新GRE填空之三空填空题练习

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GRE(VERBAL)基础填空模拟试卷3(题后含答案及解析)

GRE(VERBAL)基础填空模拟试卷3(题后含答案及解析)

GRE(VERBAL)基础填空模拟试卷3(题后含答案及解析)题型有:1. PART ONEPART ONE (Time:30 minutes 38 Questions)SECTION 1Directions: Each sentence below has one or two blanks, each blank indicating that something has been omitted. Beneath the sentence are five lettered or sets of words. Choose the word or set of words for each blank that best fits the meaning of the sentence as a whole.1.The instructor’s voice was so______that most students preferred taking a test over listening to its grating sound.正确答案:A,E解析:so…that…表示前后同义重复。

后文说这个人声音难听,所以空格也应该体现声音难听。

harsh刺耳的,cajoling甜言蜜语的,melodious悦耳的,muted 无声的,strident剌耳的,euphonious悦耳的。

答案选AE。

注:这里melodious 和euphonious是干扰项,同表示“悦耳的”且与答案构成反义。

知识模块:基础填空2.Originally (i)______mainly by young, urban audiences, rap music was ultimately (ii)______by its appreciative listeners of all ages across the country.正确答案:A,F解析:Originally和ultimately表示时间上的对比。

GRE填空三空题如何攻克

GRE填空三空题如何攻克

GRE填空三空题如何攻克GRE填空三空题如何攻克?快来一起学习吧,下面我就和大家共享,来观赏一下吧。

GRE填空三空题的详解To pay for the extra spending under this international poverty plan, each American would have to contribute less than the cost of buying a premium cup of coffee once a week. But financial aid is not(i)___, and even if the funding recommended here were to (ii)_____, the grandest objectives may well remain unfulfilled. Nonetheless, carefully targetedaid can reward responsible governments, (iii)_____individual initiative, and alleviate suffering. Many will think thats worth a cup of coffee.Blank(i) A.an impediment B.a panacea C.a maladyBlank(ii) D.be insufficient E.recede F.materializeBlank(iii) G. bviate H.temper I.encourage【韩冰老师的分析】第一空规律连接词为and,and表并列,并列的两个部分语义相同。

And后面是一个让步转折,让步转折的句子,意思的重点落在转折部分,即the grandest objectives may well remainunfulfilled. 这句话表达的是对这个扶贫方案的负态度,所以and前面也是体现负态度,又有个not, 所以选一个正评价的词,填B. panacea.再看第2空。

