版權(quán)說明:本文檔由用戶提供并上傳,收益歸屬內(nèi)容提供方,若內(nèi)容存在侵權(quán),請進行舉報或認領
文檔簡介
虹口區(qū)2023學年度第一學期期終學生學習能力診斷測試
高三英語試卷2023.12
考生注意:
1.考試時間120分鐘,試卷滿分140分。
2.本考試設試卷和答題紙兩部分。所有答題必須涂(選擇題)或?qū)懀ǚ沁x擇題)在答題紙上,做
在試卷上一律不得分。
3.答題前,務必在答題紙上填寫準考證號和姓名,并將核對后的條形碼貼在指定位置上。
I.ListeningComprehension
SectionA
Directions:InSectionA,youwillheartenshortconversationsbetweentwospeakers.Attheendofeach
conversation,aquestionwillbeaskedaboutwhatwassaid.Theconversationsandthequestionswillbe
spokenonlyonce.Afteryouhearaconversationandthequestionaboutit,readthefourpossibleanswerson
yourpaper,anddecidewhichoneisthebestanswertothequestionyouhaveheard.
1.A.Atabookstore.B.Atalibrary.
C.Atapostoffice.D.Atapolicestation.
2.A.At6:45p.m.B.At7:00p.m.C.At7:15p.m.D.At9:00p.m.
3.A.Pickupsomebottledwater.B.Workovertimeattheoffice.
C.Dosomepaperworkathome.D.Setasidesometimeforrelaxation.
4.A.Theharmdonebysingle-useplastics.B.Thetopicforthewoman'scomposition.
C.Environmentalissues.D.Somerecenthotnews.
5.A.Heiscuriousabouthisfutureneighbour.B.Heisdissatisfiedwiththeenvironment.
C.Heisworriedaboutthetrafficservice.D.Hecan'twaittomoveintothishouse.
6.A.Sheagreeswiththeman'splan.B.Sheisconcernedabouttheweather.
C.Sheconsidersitunwisetogooutside.D.Shehasabetterplanthanhavingapicnic.
7.A.Lookingatanoldpicture.B.Preparingforafamilytrip.
C.Searchingforsomeoldstuff.D.Talkingabouttheirgrandfather.
8.A.Thewomanwasuninterestedintheparty.B.Thewomanwilltakeherfamilytotheparty.
C.Thewomanislookingforwardtotheparty.D.Thewomanwasabsentfromtheparty.
9.A.Thosewhoaretalentedarenevershortofinspiration.
B.Noteveryonecanlearnhowtobeagoodwriter.
C.Creativityissomethingyouarebomwith.
D.Ittakespracticetobecomeagoodwriter.
10.A.Hehasalreadyachievedhisgoal.B.Hegoestothegymonaregularbasis.
C.Heusuallygoeshomedirectlyafterwork.D.Hehasgivenupexercisingfortwoweeks.
1
SectionB
Directions:InSectionB,youwillheartwoshortpassagesandonelongerconversation,andyouwillbe
askedseveralquestionsoneachofthepassagesandtheconversation.Thepassagesandtheconversationwill
bereadtwice,butthequestionswillbespokenonlyonce.Whenyouhearaquestion,readthefourpossible
answersonyourpaperanddecidewhichonewouldbethebestanswertothequestionyouhaveheard.
Questions11through13arebasedonthefollowingpassage.
11.A.Influencing.B.Celebritystudies.
C.Crisismanagement.D.Psychology.
12.A.Itoffersalotofrelatedcourses.B.Itscoursesaretaughtbyseniorlecturers.
C.ItpartnerswithHarvardUniversity.D.Ifsthefirstdegreeprograminthefield.
13.A.Whetherithasenoughbudgets.B.Whetheritwillattractyoungsters.
C.Whetheritcanstandthetestoftime.D.Whetheritcanofferusefulcourses.
Questions14through16arebasedonthefollowingpassage.
14.A.Itemphasizesballtackling.B.Itforbidsroughbodycontact.
C.ItwascreatedduringtheWWLD.Itismainlyplayedinthearmytoday.
15.A.Itisprettyeasytolearn.B.Itismorerecreationalthanothersports.
C.Itfollowslimitedrules.D.Itallowsthemtoshowtheirtalentsinsports.
