填空题The revolution of the British drama came in the decade following the ending of the World War II. The tremors in the post-war British theatre were caused by Samuel Beckett"s play ______.
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填空题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} In the following article, some sentences
have been removed. For Questions 41--45, choose the most suitable paragraph from
the list A--F to fit into each of the numbered blank. There is one extra choice
that does not fit in any of the gaps. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.
Theories of the value of art are of two kinds, which we may
call extrinsic and intrinsic. The first regards art and the appreciation of art
as means to some recognized moral good, while the second regards them as
valuable not instrumentally but as objects unto themselves. It is characteristic
of extrinsic theories to locate the value of art in its effects on the person
who appreciates it. (41) _____________________ The extrinsic
approach, adopted in modem times by Leo Tolstoy in What Is Art in 1896, has
seldom seemed wholly satisfactory. Philosophers have constantly sought for a
value in aesthetic experience that is unique to it and that, therefore, could
not be obtained from any other source. The extreme version of this intrinsic
approach is that associated with Walter Pater, Oscar Wilde, and the French
Symbolists, and summarized in the slogan "art for art's sake."(42)
_____________________ Between those two extreme views there
lies, once again, a host of intermediate positions. We believe, for example,
that works of art must be appreciated for their own sake, but that, in the act
of appreciation, we gain from them something that is of independent value. (43)
_____________________ The analogy with laughter--which, in some
views, is itself a species of aesthetic interest--introduces a concept without
which there can be no serious discussion of the value of art: the concept of
taste. (44) _____________________ Similarly, we regard some
works of art as worthy of our attention and others as not. In articulating this
judgment, we use all of the diverse and confusing vocabulary of moral appraisal;
works of art, like people, are condemned for their sentimentality, coarseness,
vulgarity, cruelty, or self-indulgence, and equally praised for their warmth,
compassion, nobility, sensitivity, and truthfulness. Clearly, if aesthetic
interest has a positive value, when motivated by good taste; it is only interest
in appropriate objects that can be said to be good for us. (45)
_____________________. [A] Thus a joke is laughed at for its own
sake, even though there is an independent value in laughter, which lightens our
lives by taking us momentarily outside ourselves. Why should not something
similar be said of works of art, many of which aspire to be amusing in just the
way that good jokes are? [B] All discussion of the value of art
tends, therefore, to turn from the outset in the direction of criticism. Can
there be genuine critical evaluation of art, a genuine distinction between that
which deserves our attention and that which does not? [C] Art is
held to be a form of education, perhaps an education of the emotions. In this
case, it becomes an open question whether there might not be some more effective
means of the same result. Alternatively, one may attribute a negative value to
art, as Plato did in his Republic, arguing that art has a corrupting or
diseducative effect on those exposed to it. [D] Artistic
appreciation, a purely personal matter, calls for appropriate means of
expression. Yet, it is before anything a process of “cultivation", during which
a certain part of one's "inner self" is "dug out" and some knowledge of the
outside world becomes its match. [E] If I am amused it is for a
reason, and this reason lies in the object of my amusement. We thus begin to
think in terms of a distinction between good and bad reasons for laughter.
Amusement at the wrong things may seem to us to show corruption of mind,
cruelty, or bad taste; and when it does so, we speak of the object as not truly
amusing, and feel that we have reason on our side. [F] Such
thinkers and writers believe that art is not only an end in itself but also a
sufficient justification of itself. They also hold that in order to understand
art as it should be understood, it is necessary to put aside all interests other
than an interest in the work itself.
填空题Tom took the ______ to satisfy the desire for revenge.(occasional)
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填空题The weather is getting ______ (hot)and ______ (humid).
