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提问人:网友heysein 发布时间:2022-01-06
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He has acquired a (comprehensive) knowledge of his subject through reading many new ma

He has acquired a (comprehensive) knowledge of his subject through reading many new materials and up-to-date publications. 选择能代替括号里的选项

A、extensive

B、comparative

C、subjective

D、excessive

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更多“He has acquired a (comprehensive) knowledge of his subject through reading many new ma”相关的问题
第1题
He has ______ a lot of responsibilities.A: assumedB: acquiredC: approvedD: appeared

He has ______ a lot of responsibilities.

A: assumed

B: acquired

C: approved

D: appeared

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第2题
Although he has lived there for years he has not yet ________ to the hot climate since he is from the northern part of the country.

A.adopted

B.acquired

C.adapted

D.admitted

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第3题
Only after he has acquired considerable facility in speaking______to learn to read and wri
te.

A.he began

B.will he begin

C.did he begin

D.must he begin

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第4题
Task 1 Complete each statement by choosing the appropriate answer from the four choices marked A, B, C and D. With a year’s hard work, he basic knowledge of English.

A、has caught

B、has acquired

C、has required

D、has acknowledged

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第5题
Simile is applied in ().

A、In politics, a reformer may have just as strong a love of power as a despot.

B、And is it not, perhaps, a drug which—like opium—has to be taken in continually stronger doses to produce the desired effect?

C、When the Arabs, who had been used to living sparingly on a few dates, acquired the riches of the Eastern Roman Empire…

D、What he thought was, “I must have a Navy as good as Grandmamma’s.”

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第6题
Education has acquired a kind of snob(诌上骄下的势利鬼) value in modern times. We are no l

Education has acquired a kind of snob(诌上骄下的势利鬼) value in modern times. We are no longer content to be honest craftsmen(工匠), skilled at our work through years of patient practice. Nowadays if we want promotion in even the humblest(卑微的) job, we have to obtain a certificate or a diploma first. We may know that we would be better at the job than the man with the paper qualifications, but our experience and practical skills are often regarded as relatively unimportant. "Johnson would have been manager by now if he'd taken the trouble to get a degree," his colleagues say, "he's a clever man. He could have done anything if he'd had a proper education."

I wonder if, as time goes on, we shall discover that many people, whose practical experience and ability would have been enormously useful to their employers, have been rejected form. hire or promotion on the grounds that they were insufficiently qualified. Would it not be better to allow people to become expert in the way most suited to them, rather than oblige them to follow a set course of instruction which may offer no opportunity for them to develop skills in which they would have become expert if left it to themselves?

By the first sentence in Para.1, the writer probably means ______.

A.education has acquired a pleasant value

B.education is ignored by the public

C.too much attention is paid to degrees in the workplace

D.too little attention is paid to degrees in the workplace

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第7题
Which of the following statements further illustrates the statement: “rigid attendance policies do not benefit student’s studies”?

A、Required class attendance may secure one hundred percent attendance for a course, but it does not make much sense.

B、A student should be allowed to decide for himself whether an in-class experience is worthwhile when his teacher merely repeats material from the textbook.

C、A student may never miss a single attendance in a course, but it doesn’t mean that he has acquired the knowledge of the course.

D、A student may have to give up a lecture which he finds important to his studies simply because of required attendance policies, which is a contributing factor to his course performance.

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第8题
Task 2Directions: This task is the same as Task 1.The 5 questions or unfinished statements

Task 2

Directions: This task is the same as Task 1. The 5 questions or unfinished statements are numbered 41 through 45.

Education has acquired a kind of snob (诌上骄下的势利鬼)value in modern times. We are no longer content to be honest craftsmen (工匠), skilled at our work through years of patient practice. Nowadays if we want promotion in even the humblest (卑微的) job, we have to obtain a certificate or a diploma first. We may know that we would be better at the job than the man with the paper qualifications, but our experience and practical skills are often regarded as relatively unimportant. "Johnson would have been manager by now if he'd taken the trouble to get a degree," his colleagues say, "he's a clever man. He could have done anything if he'd had a proper education."

I wonder if, as time goes on, we shall discover that many people, whose practical experience and ability would have been enormously useful to their employers, have been rejected form. hire or promotion on the grounds that they were insufficiently qualified. Would it not be better to allow people to become expert in the way most suited to them, rather than oblige them to follow a set course of instruction which may offer no opportunity for them to develop skills in which they would have become expert if left it to themselves?

By the first sentence in Para.1, the writer probably means ______.