16.A.Introduceawould-beOlympicsport.B.Compareflagfootballwithregularfootball.
C.Explaintherulesofflagfootball.D.IllustratethejobofNationalFootballLeague.
Questions17through20arebasedonthefollowingconversation.
17.A.Inordernottomisstheflight.
B.Forfearthattheflightshallbedelayed.
C.Tospareenoughtimeforsecuritychecks.
D.Totakebettercareofherbabywhentraveling.
18.A.Shewaitedthreehoursforthehotelroomtobeready.
B.Shedidn'thaveenoughmoneytogetataxiinBerlin.
C.Herluggagewasdeliveredtoawrongdestination.
D.ShewasstuckintheBerlinairportforanight.
19.A.Theyreactedquicklytopassengers9requests.
B.Theywererudetothepassenger.
C.Theyshowedenoughsympathy.
D.Theywereirresponsible.
20.A.Shewaslookingforwardtohernextholiday.
B.Shefeltterriblethatherholidaywasruined.
C.Shedidn'twantanothercupofcoffee.
D.Shethoughttheholidaywastooshort.
2
ILGrammarandVocabulary
SectionA
Directions:Afterreadingthepassagebelow,fillintheblankstomakethepassagecoherentand
grammaticallycorrect.Fortheblankswithagivenword,fillineachblankwiththeproperformofthegiven
word;fortheotherblanks,useonewordthatbestfitseachblank.
YourCatMightNotBeIgnoringYouWhenYouSpeak
Everycatownerhasastorytotellofbeingblankedbytheircat.Wecalltoourcat,itturnsaway,and
someofusmightbeleft(21)(wonder)whywedidn'tgetadog.Butyourcatmaybelistening
afterall.Morethanthat,it(22)(care)morethanyoumaythink.
AstudybyFrenchresearchers(23)(publish)lastmonthinthejournalAnimalCognition
foundthatnotonlydocatsreacttowhatscientistscallcat-directedspeech-ahigh-pitched雷音的)voice
similarto(24)wetalktobabies-theyreacttowhoisdoingthetalking.
“Wefoundthathearingtheirownersusingahigh-pitchedvoice,catsreactedmorethanwhenhearing
theirownerspeakingnormallytoanotherhumanadult,“saidCharlottedeMouzon,anauthorofthestudy.
“Butitactuallydidn'tworkwhenitcamefromastranger?svoice.^^
(25)studiesinvolvingdogs,analyzingcatbehaviorisdifficult,whichispartofwhyhumans
understandthemless.Catsarestressedbybeinginalab(26)meaningfulbehavioral
observationsbecomeimpossible.Andforgetabouttryingtogetacat(27)(sit)stillforanM.R.L
scan(核磁共振掃描)tostudyitsbrainfunction.
Sotheresearchersforthelateststudywenttothecats'homesandplayedrecordingsofdifferenttypes
ofspeechanddifferentspeakers.Atfirst,therewasconcernfromDr.deMouzonandherteamforlackof
reactionfromthecats,butuponanalysisofthefilmrecordings,delicatereactions(28)(notice).
“Itcouldbejustmovinganearorturningtheheadtothespeakerorevenfreezingwhat(29)were
doing,"Dr.deMouzonsaid.
Inthestudy,therewereafewcases(30)catswouldapproachthespeakerplayingavoice
andmeow."Intheend,wehadreallycleargainsinthecafsattentionwhentheownerwasusingcat-directed
speech,Dr.deMouzonsaid.
3
SectionB
Directions:Fillineachblankwithaproperwordchosenfromthebox.Eachwordcanbeusedonlyonce.
Notethatthereisonewordmorethanyouneed.
A.arrivesB.observableC.boundlessD.containedE.distancingF.expansion
G.liesH.parallelI.perceivingJ.threadsK.volume
WhatComesAfterSpace?
Lookingataclearnightsky,youwitnessthevastnessofspace,whichholdseverythinghumansknow
toexist.Tofindoutwhat31beyond,agoodplacetostartistodeterminewheretheuniverseends.
However,theproblemisthatscientistsareuncertainaboutwherespaceendsorwhetheritendsatall.
