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Which English accents tend to be rhotic()

A.African American English

B.Indian English

C.Singaporean English

D.General American (GA)

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更多“Which English accents tend to …”相关的问题
第1题
When John Milton writer of“Paradise Lost” entered Cambridge University in 1625 he was
already skilled in Latin after seven years of studying it as his second language at St.Paul’s School London.Like all English boys who prepared for college in grammar schools he had learned not only to read Latin but also to speak and write it smoothly and correctly.His pronunciation of Latin was English however and seemed to have sounded strange to his friends when he later visited Italy.

Schoolboys gained their skill in Latin in a bitter way.They kept in mind the rules to make learning by heart easier.They first made a word-for-word translation and then an idiomatic translation into English.As they increased their skill they translated their English back into Latin without referring to the book and then compared their translation with the original.The schoolmaster was always at hand to encourage them.All schoolmasters believed Latin should be beaten in .

After several years of study the boys began to write compositions in imitation of the Latin writers they read.And as they began to read Latin poems they began to write poems in Latin.Because Milton was already a poet at ten his poems were much better than those painfully put together by the other boys.During the seven years Milton spent at university he made regular use of his command of Latin.He wrote some excellent Latin poems which he published among his works in 1645.

1.What does the passage mainly tell about?[]

A.How John Milton wrote“Paradise Lost”

B.How John Milton studied Latin

C.How John Milton became famous

D.How John Milton became a poet

2.Which of the following is true of John Milton’s pronunciation of Latin?[]

A.It has a strong Italian accent

B.It has an uncommon accent

C.It was natural and easy to understand

D.It was bad and difficult to understand

3.It can be inferred from the passage that ________.

A.Milton’s training in Latin was similar to that of the other boys

B.Milton hadn’t learned any foreign language except Latin before going to college

C.Milton’s Italian friends helped him with Latin when talking

D.Milton's classmates learned Latin harder but worse than Milton

4.Which of the following is suggested in the passage?[]

A.The schoolmaster mainly helped those who were bad at Latin

B.The schoolmaster usually stood beside the schoolboys with a stick in his hand

C.The schoolboys could repeat Latin grammar rules from memory

D.Some of the schoolboys were quick at writing compositions in Latin

5.What is the meaning of the underlined part“Latin should be beaten in”that the writer wishes you to understand?[]

A.Schoolboys should be punished if they were lazy to learn Latin

B.Schoolboys should be encouraged if they had difficulty in learning Latin

C.Schoolboys were expected to master Latin in a short time

D.Schoolboys had to study Latin in a hard way

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第2题
Which event marks the entering of the Modern Era in the history of English()

A.The Renaissance

B.When different varieties of English have emerged

C.Norman Conquest

D.Viking Invasions

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第3题
Which type of English words does the word “four modernizations” belong to()

A.Loanwords

B.Loan translations

C.Idioms

D.Hybrids

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第4题
Blame for the ___1___ of this language __2__ should be thrust upon our schools, which
should be setting high standards of English language __3__ . Instead, they only teach a little grammar and even less __4__ vocabulary. Moreover, the younger teachers themselves __5__ have little knowledge of these __6__ structures of language because they also went without __7__ to them. Schools fail to __8__ teach the essential __9__ of language, accurate grammar and proper vocabulary, while they should take the responsibility of pushing the young onto the path of __10__ communication.

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第5题
Though having been living in the States for more than 10 years, she still has a () British accent when she talks.

A.sensitive

B.narrative

C.distinctive

D.representative

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第6题
The history of English is conventionally, if perhaps too neatly, divided into three pe
riods usually called Old (or Anglo-Saxon) English, Middle English, and Modern English.The earliest period begins with the migration of certain Germanic tribes from the continent to Britain in the fifth century A.D., though no records of their language survive from before the seventh century, and it continues until the end of the eleventh century or a bit later.By that time, Latin, Old Norse (the language of the Viking invaders), and especially the Anglo-Norman French of the dominant class after the Norman Conquest in 1066 had begun to have a substantial impact on the vocabulary, and the well-developed inflectional(词尾变化的)system that typify the grammar of Old English had began to break down.

The period of Middle English extends roughly from the twelfth century through the fifteenth.The influence of French(and Latin,often by way of French)upon the vocabulary continued throughout the period,the loss of some inflections and the reduction of others accelerate, and many changes took place within the grammatical systems of the language.A typical prose passage, especially one from the later part of the period, will not have such a foreign look to us as the prose of Old English, but it will not be mistaken for contemporary writing either.

