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提问人:网友lj_jia_jia 发布时间:2022-01-06
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The story suggests that______.A.the two doctors would become friendsB.Dr. Turner decided t

The story suggests that______.

A.the two doctors would become friends

B.Dr. Turner decided to stay at his present job

C.the two doctors would not work together

D.Dr. Johnson did not like Dr. Turner

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更多“The story suggests that______.A.the two doctors would become friendsB.Dr. Turner decided t”相关的问题
第1题
The fact that the narrator can still see the egg on the table at the end of the story afte
r his father has failed the trick, put it there and didn’t break it suggests an optimistic view of the American Dream that the family will continue to pursue.

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第2题
What is Amy Cuddy's response to the public's viewing her findings as being 'fake'?

A、She suggests that the public shouldn't be skeptical.

B、She decided to give up her ground on the power of gesture.

C、She did another experiment to support her findings.

D、She told her own story to illustrate her point.

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第3题
My mother never let herself get down. No matter how bad things were, she stayed cheerful.
Even though we had a hard life, she still maintained the attitude that everything was fine. I remember her coming home tired from her job at the restaurant and saying that we were lucky. We didn't have a lot of clothes or toys, but my mother always made sure we had enough to eat.

Her love and devotion for my brother and me made our lack of material possessions seem insignificant. Even today, if I were given a choice between having love at home and wealth, I would want it just the way I had it. I grew up poor in material things but rich in love.

Since my father was never around long enough to teach me physical things or to play games with me, I didn't succeed in any competitive sport. My mother did her best as a substitute, throwing a ball with me in the lot(空地) behind our house, but it wasn't the same. She was too protective of me, and I didn't have enough confidence in my own abilities to really try anything physically demanding.

The story suggests that the author is______his mother.

A.proud of

B.worried about

C.pitiful for

D.concerned about

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第4题
The story of apple orchard suggests that ______.A.you should find a orchard with enough ap

The story of apple orchard suggests that ______.

A.you should find a orchard with enough apples

B.the more you change, the more chances you will get

C.you can pick more apples because of your luck

D.you should try harder to find apples in the places you've visited before

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第5题
The writer suggests that Conan Doyle ______.A.was less analytical about Houdini than one m

The writer suggests that Conan Doyle ______.

A.was less analytical about Houdini than one might have expected

B.asked Houdini if he could include him in a Sherlock Holmes story

C.felt that Houdini could make more money in other ways

D.thought there were scientific explanations for Houdini's feats

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第6题
GossipEven if you've never taken a class in 18th century Russian history, you've probably

Gossip

Even if you've never taken a class in 18th century Russian history, you've probably heard the story about Catherine the Great. According to the lore, Catherine Ⅱ, Empress of Russia, died under questionable circumstances involving a horse. If you ask someone who has a fondness for history or urban legends, though, you'll learn that the story isn't true. Catherine I1 really died of a stroke, and no horses were present.

Introduction

The story of Catherine the Great and the horse isn't recent invention-it started out as gossip more than 200 years ago. It's a good illustration of the nature of gossip.

It's almost impossible to figure out who told the story first. Historians believe that the French upper class created the rumor in an attempt to destroy Catherine's reputation.

It started as a malicious (用意歹毒的) attempt to slander (诽谤) someone and possibly to improve the social standing of the people who made up the story.

When people repeat it today, they believe it is true, in spite of its inherent outlandishness (古怪).

The tale is persistent and widespread. It's stayed around for hundreds of years, and no matter how many historians refute it, people still pass it on.

It's the kind of news most people can't help spreading around, even if they've resolved to spend less time gossiping.

Even though some of the details have changel, the core of the story is the same as if was 200 years ago. In this respect, real gossip is different from the "telephone game" often used to teach children about its hazards.

However, unlike the story of Catherine I[, not all gossip is malicious or untrue. Like swearing, another use of language many people try to avoid, gossip plays a number of roles within social groups, and some of them can actually be useful.

Sociologists, linguists, psychologists and historians are among the people who research gossip and how it functions in society. It's a tricky phenomenon to study, though. People usually gossip spontaneously and in private, so it's almost impossible to study gossip in a laboratory setting. In fact, many researchers study gossip by eavesdropping (偷听) on gossipers.

