填空题

A.frequently B.adolescence C.separate D.complexion
E.unformed F.set G.genealogy H.appearance
I.commonly J.single K.alike L.populated
M.produced N.startling O.genetics
Perhaps the most 1 theory to come out of kinetics, the study of body movement, was suggested by Professor Ray Birdwhistell. He believes that physical 2 is often culturally programmed. In other words, we learn our looks—we are not born with them. A baby has generally 3 facial features. A baby, according to Birdwhistell, learns where to set the eyebrows by looking at those around—family and friends. This helps explain why the people of some regions of the United States look so much 4 . New Englanders or Southerners have certain similar facial characteristics that cannot be explained by 5 . The exact shape of the mouth is not 6 at birth, it is learned after. In fact, the final mouth shape is not formed until well after permanent teeth are set. For many, this can be well into 7 . A husband and wife together for a long time often come to look somewhat alike. We learn our looks from those around us. This is perhaps why in a(an) 8 country there are areas where people smile more than those in other areas. In the United States, for example, the South is the part of the country where people smile most 9 . In New England they smile less, and in the western part of New York state still less. Many southerners find cities such as New York cold and unfriendly, partly because people on Madison Avenue smile less than people on Peachtree Street in Atlanta, Georgia. People in densely 10 urban areas also tend to smile and greet each other in public less than people in rural areas and small towns do.

答案: N[考点] 考查形容词。
文章介绍了关于人类外貌的一种新观点:人类外貌并非完全由基因决定,相反,它在很大程度上...
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填空题

A.frequently B.adolescence C.separate D.complexion
E.unformed F.set G.genealogy H.appearance
I.commonly J.single K.alike L.populated
M.produced N.startling O.genetics
Perhaps the most 1 theory to come out of kinetics, the study of body movement, was suggested by Professor Ray Birdwhistell. He believes that physical 2 is often culturally programmed. In other words, we learn our looks—we are not born with them. A baby has generally 3 facial features. A baby, according to Birdwhistell, learns where to set the eyebrows by looking at those around—family and friends. This helps explain why the people of some regions of the United States look so much 4 . New Englanders or Southerners have certain similar facial characteristics that cannot be explained by 5 . The exact shape of the mouth is not 6 at birth, it is learned after. In fact, the final mouth shape is not formed until well after permanent teeth are set. For many, this can be well into 7 . A husband and wife together for a long time often come to look somewhat alike. We learn our looks from those around us. This is perhaps why in a(an) 8 country there are areas where people smile more than those in other areas. In the United States, for example, the South is the part of the country where people smile most 9 . In New England they smile less, and in the western part of New York state still less. Many southerners find cities such as New York cold and unfriendly, partly because people on Madison Avenue smile less than people on Peachtree Street in Atlanta, Georgia. People in densely 10 urban areas also tend to smile and greet each other in public less than people in rural areas and small towns do.

答案: N[考点] 考查形容词。
文章介绍了关于人类外貌的一种新观点:人类外貌并非完全由基因决定,相反,它在很大程度上...
填空题

A.available B.means C.that D.intersections
E.comprise F.interrelationships G.exchanged H.freely
I.involved J.replaced K.valid L.payment
M.those N.randomly O.consist
Prices determine how resources are to be used. They are also the 31 by which products and services that are in limited supply are rationed among buyers. The price system of the United States is a complex network composed of the prices of all the products bought and sold in the economy as well as 32 of a myriad of services, including labor, professional, transportation, and public-utility services. The 33 of all these prices make up the "system" of prices.
If one were to ask a group of 34 selected individuals to define "price", many would reply that price is an amount of money paid by the buyer to the seller of a product or service or, in other words 35 price is the money values of a product or service as agreed upon in a market transaction. This definition is, of course, 36 as far as it goes. For a complete understanding of a price in any particular transaction, much more than the amount of money 37 must be known. Both the buyer and the seller should be familiar with not only the money amount, but with the amount and quality of the product or service to be 38 , the time and place at which the exchange will take place and 39 will be made, the form of money to be used, the credit terms and discounts that apply to the transaction, guarantees on the product or service, delivery terms, return privileges, and other factors. In another word, both buyer and seller should be fully aware of all the factors that 40 the total "package" being exchanged for the asked-for amount of money in order that they may evaluate a given price.

答案: B[考点] 考查名词。
本句意为“价格还是将…产品或者服务定量分配给购买者所依照的______。”据此可知,空...
填空题

A.healing B.restless C.reckless D.repetition
E.moaned F.reward G.dissipate H.influential
I.handicap J.constant K.hasty L.appealing
M.course N.groaning O.infinite
The intimacy between man and nature begins with the birth of man on the earth, and becomes each century more intelligent and far-reaching. To nature, therefore, we turn as to the oldest and most 11 teacher of our race: from one point of view, once our taskmaster, now our servant; from another point of view, our 12 friend, instructor and inspirer. The very intimacy of this relation robs it of a certain mystery and richness which it would have for all minds if it were the 13 of the few instead of being the privilege of the many. To the few it is, in every age, full of wonder and beauty; to the many it is a matter of 14 . The heavens shine for all, but they have a changing splendor to those only who see in every midnight sky a majesty of creative energy and resource which no 15 of the spectacle can dim. If the stars shone but once in a thousand years, men would gaze, awe-struck and worshipful, on a vision which is not less but more wonderful because it shines nightly above the whole earth. In like manner, and for the same reason, we become indifferent to that delicately beautiful or sublimely impressive sky scenery which the clouds form and reform, compose and 16 , a thousand times on a summer day. The mystery, the terror, and the music of the sea; the secret and subduing charm of the woods, so full of 17 for the spent mind or the 18 spirit; the majesty of the hills, holding in their recesses the secrets of light and atmosphere; the 19 variety of landscape, never imitative or repetitious, but always 20 to the imagination with some fresh and unsuspected loveliness—who feels the full power of these marvelous resources for the enrichment of life, or takes from them all the health, delight, and enrichment they have to bestow

答案: H[考点] 考查形容词。
根据空格前最高级的标志词most和之前的并列连词and,可知空格处应填和oldest...
填空题

A. social B. complicated C. legitimate D. legislative E. overstepped
F. committed G. will be H. would be I. obey J. exerted
K. complex L. follow M. primitive N. explicit O. implicit
In any society, no matter how 21 , some individuals have authority over others, at least within a limited sphere. Obedience is particularly relevant as societies get more 22 where the spheres within which authority can be 23 , become much more differentiate& Teachers assign homework, doctors order intravenous feedings, and policemen stop automobiles while pupils, nurses, and motorists generally 24 . Their obedience is based on a(n) 25 recognition that the persons who issue the orders are operating within their 26 domain of authority. If this domain is 27 , obedience is unlikely. Policemen can"t order motorists to recite fists of irregular French verbs or to take two aspirins and go to bed.
Some tendency to obey authority is a vital cement that holds society together; without it, there 28 chaos. But the atrocities of this century—the slaughter of the Armenians, the Nazi death camps—give terrible proof that this disposition to obedience can also become a corrosive poison that destroys our sense of humanity. Some of these atrocities could not have been 29 without the obedience of tens or hundreds of thousands and the acquiescence of many more. How could such obedience have come about Attempt to answer this question has focused on either of the two factors. One concerns the personality structure of the blindly obedient individual; the other emphasizes the 30 situation in which the obedient person finds himself.

