完型填空:來源:考試大
Ø 出題特點(diǎn):來源:考試大
該部分文章的主題一般涉及科技方面,有時(shí)也有可能會出現(xiàn)主題與社會文化,自然地理,或衛(wèi)生健康相關(guān)的文章。文章難度略低于閱讀理解部分的文章難度,在該部分有可能出現(xiàn)考試指定書上的文章。完型填空部分的考題傾向于考察詞義的辨析,偶而也涉及到固定搭配結(jié)構(gòu),而對語法的直接考察趨勢減少。
Ø 解題思路:來源:考試大
1.注意利用被選項(xiàng)的特點(diǎn)猜測答案范圍,判斷解題方向;
2.借助空格兩端的搭配結(jié)構(gòu)特點(diǎn)或搭配語意直接判斷答案;
3.借助空格所在句子的句意,并參考上下文用詞和語意判斷答案;
4.借助文章主題/中心確認(rèn)答案。 來源:考試大
完型填空 來源:考試大
閱讀下面的短文,文中有15處空白,每處空白給出了4個(gè)選項(xiàng),請根據(jù)短文的內(nèi)容從4個(gè)選項(xiàng)中選擇1個(gè)答案,并涂在答題卡相應(yīng)的位置上。 來源:考試大
Squishy(易壓扁的)Cellphones (大哥大) add a buzz(震動聲) to calls
Vibrating rubber could be the next big thing in mobile communications. They allow people to communicate by squishing the phone to transmit __1__along with their spoken words. According to a research team at the MIT Medical Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the idea will make __2__ more fun.來源:考試大
Many mobile phones can already be made to vibrate __3__ ring when you do not want people to know you are getting a call. But these vibrations, __4__ by a motor spinning an eccentric weight inside the device, are too crude for subtle communication, says Angela Chang of the lab’s Tangible Media Group. “They’re __5__ on or off,” she says.
But when you grip Chang’s prototype latex cellphone, your fingers and thumb wrap around five __6__ speakers. They vibrate __7__ your skin around 250 times per second. Beneath these speakers sit pressure sensors, so you can transmit vibration as well as __8__ it. When you squeeze with a finger, a vibration signal is transmitted __9__ your caller’s corresponding finger. Its __10__ depends on how hard you squeeze.
She says that within a few minutes of being given __11__ the phones, students were using the vibration feature to add emphasis to what they were saying or to interrupt the other speaker. Over time, people even began to transmit their __12__ kind of ad hoc “Morse code”, which they would repeat back to show they following what they other person was saying. “It was pretty easy to communicate, though we didn’t specifically pre-arrange __13__,” says David Milovich, one of the students who tried out the device,
Change thins “vibralanguages” could __14__ for the same reason as texting: sometimes people want to communicate something __15__ everyone nearby knowing what they are saying. “And imagine actually being able to shake someone’s hand when you close a business seal,” she says.
Ø 出題特點(diǎn):來源:考試大
該部分文章的主題一般涉及科技方面,有時(shí)也有可能會出現(xiàn)主題與社會文化,自然地理,或衛(wèi)生健康相關(guān)的文章。文章難度略低于閱讀理解部分的文章難度,在該部分有可能出現(xiàn)考試指定書上的文章。完型填空部分的考題傾向于考察詞義的辨析,偶而也涉及到固定搭配結(jié)構(gòu),而對語法的直接考察趨勢減少。
Ø 解題思路:來源:考試大
1.注意利用被選項(xiàng)的特點(diǎn)猜測答案范圍,判斷解題方向;
2.借助空格兩端的搭配結(jié)構(gòu)特點(diǎn)或搭配語意直接判斷答案;
3.借助空格所在句子的句意,并參考上下文用詞和語意判斷答案;
4.借助文章主題/中心確認(rèn)答案。 來源:考試大
完型填空 來源:考試大
閱讀下面的短文,文中有15處空白,每處空白給出了4個(gè)選項(xiàng),請根據(jù)短文的內(nèi)容從4個(gè)選項(xiàng)中選擇1個(gè)答案,并涂在答題卡相應(yīng)的位置上。 來源:考試大
Squishy(易壓扁的)Cellphones (大哥大) add a buzz(震動聲) to calls
Vibrating rubber could be the next big thing in mobile communications. They allow people to communicate by squishing the phone to transmit __1__along with their spoken words. According to a research team at the MIT Medical Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the idea will make __2__ more fun.來源:考試大
Many mobile phones can already be made to vibrate __3__ ring when you do not want people to know you are getting a call. But these vibrations, __4__ by a motor spinning an eccentric weight inside the device, are too crude for subtle communication, says Angela Chang of the lab’s Tangible Media Group. “They’re __5__ on or off,” she says.
But when you grip Chang’s prototype latex cellphone, your fingers and thumb wrap around five __6__ speakers. They vibrate __7__ your skin around 250 times per second. Beneath these speakers sit pressure sensors, so you can transmit vibration as well as __8__ it. When you squeeze with a finger, a vibration signal is transmitted __9__ your caller’s corresponding finger. Its __10__ depends on how hard you squeeze.
She says that within a few minutes of being given __11__ the phones, students were using the vibration feature to add emphasis to what they were saying or to interrupt the other speaker. Over time, people even began to transmit their __12__ kind of ad hoc “Morse code”, which they would repeat back to show they following what they other person was saying. “It was pretty easy to communicate, though we didn’t specifically pre-arrange __13__,” says David Milovich, one of the students who tried out the device,
Change thins “vibralanguages” could __14__ for the same reason as texting: sometimes people want to communicate something __15__ everyone nearby knowing what they are saying. “And imagine actually being able to shake someone’s hand when you close a business seal,” she says.