In addition, when researchers study gossip, they don't all use the same definition. Most start with the same basic idra: Gossip is a conversation between two people that concerns a third person who is not present. Different researchers then add a range of stipulations.

The comversation takes place in private.

The people talking are transmitting information as though it were fact, but they have not confirmed the information as factual.

The people gossiping and the person being gossiped about know each other in real life. By this definition, celebrity gossip is not really gossip unless the speaker and the listener are sriends with the celebrity in question.

Something in the speaker's body language or tone of voice suggests a moral judgment about the information being relayed. For example, the sentence "Clara got a puppy" sounds pretty neutral. But if Clara lives in a college dorm that doesn't allow pets and the person speaking sounds scandalized, the sentence becomes gossip.

The people gossiping compare themselves in some way to the person being gossiped about, usually considering themselves to be superior to the subject.

Gossip is full of contradictions. People do it even though they think they shouldn't. Gossip can bolster (助长) one person's reputation while destroying another's, and it can establish a trusting bond between two people while betraying the trust of a third. People who gossip too much can develop a reputation for being untrustworthy or too talkative. But people who don't gossip can develop a reputation for being distant, uptight or snobbish. These fictional examples explo

A.Y

B.N

C.NG

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第7题
GossipEven if you've never taken a class in 18th century Russian history, you've probably

Gossip

Even if you've never taken a class in 18th century Russian history, you've probably heard the story about Catherine the Great. According to the lore, Catherine Ⅱ, Empress of Russia, died under questionable circumstances involving a horse. If you ask someone who has a fondness for history or urban legends, though, you'll learn that the story isn't tree. Catherine Ⅱ really died of a stroke, and no horses were present.

Introduction

The story of Catherine the Great and the horse isn't a recent invention—it started out as gossip more than 200 years ago. It's not just a juicy story; it's a good illustration of the nature of gossip.

It's almost impossible to figure out who told the story first. Historians believe that the French upper class created the rumor in an attempt to destroy Catherine's reputation.

It started ms a malicious(用意歹毒的) attempt to slander(诽谤) someone and possibly to improve the social standing of the people who made up the story.

When people repeat it today, they believe it is true, in spite of its inherent outlandishness(古怪).

The tale is persistent and widespread. It's stayed around for hundreds of years, and no matter how many historians refute it, people still pass it on.

It's the kind of news most people can't help spreading around, even if they've resolved to spend less time gossiping.

Even though some of the details might have changed, the core of the story is the same as it was 200 years ago. In this respect, real gossip is different from the "telephone game" often used to teach children about its hazards.

However, unlike the story of Catherine Ⅱ, not all gossip is malicious or untrue. Like swearing, another use of language many people try to avoid, gossip plays a number of roles within social groups, and some of them can actually be useful.

Sociologists, linguists, psychologists and historians are among the people who research gossip and how it functions in society. It's a tricky phenomenon to study, though. People usually gossip spontaneously and in private, so it's almost impossible to study gossip in a laboratory setting. In fact, many researchers study gossip by eavesdropping(偷听) on gossipers.

In addition, when researchers study gossip, they don't all use the same definition. Most start with the same basic idea: Gossip is a conversation between two people that concerns a third person who is not present. Different researchers then add a range of stipulations.

The conversation takes place in private.

The people-talking are transmitting information as though it were fact, but they have not confirmed the information as factual.

The people gossiping and the person being gossiped about know each other in real life. By this definition, celebrity gossip is not really gossip unless the speaker and the listener are friends with the celebrity in question.

Something in the speaker's body language or tone of voice suggests a moral judgment about the information being relayed. For example, the sentence "Clara got a puppy" sounds pretty neutral. But if Clara lives in a college dorm that doesn't allow pets and the person speaking sounds scandalized, the sentence becomes gossip.

The people gossiping compare, themselves in some way to the person being gossiped about, usually considering themselves to be superior to the subject.

Gossip is full of contradictions. People do it even though they think they shouldn't. Gossip can bolster(助长) one person's reputation while destroying another's, and it can establish a trusting bond between two people while betraying the trust of a third. People who gossip too much can develop a reputation for being untrustworthy or too talkative. But people who don't gossip can develop a reputation for being distant, uptight or snobbish.

