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> 103年 - 103 新北市立國民中學教師聯合甄選:英文科#16684
103年 - 103 新北市立國民中學教師聯合甄選:英文科#16684
科目:
教甄◆英文科 |
年份:
103年 |
選擇題數:
60 |
申論題數:
0
試卷資訊
所屬科目:
教甄◆英文科
選擇題 (60)
1. Intrinsic motivation comes mainly from _______. (A) achievement (B) praise (C) peer pressure (D) material reward
2. Listening, in comparison with speaking, is considered a(n) ______ language skill. (A) acquired (B) intuitive (C) receptive (D) passive
3. The English language skill that is most often tested on average high students in Taiwan is ______. (A) listening (B) speaking (C)reading (D) writing
4. Stephen Krashan proposed the input hypothesis, arguing for ________ input (i+1) as the key to successful language acquisition. (A) constructional (B) comprehensible (C) comprehensive (D) controversial
5. The pooling and exchange of information to achieve some objective is mainly the characteristic of ________. (A) brainstorming (B) information gap (C) jigsaw (D) project
6. Praising the students for making sincere effort to try out is a main feature of _______. (A) focused objective (B) cooperative learning (C) right-brain processing (D) risk taking
7. A test to predict the potential of learning is a(n) _______ test. (A) diagnostic test (B) proficiency test (C) placement test (D) aptitude test II.Vocabulary:
8. There were perfectly ________ reasons why the chairperson should be presented with a complete report of the foundation. (A) benign (B) cogent (C) jaunty (D) offensive
9. After a long economic depression, people are extremely ________ about the future. (A) apprehensive (B) evasive (C) lucrative (D) selective
10. We are very interested in the source of the rumors, though knowing they are absolutely ______. (A) backward (B) dramatic (C) fictitious (D) subsequent
11. The corrupted officials have an ________ appetite for all the profit they can get. (A) affluent (B) edible (C) insatiable (D) invincible
12. Mr. Wei Lung-hao was a famous ______ in Taiwan. His talk show tapes are still selling well many years after his death. (A) archeologist (B) dramatist (C) novelist (D) raconteur
13. The ________ is on the teacher to adjust the pace and content of teaching to meet with the ability of the learners. (A) burden (B) onus (C) provision (D) warrant
14. Our textile products are famous for their ______ value as well as their durability and good quality. (A) aesthetic (B) controversial (C) fragmentary (D) vulnerable
15. The clown ________ at the children and made them laugh during the circus performance. (A) beheld (B) grimaced (C) nodded (D) stared
16. One of the most astonishing and almost ________ features of the case was the amount of trust the bank placed on the company on the edge of bankruptcy. (A) bizarre (B) common (C) furious (D) judicious
17. He sometimes showed a ________ indifference to her feelings, which made her very upset. (A) blithe (B) mournful (C) queer (D) reserved
18. The boss is furious this morning, but nobody knows the object of his ________. (A) cabaret (B) friction (C) ire (D) parasite
19. Eleanor, a designer with an ________ flair, will decorate eight offices. (A) imagery (B) impeccable (C) integrative (D) invasive
20. The arborist plans to ________ heavy branches from the towering sugar pine tree. (A) transact (B) treadle (C) trick (D) truncate
21. The committee plans to ________ this specific information over the Internet. (A) deceive (B) disseminate (C) devour (D) divide
22. Politicians urge passage of ________ laws to protect an individual's right to privacy. (A) stabbing (B) scholastic (C) straggle (D) stringent
23. It appears that Pete is _______ to criticism because he has so much confidence in his opinions. (A) imbalanced (B) immortal (C) impervious (D) insane
24. A boy said that the gentle _______ of the carnival ride was boring compared to roller coasters! (A) objection (B) omission (C) orientation (D) oscillation
25. George offered _______ apologies to his coach for disobeying curfew. (A) unobtrusive (B) subaqueous (C) unratified (D) undebatable
26. (A) flight (B) program (C) date (D) table
27. (A) dish (B) place (C) mood (D) time
28. (A) also (B) instead (C) still (D) finally
29. (A) somewhere (B) somewhat (C) somehow (D) something
30. (A) fee (B) jewel (C) perfume (D) wine
31. (A) compass (B) discipline (C) fuel (D) way
32. (A) carnival (B) global (C) home (D) micro
33. (A) climb (B) glide (C) leap (D) slide
34. (A) ever (B) much (C) never (D) rather
35. (A) carrying (B) despite (C) pending (D) regarding
36. (A) background (B) model (C) purpose (D) theory
37. (A) anticipate (B) locate (C) prevent (D) resolve
38. (A) change (B) gene (C) germ (D) therapy
39. (A) combined (B) contrasted (C) exchanged (D) negotiated
40. (A) genomes (B) offspring (C) patients (D) relatives
41. (A) after all (B) at least (C) at most (D) in part
42. (A) confused (B) diffused (C) mediated (D) supplied
43. (A) hospitals (B) labs (C) news (D) public
44. (A) beliefs (B) marvels (C) hurdles (D) pensions
45. (A) Although (B) Because (C) Even (D) Once
46. What was Teddy Roosevelt’s attitude about women and children? (A) He believed that children all need the care of mothers. (B) He thought that they committed a crime again human race. (C) He believed women growing up in big families were good role models. (D) He thought women having many children set good example for other women.
