Canadian lives.”Unfortunately,the math doesn’t quite add up. 回答下列各题: MADD launched a public awareness campaign in order to_______.

A.criticize the Justice Minister

B.improve BAC measurement

C.restrict drivers’access to alcohol

D.revise the law regarding drunk driving

点击查看答案
第3题
Ford 1.Ford’S great strength was the manufacturing process--not invention.Long before

Ford

1.Ford’S great strength was the manufacturing process--not invention.Long before he started a car company,he was a worker,known for picking up pieces of metal and wire and turning them into machines.He started putfing cars together in l891.Although it was by no means the first popular automobile,the Model T showed the world just how creative Ford was at combining technology and market.

2.The company’S assembly line alone threw America'sIndustrial Revolution into overdrive(高速运转).Instead of having workers put together the entire car,Ford’S friends,who were great toolmakers from Scotland,organized teams that added parts to each Model T as it moved down a line.By the time Ford’S Highland Park plant was humming (嗡嗡作响)along in l914,the world’Sfirst automatic conveyor belt could turn out a car every 93 minutes.

3.The same year Henry Ford shocked the world with the$5-a-day minimum wage scheme the greatest contribution he had ever made.The average wage in the auto industry then was$2.34 for a 9-hour shift.Ford not only doubled that,he also took an hour off the workday.In those years it was unthinkable that a man could be paid thatmuch for doing something that didn’t involve an awful lot of training or education.The Wall Street Journal called the plan“an economic crime”.and critics everywhere laughed at Ford.

4.But as the wage increased later to daily$10。it proved a critical component of Ford’s dream to make the automobile accessible(可及的)to all.The critics were too stupid to understand that because Ford had lowered his costs per car,the higher wages didn’t matter--except for making it possible for more people to buy cars.

第 23 题 Paragraph 1_________

点击查看答案
第4题
Our present generation of cultural critics, arriving after the assault of postmodernism an
d the increasingly widespread commercialization of culture, has been cast adrift, without any firm basis for judgments. Publications and institutions to support serious criticism, in this view, either no longer exist or are few in number.

Critics today, it is also claimed, are too cozy behind the ivied walls of academe, content to employ a prose style. that is decipherable only to a handful of the cognoscenti. The deadly dive of Uniersity critics into the shallow depths of popular culture, moreover, reveals the unwillingness of these critics to uphold standards. Even if the reasons offered are contradictory, these Jeremiahs huddle around their sad conclusion that serious cultural criticism has fallen into a morass of petty bickering and bloated reputations.

Such narratives of declension, a staple of American intellectual life since the time of the Puritans, are misplaced, self-serving, and historically inaccurate, so difficult to prove. Has the level of criticism declined in the last 50 years? Of coarse the logic of such an opinion depends on the figures that are being contrasted with one another. Any number of cultural critics thriving today could be invoked to demonstrate that cultural criticism is alive and well.

But many new and thriving venues for criticism and debate exist today, and they are not limited solely t6 the discussion of literary works. Actually, they became so entrusted with their own certitude and political judgments that they beacme largely irrelevant. Today the complaint is that literary culture lacks civility. We live in an age of commercialism and spectacle. Writers seek the limelight, and one way to bask in it is to publish reviews that scorch the landscape, with Dale Peck as the famous, but not a typical case in point. Heidi Julavits, in an essay in The Believer, lamented the downfall of serious fiction and reviewing. She surveyed a literary culture that had embraced "snark", her term for hostile, self-serving reviews.

The snark review, according to Julavits, eschews a serious engagement with literature in favor of a sound-bite approach, an attempt to turn the review into a form. of entertainment akin to film reviews or restaurant critiques. A critic found cultural criticism to be in "critical condition". For him, the postmodern turn to theory, in its questioning of objectivity, cut the critical, independent ground out from under reviewers. The rise of chain bookstores and blockbuster best sellers demeaned literary culture, making it prey to the commercial values of the market and entertainment.

The criticism does not seem discontinuous. Nor should we forget that civility rarely reigned in the circles of New York intellectuals. The art critic Clement Greenberg physically pummeled the theatre critic Lionel Abel after Abel rejected the view that Jean Wahl, the French philosopher, was anti-Semitic. Though Robert Peck has the reputation of a literary hatchet man, so far as I know his blows thus far have all been confined to the printed page.

