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Sometimes, the pilot ladder should be rigged with accommodation ladder.

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更多“Sometimes, the pilot ladder sh…”相关的问题

第1题

The school is trying its best to make more accommodation _________.

A、commercial

B、availble

C、frequent

D、fluent

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第2题

No or minor accommodation is necessary during viewing the near object. This eye might has the problem of

A、nearsightedness (myopia)

B、farsightedness (hyperopia)

C、astigmatism

D、emmotropia

E、oldsightedness (presbyopia)

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第3题

Similarly, many programmes designed to protect young people from the streets by providing
4. Similarly, many programmes designed to protect young people from the streets by providing them with accommodations and education have failed because they have not sought the input of the young people themselves. Likewise, many programmes that intend to prevent young people from being street gangsters __ __________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________.

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第4题

Five common types of accommodation people would like to choose during the vacation are _____________.
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第5题

The house is enclosed with a high brick wall.

A、built

B、blocked

C、surrounded

D、separated

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第6题

21. In______, the handshake is accompanied with a light kiss; even males kiss both cheeks after a handshake.

A、A. the United States

B、B. Saudi Arabia

C、C. Russia

D、D. France

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第7题

The general symptoms of beriberi DOES NOT Include:

A、Tingling or loss of sensation

B、Irregular heart rate

C、Difficulty in walking

D、vomiting

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第8题

Decide where the paragraph should be divided into ...

Decide where the paragraph should be divided into two paragraphs. "Because the Internet makes the world a smaller place, the value of having a common language is greatly increased. The question is, which language? Because the Internet grew up in the United States, the largest percentage of its content is now in English. Bill Gates, Microsoft’s president, believes that English will remain valuable for a long time as a common language for International communication. His company spends $200 million a year translating software into other languages. He says, “Unless you read English passably well, you miss out on some of the Internet experience.” 【A】 Someday, software may be available to instantly translate both written and spoken language so well that the need for any common language could decline. 【B】That day is decades away, however, because flawless machine translation is a very tough problem. 【C】Computer spelling checkers also exist for various languages. 【D】Software that does crude translations already exists. It is useful if all you are trying to do is understand the general idea of something you see on your computer screen. However, if you are trying to negotiate a contract or discuss a scientific subject where details are important, machine translation is totally useless."

A、Someday, software may be available to instantly translate both written and spoken language so well that the need for any common language could decline.

B、That day is decades away, however, because flawless machine translation is a very tough problem.

C、Computer spelling checkers also exist for various languages.

D、Software that does crude translations already exists.

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第9题

You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-...

