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如图,利特尔区(Litte’searea)的解剖结构和其临床意义分别是什么?

如图,利特尔区(Litte’searea)的解剖结构和其临床意义分别是什么?

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更多“如图,利特尔区(Litte’searea)的解剖结构和其临床…”相关的问题

第1题

What are Apple’s Values?

A.There is an extraordinary breadth and depth and tenure among the Apple executive team, and these executives lead over 35,000 employees that I would call “all wicked smart.

B.They believe in the simple, not the complex.

C.They believe that we need to own and control the primary technologies behind the products we make, and participate only in markets where we can make a signi?cant contribution.

D.Apple’s Values are qualities, customs, standards, and principles that the company believes will help it and its employees succeed.

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第2题

Television is harmful to American polities because it makes the issues and electorate ______.

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第3题

Napoleon had a genius for war and politics.( )

A.an ability

B.a quality

C.a talent

D.a taste

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第4题

Napoleon had.a genius for war and politics.

A.an ability

B.a quality

C.a talent

D.a taste

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第5题

Don't call him just a college professor. Internet entrepreneur, TV personality, adviser to presidents, and friend to the rich and powerful would be more accurate.

Henry Louis "Skip" Gates Jr. is better known for his activities outside the academy. This week he sold Africana. com, a website he created with a fellow Harvard University professor, to Time Warner. Terms of the deal weren't revealed, though the Wall Street Journal pegged the price at more than $10 million, with Gates reaping up to $ I million. Time Warner will incorporate the site, a portal with news and information about people of African descent, into America Online when the two merge as expected. The sense is that Gates got a very good deal. The site is a rich source of scholarship but hardly a rich source of revenue.

As recently as the late 1980s Gates, who turns 50 this week, was an obscure professor penning books on literary theory only a graduate student could love. Now he can't be avoided, He hosted a series about Africa on public television, writes occasional articles for the New Yorker, and even advises the Gore presidential campaign. He counts director Steven Spielberg, Microsoft's Bill Gates and President Clinton as friends. "They're not intimate friends," he insists.

Indeed, Gates has evolved into a kind of expert on everything African-American. "He remains the go-to person on the state of African-American affairs," said Perry Steinberg, head of American Program Bureau, a lecture agency. The 30 or so speeches Gates delivers each year are another source of income for the professor.

With fame comes controversy. Several other black intellectuals have taken him to task for not being confrontational enough. Gates has heard it before. "Me? Critics? Oh, what a shock!" But he considers himself more a descendent of historian and educator W. E. B. Du Bois than of Malcolm X. His ultimate goal is to build the field of Afro-American studies. "Fifty years from now I want there to be at least 10 great centers of Afro-American studies," he says.

If working as a consultant on Spielberg's historical film Amistad or giving A1 Gore advice helps, so be it.

What can we learn about Africans. com?

A.It may be financially mediocre to Time Warner.

B.It is maintained by Gates for Time Warner.

C.It becomes a sister website of America Online.

D.It is meant for the U. S. general public.

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第6题

Don't call him just a college professor. Internet entrepreneur, TV personality, advisor to presidents, and friend to the rich and powerful would be more accurate.

Henry Louis "Skip" Gates Jr. is better known for his activities outside the academy. This week he sold Africana com, a website he created with a fellow Harvard University professor, to Time Warner. Terms of the deal weren't revealed, though the Wall Street Journal pegged the price at more than $10 million, with Gates reaping up to $1 million. Time Warner will incorporate the site, a portal with news and information about people of African descent, into America Online when the two merge as expected. The sense is that Gates got a very good deal. The site is a rich source of scholarship but hardly a rich source of revenue.

As recently as the late 1980s Gates, who turns 50 this week, was an obscure professor, penning books on literary theory only a graduate student could love. Now he can't be avoided. He hosted a series about Africa on public television, writes occasional articles for the New Yorker, and even advises the Gore presidential campaign. He counts director Steven Spielberg, Microsoft's Bill Gates and President Clinton as friends. "They're not intimate friends," he insists.

Indeed, Gates has evolved into a kind of expert on everything African-American. "He remains the go-to person on the state of African-American affairs," said Perry Steinberg, head of American Program Bureau, a lecture agency. The 30 or so speeches Gates delivers each year are another source of income for the professor.

With fame comes controversy. Several other black intellectuals have taken him to task for not being confrontational enough. Gates has heard it before. '"Me? Critics? Oh, what a shock." But he considers himself more a descendent of historian and educator W. E.B. Du Bois than of Malcolm X. His ultimate goal is to build the field of Afro-American studies. "Fifty years from now I want there to be at least 10 great centers of Afro-American studies," he says.

If working as a consultant on Spielberg's historical film Amistad or giving A1 Gore advice helps, so be it.

What can we learn about Africana com?

A.It may be financially mediocre to Time Warner.

B.It is maintained by Gates for Time Warner.

C.It becomes a sister website of America Online.

D.It is meant for the U. S. general public.