答案: M[解析] 词汇题,词义辨析题。primitive意为“原始的;早期的”,如:This book deals with ...
填空题

A.frequently B.adolescence C.separate D.complexion
E.unformed F.set G.genealogy H.appearance
I.commonly J.single K.alike L.populated
M.produced N.startling O.genetics
Perhaps the most 1 theory to come out of kinetics, the study of body movement, was suggested by Professor Ray Birdwhistell. He believes that physical 2 is often culturally programmed. In other words, we learn our looks—we are not born with them. A baby has generally 3 facial features. A baby, according to Birdwhistell, learns where to set the eyebrows by looking at those around—family and friends. This helps explain why the people of some regions of the United States look so much 4 . New Englanders or Southerners have certain similar facial characteristics that cannot be explained by 5 . The exact shape of the mouth is not 6 at birth, it is learned after. In fact, the final mouth shape is not formed until well after permanent teeth are set. For many, this can be well into 7 . A husband and wife together for a long time often come to look somewhat alike. We learn our looks from those around us. This is perhaps why in a(an) 8 country there are areas where people smile more than those in other areas. In the United States, for example, the South is the part of the country where people smile most 9 . In New England they smile less, and in the western part of New York state still less. Many southerners find cities such as New York cold and unfriendly, partly because people on Madison Avenue smile less than people on Peachtree Street in Atlanta, Georgia. People in densely 10 urban areas also tend to smile and greet each other in public less than people in rural areas and small towns do.

答案: H[考点] 考查名词。
文章介绍了关于人类外貌的一种新观点,因此可推测该句意为“他认为人的外貌通常是由文化决定...
填空题

A.healing B.restless C.reckless D.repetition
E.moaned F.reward G.dissipate H.influential
I.handicap J.constant K.hasty L.appealing
M.course N.groaning O.infinite
The intimacy between man and nature begins with the birth of man on the earth, and becomes each century more intelligent and far-reaching. To nature, therefore, we turn as to the oldest and most 11 teacher of our race: from one point of view, once our taskmaster, now our servant; from another point of view, our 12 friend, instructor and inspirer. The very intimacy of this relation robs it of a certain mystery and richness which it would have for all minds if it were the 13 of the few instead of being the privilege of the many. To the few it is, in every age, full of wonder and beauty; to the many it is a matter of 14 . The heavens shine for all, but they have a changing splendor to those only who see in every midnight sky a majesty of creative energy and resource which no 15 of the spectacle can dim. If the stars shone but once in a thousand years, men would gaze, awe-struck and worshipful, on a vision which is not less but more wonderful because it shines nightly above the whole earth. In like manner, and for the same reason, we become indifferent to that delicately beautiful or sublimely impressive sky scenery which the clouds form and reform, compose and 16 , a thousand times on a summer day. The mystery, the terror, and the music of the sea; the secret and subduing charm of the woods, so full of 17 for the spent mind or the 18 spirit; the majesty of the hills, holding in their recesses the secrets of light and atmosphere; the 19 variety of landscape, never imitative or repetitious, but always 20 to the imagination with some fresh and unsuspected loveliness—who feels the full power of these marvelous resources for the enrichment of life, or takes from them all the health, delight, and enrichment they have to bestow

答案: J[考点] 考查形容词。
空格前为形容词性物主代词our,空格后为三个并列名词,因此空格处应填形容词、动词的过...
填空题

A.available B.means C.that D.intersections
E.comprise F.interrelationships G.exchanged H.freely
I.involved J.replaced K.valid L.payment
M.those N.randomly O.consist
Prices determine how resources are to be used. They are also the 31 by which products and services that are in limited supply are rationed among buyers. The price system of the United States is a complex network composed of the prices of all the products bought and sold in the economy as well as 32 of a myriad of services, including labor, professional, transportation, and public-utility services. The 33 of all these prices make up the "system" of prices.
If one were to ask a group of 34 selected individuals to define "price", many would reply that price is an amount of money paid by the buyer to the seller of a product or service or, in other words 35 price is the money values of a product or service as agreed upon in a market transaction. This definition is, of course, 36 as far as it goes. For a complete understanding of a price in any particular transaction, much more than the amount of money 37 must be known. Both the buyer and the seller should be familiar with not only the money amount, but with the amount and quality of the product or service to be 38 , the time and place at which the exchange will take place and 39 will be made, the form of money to be used, the credit terms and discounts that apply to the transaction, guarantees on the product or service, delivery terms, return privileges, and other factors. In another word, both buyer and seller should be fully aware of all the factors that 40 the total "package" being exchanged for the asked-for amount of money in order that they may evaluate a given price.

答案: M[考点] 考查指示代词
本句意为“美国的价格体系是一个复杂的网络系统,不仅包含经济中一切购买和出售的产品的价...
填空题

A. social B. complicated C. legitimate D. legislative E. overstepped
F. committed G. will be H. would be I. obey J. exerted
K. complex L. follow M. primitive N. explicit O. implicit
In any society, no matter how 21 , some individuals have authority over others, at least within a limited sphere. Obedience is particularly relevant as societies get more 22 where the spheres within which authority can be 23 , become much more differentiate& Teachers assign homework, doctors order intravenous feedings, and policemen stop automobiles while pupils, nurses, and motorists generally 24 . Their obedience is based on a(n) 25 recognition that the persons who issue the orders are operating within their 26 domain of authority. If this domain is 27 , obedience is unlikely. Policemen can"t order motorists to recite fists of irregular French verbs or to take two aspirins and go to bed.
Some tendency to obey authority is a vital cement that holds society together; without it, there 28 chaos. But the atrocities of this century—the slaughter of the Armenians, the Nazi death camps—give terrible proof that this disposition to obedience can also become a corrosive poison that destroys our sense of humanity. Some of these atrocities could not have been 29 without the obedience of tens or hundreds of thousands and the acquiescence of many more. How could such obedience have come about Attempt to answer this question has focused on either of the two factors. One concerns the personality structure of the blindly obedient individual; the other emphasizes the 30 situation in which the obedient person finds himself.

答案: K[解析] 篇章题,上下文理解题。本句最后说权威的范围become much more differentiated(变...
填空题

A.frequently B.adolescence C.separate D.complexion
E.unformed F.set G.genealogy H.appearance
I.commonly J.single K.alike L.populated
M.produced N.startling O.genetics
Perhaps the most 1 theory to come out of kinetics, the study of body movement, was suggested by Professor Ray Birdwhistell. He believes that physical 2 is often culturally programmed. In other words, we learn our looks—we are not born with them. A baby has generally 3 facial features. A baby, according to Birdwhistell, learns where to set the eyebrows by looking at those around—family and friends. This helps explain why the people of some regions of the United States look so much 4 . New Englanders or Southerners have certain similar facial characteristics that cannot be explained by 5 . The exact shape of the mouth is not 6 at birth, it is learned after. In fact, the final mouth shape is not formed until well after permanent teeth are set. For many, this can be well into 7 . A husband and wife together for a long time often come to look somewhat alike. We learn our looks from those around us. This is perhaps why in a(an) 8 country there are areas where people smile more than those in other areas. In the United States, for example, the South is the part of the country where people smile most 9 . In New England they smile less, and in the western part of New York state still less. Many southerners find cities such as New York cold and unfriendly, partly because people on Madison Avenue smile less than people on Peachtree Street in Atlanta, Georgia. People in densely 10 urban areas also tend to smile and greet each other in public less than people in rural areas and small towns do.