填空题[A] to show, to describe[B] to stand for[C] to act officially for
填空题Translate the following into English. 早在二、三十年代,鲁迅先生就对国民的好凑热闹这一劣根性深恶痛绝,造成这种劣根性的原因,当然有社会的因素,主要的还是人自身的主观因素,比如有些人精神空虚,寻求刺激;有些人社会公德意识缺乏等等。有这种心理的人,长此以往,于己于人都无好处。社会心理学告诉我们,人群产生以后,会导致意识的形成。而群体行为所造成的后果,是不以个人意志为转移的。现实生活中,因此而发生的案件、事故举不胜举。劝君莫凑热闹。
填空题[A] The petitioners argue that repealing the tax will cost the Treasury billions of dollars in lost revenues and will result in either increased taxes ill the long run or cuts to Medicare, Social Security, environmental protection and other government programs. Repealing the levy " would enrich the heirs of America's millionaires and billionaires, while hurting families who struggle to make ends meet," the petition says.[B] About 120 wealthy Americans had signed or supported a petition to oppose phasing out the tax. President Bush has included the repeal of the lax in his $1.6 trillion lax-cut proposal. Normally when " dozens " of Americans join in a political cause, it is not particularly noteworthy, but in this case the dozens include: George Soros, a billionaire financier; Warren Buffett, an investor listed as America's fourth-richest person; the philanthropist David Rockefeller Jr.; and William Gates Sr., a Seattle lawyer and father of America's richest man, Microsoft Corp. Chairman Bill Gates.[C] Buffett and company cite these factors in their petition calling for opposition to the estate-tax-repeal. They also discuss something that's equally emotional and far more complex: the principle of meritocracy. The idea that everyone in America has an equal chance, that our Fates are not determined by accidents of birth, is one of our core values And nowhere is this principle more reverend than in the technology economy; entrepreneurship is almost by definition all expression of meritocracy.[D] Buffett told the New York Times that repealing the estate tax would be a " terrible mistake " and the equivalent of " choosing the 2020 Olympic team by picking the eldest sons of the gold medal winners in the 2000 Olympics. "[E] An old brokerage commercial says: " He made his money the old-fashioned way: He earned it. " There was a perfect parody of the ad in which tile line read: " He made his money the old-fashioned way: He inherited it. " In 20 or 50 or 100 years, which of these lines will be right? Buffett and Soros and friends, to their credit. want to help make the first one real. Let's hope this is only one step in that process.[F] It was refreshing to see Buffett and George Soros and a number of other extremely wealthy luminaries stand up in opposition to President Bush's proposed repeal of the estate tax. While the policy has some emotional attractions—it would protect the inheritors of some small businesses from having to sell the companies to pay taxes, and it is true that most people have been taxed on their savings once already—in practice the tax repeal would mainly be a windfall for a very small number of very, very rich people.[G] President Bush will make his case for his $1.6 trillion tax cut plan, delivering a speech at a community center in St. Louis. The proposal would slash federal tax rates across all levels of income, eliminate tile so-called marriage penalty and phase out estate taxes. Democrats complain that the plan—which would cut the top rate from 39 to 33 percent—would disproportionately benefit the wealthy and unnecessarily squander expected budget surpluses. Some of the richest Americans are urging Congress not to repeal the estate tax, the New York Times reported on Wednesday. Order: 41.______→B→42.______→43.______→44.______→D→45.______
填空题______ unexpected gain
填空题America's liberal and conservative elites disagree about everything under the sun. from the role of God in the constitution to John Bolton's table manners. Yet on one issue they are as one: the country is going to hell in a hand-basket.41. __________. For liberals, Americans are suffering from epidemics of "traumas" and "syndromes". The left has always worried about the effects of rapacious capitalism on the American psyche. Listen to Mary Pipher, a bestselling clinical psychologist, on girls: "Just as planes and ships disappear mysteriously into the Bermuda Triangle, so do the selves of girls go down in droves. They crash and burn" Or compare William Pollak. a Harvard psychologist, on boys: "Our nation is home to millions of boys who...are cast out to sea in separate lifeboats, and feel that they are drowning in isolation, depression. loneliness and despair." Half an hour listening to "Oprah" or browsing in a bookshop could produce a dozen equally depressing theses, expressed in equally dismal metaphors, about every, sort of American.42. __________. This literature is built on one huge assumption: that Americans are a fragile bunch. Forget about the flinty Pilgrims who built a hyperpower out of a wilderness. Today's Americans are so vulnerable they need to be shielded from competition. In their excellent new book. "One Nation Under Therapy: How the Helping Culture is Eroding Self-Reliance" (St. Martin's Press). Christina Hoff Sommers and Sally Satel. of the American Enterprise Institute, detail the rise of an ever-proliferating profession of grief counsellors, trauma therapists, syndrome