GRE 填空 三空题

GRE 填空 三空题

OG 三空题目GRE Verbal Reasoning Practice QuestionsSET 3 Discrete Question: Medium4 Richard M. Russell said 52 percent of the nation’s growth since the Second World War had(i) invention. He said, (ii)research, the government’s greatest role in assuring continuing innovation is promoting a strong, modern patent office. “Unless we can(iii)original ideas, we will not have invention.” Mr. Russell said. Speculating on the state of innovation over the next century, several inventors agreed that the future lay in giving children the tools to think creatively and the motivation to invent.5 Statements presented as fact in a patent application are (i)unless a good reason for doubt is found. The invention has only to be deemed “more likely than not” to work in order to receive initial approval. And, although thousands of patents are challenged in court for other reasons, no incentive exists for anyone to expend effort (ii)the science of an erroneous patent. For this reason the endless stream of (iii)devices will continue to yield occasional patent.SET 5 Discrete Question: Hard4 No other contemporary poet’s work has such a well-earned reputation for (i), and there are few whose moral vision is so imperiously unsparing. Of late, however, the almost belligerent demands of his severe and densely forbidding poetry have taken an improbable turn. This new collection is the poet’s fourth book in six years—an ample output even for poets of sunny disposition, let alone for one of such (ii)over the previous 50 years. Yet for all his newfound (iii), his poetry is as thorny as ever.5 Managers who think that strong environmental performance will (i)their company’s financial performance often (ii)claims that systems designed to help them manage environmental concerns are valuable tools. By contrast, managers who perceive environmental performance to be (iii)to financial success may view an environmental management system as extraneous. In either situation, and whatever their perceptions, it is a manager’s commitment to achieving environmental improvement rather than the mere presence of a system that determines environmental performance.6 Philosophy, unlike most other subjects, dose not try to extend our knowledge by discovering new information about the world. Instead it tries to deepen our understanding through(i)what is already closest to us—the experiences, thoughts, concepts, and activities that make up our livesbut that ordinarily escape our notice precisely because they are so familiar. Philosophy begins by finding(ii)the things that are (iii).Practice TestSection 317The most striking thing about the politician is how often his politics have been (i) rather than ideological, as he adapts his political positions at any particular moment to the political realities that constrain him. He does not, however, piously (ii)political principles only to betray them in practice. Rather, he attempts in subtle ways to balance his political self-interest with a (iii), viewing himself as an instrument of some unchanging higher purpose.Section 411What readers most commonly remember about John Stuart Mill’s classic exploration of the liberty of thought and discussion concerns the danger of (i) : in the absence of challenge, one’s opinions, even when they are correct, grow weak and flabby. Yet Mill had another reason for encouraging the liberty of thought and discussion: the danger of partiality and incompleteness. Since one’sopinions, even under the best circumstances, tend to (ii), and because opinions opposed to one’s own rarely turn out to be com pletely (iii), it is crucial to supplement one’s opinions with alternative points of view.20Wills argues that certain malarial parasites are especially (i)because they have more recently entered humans than other species and therefore have had (ii)time to evolve toward (iii). Yet there is no reliable evidence that the most harmful Plasmodium species has been in humans for a shorter time than less harmful species.PREP 三空题目SECTION1-6 The question of (i)in photography has lately become nontrivial. Prices for vintage prints(those make by a photographer soon after he or she made the negative) so drastically (ii)in the 1990s that one of these photographs might fetch a hundred times as much as a nonvintage print of the same image. It was perhaps only a matter of time before someone took advantage ofthe(iii)to peddle newly created “vintage”prints for profit.SECTION34 I’ve long anticipated this retrospective of the artist’s work, hoping it would make(i)judgments about him possible, but greater familiarity with his paintings highlights their inherent (ii)and actually makes one’s assessment(iii).5 Higher energy prices would have many(i)effects on society as a whole. Besides encouraging consumers to be more(ii)in their use of gasoline, they would encourage the development of renewable alternative energy sources that are not(iii)at current prices.6 But they pay little attention to the opposite and more treacherous failing: false certainty, refusing to confess their mistakes and implicitly claiming(i),thereby embarrassing the nation and undermining the Constitution, which established various mechanisms of self-correction on the premise that even the wisest men are sometimes wrong and need, precisely when they find it most(ii), the benefit of(iii)process.原ETS 官网题目It is refreshing to read a book about our planet by an author who does not allow facts to be (i)by politics: well aware of the political disputes about the effects of human activities on climate andbiodiversity, this author does not permit them to(ii)his comprehensive description of what we know about our biosphere. He emphasizes the enormous gaps in our knowledge, the sparseness of our observations, and the(iii), calling attention to the many aspects of planetary evolution that must be better understood before we can accurately diagnose the condition of our planet.2006题目Murray, whose show of recent paintings and drawings is her best in many years, has been eminent hereabouts for a quarter century, although often regarded with (i)__________, but the most (ii)__________ of these paintings (iii)__________ all doubts.2007题目Having displayed his art collection in a vast modernist white space in (i)______ former warehouse, Mr. Saatchi has chosen for his new site its polar opposite, a riverside monument to civic pomposity that once housed the local government. There is nothing (ii)______ about the new location: the building’s design is bureaucratic baroque, (iii)______ style that is as declamatory as a task-force report and as self-regarding as a campaign speech.PRACTICE BOOK 题目That the President manages the economy is an assumption (i)_____ the prevailing wisdom that dominates electoral politics in the United States. As a result, presidential elections have become referenda on the business cycle, whose fortuitous turnings are (ii)_____ the President. Presidents are properly accountable for their executive and legislative performance, and certainly their actions may have profound effects on the economy. But these effects are (iii)_____. Unfortunately, modern political campaigns are fought on the untenable premise that Presidents can deliberately produce precise economic results.Room acoustics design criteria are determined according to the room’s intended use. Music, for example, is best (i)_____ in spaces that are reverberant, a condition that generally makes speech less (ii)_______. Acoustics suitable for both speech and music can sometimes be created in the same space, although the result is never perfect, each having to be (iii)______ to some extent.To the untutored eye the tightly forested Ardennes hills around Sedan look quite (i)______ , (ii)_______place through which to advance a modern army; even with today’s more numerous and better roads and bridges, the woods and the river Meuse form a significant (iii)______.参考答案:CEH AFH CDH BDIBEG CDH BDG BEHADG BEG CFI ADHAEI CEH CEH BEIBEG AEH。