Cultural criticism has certainly changed over the years. The old day's of the critic who wielded unchallenged authority have happily passed. Ours is a more pluralistic age, one not beholden to a narrow literary culture. The democratization of criticism— as in the Amazon system of readers' evaluating books—is a messy affair, as democracy must be. But the solution to the problems of criticism in the present is best not discovered in the musty basements of nostalgia and sentiment for the cultual criticism of a half-century gone. Rather the solution is to recognize, as John Dewey did almost a century ago, that the problems of democracy demand more democracy, less nostalgia for a golden age that never was, and a spirit of openness to what is new and invigorating in our culture.

What is the possible connecti

A.Cultural critics attack postmodernism and commercialization cherished by publications and institutions.

B.Postmodernism and commercialization are attacked by the serious publications and institutions.

C.Cultural criticism is short of judgments and will not exist without the support of publications and institutions.

D.Publications and institutions show almost no interest in serious cultural criticism.

点击查看答案
第5题
Ford 1 Ford’s great strength was the manufacturing process—not invention .Long before h

Ford

1 Ford’s great strength was the manufacturing process—not invention .Long before he started a car company ,he was a worker ,known for picking up piecds of metal and wire and turning them into machines .He started putting cars together in 1891.Although it was by no means the first popular automobile ,the Model T showed the world just how creative Ford was at combining technology and market .

2 The cornpany’s assembly line alone threw America’s Industrial Revo1ution into overdrive(高速运转).Instead of having workers put together the entire car,Ford’s friends,who were great toolmakers from Scotland,organized teams that added parts to each Model T as it moved down a line.By the time Ford’s Highland Park plant was humming(嗡嗡作响)along in 1914,the World’s first automatic conveyor belt could turn out a car every 93 minutes.

3 The same year Henry Ford shocked the world with the $5-a-day minimum wage scheme,the greatest contrihution he had ever made.The average wage in the auto industry then was $ 2.34 for a 9一hour shift.Ford not only doubled that,he also took an hour off the workday.In those years it was unthinkable that a man could be paid that much for doing something that didn’t involve all awful lot of training or education.The Wall Street Journal called the plan“an economic crime",and critics everywhere laughed at Ford.

4 But as the wage increased later to daily $ l 0,it proved a critical component of Ford’s dream to make the automobile accessible(可及的)to all.The critics were too stupid to understand that because Ford had lowered his costs per car,the higher wages didn’t matter-except for making it possible for more people to buy Cars.

第 1 题 Paragraph 1_______________.

点击查看答案
第6题
听力原文: Today it's my turn to give the weekly oral presentation, and the topic that Prof
essor May had assigned to me is“the life of the poet, Emily Dickinson”. Compared with Walt Whitman whom we discussed last week. I found Emily Dickinson strikingly different. She seemed in fact to be the complete opposite of Whitman in her life and in her work. I would like to share briefly with the class some of the essential facts of her biography. Emily Dickinson was born in 1830 in Amherst, Mass, barely a decade after Whitman. In her early 20's for reasons which still remain a mystery she began to withdraw from her ordinary contact with the world. For the remaining 30 years of her life she was seldom seen outside her home. In this respect she was quite unlike Whitman who loved the great outdoors. Emily Dickinson spent her solitary days corresponding with her friends and writing hundreds of remarkable poems, notably“I heard a fly buzz”and the poem we have read for today“I'm nobody”. Although she showed none of her poems to her family and sent some of her letters to friends. only four were published in her life time. Most of them, almost 1,200 poems were discovered in her room after she died in 1886 at the age of 56. These poems have established her as a major poet, and several modern critics consider her the greateSt woman poet in the English language. Eh, that's about all I have. Is there any question? If not, we should probably begin talking about Dickinson's“I'm nobody”, the poem Professor May assigned for this week's class discussion.

Who is the speaker?

A.A poet.

B.A teacher.

C.A student.

D.An artist.

点击查看答案
第7题
How do the critics of the treaty think about the vote?[A] The result is beyond all expecta

How do the critics of the treaty think about the vote?

[A] The result is beyond all expectations.

[B] The pre-vote opinion polls turn out to be pessimistic.

[C] It's reasonable for public opinion to be divided.

[D] Irish voters were affected by some external factors.