答案: E[考点] 考查形容词。
根据上文提到的外貌不是生来决定的而是学习到的,可知此处意为“一般说来,婴儿的面部特征...
填空题

A.available B.means C.that D.intersections
E.comprise F.interrelationships G.exchanged H.freely
I.involved J.replaced K.valid L.payment
M.those N.randomly O.consist
Prices determine how resources are to be used. They are also the 31 by which products and services that are in limited supply are rationed among buyers. The price system of the United States is a complex network composed of the prices of all the products bought and sold in the economy as well as 32 of a myriad of services, including labor, professional, transportation, and public-utility services. The 33 of all these prices make up the "system" of prices.
If one were to ask a group of 34 selected individuals to define "price", many would reply that price is an amount of money paid by the buyer to the seller of a product or service or, in other words 35 price is the money values of a product or service as agreed upon in a market transaction. This definition is, of course, 36 as far as it goes. For a complete understanding of a price in any particular transaction, much more than the amount of money 37 must be known. Both the buyer and the seller should be familiar with not only the money amount, but with the amount and quality of the product or service to be 38 , the time and place at which the exchange will take place and 39 will be made, the form of money to be used, the credit terms and discounts that apply to the transaction, guarantees on the product or service, delivery terms, return privileges, and other factors. In another word, both buyer and seller should be fully aware of all the factors that 40 the total "package" being exchanged for the asked-for amount of money in order that they may evaluate a given price.

答案: F[考点] 考查名词。
本句意为“所有这些价格的______构成了价格系统”,结合选项可知,本题选F。inte...
填空题

A.healing B.restless C.reckless D.repetition
E.moaned F.reward G.dissipate H.influential
I.handicap J.constant K.hasty L.appealing
M.course N.groaning O.infinite
The intimacy between man and nature begins with the birth of man on the earth, and becomes each century more intelligent and far-reaching. To nature, therefore, we turn as to the oldest and most 11 teacher of our race: from one point of view, once our taskmaster, now our servant; from another point of view, our 12 friend, instructor and inspirer. The very intimacy of this relation robs it of a certain mystery and richness which it would have for all minds if it were the 13 of the few instead of being the privilege of the many. To the few it is, in every age, full of wonder and beauty; to the many it is a matter of 14 . The heavens shine for all, but they have a changing splendor to those only who see in every midnight sky a majesty of creative energy and resource which no 15 of the spectacle can dim. If the stars shone but once in a thousand years, men would gaze, awe-struck and worshipful, on a vision which is not less but more wonderful because it shines nightly above the whole earth. In like manner, and for the same reason, we become indifferent to that delicately beautiful or sublimely impressive sky scenery which the clouds form and reform, compose and 16 , a thousand times on a summer day. The mystery, the terror, and the music of the sea; the secret and subduing charm of the woods, so full of 17 for the spent mind or the 18 spirit; the majesty of the hills, holding in their recesses the secrets of light and atmosphere; the 19 variety of landscape, never imitative or repetitious, but always 20 to the imagination with some fresh and unsuspected loveliness—who feels the full power of these marvelous resources for the enrichment of life, or takes from them all the health, delight, and enrichment they have to bestow

答案: F[考点] 考查名词。
空格前为定冠词the,再由后文的instead of...可知,空格处应填和privi...
填空题

A. social B. complicated C. legitimate D. legislative E. overstepped
F. committed G. will be H. would be I. obey J. exerted
K. complex L. follow M. primitive N. explicit O. implicit
In any society, no matter how 21 , some individuals have authority over others, at least within a limited sphere. Obedience is particularly relevant as societies get more 22 where the spheres within which authority can be 23 , become much more differentiate& Teachers assign homework, doctors order intravenous feedings, and policemen stop automobiles while pupils, nurses, and motorists generally 24 . Their obedience is based on a(n) 25 recognition that the persons who issue the orders are operating within their 26 domain of authority. If this domain is 27 , obedience is unlikely. Policemen can"t order motorists to recite fists of irregular French verbs or to take two aspirins and go to bed.
Some tendency to obey authority is a vital cement that holds society together; without it, there 28 chaos. But the atrocities of this century—the slaughter of the Armenians, the Nazi death camps—give terrible proof that this disposition to obedience can also become a corrosive poison that destroys our sense of humanity. Some of these atrocities could not have been 29 without the obedience of tens or hundreds of thousands and the acquiescence of many more. How could such obedience have come about Attempt to answer this question has focused on either of the two factors. One concerns the personality structure of the blindly obedient individual; the other emphasizes the 30 situation in which the obedient person finds himself.

答案: J[解析] 词汇题,词义辨析题。exert意为“行使(职权);发挥(威力等)”,如:exert authority行使权...
填空题

A.frequently B.adolescence C.separate D.complexion
E.unformed F.set G.genealogy H.appearance
I.commonly J.single K.alike L.populated
M.produced N.startling O.genetics
Perhaps the most 1 theory to come out of kinetics, the study of body movement, was suggested by Professor Ray Birdwhistell. He believes that physical 2 is often culturally programmed. In other words, we learn our looks—we are not born with them. A baby has generally 3 facial features. A baby, according to Birdwhistell, learns where to set the eyebrows by looking at those around—family and friends. This helps explain why the people of some regions of the United States look so much 4 . New Englanders or Southerners have certain similar facial characteristics that cannot be explained by 5 . The exact shape of the mouth is not 6 at birth, it is learned after. In fact, the final mouth shape is not formed until well after permanent teeth are set. For many, this can be well into 7 . A husband and wife together for a long time often come to look somewhat alike. We learn our looks from those around us. This is perhaps why in a(an) 8 country there are areas where people smile more than those in other areas. In the United States, for example, the South is the part of the country where people smile most 9 . In New England they smile less, and in the western part of New York state still less. Many southerners find cities such as New York cold and unfriendly, partly because people on Madison Avenue smile less than people on Peachtree Street in Atlanta, Georgia. People in densely 10 urban areas also tend to smile and greet each other in public less than people in rural areas and small towns do.

答案: K[考点] 考查形容词。
根据下文中“新英格兰人或南方人具有某些类似的面部特征…”推知,此处意思为“这解释了为...
填空题

A.available B.means C.that D.intersections
E.comprise F.interrelationships G.exchanged H.freely
I.involved J.replaced K.valid L.payment
M.those N.randomly O.consist
Prices determine how resources are to be used. They are also the 31 by which products and services that are in limited supply are rationed among buyers. The price system of the United States is a complex network composed of the prices of all the products bought and sold in the economy as well as 32 of a myriad of services, including labor, professional, transportation, and public-utility services. The 33 of all these prices make up the "system" of prices.
If one were to ask a group of 34 selected individuals to define "price", many would reply that price is an amount of money paid by the buyer to the seller of a product or service or, in other words 35 price is the money values of a product or service as agreed upon in a market transaction. This definition is, of course, 36 as far as it goes. For a complete understanding of a price in any particular transaction, much more than the amount of money 37 must be known. Both the buyer and the seller should be familiar with not only the money amount, but with the amount and quality of the product or service to be 38 , the time and place at which the exchange will take place and 39 will be made, the form of money to be used, the credit terms and discounts that apply to the transaction, guarantees on the product or service, delivery terms, return privileges, and other factors. In another word, both buyer and seller should be fully aware of all the factors that 40 the total "package" being exchanged for the asked-for amount of money in order that they may evaluate a given price.