GRE三空题难题20

GRE三空题难题20

1. Countless generations have been divided on Mendelssohn’s ____________—should he inhabit the same pantheon as Bach and Haydn, or be ____________ to the ranks of could-have-beens? After all, it can be argued that his ____________ came at the age of 14 with his Octet in E-flat, a work, many believe, the composer never eclipsed in his remaining twenty-six years.2. Some note that the increase in the Native American powwow--an intertribal affair of song, dance, and storytelling, all intrinsic aspects of Native American culture--serves to (i) ______________ the very culture it presumably aims to (ii) ______________. They argue an overarching cultural narrative emerges, one that (iii)______________ the narrative of any one tribe.3. To the senior manager, unsolicited opinions, even if the views expressed did not necessarily (i) ______________ his own views, were (ii)______________ ; thus, employees had learned to be (iii)______________ lest they no longer found themselves in his good graces.4. That the comedian was so ____________ as to be unable to ____________ the effect she had on others was not lost on her audience, who quickly stood up to leave, hoping their action would at last ____________.5. That we can, from a piece of art, (i)_____ the unconscious urges of the artist—urges that remain hidden even from the artist himself—will remain a(n) (ii)_____ issue, as it is one (iii)_____ empirical analysis: we can never definitively know what is submerged deep inside the artist’s psyche, let alone reconcile any such revelations with the artist’s work.6. Special effects in movies are (i)_____, in that unlike the story, whose permutations seem to have long ago been (ii)_____, they continue to evolve: if we were magically beamed years into the future (of course that story has been told numerous times before), the special effects would (iii)_____; the story would be awfully familiar.7. Whether repression has come from the church or from a totalitarian state, science has always been an imperiled endeavor, but to claim that it will only flourish in times of libertarian rule is not a(n) ____________ conclusion. A(n) ____________ government is not the same as one that actively takes an interest in funding science – and the latter may well be, in some respects, ____________.8. For charities operating in the developing world, when noble impulses(i) ______________ into mere (ii) ______________, vapid slogans rear their heads and we witness a further deterioration in the very situation such high-mindedness had initially sought to (iii) ______________.9. The question as to what constitutes art is hardly a ____________ one. Today, artists exist whose main goal seems only to subvert work that no longer warrants the trite tag ―cutting-edge.‖ Once the pr overbial envelope is pushed even further, the public inevitably scratches its collective head – or furrows the collective brow – thinking that this time the ―artists‖ have ____________. That very same admixture of contempt and confusion, however, was not u nknown in Michelangelo’s day; only what was considered blasphemous, art-wise, in the 16th Century, would today be considered ____________.10. Perkin’s wit, surprisingly ____________ by the prudishness of his time, may not have been nearly as ____________ had he lived in an era not so prone to ____________.11. It is telling that a politician long adept at inhabiting any role that will serve his immediate purpose has been able to (i) ______________ a disgruntled electorate, an outcome that perhaps speaks more to the electorate’s (ii) ______________ nature than it does to his ability to be (iii) ______________.12. She gave him a(n) (i)_____ look that was not so much (ii)_____ as it was (iii)_____.13. For an artist of such circumscribed talent, Mario was given (i)_____ attention, many connoisseurs (ii)_____ over works that warranted nothing more than a(n) (iii)_____ glance.14. The number of speeding tickets one receives is by no means a reliable measure of (i)_____. Some (ii)_____ drivers, in fact, prove that in certain cases the inverse is true. That is those savvy enough to have availed themselves of the latest cellular phone applications receive up-to-the-minute information on the presence of highway patrolmen—greater excess speed, in these instances, simply implies a greater (iii)_____.15. Heinrich Feyermahn, in insisting that Galileo did not fully uphold the tenets of scientific rationalism, does not (i)_____ the Italian astronomer, but rather the very edifice of Western thought. For if Galileo is the purported exemplar of rational thinking, and yet is (ii)_____, then the history of science cannot be understood as an endless succession of scientists carrying out their work free of all-too-human biases. Thus, Feyermahn admonishes, in faithfully chronicling the sweep of science in the last 300 years, historiographers would be (iii)_____ to not include the human foibles that were part of even the most ostensibly Apollonian endeavors. ?16. James Clerk Maxwell once remarked that the best scientists are, in a sense, the (i)_____ ones not hemmed in by the (ii)_____ of their respective fields, they are able to approach problems with a(n) (iii)_____ mind, so to speak.17. According to Lackmuller’s latest screed, published under the title,?Why We Can’t Win at Their Game, special interest groups not nominally tied to ecological concerns have become so (i) _____ theprocess of environmental policymaking that those groups who actually aim to ensure that corporate profit does not trump environmental health have been effectively (ii) _____. Lackmuller’s contention, however, is (iii)_____ in that it fails to account for the signal achievements environmental groups have effected over the last 20 years—often to the chagrin of big business.18. For charities operating in the developing world, when noble impulses (i)_____ into mere (ii)_____, vapid slogans rear their heads and we witness a further deterioration in the very situation such high-mindedness had initially sought to (iii) _____.19. Lam bert, in his latest thesis, is guilty of (i) _____ Nietzsche’s conception of eternal recurrence, a scholarly transgression that results mainly from his propensity to (ii) _____ multiple sources. That his interpretation seems (iii) _____ may indeed obscure the fact that he liberally combined ideas drawn from numerous works, many of them contemporary, a fact that, in part, accounts for the dubious validity of his overall project.20. To view a film by Torneau is to enter the auteur’s mind. That his reality fails to correspond in salient ways to that of a ‖normal‖ person does not (i)_____ —even if Torneau is incapable of escaping his own head. To appreciate his work, the audience simply has to indulge the director his (ii)_____and leave at the theater door its own (iii)_____.。

