All the dishes in this menu, if otherwise______, will serve two to three people.
A.listed | B.listing | C.they listed | D.being listed |
高二英语单项填空困难题
All the dishes in this menu, if otherwise______, will serve two to three people.
A.listed | B.listing | C.they listed | D.being listed |
高二英语单项填空困难题查看答案及解析
All the dishes in this menu, _____ stated otherwise, will serve two to three people.
A.as B.if C.unless D.though
高二英语单项填空简单题查看答案及解析
All the dishes in this menu, unless ____ stated, will serve two to three people.
A.aside | B.otherwise | C.meantime | D.or |
高二英语单项填空中等难度题查看答案及解析
All the photographs in this book, stated otherwise, date from the 1950s.
A.unless B.until C.once D.if
高二英语单项填空困难题查看答案及解析
If you make every effort, your dream will ____, and this ____ all the people.
A. be come true; is true to B. come true; is true of
C. realize; is true for D. be realized; is true to
高二英语单项填空中等难度题查看答案及解析
All the guests disliked the salted fish. They this dish .
A. left; untouched B. left; on the table
C. took; as bad D. kept; covered
高二英语单项填空中等难度题查看答案及解析
Catch yourself daydreaming while washing the dishes again? If this happens often you probably have a pretty capable working memory and a sharper brain, new research suggests.
This mind wandering, it seems, actually gives your working memory a workout. Working memory is the mental work space that allows the brain to juggle multiple thoughts at the same time. The more working memory a person has, the more daydreaming they can do without forgetting the task at hand.
Researchers studied groups of people from the University of Wisconsin-Madison community, ranging in age from 18 to 65. The volunteers were asked to perform simple tasks, like pressing a button every time they took a breath or clicking in response to a letter popping up on a computer screen; these tasks were so easy that their minds were likely to wander, the researchers figured.
The researchers checked in periodically, asking the participants if their minds were on task or wandering. When the task was over, they measured each participant's working memory capacity by having them remember letters while doing math questions. Though all participants performed well on the task, the researchers noticed that the individuals who indicated their minds had wandered more than others also scored higher on the working memory test.
“What this study seems to suggest is that, when circumstances for the task aren't very difficult, people who have additional working memory resources allocate them to think about things other than what they're doing,” said Jonathan Smallwood, a study researcher of the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Science.
When our minds run out of working memory, these off-topic thoughts can take the main stage without us consciously meaning them to; for instance, arriving at home with no memory of the actual trip, or suddenly realizing that they've turned several pages in a book without understanding any of the words.
“It's almost like your attention was so absorbed in the mind wandering that there wasn't any left over to remember your goal to read,” study researcher Daniel Levinson, said in a statement. People with overall higher working memory were better able to stay focused when the task at hand required it. Those who had low working memory often had their thoughts drift away from the task, and did less well at it.
The findings add to past research suggesting these mind drifts can be positive moments. For instance, daydreaming has often been associated with creativity—researchers think that our most creative and inventive moments come when daydreaming. It's likely that the most intelligent among us also have high levels of working memory, Levinson noted.
1. The word “juggle” in the second paragraph can be replaced by “________”.
A. search B. understand C. handle D. foresee
2.What can be concluded from Jonathan Smallwood's words?
A. Absorbed in the mind wandering, your attention left no space for your goal.
B. On the working memory test, people with wandering minds will get high score.
C. Dealing with some easy jobs, people with higher working memory will daydream.
D. People who often have daydreams probably own a pretty capable working memory.
3. What is the best title of the passage?
A. Mind drifts are always positive.
B. Daydreaming is good for the mind.
C. Creative moments come with working memory.
D. The more daydreaming, the more effectively one works.
高二英语阅读理解中等难度题查看答案及解析
Study hard , ______ you will not pass the exam .
A. and B. otherwise C. if D. unless
高二英语单项填空中等难度题查看答案及解析
If your parents take out a loan, remind themselves to make the payments on time. Otherwise it will become a negative record in their personal credit reports, which are playing an increasingly big role in people's daily lives. A story carried by Chongqing Morning Post in June, underlines this trend.
According to the report, a Chongqing student borrowed money from the bank to finance his university studies. After he graduated in 2005, he went to work in Shenzhen. Later, he wanted to buy a house using loans. But several banks turned down his loan applications. The reason was that he had not paid back 1,500 yuan he borrowed from a bank when he was at university.
A personal credit rating is becoming an essential “pass” in everyday life, as China establishes a nationwide credit database. Personal credit systems go back 150 years. In developed countries, enterprises and banks use them to decide whether or not to loan money or do other business with a person.
A credit report estimates the credit worthiness of an individual, a company, or even a country. It is an evaluation made by credit bureaus of a borrower's overall credit history and his or her ability to repay debt. A poor credit rating means a high risk of defaulting on a loan, and thus leads to the refusal of a loan by the lender.
Today in China, credit history in banks is the major content of a credit report. But in the future, reports will include information about the payment of telephone bills, water use fees, electricity and natural gas bills, and taxes, according to officials of the People's Bank of China, the central bank.
Personal information such as appearance, genetic data, fingerprints, blood type, disease history, ethnic identity, family and religious beliefs are not to be included in credit reports, according to a draft regulation on credit rating issued last year by the Sate Council. The authors of the draft have just finished soliciting(征求) public opinions.
The Credit Reference Center run by the People's Bank of China is in charge of developing a nationwide credit database. Credit reports for all people with bank transactions (交易)began in 2006.
A personal credit rating is important to the social and economic activities of a person. According to the draft, if you have a personal negative credit record, it will be kept for five years.
1.The author took the story as an example in order to ________.
A. warn us of the importance of our personal credit report
B. tell us the story of a Chongqing student
C. encourage us to use credits widely
D. inform us to apply for a loan at university
2.Credit reports will include the following except ________.
A. taxes B. telephone bills
C. water use fees D. genetic data
3.According to the passage, which of the following statements is TRUE?
A. Personal credit systems go back 150 years in China.
B. You can turn to the People's Bank of China for the information about your credit report.
C. Credit history in banks is the only content of a credit report.
D. Credit reports began in 2006 in China.
4.What's the best title for the passage?
A. A Credit Report Rating
B. Credit in China
C. Credit Really Counts
D. Credit Report Contents
高二英语阅读理解中等难度题查看答案及解析
All efforts of cloning an animal will be ________ if there is not enough diversity in the group to overcome illness.
A.in need | B.in place | C.in vain | D.in case |
高二英语单项填空中等难度题查看答案及解析