Ⅰ 大学英语快速阅读 董亚芬主编Book2课后习题答案
点击链接http://wenku..com/view/898bc54db307e87101f696b6.html?re=view
Ⅱ 急求 新视野大学英语快速阅读第二版 的答案,是是快速阅读的答案,百度文库没有。。。
你好
网络文库一般都是有的
没有的话借上届的课本
谢谢采纳
Ⅲ 求大学英语快速阅读答案
1. You need to understand English when reading English, not Chinese.
2. You need to only use all-English dictionaries, never English-Chinese dictionaries.
3. If you read 20 words and there is only 1 new word, you are OK.
4. If you read 20 words and there are more than 1 new word, don't read it, since it is too difficult for you.
Good luck.
Ⅳ 大学英语快速阅读的《大学英语快速阅读》新版
基本信息
书 名: 《大学英语快速阅读》作者: 吴新华,余诗龙主编
出 版 社: 武汉大学出版社
出版时间: 2010-1-1
字数: 186000
版次: 1
页数: 157
印刷时间: 2010-1-1
开本: 16开
印次: 1
纸张: 胶版纸
I S B N : 9787307053946
内容简介
本书每单元由四篇文章组成,前两篇为课内阅读,由教师按规定的时间随堂练习,有计划、有步骤地培养学生的阅读技能;后两篇文章为课后阅读,可作为课后作业和学生自主学习材料,进一步强化和巩固课内所学的内容。 相信通过学习本教材,学生能更迅速和更有效地掌握英语阅读技能。
目录
Unit One Study Methods
In-Class Reading
Passage I Successful English Learning
Passage II Read Good Books
After-Class Reading
Passage I English Idioms
Passage II Reading for A's
阅读技巧:辨识意见和态度
Unit Two Friend and Friendship
In-Class Reading
Passage I The Stages of Friendship
Passage II How to Nurture a Friendship
After-Class Reading
Passage I Arnold--My Best Friend
Passage II Friendship: A Story
阅读技巧:头脑成像
Unit Three Work and Life
In-Class Reading
Passage I Tips and Advice for Workaholics
Passage II Are We Having Fun
After-Class Reading
Passage I The Importance of Just Being There
Passage II The Joy of SOH0: Making a Life while Making a Living
阅读技巧:区别事实与观点
Unit Four War and Peace
In-Class Reading
Passage I World War II
Passage II My Lai Massacre and the Peace Protest Movement
After-Class Reading
Passage I Why We Never Need to Worry About World Peace
Passage II Welcome Home, Soldier
阅读技巧:根据单词构成猜词悟意
Unit Five Ecation
In-Class Reading
Passage I Alt Ecation
Passage II Some Schools Are Leaving Recess Behind
After-Class Reading
Passage I High School Dropouts
Passage II Computers in Ecation
阅读技巧:寻找主题句
Unit Six Car Culture
In-Class Reading
Passage I The Origin of the Automobile
Passage II Well, America: Is the Car Culture Working
After-Class Reading
Passage I Car Culture Captivates China
Passage II Trying to Save Kids in Hot Cars
阅读技巧:如何读出言外之意
Unit Seven Social Problems
In-Class Reading
Passage I Should Parents Become Big Brothers
Passage II Degrees, but No Jobs
After-Class Reading
Passage I Bullying at School: Tackling the Problem
Passage II African American Marriage in the 20th Century
阅读技巧:辨认重要事实或细节
Unit Eight Business Matters
In-Class Reading
Passage I A Pension Plan
Passage II The Japanese Authorities Attempt to Clean Up thePachinko Business
After-Class Reading
Passage I The PC' s 25th Birthday
Passage II Pumping Up the Spare Tyre
阅读技巧:如何理解篇章结构
Unit Nine Computer
In-Class Reading
Passage 1 The Wonderful Structure of a Microcomputer
Passage II Father of the Computer
After-Class Reading
Passage I Dealing with Computer Viruses
Passage II Computerized Supermarket
阅读技巧:如何在阅读中扩大视幅
Unit Ten Environmental Problems
In-Class Reading
Passage I Atmospheric Pollution
Passage II Ecological Effects of Road-Building
After-Class Reading
Passage I E1 Nino in 1997-1998
Passage II China's War with the Desert
阅读技巧:理解修辞语言
Ⅳ 求新世纪大学英语快速阅读4答案
书本前面或者后封面有写呢,我记得好像是叫“U校园”app还是“随行课堂”,练习在app上都是有的,答案也有。ps:书上必须有二维码或者一串什么数字,下载了软件才能免费听呢,否则还要在上面买。
Ⅵ 大学英语快速阅读-(Book4)(第三版)详细答案解析
貌似都没有详解哦,你只能看书后面的答案了
Ⅶ 哪位大神有 大学英语四级快速阅读理解 新题型的练习题哪的都行,网址也行。麻烦发一个连接 或
Section B
Directions: In this section, you are going to read a passage with ten statements attached to it. Each statement contains information given in one of the paragraphs. Identify the paragraph from which the information is derived. You may choose a paragraph more than once. Each paragraph is marked with a letter. Answer the questions by marking the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2.
Universities Branch Out
A) As never before in their long history, universities have become instruments of national competition as well as instruments of peace. They are the place of the scientific discoveries that move economies forward, and the primary means of ecating the talent required to obtain and maintain competitive advantage. But at the same time, the opening of national borders to the flow of goods, services, information and especially people has made universities a powerful force for global integration, mutual understanding and geopolitical stability.