GRE填空三空题练习,为您量身打造

GRE填空三空题练习,为您量身打造

新GRE考试相对于其前一代的旧GRE考生的体型变化成为考生的密切关注点。

从GRE 的Verbal Reasoning(语文部分)的角度来看,填空题型发生了较大的变化。

其中最为新奇的变化在于增加了以前从未出现过的三空题,下面的十道GRE填空三空题练习,为您量身打造。

1. In Democracies and its Critics, Robert Dahl defends both democratic value and pluralist democracies, or polyarchies. Dahl argues convincingly that the idea of democracy rests on political equality—the equality capacity of all citizens to determine or (i)___ collective decisions. Of course, as Dahl recognizes, if hierarchical ordering is (ii)___ in any structure of government, and if no society can guarantee perfect equality in the resources that may give rise to political influence, the democratic principle of political equality is (iii)___ of full realization. So actual systems can be deemed democratic only as approximations to the ideal.BLANK1 BLANK2 BLANK3A hamper D circumstantial G incapableB influence E inevitable H determinedC incorporate F neutral I possible2. Although the legal systems of England and the United States are superficially similar, they (i)___in their approaches to and uses of legal reasons: substantive reasons in the United States, whereas in England the (ii) ___ is true. This (iii)___ reflects a difference in the visions of law that prevail in the two counties. In England the law has traditionally been viewed as a system of rules; the United States favors a vision of law as an outward expression of the community’s sen se of right and justice.BLANK1 BLANK2 BLANK3A differ profoundly D reverse G distinctionB convergent E conventionality H equilibriumC slightly differentiate F similarity I dissemination3. Although some censure became (i)___ during the 1980s, Dahl himself seems to support some of such earlier criticism. Although he (ii)___ that some Westernintellectuals demand more democracy from polyarchies than is possible, he nevertheless ends his book by asking what changes in structures and consciousness might make political life more (iii)___ in present polyarchies.BLANK1 BLANK2 BLANK3A characterized D monocratic G revealsB subdued E gerontocracic H regretsC overruled F democratic I approves4. A major tenet of the neurosciences has been that all neurons (nerve cells) in the brains of vertebrate animals are formed early in development. An adult vertebrate, it was believed, must make do with (i)___ neurons: those lost through (ii)___ or injury are not replaced, and adult learning takes place not through generation of new cells but through (iii)___ among existing ones.BLANK1 BLANK2 BLANK3A a fixed number of D revolution H reproduction of older onesB abundant E disease G modification of connectionsC minimal F generation I deduction of similarities5. Evidence that the defendant in a criminal prosecution has a prior conviction may (i)___ jurors to presume the defendant’s guilt, because of their preconception that a person previously convicted of a crime must be inclined toward repeated criminal behavior. That commonly held belief is at least a (ii)___; not all former convicts engage in repeated criminal behavior. Also, jury may give more probative weight than objective analysis would allow to vivid photographic evidence depictin g a shooting victim’s wounds, or may (iii)___ the weight of defense testimony that is not delivered in a sufficiently forceful or persuasive manner.BLANK1 BLANK2 BLANK3A encourage D partial distortion of reality G underestimateB deter E vivid reflection of imagination H exaggerateC participate F precise calculation of certainty I reflect6. The usage suggests that the creation and critical interpretation of literature are not (i)___ but mechanical processes; that the author of any piece of writing is not (ii)___ artist, but merely a laborer who cobbles existing materials (words) into more or less conventional structures. The term deconstruction implies that the text has been put together like a building or a piece of machinery, and that it is in need of being taken apart, not so much in order to (iii)___ it as to demonstrate underlying inadequacies, false assumptions, and inherent contradictions.BLANK1 BLANK2 BLANK3A instructive D a derivative G repairB literal E an insipid H qualifyC organic F an inspired I construct7. Most psychologists, perplexed by the feelings they acknowledge are aroused by aesthetic experience, have claimed that these emotions are genuine, but different in kind from nonaesthetic emotions. This, however, is (i)___ rather than an empirical observation and consequently lacks explanatory value. On the other hand, Gombrich argues that emotional responses to art are (ii)___; art triggers remembrances of previously experienced emotions. These debates have prompted the psychologist Radford to argue that people do experience real melancholy or joy in responding to art, but that these are (iii)___ responses precisely because people know they are reacting to illusory stimuli.BLANK1 BLANK2 BLANK3A a descriptive distinction D vivacious G zealousB a body of profound knowledge E synonymous H lugubriousC a valid evidence F ersatz I irrational8. Until recently many astronomers believed that asteroids travel about the solar system (i)___ satellites. These astronomers assumed this because they considered asteroid-satellite systems inherently (ii)___. Theoreticians could have told them otherwise: even minuscule bodies in the solar system can theoretically have satellites, as long as everything is in proper scale. If a bowling ball were orbiting about the Sun in the asteroid belt, it could have a pebble orbiting it as far away as a few hundred radii (or about 50 meters) (iii)___ the pebble to the Sun’s gravitational pull.BLANK1 BLANK2 BLANK3A unaccompanied by D scathing G without losingB unprecedented by E unstable H before reapingC unparalleled by F soporific I as well as easing9. For analytical purposes (i)___ political conduct has traditionally been divided into two categories. However, there are some common crimes that are so (ii)___ from a political act that the entire offense is regarded as political. These crimes, which are called "(iii)___" political offenses, are generally nonextraditable.BLANK1 BLANK2 BLANK3A illegal D inseparable G ambiguousB political E distinct H vagueC licit F capricous I relative10. Social democracy is a general ethical ideal, looking to human (i)___ and brotherhood, and inconsistent, in its radical form, with such institutions as the family and (ii)___ property. Democratic government, on the contrary, is merely a means to an end, an (iii)___ for the better and smoother government of certain states at certain junctures. It involves no special ideals of life; it is a question of policy, namely, whether the general interest will be better served by granting all people an equal voice in elections.BLANK1 BLANK2 BLANK3A salutary D unpredictable G aristocracyB equality E general H promotionC complicated F efficacious I grandiloquence答案:BDG AEG BHF AEG ADG CFG AEG AEG ADI BEG以上就是十道GRE填空三空题练习,希望大家能够认真对待,做好总结。

