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我認(rèn)為……我希望……(適當(dāng)發(fā)揮)Dear teacher: I am Li Tao. I’m writing to remend Amy as our new chairperson of the Students’ Union._____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 8。她很自信。她很有條理。她很樂(lè)于助人。(字?jǐn)?shù)80個(gè)左右)她聰明勤奮,功課好。He ___________________________________________yesterday.四、 任務(wù)型閱讀(,共5 分)As the saying goes, “Once in Rome, do as the Romans do.” People from different cultures have different customs.Do people associate ( 使發(fā)生聯(lián)系) colours with music in the same way all around the world? Recently, researchers from University of California, Berkeley havecarried out a study to find out the answer. The result of their study shows that the colour a person associated with a piece of music depends on how it makes them feel, not the culture they e from. Thatis to say, humans share a mon emotional palette (情緒調(diào)色板) when it es to music and colours.100 men and women or so took part in the study, of which half lived in the San Francisco Bay Area and the other half in Guadalajara, Mexico. In three experiments, they listened to 18 classical music pieces by Bach, Mozart and Brahms that varied in speed and in major versus minor keys ( 大調(diào)和小調(diào)). And then they were asked to associate certain colours with the pieces. People in both countries associated the same pieces of classical music with the same colours. Using a 37colour palette, the study found that people tend to ( 傾向) pair lively music in major keys with lighter and brighter colours while slowerpaced music in minor keys is more likely to be associated to darker and greyer colours.“The results were remarkably strong and consistent across individuals and cultures,”said the lead researcher Professor Stephen Palmer. According to him, thefindings may have implications ( 暗示) for creative treatment, advertising and even music player gadgets.A studyPurpose:To find out if people from different ( 1 ) associate colours with music in the ( 2 ) way.Researchers:From a(n) ( 3 ) universityProcess:★About ( 4 ) participants (參與者) from the US and Mexico were invited to take part in the study.★Researchers used a 37colour palette and played 18 pieces of ( 5 ) music made by Bach, Mozart and Brahms.Result:★People associate the same colours with the same music no matter where they were ( 6 ) or wherever they are in the world. In other words, people from different cultures ( 7 ) a mon emotional palette when it es to music and ( 8 ) .★ Professor Stephen Palmer who ( 9 ) the research thinks their findings may be ( 10 ) in the field of creative treatment, advertising and music player gadgets.五、書(shū)面表達(dá)(10 分)根據(jù)提示寫(xiě)一篇短文。This book ______________________________________the TV play in the past.因?yàn)樯?,他已?jīng)缺課半個(gè)月了。When you____________________ your English, you’d better ___________