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共用题干
Racial Prejudice
In some countries where racial prejudice is acute,violence has been taken for granted as a means of
solving differences,and this is not even questioned.There are countries________(51)the white man
imposes his rule by brute(粗暴的)force ; there are countries where the black man protests by______ (52)
fire to cities and by looting and pillaging(抢劫).Important people on both sides , who would appear to be
reasonable men , get up and calmly argue in ___________( 53 ) of violence as if it were a legitimate(合法的)
solution,________(54)any other. What is really frightening,what really________(55)you with despair,is
the realization that when it comes to the crunch(关键时刻),we have made no actual_________ (56) at
all.We may wear collars and ties instead of war-paint,but our instincts remain basically unchanged.The
whole of the recorded_________(57)of the human race,that tedious documentation of violence,has taught
us absolutely nothing. We have still not learnt that__________(58)never solves a problem but makes it
more acute.The sheer horror,the bloodshed and the suffering___________(59)nothing. No solution ever comes to
___________(60)the morning after we dismally(阴郁地)contemplate the smoking ruins and wonder what hit us.
The truly reasonable men who___________(61)where the solutions lie are finding it harder and harder
to get a hearing. They are despised,mistrusted and even persecuted___________(62)their own kind because
they advocate such apparently outrageous things as law enforcement. if half the energy that goes into
_________(63)acts was put to good use,if our efforts were directed at. _________(64)up the slums and
ghettos(贫民窟),at improving living-standards and providing education and employment for all, we would
not have gone a long way to
___________(65)at a solution.
Racial Prejudice
In some countries where racial prejudice is acute,violence has been taken for granted as a means of
solving differences,and this is not even questioned.There are countries________(51)the white man
imposes his rule by brute(粗暴的)force ; there are countries where the black man protests by______ (52)
fire to cities and by looting and pillaging(抢劫).Important people on both sides , who would appear to be
reasonable men , get up and calmly argue in ___________( 53 ) of violence as if it were a legitimate(合法的)
solution,________(54)any other. What is really frightening,what really________(55)you with despair,is
the realization that when it comes to the crunch(关键时刻),we have made no actual_________ (56) at
all.We may wear collars and ties instead of war-paint,but our instincts remain basically unchanged.The
whole of the recorded_________(57)of the human race,that tedious documentation of violence,has taught
us absolutely nothing. We have still not learnt that__________(58)never solves a problem but makes it
more acute.The sheer horror,the bloodshed and the suffering___________(59)nothing. No solution ever comes to
___________(60)the morning after we dismally(阴郁地)contemplate the smoking ruins and wonder what hit us.
The truly reasonable men who___________(61)where the solutions lie are finding it harder and harder
to get a hearing. They are despised,mistrusted and even persecuted___________(62)their own kind because
they advocate such apparently outrageous things as law enforcement. if half the energy that goes into
_________(63)acts was put to good use,if our efforts were directed at. _________(64)up the slums and
ghettos(贫民窟),at improving living-standards and providing education and employment for all, we would