GRE考试填空模拟练习题及答案整合5篇

GRE考试填空模拟练习题及答案整合5篇

GRE考试填空模拟练习题及答案整合5篇GRE考试填空模拟练习题及答案整合5篇该如何备考GRE考试填空题呢?整理了一些GRE考试填空模拟练习题及答案,一起来学习学习吧,下面就和大家分享,来欣赏一下吧。

GRE考试填空模拟练习题及答案The inconspicuous location and lack of striking vistas that characterizethe villa reflect the_____ aspect of its creator’s personality.A:volatileB:grandioseC:gregariousD:self-effacingE:imperious答案:DThe chairman, faced with the need to forge a consensus on a number ofproposals,acknowledged that it would be difficult to reconcile the push for aradical overhaul with the stance of those who want _____change.A:deliberateB:indiscriminateC:genuineD:immediateE:wholesale答案:ARecently released statistics on the prevalence of heart disease in the United States, while (i)_____ , nevertheless reflect a decline from heights reached in the 1960s, before health officialsbegan publicly (ii)_____ people toguard against heart disease.Blank (I)Blank (II)A:definite D:entreatingB:sobering E:defyingC:implausible F:absolving答案:BDThe humor in this play derives from its (i)_____ . The new production,however, inexplicably goes in the opposite direction; it is so (ii)_____ thatthe audience does not even seem to realize that the play is supposed to be acomedy.Blank (I)Blank (II)A:verbal nimbleness D:accessibleB:political allusions E:ploddingC:deadpan dialogue F:implausible答案:AETo say the actors were (i)_____ their director is an understatement: a director who is visibly bored by his cast and their performances is hard to (ii)_____ .Blank (I)Blank (II)A:disappointed in D:lambastB:accepting of E:displeaseC:motivated by F:suffer答案:BFGRE考试填空模拟练习题及答案Common and easily accessible resources (prey for predators or hosts forparasites) should be, all other things being equal, used frequently, yet in someenvironments apparently accessible and suitable resources remain _____.A:vulnerableB:unobtainableC:sustainableD:depletedE:unexploited答案:EEven though the authors repeatedly_____ their own shrewdness, they show aremarkable credulousness toward far-fetched ideas such as carbon-eating treesand cloud-making machinery.A:soft-pedalB:extolC:deprecateD:broadenE:compromise答案:BThe (i)_____ of molecular oxygen on Earth-sized planets around other starsin the universe would not be (ii)_____sign of life: molecular oxygen can be asignature of photosynthesis(a biotic process) or merely of the rapid escape ofwater from the upper reaches of a planetary atmosphere (an abiotic process).Blank (I)Blank (II)A:dearth D:a controversialB:presumption E:an unambiguousC:detection F:a possible答案:CEIn reviewing cases decided by lower courts, Supreme Court justices searchfor precedents to justify their arguments. Reliance on precedent (i)_____ judicial restraint: the precedent (ii)_____ a judge’s ability to determine theoutcome of a case in a way that he or she might choose if there were no precedent.Blank (I)Blank (II)A:promotes D:establishesB:compromises E:constraintsC:promulgates F:prioritizes答案:AEAs he has matured as a scholar, Felmar has come to see the merit of qualification. His conclusions, which early in his career he (i) _____, are nowoften (ii) _____.Blank (I)Blank (II)A:stated as absolute D:hedgedB:refused to reveal E:simplifiedC:backed up extensively F:reiteratedGRE考试填空模拟练习题及答案The brain has become, for many people, _____ the biological machinations ofthe self, and the self-knowledge promised by neuroscience has ignited a hungerto understand how new findings weigh in on age-oldquestions.A:tantamount toB:synonymous withC:implicated inD:divorced fromE:detached fromF:subservient to答案:ABIf you follow your intuition, you will more often than not err by misclassifying a random event as (i)_____. We are far too willing to (ii)_____the belief that much of what we see in life is random.Blank (I)Blank (II)A:uncharacteristic D:countenanceB:systematic E:rejectC:arbitrary F:championWithin the culture as a whole, the natural sciences have been so successfulthat the word “scientific” is often used in (i)_____ manner: it is often assumedthat to call something “scientific” is to imply that its reliability has been (ii)_____ by methods whose results cannot reasonably be (iii)_____.Blank (I)Blank (II)Blank (III)A:an ironic D:maligned G:exaggeratedB:a