更多"41)__________. In today’s pro"的相关试题:
[填空题]
41)__________. In today’s prosperous societies the distinction has become blurred because so many wants have been turned into needs. A writer, for instance, can work with paper and pencils. These are legitimate needs for the task. But the work can be done more quickly and efficiently with a word processor. Thus a computer is soon viewed as a need rather than a want.
42) __________. The two main categories are convenience goods and shopping goods. Two lesser types are specialty goods and unsought goods. It must be emphasized that all of these types are based on the way shoppers think about products, not on the nature of the products themselves. What is regarded as a convenience item in France(wine, for example)may be a specialty goods in the United States.
People do not spend a great deal of time shopping for such convenience items as groceries, newspapers, toothpaste, razor blades, aspirin, and candy. The buying of convenience goods may be done routinely, as
[简答题]Reading Passage 1
Title:
Classifying Societies
Question types:
TRUE/FALSE/NOT GIVEN (7);
问答(no more than two words);
填空;
文章内容回顾
人类(部落)社会的发展阶段,从band到tribe到chief到early state。问答有grouped together, 20000 people。填空有agricultural workers, foodstuffs。
题型难度分析
难度偏低,且都是有顺序的题目,降低了做题难度。
题型技巧分析
是非无判断题:
解题思路:
1. 关键词定位到原文中与题目出现重复的段落
2. 判断方式不包含任何逻辑推理
TRUE: 是原文中同义近义改写
FALSE: 对于原文信息的直接改写
NOT GIVEN: 原文没有信息,或通过原文信息不能直接推理出来
3. 书写应该规范,大写全拼
[简答题]A life-style that apparently exists in all societies is marriage--a socially sanctioned union between a woman and a man with expectation that they will play the roles of wife and husband. After studying extensive cross-cultural data, the anthropologist George P. Murdock concluded that reproduction, sexual relations, economic cooperation, and the socialization of offspring are functions of families throughout the world. We now recognize that Murdock overstated the matter, since there are a number of societies--for instance, Israeli kibbutz communities--in which the family does not encompass all four o[ these activities. What Murdock describes are commonly encountered tendencies in family functioning in most cultures.
Societies differ in how they structure marriage relationships. Four patterns are found: monogamy, one husband and one wife are found; polygyny, one husband and two or more wives; polyandry, two or more husbands and one wife; and group marriage, two or more husbands and
[填空题]To be sure, some insects can build complex societies______(由不同类别的昆虫所组成)performing different tasks.
[填空题]
41)__________. In today’s prosperous societies the distinction
has become blurred because so many wants have been turned into needs. A writer,
for instance, can work with paper and pencils. These are legitimate needs for
the task. But the work can be done more quickly and efficiently with a word
processor. Thus a computer is soon viewed as a need rather than a
want.
42) __________. The two main categories are convenience
goods and shopping goods. Two lesser types are specialty goods and unsought
goods. It must be emphasized that all of these types are based on the way
shoppers think about products, not on the nature of the products themselves.
What is regarded as a convenience item in France(wine, for example)may be a
specialty goods in the United States.
People do not spend a
great deal of time shopping for such convenience items as groceries, newspapers,
toothpaste, razor blades, aspirin, and candy. The buying of convenience goods
may be
[简答题] Prosperous alumni helped make 2006 a recorded fund-raising year for colleges and universities, which hauled in $ 28 billion—a 9.4 percent jump from 2005.
[单项选择]1 The youngest child of a prosperous Midwestern manufacturing family, Dorothy Reed was born in 1874 and educated at home by her grandmother. She graduated from Smith College and in 1896 entered Johns Hopkins Medical School. After receiving her M.D. degree, she worked at Johns Hopkins in the laboratories of two noted medical scientists. Reed’s research in pathology established conclusively that Hodgkin’s disease, until then thought to be a form of tuberculosis, was a distinct disorder characterized by a specific blood cell, which was named the Reed cell after her.
2 In 1906, her marriage to Charles Mendenhall took Reed away from the research laboratory. For ten years, she remained at home as the mother of young children before returning to professional life. She became a lecturer in Home Economics at the University of Wisconsin, where her principal concerns were collecting data about maternal and child health and preparing courses for new mothers.
3 Doro
A. Manufacturing
B. Pathology
C. Tuberculosis
D. Maternal health