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Directions: Read the passage carefully. ...

Directions: Read the passage carefully. Fill in each blank with a proper sentence given in the box. Each sentence can be used only once. Note that there are two more sentences than you need.

Einstein's Opinions on Creative Thinking

“The greatest scientists are artists as well,” said Albert Einstein, one of the greatest physicists and an amateur pianist and violinist.

For Einstein, insight did not come from logic or mathematics. 1. As he told one friend, “When I examine myself and my methods of thought. I find that the gift of imagination has meant more to me than any talent for absorbing absolute knowledge. All great achievements of science must start from intuitive knowledge. Imagination is more important than knowledge.”

But how did art differ from science for Einstein? Surprisingly, it wasn't the content of an idea, or its subject, that determined whether something was art or science, but how the idea was expressed. If what is seen and experienced is described in the language of logic, then it is science. If it is communicated and recognized intuitively, then it is art. 2. That's why he said that great scientists were also artists. Einstein first described his intuitive thought processes at a physics conference in Kyoto in 1922 when he indicated that he used images and feelings to solve his problems and found words, logical symbols or mathematical equations later.

3. “If I were not a physicist,” he once said, “I would probably be a musician. I often think in music and I see my life in terms of music. I get most joy in life out of music. Whenever I feel that I have come to the end of the road or into a difficult situation in my work. I would bury myself in music, and that would usually solve all my difficulties.”

Music provided Einstein with a connection between time and space which both combine spatial and structural aspects. “The theory of relativity occurred to me my intuition and music is the driving force behind this intuition”, said Einstein. “My parents had me study the violin from the time I was six. 4..”

A.There is no doubt that my theory was a great breakthrough then.

B.Instead, it came from intuition and inspiration

C.For Einstein, it was the humanities that mainly contributed to his achieve-ments.

D.Einstein also owed his scientific insight and intuition mainly to music.

E.My new discovery is the result of musical perception.

F.Einstein himself worked intuitively and expressed himself logically.

 

1.B 2.F 3.D 4.E 【解析】 这是一篇说明文。文章主要说明了爱因斯坦关于创造性思维的观点,对爱因斯坦来说,洞察力来自直觉和灵感,爱因斯坦本人是用直觉工作,用逻辑表达的。所以他说伟大的科学家也是艺术家。爱因斯坦还把他的科学洞察力和直觉主要归功于音乐。音乐为爱因斯坦提供了时间和空间之间的联系,它结合了空间和结构方面。 1. 根据上文For Einstein, insight did not come from logic or mathematics.可知对爱因斯坦来说,洞察力不是来自逻辑或数学。以及后文I find that the gift of imagination has meant more to me than any talent for absorbing absolute knowledge. All great achievements of science must start from intuitive knowledge. Imagination is more important than knowledge.可知我发现,对我来说,想象力的天赋比吸收绝对知识的天赋更重要。一切伟大的科学成就都必须从直觉知识开始。想象力比知识更重要。由此可知,对爱因斯坦来说,洞察力是来自直觉和灵感的。故B选项“相反,它来自直觉和灵感”符合上下文语境,故选B。 2. 根据上文Surprisingly, it wasn't the content of an idea, or its subject, that determined whether something was art or science, but how the idea was expressed. If what is seen and experienced is described in the language of logic, then it is science. If it is communicated and recognized intuitively, then it is art.可知令人惊讶的是,决定一件事是艺术还是科学的,不是理念的内容或主题,而是理念如何被表达。如何用逻辑的语言来描述所见所闻,那么这就是科学。如果它被直观地传达和认可,那么它就是艺术。以及后文That's why he said that great scientists were also artists.可知这就是为什么他说伟大的科学家也是艺术家。由此可知,本句承接上文说明,爱因斯坦本人就是用直觉工作,用逻辑表达的。所以他说伟大的科学家也是艺术家。故F选项“爱因斯坦本人就是用直觉工作,用逻辑表达的”符合上下文语境,故选F。 3. 结合后文I would probably be a musician. I often think in music and I see my life in terms of music. I get most joy in life out of music. Whenever I feel that I have come to the end of the road or into a difficult situation in my work. I would bury myself in music, and that would usually solve all my difficulties.可知我可能会成为一名音乐家。我经常用音乐思考,我从音乐的角度看待我的生活。我生活中最大的乐趣来自音乐。每当我觉得我已经走到了路的尽头或在工作中遇到困难的时候。我会沉浸在音乐中,这通常会解决我所有的困难。由此可知,爱因斯坦认为音乐会解决自己的困难,他将自己科学洞察力和直觉主要归功于音乐。故D选项“爱因斯坦还把他的科学洞察力和直觉主要归功于音乐”符合上下文语境,故选D。 4. 根据上文 “The theory of relativity occurred to me my intuition and music is the driving force behind this intuition", said Einstein.”可知爱因斯坦说:“我的直觉产生了相对论,音乐是这一直觉背后的驱动力。”由此可知,本句承接上文说明,爱因斯坦认为自己的新发现是音乐在背后驱动,是音乐感知的结果。故E选项“我的新发现是音乐感知的结果”符合上下文语境,故选E。
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    I have been wondering lately why I should teach my newborn son English. Everyone I know speaks English, but would Peter be better off learning a more sensible, mellifluous(流畅的)language, like maybe Italian? It is, I admit, a stupid question. But stupid questions can contain the seeds of great insights. This particular stupid question leads to the frontier of economic theory, as well as to the intellectual foundation            for the government's antitrust(反垄断)case against Microsoft.

