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单选题Questions 16 to 18 are based on the passage you have just heard.
单选题The doctors ______ the newly approved drug into the patient when he was critically ill.
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单选题The use of
deferential
(敬重的) language is symbolic of the Confucian ideal of the woman, which dominates conservative gender norms in Japan. This ideal presents a woman who withdraws quietly to the background, subordinating her life and needs to those of her family and its male head. She is a dutiful daughter, wife and mother, master of the domestic arts. The typical refined Japanese woman excels in modesty and delicacy; she "
treads softly
(谨言慎行) in the world," elevating feminine beauty and grace to an art form.
Nowadays, it is commonly observed that young women are not conforming to the feminine
linguistic
(语言的) ideal. They are using fewer of the very deferential "women"s" forms, and even using the few strong forms that are known as "men"s". This, of course, attracts considerable attention and has led to an outcry in the Japanese media against the defeminization of women"s language. Indeed, we didn"t hear about "men"s language" until people began to respond to girls" appropriation of forms normally reserved for boys and men. There is considerable sentiment about the "corruption" of women"s language—which of course is viewed as part of the loss of feminine ideals and morality—and this sentiment is crystallized by nationwide opinion polls that are regularly carried out by the media.
Yoshiko Matsumoto has argued that young women probably never used as many of the highly deferential forms as older women. This highly polite style is no doubt something that young women have been expected to "grow into"—after all, it is a sign not simply of femininity, but of maturity and refinement, and its use could be taken to indicate a change in the nature of one"s social relations as well. One might well imagine little girls using exceedingly polite forms when playing house or imitating older women—in a fashion analogous to little girls" use of a high-pitched voice to do "teacher talk" or "mother talk" in role play.
The fact that young Japanese women are using less deferential language is a sure sign of change—of social change and of linguistic change. But it is most certainly not a sign of the "masculinization" of girls. In some instances, it may be a sign that girls are making the same claim to authority as boys and men, but that is very different from saying that they are trying to be "masculine". Katsue Reynolds has argued that girls nowadays are using more assertive language strategies in order to be able to compete with boys in schools and out. Social change also brings not simply different positions for women and girls, but different relations to life stages, and adolescent girls are participating in new subcultural forms. Thus what may, to an older speaker, seem like "masculine" speech may seem to an adolescent like "liberated" or "hip" speech.
单选题Passage Two
单选题The old man got things straight enough to settle down at last to his usual ______.
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单选题Directions: In this section, you will hear three short
passages. At the end of each passage, you will hear some questions. Both the
passage and the questions will be spoken only once. After you hear a question,
you must choose the best answer from, the four choices marked A), B), C) and D).
Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through
the centre. Passage one
Questions 26 to 28 are based on the passage you have just
heard.
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单选题In spite of the fact that Jim violated these regulations, it does not justify ______ him in that way.
单选题That French novel had been translated into English and published in Britain by ________ of the author.
单选题The student senate will support supervisors' actions if they are ______ with the established student senate policies and procedures.
单选题The author implies that the goat of college education should be to develop the students' ability to ______.
单选题His body temperature has been ______ for 3 days, the highest point reaching 40.5 degrees centigrade.
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单选题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 and mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line
through the centre. Of all the components of a good
night's sleep, dreams seem to be least within our control. In dreams, a window
opens into a world where logic is suspended and dead people speak. A century
ago, Freud formulated his revolutionary theory that dreams were the disguised
shadows of our unconscious desires and rears, by the late 1970s. neurologists
had switched to thinking of them as just "mental noise" the random byproducts of
the neural-repair work that goes on during sleep. Now researchers suspect that
dreams are part of the mind's emotional thermostat, regulating moods while the
brain is "off-line" And one leading authority says that these intensely powerful
mental events can be not only harnessed but actually brought under conscious
control, to help us sleep and feel better, "It's your dream," says Rosalind
Cartwright, chair of psychology at Chicago's Medical Center. "If you don't like
it, change it. " Evidence from brain imaging supports this
view. The brain is as active during REM (rapid eye movement) sleep—when most
vivid dreams occur—as it is when fully awake, says Dr. Eric Nofzinger at the
University of Pittsburgh. But not all parts of the brain are equally involved,
the limbic system (the "emotional brain")is especially active, while the
prefrontal cortex (the center of intellect and reasoning) is relatively quiet.
"We wake up from dreams happy of depressed, and those feelings can stay with us
all day," says Stanford sleep researcher Dr. William Dement.
The link between dreams and emotions shows up among the patients in Cartwright's
clinic. Most people seem to have more bad dreams early in the night, progressing
toward happier ones before awakening, suggesting that they are working through
negative feelings generated during the day. Because our conscious mind is
occupied with daily life we don't always think about the emotional significance
of the day's events—until, it appears, we begin to dream. And
this process need not be left to the unconscious. Cartwright believes one can
exercise conscious control over recurring bad dreams As soon as you awaken,
identify what is upsetting about the dream. Visualize how you would like it to
end instead, the next time is occurs, try to wake up just enough to control its
course. With much practice people can learn to, literally, do it in their
sleep. At the end of the day, there's probably little reason to
pay attention to our dreams at all unless they keep us from sleeping of "we wake
you in a panic," Cartwright says. Terrorism, economic uncertainties and general
feelings of insecurity have increased people's anxiety. Those suffering from
persistent nightmares should seek help from a therapist. For the rest of us, the
brain has its ways of working through bad feelings. Sleep-or rather dream-on it
and you'll feel better in the morning.