not have gone a long way to
___________(65)at a solution.
_________(64)
A:looking
B:getting
C:taking
D:cleaning
A:looking
B:getting
C:taking
D:cleaning
参考答案
参考解析
解析:名词country后面可以用where表示地点,引导限定性定语从句。
set fire to是固定短语,意思为“点火,放火”。catch fire“着火”,用在文中意思不对。其 他选项搭配错误,因此正确答案是D。
in favor of是固定搭配,意思是“赞同”。从上下文判断,只有D项最合适,表示“赞成 暴力”。
any other前面需要一个介词,根据前面的as if从句,可以判断like(像······一样)符 合题意。
fill sb.with sth.是固定搭配,意思是“使某人充满······”。force sb.into doing sth.“强迫 某人做某事”。
make和progress搭配表示“取得进步、进展”,用在此处意思正确。make decision“做决 定”;make sense“合理,有道理”。
从上下文判断,此处应该是指人类有记录以来的历史,因此选B。 range“范围”。
从前面一句可以看出violence符合题意,即我们始终没有认识到暴力从来就没有解决 过任何问题,却只会使问题更加尖锐。argument“争论”;research“研究”。
deal和with搭配,是“处理、对待”的意思。want“想要”;根据上下文判断,C项意思合 适。mean nothing“毫无意义”。
come to light“找到,出现”;come to life“苏醒过来;有活力”;come to an end“结束”;come to decision“得出结论”。正确答案是A。
空格后紧跟一个where引导的宾语从句,四个选项中know意思符合题意,即知道解决 问题的方法,其他几个选项不符合题意。suggest sb.to do sth.“建议”;consider as“认为,视 为”;demand“要求”。
前面的“are despised , mistrusted and even persecuted”属被动语态,所以后面应该用by引出施加动作的主体,所以A项正确。
lawful“合法的”;symbolic“象征性的”;final“最后的”;violent“激烈的”;violent acts“暴力 的行为”。
clean up的意思是“清除,铲除”。look up“抬头看”;get up“起床”;take up sth.“着手处 理,开始从事”。
本句意思是:不久我们就会找出解决问题的方法。arrive at a solution“拿出/想出解决办 法”;laugh at“嘲笑”;be startled at“对······感到吃惊”。
set fire to是固定短语,意思为“点火,放火”。catch fire“着火”,用在文中意思不对。其 他选项搭配错误,因此正确答案是D。
in favor of是固定搭配,意思是“赞同”。从上下文判断,只有D项最合适,表示“赞成 暴力”。
any other前面需要一个介词,根据前面的as if从句,可以判断like(像······一样)符 合题意。
fill sb.with sth.是固定搭配,意思是“使某人充满······”。force sb.into doing sth.“强迫 某人做某事”。
make和progress搭配表示“取得进步、进展”,用在此处意思正确。make decision“做决 定”;make sense“合理,有道理”。
从上下文判断,此处应该是指人类有记录以来的历史,因此选B。 range“范围”。
从前面一句可以看出violence符合题意,即我们始终没有认识到暴力从来就没有解决 过任何问题,却只会使问题更加尖锐。argument“争论”;research“研究”。
deal和with搭配,是“处理、对待”的意思。want“想要”;根据上下文判断,C项意思合 适。mean nothing“毫无意义”。
come to light“找到,出现”;come to life“苏醒过来;有活力”;come to an end“结束”;come to decision“得出结论”。正确答案是A。
空格后紧跟一个where引导的宾语从句,四个选项中know意思符合题意,即知道解决 问题的方法,其他几个选项不符合题意。suggest sb.to do sth.“建议”;consider as“认为,视 为”;demand“要求”。
前面的“are despised , mistrusted and even persecuted”属被动语态,所以后面应该用by引出施加动作的主体,所以A项正确。
lawful“合法的”;symbolic“象征性的”;final“最后的”;violent“激烈的”;violent acts“暴力 的行为”。
clean up的意思是“清除,铲除”。look up“抬头看”;get up“起床”;take up sth.“着手处 理,开始从事”。
本句意思是:不久我们就会找出解决问题的方法。arrive at a solution“拿出/想出解决办 法”;laugh at“嘲笑”;be startled at“对······感到吃惊”。
更多 “共用题干 Racial PrejudiceIn some countries where racial prejudice is acute,violence has been taken for granted as a means of solving differences,and this is not even questioned.There are countries________(51)the white man imposes his rule by brute(粗暴的)force ; there are countries where the black man protests by______ (52) fire to cities and by looting and pillaging(抢劫).Important people on both sides , who would appear to be reasonable men , get up and calmly argue in ___________( 53 ) of violence as if it were a legitimate(合法的) solution,________(54)any other. What is really frightening,what really________(55)you with despair,isthe realization that when it comes to the crunch(关键时刻),we have made no actual_________ (56) at all.We may wear collars and ties instead of war-paint,but our instincts remain basically unchanged.The whole of the recorded_________(57)of the human race,that tedious documentation of violence,has taught us absolutely nothing. We have still not learnt that__________(58)never solves a problem but makes it more acute.The sheer horror,the bloodshed and the suffering___________(59)nothing. No solution ever comes to ___________(60)the morning after we dismally(阴郁地)contemplate the smoking ruins and wonder what hit us.The truly reasonable men who___________(61)where the solutions lie are finding it harder and harder to get a hearing. They are despised,mistrusted and even persecuted___________(62)their own kind because they advocate such apparently outrageous things as law enforcement. if half the energy that goes into_________(63)acts was put to good use,if our efforts were directed at. _________(64)up the slums and ghettos(贫民窟),at improving living-standards and providing education and employment for all, we wouldnot have gone a long way to___________(65)at a solution._________(64)A:lookingB:gettingC:takingD:cleaning” 相关考题
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Sending E-mails to ProfessorsOne student skipped class and then sent the professor an e-mail________(51)for copies ofher teaching notes.Another_________(52)that she was late for a Monday class because she was recovering fromdrinking too much at a wild weekend party.At colleges and universities in the U. S.,e-mail has made professors more approachable(平易近人).But many say it has made them too accessible,__________(53)boundaries that traditionally kept students at a healthy distance.These days,professors say,students seem to view them as available_________(54)the clock, sending a steady stream of informal e-mails."The tone that they take in e-mails is pretty astounding(令人吃惊的),"said Michael Kessler, an assistant dean at Georgetown University."They'll________(55)you to help:'I need to know this."'"There's a