填空题The discoveries of heavenly bodies that were against the principles of astrology revealed great differences between astrology and astronomy in their methods and purposes.____

题目
填空题
The discoveries of heavenly bodies that were against the principles of astrology revealed great differences between astrology and astronomy in their methods and purposes.____

相似考题
参考答案和解析
正确答案: B
解析:
由题意可定位至B段。本段讲到,这样导致的结果是,天文学和占卜术在方法和目的方面出现巨大的差异。故匹配段落为B段。
更多“填空题The discoveries of heavenly bodies that were against the principles of astrology revealed great differences between astrology and astronomy in their methods and purposes.____”相关问题
  • 第1题:

    Again, differences between people and the opportunity for natural selection to take advantage of it have diminished.


    正确答案:
    68. 【译文】人与人之间的差异以及自然选择利用该差异的机会减少了。
    【解析】注意 differences  between people和 the opportunity for natural selection to take advantage of it是两个并列的主语,千万不要理解成 people与the opportunity 是between 的并列宾语。另外注意句中的 it 指代的是 differences between people。
    重点词组:natural selection 自然选择;take advantage of 利用

  • 第2题:

    共用题干
    第三篇

    The Body Thieves

    In the early nineteenth century in Britain,many improvements were being made in the
    world of medicine.Doctors and surgeons were becoming more knowledgeable about the
    human body.Illnesses that had been fatal a few years before were now curable.However,
    surgeons had one problem.They needed dead bodies to cut up,or dissect(解剖).This
    was the only way that they could learn about the flesh and bones inside the body,and the
    only way to teach new surgeons to carry out operations.
    The job of finding these dead bodies was carried out by an unpleasant group of people
    called "body snatchers". They went into graveyards(墓地)at night and, using wooden
    shovels to make less noise,dug up any recently buried bodies.Then they took the bodies
    to the medical schools and sold them.A body could be sold for between £5 and £10,
    which was a lot of money at that time.The doctors who paid the body snatchers had an
    agreement with them一they never asked any questions.They did not desire to know where
    the bodies came from,as long as they kept arriving.
    The most famous of these body snatchers were two men from Edinburgh called William
    Burke and Wil!iam Hare.Burke and Hare were different because they did not」ust dig up
    bodies from graveyards.They got greedy and thought of an easier way to find bodies.
    Instead of digging them up,they killed the poorer guests in Hare's small hotel.Dr Knox,
    the respected surgeon they worked for,never asked why all the bodies they brought him
    had been strangled(勒死).
    For many years Burke and Hare were not caught because,unsurprisingly,the bodies
    of their victims were never found by the police.They were eventually arrested and put on
    trial in 1829.The judge showed mercy to Hare and he was released but Burke was found
    guilty and his punishment was to be hanged.Appropriately,his body was given to the
    medical school and he ended up on the dissecting table,just like his victims.In one small
    way,justice was done.
    Now,over 1 50 years later,surgeons do not need the help of criminals to learn their
    skills.However,the science of surgery could not have developed without their rather
    gruesome(令人毛骨惊然的)help.

    The body thieves contributed in their gruesome way to
    A: medical advancement,
    B: legal progress,
    C:social stability.
    D: material wealth.

    答案:A
    解析:

  • 第3题:

    共用题干
    第三篇

    The Body Thieves

    In the early nineteenth century in Britain,many improvements were being made in the
    world of medicine.Doctors and surgeons were becoming more knowledgeable about the
    human body.Illnesses that had been fatal a few years before were now curable.However,
    surgeons had one problem.They needed dead bodies to cut up,or dissect(解剖).This
    was the only way that they could learn about the flesh and bones inside the body,and the
    only way to teach new surgeons to carry out operations.
    The job of finding these dead bodies was carried out by an unpleasant group of people
    called "body snatchers". They went into graveyards(墓地)at night and, using wooden
    shovels to make less noise,dug up any recently buried bodies.Then they took the bodies
    to the medical schools and sold them.A body could be sold for between £5 and £10,
    which was a lot of money at that time.The doctors who paid the body snatchers had an
    agreement with them一they never asked any questions.They did not desire to know where
    the bodies came from,as long as they kept arriving.
    The most famous of these body snatchers were two men from Edinburgh called William
    Burke and Wil!iam Hare.Burke and Hare were different because they did not」ust dig up
    bodies from graveyards.They got greedy and thought of an easier way to find bodies.
    Instead of digging them up,they killed the poorer guests in Hare's small hotel.Dr Knox,
    the respected surgeon they worked for,never asked why all the bodies they brought him
    had been strangled(勒死).
    For many years Burke and Hare were not caught because,unsurprisingly,the bodies
    of their victims were never found by the police.They were eventually arrested and put on
    trial in 1829.The judge showed mercy to Hare and he was released but Burke was found
    guilty and his punishment was to be hanged.Appropriately,his body was given to the
    medical school and he ended up on the dissecting table,just like his victims.In one small
    way,justice was done.
    Now,over 1 50 years later,surgeons do not need the help of criminals to learn their
    skills.However,the science of surgery could not have developed without their rather
    gruesome(令人毛骨惊然的)help.