The32universe
Thefurthesthumanscanseeoutintospace,usingallthetechnologycurrentlyavailabletous,is46
billionlight-years(alight-yearisthedistancethatlightcantravelinoneyear,andisequivalenttoabout9.5
millionmillionkilometres).The33ofspacethathumanscanseeiscalledthevisibleuniverse.Beyond
this,itremainsamysterywhetherifsanexpanseofmoregalaxiesandstarsorpossiblytheedgeofthe
universe.Somethinkthattheuniverseis34,meaningspacegoesonforeverineverydirection.Inthis
case,thereisnothingafterspace,becausespaceiseverything.
Movingfurtheraway
ExpertshavecapturedimagesoftheentireEarthfromspace,andsomeastronautshavepersonally
witnesseditsbeautyfromorbit.Perhaps35thelimitsoftheuniversewouldalsobepossibletoo,if
onlyhumansknewwheretogotolookforit.
Anotherchallengeistheuniverse'srapid36.Asgalaxiesmovefurtheraway,theirlighttakes
longertoreachus.Eventually,somegalaxiesmaybesodistantthattheirlightnever37.Thismight
implythatanyedge-andwhateverisontheotherside-isincreasingly38itselffromus.Regardless
oftheseuncertainties,scientistsstillspendalotoftimethinkingaboutwhatcomesafterspace.
Manyuniverses?
It'spossiblethatthereisn'tjustoneuniverse,andthatouruniverseisjustonesmallpartofa
“multiverse”.Perhapsouruniverseis39withinitsowndistinctregionofspace,separatedfromothers
byvastexpansesofnothingness.Ormaybe40universesexist,pressedtightlyagainsteachother.
Gettinganideaoftheuniverse'strueshapemayhelpastronomersfindoutwhetherithasanedge.What
comesafterthatcouldbeanevengreatmystery.
III.ReadingComprehension
SectionA
Directions:ForeachblankinthefollowingpassagetherearefourwordsorphrasesmarkedA,B,CandD.
Fillineachblankwiththewordorphrasethatbestfitsthecontext.
4
Backin1930,theeconomistJohnMaynardKeynespredictedthatwithtechnologicalchangeand
improvementsinproductivity,we'donlybeworking15hoursaweekbynow.Butwhileworkinghourshave
41by26%,mostofusstillaverage42.5hoursaweek.
OneofthethingsKeynesunderestimatedisthehumandesireto42withourpeers-adrivethat
makesmostofusworkmorethanweneedto."Wedon'tmeasureproductivitybyhowmuchwe'veharvested
anymore,saysAlexSoojung-KimPang,visitingscholaratStanfordUniversity.""Overworkinghasbeenpart
ofWesternsocietysincetheIndustrialRevolution.Whensomepredictedthatautomationwouldcreatean
extraamountof43time,needlesstosay,thatdidn'thappen.^^
Thankstocomputerizationandglobalizationinthe1980s,managerscoulddemandmoreofemployees
underthe44thatjobscouldbegiventosomeoneelse.Sothe45piledon.Andwetookit,
exhausted,buttakinguptheburdenallthesame.ThepsychologistBarbaraKillingerwritesinWorkaholics:
TheRespectableAddictsabouthowwe46sacrificeourownwell-beingthroughoverworkfor
"success”.
Butfarfromdeliveringproductivity,value,orpersonalfulfilment,overworkhasbeenproventoleadto
burnout,stress,greaterriskofheartdiseaseandevenshorterlifespans.47wecarriedon~~until
COVID-19camealong.
Besidesmakingusworklongerhoursfromhome,COVID-19hasalso48themovetowardsthe
adoptionofautomatedmachine,especiallyforjobsrequiringmuchinterpersonalcontactfromAmazon
developingdeliverydrones阮人機)toself^drivingcars.By2050,MichaelOsborne,aprofessorofmachine
learningattheUniversityofOxford,predictsthatatleast40%ofcurrentjobswillbelostto49.
Thereare50.Jobsthatinvolvecomplexsocialinteractionsarebeyondcurrentrobotskills:so
teaching,socialcare,nursingandcounsellingarealllikelyto51theAIrevolution.Asarejobsthatrely
oncreativity.Thesamealsogoesfbr52jobs,accordingtoOsborne,duetothelargenumberofdifferent
objectscleanersencounterandthevarietyofwaysthoseobjectsneedtobedealtwith.Interestingly,areasof
theworkplacetraditionallydominatedbywomenwon'tbesoeasilyadoptedbyALRobotsareunlikelyto
53inthe"work"oftakingcareofchildren,preparinglunchboxesanddoingthelaundry.