点击查看答案

第7题

听力原文: Do you think were born with the skills to learn a language, or do you believe that we develop language skills through social interaction? Youve read ... at least I hope youve read the reading assignment Language and the Mind by Noam Chomsky. So youre familiar with his argument that were born with a device that helps us acquire a language intuitively. He calls it a language acquisition device, or LAD, for short. But psychologists like Jerome Bruner are highly critical of his theory, so today were going to examine both sides of the debate. In reality, the dispute is connected to the broader debate of nature versus nurture. What do I mean by nature and nurture? Well, let me ask it this way. Is language development controlled by biology, or do we learn from our social environment? Think about these questions and then Ill ask your opinion again at the end of the lecture, okay? But before examining Chomksys theory, I need to clarify one point first. Our discussion today will focus on the acquisition of a childs first language, or mother tongue, as it is sometimes called. And more about that term later, lets begin by discussing what Mr. Chomsky has to say about language development. Well, his language acquisition device or LAD theory is based on three key assumptions about the process. The first assumption is that children have an innate ability for language development. In other words, theyre born with a set of skills that allows them to intuitively comprehend language. In fact, Chomsky claims that their brains are preprogrammed with what he calls a universal grammar. And that device allows them to understand the =~ structure and grammar of a language just by being exposed to it. Let me elaborate on this point. From Chomskys perspective, a childs brain is like a computer. It has already been wired to process and store different kinds of information. Do you see what I mean? Yes? Good! Now this hypothesis leads us to the second assumption: young children can acquire their first language skills independently. That is to say, they dont have to rely on parents or the social environment to teach them the grammar and structure of their language; they simply use the LAD to figure it out for themselves. The third assumption is that the LAD makes it easy for young children to learn a language. However, Chomsky does admit that theres a small window of opportunity for language development. He thinks, or rather he refers to this short time period as the critical period. And a recent study of language development in feral children--the children whove grown up in extreme isolation from humans--has provided persuasive evidence of the notion of a critical period. For example, when they were found, feral children couldnt speak at all. In fact, they could only make grunting noises like animals. Thats why theyre called feral. It literally means untamed or wild. In any case, researchers discovered that when these children returned to normal living conditions, they had great difficulty acquiring language unless they were exposed to language before the age of twelve. The argument was that the brains of these abused children hadnt developed neurologically, so the LAD couldnt function properly. You can read about the actual feral experiences of a young girl in the book, Genie: A Scientific Tragedy. But getting back to the issue at hand, as you can see from this discussion, Chomksys LAD theory leans heavily toward the nature side of the debate. In other words, he and other linguists who support this theory believe that biology predetermines our ability to acquire language. And youll notice that the LAD theory focuses on acquiring language, not learning it. But psychologists like Jerome Brunet argue that language development is also a learning process. So whats the difference between acquiring a language and learning it? Well, for one thing, learning a language requires ongoing social interaction, and that assumption forms the basis of Bruners theory of the language acquisition support system, or LASS, for short. You see, according to Bruner, some type of LAD may exist, but parents and siblings also play a key role in a childs language development. How? By involving young children in routine behaviors like saying hello and goodbye and daily rituals like meal times and bath times. So its probably no surprise that the expression mother tongue evolved. After all, we all remember listening to the familiar sounds and repetitive phrases our mothers used when we were young. In fact, a researcher named Moerk nicknamed this type of language modeling as motherese. The second assumption of Bruners theory is that language learning is developmental. In other words, parents or siblings create a learning environment that supports the child as he or she builds language skills. So in the beginning, they are quite vocal and the child is rather passive. But as children develop the language skills, they become more active. From this perspective, language learning is more a process of discovery, and children learn to construct new ideas by linking it with previous knowledge and experiences. Therefore, its evident that Bruners theory strongly supports the notion that nurture is as essential as nature in language development. Now based on what youve heard today, where do you stand? P And a recent study of language development in feral children--the children whove grown up in extreme isolation from humans--has provided persuasive evidence of the notion of a critical period. What does the professor imply about the idea of a critical period?

What is the lecture mainly about?

A.Ways to enhance language development in young children.

B.A comparison of two theories on first language acquisition.

C.Methods for teaching language skills to preteen children.

D.The influence of mothers on a baby"s language development.

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第8题

Section B

Directions: This section is to test your ability to understand short conversations. There are 2 recorded conversations in it. After each conversation, there are some recorded questions. The conversations and the questions will be spoken only once. When you hear a question, you should choose the correct answer from the 4 choices marked A, B, C, and D.

听力原文:W: Are you free tomorrow? I'd like to invite you to dinner.

M: Well, actually I have something very important to do.

W: Can I ask what it is?

M: I'm going to have my driving test.

W: I hope things go well.

M: Thanks. I bet I don't pass, though.

W: Of course you will!

Q6.What do we know from the conversation?

(5)

A.The man accepts her invitation.

B.The man doesn't feel worried about the test.

C.The woman gives him some advice.

D.The woman is comforting him.

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