A.education has acquired a pleasant value

B.education is ignored by the public

C.too much attention is paid to degrees in the workplace

D.too little attention is paid to degrees in the workplace

点击查看答案
第9题
Fred Cooke of Salford turned 90 two days ago and the world has been beating a path to his
door. If you haven't noticed, the backstreet boy educated at Blackpool grammar styles himself more grandly as Alastair Cooke, broadcaster extraordinaire. An honorable KBE, he would be Sir Alastair if he had not taken American citizenship more than half a century ago.

If it sounds snobbish to draw attention to his humble origins, it should be reflected that the real snob is Cooke himself, who has spent a lifetime disguising them. But the fact that he opted to renounce his British passport in 1941--just when his country needed all the wartime help it could get--is hardly a matter for congratulation.

Cooke has made a fortune out of his love affair with America, entrancing listeners with a weekly monologue that has won Radio 4 many devoted adherents. Part of the pull is the developed drawl. This is the man who gave the world "midatlantic", the language of the disc jockey and public relations man.

He sounds American to us and English to them, while in reality he has for decades belonged to neither. Cooke's world is an America that exists. largely in the imagination. He took ages to acknowledge the disaster that was Vietnam and even longer to wake up to Watergate. His politics have drifted to the right with age, and most of his opinions have been acquired on the golf course with fellow celebrities.

He chased after stars on arrival in America, fixing up an interview with Charlie Chaplin and briefly becoming his friend. He told Cooke he could turn him into a fine light comedian; instead he is an impressionist's dream.

Cooke liked the sound of his first wife's name almost as much as he admired her good looks. But he found bringing up baby difficult and left her for the wife of his landlord.

Women listeners were unimpressed when, in 1996, he declared on air that the fact that 4 % of women in the American armed forces were raped showed remarkable self-restraint on the part of Uncle Sam's soldiers. His arrogance in not allowing BBC editors to see his script. in advance worked, not for the first time, to his detriment. His defenders said he could not help living with the 1930s values he had acquired and somewhat dubiously went on to cite "gallantry" as chief among them. Cooke's raconteur style. encouraged a whole generation of BBC men to think of themselves as more important than the story. His treacly tones were the model for the regular World Service reports From Our Own Correspondent, known as FOOCs in the business. They may yet be his epitaph.

At the beginning of the passage the writer sounds critical of______.

A.Cooke's obscure origins

B.Cooke's broadcasting style

C.Cooke's American citizenship

D.Cooke's fondness of America

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第10题
1 Fred Cooke of Salford turned 90 two days ago and the world has been beating a path to hi
s door. If you haven't noticed, the backstreet boy educated at Blackpool grammar styles himself more grandly as Alastair Cooke, broadcaster extraordinaire. An honorable KBE, he would be Sir Alastair if he had not taken American citizenship more than half a century ago.

2 If it sounds snobbish to draw attention to his humble origins, it should be reflected that the real snob is Cooke himself, who has spent a lifetime disguising them. But the fact that he opted to renounce his British passport in 1941 -- just when his country needed all the wartime help it could get -- is hardly a matter for congratulation.

3 Cooke has made a fortune out of his love affair with America, entrancing listeners with a weekly monologue that has won Radio 4 many devoted adherents. Part of the pull is the developed drawl. This is the man who gave the world "midatlantic", the language of the disc jockey and public relations man.

4 He sounds American to us and English to them, while in reality he has for decades belonged to neither. Cooke's world is an America that exists largely in the imagination. He took ages to acknowledge the disaster that was Vietnam and even longer to wake up to Watergate. His politics have drifted to the right with age, and most of his opinions have been acquired on the golf course with fellow celebrities.

5 He chased after stars on arrival in America, fixing up an interview with Charlie Chaplin and briefly becoming his friend. He told Cooke he could turn him into a fine light comedian; instead he is an impressionist's dream.

6 Cooke liked the sound of his first wife's name almost as much as he admired her good looks. But he found bringing up baby difficult and left her for the wife of his landlord.

7 Women listeners were unimpressed when, in 1996, he declared on air that the fact that 4% of women in the American armed forces were raped showed remarkable self-restraint on the part of Uncle Sam's soldiers. His arrogance in not allowing BBC editors to see his script. in advance worked, not for the first time, to his detriment. His defenders said he could not help living with the 1930s values he had acquired and somewhat dubiously went on to cite "gallantry" as chief among them. Cooke's raconteur style. encouraged a whole generation of BBC men to think of themselves as more important than the story. His treacly tones were the model for the regular World Service reports From Our Own Correspondent, known as FOOCs in the business. They may yet be his epitaph.

At the beginning of the passage the writer sounds critical of

A.Cooke's obscure origins.

B.Cooke's broadcasting style.

C.Cooke's American citizenship.

D.Cooke's fondness of America.

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