A.Y

B.N

C.NG

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第8题
It's no surprise that Jennifer Senior's insightful, provocative magazine cover story, " I
love My Children , I Hate My Life, " is arousing much chatternothing gets people talking like the suggestion that child rearing is anything less than a completely fulfilling, life-enriching experience. Rather than concluding that children make parents either happy or miserable, Senior suggests we need to redefine happiness : instead of thinking of it as something that can be measured by moment-to-moment joy, we should consider being happy as a past-tense condition. Even though the day-to-day experience of raising kids can be soul-crushingly hard, Senior writes that " the very things that in the moment dampen our moods can later be sources of intense gratification and delight. "

The magazine cover showing an attractive mother holding a cute baby is hardly the only Madonna-and-child image on newsstands this week. There are also stories about newly adoptiveand newly singlemom Sandra Bullock, as well as the usual "Jennifer Aniston is pregnant" news. Practically every week features at least one celebrity mom, or mom-to-be, smiling on the newsstands.

In a society that so persistently celebrates procreation, is it any wonder that admitting you regret having children is equivalent to admitting you support kitten-killing? It doesn't seem quite fair, then, to compare the regrets of parents to the regrets of the childless. Unhappy parents rarely are provoked to wonder if they shouldn't have had kids, but unhappy childless folks are bothered with the message that children are the single most important thing in the world: obviously their misery must be a direct result of the gaping baby-size holes in their lives.

Of course, the image of parenthood that celebrity magazines like Us Weekly and People present is hugely unrealistic, especially when the parents are single mothers like Bullock. According to several studies concluding that parents are less happy than childless couples, single parents are the least happy of all. No shock there, considering how much work it is to raise a kid without a partner to lean on; yet to hear Sandra and Britney tell it, raising a kid on their "own" (read; with round-the-clock help) is a piece of cake.

It's hard to imagine that many people are dumb enough to want children just because Reese and Angelina make it look so glamorous; most adults understand that a baby is not a haircut. But it's interesting to wonder if the images we see every week of stress-free, happiness-enhancing parenthood aren't in some small, subconscious way contributing to our own dissatisfactions with the actual experience, in the same way that a small part of us hoped getting " the Rachel" might make us look just a little bit like Jennifer Aniston.

Jennifer Senior suggests in her article that raising a child can bring______.

A.temporary delight.

B.enjoyment in progress.

C.happiness in retrospect.

D.lasting reward.

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第9题
What made Joan Ryan decide to be a sports writer? "Ten years ago, I was editing news stori
es at the Orlando Sentinel in Florida--my first job out of college. I didn't know any female sports writers. But I wanted to be one. First of all, the best writing in the paper was sports."

"Furthermore, I had the background. I grew up in an athletic family: Three boys and three girls and a coach for a dad. '

Soon after describing her ambition to a co-worker, the editor of her paper reassigned Joan to the sports department.

Today, Joan is the sports columnist for the San Francisco Examiner in California. When she landed her job eight years ago, she was the only woman sports writer on any major American newspaper. (She is now one in about six.)

Was it tough to pioneer as a female sports writer? You bet ! Take for example, the first time Joan tried to get an interview in the men' s locker room. "It was the U. S. Football League. I wanted to interview one of the players, Joe Cribbs, because he had just broken a finger. As soon as I stepped into the locker room--where all sports writers interview athletes--the room went crazy. Guys started yelling at me. It was really terrible. Suddenly I felt something move up my leg. It was the handle of the razor (剃刀) that someone used to cut the tape. I yelled and walked out."

Joan ended up interviewing Cribbs--outside the locker room. "In retrospect (回顾), I feel this was a defining moment for me as a journalist. I went back and wrote my story and made my headline. Now I know for sure that nothing can interfere with getting the story."

If you want to be a sports writer, Joan suggests that you read "the best fiction writers" and learn how to write well. Her other suggestions: "Don' t let anyone keep you from doing what you want to do. Just pretend you have courage."

The term "You bet" in Line 1 of Paragraph 5 can be best replaced by ______.

A.Not at all.

B.It depends.

C.Absolutely.

D.Hard to say.

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第10题
The case of Laconia suggests people in the U.S. wouldn’t abandon their cars even for a while when they went shopping.
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