Thosewhoseworkfoilsoutsidethecaring,cleaningorcreativefieldwillstillworkinfuture,just
54.Inabout60%ofoccupations,itisestimatedthatathirdofthetaskscanbeautomated,meaningchanges
tothewaywework.Alarge-scalestudyhaspredictedthatoverthenext20years,although7millionjobs
willbetakenoverbyAI,7.2millionnewoneswillbe55asaresult.Sowewillworkinfuture:wejust
don'tknowwhatwe'llbedoingyet.
41.A.declinedB.increasedC.continuedD.kept
42.A.disagreeB.competeC.cooperateD.identify
43.A.workingB.toughC.leisureD.active
44.A.fantasyB.influenceC.threatD.impress沁n
45.A.joyB.cashC.ambitionD.pressure
46.A.excitedlyB.willinglyC.dramaticallyD.hopefully
47.A.OtherwiseB.StillC.FurthermoreD.Therefore
48.A.speededupB.followedupC.preparedfbrD.plannedfbr
49.A.overworkB.labourC.automationD.science
50.A.dreamsB.modelsC.expectationsD.exceptions
5
51.A.causeB.ceaseC.surviveD.undergo
52.A.caringB.cleaningC.curingD.coaching
53.A.assistB.existC.believeD.understand
54.A.hardlyB.differentlyC.unfortunatelyD.probably
55.A.lostB.recoveredC.substitutedD.created
SectionB
Directions:Readthefollowingthreepassages.Eachpassageisfollowedbyseveralquestionsorunfinished
statements.ForeachofthemtherearefourchoicesmarkedA,B,CandD.Choosetheonethatfitsbest
accordingtotheinformationgiveninthepassageyouhavejustread.
(A)
ilwasalwaysareader.
2Asakid,Iwalkedtothelibraryseveraltimesaweekandcheckedoutsomanybooksandreturnedthem
soquicklythatthelibrarianoncesnapped「'Don'ttakehomesomanybooksifyou'renotgoingtoreadthem
all!”
3"ButIdidreadthemIsaid.
4ButIhadstoppedreadinggradually.IjoinedbookclubsthatIneverattended.Irequestedalibrarybook
everyonewasreading,onlytoreturnitaweeklate,unread,withfines.
sThenImetDavid.WhenIaskedhimabouthislastbook,hisfacelitupandhisfingersdanced.
eDavidreadmuchmorethanIdid,aboutabookortwoaweek.Hepreferredhistoryandnonfiction,while
Ilovedfictionwriters.
?Onourseventhdate,DavidandIvisitedthelibrary.
8"Ihaveagame,^^hesaid,pullingtwopensandPost-itsoutofhisbag."Let'sfindbookswe'vereadand
leavereviewsinthemforthenextperson.^^
9Wewanderedinthelibraryforanhour.Intheend,wesatontheflooramongthepoetry,andIreadhim
some.Helistened,thenasked,“Whatisityoulikeaboutthatone?”
loThatsummer,aswepicnickedoutside,Isaid,t4IfItellyousomething,willyounotjudgeme?”David
pausedandraisedhiseyebrows.
u'Tveonlyreadonebookthisyear,“Isaid.
i2tcButifsJune,^^hesaid.
13"Iknow.^^
i4uWell,readabook!^^
15ThenexttimeIvisitedabookstore,hischargeto“readabook“echoedinmyhead.Ipickedupabook
solelyforitspoetictitle.
i6lhadahardtimegettingintoit.Thenarratorwasanoldman.WheneverIwastemptedtogiveuponit,
IthoughtofDavid.Ipushedthroughthefirsttwochaptersanddiscoveredanewnarratorinthethird.Iloved
thealternatingpointsofview.Icarriedthebooktowork.Ireadatlunchandonmywalkhome.
/'How'syourday?”Davidtexted.
i8<4Good.Alittletired,1replied.t4Istayeduplateandfinishedmybook.^^
6
i9ltriedtomakeitsoundcasual,butIwasproudofmyself.Itwasnotacompetition,butIfelthimpushing
metobemoreofthepersonIusedtobeandmoreofwhoIwantedtobe.