答案: N[考点] 考查副词。
由题目可知,空格处的单词修饰形容词selected,因此判断空格所填词是副词。空格所在...
填空题

A.healing B.restless C.reckless D.repetition
E.moaned F.reward G.dissipate H.influential
I.handicap J.constant K.hasty L.appealing
M.course N.groaning O.infinite
The intimacy between man and nature begins with the birth of man on the earth, and becomes each century more intelligent and far-reaching. To nature, therefore, we turn as to the oldest and most 11 teacher of our race: from one point of view, once our taskmaster, now our servant; from another point of view, our 12 friend, instructor and inspirer. The very intimacy of this relation robs it of a certain mystery and richness which it would have for all minds if it were the 13 of the few instead of being the privilege of the many. To the few it is, in every age, full of wonder and beauty; to the many it is a matter of 14 . The heavens shine for all, but they have a changing splendor to those only who see in every midnight sky a majesty of creative energy and resource which no 15 of the spectacle can dim. If the stars shone but once in a thousand years, men would gaze, awe-struck and worshipful, on a vision which is not less but more wonderful because it shines nightly above the whole earth. In like manner, and for the same reason, we become indifferent to that delicately beautiful or sublimely impressive sky scenery which the clouds form and reform, compose and 16 , a thousand times on a summer day. The mystery, the terror, and the music of the sea; the secret and subduing charm of the woods, so full of 17 for the spent mind or the 18 spirit; the majesty of the hills, holding in their recesses the secrets of light and atmosphere; the 19 variety of landscape, never imitative or repetitious, but always 20 to the imagination with some fresh and unsuspected loveliness—who feels the full power of these marvelous resources for the enrichment of life, or takes from them all the health, delight, and enrichment they have to bestow

答案: M[考点] 考查名词。
该句意为“对于少数人来说,这种关系在每个时代都充满了奇妙和美丽;对多数人来说,它只是一...
填空题

A. social B. complicated C. legitimate D. legislative E. overstepped
F. committed G. will be H. would be I. obey J. exerted
K. complex L. follow M. primitive N. explicit O. implicit
In any society, no matter how 21 , some individuals have authority over others, at least within a limited sphere. Obedience is particularly relevant as societies get more 22 where the spheres within which authority can be 23 , become much more differentiate& Teachers assign homework, doctors order intravenous feedings, and policemen stop automobiles while pupils, nurses, and motorists generally 24 . Their obedience is based on a(n) 25 recognition that the persons who issue the orders are operating within their 26 domain of authority. If this domain is 27 , obedience is unlikely. Policemen can"t order motorists to recite fists of irregular French verbs or to take two aspirins and go to bed.
Some tendency to obey authority is a vital cement that holds society together; without it, there 28 chaos. But the atrocities of this century—the slaughter of the Armenians, the Nazi death camps—give terrible proof that this disposition to obedience can also become a corrosive poison that destroys our sense of humanity. Some of these atrocities could not have been 29 without the obedience of tens or hundreds of thousands and the acquiescence of many more. How could such obedience have come about Attempt to answer this question has focused on either of the two factors. One concerns the personality structure of the blindly obedient individual; the other emphasizes the 30 situation in which the obedient person finds himself.

答案: I[解析] 篇章题,上下文理解题。本句从不同方面对一个问题——命令与服从的关系——进行了说明,所涉及的人物一方面为教师等...
填空题

A.frequently B.adolescence C.separate D.complexion
E.unformed F.set G.genealogy H.appearance
I.commonly J.single K.alike L.populated
M.produced N.startling O.genetics
Perhaps the most 1 theory to come out of kinetics, the study of body movement, was suggested by Professor Ray Birdwhistell. He believes that physical 2 is often culturally programmed. In other words, we learn our looks—we are not born with them. A baby has generally 3 facial features. A baby, according to Birdwhistell, learns where to set the eyebrows by looking at those around—family and friends. This helps explain why the people of some regions of the United States look so much 4 . New Englanders or Southerners have certain similar facial characteristics that cannot be explained by 5 . The exact shape of the mouth is not 6 at birth, it is learned after. In fact, the final mouth shape is not formed until well after permanent teeth are set. For many, this can be well into 7 . A husband and wife together for a long time often come to look somewhat alike. We learn our looks from those around us. This is perhaps why in a(an) 8 country there are areas where people smile more than those in other areas. In the United States, for example, the South is the part of the country where people smile most 9 . In New England they smile less, and in the western part of New York state still less. Many southerners find cities such as New York cold and unfriendly, partly because people on Madison Avenue smile less than people on Peachtree Street in Atlanta, Georgia. People in densely 10 urban areas also tend to smile and greet each other in public less than people in rural areas and small towns do.

答案: O[考点] 考查名词。
人们传统的观点认为:人类的外貌一般由遗传基因决定,因此该句意为“新英格兰人或南方人具有...
填空题

A.available B.means C.that D.intersections
E.comprise F.interrelationships G.exchanged H.freely
I.involved J.replaced K.valid L.payment
M.those N.randomly O.consist
Prices determine how resources are to be used. They are also the 31 by which products and services that are in limited supply are rationed among buyers. The price system of the United States is a complex network composed of the prices of all the products bought and sold in the economy as well as 32 of a myriad of services, including labor, professional, transportation, and public-utility services. The 33 of all these prices make up the "system" of prices.
If one were to ask a group of 34 selected individuals to define "price", many would reply that price is an amount of money paid by the buyer to the seller of a product or service or, in other words 35 price is the money values of a product or service as agreed upon in a market transaction. This definition is, of course, 36 as far as it goes. For a complete understanding of a price in any particular transaction, much more than the amount of money 37 must be known. Both the buyer and the seller should be familiar with not only the money amount, but with the amount and quality of the product or service to be 38 , the time and place at which the exchange will take place and 39 will be made, the form of money to be used, the credit terms and discounts that apply to the transaction, guarantees on the product or service, delivery terms, return privileges, and other factors. In another word, both buyer and seller should be fully aware of all the factors that 40 the total "package" being exchanged for the asked-for amount of money in order that they may evaluate a given price.

答案: C[考点] 考查关系副词
根据前文many would reply that price is an amou...
填空题

A.healing B.restless C.reckless D.repetition
E.moaned F.reward G.dissipate H.influential
I.handicap J.constant K.hasty L.appealing
M.course N.groaning O.infinite
The intimacy between man and nature begins with the birth of man on the earth, and becomes each century more intelligent and far-reaching. To nature, therefore, we turn as to the oldest and most 11 teacher of our race: from one point of view, once our taskmaster, now our servant; from another point of view, our 12 friend, instructor and inspirer. The very intimacy of this relation robs it of a certain mystery and richness which it would have for all minds if it were the 13 of the few instead of being the privilege of the many. To the few it is, in every age, full of wonder and beauty; to the many it is a matter of 14 . The heavens shine for all, but they have a changing splendor to those only who see in every midnight sky a majesty of creative energy and resource which no 15 of the spectacle can dim. If the stars shone but once in a thousand years, men would gaze, awe-struck and worshipful, on a vision which is not less but more wonderful because it shines nightly above the whole earth. In like manner, and for the same reason, we become indifferent to that delicately beautiful or sublimely impressive sky scenery which the clouds form and reform, compose and 16 , a thousand times on a summer day. The mystery, the terror, and the music of the sea; the secret and subduing charm of the woods, so full of 17 for the spent mind or the 18 spirit; the majesty of the hills, holding in their recesses the secrets of light and atmosphere; the 19 variety of landscape, never imitative or repetitious, but always 20 to the imagination with some fresh and unsuspected loveliness—who feels the full power of these marvelous resources for the enrichment of life, or takes from them all the health, delight, and enrichment they have to bestow

答案: D[考点] 考查名词。
根据空格前的否定词no和之后的介词of,判断空格处应填名词。该句句意为“天空只有在少数...
填空题

A. social B. complicated C. legitimate D. legislative E. overstepped
F. committed G. will be H. would be I. obey J. exerted
K. complex L. follow M. primitive N. explicit O. implicit
In any society, no matter how 21 , some individuals have authority over others, at least within a limited sphere. Obedience is particularly relevant as societies get more 22 where the spheres within which authority can be 23 , become much more differentiate& Teachers assign homework, doctors order intravenous feedings, and policemen stop automobiles while pupils, nurses, and motorists generally 24 . Their obedience is based on a(n) 25 recognition that the persons who issue the orders are operating within their 26 domain of authority. If this domain is 27 , obedience is unlikely. Policemen can"t order motorists to recite fists of irregular French verbs or to take two aspirins and go to bed.
Some tendency to obey authority is a vital cement that holds society together; without it, there 28 chaos. But the atrocities of this century—the slaughter of the Armenians, the Nazi death camps—give terrible proof that this disposition to obedience can also become a corrosive poison that destroys our sense of humanity. Some of these atrocities could not have been 29 without the obedience of tens or hundreds of thousands and the acquiescence of many more. How could such obedience have come about Attempt to answer this question has focused on either of the two factors. One concerns the personality structure of the blindly obedient individual; the other emphasizes the 30 situation in which the obedient person finds himself.

