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研究所、轉學考(插大)、學士後-英文
> 109年 - 109亞洲大學_學士後招生_獸醫學系︰英文#100898
109年 - 109亞洲大學_學士後招生_獸醫學系︰英文#100898
科目:
研究所、轉學考(插大)、學士後-英文 |
年份:
109年 |
選擇題數:
80 |
申論題數:
0
試卷資訊
所屬科目:
研究所、轉學考(插大)、學士後-英文
選擇題 (80)
1. The fax machine and the telephone ______ on the separate line. (A) am (B) is (C) are (D) be
2. Attach this cable ______ the computer. (A) with (B) into (C) in (D) to
3. Tomorrow _____ a new day with no mistakes in it. (A) is (B) are (C) is going (D) is yet to
複選題
4. The case has not been solved, and nearly two and a half years later, Gilberto is still trying to make sense of what ______ that night. (A) occurred (B) take place (C) happened (D) is happened
5. The number of immigrant students who have arrived in the last three years and speak a language other than Mandarin has nearly doubled in my school district____ 2014. (A) before (B) since (C) after (D) in
6. This year, one in ______ high schoolers in the district are immigrant students. (A) seven (B) seventh (C) sevenness (D) sevenless
7. There are also signs that new immigrants in Taiwan may be increasingly ________. (A) vulnerable (B) endurable (C) inaccurate (D) compatible
8. More than 60 people have been killed by gunshot wounds each year in the city for the past several years. People of color are disproportionately______. (A) affect (B) affective (C) affection (D) affected
9. Many victims were fatally shot in what appeared to be robberies, because non-English speaking immigrants may be targeted because they are less likely to ______ police. (A) notable (B) notify (C) notice (D) note
10. In Ramirez’s case, older teenage boys seemed to have been after him. On a few occasions, the boy came home beaten up. Once, he was robbed of his cellphone. “He was _______,” his father recalled. (A) bullied (B) bulldozed (C) bulldogged (D) bulletined
11. Bats are nature’s pest patrol. Every night the winged mammals venture forth from their caves and roosts to chow down on millions of ______. (A) consent (B) insects (C) incentives (D) insecurities
12. But habitat loss and climate change, as well as infectious diseases, are _________ bats’ ability to do their job. (A) hampering (B) hammering (C) humming (D) humiliating
13. In California’s natural preserves, bats have adapted to occasional wildfires. Scientists wanted to see how these changes might be influencing ______. (A) biochemistry (B) biodiesel (C) biodiversity (D) bioengineering
14. Seventeen bat species call these forests home. The study revealed that eight of them tended to frequent the unburned patches, whereas 11 expanded to the burned areas, while some species visited both. This is a proof that some species of bats ______ from wildfire. (A) beneficial (B) benefit (C) benevolence (D) belittle
15. When there’s lots of variation in habitat after a wildfire, many species benefit in different ways. On the whole, the community becomes more diverse, and that’s a good thing for the __________. (A) land mines (B) landlords (C) landfall (D) landscape
16. For decades the mature brain was understood to be incapable of growing new neurons. Once an individual reached adulthood, the brain began losing neurons rather than ______ them. (A) extending (B) connecting (C) cutting (D) gaining
17. New evidence was building that the adult brain could generate new neurons. In one particularly striking experiment with mice, scientists found that simply running on a wheel led to the birth of new neurons in the hippocampus, a brain ________ that is associated with memory. (A) module (B) structure (C) contexture (D) symptoms
18. New studies have established that exercise also has positive effects on the brains of humans, especially as we age, and that it may even help reduce the risk of Alzheimer’s disease and other neurodegenerative _______. (A) conducive (B) conductive (C) conditions (D) conditionals
19. Physical activity improves the function of many organ systems in the body, but the effects are usually linked to better athletic performance. For example, when you walk or run, your muscles demand more oxygen, and over time your cardiovascular system responds by building new blood ______. (A) vessels (B) streams (C) circulars (D) pressures
20. The cardiovascular changes from exercises are primarily a response to the physical challenges which can enhance ________. (A) endurance (B) encouragement (C) ennui (D) environment
21. Researches carried out over the past decade indicate that exercise seems to be as much a cognitive activity as a physical one. This link between physical activity and brain health may trace back millions of years to the origin of ________. (A) humiliation (B) humidity (C) humankind (D) humbleness
22. If we can better understand why and how exercise engages the brain, perhaps we can leverage the relevant physiological pathways to design novel exercise routines that will boost people’s cognition as they _______. (A) ascend (B) accelerate (C) aggregate (D) age