点击查看答案
第8题
Critics of early schooling cite research that questions whether 4-year-old children are re
ady to take on formal learning. Educators find that【21】toddlers are more likely to succeed during. their school careers.【22】their younger counterparts are more likely to【23】. Kindergarten children who turn five during the【24】half of the year seem to be at a disadvantage when it【25】physical, emotional, social, and intellectual development. Additionally, children who are nearly six when they enter kindergarten【26】to receive better grades and score higher on achievement【27】throughout their schooling experience【28】do those who begin kindergarten having just turned five. Being bright and verbally skillful and being ready for school do not seem to be the【29】thing. It is easy to confuse the superficial poise and sophistication of many of today's children【30】inner maturity. Indeed, evidence suggests that early schooling boomerangs: Youngsters【31】parents push them to attain academic success in preschool are less creative, have【32】anxiety about tests, and, by the end of kindergarten, fall to maintain their initial academic advantage【33】their less-pressured peers.

Many psychologists and educators remain skeptical of approaches that place 4-year-olds in a formal educational setting. They question【34】environmental enrichment can significantly alter the built-in developmental timetable of a child reared in a non-disadvantaged home. They do not deny, however, the【35】of day-care centers and nursery schools that provide a homelike environment and allow children【36】freedom to play, develop at their own【37】, and evolve their social skills. But they point out that many of the things children once did in first grade are now【38】of them in kindergarten, and they worry lest more and more will now be asked of 4- year-olds. These psychologists and educators believe we are driving young children too【39】and thereby depriving them of their【40】.

(21)

A.older

B.taller

C.Stronger

D.smarter

点击查看答案
第9题
根据下列文章,请回答 23~30 题。 Ford 1 Ford’s great strength was the manufacturing pro

根据下列文章,请回答 23~30 题。

Ford

1 Ford’s great strength was the manufacturing process——not invention. Long before he stoned a car company,he was a worker. known for picking up pieces of metal and wire and turning them into machines. He started putting cars together in 1891'.Although it was by no means the first popular automobile,the Model T showed the world just how creative Ford was at combining technology and market.

2 The company’s assembly line alone threw America’s Industrial Revolution into overdrive(高速运转)。Instead of having workers put together the entire car,Ford’s friends,Who were great toolmakers from Scotland. Organized teams that added parts to each Model T as it moved down a line. By the time Ford's Highland Park plant was humming(嗡嗡作响)along in 191 4,the world's first automatic conveyor belt could turn out a car every 93 minutes.

3 The same year Henry Ford shocked the world with the$5.a.day minimum wage scheme,the greatest contribution he had ever made. The average wage in tile auto industry then was$2.34 for a 9-hour shift. Ford not only doubled that. he also took an hour off the workday. In those years it was unthinkable that a man could be paid that much,f0.r doing something that didn't involve an awful lot of training or education. The Wall Street Journal called the plan” an economic crime",and critics everywhere laughed atF0rd.

4 But as the wage increased later to daily$10,it proved a critical component of Ford’s dream to make the automobile accessible(可及的)to all. The critics were too stupid to understand that because Ford had lowered his costs per car,the higher wages didn't matter——except for making it possible for more people to buy cars.

第 23 题 Paragraph l____________

点击查看答案
账号:
你好,尊敬的用户
复制账号
发送账号至手机
密码将被重置
获取验证码
发送
温馨提示
该问题答案仅针对搜题卡用户开放,请点击购买搜题卡。
马上购买搜题卡
我已购买搜题卡, 登录账号 继续查看答案
重置密码
确认修改
欢迎分享答案

为鼓励登录用户提交答案,简答题每个月将会抽取一批参与作答的用户给予奖励,具体奖励活动请关注官方微信公众号:简答题

简答题官方微信公众号

警告:系统检测到您的账号存在安全风险

为了保护您的账号安全,请在“简答题”公众号进行验证,点击“官网服务”-“账号验证”后输入验证码“”完成验证,验证成功后方可继续查看答案!

微信搜一搜
简答题
点击打开微信
警告:系统检测到您的账号存在安全风险
抱歉,您的账号因涉嫌违反简答题购买须知被冻结。您可在“简答题”微信公众号中的“官网服务”-“账号解封申请”申请解封,或联系客服
微信搜一搜
简答题
点击打开微信