题目
题型:不详难度:来源:
"Many believe that 2 love is the same as passionate(多情的)love," said lead researcher Bianca P. Acevedo, PhD, then at Stony Brook University (currently at University of California, Santa Barbara). "It isn"t. Romantic love has the intensity, engagement and sexual chemistry that passionate love has, minus the obsessive component(过度成分). Passionate or obsessive love includes 3 of uncertainty and anxiety. This kind of love 4 drive the shorter relationships but not the longer ones."
These findings 5 in the March issue of Review of General Psychology, published by the American Psychological Association.
Acevedo and co-researcher Arthur Aron, PhD, reviewed 25 studies with 6,070 individuals in short- and long-term relationships to 6 whether romantic love is associated with more satisfaction. To determine this, they 7 the relationships in each of the studies as romantic, passionate (romantic with obsession) or friendship-like love and categorized them as long- or short-term.
The researchers looked at 17 short-term relationship studies, which included 18- to 23-year-old college students who were 8 , dating or married, with the average relationship lasting less than four years. They also 9 at 10 long-term relationship studies including middle-aged couples who were typically married 10 years or more. Two of the 10 ncluded both long- and short-term relationships in which it was possible to distinguish the two samples.
The review found that those who reported greater romantic love were more 11 in both the short- and long-term relationships. Companion-like love was only moderately 12 with satisfaction in both short- and long-term relationships. And those who reported greater passionate love in their relationships were more satisfied in the short term 13 to the long term.
Couples who reported more satisfaction in their relationships also 14 being happier and having higher self-esteem.
Feeling that a partner is "there for you" 15 or a good relationship, Acevedo said, and facilitates(促进) feelings of romantic love. On the other hand, "feelings of insecurity are generally associated with 16 satisfaction, and in some 17 may spark conflict in the relationship. This can manifest(表白) into obsessive love," she said.
This discovery may change people"s 18 of what they want in long-term relationships. According to the authors, companionship love, which is what many couples see as the natural 19 of a successful relationship, may be an unnecessary compromise(妥协). "Couples should strive for love with all the trimmings(修剪)," Acevedo said. "And couples who"ve been together a long time and wish to get back their romantic edge should know it is an attainable(可达到的) goal that, like most good things in life, 20 energy and devotion."
( ) 1. A. scholarships B. friendships C. relationships D. companionships
( ) 2. A. obsessive B. romantic C. passionate D. companion
( ) 3. A. feelings B. factors C. consequences D. barriers
( ) 4. A. contributes B. helps C. prevents D. speeds
( ) 5. A. occur B. take C. write D. appear
( ) 6. A. find out B. work out C. take out D. bring out
( ) 7. A. separated B. classified C. divided D. cut
( ) 8. A. alone B. lonely C. single D. unique
( ) 9. A. glanced B. glared C. stared D. looked
( ) 10. A. findings B. examinations C. experiments D. studies
( ) 11. A. unpleased B. disappointed C. satisfied D. desperate
( ) 12. A. referred B. associated C. contended D. conflicted
( ) 13. A. compared B. comparing C. added D. led
( ) 14. A. reported B. said C. believed D. hoped
( ) 15. A. takes B. makes C. means D. depends
( ) 16. A. higher B. lower C. no D. much
( ) 17. A. environments B. states C. air D. cases
( ) 18. A. views B. expectations C. remarks D. statements
( ) 19. A. progression B. change C. results D. choice
( ) 20. A. produces B. satisfies C. requires D. consumes
答案
解析
1. C 浪漫爱情可以持续一生,并且通往更幸福、更健康的关系(friendships),而学问(scholarships),友谊(friendships),伙伴关系(companionships),明显不合适。
