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even also similarly for example but in conclusion ...

even also similarly for example but in conclusion much as Many Americans have turned into driving or walking billboards. ___1___ we all claim to hate commercials on television, we don’t seem to have any doubts about turning ourselves into commercials. Our car bumpers (保险杠), ___2____, advertise lake resorts, underground caverns (大洞穴), and amusement parks. ___3___, we wear clothes marked with other people’s initials and slogans. Our fascination with the names of designers shows up on the backs of our sneakers and the pockets of our shirts and blue jeans. ___4___, we wear T-shirts filled with all kinds of advertising messages. For instance, people are willing to wear shirts that read “Dillon Construction,” “Nike,” or ___5___ “I Got Crabs at Ed’s Seafood Palace.” These messages belong on highway billboards. ____6____, we say we hate commercials, ___7___ we actually pay people for the right to advertise their products. (答案不加序号,每个空的答案用,隔开,注意区分大小写,如:A,B,C)

提问人:网友pip_sashi 发布时间:2022-01-07
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更多“even also similarly for exampl…”相关的问题
第1题
Friendship is both a source of【11】and good health. People who have close friends naturally
enjoy their company. The emotional benefits from friendship are also important. When we have good news, it will make us more joyful to【12】the happiness with friends. Similarly,【13】trouble, when our spirits are low, it will help【14】stress if we tell our worries and fears to close friends. Moreover, we may even get some【15】suggestions for solving a particular problem.

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第2题
Humanlike animal behavior. has a striking effect. Dogs and eats bolster our morale and mak
e us feel special, because they offer us intense loyalty and do not criticize us.【66】Many people need a caring role in order to feel that they matter, and pets make them feel needed. No matter what arrangements the humans in your life may have made for themselves, if you have a pet there is always someone who will miss you if you do not come home tonight. Taking in a pet can help children to have a greater sense of a contributing role in the family if they take responsibility for the pet's care. Similarly, a dog or cat can help parents whose children have grown up and left home — it can be an antidote to the "empty nest syndrome".【67】Better self-esteem from pet ownership and having someone to care for are of benefit to the lonely. Pets also combat the understimulation that lonely people suffer.【68】Even when the animals you keep are not very human, they can help to combat the effects of loneliness by providing positive "solitary activity.【69】Even by simply walking your dog in the park you are more likely to become involved with other people. Like babies in strollers, dogs on leashes are conversation ice-breakers—they are appealing, and it is socially safe to question strangers about them.

A dog, cat or cagebird is someone to talk to. Most pet owners do not really look upon these companions as other species but rather as unique individuals, not quite as "animal" as their wild Brethren. They talk to their pets and feel that there is a reciprocal understanding of moods—a mute communication. And they feel free to say to pets what is really on their minds, thus releasing many of their everyday tensions and anxieties.【70】Even a small but noisy dog is as effective at keeping burglars out as many sophisticated electronic systems. Its inherited urge to join in the cooperative defense of territory makes it the classic watch animal.

A. A pet can also provide an outlet for those who have never had anyone to care for.

B. Dogs, in particular, can also provide a sense of security.

C. They do not lay down conditions for continuing to love us.

D. Observations have recorded that men pet their dogs and cats every bit as much as women do.

E. They are something to watch and something to keep you busy.

F. Pets can also bring lonely people into contact with others who share an interest in annuals.

(66)

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第3题
Researchers disagree whether the "use it or lose it" philosophy holds for cognitive aging,
but there is one evidence that keeping mentally active can slow age-related declines.

At Pennsylvania State University, Sherry Willis and her husband, K. Warner Schaie, have studied 5000 people, some since 1956. People lucky enough to avoid chronic diseases may also fare better in intellectual function, they find, perhaps because chronic diseases can restrict lifestyle. and reduce mental stimulation. Similarly, those lucky enough to be relatively affluent also fare better, perhaps because money can buy intellectually stimulating things like travel.

