<label id="m9jwq"></label>
    1. <ul id="m9jwq"></ul><s id="m9jwq"></s>
    2. <s id="m9jwq"></s>

      歡迎來到新航道官網(wǎng)!Welcome to New Channel School!
      400-0311-689

      首頁>雅思>雅思機經(jīng)>2021年11月20日雅思考試閱讀機經(jīng)真題答案回憶【新航道版】

      2021年11月20日雅思考試閱讀機經(jīng)真題答案回憶【新航道版】

      來源:新航道 原創(chuàng)作者:sjzbj 瀏覽:0 發(fā)布日期:2021-11-26 11:34

      返回列表

      新航道石家莊雅思培訓機構(gòu)為大家總結(jié)關于2021年11月20日雅思考試閱讀機經(jīng)真題答案回憶【新航道版】。

      READING

      Passage 1

      Topic

      The oldest leather shoes in the world

      1-13為填空題

      1.oil

      2.暫缺

      3. Cord

      4-13.暫缺

      Passage 2

      Topic

      The Plan to Bring an Asteroid to Earth

      A:Send a robot into space. Grab an asteroid. Bring it back to Earth orbit This may sound like a crazy plan, but it was discussed quite seriously last week by a group of scientists and

      engineers at the alifomia Instiute of Technology. The four-day workshop was dedicated to investigating the feasibility and requirements of capturing a near-Earth asteroid, bringing it

      closer to our planet and using it as a base for future manned spacetight missins.

      This is not something the scientists are imagining could be done some day off in the future.

      This is possible with the technology we have today and could be accomplished within a decade.

      "Once you get over the initial reaction- "You want to do what?!'一it actully starts to seem like a reasonable idea," said engineer John Brophy from NASAS Jet Propulsion Laboratory,

      who helped organize the workshop.

      B: Though reamanging the heavens may seem an excessive undertaking, the mission has its merits. Parking an asteroid in a gravitatinally neutral spot between the Earth and the sun, known as a Lagrange point, would provide a stationary base fom which to launch missions further into space. There are several advantages to this. For one, launching materials from Earth requires a lot of power, fuel, and consequently money, to get out of our planet's deep gravity well. Resources mined from an asteroid with very litle gravitational pull could be easily shutled around the solar system.

      And many asteroids have a lot to offer. Some are full of metals such as iron, which can be used to build space- based ha bitats while others are up to one-quarter water, which would be

      either used for liesupport or broken down into hydrogen and oxygen to make fuel. As well, asteroid regolth placed around a spacep hull would shield it against radiation fom deep space, alowing safer travel to other planets.

      An asteroid could be an altemative to setting up camp on the moon, or complement a moon base with more resouroes for heading further out in the solar system, said engineer Louis Friedman, cofounder of the Planetary Societly and another co-organizer of the Callech workshop.

      C: There's also the potential for mining asterold materials to bring back to Earth. Even a small asteroid contains roughly 30 times the amount of metals mined over all of human history, with an estimated worth of $70 tllion. And astronomers would have the chance to get a close-up look at one of the solar system's earliest rlis, generating important sclentific

      data.

      Though technically feasible, budging such a hefty target - - with a mass in excess of a millin tons一would not be easy.

      "You're moving the largest mother lode imaginable,"E said former astronaut Rusty Schweickart, cofounder of the B612 Foundation, an organization dedicated to protecting Earth from asteroid strikesMost asteroids are iregular chunks of rock that spin chatically along rregular axes. Engineers would need to be absolutely certain they could control such a potentially dangerous object "It's the opposite of planetary defense; if you do something wrong you have a Tunguska event," said engineer Marco Tantardini from the Planetary Society, rering to the powerful 1908 explosion above a remole Russian region thought to have been caused by a meteoroid or comet Of course, any asteroid brought back under the proposed plan would be too small to cause a repeat of such an event.

      D: Sil, these obstacles are like catnip to engineers, who love to go over every potential difiulty in order to solve it. Actually executing the asteroid retrieval plan would help demonstrate and greatly expand mankind's space-based engneering capabitties, said Friedman. For instance, the mission would teach engineers how to capture an uncooperaive target, which could be good practice for future planetary defense missions, he added. And if the challenges for a large asteroid seem too daunting, researchers could always start with a smaler asteroid, perhaps six to 30 feet across. Gradually larger objects could be part of a campaign where engineers learm to deal with progressively greater complcalions.

