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科目:高普考/三四等/高員級◆英文
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1(C).

Betty was _______ to accept her friend’s suggestion because she thought she could come up with a better idea herself.
(A) tolerable
(B) sensitive
(C) reluctant
(D) modest


2(C).

36 Since the elevator was filled to ______ , Jerry had to wait for the next ride.
(A)extension
(B)intensity
(C)capacity
(D)condition


3(C).

第 47 題至第 50 題為題組 When we view a scene in which another person exhibits delight, pain, or disgust, the parts of our brain that react when we experience those emotions ourselves are activated. Scientists at the NeuroImaging Center, the Netherlands, wanted to see if that same region that governs those three emotions—the anterior insula—was activated when people read about someone experiencing disgust. To test this, they placed participants in an fMRI scanner, which measures changes in blood flow in the brain, and showed them 3-second movie clips of an actor sipping from a cup and then looking disgusted. “Later on, we asked them to read an article and imagine short emotional scenarios in it,” said study team member Christian Keysers. “For instance, bumping into a drunken man, who then starts to throw up, and realizing that some of his vomit had ended up in your own mouth.” Finally, the researchers had the participants taste an unpleasant drink while in the scanner. “In all three cases, the same location of the anterior insula lit up,” Keysers said. People with damaged anterior insula lose the capacity to feel disgusted. “If you give them sour milk, they would drink it happily and say it tastes like soda,” Keysers said. But for normal people, sipping that sour milk will result in them spitting it right back out with a “blech.” It is an evolutionary advantage to have the same reaction when watching someone else spit out the milk: you won’t try the same milk if you are aware of the other person’s disgust. “What this means is that whether we see a movie or read a story, the same thing happens: we activate our bodily representations of what it feels like to be disgusted,” Keysers said. “And that is why reading a book and viewing a movie can both make us feel as if we literally feel what the protagonist is going through.”
【題組】49 Based on the article, which of the following is “an evolutionary advantage”?
(A)You watch a movie clip about someone feeling disgusted.
(B)You feel happy when you drink something tasty.
(C)You learn from other people’s experiences.
(D)You read a lot and go to the movies a lot.


4(C).

請依下文回答第 33 題至第 36 題 
       Nobody knows what the global temperature is likely to be in the future, for the climate is a system of almost infinite complexity. Predicting how much hotter a particular level of carbon dioxide will make the world is impossible. It’s not just that the precise effect of greenhouse gases on temperature is unclear. It may set off mechanisms that tend to cool things down (clouds which block out sunlight, for instance) or ones that heat the world further (by melting soils in which greenhouse gases are frozen, for instance). The system could right itself or spin out of human control. 
       This uncertainty is central to the difficulty of tackling the problem. Since the costs of climate change are unknown, the benefits of trying to do anything to prevent it are, by definition, unclear. What’s more, if they accrue at all, they will do so at some point in the future. So is it really worth using public resources now to avert an uncertain, distant risk, especially when the cash could be spent instead on goods and services that would have a measurable near-term benefit?
        If the risk is big enough, yes. Governments do it all the time. They spend a small slice of tax revenue on keeping standing armies not because they think their countries are in imminent danger of invasion but because, if it happened, the consequences would be catastrophic. Individuals do so, too. They spend a little of their incomes on household insurance not because they think their homes are likely to be torched next week but because, if it happened, the results would be disastrous. Similarly, a growing body of scientific evidence suggests that the risk of a climatic catastrophe is high enough for the world to spend a small proportion of its income trying to prevent one from happening. 

【題組】35 According to the passage, why is it worth spending public resources on climate control?
(A) To lower the global temperature
(B) To prevent flooding disasters
(C) To prevent uncertain, distant risks
(D) To improve the climate for humans


5(C).

32 Because the couple could not have children of their own, they planned to__________ an orphan.
(A) adapt
(B) admit
(C) adopt
(D) adept


6(C).

ack moved to America with his family last month. On the first day of school, he was —57— nervous that his heart was pounding fast. A lot of students walked past him in the hall, but no one stopped to talk to him. Later, a boy —58— locker was next to Jack’s greeted Jack. He told Jack his name was Ken, and told Jack something about the school —59— he should first know. Ken also told Jack that there is no need to be worried because he has —60— time to fit in. Jack felt —61— at the beginning of his school day because of Ken’s warm words. He really looked forward to this unique high school life and hoped that he could help other newcomers next year.
【題組】57.
(A) very
(B) really
(C) so
(D) such


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