20IaskedDavidoncewhathelikedaboutme.
2iHepaused,thensaid,“Iseetheworldasamorewonder-filledplacewithyou.^^
22Bytheendofthatyear,Davidsuggestedwevisitthelibraryagain.HeaskedifIrememberedthegame
weplayedonourfirstvisit.
23"Iremember,1said.
24Hepulledabookfromtheshelf,droppedtooneknee,andopenedit.Inside,hisPost-itread:"Karla,it
hasalwaysbeenyou.Willyoumarryme?”
25HisproposalhadrestedbetweenthepagesofTheRebelPrincessforoverayear.
26"Yes,"Isaid.
56.Theword"snapped”(paragraph2)mostprobablymeans"
A.talkedtosomeonevoluntarily
B.spoketosomeoneimpatiently
C.gavesomeoneasuggestion
D.laughedatsomeoneheartlessly
57.Whichofthefollowingmaybestillustratetheauthor'sreadinghabitwhenshefirstmetDavid?
A.Carryingbooksaroundwithoutopeningthem.
B.Onlyreadingthebookseveryonerecommended.
C.Avoidingsharingbookswhengoingtobookclubs.
D.Oftenforgettingtoreturnthebooksalreadyread.
58.Accordingtoparagraph19,whywastheauthorproudofherself?
A.Shefinishedreadingabookshedidn,tlike.
B.ShehadreadmorebooksthanDaviddid.
C.Shedidwhatshethoughttobedifficult.
D.Shehadkepttohertasteinpoetictitles.
59.WhatwasthemainchangethatDavidbroughtintotheauthor5slife?
A.Heintroducedanewlibraryandafungametotheauthor.
B.Heencouragedtheauthortoreadmorefictionandpoetry.
C.Hehelpedtheauthorfinishreadinganentirebookinaday.
D.Hemotivatedtheauthortorediscoverherloveforreading.
7
(B)
Canyoustandononelegfor10seconds?Just15minutesadayofpracticecanbe
Balancecouldbeamatteroflifeanddeath.TheWorldbeneficial,butdomoreifyouhavetime.
HealthOrganizationestimatesthat684,000fatalfallsoccurStartingearlierhelps:trytheexercises
eachyear,makingfallingthesecondleadingcauseofbelowonahard,levelsurface.
unintentionalinjurydeath.SomeofthesefallsarecausedbyEasyLevel:Standingononeleg-with
moreseriousconditions-butmanyaren't.Accordingtoyourhandsrestingonaworksurfaceif
you'refeelingunsteady-seehowlongyou
GeorgeLocker,along-termpractitioneroftaichi,alossof
canmaintainyourbalance.Dothisone
balanceisamedicalproblemthatcan'tbetreatedwithdrugs
whileyou'rebrushingyourteeth.
orsurgery,despiteitseffects.
MediumLevel:Forthismovement,start
Increasingly,effortsarebeingmadetoremedy專卜救)
fromstandingandtakeabigstepforwards,
thebalanceproblemamongthegroupsalreadymostaffectedbendingyourfrontleguntilyourtrailing
byit.Taichi,practicedbyanestimated50millionpeopleinkneejustbrushesthefloor.Thenpushoff
China,isanoption.Studieshaveshownthataslittleaseightyourfrontlegandreturntoastanding
weeksofpracticecanimproveolderadults'scoresontheposition.
Tinettitest一acommonlyusedmeasureofcompetenceinHardLevel:Trystep-upsontoastepor
basictaskssuchasrisingfromachairandwalking一aswellbox:putonefootontoaboxandpush
asreducingfearoffalling.Longerperiodsofstudyshowthroughthatheeltostepupsobothfeetend
uptogether.Toensureyouaren'tusing
furtherbenefits.
yourtrailinglegtohelp,keepyourtoesoff
Whateveractivityyouchoose,thelessonistoworkon
thegroundonthatfoot.
yourbalancebeforeyouneedto,notafteritbecomesan
issue.AsLockerputsit:everyone'stoldtosavemoneyfortheirretirement,andnobody'staughttosavetheir
balance.Butbotharedifficulttogetbackoncethey'regone.
60.WhatdoesGeorgeLockerthinkofalackofbalance?
