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Many people pretend that they understand modern art.()

A.他们总是告诉你幅画的“意思”是什么

B.我是个学艺术的学生,画了很多画

C.它们就是些好看的图室

D.有很多人装成很懂现代艺术的样子

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更多“Many people pretend that they …”相关的问题
第1题
Lots of people pretend that they never read advertisements, but this claim ().

A.may be hardly doubted

B.may be seriously doubted

C.may be hard doubting

D.may be doubted serious

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第2题
A.Some people pretend to know what they really don't.B.What the woman said is true.C.W

A.Some people pretend to know what they really don't.

B.What the woman said is true.

C.What the woman said is wrong.

D.He knows more than the woman does.

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第3题
The example of the retired general's wife and mechanic is mentioned in the text to show th
at ______.

A.wives of high ranked official are usually very pride to poor people

B.modeling is not the only way people respond in different situations

C.there is a distinct speech difference between rich people and the poor

D.the poor tend to pretend to be well-educated in front of the rich

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第4题
There has been some interesting work on the second question: on attitudes to violence. Thi
s finds a difference between westerns and crime plays. Westerns are "black and white" simplifications,【B1】crime plays pretend to represent "real life". The【B2】of westerns is that good can defeat bad through【B3】the manly way of doing thing.【B4】is no interest in the villain(反派角色), and the【B5】is often trying to help others rather than himself. In crime stories, 【B6】there are three important differences. Firstly, that criminal does not pay. Secondly, that what criminals do is not very different【B7】what the police do. Both sides【B8】and trick each other if necessary. Thirdly, that you cannot judge somebody by【B9】he appears: a person may look【B10】but be a criminal. Though the【B11】wins in a crime play, we are sometimes shown the criminal's point-of-view.

There is【B12】important difference between westerns and crime plays. In the【B13】, there are not close-ups(特写镜头) at a kill, and the fighting is between groups rather than single people. This【B14】the effect of the violence. But in crime plays, the【B15】stays on a man who has been【B16】; we see blood on his hands and pain on his face.

The third question, about a possible difference between what writers say they feel and what they【B17】show on the screen, has not been studied【B18】. In many "real-life" plays and films there may be a wide【B19】between the "good man wins" ending and the【B20】that people have when watching the scenes. For example, a criminal may be shown in several scenes, enjoying the money he has stolen, before (in one last scene) he is caught.

【B1】

A.because

B.whereas

C.therefore

D.nevertheless

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第5题
听力原文:W: Some people know a lot more than they tell.M: Unfortunately, the reverse is al

听力原文:W: Some people know a lot more than they tell.

M: Unfortunately, the reverse is also true.

Q: What does the man mean?

(16)

A.Some people pretend to know what they really don't.

B.What the woman said is true.

C.What the woman said is wrong.

D.He knows more than the woman does.

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第6题
By 2030,people over 65 in Germany, the world's third-largest economy, will account for alm
ost half the adult population, compared with one-fifth now. And unless the country's birth rate recovers from its present low of 1.3 per woman, over the same period its population of under 35 will shrink about twice as fast as the older population will grow. The net result will be that the total population, now 82m, will decline to 70m-73m. The number of people of working age will fall by a full quarter, from 40m today to 30m.

The German demographics (人口统计) are far from exceptional. In Japan, the world's second-largest economy, the population will peak in 2005, at around 125m. By 2050, according to the more pessimistic government forecasts, the population will have shrunk to around 95m. Long before that, around 2030, the share of the over-65's in the adult population will have grown to about half. And the birth rate in Japan, as in Germany, is down to 1.3 per woman. The figures are pretty much the same for most other developed countries, and for a good many emerging ones, especially China.

Life expectancy-and with it the number of older people--has been going up steadily for 300 years. But the decline in the number of young people is something new. The only developed country that has so far avoided this fate is America. But even there the birth rate is well below replacement level, and the proportion of older people in the adult population will rise steeply in the next 30 years.

All this means that winning the support of older people will become a political imperative (需要)in every developed country. Pensions have already become a regular election issue. There is also a growing debate about the desirability of immigration to maintain the population and workforce. Together these two issues are transforming the political landscape in every developed country.

By 2030 at the latest, the age at which full retirement benefits start will have risen to the mid-70's in all developed countries, and benefits for healthy pensioners will be substantially lower than they are today. Indeed, fixed retirement ages for people in reasonable physical and mental condition may have been abolished to prevent the pensions burden on the working population from becoming unbearable. Already young and middle-aged people at work suspect that there will not be enough pension money to go round when they themselves reach traditional retirement age. But politicians everywhere continue to pretend that they can save the current pensions system.

In Germany, ______.

A.birth rate has gone up to 1.3 per woman

B.people over 65 now constitutes about half the adult population

C.its population of under-35s is twice as large as that of over-65s

D.by 2030 its working force may have shrunk by 25%

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第7题
By 2030, people over 65 in Germany, the world's third-largest economy, will account for al
most half the adult population, compared with one-fifth now. And unless the country's birth rate recovers from its present low of 1.3 per woman, over the same period its population of under 35 will shrink about twice as fast as the older population will grow. The net result will be that the total population, now 82 m, will decline to 70 m - 73 m. The number of people of working age will fall by a full quarter, from 40 m today to 30 m.

The German demographics (人口统计) are far from exceptional. In Japan, the world's second-largest economy, the population will peak in 2005, at around 125 m. By 2050, according to the more pessimistic government forecasts, the population will have shrunk to around 95 m. Long before that, around 2030, the share of the over-65's in the adult population will have grown to about half. And the birth rate in Japan, as in Germany, is down to 1.3 per woman. The figures are pretty much the same for most other developed countries, and for a good many emerging ones, especially China.

Life expectancy — and with it the number of older people — has been going up steadily for 300 years. But the decline in the number of young people is something new, The only developed country that has so far avoided this fate is America. But even there the birth rate is well below replacement level, and the proportion of older people in the adult population will rise steeply in the next 30 years.

All this means that winning the support of older people will become a political imperative (需要) in every developed country. Pensions have already become a regular election issue. There is also a growing debate about the desirability of immigration to maintain the population and workforce. Together these two issues are transforming the political landscape in every developed country.

By 2030 at the latest, the age at which full retirement benefits start will have risen to the mid-70's in all developed countries, and benefits for healthy pensioners will be substantially lower than they are today. Indeed, fixed retirement ages for people in reasonable physical and mental condition may have been abolished to prevent the pensions burden on the working population from becoming unbearable. Already young and middle-aged people at work suspect that there will not be enough pension money to go round when they themselves reach traditional retirement age. But politicians everywhere continue to pretend that they can save the current pensions system.

In Germany,______ .

A.birth rate has gone up to 1.3 per woman

B.people over 65 now constitutes about half the adult population

C.its population of under-35s is twice as large as that of over-65s

D.by 2030 its working force may have shrunk by 25%

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第8题
Many people in Russia become crackers and hackers mainly because of ______.A.interestB.eco

Many people in Russia become crackers and hackers mainly because of ______.

A.interest

B.economy

C.education

D.culture

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第9题
8There are so many people in China that we cannot but ______.(实行计划生育)

8There are so many people in China that we cannot but ______.(实行计划生育)

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第10题
Many Japanese people could not make a distinction between /l/ and /r/.()
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第11题
Hitler arrived to Marrakech and killed many Jewish people there.()
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