A baby has no k of right and wrong. 查看更多

 

题目列表(包括答案和解析)

 Language learning begins with listening. Children are greatly different in the amount of listening they do before they start speaking, and later starters are often long listeners. Most children will “obey” spoken instructions some time before they can speak, though the word“obey”is hardly exact as a description of the eager and delighted co- operation(合作) usually shown by the child. Before they can speak, many children will also ask questions by gestures and by making questioning noises.

  Any attempt to study the development from the noises babies make to their first spoken words leads to considerable difficulties. It’s agreed that they enjoy making noises, and that during the first few months one or two noises sort themselves out as particular expression like delight, pain, friendliness and so on. But since these can’t be said to show the baby’s intention to communicate, they can hardly be regarded as early forms of language. It is agreed too, that from about three months they play with sounds for enjoyment, and that by six months they are able to add new words to their store. This self - imitation(自我模仿)leads out to deliberate(有意的)imitation of sounds made or words spoken to them by other people. The problem then arises to the point at which one can say that these imitations can be considered as speech.

  It is a problem we need to get our teeth into. The meaning of a word depends on what a particular person means by it in a particular situation and it is clear that what a child means by a word will. change as he gains more experience of the world. Thus the use, at seven months, of“ mama” as a greeting for his mother cannot be dismissed as a meaningless sound simply because he also uses it at another time for his father, his dog, or anything else he likes. Playful and meaningless imitation of what other people say continues after the child has begun to speak for himself. I doubt, however , whether anything is gained when parents take advantage of his ability in an attempt to teach new words.

 Children who start speaking late ________

  A. may have problems with their listening

  B. probably do not hear enough language spoken around them

  C. usually pay close attention to what they hear

  D. often take a long time in learning to listen properly

  A baby’s first noises are ________ .

  A. an expression of his moods and feelings

  B. an early form of language

  C. an imitation of the speech of adults

  D. a sign that he means to tell you something

  The problem of deciding at what point a baby’s imitation can be considered as speech ________ .

  A. is important because words have different meanings for different people

  B. is not especially important because the change takes place gradually

  C. is one that should be ignored(忽略)because children’s use of words is often meaningless

  D. is one that can never be properly understood because the meaning of words changes with age

  The speaker implies that ________ .

  A. even after they have learnt to speak, children still enjoy imitation

  B. children who are good at imitating learn new words more quickly

  C. children no longer imitate people after they begin to speak

  D. patents can never hope to teach their children new sounds

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  Several times each year the Queen gives afternoon tea parties at which guests are served tiny cakes filled with cream from her own cows. Cakes and sandwiches are brought in by footmen, yet you never see the Queen touch a thing. She simply sits beside a big silver plate, pouring cups of tea for everyone and carefully avoiding the cakes.

  At cocktail parties the Queen moves from group to group, chatting informally, and manages to make one glass of diet(节食)drink to last an entire evening.

  Tours abroad are difficult because hosts(主人)seem to believe the warmth of their welcome must be shown with wonderful state banquets(宴会). But the Queen has perfected the art of appearing to enjoy her meal without actually eating much.

  During one visit to the Pacific islands of Tonga, a specially-prepared dinner was arranged in a hut made of wood and bamboo leaves. Deep holes were dug in the ground, filled with hot stones and baby pigs, and the pigs were slowly baked over several days. The Queen looked uneasily at her plate when she discovered a whole roast pig was her serving.

  Then she became uneasy when a turkey, some meat, bananas and an apple were also carried in for each guest. So she depended on her old favorite trick of talking with her host., King Tupou IV, carrying on a warm conversation. At the same time she pushed her food around her plate and only ate a piece of turkey and some fruit.

  Reporters traveling with her have noted that the Queen will sometimes seem so carried away by a foreign leader’s political chat that she simply never has time to finish a meal before it is time to get up and make her speech. She will lift her fork to swallow a mouthful, then put it down again to make another point, leaving almost all of her meal untouched.

