3. The nobleman should have ______.
3. The nobleman should have ______.
Which painting is not done by Gu Kaizhi?( )。 A: The Ode to the Goddess of the Luo River B: Young Nobleman on Horseback C: Admonitions of the Instructress to Court Ladies D: The Portray of Xie An
Which painting is not done by Gu Kaizhi?( )。 A: The Ode to the Goddess of the Luo River B: Young Nobleman on Horseback C: Admonitions of the Instructress to Court Ladies D: The Portray of Xie An
在需要的空白处填入适当的介词: 1.(2015·山东临沂二模)It not only helps the sick people to get the money to heal their disease,but also makes more and more people aware____________the disease. 2.(2015·山东滕州4月模拟)Years afterward,the nobleman’s son was stricken____________a serious disease.What saved him?Penicillin. 3.(2015·南昌二模)My interest in Chinese food started years ago,when I was a young reporter for the Washington Post.Our office wasn’t far____________Chinatown,where I found some very good Chinese restaurants. 4.(2015·济南二模)If you could exchange lives____________someone for a short time,would you like to do that? 5.(2015·河南省三门峡市考前适应性练习)When Jane got home,with her small but well-chosen present in her bag,her parents were already____________table having supper. 6.(2015·石家庄二模)I thought I was totally prepared____________the journey,but nothing could have prepared me for my family’s complaints. 7.(2015·临沂模拟)A man went to a barbershop to have his hair cut.As the barber began to work,they started chatting.They talked____________so many things and various subjects. 8.(2015·湖南衡阳一联)The girl____________a red dress is my sister,and the red dress looks beautiful on her. 9.(2015·陕西质量检测二)The purpose of the article is to draw public attention____________the problem. 10.(2015·邢台高三摸底考试)It’s time for you to change your attitude____________women now,Tom. They hold up half the sky,you know. 11.(2016·福州第一次调研)He has got the job because he has the advantage____________others of knowing many languages. 12.(2016·山西四校联考)—How much did he charge you____________the service? —Luckily,it’s nothing. 13.(2015·日照模拟)It saves time in the kitchen to have things you use a lot____________easy reach. 14.(2015·陕西一联)His teacher took a deep drink,smiled warmly,and thanked his student very much for the sweet water.The young man went home____________a happy heart. 15.(2015·河南洛阳模拟)He is no fool at all.____________fact,he is the smartest boy I have ever seen. 16.(2015·江西临川期中)The doctor advised her to eat more bean products____________place of meat which might be harmful to her heart. 17.(2016·郑州高三诊断)The villagers collected money to set up a monument____________memory of those who died in the great earthquake. 18.(2015·河北邯郸二模)I am in favour____________your suggestion that we should spend more time on this project. 19.(2015·菏泽模拟)He was a good student and scored____________average in most subjects. 20.(2015·湖南怀化一模)—What makes you decide to buy a new house in the town? —This town is free____________ pollution.
在需要的空白处填入适当的介词: 1.(2015·山东临沂二模)It not only helps the sick people to get the money to heal their disease,but also makes more and more people aware____________the disease. 2.(2015·山东滕州4月模拟)Years afterward,the nobleman’s son was stricken____________a serious disease.What saved him?Penicillin. 3.(2015·南昌二模)My interest in Chinese food started years ago,when I was a young reporter for the Washington Post.Our office wasn’t far____________Chinatown,where I found some very good Chinese restaurants. 4.(2015·济南二模)If you could exchange lives____________someone for a short time,would you like to do that? 5.(2015·河南省三门峡市考前适应性练习)When Jane got home,with her small but well-chosen present in her bag,her parents were already____________table having supper. 6.(2015·石家庄二模)I thought I was totally prepared____________the journey,but nothing could have prepared me for my family’s complaints. 7.(2015·临沂模拟)A man went to a barbershop to have his hair cut.As the barber began to work,they started chatting.They talked____________so many things and various subjects. 8.(2015·湖南衡阳一联)The girl____________a red dress is my sister,and the red dress looks beautiful on her. 9.(2015·陕西质量检测二)The purpose of the article is to draw public attention____________the problem. 10.(2015·邢台高三摸底考试)It’s time for you to change your attitude____________women now,Tom. They hold up half the sky,you know. 11.(2016·福州第一次调研)He has got the job because he has the advantage____________others of knowing many languages. 12.(2016·山西四校联考)—How much did he charge you____________the service? —Luckily,it’s nothing. 13.(2015·日照模拟)It saves time in the kitchen to have things you use a lot____________easy reach. 14.(2015·陕西一联)His teacher took a deep drink,smiled warmly,and thanked his student very much for the sweet water.The young man went home____________a happy heart. 15.(2015·河南洛阳模拟)He is no fool at all.____________fact,he is the smartest boy I have ever seen. 16.(2015·江西临川期中)The doctor advised her to eat more bean products____________place of meat which might be harmful to her heart. 17.(2016·郑州高三诊断)The villagers collected money to set up a monument____________memory of those who died in the great earthquake. 18.(2015·河北邯郸二模)I am in favour____________your suggestion that we should spend more time on this project. 19.(2015·菏泽模拟)He was a good student and scored____________average in most subjects. 20.(2015·湖南怀化一模)—What makes you decide to buy a new house in the town? —This town is free____________ pollution.
