題目列表(包括答案和解析)
根據(jù)對話內(nèi)容。從對話后的選項(xiàng)中選出能填入空白處的最佳選項(xiàng)。并在答題卡
上將該項(xiàng)涂黑。選項(xiàng)中有兩項(xiàng)為多余選項(xiàng)。
一Hi, Bob.Would you like to go swimming this afternoon?
一I wish I could. 1.I have to write a composition. It must be handed in next Monday morning.
一Oh, is that for Mr.Smith’s class?
一Yes, I hav to study a long peom. 2.
一That’s hard.
一And besides, I also have to prepare myself for math and history. You know, math is especially hard for me. 3.
一Take it easy, Bob. I’ve beendoing well in math. 4.
一Oh, that will be great, Mary.
一All right! 5.
一OK, I’ll meet you in front of the library.
一Good luck to you.
A.We can start right when I’m back from swimming.
B.So I don’t know how I’m going to do it at all.
C.And I can help you with your history.
D.But I have to spend the rest of the day in the library.
E.So I’ll be happy to help you.
F.My teacher asked me to read it in class next week.
G.When will I start to help you with your math?
第二節(jié) 根據(jù)對話內(nèi)容。從對話后的選項(xiàng)中選出能填入空白處的最佳選項(xiàng)。并在答題卡
上將該項(xiàng)涂黑。選項(xiàng)中有兩項(xiàng)為多余選項(xiàng)。
一Hi, Bob.Would you like to go swimming this afternoon?
一I wish I could. 61 I have to write a composition. It must be handed in next Monday morning.
一Oh, is that for Mr.Smith’s class?
一Yes, I hav to study a long peom. 62
一That’s hard.
一And besides, I also have to prepare myself for math and history. You know, math is especially hard for me. 63
一Take it easy, Bob. I’ve beendoing well in math. 64
一Oh, that will be great, Mary.
一All right! 65
一OK, I’ll meet you in front of the library.
一Good luck to you.
A.We can start right when I’m back from swimming.
B.So I don’t know how I’m going to do it at all.
C.And I can help you with your history.
D.But I have to spend the rest of the day in the library.
E.So I’ll be happy to help you.
F.My teacher asked me to read it in class next week.
G.When will I start to help you with your math?
Smart phones that react to your moods and televisions that can tell it’s you who’s watching are in your future as Intel Corporation’s top technology expert sets his sights on context-aware computing.
Chief technology officer Justin Rattner showed how personal devices will one day offer advice. “How can we change the relationship so we think of these devices not as devices but as assistants or even companions?” he asked.
Handheld devices could combine already common geographic location technology with data from microphones, cameras, heart and body monitors and even brain scans to offer their owners advice that today only a friend or relative could give.
“Imagine a device that uses a variety of sensors to determine what you are doing at an instant, from being asleep in your bed to being out for a run with a friend, ” Rattner said, “Future devices will constantly learn about who you are, how you live, work and play.’’
Rattner also demonstrated a television remote control that figures out who is holding it based on how it is held, and then learns the viewer’s entertainment preferences.
As the world leader for decades in microchips for servers and desktop computers, Intel is hurrying to catch up in the profitable market for smart phones like Apple’s iPhone and Research in Motion’s Blackberry.
Telephones with e-mail, global positioning and media players are pointing the way to a future where ever more functions are packed into ever smaller mobile devices.
The smart phone industry, including technology giants like LG and Samsung, is likely to sell 270 million phones this year and grow 25 percent in 2011, according to market research company IDC.
“I think you can expect to see features that support context-aware computing starting to appear in Intel products in the near future,” Rattner said.
But analysts say Intel faces an uphill battle getting its microchips into new phones as Nvidia, Marvell and Qualcomm have already made headway with cheap, lower-power processors based on designs by ARM Holdings.
Rattner recognized that questions about privacy and people’s willingness to be intimate with their computers will have to be settled before the future generation of smart phones he described takes off.