Education helps, too, researchers say because of instills the conviction that you can always learn something new. The Schaie-Willis team also has some other observations. Being in a stable marriage with a stimulating spouse, they say, helps maintain intellectual vigor.

Flexibility counts too. People who stay mentally vibrant are often those who do not insist that "they must do things today as they did before" Schaie says. In neuropsychological terms, the ability to see problems in new ways often yields higher scores on tests of-mental function. And people satisfied with life also stay more mentally fit, he says.

If you find your mental skills sagging, consider working on specific deficits. When Willis gave 5-hour tutorials on inductive reasoning or spatial skills to about 200 people whose skills had declined in the previous 14 years, 40 percent regained lost abilities. That advantage held up seven years late when they were retested.

Other ways to stay sharp, Schaie says, are doing jigsaw puzzles to hone visuo-spatial skills, working crossword puzzles for verbal skills, playing bridge for memory and simply matching wits at home with players on TV game shows.

Finally, remember this. Even though you may lose some mental skills with normal aging, you also gain in one key area: wisdom. The growth of wisdom continues throughout the 40s, 50s and even 60s.

In the passage, the author mainly discuss ______.

A.the role mental stimulation in preventing mental aging,

B.gradual loss of mental skills with normal aging.

C.the relationship between mental function and spatial skills.

D.effective ways to keep intellectual vigor.

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第4题
听力原文:Although we are told when young that honesty is the best policy, we are often tau

听力原文: Although we are told when young that honesty is the best policy, we are often taught the opposite by experience and observation. A child quickly learns that she cannot always tell the truth. For instance, the little girl who tells her great aunt that she's fat and ugly learns that honesty can have some unfortunate results. Similarly the five-year-old who admits to pinching the baby soon has ample evidence that dishonesty might be the real virtue. In addition to her own experience, the child also observes that adults don't practice what they preach about honesty. Any alert child knows by the age of eight that adults really employ the little white lie to serve their own purposes. For instance, a child may hear a parent explain on the phone that his family have a lot of company when the child knows that no one is there but family members. Another child may hear her mother insist that she's terribly glad to see an old friend who has dropped by and then, two hours later, hear her mother complain about her day being interrupted by the visit. As a result, the child learns from watching that dishonesty is the practice even when honesty is the stated policy.

(30)

A.Practice requires him to be honest.

B.Dishonesty is not a virtue.

C.Honesty may make him suffer.

D.Honesty is the best policy.

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第5题
Section BDirections: There are 2 passages in this section. Each passage is followed by som

Section B

Directions: There are 2 passages in this section. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. You should decide on the best choice.

Researchers disagree whether the "use it or lose it" philosophy holds for cognitive (认知的) aging, but there is some evidence that keeping mentally active can slow age-related declines.

At Pennsylvania State University, Sherry Willis and her husband, K. Warner Schaie, have studied 5,000 people, some since 1956. People lucky enough to avoid chronic diseases may also fare better in intellectual function, they find, perhaps because chronic diseases can restrict lifestyle. and reduce mental stimulation. Similarly, those lucky enough to be relatively affluent also fare better, perhaps because money can buy intellectually stimulating things like travel.

Education helps, too, researchers say, perhaps because it instills the conviction that you can always learn something new. The Schaie-Willis team also has some other observations. Being in a stable marriage with a stimulating spouse, they say, helps maintain intellectual vigor.

Flexibility counts, too. People who stay mentally vibrant are often those who do not insist that "they must do things today as they did before," Schaie says. In neuropsychological (神经心理学的) terms, the ability to see problems in new ways often yields higher scores on tests of mental function. And people satisfied with life also stay more mentally fit, he says.

If you find your mental skills sagging, consider working on specific deficits. When Willis gave 5 hour tutorials (辅导课) on inductive reasoning or spatial (空间的) skills to about 200 people whose skills had declined in the previous 14 years, 40 percent regained lost abilities. That advantage held up seven years later when they were re-tested.