    The body snatchers used wooden shovels because
    A: they did not wish to spoil the dead bodies.
    B: they wanted to keep the bodies to themselves.
    C:they were afraid of being caught.
    D: they were careful not to disturb anyone.

    答案:C
    解析:

  • 第4题:

    In 17th-century England, astronomy provided methods of keeping______of time that were especially useful for accurate navigation.

    A.investigate
    B.trace
    C.check
    D.track

    答案:D
    解析:
    本题考查近义词辨析。题目意为“在17世纪的英格兰,天文学提供了跟踪时间的方法,这对于精确导航特别有用。”A选项“调查”,B选项“追踪”,C选项“检查”,D选项“跟踪”,keep track of 为固定搭配,意为“记录”,故选项D符合题意。
      

  • 第5题:

    The zodiac is used in astrology to predict the future.()

    • A、占星术中的黄道带是用来卜卦,测算将来的。
    • B、杀人命盘在卜卦中用来预告未来。
    • C、十二宫图在占星术中用做预测未来。
    • D、星辰表用于占星术中可先知先决。

    正确答案:C

  • 第6题:

    填空题
    During the 1700’s in England astrology gained less popularity than before.____

    正确答案: H
    解析:
    由题干中“1700’s in England”定位至H段。本段讲到,英格兰的占星术拥护者数量在1700’s期间减少了。故匹配段落为H段。

  • 第7题:

    填空题
    Publishing horoscope columns in newspapers helped to make astrology spread across the world widely.____

    正确答案: H
    解析:
    由题干中“newspapers”定位至H段。该段指出,英格兰的报纸在1930’s开始刊登占星专栏,很快全世界的报纸上都出现了这些专栏,人们对占星术的兴趣日益增加。故匹配段落为H段。

  • 第8题:

    单选题
    The passage mainly discusses ______.
    A

    how sex differences are demonstrated in social relations

    B

    how hormone determines sex differences

    C

    why there are differences between males and females

    D

    why men and women have different social roles


    正确答案: A
    解析:
    可以先看一下四个答案的意思:A“性别差异是如何在社交中体现的”,B“激素是如何决定男女差异的”,C“男女之间为什么会产生差异”,D“为什么男女会有不同的社会角色”。本文在前两段论述了男女性别的差异,紧接着后面开始阐述这种差别所导致的男女在竞争及工作中的不同表现。很明显选A。

  • 第9题:

    填空题
    In astrology, the earth is regarded as the center of the solar system.____

    正确答案: C
    解析:
    由题干中“the earth”定位至C段。本段讲到在占星术里,地球被当作太阳系的中心。故匹配段落为C段。

  • 第10题:

    单选题
    We are said to be living in _____ Information Age, _____ time of new discoveries and great changes.
    A

    an; the

    B

    不填; the

    C

    不填; a

    D

    the; a


    正确答案: D
    解析:
    句意:据说我们正生活在信息时代,一个充满新发现和巨大变化的时代。“Information Age”前加定冠词the,特指这一时代。根据句意可知,第二空填入不定冠词a,“a time of”表示“一个……的时代”。故D选项正确。

  • 第11题:

    填空题
    Astrology is based on the conviction that the patterns the heavenly bodies form can tell a person’s character or future.____

    正确答案: A
    解析:
    由题意可定位至A段。首先提出占星术研究的对象,然后讲到它的依据是,人们认为天体的形状能够反映一个人的性格或将来。故匹配段落为A段。

  • 第12题:

    填空题
    ()stands as a great dividing line between the nineteenth century and the contemporary American literature.

