最新国家开放大学电大《人文英语4》网络核心课形考网考作业及答案
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考试说明:2018年秋期电大把《人文英语4》网络核心课纳入到“国开平台”进行考核,它共有八个形考任务(单元自测)。针对该门课程,本人汇总了该科所有的题,形成一个完整的标准题库,并且以后会不断更新,对考生的复习、作业和考试起着非常重要的作用,会给您节省大量的时间。做考题时,利用本文档中的查找工具,把考题中的关键字输到查找工具的查找内容框内,就可迅速查找到该题答案。本文库还有其他网核及教学考一体化答案,敬请查看。本课程考核采用形成性考核与终结性考试相结合的方式。 since he graduated from Harvard University. 形成性考核占课程综合成绩的50%,终结性考试占课程综合成绩的50%。课程考核成绩统一采用百分制,即形成性考核、终结性考试、课程综合成绩均采用百分制。课程综合成绩达到60分及以上(及格),可获得本课程相应学分。 单元自测 1
一、选择填空,从A、B、C三个选项中选出一个能填入空白处的最佳选项。(每题10分) 题目1
– Thank you for your invitation. _______________ 选择一项: B. It's a pleasure. 题目2
– Good afternoon. Can I help you? ______________ 选择一项:
B. I need to buy a birthday present for my son. 题目3
On average, a successful lawyer has to talk to several ________ a day. 选择一项: B. clients 题目4 题干
Both the kids and their parents __________English, I think. I know it from their accent. 选择一项: B. are 题目5
John's father _________ mathematics in this school ever
选择一项: B. has taught 题目1
– Do you think I can borrow your bike for a few hours?________ 选择一项:
A. I'm sorry, but I really need it this afternoon. 题目2
– Excuse me, could you tell the time? _________ 选择一项:
C. It's three thirty by my watch. 题目3
Professor Smith promised to look ________ my paper, that is, to read it carefully before the defence. 选择一项: A. over 题目4
Never before _________ see such a terrible car accident on the road! 选择一项: C. did I 题目5
Both the kids and their parents __________English, I think. I know it from their accent. 选择一项: C. are 题目1
– Do you think I can borrow your bike for a few hours?
_________________ 选择一项:
C. I'm sorry, but I really need it this afternoon. 题目2
– Thank you for your invitation. _________ 选择一项: C. It's a pleasure. 题目3
As the bus came round the corner, it ran ________ a big tree by the roadside. 选择一项: B. into 题目4
Never before _________ see such a terrible car accident on the road! 选择一项: C. did I 题目5
Did you notice the guy _________head looked like a big potato? 选择一项: B. whose
二、阅读理解:选择题(每题10分)
Graffiti painting is traditionally a daredevil pursuit. Teenagers dodge security guards to put their names on trains and buses. But over the past decade, graffiti has all but disappeared from Britain's cities. Between 2007 and 2012 the number of incidents of graffiti recorded by the British Transport Police fell by 63%. A survey by the Environment Ministry shows that fewer places are blighted by tags than ever. Graffiti are increasingly confined to sanctioned walls, such as the Stockwell ball courts. In time the practice may die out entirely.
The most obvious reason for the decline in tagging and train-painting is better policing. Numerous CCTV cameras mean it is harder to get away with painting illegally. And punishments are more severe. A generational shift is apparent, too. Fewer teenagers are getting into painting walls. They prefer to play with iPads and video games. Some have gone to art school and want to make money from their paintings. The Internet means that painters can win far more attention by posting pictures online than they can by breaking into a railway yard.
Taggers and graffiti artists mostly grew up in the 1980s and 1990s. Those men—and almost all are men—are now older and less willing to take risks. Graffiti may eventually disappear. But for now the hobby is almost respectable. The former graffiti artists paint abandoned warehouses at the weekend. It has become something to do on a Sunday afternoon—a slightly healthier alternative to sitting and watching football.
1.Teenagers are not afraid of being caught by security guards when they put their names on trains and buses. F 2.Less tags can be found in public places nowadays. T 3.Because of better policing graffiti decreases. T 4.Some teenagers go to art school in order to learn to paint walls. F
5.Taggers and graffiti artists are still willing to take risks.F 选择题(每题10分)
Jim Thorpe was a Native American. He was born in 1888 in an Indian Territory(印第安人保护区)that is now Oklahoma. Like most Native American children then, he liked to fish, hunt, swim, and play games outdoors. He was healthy and strong, but he had very little formal education. In 1950, Jim Thorpe was named the greatest American football player. He was also an Olympic gold medal winner. But