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1.Which of the following examples best illustrates the idea "network" mentioned in the passage?

A.Microsoft limits reasonable competition through its aggressive pricing mechanism.

B.Some scholars speak out against the fundamental economic theory in a journal.

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D.Families sit together to watch the Spring Festival Gala on New Year's Eve.

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B.less governmental intervention is good for society

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D.the market wouldn't operate properly without the "invisible hand"

3.What can we infer from the passage?

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B.The QWERTY keyboard reflects a network failure in business.

C.Convenience gave way to efficiency in the design of the keyboard.

D.Personal preferences may well be determined by how others act.

4.Which of the following can be the best title for this passage?

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Occupational Licenses with the Biggest Bang for Buck

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Radiologic Technologists: Licensing requirements for cosmetologists(美容师)have become so onerous that candidates now need 2,700 hours of training and experience on average. That's not much less than the requirement for becoming a Radiologic or MRI Technologist (3,300 hours), a job which is growing considerably faster than average, is more recession - proof, and pays twice as much ($ 56,162 versus $ 28,608).

Dental Hygienists: Among jobs that require a two-year associate's degree granted by a college or university, some pay substantially more than others. The average state licensing fee for becoming a Dental Hygienist is a hefty $ 1,600, but the pay bump you'll receive will likely make up for it ten times over in the first year.

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A.the job loss for your hesitation to invest

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C.a good return for the money you have spent

D.the great efforts you'd make to change your life.

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B. Drone Pilot; General Contractor; Dental Hygienists

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D. Drone Piolt; Cosmetologist; Radiologic Technologist

 

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    These days, nobody needs to cook. Families graze on high-cholesterol(胆固醇)take-aways and microwaved ready-meals. Cooking is an occasional hobby and a vehicle for celebrity chefs, which makes it odd that the kitchen has become the heart of the modern house. What the great hall was to the medieval castle, the kitchen is to the 21st - century home.

The money spent on kitchens has risen with their status. In America the kitchen market is now worth $ 170 billion, five times the country's film industry. In the year to August 2007, the Swedish furniture chain IKEA sold over one million kitchens worldwide. The average budget for a "major" kitchen overhaul in 2006, calculates Remodeling magazine, was a staggering $ 54,000, even a "minor" improvement cost on average $ 18,000.

Exclusivity, more familiar in the world of high fashion, has reached the kitchen: Robinson & Cornish, a British manufacturer of custom-made-kitchens, offers a Georgian-style one, which would cost 145,000 to 155,000 pounds -- excluding building, plumbing and electrical work. Its big selling point is that nobody else will have it: "You won't see this kitchen anywhere else in the word."