fine________(56)between meeting their needs and at the same time maintaining a level of legitimacy(正统性)as an_________(57)who is in charge."Christopher Dede,a professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education,said_________ ( 58 ) show that students no longer defer to(听从)their professors,perhaps because they realize that professors'________(59)could rapidly become outdated."The deference was driven by the_______(60)that professors were all-knowing sources of deep knowledge,"Dede said,and that notion has_________(61).For junior faculty members,e-mails bring new tension into their work,some say, as they struggle with how to________(62).Their job prospects,they realize,may rest in part on student evaluations of their accessibility.College students say e-mail makes________(63)easier to ask questions and helps them learn.But they seem unaware that what they write in e-mails could have negative effects________ (64)them,said Alexandra Lahav,and associate professor of Law at the University of Connecticut. She recalled an e-mail message from a student saying that he planned to miss class so he could play with his son.Professor Lahav did not respond."Such e-mails can have consequences,"she said."Students don't understand that ________(65)they say in e-mail can make them seem unprofessional,and could result in a bad recommendation."_________(60)A:tradition B:sense C:notion D:meaning
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共用题干
Traffic in Our CitiesThe volume of traffic in many cities in the world today continues to expand.This causes many problems,including serious air pollution,lengthy delays,and the greater risk______(1)accidents.Clearly,something must be done,but it is often difficult to persuade people to______(2)their habits and leave their cars at home. One possible______(3)is to make it more expensive for people to use their cars by ______(4)charges for parking and______(5)tougher fines for anyone who______(6) the law.In addition,drivers could be required to pay for using particular routes at different times of the day.This system,______(7)as“road pricing”,is already being introduced in a______(8)of cities,using a special electronic card______(9)to the windscreen of the car.Another way of______(10)with the problem is to provide cheap parking on the ______(11)of the city,and strictly control the number of vehicles allowed into the centre.Drivers and their passengers then use a special bus______(12)for the final stage of their journey. Of course,the most important______(13)is to provide good public transport.How-ever,to get people to______(14)the comfort of their cars,public transport must be felt to be reliable,convenient and comfortable,with fares______(15)at an acceptable level.12._________A:serviceB:stationC:routeD:fare
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共用题干
A Country's Standard of LivingThe"standard of living"of any country means the average person's share of the goods and services the country produces.A country's standard of living,therefore____________(51)first on its capacity to produce wealth."Wealth"in this____________(52)is not money,for we do not live on money but on things that money can buy:"goods",such as food and clothing,and"services",such as transport and entertainment.A country's capacity to____________(53)wealth depends upon many factors,most of____________(54) have an effect on one another.Wealth depends_(55)a great extent upon a country's natural re-sources.Some regions of the world are well supplied with coal and minerals, and have fertile(肥沃的)soil and a favorable climate;other regions_____________(56)none of them.Next to natural resources comes the ability to_____________(57)them to use.China is perhaps as rich asthe USA in natural resources,but she suffered for many years____________(58)civil and external wars,and for this and other_____________(59)was unable to develop her resources.Sound and stable political conditions, and_____________(60)from foreign invasions,enable a country to develop its natural resources peacefully and steadily,and to produce more_____________( 61)than another country equally well favored by nature but less well ordered.A country's standard of living does not only depend upon the wealth that is produced and_____________(62) within its own borders,but also upon what is directly produced through international trade.For example, Britain's wealth in food stuffs and other agricultural_____________(63)would be much less if she had to de- pend only on those grown at home.Trade makes it possible for her surplus(剩余的)manufactured goods to be traded abroad for the agricultural products_____________(64)would otherwise be lacking.A eountry'B wealth is,therefore,much influenced by its manufacturing capacity,_____________(65)that other countries can be found ready to accept its manufactures._________(53)A:distributeB:produceC:containD:buy