The period of Modern English extends from the sixteenth century to our own day.The early part of this period saw the completion of a revolution in vowel distribution that had began in late Middle English and that effectively brought the language to something resembling its present pattern.Other important early developments include the stabilizing effect on spelling of the printing press and the beginning of the direct influence of Latin, and to a lesser extent.Greel pm the vocabulary.Later, as English came into contact with other cultures around the world and distinctive dialects of English developed in the many areas which Britain had colonized, numerous other languages made small but interesting contributions to our word-stock.

1.The earliest writing record of English available to us started_____.

A.from the seventh century

B.from the fifth century

C.from the twelfth century

D.from the ninth century

2.What is the main features of the grammar of Old English?()

A.The influence of Latin

B.A revolution in vowel distribution

C.A well-developed inflectional system

D.Loss of some inflection

3.What can be inferred from the passage?()

A.Even an educated person cannot read old English without special training

B.A person who knows French well can understand old English

C.An educated person can understand old English but cannot pronounce it

D.A person can pronounce old English words but cannot understand them

4.Which of the following is NOT mentioned?()

A.French

B.Latin

C.Greek

D.German

5.What is the most remarkable characteristic of Modern English?()

A.Numerous additions to its vocabulary.

B.Completion of a revolution in vowel distribution.

C.Gradual changes in tis grammatical system.

D.The direct influence of Latin.

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第7题
The iMOVE database(数据库)is a foreign-1anguage information platform. for persons inte
rested in job opportunities offered by German companies.The information can be obtained in seven languages:German,English,French,Spanish,Chinese, Russian and Arabic.

All programs in the area of professional training are carried out by German training providers.All these programs have a clear content to meet your special needs.

Programs which take place in Germany are carried out in English.Many of the German training providers have started their training activities towards the international market.Therefore,they also offer courses abroad. These courses are taught in English or the language of the target country.Providers will be glad to supply you with additional information on these courese.You can contact the provider directly to find out more about a program and the training provider.

To guaranteee high standards in the database,iMOVE has developed quality standards for training providers and their services.All of the training facilities in the iMOVE database have to follow these quality criteria (标准).All training providers who publish their international training programs in the iMOVE database have recognized General Terms and Conditions.

21.The iMOVE database is intended for persons who ____.

A)seek a job as a language translator

B)are interested in the German language

C)want to be employed by German companies

D)wish to work for professional training providers

22.The iMOVE programs are carried out by ____.

A)language training centersB)German training providers

C)special service developers D)overseas employment advisers

23.The training programs held in Germany are taught in ____.

A)German B)English

C)FrenchD)Chinese

24.Which of the following measures has iMOVE taken to guarantee its high standards?

A)Offering different language courses.

B)Providing modern training facilities.

C)Starting training courses overseas·

D)Developing quality standards.

25.The purpose of the passage is to ____.

A)advertise the iMOVE database

B)make German companies more pupular

C)hire overseas employees to work in Germany

D)encourage people to learn more foreign languages

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第8题
Six Potential Brain Benefits of Bilingual EducationA) Brains,brains,brains. People are f

Six Potential Brain Benefits of Bilingual Education

A) Brains,brains,brains. People are fascinated by brain research. And yet it can be hard to point to places where our education system is really making use of the latest neuroscience(神经科学) findings.But there is one happy link where research is meeting practice: bilingual(双语的)education.“In thelast 20 years or so,there's been a virtual explosion of research on bilingualism,”says Judith Kroll,aprofessor at the University of California,Riverside.

B)Again and again,researchers have found,“ bilingualism is an experience that shapes our brain for life,”in the words of Gigi Luk,an associate professor at Harvard's Graduate School of Education. Atthe same time,one of the hottest trends in public schooling is what's often called dual-language or two-way immersion programs.

C)Traditional programs for English-language learners,or ELLs,focus on assimilating students into

English as quickly as possible. Dual-language classrooms,by contrast,provide instruction acrosssubjects to both English natives and English learners,in both English and a target languagc. The goal isfunctional bilingualism and biliteracy for all students by middle school. New York City,NorthCarolina,Delaware,Utah,Oregon and Washington state are among the places expanding dual-language classrooms.

D)The trend flies in the face of some of the culture wars of two decades ago,when advocates insisted on “English first”education.Most famously,California passed Proposition 227 in 1998. It was intendedto sharply reduce the amount of time that English-language learners spent in bilingual settings.Proposition 58,passed by California voters on November 8,largely reversed that decision,paving theway for a huge expansion of bilingual education in the state that has the largest population of English-language learners.

