问题 选择题

Today is Teachers' Day. Let's ____________ hello to our teachers. [ ]

A. speak

B. tell

C. talk

D. say

答案

答案:D

问答题 案例分析题

音乐不仅是生命中流动的旋律,它还是游走在心海的精灵,音乐使一个民族的气质更独特,使人类的精神爆发出火花,更是一部鲜活的史诗。阅读下列材料,回答问题。材料一贝多芬,德意志著名音乐家,一生中创作了大量音乐作品。他对当时的自由思想很是同情,在作品《爱格蒙特》、《菲岱里奥》及《第九交响曲》中都有表现,就这方面而言,贝多芬是第一位伟大的“主观”作曲家,并且他创作的唯一歌剧《菲岱里奥》被公认为是爱情与自由的象征。《英雄交响曲》创作前发生许多重大事件发生:1789年标志着封建制堡垒的巴士底监狱陷落;1799年,拿破仑执政,五年后称帝。这部作品热情讴歌了在“自由、平等、博爱”旗帜下实现的法国革命,标志者欧洲音乐历史中具有重要社会政治意义的题材第一次进入交响乐这个音乐体裁的领域。材料二《黄河大合唱》是冼星海最重要的和影响最大的一部代表作,创作于1939年3月。其第七部分是“保卫黄河”:(朗诵词)“但是,中 * * 的儿女啊,谁愿意像猪羊一般任人宰割?我们抱定必胜的决心,保卫黄河!保卫华北!保卫全中国!”(多声部合唱)“风在吼。马在叫。黄河在咆哮。黄河在咆哮。河西山冈万丈高。河东河北高粱熟了。万山丛中,抗日英雄真不少!青纱帐里,游击健儿逞英豪!端起了土枪洋枪,挥动着大刀长矛,保卫家乡!保卫黄河!保卫华北!保卫全中国!”这是一部反映中 * * 解放运动的音乐史诗。作品表现了在战争年代里,中国人民的苦难与顽强斗争,也表现了我们民族的伟大精神和不可战胜的力量。

结合材料一和所学知识分析为什么说“贝多芬是第一位伟大的‘主观’作曲家”?其重要的贡献有哪些?

填空题

Although no longer slavers after the Civil War, American blacks took no significant part in the life of white America except as servants or laborers. Many thousands of them emigrated from the war-ravaged South to the North from 1865 to 1915 in the hope of finding work in the big industrial cities. Whole communities of blacks crowded together into ghettos in New York City, Chicago and Detroit, where once the poor white immigrants had lived. These ghettos, neglected by the city authorities, became slums. The schools to which black children went were hopelessly inadequate. Unemployment in black ghettos remained consistently higher than in white communities.
41. Serious problems with black ghettos. ______
Stable family life was difficult to maintain.
42. The extreme poverty of the blacks. ______
In the late 1970s, nearly a third of all blacks still belonged to the so-called "underclass", they are so " under-privileged " and poor that they cannot seize the opportunity for advancement.
43. Efforts to put an end to racial discrimination. ______
Race relations in the USA continue to be a thorny problem.
44. Improvements in lives of the blacks. ______
Despite some setbacks, race relations are improving.
45. Prevailing violence in solving racial problems. ______
It is said that television had an enormous influence on frustrated and bitter blacks, for it showed them bow much better whites on the whole lived than blacks. At the end of the 1960s, there were serious riots in many cities.
The violence quickly died down. Blacks began to use their votes to exert political pressure. Cities like Atlanta (Georgia), Gary (Indiana), and Los Angeles (California) elected black mayors. Integration of schools, despite resistance from white groups, goes on, and the proportion of blacks in American colleges has increased dramatically in the last 20 years. There are reasons to maintain a cautious optimism that progress in race relations will continue.
[A] It has been estimated that there are more than 20 million Americans in this category, 10% of the population, including many millions of whites.
[B] Blacks are gaining in self-confidence. In more and more areas, they are winning control of their communities, and their standard of living is going up faster than that of the poor whites. It is still a hard struggle. There is still prejudice and even some hatred, but in most walks of American life there are now more blacks than ever before.
[C] The era of blatant discrimination ended in the 1960s through the courageous actions of thousands of blacks participating in peaceful marches and sitins, to force Southern states to implement the Federal desegregation laws in schools and public accommodations. Down came the " whites only" notices in bused, hotels, trains, restaurants, sporting events, restrooms and on park benches that once could be found everywhere throughout the South. Gone were the restrictions that prevented blacks voting. Gone, too, were the hideous lynchings, which since the Civil War had caused the death of thousands of innocent blacks-- hanged without trial by white mobs. However, even today, poor, uneducated lacks do not always receive the same degree of justice that the more affluent and better educated can expect.
[D] Many blacks chose to keep silent about their unfairness instead of resorting to violence. But their silence was also problem provoking: on the one hand, silence would build up a lot of complaints and hatred in their minds, thus resulting in a negative approach to life and everything; on the other hand, silence would give the whites an impression that the blacks take the reality for granted and put more racial discrimination on them.
[E] Unemployed fathers would on occasion walk out of their homes and never return. Children neglected by their parents turned in some instances to drugs and crimes. There are more than 700 murders a year in cities like New York, Detroit, Los Angeles and Houston, and most of these deaths are of blacks killed by blacks. The black ghettos are dangerous both for blacks and non-blacks.
[F] Radical blacks like the Black Panthers demanded a free black state within the Union, and advocated violence to achieve that end and to protect themselves against what they felt was police brutality toward blacks. For a while, violence overshadowed the influence of the greatly respected pacifist black, Martin Luther King, Jr. , who had provided the inspiration and leadership for those devoted to a peaceful change and whose murder in 1968 stunned America.