问题 问答题 共用题干题

七斤将破碗拿回家里,坐在门槛上吸烟;但非常忧愁,忘却了吸烟,象牙嘴六尺多长汀妃竹烟管的白铜斗里的火花,渐渐发黑了。他心里但觉得事情似乎十分危急,也想想些方法,想些计划,但总是非常模糊,贯穿不得:“辫子呢辫子?丈八蛇矛。一代不如一代!皇帝坐龙庭。破的碗须得上城去钉好。谁能抵挡他?书上一条一条写着。入娘的!……”

这里是通过什么方法来刻画人物?其中前半段与后半段的刻画方法又有何不同?

答案

参考答案:

行动描写、心理描写;前段行动描写是为后面心理描写作铺垫。

单项选择题
单项选择题

Although "naming rights" have proliferated in American higher education for the past several decades, the phenomenon has recently expanded to extraordinary lengths. Anything to get an extra dollar out of donors is fair game. I know colleges and universities sorely need to raise funds in these times of fiscal constraints, but things have gotten a bit out of hand.
Universities and colleges have long been named after donors-think of Harvard, Yale, Brown, and many others. John Harvard would hardly get a bench named after him today, given the modesty of his gift of books for the library back in the seventeenth century. Now it takes much more to get one’s name on a college. One institution, Rowan University of New Jersey, changed its name (from Glassboro State College) not long ago when a large donation was made. Buildings, too, have been affected. Traditionally, they were named after people such as distinguished scholars or visionary academic leaders; now they’re often named after big donors.
Why is all of this happening now The main motivation for the naming frenzy is, of course, to raise money. Donors love to see their names, or the names of their parents or other relatives, on buildings, schools, institutions, professorships, and the like. Increasingly, corporations and other businesses also seek to benefit from having their names on educational facilities. Today, no limits seem to exist on what can be named. If something does not have a name, it is up for grabs—a staircase, a pond, or a parking garage. Once all the major facilities have titles, lesser things go on the naming auction block. Colleges and universities, public and private, are all under increased pressure to raise money, and naming brings in cash.
It is unproductive. Separate branding weakens the focus and mission of an institution and perhaps even its broader reputation. It confuses the public, including potential students, and feeds the idea that the twenty-first-century university is simply a confederation of independent entrepreneurial domains.
The trends we see now in the United States, and perhaps tomorrow in other countries, will inevitably weaken the concept of the university as an institution that is devoted to the search for truth and the transmission of knowledge. All this naming distracts from the mission of an institution that has almost a millennium of history and cheapens its image. It is a sad symbol indeed of the commercialization and entrepreneurialism of the contemporary university.

From this passage, we can learn that the author holds a(n) ______ attitude towards the current naming phenomenon in American higher education.

A.supportive

B.critical

C.indifferent

D.sarcastic