题目内容 (请给出正确答案)
[主观题]

The police will need to keep awary eye on this area of town

A.naked

B.cautious

C.blind

D.private

提问人:网友lidabin36 发布时间:2022-01-06
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更多“The police will need to keep a…”相关的问题
第1题
So the question we have to answer is very simple: will we learn from this crisis, or will we ( ) ourselves to repeat it?

A、content

B、condemn

C、contact

D、contend

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第2题
The majority of middle-class people today have working class parents or grandparents.
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第3题
In Your Face

Why is this man so angry? Wedon't know the reason, but we can see the emotion in his face.Whatever cultureyou have, you can understand the feeling that he is expressing.

Forty years ago, psychologistPaul Ekman of the University of California, San Francisco, became inter-ested in how people's faceshow their feelings. He took photographs of Americans expressing variousemo-tions. Then he showed them to the Fore people, who live in the jungle inNew Guinea.Most of the Fore had never seen foreign faces, but they easily understoodAmerican's expressions of anger, happiness, sadness,disgust, fear, andsurprise.

Then Ekman did the sameexperiment in reverse. He showed pictures of Fore faces to Americans,and theresults were similar. Americans had no problems reading the emotions on theFore people's faces. Ekman's research gave powerful support to the theory thatfacial expressions for basic emotions are the same everywhere. He did moreresearch inJapan,Brazil, andArgentina, and got the samere-sults.

According to Ekman, these sixemotions are universal because they are built into our brains. They developedto help us deal with things quickly that might hurt us. Some emotional triggersare universal as well. When something suddenly comes into sight, people feelfear, because it might be dangerous.But most emotional triggers are learned.For example, two people might smell newly cut grass. One reason spent wonderfulsummers in the country as a child, so the smell makes him happy. The otherperson remembers working very hard on a farm and being hungry, so he feels sad.

Once we make an emotionalassociation in our brain, it is difficult, and sometimes impossible, to changeit. "Emotion is the least changeable part of the brain. " says Ekman.But we can learn to manage our emotions better. For instance, we can be moreaware of things that make us angry, and we can think before we react.

There are many differencesbetween cultures, in their languages and customs. But a smile is exact-ly thesame everywhere.

Paul Ekman studies people's faces in different cultures.

A.Right

B.Wrong

C.Not mentioned

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第4题
Why Don't Babies Talk Like Adults?

Over the past half-century,scientists have settled on two reasonable theories related to babytalk.Onestates that a young child's brain needs time to master language, in the sameway that it does to master other abilities such as physical movement. Thesecond theory states that a child's vocabulary level is the key factor.According to this theory, some key steps have to occur in a logical sequencebe-fore sentence formation occurs. Children's mathematical knowledge developsin the same way.

In 2007, researchers at Harvard University, who were studying the twotheories, found a clever way to test them. More than 20,000 internationallyadopted children enter theU. S.each year. Many of them no longer heartheir birth language after they arrive, and they must learn' English more orless the same way infants do-that is, by listening and by trial and error.International adoptees don't take classes or use a dictionary when they arelearning their new tongue and most of them don't have a well-developed firstlanguage. All of these factors make them an ideal population in which to testthese com-peting hypotheses about how language is learned.

Neuroscientists JesseSnedeker, Joy Geren and Carissa Shafto studied the language development of 27children adopted fromChinabetween the ages of two and five years. These children began learn- ing Englishat an older age than US natives and had more mature brains with which to tacklethe task. Even so, just as with American-born infants, their first Englishsentences consisted of single words

and were largely bereft(缺乏的)of functionwords, word endings and verbs. Theadoptees then went through the same stages as typical American-born children,though at a faster clip. The adoptees and native children started combing wordsin sentences when their vocabulary reached the same sizes, fur-ther suggestingthat what matter is not how old you are or how mature your brain is, but thenumber of words you know.

This finding-that havingmore mature brains did not help the adoptees avoid the toddler-talkstage-suggests that babies speak in babytalk not because they have baby brains,but because they have only just started learning and need time to gain enoughvocabulary to be able to expand their conversa-tions. Before long, the one-wordstage will give way to the two-word stage and so on. Learning how to chat likean adult is a gradual process.

But this potential answeralso raises an even older and more difficult question Adult immigrants wholearn a second language rarely achieve the same proficiency in a foreignlanguage as the average child raised as a native speaker. Researchers have longsuspected there is a "critical period" for language developm'ent,after which it cannot proceed with full success to fluency. Yet we still do notunderstand this critical period or know why it ends.

What is the writer's main purpose in Paragraph 2?

A.To reject the view that adopted children need two languages

B.To argue that culture affects the way children learn a language

C.To give reasons why adopted children were used in the study

D.To justify a particular approach to language learning

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第5题
DNA fingerprinting is a technique of

A.grouping DNA strands into structures

B.segmenting DNA with probes

C.constructing body tissues by enzymes

D.identifying a person by comparing DNAs

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第6题
65

A.option

B.method

C.proposal

D.data

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第7题
The photographs eokedstrong memories of our holiday inFrance

A. refreshed

B.stored

C.blocked

D.erased

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第8题
Every week the magazine presents the profile of a well-known sports personality

A.success

B.description

C.evidence

D.plan

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第9题
Caffeine withdrawal symptoms

A.can become an ongoing problem

B.may last as long as a week

C.are weight loss and mental disorder

D.are usually short-lived

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第10题

In the last century, new technology improved the lives of many people in many countries. Howev-er, one country resisted these changes. High in the Himalayan mountains of Asia, the kingdom of Bhutan remained separate. Its people and Buddhist (佛教) culture had not been affected for almost a thousand years. Bhutan, however, was a poor country. People died at a young age. Most of its people could not read, and they did not know much about the outside world. Then, in 1972, a new rulernamed King Jigme Singye Wangchuck decided to help Bhutan to become modern, but without losing its traditions.

King Wangchuck looked at other countries for ideas. He saw that most countries measured their progress by their Gross National Product (GNP). The GNP measures products and money. When the number of products sold increases people say the country is making progress. King Wangchuck had a different idea for Bhutan. He wanted to measure his country's progress by people's happiness. If the people's happiness increased, the king could say that Bhutan was making progress. To decide if people were happier, he created a measure called Gross National Happiness (GNH).

GNH is based on certain principles that create happiness. People are happier if they have health care, education, and jobs. They are happier when they live in a healthy, protected environment. They are happier when they can keep their traditional culture and customs. Finally, people are happier when they have a good, stable government.

Now this is some evidence of increased GNH in Bhutan. People are healthier and are living longer. More people are educated and employed. Twenty-five percent of the land has become national parks, and the country has almost no pollution. The Bhutanese continue to wear their traditional clothing and follow their ancient Buddhist customs. Bhutan has also become a democracy. In 2008, King Wangchuck gave his power to his son. Although the country still had a king, it held its first democratic elections that year. Bhutan had political parties and political candidates for the first time. Finally, Bhutan has connected to the rest of the world through television and internet.

Bhutan is a symbol for social progress. Many countries are now interested in Bhutan's GNH. These countries are investigating their own ways to measure happiness. They want to create new poli-cies that take care of their people, cultures, and land.

Brazil may be the next country to use the principles of GNH. Brazilian leaders see the principles of GNH as a source of inspiration Brazil is a large country with a diverse population. If happiness works as a measure of progress in Brazil, perhaps the rest of the world will follow.

Who was Jigme Singye Wangchuck?

A.A president

B.A Buddhist priest

C.A general

D.A king

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