specialists, stress-reducers and assorted degree-bearing charlatans.43. __________. This book has naturally garnered favourable reviews from fellow conservatives. Yet the right is equally prey to its own variety of crisis-mongering. Conservatives blame sin. rather than syndromes, and cultural decline, rather than economic dislocation. But many share the left's sense of human vulnerability, and a surprising number have a weakness for psychobabble. It is no accident that the most powerful man in the Christian right. James Dobson. the head of Focus on the Family, is both a child psychologist and a veritable fountain of social' science statistics.44. __________. For conservatives, the family is being battered by pop culture, gay rights and feminism. Rebecca Hagelin of the Heritage Foundation argues that, thanks in pan to the ubiquity of the porn culture, America has gone "stark raving mad" (to use the subtitle of her new book). Gloomy conservative groups issue toe-curling warnings about the "inexorable grip of homosexual lust" and "feminism's love affair with abortion, and lesbianism".45. ___________. Is this really true? Take a look at most of the recent cultural indicators, and it is hard to know where to start with the good news. The proportion of black children living with married parents is increasing. The proportion of women with infants in the. workforce (the women that is, not the infants) is declining, meaning that more mothers are staying at home. Both teenage pregnancy rates and teenage abortion rates have declined by about a third over the past 15 years. For all the talk of "hooking up", a growing proportion of schoolchildren are waiting to have sex until they are older. The good news is not confined to sex. Child poverty is down substantially from its high in 1993 (whatever happened to the "disastrous consequences" of welfare reform?). So is juvenile crime. Alcohol and drug use are lower. The idea that young America is tossing about on a sea of misery hardly tallies with academic evidence, which shows 73% of teenagers to be "hopeful and optimistic, in thinking about the future" (a Horatio Alger study in 2002-03 ), a mere 7.5% of college students feeling frequently depressed (UCLA. 2003 ) and the teen-suicide rate down by a quarter (the Centres for Disease Control. 2004).[A] The literature assumes that Americans are vulnerable.[B] The conservatives' opinions of Americans' psychological problems[C] The conservatives think that Americans are fragile.[D] The liberals' opinions about the American psyche[E] The conservatives regard the social problems as the cause of the American's psychological problems.[F] The recent data indicates that Americans have an improvement in many social problems.
填空题S______ relation is the relation between one item and others in a sequence, or between elements which are all present.
填空题She felt very ______ when her mother forgot her birthday. (disappoint)
填空题As these goods are to be purchased ______ CIF basis, we would like to be informed whether you can accept the insurance ______ them ______ All Risks.
填空题I prefer ______. 我比较欣赏他帮助穷人的方式。
填空题Honesty comes from social pressure, and it is helpful to the security of society.
填空题Before you leave the office, please (connect) ______ your computer from the Internet.
填空题如果你听从我的劝告, you will probably succeed.
填空题{{B}}Directions: Pick out five appropriate expressions from the eight choices
below and complete the following dialogue by blackening the corresponding letter
on the Answer Sheet.{{/B}}
A. Please wait here
B. Show C. Here it is
D. your
license E. beg your pardon
F. May I see G. I’m sorry
H. Be careful Joe ran through the stop sign and was
caught by the police officer. Joe: Sir, did I do anything
wrong? Officer: Yes, sir. You ran through the stop sign.{{U}}
(56) {{/U}}your driver license, please? Joe: Oh,{{U}}
(57) {{/U}}, I didn’t see the stop sign at the comer. I didn’t mean
it. Officer: That doesn’t justify your violation. May I see{{U}}
(58) {{/U}}, please? Joe: Oh, sorry sir, I don’t have
it on me. Honestly, I forgot it back at the house. But I have the insurance
policy with me.{{U}} (59) {{/U}}. Officer:{{U}} (60)
{{/U}}, sir. I’ll come back in a moment.
填空题A. give presentations
B. new innovations
C. uploaded
Phrases:
A. how to help poor people with all sorts of
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B. all the speeches are
2
to their website
C.
3
on a variety of topics
TED
is a set of conferences, held in various cities around the world every year. With various speakers—also from various parts of the globe—
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, for everyone to see.
TED
conferences invite speakers to
5
. The different speakers are usually experts in their field and talk about new ideas and recent developments that are important to their work. The speakers are often also well known, with people such as Microsoft giant Bill Gates and world-renowned chimpanzee expert, Jane Goodall, having given talks. There are many talks on environmentalism, for example, and on international development, aid work, and
6
. While the talks cover a wide variety of topics, all speakers have a strict time limit—each presentation must last no longer than 18 minutes.