2. B “很多人以为浪漫(romantic)之爱和激情之爱是一回事,全文说的主体就是浪漫爱情,而不是过分关心的(obsessive),也不是多情的(passionate),更不是陪伴(companion)。
3. A激情的或者强迫性的爱情包含了不确定和焦虑的感觉(feelings),无论是那种情都是一种情感感觉,而不是因素(factors),结果(consequences),和障碍(barriers)。
4. B这种爱情有助于(helps)驱动的是短期关系而不是长期关系,贡献于(contributes)要和to搭配,阻止(prevent)和加速(speeds)都显得不合适,不能让语意通顺。
5. D这些研究结果刊登(也就是出现appear)在美国心理学会出版的《普通心理学评论》三月号上,而不是发生(occur),拿走(take),写(write)。
6. A 以检验(就是找到结果,也就是find out)浪漫爱情是否与更高的满意度相联系,计算出(work out),拿出(take out),取出(bring out)等等不符合语意逻辑。
7. B为了证实这一点,他们把每项研究中的爱情关系归类(classified)为浪漫的、激情的(浪漫加上强迫成分)和友谊式的,再分为长期和短期关系两类。Separated:分离,divided:分开,cut:剪开,都不能表示这样的意思。
8. C其对象包括18-23岁的单身(就是single)、恋爱中或已婚的大学生,单身是说没有结婚,而不是单独(alone),孤独(lonely),和唯一一个(unique)。
9. D他们还看了(looked)10个对于长期关系的研究,其对象包括结婚10年或更久的中年夫妇。匆匆一看(glanced),瞪眼看(glared),目不转睛地看(stared),这三个词都与at搭配,但是表示的意思都带有感情色彩,也不符合语意。
10. D其中两个研究(studies)同时包括了短期和长期关系,这两组样本是区分开来的。前文用的都是研究,而不是发现(findings),测试(examinations),和实验(experiments)。
11. C那些报告出更多浪漫成分的人都对自己的爱情关系更满意(satisfied),而不是不高兴(unpleased),失望(disappointed),和绝望(desperate)。
12. B 。在短期和长期关系中,伙伴式的爱情都只有中等程度的和满意度相关(associated),涉及(referred),争斗(contended),和冲突(conflicted),显然不合时宜。
13. A而那些报告出较多激情成分的人在短期关系中比(比较和比较的对象之间是被动关系,故用过去分词compared,而不是现在分词comparing)在长期关系中满意度更高。Added(加上)和led(导致),根本就没有比较的意思。
14. A对爱情关系满意度较高的夫妇或恋人同时也报告(reported)出较强的幸福感和较高的自尊。前文用的就是report,而说(said),相信(believed),和希望(hoped)明显不是针对研究,
15. B感觉伴侣“与你同在”有助于(make for )建立良好的爱情关系,take for的意思是把……当做…..,意味着(means)依赖(depends)通常和for不搭配,构不成一定意义上的短语。
16. B不安全感通常伴随着较低的(lower)满意度,而不是较高的(higher),根本没有(no)和很多(much)。
17. D有时(就是有些情况下 in some cases)还会导致爱情中的冲突。Environments往往指的是自然环境,state说的是物体所处的物理状态。Air是空气和气氛,明显不符合逻辑。
18. B这个发现或许会改变人们对长期关系的一般预期(expectations),观点(views)看上去对,但是这儿不强调人们对爱情的认识,而是能在多大程度上让自己满意,这就是期望或预期,更不是评论(remarks)和陈述(statements)。
19. A研究者称,虽然伙伴式的爱情在很多夫妇看来是成功爱情关系的自然发展()阶段,但它实际上可能是一种不必要的妥协。改变(change),结果(results),选择(choice)不能表达这样的意思。
20. C ,它需要(requires)投入精力才能达成。生产(produces),满足(satisfies),消耗(consumes)不能表达这样的意思。
核心考点
试题【Romance does not have to fizzle out(失败) in long-term relationships and progress 】;主要考察你对题材分类等知识点的理解。[详细]
举一反三
It was a rare — indeed unique — occasion when I was able to put Ritchie right. A 19th-century inventor, William Henry James Grout, did in fact design a folding wheel. His bike, predictably named the Grout Portable, had a frame that split into two and a larger wheel that could be separated into four pieces. All the bits fitted into Grout’s Wonderful Bag, a leather case.
Grout’s aim: to solve the problems of carrying a bike on a train. Now doesn’t that sound familiar? Grout intended to find a way of making a bike small enough for train travel: his bike was a huge beast. And importantly, the design of early bicycles gave him an advantage: in Grout’s day, tyres were solid, which made the business of splitting a wheel into four separate parts relatively simple. You couldn’t do the same with a wheel fitted with a one-piece inflated (充气的) tyre.
So, in a 21st-century context, is the idea of the folding wheel dead? It is not. A British design engineer, Duncan Fitzsimons, has developed a wheel that can be squashed into something like a slender ellipse (椭圆). Throughout, the tyre remains inflated.
Will the young Fitzsimons’s folding wheel make it into production? I haven’t the foggiest idea. But his inventiveness shows two things. First, people have been saying for more than a century that bike design has reached its limit, except for gradual advances. It’s as silly a concept now as it was 100 years ago: there’s plenty still to go for. Second, it is in the field of folding bikes that we are seeing the most interesting inventions. You can buy a folding bike for less than £1,000 that can be knocked down so small that it can be carried on a plane — minus wheels, of course — as hand baggage.
Folding wheels would make all manner of things possible. Have we yet got the magic carpet of Andrew Ritchie’s imagination? No. But it’s progress.
