公共英语五级-31(无听力原文)及答案解析.doc
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1、公共英语五级-31(无听力原文)及答案解析(总分:100.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、Part (总题数:0,分数:0.00)二、Talk 1(总题数:1,分数:16.00)(分数:16.00)(1).Answer the following questions by circling TRUE or FALSE. In business, you can see your performance clearly.(分数:2.00)A.正确B.错误(2).Playing sports will help build confidence, both male and female.(分数:
2、2.00)A.正确B.错误(3).She suggested women practice their skills when they are not in the paid work force.(分数:2.00)A.正确B.错误(4).Kanter currently teaches sociology to graduate students.(分数:2.00)A.正确B.错误(5).Answer the following questions by using NO MORE THAN four words. What is her comment on her women stud
3、ents?(分数:2.00)_(6).What is the reason for women“s less willingness to talk?(分数:2.00)_(7).How did she define confidence?(分数:2.00)_(8).What is the aim of her book?(分数:2.00)_三、Talk 2(总题数:1,分数:16.00)(分数:16.00)(1).Answer the following questions by circling TRUE or FALSE. Doctorow thinks Edgar Ellen Poe i
4、s a bad writer.(分数:2.00)A.正确B.错误(2).He regards the Civil War as a sin.(分数:2.00)A.正确B.错误(3).In transforming identities, there is no other event comparable with the Civil War.(分数:2.00)A.正确B.错误(4).Black people recognized their identity from land during the War.(分数:2.00)A.正确B.错误(5).Writers dealing with
5、actual events should have serious responsibility.(分数:2.00)A.正确B.错误(6).In his opinion, President Bush doesn“t make the effort to understand death.(分数:2.00)A.正确B.错误(7).Choose the best answer. What is his relationship with other novelists like?(分数:2.00)A.He feels an affinity with them.B.They work indep
6、endently.C.They don“t learn from each other.D.Their relation is characterized by competition.(8).How does he think of the question of writing at his mid-1970s?(分数:2.00)A.He thinks he still has the talent.B.He considers the question immature.C.He believes he can be successful.D.He likes to write abou
7、t society.四、Talk 3(总题数:1,分数:18.00)(分数:18.00)(1).Answer the following questions by circling TRUE or FALSE. Kate disapproves the nurse with multiple ear piercing because elderly patients don“t like them.(分数:3.00)A.正确B.错误(2).Kate believes that the nurse uniforms should convey intimacy to patients to he
8、lp them relax.(分数:3.00)A.正确B.错误(3).Before 1960s, nursing uniforms were characterized by frills, buckles and aprons.(分数:3.00)A.正确B.错误(4).Today nurses have to stick to strict dress code of hats, collars and belts.(分数:3.00)A.正确B.错误(5).Wearing uniforms outside the hospital can give confidence to people
9、in need and help improve the care.(分数:3.00)A.正确B.错误(6).While working in the hospital, nurses cannot have individualized dress.(分数:3.00)A.正确B.错误五、Passage(总题数:1,分数:18.00)What is Love?Valentine“s Daythoughts turn to, or are supposed to turn to “love“ but what is it, does it actually exist, and can soci
10、al science help? There“s a seemingly endless list of descriptions and definitions of love from Shakespeare“s “as a fever, longing still“ to Erich Segal“s hopelessly unpragmatic “never having to say you“re sorry“. Traditionally, love has been considered so complex and mysterious that the whole breath
11、less, smouldering, messy business was left to writers, fifties croonersand the occasional Irish boy band. But, not any more. These days, psychologists are keen to nail down that which was once left to the poets, and lay bear what love is, how it works and why it exists in the first place. In his rec
12、ent book, Love Sick, clinical psychologist Frank Tallis gives credence to popular term “madly in love“ by setting out the similarities between falling in love and being mentally ill. Love, he argues, is characterised by mania (heightened emotions, inflated self-esteem and extravagant present giving)
13、, depression (tearfulness and loss of concentration) and extreme mood swings (on a high when beloved calls and in the depths when beloved doesn“t). Given the manic depressive symptoms, you wonder why we chase love rather than run screaming in the opposite direction. Love as mental illness is all ver
14、y intriguing. But it comes wrapped Jn an unsettling suggestion. Tallis and others have proposed that love might eventually be treatedwith a course of cognitive behaviour therapyas if it were a sickness. More evidence that we live in a society where pills cushion us against all life“s ups and downs?
15、It all seems a very long way from love as the poets saw it. Tallis, to be fair, insists that he accepts love as part of the human condition. His point is that for some people the effects of love are extremely debilitating. He claims to have patients who present with depression or anxiety only to dis
16、cover they are suffering for love. While Tallis deals with the symptoms of the “loved up“ but confused who pass through his consulting room, neuro-psychologypsychology“s cutting edgeis busy investigating the brain processes that underpin their behaviour. So what has neuropsychology discovered about
17、that thing popular culture claims drives you insane, tends to be blind and can leave you as enslaved as a coke addict? Well, it“s discovered that all these claims for love arein neurological termspretty accurate. In 2000, psychology professor Semir Zeki and his colleague Dr Andreas Bartels of Univer
18、sity College London used Magnetic Resonance Imaging to scan the brains of 11 female and six male students, who claimed to be “truly, madly and deeply“ in love. When the students were shown photographs of their lovers and friends, Zeki and Bartels discovered that very different areas of the cortex li
19、t up. The researchers were surprised to discover that the “romantic love“ brain areas were small compared to those activated by ordinary friendship, remarking in their eventual research paper that it was “fascinating to reflect that the face that launched a thousand ships should have done so through
20、 such a limited expanse of cortex“. The second surprise was that the cortical romance zones did not overlap with areas associated with other emotional states such as anger and fear. Instead, the areas for romance were similar to those associated with addiction. As it turns out, the brain activation
21、patterns of the madly-in-love look ever so similar to those of people under the influence of cocaine. So human beings might as well face it, they can indeed be addicted to love. That may soften criticism of Tallis“s talk of treatment. So love really is blind and irrational, or mad. When we are in it
22、s thrall, we are as enslaved as drug addicts and robbed of our ability to make sound judgments about the object of our affections. That explains why our friends can all see that the person we adore is shifty or deadly dull while we are entirely oblivious. Romantic love, of course, has a shelf life.
23、By comparing the NGF (nerve growth factor) levels of the madly in love with those of established couples and singletons, the researchers concluded that romantic love dies within a year. That“s roughly the time it takes to realise that your beloved will never master screwing the top back on the tooth
24、paste. We may be shedding new light on how love works, but the questions remains as to why it exists at all. Anthropologist Dr Helen Fisher of Rutgers University, in New Jersey, suggests that love comes in three formssexual lust, romantic love and long-term attachment. In Why We Love: The Nature and
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- 公共英语 31 听力 原文 答案 解析 DOC