Other ways to stay sharp, Schaie says , are doing jigsaw puzzles to hone (磨炼) visual-spatial skills, working crossword puzzles for verbal skills, playing bridge for memory and simply matching wits at home with players on TV game shows.

Finally, remember this. Even though you may lose some mental skills with normal aging, you also gain in one key area: wisdom. The growth of wisdom loosely defined as the maturation of intellectual abilities that comes with life experience-continue throughout the 40s, 50s, and even 60s.

In this passage, the author mainly discusses ______.

A.research about mental function

B.gradual loss of mental skills with normal aging

C.the relationship between mental function and skills

D.effective ways to keep intellectual vigor

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第6题
Professional women who put careers on hold for family or other reasonsearn 18 percent less

Professional women who put careers on hold for family or other reasons

earn 18 percent less once they return to the workforce, a new survey reports.

The salary penalty for hopping off the career track is even high in the business 【M1】______.

world, where earnings drop an average of 28 percent, according to

the survey of the New York-based Center for Work-Life Policy. 【M2】______.

The drop in pay partly reflects many women's decisions

to return to work in jobs with more responsibility, or to part-time 【M3】______.

jobs. But it may also reflect what women are exiting the 【M4】______.

workforce during the years when many men make the largest leaps

up the corporate ladder, the survey's authors conclude. The price

for exiting work steepens the longer woman wait before returning. 【M5】______.

Women who take less than a year off from their careers,

returns to the labor force at an average of 11 percent less pay. 【M6】______.

But those who take off for three years or more return to pay averaging

37 percent less than what they originally earned, according to the survey.

The research is detailed in the March issue of the Harvard Business Review,

a copy of that was delivered Wednesday to The Associated Press. 【M7】 ______.

The survey tapped more than 2,400 women nationwide, focusing

on those of a graduate degree, professional degree or 【M8】______.

undergraduate degree with high honors. The group also surveyed

653 similarly qualified men as a means of drawing comparisons.

The notion which more executive women are 【M9】______.

choosing to exit the workforce has generated

considerable attention over the past year in business

circles. The survey, did this past summer, is one of the 【M10】______.

first efforts to try to verify and explain women's choices.

【M1】

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第7题
Professional women who put careers on hold for family or other reasonsearn is percent less

Professional women who put careers on hold for family or other reasons

earn is percent less once they return to the workforce, a new survey reports.

The salary penalty for hopping off the career track is even high in the business【M1】______.

world, where earnings drop an average of 28 percent, according to

the survey of the New York-based Center for Work-Life Policy. 【M2】______.

The drop in pay partly reflects many women's decisions

to return to work in jobs with more responsibility, or to part-time 【M3】______.

jobs. But it may also reflect what women are exiting the 【M4】______.

workforce during the years when many men make the largest leaps

up the corporate ladder, the survey's authors conclude. The price

for exiting work steepens the longer woman wait before returning. 【M5】______.

Women who take less than a year off from their careers,

returns to the labor force at an average of 11 percent less pay. 【M6】______.

But those who take off for three years or more. return to pay averaging

37 percent less than what they originally earned, according to the survey.

The research is detailed in the March issue of the Harvard Business Review,

a copy of that was delivered Wednesday to The Associated Press. 【M7】______.

The survey tapped more than 2,400 women nationwide, focusing

on those of a graduate degree, professional degree or 【M8】______.

undergraduate degree with high honors. The group also surveyed

663 similarly qualified men as a means of drawing comparisons.

The notion which more executive women are 【M9】______.

choosing to exit the workforce has generated

considerable attention over the past year in business

circles. The survey, did this past summer, is one of the 【M10】______.

first efforts to try to verify and explain women's choices.