23. To explore why exercise benefits the brain, we need to first consider which aspects of brain structure and cognition seem most ________ to it. (A) responsible (B) responsive (C) repulsive (D) resistant
24. Researchers have documented clear links between aerobic exercise and benefits to other parts of the brain. Such augmentation of this region has been tied to sharper executive cognitive functions, which involve aspects of planning and decision-_______. (A) taking (B) caking (C) making (D) junking
25. Scientists suspect that increased connections between existing neurons, rather than the birth of new neurons, are responsible for the beneficial effects of _______. (A) excellence (B) expulsion (C) exercise (D) examination
26. We have to be grateful to Taiwan’s medical administrations and practitioners for keeping the outbreak under _________. (A) control (B) concussion (C) consecutive (D) concession
27. To keep fans watching on their smartphones, PCs and TVs, the league is encouraging teams to give their stadiums a ________, lively feel. (A) realistic (B) recessive (C) regressive (D) repetitive
28. All professional baseball leagues around the world have been postponed due to the global ________. (A) pentagon (B) pancake (C) pandemics (D) panorama
29. Beyond baseball, organized sports worldwide have canceled or delayed _______. (A) concealment (B) composition (C) compensation (D) competition
30. The Tokyo Olympic Games have been ________ back a year. (A) excelled (B) pushed (C) accentuated (D) backfired
31. No fans have come to any local games of the professional baseball league in Taiwan as a result of the decision to bar spectators over concerns of spreading COVID-19 in a crowded ________. (A) spec (B) space (C) span (D) spectrum
32. Taiwanese professional baseball league decided it was safe to let in players, coaches, cheerleaders, costumed mascots, mask-wearing batboys and the media, as the nation has ________ few cases of the coronavirus. (A) relatedly (B) previously (C) preciously (D) relatively
33. Although no fan is allowed to enter the stadium, we consider ourselves still lucky. We have not stopped our season and people can still see the _______. (A) spectrum (B) spectacle (C) game (D) gymnastics
34. Baseball with no fans may not be as entertaining as it used to be, but it is a good way to stop the coronavirus _______ spreading. (A) from (B) out of (C) into (D) at
35. The fact that we’re playing in front of empty seats is acceptable. It’s comforting to know that some part of the world still goes on as it used to _____. (A) be (B) going to be (C) will be (D) being
36. Our ways of life will not be the same after COVID-19. Nor should they ______. (A) be (B) are (C) will be (D) being
37. In Italy, inadequacy in hospital accommodates and the lack of awareness of a public-health crisis have _______ contagion. (A) fulfilled (B) fueled (C) followed (D) flourished
38. As a result of negligence, the coronavirus is shutting down the engine of ideas and interactions that drives social dynamism and economic _______. (A) gross (B) galaxy (C) glacier (D) growth
39. Because contagion might turn out to be a long-term or chronic threat, how to adapt urban design and management accordingly has become a _______ question. (A) sacrificial (B) savvy (C) satellite (D) salient
40. It is clear that cities cannot build urban spaces with a single function if they want them to be useful in emergencies. Both the thinkable and the unthinkable must be part of urban _____. (A) detachment (B) delusion (C) design (D) delirium
41. Numerous people accused the WHO Director-General of being dishonest, some posting images of Taiwan’s national flag in _______ to his tweets. (A) response (B) accordance (C) counteraction (D) reflection
42. The sports documentary publicized last week gives a definitive account of Michael Jordan’s career and the Chicago Bulls, with unaired footages of his final season ______ the team. (A) with (B) off (C) from (D) to
43. Michael Jordan, also known by his initials MJ, is an American professional basketball player and the principal owner of the Charlotte Hornets of the National Basketball _______. (A) Association (B) Astronomy (C) Anatomy (D) Astronauts
44. He played 15 seasons in the NBA and won six ______ with the Chicago Bulls. (A) championships (B) comrades (C) constipation (D) conspiracies
45. His biography on the official NBA website states, “By acclamation, Michael Jordan is the greatest basketball player of ______ time.” (A) a (B) all (C) altogether (D) accompanying
46. Bob Dylan is an American singer, songwriter and author who remained a lively major _________ of popular culture for more than 50 years. (A) fizzle (B) figure (C) entity (D) personification
47. Many of Dylan’s most celebrated works from the 1960s became anthems for the civil rights and anti-war _________. (A) impeachments (B) celebrations (C) movements (D) entertainments