A.Itiscostlytogettreatedwithdrugsandsurgery.
B.Itisaminorissuethatdoesn'taffectone'soverallhealth.
C.Itisaproblemwithoutanymedicalsolution.
D.Itisaproblemthatcanbeeasilyfixedbyexercising.
61.WhichofthefollowingbestillustratestheMediumLevelpractice?
8
62.Whatisthelessonconveyedinthepassageregardingbalanceandhealth?
A.Balanceisthetopleadingcauseofsuddendeathfrominjuries.
B.Itisessentialforthoseaffectedbybalanceissuestoseekhelp.
C.Taichiisthemosteffectivewaytoimproveone'sbalance.
D.Itiswisertoworkonbalanceasearlyaspossible.
(C)
Theconceptofdynamicpricingissimple-andeasyforbusinessestoimplement.Whetherifsa
Friday-eveningflight,ahotelduringtheholidays,orataxirideinadownpour,wehaveallbeenburnedby
higher-than-normalpricesduetoexcessdemand.Raisingcostswhenbusinessesarebusiestisthenormacross
thetravelindustry.Perhapsthemostwell-knownexampleofthisiswithinride-sharecompanies,whichhave
usedsurgepricingforyearstochargeriderswhendemandforcarsrocketsrelativetothenumberofdrivers
available.
Outsidetravel,onlinestoresareincreasinglyusingthisdynamicpricing,too,saysVomberg."On
Aalone,millionsofpricechangesoccurwithinaday,correspondingtoapricechangeofabout
everytenminutesforeachproduct.^^Whileconsumersmightnotalwayspickuponthesevariationsinprice,
Vombergsaystime-baseddynamicpricingwilllikelybecomeacompetitivestandardatleastinonline
markets.6<AI-enabledtoolscansuggestthebestpricesviamachinelearningalgorithms算法).Theycanalso
trackandlearncompetitorandcustomerresponsestopricechanges,hesays.
Now,surgepricingishappeninginstoresincludingbarsandsupermarketsaswell."Physicalbusinesses
areadoptingelectronicshelflabelsthatenablerealtimepriceadjustmentsdependingonthetimeofday,
stocklevelsandwhetheritemsareapproachingtheirsell-bydate,“saysSarwarKhawaja,chairmanofthe
OxfordEducationGroup.Hesaysthistechnologyislikelytocausepricesinbarsthatusethesesignsto
increaseduringtherushesofdinner,weekendsorholidays,orforsupermarketstoadjustpricesthroughout
thedayorweek,dependingonvolumeofshoppers.
Thecurrenteconomicclimateisalsodrivingtheneedforthesepricingtechnologies.Whilecreating
competitivepricesisalwayskeytohealthyprofitmargins,Khawajasaysdynamicpricingenablesbusinesses
tooptimisetheirpricingdependingonthefinancialsituationsoftheircustomerbase."'Businessescanoffer
discountsduringdownturns,whileincreasingpricesinbetteroffareas,9,hesays.
Thechanges,however,maynotsitwellwithconsumers."'Dynamicandsurgepricingwilllikelyexpand
tomoreindustriesandmorecompaniesinthelongterm,butjustbecauseaproductmaybepopulardoesnot
meanthatcustomersarewillingtoturnablindeyetobeingchargedmore,^^saysKhawaja.Headdssurge
pricingcancausecustomerstolosefaithinacompanyiftheybelievetheyarebeingovercharged.""Perhaps
dynamicpricingofadrinkinyourfavouritepubmightbeasteptoofarforloyalcustomers.
9
inparagraph1?
A.Asystemofdecidingwhatthepricesshouldbe.
B.Ameansforcompaniestofindtargetcustomers.
C.Amethodthathelpspromotesharingeconomy.
D.Astrategyofofferingdiscountstoattractclients.
64.ItcanbeinferredfromArndVbmberg'scommentsthatonlinestores.
A.offerthemostcompetitiveprices
B.makeprofitsbychangingpricesinrealtime
C.confusecustomersbychangingprices
D.relytoomuchonmachinelearningalgorithms
65.Accordingtothepassage,whydophysicalbusinessesadoptdynamicpricing?
A.Tomatchsupplyanddemandduringpeakhours.
B.Toliftcustomerexperienceandencourageloyalty.