中国大学MOOC: II Read the following passage, and choose the best answerThe Caravaggio MysteryItalian painter Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571-1610), usually known simply as “Caravaggio,” had a dramatic life, of which parts remain mysterious to scholars even today. Why, then, would it be a surprise that mysteries also surround his work? For example, The Taking of Christ, one of his paintings that had been considered lost since the eighteenth century, was rediscovered in 1990. It had hung, seemingly unrecognized, in the dining room of the Society of the Jesuits in Dublin, Ireland, for more than fifty years. The discovery that the painting was, indeed, a Caravaggio, led many to wonder how such a treasure could be hidden—seemingly in plain sight.The first clue historians have about The Taking of Christ is in the 1603 accounts of an Italian nobleman, Ciriaco Mattei, who paid 125 “scudi” for “a painting with its frame of Christ taken in the garden.” At the time, Caravaggio’s style, with its striking use of light and dark, was admired and often imitated by both students and fellow artists. However, trends in the art world come and go, and two centuries later, Caravaggio’s work had fallen out of favor with collectors. In fact, it wouldn’t be until the 1950s that a Caravaggio “renaissance” occurred, and interest in the artist was renewed.In the meantime, The Taking of Christ had traveled far and wide. Ironically, it was the Mattei family itself that originally misidentified the work, though several centuries after the original purchase. In 1802, the family sold it as a Honthorst to a Scottish collector. This collector kept it in his home until his death in 1921. By 1921, The Taking of Christ—now firmly attributed to Gerard van Honthorst—was auctioned off in Edinburgh for eight guineas. This would have probably been a fair price if the work had been a van Honthorst; for a true Caravaggio, though, it was the bargain of the century. An Irish doctor bought the painting and donated it to the Dublin Jesuit Society the following decade.From the 1930s onward, The Taking of Christ hung in the offices of the Dublin Jesuits. However, the Jesuits, who had a number of old paintings in their possession, decided to bring in a conservator to discuss restoring them in the early 1990s. Sergio Benedetti, the Senior Conservator at the National Gallery of Ireland, went to the building to examine the paintings and oversee their restoration. Decades of dirt, including smoke from the fireplace above which it hung, had to be removed from the painting before Benedetti began to suspect that the painting was not a copy of the original, but the original itself.Two graduate students from the University of Rome, Francesca Cappelletti and Laura Testa, were primarily responsible for verifying that Caravaggio did, in fact, create this version of the painting. Over years of research, they found the 1603 Mattei accounts. The verification of the painting, though, went far beyond this circumstantial evidence. Certifying that a painting came from a certain artist’s hand is not easy, though forensic science that wouldn’t have been available in the 1920s helped to attribute the work to Caravaggio definitively. The canvas underwent a number of treatments. It was X-rayed and scanned with an infrared light. The cracks on the surface of the painting (known in the industry as “craquelure”) were studied. Furthermore, The Taking of Christ underwent much analysis by art historians, who studied the form and color in the painting to determine its authenticity. For example, Caravaggio never used sketches to set up the composition of his paintings. Instead, he made marks with the end of his brush as he painted—marks that can still be visible today.Of course, the verification of the painting required entire teams of people, in addition to the three mentioned above, and took years. By 1993, the announcement was finally made that the long-lost Caravaggio had been found. Rather than sell the painting, which is most likely worth millions of dollars, the Jesuits decided to make it available to the nation of Ireland for viewing. Thus, the painting is on “indefinite loan” to the National Gallery of Ireland. Nevertheless, the painting continues its travels as it features in exhibitions around the world, from the United States to Amsterdam. In 2010, it even travelled back to Rome to be displayed for the 400th anniversary of the painter’s death. A fitting tribute, many would say, to a mysterious master.( ) Which of the sentences below best expresses the essential information in the highlighted sentence in paragraph 6? Why?