B) In response to the same forces that have driven the world economy, universities have become more self-consciously global: seeking students from around the world who represent the entire range of cultures and values, sending their own students abroad to prepare them for global careers, offering courses of study that address the challenges of an interconnected world and collaborative (合作的) research programs to advance science for the benefit of all humanity.
C) Of the forces shaping higher ecation none is more sweeping than the movement across borders. Over the past three decades the number of students leaving home each year to study abroad has grown at an annual rate of 3.9 percent, from 800,000 in 1975 to 2.5 million in 2004. Most travel from one developed nation to another, but the flow from developing to developed countries is growing rapidly. The reverse flow, from developed to developing countries, is on the rise, too. Today foreign students earn 30 percent of the doctoral degrees awarded in the United States and 38 percent of those in the United Kingdom. And the number crossing borders for undergraate study is growing as well, to 8 percent of the undergraates at America’s best institutions and 10 percent of all undergraates in the U.K. In the United States, 20 percent of the newly hired professors in science and engineering are foreign-born, and in China many newly hired faculty members at the top research universities received their graate ecation abroad.
点击下载2013年12月大学英语四级样题及答案>>
D) Universities are also encouraging students to spend some of their undergraate years in another country. In Europe, more than 140,000 students participate in the Erasmus program each year, taking courses for credit in one of 2,200 participating institutions across the continent. And in the United States, institutions are helping place students in summer internships (实习) abroad to prepare them for global careers. Yale and Harvard have led the way, offering every undergraate at least one international study or internship opportunity—and providing the financial resources to make it possible.
E) Globalization is also reshaping the way research is done. One new trend involves sourcing portions of a research program to another country. Yale professor and Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator Tian Xu directs a research center focused on the genetics of human disease at Shanghai’s Fudan University, in collaboration with faculty colleagues from both schools. The Shanghai center has 95 employees and graate students working in a 4,300-square-meter laboratory facility. Yale faculty, postdoctors and graate students visit regularly and attend videoconference seminars with scientists from both campuses. The arrangement benefits both countries; Xu’s Yale lab is more proctive, thanks to the lower costs of concting research in China, and Chinese graate students, postdoctors and faculty get on-the-job training from a world-class scientist and his U.S. team.
F) As a result of its strength in science, the United States has consistently led the world in the commercialization of major new technologies, from the mainframe computer and the integrated circuit of the 1960s to the Internet infrastructure (基 础 设 施 ) and applications software of the 1990s. The link between university-based science and instrial application is often indirect but sometimes highly visible: Silicon Valley was intentionally created by Stanford University, and Route 128 outside Boston has long housed companies spun off from MIT and Harvard. Around the world, governments have encouraged ing of this model, perhaps most successfully in Cambridge, England, where Microsoft and scores of other leading software and biotechnology companies have set up shop around the university.
G) For all its success, the United States remains deeply hesitant about sustaining the research-university model. Most politicians recognize the link between investment in science and national economic strength, but support for research funding has been unsteady. The budget of the National Institutes of Health doubled between 1998 and 2003, but has risen more slowly than inflation since then. Support for the physical sciences and engineering barely kept pace with inflation ring that same period. The attempt to make up lost ground is welcome, but the nation would be better served by steady, predictable increases in science funding at the rate of long-term GDP growth, which is on the order of inflation plus 3 percent per year.
H) American politicians have great difficulty recognizing that admitting more foreign students can greatly promote the national interest by increasing international understanding. Adjusted for inflation, public funding for international exchanges and foreign-language study is well below the levels of 40 years ago. In the wake of September 11, changes in the visa process caused a dramatic decline in the number of foreign students seeking admission to U.S. universities, and a corresponding surge in enrollments in Australia, Singapore and the U.K. Objections from American university and business leaders led to improvements in the process and a reversal of the decline, but the United States is still seen by many as unwelcoming to international students.
I) Most Americans recognize that universities contribute to the nation’s well-being through their scientific research, but many fear that foreign students threaten American competitiveness by taking their knowledge and skills back home. They fail to grasp that welcoming foreign students to the United States has two important positive effects: first, the very best of them stay in the States and—like immigrants throughout history—strengthen the nation; and second, foreign students who study in the United States become ambassadors for many of its most cherished (珍视) values when they return home. Or at least they understand them better. In America as elsewhere, few instruments of foreign policy are as effective in promoting peace and stability as welcoming international university students.
注意:此部分试题请在答题卡 2 上作答。
46. American universities prepare their undergraates for global careers by giving them chances for international study or internship.
47. Since the mid-1970s, the enrollment of overseas students has increased at an annual rate of 3.9 percent.
48. The enrollment of international students will have a positive impact on America rather than threaten its competitiveness.
49. The way research is carried out in universities has changed as a result of globalization.
50. Of the newly hired professors in science and engineering in the United States, twenty percent come from foreign countries.
51. The number of foreign students applying to U.S. universities decreased sharply after September 11 e to changes in the visa process.
52. The U.S. federal funding for research has been unsteady for years.
53. Around the world, governments encourage the model of linking university-based science and instrial application.
54. Present-day universities have become a powerful force for global integration.
55. When foreign students leave America, they will bring American values back to their home countries.
答案:Section B
46. D 47. C 48. I 49. E 50. C
51. H 52. G 53. F 54. A 55. I
Ⅷ 大学英语快速阅读答案
额,买一个学习机查一下不就得了!!!