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Three places of articulation that involve the teeth and/or the lips are().

A.palatal, velar, glottal

B.bilabial, labiodental, dental

C.stop, fricative, affricative

D.nasal, lateral, semi vowel

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更多“Three places of articulation t…”相关的问题
第1题
听力原文:Tokyo is one of those places that you can love and hate at the same time.In Tokyo

听力原文: Tokyo is one of those places that you can love and hate at the same time.In Tokyo there are always too many people in the places where I want to be.Of course there are too many cars.The Japanese drive very fast when they can.But in Tokyo they often spend a long time in traffic jams.Tokyo is not different when one wants to walk.At certain times of the day there are a lot of people on foot in London's Oxford Street.But the streets near Ginza in Tokyo always have a lot of people on foot,and sometimes it is really difficult to walk.People are very polite;there are just too many of them.The worst time to be in the street is at 11:30 at night.That is when the night-clubs are closing and everybody wants to go home.There are 35,000 night-clubs in Tokyo,and you do not often see one that is empty.Most people travel to and from work by train.Tokyo people buy six million train tickets every day.At most stations,trains arrive every two or three minutes,but at certain hours there do not seem to be enough trains.Although they are usually crowded,Japanese trains are very good.They always leave and arrive on time.On a London train you would see everybody reading a newspaper.In Tokyo trains everybody in a seat seems to be asleep,whether his joumey is long or short.

How does the speaker feel about Tokyo?

A.Convenient.

B.Clean.

C.Crowded.

D.Lovely.

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第2题
听力原文:M: Hey, Jane. What's so interesting?W: Hi, Tom. I'm reading this fascinating arti

听力原文:M: Hey, Jane. What's so interesting?

W: Hi, Tom. I'm reading this fascinating article on the societies of the Ice Age.

M: (19)The Ice Age? There weren't any societies then, just a group of people living in the cave.

W: That's what people used to think. But a new exhibit of the America museum of natural history showed Ice Age people were surprisingly advanced. You may never hear of it.

M: Oh, really? In what ways?

W: (20)Well, Ice Age people were the inventors of language, art, and music as we know it. And they didn't live in caves, they built their own shelters.

M: What did they use to build them? The cold weather would have killed off most of the trees so they couldn't have used wood. Of course they couldn't live in the ice blocks.

W: In some of the warmer climate, they did build the houses of wood. In other places, they used animal bones and skins or lived in natural stone shelters.

M: How did they stay warm? Animal skin wails don't sound very sturdy(坚固的).

W: (21)Well, it says here that in the early Ice Age, they often faced the house towards south to take the advantage of the sun, a primitive sort of solar heating.

M: Hey, that's pretty smart. But when night comes, it is still a problem to keep warm.

W: They had some solution. People in the late Ice Age even insulated their homes by putting heated stones on the floor. They also have some creative ways to make their life better.

M: All these sound interesting. (22) Can I read that magazine article after you're done? I think I can use some of the knowledge for my recent paper.

W: Yes, sure.

(23)

A.They lived in caves.

B.They traveled in groups.

C.They had an advanced language.

D.They ate mostly fruits.

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第3题
A.The buyer has the right to reprint it.B.The buyer is allowed to change it.C.The arti

A.The buyer has the right to reprint it.

B.The buyer is allowed to change it.

C.The artist continues to hold the copyright for it.

D.The artist must report the sale to the authority.

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第4题
听力原文:W: The law on car is very interesting and I know in London it's different from ot
her places and rules are quite strict, aren't they'?

M: (22)Any London cab driver does a thing called the Knowledge, which is an examination really. It's called the Knowledge and it's a basic test of 468 runs what they call runs from a blue book.

W: Is it difficult to learn the Knowledge?

M: (23)On average, it took me nineteen months. Now it's taking guys three years. It can take anywhere from now to three years. And then you do a driving test at the end.

W: It get the impression they're very strict about taxis. Quite apart from the Knowledge, there's the license. Do you have to get a new license every year?

M: The license is renewed every three years, but your cab, whether you rent it or you own it, has to have a yearly overhaul. I enjoy being a taxi driver and, not only that, it does keep the standard very high, which is what we want in London.

W: (24) Do you feel proud to be a Londoner? Were you born in London?

M: No, I was actually born in Bristol.

W: What do you do in your spare time?

M: Well, (25)I'm into body building. That takes up quite a good deal of my spare time. I might do a system of three days' training with a day off, followed by another three days' training and a day off.

(23)

A.It's composed of 568 runs.

B.It's a blue book.

C.A London driver has to do it.

D.It's an exam.

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第5题
Entertainment in London Buying Books Londoners are great readers. They buy vast numbers of

Entertainment in London

Buying Books

Londoners are great readers. They buy vast numbers of newspapers and magazines and even of books especially paperbacks, which are still comparatively cheap in spite of ever-increasing rises in the costs of printing. They still continue to buy "proper" books, too, printed on good paper and bound between hard covers.