You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below. The Benefits of Being Bilingual A According to the latest figures, the majority of the world’s population is now bilingual or multilingual, having grown up speaking two or more languages. In the past, such children were considered to be at a disadvantage compared with their monolingual peers.Over the past few decades, however, technological advances have allowed researchers to look more deeply at how bilingualism interacts with and changes the cognitive and neurological systems, thereby identifying several clear benefits of being bilingual. B Research shows that when a bilingual person uses one language, the other is active at the same time. When we hear a word, we don’t hear the entire word all at once: the sounds arrive in sequential order. Long before the word is finished, the brain’s language system begins to guess what that word might be. If you hear ‘can’, you will likely activate words like ‘candy’ and ‘candle’ as well, at least during the earlier stages of word recognition. For bilingual people, this activation is not limited to a single language; auditory input activates corresponding words regardless of the language to which they belong. Some of the most compelling evidence for this phenomenon, called ‘language co-activation’, comes from studying eye movements. A Russian-English bilingual asked to ‘pick up a marker’ from a set of objects would look more at a stamp than someone who doesn’t know Russian, because the Russian word for ‘stamp’, marka, sounds like the English word he or she heard, ‘marker’. In cases like this, language co-activation occurs because what the listener hears could map onto words in either language. C Having to deal with this persistent linguistic competition can result in difficulties, however. For instance, knowing more than one language can cause speakers to name pictures more slowly, and can increase ‘tip-of-the-tongue states’, when you can almost, but not quite, bring a word to mind. As a result, the constant juggling of two languages creates a need to control how much a person accesses a language at any given time. For this reason, bilingual people often perform better on tasks that require conflict management. In the classic Stroop Task, people see a word and are asked to name the colour of the word’s font. When the colour and the word match (i.e., the word ‘red’ printed in red), people correctly name the colour more quickly than when the colour and the word don’t match (i.e., the word ‘red’ printed in blue). This occurs because the word itself (‘red’) and its font colour (blue) conflict. Bilingual people often excel at tasks such as this, which tap into the ability to ignore competing perceptual information and focus on the relevant aspects of the input. Bilinguals are also better at switching between two tasks; for example, when bilinguals have to switch from categorizing objects by colour (red or green) to categorizing them by shape (circle or triangle), they do so more quickly than monolingual people, reflecting better cognitive control when having to make rapid changes of strategy. D It also seems that the neurological roots of the bilingual advantage extend to brain areas more traditionally associated with sensory processing. When monolingual and bilingual adolescents listen to simple speech sounds without any intervening background noise, they show highly similar brain stem responses. When researchers play the same sound to both groups in the presence of background noise, however, the bilingual listeners’ neural response is considerably larger, reflecting better encoding of the sound’s fundamental frequency, a feature of sound closely related to pitch perception. E Such improvements in cognitive and sensory processing may help a bilingual person to process information in the environment, and help explain why bilingual adults acquire a third language better than monolingual adults master a second language. This advantage may be rooted in the skill of focusing on information about the new language while reducing interference from the languages they already know. F Research also indicates that bilingual experience may help to keep the cognitive mechanisms sharp by recruiting alternate brain networks to compensate for those that become damaged during aging. Older bilinguals enjoy improved memory relative to monolingual people, which can lead to real-world health benefits. In a study of over 200 patients with Alzheimer’s disease, a degenerative brain disease, bilingual patients reported showing initial symptoms of the disease an average of five years later than monolingual patients. In a follow-up study, researchers compared the brains of bilingual and monolingual patients matched on the severity of Alzheimer’s symptoms. Surprisingly, the bilinguals’ brains had more physical signs of disease than their monolingual counterparts, even though their outward behaviour and abilities were the same. If the brain is an engine, bilingualism may help it to go farther on the same amount of fuel. G Furthermore, the benefits associated with bilingual experience seem to start very early. In one study, researchers taught seven-month-old babies growing up in monolingual or bilingual homes that when they heard a tinkling sound, a puppet appeared on one side of a screen. Halfway through the study, the puppet began appearing on the opposite side of the screen. In order to get a reward, the infants had to adjust the rule they’d learned; only the bilingual babies were able to successfully learn the new rule. This suggests that for very young children, as well as for older people, navigating a multilingual environment imparts advantages that transfer far beyond language. Question 27-31 Complete the table below. Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 27-31 on your answer sheet. Test Findings   Observing the 27______ of Russian-English bilingual people when asked to select certain objects   Bilingual people engage both languages simultaneously: a mechanism known as 28________.   A test called the 29_____, focusing on naming colours   Bilingual people are more able to handle tasks involving a skill called 30_______.   A test involving switching between tasks   When changing strategies, bilingual people have superior 31_______.   Question 32-36 Do the following statements agree with the claims of the writer in Reading Passage 3? In boxes 32 - 36 on your answer sheet, write YES if the statement agrees with the claims of the writer NO if the statement contradicts the claims of the writer NOT GIVEN if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this 32. Attitudes towards bilingualism have changed in recent years. 33. Bilingual people are better than monolingual people at guessing correctly what words are before they are finished. 34. Bilingual people consistently name images faster than monolingual people. 35. Bilingual people’s brains process single sounds more efficiently than monolingual people in all situations. 36. Fewer bilingual people than monolingual people suffer from brain disease in old age. Question 37-40 Reading Passage 3 has seven paragraphs, A-G. Which paragraph contains the following information? Write the correct letter, A-G, in boxes 37-40 on your answer sheet. 37 an example of how bilingual and monolingual people's brains respond differently to a certain type of non-verbal auditory input 38 a demonstration of how a bilingual upbringing has benefits even before we learn to speak 39 a description of the process by which people identify words that they hear 40 reference to some negative consequences of being bilingual

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