小题1:We can infer from Paragraph 1 that the Brompton folding bike .
A.was portable |
B.had a folding wheel |
C.could be put in a pocket |
D.looked like a magic carpet |
A.were difficult to separate |
B.could be split into 6 pieces |
C.were fitted with solid tyres |
D.were hard to carry on a train |
A.kept the tyre as a whole piece |
B.was made into production soon |
C.left little room for improvement |
D.changed our views on bag design |
A.Three folding bike inventors |
B.The making of a folding bike |
C.Progress in folding bike design |
D.Ways of separating a bike wheel |
Did your mother ever tell you to eat your carrots because they are good for your eyes? Scientists now report that eating carrots can help prevent a serious eye disease called macular degeneration Eating just one carrot a day can reduce the possibility of getting this disease by 40%. Garlic(蒜)is good for you, too。It can kill the type of virus that causes colds.
Unfortunately, not all of Mom’s advice passed the test of medical studies. For example, generations of children have been told not to go swimming within an hour after eating. But research suggests that there is no danger in doing so. Do sweets cause tooth problems? Well, yes and no. sticky sweets made with grains tend to cause more problems than sweets made with simple sugars.
Even though science can tell us that some of our traditional beliefs don’t hold water, there is still a lot of truth in the old wives’ tales, After all, much of this knowledge has been accumulated (积累) from thousands of our traditional beliefs don’t hold water should respect this body of knowledge even as research for clear scientific support to proven it true or false
小题1:Which of the following is TRUE according to the text?
A.Eating garlic is good for our eyes |
B.Sticky sweets are damaging to our teeth |
C.Swimming after a meal is dangerous。 |
D.Carrots prevent people from catching colds |
A.by cause and effects | B.by order in space |
C.by order in time | D.by examples |
A.to be believable | B.to be valuable | C.to be admirable | D.to be smtable |
A.So objective | B.Objective | C.Dissatisfied | D.Curious |
Most people believe they don’t have much imagination. They are 50 .Everyone has imagination, but most of us, once we become adults, forget how to 51 it. Creativity isn’t always 52 with great works of art or ideas. People at work and in their free time 53 think of creative ways to solve problems. Maybe you have a goal to achieve, a tricky question to answer or you just want to expand your mind! Here are three techniques to help you.
Making connections This technique involves taking 54 ideas and trying to find links between them. First, think about the problem you have to solve or the job you need to do. Then find an image, word, idea or object, for example, a candle. Write down all the idea/words 55 with candles: light, fire, matches, wax, night, silence, etc. Think of as many as you can. The next stage is to relate the 56 to the job you have to do. So imagine you want to buy a friend an original 57 ; you could buy him tickets to match or take him out for the night.
NO limits! Imagine that normal limitations don’t 58 . You have as much time/space/money, etc. as you want. Think about your goal and the new 59 .If your goal is to learn to ski, 60 , you can now practise skiing every day of your life (because you have the time and the money). Now 61 this to reality. Maybe you can practise skiing ever day in December, or every Monday in January.
Be someone else! Look at the situation from a 62 point of view. Good businessmen use this technique in trade, and so do writes. Fiction writers often imagine they are the 63 in their books. They ask question: What does this character want? Why can’t she get it? What changes must she make to get what she wants? If your goal involves other people, put yourself in their 64 . The best fishermen think like fish!
小题1: |
|
小题2: |
|
小题3: |
|
小题4: |
|
小题5: |
|
小题6: |
|
小题7: |
|
小题8: |
|
小题9: |
|
小题10: |
|
小题11: |
|
小题12: |
|
小题13: |
|
小题14: |
|
小题15: |
|
In 1879, a group of explorers made an incredible find. They discovered paintings of remarkable beauty on the walls of a cave in Spain. Some scientists believed that these paintings were created by early humans from the Stone Age, between ten and thirty thousand years ago. Other scientists and the public did not believe the claim, but over the years, it was proven correct. Our ancestors had incredible artistic talents.
Most of the cave art that has been discovered has been found in Spain and France. A smaller number of such caves are located in Italy, Portugal, Russia, and other countries. Scientists believe that many more caves will be discovered in the coming years, and are concentrating their efforts on Africa and the area between Europe and Asia. These two regions of the world were, populated first by humans.
Cave art was carved or painted on the walls and roofs of caves, usually near the entrance. The entrance area was probably chosen to take advantage of daylight and to allow many people to view the paintings. In some cases, the art appears much deeper in caves and requires artificial light. Evidence suggests that the artists used torches or shallow bowls in which animal fat was burned.
9.What was the response of general public to the discovery of cave art made by Stone Age people?