There are many streets in London containing shops which specialize in book-selling. Perhaps the best known of these is Charing Cross Road in the very heart of London. Here bookshops of all sorts and sizes are to be found, from the celebrated one which boasts of being "the biggest bookshop in the world" to the tiny, dusty little places which seem to have been left over from Dickens' time. Some of these shops stock, or will obtain, any kinds of books, but many of them specialize in second-hand books, in art books, in foreign books, in books or philosophy, politic or any other of the various subjects about which books may be written. One shop in this area specializes solely in books about ballet!

Although it may be the most convenient place for Londoners to buy books, Charing Cross Road is not the cheapest. For the really cheap second-hand volumes, the collector must venture off the busy and crowded roads, to Farringdon Road, for example, in the East Central district of London. Here there is nothing so grand as bookshops. Instead, the booksellers come along each morning and tip out their sacks of books on to barrows(推车) which line the gutters(贫民区). And the collectors, some professional and some amateur, who have been waiting for them, pounce towards the sellers. In places like this one can still, occasionally, pick up for a few pence an old volume that may be worth many pounds.

Both Charing Cross Road and Farringdon Road are well-known places of the book buyer. Yet all over London there are bookshops, in places not so well known, where the books are equally varied and exciting. It is in the sympathetic atmosphere of such shops that the loyal book buyer feels most at home. In these shops, even the life-long book-browser is frequently rewarded by the accidental discovery of previously unknown delights. One could, in fact, easily spend a lifetime exploring London's bookshops. There are many less pleasant ways of spending time!

Going to the Theatre

London is very rich in theatres: there are over forty in the West End alone--more than enough to ensure that there will always be at least two or three shows running to suit every kind taste, whether serious or lighthearted.

Some of them are specialist theatres. The Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, where the great opera singers of the world can be heard, is the home of opera and the Royal Ballet. The London Coliseum now houses the English National Opera Company, which encourages English singers in particular and performs most operas in English at popular prices.

Some theatres concentrate on the classics and serious drama, some on light comedy, some on musicals. Most theatres have a personality of their own, from the old, such as the Theatre Royal (also called the "Haymarket") in the Haymarket, to the more modern such as the recently opened Baibican centre in the city. The National Theatre has three separate theatres in its new building by Waterloo Bridge. At the new Barbican centre the Royal Shakespeare Company has their London home-their other centre is at Stratfor-on-Avon.

Most of the old London theatres are concentrated in a very small area, within a stone's throw of the Piccadilly and Leicester Square tube stations. As the evening performances normally begin either at seven-thirty or eight p. m., there is a kind of minor rush-hour between seven-fifteen and eight o'clock in this district. People stream out of the nearby tube stations, the pavements are crowded, and taxis and private cars

A.Newspapers.

B.Magazines.

C.Paperbacks.

D.Hardbacks.

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第6题
When Louis Nevelson works, she _________A. can carve anything into a great piece of arti

When Louis Nevelson works, she _________

A. can carve anything into a great piece of artistic work

B. refuses to make sculpture work for churches

C. doesn't confine her talents into any specific categories

D. always has her religious belief in mind

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第7题
听力原文:[31] Mr. Foster started his publishing business with only one magazine. It was ca

听力原文: [31] Mr. Foster started his publishing business with only one magazine. It was called "World News". Mostly it had summaries of important week events from around the world. But it always included one or two stories about interesting people. Mr. Foster put these in [29] because he believed all people like to read about other people. Several years ago, Mr. Foster started two magazines. One was called "Enterprise". It is for business people. And the other was called [30] "Action", for sports fans. Like World News, they always have two or three stories about interesting people. Five years ago, Mr. Foster got another idea for a magazine. He wanted this one to have even more stories about people than the others and to have more photographs. This one was named "Faces and Places". From the very beginning, it was a big success.

(30)

A.He was good at writing about interesting people.

B.It was much easier to write stories about people.

C.He believed that people are always eager to learn about other people.

D.He thought people played an important role in world events.

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第8题
There's simple premise behind what Larry Myers does for a living: If you can smell it, you
can find it. Myers

is the founder of Auburn University's institute for Biological Detection Systems, the main task of which is to chase the ultimate in detection devices-an artificial nose.

For now, the subject of their research is little more than a stack of gleaming chips tucked away in a laboratory drawer. But soon, such a tool could be hanging form. the belts of police, arson (纵火) investigators and fund-safety inspectors. The technology that they are working on would suggest quite reasonable that, within three to five years, we'll have some workable sensors ready to use. Such devices might find wide use in places that attractterrorists. Police could detect drugs, bodies and bombs hidden in cars, while food inspectors could easily test food and water for contamination.

The implications for revolutionary advances in public safety and the food industry are astonishing. But so, too,are the possibilities for abuse: Such machines could determine whether a woman is ovulating (排卵), without a physical exam or even her knowledge.

One of the traditional protectors of American liberty is that it has been impossible to search everyone. That's getting not to be the case.

Artificial biosensors created at Auburn work totally differently from anything ever seen before. Aromascan, for example, is a desktop machine based on a bank of chips sensitive to specific chemicals that evaporate into the air. As air is sucked into the machine, chemicals pass over the sensor surfaces and produce changes in the electrical current flowing through them. Those current changes are logged into a computer that sorts out odors based on their electrical signatures.