答案: O[解析] 篇章题,上下文理解题。implicit意为“隐含的,不言明的”,如:implicit contract默认契...
填空题

A.frequently B.adolescence C.separate D.complexion
E.unformed F.set G.genealogy H.appearance
I.commonly J.single K.alike L.populated
M.produced N.startling O.genetics
Perhaps the most 1 theory to come out of kinetics, the study of body movement, was suggested by Professor Ray Birdwhistell. He believes that physical 2 is often culturally programmed. In other words, we learn our looks—we are not born with them. A baby has generally 3 facial features. A baby, according to Birdwhistell, learns where to set the eyebrows by looking at those around—family and friends. This helps explain why the people of some regions of the United States look so much 4 . New Englanders or Southerners have certain similar facial characteristics that cannot be explained by 5 . The exact shape of the mouth is not 6 at birth, it is learned after. In fact, the final mouth shape is not formed until well after permanent teeth are set. For many, this can be well into 7 . A husband and wife together for a long time often come to look somewhat alike. We learn our looks from those around us. This is perhaps why in a(an) 8 country there are areas where people smile more than those in other areas. In the United States, for example, the South is the part of the country where people smile most 9 . In New England they smile less, and in the western part of New York state still less. Many southerners find cities such as New York cold and unfriendly, partly because people on Madison Avenue smile less than people on Peachtree Street in Atlanta, Georgia. People in densely 10 urban areas also tend to smile and greet each other in public less than people in rural areas and small towns do.

答案: F[考点] 考查动词。
根据下文“实际上,嘴巴的最终形状要在恒牙固定后才会确定”,可知该句意为“嘴巴的实际形状...
填空题

A.healing B.restless C.reckless D.repetition
E.moaned F.reward G.dissipate H.influential
I.handicap J.constant K.hasty L.appealing
M.course N.groaning O.infinite
The intimacy between man and nature begins with the birth of man on the earth, and becomes each century more intelligent and far-reaching. To nature, therefore, we turn as to the oldest and most 11 teacher of our race: from one point of view, once our taskmaster, now our servant; from another point of view, our 12 friend, instructor and inspirer. The very intimacy of this relation robs it of a certain mystery and richness which it would have for all minds if it were the 13 of the few instead of being the privilege of the many. To the few it is, in every age, full of wonder and beauty; to the many it is a matter of 14 . The heavens shine for all, but they have a changing splendor to those only who see in every midnight sky a majesty of creative energy and resource which no 15 of the spectacle can dim. If the stars shone but once in a thousand years, men would gaze, awe-struck and worshipful, on a vision which is not less but more wonderful because it shines nightly above the whole earth. In like manner, and for the same reason, we become indifferent to that delicately beautiful or sublimely impressive sky scenery which the clouds form and reform, compose and 16 , a thousand times on a summer day. The mystery, the terror, and the music of the sea; the secret and subduing charm of the woods, so full of 17 for the spent mind or the 18 spirit; the majesty of the hills, holding in their recesses the secrets of light and atmosphere; the 19 variety of landscape, never imitative or repetitious, but always 20 to the imagination with some fresh and unsuspected loveliness—who feels the full power of these marvelous resources for the enrichment of life, or takes from them all the health, delight, and enrichment they have to bestow

答案: G[考点] 考查动词。
根据空格前的并列连词and和前文的form and reform(形成和重组)可知,空...
填空题

A.available B.means C.that D.intersections
E.comprise F.interrelationships G.exchanged H.freely
I.involved J.replaced K.valid L.payment
M.those N.randomly O.consist
Prices determine how resources are to be used. They are also the 31 by which products and services that are in limited supply are rationed among buyers. The price system of the United States is a complex network composed of the prices of all the products bought and sold in the economy as well as 32 of a myriad of services, including labor, professional, transportation, and public-utility services. The 33 of all these prices make up the "system" of prices.
If one were to ask a group of 34 selected individuals to define "price", many would reply that price is an amount of money paid by the buyer to the seller of a product or service or, in other words 35 price is the money values of a product or service as agreed upon in a market transaction. This definition is, of course, 36 as far as it goes. For a complete understanding of a price in any particular transaction, much more than the amount of money 37 must be known. Both the buyer and the seller should be familiar with not only the money amount, but with the amount and quality of the product or service to be 38 , the time and place at which the exchange will take place and 39 will be made, the form of money to be used, the credit terms and discounts that apply to the transaction, guarantees on the product or service, delivery terms, return privileges, and other factors. In another word, both buyer and seller should be fully aware of all the factors that 40 the total "package" being exchanged for the asked-for amount of money in order that they may evaluate a given price.

答案: K[考点] 考查形容词。
空格后一句提到For a complete understanding...much...
填空题

A. social B. complicated C. legitimate D. legislative E. overstepped
F. committed G. will be H. would be I. obey J. exerted
K. complex L. follow M. primitive N. explicit O. implicit
In any society, no matter how 21 , some individuals have authority over others, at least within a limited sphere. Obedience is particularly relevant as societies get more 22 where the spheres within which authority can be 23 , become much more differentiate& Teachers assign homework, doctors order intravenous feedings, and policemen stop automobiles while pupils, nurses, and motorists generally 24 . Their obedience is based on a(n) 25 recognition that the persons who issue the orders are operating within their 26 domain of authority. If this domain is 27 , obedience is unlikely. Policemen can"t order motorists to recite fists of irregular French verbs or to take two aspirins and go to bed.
Some tendency to obey authority is a vital cement that holds society together; without it, there 28 chaos. But the atrocities of this century—the slaughter of the Armenians, the Nazi death camps—give terrible proof that this disposition to obedience can also become a corrosive poison that destroys our sense of humanity. Some of these atrocities could not have been 29 without the obedience of tens or hundreds of thousands and the acquiescence of many more. How could such obedience have come about Attempt to answer this question has focused on either of the two factors. One concerns the personality structure of the blindly obedient individual; the other emphasizes the 30 situation in which the obedient person finds himself.

答案: C[解析] 词汇题,词义辨析题。legitimate既可表示“法定的,合法的”,也可表示“合理的,正当的”,即被风俗、惯...
填空题

A.frequently B.adolescence C.separate D.complexion
E.unformed F.set G.genealogy H.appearance
I.commonly J.single K.alike L.populated
M.produced N.startling O.genetics
Perhaps the most 1 theory to come out of kinetics, the study of body movement, was suggested by Professor Ray Birdwhistell. He believes that physical 2 is often culturally programmed. In other words, we learn our looks—we are not born with them. A baby has generally 3 facial features. A baby, according to Birdwhistell, learns where to set the eyebrows by looking at those around—family and friends. This helps explain why the people of some regions of the United States look so much 4 . New Englanders or Southerners have certain similar facial characteristics that cannot be explained by 5 . The exact shape of the mouth is not 6 at birth, it is learned after. In fact, the final mouth shape is not formed until well after permanent teeth are set. For many, this can be well into 7 . A husband and wife together for a long time often come to look somewhat alike. We learn our looks from those around us. This is perhaps why in a(an) 8 country there are areas where people smile more than those in other areas. In the United States, for example, the South is the part of the country where people smile most 9 . In New England they smile less, and in the western part of New York state still less. Many southerners find cities such as New York cold and unfriendly, partly because people on Madison Avenue smile less than people on Peachtree Street in Atlanta, Georgia. People in densely 10 urban areas also tend to smile and greet each other in public less than people in rural areas and small towns do.