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B.It is where the family entertains important guests.

C.It has become something odd a modern house.

D.It is regarded as the center of a modern home.

2.Why does the Georgian-style kitchen sell at a very high price?

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B.There will be no kitchen exactly the same anywhere.

C.It is manufactured by a famous British company.

D.No other manufacturer can produce anything like it.

3.What was the Beecher sisters' idea of a kitchen?

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B.A place where high technology could be applied.

C.A place of interest to the educated people.

D.A place to experiment with new ideas.

4.What do we learn about today's kitchen?

A.It represents the rapid technological advance in people's daily life.

B.Many of its central features are no different from those of the 1920s.

C.It has been transformed beyond recognition.

D.Many of its functions have changed greatly.

 

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Friendly Laughter

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It's really cool to see how early infants are distinguishing between different forms of laughter," says Adrienne Wood, a psychologist at the University of Virginia, who was not involved in the study. "Almost every ________ moment is a social interaction for babies. Therefore it ________ that they are becoming very much accustomed to their social worlds."

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2.A.universally B.apparently C.fairly D.precisely

3.A.groups B.pairs C.rivals D.partners

4.A.shorter B.longer C.less patiently D.more diligently

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6.A.interacting B.reflecting C.clubbing D.interpreting

7.A.value B.meaning C.information D.friendship

8.A.accounts B.implications C.routes D.hints

9.A.engagement B.frequency C.intensity D.length

10.A.obliged B.involuntary C.encouraged D.internal

11.A.evolved B.heaped C.sprang D.originated

12.A.apart from B.along with C.as against D.ahead of

13.A.available B.crucial C.sensitive D.neutral

14.A.screaming B.kicking C.shifting D.waking

15.A.turns out B.comes true C.rings hollow D.makes sense

 

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Directions: After reading the passage below, fill in the blanks to make the passages coherent and grammatically correct. For the blanks with a given word, fill in each blank with the proper form of the given word; for the other blanks, use one word that best fits each blank.

Voice for the Planet

It's the voice you notice first. In person, David Attenborough speaks in the same awestruck hush he has used in dozens of nature documentaries, a crisp half whisper 1. is often imitated but seldom matched. Sitting in his home in the Richmond neighbourhood of west London for one in a series of conversations, I feel obliged to drink  2. second cup of tea when he offers. It somehow seems wrong to say no.

In his native U. K. Attenborough is held in the kind of respect usually  3. (reserve) for royalty. Over decades - first as a television executive, then as a wildlife filmmaker and recently as a kind of elder statesman for the planet -- he has achieved near saintly(圣人的)status. He was knighted(封为骑士)by the Queen in 1985 and 4. (usually refer) to as Sir David.

Attenborough pioneered a style of wildlife film-making that brought viewers to remote landscapes and gave them a close perspective on the wonders of nature. In the autumn of his life, Attenborough has largely moved away from 5. these films are made but lends his storytelling abilities to wildlife documentaries in collaboration with filmmakers his storytelling abilities to wildlife documentaries in collaboration with filmmakers he has mentored. His most famous work, the 2006 BBC series Planet Earth, set a benchmark in the use of high-definition cameras and had a budget equal to 6. of a Hollywood movie. Among its highlights 7. (be) the first footage of a snow leopard, the impossibly rare Asian wildcat that hunts high in the Himalayas. More than a decade 8. it was first released, Planet Earth remains among the all-time best-selling nonfiction DVDs.

Now Attenborough is putting his voice and the weight of authority he has accumulated to greater moral purpose. In recent months he has stood 9. powerful audiences at the 2018 U. N. climate talks in Katowice, Poland, and the 2019 World Economic Forum at Davos, in Switzerland, to urge them into action on climate change. These kinds of event are not his chosen habitat, Attenborough tells TIME. "I would much prefer not to be a sign- 10. (carry) conservationist. My life is the natural world. But I can't not carry a placard(标语牌)if I see what's happening."

 

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