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You look great in this dress!()
A . You can't wear it.
B . It's not very expensive
C . Thank you.
D . You are welcome.
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What a beautiful house! Especially there are many()
A . furniture
B . furnitures
C . pieces of furniture
D . pieces of furniture
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What do you think of my new dress?()
A . It's on sale
B . It's a birthday present for you
C . You really need one
D . It looks very good on you
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-That’s a beautiful dress you have on! -()
A . Oh,thanks.I got it yesterday
B . Sorry,it’s too cheap
C . You can have it
D . See you later
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A person has suffered a laceration of the arm. Severe bleeding has been controlled by using a sterile dressing and direct pressure. What should you do next? ()
A . Apply a tourniquet to prevent the bleeding from restarting
B . Apply a pressure bandage over the dressing
C . Remove any small foreign matter and apply antiseptic
D . Administer fluids to assist the body in replacing the lost blood.
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What a ________ Chinese ________ here with those red lanterns ________ and those beautiful pictures on the wall!
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To attend a formal party, how will you dress yourself? (5.0分)
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What can you see from the way Elisa, the protagonist, is dressed?
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You know what a brand is , what it , what it’s going to .
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To attend a formal party, how will you dress yourself?
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When a beautiful woman suggests her love to you with her eyes, she _________.
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What is the No.1 rule a lady must keep in mind when dressing for an office party?
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听力原文:M: What a beautiful day today! Life lies in motion, so let's go play tennis together, shall we?
W: It has been the last thing I will do since the ball hit me last time.
Q: What does the woman mean?
(18)
A.She won't go to play tennis.
B.She can't play tennis.
C.She doesn't like doing sports.
D.She is not good at playing tennis.
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—That's a beautiful dress you have on —()
—That&39;s a beautiful dress you have on —()
A.Oh,thanks.I got it yesterday.
B.Sorry,it's too cheap.
C.You can have it.
D.See you later.
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—What do you think of the songs?—In fact ______of them sounds beautiful.
A.not all
B.no one
C.not everyone
D.not every one
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a typical western girl's response to the compliment "you look beautiful in this blue dress." would be "_________".
A、No, no. This is just an ordinary dress. I got it really cheap.
B、You are just flattering me to cheer me up.
C、Really? Well, perhaps I look more beautiful in red.
D、Thank you. I believe I look good in blue.
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- That's a beautiful dress you have on!- __________.
A.A.Oh,thanks. I got it yesterday
B.B.Sorry,it's too cheap
C.C.Hey you can have it
D.D.See you later
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听力原文:M: Fiona, I need your advice, I want to buy a dress for my wife as a birthday gift, and can you tell me where I can get one at a reasonable price?
W: Sure, go to Jane's. It has the latest styles and gives a 20% discount to husbands who shop alone.
Q: What do we know about Jane's shop?
(13)
A.It gives a 20% discount to all customers.
B.It is run by Fiona's friend,
C.It hires Fiona as an adviser.
D.It encourages husbands to shop on their own.
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most girls like ____(dress) up to make themshelves more beautiful
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______the window,you can get a beautiful scene of the garden.
A.Looking at
B.Looking after
C.Looking through
D.Looking into
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Ladkin is a proponent of what she calls aesthetic leadership, or “leading beautifully.”
A.advocate
B.adversary
C.administrator
D.adventurer
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An article in Scientific America has pointed out that empirical research says that, actually, you think you’re more beautiful than you are. We have a deep-seated need to feel good about ourselves and we naturally employ a number of self-enhancing strategies to research into what the call the “above average effect”, or “illusory superiority”, and shown that, for example, 70% of us rate ourselves as above average in leadership, 93% in driving and 85% at getting on well with others—all obviously statistical impossibilities.
We rose tint our memories and put ourselves into self-affirming situations. We become defensive when criticized, and apply negative stereotypes to others to boost our own esteem, we stalk around thinking we’re hot stuff.