48. Dylan’s lyrics ________ a range of political, social, philosophical, and literary influences that turned out to defy pop music conventions. (A) initial (B) insecure (C) incorporated (D) inappropriate
49. The Pulitzer Prize Board in 2008 awarded Bob Dylan for his _______ impact on popular music and American culture. (A) profound (B) proficient (C) porcelain (D) profane
50. Dylan was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature for having created new poetic expressions within the great American song _________. (A) tangerine (B) temple (C) tambourine (D) tradition
51. (A)bury(B)bumble(C)bundle(D)burgle
52. (A)allusion(B)allegory(C)aspiration(D)anxiety
53. (A)chemists(B)psychologists(C)physical(D)chemotherapist
54. (A)naps(B)napkins(C)nature(D)maturity
55. (A)naive(B)nerds(C)nerves(D)lullaby
56. (A)reboot(B)recognize(C)rebate(D)refuse
57. (A)as(B)like(C)such(D)such as
58. (A)turbo(B)pervert(C)price(D)pride
59. (A)anniversary(B)annual(C)announcement(D)anchor
60. (A)however(B)such(C)for example(D)like
61. The author believes that names of typhoons and hurricanes ________. (A) are necessary to weather forecasting, and should not be changed. (B) are extremely important to describe their strength and positions. (C) should be taken from the leaders of the women’s liberation movement. (D) have changed many times and will certainly change again.
62. In 2004, which description of a typhoon or hurricane is NOT heard? (A) Typhoon Queen Elizabeth (B) Typhoon George (C) Hurricane Grace (D) Hurricane Charles
63. According to this passage, what does the word “identify” in the last line of the first paragraph mean? (A) to recognize something clearly (B) to know somebody’s name (C) to treat something as the same (D) to prove someone’s social status
64. Which of the following statements is NOT mentioned in this passage? (A) Queen Elizabeth is the first queen to announce the official naming of hurricanes. (B) Feminist activists were also part of the history of climatology. (C) Naming hurricanes and typhoons after both men’s and women’s names is a sign of improvement of gender equality. (D) Typhoons are named after military alphabets during the First World War.
65. 65. Which of the following statements is WRONG. (E) (A) Naming typhoons after its position is problematic because their movement is difficult to predict. (F) (B) Naming typhoons after women is a collective resolution to show respect for women. (G) (C) Naming typhoons and hurricanes after disliked politicians shows contempt and irony. (H) (D) Transformations of naming typhoons and hurricanes reveal a path of development of human civilization.
66. Which of the following statements is TRUE? (A) Left-brained learners like to connect new things with what they have known. (B) Scientists have solved all the secrets of left and right halves of the brain. (C) People use only one side of their brains to learn languages. (D) Many parts of the brain are used to learn things.
67. What is the main concern of this passage? (A) Recent medical research on humans. (B) Discoveries of left and right halves of the brain. (C) How the human brain functions. (D) The secrets of human brains.
68. After reading this passage, what assumption could you make? (A) That we do not have enough technology to study the human brain. (B) That scientists are learning many new and exciting things about the brain. (C) That each half of the brain can only do certain things. (D) That scientists now know everything about the human brain.
69. Which of the following statement is TRUE? (A) According to recent studies, left half is devoted to sense, right half to sensibility. (B) With the amazing recent discoveries, scientists are just one step away from the truth of human brains. (C) Human brains have potentials far more than we used to presume. (D) Human brains lack the overall coordination capacity and the function of spinal cords is essential.
70. Which of the following statements is WRONG? (A) When some parts of the brain are injured, certain function relevant to these parts are paralyzed for sure and would never be taken back by other parts. (B) Human brain is a complicated organ we have not really explored thoroughly. (C) Recent discoveries of human brain bring confidence for scientists. (D) Human beings remain hopeful in the mission to explore the function of human brain.
71. (A) combat (B) comrade (C) command (D) compensation
72. (A) additionally (B) early (C) accordingly (D) previously
73. (A) acoustic (B) electrified (C) eccentric (D) elaborate
74. (A) accompanied (B) attached (C) appendix (D) apprenticed
75. (A) casket (B) helmet (C) costume (D) covenant
76. (A) optimzied (B) optional (C) outlawed (D) outcast
77. (A) sharpening (B) penalizing (C) penetrating (D) concentrating
78. (A) accuracy (B) aperture (C) appointment (D) adaptation
79. (A) blasphemy (B) blade (C) bladder (D) blaze
80. (A) splendour (B) spectacle (C) shred (D) shield
申論題 (0)