更多"The baby monkey ______to its mother"的相关试题:
[单项选择]The baby monkey ______to its mother all day.
A. held
B. grasped
C. stuck
D. clung
[单项选择]A tiny baby soon learns to __________ its mother’s face from other adults’ faces.
A. select
B. make
C. differ
D. distinguish
[单项选择]The baby monkey is much more developed at birth than the human baby. Almost from the moment it is born, the baby monkey can move around and hold tightly to its mother. During the first few days of its life the baby will approach and hold onto almost any large, warm, and soft object in its environment, particularly if that object also gives it milk. After a week or so, however, the baby monkey begins to avoid newcomers and focuses its attentions on “mother”—the real mother or the mother-substitute (母亲替代物).
During the first two weeks of its life warmth is perhaps the most important psychological thing that a monkey mother has to give to its baby. The Harlows, a couple who are both psychologists, discovered this fact by offering baby monkeys a choice of two types of mother-substitutes—one covered with cloth and one made of bare wire. If the two artificial mothers were both the same temperature, the little monkeys always preferred the cloth mother. However, if the wire model was hea
A. Warmth
B. Milk
C. Contact
D. Trust
[填空题]
Not too many years
ago my mother jogged in the alley behind our house because she was embarrassed
to see jogging
in public.
- A. Not too many
- B. ago
- C. to see
- D. in public
[单项选择]Passage OneWhat will a baby do if her mother does something she likes
A. She will clap.
B. She will blink.
C. She will smile.
D. She will imitate her mother.
[填空题]The mother put her coat over the baby for fear that ____________________ (他会感冒).
[单项选择]
Everyone wants the best for a baby. A mother wants her baby to have the best in the ways of food, toys, clothing and equipment. Her value judgments on prices may go wrong when it comes to buying for a baby, particularly the first one. Factory producers and advertisers recognize this, and exploit it to the full. Far more is spent in buying push-chairs, special milk, and special powders for small babies than is necessary.
The child himself watches television, a particularly strong influence on small children. Looking at them as they watch television, and then watching them react to products afterwards, suggests that young children accept the television advertisements as well as the guidance offered by children’s pro- grams, and find both equally attractive. The child comes early in life to the feeling widespread in this country that if something is said on television it must be true.
For this reason much Christmas-gift advertising, and advertising for sweets,
A. TV services
B. baby powders
C. repeated demands
D. children’s programs