literal E:challenged H:anticipatedC:an honorific F:established I:disputed答案:CFIThe researcher found that in assessing others, many people hold an unconscious view that competence and warmth are(i)_____: when they perceive aperson to be highly capable, they infer that he or she must have a tendency tobe (ii)_____.Blank (I)Blank (II)A:equally important D:ambitiousB:mutually reinforcing E:unfeelingC:inversely related F:disingenuousThe era’s examples of _____ that are cited by the author can be balanced inpart by certain examples of dissent during the same period.A:diversityB:authoritarianismC:forbearanceD:volatilityE:lucidity答案:BGRE考试填空模拟练习题及答案The brain has become, for many people, _____ the biological machinations ofthe self, and the self-knowledge promised by neuroscience has ignited a hungerto understand how new findings weigh in on age-old questions.A:tantamount toB:synonymous withC:implicated inD:divorced fromE:detached fromF:subservient toIf you follow your intuition, you will more often than not err by misclassifying a random event as (i)_____. We are far too willing to (ii)_____the belief that much of what we see in life is random.Blank (I)Blank (II)A:uncharacteristic D:countenanceB:systematic E:rejectC:arbitrary F:champion答案:BEWithin the culture as a whole, the natural sciences have been so successfulthat the word “scientific” is often used in (i)_____ manner: it is often assumedt hat to call something “scientific” is to imply that its reliability has been (ii)_____ by methods whose results cannot reasonably be (iii)_____.Blank (I)Blank (II)Blank (III)A:an ironic D:maligned G:exaggeratedB:a literal E:challenged H:anticipatedC:an honorific F:established I:disputed答案:CFIThe researcher found that in assessing others, many people hold anunconscious view that competence and warmth are (i)_____: when they perceive aperson to be highly capable, they infer that he or she must have a tendency tobe (ii)_____.Blank (I)Blank (II)A:equally important D:ambitiousB:mutually reinforcing E:unfeelingC:inversely related F:disingenuous答案:CEThe era’s examples of _____ that are cited by the author can be balanced inpart by certain examples of dissent during the same period.A:diversityB:authoritarianismC:forbearanceD:volatilityE:lucidity答案:BGRE考试填空模拟练习题及答案The automation of many of the functions performed at the factory, althoughinitially inspiring_____ in many of the company’s employ ees, has had none of thedeleterious effects forecast either within or beyond the organization.A:indifferenceB:optimismC:ambitionD:arroganceE:trepidation答案:EOne thing both authors have in common is a striking amount of _____: theyclaim to know how massive institutions, some of them richly endowed, all of themcentral to American society and culture, should be reshaped.A:hubrisB:proprietyC:biasD:prescienceE:indolence答案:AMaking the shift to the 90-nanometer manufacturing process has been (i)_____for semiconductor companies. This process effectively doubles the manufacturing capacity of the industry, but it (ii)_____ enormous technicalchallenges because some components of the new semiconductor chips are no morethan five to seven molecules thick.Blank (I)Blank (II)A:an unanticipated boon D:circumventsB:a routine accomplishment E:entailsC:a significant struggle F:resolves答案:CEThere has been (i) _____elephant’s fabled mental capacities until recently,when these behavioral observations have begun to be (ii) _____by brain science.MRI scans of an elephant’s brain suggest that even relative to its overall sizeit has a large hippocampus, the component in the mammalian brain linked tomemory and an important part of its limbic system, which is involved in processing emotions.Blank (I)Blank (II)A:surprising credence given to D:buttressedB:a widespread dismissal of E:anticipatedC:only anecdotal evidence for F:overwhelmed答案:CDThe description of Green’s scholarship as (i)_____ is grossly misleading:while her research on interstellar particles is not especially novel, the conclusions she draws from her data are (ii)_____ .Blank (I)Blank (II)A:esoteric D:remarkably pioneeringB:tendentious E:dubiously supportedC:derivative F:strangely comforting答案:CDGRE考试填空模拟练习题及答案整合。