答案: B[考点] 考查名词。
前两句说到嘴巴的最终形状并不是在出生时就形成的,而是要在恒牙固定后才会确定,可推知该句...
填空题

A.healing B.restless C.reckless D.repetition
E.moaned F.reward G.dissipate H.influential
I.handicap J.constant K.hasty L.appealing
M.course N.groaning O.infinite
The intimacy between man and nature begins with the birth of man on the earth, and becomes each century more intelligent and far-reaching. To nature, therefore, we turn as to the oldest and most 11 teacher of our race: from one point of view, once our taskmaster, now our servant; from another point of view, our 12 friend, instructor and inspirer. The very intimacy of this relation robs it of a certain mystery and richness which it would have for all minds if it were the 13 of the few instead of being the privilege of the many. To the few it is, in every age, full of wonder and beauty; to the many it is a matter of 14 . The heavens shine for all, but they have a changing splendor to those only who see in every midnight sky a majesty of creative energy and resource which no 15 of the spectacle can dim. If the stars shone but once in a thousand years, men would gaze, awe-struck and worshipful, on a vision which is not less but more wonderful because it shines nightly above the whole earth. In like manner, and for the same reason, we become indifferent to that delicately beautiful or sublimely impressive sky scenery which the clouds form and reform, compose and 16 , a thousand times on a summer day. The mystery, the terror, and the music of the sea; the secret and subduing charm of the woods, so full of 17 for the spent mind or the 18 spirit; the majesty of the hills, holding in their recesses the secrets of light and atmosphere; the 19 variety of landscape, never imitative or repetitious, but always 20 to the imagination with some fresh and unsuspected loveliness—who feels the full power of these marvelous resources for the enrichment of life, or takes from them all the health, delight, and enrichment they have to bestow

答案: A[考点] 考查名词。
该空格前为短语full of,因此空格处应填名词。结合空格所在句句意“对疲惫的心灵或…...
填空题

A.available B.means C.that D.intersections
E.comprise F.interrelationships G.exchanged H.freely
I.involved J.replaced K.valid L.payment
M.those N.randomly O.consist
Prices determine how resources are to be used. They are also the 31 by which products and services that are in limited supply are rationed among buyers. The price system of the United States is a complex network composed of the prices of all the products bought and sold in the economy as well as 32 of a myriad of services, including labor, professional, transportation, and public-utility services. The 33 of all these prices make up the "system" of prices.
If one were to ask a group of 34 selected individuals to define "price", many would reply that price is an amount of money paid by the buyer to the seller of a product or service or, in other words 35 price is the money values of a product or service as agreed upon in a market transaction. This definition is, of course, 36 as far as it goes. For a complete understanding of a price in any particular transaction, much more than the amount of money 37 must be known. Both the buyer and the seller should be familiar with not only the money amount, but with the amount and quality of the product or service to be 38 , the time and place at which the exchange will take place and 39 will be made, the form of money to be used, the credit terms and discounts that apply to the transaction, guarantees on the product or service, delivery terms, return privileges, and other factors. In another word, both buyer and seller should be fully aware of all the factors that 40 the total "package" being exchanged for the asked-for amount of money in order that they may evaluate a given price.

答案: I[考点] 考查形容词。
本句意为“要想完全理解任何一桩交易中的价格,所要了解的东西绝不仅仅是______金额...
填空题

A. social B. complicated C. legitimate D. legislative E. overstepped
F. committed G. will be H. would be I. obey J. exerted
K. complex L. follow M. primitive N. explicit O. implicit
In any society, no matter how 21 , some individuals have authority over others, at least within a limited sphere. Obedience is particularly relevant as societies get more 22 where the spheres within which authority can be 23 , become much more differentiate& Teachers assign homework, doctors order intravenous feedings, and policemen stop automobiles while pupils, nurses, and motorists generally 24 . Their obedience is based on a(n) 25 recognition that the persons who issue the orders are operating within their 26 domain of authority. If this domain is 27 , obedience is unlikely. Policemen can"t order motorists to recite fists of irregular French verbs or to take two aspirins and go to bed.
Some tendency to obey authority is a vital cement that holds society together; without it, there 28 chaos. But the atrocities of this century—the slaughter of the Armenians, the Nazi death camps—give terrible proof that this disposition to obedience can also become a corrosive poison that destroys our sense of humanity. Some of these atrocities could not have been 29 without the obedience of tens or hundreds of thousands and the acquiescence of many more. How could such obedience have come about Attempt to answer this question has focused on either of the two factors. One concerns the personality structure of the blindly obedient individual; the other emphasizes the 30 situation in which the obedient person finds himself.

答案: E[解析] 篇章题,上下文理解题。上文已交待,权威的实现须在一定的范围之内,因此可以推断,如果超越了这个合理的范围,就不...
填空题

A.frequently B.adolescence C.separate D.complexion
E.unformed F.set G.genealogy H.appearance
I.commonly J.single K.alike L.populated
M.produced N.startling O.genetics
Perhaps the most 1 theory to come out of kinetics, the study of body movement, was suggested by Professor Ray Birdwhistell. He believes that physical 2 is often culturally programmed. In other words, we learn our looks—we are not born with them. A baby has generally 3 facial features. A baby, according to Birdwhistell, learns where to set the eyebrows by looking at those around—family and friends. This helps explain why the people of some regions of the United States look so much 4 . New Englanders or Southerners have certain similar facial characteristics that cannot be explained by 5 . The exact shape of the mouth is not 6 at birth, it is learned after. In fact, the final mouth shape is not formed until well after permanent teeth are set. For many, this can be well into 7 . A husband and wife together for a long time often come to look somewhat alike. We learn our looks from those around us. This is perhaps why in a(an) 8 country there are areas where people smile more than those in other areas. In the United States, for example, the South is the part of the country where people smile most 9 . In New England they smile less, and in the western part of New York state still less. Many southerners find cities such as New York cold and unfriendly, partly because people on Madison Avenue smile less than people on Peachtree Street in Atlanta, Georgia. People in densely 10 urban areas also tend to smile and greet each other in public less than people in rural areas and small towns do.

答案: J[考点] 考查形容词。
该句意为“这可能就是为什么在______国家有些地区的人比其他地区的人更爱笑”,由此...
填空题

A.healing B.restless C.reckless D.repetition
E.moaned F.reward G.dissipate H.influential
I.handicap J.constant K.hasty L.appealing
M.course N.groaning O.infinite
The intimacy between man and nature begins with the birth of man on the earth, and becomes each century more intelligent and far-reaching. To nature, therefore, we turn as to the oldest and most 11 teacher of our race: from one point of view, once our taskmaster, now our servant; from another point of view, our 12 friend, instructor and inspirer. The very intimacy of this relation robs it of a certain mystery and richness which it would have for all minds if it were the 13 of the few instead of being the privilege of the many. To the few it is, in every age, full of wonder and beauty; to the many it is a matter of 14 . The heavens shine for all, but they have a changing splendor to those only who see in every midnight sky a majesty of creative energy and resource which no 15 of the spectacle can dim. If the stars shone but once in a thousand years, men would gaze, awe-struck and worshipful, on a vision which is not less but more wonderful because it shines nightly above the whole earth. In like manner, and for the same reason, we become indifferent to that delicately beautiful or sublimely impressive sky scenery which the clouds form and reform, compose and 16 , a thousand times on a summer day. The mystery, the terror, and the music of the sea; the secret and subduing charm of the woods, so full of 17 for the spent mind or the 18 spirit; the majesty of the hills, holding in their recesses the secrets of light and atmosphere; the 19 variety of landscape, never imitative or repetitious, but always 20 to the imagination with some fresh and unsuspected loveliness—who feels the full power of these marvelous resources for the enrichment of life, or takes from them all the health, delight, and enrichment they have to bestow