“If you think identity threat is a problem today, imagine when your whole context is readily available on the Net.”, he said.
【小題1】The future smart phones can do all of the following except _______.
A.giving responses to the moods of the owners |
B.giving proposals like assistants or companions |
C.offering advice to their owners’ friends or relatives |
D.telling the phone holders or carriers where they are |
A.iPhone and Blackberry | B.LG and Samsung |
C.Marvell and Qualcomm | D.Nvidia and ARM Holdings |
A.Intel Corporation has become the world leader in the smar tphone market |
B.Intel Corporation has fallen behind in the profitable market for smart phones |
C.more functions packed into mobile phones will make mobile devices larger |
D.the smart phone industry is likely to grow 25 percent in the year of 2011 |
A.Smart phones and Televisions | B.Context-aware Computing |
C.Personalized Televisions | D.Personalized Smart phones |
閱讀下面短文,掌握其大意,從每題所給的A、B、C、D四個(gè)選項(xiàng)中,選出最佳選項(xiàng)。
Nowadays lots of students ask their parents for money to buy things they like. For me, to ask for money is like entering a(n) _36__. I learned this from 37 .
Last year my mother told me that the _ 38 way I would get a driver’s license before I turned eighteen depended on _ 39 I paid for the classes myself. “What?” I asked in _ 40 . But I knew _ 41 that my reasoning would have no_ 42 on the situation, 43__ by the look on my mother’s face.
Three weeks later, I started working _ 44 a hostess at a factory, twice a week. A month later I paid $ 270 for driving lessons, and then over $ 20 to _ 45 my permit test. My pockets were empty _ 46 as soon as they were filled.
My mother thought that I’d be _ 47 to do things without her help. The funny thing was that even though I was totally _ 48 in the beginning, I truly appreciated it, _ 49 if I had just been handed bills from her.
When I realized that my mother wasn’t going to _ 50 something like a driver’s license, at first, it seemed as if she had __51__ an immovable block before me and I would never _ 52 it. But my mother was __53 _. She knew that I wanted a luxury(奢侈品)but _ 54 me to get it. That is as _ 55 as this ---- if I really want it, I’ll find a way to get it myself.
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In 1978, I was 18 and was working as a nurse in a small town about 270 km away from Sydney, Australia. I was looking forward to having five days off from duty. Unfortunately, the only one train a day back to my home in Sydney had already left. So I thought I’d hitch a ride(搭便車).
I waited by the side of the highway for three hours but no one stopped for me. Finally, a man walked over and introduced himself as Gordon. He said that although he couldn’t give me a lift, I should come back to his house for lunch. He noticed me standing for hours in the November heat and thought I must be hungry. I was doubtful as a young girl but he assured(使…放心) me I was safe, and he also offered to help me find a lift home afterwards. When we arrived at his house, he made us sandwiches. After lunch, he helped me find a lift home.
Twenty-five years later, in 2003, while I was driving to a nearby town one day, I saw an elderly man standing in the glaring heat, trying to hitch a ride. I thought it was another chance to repay someone for the favor I’d been given decades earlier. I pulled over and picked him up. I made him comfortable on the back seat and offered him some water.
After a few moments of small talk, the man said to me, “You haven’t changed a bit, even your red hair is still the same.”
I couldn’t remember where I’d met him. He then told me he was the man who had given me lunch and helped me find a lift all those years ago. It was Gordon.
【小題1】The author had to hitch a ride one day in 1978 because __________.
A.her work delayed her trip to Sydney | B.she missed the only train back home |
C.the town was far away from Sydney | D.she was going home for her holidays |
A.He watched the girl for three hours. | B.He gave the girl a ride back home. |
C.He bought sandwiches for the girl. | D.He helped the girl find a ride. |
A.she was going to the nearby town | B.she had known him for decades |
C.she wanted to repay the favor she once got | D.she realized he was Gordon |
A.Those who give rides will be repaid. | B.Giving sometimes produces nice results. |
C.Good manners bring about happiness. | D.People should offer free rides to others. |
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