E) Some of the insistence on English-first was founded on research produced decades ago,in which bilingual students underperformed monolingual(单语的)English speakers and had lower IQ scores.Today's scholars,like Ellen Bialystok at York University in Toronto,say that research was “deeplyflawed.”“Earlier research looked at socially disadvantaged groups,”agrees Antonella Sorace at theUniversity of Edinburgh in Scotland.“This has been completely contradicted by recent rescarch”thatcompares groups more similar to each other.

F) So what does recent research say about the potential benefits of bilingual education? It turns out that, in many ways,the real trick to speaking two languages consists in managing not to speak one of thoselanguages at a given moment—which is fundamentally a feat of paying attention. Saying “Goodbye”tomom and then“Guten tag”to your teacher,or managing to ask for a crayola roja instead of a redcrayon(蜡笔),requires skills called “inhibition”and“task switching.”These skills are subsets of anability called executive function.

G) People who speak two languages often outperform. monolinguals on general measures of executive function.“Bilinguals can pay focused attention without being distracted and also improve in the abilityto switch from one task to another,”says Sorace.

H) Do these same advantages benefit a child who begins learning a second language in kindergarten instead of as a baby? We don't yet know.Patterns of language learning and language use are complex. ButGigi Luk at Harvard cites at least one brain-imaging study on adolescents that shows similar changes inbrain structure when compared with those who are bilingual from birth,even when they didn't beginpracticing a second language in earnest before late childhood.

l) Young children being raised bilingual have to follow social cues to figure out which language to use with which person and in what setting.As a result,says Sorace,bilingual children as young as age 3 havedemonstrated a head start on tests of perspective-taking and theory of mind—both of which arefundamental social and emotional skills.

J) About 10 percent of students in the Portland,Oregon public schools are assigned by lottery to dual-language classrooms that offer instruction in Spanish,Japanese or Mandarin,alongside English.Jennifer Steele at American University conducted a four-year,randomized trial and found that thesedual-language students outperformed their peers in English-reading skills by a full school-year's worthof learning by the end of middle school. Because the effects are found in reading,not in math orscience where there were few differences,Steele suggests that learning two languages makes studentsmore aware of how language works in general.

K) The research of Gigi Luk at Harvard offers a slightly different explanation. She has recently done a small study looking at a group of 100 fourth-graders in Massachusetts who had similar reading scores ona standard test,but very different language experiences.Some were foreign-language dominant andothers were English natives.Here's what's interesting.The students who were dominant in a foreignlanguage weren't yet comfortably bilingual;they were just starting to learn English.Therefore,bydefinition,they had a much weaker English vocabulary than the native speakers. Yet they were just asgood at interpreting a text.“This is very surprising,”Luk says.“ You would expect the readingcomprehension performance to mirror the vocabulary—it's a cornerstonc of comprehension.”

L) How did the foreign-language dominant speakers manage this feat? Well,Luk found,they also scored higher on tests of executive functioning.So,even though they didn't have huge mental dictionaries todraw on,they may have been great puzzle-solvers,taking into account higher-level concepts such aswhether a single sentence made sense within an overall story line. They got to the same results as themonolinguals,by a different path.

M)American public school classrooms as a whole are becoming more segregated by race and class.Dual-language programs can be an exception.Because they are composed of native English speakersdeliberately placed together with recent immigrants,they tend to be more ethnically and economicallybalanced. And therc is some evidence that this helps kids of all backgrounds gain comfort withdiversity and different cultures.

N) Several of the researchers also pointed out that,in bilingual education,non-English-dominant students and their families tend to feel that their home language is heard and valued,compared with aclassroom where the home language is left at the door in favor of English. This can improve students'sense of belonging and increase parents’ involvement in their children's education,including behaviorslike reading to children.“Many parents fear their language is an obstacle,a problem,and if theyabandon it their child will integrate better,”says Antonella Sorace of the University of Edinburgh.“We tell them they're not doing their child a favor by giving up their language.”

O)One theme that was striking in speaking to all these researchers was just how strongly they advocated for dual-language classrooms.Thomas and Collier have advised many school systems on how to expandtheir dual-language programs,and Sorace runs“Bilingualism Matters,”an international network ofresearchers who promote bilingual education projects. This type of advocacy among scientists isunusual;even more so because the "bilingual advantage hypothesis”is being challenged once again.

P) Areview of studies published last year found that cognitive advantages failed to appear in 83 percent of published studics,though in a separate analysis,the sum of effects was still significantly positive.Onepotential explanation offered by the researchers is that advantages that are measurable in the veryyoung and very old tend to fade when testing young adults at the peak of their cognitive powers.And,they countered that no negative effects of bilingual education have been found. So,even if theadvantagcs are small,they are still worth it. Not to mention one obvious,outstanding fact:"Bilingualchildren can speak two languages!”