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The Beginning of American Literature America has always been a land of beginnings.After Europeans"discovered"America in the fifteenth century,the mysterious New World became for many people a genuine hope of a new life,an escape from poverty and persecution,a chance to start again.We can say that,as a nation,America begins with that hope.When,however,does American literature begin? American literature begins with American experiences.Long before the first colonists arrived,before Christopher Columbus,before the Northmen who"found"America about the year 1000,native Americans lived here.Each tribe's literature was tightly woven into the fabric of daily life and reflected the unmistakably American experience of linking with the land.Another kind of experience,one filled with fear and excitement,found its expression in the reports that Columbus and other explorers sent home in Spain, French and English.In addition,the journals of the people who lived and died in the New England wilder- ness tell unforgettable tales of hard and sometimes heartbreaking experiences of those early years. Experience,then, is the key to early American literature.The New World provided a great variety of experiences,and these experiences demanded a wide variety of expressions by an even wider variety of early American writers.These writers included John Smith,who spent only two-and-a-half year on the American continent.They included Jonathan Edwards and William Byrd,who thought of themselves as British subjects,never suspecting a revolution that would create a United States of America with a literature of its own.American Indians,explorers,Puritan ministers,frontier wives,plantation owners-they are all the creators of the first American literature.When did American literature begin?A:Before the American natives lived there.B:When Columbus and other explorers sent reports back home.C:When the Northmen found America in about 1000.D:Long before the year 1000.
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共用题干
Waste Not,Want Not1 Bob and Clara Darlington,who own and run a farm in the North of England,have always looked for new ways of making money out of the produce they grow.Their success began when they established a shop on their farm so that people could come and buy fresh vegetables directly from them.2 The business was an immediate success,and soon scored top marks in a competition set up by the Farm Retail Association to find the best farm shop in the country.The Association's inspectors found the Darlingtons' shop offered excellent service and value for money as well as quality fruit and vegetables.3 Clara Darlington is a trained chef and,in addition to a range of home-grown foods and other local produce,she began offering a variety of prepared meals which she had made herself in the farmhouse kitchen. A small cafe alongside the farm shop was soon added,with everything that visitors could taste on the menu also being for sale in the shop.4 Clara admits that starting the business was expensive,and she has worked very hard,but maintains that if the product is good,the public will recognize this and buy it."I aim to offer the highest quality to our cus- tomers,whether they come in for a loaf of bread,or take a whole dinner-party menu.I take it as a compliment (恭维)if people take home one of my dishes to serve to their family and friends and get away with preten- ding they made it themselves."5 The couple realized that they had a surplus of misshapen or damaged vegetables grown on the farm which were unsuitable for selling in the shop.Clara,not wishing to see them get thrown away,decided to turn them into soup.6 The soup met with the immediate approval of customers to the shop and Clara now produces ten different varieties. She spent much of the summer traveling up and down to London by rail,doing presentations of the soups.As a result,they are now served in first-class railway restaurant cars belonging to three companies as well as being stocked by a number of high-class London stores.Apart from quality fruit and vegetables,the couple___________.A:sell fresh vegetablesB:turned them into soupC:sell as much as possibleD:promote her soupsE:fill a gap in the marketF: offered a variety of prepared meals
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共用题干
Self-relianceThe most important thing to understand about Americans is probably their_______(51)to "individualism".They have been trained_______(52)very early in their lives to consider them-selves as_______(53)individuals who are responsible for their own situation in life and their own destiny.They have not been trained to treat themselves as members of a tightly_______(54)family,religious groups or nation or other_______(55).You can see it in the way American treat their children.Even young children are given _______(56)to make their own decision and express their own opinions.A parent will ask a one-year-old child which candy bar he would_______(57),or_______(58)he wants to sits next to mommy or daddy.The child's_______(59)will normally be recognized._______(60)this practice,Americans come to consider themselves as separate human beingswho have their own opinions._______(61),many American books on how to_______(62)kids state that the parents'objective is to_______(63)their kid a responsible,independent individual who,by the age of 18,is ready to_______(64)the parents' house and make their own_______(65),and this advice is taken so seriously by Americans that every person beyond the age of 20 is supposed to lead an independent life._________(54)A:interdependent B:unreliableC:independent D:dependent