答案: B[考点] 考查形容词。
空格前为定冠词the,后面紧跟名词spirit,再由之前的并列连词or可知,空格处应...
填空题

A.frequently B.adolescence C.separate D.complexion
E.unformed F.set G.genealogy H.appearance
I.commonly J.single K.alike L.populated
M.produced N.startling O.genetics
Perhaps the most 1 theory to come out of kinetics, the study of body movement, was suggested by Professor Ray Birdwhistell. He believes that physical 2 is often culturally programmed. In other words, we learn our looks—we are not born with them. A baby has generally 3 facial features. A baby, according to Birdwhistell, learns where to set the eyebrows by looking at those around—family and friends. This helps explain why the people of some regions of the United States look so much 4 . New Englanders or Southerners have certain similar facial characteristics that cannot be explained by 5 . The exact shape of the mouth is not 6 at birth, it is learned after. In fact, the final mouth shape is not formed until well after permanent teeth are set. For many, this can be well into 7 . A husband and wife together for a long time often come to look somewhat alike. We learn our looks from those around us. This is perhaps why in a(an) 8 country there are areas where people smile more than those in other areas. In the United States, for example, the South is the part of the country where people smile most 9 . In New England they smile less, and in the western part of New York state still less. Many southerners find cities such as New York cold and unfriendly, partly because people on Madison Avenue smile less than people on Peachtree Street in Atlanta, Georgia. People in densely 10 urban areas also tend to smile and greet each other in public less than people in rural areas and small towns do.

答案: A[考点] 考查副词。
根据上下文语境可推测,该句意为“例如,在美国,南部地区的人笑得最______”,空格处...
填空题

A.available B.means C.that D.intersections
E.comprise F.interrelationships G.exchanged H.freely
I.involved J.replaced K.valid L.payment
M.those N.randomly O.consist
Prices determine how resources are to be used. They are also the 31 by which products and services that are in limited supply are rationed among buyers. The price system of the United States is a complex network composed of the prices of all the products bought and sold in the economy as well as 32 of a myriad of services, including labor, professional, transportation, and public-utility services. The 33 of all these prices make up the "system" of prices.
If one were to ask a group of 34 selected individuals to define "price", many would reply that price is an amount of money paid by the buyer to the seller of a product or service or, in other words 35 price is the money values of a product or service as agreed upon in a market transaction. This definition is, of course, 36 as far as it goes. For a complete understanding of a price in any particular transaction, much more than the amount of money 37 must be known. Both the buyer and the seller should be familiar with not only the money amount, but with the amount and quality of the product or service to be 38 , the time and place at which the exchange will take place and 39 will be made, the form of money to be used, the credit terms and discounts that apply to the transaction, guarantees on the product or service, delivery terms, return privileges, and other factors. In another word, both buyer and seller should be fully aware of all the factors that 40 the total "package" being exchanged for the asked-for amount of money in order that they may evaluate a given price.

答案: G[考点] 考查动词。
该句意为“买卖双方不仅要熟悉涉及的金额,而且还要熟悉即将被______的商品或服务的数...
填空题

A. social B. complicated C. legitimate D. legislative E. overstepped
F. committed G. will be H. would be I. obey J. exerted
K. complex L. follow M. primitive N. explicit O. implicit
In any society, no matter how 21 , some individuals have authority over others, at least within a limited sphere. Obedience is particularly relevant as societies get more 22 where the spheres within which authority can be 23 , become much more differentiate& Teachers assign homework, doctors order intravenous feedings, and policemen stop automobiles while pupils, nurses, and motorists generally 24 . Their obedience is based on a(n) 25 recognition that the persons who issue the orders are operating within their 26 domain of authority. If this domain is 27 , obedience is unlikely. Policemen can"t order motorists to recite fists of irregular French verbs or to take two aspirins and go to bed.
Some tendency to obey authority is a vital cement that holds society together; without it, there 28 chaos. But the atrocities of this century—the slaughter of the Armenians, the Nazi death camps—give terrible proof that this disposition to obedience can also become a corrosive poison that destroys our sense of humanity. Some of these atrocities could not have been 29 without the obedience of tens or hundreds of thousands and the acquiescence of many more. How could such obedience have come about Attempt to answer this question has focused on either of the two factors. One concerns the personality structure of the blindly obedient individual; the other emphasizes the 30 situation in which the obedient person finds himself.

答案: H[解析] 语法题。本句前面部分指出了一个现实情况——服从对社会产生的作用,时态为一般现在时;紧接着又说,如果没有“服从...
填空题

A.healing B.restless C.reckless D.repetition
E.moaned F.reward G.dissipate H.influential
I.handicap J.constant K.hasty L.appealing
M.course N.groaning O.infinite
The intimacy between man and nature begins with the birth of man on the earth, and becomes each century more intelligent and far-reaching. To nature, therefore, we turn as to the oldest and most 11 teacher of our race: from one point of view, once our taskmaster, now our servant; from another point of view, our 12 friend, instructor and inspirer. The very intimacy of this relation robs it of a certain mystery and richness which it would have for all minds if it were the 13 of the few instead of being the privilege of the many. To the few it is, in every age, full of wonder and beauty; to the many it is a matter of 14 . The heavens shine for all, but they have a changing splendor to those only who see in every midnight sky a majesty of creative energy and resource which no 15 of the spectacle can dim. If the stars shone but once in a thousand years, men would gaze, awe-struck and worshipful, on a vision which is not less but more wonderful because it shines nightly above the whole earth. In like manner, and for the same reason, we become indifferent to that delicately beautiful or sublimely impressive sky scenery which the clouds form and reform, compose and 16 , a thousand times on a summer day. The mystery, the terror, and the music of the sea; the secret and subduing charm of the woods, so full of 17 for the spent mind or the 18 spirit; the majesty of the hills, holding in their recesses the secrets of light and atmosphere; the 19 variety of landscape, never imitative or repetitious, but always 20 to the imagination with some fresh and unsuspected loveliness—who feels the full power of these marvelous resources for the enrichment of life, or takes from them all the health, delight, and enrichment they have to bestow

答案: O[考点] 考查形容词。
空格前为定冠词the,之后为名词variety,因此空格处应填形容词、动词的过去分词...
填空题

A.frequently B.adolescence C.separate D.complexion
E.unformed F.set G.genealogy H.appearance
I.commonly J.single K.alike L.populated
M.produced N.startling O.genetics
Perhaps the most 1 theory to come out of kinetics, the study of body movement, was suggested by Professor Ray Birdwhistell. He believes that physical 2 is often culturally programmed. In other words, we learn our looks—we are not born with them. A baby has generally 3 facial features. A baby, according to Birdwhistell, learns where to set the eyebrows by looking at those around—family and friends. This helps explain why the people of some regions of the United States look so much 4 . New Englanders or Southerners have certain similar facial characteristics that cannot be explained by 5 . The exact shape of the mouth is not 6 at birth, it is learned after. In fact, the final mouth shape is not formed until well after permanent teeth are set. For many, this can be well into 7 . A husband and wife together for a long time often come to look somewhat alike. We learn our looks from those around us. This is perhaps why in a(an) 8 country there are areas where people smile more than those in other areas. In the United States, for example, the South is the part of the country where people smile most 9 . In New England they smile less, and in the western part of New York state still less. Many southerners find cities such as New York cold and unfriendly, partly because people on Madison Avenue smile less than people on Peachtree Street in Atlanta, Georgia. People in densely 10 urban areas also tend to smile and greet each other in public less than people in rural areas and small towns do.