Myers says they expect to lead a single fingernail-size chip with thousands of odor receptors(感受器), enough to create a sensor that's nearly as sensitive as a dog's nose.

Which of the following is within the capacity of the artificial nose being developed?

A.Performing physical examinations.

B.Locating places which attract terrorists.

C.Detecting drugs and water contamination.

D.Monitoring food processing.

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第9题
Questions 26 to 30 are based on the following passage: There’s simple premise behind what
Larry Myers does for a living: If you can smell it, you can find it.

Myers is the founder of Auburn University’s Institute for Biological Detection Systems, the main task of which is to chase the ultimate in detection devices—an artificial nose.

For now, the subject of their research is little more than a stack of gleaming chips tucked away in a laboratory drawer. But soon, such a tool could be hanging from the belts of police, arson (纵火) investigators and food-safety inspectors.

The technology that they are working in would suggest quite reasonably that, within three to five years, we’ll have some workable sensors ready to use. Such devices might find wide use in places that attract terrorists. Police could detect drugs, bodies and bombs hidden in cars, while food inspectors could easily test food and water for contamination.

The implications for revolutionary advances in public safety and the food industry are astonishing. But so, too, are the possibilities for abuse; Such machines could determine whether a woman is ovulating (排卵), without a physical exam-or even her knowledge.

One of the traditional protectors of American liberty is that is has been impossible to search everyone. That’s getting not to be the case.

Artificial biosensors created at Auburn work totally differently from anything ever seen before. Aroma Scan, for example, is a desktop machine based on a bank of chips sensitive to specific chemicals that evaporate into the air. As air is sucked into the machine, chemicals pass over the sensor surfaces and produce changes in the electrical current flowing through them. Those current changes are logged into a computer that sorts out odors based on their electrical signatures.

Myers says they expect to load a single fingernail-size chip with thousands of odor receptors (感受器), enough to create a sensor that’s nearly as sensitive as a dog’s nose.

第26题:Which of the following is within the capacity of the artificial nose being developed?

A) Performing physical examinations.

B) Locating places which attract terrorists.

C) Detecting drugs and water contamination.

D) Monitoring food processing.

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第10题
听力原文:Nowadays there are more and more ways of going on holiday. More and more people g

听力原文: Nowadays there are more and more ways of going on holiday. More and more people go abroad every year. Some people even go on two or three holidays a year.

In my opinion, there are two types of holidaymakers. The first kind of holidaymakers always flocks to seaside resorts when they go on holiday. Their one and only aim is to have a good time by sunbathing and putting their feet up. They are not a hit interested in local specialties. At mealtimes, if they can get a plate of British "fish and chips", they're more than happy! They spend their days in the sunshine and their evenings getting drunk, then sleep soundly. If this sort of person forgets to pack the suntan oil, he or she will Undoubtedly come home as red as a lobster.

The other sort of holidaymakers goes to every country to increase their knowledge of foreign lands. They make use of the chance to travel to improve their world knowledge. For them, going on holiday is educational. Consequently, this sort of travelers will move from place to place every few days. If they visit lots of places in a short span of time, there is no way that they can get a proper feel of a place or fully appreciate the local food and wine.

Whichever type of holiday chosen, everybody has the same aim: to put their work to the back of their minds, have as much fun as possible and come home happy and relaxed.

(30)

A.Drinking.

B.Sleeping.

C.Sunbathing.

D.Swimming.

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第11题
听力原文:W: Good evening and welcome to this week's Business World. It programs for and ab
out business people. Tonight we have Mr. Angelino who came to the United States six years ago, and is now an established businessman with three restaurants in town. Tell us, Mr. Angelino, how did you get started?

M: Well, I started off with a small diner. I did all the cooking myself and my wife waited on tables. It was really too much work for two people. My cooking's great. And word got around town about the food. Within a year, I had to hire another cook and four waitresses. When that restaurant became very busy, I decided to expand my business. Now with three places, my main concern is keeping the business successful and running smoothly.

W: Do you advertise?

M: Oh yes. I don't have any TV commercials, because they are too expensive. But I advertise a lot on radio and in local newspapers. My children used to distribute ads in nearby shopping centers, but we don't need to do that anymore.

W: Why do you believe you've been so successful?

M: Um, I always serve the freshest possible food and I make the atmosphere as comfortable and as pleasant as I can, so that my customers will want to come back.

W: So you always aim to please the customers?

M: Absolutely! Without them I would have no business at all.

W: Thank you, Mr. Angelino. I think your advice will be helpful to those just staring out in business.

Questions:

22. What is the woman's occupation?

23. What do we learn about Mr. Angelino's business at its beginning?

24. What does Mr. Angelino say about advertising his business?

25. What does the man say contribute to the success of his business?

(23)

A.Journalist of a local newspaper.

B.Director of evening radio programs.

C.Producer of television commercials.

D.Hostess of the weekly "Business World".

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