    正确答案: The First World War
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第13题:

    共用题干
    第三篇

    The Body Thieves

    In the early nineteenth century in Britain,many improvements were being made in the
    world of medicine.Doctors and surgeons were becoming more knowledgeable about the
    human body.Illnesses that had been fatal a few years before were now curable.However,
    surgeons had one problem.They needed dead bodies to cut up,or dissect(解剖).This
    was the only way that they could learn about the flesh and bones inside the body,and the
    only way to teach new surgeons to carry out operations.
    The job of finding these dead bodies was carried out by an unpleasant group of people
    called "body snatchers". They went into graveyards(墓地)at night and, using wooden
    shovels to make less noise,dug up any recently buried bodies.Then they took the bodies
    to the medical schools and sold them.A body could be sold for between £5 and £10,
    which was a lot of money at that time.The doctors who paid the body snatchers had an
    agreement with them一they never asked any questions.They did not desire to know where
    the bodies came from,as long as they kept arriving.
    The most famous of these body snatchers were two men from Edinburgh called William
    Burke and Wil!iam Hare.Burke and Hare were different because they did not」ust dig up
    bodies from graveyards.They got greedy and thought of an easier way to find bodies.
    Instead of digging them up,they killed the poorer guests in Hare's small hotel.Dr Knox,
    the respected surgeon they worked for,never asked why all the bodies they brought him
    had been strangled(勒死).
    For many years Burke and Hare were not caught because,unsurprisingly,the bodies
    of their victims were never found by the police.They were eventually arrested and put on
    trial in 1829.The judge showed mercy to Hare and he was released but Burke was found
    guilty and his punishment was to be hanged.Appropriately,his body was given to the
    medical school and he ended up on the dissecting table,just like his victims.In one small
    way,justice was done.
    Now,over 1 50 years later,surgeons do not need the help of criminals to learn their
    skills.However,the science of surgery could not have developed without their rather
    gruesome(令人毛骨惊然的)help.

    The problem facing British surgeons in the early 1 9th century was that
    A:some ii{nesses remained incurable.
    B: few people were willing to work as surgeons.
    C: medical expenses were too high.
    D:dead bodies were not easily available.

    答案:D
    解析:

  • 第14题:

    共用题干
    第三篇

    The Body Thieves

    In the early nineteenth century in Britain,many improvements were being made in the
    world of medicine.Doctors and surgeons were becoming more knowledgeable about the
    human body.Illnesses that had been fatal a few years before were now curable.However,
    surgeons had one problem.They needed dead bodies to cut up,or dissect(解剖).This
    was the only way that they could learn about the flesh and bones inside the body,and the
    only way to teach new surgeons to carry out operations.
    The job of finding these dead bodies was carried out by an unpleasant group of people
    called "body snatchers". They went into graveyards(墓地)at night and, using wooden
    shovels to make less noise,dug up any recently buried bodies.Then they took the bodies
    to the medical schools and sold them.A body could be sold for between £5 and £10,
    which was a lot of money at that time.The doctors who paid the body snatchers had an
    agreement with them一they never asked any questions.They did not desire to know where
    the bodies came from,as long as they kept arriving.
    The most famous of these body snatchers were two men from Edinburgh called William
    Burke and Wil!iam Hare.Burke and Hare were different because they did not」ust dig up
    bodies from graveyards.They got greedy and thought of an easier way to find bodies.
    Instead of digging them up,they killed the poorer guests in Hare's small hotel.Dr Knox,
    the respected surgeon they worked for,never asked why all the bodies they brought him
    had been strangled(勒死).
    For many years Burke and Hare were not caught because,unsurprisingly,the bodies
    of their victims were never found by the police.They were eventually arrested and put on
    trial in 1829.The judge showed mercy to Hare and he was released but Burke was found
    guilty and his punishment was to be hanged.Appropriately,his body was given to the
    medical school and he ended up on the dissecting table,just like his victims.In one small
    way,justice was done.
    Now,over 1 50 years later,surgeons do not need the help of criminals to learn their
    skills.However,the science of surgery could not have developed without their rather
    gruesome(令人毛骨惊然的)help.

    Burke and Hare differed from other body snatchers in that
    A:they got other people to dig up bodies for them.
    B: they sold the bodies only to one surgeon.
    C: they dug up bodies not just from graveyards.
    D: they resorted to murder to get bodies.

