欢迎光临,有需要请联系站长!
想要快速找到正确答案?
立即关注 超新尔雅学习通微信公众号,轻松解决学习难题!
作业辅导
扫码关注
论文指导
轻松解决学习难题!
中国大学MOOC大学英语II④作业答案
大学英语II④
学校: 无
平台: 超星学习通
题目如下:
1. 【单选题】 Which of the following is NOT TRUE about the Chinese New Year?
A. It always falls between January 21 and February 20.
B. It is called “Spring Festival” but it comes in winter.
C. In Malaysia, 30 million people get three days of public holiday.
D. Red envelopes with cash are special New Year’s bonus.
答案: In Malaysia, 30 million people get three days of public holiday.
2. 【单选题】Chinese people do the following things during Spring Festival EXCEPT __________ .
A. making peace with people
B. wearing new clothes
C. giving out red envelopes
D. picking a fight with strangers
答案: picking a fight with strangers
3. 【单选题】Which of the following is TRUE about the Lantern Festival?
A. It falls on the 15th day of the first lunar month.
B. It is on the 16th day of the first lunar month.
C. On that night, families will stay at home to watch fireworks on TV.
D. People put up lanterns to scare the monsters.
答案: It falls on the 15th day of the first lunar month.
4. 【单选题】 It can be inferred from the passage that __________.
A. The year 2018 is a year of dragon
B. A 35 year-old unmarried woman may face embarrassing interrogations by parents and relatives.
C. Fireworks are meant to scare evil spirits.
D. Chinese New Year is relaxing for “old” singles.
答案: A 35 year-old unmarried woman may face embarrassing interrogations by parents and relatives.
5. 【单选题】 Which of the following is NOT TRUE about the “old” singles?
A. They are above the normal matrimonial age.
B. Their parents are so anxious that they arrange dating for them.
C. Some of them rent a boyfriend or girlfriend to go home with them.
D. Taobao offers fake boyfriend or girlfriend rental services at the price of 1,000 yuan a day.
答案: Taobao offers fake boyfriend or girlfriend rental services at the price of 1,000 yuan a day.
6. 【单选题】 宜立特大学英语快速阅读 Book 4,Unit 1,Passage 2 Despite Restrictions, Micro The “four accomplishments” necessary for a cultivated gentleman in Tang Dynasty are proficiency in Go, lute-playing, book writing and painting. blogs Catch on in China Despite Restrictions, Microblogs Catch on in China Wang Yin, a 24-year-old graduate student at the elite Tsinghua University in Beijing, constantly uses Sina Weibo, China’s Twitter-like social networking site. “On Weibo, I’m mostly interested in current events, what my friends are sa 渝粤教育 ying, and some information related 国家开放大学 to health and psychology,” Mr. Wang said. “Every day I log in over five times, using either my computer or mobile phone. And I stay on for two or three hours.” Mr. Wang and Weibo’s 140 million other registered users are one big reason American Internet companies like Facebook, Twitter and YouTube want to get into China. It has the world’s biggest Internet population, about 457 million users, and they are mostly young people who spend long periods engaged in social networking, online games and electronic commerce. But for now, they cannot enter China. Although there are no regulations that prevent American companies from operating here, the three popular American Web sites have been blocked in China for several years. Analysts say this is probably because the Chinese government wants to prevent the services from distributing uncensored information. Meanwhile, the Chinese social networking companies are booming. Two weeks ago, shares of the Chinese social networking site Renren soared after a dazzling initial public offering on Wall Street that, for a time, gave the start-up a market value of close to $7 billion. But Renren, despite being called China’s Facebook, is not even the leader of this country’s hottest Internet craze. That company is Sina.com, the 13-year-old online portal that has reinvented itself with Sina Weibo. Shares of Sina listed on the Nasdaq Exchange have jumped about 250 percent during the last year, and some analysts estimate that the company’s microblog unit could alone be worth $5 billion. It’s all about traffic. In the two years since microblog services became widely available in China, they have attracted more than 220 million registered users. Now, as microblogs have a powerful effect on public discourse and advertisers start to create campaigns aimed at microblog users, other Chinese Internet companies are scrambling to develop and promote their own microblog services. “This is a big, big category,” said Zhao Chunming, an Internet analyst at the Susquehanna International Group. “The news media and celebrities are tweeting; so are CEOs. This is changing the way people receive their news and information.” What is striking is that microblog services are booming here despite a recent Chinese government crackdown on social networking sites in the wake of democracy demonstrations in North Africa and the Middle East. The restrictions, which typically involve deleting or censoring politically charged content, seem to be aimed at preventing microblogs and other sites from being used to foster dissent or organize antigovernment protests. Still, young Internet users in China seem unfazed by the restrictions, in part because microblog services are a compelling alternative to this country’s more heavily censored state-run media and, perhaps more important, because microblogs are a powerful tool for self-expression. “There are just so many talkative people on Weibo,” said Guobin Yang, an associate professor at Barnard College in New York and the author of “The Power of the Internet in China: Citizen Activism Online.” He said, “They talk about anything, from Marx