      E: No matter the size of the asteroid, these plans would require hety investments. Even capturing a small asteroid would consume at least a blion dolars and anything larger would

      be a mufibilindollar endeavor. Convincing taxpayers to foot such a bil could be tricky. Considering the resources available in any asteroid, private industry might be interested in

      getting involved. One possible mission would be to simply execute the first part of the plan pushing the asteroid to nearEarth orbit 一and then convene a commercial competition

      inting arnyone who wants to develop the capabilies to reach and mine the object.

      Though the undertaking might be soentifally. exciting, this. wouldn't be the primary motivalion. An asteroid would provide great insight int the solar system's formation, it's not

      enough to justify the expense of bringing one to Earth. Any interesting science can be done much cheaper with an unmanned robotic spacecraft, said chemist Joseph A Nuth from

      NASA's Goddard Spaceflight Center."Ulimately, we would be developing this target in order to help move out into the solar system," Brophy said.

      題目方面

      14-18為list of headings

      A. An available goal, not a dream

      B. What the asterold can offer

      C. Need skill and care

      D. Start from a smaller challenge

      E. Seek for support

      14-18暫缺

      19-21為匹配題

      19. Louis Friedman B

      20. Rusty Schweickart C

      21. Joseph A Nuth E

      22-26為填空題

      22. Asteroid can offer

      23. Less gravity

      24. a landing place

      25. Metal can be brought back to earth

      26. Water can be used

      Passage3

      Topic

      The causes of linguistic changes

      Mechanism of Linguistic Change

      The changes that have aused the most disagreement are those in pronunciation. We have varlous sources of evidence for the pronundations of earlier times, such as the spelings.

      the treatment of words borrowed from other languages or borrowed by them, the descriptions of contemporary, grammanians and spelling-reformers, and the modem pronuncialions in all the languages and dialeds concermed. From the middle of the siteenth century, there are in England writers who attempt to descrbe the postion of the speech-organs for the production of English phonemes, and who invent what are in effect systems of phonetic symbols. These various kind of evidence, combined with a knowledge of the mechanisms of speech-produdion, can often give us a very good idea of the pronunciation of an eartier age, though absolute certainty is never possible.

      When we study the pronunciaton of a language over any period of a few generations or more, we find there are always large-scale regularities in the changes: for example, over a

      certain period of time, just about all the long [] vowels in a language may change into long[e:] vowels, or all the [bloconsonants in a certain position (for example at the end of a

      word) may change into [p] consonants. Such regular changes are often caled sound laws. There are no universal sound laws (even though sound laws often reflect universal

      tendencies), but simply particular sound laws for one given language (or dialect) at one given period.

      It is also possible that fashion plays a part in the process of change. It certainly plays a part in the spread of change: one person imitates another, and people with the most prestige

      are most lkely to be imitated, so that a change that takes place in one social group may be imitated (more or less acurately) by speakers in another group. When a social group goes

      up or down in the world, s its pronuncation may gain or lose prestige. It is salid that, after the Russian Revolution of 1917, the upper-class pronundation of Russian, which had

      formertly been considered desirable, became on the contrary an undesirable kind of accent to have, so that people tried to disguise it. Some of the changes in accepted

      English pronunciation in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries have been shown to consist in the replacement of one style of pronunciation by another style already existing. and it is Ikely that such subsitutions were a result of the great social changes of the period: the increased power and wealth of the middle classes, and their steady infitration upwards into the ranks of the' landed gentry, probably carried elements of middle-class pronunciation into upper-dass speech.

      A less specifc variant of the argument is that the imitation of children s is imperfect: they copy their parents' speech, but never reproduceit exacty. This is true, but it is also true

      that such deviations from adult speech are usually corrected in later childhood. Perhaps it is more significant that even。adults show a certain amount of random variation in their

      pronunclation of a gven phone me, even if the phonetic context is kept unchanged. This, however, cannot explain changes in pronunciation unless it can be shown that there is some systematic trend in the failures of imitation: if they are merely random deviations they will cancel one another out and there will be no net changein the language.