    答案:D
    解析:

  • 第15题:

    共用题干
    第三篇

    The Body Thieves

    In the early nineteenth century in Britain,many improvements were being made in the
    world of medicine.Doctors and surgeons were becoming more knowledgeable about the
    human body.Illnesses that had been fatal a few years before were now curable.However,
    surgeons had one problem.They needed dead bodies to cut up,or dissect(解剖).This
    was the only way that they could learn about the flesh and bones inside the body,and the
    only way to teach new surgeons to carry out operations.
    The job of finding these dead bodies was carried out by an unpleasant group of people
    called "body snatchers". They went into graveyards(墓地)at night and, using wooden
    shovels to make less noise,dug up any recently buried bodies.Then they took the bodies
    to the medical schools and sold them.A body could be sold for between £5 and £10,
    which was a lot of money at that time.The doctors who paid the body snatchers had an
    agreement with them一they never asked any questions.They did not desire to know where
    the bodies came from,as long as they kept arriving.
    The most famous of these body snatchers were two men from Edinburgh called William
    Burke and Wil!iam Hare.Burke and Hare were different because they did not」ust dig up
    bodies from graveyards.They got greedy and thought of an easier way to find bodies.
    Instead of digging them up,they killed the poorer guests in Hare's small hotel.Dr Knox,
    the respected surgeon they worked for,never asked why all the bodies they brought him
    had been strangled(勒死).
    For many years Burke and Hare were not caught because,unsurprisingly,the bodies
    of their victims were never found by the police.They were eventually arrested and put on
    trial in 1829.The judge showed mercy to Hare and he was released but Burke was found
    guilty and his punishment was to be hanged.Appropriately,his body was given to the
    medical school and he ended up on the dissecting table,just like his victims.In one small
    way,justice was done.
    Now,over 1 50 years later,surgeons do not need the help of criminals to learn their
    skills.However,the science of surgery could not have developed without their rather
    gruesome(令人毛骨惊然的)help.

    The bodies of Burke's and Hare's victims couldn't be found by the police because
    A: they had been stolen.
    B:they had been strangled.
    C: they had been dissected.
    D:they had been buried.

    答案:C
    解析:

  • 第16题:

    The most recognizable differences between American English and British English are in()and vocabulary.

    • A、usage
    • B、grammar
    • C、pronunciation
    • D、structure

    正确答案:C

  • 第17题:

    单选题
    It was from the earliest time _____ men began to study the natural phenomena and heavenly bodies.
    A

    when

    B

    where

    C

    that

    D

    how


    正确答案: C
    解析:
    句意:人类在很早的时候就开始研究自然现象和天体。看到It is (was) ...就应马上想到是否强调结构。从空白前内容可推知强调的是时间状语。注意,强调结构中,如强调部分指人,可用who或whom代替that;如果强调部分指物,可用which代替that。但如果强调部分指时间或地点,不可用when或where代替that。本题中,因强调的是时间状语,所以不可用when代替that,正确选项为C。

  • 第18题:

    填空题
    The names for the planets and the signs of zodiac used in astrology today were originally devised by the Roman.____

    正确答案: G
    解析:
    由题干中“The names for the planets and the signs of zodiac”可定位至G段。本段讲到,沿用到现在的行星和星座的名称是古罗马人的叫法,即表明这些名称是由罗马人创造的。故匹配段落为G段。

  • 第19题:

    单选题
    There are radical differences between binary and decimal _____.
    A

    division

    B

    distribution

    C

    multiplication

    D

    numeration


    正确答案: D
    解析:
    句意:二进制数和十进制数之间有根本的区别。numeration计算,读数法。division区分,除法。distribution分发,分配。multiplication乘法,增加。

  • 第20题:

    单选题
    ()astrology and alchemy may be regarded as fundamental aspects of thought is indicated by their apparent universality.
    A

    Bothare

    B

    Whatboth

    C

    Both

    D

    Thatboth


    正确答案: D
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第21题:

    单选题
    We can conclude from the passage that _____.
    A

    there are significant differences between the Official Dinner and other dinner parties

    B

    American students like to participate in public services very much

    C

    being a secretary of state is the best, even better than being a president

    D

    the students who were invited to the dinner party were enthusiastic about the program


    正确答案: B
    解析:
    第十二段中作者提到该培训项目包括介绍总统、法院、媒体和国际事务等。学生们还讨论公众问题。该项目的主任Mary Waikart说:“到晚上10点了他们还在讨论,这是为他们将来到华盛顿从政进行的很好的练习”。

  • 第22题:

    单选题
    Can you______the differences between the two pictures?
    A

    tell

    B

    talk

    C

    speak

    D

    say


    正确答案: B
    解析:

  • 第23题:

    填空题
    Astrologers hold the belief that the planets exert more influence on a person than other heavenly bodies.____

    正确答案: D
    解析:
    由题干信息定位至D段。本段提到占星家们相信,行星比其他任何天体更能对人产生影响。故匹配段落为D段。