1. The main idea of the passage is about ____.

  A. the Queen’s favorite food

  B. the Queen’s tours abroad

  C. how the Queen keeps her diet during her tours

  D. the Queen’s trouble with a foreign leader

2. The Queen talked with her host and carried on conversation with him. The purpose of doing this is ____.

  A. to show her politeness

  B. not to eat much 

  C. to show her great interest in food

  D. to hide her dislike to the food

3. We can infer from the passage that tours are difficult for the Queen, because ____.

  A. she has to meet with so many important leaders

  B. she has to eat much oily food

  C. she has so many reporters to travel with her

  D. hosts always present wonderful state banquets

4. What probably is the Queen’s art of acting at state dinners?

  A. Appearing to enjoy her meal without actually eating much.

  B. Drinking Malvern water.

  C. Eating a piece of turkey and some fruit.

  D. Eating much without being noticed.

 

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  阅读理解

  Animals seem to have the sense to eat when they are hungry and they do not eat more than their bodies need.It has been demonstrated that rats will, when given a choice over a period of time, prefer water with vitamins to water without vitamins even though there is no difference in taste or smell between the two water bottles.When a fragrant(香的) flavor was added to the vitamin-enriched water, the rats did seem to prefer it and kept drinking it ,even after the vitamins were switched to the clear water.In time, however, they broke the habit and went back to where the necessary vitamins were.

  In a classic experiment, babies of 6 to 12 months old were placed in a cafeteria(自助)feeding arrangement, with a wide selection of baby food before them.They were given whatever food they pointed to or appeared interested in.We are told that at first they showed some unusual eating patterns, but that over a period of time they managed to select well-balanced diet.

  So, in selecting food, rats and babies do seem to know and act on what's best for them.Apparently, there is a kind of "body wisdom", which humans soon lose.Most of us do not eat as wisely as we could.Many of our food preferences are culturally determined and influenced by long-established habits.Some people eat fox, dog and blackbirds, while we eat cows and pigs.So what people eat and how much they eat seems to be greatly influenced by what is going on around them.

(1)

The expression"the habit"(para.1, sentence 4)refers to drinking water which________.

[  ]

A.

has no smell

B.

is tasteless

C.

has vitamins

D.

is flavored

(2)

According to the passage ,adults eating habits differ from those of babies because _______.

[  ]

A.

adults know better than babies what kind of food are good for their health

B.

adults usually cannot resist the temptation of various delicious foods

C.

adults' eating habits are closely related to the social and cultural customs

D.

adults have more choices of food than babies in eating patterns

(3)

The author implied in the passage that most of us _______.

[  ]

A.

eat a balanced diet

B.

choose the food that is of nutrition

C.

have the habits influenced by the surroundings

D.

like to eat the food with a fragrant flavor.

(4)

As far as their eating habits are concerned, babies and rats are similar in that _______.

[  ]

A.

both have the wisdom to choose a balanced diet

B.

both prefer flavored food and drink

C.

both have the same eating patterns

D.

