单选题Ask three people to look out the same window at a busy street corner and tell you what they see. Chances are you will receive three different answers. Each person sees the same scene, but each perceives something different about it.
Perceiving goes on in our minds. Of the three people who look out the window, one may say that he sees a policeman giving a motorist a ticket. Another may say that he sees a rush-hour traffic jam at the intersection. The third may tell you that he sees a woman trying to cross the street with four children in tow. For perception is the mind"s interpretation of what the senses—in this case our eyes—tell us.
Many psychologists today are working to try to determine just how a person experiences or perceives the world around him. Using a scientific approach, these psychologists set up experiments in which they can control all of the factors. By measuring and charting the results of many experiments, they are trying to find out what makes different people perceive totally different things about the same scene.
单选题If you ______ your friends, you may lose them.
单选题When I think
1
to my schooldays, I have very mixed memories. On
2
one hand, I have many very pleasant memories of my classmates and some of my classes, for
3
Science and P.E.
4
, on the
5
hand, I have very
6
memories of some of my teachers, especially of my maths teacher.
He was an old man
7
had been teaching for
8
least 35 years and he had old-fashioned ideas
9
teaching. He never let students
10
any of the problems. We had to be silent in class all
11
time. He
12
to punish anybody who got an answer wrong
13
hitting him with a long wooden ruler. It really hurt! He
14
be in trouble if he was still a teacher now
15
it is illegal to hit students. I don"t think he could manage to control the class now as his classes were really
16
. These days teachers must motivate students by
17
them in what they are teaching
18
than by punishing them.
Still,
19
some of my memories are not very pleasant, I think I enjoyed my childhood. I managed to get into university so my school
20
not have been so bad.
单选题He has spent a large ______ of money with no results.
单选题John is very ______ —if he promises to do something he"ll do it.
单选题The building ______ over there will be the largest laboratory in our
university.
A. be built
B. being built
C. built
D. is being built
单选题The climate in Australia is generally ______.
单选题The old lady is said ______ on her way back home from the bank.
单选题______ made the school proud was ______ more than 90% of the students had been admitted to key universities.
单选题It is essential that we ______ measure to protect the ozone layer.
单选题The Caspian Sea, a salt lake, is ______ any other lake in the world.
单选题The little boy ______ his bike and broke his right leg.
单选题The fact ______ the flu has been brought to every continent is disturbing.
单选题Whether the eyes are "the windows of the soul" is debatable, that they are intensely important in interpersonal communication is a fact. During the first two months of a baby"s life, the stimulus that produces a smile is a pair of eyes. The eyes need not be real: a mask with two dots will produce a smile. Significantly, a real human face with eyes covered will not motivate a smile, nor will the sight of only one eye when the face is presented in profile. This attraction to eyes as opposed to the nose or mouth continues as the baby matures. In one study, when American four-year-olds were asked to draw people, 75 percent of them drew people with mouths, but 99 percent of them drew people with eyes. In Japan, however, where babies are carried on their mother"s back, infants do not acquire as much attachment to eyes as they do in other cultures. As a result, Japanese adults make little use of the face either to encode (把……编码) or decode(理解) meaning. In fact, Argyle reveals that the "proper place to focus one"s gaze during a conversation in Japan is on the neck of one"s conversation partner."
The role of eye contact in a conversational exchange between two Americans is well defined; speakers make contact with the eyes of their listener for about one second, then glance away as they talk; in a few moments they re-establish eye contact with the listener or reassure the selves that their audience is still attentive, then shift their gaze away once more. Listeners, meanwhile, keep their eyes on the face of the speaker, allowing themselves to glance away only briefly. It is important that they be looking at the speaker at the precise moment when the speaker reestablishes eye contact: if they are not looking, the speaker assumes that they are disinterested and either will pause until eye contact is resumed or will terminate the conversation. Just how critical this eye maneuvering is to the maintenance of conversational flow becomes evident when two speakers are wearing dark glasses: there may be a sort of traffic jam of words caused by interruption, false starts, and unpredictable pauses.