GRE三空题难题20

GRE三空题难题20

1. Countless generations have been divided on Mendelssohn’s ____________—should he inhabit the same pantheon as Bach and Haydn, or be ____________ to the ranks of could-have-beens? After all, it can be argued that his ____________ came at the age of 14 with his Octet in E-flat, a work, many believe, the composer never eclipsed in his remaining twenty-six years.2. Some note that the increase in the Native American powwow--an intertribal affair of song, dance, and storytelling, all intrinsic aspects of Native American culture--serves to (i) ______________ the very culture it presumably aims to (ii) ______________. They argue an overarching cultural narrative emerges, one that (iii)______________ the narrative of any one tribe.3. To the senior manager, unsolicited opinions, even if the views expressed did not necessarily (i) ______________ his own views, were (ii)______________ ; thus, employees had learned to be (iii)______________ lest they no longer found themselves in his good graces.4. That the comedian was so ____________ as to be unable to ____________ the effect she had on others was not lost on her audience, who quickly stood up to leave, hoping their action would at last ____________.5. That we can, from a piece of art, (i)_____ the unconscious urges of the artist—urges that remain hidden even from the artist himself—will remain a(n) (ii)_____ issue, as it is one (iii)_____ empirical analysis: we can never definitively know what is submerged deep inside the artist’s psyche, let alone reconcile any such revelations with the artist’s work.6. Special effects in movies are (i)_____, in that unlike the story, whose permutations seem to have long ago been (ii)_____, they continue to evolve: if we were magically beamed years into the future (of course that story has been told numerous times before), the special effects would (iii)_____; the story would be awfully familiar.7. Whether repression has come from the church or from a totalitarian state, science has always been an imperiled endeavor, but to claim that it will only flourish in times of libertarian rule is not a(n) ____________ conclusion. A(n) ____________ government is not the same as one that actively takes an interest in funding science – and the latter may well be, in some respects, ____________.8. For charities operating in the developing world, when noble impulses(i) ______________ into mere (ii) ______________, vapid slogans rear their heads and we witness a further deterioration in the very situation such high-mindedness had initially sought to (iii) ______________.9. The question as to what constitutes art is hardly a ____________ one. Today, artists exist whose main goal seems only to subvert work that no longer warrants the trite tag ―cutting-edge.‖ Once the pr overbial envelope is pushed even further, the public inevitably scratches its collective head – or furrows the collective brow – thinking that this time the ―artists‖ have ____________. That very same admixture of contempt and confusion, however, was not u nknown in Michelangelo’s day; only what was considered blasphemous, art-wise, in the 16th Century, would today be considered ____________.10. Perkin’s wit, surprisingly ____________ by the prudishness of his time, may not have been nearly as ____________ had he lived in an era not so prone to ____________.11. It is telling that a politician long adept at inhabiting any role that will serve his immediate purpose has been able to (i) ______________ a disgruntled electorate, an outcome that perhaps speaks more to the electorate’s (ii) ______________ nature than it does to his ability to be (iii) ______________.12. She gave him a(n) (i)_____ look that was not so much (ii)_____ as it was (iii)_____.13. For an artist of such circumscribed talent, Mario was given (i)_____ attention, many connoisseurs (ii)_____ over works that warranted nothing more than a(n) (iii)_____ glance.14. The number of speeding tickets one receives is by no means a reliable measure of (i)_____. Some (ii)_____ drivers, in fact, prove that in certain cases the inverse is true. That is those savvy enough to have availed themselves of the latest cellular phone applications receive up-to-the-minute information on the presence of highway patrolmen—greater excess speed, in these instances, simply implies a greater (iii)_____.15. Heinrich Feyermahn, in insisting that Galileo did not fully uphold the tenets of scientific rationalism, does not (i)_____ the Italian astronomer, but rather the very edifice of Western thought. For if Galileo is the purported exemplar of rational thinking, and yet is (ii)_____, then the history of science cannot be understood as an endless succession of scientists carrying out their work free of all-too-human biases. Thus, Feyermahn admonishes, in faithfully chronicling the sweep of science in the last 300 years, historiographers would be (iii)_____ to not include the human foibles that were part of even the most ostensibly Apollonian endeavors. ?16. James Clerk Maxwell once remarked that the best scientists are, in a sense, the (i)_____ ones not hemmed in by the (ii)_____ of their respective fields, they are able to approach problems with a(n) (iii)_____ mind, so to speak.17. According to Lackmuller’s latest screed, published under the title,?Why We Can’t Win at Their Game, special interest groups not nominally tied to ecological concerns have become so (i) _____ theprocess of environmental policymaking that those groups who actually aim to ensure that corporate profit does not trump environmental health have been effectively (ii) _____. Lackmuller’s contention, however, is (iii)_____ in that it fails to account for the signal achievements environmental groups have effected over the last 20 years—often to the chagrin of big business.18. For charities operating in the developing world, when noble impulses (i)_____ into mere (ii)_____, vapid slogans rear their heads and we witness a further deterioration in the very situation such high-mindedness had initially sought to (iii) _____.19. Lam bert, in his latest thesis, is guilty of (i) _____ Nietzsche’s conception of eternal recurrence, a scholarly transgression that results mainly from his propensity to (ii) _____ multiple sources. That his interpretation seems (iii) _____ may indeed obscure the fact that he liberally combined ideas drawn from numerous works, many of them contemporary, a fact that, in part, accounts for the dubious validity of his overall project.20. To view a film by Torneau is to enter the auteur’s mind. That his reality fails to correspond in salient ways to that of a ‖normal‖ person does not (i)_____ —even if Torneau is incapable of escaping his own head. To appreciate his work, the audience simply has to indulge the director his (ii)_____and leave at the theater door its own (iii)_____.。

新GRE全部三空题——填空详解详析 精品

新GRE全部三空题——填空详解详析 精品

例1.(OG Verbal Practice Set 3 Q4, Medium)Richard M. Russell said 52 percent of the nation’s growth since the Second World War had (i) ______ invention. He said, (ii)______ research, the government’s greatest role in assuring continuing innovation is promoting a strong, modern patent office. “Unless we can (iii) ______ original ideas, we will not have invention.” Mr. Russell said. Speculating on the state of innovation over the next century, several inventors agreed that the future lay in giving children the tools to think creatively and the motivation to invent.(一) 节选出第二、三空格部分He said, (ii) ______research, the government’s greatest role in assuring continuing innovation is promoting a strong, modern patent office. “Unless we can (iii) ______ original ideas, we will not have invention.”1. 去除blank2所在的部分,“He said the government’s greatest role in assuring continuing innovation is promoting a strong, modern patent office.”这句话表明R先生的态度是支持科技创新。

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新GRE填空之三空填空题练习目前,新GRE填空题的复习资料还较少,环球北美考试院为大家整理了有关新GRE填空题三空选择题复习资料分享给大家,希望对考生有所帮助。