36. A study found that there are similar changes in brain structure between those who are bilingual from birth and those who start learning a second language later.

37. Unlike traditional monolingual programs,bilingual classrooms aim at developing students’ ability touse two languages by middle school.

38.A study showed that dual-language students did significantly better than their peers in reading Englishtcxts.

39.About twenty years ago,bilingual practice was strongly discouraged,especially in California.

40. Ethnically and economically balanced bilingual classrooms are found to be helpful for kids to get usedto social and cultural diversity.

41.Researchers now claim that earlier research on bilingual education was seriously flawed.

42. According to a researcher,dual-language experiences exert a lifelong influence on one's brain.

43. Advocates of bilingual education argued that it produces positive effects though they may be limited.44. Bilingual speakers often do better than monolinguals in completing certain tasks 41.

45. When their native language is used,parents can become more involved in their children's education.

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第9题
When Louis Braille was three years old, he became blind in both eyes as the result of
an accident in his father's harness shop.His father, determined that Louis should not suffer the usual fate of blind persons at that time and become a beggar, kept him in the village school until he was ten and then entered him in the institution des Jeunes Aveugles in Paris.Louis learned to read from the three books engraved in large raised letters in the Institution library.He did exceptionally well both in academic work and at the piano and the organ, and was soon helping to teach the younger children.

In 1819, the same year that Louis entered the Institution, Charles Barbier, an army captain, reported to the Academy of Sciences on a system of raised dots and dashes which enabled soldiers to read messages in the dark.Later, Barbier brought his invention to the Institution.After experimenting with it, young Braille produced a writing system using only dots, from which he gradually devised 63 separate combinations representing the letters in the French alphabet.At the request of an Englishman, he later added the letter “w”, accents and punctuation marks, and mathematical signs.Although government bureaucracy prevented immediate official adoption, his system was used at the Institution as long as the director, Dr.Pignier, was in office.Pignier’s successor insisted on returning to the officially approved former system, but students continued to use Braille's method secretly.Eventually, its superiority was established and it was adopted throughout France.

(1).Louis-Braille first learned to read with the aid of _________________.

A.his father

B.special books at the Institution

C.the village school teacher

D.Captain Barbier's system of dots and dashes

(2).Louis's father kept him at the village school until he was ten because his father ________________.

A.wanted Louis to help him in the harness shop

B.thought it was not worthwhile to have Louis work when he was young

C.did not want Louis to live the same sort of life as that of other blind people

D.wanted Louis to remain with the family as long as possible

(3).Louis Braille did all of the following things EXCEPT________________.

A.teaching young children at the Institution

B.developing a writing system for the blind

C.learning to play musical instruments well

D.encouraging students to use his method secretly

(4).Charles Barbier originally devised his writing system for________________.

A.the Academy of Sciences

B.blind children

C.military personnel

D.the English government

(5).Braille's method was not adopted officially for some time because________________.

A.the students preferred the former method

B.the large library collection would then have been useless

C.Dr.Pignier's successor disliked Braille's method

D.the government was slow to approve it

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第10题
The inventor of spectacles probably lived in the town of Paris, Italy, around 1286, a
nd was almost certainly a craftsman working in glass. But nobody knows his name. We only know this much about him because Friar Giordane preached a sermon one Wednesday morning in February 1306 at a church in Florence. "It’s not yet 20 years since there was found the art of making eye-glasses which make for good vision," said the Friar."One of the best arts and most necessary that the world has. So short a time is it since there was invented a new art that never existed. I have seen the man who first invented and created it, and I have talked to him." We know what Friar Giordane said because admirers copied his sermons down as he gave them. The inventor of spectacles apparently kept the method of making them to himself. Perhaps he thought this was the best way of getting money from his invention. But the idea soon got around. As early as 1300, craftsmen in Venice,the centre of Europe’s glass industry, were making the new "disks for the eyes".Spectacles at first were only shaped for far-sighted people. Concave lenses, for short-sighted people, were not developed until the late 15th century. Spectacles allowed people to go on reading and studying long after bad eyesight would normally have forced them to give up.They were like a new pair of eyes. The inventor of such a valuable thing should be honored, everyone thought. But for centuries no one had any idea who the inventor really was. So all kinds of candidates were put forward: Dutch, English, German, Italians from rival cities. A fake memorial was erected last century in a church in Florence to honor a man as the true inventor of spectacles-but he never even existed.

The first spectalces were made for ()

A、any one who had an eye trouble

B、the far-sighted

C、the short-sighted

D、both the far-sighted and the short-sighted

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第11题
Do you know________?

A.how is English widely used

B.how widely is English used

C.how widely English is used

D.English is how widely used

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