47. What may be the main reason for the changing attitudes about women who have children relatively late? (A) The feminist movement. (B) The many gray-haired mothers. (C) Young mothers who had their bodies unscathed.. (D) The false assumption that early motherhood is better for the body.
48. What subgroup of women do recent studies suggest have the longest life span? (A) Those who have fewer children, and have them early. (B) Those who have fewer children, and have them late. (C) Those who have more children, and have them early. (D) Those who have more children, and have them late.
49. Why, according to the passage, is late motherhood a marker for longevity? (A) Late motherhood suggests more mature physical and psychological conditions. (B) Old mothers need not spend as much energy on their children as young mothers. (C) Women who get pregnant when they are old receive more feedback from the children. (D) Late pregnancy implies late menopause, suggesting delayed onset of age-related diseases.
50. What, according to the passage, is an important factor that contributes to man’s longevity? (A) Their promiscuous nature to propagate the species. (B) Their sacred tenets of evolutionary psychology. (C) Their refraining from over investment in reproduction. (D) The number of children that their spouses produce at an early age.
51. In most people’s eyes, many health insurance companies . (A) posted considerable amount of loss (B) are suffering steep cost increase (C) have employers from all walks of life (D) are making huge profit
52. Which of the following is true about health insurance companies? (A)Their profit is higher than other insurance companies. (B)They benefit from the new medical technologies. (C) They are troubled by the low profit margin. (D) They hire too many employees who do not pay any more cent.
53. The HMOs received complaints on its restrictions mainly from __________. (A) doctors (B) patients (C) other insurers (D) employers
54. The “employers” referred to in this passage means those __________. (A) of the insurers (B) of the insured (C) of the medical offices (D) of the pharmacists
55. The health insurance system is unsustainable because of the disapproval of _________. (A) the employers (B) the doctors (C) the insured (D) the company
56. What are the advantages of product standardization? (A) A woman may prefer chaos to order. (B) They save time and reduce confusion. (C) Clothing sizes may disguise fattened figures (D) Clothing sizes become more and more a matter of vanity.
57. Why is the trend in women’s clothing sizes toward less standardization? (A) They have the inclinations to align their hearts and heads. (B) Standardization is but an imagination in many women’s mind. (C) They prefer sizing systems that don’t make the sizes too plain. (D) Standardized products are attached only to a dependable brand.
58. What is one possible explanation that men’s clothing sizes have not been affected by de-standardization? (A) Men do not indulge their appetites as much as women do. (B) Being large in sizes does not have strong negative connotations. (C) The sizing system of men’s clothes is the same in different countries. (D) Men do not care for soothing words—petite, regular and missy—as much as women.
59. What would happen if the standardized sizing system is re-introduced? (A) It would be easier to try to buy clothes on line. (B) It would mean a dilemma between intellectuality over emotionality. (C) It would be favored by women who need to disguise fattened figures. (D) It would take an unbearable enormous time and budget to have the system re-introduced.
60. What is the potential function of bar coding of standardized sizes that cannot be read on sight? (A) More things must be tried on, which takes more time. (B) That would eliminate the cost of attaching the written labels. (C) Women cannot deceive themselves anymore and must face the reality. (D) Women who seek shopping efficiency and those who are after vanity may both be satisfied.
申論題 (0)