both develop a taste for the same kinds of flavors

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Last week I was invited to a doctor’s meeting at the Ruth hospital for incurables. In one of the wards a patient, an old man, got up shakily from his bed and moved towards me. I could see that he hadn't long to 36, but he came up to me and placed his right foot close mine on the floor.
  “Frank!” I cried in astonishment. He couldn’t 37, as I knew, but all the time 3 8 his foot against mine.
  My 39 raced back more than thirty years to the 40 days of 1941, when I was a student in London. The 41 was an air-raid shelter, in which I and about hundred other people slept every night. Two of the regulars were Mrs. West and her son Frank.
   42 wartime problems, we shelter-dwellers got to 43 each other very well. Frank West 44 me because he wasn’t 45 not even at birth. His mother told me he was 37 then, but he had 46 of a mind than a baby has. His “ 47 ” consisted of rough sounds——sounds of pleasure or anger and  48 more. Mrs. West, then about 75, was a strong, capable woman, as she had to be, of course, because Frank 49 on her entirely. He needed all the 50 of a baby.
  One night a policeman came and told Mrs. West that her house had been flattened by a 500-pounder. She 51 nearly everything she owned.
  When that sort of thing happened, the rest of us helped the 52 ones. So before we 53 that morning, I stood beside Frank and 54 my right foot against his. They were about the same size. That night, then, I took a pair of shoes to the shelter for Frank. But as soon as he saw me he came running and placed his right foot against mine. After that, his 55to me was always the same.
36.A.work         B.stay          C.live            D.expect
37.A.answer        B.speak         C.smile          D.laugh
38.A.covering       B.moving       C.fighting         D.pressing
39.A.minds         B.memories      C.thoughts        D.brains
40.A.better         B.dark         C.younger        D.old
41. A.cave         B.place         C.sight           D.scene
42.A.Discussing     B.Solving       C.Sharing         D.Suffering
43.A.learn from      B.talk to        C.help           D.know
44.A.needed         B.recognized     C.interested       D.encouraged
45.A.normal         B.common      C.unusual         D.quick
46.A.more          B.worse        C.fewer          D.less
47.A.word         B.speech        C.sentence       D.language
48.A.not           B.no           C.something       D.nothing
49.A.fed           B.kept          C.lived           D.depended
50.A.attention       B.control        C.treatment       D.management
51.A.lost           B.needed        C.destroyed       D.left
52.A.troublesome     B.unlucky       C.angry          D.unpopular
53.A.separated       B.went         C.reunited        D.returned
54.A.pushed        B.tried         C.showed        D.measured
55.A.nodding    B.greeting         C.meeting         D.acting

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阅读下列短文,从每题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出最佳选项。

Cool snowflakes

  You have seen snow, but have you ever studied a snowflake? Have you looked hard at falling snowflake and seen its design up close?

  It' s not easy to look at something so tiny.The flake often melts or blows away as soon t it lands.If looking at one seems difficult, imagine trying to photograph one.

  But that' s what Ken Libbrecht has spent much of the past four years doing:catching snowflakes, putting them under a microscope and taking pictures of them.

  Libbrecht is an American scientist who has written four books about snowflakes.Four of his snow photos will be put on US postage stamps this holiday season.

  It' s the structure

  In his latest book "Ken Libbrecht' s Field Guide to Snowflakes", he answers lots of questions about snowflakes in a way that' s easy to understand.

  The beautiful structure of snowflakes is mainly the result of two things:conditions in the sky and the structure of water molecules(分子).

  A snowflake starts as a very small spot of dust.Water molecules in the air get attached to the dust, then freeze.These molecules are triangular.When enough of them become attached, a six-sided shape is formed.

  Some snowflakes become flat and stay that way.Sometimes more water molecules freeze at the six corners and make the snowflake look like flowers.Other snowflakes turn into six-sided columns.

  But if the changes in temperature and the amount of water in the air are just right, thin branches may grow on a baby snowflake as the snowflake travels in the air.The six-pointed starbursts(星放射状)are usually the prettiest.They are most likely to form when the weather is either just below freezing or around 5 degrees.

  Be a snowflake watcher

  1.A gentle snowfall is best.

  2.Take a magnifying glass(放大镜)and a piece of black paper outside and wait a few minutes for the paper to get cold.

  3.Hold the paper out flat until a few flakes have landed on it.Quickly examine them with the magnifying glass.Look for the best ones, or see how many types you can find.

(1)

It is not easy to study snowflakes because ________.

[  ]

A.

they are tiny and triangular

B.

they are difficult to catch by hand

C.

they are white and cool

D.

they are easy to melt and blow away

(2)

We can learn from the passage that Libbrecht

[  ]

A.

has written a lot of books about postage

B.

has taken a lot of pictures of snowflakes

C.

has designed some snow stamps

D.

has published only four books

(3)

Which of the following is true about snowflakes?

[  ]

A.

Starbursts form when it is freezing cold.

B.

Snowflakes are flat and contain lots of water.

C.

Snowflakes are six-sided.

D.

Snowflakes won' t melt.

(4)

What is the passage mainly written for?

[  ]

A.

Introducing Libbrecht and his latest book.

B.

Encouraging readers to watch snowflakes.

C.

Telling people what fun it is to study snowflakes.

D.

Helping readers to become a scientist.

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