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共用题干
第三篇Technology Transfer in GermanyWhen it comes to translating basic research into industrial success,few nations can match Germany.Since the 1940s,the nation's vast industrial base has been fed with aconstant stream of new ideas and expertise from science.And though German prosperity (繁荣)has faltered(衰退)over the past decade because of the huge cost of unifying east and west as well as the global economic decline,it still has an enviable record for turning ideas into profit.Much of the reason for that success is the Fraunhofer Society,a network of research institutes that exists solely to solve industrial problems and create sought-after technologies.But today the Fraunhofer institutes have competition.Universities are taking an ever larger role in technology transfer,and technology parks are springing up all over.These efforts are being complemented by the federal programmes for pumping money into start-up companies.Such a strategy may sound like a recipe for economic success,but it is not without its critics.These people worry that favouring applied research will mean neglectingbasic science,eventually starving industry of fresh ideas.If every scientist startsthinking like an entrepreneur(企业家), the argument goes, then the traditional principles of university research being curiosity-driven,free and widely available willsuffer.Others claim that many of the programmes to promote technology transfer are a waste of money because half the small businesses that are promoted are bound to go bankrupt within a few years.While this debate continues,new ideas flow at a steady rate from Germany's research networks,which bear famous names such as Helmholtz,Max Planck and Leibniz.Yet it is the fourth network,the Fraunhofer Society,that plays the greatest role in technology transfer.Founded in 1949,the Fraunhofer Society is now Europe's largest organisation for applied technology,and has 59 institutes employing 12,000 people.It continues to grow.Last year,it swallowed up the Heinrich Hertz Institute for Communication Technology in Berlin.Today,there are even Fraunhofers in the U.S.and Asia.When was the Fraunhofer Society founded?A:In 1940.B:Last year.C:After the unification.D:In 1949.
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共用题干
Can Mobile Phones Cause Disease?1 "Mobile phone killed my man,"screamed one headline last year.Also came claimsthat an unpublished study had found that mobile phones cause memory loss.And a Britishnewspaper devoted its front page to a picture supposedly(假定地)showing how mobilephones heat the brain.2 For anyone who uses a mobile phone,these are worrying times.But speak to the scientists whose work is the focus of these scares and you will hear a different story.According to them, there is no evidence that mobile phones cause cancer or any other illness in people.3 What we do have,however, are some results suggesting that mobile phones' emissions have a variety of strange effects on living tissue that can't be explained by thegeneral radiation biology.And it's only when the questions raised by these experiments are answered that we'll be able to say for sure what mobile phones might be doing to the head.4 One of the odd effects comes from the now famous"memory loss" study.Alan Preeceand his colleagues at the University of Bristol placed a device that imitated the microwave emissions of mobile phones to the left ear of volunteers.The volunteers were just as good at recalling words and pictures they had been shown on a computer screen whether or notthe device was switched on.Preece says he still can't comment on the Effects of using a mobile phone for years on end.But he rules out the suggestion that mobile phones have an immediate effect on our cognitive abilities." I'm pretty sure there is no effect on short-termmemory,"he says.5 Another expert,Tattersall,remarked that his latest findings have removed fears about memory loss.One result, for instance, suggests that nerve cell synapses(突触) exposed to microwaves become more一rather than less一receptive(感受的)to undergoing changes linked to memory formation.6 Hopefully,microwaves might turn out to be good for you.It sounds crazy,but a couple of years ago a team led by William Adey at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in California found that mice exposed to microwaves for two hours a day were less likely to develop brain tumours when given a cancer-causing chemical.Paragraph 4_________A:Bad ResultsB:Widespread OppositionC:Groundless AnxietyD:No Effect on Short-term MemoryE:Mysterious EffectsF:Further Reassurance