单选题Though being single in her early thirties, she never thinks that it is high time that she ______ married.
单选题After Michael ________ his father’s company, he discovered that he was more skilled than his father in managing the business.
单选题 The usual image of studying is of someone peering
into a book, hoping to learn something. Study is a dull word for {{U}}
{{U}} 1 {{/U}} {{/U}}fascinating ways to {{U}} {{U}} 2
{{/U}} {{/U}}the world of learning. A 5-year-old child must study to learn the
alphabet. A team member in the National Football League must study the plays
{{U}} {{U}} 3 {{/U}} {{/U}}by the coaches. All the practice
sessions a pianist endures are {{U}} {{U}} 4 {{/U}} {{/U}}forms
of study. The success of every learning experience in school or
in a career depends on some {{U}} {{U}} 5 {{/U}} {{/U}}of
studying, and not all studying is done with books. The biologist must inspect
nature firsthand. The airline {{U}} {{U}} 6 {{/U}} {{/U}}must
learn about wind and other weather {{U}} {{U}} 7 {{/U}}
{{/U}}.Soldiers must be trained to {{U}} {{U}} 8 {{/U}}
{{/U}}under the most difficult conditions.{{U}} {{U}} 9 {{/U}}
{{/U}}, for most persons the reading of useful books is a{{U}} {{U}}
10 {{/U}} {{/U}}step to learning. The study that underpins learning is a
lifelong pursuit. Although memory is vital to all learning,
study is not {{U}} {{U}} 11 {{/U}} {{/U}}of memory only.
Arithmetic problems, for instance, are mainly practice in using numbers in ways
already learned. Reading, spelling, and writing are skill subjects too and
require practice. By repeated effort,{{U}} {{U}} 12 {{/U}}
{{/U}}in these subjects is increased {{U}} {{U}} 13 {{/U}}
{{/U}}typing and driving are. They are tool subjects, or stepping stones,
{{U}} {{U}} 14 {{/U}} {{/U}}the learner increases knowledge and
expands it into other areas. The sciences, language arts, and social studies are
skill subjects only in part. They also give the learner practice in
understanding the {{U}} {{U}} 15 {{/U}} {{/U}}between ideas and
events, or cause and effect. Some facts and skills are learned
by taking part in activities. Some are learned by {{U}} {{U}} 16
{{/U}} {{/U}}what others do or by reading about {{U}} {{U}} 17
{{/U}} {{/U}}has happened. In every {{U}} {{U}} 18 {{/U}}
{{/U}}a background of information from experience or study can help speed the
learning process. The textbook is the most common {{U}}
{{U}} 19 {{/U}} {{/U}}for school use. It establishes the {{U}}
{{U}} 20 {{/U}} {{/U}}by which learning proceeds. It frequently
includes practice problems and activities that allow the learner to use what has
been learned.
单选题People are more likely to stay ______ 30 miles of ______ they were born.
单选题They insisted that the device ______ under operating conditions.
A. would be tested
B. be tested
C. to tested
D. be testing
单选题Long hours at the screen can cause aching eyes, blurred vision and headaches, experts say. In fact, eyestrain surpasses even wrist pain as the top physical complaint among heavy computer users.
When peering into the computer screen, the eye"s focusing muscle is at constant tension. Like any muscle, it feels sore when overloaded. And when someone spends a lot of time looking at something close, the eye muscle can get stuck on the near-focus setting and have difficulty relaxing, leaving the person temporarily nearsighted, a condition called accommodative spasm(痉挛) that can last seconds or hours.
This is why after looking at a monitor all day, some computer workers complain that their distance vision is bluffed when they attempt to drive home.
The letters on the screen are not as clearly defined as on a printed page. Take a magnifying glass to your monitor and you"ll see the letters, each made up of pinpoint sources of light, have no sharp edges. But those liquid crystal display (LCD) monitors, like those found on laptop computers, are easier on the eyes because they display sharper images.
And studies have shown that when people are working on a computer, their rate of blinking goes down by two-thirds, which can result in dry, stinging eyes. This is especially a problem for contact-lens wearers.