中国大学MOOC: II Read the following passage, and choose the best answerThe Caravaggio MysteryItalian painter Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571-1610), usually known simply as “Caravaggio,” had a dramatic life, of which parts remain mysterious to scholars even today. Why, then, would it be a surprise that mysteries also surround his work? For example, The Taking of Christ, one of his paintings that had been considered lost since the eighteenth century, was rediscovered in 1990. It had hung, seemingly unrecognized, in the dining room of the Society of the Jesuits in Dublin, Ireland, for more than fifty years. The discovery that the painting was, indeed, a Caravaggio, led many to wonder how such a treasure could be hidden—seemingly in plain sight.The first clue historians have about The Taking of Christ is in the 1603 accounts of an Italian nobleman, Ciriaco Mattei, who paid 125 “scudi” for “a painting with its frame of Christ taken in the garden.” At the time, Caravaggio’s style, with its striking use of light and dark, was admired and often imitated by both students and fellow artists. However, trends in the art world come and go, and two centuries later, Caravaggio’s work had fallen out of favor with collectors. In fact, it wouldn’t be until the 1950s that a Caravaggio “renaissance” occurred, and interest in the artist was renewed.In the meantime, The Taking of Christ had traveled far and wide. Ironically, it was the Mattei family itself that originally misidentified the work, though several centuries after the original purchase. In 1802, the family sold it as a Honthorst to a Scottish collector. This collector kept it in his home until his death in 1921. By 1921, The Taking of Christ—now firmly attributed to Gerard van Honthorst—was auctioned off in Edinburgh for eight guineas. This would have probably been a fair price if the work had been a van Honthorst; for a true Caravaggio, though, it was the bargain of the century. An Irish doctor bought the painting and donated it to the Dublin Jesuit Society the following decade.From the 1930s onward, The Taking of Christ hung in the offices of the Dublin Jesuits. However, the Jesuits, who had a number of old paintings in their possession, decided to bring in a conservator to discuss restoring them in the early 1990s. Sergio Benedetti, the Senior Conservator at the National Gallery of Ireland, went to the building to examine the paintings and oversee their restoration. Decades of dirt, including smoke from the fireplace above which it hung, had to be removed from the painting before Benedetti began to suspect that the painting was not a copy of the original, but the original itself.Two graduate students from the University of Rome, Francesca Cappelletti and Laura Testa, were primarily responsible for verifying that Caravaggio did, in fact, create this version of the painting. Over years of research, they found the 1603 Mattei accounts. The verification of the painting, though, went far beyond this circumstantial evidence. Certifying that a painting came from a certain artist’s hand is not easy, though forensic science that wouldn’t have been available in the 1920s helped to attribute the work to Caravaggio definitively. The canvas underwent a number of treatments. It was X-rayed and scanned with an infrared light. The cracks on the surface of the painting (known in the industry as “craquelure”) were studied. Furthermore, The Taking of Christ underwent much analysis by art historians, who studied the form and color in the painting to determine its authenticity. For example, Caravaggio never used sketches to set up the composition of his paintings. Instead, he made marks with the end of his brush as he painted—marks that can still be visible today.Of course, the verification of the painting required entire teams of people, in addition to the three mentioned above, and took years. By 1993, the announcement was finally made that the long-lost Caravaggio had been found. Rather than sell the painting, which is most likely worth millions of dollars, the Jesuits decided to make it available to the nation of Ireland for viewing. Thus, the painting is on “indefinite loan” to the National Gallery of Ireland. Nevertheless, the painting continues its travels as it features in exhibitions around the world, from the United States to Amsterdam. In 2010, it even travelled back to Rome to be displayed for the 400th anniversary of the painter’s death. A fitting tribute, many would say, to a mysterious master.( ) Which of the sentences below best expresses the essential information in the highlighted sentence in paragraph 6? Why?