C.Tomaintainconsistentpricingacrossallproducts.
D.Tocompetewithonlinestoresandbusinesses.
66.Whichofthefollowingbestpredictshowcustomersmayreacttotheexpansionofdynamicpricing?
A.Turntowhateveroffersthelowestprices.
B.Protestagainstitforbeingtooannoying.
C.Refusetogiveinandarelikelytoresist.
D.Takeitforgrantedandacceptitaltogether.
10
Directions:
sentencecanbeusedonlyonce.Notethattherearetwomoresentencesthanyouneed.
-Z
B.Habitslikethesewhichencourageyoutomultitaskmakeyoumentallyexhaustedandunproductive.
C.Makesurethatyoualsotakebreaksinyourmonotasking,becausethafswhathelpsyourbrainto
stayfocused.
D.Soifsawin-winforeveryone!
E.Thelittleinformationwedotakeinwhenwe'remultitaskingismoredifficulttorememberatalater
stage.
F.Youfeelsogoodthatyoubelieveyou'rebeingeffectiveandfurtherencouragesyourmultitasking
habit.
Mostofusdomultitaskingalmostdaily.Butit'stimetochangethat.Yourattentionisalreadybeing
pulledinmillionsofdirectionsdaily,soyoureallydon'tneedtoaddmultitaskingtothelist.Lefstakethe
smartphoneforexample.Onaverageyoucheckyourphone110timesaday-thatmeansyou'respending
23dayseveryyeargluedtoyoursmartphone!Howproductivedoyouthinkthatmakesyou?67
Butit'shardtoletgoofthesehabitsbecauseyou'veconditionedyourbraintosendmisleadingsignals
toyourbody.Resea
溫馨提示
- 1. 本站所有資源如無特殊說明,都需要本地電腦安裝OFFICE2007和PDF閱讀器。圖紙軟件為CAD,CAXA,PROE,UG,SolidWorks等.壓縮文件請下載最新的WinRAR軟件解壓。
- 2. 本站的文檔不包含任何第三方提供的附件圖紙等,如果需要附件,請聯(lián)系上傳者。文件的所有權(quán)益歸上傳用戶所有。
- 3. 本站RAR壓縮包中若帶圖紙,網(wǎng)頁內(nèi)容里面會有圖紙預覽,若沒有圖紙預覽就沒有圖紙。
- 4. 未經(jīng)權(quán)益所有人同意不得將文件中的內(nèi)容挪作商業(yè)或盈利用途。
- 5. 人人文庫網(wǎng)僅提供信息存儲空間,僅對用戶上傳內(nèi)容的表現(xiàn)方式做保護處理,對用戶上傳分享的文檔內(nèi)容本身不做任何修改或編輯,并不能對任何下載內(nèi)容負責。
- 6. 下載文件中如有侵權(quán)或不適當內(nèi)容,請與我們聯(lián)系,我們立即糾正。
- 7. 本站不保證下載資源的準確性、安全性和完整性, 同時也不承擔用戶因使用這些下載資源對自己和他人造成任何形式的傷害或損失。
最新文檔
- 《延安大學研究生》課件
- 幼兒園周四營養(yǎng)食譜
- 《爆管應急處理預案》課件
- 《汽車回收再生服務》課件
- 教育行業(yè)前臺服務總結(jié)
- 醫(yī)療行業(yè)前臺工作體會
- 財務工作成長心得
- 康復閱讀護士的工作總結(jié)
- 客戶信用評估總結(jié)
- 《淺談酒店市場營銷》課件
- 汽車維修人員培訓管理制度
- GB∕T 37587-2019 埋地鋼質(zhì)彎管聚乙烯防腐帶耐蝕作業(yè)技術(shù)規(guī)范
- 消化內(nèi)科診療指南和技術(shù)操作規(guī)范
- 作文稿紙A4打印模板-
- CNAS質(zhì)量體系文件(質(zhì)量手冊程序文件)
- ojt問答題未升版ojt204
- 五年級語文滲透法制教育滲透點教案呈現(xiàn)
- 貝雷片-潮白新河鋼棧橋及鋼平臺計算說明書
- VF程序設計知識要點
- 凱普21種基因型HPV分型與其它比較
- 雞場養(yǎng)殖情況記錄登記表
評論
0/150
提交評論