【M1】

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第8题
Since pleasure is the first good and natural to us, for this very reason we do not choose
every pleasure, but sometimes we pass over many pleasures, when greater discomfort accrues to us as the result of them; and similarly we think many pains better than pleasures, since a greater pleasure comes to us when we have endured pains for a long time. Every pleasure then because of its natural kinship to us is good, yet not every pleasure is to be chosen; even as every pain is also an evil, yet not all are always of a nature to be avoided. Yet by a scale of comparison and by the consideration of advantages and disadvantages we must form. our judgement on all these matters. For the good on certain occasions we treat as bad, and conversely the bad as good.

We must consider that of desires some are natural, others vain, and of the natural some are necessary and others merely natural; and of the necessary some are necessary for happiness, others for the repose of the body, and others for very life.

Unhappiness comes either through fear or through vain and unbridled desire; but if a man curbs these, he can win for himself' the blessedness of understanding. Of desires, all that do not lead to a sense of pain, if they are not satisfied, are not necessary, but involve a craving which is easily dispelled, when the object is hard to procure or they seem likely to produce harm. Wherever in the case of desires which are natural, but do not lead to a sense of pain, if they are not fulfilled, the effort is intense, such pleasures are due to idle imagination, and it is not owing to their own nature that they fail to be dispelled, but owing to the empty imaginings of the man.

The disturbance of the soul cannot be ended nor true joy created either by the possession of the greatest wealth or by honour and respect in the eyes of the mob or by anything else that is associated with causes of unlimited desires. We must not violate nature, but obey her; and we shah obey her if we fulfil the necessary desires and also the natural, if they bring no harm to us, but sternly reject the harmful. The man who follows nature and not vain opinions is independent in all things. For in reference to unlimited desires even the greatest wealth is not riches but poverty.

Insofar as you are in difficulties, it is because you forget nature; for you create for yourself unlimited fears and desires. It is better for you to be free of fear lying upon a pallet, than to have a golden couch and a rich table and be full of trouble.

What does "greater discomfort accrues to us" in Paragraph 1 mean here?

A.We get greater discomfort over a period of time.

B.We are tortured by greater discomfort.

C.Greater discomfort exists in our body.

D.Greater discomfort makes us miserable.

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第9题
听力原文:M: Do you really believe that clothes carry a kind of message and that what we pu
t on is a reflection of what we feel?

W: Oh, yeah. Now people are beginning to take seriously the idea of a kind of psychology of clothing, to believe that there is not just individual taste but also a thinking that is trying to express something we may not even be aware of ourselves.

M: But surely this has always been the case. We all dress up when we want to impress someone; we tend to put on something smart.

W: But that's a conscious act. What I am talking about is more of a subconscious thing. Take for example the student away from home at university: if he tends to wrap himself up more than others, this is because he is probably feeling homesick. Similarly, a general feeling of insecurity can sometimes take the form. of overdressing in warmer clothes than necessary.

M: Can you give any other examples?

W: Yes. I think people who are sociable tend to dress in an extroverted way, preferring brighter or more dazzling colors--yellows, bright reds, and so on.

M: Do you think the care--or lack of it--over the way we wear has anything to tell us?

W: Yes, indeed. The length of a man's trousers speaks volumes about his awareness of his own image. If his trousers are very short or having loosely, this probably means he's absorbed by other things.

According to the woman, what governs the clothes we wear?

A.A desire to display one's wealth and express oneself.

B.Love for beauty and a desire to impress others.

C.Individual taste and love for beauty.

D.Individual taste and a desire to express oneself.

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第10题
What is not Mencius’ ideas?

A、Everyone was born morally good

B、Benevolen tgoverning was an alternative approach to bring about national unification.

C、Is it not a delight to acquire knowledge and put it into practice?

D、I desire fish but I also desire bear’s paw. If I choose the bear’s paw I must relinquish the fish since I cannot have both. Similarly, I desire life but also righteousness. So, if I cannot have both I will choose righteousness and relinquish life.

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