答案: L[考点] 考查动词。
该句意为“在______众多的大城市里,人们微笑和相互打招呼的频率往往比乡村和小城镇上...
填空题

A.available B.means C.that D.intersections
E.comprise F.interrelationships G.exchanged H.freely
I.involved J.replaced K.valid L.payment
M.those N.randomly O.consist
Prices determine how resources are to be used. They are also the 31 by which products and services that are in limited supply are rationed among buyers. The price system of the United States is a complex network composed of the prices of all the products bought and sold in the economy as well as 32 of a myriad of services, including labor, professional, transportation, and public-utility services. The 33 of all these prices make up the "system" of prices.
If one were to ask a group of 34 selected individuals to define "price", many would reply that price is an amount of money paid by the buyer to the seller of a product or service or, in other words 35 price is the money values of a product or service as agreed upon in a market transaction. This definition is, of course, 36 as far as it goes. For a complete understanding of a price in any particular transaction, much more than the amount of money 37 must be known. Both the buyer and the seller should be familiar with not only the money amount, but with the amount and quality of the product or service to be 38 , the time and place at which the exchange will take place and 39 will be made, the form of money to be used, the credit terms and discounts that apply to the transaction, guarantees on the product or service, delivery terms, return privileges, and other factors. In another word, both buyer and seller should be fully aware of all the factors that 40 the total "package" being exchanged for the asked-for amount of money in order that they may evaluate a given price.

答案: L[考点] 考查名词。
and连接两个并列的短语,and前面的句子the time and place at ...
填空题

A. social B. complicated C. legitimate D. legislative E. overstepped
F. committed G. will be H. would be I. obey J. exerted
K. complex L. follow M. primitive N. explicit O. implicit
In any society, no matter how 21 , some individuals have authority over others, at least within a limited sphere. Obedience is particularly relevant as societies get more 22 where the spheres within which authority can be 23 , become much more differentiate& Teachers assign homework, doctors order intravenous feedings, and policemen stop automobiles while pupils, nurses, and motorists generally 24 . Their obedience is based on a(n) 25 recognition that the persons who issue the orders are operating within their 26 domain of authority. If this domain is 27 , obedience is unlikely. Policemen can"t order motorists to recite fists of irregular French verbs or to take two aspirins and go to bed.
Some tendency to obey authority is a vital cement that holds society together; without it, there 28 chaos. But the atrocities of this century—the slaughter of the Armenians, the Nazi death camps—give terrible proof that this disposition to obedience can also become a corrosive poison that destroys our sense of humanity. Some of these atrocities could not have been 29 without the obedience of tens or hundreds of thousands and the acquiescence of many more. How could such obedience have come about Attempt to answer this question has focused on either of the two factors. One concerns the personality structure of the blindly obedient individual; the other emphasizes the 30 situation in which the obedient person finds himself.

答案: F[解析] 词汇题,词义辨析题。空格须填入能与前面的atrocities(暴行)搭配的词。committed意为“犯,干...
填空题

A.healing B.restless C.reckless D.repetition
E.moaned F.reward G.dissipate H.influential
I.handicap J.constant K.hasty L.appealing
M.course N.groaning O.infinite
The intimacy between man and nature begins with the birth of man on the earth, and becomes each century more intelligent and far-reaching. To nature, therefore, we turn as to the oldest and most 11 teacher of our race: from one point of view, once our taskmaster, now our servant; from another point of view, our 12 friend, instructor and inspirer. The very intimacy of this relation robs it of a certain mystery and richness which it would have for all minds if it were the 13 of the few instead of being the privilege of the many. To the few it is, in every age, full of wonder and beauty; to the many it is a matter of 14 . The heavens shine for all, but they have a changing splendor to those only who see in every midnight sky a majesty of creative energy and resource which no 15 of the spectacle can dim. If the stars shone but once in a thousand years, men would gaze, awe-struck and worshipful, on a vision which is not less but more wonderful because it shines nightly above the whole earth. In like manner, and for the same reason, we become indifferent to that delicately beautiful or sublimely impressive sky scenery which the clouds form and reform, compose and 16 , a thousand times on a summer day. The mystery, the terror, and the music of the sea; the secret and subduing charm of the woods, so full of 17 for the spent mind or the 18 spirit; the majesty of the hills, holding in their recesses the secrets of light and atmosphere; the 19 variety of landscape, never imitative or repetitious, but always 20 to the imagination with some fresh and unsuspected loveliness—who feels the full power of these marvelous resources for the enrichment of life, or takes from them all the health, delight, and enrichment they have to bestow

答案: L[考点] 考查形容词。
空格前的并列连词but连接前面的形容词imitative和repetitious,因...
填空题

A. social B. complicated C. legitimate D. legislative E. overstepped
F. committed G. will be H. would be I. obey J. exerted
K. complex L. follow M. primitive N. explicit O. implicit
In any society, no matter how 21 , some individuals have authority over others, at least within a limited sphere. Obedience is particularly relevant as societies get more 22 where the spheres within which authority can be 23 , become much more differentiate& Teachers assign homework, doctors order intravenous feedings, and policemen stop automobiles while pupils, nurses, and motorists generally 24 . Their obedience is based on a(n) 25 recognition that the persons who issue the orders are operating within their 26 domain of authority. If this domain is 27 , obedience is unlikely. Policemen can"t order motorists to recite fists of irregular French verbs or to take two aspirins and go to bed.
Some tendency to obey authority is a vital cement that holds society together; without it, there 28 chaos. But the atrocities of this century—the slaughter of the Armenians, the Nazi death camps—give terrible proof that this disposition to obedience can also become a corrosive poison that destroys our sense of humanity. Some of these atrocities could not have been 29 without the obedience of tens or hundreds of thousands and the acquiescence of many more. How could such obedience have come about Attempt to answer this question has focused on either of the two factors. One concerns the personality structure of the blindly obedient individual; the other emphasizes the 30 situation in which the obedient person finds himself.

答案: A[解析] 篇章题,上下文理解题。本句中的重要路标词“One...; the other...”表明所谈为两个因素。其中...
填空题

A.available B.means C.that D.intersections
E.comprise F.interrelationships G.exchanged H.freely
I.involved J.replaced K.valid L.payment
M.those N.randomly O.consist
Prices determine how resources are to be used. They are also the 31 by which products and services that are in limited supply are rationed among buyers. The price system of the United States is a complex network composed of the prices of all the products bought and sold in the economy as well as 32 of a myriad of services, including labor, professional, transportation, and public-utility services. The 33 of all these prices make up the "system" of prices.
If one were to ask a group of 34 selected individuals to define "price", many would reply that price is an amount of money paid by the buyer to the seller of a product or service or, in other words 35 price is the money values of a product or service as agreed upon in a market transaction. This definition is, of course, 36 as far as it goes. For a complete understanding of a price in any particular transaction, much more than the amount of money 37 must be known. Both the buyer and the seller should be familiar with not only the money amount, but with the amount and quality of the product or service to be 38 , the time and place at which the exchange will take place and 39 will be made, the form of money to be used, the credit terms and discounts that apply to the transaction, guarantees on the product or service, delivery terms, return privileges, and other factors. In another word, both buyer and seller should be fully aware of all the factors that 40 the total "package" being exchanged for the asked-for amount of money in order that they may evaluate a given price.

答案: E[考点] 考查动词。
根据上下文,此处要填入一个表示“组成,构成”之意的单词。E项comprise和O项co...
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