and McLuhan to personal relationships and love affairs. So the real success of Weibo is that it 渝粤题库 offers a place for this kind of chitchat.” American companies have not given up. Groupon, the online coupon giant, recently formed an alliance with Tencent, China’s biggest Internet company. And last December, Mark Zuckerberg, the founder of Facebook, visited Beijing and toured the offices of Sina and Baidu, China’s huge online search engine. Facebook has dismissed rumors that it plans to enter China by teaming up with Baidu. Company executives have said only that they are exploring a way to enter China. Analysts warn that the growth of Chinese microblogs could be curtailed if the government decided they have become too powerful a force in public opinion. But for the time being, microblog services are complying with censors and winning over new users, while social networking sites, like Renren, are struggling to keep pace, according to iResearch, an analytics firm based in Shanghai. Some experts say the government may try to turn microblogs to its benefit, monitoring comments and traffic to take the pulse of the nation, and perhaps even anticipate and respond to signs of social discontent. “It’s a real-time polling system to find out what’s going on in China,” said Bill Bishop, an independent Internet analyst in Beijing. “And it’s also a steam valve, since China’s a pressure cooker.” He says that if people get upset, “they can just say things on Weibo.” Besides, analysts say, using Weibo—the Chinese word for microblog—is not about activism; it’s about free expression, sharing information and connecting with people in the know. When Sina Weibo was introduced in 2009, the company built its microblog service by moving its most popular Internet bloggers—movie stars, real estate tycoons, athletes and writers—onto the microblog platform. Millions of young people soon followed. Executives at Sina—who declined to be interviewed for this article—face intense competition from Tencent, Baidu and other microblog service providers. But for now, the company’s microblog service is the undisputed champion, partly because it got an early start but also because it combines features of both Twitter and Facebook, with some local elements thrown in. Twitter, for example, does not allow users to post photographs and video, but Sina Weibo does. Sina also allows users to more effectively repost or comment on and share other people’s posts, creating bigger microblog communities. Advertisers are flocking to microblogs, asking celebrities to promote their products or distributing coupons or promotions. “My clients are saying, ‘Everybody’s on Weibo, so what do we do?’ ” said Peony Wu, chief digital officer at Ogilvy & Mather China. “So many big companies are now testing the waters.” Ⅰ . Please choose the best answer to each of the following questions. 1. Which of the following statements is TRUE according to the passage?
A. Sina’s market value is about $5 billion.
B. Sina’s microblog is the undisputed champion in China.
C. Renren is the leader of Chinese social networking companies.
D. Twitter adds some local elements to attract users.
答案: Sina’s microblog is the undisputed champion in China.
7. 【单选题】What should you do by Sina Weibo?
A. Posting photographs and video.
B. Creating bigger microblog communities.
C. Sharing other people’s posts.
D. All of the above.
答案:请关注【九八五题库】微信公众号,发送题目获取正确答案。
8. 【判断题】The game Go is more difficult than chess, but chess is more subtle than Go.
答案:请关注【九八五题库】微信公众号,发送题目获取正确答案。
9. 【判断题】If you want to be a winner in a Go game, you need to capture the opponent’s actu 成人学历 al pieces as many as possible.
答案:请关注【九八五题库】微信公众号,发送题目获取正确答案。
10. 【判断题】The story about Wang Zhi, the woodcutter, tells much about the enduring fascination of the game Go.
答案:请关注【九八五题库】微信公众号,发送题目获取正确答案。
11. 【判断题】During Tang Dynasty, Go began to spread to some neighboring countries.
答案:请关注【九八五题库】微信公众号,发送题目获取正确答案。
12. 【判断题】The “four accomplishments” necessary for a cultivated gentleman in Tang Dynasty are proficiency in Go, lute-playing, book writing and painting.
答案:请关注【九八五题库】微信公众号,发送题目获取正确答案。
13. 【单选题】 宜立特大学英语快速阅读 Book 4,Unit 3,Passage 2 Ⅰ . Please choose the best answer to each of the following questions. 1. In the first line, Paragraph 1, the phrase “bump into” means __________.
A. come across
B. bum around
广东开放大学 >C. pay a visit to
D. call on
答案:请关注【九八五题库】微信公众号,发送题目获取正确答案。
14. 【单选题】 4. Which CANNOT be inferred from paragraph eight about the novel Oliver Twist?
A. The protagonist had a poor childhood.
B. The author depicted Oliver Twist’s childhood vividly.
C. The author wildly exaggerated the misery and poverty that Oliver Twist experienced.
D. The main character is Oliver Twist.
答案:请关注【九八五题库】微信公众号,发送题目获取正确答案。
15. 【单选题】5. What is the author’s attitude to the misery literature?
A. Ambiguous.
B. Critical.
C. Subjective.
D. Approving.
答案:请关注【九八五题库】微信公众号,发送题目获取正确答案。
16. 【单选题】 1. Some largest distributors of soy milk promote their products by __________ .
A. advertisement
B. television product placement
C. coupon
D. all of the above
答案:请关注【九八五题库】微信公众号,发送题目获取正确答案。
17. 【单选题】 5. What can be inferred from the last paragraph?
A. All the soy milks did not meet the leadership criteria.
B. Soy milk brands have a long way to go in terms of taste.
C. Soy milk is out of date.
D. Soy milk is not tasty compared with ketchup.
答案:请关注【九八五题库】微信公众号,发送题目获取正确答案。
18. 【单选题】According to this passage, the Artificial Intelligence Industry Alliance was established by the following industry giants EXCEPT __________ .
A. Tencent
B. Alibaba
C. Google
D. Baidu
答案:请关注【九八五题库】微信公众号,发送题目获取正确答案。