1. In Democracies and its Critics, Robert Dahl defends both democratic value and pluralist democracies, or polyarchies. Dahl argues convincingly that the idea of democracy rests on political equality—the equality capacity of all citizens to determine or (i)___ collective decisions. Of course, as Dahl recognizes, if hierarchical ordering is (ii)___ in any structure of government, and if no society can guarantee perfect equality in the resources that may give rise to political influence, the democratic principle of political equality is (iii)___ of full realization. So actual systems can be deemed democratic only as approximations to the ideal.BLANK1 BLANK2 BLANK3A differ profoundly D reverse G distinctionB convergent E conventionality H equilibriumC slightly differentiate F similarity I dissemination2. Although the legal systems of England and the United States are superficially similar, they(i)___in their approaches to and uses of legal reasons: substantive reasons in the United States, whereas in England the (ii) ___ is true. This (iii)___ reflects a difference in the visions of law that prevail in the two counties. In England the law has traditionally been viewed as a system of rules; the United States favors a vision of law as an outward expression of the community’s sense of right and justice.BLANK1 BLANK2 BLANK3A hamper D circumstantial G incapableB influence E inevitable H determinedC incorporate F neutral I possible3. Although some censure became (i)___ during the 1980s, Dahl himself seems to support some of such earlier criticism. Although he (ii)___ that some Western intellectuals demand more democracy from polyarchies than is possible, he nevertheless ends his book by asking what changes in structures and consciousness might make political life more (iii)___ in present polyarchies.BLANK1 BLANK2 BLANK3A a fixed number of D revolution H reproduction of older onesB abundant E disease G modification of connectionsC minimal F generation I deduction of similarities4. A major tenet of the neurosciences has been that all neurons (nerve cells) in the brains of vertebrate animals are formed early in development. An adult vertebrate, it was believed, must make do with (i)___ neurons: those lost through (ii)___ or injury are not replaced, and adult learning takes place not through generation of new cells but through (iii)___ among existing ones.BLANK1 BLANK2 BLANK3A characterized D monocratic G revealsB subdued E gerontocracic H regretsC overruled F democratic I approves5. Evidence that the defendant in a criminal prosecution has a prior conviction may (i)___ jurors to presume the defendant’s guilt, because of their preconception that a person previously convicted of a crime must be inclined toward repeated criminal behavior. That commonly held belief is at least a (ii)___; not all former convicts engage in repeated criminal behavior. Also, jury may give more probative weight than objective analysis would allow to vivid photographic evidence depicting a shooting victim’s wounds, or may (iii)___ the weight of defense testimony that is not delivered in a sufficiently forceful or persuasive manner.BLANK1 BLANK2 BLANK3A stimulate D partial distortion of reality G underestimateB deter E vivid reflection of imagination H exaggerateC participate F precise calculation of certainty I reflect6. The usage suggests that the creation and critical interpretation of literature are not (i)___ but mechanical processes; that the author of any piece of writing is not (ii)___ artist, but merely a laborer who cobbles existing materials (words) into more or less conventional structures. The term deconstruction implies that the text has been put together like a building or a piece of machinery, and that it is in need of being taken apart, not so much in order to (iii)___ it as to demonstrate underlying inadequacies, false assumptions, and inherent contradictions.BLANK1 BLANK2 BLANK3A instructive D a derivative G repairB literal E an insipid H qualifyC organic F an inspired I construct7. Most psychologists, perplexed by the feelings they acknowledge are aroused by aesthetic experience, have claimed that these emotions are genuine, but different in kind from nonaesthetic emotions. This, however, is (i)___ rather than an empirical observation and consequently lacks explanatory value. On the other hand, Gombrich argues that emotional responses to art are (ii)___; art triggers remembrances of previously experienced emotions. These debates have prompted the psychologist Radford to argue that people do experience real melancholy or joy in responding to art, but that these are (iii)___ responses precisely because people know they are reacting to illusory stimuli.BLANK1 BLANK2 BLANK3A a descriptive distinction D vivacious G zealousB a body of profound knowledge E synonymous H lugubriousC a valid evidence F ersatz I irrational8. Until recently many astronomers believed that asteroids travel about the solar system(i)___ satellites. These astronomers assumed this because they considered asteroid-satellite systems inherently (ii)___. Theoreticians could have told them otherwise: even minuscule bodies in the solar system can theoretically have satellites, as long as everything is in proper scale. If a bowling ball were orbiting about the Sun in the asteroid belt, it could have a pebble orbiting it as far away as a few hundred radii (or about 50 meters) (iii)___ the pebble to the Sun’s gravitational pull.BLANK1 BLANK2 BLANK3A unaccompanied by D scathing G without losingB unprecedented by E unstable H before reapingC unparalleled by F soporific I as well as easing9. For analytical purposes (i)___ political conduct has traditionally been divided into two categories. However, there are some common crimes that are so (ii)___ from a political act that the entire offense is regarded as political. These crimes, which are called "(iii)___" political offenses, are generally nonextraditable.BLANK1 BLANK2 BLANK3A salutary D unpredictable G aristocracyB equality E general H promotionC complicated F efficacious I grandiloquence10. Social democracy is a general ethical ideal, looking to human (i)___ and brotherhood, and inconsistent, in its radical form, with such institutions as the family and (ii)___ property. Democratic government, on the contrary, is merely a means to an end, an (iii)___ for the better and smoother government of certain states at certain junctures. It involves no special ideals of life; it is a question of policy, namely, whether the general interest will be better served by granting all people an equal voice in elections.BLANK1 BLANK2 BLANK3A illegal D inseparable G ambiguousB political E distinct H vagueC licit F capricous I relative答案:ADH CDI AFH BDI AEG ADI CFH AEH BEG ADG。

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