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共用题干
The Forbidden AppleNew York used to be the city that never sleeps.These days it's the city that never smokes,drinks or does anything naughty(at least,not in public).The Big Apple is quickly turning into the Forbidden Apple.If you wanted a glass of wine with your picnic in Central Park,could you have one?No chance.Drinking alcohol in public isn't allowed.If you decided to feed the birds with the last crumbs(碎屑)of your sandwich, you could be arrested.It's illegal.If you went to a par for a drink and a cigarette,that would be OK.wouldn't it?Er…no.You can't smoke in public in New York City.What's going on?Why is the city that used to be so open-minded becoming like this?The mayor of New York is behind it all.He has brought in a whole lot of new laws to stop citizens from doing what they want,when they want.The press are shocked.Even the New York police have joined the argument.They recently spent$100,000 ona“Don't blame the cop”campaign.One New York police officer said,“We raise money for the city by giving people fines for breaking some very stupid laws.It's all about money.”The result is a lot of fines for minor offences.Yoav Kashida,an Israel tourist,fell asleep on the subway.When he woke up,two police officers fined him because he had fallen asleep on two seats(you mustn't use two seats in the subway).Elle and Serge Schroitman were fined for blocking a driveway with their car.It was their own driveway.The angry editor of Vanity Fair magazine,Graydon Carter,“says.Under New York City law it is acceptable to keep a gun in your place of work,but not an empty ashtray.”He should know.The police came to his office and took away his ashtray(烟灰缸).But not all of New York's inhabitants are complaining.Marcia Dugarry,72,said,“The city has changed for the better.If more cities had these laws.America would be a better place to live.”Nixon Patrick.38,a barman,said,“I like the new laws.If people smoked in here. we'd go home smelling of cigarettes.”Recent figures show that New York now has fewer crimes per 100,000 people than 193 other US cities.And it's true一It's safer,cleaner and more healthy than before.But let'sbe honest一who goes to New York for its clean streets?The businessman like the new laws.A:RightB:WrongC:Not mentioned
考题
Baby Talk
Babies normally start to talk when they are 13 to 15 months old. Ryan Jones is only eight months old, but he is already “talking” with his parents. When lie is hungry, he opens and closes his hand. This means milk. He also knows the signs for his favorite toy and the word more.
Ryan is not deaf, and his parents are not deaf, but his mother and father are teaching him to sign. They say a word and make a sign at the same time. They repeat this again and again. When ___1___ Ryan’s parents think that he will be a happier baby because he can communicate with them.
Ryan s parents are teaching Ryan to sign because of a man named Joseph Garcia. Although Garcia was not from a deaf family, he decided to learn American Sign Language (ASL). First, he took courses in ASL. Then he got a job helping deaf people communicate with hearing people. In his work, he saw many deaf parents sign to their infants. He noticed that these babies were able to communicate much earlier than hearing children. ___2___ When they were one year old, they could use as many as 50 signs.
Garcia decided to try something new. He taught ASL to parents who were not deaf. The families started to teach signs to their infants when they were six or seven months old. ___3___ More and more parents took Garcia’s ASL classes. Like Ryan’s family, they were excited about signing with their babies. They wanted to give their babies a way to communicate before they could use spoken words.
Some people worry about signing to babies. They are afraid that these babies won’t feel a need to talk. Maybe they will develop spoken language later than other babies. ___4___ In fact, one study found just the opposite. Signing babies actually learned to speak earlier than other children. As they grow older, these children are more interested in books. They also score higher on intelligence tests1.
There is still a big question for parents: Which are the best signs to teach their babies ? Some parents make their own signs. Other parents want to teach ASL. ___5___ There’s no clear answer, but we do know this: All signing babies and their families are talking quite a lot!
词汇:
normally /'n :m( )li/ adv. 正常地;通常地,一般地
infant /'inf nt / n. 婴儿;幼儿;未成年人
communicate /k 'mju:nikeit/ 通信;交流;感染
opposite /' p zit/ adj. 相反的;n. 对立面,反义词
注释:
1. intelligence test:智力测试
练习:
A However, research does not show this.
B All parents want to teach babies to sign.
C Ryan learns a new sign, his family is very excited.
D These babies started using signs about two months later.
E It can be useful because many people understand it.
F They talked with signs by the time they were eight months old.
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