A. They believed it at first.
B. They did not believe it.
C. They thought it was beautiful.
D. They ignored it.
10.According to the passage, what can we conclude about animal fat?
A. It does not burn.
B. Stone Age artists used it to preserve their paintings.
C. It can be burned to produce light.
D. Stone Age artists mixed it with their food.
11.. Where do scientists expect to find more cave paintings?
A. In Central and South America.
B. In Spain and France.
C. In the places where there are caves with large openings.
D. In the regions of the world first populated by humans.
12.Where would this passage be most likely to appear?
A. In a textbook about early human history.
B. In a textbook about modern art.
C. In a dictionary.
D. In an encyclopedia entry about caves.
36. A. humorous B. private C. reasonable D. valuable
37. A. followed B. gave C. set D. took
38. A. ordered B. booked C. offered D. bought
39. A. hesitation B. doubt C. permission D. difficulty
40. A. other B. last C. extra D. rest
41. A. again B. already C. only D. also
42. A. nothing B. everything C. anything D. something
43. A. finding B. accepting C. looking for D. pointing at
44. A. behind B. beyond C. ahead of D. next to
45. A. much B. some C. any D. enough
46. A. far B. 1ong C. short D. high
47. A. and B. but C. SO D. while
48. A. 1itres B. kilograms C. pounds D. kilometers
49. A. $15 B. $20 C. $25 D. $30
50. A. until B. as C. although D. unless
51. A. what B. which C. whatever D. whichever
52. A. excited B. surprised C. interested D. encouraged
53. A. easier B. better C. faster D. worse
54. A. comer B. way C. ground D. carpet
55. A. there B. here C. out D. around
最新试题
- 1有一组物质:①NaOH、②H2O、③MgBr2 、④CO2、⑤H2、⑥N2、⑦Na2O2、 ⑧H2O2、⑨NH4Cl、⑩
- 2(1)我们知道有多种途径可以获得氧气.如:A.电解水 B.分离液态空气 C.加热高锰酸钾 D.分解过氧化氢E
- 3如图所示:红色面包霉(一种真菌)通过一系列酶将原料合成它所需要的氨基酸。据图分析,以下叙述正确的是 [ ]A.若
- 4设是第二象限的角,P(x,4)为其终边上的一点,且cosα= ,则=( )A.B.C.D.
- 5下列句子中,没有语病的一句是( ) A.目前,市场上有转基因食品如大豆油、油菜籽油及调和油等均已作了标志,今后,农业部
- 6社会主义建设新时期,把党中央多年酝酿的和平统一祖国的构想概括为“一国两制”的领导人是 [ ]A.毛泽东B.周恩来
- 7温家宝总理在十届全国人大三次会议上所作的政府工作报告中指出:从2010年起,免除国家扶贫开发重点县农村义务教育阶段贫困家
- 8十一届三中全会拉开了我国改革开放的序幕。在我国改革开放中,首先进行改革的是[ ]A.国有企业B.机关C.学校D.
- 9用录音机把自己朗读或唱歌的声音录下来后,再播放出来.其他人听没有什么意外,自己听总感到有些别扭,觉得不象自己的声音,其主
- 10下图是武汉地区城市发展图,读图回答下列问题。小题1:根据图中信息,不能直接得出的结论是A.城市等级体系不断完善B.城市规
热门考点
- 1直线被圆截得的弦长等于 ( )A.B.C.2D.
- 2若函数,当时,,若在区间内恰有一个零点,则实数的取值范围是( )A.B.C.D.
- 3阅读下面三则材料,针对“历史教学”问题说说你的发现以及由此得到的启示。(4分)材料一:初中阶段,中国的历史课被纳入“副课
- 4下列实验方法无法达到实验目的的是( )A.用肥皂水鉴别硬水和软水B.用适量氯化钙溶液除去氢氧化钠中混有的少量碳酸钠C
- 5一个人如果在与他人相处中常以自己之长去比别人之短,这就容易导致[ ]A.过于自信,滋长骄傲自满的心理B.过于自尊
- 6The use of the word imitation(模仿) reminds me that we ought t
- 7 下面是2010年上海世博会志愿者标志,(英文“Volunteer”的意思是“志愿者”)请解读该标志的寓意。(找出3点
- 8董仲舒的“天人感应”学说继承了儒家的“仁政”思想,这主要表现在 [ ]A.主张“民为贵,社稷次之,君为轻。”
- 9人们常常把工作、学习中所取得重大突破称之为“发现了新大陆”,在新航路开辟的过程中,哥伦布发现的“新大陆”就是今天的A.印
- 10探究“压力作用效果与哪些因素有关”的操作过程如图所示。(1)比较图甲和图乙,可以得出__________________