      One such force which is often invoked is the principle of ease, or minimization of ffort. The change from fussy to fuzzy would be an example of assimilation. which is a very common kind of change. Assimilation is the changing of a sound under the infuence of a neighbouring one. Fon example, the word scant was once skamt,but the /mhas been changed to m/ under the infuence of the folowing Itw. Greater efficiency has hereby been achieved, because In/ and IV are articulated in the same place(with the tip of the tongue against the teth-ridge), whereas /m/ is articulated esewhere (with the two lips). So the place of articulation of the nasal consonant has been changed to confom with that of the fllowing plosive. A more recent example of the same kind of thing is the common pronunciaion of fooball as foball.

      Assimilation is not the only way in which we change our pronunciation in order to increase effciengy. It is very common for consonants to be lost af the. end of a word: in Middle

      English, word-final [-η] was often lost in unstressed sylables, so that baken "to bake'changed from [bak?n] t.and. later to.. Consonant-clusters are oten simplfied. At onetime

      there was a [t in words like castle and Christmas, and an intial [K] in words like knight and know. Sometimes a whole sllable is dropped out when two successive syllables begin with the same consonant (haplology): a recent example is temporary, which in Britain s oten pronounced as i建were temporary.

      27-30為填空題.

      The pronunciation of living language undergo changes throughout thousands of years.

      Large scale regular Changes are usually caled 27. sound laws. There are three reasons for these changes. Firsty, the infuence of one language on another; another aspect which

      affect accent is 28.fashion.Secondly, 29.Children jimitate the words imperfect,and may also contibute to this change if there are insignificant deviations tough later they may be

      corrected Finally, for those random variations in pronunciation, the deeper evidence lies in the 30. assimilation.

      31-37為判斷題

      31. It is impossible for modem people to find pronunialion of words in an eartier age.False

      32. The great change of language in Russian history is related to the nising status and fortune of middle classes. Not Given

      33. AI the children learn speeches from aduts while they assume that certain language is difoult to imitate exactly. Not Given

      34. Pronunciation with causal inaccuracy wll not exert big infuence on language changes.True

      35. The link of 'mt can be infuenced being pronounced as. True

      36. The [g] in gnat not being pronounced will not be spelt out in the future. Not Given

      37. The sound of temporary' cannot wholly present its spelling. True

      38- 40為匹配題

      A Since the speakers can pronounce it with less effort

      B Assimiation of a sound under the ifluence of a neighbouring one

      C It is a trend for changes in pronunciation in a large scale in a given period


      閱讀調(diào)查

      您覺得新航道提供的這篇文章有幫助嗎?

      您需要新航道內(nèi)部講義資料嗎?

      新航道助您順利出國有打算了解嗎?

      您的姓名
      您的電話
      提交獲取幫助

      新航道英語,高能高分優(yōu)選擇!

      雅思機經(jīng)課程中心

      查看更多 >
      • 雅思核心班 內(nèi)部講義,代報名服務 雅思核心班系列,新航道雅思核心班,雅思基礎/強化/精品核心班課程 在線咨詢
      • 雅思沖刺班 內(nèi)部講義,代報名服務 雅思沖刺班系列,新航道雅思沖刺班,雅思沖刺班有多少課時 在線咨詢
      • 雅思基礎一對一 內(nèi)部講義,代報名服務 雅思基礎一對一,新航道雅思基礎一對一 在線咨詢
      • 雅思基礎一對二 內(nèi)部講義,代報名服務 雅思基礎一對二,新航道雅思基礎一對二 在線咨詢
      • 雅思工作室-40小時短訓班 雅思工作室,雅思課程 在線咨詢
      • 雅思工作室-60小時強化班 雅思工作室,雅思課程 在線咨詢
      • 關注新航道動態(tài)

        關注新航道動態(tài)

      • 關注獲取學習資料

        關注獲取學習資料

      課程咨詢熱線
      400-0311-689
      集團客服電話
      400-097-9266

      新航道石家莊學校:石家莊槐安路和建華大街東北角萬達廣場寫字樓B座二層

      郵編:050000

      欧美日韩动漫精品专区,99热99这里精品6国产,欧美一级a毛无片在线,亚洲无码 在线免费视频 亚洲无码播放亚洲成人av 人妻丰满熟妇岳AV无码区HD

          <label id="m9jwq"></label>
        1. <ul id="m9jwq"></ul><s id="m9jwq"></s>
        2. <s id="m9jwq"></s>