Psychologist and behavioral scientist Nicholas Epley oversaw a key studying into self-enhancement and attractiveness. Rather that have people simply rate their beauty compress with others, he asked them to identify an original photogragh of themselves’ from a lineup including versions that had been altered to appear more and less attractive. Visual recognition, reads the study, is “an automatic psychological process occurring rapidly and intuitively with little or no apparent conscious deliberation”. If the subjects quickly chose a falsely flattering image- which must did- they genuinely believed it was really how they looked. Epley found no significant gender difference in responses. Nor was there any evidence that, those who self-enhance the must (that is, the participants who thought the most positively doctored picture were real) were doing so to make up for profound insecurities. In fact those who thought that the images higher up the attractiveness scale were real directly corresponded with those who showed other makers for having higher self-esteem. “I don’t think the findings that we having have are any evidence of personal delusion”, says Epley. “It’s a reflection simply of people generally thinking well of themselves’. If you are depressed, you won’t be self-enhancing. Knowing the results of Epley ‘s study,it makes sense that why people heat photographs of themselves Viscerally-on one level, they don’t even recognise the person in the picture as themselves, Facebook therefore ,is a self-enhancer’s paradise,where people can share only the most flattering photos, the cream of their wit ,style. ,beauty, intellect and lifestyle. it’s not that people’s profiles are dishonest,says catalina toma of Wiscon—Madison university ,”but they portray an idealized version of themselves.
According to the first paragraph, social psychologist have found that ______ .
A.our self-ratings are unrealistically high
B.illusory superiority is baseless effect
C.our need for leadership is unnatural
D.self-enhancing strategies are ineffective
Visual recognition is believed to be people’s______ .A.rapid watching
B.conscious choice
C.intuitive response
D.automatic self-defence
Epley found that people with higher self-esteem tended to______ .A.underestimate their insecurities
B.believe in their attractiveness
C.cover up their depressions
D.oversimplify their illusions
The word “Viscerally”(Line 2,para.5) is closest in meaning to_____.A.instinctively
B.occasionally
C.particularly
D.aggressively
It can be inferred that Facebook is self-enhancer’s paradise because people can _____.A.present their dishonest profiles
B.define their traditional life styles
C.share their intellectual pursuits
D.withhold their unflattering sides
请帮忙给出每个问题的正确答案和分析,谢谢!
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— What can I do for you?
— _______
A I'd like to buy a dress.B Nice to meet you, too!C Best wishes.D Glad to see you again.
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Imagine that the world consists of 20 men and 20 women, all of them heterosexual and in search of a mate.Since the numbers are even, everyone can find a partner.But what happens if you take away one man? You might not think this would make much difference.You would be wrong,argues Tim Harford,a British economist, in a book called The Logic of Life. With 20 women pursuing 19 men, one woman faces the prospect of spinsterhood. So she ups her game. Perhaps she dresses more seductively. Perhaps she makes an extra effort to be obliging. Somehow or other, she “steals” a man from one of her fellow women. That newly single woman then ups her game, too, to steal a man from someone else. A chain reaction ensues.
Real life is more complicated, of course, but this simple model illustrates an important truth.In the marriage market, numbers matter.And among African-Americans,the difference is much worse than in Mr.Harford's imaginary example.Between the ages of 20 and 29, one black man in nine is behind bars.For black women of the same age, the figure is about one in 150.For obvious reasons, convicts are excluded from the dating pool.
Removing so many men from the marriage market has profound consequences.As imprisonment rates exploded between 1970 and 2007, the proportion of U.S.-born black women aged 30-44 who were married plunged from 62%to 33%.Why this happened is complex and furiously debated.The era of mass imprisonment began as traditional mores were already crumbling, following the sexual revolution of the 1960s and the invention of the contraceptive pill.① It also coincided with greater opportunities for women in the workplace. These factors must surely have had something to do with the decline of marriage.
But jail is a big part of the problem, argue Kerwin Kofi Charles, now at the University of Chicago. They divided America up into geographical and racial “marriage markets”, to take account of the fact that most people marry someone of the same race who lives relatively close to them.② Then, after crunching the census numbers, they found that a one percentage point increase in the male imprisonment rate was associated with a 2.4-point reduction in the proportion of women, who ever marry.③ Could it be, however, that mass imprisonment is a symptom of increasing social malfunction, and that it was this social malfunction that caused marriage to wither?④ Probably not. For similar crimes, America imposes much harsher penalties than other rich countries.Mr. Charles and Mr. Luoh controlled for crime rates, as a substitution for social malfunction, and found that it made no difference to their results. They concluded that “higher male imprisonment has lowered the likelihood that women marry...and caused a shift in the gains from marriage away from women and towards men.”
阅读以上文章,回答 87~91 题
第 87 题 The word “ensues” in Paragraph 1 probably means __________.{Page}
[A] to result in something
[B] to happen after something
[C] to be welcome
[D] to be interrupted temporarily